Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT)

 - Class of 1939

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Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT) online collection, 1939 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 444 of the 1939 volume:

R-WA Uw The Tale ' Banner 1939 YALE BANNER NINETEEN HUNDRED THIRTY-NINE Founded 1841 Incorporating THE YALE POT-POURRI and FRESHMAN YEAR BOOK Volume XCVIII New Haven, Connecticut FOREWORD Believing that improvement is always possible where the spirit is willing, the Editors of the 1939 Tale Banner have sought to produce the finest book possible. New material and original treatment have been com- bined with the best of past work in an attempt to weld editorial matter, photographs, and art work into a homogeneous whole. With the hope that they have not striven in vain, the Editors take pride in presenting this, the ninety-eighth volume of the Tale Banner. CONTENTS From the Georgian and Gothic of Yale architecture, the inquisitive reader proceeds to the personalities of administration and the roll ' call of honors. Senior Societies next meet his eye, with Fraternities, multi- tudinous organizations, and clubs of all kinds following in their turn. The important place in University lite of Yale ' s nine old colleges is next portrayed m photo and story, succeeded by athletics of every calibre. Freshman portraits and biographies appear in the Freshman edition only. Last of all, and telling all, comes the index. F f.l ' DEDI CAT I ON Scholars respect his intimate knowledge of English poetry; fellow faculty members know him as an able and kindly administrator; and undergraduates find in him an understanding heart and ready sense of humor. He has returned to Yale fresh from success on a multitude of academic fronts, and it is with the well-founded hope that his Alma Mater will grant him an even more brilliant future, that the editors of the 1939 Yale Banner dedicate this, the story of his lirst year as Dean ot Yale College, to WILLIAM CLYDE DeVANE Controversial is Yale ' s architecture. - Therefore, let us consider a tew of the structures that make up the physical Yale, before going on to the activities that make up the dynamic Yale. Here we wish to give the Gothic and the Georgian of it, hoping that those who have rushed about without thinking of the architecture, and those who have criticized without thinking of the architect ' s problems, will pause together and reconsider. ARCHITECTURE OF YALE Gothic and Georgian VIEWS Looking Northeast Across ' Branford Qourt This might be just a corner of a court, but in true Gothic style it has been made interesting with gables and arches, and varied window forms. Angles break up plain surfaces. Above is Wrexham Tower, square and sturdy enough to balance the much greater height of Harkness, yet reaching upward in its own right with its tracery, pinnacles, and tourelles. Looking North in 13rumhull ' s East Qourt Here we see how successfully the Gothic can handle the problem of a dormitory. Though Trumbull College covers half a city block, it retains the intimate charm essential to living quarters. Note also Trumbull ' s famed little man; such grotesque carving is typical of Gothic architecture, and can be seen at many points about Yale. T5he ayne Whitney Gymnasium With its great mass the Payne Whitney Gyrri ' nasium presents a difficult architectural problem. Within, it has been solved with eminent success — we doubt that a better gymnasium can be found. But the exterior is not so successful: awe- some in aspect it seems more a cathedral than a gymnasium. We also feel that the tower is too high for the rest of the building. Looking Southwest in ' Jjimothy ' Dwight Qourt Here the corner treatment is in the Georgian style — plainer, simpler, more straightforward than the Gothic. The detail is not so varied, but proportion, line, and simplicity make it just as effective in its own way. In the foreground is Timothy Dwight ' s Town Hall with its classic columns, cornice, and pediment. An Entry in davenport Qollege The difficult problem in Georgian architecture is to achieve grace in large buildings with the small scale and regular features of the style. The archi- tects solved the problem beautifully in Daven- port, by varying the levels. This fine little temple entrance with its semi-circular shape and fan light over the door is in the true classical revival style. A Section of Sterling ' Divinity adr angle Architecturally the finest group of buildings in New Haven is the Divinity School Quadrangle. Patterned after Thomas Jefferson ' s University of Virginia, the series of smaller buildings lead rhythmically up both sides of the broad lawn to a fitting climax in the Chapel. Note the colonnades and pediments, and the somewhat low-proportioned steeple after the Bullfinch style. The Grove Street entrance to Silliman Qollege Long have been the discussions and speculations on the architecture to be used for Silliman C!ollege. In choosing eighteenth-century Georg- ian, the architects are making it appropriate to a college named for Benjamin Silliman. The small cupola, the balustrade, the steep hipped roof, and two-storied order are typical features of this style of architecture. ■ ;! ' : pip| C rom the physical to the dynamic we move and at the head of dynamic Yale are its leaders. Anarchy might do for Thoreau, but Yale trusts in administration to assure a smooth course of action. Corpor ' ate affairs and freshman proms require direc ' tion and coordination. So do staid Seniors and learned Faculty. That you may here appreciate the sine qua non of Yale, we bring you the following section. ■It; - ' r tr NsSvi . ' . ' '  . ' ;■■ ■ ■ ' 4 ■:;U .;4 iL ' v ' i ' i? ' • !?. $j mi ADMINISTRATION How V)ftany Qourses VyCa e an Education? BY CHARLES SEYMOUR (T he outstanding fact in the history of the American college of arts and sciences during the past - fifteen years has been the advance in the intellectual maturity of the undergraduate. This has been manifested partly in the interest he has come to take in subjects that provide a cultural basis for life but which do not necessarily form part of the regular curriculum and which are related only indirectly to the major field in which the student will take his examination. Vastly increased interest I in the formal curriculum itself has also developed among undergraduates, at least when they are compared with their predecessors of thirty years ago. The colleges have taken note of this more mature attitude and have changed in some part their curricular methods to take advantage of it and to stimulate it. More stress is laid upon the intellectual achievement of the student; there is less tendency to make a bachelor ' s degree depend upon an accu- mulation of credits which the student has acquired by passing through isolated courses. More important still is the growing recognition on the part of the college that the quality of the education acquired by the individual student will largely depend upon the intellectual effort of the student himself; that it is for the student to teach himself how to learn. The function of the faculty is not merely to poke knowledge down the student ' s gullet and examine him upon the undigested mass. It is for the faculty to show the student how to evaluate the knowledge he acquires for himself and stimulate him to develop his critical and appreciative capacities. The educated man is the one who has learned how to educate himself. Nothing surprises our academic visitors from overseas more than our traditional American system of formal classes, in which the student ' s work is carefully doled out three times a week and an appreciable portion of the teacher ' s time and effort is given to the mere checking-up of the stu- dent ' s work and the recital of facts which the student might have learned for himself. Nothing is more encouraging than the tendency in the American college of today to throw more responsibility upon the student, as well as the willingness of the student to carry an increased responsibility for his own education. Formal classroom exercises certainly cannot be dispensed with entirely. For elementary exercises and introductory surveys they provide the most effective help to the student. Formal lectures for advanced students are equally desirable, provided the college can provide men of distinguished scholarship and capacity for oral presentation. Our American colleges have been characterized by a great lecturing tradition which has given us an outstanding advantage, in one respect at least, over our British cousins. At Yale it is important to perpetuate this tradition, set by such great lecturers as Sumner, Wheeler, Brewer, Lewis, Lull, Phelps, and continued worthily in our present faculty. But the formal recitation and the formal lecture should be restricted so far as possible, in the case of the former to unskilled students in elementary work, in the case of the latter to really great lecturers. Recognition of the desirability of throwing more responsibility for his own education upon the student would lead naturally, one might say, to a diminution in the number of formal courses offered by the college. The more the student learns by himself, the less need of formal instruction. The actual history of recent years, however, has belied this probability. Almost everywhere the colleges have multiplied the number of courses offered, dividing and subdividing subjects of study, and only too often setting up courses of a purely factual and descriptive character. We have been hypnotized by academic myths. The students and their parents have apparently believed that the more courses taken, the better the education; the college administration seems to have been guided by the equally prevalent legend that the more courses offered, the greater the educational distinction of the in stitution. There is real danger in this multiplication of formal courses. Given the inescapable fact that academic income available for educational purposes is threatened by the fall in the rate of return upon invested endowment, it is clear that a continual thinning of the amount spread upon teaching exercises means mediocrity and ultimate decad nc.;. Our policy should he one of concentration and not dispersion. For the student it is a cruel deception to permit him to helieve that the quality of the education he gets depends upon the number of courses he takes. Rather he should be trained to do more and more of his work upon his own intellectual responsibility. From the administrative point of view, the formal courses offered will be stronger the more carefully their number is re- stricted; from the student ' s point of view, the quality of his work will be improved the more it results from his own efforts. At Yale we have accepted the principle of throwing increased responsibility upon the student. We test his intellectual achievement in the general departmental examination in the field of his major and we expect that his showing will depend largely, not upon the number of courses he has taken but upon his individual effort supplemented by special work in the reading periods or in small discussion groups. We permit him to reduce the number of formal courses taken in each of the last two years from five to four, provided his grades place him in the upper half of his class. In my opinion it is desirable, purely from the student ' s point of view, to make the four course plan not merely optional but mandatory, except for individuals who because of peculiar capacity have earned the right to especial privilege. In the case of the weaker student who must face his final general examination in his major field it is obvious that he can meet that test with improved chance of success if he has concentrated his effort with greater intensity than is possible if he is taking five courses in each of his final years. In the case of the superior student it seems evident that he should be given the opportunity to go faster and further in his chosen subject of special study. Assuming real intellectual quality in such a student, there is little danger of over specialization. Far greater is the danger that by reason of disperson of effort he will not get far enough in his subject of specialisation to appreciate its in- tellectual value. He can audit courses in other fields; he can acquire a broad cultural background by reading in his own study, by visiting the art galleries, or listening to concerts. The necessity of a fifth course is merely legendary. Corporation Charles Seymour, Ph.D., Litt.D., LL.D., President FELLOWS His Excellency the Governor of Connecticut, ex officio His Honor the Lieutenant Governor of Connecticut, ex officio Mortimer Norton Buckner, LL.D. Rev. Henry Sloane Coffin, D.D., LL.D. Fred Towsley Murphy, M.D., M.A. Edward Belden Greene, M.A. Thomas Walter Swan, LL.B., M.A. James Lee Loomis, LL.D. Reeve Schley, LL.B., M.A. Thomas Day Thacher, LL.D. Rev. Arthur Howe Bradford, D.D. Edward Earned Ryerson, Jr., M.A. Robert Alphonso Taft, LL.B., M.A. Rt. Rev. Henry Kno.x Sherrill, D.D., LL.D. Georc.e VanSantvoord, L.H.D. Dean Gooderham Acheson, LL.B., M.A. Frederick Trubee Davison, LL.D. Wilmarth Sheldon Lewis, M.A. Alumni oard OFFICERS John Marshall Holcombe, Jr., U, Hartford, Conn. Chairman Charles Carroll Glover, Jr., 10, Washington, D.C. First Vice Chairman James B. Gr.ant, 09, Denver, Colorado Seco7id Vice Cfiairrnan Ogden D. Miller, 30, New Haven, Conn. Secretary George D. Vaill, 35, New Haven, Co nn. Acting Executive Secretary EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE John M. Holcombe, Jr. Charles C. Glover, Jr. James B. Grant George T. Adee, 95, New York City W. McCoRMiCK Blair, 07, Chicago Morgan B. Brainard, 00, Hartford Harvey H. Bundy, ' 09, Boston R. Mayo Crawford, 15S., New Haven Ogden D. Miller George D. Vaill John B. Dempsey, U, Cleveland Jack S. Ewing, 25, Baltimore Paul Mellon, 29, Pittsburgh E. Kendall Morse, 09, Plainfield Chester T. Neal, 05, Springfield Walter G. Preston, Jr., 25, New York City A. Wessel Sh, pleigh, 11, St. Louis Ex Officio Gilbert Kinney, 05 Edward J. Dimock, 11 Ojficers of A dministration Charles Seymour, Ph.D., Litt.D., LL.D. Edgar Stephenson Furniss, Ph.D., LL.D. Carl Albert Lohmann, M.A. George Parmly Day, LL.D. Thomas Wells Farnam, M.A. Laurence Gotzian Tighe, M.A. Ogden Dayton Miller, M.A. Frederic Blair Johnson, M.A. BOARD OF ADMISSIONS Edward Simpson Noyes, Ph.D. Chdirnuni THE FRESHMAN YEAR Norman Sidney Buck, Ph.D. Dean Theodore Babbitt, LL.B., Ph.D. Asiiv ' Jtant Dean YALE COLLEGE George Henry Nettleton, Ph.D., Litt.D. Dean (first term) William Clyde DeVane, Ph.D. Dean (second term) N. ' thaniel Burton P.aradise, Ph.D. Registrar and Junior Class Ojficer Russell Laym.an Bradley, M.A. Senior Class Officer James Graham Leyburn, Ph.D. Sophomore Class Officer SHEFFIELD SCIENTIFIC SCHOOL Charles Hyde Warren, Ph.D. Dean LooMis Havemeyer, Ph.D. Assistant Dean SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING Samuel William Dudley, M.E. Dean LooMis Havemeyer, Ph.D. Registrar GRADUATE SCHOOL Edgar Stephenson Furniss, Ph.D., LL.D. Deaji RoswELL Parker Angier, Ph.D., LL.D. Associate Dean SCHOOL OF MEDICINE Stanhope Bayne-Jones, M.D. Dean DIVINITY SCHOOL Luther Allan Weigle, Ph.D., D.D., Litt.D., S.T.D., LL.D. Dean SCHOOL OF LAW Charles Edward Cl.ark, LL.B., M.A., LL.D. Dean Ashbel Green Gulliver, LL.B., M.A. Assistant Dean SCHOOL OF THE FINE ARTS Everett Victor Meeks, Litt.D., F.A.I. A., A.N. A. Dean SCHOOL OF MUSIC David Stanley Smith, M.A., Mus.D. Dean Richard Fr.ank Donovan, Mus.B. Assista7it Dea7i President Prot ' oxt Secretary Treasurer Associate Treasurer and Comptroller Associate Treasurer Assistant Secretary Bursar SCHOOL OF FORESTRY Henry Solon Graves, LL.D. Dean George Alfred Garr.att, Ph.D. Assistant Dean SCHOOL OF NURSING Ehfie Jane Taylor, M.A. Dean UNIVERSITY LIBRARY Bernhard Knollenberg, LL.B., M.A. Librarian PEABODY MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY Albert Eide Parr, M.A. Director GALLERY OF FINE ARTS Everett Victor Meeks, Litt.D., F.A.I. A., A.N. A. Director Theodore Sizer, M.A. Associate Director UNIVERSITY OBSERVATORY Frank Schlesinger, Ph.D., Sc.D. Director Dirk Brouwer, Ph.D. Acting Director [first term) CHURCH OF CHRIST IN YALE UNIVERSITY Rev. Sidney Lovett, D.D. 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 Studv Richard Cushm- iN Carroll, B.A. Secretary of the Bureau of Appointments DEPARTMENT OF UNIVERSITY HEALTH Orville Forrest Rogers, M.D. Director ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION Malcolm F.armer, M.A. Chairman 0 the Board of Control UNIVERSITY DINING HALLS Cora C. Colburn, M.A. Director Alice Marg.aret Bowers, M.S. Associate Director SEKIOR a Gaspard d ' Andelot Belin, Jr. Secretary Qlass Qounci] Gaspard d ' Andelot Belin, Jr. Albert Stanley Wilson, Jr. Frederick William Wilhelmi, Jr. Berl{eley John Garrison Mersereau Branjord Charles Wright, III Calhoun Lowell Melcher Clucks, Jr. Davenport Frederic Charles HiRONS, Jr. Jonathan Edwards Class Secretary Class Treasurer Jerred Gurley Bl. nchard Pierson Albert Allen Manning Sayhrool{ Donald Wall. ce Henry Timothy Dwight Herbert Elmer Pickett, Jr. Trumbull Philip Leonard Hovey Shejf Baci{ row nchard, Mersereau, Hirons. Manning. Frniil row: Pickett, Hovey, Belin. Clucas. Wi — 30 — OR CLASS Albert Stanley Wilson, Jr. Treasurer Qlass ay Exercises Philip Leonard Hovey Lowell Melcher Clucas, Jr. Class Historian LUCIEN BUNCE D.AY Class Poet Chairman William Putn.am Bundy Class Orator Ger.ard Fount.ain, Jr. Ivy Orator Bundy, Clucas, Hovey, Day, Founta — 31 — Hirons, Henry, Wilson, Belin. Triennial Qommittee Frederic Charles Hirons, Jr. Gaspard d ' Andelot Belin, Jr. Cha Donald Wallace Henry Albert Stanley Wilson, Jr. Tale University budget Oni;e - fT he University Budget Drive, Yale ' s Response to Human Need, continued its successful career - as co-ordinator of all general solicitation for charity on the campus. The scheme of one unique drive was inaugurated in 1922 at the request of Dwight Hall, the Yale Hope Mission, and Yale-in- China, and has continued every year since that time. In addition to the three original participants, the New Haven Community Chest benefits from the proceeds, and Dr. Grenfell ' s work in Labrador, one part of which was started by Yale men, also receives a small sum. Dwight Hall, the chief benefici- ary, has been active in helping New Haven townspeople and the Boys Club. The Budget Drive has been the most logical and consistently successful means of collecting money for charities. The undergraduate has found it to his convenience to make one contribution. The separate charities have made a substantial saving in time and money since they no longer are forced to make their individual appeals. Since this year ' s drive came just after the disastrous New England hurricane, it was decided to give a special donation of $500 to the Red Cross for this purpose. As in the previous year the Budget continued the practice of giving to each contributor a booklet of tickets for the Hope Mission designed for use in dealing with panhandlers. The goal for the drive was set at $20,000, and during the second week of college some 170 students, including men from the Law, Medical, and Divinity Schools, conducted the work of solicitation from door to door. Last year a graph in front of Yale Station of thermometers marked the monetary progress of the Drive. This year it was a question of pushing a football over the $20,000 goal line. With the aid of a record collection from the Law School, and the generous support of all other students the final total of the Drive was $21,800, over the goal, but slightly below the 1937 figure. Bac row. Holden, Hovey, Glover, Miller, Manning, Resor, Elder, Games. Front row: Humphrey, Black. Bundy, Hirons, Chittenden. Mitchell. Belin, Bundy. 15he Undergraduate Conference Group Gaspard d ' Andelot Belin, Jr. Charles Carroll Glover, III William Putnam Bundy Gilbert Watts Humphrey Harry Hartwood Mitchell BY GEORGE H. NETTLETON (T he origin and history of the Conference Group, or Deun s Committee, of Yale College are un- usual. In October, 1937, even before any announcement of its general purpose — that of an informal clearing-house of opinion between students and administration on matters of mutual con- cern — or of Its proposed personnel, the new plan was suddenly translated from theory into action. The test came literally overnight. Not until the crisis of Calcium Night had been promptly met by decisive student action did the Campus come to realize that a new agency of counsel and co- operation had arisen and had already served effectively. Thus simply and quietly the new Conference Group proved its worth, and was thenceforth established in the firm favor and respect of the Campus. Within a few months Yale College undergraduates invited the new committee to investigate the cheating problem, and before the close of the year the Yale College Faculty voted cordial approval of the committee ' s constructive report and recommendations. With such conclusive verdict on its first trial year, the Conference Group became a fixed factor and influence in the life and tra dition of Yale College. This year, as last, the Group has studied a wide range of educational questions — the four- course plan, the uniform marking system, the merger of the Honors course with the Departmental system. As a constant means of interpreting thoughtful student opinion, the Conference Group has become invaluable to Yale College. Sheffield Student Qouncil Albert Stanley Wilson, Jr. Sam Roy Watkins Chairman Secretary Robert Oscar Berger, Jr. Leete Parmelee Doty Stu. rt Cheney Ferris Nicholas Schuyler Kerr Robert Leroy Wanamaker deceased D.- VID I. N Thierm. ' Vnn CLASS OF 1940 George Smith Watson Bdcl{ row: Wanamaker, Doty. Thiermann. Watson. Front jow: Watkins. Wilson. Berger. Senior Promenade CALVIN WILLIAM VERITY, JR. Chairman ALBERT ALLEN MANNING Treasurer WILLIAM WALLACE ATTERBURY Floor Manager Qommittee William Wallace Atterbury Thaddeus Reynolds Beal Jerred Gurley Blanchard Edward Trowbridge Collins Leete Parmelee Doty Jean Drouet Fennebresque Frederick Carpenter Iiving, Jr. Albert Allen Manning Eric Nelson Ferryman Calvin William Verity, Jr. Frederick Willi.am Wilhelmi, Jr. Burch Williams hac row. Ferryman, Fennebresque, Doty, Wilhelmi, Blanchard, Irving, Front row: Atterbury, Williams, Collins, Verity, Beal, Manning. Bacl row: Torrey, Mersereau, Stack, ShielJs, Vietor. Glover. Hackett. Front row: Dnscoll, GrefiiJ, Howe. Hammer, Smith. he Junior Promenade T T rhile it can hardly be said that every day is prom-day, as the Prom pubUcity department would lead one to believe, there is not a great deal of the year that goes by without some thought ot the Junior Prom. All through the Spring there is reminiscing to do over the last one; then, when one comes back in the Fall, there is the next one to consider —and who is going to be on the Committee? (Some profiteers even got up a pool on this subject). So this year it was on a dreary day in December that the O.C.D. announced the election of the 1940 Junior Promenade Committee, though the event was still well in the future. Soon afterwards, the Committee announced its officers — Doc Howe, Chairman, Bill Dnscoll, Floor Manager, and Steve Smith, Treasurer. Things were beginning to happen. But first there are always three problems that face the group that plans such a colossal party: where? when? and whose orchestra? These were soon answered by Chairman Howe. Mr. Farmer and Mr. Woodcock granted the use of the amphitheatre of the gym, the Committee decided on February 24th as the date, and Paul Whiteman ' Company were engaged to supply the music. But this last was not accomplished as easily as might be supposed. It took many trips to New York before Floor Manager DriscoU had the contract — many trips, and it is rumored that his Manhattan research was not all done solo. Further- more, It seemed to be necessary for the Chairman to make an excursion now and then to the city, too — just to make sure that everything was all right. Meanwhile, there were other operatives at work attacking each little problem, and insuring that when the night of nights came, all would be set to make the bestest party ever. Jim Torrey took care of the personnel, and most efficient he was. Some 2500 coats were checked with nary a loss, and he even had a trained nurse at hand to take care of such of the weaker sex as swooned away in true OFFICERS Harold Howe, II Chairman William Nott Driscoll Floor Manager George Stevenson Smith Treasurer Harold Howe, II COMMITTEE Charles Carroll Glover, III Donald Gregg KiERAN Jeremiah Hackett Alexander McKenzie Hammer, Jr. George Frederick Vietor, Jr. David McGregor Mersereau Jay Manville Shields Joseph William Stack, Jr. James Humphrey Torrey Victorian fervor. Besides this corps to meet the physical needs of the guests, there was also needed some decoration to satisfy the aesthetic sense and put one and all m the Prom mood. Bill Stack and George Vietor handled this minor Bsaux Arts project by calling in such famed artists as Jaro Fabry, Peter Arno, and E. Simms Campbell to supply their conceptions of the typical prom girl. These decorated the walls, while blue and white streamers overhead gave the great room a festive air. And finally, to satisfy the innet ' man, Dave Mersereau was given the task of providing the buffet supper. This he did, after a sampling tour of caterers that is said to have added some ten pounds to his frame. Statisticians computed that the sausages consumed during the evening woul d, if laid end to end, stretch from Yale Station to the Commons. Envious Freshmen wish that the truth of this statement had been actually tested. So do the inhabitants of local kennels. Thus the arrangements were completed. And after a two-week publicity campaign by Publicity Manager Glover, the last ducat was sold. The story of the Party itself is now history. From the first drop of the Jazz King ' s baton, through the Grand March and presentation of the ancient wooden spoon, to the Whiff ' s too-brief concert and the three o ' clock curfew, it was party-time chez k Club Payne Whit?! . Now Spring is here, and it is reminiscing time. But already we are beginning to speculate — can next year ' s be as good? Bi]ci( row: Beal, Kelsey, Cherry. Second row: Perkins, Molina, Boswell, Morris, Chittenden. Front row: Feme, Clucas, Browning. The University gatta John P. Boswell Thaddeus R. Beal Stephen T. Kelsey, Jr. Ralph R. Browning, Jr. George H. Chittenden W. LTER L. Cherry, Jr. Lowell M. Clucas, Jr. Stuart C. Ferris Chdirijian Secretary Treasurer Henry G. Molina, Jr. Richard L. Morris, Jr. Horace O. Perkins Decause 1938 was the off-year for the traditional Derby Day it was decided in a poll by the class ■ - of 193Q that a substitute should be arranged as the Spring social function. In this embryonic state of affairs a committee of Juniors was named and work began on the new project. In the quest for a suitable name for the enterprise such titles as The Classiest Class ' s Classiest Clambake and the more conservative 1939 Class Social were ultimately rejected and the University Regatta, a contribution by Dean Nettleton, was adopted. Skepticism reigned throughout the Spring, but when all was prepared and May 14th rolled around over three thousand undergraduates and their guests were on hand to witness such features as crew races, some ludicrous and others serious, a faculty-student soft-ball game, and a miniature Coney Island set up on McConney ' s field at Derby. That night in the spacious ballroom of the Hotel Taft almost five-hundred couples danced till two to the strains of the traditional Eddie Witt- stein orchestra. It was an interesting experiment which succeeded in a most orderly fashion in spite of the many predictions that it would turn into one of Yale ' s worst orgies. Such a contrast with the usual Derby Day led to some speculation that Regatta Day might well be continued to the advantage of the University and the pleasure of the undergraduates. The Freshman ' Promenade George W. Kirch wev. III Garden R. McLean George E. Haines David T. Harris Lampkin H. Butts Richard M. Moore Caspar W. B. Townsend, Jr. Chairman Secretary Floor Manager Treasurer Charles P. Stetson On March 10th the Freshmen won a six-year battle with the administration by proving beyond doubt that they were capable of successfully engineering a Promenade of their own. To Dean Buck and Assistant Dean Babbitt should be given much credit for the Prom ' s ultimate success, for It was their indulgence and unceasing effort that enabled the Committee to plan and execute every detail of the dance. Owing to the limitations of a meagre budget, the prospects of securing a popular orchestra and providing entertainment up to the traditional Yale standard seemed at the beginning slightly dis- couraging. But George Kirchwey, Gappy Townsend, and Newt Perry hopped a rattler for Man- hattan to perform a minor miracle in signing up Jimmy Dorsey, while Yales own Newt Perry consented to share orchestral honors. Dave Harris proved himself indispensable as treasurer, and George Haines spared no efforts in securing attractive decorations. Dick Moore toiled efficiently on the novel accommodation problem in Bingham and Vanderbilt, while Charley Stetson ' s catering tours resulted m a sumptuous repast. Cardy McLean and Lampkin Butts racked their brains for publicity gags, and their Freshman Prom Program proved a popular addition. The pulchritude of the multitudinous girls, the gentlemanly but convivial conduct of the yearlings, and the music of Jimmy Dorsey and Newt Perry combined to make the Promenade a spectacular success. ; row: Moore. Stetson, TownsenJ. From row H.nnes, Butts, Kirchwey, McLe.tn. H.irri — 41 — A 11 work and no play may make Jack a dull boy, but most of us have found, much to our sorrow, that the antithesis of this household axiom is even less of a success formula. Those who have worked have been rewarded; those who have not have only their regrets. For the industrious there are such societies and scholarship honors as mentioned in the ne.xt few pages; for the others. ? « ' ' ' - ' ' - I ' i ' HONORS hi etd Kappa Scholastic Honor Society Harry Hartwood Mitchell William Putnam Bundy Cameron Sands Moseley Robert Henry Gemmill John Brumback Spitzer President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Member of Executive Committee Henry Emerson Butler, Jr. Richard Woolsey Cutler Joseph Richardson Dilworth William Robert Duff CLASS OF 1938 (June Elections) Robert Lake Foote Elbert Bacon Hamlin, Jr. Alton K. stner Arthur Stern, Jr. Tom Stix Willis E. Urick, Jr. Frederick Henry von Schleinitz Edwin Richard Weinerman John Munro Wool-sey, Jr. George Elisha Hall, Jr. William James Kennedy CLASS OF 1938 S.S.S. Jacob Solomon HoYT Arthur Stearns Bertram Yood Louis Stanton Auchincloss Max Wellington Babb, Jr. Thaddeus Reynolds Beal. Jr Harrie Waldo Bird, Jr. Robert Lounsbury Black, Jt P.AUL Franklin Boller, 2d. William Putnam Bundy William Wheeler Darrow. George Edward Dimock, Jr. Richard David Ellmann Edward William Fager Gerard Fountain, Jr. Joe Lee Frank, Jr. Robert Henry Gemmill Robert David Gillman CLASS OF 1939 John Abram Gilray, Jr. Robert Hayden Harry Ernest Richard Heyde Robert Tilden Jackson Charles Henry Jung, Jr. Joseph K. tz David Robert Kerr Henry Kohn, Jr. William O ' Donnell Lee S.- UL Bernard Liberman Frederick Stevens McConnell, Jr. Richard Wellington McLaren Thomas Charles M.ason Harry Hartwood Mitchell Cameron Sands Moseley David Novarr Arthur Lachlan Reed Harding Rees Bernard Joseph Rogers Franklin Morton Schultz John Brumback Spitzer Edward Stevens John Hobson Stubbs Warren Tanner Troutman Warren Wilhelm David Willard Williams Lloyd Thomas Williams, Jr. William John Woods. Jr. Nelson Clark Works, Jr. Erwin Lamb Baldwin Relvert Jewell Coe Marvin Jay Fahrenb.ach Harold Leon Golubock CLASS OF 1939 S.S.S. Allan Victor Norman Goodyer William Kearney Hall William Graves Harris Herbert Stanley Holland, Jr. Sadron Clyde Lampert, Jr. Solomon Resnick Ralph Simon James Payne Alter William Edward Barnes Benson Lansdale Boardman John Bridge Brueckel CLASS OF 1940 McGeorge Bundy Donald Arthur Schmechel Hart Hunter Spiegel Peter Gordon Bradley Stillm.a Henry Clarke Th.acher, Jr. Rowland Boyd Vance William Howells Vinton Owen Watkins Welles CT ' he Yale chapter of Phi Beta Kappa is the Alpha of Connecticut of the United Chapters of Phi Beta Kappa, a national scholastic honor society. The society was organized here in 1780 by Elisha Parmele, Yale undergraduate and then a B.A. of Harvard. He obtained charters for Yale and Harvard from the parent society at the College of William and Mary in Virginia. The Yale chapter, or branch as it was called in the old days, was established first and then the Harvard chapter in 1781. The society at William and Mary went out of existence during the American Revolution but Yale and Harvard carried on, establishing other chapters by granting charters to Dartmouth (1787), Union (1817), Bowdoin (1825), Brown (1830) and elsewhere. The United Chapters of Phi Beta Kappa was founded in 1883 at Cambridge and now has its central office in New York City. There are one hundred and thirty-two chapters m the United States and more than one hundred associations of graduates of colleges who are members of the society. The original charter and the old records of the Yale chapter are preserved in the Rare Book room of the Yale University Library and there is also a small collection of old medals and keys in the Yale Memorabilia collection. The oldest known Yale medal is that of the Reverend Edward Dorr Griffin, Yale B.A. of 1780, who was later pastor of the Park St. Church in Boston and then President of Williams College. Back, TO ' Darrow, Spiegel, Benson, Black, Woods, Stillman, Reed. Fourth row. Vance. Ellman, Lampert. Thatcher, Jung. Jackson, Rees. Thud row: Novarr. Schmechel, Welles, Kerr, Lee, Frank, Stuhbs. Second row Vinton, McConnell. Liberman, Cohen, Baldwin, Schulti, Coe, Gilman. Front row: Spitzer, Liehnit:, Moseley, Gandelman, Mitchell, Boiler. Bundy, Katz. Bird. Sigma XI Scientific Honor Society Alois Francis Kovarik Leon Stansfield Stone Francis Thomas McNamara Harold John Lutz President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Gerald T. Evans, M.D. Irving Friedman, M.D. David C. Murdoch, Ph.D. Helen G. Richter, M.D. Thornton L. Page. D. Phil. John D. Bateman Raimond L. Beard Roy W. Bonsnes James S. Calvin Harold G. Cassidy Charles C-H. Ch ' enc Louis H. Cohen Paul C. Condit Anne M. Cooke Georglana B. Deevev Edwin C. Dreby James E. Eaton Margaret M. Endicott Leslie D. Fallon Frank M. Fletcher, Jr. William V. Freed James W. Kimmey Gregory Baker Paul Bender Relvert ]. CoE Robert D, Drew John C. Fedoruk Noel H. Matthews Manuel R. Angulo Walton F. Battershall James M. De Loreto MEMBERS FACULTY AND RESEARCH FELLOWS Warren S. McCulloch, M.D. M.- rtin Heinemann, M.D. Kaino K. E. Hyyppa, Ph.D. ASSOCIATES Floyd Moser, Ph.D. Robert A. Newburger, M.D. Frank J. Turner, Sc.D. Alfred J. Vicnec Charles A. Connaughton, M.F. ALUMNI Earl M. Bilger. Ph.D. GRADUATE STUDENTS Walter R. C. Golden Eugene M. Grabbe Harvey Hall, Jr. Helen C. Harrison Charles F. Hockett Jesse W. Hofer Edwin O. Hook Robert A. J. ' ckson Benjamin Katzin Alex Lesuk Keith H. Lewis James C. Lipsett Joseph L. Melnick Joseph Miller Edwin L. Min. ' rd Helen I. Miner Helen H. Nowlis SCHOOL OF FORESTRY James L. Mielke Thaddeus Parr ASSOCIATES Richard C. Desmond John L. Farrar Undergraduates SENIORS IN SHEFFIELD SCIENTIFIC SCHOOL Marvin J. Fahrencach Bengt E. GiSELSiON Harold L. Golubock SENIORS IN THE SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING James L. Meriam John G. Stephenson Hyman Rosenthal Robert G. Treuting Howard R. Spendelow, Jr. Robert L. Wanamaker Stephen W. Reed Henry J. Riblet Arthur M. Ross, Jr. Jackson P. Sickels Allan H. Smith Elizabeth S. Stevenson Paul R. Trumpler James H. Wakelin, Jr. Charles R. Warren (jOrdon p. Whitcomb Beatrice B. Whiting Everard M. Williams Thomas C. Wilson Gerald A. Wrenshall Tsun-Yi Yang Robert D. Muir Leon. rd W. Wing Edw.ard T. Mish Herbert S. Holland, Jr. R. LPH Simon SENIORS IN YALE COLLEGE Edward W. Eager Ernest R. Heyde JUNIORS IN YALE COLLEGE William E. B. Benson Robert T. J.ackson Jerome S. Kornreich John B. Spitzer Tau eta i Engineering Honor Society Samuel Spencer Dils RoMER Franklin Good William Moonan John Gregg Stephenson Robert Leroy Wanamaker MEMBERS CLASS OF 1Q39 Richard Philip Arms Marshall Bliss Herbert Edmund Brumder Samuel Spencer Dils Robert Daniel Drew John Charles Fedoruk Romer Franklin Good John Oscar Heintz Albert Herman Jacobson, Jr. George Baily King Noel Hall Matthews, Jr. George Allen Kichels CLASS OF 1940 Gunn.ar Lund President Vice President Treasurer Corresponding Secretary Recording Secretary James L.athrop Meriam William Moonan Edward William Petrillo John Shedd Reed Charles Ernest Reutter, Jr. Richard Harold Seligman HOW.ARD R.- NDALL SpENDELOW, Jr. John Gregg Stephenson Robert Louis Stilmar Robert Graham Treuting Robert Leroy Wanamaker Thomas Rees f 1 ' I f 1 1 1 n ♦ ' Bacl{ tow: Lund, Koehler, Stilmar, Reed. Meriam, Reutter. King. Second row: Seligman. Matthews, Heint:. Jacohso Treuting, Drew. Fedoruk Frrrnr rote. Stephenson. Good. Dils, Wanamaker, Arms Scholarship Honors Yale College RANKING SCHOLARS, CLASS OF 1939 SCHOLARS OF THE FIRST RANK Louis S. Auchincloss Paul F. Boller, II William P. Bundy George E. Dimock, Jr. Joe L. Frank, Jr. Robert D. Gillman John A. Gilray, Jr. Ernest R. Heyde Henry Kohn, Jr. William O. Lee Thomas C. Mason John B. Spitzer Edward Stevens Warren Wilhelm William J. Woods, Jr. Nelson C. Works, Jr. SCHOLARS OF THE SECOND RANK Joseph Abihider Max W. Babb, Jr. Walton F. Battershall Thaddeus R. Beal, Jr. Sidney Berman Harrie W. Bird, Jr. Robert L. Black, Jr. Howard W. Blauvelt Henry M. Childs, Jr. Alfred C. Clark Robert J. Clarke Ambrose C. Cramer, 111 Herbert J. Curtis William W. Darrow, Jr. James M. DeLoreto George S. Dickinson, Jr. Stanley W. Durham Arthur D. Dyess, Jr. Richard D. Ellmann Edward W. Fager Gerard Fountain, Jr. Robert H. Gemmill Jack M. Ginsberg Richard M, Goldwater Robert H. Harry John L. Harvey, Jr. Francis W. Hensley Stephen Herz, Jr. Robert T. Jackson EDw, RD H. Jones, Jr. Charles H. Jung, Jr. Joseph Katz William W. Kaufmann Raphael L. Kemler David R. Kerr Jerome S. Kornreich Kenneth I. Lash Saul B. Liberm.an Frederick S. McConnell, Jr. Lee H. B. Malone Harry H. Mitchell Richard L. Morris, Jr. Cameron S. Moseley David Novarr Charles T. Rayhill Norman H. Rayman Arthur L. Reed Harding Rees Paul E. Roche Bernard J. Rogers William M. Roth Terry B. Sanders, Jr. Carl G. Schluederberg, Jr. William G. Schmidt Franklin M. Schultz William W. Scranton Roger S. Starr Newton I. Steers, Jr. John D. Strobell, Jr. John H. Stubbs Thomas E. Toney, Jr. Warren T. Troutman Doane Twombly Richard H. Wilmer, Jr. Stanley E. Zimmerman JUNIOR APPOINTMENTS, CLASS OF 1940 PHILOSOPHICAL ORATIONS William E. B. Benson Lansdale Boardman McGeorge Bundy James P. Alter WoLcoTT N. Baker Loring W. Batten, III John L. Behr Arthur M. Borden John E. Brewster Thomas J. Camp, Jr. Irving Caplan Stephen C. Carroll Richard T. Ewing Henry L. Finch, Jr. Donald A. Schmechel Hart H. Spiegel Peter G. B. Stillm.iin HIGH ORATIONS Donald S. Fuller Edgar S. Furniss, Jr. Herbert P. Galliher, Jr. Nicholas S. Gimbel Walker F. Givan Charles C. Glover, Jr. Reuben A. Holden, IV John S. MacSporran Lewis S. Mohr, II Stanley J. Pogorzelski John W. Price Mortimer R. Proctor, Jr. Rowland B. Vance William H. Vinton Owen W. Welles Edward Ryan Vincent J. Scully, Jr. Joseph F. Shevelson Daniel J. Shiller W.arren P. Snyder MlAL D. St. fford William McD. Stucky Howard S. Tierney, Jr. Willard N. V. n Slyck, Jr. Jerold M. Wallman Richard M. Weissman — 48 — Scholarship Honors Sheffield Scientific School GENERAL TWO YEAR HONORS FOR EXCELLENCE IN ALL STUDIES Erwin L. Baldwin Applied Economic Science Paul Bender Chemistry Phil D. Caesar Chemistry Hyman M. Chernoff Biological Science Relvert J. CoE Biological Science Marvin J. Fahrenbach Chemistry Bengt E. Giselsson Mathematics Harold L. Golubock Biological Science Allan V. N. Goodyer Biological Science William K. Hall Biological Science William G. Harris Applied Economic Science John O. Heintz Industrial Administration Herbert S. Holland, Jr. Industrial Admini.S ' tration Sadron C. Lampert, Jr. Applied Economic Science William Moonan Industrial Admini. ' itrdtion Solomon Resnick Biological Science Charles F. Scholh. ' Kmer Biological Science Ralph Simon Physics Myron S. Weil Applied Economic Science GENERAL ONE-YEAR HONORS FOR EXCELLENCE IN ALL STUDIES Lewis M. Bloomingd. le, Jr. Mathematics Lee B. Brody Applied Economic Science Herbert M. Clark Clieini5tr John K. Dellenback Applied Economic Science Clayton DuBosque, Jr. Industrial Adnimis- tration RossELL P. Duncan Applied Economic Science Gilbert V. Edlin Industrial Admmistratio?! Paul M. H. user Chemistr;y Aaron W. Horton Chemistry Edward J. Kaliski Applied Economic Science Jonathan T. Lanman Cheinistrv James B. Lockhart, Jr. Applied Economic Science Ben F. McC. ' mey, Jr. Plant Science Thorvol M.- rtin Industrial AdTninistration Milton Pollock Chemistry Walter Romanow Cheinistrv James S. Smith Chernistrv Benjamin J. Sullivan Chemistry School of Engineering GENERAL TWO-YEAR HONORS FOR EXCELLENCE IN ALL STUDIES Robert D. Drew Chemical Engineering James L. Meriam Mechanical Engineering Howard R. Spendelow, Jr. Metallurgy John G. Stephenson Electrical Engineering Robert G. Treuting Metallurgy Robert L. Wanamaker Electrical Engineering GENERAL ONE-YEAR HONORS FOR EXCELLENCE IN ALL STUDIES Hallett B. Addoms Chemical Engineering Rowland S. Bevans Chemical Engineering Peter P. Gudaitis Chemical Engmeernig George A. Koehler Engineering Science James D. Laurits Metallurgy Gunnar Lund Chemical Engineering Thom. s Rees Chemical Engineering Charles T. Roelke Engineering Science Joseph C. Sweet, Jr. Engineering Science (T he traditions of Yale may seem incom- prehensible to some, but beneath ivy ' coated exteriors one will usually find a sound raison d ' etre, a thought or ideal which gives purpose to their existence. Such is the case of the six Senior Honorary Societies ot Yale. Outwardly passive, they quietly pursue their way of lite, unnoticed by many, but e.xercis- ing a beneficent influence over all those whom they embrace. SENIOR SOCIETIES I I C. T. I. erzelius Founded 1848 Harris Waldo Bird, Jr. Norman Campbell Cross Albert Peter Dewey John Lawrence Fearey William Graves Harris Frederic Charles Hirons, Jr. William Emery Littlefield Donald McBride, Jr. John Garrison Mersereau Herbert Elmer Pickett, Jr. Robert Seelye Reigeluth Paul Edward Roche William Warren Scranton Abbott Widdicombe Harold Nelson Willard oo and Snd e Founded 1863 Lawrence DeForest Anderson John Pershing Boswell Ralph Rushton Browning, Jr. Courtlandt Palmer Dixon, Jr. Edward L. urence Doheny, III Charles Walter Findlay, Jr. Decatur Sawyer Higgins Charles Nelson Hoyt Dudley Sherman Humphrey, III Monroe Albin Jubitz David Knapp William John Loveday George Cuthbert Sweeney Frederick Chauncey T. nner, Jr. Ch. rles Frederick Wilson Elihu Founded 1903 James McKenna Bird Wirt Randall Gates Paul Jerome Chase John William Good Donald Wallace Henry Edward Gillette Hotchkiss, Jr. Irving Howbert, II David Richardson Hubbard Charles Hosmer Kellogg Stephen Tomlinson Kelsey, Jr. Haines Rennyson Merritt, Jr. John Hall Norton Hugh Roberts Hov. l Smith BoG.ART Fenn Thompson Charles Wright, III — 57 — c. s. p. t ! C. C. J. Scroll and Ke} ' Founded 1842 Thaddeus Reynolds Beal, Robert Lounsbury Black, Jr. David Boies Edward Trowbridge Collins, Jr. Edward Peter Garrett Anthony Nicholas Brady Garvan Stuart Clayton Hemingway, Jr. Gilbert Watts Humphrey Collister Johnson Richard Lewis Morris, Jr. M.ALCOLM MuiR, Jr. Cl.aude Jewell Peck, Jr. Stanley Rogers Resor Cyrus Roberts Vance Clarence Mott Woolley, Jr. — 59 — I S ull and ones Founded 1832 Gaspard d ' Andelot Belin, Jr. Jerred Gurley Blanchard William Putnam Bundy George Hastings Chittenden Lowell Melcher Clucas, Jr. Arthur Delma Dyess, Jr. Clement Dexter Gile Archibald Robinson Hoxton, Jr. William Welch Kellogg Andrew Otterson Miller, Jr. Charles Lewis Miller, Jr. Harry Hartwood Mitchell Lloyd Montgomery Shepard, Jr. Frederick William Wilhelmi, Jr. BuRCH Williams — 61 — f Wolf ' s Head Founded 1883 Douglass Marshall Allen, Jr. Derrick Carrington Banning Charles Urban Banta WiNFiELD Newton Burdick, Jr. Hugh Whitney Fosburgh Bayliss Griggs Richard Kingsley H.awes, Jr. Gordon Phillips Hoover John Inniss Howell James Robert Judo, Jr. William Vernon Platt Thomas Wright Russell, Jr. George Steel Swope Raymond Holmes Tucker Ward Alington Wickwire, Jr. — 63 — y .urelian University Honor Society Founded 1910 WiNFiELD Newton Burdick, Jr. Sheldon Yates Carnes Walter Lorrain Cherry, Jr. Edward Trowbridge Collins, Jr. Frank Watson Curtis Samuel Spencer Dils Edward Huntington Ethridge, Jr. Edward Peter G. rrett Benjamin Stilwell Holderness Peter Knowlton Douglas Howard McKellar Andrew Otterson Miller, Jr. William Vernon Platt John Shedd Reed Stanley Rogers Resor — 64 — University Honor Society Founded 1916 William Wallace Atterbury Felix Caracciolo Stuart Clayton Hemingway, Jr. Philip Leonard Hovey Archibald Robinson Hoxton, Jr. Gilbert Watts Humphrey Stirling Martin William Clifford Messinger Charles Lewis Miller, Jr. Malcolm Muir, Jr. Cyrus Roberts Vance Calvin William Verity, Jr. Albert Stanley Wilson, Jr. s a sophomore first the Yale man wakes to a new side ot University life. The calcium flares of Fraternity Row and the derbies of ShefFtown beckon to the yearling who is just beginning to think he knows his Yale. Representing a supplementary, not antagonistic, concept of college life, the Fraternities are not so far removed from the interests of Harkness Quadrangle, and the bewildered sophomore finds that each helps to satisfy his varying needs and inclinations. FRATERNITIES Back, ' ■OK- Pollock, Mersereau. Front row: Dnscoll, Hjmmer, Mennel. Inter fraternity Qouncii Alexander McKenzie Hammer, Jr. William Nott Driscoll David McGregor Mersereau President Secretary Treasurer William Calvert Mennel David McGregor Mersereau Alexander McKenzie Hammer, Jr. William Nott Driscoll George Frederick Vietor, Jr. Edwin Fithian Pollock Alpha Sigma Phi Beta Theta Pi Chi Psi Delta Kappa Epsilon Fence Club Zeta Psi Presidents Qommittee Walter Lorrain Cherry, Jr. Eric Nelson Ferryman Presiiie nt Secretary-Treasurer Walter Lorrain Cherry, Ji Jean Drouet Fennebresque Philip Leonard Hovey Eric Nelson Ferryman St. Elmo Hall York Hall St. Anthony Hall Vernon Hall Ferryman, Fennebresque. Alpha Sigma Vhi Founded 1845 Robert R. Anderson Max W. Babb, Jr. NoRRis L. BowEN, Jr. Harold E. Chittenden. Jr. Warner G. Cosgrove. Jr. John G. de Bruycker Benjamin P. Douglass Welles Eddy Hugh Gregg Louis Hamman, Jr. Robert O. H.annaford Pliny H. HAYEsr III CLASS OF 1939 Donald B. Haynie Joseph P. Holihan Peter H. Holme, Jr. Paul C. Hughes Robert C. Lovejoy George M. M.axwell William G. Metzger, HI William E. Mulvey ' . Jr. George H. Page Sanford B. Perkins, Jr. William J. Robb Frederick K. Sargent Daniel C. Schipfer Harold B. Scott, Jr. John W. Starbuck, Jr. Hooker Stoughton George M. Sus Frederick C. Tanner, Jr. Thomas H. Taylor Frederick W. Toohey Warren T. Troutman William G. Waite William H. Welch, Jr. Clarence D. Barton RoswELL M. Boutwell, III Gordon V. Brooks Arthur A. Burrows, Jr. John D. Canale Robert S. Clark sven l. eurenius Julian Ferguson David M. Gerber Edward M. Graham, Jr. Harry J. Groblewski Rol.and B. Hammond, Jr. CLASS OF 1940 John C, Hindley Robert P. Humphrey Clive P. Jaffray, Jr. James F. Johnson, III Spencer M. King Gunther K. Klose Walter T. Kuhlmey Cyrus A. Leland, III Donald MacGregor Raymond F. Marcus Chauncey D. Mathews Walter McL. Mennel William C. Mennel Henry A. Moran, Jr. James L. Nammack William G. Parrott, Jr. Carl U. S.autter Joseph F. Shevelson Frederic H. Taylor, Jr. David M. Weil Henry H. Wells, Jr. Louis Williams, III Hugh R. Wilson, Jr. Carlos J. Angulo Charles P. Armstrong Douglas E. Asche Norman Badenhop Theodore G. Barlow Edward J. Bermingham, Jr. William Carnill, II Thomas T. Church Ernest M. Daniels, Jr. Francis C. Donovan, Jr. Oscar F.-A. Douglas, III John H. Downs Charles E. Ford, II CLASS OF 1941 Charles E. Gilbert Tracy Griswold Seth Heywood, Jr. Dan B. Hodgson Arthur H. Hopkins, Jr. Philip J. Huber Henry P, Isham, Jr. Lewis M. J. ck Trist.am B. Johnson James M. Kieran T hom.as H. Kingsley Gerald H. Miller Pratt D. Phillips, Jr. Henry C. Pierce Joseph A. Priory, Jr. James N. Rawleigh. Jr. George R. Read David B. Ressler PlERSON C. TaTOR Arthur K. Underwood, Jr. Joseph B. Unucke, Jr. Robert J. Whalen Black WE ' -L Willi. ms T. Gartley Wilson James R. Winburn, Jr. eta heta Pi Founded 1892 I Justus J. Addiss Duncan H. Baird Richard H. Bowerman Brewster C. Breeden Samuel G. Brown Gordon H. Clark Frank A. Close Francis W. Coker, Jr. James S. Copley Ambrose C. Cramer, III Edward F. Creekmore, Jr. Antony Barker Donald E. Battey, Jr. H.ARVEY S. Bennett HOLBROOK Br.ADLEI ' Curtis R. Buttenheim Thom.as J. Camp, Jr. Richard B. Campbell Perry K. Clark Thomas R. Clark, Jr. Benjamin E. Cole. Jr. Allan J. Crane, Jr. Robert B. Egan CLASS OF 1939 John Davol William H. Ferguson Stu.art H. Fulkerson Arthur H. Hardy, Jr. Girard I.ason Monroe A. Jubitz Frederic J. Kell.am, Jr. ROLFE KiNCSLEY, Jr. Putnam Lee William H. Mackey Robert W. Mairs CLASS OF 1940 Chester E. Finn George L. Forman David K. Harrison John L. Hauer William H. Hobbs, III Grant Hubley Morgan Jones Richard G. Jordan William R. Kitchel Robert H. Knight Henry W. L.awrence, J James A. MacGregor William H. Mann John G. Mersereau Lawrence S. Murphy Da is B. Oat Paul E. Roche William M. Roth Edgar P. S.ackett Horace M. Schell, Jr. John C. Speh Warren Stringer George K. Thompson, III Theodore Weston, II David M. Mersereau Thomas B. Morison Joseph D. Nelson John C. Nemi.ah Edward M. Noyes, II James G. Overall Leonard F. P.aine Norman S. P.aul John D. Scheuer, Jr. Frederick L. Seely, Jr. John M. Weeks Francis R. Wholley Wallace C. Bedell Rowe H. F. Bisbee Gordon C. Brown James O. Buchanan Kenneth F. Burgess, Jr. Livingston P. Carroll L.awrence F. Crowley Alan F. Dill Hammond B. Douglas, Jr. John F. Dryden, III Carl O. Dunbar, Jr. WaLiAM C. Fownes, III Ray Garrett, Jr. CLASS OF 1941 William J. Garvey George Griswold, Jr. Victor E. Irons, Jr. Robert E. Keating. Jr. George J. McC. Kelly WiLLLAM R. Leathers Franklin A. M.. cWilliam Thomas H. Mahony, Jr. John R. Moulton John A. Orb Robert L. Owen, III Is A.AC N. Perry, Jr. William P. Porter D. ' WiD W. Riesmeyer Edw. ' rd Schirmer George G. Schreiber, Jr. Howard W. Selby, Jr. Charles S. Smith, Jr. Herbert G. Smith Richard C. Stickney William W. Struther.s, Jr. St.anley a. Sweet, Jr. William L. Westen Henry R. Wilson, III Sidney S. Wilson W1LLI.AM H. WOOLVERTON, Jr. Peter Wright ■73- Founded 1843 Douglass M. Allen, Jr. Roy O. Beach, Jr. R. ' LPH R. Browning, Jr. Gordon W. Campbell Stephen M. Cooke Edward L. Doheny, III David Dows, Jr. John A. Farley Charles W. Findlay, Jr. Charles D. Frey, Jr. Henry R. Geyelin, Jr. John W. Good Carlton M. Higbie, Jr. CLASS OF 1939 Edward G. Hotchkiss, Jr. Irving Howbert, II Frank R. Hurlbutt, Jr. J.AMES R. Judd, Jr. Charles H. Kellogg Andrew M. Kennedy, Jr. J.AMES G. Leonard Dorr F. Lovett Hugh M. Matheson, Jr. Luis F, Menocal, Jr. H.AiNEs R. Merritt, Jr. Theodore T. Pearson HoR.ACE O. Perkins Stowe C. Phelps William W. Phelps, Jr. William H. Reeves, III Abram H. Robertson, II WiLLl.AM W. ScR.ANTON B-AsiL W. Stetson Richard Storm George C. Sweeney John T. Taintor Josi.AH V. K. Thompson, II Anthony Walker John G. Webb Harold N. Will.ard Charles J. Wilson Edw.ard W. Brightwell Edward F. Callan, Jr. Frank E. Chaffee Theodore D. Day Bruce B. Dayton John A. Dillon, Jr. Julian M. Gerard, Jr. Richard T. Hale Alexander M. Hammer, Jr. William H. H.arrison, III Wellington B. H.ay, Jr. Abner R. Hayes, Jr. William R. Hegeman CLASS OF 1940 George W. Hurlbutt Raymond C. Jopling, Jr. Paul F. Kal.at John D. K.ausel Robert T. Larkin WiLLLAM J. LiPPINCOTT, Jr. Sumner McR. M.acomber William Piper Philip B. Pool Robert A. Powers Mortimer R. Proctor, Jr. Thomas G. Rutledge William F. Schell John H. Spalding McLeod Stephens George E. Tener John M. P. Thatcher, Jr. Lewis C. Thomson James R. Todd Henry F. Vaughan, Jr. Michael von Moschzisker James D. Voorhees, Jr. Frederick G. Wacker, Jr. H.AVEN Waters William A. Wiedersheim, III Erik Wilkinson Robert B. Adam, Jr. Leavitt B. Ahrens Bruce B. Allen William N. Bannard, III Gerard C. Besse, Jr. Robert T. Bower John C. Cobb, III Walter K. Collins Robert A. Cooke, Jr. Tyson Dines, Jr. Robert E. Fagley John E. Flaherty James P. Furniss CLASS OF 1941 Robert B. Gardner, Jr. Joseph N. Greene, Jr. Roger C. Hazen Norman G. Hickm.an David H. Hughes James F. Jaffray Edwin M. L.atson Nixon Lee, Jr. WiLBERT E. McClELLAN, Jr. Robert H. Matheson John G. M.atthews David R. Millard, Jr. William S. Miller M.ALCOLM Monroe L.AWRENCE K. Pickett Thomas C. Schuller Alex.ander W. Sh.apleigh, Jr. John K. Spring William G. Stewart James G. T.aliaferro Henry G. Thompson, Jr. John V. Tomkins WiLLI.AM R. TUBBS Addison F. V.ars, Jr. Henry C. Wood Reid T. Woodward ©elta Kappa Epsilon Founded 1844 It Alexander B. Adams Thaddeus R. Beal Gaspard d ' A. Belin, Jr. Jerred G. Blanchard Wirt R. Gates Thomas C. Clark Lowell M. Clucas, Jr. Edward T. Collins, Jr. Norm.an C. Cross Arthur D. Dyess, Jr. John L. Fe.arey Edward P. G.arrett Bayliss Griggs CLASS OF 1939 Stu.art C. Hemingway, Jr. Donald W. Henry Gordon P. Hoo ' er John L Howell Archibald R. Hoxton, Jr. James H. Hoyt, II Dudley S. Humphrey, III Gilbert W. Humphrey Stephen T. Kelsey, Jr. William J. Loved.ay Theodore A. McGraw, III Stirling Martin Ch.- rles L. Miller, Jr. John A. Miller William M. Mitchell William R. Moody L. tham W. Murfey, Jr. John H. Norton Charles A. Pillsbury Robert S. Reigeluth Thomas W. Russell, Jr. Lloyd M. Shepard, Jr. Robert T.apt Raymond H. Tucker Paul M. Wick Abbott Widdicombe Burch Williams John L. Armstrong Robert Atkins Paul B. Badger, Jr. WoLCOTT N. Baker Bowen Bl.air John T. Blossom, Jr. Frederic M. Burr Ch.arles J. Cole Rob Roy M. Converse Jesse A. Davis, Jr. William N. Driscoll Livingston G. G. rdner Paul T. Gillespie CLASS OF 1940 Ch.arles C. Glover, III James G. Grayson Dwight Griswold William D. Hart. Jr. Alexander H. ' wley Dr.ayton Heard, Jr. W.ALTER R. HeRRICK, Jr. H.AROLD Howe, II Melchior C. Jennings R.andolph M. Jordan James F. McClelland, Jr. George C. Merrick Richard L. Merrick Joseph D. Nelson Robert D. Orr J.AMES O- Parsons, Jr. Sherman P. Platt. Jr. Nelson Schwab, Jr. Augustine T. Smythe, Jr. Joseph W. Stack, Jr. Peter G. B. Stillman William M. Stucky Peter B. Thorne William B. Watson, Jr. Leslie Wheeler, Jr. William A. Whitcomb, Jr. Henry C. Wood Carleton Ashley Robert B. Brooks Caperton Burn.am George Curtis Joseph F. Dempsey, Jr. Elliott R. Detchon, Jr. Franklin H. Ellis, Jr. Charles B. Finch Nicholas V. V. Franchot, III Seth B. French, Jr. Richard N. Gould John M. Greene Eric R. Hansen Deceased CLASS OF 1941 William H. Harris, Jr. Charles E. Hart, III WiLLi.AM E. Jackson DeL.aney Kiphuth Malcom R. Maclean Geop-ge N. McLennan William H. McManus Edward R. M.acomber QuENTiN Mitchell Thomas Parsons, III D. id M. P.ayne Philip F. W. Peck, Jr. Paul S. Pierson Charles B. Price, Jr. John R. Se.ars Peter O. A. Solbert Charles F. Sp.alding WiLH.AM H. Stevens, Jr. Joseph S. Sweeny WiLLi.AM G. Thorn Laurence G. Tighe, Jr. Richard B. Tweedy Kinsley Twining Harold B. Whiteman, Jr George C. Wick William A. Wick he Fence Qlub Founded iS ' o Lawrence D. Anderson LeBaron C. Anthony William R. Bailey Derrick C. Banning Charles U. Banta David Boies John P. Boswell Robert D. Brewster Anson Brooks WiNFIELD N. BURDICK, Jr. Alfred C. Clark CLASS OF 1939 James F. Cullen Henry M. Curry, III COURTLANDT P. DiXON, Jr. Hugh W. Fosburgh Thomas Goodyear Decatur S. Higgins George M. V. Hook Charles N. Hoyt David R. Hubbard Collister Johnson David Knapp Hayw ' ard F. Manice John Pierrepont William V. Platt Edmund P. Rogers, Jr. Hugh R. H. Smith George S. Swope Cyrus R. Vance Calvin W. Verity, Jr. Ward A. Wickwire, Jr. Charles F. Wilson Clarence M. Woolley, Jr. WiLLi. ' M S. Barnes F. Roberts Bl. mr John H. Brooks James Butler, Jr. Buckley M. Byers Henry F. Ch. ' Kney, Jr. William H. Chisholm Alan L. Corey, Jr. Charles D. Dickey, Jr. John L. Eyre Serge S. Gagarin CLASS OF 1940 George E. Gillespie, Jr. John W. Gr.aham Francis L. Hine Clement C. Kite Ch. ' IiRles E. Leary Philip F. MacGuire Brooks McCormick Gerrish H. Milliken, Jr. Eugene M. Moore Stephen P. Moorhe.ad Effingham B. Morris, III Joseph R. Neuhaus George S. Oliver, II Jonathan S. R.aymond, Jr. David B. Rood Howard LeC. Roome George S. Seabury William H. Starbuck Cyrus R. Taylor Henry S. Taylor Edw.ard D. Tol. ' nd, Jr. John T. Tubbs George F. Vietor, Jr. Edward L. Beard, III John A. Blair John G. Carhart HOBART ChATFIELD-TaYLOR John Churchill, Jr. Paul H. Converse Wilbur L. Cross, III Howard C. Davis, Jr. Lawrence H. Dixon John J. Dore, Jr. Robert C. Dye Howard Ferguson CLASS OF 1941 Fr.ank H. Goodye. r, III Charles E. Hewes George H. Hunt, Jr. Howard Kaye Ellis Knowles Shepard Krech, Jr. John A. MacDonald, Jr. John B. Madden John H. Mallory, Jr. George H. Mead, Jr. Daniel C. Millett Paul Moore, Jr. Cjleman W. Morton John B. Oliver Steuart L. Pittman WiLMOT T. Pope John Reid How. ' rd E. Rogers John P. Schroeder Hermann C. Schwab Ch. ' rles p. Stevenson Donald K. T.aylor Boylston a. Tompkins, Thomas J. White, Jr. I ! Zeta si Founded 1888 Harrie W. Bird, Jr. Robert L. Bla ck, Jr. Robert G. Botsford William P. Bundy Sheldon Y. Carnes Paul J. Ch. se George H. Chittenden Albert P. Dewey Robert D. Elder, Jr. Henry T. Emerson, Jr. Anthony N. B. G. rvan Da id K. Gernerd CLASS OF 1939 Clement D. Gile George M. Godley, II Marshall Green Thomas M. Hart Richard K. Hawes, Jr. J.AMES H. Higgins, II William W. Kellogg Frederick Lippitt WlLLI. M E. LitTLEFIELD Donald McBride, Jr. Andrew O. Miller, Jr. Richard L. Morris, Jr. Mandeville Mullally, Jr. Claude J. Peck, Jr. John H. Perry, Jr. Stanley R. Resor Kearsley H. Roberts Harold B. Scott, Jr. Clarke Simonds John B. Spitzer Newton I. Steers, Jr. Bogart F. Thompson John D. Turner Charles Wright, III Reginald L. Auchincloss, Jr. Richard J. Bakewell Ellis A. B. illard, II McGeorge Bundy Austin Carey Edward Q. Carr, Jr. Magruder Dent. Jr. William L. Dommerich John F. Eagle, Jr. D.AVID P. Ferriss William W. Field Henry Ford, II Granger H. Frost H. Scott Goodfellow CLASS OF 1940 Carol B. Haff, Jr. George H. Haley, III Stevens F. Hammer Reuben A. Holden, IV Charles H. Hulburd, II Henry James, Jr. Peter M. Lindsay Willi. m C. McMillan John S. MacSporr. ' n Ralph H. Matthiessen, Jr. Schuyler M. Meyer, Jr. Harry C. Moorhead Peter K. Ogden Andrew D. Orrick Edwin F. Pollock Judd L. Pollock Wiley R Reynolds, Jr. Harry S. Robinson, Jr, William Rockefeller Pierre de Saint Phalle WiNTHROP D. deV. Schwab Walter S. Sullivan, Jr. Edward F. Swenson, Jr. W. Stu.- rt Thompson, Jr. Howard S. Tierney, Jr. Malcolm B. Vilas, Jr. - Andrew Wilson, III Charles P. Aberg, Jr. Walter I. Badger, III Kingman Brewster, Jr. John M. Butler. Jr. Gordon S. C-- lder Wallace Campbell, III George W. Cheney, Jr. H.. Ys H. Clemens, Jr. Harold T. Clement, Jr. Edward S. Cooke Carl B. Drake, Jr. Deane M. Evans Ch. ' rles H. C. Ger.ard CLASS OF 1941 Edw. rd T. Hall John L. Hannaford Lewis D. Heck William P. Jeffery, Jr. William T. Ketcham, Jr. Frederick B. Kieckheper E erett H. Krueger John Lohmann Robert F. Loree, Jr. LaRue R. Lutkins George B. Mallory Newbold Noyes, Jr. James B. Phillips John A. Pierce, II Henry A. Preston Malcolm D. Raworth, Jr. H. rry a. Richards, Jr. William A. Robinson Edwin J. Rooney Edward L. Ryerson, III William C. Schwab Alfred L. Shapleigh, II Philip J. Stevens Eric P. Swenson, II Dougl.as a. Warner, Jr. Gordon A. Weller — 81 — Saint Anthony Hall Delta Psi Founded 1869 Francis D. Andruss William W. Atterbury Frederic A. Borsodi Felix Caracciolo James S. Cooney Samuel S. Dils E. Huntington Ethridge, Jr. George B. Gascoigne, Jr. CLASS OF 1939 Philip L. Hovey Benj. ' Vmin S. Holderness George D. Kellogg, Jr. William C. Messinger Henry G. Molina, Jr. Frank T. Powers, Jr. John S. Reed Gilbert H. Scribner, Jr. Robert B. Silleck William F. Slaymaker William H. Sweney, Jr. Robert B. Talbot Linscott Tyler Samuel J. Underhill Albert S. Wilson, Jr. Harrison C. Berkeley, Jr. George P. Bissell, Jr. Sterling B. Brinkley Jesse G. Burton, Jr. Daniel S. Campbell Gerry J. Dietz Henry W. Dodge, Jr. CLASS OF 1940 Atwood C. Ely Benedict D. Flynn, Jr. George J. Harding, III Benjamin Hinman Robert T. Houk, III Edward B. Ijams Thomas A. Lussen Ralph A. Mertens Grant H. Messinger Richard C. Morse, Jr. Philip L. Ross, Jr. Charles M. Ruprecht George S. Smith George S. W. ' tson Charles C. Wooster James T. Anderson Raymond G. Anderson Gust AVE B. Ballard, Jr. Harry T. Buchenau William T. Clark Foster M. Fargo Robert K. Farrington CLASS OF 1941 Robert L. Hovis, Jr. George C. Huffard William B. Lewis George N. Lindsay, Jr. Paul B. Metcalf, Jr. John W. Owen Burton C. Rowley Arnold C. Saunders, III James G. Taylor Benjamin C. Tilghman, Jr. Harrison B. Wetherill William D. Wiggins, Jr. William C. Zilly Saint Elmo Qluh Founded 1889 Hugh H. Aiken WiLLiAM H. Allen, III Robert O. Berger, Jr. Philip C. Brainard Herbert E. Brumder James T. Bryan, Jr. Charles W. Bulkley Walter L. Cherry, Jr. CLASS OF 1Q39 Frank D. Doble Sidney R. Francis, Jr. Edward W. Gosselin Frederick C. Irving, Jr. Peter Knowlton David B. Lovejoy Douglas H. McKellar Henry S. McNeil Baird H. M.arkham, Jr. William Moonan Thomas S. Quinn, Jr. John R. Suman, Jr. John R. Wallace Douglas Wick Henry H. Ziesing, Jr. Harry H. B.assett Robert O. Bassett Douglas P. Bates Robert M. Boice Ronald W. Cooke Frederick C. Cross, Jr. Russell P. Duncan CLASS OF 1940 James D. Emerson Edmund F. Higgins Harrison W. Holt Thomas A. Jones Lawrence W. Krieger Stanley Livingston, Jr. Antonio G. Mendoza, Jr. Paul C. Nicholson, Jr. H.arry L. Quinn John W. Rannenberg Truman G. Schnabel, Jr. Harold C. Strong, Jr. Benjamin J. Sullivan James H. Torrey Laurence R. Wallace George E. Brown, Jr. Harold R. Brown, Jr. Gerard L. Buhrman, Jr. Robert E. Cooke Edward G. Counselman James R. Dern Di.xon p. Downey Deceased CLASS OF 1941 Edwin E. Gesner Thomas F. Goldcamp John S. Hoes Henry S. Kleppinger George W. L. ' mberson Wilmer B. L.- ufman, III D.-wid W. Rewick Willis H. Sanburn, II Richard M. Schreiber John N. Smith, Jr. William H. Y. Stevens Ross S. Taber Robert Wier, III Bruce S. Williams Arthur W. Wrieden, Jr. Uernon Hall Phi Gamma Delta Founded 1908 William H. Booth, Jr. Alva R. Corlett, Jr. Martin J. Harrington James R. Johnson Nicholas S. Kerr James J. Larson CLASS OF 1939 Stewart L. Leonard John E. McPhee Charles G. Martin, Jr. Stanley W. Mase Thomas S. Mohr David H. Nelson Eric N. Ferryman Charles E. Reutter, Jr. William E. Snavely John D. Stubbs John K. Vulte Henry C. Wheeler Albert J. Alter Walter A. Bareiss Lawrence G. Bl. ' ckmon Archer L. Bolton, Jr. Joseph L. Burns, Jr. Richard B. Caswell Darrah Corbet, Tr- CLASS OF 1940 Martin L. Davey, Jr. John R. Dellenback Richard H. Deming, Jr. Samuel Field, III John B. Fuller Donald Gregg Frank W.Hamilton, Jr. Harris F. Hanscom Robert W. Holmes, Jr. John E. Sloane James S. Smith Henry B. Stimson, Jr. George R. Wilson, Jr. Edward H. Beavers, Jr. William G. Boynton Truman L. Bradley George E. Brunner, Jr. John P. Cassilly CLASS OF 1941 James A. Currie John Dickenson, IV William H. Farrell Alfred C. Gilbert, Jr. Winthrop a. Haviland, Jr. Robert E. Jones John W. Lomas Kenneth G. Smith George H. Southworth Joseph L. Tweedy, Jr. Lyman G. Wickwire Deceased York Hall Chi Phi Founded 1878 ix John B. Curtis James C. Danly John P. Ekberg, Jr. Jean D. Fennebresque Arthur L. Fuller WiLLL ' Mvi C. Harding CLASS OF 193Q John V. Hewitt, Jr. Gordon W. Hickenlooper Stuart D. Holland John A. Marshall, Jr. William J. McClure William R. McKelvy Joseph J. Sibley Sam R. Watkins Harry T. Whitin, II Chester A. Wiese, Jr. Thomas W. Wright Richard S. Wright Robert C. B. ' rrett Cornell B. Blanding George J. Bounakes Leonard D. Burdett De France Clark, Jr.. Ralph G. Collins, Jr. CLASS OF 1940 Harold G. Edwards, Jr. Walter C. Emery Herbert W. Evans, Jr. Kieran J. Hackett Robert B. Hopgood Sherwin Kibbe A. Hicks Lawrence, Jr. Scott McFarland Thorvol M. ' RTIN John P. Milnor, Jr. Jo hn D. Reilly Charles T. Roelke Hugh Rowland Wiley Blair, III Kenneth G. Bond John L. H. Cole Robert G. Crockett Howard G. Davis, Jr. John B. de Brun Roger D. Farnham CLASS OF 1941 Frederick J. Ferris David Foster, Jr. Laurence S. Garland, Jr. Paul E. Graybeal John M. Greene Howard L. Harwell Herman K. Hochschwender Edward R. Kemp William P. Kennard George O. Keutgen, Jr. David C. Martin George R. Shepherd Paul Trautman Charles W. Watson Iames Young, II T)aled though he be by examinations, the Freshman wastes Httle tmie branching out into fields extra-curricular. And as there are classes (and examinations) tor every in- tellectual interest, so are there organizations tor every extra-curricular interest. While classrooms are making your Yale man a Hutchins, Thurman Arnold, or (in the ex- treme case ot Sheff men) an Einstein, these organizations are making him a Hearst, Noel Coward, or Fosdick. zr r «.• ' - ; S v. , ' t ' . , ' .- ORGANIZATIONS Bacl{ row: Roesler, B.irnet, Morison, Bull, Martin. Front row: Bryan, Plum, Mersereau, Benjamin. The Tale banner John G.arrison Mersere.au Stephen Haines M.alcolm Plum David Joseph Benjamin James Taylor Brv. n. Jr. Chairman Editor Business Manager Circulation Manager Sylvan M. Barnet ASSOCIATE EDITORS CLASS OF 1940 Thor Martin Alfred B. Thacher Thomas B. Morison DeWitt M. Bull, Jr. CLASS OF 1941 H. Robert Hamel John K. Spring Robert F. Loree, Jr. Dean P. La Field CLASS OF 1942 Peter L Roesler John Garrison Mersereau The VY[an with the Vipe T he man with the pipe sat comfortahly in his deep chair, thoughtfully inhaling from the old - briar. He was not reading, he was not talking — he was just thinking . . . and puffing. About him the world whirled, but he, unheeding, was oblivious to it. His was a life of peace. Much, perhaps too much, has been said this past year on the subject of extra-curricular activi- ties. Perhaps too much . . . but we do not feel that one phase of the subject has been brought out. Without making any claims tor the finality of our point, we should like to state it before the dis- cussion is closed. All through the discussion the argument has seemed to hinge upon the tremendous amount of time devoted outside of class hours to extra-scholastic activities. One school of thought maintained that the free time would be much better spent in scholarly pursuits, or maybe we should say in- tellectual pursuits. That the Yale Student today does not thus occupy himself is blamed on the fact that extra-curricular activities and their devotees enjoy a higher prestige than do the intellectuals or scholars. If the prestige of intellectuality were built up in some way (never mind how here), that is, if the standard of values were changed, this school of thought thinks more time would be devoted to the field of study and research, less to extra-curricular activities. Then the intellectual rather than the activities-hound would become the college idol. Briefly, we believe, that is their theory — that the intellectual is the best course of life and more time should be devoted to it. The opposing school of thought has been that the experience gained in extra-curricular activitie s is just as important as scholarly proficiency, and that as long as one does the required course work — that amount of education is desirable — the more he does in extra-curricular pursuits the better. The principles and problems met in heeling, competing — be it in sports or other — and managing are the same that one must meet m life after college in Life. Roughly, that is the case of the proponents of activities. Before we go on to state our position, we want to give briefly our credentials, as it were. As the Yearbook of the University, we chronicle every phase of Yale life. It is our purpose to look at Yale from every viewpoint, to gather together what we see, and present it in this book for your consideration. We cover the activities, we cover the scholastic honors. Then, too, we cover the residential sections, and we cover the little day-to-day happenings and parties that make up the college atmosphere. So we think there is some reason for us to state our viewpoint in this controversy. It seems then that we are in the right place to make this contribution, but when we come right down to an analysis of our position it is only fair to say that it is probably derived as much from our personal philosophy of life as from a careful study of the life which we say we chronicle on these pages. It is, first, our firm belief that the purpose of going to college should be to learn how to live successfully — and most emphatically we do not mean just financially successful. However, since that is quite likely the same purpose which the two other groups ascribe to college, it is probably in our philosophy of life that we differ. To us it seems altogether unrealistic to place too much emphasis on scholarly pursuits. It they are not the only thing in college, it seems even truer that they are not the only thing in life. One does have to make a living and we cannot all make it in teaching or research. At the same time, we do not think the other point of view is any better. The mad rush to be the leader in a galaxy of ephemeral activities seems equally absurd. Ours is a plea for a middle point — a balanced life with a little of each, and leisure time left over. We plead for a balanced life at a slower, less concentrated pace — a life that will allow a man to get the most out of a few things, not a surfeit of one only, nor a smattering of a hundred and one. We would have our ideal man maintain a good, better than average, scholastic stand, but not try for top honors in his class. On the side he might take part in the athletic program, in dramatics, debating, glee club, editing, managing in this or that, but not this and that. Then he would have some leisure besides. He would have time for a game of golf, for a concert, for a bull-session, or for reading. These unregimented leisure activities would lead to peace of mind and peace of mind is the key-note of our ideal life. The happy man in life, we think, is the man who has learned to have some leisure time and has developed some interests to make that leisure worth while. And, finally, we think that the perfect setting for the development of this lite has been set up in Yale — in the Colleges. We have devoted pages here to the Colleges, to their athletics, to their activities within their own walls. There we should like to see our man develop, there study, ther e play, there talk, even there argue and there sit in his deep armchair and smoke his favorite pipe. David Joseph Benjamin Stephen Haines Malcolm Plum James Taylor Bryan, Jr. t f t  1 1 Bac row: Whittemore, Cummings, Wilcox, Angleton, James, Day. Front rou ' , Bardach, Garvan, Starr, (Chairman), Woods, Ellman. 15he Tale Literary Magazine Anthony N. B. Garvan James J. Angleton Arthur J. Cummings Dum mens grata manet, nomen laudesque YALENSES Cantabunt SOBOLES, unanimique PATRES. Roger S. Starr, Chairman EXECUTIVE EDITORIAL BOARD Richard D. Ellmann W. John Woods, Jr. ASSOCIATE EDITORIAL BOARD LuciEN B. Day, Jr. Richard L. Wilcox James B. Christerson, Jr. Marvin J. Colangelo Martin D. Freeman Anthony N. B. Garvan John W. Haine John E. McPhee BUSINESS BOARD Howard M. Bardach, Business Manager E. Richard Schwabach Arthur J. Cummings John L. Eyre Edward J. Bermingham, Jr. Wirt Davis, II Robert J. Freedman — 96 — Henry James, Jr. E. Reed Whittemore, Jr. James E. Pope John V. Tompkins Warren H. Wagner Haldane Y. Wilson William H. Wolverton, Jr. Isr. el Gordon I We can offer gentlemen with ideas and no voices a chance to use our voice. We can offer them listeners. We can even offer them answerers. We want to hear their ideas. We w ant to hear what they think about the world; and about Yale. We want to hear what they approve of here; and what they think is in need of change. We want ideas that will make other people angry enough to think and to retort. From the 1Q39 Board ' s opening Leader Any attempt to make suggestions concerning the architectural design of Silliman College is certain to be greeted with the criticism of ' unreality. ' Our pied-a-terre friends inform us that the problem of building Silliman is not simply one of structural satisfaction; other factors are involved of which a realistic scheme must take account. Among these factors are mentioned the whims and traditions of the Corporation, Mr. Vanderbilt ' s will, a nebulous generalized ground plan of the New Yale, and the posthumous designs of a New York neo-Goth. Roger St. ' rr ' In the name of the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Ghost. Amen. ' The boy crossed himself as he spoke and paused a moment looking at the candle he had just lit. Its little flame danced above the rose red nm of its cup as if it had eternity before it. He won- dered if the flame would be reborn like the rose or did it merely dance for a while and then go out, Its spark frustrated by the cup that held it. Anthony N. B. Garv. ' n He left his mother, never to see her again, to travel towards his father, who would love him deeply, but for whose death he would be ultimately responsible. He did not know all this, nor did he know that Periphetes and Procrustes awaited him around the corner. The happiest days of his life were over, but he did not know this. He would not have cared if he had known. It was enough to be going. William John Woods Joseph was no match for the angel and for Mary ' s flattering tears. He felt a wince of disap- pointment at the idea that she had had a vision too, but then she was his wife, and perhaps the whole family now had the prophetic gift. He would have to try it out, on the harvest. Meanwhile he would seek to forget his jealousy, despite the fact that the story sounded a bit fantastic to a reasonable man, which he guessed he was, and it would be well not to talk about it much outside. It was better to leave things the way they were. Not much of a wedding night, but one could tell white lies about that to one ' s friends. Richard D. Ellmann house like cat with yellow eyes crouched with fear beneath the night and balancing towering overhead the frozen silence of the stars and time beyond the darkened earth implicit with the sign of death behind the mind a faint despair as if a bird were dead in snow LuciEN B. Day Being New England, I was bred with elms Deep in the blood and in the hard, white bone. The slow wash of their presence overwhelms The village that my young desire has known. Ever they will endure within the bram; Though I may later sleep on alien hills, I still shall hear the subdued, leafy strain Of elm trees at remembered window sills. . . . Richard Leon Wilcox We find it difficult to criticize a play we really like. Not only is our sympathetic interest in the doings behind grease-paint and lines apt to make us forget our duty to our public, but, in retro- spect, our critical barbs are inclined to become over-sharp, and pierce faults not really worth prick- ing. It IS, of course, far easier to wax witty about an obvious flop, saying for example, The Good, it stinks, than to write the interesting truth about a fine play like Oscar Wilde. But so much by way ■of an excuse. Henry James, Jr. No night-birds cried; behind black shutters good men slept: and shadows mourned the hooded roofs; and gargoyles mocked a cowled sky while wine-dark windows saw an aged lady mumbling over faces half-remembered, over sounds and tales once-heard on fingered beads. Arthur John Cummings Forwards and backwards round and round tapping and beating feather-lipped softcroonmg so gently felt. Tough guy, you did it, you and your damn little slug. James J. Angleton ' Hello there, my fine pregnant wife. ' ' Not so loud. Do you know where you are? ' ' ' I ' m beside my wife. See, my friends, I ' m standing beside my wife. ■ ' Bob, f)lease. ' The elevator door opened. ' Going up. They went up. E. Reed Whittemore, Jr. i Literary Honorary Society FOUNDED IN 1821 LuciEN B. Day Richard D. Ellman CLASS OF 1Q3Q Anthony N. B. Garvan Roger S. Starr William J. Woods, Jr Arthur J. Cummings CLASS OF 1Q40 Henry James, Jr. Richard L. Wilcox James J. Angleton CLASS OF 1941 E. Reed Whittemdre, Jr. Bact{ row Vecchione. Kiith. Tenenbaum, Boyce. Rosenthal, front row: Winet, Pauker, Seipp. The Tale Freshman Weel y John Pauker Chav Ralph H. Major, Jr. EDITORS R. Conrad Seipp Herbert 1. Winer ASSOCIATE EDITORS Charles D. Blake William L. Borden John S. Boyce, Jr. Charles F. Emery, Jr. Robert L. Griffiths, III Paul C. Harper, Jr. James E. Kuth Charles L. Rosenthal Robert W. Taylor Edward A. Tenenbaum Pasquale J. Vecchione Volume II. No. 27 M.- Y 11, 19?9 RECAPITULATION I The Y.ale Freshm. n Weekly serves as a unique medium for Freshman expression on any topic of interest to the Class. Its columns are open to the divers contributions which a broad and flexible policy inevitably attracts. In selecting mat- ter for publication the Editors are gov- erned not by a majority opinion as such, but by the stimulating and provocative effect, favorable or otherwise, upon Fresh- man readers. The Magazine is unique in that its scope is not limited to the literary, nor is it confined to duplicating the func- tion of a newspaper. The minimum of indispensable adminis- trative machinery was organized to expedite the practical appHcation of this poHcy. An Editorial Board acted merely to direct the assembling of each issue. Business affairs were managed by the Yale Literary Maga- zine; this arrangement insured editorial in- tegrity. The Freshman Office, as a respon- sible agency, supervised all copy. Tlie only consistency is absolute incon- ristency, said Oscar Wilde. This year we have been consistent in publishing with the unbounded enthusiasm of Youth articles of an infinite variety. Rushing in where angels fear to tread — to draw and quarter a homely analogy — we have dealt with affairs tragical, comical, histor- ical, pastoral, pastoral-comical, historical- pastoral, tragical-historical, and tragical- comical-historical-pastoral. Typical issues have thus included articles on dormitory privies, English 10, sports gossip, and or the dialectical approach to God. The 600- word page presented a challenge to all writers who would be comprehensive yet concise. And Forty-two even went cru- sading long enough to launch a Freshman Prom, the first in six years. That some readers have never quite grasped the distinction between a paper for Freshmen and a magazine for Freshman expression is shown by the criticisms lev- eled at us: too damn radical, irrever- ent, too many stories, too many poems, not enough about Freshmen. All of these and especially the last fail to appreciate the Magazine ' s basic objective. We have printed sincere Freshman contributions of every type. Though we do not defend the merits of any article, we have not lost sight of our purpose; we have not presumed, by soliciting material of a specific nature, to shape the character of the Weekly. We have endeavored to make use of our mistakes. We have established no traditions to restrict future Boards. We hope they will strive to be a vital force, skeptical, exasperatingly critical. We hope The Oldest Freshman Weekly will never grow up. .f . f f t f ' 4 f 1 ft f F ' W Bdcf; row Hijjgins, Allen. Morris, Scranton, Spitzer, Botsford. Thud row. Woods, Hoover. Matthews, Lippitt, Kelsey, Resor. Secotui row: Dewey, Minor, Goldsmith. Roth, Boswell, Games. ?ror X. row: Seal, Chittenden, Verity, Belin, Clucas, Bundy, Widdicombe. The Oldest College Dailv Founded January 28, 1878 Gaspard d ' Andelot Belin, Jr., Chairman Thaddeus Reynolds Beal, Assignment Editor Calvin William Verity, Jr., Bv. mci!, Manager William Putnam Bundy, Vice Chairman Lowell Melcher Clucas, Jr., Managing Editor Abbott Widdicombe, Advertising Manager George Hastings Chittenden, Sports Editor Albert Peter Dewey, Circulation Manager William Warren Scranton, Radio Editor J. P. Boswell S. Y. Carnes E. A. Ballard, 11 J. F. Eagle, Jr. D. P. Ferriss H. L. Finch, Jr. N. S. Gimbel C. C. Glover, IU H. S. GoODFELLOW W. D. Hart, Jr. R. A. HOLDEN EDITORS L. C. GOLDSMPTH J. R. Minor R. L. Morris, Jr. S. R. Resor ASSOCIATE EDITORS R. D. Orr S. P. Platt, Jr. H. S. Robinson, Jp A. T. Smythe, Jr. W. P. Snvder J. M. Weeks R. M. Weissman J. G. Aiken, III R. L. Arnstein L. D. Bragg, Jr. K. Brewster. Jr. E. T. Hall J. L. Hannaford J. H. Isaacs W. E. Jackson J. F. Jaffray Noel Hall M. ' Mthews, Jr., Photographer Wiley Richard Reynolds, Jr., Asst. Photographer W. M. Roth J. B. Spitzer W. P. Jeffery, Jr. L. R. Lutkins Q. Mitchell J. O. Morris J. A. Pierce, II J. K. Spring R. B. Tweedy B. Zorthian I Taft Hostelry Will be Setting ,hrou?h ' , ' h Of Regatta Ball T A MEMO TO ALL COACHES! 1. .ubjecl of Term Conlr.cl. our coaching ttaff tha .. would be helpful to n Committee Pliice Prizes fore the Board of Athletic C racis has been brought up in its issue of April 26 al and disturbed feeling I had been aware of. Joseph Alsop, Prominent Writer, To Talk at Annual ' News ' Dinner At $2.50 for Couple; $2.00 for Stag BROADCAST TONIGHT Explanation of Regatta Day Will Appear Tomorrow thoroughly settled. ; in Ihe Main Tan 1 John C. Adams. Mrs. Harvey Cush- ine. Mrs. Samoel Hemingway. Mrs Malcolm Farmer, Mrs, George Net- tfcrcn. Mrs. Edwaid Xoyes. Mrs William H. Dunham. Jfrs. Willian- Lvon Phelps, and Mrs. .ArnoW WoHers. The prices of the dance have beer set ai 52.50 a couple, and $2.00 slag Formal Summer evening dress will tx lonight. John Bosw. f the Regalia Day Co ir Ihc current plane of I Siaiion WICC on I • t. Farmkr has in Ihe atwve nott- officially recognized the of coaches contracts raised by the News and has asked the coaches for their views on ihc question. We offer today a list of specific points which it would be well for them to agree upon as they meet to state their case. And it is of the utmost importance that they should meet together with Mr. Farmer and not lose the day through individual conferences. 1. There should be the understanding that first-year men and other young coaches who arc not yet permanently settled at Yale cccive one-year kti Zoi agreements during what amounts to their probationary period. It would be foolish to demand long-term contracts for these men, whose ability has not yet been proven, and who may wish at some lime to make a more satisfactory VIEWS ON THE NEWS the present basis. MALCOLM FARMER. AN EDITORIAL for t rrangfi 2. There n element of risk ■ appeared by thi; s here or elsewhere a s the value ;t be. after five years of service, a three-year aches who have demonstrated their ability. The the part of the A. A. should certainly have dis- ime. and they stand to lose nothing by a three- Nalurally. if some of the younger men on the fter five years of service still feel they have more to gain by continuing on a one-year basis, they should be given that privilege only fair to stack the cards to this extent in favor of the individual. 3. The third point in any program embarked upon would iturally be some stipulation regarding the notice to be given the coach, who is entitled to this consideration normally granted to employees. Eight months befdre the contract terminates would seem to be a fair period, since most univ ersities and colleges sign their new men long in advance of the season. 4. A new argument for introducing the contract system which has arisen in the course of the past few weeks ' investigation is the fear that the coaches now have for the security of their jobs at the time in the future when a new athletic director comes to Yale. While this is not a pressing question, but an eventuality for the distant future, it is undeniable that gentlemen ' s agreements would seem very flimsy in the event of a new regime. 5. It appears now to be an opportune time to broach [or the consideration of the authorities a plan which would perhaps even more to the coaches than contracts, though at present it less feasible. This is a Pension Fund to provide for coaches after they have finished their active service at Yale. For this purpose it {Continuid on page Four) Eli Law Students To Vie for Prize ' eier Woodbury, Associaie the New Hampshire 5u[ Court. Samuel O. Oark, 1938L. ner of the S.EC. and Pi 200 WILL ATTEND Former Tribune ColumnUt Favor Con ervati m ; Wrote ' 168 Days ' BANQUET TUESDAY President Seymour, Belin And Shriver Will Speak Joseph W. Alsop Jr.. olumnist and magazine writer, will lie the Rucst speaker at the sixtieth annual Yale Daily . Hanquet in the Common Room of the Sterling Law Build- ngs on Tuesday at 7. Mr. Alsop will share the limelight with President Seymour who will give second principal speech of the . ndelot Belin, Jr.. Chaii ' Rosey Threatens To Go io Harvard Hia Prices Bring Surplu Of Trouble— Sheriff, Bed Checkt. etc. rein lies a lale. an Eli Sophomon So the Check 1 i was perplcjied. Taking rapid a FT. he sent a letter to the Ell askii (Ccnitniud en Page Thrt,) lOted ring Business Manager of the News. ill act as toastmasler. Also present : the principal Uble. in addition to Ir. Alsop and President Seymour, ill be Provost Edgar S. FurnJss and ecrelary Carl Lohmann. Joseph .Msop has made rapid strides I the field of journalism since his raduation from Harvard in 1932. e University than u- The Wblfrenpoofs s to ihe Nrwi banquet, will be held in the Common 3f the Sterling Law Bu.W- I Tuesday night at 7. are Bv Gardner Botsford Knowing full well that a stitch in time saves nine (a little axiom learned at the housemaid ' s knee — she thought it referred to a baseball team) I have been looking over the field of English poetry with an eye to the coming Compre- hensives. This work has all been done from memory, as I dropped my poetry book down a cistern when just a little toddler. In case anybody else wants to keep an eye in the English Comprehensive, 1 give you here Botsford ' s Anthology of Verse, or, I Don ' t uite Remember the Second Line. Thou itill unravish ' d bride of quietness. Thou . . . silence and slow time. , . . — The Yearning Greek. By Charles Keats Just -now, out of the strange Still dus , a white moth ew. Why am I gromn so cold? Button Up Your Overcoat (popular song), by Adelaide Crapsey. Bubble bubble Toil and trouble Battenes foj today, Mdncuso and Hubble. Tou ' iie got a beard. But I ' t ' e got stubble. — Witches ' chorus from Enough, Macduff ' By William Shakespeare Once aboard the lugger . . . maggots — from Once Aboard the Lugger, Nelly, by Robert Browning A(o motmn has she now, no force; She neither I ' ieu ' S nor sees. Rolled round m earth ' s m ernal course With trees, and stones, and (something wrong here) — The Corpse By William Wordsworth Hail to thee, blithe spirit, Tou don ' t looi liije a bird to me (questionable) That from heaven, or near it, (Something about pouring something.) — To a Skylark By Eddie Guest. On second thought, I would advise those interested in the Comprehensives to consult their own anthologies. I ' ve got to find that cistern, or I ' m lost. %Jisions ' (eyisions RicH. RD L. Morris, Jr. In November, 1940, along with most of the present Sophomore, Junior and Senior classes, this writer will cast his first Presidential ballot. Barring unforeseen eventualities, that vote will he cast for the candidate of the New Progressive Party of America. A conditioned-refle.x Republican all through babyhood, little- boyhood, the boy scout age and the prep school period and a prac- titioner of suspended judgment during the last three or four years, 1 now confess to feeling a definite satisfaction in the emergence of a political party with whose ideals and whose leadership I find myself in hearty agreement. Why do I like the Progressives? For one reason, because I am either apathetic or definitely opposed to every other extant group. The Republicans, by and large, are the most negatively insidious influence in the country. With practically no exceptions, since the Civil ' ar period in which they sprouted overnight, their states- manship has been ignorant, their morals have been selfish and debased, and their leaders have been either mediocre or subject to mediocre influences. As for the Democrats, or rather the New Dealers, their policies in the last six years have represented such an inconsistent amalgam of good and bad that it tires me to even contemplate them in retrospect. If their ideals have been good, the execution of them has been awful. If their leading men are great and noble spirits, the underpinning of their organization is louse-ridden with such toxic characters as Mayor Hague of Jersey City and those hardened opportunistic re- actionaries, the hordes of professional politi- coes that take their cues from Jim Farley. Finally, I have reached a point of utter satiation in regard to the Roosevelts. all 92 of them. If I am forced to listen to just one more fireside chat or one more joke in which the drunk says to Mrs. Roosevelt but I ' ll be all right in the morning, I shall straight- way turn bright crimson in a pronounced allergic rash. ■ IN Very few people have taken the trouble to look into the Progressives ' program. Those who read the condensed platform got a nebulous and badly hashed impression of what is going on. LaFolIette ' s Madison speech, however, was fairly specific and clearly indicated the direction of the party ' s policy. The crux of the matter lies in the emphasis on planning to in« crease production. As La Follette said, Less from agriculture, less from industry and business, and less from labor can only mean less for all, instead of more for all. Heywood Broun, the World- Tellv ' s discredited parlor-pink sorehead, made the obvious remark that there was plenty of production going on at the time of the 1929 crash, when it was impossible to get rid of over-abundant agricultural and industrial products. The best retort is the word PLANNING in neon letters thirty feet high. However, the Progressives have a sound conception of the reali- ties of planning and if they are to accomplish anything they must develop them in the near future. Even now the Progressive bloc in Congress has presented the important Industrial Expansion Bill, which will soon be forcibly called to the public ' s attention. If they can consistently continue their program of planning in the interests of abundance for all, they will fully merit wide support. Bac row: Muti, WilLirJ, Manice, Pierrepont, Cosgrove, Silleck. Front row: Copley, Russell. Perkins, Adams, Whitestone. The Tale cord Horace O. Perkins Alexander B. Adams DoRSEY Whitestone, Jr. Thomas W. Russell, Jr. James S. Copley Warner G. Cosgrove, Jr. Harold N. Willard Clwirnidji Md?wgmg Editor Feature Editor Business Manager Advertising Manager Promotion Manager Circulation Manager T, L. MuTz, 3QA C. A. Alexander, Jr., 40 R. F. McMullen, ' 40 R. B. Silleck, 39S C. M. Woolley, Jr. J. Pierrepont, 39 H. F, Manice, ' 3Q W. S. Barnes, ' 40 39 EDITORIAL STAFF J. C. Nemiah, ' 40 J. W. Link, 40 C. DuBosQUE, Jr., 40S BUSINESS STAFF A. J. Cummings, ' 40 J. L. Simonds, ' 40S H. Ford, II, ' 40 J. E. Sloane, ' 40S C. H. Cheyney, ' 40 R. S. Fox, Jr., ' 41S G. W. Cheney, Jr., ' 41 S. E. Baltz, ' 40 H. H. Bassett, ' 40S G. Breed, III, ' 41 H. H. Clemens, Jr., T. Griswold, ' 41 V Qlass oo Picture Maclntyre came over to my room one morning with a postal card. This in Itself was pretty excit- ing, as 1 am not the type that gets mail. And what ' s more it told me to go over and get my picture taken for the class hook. 1 found the photographer without much trouble. I felt quite important, for he seemed to be expecting me. He asked me my name and address, and then he took me into a little room all hung with curtains. I guess he wanted to be alone, so he could ask me something private. I couldn ' t imagine what though. Maybe he wanted to find out the inside dope on the elections. He then sat me down on a little chair. it was very uncomfortable, and there were a lot of bright lights around. He told me to look over at one corner. I did, but I couldn ' t see anything. I started to tell him that, when he disappeared under a black curtain hanging behind the camera. 1 knew he was peeking at ir.e. But 1 didn ' t let on. Pretty soon he came out again. I guess things had gone well under there, for he w ' as smiling. Maybe he had just learned that he had won in the fourth at Pimlico. But 1 thought 1 had better not ask him. Things began moving very fast after that. He squeaked a rubber bulb. This startled me, and I jumped. He grew rather angry over this, but I didn ' t care. It was his own fault tor not telling me. Then he took part of the camera out of the hack. 1 told him he shouldn ' t show his temper like that. He might hurt the camera. But he didn ' t pay any attention to me. After that he got more business-like. He got hold of me by the chin. I was afraid he was going to strangle me, but I kept very quiet. Then he asked me if I had a girl. I knew I was supposed to laugh at this, but 1 don ' t know why. It wasn ' t very funny. I gave out a little giggle, t hough, and slapped my kr.ee m pretended good humor. He got angry again. Don ' t move like that, he yelled. Don ' t yell like that, I calmly answered. 1 was only trying to be polite and laugh at your joke. 1 must have won the battle, for he stopped making nasty cracks. After that we got along better together. He still kept on putting things m the back of the camera and taking other things out. Can ' t you find the part you want? I asked. This sort of thing in- terests me, for I ' ve got a mechanical mind. I used to change tires on my Uncle Jaffrey ' s car. Then he started rolling the camera around. I got embarrassed about this, because I knew he was trying to find the right angle, and I don ' t think I have one. I ' m funny that way. After a while, though, he said I could go. That was very nice of him, because I was beginning to get hored, now the novelty had worn off. But he forgot to ask me about the elections. i ' Potts certainly td}{es his research serioush — 107 — Bacl{ row: Lovejoy, Harding, Williamson, Nelson. Front row: Doty, Reed, Wanamaker. The Tale Scientific ' Magazine John S. Reed, 3QS, Chairmaii EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Robert L. Wanamaker, 3QE Managing Editor William C. Harding, 39E Pictorial Editor David H. Nelson, ' 39S 6ooi( Review Editor James W. Williamson, 395 Editor James M. Dill, Jr., 4()S Associate Prince A. Hawkins, 40 Associate Lewis M. Bloomingdale, Jr., 4()S Associate BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Leete p. Doty, 39E Business Manager David B. Lovejoy, ' 3QS Adi ' ertismg Manager Richard H. Smith, ' 39E Circu ation Manager Thaddeus T. Kalinowski, 40E Associate Alan M. Bateman, Faculty Adviser (T he Ta e Scientific Magazine made its first splash as the Yak Sheffield Monthly in 1894. Today V_ its ripples cover the largest area of any undergraduate publication — graduate engineers, libraries and scientific firnis receiving their quarterly copies on every continent, from progressive South America to war-torn Asia. The 1Q3Q board made no radical changes from the high standards of articles, contributed in the past by such men as de Forest, Sikorsky, and others, although the format was altered appreciably in the direction of easier reading, and articles were chosen for generality of interest as well as for scientific excellence and the technical rigor of the past. The Board feels it has enhanced the tradition of the Magazine in publishing in issue entirely devoted to one branch of its field, namely the Spring Issue on railroad engineering, which offered papers by Yale alumni who have become leaders in various phases of railroading. Tftis provides the general reader with a com prehensive and authoritative survey of railroad engineering, besides being of paramount interest to all those interested in transportation. It is the policy of the Tale Scientific Magazine to print as equal a balance as possible between articles by students, members of the faculty, and those by executives of industrial organizations. The first category included able discussions in the fields of television, rocket engineering, and the archeology of Cuzco, as well as more general informative papers on science at the World ' s Fair and automobile racing abroad. Scientific research in electrical physiology, liquid helium, traffic engineering, railroad engineering, and the position of the Navy at Yale was elucidated by members of the faculty, while outside sources provided material on the cosmic ray, lightring, petroleum engineering, electrical transmission, and interstellar gases. The Magazine is also the official organ of the Yale Engineering Association and various under- graduate organizations, and publishes illustrated news of the scientific world and editorials of general scientific import especially connected to Yale. It occupies the position of both the Lit and the AJeics to Sheffield and the Engineering Schools, while offering vital and authoritative material to all those interested in science and engineering. The Tale Scientific Magazme was dedicated to the interests of science and engineering at Yale, and toward this goal it has consistently bent its efforts. Its success IS measured in ever-increasing circulation, which was especially marked in this last year, and by the interest of students and faculty of Yale. Bac}{row: Poerter, Barney. Alexander. Heller, LmJsev. Front row: Angieton, Peebles. Arnngton, McMullen, M.txweli Vif John H. Arrington James J. Angleton Robert S. Peebles G. McCall Maxwell Robert F. McMullen Chairman Managing Editor Business Manager Vice Chairman Art Editor C ' rench is a language that virtually demands expression. By the time people have absorbed - ■ enough French to say Comment 5a va? they are usually stirred by a desire to find some outlet for their newly-won ability. Sometimes they join French Clubs, and sometimes they go to Europe, but usually they merely dissipate the impulse in buying a copy of some French newspaper. Here at Yale, however, the results were different. In an effort to give the student an oppor- tunity to say something in French to an audience of fellow Francophiles, to correlate the student ' s knowledge of French with his current surroundings, and to instill in him an appreciation of French culture through a presentation of various contemporary French achievements in art and literature, Vi was duly founded last December. Vif IS a National Intercollegiate French Review, but in large part it belongs to Yale — tor here was found the necessary enthusiasm. During the course of the past year, Vif has become a campus by-word, due to the activity of its editors and their aggressive publicity campaigns. Work with the magazine has involved many delightful contacts and valuable experience. People of great note have expressed their approval of the idea but Vif remains fundamentally a student endeavor. In time it will achieve its purpose of making the language mean more than just a classroom exercise to those who study it. Alpha Qhi Sigma Professional Chemical Fraternity Thomas Rees Carleton Thomas Handy William Howells Vinton Donald Eugene Anderson Miguel Alfredo Alfonzo Jonathan Trumbull Lanman Paul Bender Frank Watson Curtis Edward William Pager Marvin Jay Fahrenbach Walter DeWayne France RoMER Franklin Good Gerrit Leverne Hekhuis Miguel Alfredo Alfonzo James Payne Alter Donald Eugene Anderson Carleton Thomas Handy Willis Oliver Hooker Charles Joseph Kentler, Jr. Rolfe Lorimer Carmean Harold Robert Hamel Arthur Joseph Hill, Jr. CLASS OF ig3Q CLASS OF 1940 CLASS OF 1941 Master Alchemist Vice Master Alchemist Reporter Recorder Treasurer Master of Ceremomes John Herbert Linnenberg, Jr. Claude Grenville Myers Harry Herman Philli.s, Jr. James Emerson Smith Robert Franklin Smith Frederick Fancher Taylor William Cretcher Walker Jonath.- n Trumbull L.anm.an James David Laurits Thomas Rees Robert Fr.ank Romell William Howells Vinton John Thom.as Maynard Jean Morton Morris John Schurr Webb Bdc); row: Carmean, Fager, Walker, Linnenberg, France. Third row: Morns. Taylor. Webb, .Alter, Hooker. Hamel. Bender. Second row: Maynard, Laurits, Kentler, Fahrenbach, Hekhuis, Myers, Smith, Romell, Front row: Phillips, AlfonM, Handy, Good, Rees, Hill, Anderson, Vinton, Curtis. ♦! ' %• 1 •• w 1 fc. .MteiitsMS BI S . iL A . Si ■■r R. Cargill P. W. Clark, Jr. D. S. Devor, Jr. H. E. Hayward C. H. Jacobson G. C. Anderson E. J. Clapp, Jr. H. H. COMLY W. C. Gant A. R. Bellinger I. Clancey E. T. Gammon A. L. Kerr, Jr. W. W. Beach W. E. B. Benson R. BiRDSALL J. G. Blanchard M. F. BURWELL University Qhoir FIRST TENORS H. W. Lawrence, Jr. H. H. Peck A. Levett H. E. Phillips M. T. McNeil W. H. Protheroe L. A. Miller I. W. Schlesinger, Jr. SECOND TENORS C. L. Gary J. M. Knapp I. VanB. Griggs S. L. Lasell, Jr. B. D. Henning D. C. McCabe FIRST BASSES S. Matisse C. R. Pangborn R. Mower W. A. Pardee K. W. Murray J. R. Pearson, Jr. SECOND BASSES y. M. Gates, Jr. R. H. Ebel R. G. Ernst R. J. FiTZWILLIAM A. E. Kahn A. R. Kaynor J. D. Laurits G. L, MiLLIKEN A. F. Shg(;ren A. E. Smith C. D. Stokes R. S. Taber T. Martin F. A. Norwood T. R. Palmer C. Stilson T. H. W.- TKINS, II R. L. Watson F. J. Wimble C. R. Wischmeyer H. P. Morgan E. G. O ' Neill, Jr. P. L. Springer T. V. Tilley For nearly forty years there has been one name which has been intimately connected with Yale music and its place in the University life — that of Harry Benjamin Jepson. His stimulating personality and sense of humor will long remain in the memory of both faculty and undergraduates. As Organist of Yale University, Leader of the Choir, composer and interpreter, he brought to his work a personal enthusiasm and native integrity which has made it a record deep-etched upon the history of Yale and upon the lives of those who know him. 13he Qhurch of Qhrist As Battell Chapel seems a cornerstone ot the Old Campus, rooted securely in place on the busy • ■ ■ corner of Collej e and Elm Streets, so worship and spiritual development form a cornerstone in undergraduate life, firmly fixed, with some in the dim subconscious, with others playing an active part in everyday life, but for all a permanent and all-pervasive influence. To bind together the individual religious groups of the University into one non-denominational whole for the mutual benefit of all is the purpose of the Church of Christ in Yale University, and it is toward this end that it has been working since its founding in 1756. Under the guidance of Rev. Sidney Lovett, 13, the Church brings to Battell Chapel every Sunday of the college year men widely known as leaders of religious thought. Prominent among these are the Board of Preachers, composed of nine visiting clergymen, Messrs. Arthur H. Bradford, George A. Buttrick, Henry Sloane Coffin, Angus Dun, Reinhold Nieburr, Henry Knox Sherrill, Willard L. Sperry, Arthur Lee Kinsolving, and Robert R. Wicks. Each of these men is unofficially connected with one of the Colleges, where he resides during his stay in New Haven. From Thanksgiving to the Spring Recess a daily vesper service is held in Dwight Memorial Chapel in place of the usual morning and evening prayer. Wednesday services are often conducted by visiting headmasters of various preparatory schools. On the nine Fridays following the Christmas recess each of the colleges in turn sponsors a vesper service, with the Master or a Fellow of the college making the address. Bacl{ row: Mr. Clement, Pillsbury, Hoxton, Blanchard, Cherry, Bundy, Hemingway. Wilson, Mr. Lovett. Humphrey, Gascoigne, Miller, Jubitz, Pickett, Hubbard, Reigeluth, Henry, Real. ,. I ' 1 -: - ? Bac1{ row: Corey, Alter. Whittlesey. Mersere.iu. Swift. Dellinger, Wagoner. Welles. Front row: Carries. Williams. Ornc Bilheimer. Holden. Pickett. Campbell. ' Dwight Hall OFFICERS Robert Sperry Bilheimer Herbert Elmer Pickett Walter Frisby Hendricks, Jr. Francis Willis Hensley Preside?!! Vice President Secretary Treasurer CHAIRMEN OF THE COMMITTEES J.AMES P. Alter, 1Q4(), Peace Commission George B. Norris, 1939 | „ „ , Yale Hope Mission A. Downey Orrick, 1940 1 Reuben A. Holden, IV, 1940, University Christian Conference Walter D. Wagoner, 1941, Deputations Herbert E. Pickett, 1939, Freshmin Committee Stephen M. Whittlesey , 1940, Worship John H. Burrowes, 1941, Interfaith D. Ian Thiermann, 1940, Far Eastern Student Service Fund Robert S. Bilheimer, 1939, Study Group II ' !■ Robert S. Bilheimer Students are not wholly convinced about religion, but many of them are haunted by it. Here is a temper better by far than the unintellectual contempt for religion and all its offices so common a decade ago. So reads an excerpt from the statement of the purpose of the University Christian Conference. That such a statement can be written is a tribute to Dwight Hall. Here is an institution which takes leadership in a world-wide movement toward a World Christian Community. It ac- complishes this by Its active membership in the New England Student Christian Movement, which is in turn a member of the World Student Christian Federation. As the active member of this move- ment on the campus, Dwight Hall attempts to arouse and foster interest in religious questions. To this end, Dwight Hall can best be described as a fellowship of students, some definitely committed to the Christian way of life, others only interested, but it is open to any member of the University. Its activities can arbitrarily be divided into worship, discussion, and work. In worship, Dwight Hall has always supported the daily chapel services and provided student leadership therein. Smaller and more informal worship is carried on in several prayer groups. Discussion groups have always been at the heart of Dwight Hall. It has always been a part of its belief that a college man should be intelligent about his religion, and groups to discuss and study various phases of his belief have always been very important. More than a hundred men have partici- pated in a number of groups on widely diverse topics, although the majority of the groups concerned themselves with the topics dealt with by Dr. Buttnck in his series of talks. Excellent leadership has been recruited from the faculty and the divinity school, and the most extensive program m years was earned on in 1938-39. In practical work, deputations have been sent out every week to rural communities in Con- necticut and Massachusetts, with great success. Also, Yale sent the largest delegation in years to the O-At-Ka and Northfield conferences. Dwight Hall has always supported the Yale Community Council and provided the leadership for the Yale Peace Council. Some of the richest experience working for Dwight Hall is to be gained by association and fellowship with its great staff, headed by the general secretary. Fay Campbell. For many, the greatest experience they have had in college is knowing this great Christian and leader. So, in the evolution of a world Christian Community, Dwight Hall has made great strides in the past year. On the officers of next year lies a heavy responsibility for the tradition and work of Dwight Hall, and the chance to carry on a glorious undertaking. Bacl{ row: Arnstein, Tighe. Solbert, FielJ, Mersere,ui, Tilghman, Hall, Hernck. Front row: Hemingway, Holden, Carnes, Dyess, Williams, Swenson, McGraw, Snyder, Elder. T3he Tale Qommunity (Council David W. Williams, 3Q ATHLETICS Edward F. Swenson, Jr., 40 Warren P. Snyder, ' 40 DRAMATICS Walter R. Herrick, Jr., ' 40, Chairman Robert L. Arnstein, 41 ENTERTAINMENTS Stuart C. Hemingway, Jr., 39, Chairman Theodore A. McGraw, III, 3Q George C. Wick, 41 Sheldon Y. Carnes, 39 William W. Field, ' 40 Robert D. Elder, Jr., ' 39 GROUPS Edward T. Hall, 41 HANDICRAFTS Robert O. Hannaford, 39 HOSPITAL PUBLICITY Reuben A. Holden, IV, ' 40 SCOUTING Benjamin C. Tilghman, Jr., 41S President Arthur D. Dyess, Jr., 39 Paul H. Converse, 41 Laurence G. Tk;he, Jr., 41 David G. Mersereau, ' 40 Peter O. A. Solbert, 41 Hugh S. Goodfellow, 40 Elliott R. Detchon, Jr., 41 Paul S. Pierson, 41 — 116- f David W. Williams Just a year ago the Yale Community Council announced its existence. It was organized by a small group of men in the Class of 1939 who thought the campus would welcome an undergraduate service, offering experience and fun in volunteer jobs in the New Haven community. After feeling its way during the spring term of last year, the Council, at its banquet in June, seemed justified in believing that it deserved a definite position on the campus. Receiving excellent support this year, the Council made tremendous progress toward an ever more valuable and consolidated program. But it is true that the two hundred eighty men who have done work of one sort or another have found themselves in the position of the proverbial laboratory guinea pig, and many of them have not survived their treatment in that capacity. Mortality has been high among volunteers as boys ' club leaders, for in January that department was convulsed with revolution. It now, however, stands much stronger than it did at the beginning of the year. Other difficulties have appeared constantly, especially in obtaining efficiency m the relations of the executive board with students on the one hand and New Haven institutions on the other — institutions varying in type from the poor house to the hospital and county jail. Nevertheless the year has been a great success. Highlights included the three meetings for undergraduates, at which professionals spoke. Sheriff Edward Slavin and Mr. John M. Kingman of Boston were especially successful in stimulating interest. The beer party held on November 22nd was very well attended and valuable in the ideas it brought forth. On March first the group leaders staged a track meet at the New Haven Boys Club, and that experiment proved to have great possi- bilities. Presentation of dramatic skits at the orphanages and settlement houses was attempted this year for the first time and has met with unqualified success. Basketball and roller hockey leagues, each team having a student leader, have steadily maintained undergraduate interest. The year saw also the formation of an embryonic speakers program used m conjunction with other musical, magical, and dramatic entertainments. The scouting committee has now become well established, for the enthusiasm of the student scout leaders has proved the worth of work in that line. On February 27th, at the annual meeting, Edward Swenson took over his duties as the Council s next president. The meeting was attended by members, a newly established category including at that time eighty-one men. Plans are being laid for a second annual dinner in May, and there seems to be no reason why it should not climax as successful a year ' s development as its predecessor. The Chapel of St. Thomas More The VYlore Qluh OFFICERS Rev. T. Lawrason Riggs, ' 10, Chaplain Hugh M. Matheson, Jr., 39 President Marvin J. Colangelo, 39 V ce-Fres Aent W. James Hill, 39 Secretary Bernard J. Rogers, 39 Treasurer Joseph C. Ambelang Edward B. Ham EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Faculty Member Faculty Member Harrie W. Bird, Jr. Richard H. Bowerman Warner G. Cosgrove, Jr. Hugh S. Gamble, Jr., ' 39S CLASS OF 1Q3Q Daniel J. Healy, Jr., ' 39E Daniel E. Hog. n, Jr., ' 39S Edward G. Hotchkiss, Jr. P.iiUL C. Hughes Fr. ' Vncis G. Jarlett L. H. B. Malone Barnet Phillips, III, 39E William N. Taft, ' 39E Edw.ard F. Callan, Jr. Edward Q. Carr, Jr. Stephen C. Carroll Roger A. Clarke Arthur J. Cummings John L. Eyre CLASS OF 1940 Edward W. Gosselin, ' 40S James T. Healey Walter R. Herrick, Jr. Henry James, Jr. Thaddeus T. K. ' VLINOWSKI, 4()E Robert L. L. McCormick John G. McQuaid Francis J. Menton, ' 40S John O ' K. Mullen, 40E Philip J. O ' Brien, Jr. Robert G. Quinn, ' 40E Edward Ryan Thomas C. Traceski, 40E Morgan P. Ames Carlos J. Angulo Frank B. Clark, ' 41S G. E. H. Comte, ' 41S Alfred P. Daignault, ■41s Fr.ancis C. Donovan, Jr. CLASS OF 1941 John E. Flaherty Eugene J. Garvy Robert E. Keating, Jr. Roger M. Keefe Franklin D. Lane F. T. S. Lavery James J. McCormick, Jr. R. Hardy Matheson William J. Nolan, Jr. WiLLi. ' M J. O ' Hearn. J Frederick E. Ossorio Alexander S. Parr Robert L. Roy, 4lS John W. Adams, Jr. John H. Allen, Jr. John A. Arcudi Ralph M. Bisaccia Norman F. Boucher John R. Brisley John W. Buckley Harry G. Callow Lee L. Ch.andler, 111 Edward M. Cummings CLASS OF 1942 Ralph E. de Simone, Jr. P. J. R. Desjardins John W. Dickerson P. W. D. Farley Thomas W. Ford Edward L. Ives, Jr. James J. Keating Arthur T. Keefe, Jr. John E. Ledan Edward J. Logue, Jr. William J. McAndrews William H. Moffitt, IV Raymond D. O ' Brien Robert B. Sefton James T. Shea Charles W. Smith Vaughan C. Spalding, Jr. Edmund B. Tobin Sidney E. Traceski David C. Wilhelm Augustus H. Baer GRADUATE SCHOOL Jane F. McKeon Frank Sullivan William K. Wimsatt, Jr. Mary T. Goode A. Andrew Hauk LAW SCHOOL Richard A. Moore John C. Morrissey R. S.argent Shriver, Jr. Charles J. Tobin, Jr. Theodore E. Allen MEDICAL SCHOOL Norman L. Cressy Eugene M. de Hostos John C. Murphy ART SCHOOL Thomas J. Imbs NURSING SCHOOL Mary V. Downing DRAMA SCHOOL Margaret E. Pickman Rack ■ ' Brewster, Spiegel. Ballard. Front row: Harry, Hopf, Spitzer. Tale debating dissociation Fritz J. Hopf Robert H. Harry Hart H. Spiegel John B. Spitzer Kingman Brewster, Jr. Ellis A. Ballard, II Charles B. Finch Professor John C. Adams Spencer H. Whedon President Vice-President Manager Member at Large Secretary Publicity Director AssistdJit Secretary Coach Freshman Coach . © Frit; J. Hopf Rebating enjoys a position unique on the Yale campus. In no other activity is the ratio of disagree- able to pleasurable activity so low. With all such annoying details as letter writing and schedule arrangement m the capable hands of Professor Adams, the members of the debating association do only one thing in their official capacity — debate. The imposing list of officers on the left is only a meaningless formalism, made necessary by yearbook requirements. Their only function is to speak at the annual banquet, matching themselves with the orators ' orator, Professor Driver, when he delivers his annual speech. The utter lack of prestige attaching to membership in the debating association insures that only those appear who are delighted at the prospect of eight minutes of uninterrupted discourse. And there is no business board to heel, in fact there is nothing to heel at all. An explanation for such enthusiasm is to be found in the record of the debating season to date. There is nothing more unaccountable than a debating judge, but despite this fact Yale has won nine of its ten debates. The first debate of the year was with Harvard, both home teams winning. Stevens, Harry, and Spitzer in New Haven argued that the government was more interested in political power than the welfare of the people, while Kohn, Spiegel, and Schultz maintained the opposite in Cam- bridge. Brown was beaten both ways in a Federal spending debate, with Campbell, Schmechel, Harry, Watson, Finch, and Furniss doing the honors. Dartmouth fared badly over the prom week- end when Harry, Norris, and Scheuer insisted on a big navy in New Haven while Wagner, Schme- chel, and Watson — a Freshman — insisted on a small one in Hanover. Brewster and Campbell de- feated Columbia protesting against an Anglo-American military alliance. McGeorge Bundy and Hopf won on the other side of this issue when they spoke before an audience of hundreds at Bridge- port. Hopf put up such a stirring plea for England that an earnest Irishwoman sent him a vituper- ative letter informing him of England ' s atrocious conduct against Ireland. This same star team was scheduled to meet Cambridge on Resolved, that work is the curse of the drinking classes and prepared a magnificent twelve-bottles-under-the-sink anecdote for the occasion, but the English took fright and the debate was called off. A projected Southern tour during vacation was called off when all colleges, including the North Carolina State College for Negroes, refused to meet a Yale team. Ballard and Bundy defeated Vassar in n eutral territory at Salisbury, and Finch and Scranton successfully upheld a ticklish pro-Chamberlain policy against Amherst. The Freshmen under Spencer Whedon have won four and lost three. Those participating in two or more debates were : Allen, Curtis, Johnson, Owen, Pigott, Steere, Campbell. In the prue speaking field Finch won the Buck, Bill Bundy the DeForest, and McGeorge Bundy rounded off the third lap of a four year straight sweep by winning the Ten Eyck. Biici row: M. Bundy, Scranton. Spitzer. Front roic Harry, W. Bundy, Hopf. The Tale Political Union William P. Bundy John B. Spitzer William W. Scranton McGeorge Bundy Fritz J. Hopf Robert H. Harry Cornelius J. Dwyer J. Gordon Woodruff President Vice-President Treasurer Secretary Leader of Liberal Party Leader of Conservative Party Leader of Labor Party Leader of Tes-But Party Jn Its fifth year the Political Union gave little doubt as to its permanent value as the organ for undergraduate public interest on the campus. Meetings were well attended, and the standard of speaking showed perhaps a slight improvement. The year was marked by more student speaking as a result of the policy of restricting the number of guest speakers. The first meeting after the election of new officers in January, 1938, saw the enlargement of the navy upheld. The house next refused to deplore the trend to collectivism in this country, and continued its liberal sweep by upholding the utilities policy of the government, partly as a result of the persuasion of Law School Professor Walton Hamilton. The house tied on the profound issue of whether to give the land west of the Hudson back to the Indians, and to round out the year, approved Chamberlain ' s foreign policy and rejected the compulsory incorporation of labor unions. After an introductory meeting in the fall, the Munich Pact was upheld, with the aid of A. Whitney Gnswold, and at the next meeting the Conservatives finally carried the day and resolved that New Deal candidates should be defeated in the elections. In the final meeting civil liberties for communists and fascists was given the record vote of the Union ' s history, sixty-four to three, as a result of the oratory of Arthur Garfield Hays. J. Abihider H. B. Anderson. Jr. E. N. AsiEL E. L. Baldwin C. W. Barnard E. D. Bauer T. R. Beal, Jr. G. d ' A. Belin, Jr. R. C. Berens G. BORTIN W. W. Brill C. W. Bulkley W. P. Bundv W. H. Calhoun L. E. Caplan J. B. Christerson. |r. R. P. Coffin F. W. Coker, Jr. M. J. Colanoelo A. Collins E. W. Cummer C. J. DWYER B. Eisem. n R. D. Elder E. C. Ford A. K. Gage R. H. Gemmill G. M. Godlev, 11 L. Goldsmith R. M. Goldwater M. Green J. W. Maine F. M. H.AiNEs. Jr. W. A. Hamilton R. H. Harry F. J. HopF 1. HOWBERT, II CLASS OF 1939 M. A. JUBITZ W. W. Kellogg S. T. Kelsey, Jr. R. L. Kemler W. A. KOEHNE H. KoiiN, Jr. L. J. KOVEN |. L. KuHN, Jr. W. Lee F. LiPPITT W. D. LoucKs, Jr. R. C. LOVEJOY D. McBride. Jr. F. S. McConnell, Jr- W. S. Mailliard H. Maza D. A. MooRE R. L. Morris, Ir. M. Mullally, Jr. H. W, Nestler R. G. NiMs G. B. NoRRis G. H. Page T. R. Parker S. S. Postol T. S. QuiNN. Jr. G. E. Ray, Jr. S. Resnick R. S. Reigeluth S R. Resor R R Rich, Jr. I- K. Rosen D. ' LE W. M. Roth C. Sa AGE W. W. Scranton R, E. Shoemaker J. R. Slevin W. F. Spanton E, O. Spencer J. B. SPITZER R. Starr N. L Steers, Jr. E. Stevens R. Taet F. C. Tanner, Jr. T. C. Taylor B. F. Thompson D. TwOMBLY D. A. Warner A. W. Wells D. Wick W. WlLHELM R. H. WiLMER, Jr. E I. Wilson, Jr. W. J. Woods, Jr. J. P. Alter R. L. Auchincloss. Jr. E. A. Ballard, 11 W. S. B.i rnes A. A. Beal N. H. Bigelow L. BO.ARDMAN H. D. Bl.akeslee. Ill G. Bradford L. B. Brody T. BUCKY McG. BuNDY A. A. Burrows, Jr. L. C. Byck, Jr. J. H. Carlin S. C. Carroll C. J. Cole R. R. M. Converse C. C. Cory W. J. Cousins S. L. CoxE, Jr. A. J. CUMMINGS M. Dent, Jr. L. B. Drell J. V. Duncan J. F. Eagle, Jr. H. G. Edwards, Jr. H. W. Elin J. A. Elliott J. L. Eyre J. A. M. Fau-x W. W. Field C. E. Finn E. A. Flickner, Jr. E. S. FuRNiss, Jr. W. F. Givan C. C. Glover, III H. 8. GoODFELLOW A. P. Greenblatt R. E. Grote O. L. Guernsey, Jr. G. S. Hannaw.ay L. R. Harper S. G. Harris, Jr. CLASS OF 1940 W. D. Hart, Jr. A. P. Harvey. Jr. J. T. Healey D. Heard. Jr. W. F. Hellmuth, Jr. H. L. Henkel S. T. Herrick R. A. Holden, IV H. James, Jr. O. D. Johnson T. T. K.ALINOWSKI B. D. Kaplan, III W. R. Kitchel T. R. Lazarus M. L. Lejeune R. J. Lewisohn H. H. Li ' iNGSTON, Jr. R. L. McCoRMICK J. G- McQuAiD R. L. Merrick J. P. MiLNOR, Jr. S. L. MiMs, Jr. J. M. Nelso.v ■R. D. Orr A. D. Orrick L. F. Paine W. M. Parker, Jr. A. Peter F. S. Pierce S. P. Platt. Jr. M. Pollock H. L. QuiNN J. S. Raymo.nd, Jr. O. RlCH. RDS C. T. ROELKE J. D. SCHEUER, Jr. D. A. SCHMECHEL F. M. Schultz, Jr. T. R. SH. PIRO D. J. Shiller A. T. Smythe, Jr. W. P. Snyder A. D. SoKOLOw H. H. Spiegel B. Stubbs W. S. Sullivan, Jr. E. F. SwENsoN, Jr. R. M. Tenney H. E. Terhune T. C. TiLLEY W. A. Trafton, Jr. W. N. Van Slyck. Jr. W. H. V.NTON M. ' ON MOSCHZISKER. J. D. VOORHEES G. R. Wall. ce T. C. Weber R. M. Weissm,an R. A. Weyburn E. Wheat, Jr. G. R. Wiener D. Williams A. Wilson, III O. B. Wyman, Jr. J. N. Young, Jr. I. G. Aiken, III M. p. Ames J. J. Angleton R. L. Arnstein T. W. Arnold W. Barker W. T. Bahlman, Jr. P. Billingsley K. Brewster, Jr. K. F. Burgess. Jr. J. I. Campbell W. Campbell, 111 H. H. Clemens. Jr. P. L. Coleman L. F. Crowley E. R. Detchon J. Dickinson, IV A. F. Dill T. Dines, Jr. E. J. Doyle P. W. Emery C. B. Finch G. A. Finck E. Fisher W. D. Fisher R. E. Forster R. J. Freedman R. Garrett, Jr. B. Glazer C. S. Goodrich, Jr. A. N. Gordon, Jr. H. G. Graybill L. Grimes E. T. Hall S. J. Hall J. L. Hannaford I. H. H.artm.an, [r. R. L. Hatch J. W. Heckinger N. G. Hickman CLASS OF 1941 J. J. Hitchcock A. H. Hopkins B. F. Hopkins J. L. Houghteling, Jr. W. E. J. CKSON W. P. Jeffery, Jr. R, M. Keefe R. C. Kellogg W. T. Ketcham, Jr. T. H. Kingsley G. J. Kleman H. H. Knight E. H. Kreuger A. H. Landay W. E. Lerner A. A. Litt J. LOHMANN A. F. LovEjOY L. R. LuTKINS p. J. MacCarthy J. G. K. McClure, M. R. M.acle. ' n S. W. McLeod W. S. McCain M. G. Main C. G. Metzler J. O. Morris C. W. Morton T. Parsons, III C. B. Price, Jr. D. B. Ressler H. A. RiCH.ARDS W. A. Robinson A. I. Rosenthal B. C. Rowley, Jr. T. G. Rutledge J. O. Shea J. R. Sloss P. O. A. Solbert C. F. Spalding J. K. Spring J. E. Stock C. R. Swift R. S. Tabor L. G. Tighe K. F. Thompson R. B. Tweedy R. K. DE Veer W. T. ViETS W. H. Wagner W. D. Wagoner I. C. Washburne C. W. Watson H. B. Whiteman E. R. Whittemore W. A. WicK R. WiER, III B. Williams B. Zorthian G. H. Allen W. L. Borden K. Chandler, Jr. B. D. Coleman M. H. Curtis CLASS OF 1942 W. M. Ford D. A. GOSSWEILER J. Pauker E. A. Riley B. M. Steere C. C. Williams, Jr. W. G. White I. G. WiLMER Back, ro ' P ' l ' - ' l. Hinrichs, Goodyear, Teiier, Pjlmer. Larareth, Cheney, Richards. Third row: Dodge, Healy, Johnson, Thompson, Anderson, Ely. Second row: Schwab, Demmg, Lovejoy, Peck, Hernck, Dill, Borten. Front rote, Judd, Littlefield, Reigeluth, Hannaford, Swope, Hill, Emerson, Eiseman, Twombly. 13he Tale Dramatic Association Ueorge Steel Swope Robert Seelye Reigeluth George Emil Serries Do.ANE TWOMULV Henry Truxtun Emerson, Jr. James Clough Daniy Ben Eiseman R. R. Anderson G. BORTIN H. P. Brown T. L. Cheney, Jr. J. C. Danly B. Eiseman H. T. Emerson, Jr. S. M. Barnet, Jr. R. R. M. Converse H. W. Dodge, Jr. J. T. Healey W. C. Bedell J. N. Deming A. F. Dill D. M. Allen, Jr., ' 39 R. L. Arnstein, 41 S. Berman, ' 39 F. A. BoRsoDi, SgS J. Butler, Jr., 40 W. R. C.- tes, ' 39 W. B. CONDIT, ' 40 R. D. Dalzell, Jr., 40 y. A. Davis, Jr., ' 40 R. S. Davis, ' 42 C. D. Dickey. Jr., ' 40 C. P. Dixon, Jr., ' 39 L. H. Dixon, 41 T. GOODVEAR R. O. Hannaford I. L. Harvey, Jr. W. J. Hill C. M. Jacobs, J. R. Johnson 111 W. R. Herrick, Jr D. Heard, Jr. I. S. Hinrichs T. B. A. F. Johnson Lovejoy CLASS OF 1939 J. R. Il ' dd, Jr. J. L. KuHN, Jr. W. E. Littlefield T. R. Palmer R. S. Reigeluth G. E. Serries CLASS OF 1940 T. R. Lazarus N. S. Paul I. Richards, Jr. CLASS OF 1941 W. H, McManus D. M. Payne President Busmess Manager SfcretdTv Publicity Manager Production Manager Technical Director Stage Manager G. S. Swope B. F. Thompson D. Twombly A. W. Wells B. Williams R. F. ZOCBAUM, N. Schwab, Jr. W. M. Stucky G. E. Tener J. D. Voorhees, Jr. F. W. Peck, Jr. G. TicHE, Jr. Trautman ASSOCIATE MEMBERS Ely, ' 40S J. T. Lanman, A. C C. W. FiNDLAY, D. Foster, Jr., ' 41E D. Given, 42 M. E. Gottlieb, ' 41 J. L. H. nnaford, ' 41 A. Hawley, 40 D. H. Hughes, ' 41 R. M. Jordan, 40 T. A. fuDCE. Jr.. 41 S. KiBBE, 40S D. Knapp, 39 40S W. E. Lerne R. C. Lewin. 41 R. H. LocKwooD, 41 F. A. McWilliam, 41 H. G. Molina, Jr., ' 39S C. S. Muscatine, 41 J. M. Nelson, IM, 40 W. B. Newberry, Jr., ■41S R. Osborn, Jr., ' 41 E. Park, 39 T. R. Parker, 39 T. Parsons, III, ' 41 P. B. Pool, 40 R. J. Redington, 41 R. C. Stickney, 41 H. S. Tierney, Jr., 40 L. Tyler, 39S A. D. Ullman, ' 40 S. J. Underhill, 39S M. Wesson, ' 41 T. J. White, Jr., ' 41 M. Whitmore, ' 40 G. R. Wiener, 40 I Back, row: Olcott, Underhill, C, Barnard, Clapp, Auchincloss, Weher, Hams, Chidestcr, Krarr.er, Fit:wilUam, Dwight, Lanman, Tener. Fourth row: Todd, Camp, Taber, Devor, Ohler, Ruhin, Pierson, E. Jones, Laurits, R. Clark, Wallace, Mennel, Tilley, Comly. Third row: Wright, Stafford. J. Lawson, Blossom, Ramsey, Dodge, Schlesinger, Martin, R. Lawson, McKellar, Kerr, Dodd, Haff, P. Clark, Benson, Galliher. Second roui: Carey, Perry, Mullally, Rockwood, Holderness, Higgins, Dixon, Blanchard, Bagg, Knapp, Cherry, B. Thompson, Scribner. Frorit row: G. Anderson, J. Barnard, Manilla, Cheney, Gary, Protheroe, Hill, Wilson, Kaynor, R. Anderson, L. Thompson. The Tale Glee Qlub Jerred G. BlANCH. ' iRD Alexander B. Adams James R. Todd Lewis C. Thomson Marshall Bartholomew Arthur Hall Merrill E. Knapp Joseph N. M.anilla President Manager Assistant Manager Publicity Manager ' 07S, Director ' 24M, Assistant Director ' ti6, ApoUo Director ' 40, Afio lo Manager CT he Yale Glee Cluh held its Annual Organization Meeting e irly last fall, and began the season - ■ in gala fashion with a 5(X)-man turn-out. The leader of the Club, Jerry Blanchard, and the man- ager, Al Adams, addressed the candidates; they were followed by Marshall Bartholomew, 07S, the director, who outlined plans for the year, the climax of which is to be the European trip. Then, as soon as the singers divided into squads, intensive practice was begun in preparation for the joint concert with Harvard. This took place in Sprague Hall the night before the football game, and a standing-room-only crowd filled the Hall to hear it. Soon after, Christmas vacation put an end to the Club ' s activities for a short while, but on their return, the group immediately collected to start work on the music for the concert with the New Haven Symphony Orchestra on February 6th. This was the first time that these two organizations had joined forces. The Club presented Randall Thompson ' s Tarentella, Sibelius ' s Origin of Fire, and Hoist ' s Dirge for Two Veterans. One hundred and sixty men stood on the stage of Woolsey Hall for this concert, the largest group the Club had ever gathered together for a single concert. Before the Junior Prom the Club repeated its earlier successes, and the management again had trouble finding seats for everyone. The singers won their quota of applause, the WhifFenpoofs sharing in the honors, despite the fact that Jerry Blanchard had difficulty producing his pitchpipe. March 3rd found the Glee Club at Stratford, Connecticut, where the inhabitants turned out en masse to welcome them. The Cupheag Club sponsored the concert and gave a dance and party afterwards. Meanwhile, a semi-chorus was participating in a series of concerts with the Junior League Club of New York, three taking place down there, and a fourth in Saybrook College. The Spring Term brought renewed activity, and with the final squad chosen, the Club traveled to Bridgeport. Then on April 28th, the Norwegian Royal University Chorus of Oslo, which was in the United States to open the Norwegian Exhibit at the New York World ' s Fair, was entertained by the members of the Yale Glee Club. The festivities were capped by a banquet at the Lawn Club, where there was an exchange of songs between the two groups. After singing before the Commencement-Week throngs, the singers will embark for Europe on the Queen Mary. This will be the fourth trip of its kind in the Club ' s history. The visiting Elis will first view the sights of Paris and Brussels; then they will swing northward to present their concert of American folk-songs before audiences of various Scandinavian cities. From the Northlands the Club will move into Central Europe where Budapest will be the scene of the farewell concert. Jerred G. Blanchard Alexander B. Adams — 127 — ' S ' t I ? ?■ ??■!■! ' V % t . -v . Bac}{ row: Rumbough, Boaz, Esty, T. B. Turner, Desjardins, Marvin, Tripp, Booth, Turner, D. B. Third row: Sladen, Halsey, Forrest, R. D. Johnson, Wright, Bermingham, Alpert, Wiggin, White, Link. Second row: Swenson, Levy, Dodge, Kilvert, Griswold, Milliken, Spurney, Harris, deZaido, Friedman. Front row: Pigott, Benson, German, Fox, Hemingway, Simmons, Smith, McLean, W. R. Johnson, Donovan. The Tale Freshman Glee Qluh Qelected from a large fall turnout, the 1942 Freshman Glee Club experienced one of the most successful seasons of its history. Mr. Arthur Hall, ' 24Mus., worked with his usual diligence and interest and developed enthusiasm not only in the club itself but also in a freshman octet. Zealous work on the part of the freshmen themselves resulted in the formation of a group of singers whose enthusiastic reception was indicative of their merit. Combining with the Varsity Glee Club and the New Haven Symphony Orchestra, the season began with a concert given in Woolsey Hall to a packed house. Winter activities continued with the club traveling to Washington, Conn., where they sang before a large gathering at Suffield School. After spring vacation the Freshmen began a series of concerts at the Dwight School in Engle- wood, N. J. Low Heywood and Wickham Rise followed Dwight and again vacant seats were nowhere to be found. An active and interesting season was brought to a close when the Club sang at the Westover School. T5he Tale and Charles L. Gary, ' 39 Arnold J. Adelkerg, 39 John M. Shull, 40E Charles F. Smith Stuart H. Clement, ' 17 Gaspard D ' A. Belin, Jr., ' 39 ADVISORY COMMITTEE (erred G. Blanchard, ' 39 Leader and Drum Major Manager Assistant Manager Director Treasurer Basses J. S. Kornreich, 1939 R. F. SCHLUETER, 1940 Baritones D. M. Bridgham, 2 Mus. Horr s D. C. Mascola, Mus. J. H. Owen, 1942 J. L, Wallace, 1941E Trumpets E. A. Adelberg, 1942 M. N. Fox, 1942 P. E. Graybeal, 1941E A. W. Horton, 1940S A. H. J.ACOBSON, Jr., 1939S J. H. King, Jr., 1941E J. J. Kennedy, 1941 R. P. Levine, 1942 I. F. Shapiro, 1940 R. H. Smith, 1940E J. C. Sweet, Jr., 1940E Clarinets E. A. Flickner, Jr., 1940 D. M. French, 1941S E. L. German, 1942 A. I. Golden, 1940 T. S. Goslin, II, 1942 D. H. Gould, 1942 W. H. Haggard, 1942 R. L. Kemler, 1939 R. J. MacLaury, 1940 J. Nania, Mus. |. F. Partridge, 1940S C. W. Smith, 1942 R. Stillmar, 1939E I. E. Stock, 1941 Glocl enspiel J. J. Maynard, 1941S Accordion J. G. Stephenson, 1939E Trombones A. |. Adelberg, 1939 H. G. Callow, 1942 L. D. Chirgwin, 1941S L. R. Cummins, 1941S R. H. Faust, 1940E C. B. Hansen, 1941 H. D. Kelsey, 1942 [. R. Kelsey, 1939E G. B. King, 1939E D. C. McCabe, 1939 W. B. Simmons, Jr., 1942 T. H. Taylor, 1939 J. I. Tracy, Jr., Grad. W. B. Williams, 19415 Snare Drums A. G. Dingwall, 1939E I, M. Shull, 1940E I. P. Wilson, IV, 1941E T. E. Keena, 1941 Bass Drum D. S. Magee, 1941 Cymbals E. G. Small, 1941S Piccolos R. p. Arms, 1939E H. S. Lowenhaupt, 1940S Saxophones S. C. Alenier, 1939 A. W. Andrews, Jr., 1941E G. I. Fisher, 1941 H. C. F. Gifford, 1942 mmM¥m0m Bac)( row Zimmerman, Kornreich. Kelsev, Mavnard, Schlueter, Small, Dingwald, Wooster, J. Shull, Wilson, Ryan, Linnenberg, Holt. F.mrrli nuc LeyJen i Arr.mgeri, Porpora, Owen, Kennedy, Bndgham, Mascola, Wallis. Fuller, Fisher, Alenier, Andrews, Arms, Lowenhaupt, Stevenson. Third roic: C. F. Smith (Conductor). Simmons, French, Goslin, H. King, C. W. Smith, Gould, Haggard, Partridge, Allen, German, Stilmer, R. Shull, Flickner, Kemler, Russell. Second row: Faust, Golden, Horton, Chirgwin, Williams, Taylor, Gary (Leader), A. Adelberg (Mgr.), McCahe, Kelsey, Hansen, Callow, Cummins, G. King. Front rote: R. Smith, Fox, Jacobson, Graybeal, J. King, Shapiro, Le% ' ine, Sweet, E. Adelberg, Willis. Bac}{ row: Kahn, Robertso n, Chergwin, Simmons, Wills, Southworth, Mannweiler, Holt. Front row: Achelis, Callow, Crum, Ebel, Alpert. The Yale Qollegians Robert J. Alpert Leader eompletmg their nineteenth year of existence as an organization, the Yale Collegians are now looking forward to what will probably be the greatest period of their existence. This famous college dance orchestra, some of whose f jrmer members have later played with such popular bands as Red Norvo and Paul Whiteman, h; - been reorganized this year by several freshmen, including the leader. Bob Alpert. With an eye to the future and an ear to the present, a very well-knit unit has been built up exclusively of Yale musicians, mainly freshmen and sophomores, and includes a number of excellent soloists. In addition, two very promising arrangers, Gordon Mannweiler and Fred Achelis, both of whom have had their music played by well-known bands, have helped build up a style based on those of Count Basie and Jimmie Lunceford. Other featured musicians with the band are Bob Alpert, pianist and leader, with a style rem- iniscent of Jess Stacy; Dave Holt, a sensational drummer discovered composing sonatas in the music school; and George Southworth, a trumpeter with a natural Dixieland style. The Collegians started rather late this year, but once rolling, were received enthusiastically at Smith and many other places throughout New England. With two years ahead of the present personnel, they expect to develop into the best unit yet to bear the name Yale Collegians. ' H wt erry, U His Orchestra iT here have always been hands at Yale, but it has been only occasionally that one has come along C9 which has had the time and organuation to make a reputation in the dance world outside of the College. There was Rudy Vallee; there was Bobby Burnett; there was Sleepy Hall. After a lapse of some years, there is now Newt Perry. Last year he organized an orchestra composed partly of students and partly of New Haven musicians, and this year he has gradually replaced many of the Yale men m order to get the organization and talent necessary to compete with other orchestras in the field. And he has achieved quite a reputation, too. This past year he has fulfilled engagenients and return engagements at most of the East ' s leading schools and colleges. Hotchkiss, St. Mark ' s, Dobbs Ferry, Pme Manor, Smith, Sarah Lawrence, Amherst, and Yale are included in the imposing array which have been entertained by the maestro and his men. But his engagements have not been limited to the scholastic institutions. His orchestra is said to be the debutantes delight and young misses have made their bows to the accompaniment of Newt Perry ' s orchestra in New York, Boston, Chicago, and New Haven. Chr istmas vacation found Newt with his orchestra playing at the Bal Tabarin Room of Chicago ' s Hotel Sherman and numerous holiday dances. He also stopped off en route to play in Bronxville. So m the remarkably short time of one year the orchestra is already being classed as one of the country ' s coming name bands. But it has meant more than fame to the members of the orchestra and their leader; rather, it is a lifelong interest m music and entertainment that has led them to continue the long hours and practice so essential to polished playing. J iaval serve Ojficers draining Qorps STAFF Lieutenant Commander John V. Hewitt, Jr. Lieutenant Richard H. Seligman Lieutenant Romer F. Good Lieutenant (JG) Charles F. Wilson Ensign Albert A. Manning Chief Petty Opficer George B. King Battalion Commander Sub Commander Adjutant Ordnance Ojficer Commiss ary Officer Battalion C.P.O. Lieutenant Robert D. Elder, Jr. COMPANY COMMANDERS Lieutenant John W. Starbuck. Jr. Lieutenant Francis C. J. ' vckson Lt. (JG) George D. Kellogg, Jr. Ensign Robert E. Lapides PLATOON LEADERS Lt. (JG) Joseph V. Terenzio Ensign Stanley E. Zimmerman Lt. (JG) Henry C. Wheeler Ensign Chas. P. Rockwood, Jr. William H. Sweney, Jr. COLOR BEARERS Donald B. Haynie William S. Milliard William L. Dommerich T. L. Bradley P. R. Levine J. R. Kelsey DRUM AND BUGLE CORPS First Petty Officer Thaddeus T. Kalinowski, Drum Major Fourth Petty Oppicer Augustus Knight, Jr., Mustering Petty Officer J. F. Cox J. H. King, Jr. T. H. Russell, III N. O. Abelson E. Ocumpaugh, IV D. P. LaField D. E. AscHE Winner oj t ie Admiral Berrien Battalion Cup jor best drilled Platoon: Stanley E. Zimmerman Winner of the Captain T. F. Caldu ' ell Cup for the platoon shou ' ing greatest imfirovement after third drill: Joseph V. Terenzio Winner of the Doctor Raynham Toumshend Sword Trophy: John V. Hewitt, Jr. 132 — Southward Ho! in the r ie ' and Tillman ' We were aboard the U.S.S. Arkansas by mid-morning, June 21st. After the medical exam and a tour of the bowels of the once-greatest of the world ' s dreadnoughts was over, the hook was up and we naval embryos of Harvard, Georgia Tech., Northwestern, and Yale were officially en route to Havana. Behind us in the Sound waited the U.S.S. TiUman for an uncruised senior or two and Mr. Theodore Babbitt who with Mr. Russell Bradley (with us on the Ar ie) were official guests of the Navy. We passed Montauk Point, hit the first sea swells, downed our first chow and with our billet slip s discovered our lockers, into which we literally poured all we owned. Locating Fire and Rescue, Collision, and Abandon Ship quarters was different; fire plug jf36, water tight hatch 2092, and a Jacob ' s Ladder were found by a passing Bosn ' s Mate. The Ar ie mocked a rampant Gulf Stream, while in its wake the Roper and even farther behind the delayed T; mari were plummeting about with a hundred or so mal-de-mer sufferers. But we were a busy lot. Every day we swabbed decks, listened to lectures on The Battleship in Battle, ship control, seamanship, communications, engineering, gunnery, chemical warfare, water tight integrity, damage control and navigation with a morning or evening star sight on the boat deck. At gun drills we drilled pointers, trainers, and sight setters simulating gun fire with small calibre blanks, or trained the crew at the loading machines, where m a whirl of flying dummy shells, powder bags, and breeches, we sweated to cut the loading time. By the 25th, the Tillman had joined us astern with wild tales of a siil through stormy seas. We had sighted San Salvador and navigated the Crooked Island passage to the east coast of Cuba. Coasting along the shore to Havana we let go a 21-gun salute on Sunday morning with all hands mustered on the foc ' s ' le and quarter deck. Slipping past Old Morro, we passed up the narrow channel, received a return salute and dropped anchor over the spot where the Maine sank forty years before. From the 26th to the 29th we made the merry rounds of bazaars. Sloppy Joe ' s, Jai Alai, the Shanghai, or toured the city with a dusky Cuban shouting On these side gentlemens we have . Our whale boat crew with Seligman, coxswain, and Dox, Wolfe, Dwight, Nelson, Tener, Tyler, HoG. iN, MacLean and Knight at the oars outdistanced Harvard and later went on to beat Georgia Tech. on Chesapeake Bay. Two cruise ships provided us with giggling school teachers and stenogra ' phers while the U. S. Army attache rounded up two hundred Cuban belles at the Jaimanitas Club for a grand finale dance. We left the Pearl of the Antilles on the 29th and returned to our busy routine. Sailing north, pausing briefly at Hampton Roads for a customs inspection, we passed up the Chesapeake holding a Happy Hour of boxing, wrestling, rope climbing, rail fencing, and a pie-eating contest — won by Yale ' s Danny Hogan. At night skits were featured with Al Manning directing the Yale reper- toire of songs and banter. On Sunday July 3rd, we hit the beach at Annapolis and blew on to Washington where, thanks to a tan and uniform, the hotels proffered special rates and meals. The next day we toured the academy with upperclassmen and sat down to a superior cold cut lunch — a la Bancroft. On the 6th we were back at the Roads for a thundering day of Short Range Battle Practice. On the old Arl(ie with the 5-inchers Yale ' s five crews shot a poor third place behind Georgia Tech. and Northwestern, while on the Tillman — at long range — Starbuck as Control Officer, Henry as Officer of the Deck, Davies as Gun Captain, with Jones, C.aracciolo, Grace, Kellogg, and Cor- LETT as gun crew garnered the top honors in the Destroyer class. That night all Yale shifted to the Ar ie and headed to New York. A day ' s leave and then on through a foggy night to Boston where the Parker House and movie palaces were havens for a short evening. On the 11th ninety hearty Yalies disembarked at New Haven and with a Good summer, sailor returned home with a bag or so of curios, recollections of chalking their girls ' names on target shells, playing bridge under j 4 turret, or more impressively standing watch as helmsman or officer of the deck on one of Uncle Sam ' s old battle wagons ! The Arkansas at Moro Disembarkation Easy with that perfume. The Navy ' s guest (Mr. Bradley) disembarks. CLASS OF 1939 R. H. BOWERMAN F. Caracciolo A. R. CORLETT, Jr. J. Davol R. D. Elder, Jr. C. A. FOSSETT R. J. Garnaus F. C. Gleason G. M. GODLEV. R. F. Good D. R. Grace II F. M. H.AINES, Jr. J. K. Hanrahan R. K. Hawes, Jr. D. B. Haynie S. C. Hemingway. J. V. Hewitt, Jr. D. E. Hogan, Jr. F. C. Jackson D. S. Johnson E. H. Jones, Jr. G. D. Kellogg, Jr. G. B. King R. E. Lapides W. S. Maelliard A. A. Manning J. L. Matthews C. P. ROCKWOOD, Jr R. H. Seligman F. C. Shaw, Jr. L. M. Shepard, Jr. W. F. Slaymaker R. H. Smith J. W. Starbuck, Jr. W. Stringer W. H. SwENEY, Jr. J. V. Terenzio L. Tyler H. C. Wheeler C. F. Wilson S. E. Zimmerman R. F. Zogbaum, |r. CLASS OF 1940 R. E. August G. Bradford, Jr. B. T. Brooks, Jr. J. G. Burton, Jr. J. N. Carlin T. R. Clark, Jr. M. Dent, Jr. W. L. Dommerich J. F. Doran W. M. Dox, Jr. R. C. Dryer F. W. Hamilton, Jr. G. J. Harding, III R. B. Hopgood A. Knight, Jr. J. D. Laurits C. E. Learv J. J. Martin, Jr. S. M. Meyer, Jr. J. O ' K. Mullen F. J. Murphy, Jr. J. M. Nelson, III A. W. Pe.kham R. A. Powers R. G. QuiNN J. W. Rannenberg J. S. Raymond, Jr. J. M. SCHLESS N. Schwab, Jr. F. L. Seely, Jr. A. T. Smythe, Jr. H. S. Swan, Jr. G. E. Tener J. D. Voorhees, Jr. J. M. Wallman D. R. Welter J. G. Woodruff CLASS OF 1941 R. F. Aranow D. H. L. Aron D. E. As;he C. D. Beebe J. M. Boots R. T. Bower T. L. Bradley G. Breed, III G. E. Brown, Jr. R. I. Bruce K. F. Burgess, Jr. F. T. Cleland G. E. H. Comte R. A. Cooke. Jr. J. F. Cox E. M. Daniels H. C. Dow B. R. Eggeman. Jr. W. H. Farrell W. D. Fisher D. L. Gillett. Ill B. Glazer G. Griswold, Jr. P. F. Kalat J. H. King, Jr. J. A. Lee G. N. Lindsay. Jr. M. R. M. clean L. C. Martin W. S. McCain F. P. Merrels J. A. O ' Connor, Jr. E. Ocumpaugh, IV D. B. Ressler D. W. RlESMEYER W. G. ROTHENBERG W. H. Sanburn. II G. A. Weller M. Wesson H. B Wetherill B. S. Williams H. Y. Wilson W. N. Wolfe N. E. Wood w A. Aycrigg. II w A. Barrows, IV G. G. Browning W D. Campbell V W. Carpenter u. W. Carrington, R. H. Carter 1. Chandler, Jr. H. F. Church, Jr. H. B. De. n, |r. C. H. Dearborn, II (.;. C. E. Dempsey R. E. DeSimone, Jr. T. H. DOOLING, Ir. s. R. DUCKER, |r. D. C. Dugan M J. Edgerton, Jr. R. H. Evans P. W. D. Farley H. Bradley J. H. Brooks G. C. Brown L. D. Burdett N. O, Abelson W. M. Adams W. F. Arnoldy, R. I. BONSAL CLASS OF 1942 E. T. Franzen D. P. LaField D. W. Shand, Jr. E. R. Frisbv J. R. Lee H. V. Sherrill R. M. Gill R. W. Meyer H. F. Smith, Jr. F. A. GoDLEY, Jr. R. J. MUSSER H. B. Smythe G. S. GoODSPEED, Jr. W. H. Page E. P. Snyder, Jr. E. C. Goodwin R. K. Patch F. A. Sprole J. Grand™ J. T. PiGOTT, Jr. J. R. Stunzi J. M. Green E. B. Prindle, Jr. R. M. Talcott G. E. Haines W. H. Quittman B. LeR. Taylor, III A. C. Hall E. C. Reckard, Jr. J. H. D. Titus R. W. Halsey, Jr. H. A. Reed F. B. Trudeau, J. . F. HiRscHORN, Jr. S. H. Reisner R. Wall.ace G. R. Homer W. I. Rodgers, III D. P. H. WAT.SON R. L. Ireland, III S. M. Rumbough, Jr. G. W. Welsh, III J. B. Jessup T. H. Russell, III J. J. White t. P. Kane F. P. Samford, J r. C. C. Williams, Jr J. R. Kelsey W. R. SCHULHOF C. P. Wilson S. C. Kennedy, Jr. J. R. Se. ' CREST R. J. M. Wilson P. E. Lacouture H. Seymour L. S. WoLPE, Jr. SPECIAL STUDENTS CLASS OF 1939 C. G. Collins K. H. White CLASS OF 1940 R. G. Jordan E. J. Kaliski T. T. Kalinowski B. McClintock CLASS OF 1941 W. T. Clark F. E. Ossorio D. B. CoGHLAN T. W. Schwartz CLASS OF 194: M. Br.atkowsky R. S. Davis J. W. Fawcett, III H. S. Forrest D. F. Harris F. W. Keith, Jr. R. P. Lathrop P. R. Levine R. S. McCORMICK E. C. McDonald, Jr. J. Z. Miller, IV E. B. Morris, III L. R. W.all.ace E. H. Sieber G. G. Symes, Jr. J. H. Woodruff, II J. J. Smith, II H. T. Stude, Jr. F. C. Sutro, Jr. B. R. TOLAND fe4 Search Morning scrub-down, contact. Talking it ever. y .rmy serve Officers Training Qorps Battalion Commander: Cadet Major S. R. Resor Battalion Adjutant: Cadet Captain T. T. Pearson AWARDS 1938-39 United States Field Artillery Association Medal —Thomas James Camp, 1940 General David Hmn ilirevs Branch, Coiniecticut Society, Sons of the Ainencati Rei ' olution Medal- Stanley Rogers Resor, 1939 igist Field Artillery Saber— Theodore Talmadge Pearson, 1939 PISTOL TEAM R. M. Lederer, Jr. (Captain) 1939S J. B. Curtis (Mai;ager) 1939S S. CONLAND 1939 J. M. Dill, Jr. (Secretary) 1940S A. I. Parvey 1940 H. C. Thacher, Jr. 1940 R. H. Bingham 1941 Yale 1276 Harvard 11.54 Princeton 1151 f f f tiff I t I f ■ ' ••■ • :-. ■; ' 4 X 4-, i •; ••■ r • ;• I ■ : BATTERY A Battery Commandi r: Cadet Capta Cadet Lieutenant. R. C. Joplinc, J Cadet 1st Sergeant: P. L. Wright Cddet Sergeants: D. Dows, Jr., S. M. Abr.- hams R. M. Blustein F. C. Donovan, W. A. Crawford, II J. D. F. Foskett C. V. H. ' NSEN J. M. Andrew? R. P. Bird E. N. Carpenter J. F. Clark C. T. Corse R. I. Dixon, Jr. C. DouTHiT, Jr. W. M. Gaylord, y W. P. GiTHENS G. A. Goss, Jr. W. F. H.AVEMEYER D. B. HousER, Jr. W. B. Hume Clarke, W. S. Lurie CLASS OF 1939 R. L. Bl.ack, Jf CLASS OF 1940 R. H. Knight C. D. Mathews CLASS OF 1941 E. T. Hart S. Heywood, Jr. W. P. Kenn.. rd CLASS OF 1942 A. E. Hunter I. E. Ingraham R. deL. Johnson J. H. Jones J. G. Keller J. J. Kennedy, Jr. I. E. Kenny W. S. ScoLNicK, J. R. Morford, Jr. T. B. MoRisoN C. B. Price, Jr. B. E. Smith N. D. McClure, Jr. T. E. McMoRROw E. D. Marvin, Jr. F. O. Northrup C. F. O ' Brien, J.i. P. D. Pattinson F. D. Rosi R. J. POUST H. H. Vreeland, III W. H. Woolverton, Jr. M. D. Salisbury R. D. Smith E. A. Tenenbaum E. B. Tobin S. E. Traceski J. M. WOODHULL t f f f t i i 1 f ♦ 1 f ' t r t t 1 t f i-fif f 1. f f 1 f f f .f I i. t f • 1 l-,-l. Np BATTERY ' B Battery Commander: Cadet Captain S, R. Watkins Cadet Lxentenants: S. Conland, W. D. Weber Cadet First Sergeant: J. C. Thompson Cadet Sergeants: J. R. Johnson, T. H R. C. Barrett N. H. Bennett R. B. Adam, Jr. W. R. Benson P. H. CoN ' ERSE M. S. Beinfield G. M. Butcher, Jr. M. D. Cohen W. E. COVKENDALL, Jh T. W. Crawpord W. M. Decker, III J. C. Duncan, III D. S. Camphell T. J. Camp, Jr. R. W. Fuller. Jr. H. G. GRAVniLL Taylor, H. N. Taylor, Jr CLASS OF 1939 H. T, Emerson. Jr. CLASS OF 1940 R. R. M CoN ERSE I- J. M, Dill, Jr. S. K. J. H.ackett CLASS OF 1941 R. Garrett, Jr. J. W. Hechinger R. P. Hall, H. Maza, T. C. Mason G. E. Goring G. Harwooi) E. D. Hicks G. H. Jacobson (Mus. Sch R. M. C. Johnson R. F. Link A. C. Madden R. H. Major. Jr. C. HlNDLEY M. King C. Thacher. Jr. I. Wells A. H. Hopkins, Jr. L. M. Jack E. Knowles J. N. Silverman J. S. Sweeny CLASS OF 1942 R, F. Malone I. M. QuiNN E. J. Webster, Jr. A. Markle, 111 H. B. ScHOOLEY, Jr. R. C. White R. R. Monroe J. D. Sullivan J. B. Wiley ) R. G. Myers R. S. Tolles D. C. Wilhelm R. D. O ' Brien D. T. Tuttle E. A. Willets, Jr. R. J. O ' Neill T. Twigg-Smith T.J.Wills, Jr. (Mus. Scli.i C. G. Paxson J. T. Van Voast W. H. Worrilow. Jr. G. R. Pfeiffer H. B. Waugh J J t $ « « « « f « i .V t S ' ' if 1: t S f i i ■ f . ' Sr fi tii t ' i ' -l ' fif ' i- . l- ■V - - , : . '  -■ t M BATTERY C Batterv Commdnder; Cadet Captain D. Twomblv Cadet Lieutenants: R. L. Lamoreaux, R. M. Lederer, Jr. CaAet First Sergeant: Myron Weil Cadet Sergeants. J. B. Curtis, R. S. Wright. J. M. DeLoreto. H. M. Bell. E. C. Ford, M C. Freedman J. T. Healey W. F. Hellmuth, ]r. J. D. Aronson, Jr. R. H. BiNGH. ' iM J. L. Namm.-kck J. G. Campbell J. B. deBrun R. J. Freedman CLASS OF 1940 C. A. Parcells. Jr. C. M. Parr, Jr. A. I. Parvey B. Stubbs CLASS OF 1941 R. M. Keepe C. O. Page A. M. Thomas, 3d J. M. KiERAN A. S. Parr J. L. Woolner D. C. Martin R. H. Skelton, II D. C. Alexander J. W. Bancker, Jr. K. J. B.-KRN. RD W. M. Boucher C. C. Brook? R. L. Brush S. G. Burger L. H. Butts J. H. C.AHN A. W. Cheney, J. B. Dealy, Jr. T. Deland, Jr. A. Devine J. S. Eldridge CLASS OF 1942 J. P. Fennelly G. C. Ha.as. Jr. P. C. H.ARPER, Jr. F. H. Harrison H. R. HOBBS F. W. HOENIGMAN J. F. KlERAN, Jr. W. E. Leaman, Jr. H. S. Marsh A. R. Mekelburg J. P. Miller J. L. Mitchell A. Murray. 3d P. A. Plotkin W. P. POWNINC C. N. Robertson, III A. S. ' LTZSTEIN W. Sherman T. C. Warner, Jr. D, 1. Williams. II mm ' ' SB, 4 f m ' mm f n 1 i fc|: ' v-| ■ ' ' ♦ m0-i mtm rf -. ,-. . vg. W3SM Tt ■ V ' Iff m ' ' '   ' % ■ ff:- •f- t- ?- . r • • • • . , . ' ' ■ ■ ' S . ' • 1 ' ' 1 FVja fW w €m iltvl LiS m I Bac row: Wright, Johnson, Curtis. Second row: Dows, Conland, Eckhardt, Jopling. McKellar. Front row: W. Weber, Watkins, Pearson, Resor, Twotnbly. Qannon and Qastle Military Honor Society OFFICERS Theodore Talmadge Pearson Sam Roy Watkins Fres dent Secretary-Treasurer Stephen Conland John B. Curtis David Dows, Jr. Malcolm M. Eckhardt James R. Johnson MEMBERS Raymond C. Jopling, Jr. William D. Loucks, Jr. Douglas H. McKellar Theodore T. Pearson Stanley R. Resor Doane Twombly Sam R. Watkins William D. Weber Richard S. Wright I tinos Society Wallace Rodgers Lee, Jr. John Stanton Gifford William Spearing Evans Arvin Benjamin Shaw, III President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Robert Elmer Anderson Richard James Barr, Jr. William Adolphus Briggs Th.addeus Greaves Crapster, Jr. Henry Darbee Ethan Allen Dennison, Jr. Richard Sears Gall.agher Thomas Justin Imbs George Sealy Livermore Porter Ale.xander McCray Robert Boyd Picking Carl Homer Riesen Frank Coolidge Shattuck Sydney Ma.xwell Shelov Robert Jackson Smith Cope Buffum W.albridge M ' ' an IS a social beast, and the sons of Elihu are men. So when there is the provocation ot like interests, they gather together m fellowship. As there is a way where there is a will, there is a club where there is an interest. Be the interest in the sail, the song, or the wine, or merely the result ot previous condition of servitude, it leads to the formation ot clubs. CLUBS m I The Tale Qonnthian Tacht Qluh Commodore Hui;h Merritt Matheson, Jr Vice ' Commodore Franklin Mifflin Haines, Jr. Fleet Captain John Marbury Nelson, III Rear-Commodore Robert Duncan Elder, Jr. Secretary-Treasurer Henry Herbert Jessup, Jr. C. W. BULKLEV E. L. DOHENY, III R. D. Elder, Jr. E. A. Ballard, II D. CcRBET, Jr. M. Dent, Jr. R. H. Deming, Jr. W. L. Dcmmerich W. W. Field G. Breed, III K. Brewster, Jr. J. M. Euti.er, Jr R. S. Clark R. M. Gill J. B. Jessup MEMBERS CLASS OF 1939 S. H. FuLKERsoN R. W. Mairs F. M. Ha ines, Jr. H. M. Matheson, CLASS OF 1940 C. C. Glover, III O. L. Guernsey, Jr. W. H. Harrison, III W. S. Howard, II H. H. Jessup, Jr. W. J. LippiNCOTT, Jr. J. Z. Miller, IV J. M. Nelson, III P. C. Nicholson, Jr. J. S. Raymond, Jr. W. Rockefeller T. G. Rutledge CLASS OF 1941 G. Griswold, Jr. J. O. Morris J. Markell, Jr. E. K. Sanders R. H. Matheson H. V. Smith CLASS OF 1942 R. S. McCoRMICK S. M. RUMBOUGH, Jr. J. p. McGowan W. W. Shelden R. H. Seligman R. B. Talbot G. E. Tener W. S. Thompson, Jr. H. F. Vaughan, Jr. G. R. Wiener A. Wilson, III R. C. Stickney J. H. Ware, Jr. J. H. Woodruff B. L. Taylor, III ■144 — III WHi ii ri I Biicl( row: Atterbury, Muir, Tyler, Garvan. front row: Borsodi, Johnson. 15he Qup VKtm William Wallace Atterbury, Jk. Frederic Austin Borsodi Anthony Nicholas Brady Garvan Collister Johnson Malcolm Muir, Jr. Linscott Tyler 15he VYtohiccms Big Chief John Hold the Enemy Boies I. Bra ' e Bandy-it-up Banta Brave Sweet Sioux Clucas Brave Reach for a Squaw Curry Brave Gitchie Goomie Garrett Bra e Hoister-Higher Hoyt Squaw Squatendtekkit Swope Brave Can Opener Vance Brave ' Peace-and-Plenty-of-it Verity Brave Swap um Pop Walker Brave Totem-Long-Pole Wickwire Papoose Wheedle the Needle Williams Brave Goose in Tepee Woolley Biici; rou-. Hoyt. Garrett. Walker. Verity. Second row Swope. Wilson, Banta. Curry. Boies. WooUey, Vance. Fror.t row. Wickwire. Biicl{ row: Heller McKellar. Ivor C Johnson. Kid Knapp, Mason Dixon. Strangle Holderness, Popocatapith Blanchard. Bugeye Thompson, Rosa Phelps, Shenan Higgins. Front row: Hairy Cherry, Wotta Bagg, Pitch- pipe Scribner. T5he Whijfenpoofs (T he Ancient and Honorable Order of Whitfenpoof ' s this year commemorated the thirtieth anniver- sary of their chequered and fruitful existence. Perhaps it was the unconscious recognition that such an event should be properly observed that led the 1939 membership to celebrate for the full college annum. Suffice it to say that at the drop of a cork they mobilized and set to the delightful pastime of singing wherever the group happened to be at the moment. The Whiffs have undoubtedly satisfied their somewhat bizarre interest in the present system of feminine education, having made sundry enlightening field trips to many of the best known fonts of learning such as Ethel Walker ' s, Sarah Lawrence, and Smith. Their entire efforts have not been limited to this survey, however, for they have rubbed elbows with the urchins at the New Haven Orphanage as well as with ermines of the inty New York set at the Rainbow Room. To be men- tioned also are the numerous pleasant memories connected with singing at the fraternity dances and the Prom. The high point of the year was reached on the evening of February third when a large number of the Whiffenpoof graduates joined with the ' 39 members to mark officially the organization ' s thir- tieth birthday. All musty pipes were mended in short order by the traditional gargle (two parts Mory ' s ale, one part Green Cup) and the old harmonies were rendered with finesse. At this time Charles Seymour 08 and Theodore Babbitt ' 18 were elected to honorary membership. So from the tables down at Mory ' s ano ther set of black sheep go astray — baa ! baa ! baa ! Charles U. Banta Thaddeus R. Beal David Boies R. Gardner Botsford William P. Bundy Gilbert W. Humphrey Stephen T. Kelsey, Jr. Malcolm Muir, Jr. Stanley R. Resor Bac row: Beal. Humphrey, Banta. Bundy, Boies. Resor. Fnmt row: Professor Crawford. Botsford, Professor Phelps, Kelsey, Muir. Morys Association OFFICERS FOR 1939 John L. Gilson, 1899 Charles M. Bakewell, 1905H BURNSIDE WiNSLOW, 19()4 Carlos F. Stoddard, Jr., 1926 To serve until 1940 T. Babbitt, 1918 B. D. Henning, 1932 G. F. Thompson, 1907S B. WiNSLOw, 1904 E. S. Bronson, 1900 J. F. Baker, 1909. Cliairman BOARD OF GOVERNORS To iem until 15141 I. F. Baker, 1909 I D. Dana. 1911 F. D. Grave. 191 IS D. H. Hemingway, 1914 HONORARY MEMBERS T. A. D. Jones, 1938S ADMISSIONS COMMITTEE HOUSE COMMITTEE F. D. Grave, 191 IS, Chairman To serve until 1942 Thomas W. Farnam, 1899 William Hamilton, 1925 R. Selden Rose, 1909 Laurence G. Liglie, 1916 O. M. Platt, 1899 J. D. Dana, 1911 t sheville School Qlub Reuben A. Holden, IV Secretary Douglass M. Allen, Jr. CLASS OF 1939 Thomas L. Cheney, Tr. Leete p. Doty John T. Blossom, Jr. Herbert P. Galliher, Jr. Reuben A. Holden, IV CLASS OF 1940 Mortimer R. Proctor, Jr. Fred L. Seely, Jr. L Manville Shields Lewis C. Thomson James R. T(5DD Charles S. Allyn, Jr. Wilbert E. McClellan, Jr. CLASS OF 1941 Malcolm R. Maclean David R. Millard, Jr. James G. Taliaferro W.- LTER A. B.ARROWS, Polk Laffoon, III James M. Nelson, III CLASS OF 1942 IV Livingston Platt, Jr. Charles E. Pynchon, Jr. W. Stew. irt Retherford James J. Smith, II Robert D. Taylor Richard R. Waite Hiram S. Cody, Jr. GRADUATE SCHOOLS Philip C. Rand Logan T. Robertson . Canterbury School Qluh Charles P. Carroll, Jr. Edward F. Creekmore, Jr. CLASS OF 1939 Clarence J. DAlton Marvin J. Harrington George C. Sweeney CLASS OF 1941 John A. O ' Connor, Jr. James F. Corroon, Jr. CLASS OF 1942 Robert B. Sefton Robert D. Smith William Lowell Dougherty GRADUATE SCHOOLS R. S.argent Shriver, Jr. H. ' Krlan J. Swift T5he Qheshire Academy Qluh Charles F. Carlton James C. Danly Stuart C. Ferris CLASS OF 1Q3Q George H. Haley, III William E. John, Jr. Robert E. Lapides Ira Marder Joseph V. Terenzio Howard W. Baldwin Spencer M. Berger Allan j. Crane, Jr. CLASS OF ig40 John T. Haney Richard J. Levinsohn John J. H. Martin, Jr. Philip J. O ' Brien, Jr. Cyrus R. Taylor Haven Waters John P. Wheeler John H. Adams, Jr. Henry B. Armstrong, III Irving H. Berkowitz William G. Boynton CLASS OF 1941 William J. Garvey Nixon Lee, Jr. Grant H. Messinger Robert L. Metzger Gerald H. Miller Stanley A. Sweet, Jr. Alan B. Tulipan WiLLI.AM C. ZiLLY Gaston R. de Carrera RoswELL G. Ham, Jr. John H. Heller CLASS OF 1942 John A. Ingersoll, Jr. Richard N. Nelson Shepard F. Palitz Norman K. Shachnow John J. White Grown School Qluh Louis S. Auchinclcss William R. Bailey William P. Bundy John L. Fearey Marshall Green Reginald L. Auchincloss, Jr. WoLCOTT N. Baker Bowen Blair William R. Cross, Jr. Tyson Dines, Jr. Charles H. C. Gerard John Ch. ' ndler, Jr. Kent Chandler, Jr. Edwin Corning Malcolm J. Edgerton, Jr. Louis P. Ewald, III Donald P. Farquhar CLASS OF 193Q Richard C. Greenleaf James H. Higgins, II Frederic C. Hirons, Jr. William A. G. Minot CLASS OF 1940 McGeorge Bundy John F. Eagle, Jr. James F. McClelland, Jr. CLASS OF 1941 Frank H. Goodyear, III Shepard Krech, Jr. Howard E. Rogers CLASS OF 1942 William E. S. James Merrill C. Krech Robert S. Lewis George deF. Lord, Jr. George K. McClelland Roger S. McCormick Beniamin T. Pierce Stanley R. Resor Edmund P. Rogers, Jr. John G. Webb Brooks McCormick Walter S. Sulliv. ' in, Jr. Arnold N. Welles Peter O. A. Solbert Boylston a. Tompkins, Jr. Jeremiah Milbank, Jr. M. ' soN D. Salisbury William W. Shelden Peter F. Tripp Joseph Walker David P. H. Watson Hill School Qluh I Frederick A. Borsodi Frank A. Close Benjamin P. Douglass John A. Farley Robertson F. Alford Rowland S. Bevans George P. Bissell, Jr. John A. Bleak ley Arthur A. Burrows, Jr. CLASS OF 1939 Hugh S. Gamble, Jr. John W. Good John K. Hanrah.an CLASS OF 1Q4() John L. Butler, Jr. Raymond M. Dean William N. Driscoll J.AMES F. Johnson, III Lawrence W. Krieger Rolfe Kinosley, Jr. William J. McClure Henry G. Molina, Jr. Robert B. Silleck Keith Merrill, Jr. Gordon S. Mustin George P. Pilling, IV George S. Smith George S. Watson Frederic Achelis Willi.am N. B.annard, III Lawrence D. Br.agg, Jr. Harold R. Brown, Jr. Gerard L. Buhrman, Jr. Guilford G. H. Congdon Edgerton F. Hyde CLASS OF 1941 Henry P. Isham, Jr. William T. Ketcham, Jr. William J. Knapp, Jr. George W. Lamberson, Jr. David D. Longmaid Malcolm R. Maclean Alvan Markle, III Richard H. Peters James B. Phillips Edw. ' rd L. Ryerson, III John V. Scott, Jr. Ch.arles F. Sp.alding, II Laurence G. Tighe, Jr. Lew Wallace, III Douglas A. Warner, Jr. Herbert M. Bevans Norman P. Clement, Jr. Alan F. Daily Freeman T. Eagleson, Jr. Frank W. Hoenigman CLASS OF 1942 Thomas P. Kane Frederick W. Keith, Jr. Eugene B. Krieger Benjamin W. Lamson, Jr. Bayard M. Mallery Francis O. Northrup Hugh V. Sherrill V. ' Vughan Spalding, Jr. Gilbert L. Watson, II Hotch iss School Qluh W. W. Atterbury C. U. Banta T. R. Beal, Jr. G. d ' A. Belin W. L. BOSWORTH R. G. BOTSFORD J. T. Bryan, Jr. S. Y. Carnes G. H. Chittenden J. F. CULLEN R. D. Elder, Jr. H. T. Emerson, Jr. E. P. Garrett A. N. B. Garvan G. M. GODLEY, II F. M. Haines, Jr. A. A. Halle, Jr. W. A. Hamilton CLASS OF 103Q S. C. Hemingway, Jr. G. P. Hoover I. Howbert, II D. R. Hubbard G. W. Humphrey C. Johnson A. R. Kaynor G. D. Kellogg, Jr. S. T. Kelsey, Jr. W. D. LoucKS, Jr. D. B. LoVEJOY D. McBride, Jr. D. H. McKellar A. O. Miller, Jr. E. K. Paavola C. J. Peck, Jr. J. H. Perry, Jr. S. H. M. Plum T. S. QuiNN, Jr. J. S. Reed K. M. SCHIFFER H. B. Scott, Jr. W. W. SCRANTON J. E. Spalding N. I. Steers, Jr. W. H. SwENEY, Jr. F. C. Tanner, Jr. H. J. Weisman, Jr. A. W. Wells H. T. Whitin, II C. A. WiESE, Jr. L. T. Williams, Jr. C. F. Wilson C. Wright, III R. S. Wright p. B. Badger, Jr. R. J. Bakewell H. H. Bassett J. L. Behr L. Boardman J. Butler, Jr. R. G. Collins, Jr. R. R. M. Converse E. M. Cullman R. H. Deming, Jr. W. L. DOMMERICH C. DuBosQUE, Jr. W. W. Field H. Ford, II E. S. Furniss, Jr. N. S. GiMBEL H. S. GOODFELLOW CLASS OF ig40 D. Griswold C. B. Haff, Jr. C. H. HuLbURD, II H. H. Jessui ' , Jr. J. T. Lanman R. T. Larkin W. J. Lifi ' iNcoTT, Jr. H. H. Livingston, Jr. W. C. McMillan J. S. MacSporran R. H. Matthiesson, Jr. J. L. Nammack J. C. Nemiah P. K. Ogden R. D. Orr A. D. Orrick A. B. Orthwein A. W. Peckh m E. F. Pollock J. L. Pollock P. B. Pool H. L. QuiNN W. R. Reynold?, Jr. H. S. Robinson, Jr. L. M. Starr, II H. C. Strong, Jr. F. H. Taylor, Jr. G. E. Tener W. S. Thomi ' son, Jr. H. S. Tierney, Jr. F. G. Wacker, Jr. L. R. Wallace G. R. Wiener A. Wilson, III T. W. Arnold, Ir. W. W. Blackburn, II J. M. D. Brion J. M. Butler, Jr. J. W. Clark P. H. Converse E. S. Cooke L. B. Cullman E. R. Detchon, Ir. A. B. Dick, III P. R. Freeman R. B. Gardner, Jr. L. S. G. RLAND, Jr. CLASS OF 1Q41 D. L. Gillett, III H. G. Graybill J. N. Greene, Jr. G. Griswold, Jr. R. L. Hatch N. G. Hickman W. P. Jeffery, Jr. E. R. Kemp W. S. Lambie, Jr. C. T. Larus R. F. LoREE, Jr. A. F. LovEjOY J. G. K. McClure, Jr. G. N. McLenn.an G. H. Me.ad, Jr. C. W. Morton T. Parsons, III P. F. W. Peck, Jr. M. R. Pr.ass, Jr. W. A. Robinson A. J. Rosenthal, Jr. W. M. SCHUTTE G. A. Weller B. S. Williams H. R. Wilson, III D. G. C. Bridgman J. S. Broeksmit, Jr. H. M. Brush, Jr. R. L. Brush M. Butler, II D. Campbell, Jr. H. A. Carlton V. W. Carpenter G. W. Carrington, Jr. S. S. Connor W. L. CONYNGHAM, Jr. J. S. Cooke C. T. Corse E. M. CUMMINGS T. Deland, Jr. E. deZaldo, Jr. J. C. W. Dix CLAS3 OF 1942 J. C. Duncan, III W. Flinn, II W. M. Ford C. F. Freeman, Jr. F. A. GoDLEY, Jr. G. A. Goss, Jr. H. S. M. Graymount H. T. Greene G. E. Haines A. C. Hall R. W. Halsey, Jr. D. F. Harris D. B. HousER, Jr. J. B. Jessup R. deL. Johnson W. R. Johnson J. C. Kaynor J. W. KisER, Ir. E. Lockwood, Jr. N. D. McClure, Jr. C. R. McLean R. W. Meyer E. V. NUNES H. R. Prudden J. M. QuiNN H. F. Smith, Jr. T. C. Smith F. A. Sprole R. W. Stinchfield R. W. T.AYLOR E. R. TiTCOMB A. K. W.- TSON G. W. Welsh, III C. P. Wilson J. M. Woodhull Horace VYtann School Qluh John H. Dirks John B. Reubens Floyd Shumway, Jr. CLASS OF 1939 CLASS OF 1040 John H. Frank F. Bewley Warrick Samuel W. Weiss DoRSEY Whitestone, Jr. George M. Avakian CLASS OF 1941 William M. Orcutt James L. Woolner Richard H. Aime Donald A. Kubie CLASS OF 1942 Robert P. Marcus Richard J. Turner Kingswood School Qluh Atwood Collins, II Welles Eddy CLASS OF 1939 James Howard David Hunter Edwin Sage Robert Stolz CLASS OF 1940 Benedict Flynn WiNTHROP HaVILAND CLASS OF 1941 William McClellan Henry Hastings CLASS OF 1942 Robert House Price Merrels William Pope I La e Forest yicademy Qluh Walter L. Cherry, Jr. CLASS OF 1939 Marvin J. Colangelo George M. Sus CLASS OF 1940 Frederick G. Wacker, Jr. William T. Brown CLASS OF 1941 James W. Daily Dixon P. Downey James F. Teevan CLASS OF 1942 John S. Broeksmit, Jr. GRADUATE SCHOOL Robert B. Woolsey Lawrenceville School Qluh R. O. Berger, Jr. R. H. BOWERMAN C. A. BURKEY G. W. Campbell E. H. Ethridge, Jr. CLASS OF 1939 C. W. Mackey J. Pierrei ' ont F. T. Powers, Jr. H. Scott, Jr. C. R. Shipley, Jr. J. W. Starbuck, Jr. R. S. Starr C. H. Watts F. J. Wetzel W. J. Woods, Jr. S. M. Barnet, Jr. R. M. BoicE J. G. Burton, Jr. J. A. Dillon, Jr. CLASS OF 1Q40 D. M. Ehrman D. Gregg H. T. Kramer L. S. Parsons O. Richards W. F. Schell J. T. Tubes W. Carnill, II J. R. Colpitts |. V. dePl.- nque C. M. Dow, III J. H. Hartman, Jr. T. B. Johnson CLASS OF 1941 R. E. Jones W. S. Miller P. D. Phillips, Jr. J. N. Rawleigh, Jr. H. A. Richards, Jr. P. H. Steckler, Jr. W. D. Wiggins, Jr. S. S. Wilson T. G. Wilson W. N. Wolfe A. W. Wrieden, Jr. G. K. Benson G. Burtcn J. W. Fawcett. Ill S. F. Gripping. Ir. CLASS OF 1942 W. E. Leaman, Jr. C. G. P.AXSON J. H. C. Peake E. B. Prindle, Jr. H. B. Schooley, Jr. O. H. Simonds, Jr. R. B. SWENSON W. H. WoRRiLOw, Jr. I Mercershurg School Qluh David J. Benjamin John G. deBruycker Daniel M. Endweiss William G. Harris CLASS OF 1939 Julius J. Herz, Jr. James R. Johnson Fred J. Kellam, Jr. William H. Mackey William Moonan Davis B. Oat John D. Smallridce William D. Weber John B. Bruekel Philip Frankenburcer CLASS OF 1940 David M. Gerber Raymond F. Marcus Walter Neustadt, Jr. Edward L. Newberger Philip B. Statton Edw. rd H. Beavers, Jr. William B. DeLuca CLASS OF 1941 Manfred J. Flock Philip L. Jefferson Robert C. Lewin Haynes W. Sheppard Robert F. Weis James J. Clifford, Jr. Glen M. Comstock, Jr. John H. Conard John Grandin John McK. Green CLASS OF 1942 Albert J. Ingley Howard R. Johnson Richard C. Kelly Donald M. Munding Robert J. Musser Douglas MacK. Smith Robert A. Statton Donald L. Sweetman Alfred J. Washburn omfret School Qluh LeBaron C. Anthony John P. Boswell CLASS OF igjQ Richard K. Hawes, Jr. BoGART F. Thompson HoLBROOK Bradley Walter R. Herrick, Jr. Benj. ' min HiNM. ' KN CLASS OF 1940 Stephen P. Moorhead Raymond E. Ostby, Jr. Hugh Rowland George W. Cheney, Jr. Hays H. Clemens, Jr. H. ' rold T. Clement, Jr Robert C. Dye CLASS OF 1Q41 Seth B. French, Jr. Eric R. Hansen Malcolm D. Raworth, Jr. Howard B. Dean, Jr. Norman C. Eddy Edwin A. Hansen CLASS OF 1942 Charles E. Huntington William C. Schwab RicH.ARD K. Warren I Portsmouth Priory School Qluh Warner G. Cosgrove, Jr. CLASS OF 1Q3Q Barnet Phillips, III Edward F. Callan, Jr. CLASS OF 1940 William G. Parrott, Jr. Frederic E. Ossorio CLASS OF 1941 Joseph B. Uniacke, Jr. Raymond D. O ' Brien CLASS OF 1942 Edmund B. Tobin LAW SCHOOL Charles J. Tobin, Jr., 1937 1 Saint Georges School Qluh Richard C. Berens Cutler G. Collins George S. Dickinson, Jr. Edmund W. Nash, Jr. John A. Dillon, Jr. George L. Forman Richard B. Hunt Robert W. Johnson, Jr. Samuel W. Fairchild Francis B. Hamlin, Jr. John Y. Huber, III CLASS OF 1Q39 Theodore T. P.arsons Kearsley H. Roberts Thomas W. Russell, Jr. CLASS OF 1940 Julian M. Gerard, Jr. CLASS OF 1Q41 David C. Martin CLASS OF 1942 Charles A. Kilvert, Jr. Edward H. Lockwood Clarke Simonds Sherwoode a. Taffinder, Jr. Rufus F. Zogbaum, Jr. William H. Harrison, III Kinsley Twining John F. Milliken Richard H. Semple, Jr. i Saint Louis Qountry ay School Qluh Edward G. Hotchkiss, Jr. Elihu McG. Hyndman Richard J. Falk Edward G. Hotchkiss, Jr. David P. Ferriss Robert E. Grote, Jr. Arthur K. Howell, Jr. Richard W. Bland Frederick T. Goldberg CLASS OF 1939 Elihu McG. Hyndman CLASS OF 1940 Peter McN. Lindsay Adolph B. Orthwein CLASS OF 1941 David W. Riesmeyer Ale.xander W. Shapleigh, Jr. President Secretary Charles T. Rayhill Lawrence K. Roos Thomas G. Rutledge McLeod Stephens Alfred L. Shapleigh, II John K. Spring CLASS OF 1942 Warren McK. Shapleigh i Saint VYCarl(s School Qluh A. C. Clark T. Goodyear CLASS OF IQJQ F. Lll ' I ' ITT H. F. Manice R. L. Morris, Jr. W. W. Phelps Jr. P. T. Gillespie C. C. Glover, III L. R. Harper CLASS OF 1940 L. M. King, Jr. E. T. Littell, Jr. L RlCH.-VRDS, |i . H. C. Thacher, Ji L. Wheeler, Jr. H. R. Wilson, Jr. J. G. Carhart H. Chatfield-Taylor F. H. Ellis, Jr. E. T. Hall CLASS OF 1941 H. Kaye W. A. King W. B. Lewis LaR. R. Lutkins D. C. MiLLETT I. N. Perry, Jr. J. Reid H. C. Schwab R. p. B.aldwin J. M. Bowers R. G. Congdon T. A. Ennis CLASS OF 1942 S. E. Nash P, R. Neuhaus S. Phelps S. M. RuMBOuGH. Jr. B. D. Salmon C. W. B. Townsend, Jr. H. P. Wheeler %svX Saint aul A cademy Qlub Duncan H, Baird Samuel G. Brown Bayliss Griggs CLASS OF 1939 Robert O. Hannaford Donald B. Haynie Robert W. Mairs Warren Stringer William H. Sweney, Jr. Robert S. Clark CLASS OF 1940 Benjamin C. Thompson Carl B. Drake, Jr. John L. Hannaford Robert A. Kend. ' ll CLASS OF 1941 William H. Lightner, II CLASS OF 1942 John C. Murphy Howard J. Seesel, Jr. William G. White i ' University School Qluh G. B. Gascoigne, Jr. I. W. HUGGETT D. S. Humphrey, III CLASS OF 1939 F. S. McCoNNELL, Jr. T. R. P. RKER E. W. Rose, Jr. J. K. ROSENDALE G. P. Sawyer W. L. Selden L. B. Brody CLASS OF 1940 W. B. CONDIT C. W. BiLLINGSLEY J. T. Clark W. T. Clark G. E. H. COMTE CLASS OF 1941 J. Dickenson, IV G. H. Feil P. G. FuLSTOW B. F. Hopkins, Jr. E. H. Krueger A. C. Saunders, III J. R. Sloss W. M. Charm. ' Kn, Jr. D. E. Dangler, II A. C. Madden CLASS OF 1942 W. E. Newcomb, Jr. D. E. Pierce T. B. Ross C. F. Seelbach, Jr. A. B. Spurney, Jr. C. H. Toomey W. C. Witt ' Tme ot them there are, but they are not old not by any means. Perhaps their primary purpose is that ot housing, and maybe their physical appearance is simply that ot a dormitory, but they call them colleges. And colleges they are. They have their students and their faculty; they have their libraries, and they have their outside activities. Today they are the center of Hte at Yale. Tf COLLEGES BERKELEY COLLEGE er eley Qollege Samuel Burdett Hemingway, Master Professor of English HONORARY FELLOWS President Charles Seymour President Emeritus James Rowland Angell Edward Stephen Harkness () Political John Maudgridge Snowden Allison Ralph W. Townsend Professor of History Charlton Dows Cooksey Assistant Professor of Physics Sumner McKnight Crosby Instructor m the History of Art Clive Day Seyniour H. Knox Professor Economy, Emeritus Albert Gabriel Feuillerat Sterling Professor of French Sherman Kent Assistant Professor of History Pearson Hunt Instructor in Applied Economics Thomas C. Mendenhall, II Instructor in Historv Marcel Aubert Professor of the History of Art: Menihre de rinstitut des Charles: and Curator of Medieval Sculpture m the Louvre F. Lammot Belin PIl.B. IQOI Right Reverend Chauncey Bunce Brewster B.A. 1868, D.D. i8gS, Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese oj Connecticut Russel Henry Chittenden Director of the Sheffield Scientific School, Professor of Physiological Chemistry, Eyneritus Henri Focillon Professor of the History of Art: Professor in the College de France Frederick Scheetz Jones Dean of Tale College, Emeritus Paul Mellon B.A. 1929 Charles Nagel, Jr. B.A. 1923, M.F.A. 1928 FELLOWS Russel G. Pruden Associate Curator of the Edward M. House Collection Richard L. Purdy Assistant Professor of English Carl Frederick Schreiber Leai ' enu ' orth Professor of German Language and Literature and Curator of the William A. Spec}{ Collection of Goetheana Jerome Sperling Instructor in Classics James Kelsey Whittemore Associate Professor of Mathematics Ale.xander McLaren Witherspoon Associate Professor of English Walter Jacob Wohlenberg Sterling Professor of Mechanical Engineering ASSOCIATE FELLOWS George Wharton Pepper LL.D. 1914 Duncan Phillips B.A. 1908 Dr. Orville Forrest Rogers Director of the Department of University Health George Dudley Seymour Honorary M.A. 1913 John Tresidder Sheppard Proi ' ost of Kings College, Cambridge, England D. ' Wid St. nley Smith Dean of the School of Music, Battell Professor of the Theory of Music Harold Stanley B.A. 1908 Judge Thomas Walter Swan Fellow of the Tale Corporation George Edward Woodbine George Burton Adams Professor of History i. er eley Qollcgc Qince her birth five short years ago, Berkeley ' s development has precociously outstripped her years, and she now finds herself willy-niUy in a position of dis- tinction among her sister colleges. The wise and kindly leadership of her first Master, Charles Seymour, now President of the University helped develop some of the scholarly and humanitarian traits with which her patron, George Berkeley, Bishop of Cloyne, endowed her. More than his gift of nearly a thousand volumes to the struggling college or the transference of his estate to Yale, the renowned eighteenth- century philosopher left a herit- age of intellectual curiosity and pursuit that is now the College ' s most cherished tradition. Under Mr. Hemingway the old customs and practices have been main- tained while the development continues. New organisations come into being gradually as the need for them arises, and they come from the undergraduates. There is no aegis of efficient organization hanging heavy over the students ' heads. Once activi- ties are started they receive every help and encouragement from the Master and Fellows, but they are never imposed from above. It IS impossible to define either Berkeley ' s spirit or her qualities. She IS by turns brilliant and scholarly enough to produce a plethora of Phi Beta Kappa men; but at the same time she wins the Ail-Around Athletic Cup, (true, only by the scantest of scant margins) and produces four captains of major sports in one year. The much-maligned extra- curricular interests are well represented, and the under- graduate phones tinkle in droves. Even so, the happy group who live below her mitre have time for a game of Nigger-Baby on a warm spring evening, punctuated by the cries of those unhappy individuals lined up against the wall to meet their winged fate. There are glasses of foaming brew and a nibble of cheese in Mr. Allison ' s rooms while sprawling on the floor and listening to his incisive comments on the French temperament or the last Berkeley hockey game. It takes all kinds to make a college; it is a vertical cross- section of University life and activity. If it is athletic promi- nence you seek, by all means play on the championship Berkeley football, hockey, squash, or bowl- ing teams. Yes, even bowling. If you would devote yourself to English, History, and the hu- manities, you could find no more inspiring Fellows than Professor Hemingway, the Master and Chairman of the English Depart- ment, or Professor Allison, Chair- man of the History Department, or any of the other distinguished scholars and cultured gentlemen who lend sound counsel on aca- demic matters, and incidentally make fine friends. Professor Witherspoon, well-known au- thority on Milton and the Bible, Professor Sherman Kent of the History Department, or Professor Richard Purdy, specializing in the field of Nineteenth-Century Poet s, are indicative of a few of the cultural doors open to those who would but seek. Those inclined to sampling the social atmosphere of Berkeley make up the numbers who drop in at the I teas at the Master ' s House, charmingly presided over by Mrs. Hemingway. Such stimulat- ing personalities as Mr. George Wharton Pepper, Mr. John Tressidder Sheppard, Provost of King ' s College, Cambridge, and many others make frequent visits to Berkeley and are often on hand at such gatherings to meet and chat with interested under- graduates. Then too there are those inimitable dinners of Mrs. Hemingway ' s, as often as not enlivened by a house full of girls at a football or prom weekend, times when scholarship is right- fully considered of secondary importance. Berkeley ' s sons, however, are fully as proud of her traditions as of her winning teams, her scholastic honors, and the hospi ' tality and friendship of her Master and Fellows. The annual celebration of Bishop Berkeley ' s birthday on March 12th is the best-established and most im- pressive tradition of the College and is observed by ex-Berkeleyites the world over. The far-flung borders of the British Empire, China, and more accessible Ox- ford have taken notice of the Bishop ' s anniversary, as well as the College ' s Gothic Hall where assemble in full conclave the Master, Fellows, and under- graduates. Berkeley men are apt, however, to look forward with most anticipation to the biennial D ' Oyly Carte party, when the College fetes the company re- nowned for their Gilbert and Sullivan productions, despite the inroads of Bill Robinson, at an after-theatre dinner. The oc- casion is the gayest of the year, as the Whiffenpoofs and the members of the D ' Oyly Carte vie for singing laurels while the attending college company quaffs its beer and busies itself with a kingly repast, to make up for which they have suffered the culinary torments of the damned for untold weeks before. Still another tradition which those more inclined to the informal delights of wining and dining among a group of congenial friends enjoy is the Nephews of Vanessa. Members of this club meet on odd Friday evenings in the sixteenth-century Fellow ' s Common Room to entertain and be enter- tained by interesting men in the world of politics, business, or the professions. Recent speakers who have added more to the evening perhaps than even the Club ' s famous cocktails, numbered Dr. Fordyce B. St. John, Sir William Wiseman and Mr. Lucius Beebe of brass and steel rail fame. The Master ' s Beer and Hymns parties at Christmas and Thanksgiving and the several other beer parties during the year also help temper Berkeley ' s cultural, scholastic, and athletic renown and prove to outsiders that we are bonvivants for a ' that. Unified in spirit, despite any physical division, Berkeley attempts to strike a mean between intra and extra-college activities, encouraging groups and clubs within the College, but not at the cost of deprecating outside organizations. Like Woman, a College may be all things to all men, and one of the unquestioned values of the College plan is its providing opportunities for men of varied interests to find something that appeals to them m the life of the unit that is becoming the center of modern-day Yale. Far from offering a disordered, eclectic design for living to the under- graduate, Berkeley — its Master and its Fellows — helps him to select from many fields that intel- lectual or social pursuit which interests him most. • Arthur Lachlan Reed STUDENT MEMBERS CLASS OF 1939 L. G. Bacg E. L. Baldwin D. C. Banning T. R. Beal G. d ' A. Belin, Jr. D. J. Benjamin M. C. Betts D. Boies W. P. BORTEN J. P. Bos WELL R. H. BOWERMAN W. W. Brill W. N. Burdick, Jr. B. A. Burrows W. R. Gates S. S. Chase E. T. Collins, Jr. W. G. CosGROvE, Jr. D. C. Crane E. F. Creekmore, Jr. G. E. DiMocK, Jr. E. Evans R. J. Falic S. C. Ferris C. W. FiNDLAV, Jr. M. C. Freedman S. H. FULKERSON J. B. Gaynor B. Griggs J. X. He.jvley, Jr. W. F. Hendricks, Jr. D. E. Hogan, Jr. I. P. HOLIHAN G. P. Hoover J. I. Howell G. W. Humphrey W. E, John, Jr. M. A. JUBITZ C. H. Kellog S. T. Kelsey, Jr. R. L. Kemler D. R. Kerr R. L. Lamoreau.x A. R. Latson, III I. C. Loram W. H. M. CKEY R. W. Mairs H. M. Matheson, Jr. L. F. Menocal R. G. NiMs J. H. Norton D. NOVARR G. Olcott A. C. Peasco C. A. PiLLSBURY W. V. Platt W. A. Powers C. E. Prokesch A. L. Reed T. W. Russell, Jr. W. W. Scranton L. M. Shepard, Jr. D. Silver H. R. H. Smith J. B. Spitzer R. K. Stolz G. M. Sus F. F. Taylor H. N. Taylor, Jr. F. W. TOOHEY C. R. Vance F. B. Warrick M. Weil P. M. Wick A. WiDDICOMBE F. W. Wilhelmi, Jr. C. J. Wilson J. J. Zeisler CLASS OF 1940 H. B. Addoms H. S. Angell G. L. Atkin P. B. Badger, Jr. P. F. Beetz S. M. Berger J. T. Blossom, Jr. A. M. Borden J. H. Brooks S. G. Brown A. A. Burrows, Jr. J. F. Carney M. Chapin B. E. Cole, Jr. R. R. M. Converse J. C. COOLIDGE S. M. Covin J. A. Duncan I. G. ElSENBERG ' l. A, M. Faux W. W. Field H. L. Finch, Jr. R. J. FlTZWILLIAM S. S. Gagarin H. S. GoODFELLOW D. Griswold C. B. Haff, Jr. H. HUBBELL J. F. Johnson, III E. ]. Kaliski W. P. Karsten J. D. Kausel H. T. Kr.amer J. D. Laurits H. H. Li ' Ingston, Jr. J. B. Lockhart, Jr. D. MacGregor C. D. Mathews E. M. Moore H. C. Moorhead J. O. Mullen J. L. Nammack J. D. Nelson, Jr. W. Neust.adt, Jr. R. D. Orr A. D. Orrick S. F. Parham A. L Parvey M. C. Pease, [r. S. P. Platt, Jr. E. F. Pollock J. L. Pollock R. G. QuiNN I. Richards, Jr. H. S. Robinson, Jr. R. F. Romell T. G. Rutledge R. S. Slazer J. M. Shull J. L. Simonds McL. Stephens P. G. B. Stillman W. V. Stone W. Stringer A. SULMAN F. H. Taylor, Jr. H. S. Taylor L. C. Thomson H. S. TiERNEY, Jr. W. A. Trafton, |r, R. B. Vance G. R. Wiener CLASS OF 1941 C. P. Aberg, Jr. C. S. Allyn, Jr. C. J. Angulo J. J. Campbell R. E. Chapman P. H. Converse, Jr. W. A. Crawford, II E. R. Detchon, Jr. C. B. Finch W. D. Fisher C. E. Ford, II A. C. Gilbert. Jr. A. N. Gordon, Jr. G. Griswold, Jr. E. Knowles, Jr. W. M. Kunstler, Jr. E. M. Latson F. T. S. Lavery G. N. McLennan B. F. McMahon, J. B. Madden G. B. Mallory G. H. Mead, Jr. H. F. Noyes P. D. Phillips, Jr. D. B. Ressler H. A. Richards, J E. L. Ryerson, III R. M. Schreiber G. R. Shepherd V. R. Spader K. F. Thompson L. Wall.ace, III G. C. Wick NON-RESIDENT MEMBERS F. D. Andruss R. O. Berger, [r, W. H. Booth, Jr. A. P. Brooks J. T. Brugger, Jr. W. E. C. Bulkeley J. M. Butler, Jr. W. L. Cherry, Jr. R. W. Cooke F. C. Cross H. C. Davis, Jr. R. C. Dye A. S. FoORD J. A. Ford, Jr. S. R. Francis, Jr. S. B. French, Jr. E. W. GOSSELIN J. C. Graham B. Gropp E. R. Hansen W. H. Harris, Jr. C. E. Hewes E. F. HiGGINS E. B. Ijams W. P. Jefpery, Jr. J. R. Johnson N. S. Kerr E. W. Lakin J. G. K. McClure, Jb G. B. Mallory G. H. Messinger W. C. Messinger P. Moore, Jr. R. E. Murphy D. H. Nelson C. Page P. R. Paladino T. Parsons, III G. H. Scribner, Jr. F. C. Shattuck S. G. Sp.ader B. C. Tilchman, Jr. J. H. TORREY L. Tyler G. S. Watson G. A. Weller ■i Hi ill ii . Ii ill ill . iiii . ' BRANFORD COLLEGE ■ I ranford Qollege Clarence Wittlesey Mendell, Master Dunham Professor of the Latin Language and Literature HONORARY FELLOWS President Charles Seymour President Emeritus James Rowland Angell Edward Stephen Harkness FELLOWS Theodore Babbitt Assistant Dean of Freshmen and Instructor 171 Spanish Andrew Barr, Jr. Assistant Projessor of Accounting Norman Sydney Buck Dean o} Freshmen and Professor of Political Economy Allen Tracy Hazen Instructor m £ng ish George Lincoln Hendrickson Laijifison Professor of Latin and Greek, Litera- ture, £7neritus Frederick Bliss Luquiens Street Professor of Modern Languages Harvey Claflin Mansfield Assistant Professor of Government William Gamwell Moulton Instructor m German George Henry Nettleton Lamfison Projessor of English, Emeritus Oystein Ore Ster mg Professor of Mathematics Nathaniel Burton Paradise Registrar oj Tale College and Assistant Professor of English William Ruff, Jr. Assistant Professor of £ng ish Charles Joseph Tilden Strathcona Professor of Engineering Mechanics Gilbert Tucker Assistant Professor of History Lorande Loss Woodruff Professor of Protozoology ASSOCIATE FELLOWS Edward Grant Buckland LL.D. {LL.B. i88g, hon. M.A. u% } Rev. George A. Buttrick D.D. 1932 Malcolm Farmer Chairman of the Board of Control of the Tale University Athletic Association Carroll Clark Hincks B.A. 19 r I David Russell Lyman M.D. (hon. M.A. 1916) John Rodman Paul Associate Professor of Medicme William Lyon Phelps Litt.D. (B.A. 1887), Lampson Professor of English Literature, Emeritus Michael Ivanovich Rostovtzeff LL.D., Sterling Professor of Ancient History and Classical Archeology Eugene Francis Savage William Leffmgivell Professor of Painting Thomas Day Thacher LL.D. (B.A. 1904), Fellow of the Tale Corpo- ration William Francis Verdi M.D. 1894 (hon. M.A. 7974), Clinical Professor of Surgery John Munro Woolsey LL.D. (B.A. 1898) I 7- ranford Qollege rT wenty ' one years ago this tall the corner-stone of what is now Branford College was set and dedicated by President Hadley, but it remained our happy lot to help the college celebrate its coming-of-age. To- day, men of Branford walk about with the lilting words of an old Connecticut proverb on their lips- ' - Where Branford is, there IS the heart of the University. Branford may not be the brain, the muscles, or the backbone of the university, hut it is the heart. And It appeals most to the emotions, quite appropriately. Long famed as the oyster bed, where the classical traditions had their deepest root, it is now to be considered for its sense of beauty. The fine seam-faced granite from the Plymouth quarries has had plenty of time to grow mellow, and so have the traditions of the college Itself. Under the subtle but persistent influence of the most beautiful college Gothic architecture in America, the college spirit has grown, and it has been fostered and shaped by the personality of Mr. Mendell and our Fellows. We are con- stantly being reminded of the beauties of our courtyards by the almost hysterical ecstasies of the elderly ladies who follow their guides through the cloistered vistas ot Branford ' s courts. Then m the springtime, when our numerous trees are in bloom and the grass takes on its celebrated Branford-green color, the visitors and tourists coo almost as ef- fusively as our perennial pigeons. And because we ' re the heart of the university, we ' re generous — too generous I fear. Not only IS Harkness Tower an archi ' tectural marvel, but it is a singing fool as well. Every morning and evening, for matins and vespers it plays a hymn, and although the Sunday hymn at about eleven o ' clock usually serves as a reveille for the whole university, it doesn ' t yell at you other people to get up, but just reminds you at that very moment some Bran- ford man somewhere, somehow is doing his good deed, like a good little pearl who has left the oyster bed. Furthermore, this glorious tower of ours — and it is our greatest pride certainly, just as it is the most photogenic and renowned of Yale ' s architecture -chimes forth, every day of the year, what is undoubtedly the most familiar tune to all Yale men. I don ' t mean Boola-Boola or Bright College Tears — but that portion of Anton Dvorak ' s ? [ew World Symphony which our generous old tower plays every day at noon, that all the world may share it with her favorite sons. Perhaps it would be a good idea if we charged every non- Branfordian a nominal fee for this great and musical service. Perhaps it would. Then we could use the money to subsidize our athletic teams and strengthen the less certain links in our chain of victories. Even if other colleges do serve steak and beer five times a week to their athletes, I ' m not saying that they subsidize pro- fessional athletes. Perish the thought! But it is rather interest- ing (I almost said significant) that i (I I Branford should be pre-eminent at those games which are freest from the nasty taint of profession- alism. It ' s this spirit of amateur- ism — and not amateurishness — that keeps our football, hockey, baseball, squash, and basketball teams comfortable near the bot- tom, and, if happily free from genius, at the same time they are happily free from the taint ot professionalism. And since the men on our swimming team dont imbibe like fishes, why should they swim like them? The greatest characteristic of Branford has been individuality, but that has only left those with similar tastes free to band to- gether in the pursuit of then- particular interest. So the year has seen various activities. Unique in college activities are the junior swing quartet and Walt Rose ' s swing band. If the former had harmony, the latter had a certain something all of its own. With a pipe-line to news of the inner circles of Branford that has long been the envy of the London Times, the New York Times, and the }{ews, the Tower Bulletin again pulled off a scoop or two again this year — notably beating the press of the world in the announcement of the new Chief Aide ' s appointment. Besides the Bulletin, the Branford Press has turned out considerable work varying from Christmas cards to the Jared Eliot Associ- ation pamphlet, which reached a circulation of over five hundred copies. In the field of entertainment, the college preserves its attitude of classical balance and harmony. The Christmas Dinner and the Founder ' s Day Banquet were particularly notable for their enthusiasm and fellowship, due largely to the good humor and resourcefulness of the Fellows, And this year, at the former function, Branford men were privileged to hear what Mr. Tinker declared was to be absolutely his last after-dinner speech; for the sake of the intelligent audiences and other colleges less fortunate than we, let us hope he erred on the side of modesty. Finally, there was the performance of the Frogs, originally conceived by Aristophanes, altered to suit the modern taste by Mr. Mendell, Mr. Babbitt, Mr. Moulton and company, and acted and sung by the undergraduates with boundless enthusiasm and, we hope, a certain amount of talent. Dionysus I know, for one, was approached by Sam Goldwyn, but he wisely chose to remain in college and confine his talents to the antechambers of the Entry of Geniuses, or Boys Town, as the famed middle court entry will go down m history. Thus when there is a community of interest and talent, there is team-work. But it was some of Branford ' s individualists who sought to block up the entrances with snow — whether the purpose was to keep Branford in or the world out has never been ascertained. Unfortunately the venture did not get much further than our High Street neighbors who attempted to pad-lock the Old Campus, and it is always every man for himself when the snow falls, but keep your windows closed ! Enough snow was shoveled out of rooms during the winter to build a three-story igloo with a penthouse, and enough left over for a garage. Ah, there rings old Harkness Tower again. Ring out, ye bells! You ' re welcome, one and all — glad you like it. We do too. Ambrose Cochill Cramer, III STUDENT MEMBERS CLASS OF 19J9 W. J. Albinger L. M. AsHER W. F. Battershall H. W. Blauvelt A. J. Cade C. F. Carlton H. S. Chase T. L. Cheney, Jr. T. C. Clark A. C. Cramer, III Taylor Culbert R. K. Davis John Davol J. D. Dodge E. L. Doheny, III S. W. Durham Ben EisEkLAN E. W. Eager Irving Fanger C. J. Fay, Jr. J. S. Ferguson C. A. Fossett R. T. Garland R, J. Garnaus A. A. Halle, Jr. W. C. Harding E. T. Harmon |. L. H.- r ey, Jr. b. G. Hlimm D. S. Humphrey, III F. C. Jackson R. T. J. ' CKSON C. M. Jacobs, MI H. V. Jaffa C. H. Jung, ]r. G. B. King ROLFE KiNGSLEY, Jr. Putnam Lee J. D. Levy S. B. LiBERMAN R. C. LOVEJOY Z. S. Mai.inowski J. G. Mersereau J. S. Mertz C. S. MOSELEY L. W, MuRFEY, Jr. J. C. O ' Keeffe D. C. Pailler W. F. Peter, III S. C. Phelps W. A. Raleigh, Jr. G. E. Ray, Jr. Harding Rees W. H. Reeves, III R. R. Rich, Jr. A. H. Robertson, II A. B. RocKwooD, Jr. E. W. Rose W. H. Rose W. M. Roth T. B. Sanders, Jr. M. E. Sanford J. R. Slevin R. H. Smith R. J. Staub W. A. Swinerton R. W. Taber W. F. Tibbitts T. E. ToNEY, Jr. J. S. VanDerbeck W. C. Walker R. L. Wan. ' maker J. P. Wheeler k. H. White T, W, Wright CLASS OF 1940 G. C. Anderson H. W. Baldwin J. L. Beyer, Jr. J. F. Boland Harold Bolton HOLBROOK Br.- DLEY J. L. Butler, Jr. Booth Carey E. Q. Carr, Jr. H. J. ClBEL E. H. CUL ER R. M. De.an C. L. Dohme W. M. Dox, Ir. L. B. Drell H. W. Evans, Jr. E. L. Forer G. L. FORMAN H. P. Galliher, Jr. I. A. Goldner M. A. Gunst, Jr. C. A. Haas J. T. Haney G. S. Hannaway L. R. Hayes |. T. Healey W. O. Hooker R. B. HoPGOOD H. M. Kenn.ard, Jr- A. M. Kennedy, Jr. W. R. KiTCHEL R. H. Knight B. L. KUBERT E. A. Landau A. H. L.JWV ' RENCE, Jr. W. J. LippiNcoTT, Jr. H. S. LOWENHAUPT J. C. McCarty R. L. L. McCoRMicK Scott McFarl. ' nd J. A. MacGregor J. G. McQuAiD D. McG. Mersereau H. C. Nearing M. J. Neiditz P. i O ' Brien, Jr. C. M. Parr, Ir. N. S. Paul P. R. Perlowin G. P. Pilling, IV R. U. Plant, Jr. Owen Rich. rds D. L. Rubin I. H. SCHLESINGER, Jr. R. F. SCHLUETER J. E. Spalding E. O. Spencer H. H. Spiegel R. G. Spring H. W. Steane A. B. Stevens E. R. Stolz J. J. SULLIV. N, Jr. G. K. Thompson, III A. D. Ullman W. N. Van Slyck, Jr. W. H. Vinton O. W. Welles A. B. C. Whipple R. E. Whittlesey, II H. C, Willi.ams CLASS OF 1941 M. P. Ames E. J. Applewhite, Jr. C. P. Armstrong J. L. Bagg, Jr. J. F. Barnard P. D. B.artlett, Jr. W. G. BOYNTON L. D. BuRDETT F. T. Cleland W. K. Collins L. F. Crowley L. B. Cullman D. P. Downey I. H. Downs I. F. Dryden, III B. R. Eggeman, Jr. C. A. Fenton r. e. forster, ii David Foster, Jr. W. C. FOWNES, III R. S. Fox, Jr. Clifford Greene, Jr. Lee Grimes J. B. Heald J. F. HOGERTON A. H. Hopkins, Jr. V. E. Irons, Jr. J. H. Isaacs T. B. Johnson I. W. LOMAS W, S. McCain D. S. Mackay D. C. Martin D. M. Merriell R. L. Owen, III H. C. Pierce |. A. Priory, Jr. j. D. Reilly, Jr. A. A. RossiN Philip Sil ' er J. W. Spelm.an A. M. Thomas, III J. L. Tweedy, Jr. R. N. Wales I. B. Wheeler, III H. Y. Wilson J. F. Wood, Jr. A. W. Wrieden, Jr. J. M. WuNDERLE James Young, II NON-RESIDENT MEMBERS W. A. Bareiss G. B. Gascoigne, Jr. S. L. Leonard Thorvol Martin A. K. Mills, Jr. F. L. Seely, Jr. H. B. Stimson, Jr. B. J. Sullivan S. J. Underbill I CALHOUN COLLEGE Qalhoun Qollege Arnold Whitridge, Master Professor in the Department of History, the Arts, and Letters HONORARY FELLOWS President Charles Seymour President Emeritus James Rowland Angell Edward Stephen Harkness Rudolph John Anderson Professor of Chemistry Charles Frederick Tucker Brooke Sterhng Professor of English Fred Rogers Fairchild Knox Professor of Political Economy Gordon Sherman Haight Assistant Professor of Eriglish Edward Billings Ham Assistant Professor of French Raymond Thompson Hill Associate Professor of French FELLOWS Kent Tenney Healy Assistant Professor of Economics Frank Monaghan Assistant Professor m History Robert Selden Rose Professor of Spanish Richard Benson Sewall instructor m English Edward Taite Silk Assistant Professor of Latin Alan Tower Waterman Associate Projessor of Physics Stanley Thomas Williams Colgate Professor of English ASSOCIATE George Townsend Adee B.A. 1895 Richard Steere Aldrich B.A. 1906 Leonard Bacon B.A. 1909 Stephen Vincent Benet B.A. 1919 Allerton Frank Brooks Ph.B. rgir Peter Henry Buck Director of the Bernice P. Bishop Museum, Professor of Anthropology Mortimer Norton Buckner Fellow of the Tale Corporation Stuart Holmes Clement Associate Director of the Department of Personnel Study James Dwight D. ' na B.A. 1911 FELLOWS James Cowan Greenway Director of the Department of University Health, Retired Richard Arthur Kimball B.A. ig22 Wilmarth Sheldon Lewis M.A. 1937, Research Associate of the Uni- versity Library, Pelloiv of the Yale Corporation Douglas Stuart Moore B.A. 191 5 Donald Wallace Porter B.A. 1915 Rev. T. Lawrason Riggs B.A. 1910 Carl Purington Rollins Printer to the University Rev. John Charles Schroeder Professor of Hoynilectics and Pastoral Theology Joseph Rockwell Swan B.A. 1902 Vanderbilt Webb B.A. 1913 Qalhoun Qollege T remember the day well — it was - - a glorious spring day in 1804 and I, a lowly Freshman, was chatting with a Senior named Calhoun — John C. Calhoun of South Carolina. Someday, suh, he said to me, I shall be famous. I shall be United States Senator, Secretary of State, Secretary of War, and Vice President of the United States of America; but even more than that, I shall have added fame by having a residen- tial college at Yale University named after me. Good day, suh. With the kind co-operation of the faculty, with whom I had a few differences, I loitered, shall we say, my way through college. I saw John C. Calhoun become successively all that he had told me of, and finally in 1933 Calhoun College opened its doors to an avid public as a unit in the Resi- dential System, and I was at last able to become a member. I speak for all Calhoun men, or Senators as we are called by the ?iews sportswriters (so-called), when I attempt to describe a few of its amenities. Believing that the way to a man ' s heart is through his stom- ach, Calhoun first of all endears Itself to us by what is generally accepted as the finest college cuisine, dreamed up by a superb chef, one Joseph Corino, who has refused more lucrative offers to remain in our spotless galley. Along more cultural lines Cal- houn boasts a fine library of over five thousand volumes. Much ex- aggerated have been the dastardly rumors spread abroad by our rivals who maintain that trolley cars make study virtually im- possible in the library by passing right through the room every five minutes. Every ten minutes would be closer to the truth. Calhoun is proud of its cul- tural activities, which are sur- prisingly varied. There is a dance orchestra, which plays engage- ments outside our wistariaed walls; there is a double quartet which rivals the Whiffs (at least in beer consumption at the Cal- houn beer parties); there is the French table; there is the Bible Club; particularly outstanding is the Calhoun Dramat, which each year presents plays running the g,imut from Stephen Leacock ' s comedies to Shakespeare ' s trage- dies. This year Shakespeare ' s Coriolanus was performed, and with great polish and technique. Under the able direction of Father Riggs, a Fellow of Cal- houn, the Calhoun play has come to be accepted as always a fine production, and no small amount of good dramatic ability is to be found among the actors of Cal- houn. To proceed with brief enumeration of the College ' s activities, there is the Science Club, which meets periodically to discuss interesting subjects, color photography, acid bacilli, and the science of streamlining being three diversified examples of Science Club topics. Probably the most popular of Calhoun ' s in- tellectual activities is the Current Events Club, under the guidance of Professor Fairchild. This club has presented many fascinating speakers during the course of our years in Calhoun. Some of the most interesting ones that come to mind are: Censorship in Radio by Homer Picket, the Director of the March of Time; Advertising and Public Rela- I k tions as a Career by Fred Farrar, Director of Lord and Thomas; there have been talks on the international gold situation, the federal budget, the European crisis, the Munich Agreement, the Stock Market; a talk by the former Commissioner of Correc- tion of New York City on The Making and Unmaking ot Crmi- inals. Athletically speaking — and let ' s be frank — in Intet ' CoUege Athletics Calhoun is often either in the athletic cellar or at least near enough to it to know the garbage man by his first name. But this does not dim the pleasure its athletes get out of inter- college competition. Calhoun al- ways has a team to represent it on the field, whether in football (where it finished ninth this year), m Squash (where it just missed first to place second) or in base- ball (where chances look pretty good as this goes to press). Last year Calhoun had representatives in nineteen inter-college tourna- ments and one hundred and six- teen of its members went out to do or die for old Calhoun. The importance of athletic activity among the residential colleges lies not in the standing of the teams but in the invaluable associations that are formed through partici- pation in good healthy exercise. The Calhoun Council is an important phase of the college that must be mentioned here. The Council is a group of six undergraduates, two each elected by ballot from the Senior, Junior, and Sophomore Classes. These men, meeting with the Master of the College, serve in an ad- visory capacity and are the repre- sentatives between the under- graduate members of the College and the administration. Problems dealing with the welfare of the College come before their consideration. Praise is due this democratic and efficient step towards the improvement of College life. Of the social events of the Calhoun year, far and away the most eagerly anticipated are the Banquets, held at various times, such as Thanksgiving, Christmas, or to honor any special guest These banquets have brought before us during our years here such distinguished people as Presidents Angell and Seymour, Dorothy Thompson, and H. G. Wells, to mention but a few. At our Christmas Party this year we were regaled by the wit of John Hoysradt, well-known monologist of fame and the Rainbow Room (tomato-juice — 75 cents). But there is a much more important social relationship which, thank Heaven, does not occur as infrequently as a Christmas banquet. This is the daily relationship with the distinguished group of men that it is Calhoun ' s good fortune to have as its Fellows. We relish the opportunity of sharing the sly wit of Stanley Williams, the contagious laugh of Tucker Brooke, the Fairness (World ' s) that IS Frank Monaghan ' s, as well as the fortunate occasions when such a distinguished Fellow as Stephen Vincent Benet drops in for lunch. Above all there is a tall, distinguished-looking gentleman with a quiet charm and sincere friendliness that makes every man in Calhoun his ardent admirer. No more gracious Master could be found than Arnold Whitndge; no more attentive hostess than Mrs. Whitndge. The remembrance of pleasures past — of a good dinner in the Dinmg Room, a good book in the Library, even of a good drubbing out at Inter-College Football; the memory of tea at the Whitridge ' s, of the tapped keg at a beer party, of a provocative discussion at the Current Events Club, the proud recollection of our Inter-College record for entertaining more females at meals than any other college — these and many more happy memories make us think reverently of that chap, John C. Calhoun, Class of 1804. For God, for Country, for Yale — and for Calhoun ' HoR.ACE Orville Perkins i STUDENT MEMBERS CLASS OF 1939 LeB. C. Anthony W. R. Bailey H. W. Ballou M. L. Barron R. S. Bilheimer Howard Bird, Jr. J. M. Bird E. M. Brooks W. H. Calhoun, Jr. M. L. Cardm. ' n C. P. Carroll V. J. Cavaliere P. J. Chase G. G. Chittenden A. C. Clark F. A. Close Stephen Conl. nd E. W. Cummer A. Aigeltinger, Jr. D. E. Battey, Jr. H. S. Bennett F. B. Beck H. D. Blakesley L. M. Bloomingdale, G. V. Brooks J. R. Caldwell D. C. Camp E. B. Chapin H. M. Clark R. W. Comery H. P. Culver J. M. Dill J. A. Dillon, Jr. E. H. Beavers, Jr. C. A. Bemis J. M. Boots B. T. Brooks, Jr. G. V. Brooks W. T. Clark J. R. COLPITTS E. G. Counselman R. D. Coursen A. J. Crane, Jr. P. Crane M. C. Curtis R. M. BoicE A. L. Bolton, Jr. B. H. Brinton, Jr. J. G. Burton, Jr. D. S. Campbell L. R. Cummins R. C. CURREY I. C. Danly W. W. Darrow, Jr. J. M. De Loreto G. H. Doherty R. D. Drew C. J. Dwyer D. M. Endweiss J. L. Fearey J. C. Fedoruk J. L. Frank, Jr. H. S. Gamble, Jr. R. D. Gillman J. A. Glascock D. R. Grace R. P. Hall C. A. S. Hatfield, Jr. S. D. Holl. ' nd H. Z. W. Holstein CLASS R. C. Dryer J. D. Emerson R. T. EwiNG F. N. Fowler W. F. Givan (r. J. B. Grant D. A. Griffin H. J. Groblewski G. H. Haley, III R. B. Hammond, Jr. A. W. Horton E. M. Hyndman C. P. Jaffray, Jr. H. H. Jessup, Jr. C. J. Kentler CLASS T. D. Dyer E. Fisher L. J. Fisher J. E. Flaherty B. S. Ford C. H. C. Gerard J. E. Hart R. L. Hatch W. E. W. Howe P. J. Huber D. H. Hughes W. P. Hutchings J. L. Howard, Jr. D. R. Hubbard F. C. Irving, Jr. E. H. Jones, Jr. E. E. KOGER J. S. KORNREICH L. J. KOVEN D. F. Lovett W. S. LURIE F. H. McGowN, Jr. N. H. Matthews, ]r. W. A. G. Minot W. M. Mitchell D. A. Moore L. S. MURPHEY H. W. Nestler T. R. Palmer H. O. Perkins OF 1940 C. E. Leary E. T. LiTTELL, Jr. R. J. MacLaury S. McR. Macomber J. A. Marcus E. R. Masback, Jr. T. B. MORISON J. S. Overbagh C. A. Parcells, Jr. J. R. Pearson, Jr. J. B. POORE M. R. Procter, Jr. Thomas Rees C. T. Roelke T. Rogers OF 1941 W. P. Kennard R. L. Macklin J. M. Martin R. R. Millhiser R. D. Moore, Jr. A. A. Mudge, Jr. C. S. Muscatine H. A. Preston D. W. Riesmeyer W. A. Robinson H. E. Rogers R. L. Roy NON-RESIDENT MEMBERS C. F. Dalton, Jr. J. B. deBrun R. H. Deming, Jr. J. D. Emerson D. Gregg F. C. Irving, Jr. P. Knowlton J.J. Larson J. P. Logan D. B. Loveioy S. W. Mase T. S. MOHR W. S. Oswald, Jr. R. H. Peters G. L. Peters B. T. Pierce John Pierrepont J. R. Prann C. T. Rayhill M. J. Rzasa Saul A. Schatzky J. D. Smallridge James E. Smith W. F. Spanton E. Stevens R. Swan, III R. G. Treuting C. H. Watts W. H, Welch, Jr. J. W. Williamson C. Wright, III S. E. Zimmerman D. A. Schulte J. F. Shevelson J. M. Shields R. M. Sills, Jr. R. H. Smith A. W. Steisel R. W. Titus, Jr. J. R. Todd T. C. Traceski J. T. TuBBS H. Waters T. C. Weber A. E. Were R. F. Zogbaum, Jr. A. C. Saunders, III A. W. Shapleigh, Jr. N. SiviN G. S. Stirling, Jr. W. R. Tubes H. H. Vreeland, II W. D. Wagoner ]. L. Wallace N. W. Walz I. R. Winburn, Jr. W. R. Wr. y H. B. Spencer H. B. Ray J. S. Smith J. R. SuMAX, Jr. a. J. Waring, Jr. G. R. Wilson, Jr. DAVENPORT COLLEGE a , davenport Qollege Emerson Tuttle, Master Curator of Prints in the University HONORARY FELLOWS President Charles Seymour President Emeritus James Rowland Angell Richard Mervin Bissel, Jr. Instructor m Political Economy Philip Bishop Cowles AsiLStdJit Projessor oj Immunology Frederick Sherwood Dunn Professor oj International Re ati07i5 Howard Theodore Engstrom Assistant Professor of Mathematics Joseph Francis Jackson Associate Professor of French Leonard Woods Labaree Associate Professor of History Maynard Mack Instructor m English Dean Gooderham Acheson Fellow of the Tale Corporation Malcolm Pratt Aldrich B.A. 1922 Charles McLean Andrews Farjiani Professor of America)! History, Emeritus Allison Vincent Armour B.A. 1884 James Tinkham Babb B.A. 1925 Ludlow Bull Research Associate m Egyptology Starling Winston Childs B.A. 1891 Norman Vaux Donaldson B.A. ipiy Thomas Wells Farnam Associate Treasurer and Comptroller of the University Edward Stephen Harkness FELLOWS Champion Herbert Mathewson Professor of Metallurgy and Metallography George Moseley Murphy Assistant Processor of Chemistry George Wilson Pierson Assistant Projessor of History Frederick Albert Pottle Professor of English Theodore Sizer Professor of the History of Art Chauncey Brewster Tinker Sterling Professor of Ejiglish Literature Lewis Edwin York, Jr. Associate Professor of Drawing and Painting ASSOCIATE FELLOWS Edward Belden Greene Fellow of the Tale Corporation Rev. Sidney Lovett Chaplain of the University Archibald MacLeish B.A. 19;,- Albert Fide Parr Director oj the Peabody Museum, Professor of Oceanography Bruce Simonds Associate Professor oj the History of Music Malcolm Rutherford Thorpe Research Assistant m Paleontology Frederick Holme Wiggin B.A. 1904 Thornton Niven Wilder B.A. 1920 II davenport Qollege ou can ' t describe the spirit of a college. That is, you can ' t sit down and say a college is thus and so and nothing else. Try and tell a stranger the spirit of the University in a few hundred words and you will see how difficult It IS. It ' s an evanescent something that defies definition and is felt only after long and intimate acquaintance. What there is to be said about Daven- port may not make much sense to an outsider, though it makes sense to us; we ' ve taken it all for granted for so long. If after you have read this article you get some faint glimmering of what goes on behind that stern Gothic exterior that frightens York Street during every normal work- ing day, then, in some small measure at least, I have succeeded in this present duty. Ladies and Gentlemen, the guide says on a University tour, We are now entering Davenport College. Note the Gothic ex ' tenor, the Georgian interior, upper and lower courts, and the green window blinds. On your left is the Dining Hall, on your right, the Senior Entry (among other things), the fagade is modelled after the Boston State House, and that, succinctly, is that. Any questions ... or com- plaints? Obviously, to a Davenporter, ' nil nil that, succinctly, is not that. For instance. Did you notice the cheerie hello George, Perry, Boh or Joe, the porters, gave you when you came in? Of course not. But we notice it. Every day. Why you probably even missed those unicorns on the cupola over the archway through which you entered. (Ed. note. We have, on what we believe to be good au- thority, a statement that these so-called unicorns are reproduc- tions of the original beast, the E.ilc, the only known prototype ot which IS preserved m stone in a remote castle of Cornwall). And you probably didn ' t notice that the bulletin board wasn ' t plastered with notices about college activities, that, in fact, there didn ' t seem to be any order of organization anywhere, that life on the whole seemed a pretty easy-going affair behind those red brick walls. And therein lies what proba- bly IS most charming about Davenport. There is no frenzied rush to push our prowess in athletics out ahead of everyone else. As we have said before, a sport ' s a sport, and whether you win or not doesn ' t, in the long run, outweigh the fun you get out of it. We did have a cham- pionship basketball team for two years straight and managed to win four intercollege champion- ships for the year. Everybody was contented. Yet this year ' s basketball season wasn ' t a world beater. And everybody still re- mained contented. We ' ve got four good squash courts, we have beer every Wednesday night, and we have Pierson ' s Big Ben to tell the time by. What could be sweeter? They have to pay for the upkeep. We don ' t. We have as complete a college library as any one could desire and boast an outstanding Boswell collec- tion. We play touch football on the upper court in the fall and Nigger-Baby in the spring. And between times mimic Grover Whalen with his Trylon and Perisphere. When Pierson (hiss) stages a mammoth rally before th e Slave-Hybrid football classic, we don ' t hire a band and a city hall in vain attempts to rival them. It ' s more entertaining, and safer, just to douse them with water when they come through the archway. We don ' t do It to be funny. It just sort of arises somehow and there that water is. All over Pierson. One step better than passive resist- ance, we think. So much for the external aspects of the Gold Coast. For to really get inside to the heart of the institution you would have to meet some of the men who are Fellows of the College, and specifically, the College Master. It has long been Mr. Emerson Tuttle ' s policy to let Davenport shape its own ends. As Master of the College, he chooses to favor spontaneity rather than to emphasize rigid organization. For instance, the Fellows have a habit of coming in the Dining Hall each Wednesday fully ar- i rayed in dinner coats. Once a year, and the Master and Fellows never know when, the Seniors enter at the same time in similar sartorial attire. This past fall, the Seniors went the older men one better and appeared in tail coats and Groucho Marx Moustaches. Mr. Tuttle arose, welcomed them, and, in no time at all, he had the laugh on the Seniors. Every Sunday afternoon, and usually once during the week. Master and Mrs. Tuttle enter- tain at tea. Again, an informal talk on music, accompanied by illustrations on the piano will be held by Bruce Simonds of the Music School and a Fellow of the College. Mr. Chauncey Brew- ster Tinker, Davenport ' s Odd Fellow, always launches into The Alight Before Christmas at the regular Christmas party in the Master ' s house; that ' s his picture you see behind the Fellows ' table in the Dining Room. Occasionally, Mr. Pottle, a national authority on Boswell, will lecture in the Common Room. His renditions of old Maine Ballads, appropriate with accent, are famous. Perhaps I could add that the Gym or Mrs. Kligerman ' s, or even the Sherman are only a step away. Shoe-shine boys haunt the York Street entrance in droves. Perhaps I could list the scores of athletic contests, all of them highly favorable, naturally, or give you the cast of the spring play, but this would merely confuse the issue. If there is an issue. They call us the Gold Coast along York Street. We ' ve never known why. Perhaps it ' s because we are the most gullible of window-shoppers over those Feinstein sweaters and jackets. It certainly can ' t be because we pay the biggest income tax in the State of Connecticut. Maybe it ' s because we lead a twenty-four carat, downright pleasant existence. -r ' ' Lowell Melcher Clucas, Jr. RESIDENT MEMBERS CLASS OF 1939 H. B. Anderson L. D. Anderson H. M. Bardach R. O. Beach, Jr. I. F. Belser R, L. Black, Jr. E. L. Bliss A. G. Bralower E. F. Brown H. P. Brown R. F. Campbell J. J. Clark L. M. Clucas, Jr. H. J. Curtis S. H. D.-WIDSON J. H. Dirks H. T. Emerson. Jr. M. J. F. ' hrenbach G. Fountain, Jr. R. H. Gemmill C. D. Gile B. I. Gorokhofp F. M. Haines, Jr. R. K. H.awes, |r. P. H. Haves, 111 D. B. Havnie J. J. Her:, Jr. J. V. Hewitt, Jr. D. S. HiGCINS A. R. Hoxton, Jr. C. N. Hoyt A. J. IsA.Ac, Jr. D. S. Johnson A. L. Kerr, Jr. David Knapp J. G. Leonard L. M. Lieberfeld R. B. LiNDs.«-, Jr. F. Lippitt W. E. Littlefield F. S. McCoNNELL, Jr. L. H. B. Malone H. F. Manice j. a. Marshall, Jr. J. L. Matthews H. R. Merritt, Jr. ]. M. Metten C. L. Miller, Ji. J. R. Minor W. R, Moody R. L. Morris, Jr. T. R. Parker W. W. Phelps, Jr. E. W. Price D D Ramsey N. N. Rayman K. H. Roberts P, E. Roche P. E. Rogers, Jr. F. K. Sargent F. C. Shaw, Jr. Clarke Simonds H. L Slavin R, F. Smith J. C. Speh H. R. Spendelow, Jr. G. C. S -EENEY G. S. SwoPE W. N. Taft T. H. Taylor B. F. Thompson J. D. Turner D. TwOMBLY S, S, Weinstein S. W. Weis-s Dorsev Whitestone, Jr. F, B. Wilkes A. H. WiLKINS CLASS OF 1940 Maurice Abrahams M. a. Alfonzo B. L. Apfel J. L. Armstrong R. W. Belcher, Jr. R. B. Borough A. Carey R. A. Clarke W. B. Condit S. L. CoxE, Jr. M. L. Davey, Jr. J. A. Davis, U. C. D. Dickey, Jr. C. DuBosque, Jr. H. V. Dwight J. L. Eyre B. D. Flynn, Jr. H. Ford, II R. R. Gandelman P. T. Gillespie R. B. Glenn C. C. Glover, 111 T. Goodye-ar J. G. Grayson O. L. Guernsey A. McK. H.AMMER, Jr. W. S. Harrington W. Harvey A. Hawley W. B. Hay, Jr. B. Hinman R. A. Holden, IV R. T. Houk, III H. Howe, II J. L. Israel M. C. Jennings T. H. Kendall C. C. Kite P. H. Knight M. L. Lejeune J. S. M.acSporran B. F. Martin J. L. Matthews R. L. Merrick L. S. MoHR, II J. R. Morford, Jr. J. M. Nelson, III H. F. Newell, Jr. G. L. New ' ton R. E. OsTBY, Jr. R. L. Ott W. M. Parker, Jr. R. A. Peattie, Jr. F. S. Pierce W. F. Poole, III D. B. RoDD H. RoWL.AND J. M. ScHLESS N. Schwab, Jr. D. E. Sharton J. W. Stack, Jr. J. Stein E, A. Stephens, Jr. H. C. Th. ' cher, Jr. P. B. Thorne L. F. TiCHNOR T. C- TlLLEY G. F. Vietor, Jr. I. D. VOORHEES, 1r. G. R. Wallace, Jr. C. T. Wilson, Jr. CLASS OF 1941 J. S. ACKERMAN R. L. Arnstein W. T. Bahlman, Jr. F. F. Baker R. J. Bakewell D. M. Brush H. T. Clement, Jr. J. L. H. Cole W. R. Cross, Jr. T. D. Day H. C. Dow D. M. Evans R. D. Farnham N. V. V. Franchot III J. M. Green H. L. Harwell I- I- Hitchcock E. ' F. Hyde F. D. Lane G. N. Lindsay, Jr. J. Lohmann LaR. R. Lutkins m. r. m, ' clean E. R. Macomber N. NoYES. Jr. R. OsBORN, Ir. I. W. Owen A. S. Parr C. B. Price, Jr. B. C. Rowley W. H. Sanburn, II W. C. Schmidt P. O. A. SOLBERT C. F. Spalding, II E. P. SwENSON, II L. G. TiGHE, Jr. D. a. Warner, Jr. M. Wesson H. C. Wood, Jr. NON-RESIDENT MEMBERS F. Achelis H. H. Aiken D. P. Bates H. C. Berkeley, Jr. E. S. Cooke C. B. Drake, Jr. J. L. Hannaford B. Hinman R. T. Houk, III P. L. HOVEY L. W. Krieger T. A. Lussen C. F. Malcolm, Jr. C. G. Martin, Jr. J. P. MiLNOR, Jr. J. B. Phillips T. C. SCHULLER P. L. Silliman W. E. Snavely J. D. Stubbs G. G. Symes, Jr. R. S. Taber R. B. Talbot W. R. Tepper W. D. Thomas I. R. Wall.ace A, S. Wilson, Jr. JONATHAN EDWARDS COLLEGE I Jonathan Edwards Qollege Robert Dudley French, Master Professor of English HONORARY FELLOWS President Charles Seymour President Emeritus James Rowland Anoell EowAkD Stephen Harkness John Chester Adams Assistant Professor of English. Director of Undergraduate Literary Activities Edward Wight Bakke Professor of Economics Robert Chapman Bates Assistant Professor of French Joseph McGrath James Bottkol Instructor in English Lewis Perry Curtis Paskus Fellow and Assistant Professor of History Joseph Toy Curtiss Assistant Professor of English FELLOWS Erwin Ramsdell Goodwiough Professor of the Histdry of Religion Hajo Holborn Pasl{us Fellow and ' . Associate Professor of History ' Egbert J. Miles Associate Professor of Mathematics Walter Richard Miles Professor of Psychology HoLKiNs Dillingham Palmer Instructor m Arcliitectura!. Design Ernest Charles Pollard Assistant Professor of Physics Henry Thompson Rowell Assistant Professor of Latin ASSOCIATE FELLOWS H. Frank Bozyan Assistant Professor of Organ Playing Rev. Henry Sloane Coffin Fellow of the Tale Corfioration Albert Beecher Crawford Director of the De|3artment of Personnel Study and of the Bureau of Appointments Joannes Gregorius Dusser de Barenne Sterlmg Professor of Physiology Edgar Stephenson Furniss Provost oj the University and Dean of the Graduate School Arthur Lehman Goodhart B.A. 1912 Roswell Gray Ham Former Associate Professor of English Austin Morris Harmon Lampson Professor of Greel{ Charles Beecher Hogan B.A. 1928 Alvin Saunders Johnson Professor of Economics Carl Albert Lohmann Secretary of the University Richard Swann Lull Sterling Professor of Paleontology and Director of the Peabody Museum, Emeritus Edward Bliss Reed B.A. 1894 Frank Schlesinger Professor of Astronomy and Director of the Observatory Robert Alphonso Taft Fellow of the Tale Corporation Karl Young Sterling Professor of English Jonathan Edwards Jonathan Edwards College is unique; so much so that an- other College Master, since ele- vated to a position which must exempt him from mention here, has always avowed his bewilder- ment at the individualism existing across Library Street. Other Colleges may loudly boast of their lone elm, flagpoles, clocks, falling plaster, and false fronts, but where else in the world could you find another ' noble Savage up- holding a sundial? A generous laissez-taire attitude in the Col- lege has caused it to flourish, if not like the green bay tree, at least with interesting results. Our architecture is unique. Mas- sive and dark Weir Hall of the Architecture School overhangs the quadrangle and is the source of a peculiar charm and liberal doses of snowballs and assorted epithets. Besides, Jonathan Ed- wards ' buildings have had time to mature; our walls are already pseudo-ivied, and we look for- ward to the time when our abode will reach that peak of verdant perfection conducive to the high- est scholastic inspiration. In complete harmony with the spirit of laissez-faire mentioned above, a number of organisations have grown up within the Col- lege. The justly famed Gilbert and Sullivan Club puts on one ot the lesser-known operettas of the — 207 — immortal pair every year in a style the D ' Oyly Cartes un- doubtedly never thought of. The awe-inspiring majesty of the PoHtical Union found its humble beginnings in the Lounge, and now that it has outgrown that place and moved on, a new em- bryonic political group has grown up in Its stead. The ever-active nuclei of this group are doubtless the ones responsible for a recently- organised orchestra consisting ot a guitar, three octannas, and a miniature slide-trombone. A Kaffeeklatsch, held under the hospitable roof of the Master and Mrs. French offers oppor- tunity for expression in German song and polysyllables to those so inclined; the Frangaisants, voluble devotees of the rival French tongue, gather from time to time for a display of liquid and linguistic prowess in the French manner che: Mr. Bates. In addi- tion to these more or less in- formal functions the College also offers a series of concerts and talks in the Common Room. Every year the College is favored with a piano recital by Mrs. Hogan; while the undergraduate has had an opportunity to hear such artists as Paul Hundenville, Ray Lev, and Ralph Kirkpatrick. Bill House, the only Jonathan Edwardsman ever to climb the Harkness Tower from the out- side, returns to his Alma Mater once in a while to give us excerpts from his exciting mountain- climbing experiences. Working upon the assumption that all work and no play makes jack a dull boy, the College at nicely spaced intervals indulges in varied conviviality. October sees the celebration of Jonathan Ed- wards birthday. The climax of the party is the rendering of our own song, A Tuneful and Solemn Ode led by Mr. Loh- mann. Christmas is celebrated with carols in the candle-lit Hall, and everyone gives and receives a gift, though (for the information of profiteers) a top limit of a quarter is set on the purchase price. Ever and anon are beer parties at which dignity of high and low alike is cast aside, and no one is safe from internment m the alcoholic ward. It has been the custom from time immemorial (at least six years) that no speeches are ever made in the Hall at any function. This prac- tice has arisen, if rumor is to be believed, from a rule to that effect passed by the Fellows of the College at their first meeting for the express purpose of curbing the post-prandial loquacity of the Master himself. No picture of the College would be complete without men- tion of that interesting item, the printing press. In addition to programs, announcements, and routine jobs, the press prints a weekly paper, the Jonathan Edwards Almanack. Three times a year they collaborate in the issuing of the Spider ' s Web, devoted to intramural literary effort. At least one big work is printed each year, this year ' s effort being a hitherto unpublished letter from George Washington to Jonathan Edwards ' son. In the field of athletics Jonathan Edwards has been noted for its amateur mediocrity, which though undoubtedly not productive of an excess of championships, it certainly has been productive of good sport and numerous anecdotes, which is all that counts. Last year all traditions were broken when the water spiders outstroked all inter-college competition on the Housatonic. In the course of the years an athletic and social tie has been formed with Eliot House, Harvard, with the tragic result that Jonathan Edwards has played them in football the last two years on the day before the varsity game. On both occasions J. E. lost gloriously. After SIX years of the College Plan it is generally conceded by all that faculty are really human beings after all; every college now feels itself especially blessed in its group of Fellows, and Jonathan Edwards shares these sentiments for good reasons. Ample opportunity is given to meet the Fellows, and it is taken advantage of. There is a feeling of informality about these contacts which is by no means typical of Jonathan Edwards alone. The Master and Mrs. French hold a sort of friendly sway over the College, always ready with encouragement for any worthy plan. They prefer to watch undergraduate initiative take a large part in shaping the course of developments. Everyone is welcome at their house, which is a short saying with a mighty meaning. Under this headship. Fellows and students are gradually merging into one body, the academic happy family which must be the highest ideal of a college. Duncan H.all Baird STUDENT MEMBERS CLASS OF 1939 R. B. Acker, Jr. E. N. AsiEL D. H. Baird C. E. Barnard H. C. Barthel H. M. Bell M. I. Bernstein H. W. Bird, Jr. George Bortin R. D. Brewster W. P. Bundy R. L. Calvert R. J. Clark M. J. Col. ' ngelo R. B. COONEY H. H. CoRBiN, Jr. B. P. Douglass R. D. Ellmann J. D. Fennebresque Ieffrey Ferris C. L. Gary J. A. Gilr.ay, Jr. H. L. GOLUBOCK M.ARSH.ALL Green R. H. H.ARRY D. J. Healy, Jr. F. C. HiRONs, Jr. F. J. Hope Irving Howbert, II I. W. HUGGETT C. S. Ives W. W. Kaufm. nn J. L. KuHN, Jr. R. M. Lederer, Jr. J. H. Linnenberg, Jr. D. C. McCabe W. S. Mailli.ard Thaw Malin Ira M. ' vrder Oscar Miller H. H. Mitchell E. W. N.ASH, Jr. Barnet Phillips, III W. T. Raley S. R. Resor H. L. Rogers J. K. R0SEND.11LE S. M. Rowe, Jr. Charles Savage G. P. Sawyer R. H. Schilling C. G. Schluederberg, Jr. W. G. Schmidt R.alph Simon W. D. Smith N. I. Steers, Jr. R. L. Stilmar W. B. Stone Robert Taft R. H. Tucker S. R. Watkins J. R. Weiselberg Theodore Weston, II H. T. Whitin, II C. A. WiESE, Jr. R. H. Wilmer, Jr. W. J. Woods, Jr. R. S. Wright CLASS OF 1940 D. E. Anderson R. L. AucHiNCLoss, Jr. E. A. Ballard, II R. F. B.ARNUM, Jr. A. A. Beal F. M. Blount L.ansdale Boardman J. B. Brueckel McGeorge Bundy C. R. Buttenheim R. M. Caldwell R. B. Campbell J. N. C.ARLIN T. C. Chalmers, Jr. Robert Donhauser K. P. Donovan C. E. Finn A. L. Fuller E. S. Furniss, Jr. N. S. Gimbel S. F. Hammer L. R. Harper J. L. H.AUER H. L. Henkel J. C. Hindley Henry J.ames, Jr. R. C. Jopling, Jr. B. D. K.. plan, III B. V. Ketcham L. M. King, Jr. S. M. King G. A. KOEHLER W. T. KUHLMEY C. E. L.AURIAT T. W. Lewis W. R. McKelvy D. M. Mennel G. S. MUSTIN J. C. Nemiah C. M. NOONE G. A. Paddock, Jr. W. G. P.ARROTT, Jr. L. S. Parsons William Piper R. J. POUST J. D. Rogers M. B. Roth W. S. Roundy Rich.ard S. muels J. D. Scheuer, Jr. W. D. deV. Schwab V. J. Scully, Jr. J. F. Sh. ' Kpiro A. T. Smythe, Jr. L. M. Starr, II P. B. St.atton B. RRY St U BBS W. S. SuLLiv. N, Jr. E. F. Swenson, Jr. J. M. P. Thatcher, Jr. D. V. vanS. ' vnd R. M. Weissman R. L. Wilcox H. R. Wilson, Jr. CLASS OF 1941 A. W. Andrews, Jr. Robert Beeman R. H. F. BisBEE E. E. Bloch R. B. Brooks G. S. Calder J. T. Clark H. H. Clemens, Jr. J. R. Congbe, re L. C. Dahl A. P. Daignault S. R. Dietrich E. J. Doyle C. S. Goodrich, Jr. Gordon Griscom K. L. J. coBS W. A. King H. S. Kleppinger W. E. Kline, Jr. W. E. Lerner W. B. Lewis W. H. McManus Malcolm Monroe J. M. Newmyer F. E. OssoRio D. M. P.- yne R. L. Rose Fielder Schillinberg R. S. Schluederberg P. J. Stevens A. P. Stowe, Jr. G. R. Waldmann, II W. L. Westen H. B. WHITEM.A.N, Jr. J. K. WiLKINSEN J. H. Adams, Jr. R. F. Aranow C. M. Brown H. W. Holt NON-RESIDENT MEMBERS J. E. McPhee C. G. M-ARCH.ANT J. W. R.ANNENBERG C. E. Reutter, Jr. R. V. Safford D. R. Welter Arthur Sandiford, Jr. J. S. Y.ates N. P. R. Spinelli H. N. Tower -211- PIERSON COLLEGE ierson Qollegc Arnold Wolfers, Master Professor of International Relations HONORARY FELLOWS I! I! President Charles Seymour President Emeritus James Rowland Angell Edward Stephen Harkness Irston Robert Barnes Assistant Professor of Ecor omics William Clyde DeVane Dean of Tale College and Professor of English Richard Foster Flint Associate Professor of Geology James Graham Leyburn Associate Professor of llie Science of Society Arthur Moore Mizener Instructor m English Andrew Richmond Morehouse Assistant Professor of French Benjamin Christie Nangle Associate Professor of English Stanley McCrory Pargellis Assistant Professor of History James Harvey Rogers Sterling Professor of Economics Harry Rudolph Rudin Associate Professor of History Charles Seymour, Jr. Instructor in the History of Art John Edward Vance Assistant Professor of Chemistry Andrews Wanning Jnstri ctor in English William Weldon Watson Associate Professor of Physics Charles Bradford Welles Associate Professor of Classics ASSOCIATE FELLOWS Frank Altschul B.A., igo8 Robert Nelson Corwin Professor of German, and Chairman of the Board of Admissions, Emeritus Eugene Arthur Davidson Editor, Tale University Press George Parmly Day B.A., 1897, Treasurer of the University Robert Frost Litt.D., 1924 John Farquhar Fulton Sterling Professor of Physiology Wilton Hale Hamilton Southmavd Professor of Law Philip Hofer B.A., Harvard University 192 1 Robert James Menner Associate Professor of English F red Towsley Murphy Fellow of the Tale Corporation Garrison Norton B.A. Harvard University, 1923 Wallace Notestein Sterling Professor of English History Reeve Schley Felloio of the Tale Corporation H. Gordon Sweet B.A., 1926 Alan Valentine President of the University of Rochester and former Master of Pierson George Van Santvoord Fellow of the Tale Corporation George Edgar Vincent B.A., 18S5, EE.D., 1911 Herbert Eustis Winlock Litt.D., 1933 lerson Qollege heavy fog shrouded the • X. spires of Harkness and gave the Old Campus, with its dim, sepulchral buildings, a ghostlike appearance. Street lamps tried to pierce the mist but only suc- ceeded in glowing fuzzily. It was devilishly raw and cold, and a light drizzle didn ' t add to my comfort, especially with a light topcoat and no hat. As I had been studying late and was tired and anxious to get back to Pierson as quickly as possible, I hurried across the Old Campus absorbed in my own thoughts. It was little wonder then that I ran right into a small, timid person, just before reaching the High Street gate. I looked up, blurted out an apology, and was about to go on when something extremely un- usual struck my attention. The pedestal on which Hanc Statuam, the great Abraham Pierson, stands was empty ! Great 1 umpmg codfish ! I must be quite mad. I pinched my ear hard, but there were no two ways about it. Abraham was not there. And there was only one place he could have gone. Back to Pierson! But what if he were run over by an automobile? Two and a half centuries had made a difference in traffic. There was no time to be lost. Arriving breathless in the Pierson court, I found it just as I had guessed. There standing by the wall, hat drawn down over his eyes, mouth stern, face seamed with lines of care and worry, and one hand holding a long great- coat by the lapel, was Abraham Pierson ! E ssir-Sr Thought was turbulent and speech quite impossible. I just stood and gaped. With a slow rasping noise the figure turned and spoke in a curiously metallic and toneless voice. Young man, overcome your apparent trepi- dation. I come to animadvert upon the affairs of our mutual habitation. For the past five years I have returned unseen and unrecognized to observe the progress and retrogression of our college. What I see fails to bring joy to my heart. My trepidation was somewhat augmented rather than dimin- ished at this mode of address. I gathered courage, however, and ventured to remark, We in Pierson think that things are running along sorta nicely. Maybe we didn ' t do so well in athletics this last year; all right, but let me tell you, if those ringer bus- boys What have you Piersonites done to further the intellectual goals of the college plan? he cut me short, with a peremptory Tinksonian gesture. Listen here, Abe, if you think you can stand there But his deep-furrowed frown brought me to my senses. What I mean to say, sir, I murmured weakly, is that we do further these goals. That is, we have Spanish, French, and German tables every week in our dining hall. Then too, I rushed on, recollecting some signs I had seen posted on the bulletin board, we have a Philosophy Group and an Historical Group, which meet every other week and at which men like Mr. Northrop and Mr. Calhoun talk. Every Wednesday Mr. Wolfers gets some ' big-wig ' to speak in the lounge. Dr. Gallup — you know. I the poll man-- Dr. Condlitfe, and Ambassador Johnson from China have been here during the past year, as well as two mu- sicians — Dubois and Maas — who gave a darn good recital. Mr. Pierson ' s scowl threat- ened to soften at the mention of these names, but it quickly grew darker. The production of Gil- bert and Sullivan fol-de-rol is distinctly contrary to my notions of propriety and decency, he announced menacingly. Oh, but you ought to see Mrs. Morgan in them, I replied. She helps us out with the annual productions, and she ' s got advice that would put Shelley ' s skylark to shame. Then too, our blossoming young play- wright. Bill Stucky, produced a corking one-act play this last year. Real bosh, Abraham said emphatically. What sort of social activities do you have now? Just thousands, I exclaimed, rather glad that it was he who had introduced the subject. We have three beer parties a year — Mr. Pierson ' s frown changed to a growl — many of which the Fellows attend. Mrs. Wolfers serves tea twice a week at which a good time is had by all. I just wish you could go to one of those teas. It would make even you let your hair down. I suppose you have a glee club too? Mr. Pierson asked. You bet we do. A note of pride crept into my voice. Over one-sixth of the members of the college have sung in it at one time or another. Besides we have Popocatapetl, the Great, to lead our songsters. Not only do we have a glee club, we have a college weekly — the Pierson Slave — which carries the news and views of Piersonites. What it lacks in size it makes up in activity. Last winter it carried an editorial advocating a skating rink in the court here. Lo and behold, on the following morning after a rain, all the drains were found mysteriously blocked up, and before after- noon the lake had frozen over, making the best rink in Yale. Old Abraham looked as though he would burst a blood vessel when I mentioned the skating rink. To think that it would come to this, he kept muttering to himself over and over again. One thing I am certain you would approve, sir; that is the addition of Dean DeVane to our list of Fellows. ' This piece of information struck a responsive chord; the frown disappeared entirely. That ' s one thing on which we are agreed, young man. DeVane is a very delightful and charming person, and I ' m glad to see him here. By the way, that suggests another thing which I like — the way your Fellows eat with the undergraduates. It must be pretty hard on the Fellows, but as long as they don ' t object, I must say I think it creates the most casual and delightful faculty-undergraduate relationship in Yale. As he spoke, Abraham ' s voice trailed off into a mere whisper. A short metallic click put the period after his final word. StifBy and with great effort he turned toward the archway and, creaking perceptibly, moved off. Involuntarily I looked up at the tower clock. It was exactly midnight. When I looked back, the mist had gathered thicker in the alleyway and the lights gave off a fuzzy glow, hut Abraham was gone. Sheldon Yates Carnes I I STUDENT MEMBERS CLASS OF 19J9 D. M. Allen, Jr. R. R. Anderson J. H. Arrington |. M. Ballou j. O. Beattie R. C. Berens J. G. Blanchard P. F. Boller, Jr. V. P. Carrev S. Y. Carnes W. S. C. Chin J. B. Christerson. Jr. G. H. Clark C. A. CoiT F. W. COKER H. Cross, Jr. N. C. Cross C. I. D ' Alton, Jr. L B. Day 1. G. DE BrUVCKER A. Dun, Jr. W. Eddy C. M. Ellison E. C. Ford B. E. Giselsson H. Gregg W. S. Grippin 0. A. Haac 1. W. Maine A. H. Hardy, Jr. W. G. Harris S. C. Hemingw.ay, Jr. F. W. Hensley W. I. Hill P. H. Holme, Jr. G. M. V. Hook E. G. HOTCHKISS C. H. HULBURD, II F. G. Jarlett E. W. Jennes W. W. Kellogg H. KoHN, Jr. R. E. Lapides W. O ' D. Lee W. D. LoucKs, Jr. W. J. LOVEDAY D. McBride, Jr. G. McC. Maxwell H. Maza I. MuROV F. Morse G. B. NoRRis E. Park C. J. Peck, Jr. S. S. POSTOL R. S. Reigeluth C. P. RocKwooD, Jr. D. E. Ross H. M. ScHELL, Jr. F. M. SCHULTZ W. L. Selden F. M. Shumway R. S. Starr H. Stoughton J. D. Strobell, Jr. J. W. SWIHART J. T. Taintor T. C. Taylor L. D. Tyler, Jr. C. W. Verity W. G. Waite H. J. Weisman, Jr. W. C. Wilcox B. Williams D. W. Williams N. C. Works, Ir. P. L. Wright CLASS OF 1940 R. Atkins R. E. August W. N. Baker A. Barker W. S. Barnes H. H. Bassett J. L. Behr D. W. Berm. nt B. Blair F R. Blair E. W. Brightwell F. M. Burr 1. Butler. Jr. B. M. Byers E. F. Callan, Jr. W. H. Chisholm C. J. Cole A. L. Corey, Jr. C. C. Cory A. I. CUMMINGS M. Dent, Jr. W. N. Driscoll J. H. Frank P. Frankenberger L. G. Gardner I. Geller P. McG. Hall W. D. Hart, Jr. P. A. Hawkins A. R. Hayes, Jr. D. Heard, Jr. W. F. Hellmuth. Ir. W. R. Herrick, Jr. R. M. Jordan R. G. Jordan T. T. Kalinowski A. E. Kenrick, Jr. P. D. Lacerquist H- W. Lawrence, Ir. C. A. Leland, hi ' J. C. LOBENSTINE J. F. McClelland B. McClintock P. F. MacGuire J. Mackenzie, Jr. R. F. McMullen W. H. Mann E. L. Meister S, M. Meyer, Jr. S. P. Moorhead W. E. Mulvey, Jr. E. L, Newberger R. W. Oakes W. M. Oler, III G. H. Orgelman N. E. Osborn J. G. Overall W. R. Rey ' Nolds, Jr. E. Ryan D. A. Schmechel G. F. Serries D. J. Shiller W. P. Snyder N. A. Spector W. H. Starbuck A. L. Stephens, Jr. W. McD. Stucky D. I. Thiermann E. D. ToLAND, Jr. R. T. Vanderbilt. Jr. H. F. Vaughan, Jr. W. B. Watson, Jr. J. M. Weeks L. Wheeler L. Williams M. Whitaker I. WiNSLOW CLASS OF 1941 C. A. Alexander, Jr. C. M. Allen I. L. Anderson W. I. Badger E. L. Beard, III C. N. Berry J. A. Blair K. F. Burgess, Jr. C. Burnam I. H. Burrowes W. L. Cross, III |. Dickenson, IV A. F. Dill J. Dunlap R. B. Fisher D. G. Foulk R. N. Gould N. G. Hickman H. W. Kenner G. J. Kleman E. H. Krueger G. R. MacLane C. Maechling, Jr. M. G. Main R. J. Mathias E. L. Met: E. B. Morris C. W. Morton A. B. Orthwein J. O. Parsons, Jr. T. J. Patton R. J. Redington P. L. Smith W. H. Y. Stevens J. F. Teevan R. G. Van Peursem W. H. Wagner C. W. Watson T. C. Wedel R. Weir, III P. H. Wootton, Jr. SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE P. K. Ogden NON-RESIDENT MEMBERS G. P. Bissell, Jr. 1. T. Bryan, Jr. G. E. H. Comte T. Dines, Jr. J. I. Everest M. R. Fincke P. H. Freeman E. J. Garvey J. N. Greene, J G. j. H.arding, C. S. Hartley R. M. Keefe R. C. Kellogg T. H. Kingsley I. R. Moulton P. F. W. Peck, Jr. M. Pfeiffenberger P. S. Pierson W. T. Pope P. L. Ross, Jr. C. M. RUPRECHT G. S. Smith C. R. Swift S. M. Whittlesey D. Wick C. C. WOOSTER H. H. ZiEsiNG, Jr. SAYBROOK COLLEGE i A Sayhroo Qollege Elliot Dunlap Smith, Master Professor of Economics II HONORARY FELLOWS President Charles Seymour President Emeritus James Rowland Ancell Edward Stephen Harkness FELLOWS Alfred Raymond Bellinger Associate Professor of Greek, ' ' d Latin John Milton Berdan Emily Sanford Professor oj English Literature Frank Edward Brown Instructor m Classics Rev. Robert L. Calhoun Professor of Historical Theology Gerald Mortimer Capers, Jr. Instructor in History Harold Glenn Dietrich Assistant Professor of ChL ' nii.strv William Douglas Curator of Glass and Ceramics m the Gallery of Fine Arts William Huse Dunham, Jr. Assistant Professor of History John Archer Gee Associate Professor of English John van Benschoten Griggs Instructor m Italian Basil Duke Henning Instructor ni History Albert Galloway Keller Wi !iam Grahttin Sunnier Professor of the Science of Society Angelo Lipari Professor of Italian Everett Victor Meeks Dean of the School of Fine Arts Sydney Knox Mitchell Durfee Professor of History John Collins Pope Assistant Professor of English ASSOCIATE FELLOWS Kan ' Ichi Asakawa Professor of History Marshall Moore Bartholomew Director of the Tale Glee Club Samuel Flagg Bemis Farnani Professor of Diplomatic Historv Rev. Arthur Howe Bradford Fellow of the Tale Corporation Arthur Linton Corbin William K. Townsend Professor of Law Samuel Willi.am Dudley Dean of the School of Engineering Walter Prichard E.-vton Associate Professor of Playwritmg Morris Hadley B.A. 1916 Samuel Clark Harvey William H. Carmalt Professor of Surgery Harry Benjamin Jepson Professor of Applied Music Bernh. ' Krd Knollenberg University; Librarian Stanley R. McCandless Associate Professor of Lighting Ashley Webster Oughterson Associate Professor of Surgery Leigh Page Professor of Mathematical Phvsics L- MES G.amble Rogers B.A. 1889 Frederick Ely Williamson B.A. 1808 Sayhroo Qollege regoire is a gargoyle who sits - on the upper end of a but- tress and just holds a globe and thinks all day (and all night, too). The buttress is in KiUingworth Court of Saybrook College, and isn ' t of much importance except as a seat from which Gregoire can view all that goes on within these towering walls. For though Gregoire is merely carved from stone, the concentrated stare of his bulging eyes indicates that he doesn ' t miss a thing. He certainly must have a good laugh over the last-minute breakfast-rushers who soon re- appear in the court, swearing that the clock said only 8:29. He can watch the technologists hurry off with their slide-rules tor that eight o ' clock lab, and he l irely refrains from dropping his globe on the tousled heads of the gaunt and harrowed intellectuals who straggle down for that mid-morning semi- nar. He must marvel with the rest of us that a group of such varied interests could be so closely united in spirit as are the members of this college. If one studies the expression on Gregoire ' s solemn face more closely, he will find a definite element of pride. And justly so. Having but barely missed win- ning the Tyng Trophy last year, Saybrook immediately massed her athletes for a new concertetl drive and barely missed first place in the intercoUege football league. The team captained by Big Bill Rockwood and coached by Brownie Watson of the Law School had plenty of beef but i just lacked that scoring punch to clinch many of its games. Al Kaynor ' s touchball team didn ' t do so well, yet had fun anyway trying to keep T.D. from scoring over a hundred points; it was a moral victory and the Ace-Cap was pleased. With the basketball team, the story has been a differ- ent one entirely as Sam Dils, Ray Anderson, Johnny Miller, Al Manning, and Frank Burych hooped their way to the top of the ladder, even subduing the flashy Divinity School quintet as well as the Adams House gang from Cambridge. And Greg bets every stone hair on his head that the Seals place well in base- ball and crew again this spring. Our little gargoyle must wish he could participate in many of the activities of Sealdom, for as he is now, he ' s definitely left out in the cold. Saybrook is a genial college, and everybody is inter- ested in one thing or another. Many are the barbershop quar- tettes who do a little harmon- izing after the bi-monthly Cakes- and-Ale parties in the Master ' s House or after the song-fests held in the dining-room con- ducted by Barty, Duke Hen- ning, or Van Griggs. And for pure entertainment the acme is always reached in the annual Founder ' s Day ceremonies when the potent punch concocted by Bill Douglas is passed around, and Dean Meeks in sartorial robes plants a tree or some ivy some- where in the courtyards. This is followed, according to custom, by a Restoration comedy pre- sented by the Duke ' s company, last spring the play selected being the Double-Dealer, which starred Oggie Hannaford, Say- brook ' s own blushing heroine, Harry Quinn, and Bob Judd, the prompter. Saybrook keeps her eye on the world outside Yale by entertain- ing many prominent economists, lawyers, politicians, and diplo- mats. Among the guest speakers this year were Mayor La Guardia, Thurman Arnold, Chafee of Harvard, John Brophy of the C. I. O., and Fred Williamson of the New York Central, all of whom chatted delightfully off- the-record in the crowded common-room. On International affairs the inmates of Saybrook were privileged to hear Herbert Feis from Washington, Major General Beck, and Dr. Prochnik, ex-Ambassador to the United States from Austria. It would be a shame to leave out mention of what the Seals think themselves of the European situation when they presented a little drama about Charlie McCarthy Czechoslovakia at the President ' s party in the fall. Other parties that have been given this year were the Inter- national Dinner which featured gay peasant costumes and na- tional cheeses, Mr. Liparfs Ital- ian Dinner accompanied by all the trimmings from Chianti to Ravioli, and the Gotham Junior League Glee Club ' s joint concert with Yale songsters and Whiffen- poofs in the refectory. In the above-mentioned hall, Saybrook ' s own Barney Hurlbutt and Dave Ramsay have often tickled the ivories in the evenings to the great enjoyment and bafflement of all listening. Particularly unique among organizations within the shadow of Harkness Tower are the different clubs for those scholars interested in history, medicine, and the law. For those athletes, on the other hand, who wish i exercise elsewhere than up at the Payne Whitney gym there are of course the squash courts in which Moo Plum ruled supreme this year. With the passing of winter, snowballing has naturally gone out of vogue as an after luncheon amusement, and a Saybrook Racquets Club has been founded in the ping-pong room where the third and fourth floor habitants of Willis entry hold sway. Finally, there ' s always the movie team which attracts a large percentage of the Seals. So if Gregoire could do a Pygmalion stunt, he could join in any one of these activities. Yet they cannot just be taken for granted; there is a controlling hand which is continually doing the dirty- work in preparation for all these events. Warren Wilhelm, Jake Lee, Bob Clarke, and George Chase are forever busy over in the Student Office. Outstanding is Anson Peckham who roams the halls looking for men to play on his special pet, the squash team. Under the able executive-training of E.D., these Student Oifice men have become so capable that the acting Master, Professor Sidney K. Mitchell, IS able to take over in Mr. Smith ' s sabbatical absence and both reigns and rules entirely through his friendly spirit and invigorating interest. Mrs. Mitchell has filled the vacancy left by the amiable Mrs. Smith with equal charm. In spite of Gregoire ' s confinement to his lofty perch, he is in some ways more fortunate than those of us who dwell within these walls but three short years. Ah! the wheel turns. And so, another June finds more of us ready and willing to apply the timely lessons taught by Mr. Smith in his demonstration interviews to ease our path ahead. Gregoire has witnessed a great year of genial companionship and progress, and when we visit this alma mater, Saybrook, in the years to come, Gregoire will welcome us with that stoney twinkle in his eye. Robert Elston Bond STUDENT MEMBERS CLASS OF 1939 A. B. Adams R . P. Arms Paul Bender H. R. Bloch, Ir. R. E. Bond W. L. Bosworth R. G. BOTSFORD N. L. BowEN, Jr. B. C. Breeden G. W. Campbell W. C. Caswell A. W. Chambers, Jr. G. S. Ch.- se H. E. Chittenden, Jr. R. J. Clarke R. P. Coffin Atwood Collins J. J. Conran F. W. Curtis A. S. Denton Alan Dodd A. D. Dyess, Jr. J. A. Farley G. L. Farrell D. J. Ferguson W. D. Fr. nce C. D. Frey. Jr. A. A. Garthwaite, Jr. H. R. Geyelin, Jr. J. M. Ginsberg F. C. Gle.ason E. E. Gold J. W. Good S. H. Hall R. O. Hannaford G. L. Hekhuis Stephen Herz, Jr. P. C. Hughes F. R. Hurlbutt GiR.ARD Iason J. R. JuDD, Jr. A. R. Kaynor D. A. Kr. mer R. D. Lackland S. C. Lampert, Jr. J. K. Lee R. O. Lehmann J. L. LovETT, Jr. A. A, Manning J, A. Miller R. A. Miller J. A. MoFFiTT, Jr. G. I. MOLNAR I. W. O ' Meara, |r. E. K. Paavola |. H, Perry, Jr. S. H. M. Plum J. B. Reubens W. A. Rockwood E. E. Sage E. R. ScHWABACH Harlan Scott. Jr. R. H. Seligman J. J. Sibley L. H. Smith J. W. Starbuck, Jr. J. H. Stubbs A. M. Suchin H. G. Van Sant Warren Williams L. T. Williams, Jr. E. L Wilson, Jr. Alpheus Winter, Jr. J. W. Wolfendon B. C. Young CLASS OF 1940 R. Atherton V. A. AUTUORI 8. M. Barnet, Jr. R. C. Barrett N. H. Bennett S. P. W. Black H. S. Bowser J. E. Brewster J. F. BURDITT G. K. BuRNISTON R. G. Caldwell, Jp S. Caplin S. C. Carroll C H. Cheyney P. K. Clark R. H. Cl.ark B. B. Dayton W. L. Dommerich J. F. Doran J. F. Eagle, Jr. I. A. Elliot R. H. Faust E. H. Fletcher E. A. Flickner, Jr. D. M. Gerber A. J. Golden A. G. Greany N. Haflich J. S. Hamilton C T. Handy S. T. Herrick J. S. Hinrichs G. W. Hurlbutt R. C LA.MS P. F. Kalat W. Lautz P. A. Levin K. J. Lynch A. A. M.acDonald W. C. McMillan J, N, Manilla R. H. M.atlhiessen, Jr. S. L. Mims, Jr. H. A. MoRAN, Jr. R. L. Oehrig W. P. Parker, Jr. J. F. Partridge a. W. Peckham P. B. Pool G. O. Redington, Jr. L. K. Roos R. B. Russ E. P. Sackett R. A. Schmalz T. R. Shapiro M. D. St.afford G. A. Stearns H. S. Swan, Jr. J. C Sweet, Jr. R. M. Tenny W. S. Thompson, Jr. M. B. Vilas, Jr. J. M. Wallman M. S. Weinberg M. Whitmore L. Wiley J. H. Williams A. Wilson, 3d J. N. Young, Jr. CLASS OF 1941 B. B. Allen R. G. Anderson C. Ashley G. B. Ballard, Jr T. L. Bradley G. Breed G. C. Brown H. T. Buchenau F. T. BuRYCH, Jr. F. C ' LL.AH.AN T. R. Clark, Jr. B. L. Clune D. B. Coghlan P. L. Coleman G. Curtis R. J. Curtis J. W. Daily H. L. DeFelice J. F. Dempsey, Jr. F. C Donovan, Jr. R. R. Earle D- McK. Ehrman F. M. Fargo, 3d |. D. F. Foskett W. F. Gips, Jr. B. Glazer T. F. Goldcamp J. Q. Gormley J. Grah.am H. G. Graybill T. Griswold H. R. H.amel A. J. Hill, Jr. J. J. HOUGHTELING, Jr. G. H. Hunt, Jr. H. P. IsHAM, Jr. R. A. Jackson P. E. H. Kain F. H. KiLLORIN G. W. Lamberson J. A. Lee ]. A. MacDonald, Jr. S. W. McLeod T. H. Mahony, Jr. J. M. Morris E. OcuMPAUGH, 4th W. J. O ' Hearn W. M. ScHUTTE J. R. Sears H. W. Selby, Jr. H. V. Smith H. G. Smith J. N. Smith, Jr. E. P. Snyder W. H. Stevens, Jr. J. S. Sweeny J. C Washburne H. H. Wells, Jr. R. P. Williams W. B. Williams J. P. Wilson, 4th J. L. Woolner R. ZuCKER NON-RESIDENT MEMBERS S. B. Brinkley J. M. BUNCE H. S. Cody J. S. COONEY R. G. Crockett R. W. Cutler G. L. Dietz S. S. DiLs H. W. Dodge, Jr. E. H, Ethridge, Jr. R. E. Herman B. S. Holderness E. H. Kenyon R. M. Luby D. V. McNamee R. A. Mertens H. L. Quinn T. S. Quinn, Jr. J. S. Reed B. J. Rogers H. C Strong, ] . L. R. Wall.ace B. Watson TIMOTHY DWIGHT COLLEGE li Ijimothy wight Qollege James Grafton Rogers, Master Professor of Law I HONORARY FELLOWS President Charles Seymour President Emeritus James Rowland Angell Edward Stephen Harkness FELLOWS Roswell Parker Anoier Professor of Psychology, Director of the tory of Psychology Allen Jennings Barthold Assistant Professor of French Robert Fessler Bryan Instructor m Economics Richard Cushman Carroll Secretary, Bureau of Appointments Francis William Coker Projessor of Government Thomas Wellsted Copeland Instructor i?i English Jack Randall Crawford Associate Professor of English Cecil Herbert Driver Associate Professor of Got ' erntJient Alfred Whitney Griswold Labora- Assistant Professor of Government and Inter- national Relations AsHBEL Green Gulliver Assistant Dean of the School of Law Howard Wilcox Haggard Professor of Afip ied Physiology LooMis Havemeyer Assistant Dean of the Sheffield Scientific School Robert John Herman Kiphuth Assistant Projessor of Physical Education John Marshall Phillips Assistant Professor of the History of Art Nils Gosta Sahlin Instructor in German Raymond Wright Short Instructor in English Joshua Irving Tracey Associate Professor of Mathematics ASSOCIATE FELLOWS Edwin Montefiore Borchard Justus S. Hotch iss Professor of Law John Rensselaer Chamberlain B.A. 1925 ' - ' • ' Hendon Chubb Ph.B. 1895 Charles Edward Clark Dean o) the School of Law Albert Godfrey Conrad Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering Wilbur Lucius Cross Dean of Graduate School, Emeritus WiNTHROP Edwards Dwight B.A. 1893 Henry Solon Gr. ' ves Dean £7neritus of the School of Forestry Deane Keller Associate Professor of Drawing and Painting James Lee Loomis Fellow of the Tale Corporation Ogden Dayton Miller Assistant Secretary of the Uniuersifv Walter Millis B.A. 7920 Benton B. Owen Assistant Profes.wr of Chemistry Justice Owen Josephus Roberts Right Rev. Henry Knox Sherrill Fellow of the Tale Corporation Henry Lewis Stimson B.A. 1888 o Timothy wight Break, break, plaster break! Pack up your duffle in the night A crack from the plaster, a word from the Master, A welcome into anywhere but Dwight [ own the long brown tables two hundred arms lift two hundred brimful glasses of beer; the austere colonial banquet hall warms to two hundred voices booming out in remembrance of the great Plaster Night, Timothy Dwight ' s oldest tradition. For, strangely enough, Timothy Dwight, newest of Yale ' s resi- dential colleges, has its traditions. Time moves swiftly m youth, and a full college genfration has passed since the day the last, crisp brick was laid in the quiet New England square which is Timothy Dwight. The bricks may have weathered little m these four years, but the spirit they house has discarded its swaddUng clothes. It is a spirit already hallowed, for it is a spirit transplanted from the Old Brick Row, a spirit of the e uberant. red-blooded loyalties of Old Yale tempered with the mature, schol- arly restraint of the New. From the Master down, this spirit touches all men of Timothy Dwight, deeply and quietly. It is Yale. It IS Timothy Dwight. With steam-shovels constantly grinding out in our ears a re- mmmmm minder that the erection of the magisterial Silliman will end for- ever our splendid isolation, we smile with comfortable satisfac ' tion at the well ' beaten paths already worn to our doors. For the Yale community has long given sharp eye to the doings at this outpost. Perhaps the day best remeni ' bered, as old grads thumb long- ingly through their yearbooks, will be the famous annual Field Day in May when Timothy Dwight men cast off with equal relief their examination cares and their well-pressed tweed jackets, and spend the afternoon at base- ball and horseshoes and campfire singing at Dr. Haggard ' s farm in Woodbridge. It is then that Master Rogers, with the skill of an old cowhand, turns out those steaks that live in men ' s hearts. Then there was the Christmas party with boisterous repartee between St. Nick and the soot- black college fathers, who de- scend from their post of vigilance on the clocktower for the annual festivities. That night Timothy Dwight offered the first fruits of its dramatic talent, the medieval Second Shepherd ' s Play. And in the Spring came the garden party on Derby Day, with the soft, terraced New England lawn pricked out with colored lights, and the vigorous voices of young actors declaiming. These are the milestones, but there are other days which will be recalled. There was the day when the venerable president- emeritus of Harvard, A. Law- rence Lowell, with the power of a veteran steam-engine, puffed out an address on The Futility of Human Endeavor. Other beer dinners will be remembered for the smiling voice of the Ma s- ter singing out As Freshmen First . . ., the Glee Club and the Grunyons matching the beer in creating an atmosphere of mellow sentiment, and the informal knots of students sitting at the feet ot statesmen, diplomats, journalists, and adventurers in the lounge. During the daytime Timothy Dwight ' s men are no less active. The fame of the so-called Prexies has spread on the playing fields ot Yale, and at least one title — the touch football championship — has been brought home in tri- umph to Temple Street. Hockey honors were missed — by a thin skin of ice. Meanwhile, in the bowels of the college halls, the smooth gray wheel of the power press spins around, printing the ■weekly Town Hall Bulletin, post- ers for the art or photographic exhibitions, or the neatly- designed edition of Gray ' s Elegy which won praise in the Tiynes ' pompous book review. From the next door leaks the rasping grunts of handsaw and lathe in Timothy Dwight ' s new metal and woodworking shop. And nearby, a handful of the literati, with apostolic disdain, set be- tween pipe puffs the literary standards of the Weatheri ' ane, standards so high and so well attained that spectacles from all over Yale peered intently in the direction of Timothy Dwight. For it is realued that there is more to the College Plan than bricks and up-to-the-minute plumbing. To fill the gaps in in- dividual educational programs the College has continued its weekly seminars in economics, govern- ment, literature, and so on, led by Fellows and attended only by those who desire them. There is no compulsion m Timothy Dwight activities, but a close ri feeling of intellectual comradeship has sprung up between Fellow and Student, and the discussion groups are well attended. Moreover, every noon at the long table the tousled heads of youth are well mingled with the grayer and sparser-covered heads of their elders. The Master is always there, beaming with genuine good fellowship. Even on Week-ends when shining coupes streak northward there are compensations within Timothy Dwight ' s walls. The riches of the great college library and the wealth of classical music in the record collection offer quiet hours of profound intellectual pleasure. Over at the Master ' s House Mr. and Mrs. Rogers are entertaining at tea with a grace and a charm which endear them to successive college generations. Timothy Dwight is new. There are things which must be undone and there are things yet to do. The College Plan has yet to be crystallized into a deep-set part of our educational pattern. The individual colleges have still to develop clear-cut personalities. And yet down at Timothy Dwight there are growing signs of a character which stamps the College apart from the rest. Presi- dent Seymour has spoken of that elusive spiritual something which is at the core of all that means Yale, a feeling which comes at least once to the heart of those who love Yale. Living quietly in the old traditions but with the new forms, Timothy Dwight hopes that more and more that spirit will be found where the Old Brick Row has given spiritual place to the new. L.AWRENCE C. Goldsmith STUDENT MEMBERS CLASS OF 1939 A. J. Adelberg R. P. AXTON E. D. Bauer Marshall Bliss c. s. bonanzino R. R. Browning, Jr. E. G. BuRSTEIN H. M. Chilrs, Jr. J. S. Crosby H. M. Curry, III J. B. Curtis A. P. Dewey C. P. Dixon, Jr. L. P. Doty H. W. FOSBURGH A. N. B. Garvan L. C. Goldsmith R. M. Goldwater David Mali. W. A. Hamilton I. O. Heintz b. W. Henry G. M. Herrick G. W. HiCKENLOOPER E. K. HiNE D. G. Hunter, Jr. G. S. HussoN W. H. HUSTED G. A. Hutchinson E. E. Huth Joseph Katz W. E. Kilpatrick loHN Lawson T. A. McGraw, III J. L. Meri. m A. O. Miller, Jr. Malcolm Muir, Jr. Mande tlle Mullally, Jr. W. W. Reiter W. J. ROBB E. S. Rumely K. M. SCHIFFER H. B. Sjott, Jr. H. M. Smith, Jr. J. G. Stephenson M. F. Steward Ric:iard Storm W. M. Tracy W. T. Troutman J. D. Walder Anthony Walker D. A. Warner S. C. Weber F. J. Wetzel, Jr. W. A. WicKwiRE, Jr. C. M. Woolley, Jr. CLASS OF 1940 S. E. Balt: C. B. Bl.anding J. A. Bleakley Gerard Bradford, Jr J. L. Br.adley L. B. Brody S. H. Cady H. F. Chaney, Jr. R. D. Dalzell, Jr. F. W. Dittman, Jr. R. B. Egan W. C. Emery B. H. Evans, Jr. D. P. Ferriss John Forsyth D. S. Fuller W. W. Gibson, Jr. A. P. Greenbl.att R. E. Grote, Jr. J. C. H.arper W. H. Harrison, 111 W. R. Hecem.an W. S. Howard, II W. D. HOYT Grant Hubley R. P. Humphrey R. W. Hyde R. M. Johnson Morg. n Jones T. D. Kingsley G. K. Klose E. L. Krochalis Robert Lawson S. B. Legg W. E. Levy P. M. Lindsay B. F. McCamey, Jr. Brooks McCormick H. R. Mancusi-Ungaro F. I. Menton J. Z. Miller, IV F. P. Morrison F. J. Murphy, Jr. J. R. Neuhaus G. S. Oliver, II S. B. Perkins, Jr. Arthur Peter, Jr. Milton Pollock J. S. Raymond, Jr. William Rockefeller J. B. S. Rousseau D. C. Schipfer G. S. Seabury R. M. Seamon G. B. Smith A. D. SOKOLOW A. M. Stover C. R. Taylor H. E. Terhune A. B. Th. ' vtcher T. G. W. TsoN, Jr. A. N. Wells R. A. Weyburn Paul Winer CLASS OF 1941 H. B. Armstrong, III T. W. Arnold, Jr. W. A. Barker, II W. C. Bedell W. W. Bl. ckburn, II Wiley Blair, III L. D. Bragg, Jr. Kingman Brewster, Jr. R. K. Brodie, Jr. G. L. BUHRMAN, Ir. D. M. Bull, Jr. ' Wallace Campbell, III S. A. CARTON Wirt Dams, II J. R. Dern D. S. Devor, Jr. E. H. Dft-icHT F. H. Ellis, Jr. P. W. Emery Howard Ferguson D. L. GiLLETT, III F. H. Goodyear, III P. E. Graybeal J. H. Green, Jr. R. P. GUTTERMAN E. T. Hall I. S. Hausman L. D. Heck G. C. Hupfard P. B. J.ACKSON W. E. Jackson How.ard K.aye J. H. King, Jr. DeLaney Kiphuth Shepard Krech, Jr. W. B. Laufman, III Alex.ander Leslie A. F. LovEjOY R. T. McNamara J. T. Maynard P. B. Metcalf, Jr. D. C. MiLLETT QuENTiN Mitchell J. O. Morris J. B. Oliver T. C. Oliver, Jr. C, O. Page J. A. Pierce, II S. L. PiTTMAN lOHN ReID D. W. Rewick A. J. Rosenthal, Jr. J. N. Rothschild H. C. Schw.ab, Jr. G. H. Southworth J. P. Spillane C. P. Stevenson R. C. Sri;KNEY W. W. Struthers, Jr. B. A, Tompkins, Jr. R. B. Tweedy Kinsley Twining W. T. ViETS H. T. Ware, Jr. I. H. Ware, Jr. W. S. Wolff N. E. Wood, Jr. C. W. Woodruff W. C. ZiLLY NON-RESIDENT MEMBERS A. L. Armitage W. W. Atterbury, Jr. G. H. Barber, Jr. R. O. Bassett F. A. Borsodi P. C. Brainard G. W. Cheney. Jr. John Churchill, Jr. R. E. Cooke D. ' Krrah Corbet, Jr. A. R, CORLETT, Jr. P. G. COTTELL J. R. Dellenback Lawrence Dixon F. D. Doble E. J. Dryer, Jr. R. P. Duncan A. C. Ely Samuel Field, III R. C. Fowler Charles Gibson, II F. W. Hamilton, Jr. L. V, Hammond Albert Hessberg. II W. T. Hodge T. A. Jones G. D. Kellogg, Jr. St.anley Lutngston, jr. D. H. McKellar H. S. McNeil B. H. Markham, Jr. R. C. Morse. Jr. P. C. Nicholson, Jr. E. C. ScHROEDER R. T. Shinkle I. E. Sloane W. H. Sweney, Jr. W. G. Thorn W. A. Wick TRUMBU LL COLLEGE r I rumhull Qollege Charles Hyde Warren, Master Deciii 0 the Sheffield Saentific School, and Projessor of Geology HONORARY FELLOWS President Charles Seymour President Emeritus James Rowland Ancell Edward Stephen Harkness FELLOWS Russell Layman Bradley Iii5tn«:tOT in German Hollon Augustine Farr Associate Professor of German Ralph Henry Gabriel Lamed Professor of Americuti Historv Frederick Whiley Hilles Assistant Professor of English Harry Mortimer Hubbell Takott Professor of Gree Henry Margenau Assistant Professor of Psysks Donald George Marquis Assistant Professor of Psychology Alan Van Keuren McGee nstritclor m English John Spangler Nicholas Branson Professor of Comf ' aratwe Anatomy FiLMER S. C. Northrop Professor of Philosofihv Edward Simpson Noyes Chairman of the Board of Admissions, and Associate Professor of English Joseph Seronde — Benjamin F. Barge Professor of Romance Languages and Literature RoscOE Henry Suttie Associate Professor of Civil Engineering John Arrend Timm Assistant Professor of Chemistrv ASSOCIATE FELLOWS Stanhope Bayne-Jones Dean of the School of Medicine, and Professor of Bac- teriology Harvey Cushing Sterling Professor of 7 leurology, Emeritus Frederick Trubee Davison Fellow of the Tale Corporation Richard Frank Donovan Assistant Dean of the School of Music, and Assistant Professor of the Theory of Music Samuel Herbert Fisher Former Fellow of the Tale Corporation Clements Collard Fry Associate Professor of Psychiatry and Mental Hygiene Frederick Augustus Godley Associate Professor of Architecture Andrew Keogh Unitiersity Librarian, and Sterling Professor of Bibliogra- phy, Emeritus William Raymond Longley James E. English Professor of Mathematics Chester Ray Longwell Henry Barnard Davis Professor of Geology Mark Arthur May Director of the Institute of Human Relations Underhill Moore Sterling Professor of Law Allardyce Nicoll Professor of the History of the Drama Edward Larned Ryerson Fellow of the Tale Corporation George Henry Soule, Jr. B.A., 1908 Reverend Anson Phelps Stokes Former Secretary of the University Charlcs-Edward Amory Winslow Anna M. R. Lauder Professor of Public Health Milton Charles Winternitz Anthony J. Brady Professor of Pathology m i . - - Trumbull Qollege No matter where he lives in Trumbull, he is a hull with a delicate ego. Whether he has counted taxi-belles high above York Street ' s busy corner, or slept with boastful pride above TrumbulFs sun-drenched, aristo- cratic center court, or even dozed lackadaisically just off High Street ' s cloistral retreat, a subtle craving for conformity and unity in mind and matter has induced him to make changes as he sees tit. Evidence of this fact is well- nigh traditional in the ceremonial bedaubing of Trumbull ' s famed Little Man. Something in his ex- pression of complacent reverie has annually invited the Bulls to keep him colorful and conspicu- ous. Despite the frowning prox- imity of the library ' s Reading Room, Center Court inmates perennially change their once- grassy court into an arena of sport. Not to be outdone by varsity and college teams, Trum- bull has its own league games right on this sand-lot. Most im- portant of these activities are the spring nigger-baby sessions, held every evening after supper until dusk. Who would not come from far and near to see Trum- bull ' s star hurler, Jim Higgins, mighty of wing and sharp of eye, wind up to blast his victims head- first through the Library wall? Those who have sought col- lective security in Trumbull ' s tranquil court overlooking High Street often find that quite the opposite situation prevails. Pails of water and snowballs are likely to be dropped on unsuspecting passers-by by the playful seniors of entry K, whose actions have long since ceased to astonish staid sophomores and juniors. Yet like lambs they all troop into Dean and Mrs. Warren ' s entertaining teas or climb up to Mr. Bradley ' s for bridge, music, and just plain talk. Situated thus between the Geology and the German Depart- ments, they are nurtured upon a proper diet of the arts and sciences. Trumbullian athletics are not confined entirely to the all- purpose center court, for many of the college members are active on both the varsity athletic fields and in the more informal inter- college contests. Devoting their bovine talents to soccer, basket- ball, squash, and wrestling the Bulls have left their mark in the field of University athletics to carry on in the spirit of their talented predecessors Frank and Kelley. On the intercollege grid- iron Captain Duncan Elders men gave a good account of them- selves, undoubtedly spurred on to greater heights of achievement by the well-timed addition of new gold-and-black jerseys. High points of the season included an insidious aerial attack built around Tricky Alter, a chemist of no mean repute, who is equally proficient with pigskin and horse- hide, and one-boot Bradley ' s place-kick against Jonathan Ed- wards, which produced the neces- sary one point margin of victory. The winter season was not too successful for the athletically- inclined Bulls as Captain Sevan ' s courtmen just broke even in games, and Co-Captains Johnson and Garrett brought their skaters to an impressive finish with one victory. The swimmers, perennial threats to the league title, were handicapped by the loss of Cap- tain Jacobson to the environs of the New Haven Hospit.il. The balmy zephyrs of spring bring rumors of a Florida-trained dia- mond squad behind the battery of Metiger and Willard, and camera-man SiUeck and his co- horts have already begun talking about their intended triumphs on the Harbor. But Trumbull is not made up entirely of muscle-ripplers and iron men. Au ynonde hteraire the democratic voice of The Trum ' bu id7i stoutly upholds the prin- ciples of college democracy in this day and age of autocracies and dictatorships. Yale ' s Oldest Col- lege Periodical expresses the sundry opinions and moods of any member of the college who chooses to contribute. Under the capable editing of Duncan Elder this organ of public opinion and free speech adopted a policy of conservatism not entirely di- vorced from mild censorship. In most cases the TrumbulUan board welcomes criticism. As a result of a definite leaning towards the satirical, many personal carica- tures have been unearthed from among the pages of this rather frank magazine. These have led to vigorous threats from Trum- bulUan readers, and on one occasion at least, a contribution, deemed too libelous, was pur- loined from the city Editor ' s desk and returned only with the understanding that it should undergo complete deletion. The TrumbulUan does come out peri- odically, if irregularly, although the cause of its tardiness is usually laid at the door of the innocent printer. This painful uncertainty of never knowing when the bomb is going to burst adds to, rather than detracts from, the attractiveness of the Bull sheet. . Famous in the annals of TrumbuUian amateur theatricals is last spring ' s presentation of Ferdi- nand. This gala spectacle saw the center court take on the exotic atmosphere of old Barcelona as Trumbull ' s only tree was plentifully bedizened with corks which had seen harder service elsewhere. A bull pen was roped off to form a ring for the courageous bandilleros, picadors, and matador. Fever ran high as Mr. Bradley, ably seconded by a public address system, put the story across. From a balcony above, a bevy of senoritas, faculty wives in disguise, blushed and curtsied in true Spanish style. Handkerchiefs and kisses were thrown to Tal Pearson as he circumnavigated the ferocious- looking Ferdinand, and heart-rending was his grief when the bull refused to fight. Most amusing was Ferdinand himself, whose bulk was amply filled out by Trumbull ' s strong boys, Herbert Pickett and Mac Godley, holding up the fore and aft parts respectively. Most to be regretted was the poor little Bull who was so reluctant to be called a little Bull. The festive spirit reigns supreme at these festivities and at the annual Jonathan Trumbull birthday party. This year was no exception, with the usual flow of ready wit from the genial Mr. Noyes, master of ceremonies. Dean Warren and President Seymour were the principal speakers. The traditional gaiety ran far into the night and beyond the Trumbull dining hall, but not until the alcoholic ward had been well filled. Equally as effective was the Christmas Dinner, at which Fellows and their families joined TrumbuUians in listening to carol singing by Mrs. Donovan and the Trumbull Glee Club. Too much tribute cannot be paid to Dean and Mrs. Warren for carrying on so genuinely the Trumbull tradition of these affairs and for filling the place left vacant last year by Dr. and Mrs. Bayne-Jones. George Stebbins Dickinson, Jr. STUDENT MEMBERS CLASS OF iqjQ M. W. Babb, Jr. C. U. Banta E. F. Blount C. A. BURKEY R. M. Byrnes, Jr. P. D. Caesar T. H. Carlson C G. Collins J. F. CULLEN L. M. Davey G. S. Dickinson, Jr. D.AViD Dows, Jr. R. D. Elder, Jr. R. M. Fasanell.a H. R. Feldm.an M. D. Freeman A. K. Gage E. P. Garrett E. P. German D. K. Gernerd G. M. Godley J. J. Goldstein R. F. Good A. V. N. Goodyear H. R. Greenhouse Louis Hamman, Jr. ]. K. Hanrahan R. H. Harris C L. Herbert E. R. Hyde J. H. Higgens A. H. Jacobson, Jr. Collister Johnson F. J. Kellam, Jr. K. L Lash W. J. McClure N. L. McCoMB R. W. McLaren D. W. Menton W. G. Metzger, 3d D. B. Oat G. H. Page T. T. Pearson H. E. Pickett, Jr. Solomon Resnick R. S. Ross R. P. Shaw B. T. Stodd.art F. C Tanner, Jr. J. C Thompson }. G. Webb W. D. Weber A. W. Wells H. N. Willard C F. Wilson CLASS OF 1940 R. E. Alford J. P. Alter C D. Barton L. W. B.ATTEN W. E. B. Benson R. S. Bev.ans N. H. BiGELOW R. M. BOUTWELL G. L. Brownell, 2d T. L. Bucky T. J. Camp, Jr. J. D. Canale E. R. Clark DeFrance Clarke, Jr. R. G. Collins, Jr. J. N. CoMPTON, Jr. C A. CONGDON, 2d V. W. Cooke F. C Cunningham H. G. Edwards, Jr. J. P. Ekberg, Jr. T. F. Erickson S. L. EuRENIUS J. Ferguson R. H. Ferst, Jr. J. B. Fuller A. L. Gluckin E. M. Graham, Jr. D. K. Harrison P. M. Hauser W. H. Hobbs, 2d A. K. Howell, Jr. N. H. HURWITZ L. H. Kaplan A. Knight, Jr. J. T. L.anman T. R. Lazarus H. A. Lear R. J. Levinson J. W. Link R. F. Marcus W. McL. Mennel W. C Mennel K. Merrill, Jr. E. M. Noyes, 2d L. F. P.AINE D. D. Pascal S. J. Pogorzelski R. A. Powers R. E. Rhoads, Jr. P. de Saint Phalle C U. Sautter W. F. SCHELL W. A. Solomon R. Stewart S. A. Taffinder G. E. Tener J. V. K. Thompson, 2d M. von Moschzisker F. G. Wacker, Ir. D. M. Weil J. E. Wheeler, Jr. F. R. Wholley W. A. Weidersheim A. J. WOLFSON }. G. Woodruff G. W. Young CLASS OF 1941 L. B. Ahrens J. G. Aiken, 2d R. C Ames J. D. Aronson, Jr. C G. Aschmann, J T. G. Barlow G. C Besse, Jr. J. O. Buchanan R. L. Carmean L. Carroll J. C Causey T. T. Church J. A. Cohen H. H. COMLY L. E. Dearborn R. K. DE Veer J. J. DoRE, Jr. F. N. Everard R. E. Fagley G. N. French J. P. Furniss R. Garrett, Jr. K. Gebhard, Jr. E. T. Hart R. C H.AZEN S. Heywood, Jr. R. L. Hovis, Jr. L. M. Jack H. H. Knight R. T. Larkin F. A. McWilliam P. H. Mehrtens D. R. Millard, Jr. B. L. MiMS L N. Perry, Jr. L. K. Pickett G. R. Read W. G. Stewart W. A. Whitcomb, Jr. R. T. Woodward NON-RESIDENT MEMBERS T. E. Allen A. ]. Alter C E. BicK L. G. Bl.ackmon L. G. BONGIORNI R. F. Bradley, Jr. H. E. Brumder C W. Bulkley J. B. Fuller M. J. Harrington G. W. Heston R. W. Holmes, Jr. H. D. Humphrey S. Kibbe H. D. McKenna W. MOON.AN J. C MORRISSEY S. Partridge E. Perryman W. P. Porter T. G. Schnabel H. W. Shepp.ard R. B. SiLLECK E. G. Small E. Z. Steever T. D. Stein }. S. Webb A. J. WOLFSON asual visitors to New Haven on fall Saturday afternoons scarcely do more than scratch the surface of Yale athletics. Legion are the varsity, freshman, inter-college and intramural athletes who make use of the Payne Whitney Gym, Yale Field, the Derby Boathouse and other facilities to play the game for the fun of it and to develop the true ideals of amateur sportsmanship for which Yale stands. t ATHLETICS T5he Tear W J H In A thletics BY MALCOLM FARMER Chairman oj Athletic Board oj Control Tn reviewing the year in athletics we must recognise the fact that it was not one tilled with the usual number ot victories in intercollegiate competition, but it was marked by a high morale and a fine spirit. No administrative changes were made by the Athletic Association during the year and nothing in the way of an innovation was put into effect. Two changes have been made m the coaching person- nel. Dr. Emerson Nelson, a graduate of the University ot Iowa joined the University football coach- ing staff as line coach, succeeding Marshall Wells. Last year Dr. Nelson was head coach in football at Mississippi State, and for six years, up to the time he took the Mississippi State position he coached at Louisiana State University. His wide experience as a player and coach, and his excellent background as a student and athlete, make it seem certain that he is well fitted for his duties at Yale. He will assist in the development of track candidates in the field events during the Winter and Spring. The other change in the coaching staff was in hockey. Murray Murdoch, who for over ten years had been a member of the New York Rangers team, and was considered one of the best players in the game, assumed the hockey coaching responsibilities at Yale. The Fall season, starting on September 15th when the football squad reported at Gales Ferry for early training, was handicapped by rains and the damaging hurricane which forced the whole squad to return to New Haven, either by automobile, trucks, hitch hiking or in any manner they could obtain transportation. Six practice sessions were lost to us at this very important time in the preparation of the team. With a difficult schedule of teams to play, all of whom had a considerable number more days of practice than the Yale team, we succeeded in winning but two games, those with the Navy and Brown. The team, however, played good football in most of the games, especially against Michigan, Dartmouth and Harvard. The Cross Country team did well, Clark being outstanding in some of the meets and Holderness and Watson doing well. Soccer was handicapped by injury to one or two of the players, but had a very creditable season, the games being closely contested. I The Winter season was marked hy the outstanding record of the Varsity and Freshman swim- ming teams, both of which were unbeaten in Eastern competition. Captain Good was a consistent winner in the sprints and garnered four firsts against Princeton and Harvard. The boxing team came through another season, with credit to the University and to the sport, but did not place so well in the intercoUegiates as it has done in the past. Interest in fencing again showed an increased number of students taking part. Handicapped by the loss of Captain Mertens, the Varsity won from Princeton and lost to Harvard. The Freshman team was undefeated. In wrestling the Varsity lost only to the well-nigh unbeatable Lehigh team, and to Prince- ton by a close score. The Varsity basketball team, although the scoreboard shows an unimpressive record, went through a series of difficult games against strong teams, displaying a fine spirit and high morale, as well as playing very good basketball. By winning twice from Harvard and once from Princeton the Triangular Championship for the season was won by Yale. Freshman basketball had a good season, winning most of its games. Hockey, in its first year under the guidance of Murray Murdoch, showed marked improvement in skating, passing and stickwork, b ut failed to register as many victories as had been hoped from the impressive early games. Each contest was well fought out, and great enthusiasm was evidenced by the squad which augurs well for the future with Murdoch at the hockey helm assisted by Dan Badger who brought the Freshmen through a good season. Squash racquets came through with only one defeat administered by Harvard in a closely con- tested match. Harding annexed the Amateur Squash Racquets Championship for Connecticut. The Freshmen were well up to the usual standard, winning all their contests. Reigeluth, Bl.mchard. Woolley, Vance, Miller, Hook, McKellar, Swope — 247 — 1 The indoor polo team was one of the best Yale has turned out in several years, losing only to Harvard and doing well m the IntercoUegiates. The Spring sports reflect the results of the season of 1938, as this review, which is written in March, cannot cover the Spring of 1939. In crew the Varsity won all its races except the four mile with Harvard last June, in which Yale was less than a boat length behind her rival. The 150-pound crew won the American Champion ' ship and later competed in the English Henley Regatta, only to be defeated in the finals by Kent. For the fourth successive year the Varsity baseball team won the championship in competition with Harvard and Princeton and looks forward with confidence and a wealth of material to an even better 1939 season. The tennis team was exceptionally good and played a fine season of matches. Lacrosse played a very difficult schedule, and showed improvement as the season progressed, registering a fair share of victories. In golf the Yale team was well up to its standard of quality, winning most of its matches, but failed to annex the Championship which has been credited to Yale many times in recent years. In track Yale defeated Harvard and Pennsylvania, and lost to Princeton in dual competition. What the coming Spring season has in store, remains to be seen. The year in athletics as a whole, was not so successful, according to scoreboard record, as for the past few years, but we may look forward to a brighter one in 1939-1940. Harvard by a length- New London. I9JS , Bac){row: Kellogg, Johnson, Piatt, Ethridge, Good, Miller, Perkins. Henry, Peck, Byers. Collins. Front row. Hook, Bird, Williams, Browning, Humphrey, The Undergraduate Athletic Association Gilbert W. Humphrey BuRCH Williams Edward T. Collins, Jr., Baseball George M. V. Hook, Baseball Charles H. Kellogg, Basketball James R. Johnson, Basketball Andrew O. Miller, Jr., Boxmg Buckley M. Byers, Creiv Ralph R. Browning, Jr., Crew William V. Platt, Football President Secretary Burch Williams, Football Gilbert W. Humphrey, Hoc ey Horace O. Perkins, Hockey Don W. Henry, Lacrosse John W. Good, Swimming E. Huntington Ethridge, Jr., Trac Claude J. Peck, Jr., frac Harrie W. Bird, Jr., Wrestling Malcolm Farmer George P. Day Charles Seymour Dean George H. Nettleton Dean Charles H. Warren Dean Norman S. Buck Dr. Orville F. Rogers BOARD OF CONTROL MEMBERS Dr. Orville F. Rogers Thomas W. Farnam George P. Day H. Emerson Tuttle EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Malcolm Farmer, Chairman H. Emerson Tuttle Burch Williams Chairman Treasurer John W. Field Charles W. Littlefield Gilbert W. Humphrey Burch Williams Gilbert W. Humphrey •249 — VYCajor T VYCen in Qollege R. G. Anderson, ■41E R. G. Brooks, ' 41 F. M. Burr, ' 40 F. Caracciolo, J9E E. T. Collins, Jr., ' 39 J. R. Dern, ' 415 S. S. DiLs, ' jgs A. D. Dyess, Jr., ' 39 S. C. Hemingway, Jr., 39 A. R. HoxTON, Jr., ' 39 G. W. Humphrey, ' 39 W. E. John, Jr., ' 39 C. L. Miller, Jr., 39 J. A. Miller, ' 39 W. R. Moody, ' 39 A. J. MoTT, ' 40E H. W. Nestler, ' 39 W. V. Platt, ' 39 E. S. Rumely, ' 39S W. E. Snavely, ' 39S J. W. Stack, Jr., 40 L. Tyler, ' 39S H, B. Whiteman, Jr., ' 41 H. N. Willard, ' 39 B. Williams, ' 39 A. S. Wilson, Jr., ' 39E W. C. ZlLLY, ' 415 J. C. Cobb, 111, ' 41 T. F. Erickson, ' 40 J. R. loHNSON, ' 39S C. H. Kellogg, ' 39 BASKETBALL L. W. Krieger, ' 39 D. H. McKellar, ' 39S J. H. Norton, ' 39 J. W. Owen, ■41E G. H. Page, ' 39 A. B. Stevens, ' 39 B. J. Sullu ' an, ' 40s W. G. Thorn, ' 41 W. C. Zilly, ■41s W. S. Barnes, 40 D. Boies, ' 39 C. W. Bulkley, •39s W. P. BUNDY, ' 39 F. M, Burr, ' 40 G. Curtis, ' 41 N. V. V. Franchot, P. T. Gillespie, ' 41 R. C. Hazen, ' 41 H. W. Holt, ' 40S H. Howe, 1I, ' 40 D. S. Humphrey, ' 39 G. W. Humphrey, ' 39 C. C. Kite, ' 40 G. N. McLennan, ' 41 H. O. Perkins, ' 39 P. S. PlERSON, ' 41 W. V, Platt, ' 39 D. B. RoDD, ' 40 G. S. Seabury, ' 40 E, D. ToLAND, Jr., ' 40 C. R. Vance, ' 39 W. J. Albinger, ' 39 A. J. Alter, ' 40S E. T. Collins, Jr., ' 39 R W. Cooke, 405 J. S. Crosby, ' 39S G. F. DooNAN, ' 39 G. B. Gascoigne, Jr., H. W. Holt, •40S D. S. Humphrey, ' 39 M. a. Jubitz, ' 39 W. J. Lo ' eday, ' 39 B. M. Byers, 40 F. C. Cross, Jr., 40 F. D. DoBLE, ' 39S G. H. Frost, ' 41 P. Knowlton, ' 39S C. M. Ruprecht, ' 40 P. M. Wick, ' 39 E. L. Bliss, ' 39 R. J. Clark, ' 39S T. Culbert, ' 39 F. W. Curtis, ' 39E T. D. Day, ' 40 E. H. Etheridce, Jr., ' 39 J. S. Ferguson, ' 39 M. W. FiNLAYSON, ' 39 D. K. Gernerd, ' 39 B, S. HOLDERNESS, ' 39S W. E. John, Jr., ' 39 N. S. Kerr, ' 39 T. H. Lussen, 40s J. M. Shields, ' 40S W. D. Wagoner, ' 41 A. Walker, ' 39 W. B. Watson, Jr., ' 40 SQUASH RACQUETS G. P. BissELL, Jr., ' 40S J. Ferguson, 40 R. T. Houk, III, ' 40E P. G. B. Stillman, ' 40 R. J. Clark, ' 39S G. J. Harding, III, ' 405 M. Mum, Jr., ' 39 H. Waters, 40 |. B. Brueckel, ' 40 J. L. Burns, Jr., ' 405 R. P. Duncan, ' 40S SWIMMING D. M. Endweiss, ' 39S E. E. Gesner, ' 41S J. W. Good, 39 P. B. Metcalf, Jr., W. Moonan, 39S E. N. Perryman, ' 39 LACROSSE D. W. Henry, ' 39 ' Minor T Men in Qollege J. J. Angleton, ' 41 N. L. BowEN, |r.. 39 H. R. Brown, 1r,, ' 41S R. I. Bruce, ' 415 C. A. Carton, 41 G. S. Dickinson, Jr., ' 39 L. P. DoTv, ■39E H. T. Emerson, Jr., ' 39 T. F. Erickson, 40 |. L. Fearey, ' 39 W. P. HUTCHINGS, ' 418 E. H. Jones, Jr., 39 R. M. Keefe, ' 41 J. Lawson, ' 39 I. C. Lor am, ' 39 I. H. Perry, Jr., 39 W. F. Poole. Ill, ' 40 W. A. Raleigh, Jr., ' 39 W. H. Reeves, III, ' 39 W. H. Y. Stevens, ' 41S R. G. Van Peursem, ' 41 H. C. Wheeler, ' 395 R. M, Fasanella, ' 39 G. W. Hickenlooper, ' 39S A. O. Miller, Jr., 39 J. B. Reubens, ' 39 C. Wright, III, ' 39 R. L. Auchincloss, Jr. 40 H. C. Barthel, 39 W. H. Calhoun, Jr., 39 G. E. DiMocK, Jr., ' 39 E. T. Hart, 41 R. M. Johnson, 40 A. A. LiTT, 41 J. A. Marcus, 40S J. M. Morris, 41E L. S. Parsons, ' 40 P. R. Perlowin, 40 V. J. Scully, Jr., 40 SWIMMING L. C. Anthony. 39 R. W. Belcher, Jr., ' 40S J. B. Brueckel. 40 J. T. Bryan, Jr., 39S J. L. Burns, Jr., 40S A. A. Burrows, Jr., 40 J. G. Burton, Jr., 40S D. B. Coghlan. 41E R. P. Duncan, 403 D. M. Endweiss, 39S R. F. Good, 39E E. E. HiGGiNs, 40S C. P. Jaffray, Jr., 40 T. A. Jones, ' 405 H. S. Kleppinger, ' 41E 41 S. Livingston, Jr., ' 40S W. H. Mackey, ' 39 T. H. Mahony, Jr G. S. Mustin, ' 40S D. B. Oat, ' 39 E. N. Perryman, 39S B. Phillips, III, 39E W. H. Sanburn, II, 4lS E. P. Snyder, ' 41S H. R. Spendelow, Jr., ' 39E N. I. Steers, Jr., ' 39 K. Twining, ' 41 H. G. Van Sant, 39 B. C. Young, 39 H. W. Bird, Jr., : J. M. Bird, 39 R. J. Clarke, 39 WRESTLING D. M. Gerber, 40 J. A. GiLRAY, Jr., 39 L. Hamman, Jr., 39 J. L. Hauer, 40 E. M. Latson, 41 Z. S. M.alinowski, 39 H. E. Pickett, Jr., 39 L. K. Pickett, 41 F. F. Allen, 39 F. A. Borsodi, 39S R. B. Egan, 40 GOLF E. L. Meister, 40 H. R. Merritt, Jr., ' 39 C. W. Verity, Jr., ' 39 D. E. Battey, Jr., ' 40 A. L. Bolton, Jr., ' 40S F. W. Hamilton, Jr., ' 40S R. B. Hopgood, ' 40S LACROSSE D. W. Henry, 39 G. Iason, 40 F. C. Irving, Jr., ■39E A. N. Kennedy. Ir.. ' 40 I. C. 0 Keeffe, 39 R. L. Ott. ' 40 F. T. Powers. Jr.. ' 39S W. A. Powers, ' 39 W. W, Reiter, ' 39 P. E. Roche, ' 39 W. C. Schmeisser. A. L. Corey, Jr., ' 40 A. N. B. Garvan, ' 39 C. Johnson, ' 39 POLO K. M. SCHIFFER, ' 39 C. M. WooLLEY, Jr., 39 G. W. Campbell, ' 39 R. KmosLEY, Jr., ' 39 L. W. Krieger, ' 40S P, F. MacGuire, ' 40 J. P. Milnor, Jr., 403 L. Wheeler, Jr., 40 M. Stephens, ' 40 9 9 13? ? «!t a %C : a f 3 . K 1 Ai ' )£ - ft i % l«f « Bdc){ row: Williams (Mgr.), Dern, Brooks, Rumely, Hoxton. Third row: John, Burnam, Whiteman, Willard, Hemingway, Tyler, Dils, Zilly. Second row: Dyess, Wilson, Stack, Piatt (C), Humphrey, C. Miller, Moody. Front row: J. Miller, Caracciolo, Anderson, Burr, Nestler, Collins. William V. Pl.-vtt BuRCH Williams Raymond W. Pond Ivan B. Williamson A. Earle Neale Marshall Wells Captain Manager Coach End Coach Backjield Coach Line Coach fl « Arthur D. Dyess, Jr., 39 William V. Platt, ' 39 Charles L. Miller, Jr., ' 39 Joseph W. Stack, Jr., ' 40 Caperton Burnam, ' 41 William E. John, Jr., ' 39 William R. Moody, ' 39 Gilbert W. Humphrey, ' 39 Albert S. Wilson, Jr., ' 39E John A. Miller, ' 39 William E. Snavely, ' 39S left end Archibald R. Hoxton, Jr., ' 39 left tackle Cyrus R. Taylor, ' 40 left guard Felix Caracciolo, ' 39E center Harold N. Willard, ' 39 right guard Stuart C. Hemingway, Jr., ' 39 right tackle Robert B. Brooks, ' 41 rtght end William C. Zilly, ' 40S quarterhac Raymond G. Anderson, ' 41E right halfback Frederic M. Burr, ' 40 left halfback Edward T. Collins, Jr., ' 39 fullback Harold B. Whiteman, Jr., ' 41 1 t The Football Season BY RAYMOND W. POND Facing about as strong a group of teams as any Yale eleven has been called upon to meet in a single season, Yale had what may be termed a disappointing football season in 1938 so far as actual scoreboard results are concerned, but from the standpoint of spirit, I am indeed glad to say that Captain Bill Piatt and the squad members did themselves proud. From the beginning of Spring train- ing through the final whistle of the Harvard game, there was not a single let-down, every man giving his best and generally against odds. Of that, Yale is proud, as are the coaches. Yale rode high at times over the season, but our squad was not made up of thirty great football players and on occasion other teams overpowered us, simply because their reserve material was superior to Yale ' s. Against Michigan, Navy, Brown and Harvard, Yale played heads-up football, and while we lost to Michigan and Harvard, these two highly-touted teams were all but beaten. Harvard, played on a muddy field, was actually outfought during fifty-eight minutes of the game, but two well-executed passes proved the margin of superiority. Yale also lost to Columbia, Penn- sylvania, Dartmouth and Princeton, making six losses against the wins over Brown and Navy. With the 1938 season well over, we are building for next Fall, and the best I can say is that we hope to better the record of a year ago. If scholastic troubles do not enter into the picture, I think a good, representative Yale team will take the field. The schedule calls for games with Columbia, Pennsylvania, Army, Michigan, Dartmouth, Brown, Princeton and Harvard in that order, the Michigan game being in Ann Arbor and the Princeton contest in Princeton. Emerson (Spike) Nelson has joined our coaching staff as line coach. He is a University of Iowa graduate, where he played three years of football and for two years was all Big-Ten tackle. He coached there and at Louisiana State and Mississippi State and has the ideal personality and background necessary to get the most out of Yale ' s linemen. I believe the line will be stronger than that of a year ago and that our great problem will be the development of the backfield and ends. In Captain Bill Stack, Yale should have a fine leader and player, one whose enthusiasm will carry the team along over the hard schedule in an admirable manner. Although the Sophomore prospects are somewhat doubtful at present, we expect to develop some of these men into varsity material. PLATT Captain STACK Captain-elect , Yale 14 Columbia 27 Wilson-Hoxton scoring combiiution. Yale ' s opening game of the season with Columbia on October 1 in the Bowl was a real test. In Sid Luckman we knew that the Lions had a No. 1 forward passer, and we planned our game to meet this ever-present threat. Handicapped by the loss of four practice sessions due to the hurricane of September 21, Yale entered the game with a decided lack of thorough preparation. Two beautiful forward passes, after it appeared that Yale had them stopped before they left Luckman ' s right arm, accounted for two of Columbia ' s touchdowns. Yale was in the fight during the first period, holding Columbia to six points while the Blue scored seven, but the Columbia power told in the second quarter when the Lions rolled up fourteen points. Bill John scored in the first quarter and Al Wilson in the third, and Bud Humphrey converted each time. In the final quarter Columbia scored again and the final score was 27 14. Yale o Pennsylvania 21 Shadows and Zilly about to be tackled. There was a great deal of elation in Philadelphia on October 8 when Pennsylvania scored a 21 to shutout. It was the first time in four football seasons that a Yale varsity team had been unable to score a point. The string had to be broken sometime, however, and there was no feeling of de- jection when the team was blanked. In fact all praise went to Pennsylvania for the decisive manner in which the feat was accomplished. Yale was outplayed from the start. The effects of the lack of full preparation were seen early in the game. We used everybody on the squad not only in the desire to give the Sophomores some real football experience, but because of real necessity. A demoral- ised Yale team was soundly beaten, Penn scoring in the first, third and fourth periods, and Shinn adding the extra point each time. k Yale 9 Navy 7 Snavely scores on a pass trom Humphrey. Yale was not in the best of shape when Navy appeared in the Bowl on October 15 and pre-game opinion seemed to favor the Midshipmen, and for three periods it seemed as though this opinion had been justified. Against the Midshipmen we used another veteran group with the exception of Cape Burnam who took injured Stu Hemingway ' s place at left guard. The first period went scoreless; Whitehead, a hard-charging Navy back, broke the ice and Wood made it seven points, the half ending 7-0. Yale was outplaying Navy in the second half, and hopes ran high for a further comeback in the final quarter, even though the third quarter was scoreless. Soon after the opening of the final quarter, Yale scored on a neat forward from Bud Humphrey to Bill Snavely, but Bud missed the placement kick and Navy was still leading 7-6. Humphrey, however, put Yale out front a few moments later by a nice place-kick for three points, making the final score Yale 9-Navy 7. Yale 13 Michigan 15 HuTiphrey spins forward for a short gain. Yale rose to heights m the Michigan game on October 22, and for over three periods led one of the West ' s most powerful elevens. A safety in the first period turned out to be the margin of victory. Fine passing on the part of Bud Humphrey, combined with the catches of Dyess, Wilson, and Moody, played a big part in a march down the field, and Moody went over, putting Yale on the long end of a 6-2 score in the first period. Moody scored m the second period on a pass trom Hum- phrey, and Yale was leading 13-2 at the half. Soon after the opening of the second half, Parucker raced thirty-seven yards down the side line to the eleven, and Michigan pounded over after a gallant Yale stand. Starting on their own twenty-six yard line late in the fourth quarter, Michigan put on a continued drive and scored again on a forward from Harmon to Nicholson. I Yale 6 Dartmouth 24 Miller kicks from behind his goal line. Superior in the line and backiield, Dartmouth rode over the Yale team on October 29 to the tune of 24 to 6, Yale ' s sophomores Burnam, Brooks, Whiteman, Anderson, Wooster and others figuring prominently. It was a better game, from the Yale standpoint, than the score indicates, as Yale made thirteen first downs to Dartmouth ' s six. Yale ' s only score came in the final quarter, when Anderson, who had replaced Humphrey, tossed to Zilly from Dartmouth ' s sixteen-yard line, Zilly taking the ball in the end zone for a touchdown. Dartmouth was held scoreless in the first quarter, but Howe scored early in the second on a line buck. Fourteen points were rolled up by the Green in the third quarter, both touchdowns being by MacLeod, the first on a run from near midfield. In the final period, Dostal kicked a goal from placement, running up her total to twenty-four. Yale 20 Brown 14 Anderson off-tackle for Yale ' s second score. Yale turned in a fine performance against Brown on November 5th when it beat a favored team 20 to 14. With some of the regulars out of town watching ancient rivals, we entered the game with a makeshift lineup and took the contest in stride with the brilliant individual work of Anderson, Moody, and Snavely very much in evidence. Brown scored in the first period on a forward from Hall to Atwood. On a pass from Anderson to Snavely, Yale scored and converted to even the count. Brown scored in the second quarter on a line buck and converted. In the third quarter, Anderson scored on an off-tackle thrust, but Miller failed on the tieing point. A fumble by Hall, a penalty and a short kick, cost Brown heavily in the final minute, and Yale was alert enough to score on a pass from Anderson to Moody. Yale Princeton 20 Wilson righting for ground in mij-tield. Yale went to Princeton on November 12th and caught the Tigers at their best. From the Yale standpoint, the game was quite similar to the Pennsy lvania fracas, the team not playing up to its full capabilities. We might have made the score closer, but Princeton was not to be denied that afternoon. Princeton scored first on a pass from Allerdice to Harper in the first period, and again in the second he passed to White to make the count 13-0. In the third quarter a long pass to Harper from Allerdice set up the Tigers ' third score, and Princeton now had a fairly comfortable lead of 20 to 0. In the final period, however, Yale started a long march, culminating in a pass from Anderson to Dyess. Eddie Collins knifed his way off tackle from the one-yard stripe for Yale ' s only touchdown and Johnnie Miller added the extra point. Yale o Harvard 7 Anderson away for ten yards m the mud. The climax game of the season on November 19th was a heartbreaker for Yale. The Yale line clearly outplayed the Harvard front wall and the fast backs in crimson could do nothing against the Blue. Yale made nine first downs to Harvard ' s five and gained 114 ' yards rushing to Harvard ' s 94. It looked like a Yale day and an upset for Harvard until late in the game. Then trouble started at mid-field with a beautifully-executed play over Yale ' s right side. Foley threw a pass to MacDonald, and the captain-elect sprinted to Yale ' s ten-yard line. Two plays later, Foley tossed over Yale ' s left flank to MacDonald in the end zone. He managed to gather it in for a touchdown, although Eddie Collins was also in the air. In the six minutes left after Boston ' s conversion, Yale advanced to Har- vard ' s 17-yard line, but lost the ball on downs. Tale Football Record Since 1883 Record of Yale-Pnnceton games to 1883 1873— Princeton 3, Yale 1876— Yale 2, Princeton 1877— Princeton 0, Yale 1878 — Princeton 1 touchdown, 1 goal; Yale 1879— Princeton 0, Yale 1880— Princeton 0, Yale 1881— Princeton 0, Yale 1882 — Yale 2 goals, 2 touchdowns, 1 safety; Princeton 1 goal, 1 safety Record of Yale-Harvard games to 1883 875— Harvard 4 f.g., 4 t.; Yale 876— Harvard 0, Yale 1 f.g. 878— Harvard 0, Yale 1 f.g. 879— Harvard 0, Yale 880— Harvard 0, Yale 1 f.g., 1 t. 881— Harvard 4 s., Yale 882— Harvard 2 s., Yale Ig., 3 t. 1883 1888 46 Williams 10 1895 Yale vs. Points Yale vs. Points 30 Stagg ' s Eleven Yale vs. Points 58 Wesleyan 76 Wesleyan 37 Orange AC. 8 Trinity 90 Wesleyan 65 Rutgers 36 Lehigh 4 Brown 36 Stevens Institute 46 Univ. of Penn 70 Crescent A.C. 26 Union 97 Rutgers 46 Wesleyan 76 Wesleyan 36 Amherst 93 Columbia 39 Amherst 27 Amherst 8 Crescent A.C 64 Michigan Uni V. 30 Williams 48 Univ. of Penn. 26 Dartmouth 6 Princeton 68 Boston Tech. 10 Harvard 24 Orange A.C. 12 23 Harvard 2 69 Stevens 19 Princeton 54 Williams 1884 50 Univ. of Penn 1892 vs. Poi Wesleyan Crescents Williams Manhattan A.C. Amherst Boston A.C. Yale 31 96 63 76 113 vs. Points Wesleyan Stevens Institute Wesleyan Rutgers 10 Dartmouth 28 70 115 10 Crescents Amherst Wesleyan Princeton 1889 Yale 6 26 32 22 29 nts 32 28 18 6 26 20 Dartmouth West Point Carlisle Brown Orange A.C. Princeton 8 6 10 46 18 Wesleyan Graduates Yale 38 vs. Wesleyan Wesleyan Points 58 50 Orange AC. Spring Y.M.C.A. Yale 1896 vs. Points 48 Harvard 63 5 44 Tufts 18 Brown 6 Princeton 1 885 4 36 60 Williams Cornell Amherst Trinity Columbia 72 48 Weslevan New York A.C. 12 Orange A.C. Williams Yale 55 Stevens Points 42 64 62 28 6 J9 Univ. of Penn. Harvard Princeton 42 12 12 Dartmouth Carlisle Elizabeth A.C 6 6 18 Wesleyan 22 Univ. of Penn 10 16 West Point 71 Wesleyan 30 Stevens 8 1893 10 Boston A. A. 51 Inst, of Tech. n 7 Crescent AC. Yale 18 6 vs. Poi Brown Crescent A.C. 18 Brown 52 53 5 Crescents Univ. of Penn Princeton 5 5 70 3 70 Cornell Amherst Williams nts 16 6 New Jersey A.C. Princeton 24 61 Wesleyan 1886 52 6 Wesleyan Harvard Princeton 10 28 52 50 Dartmouth Amherst Orange AC. Yale 10 1897 vs. Trinity Points Yale vs. Points 82 Williams 30 Wesleyan 75 Wesleyan 1890 28 U.S. Military Acad .0 18 Amherst 52 Wesleyan Yale 8 8 34 26 16 32 12 Points 6 32 New York AC. 32 Williams 96 54 76 136 82 75 29 4 Technology Stevens Williams Wesleyan Crescents Univ. of Penn Harvard Princeton 4 vs. Wesleyan Crescent AC. Wesleyan Lehigh Orange Williams Amherst 14 6 Yale 42 28 Univ. of Penn. Harvard Princeton 1894 vs. Poi Trinity Brown 6 6 Its 5 10 18 24 6 16 6 Newton A.C. Brown Carlisle West Point Chicago A.C. Harvard Princeton 14 9 6 6 76 Wesleyan 10 Crescent A.C. 1898 1887 52 Crescent A.C. 34 Lehigh Yale vs. Points Yale vs. Points 70 Rutgers 34 Dartmouth 5 Wesleyan 38 Wesleyan 60 Univ. of Penn. 24 Orange A.C. 34 Amherst 106 Wesleyan 6 Harvard 12 23 Boston A. A. 23 Williams 74 Williams 32 Princeton 12 West Point 6 Newton A.C. 50 Univ. of Penn 12 Brown 22 Brown 6 74 Rutgers 1891 67 Tufts 18 Carlisle 5 68 Crescents Yale vs. Points 50 Lehigh 10 West Point 74 Wesleyan 4 28 Wesleyan 48 Chicago A.C. 10 Chicago A.C. 12 Princeton 26 Crescent A.C. 12 Harvard 4 Princeton 6 17 Harvard 8 36 Trinity 24 Princeton Harvard 7 i i Yale 23 46 6 24 42 10 Yale 18W vs. Points Amherst Trinity Bates Dartmouth Wisconsin Columbia .S West Point Penn. State Harvard Princeton 1 1 1900 vs. Points Trinity Amherst Tufts Bates Dartmouth Bowdoin Wesleyan 23 Holy Cross 17 Tufts 7 Colgate 3 24 Penn. State 12 Holy Cross 6 Brown 21 6 Springfield T.S. 3 West Point 9 10 Princeton 17 Syracuse 9 Vanderbilt rt Harvard 3 6 West Point 11 19 Colgate 9 34 Columbia Brown 21 1917 Brown 5 Princeton 3 Yale vs. Points 12 Princeton Harvard 7 Trinity 12 Harvard 1911 33 7 Naval Base Loomis 1905 Yale vs. Points 27 Weslevan 16 Syracuse 24 Springfield T.S. 30 Holy Cross 12 Penn. State 20 West Point 53 Columbia 1 1 Brown 23 Princeton 4 6 Harvard Yale vs. Points 21 Wesleyan 26 Holy Cross 12 Syracuse 33 Virginia P.l. West Point 6 23 Colgate 28 New York Univ. 3 1 5 Brown 3 Princeton 6 Harvard 12 Columhui 5 ' ' 1912 18 West Point 1906 Yale vs. Po nts 35 Carlisle Yale vs. Points 10 Wesleyan 3 29 Princeton 5 21 Wesleyan 7 Holy Cross 28 Harvard 51 Syracuse 16 Syracuse 12 Springfield 16 Lafayette 1901 17 Holy Cross 6 West Point Yale vs. Points 10 Penn. State 13 Wash, and Jeff. 3 23 Trinity 12 Amherst 10 Brown 6 Amherst 10 West Point 6 6 Princeton 6 29 Tufts 5 5 Brown Harvard 24 Wesleyan Princeton 24 45 Annapolis Bowdoin 6 Harvard Yale 1913 vs. Points Penn. State 1907 21 Wesleyan 21 Bates Yale vs. Points 10 Holy Cross 10 Columbia 5 25 Wesleyan Univ. of Maine 5 West Point 5 11 Syracuse 28 Lafayette 35 Orange AC. Princeton 17 Springfield T.S 37 Lehigh 12 52 Holy Cross Wash, and Jeif. Harvard West Point 6 Colgate 16 44 Villanova 17 Brown 1902 11 Wash, and JelT 3 Princeton 3 Yale vs Points 22 Brown 5 Harvard 15 40 Trinity 12 Princeton 10 34 Tufts 6 12 Harvard 1914 23 Amherst Yale vs. Points 35 Wesleyan Brown 1908 20 Univ. of Maine 10 Yale vs. Points 21 Univ. of Virginia 32 Univ. of Vermont 16 Wesleyan 20 Lehigh 3 11 Penn. State 5 Syracuse 28 Notre Dame 24 Syracuse 18 Holy Cross 7 Wash, and Jeff. 13 6 West Point 6 6 West Point 49 Colgate 7 36 Bucknell 5 38 Wash, and JelT 14 Brown 6 12 Princeton 5 49 Mass. Agr. College 19 Princeton 14 23 Harvard 10 11 Brown Princeton 10 6 Harvard 36 1903 Harvard 4 1915 Yale vs. Points Yale vs. Po nts 35 Trinity 1909 37 Univ. of Maine 19 Tufts Yale vs. Points Univ. of Virginia 10 46 Univ. of Vermont 11 Wesleyan 7 Lehigh 6 33 Wesleyan 15 Syracuse 9 Springfield T.S. Springfield T.S 12 Holy Cross 7 Wash, and Jeff. 16 36 Holy Cross 10 36 Springfield T.S Colgate 14 27 Penn. State 17 West Point Brown 3 17 West Point 5 36 Colgate 13 Princeton 7 25 Columbia 34 Amherst Harvard 41 30 Syracuse 23 Brown 6 Princeton 11 17 Princeton 1916 16 Harvard 8 Harvard Yale 25 vs. Po Carnegie Inst. nts 1904 1910 61 Univ. of Virginia 3 Yale vs. Points Yale vs. Points 12 Lehigh 22 Wesleyan 22 Wesleyan 19 Virginia Poly. 42 Trinity 12 Syracuse 6 36 Wash, and Jeff. 14 1919 Yale vs. Points 20 Springfield Col. 34 North Carolina 5 37 Tufts 31 Maryland 14 Brown 6 Princeton 13 3 Harvard 10 1920 Yale vs. Points 44 Carnegie Tech. 21 North Carolina 13 Boston College 21 24 West Virginia 21 Colgate 7 14 Brown 10 Princeton 20 Harvard 9 1921 Yale vs. Points 28 Bates 14 Vermont 34 North Carolina 23 Williams 14 Army 7 45 Brown 7 28 Maryland State 13 Princeton 7 3 Harvard 10 1922 Yale vs. Points 48 Bates 13 Carnegie Tech. 18 North Carolina Iowa 6 38 Williams 7 Armv 7 20 Brown 45 Maryland 3 Princeton 3 3 Harvard 1923 Yale vs. Points 53 North Carolina 40 Georgia 29 Bucknell 14 21 Brown 31 Army 10 16 Maryland 14 27 Princeton 13 Harvard 1924 Yale vs. Points 27 North Carolina 7 Georgia 6 14 Dartmouth 14 1 3 Brown 3 7 Armv 7 47 Maryland 10 Princeton 19 Harvard 6 L 1925 18 Dartmouth 1932 6 Dartmouth 14 Yale vs. Points Maryland 6 Yale vs. Points 20 Brown 53 Middlebury 2 Princeton 12 Bates 55 Lafayette 35 Georgia 7 Harvard 17 7 Chicago 7 14 Harvard 7 13 Pennsylvania 16 Brown 7 7 Princeton 38 20 28 Brown Army 7 7 Yale 1929 vs. Points 6 Army Dartmouth 20 1936 43 12 Maryland Princeton Harvard 14 25 89 14 Vermont Georgia Brown 15 6 7 19 Princeton Harvard 7 Yale 23 % ' S. Cornell Points Yale 55 19 14 1926 vs. Boston Univ. Georgia Dartmouth Brown Points 7 7 21 16 13 6 13 Army Dartmouth Maryland Harvard Princeton 1930 13 12 13 10 Yale 14 14 14 1933 vs. Maine W. and L. Brown Army Points 7 6 21 7 12 28 7 14 26 14 Pennsylvania Navy Rutgers Dartmouth Brown Princeton Harvard 7 11 6 23 13 Army Maryland 33 15 Yale 38 vs. Maine Points 14 Dartmouth Georgia 13 7 1937 7 Princeton 10 40 Maryland 13 6 Harvard 19 Yale vs. Points 12 Harvard 7 14 Georgia 18 2 Princeton 27 26 Maine 21 Brown 27 Pennsylvania 7 1927 7 Army 7 1934 15 Army 7 Yale vs. Points Dartmouth Yale vs. Points 9 Cornell 41 Bowdoin 66 Alfred 6 Columbia 12 9 Dartmouth 9 10 Georgia 14 10 Princeton 7 14 Pennsylvania 6 19 Brown 19 Brown Harvard 13 37 Brown 26 Princeton 10 Army 5 12 Army 20 6 Harvard 13 19 Dartmouth 1931 7 Dartmouth 2 30 Maryland 6 Yale vs. Points 7 Georgia 14 1938 14 Princeton 6 19 Maine 7 Princeton Yale vs. Points 14 Harvard 7 Georgia 26 14 Harvard 14 Columbia 27 27 Chicago Penn 21 1928 6 Army 6 1935 9 Navy 7 Yale vs. Points 33 Dartmouth 33 Yale vs. Points 13 Michigan 15 27 Maine 52 St. John ' s of 34 New Hampsh re 6 Dartmouth 24 21 Georgia 6 Annapolis 31 Pennsylvania 20 20 Brown 14 32 Brown 14 3 Harvard 7 Navy 6 7 Princeton 20 6 Army 18 51 Princeton 14 8 Army 14 Harvard 7 Saturday ' s gl.idi.itors take the field. — 260 — i I B(K row: Renner (Asst. Coach), Merrick, Knapp, For J (Head Coach), Saunders, Reutter, Emery, DeAngelis(Asst. Coach). Third row: Converse. Dempsey, Pickett, Nestler, Rumely, Clark, Young, Taft, Lovett. Second Row: Lussen, Kieckhefer, Garrett, Roller, Hopgood, Selby, Thiermann, Torrey, Hovis, Jopling. Fror t row: Neuhaus, Ashley, Kite, Berger, Schnabel, Ellis. The Junior Uarsity Football Season, 1938 Clement C. Kite BuRCH Williams Gerald Ford WiLLi.AM Renner James DeAngelis Cdptdin Manager Coach Assistant Coach Assistant Coach Coaches Gerry Ford, Bill Renner, and Jimmy DeAngelis, though handicapped by a constantly changing personnel, produced a fighting 1938 Junior Varsity eleven which won three of its four games. The scrappy Jayvees, effectively led by Captain Clem Kite, beat Navy, Army, and Princeton, but lost to Harvard in the finale. The team also rendered a valuable service in furnishing opposition to the Varsity in practice sessions. The squad as a whole exhibited ability and spirit, while several individuals showed promise as 1939 Blue material. By October 15, the team had recovered from the Gales Ferry debacle. Navy was downed, 7-0, the touchdown coming on a second-quarter pass from Torrey to Reid. The Yale defense was good, but the offense looked spotty. More strength and cO ' Ordination were displayed in the game at West Point on the 28th. Thiermann made the Elis ' touchdown as Yale won, 7- 3- For Princeton, the Jayvees were at their peak. Keeping the situation well in hand throughout, they romped to a 38-7 victory. Torrey, Lussen, and Berger made the touchdowns. The whole team functioned well, Merrick, Kite, and Dempsey being especially outstanding. The next week saw the Junior Varsity facing the Cantabs. Harvard got the jump by scoring first and converting for the extra point. ElHs brought the count up to within a point of the Crimson, but the Elis were hampered by the ram. A last-quarter pass was intercepted, making the final score 14-6. ' % 5 _ s i sr J! ; •• .. • ■■• Bac}{row: Barnes (Mgr.), Sage, Colangelo. Loeffler (Coach), Halle, Madden, Wrigley (Trainer). Third row: Hamjlton, Anderson, Green, Johnson. Lampert, Healey. Second row St. Phalle, Heintz, Twomhly, Moorhead, Roche (C), Merntt, Taher, Baker, Cade. Front row: Krech, Bell. The i o ound Football Season Paul E. Roche William S. Barnes Kenneth Loeffler Captam Manager Coach V X hen more than eighty candidates reported for the first practice, the outlook tor a third undefeat- ed season for the 150 ' Pound Football Team was bright. The problem of molding a team around a few returning veterans was not easy, yet Coach Loeffler succeeded in putting on the field a team which lost only to Princeton and Cornell. Travehng to Easton, Pennsylvania, for their initial game, the Bulldog lightweights nosed out Lafayette 7- 5. The following week the Penn. 150 ' s were d owned 6-0. The Princeton lightweights invaded New Haven to win a highly exciting game IQ- 13. A twenty-yard pass set up the first touch ' down for Yale, but the Tigers evened the score in the second period. Staging a series of brilliant plays ending in a twenty-five-yard reverse, Yale scored again to take the lead 13-6. Princeton got completely out of hand in the third period, however, and pushed over two quick scores which gave them the game. Yale journeyed to Ithaca the next Saturday, where they suffered a 19-0 shutout at the hands of an aggressive Cornell eleven. The Bulldogs tied Rutgers 0-0 in Paterson on Armistice Day, and in an anti-climax game at New Haven a week later, overcame the Villanova lightweights 13-6. Yale placed fourth in the Eastern Lightweight Football League with Shep Krech the sparkplug of the backfield attack and Cotty Johnson and Art Cade playing well in the line. I The Freshman Football Season HovEY Seymour James Butler, Jr. Reginald D. Root Captain Manager Coach ■f T inning only two games and losing three, including the all-important Princeton and Harvard encounters, the 1942 Freshman Football Team emerged from a mediocre season with a year of experience and a firm grounding in the fundamentals of the Yale system. The season opened at Andover when the team, paced by Captain Seymour, who scored all three touchdowns, overcame the schoolboys, 19 to 7, m a fast and sparkling game. The second victory came when the Freshmen defeated Exeter, 26 to 20, at Yale. In a thrilling game the Elis, after scoring thirteen points in the first half, saw their lead disappear as the Exonians scored three times in the third period for twenty points. However, led by Seymour, the Cubs surged back to triumph in the closing minutes. In the next game the Cubs bowed to a strong Cheshire team, 6 to 0. The schoolboys scored early on a spectacular 30-yard run and then held back Yale ' s most desperate offenses. At Princeton a stubborn Yale team fell before the Tigers ' reserve power and fine team play, which held the Elis powerless, 25-0. Harvard ' s Cubs capitalized on Seymour ' s blocked quick kick in the first period and a fourth period field goal to defeat Yale in the final game, 9 to 0. To Captain Seymour goes credit for the best individual performance of the season and to the whole team for their co-operation and splendid spirit. Bocl row: Butler (Mgr. I. Johnson, Krieger, Root (Coach I. Third row: Emery, Semple. Smith, Turner, Keller, White, Hall, McClelland, Bartholemy, Witt, Thompson, Kubie, Harding. Second row: Eddy, Sprole. Magee, Kemp, Seymour, Westfeldt, Snyder, Ralferty, Seelhach. Front row: Wheeler, Barnum, Smith, Bell. Greaves, Sutro, Jones. — 263 — 41 Bacl{ row: Johnson (Manager), Sullivan, Thorn, Owen, Loeffler (Coach). Front row: Norton, Cobb, Stevens, Kellogg (Captain), Erickson, McKellar, Page. Charles H. Kellogg James Johnson Kenneth D. Loeffler Captain Manager Coach II John C. Cobb, III, ' 41 Charles H. Kellogg, ' 39 Albert B. Stevens, ' 40 Thomas F. Erickson, ' 40 George H. Page, ' 39 right forward left forward center right guard left guard Douglas H. McKellar, ' 39S Benjamin J. Sullivan, ' 40S John H. Norton, 39 William G. Thorn, ' 41 William C. Zilly, ' 40S The as etball Season BY KENNETH D. LOEFFLER Tale concluded its 1938-39 basketball season on the eleventh of March in the Payne Whitney Gymnasium with a 42-29 victory over Harvard and thereby captured the Big Three Champion- ship. The victories over Harvard and Princeton brought a great degree of satisfaction out of an otherwise disappointing season from the standpoint of wins and losses. It must be said, however, that all the games were well played and no less than nine of the contests were lost within the last few minutes of play. This is noteworthy considering that the opposition encountered was of the highest calibre. The season opened in New Haven with Lafayette, and Yale won by the score of 37-27. Over the Christmas holidays the team journeyed to the Chicago section to engage Bradley Tech., Middle West champions, and the University of Chicago. Both of these games ended m defeats, but the latter game was very closely contested until the last few moments of play. Wesleyan, Pennsylvania, Columbia and Cornell were met m the order mentioned with the fickle finger of fate depriving the Elis of a victory until January 21st when Princeton was defeated to the tune of 27-26. This game was not as close as the score might indicate, for Yale led most of the game by a comfortable margin of seven points. Bad luck continued at Cornell as it did m the Fordham and Dartmouth games when both of these two were lost in the last seconds of play; Fordham winning 49-46 and Dartmouth by the score of 34-32. Then followed another game with Columbia, which was won by the latter 39-33. February 11th found the Army team definitely the master to the tune of 45-27. Dartmouth managed to eke out another close victory 40-36, after which followed defeats by Pennsylvania and Princeton, 40-31 and 39-27. Georgetown was the next to take advantage of the jinx, and they added to the Yale woes by a 20-19 count in the customary last few seconds of play. March 4th found the Elis at Harvard and at last the jinx was broken and Yale won easily 47-31. A close threc ' second defeat by a strong Brown team followed, but another rousing victory over Harvard by the score of 42-29 brought the season to a happy close and won the Big Three Champion- ship for Yale. Charles Kellogg captained the team and proved to be an ideal leader. He played his best offensive game against a fine Fordham team scoring seventeen points to equal those hung up by Fordham ' s KELLOGG Captain ERICKSON and STEVENS Co ' Captains-elect . famed HassenmiUer. All through the season his team play was particularly noteworthy and he was the quintet ' s best foul shooter. Tom Erickson and Al Stevens, next season ' s cO ' Captains, were dependable throughout the season, playing more than anyone else. Tom was the team ' s high-scorer, and Al finally found his scoring eye towards the end of the year, finishing the last three games with an average of fifteen points. Both of these men were defensively on their toes all season. George Page, another senior, finished his career at Yale playing his best brand of basketball. He was one of the squad ' s hardest workers and during the first half of the season was the high scorer. His best game was played against Dartmouth when he scored eight goals, much to the Indians ' discomfort. Doug McKellar and John Cobb alternated at the other forward position and played well all season. Cobb, a Sophomore, should, with the experience of this year, play some fine basketball next year. McKellar was slow in starting, but when he had his shooting eye he was unbeatable. He finished his career in a blase of glory with fifteen points in the Harvard game. Ben Sullivan, Joe Zilly, Bill Thorn, and Ziggy Owen were the other substitutes. Sullivan, a Junior, was the best set-shot on the squad and should be even better next year. Owen, Zilly, and Thorn are Sophomores and played very creditably. Owen was one of the squad ' s most accurate marksmen and in spite of his lack of size should do well next year. Zilly and Thorn are both large men and came along fast towards the end of the season. John Norton, a regular two years ago, was handicapped by sickness this season and never really got started in his old form. Larry Kneger, another good player, was lost to the squad in mid-season but should wage a great fight for the first team next year. Too much credit cannot be given to Jim Johnson for the extremely competent manner in which he managed the team. The season was very difficult from the managerial standpoint, but Jim and his assistants did a topnotch job in the opinion of all who had anything to do with their work. iriiinftnii — Yale scramble. — 266 — The Freshman ' Bas ethall Season Charles Seelbach Ivan Williamson David M. Mersereau Caj tam Coach Manager ©espite disappointing losses to Princeton and Harvard, the Freshman basketball team completed a successful season, its final record showing sixteen victories against four defeats. With two days of practice after Christmas vacation the Freshmen easily trounced Hebron Academy. Neighborhood House, Choate, Collegiate Prep, and Hillhouse were the next to succumb to the Elis as Seelbach ' s play stood out. Milford gave the Freshmen a scare, but Bartholemy ' s six successive baskets and Kubie ' s overtime shot gave the Elis a thrilling victory. After vanquishing Junior College for their seventh consecutive victory, the Freshmen lost a long, hard-fought battle to Lawrenceville on the latter ' s floor. Back in New Haven again, the Elis defeated Horace Mann, Bridgton, and Newark; then, due to the sparkling floor-work and shooting of Ingley, Exeter was downed on its own court. This winning streak was finally stopped, as Dart- mouth came to Elitown to win a well-played contest. After an easy victory over Cheshire, the Elis went down to defeat before a powerful Tiger quintet. Striving to redeem themselves they fought hard to beat the Yale Juniors and the J.V. ' s on successive days, and two days later to win from Peekskill. The following week the Cubs travelled to Harvard for their last game and there met a narrow defeat, but only after a fourth-quarter spurt by Harvard. Congratulations must be extended to Captain Seelbach for his capable leadership and to Ivan Williamson for his excellent coaching job with green material. Bflci; row. Williamson (Coach), Witt, Hindenlang, Shapleigh, McGowan, Mersereau (Mgr.). Bartholemy, Turner, Seelbach (Captain), Rosi, Ingley, Greaves. Front row: Dangler, Kubie. ■■- f-i YALE . ■ ■ ' ..Kft- -WLL 1 -  - = — ' VALE -i S. BB ' ■ T ' :- IBs. V, aTB -. __--- . fc. t lf sW ' m J.jf Sl ' -: ' « X s w v T 1 1 . r ' • • Bacf( rou ' . Perkins (Mgr.), Haien. Pierson, Curtis. Miller (Trainer), RoJJ, Barnes, MurJock (Coach). Second row: Toland, Gillespie, D. Humphrey, Burr, G. Humphrey (Captain), Boies, Kite, Vance, Seabury. front rou . Franchot, Holt. Gilbert W. Humphrey Horace O. Perkins Murray Murdock Captain Manager Coach Harrison Holt, 40S Frederic M. Burr, 39 Harold Howe, II, 40 Dudley S. Humphrey, 39 Gilbert W. Humphrey, 39 David Boies, 39 goal right dejense left defense right wing center left wing Edwin J. Rooney, 40 Clement C. Kite, 40 Paul S. Pierson, ' 41 William S. Barnes, 40 David B. Rood, 40 Edward D. Tol. ' vnd, Jr., 40 The Hoc ey Season BY HORACE O. PERKINS (7 °hc 1Q3Q Varsity Hockey season is a very difficult one to write about. At the start of the season V- the team appeared to have all the earmarks of a world-beater. There was plenty of good material and an excellent new coach in Murray Murdoch to put the material in shape. After losing the opener against St. Nicks, Yale went on to overwhelm, as the newspapers put it. Brown 13-2, Boston University 12-2, Pittsburgh at Pittsburgh 11-0 and Cleveland at Cleveland (17-0) as well as beating Yale ' s Old Men, the Alumni, by a score of 7-2. Playing a fast well-coordinated game of hockey, even if against rather inconsequential teams, it appeared that Yale had a good chance to grab off the Quadrangular League title, and some of the day-dreamers among us even had visions of the Thompson Trophy (for the victorious team in the International Intercollegiate Ice Hockey League) residing in a glass case in the Payne Whitney Gymnasium. Returning to New Haven after the Mid- Western trip (Cleveland made a great to-do about the two Humphrey boys returning to the home town) Yale opened its after-Christmas campaign against McGill at the New Haven Arena on January 7th, and put up one of the finest exhibitions of Yale hockey seen in the Arena in many a day. While the score ended 5-2 for McGill, the game was not decided until the third period when McGiU, the eventual winner of the Thompson Trophy, came out on the ice with the horrified realization that Yale, a lowly American team, was tied with them at 2-2 and that they had better get moving. Observers were inclined to feel that Yale had outplayed McGill during the better part of the game. Two days later the Eli skaters beat a Canadian team in comparative ease when they triumphed over Montreal by 6-3. From then on, however, things seemed to go wrong, very wrong. Playing Dartmouth at Hanover, Yale scored the first goal and thereupon promptly sank into anaesthetized lethargy, watching the Indians whus all over the place to pile up five goals. The next weekend s game proved to be nothing short of a nightmare with a good Princeton team smothering the blue ' clad visitors to the unhappy tune of 12-1, which sounded like lunch hours rather than the score by which a Yale hockey team had been beaten. The next important game was played against Clarkson, always a superior team. In this fracas Yale again played beautiful hockey, losing by the close margin of 4-3. Here again the Bulldogs gave the Clarkson team, comprised mostly of Canadians, the surprise of their life. Next on the heavy HUMPHREY Captain BURR Captam-ekct schedule (Yale played ten games away), came a trip to Canada to meet — and succumb to by decisive scores — Queens University and Toronto University. Then came victories over Williams, played at Williamstown (alias the North Pole) under near-Arctic weather conditions, and revenge on the St. Nicks at Brooklyn by a tally of 3-1 in a great exhibition of smart, fast hockey. On February 17, the first of the two-game series against Harvard produced a thrilling game which ended, thanks to Harvard ' s superb Captain Austie Harding, in a 2-2 deadlock. The encore game with Princeton again proved that the Tigers had one of the best teams they have had in a number of years, when they beat us by three goals. The succeeding game again proved that scores can be misleading because, while Yale lost to Dartmouth (winners of the Quadrangular League) by a score of 4-2, the game was what might be tritely called a moral victory for the EHs. The Indians ' two winning goals came in the last half of the third period when Yale had two men in the penalty box. For the final item on the score sheets Harvard, Harding €s? Co. brought the curtain down on Yale by a score of 7-3 at the Boston Garden. Appropriately enough the individual high-scoring honors, based on goals and assists, go to Captain Bud Humphrey and Dudley ( No-relation ) Humphrey, followed by Dave Rodd. During a season marked by high scores, both pro and con, Yale scored 103 goals, while the opponents gar- nered only 82. Consistent good work marked the season record of Fred Burr, Doc Howe, Clem Kite, and Harry Holt, returning goalie, as well as many indications of occasional brilliance on the part of the whole squad, the Sophomore line of Hazen, Curtis, and McLennan in particular. Nineteen thirty-nine, then, could hardly be called a successful year for Yale Hockey on the basis of scores. Recapitulation shows that Yale won 10, lost 10, and tied one, which would probably best be described as so-so. Yet in a sense it was an important year for Yale Hockey. Under the aegis of a great coach and a fine gentleman in Murray Murdoch, himself a charter member of the New York Rangers, Yale played a different type of hockey, a game of studied technique and style. Losing scores do not indicate that the new style of hockey is unsuccessful, merely that twenty-one games is not sufficient time for the change to become natural and easy. Games like those against McGill and Clarkson and the second game against Dartmouth prove the energy that can be and will be Yale ' s, and the 1939 Yale Hockey team leaves a valuable legacy in proving that the Blue skaters can play scientific hockey, the only kind that can beat the Canadians as well as the Americans. Graduation will remove only four men — Cy Vance, Dave Boies, Dudley Humphrey, and Captain Gilbert ( Bud ) Humphrey. To all of these must go a great deal of credit and appreciation for the important part they played in three years of Varsity Hockey, and especially to the last- named. Captain Bud Humphrey, is due the respect, admiration, and friendship of those whose opportunity it was to experience his quiet, calm, sincere leadership. A very promising group of Juniors, headed by Captain-elect Fred Burr, as well as several competent Sophomores (members of last year ' s Freshman Championship team) are returning and will prove valuable assets in a hockey future which should be bright and which ' 39 and the advent of Murray Murdoch have inaugurated. I i T5he Freshman Hoc ey Season James L. Carton, Jr., Benjamin R. Tiuand Henry F. Chaney, Jr. Daniel B. Badger Co ' Captains Manager Coach (7 = he 1938-1939 Freshman hockey season proved one of the most successful in recent years. Al- though they did not retain the Big-Three honors, they won a high proportion of their games, losing only three. In the opening game, played at Madison Square Garden during the Christmas recess, a good St. Paul ' s team by scoring late in the third period edged them 3-2. Returning from vacation the Freshmen ran through an imposing list of neighboring prep schools, numbering Choate, Taft, Hotch- kiss, and Cheshire among their victims, only a 2-2 tie with Kent marring their record. Playing away at Exeter, the Freshmen received a severe test against the Academy team which resulted in a scoreless draw that even an overtime failed to break. The Princeton Freshmen invaded New Haven, and after what appeared to be an Eli victory, rallied in the final frame to net two center-ice shots while Yale was playing shorthanded, returning home on the long end of a 3-2 count. Their tempers aroused, the Freshmen wound up the winter by conclusively drubbing a squad of New Haven High School All-Stars 6-1, and then traveling to Boston to defeat the Harvard Freshmen 3-0. The work of Dick Ohler in the Blue nets was outstand- ing as was also the playing of Carton and Thompson, centering the first and second lines respectively. Coach Dan Badger, Ex- Yale hockey star, recruited from the law school to fill the vacancy left by Sid Towle, should be congratulated on his handling of the squad and for the fine season. Bac row: Chaney (Mgr.), Bermingham, Harrison, Wngley (Trainer), Pike, Gill, Badger (Coach). Second row: Thompson, Halsey, Esser, Carton and Toland (Co-captains), Davis, Wyman, Chapin. Front row: Ennis, Ohler. (ULe.. ' ' ' L !f NL4. L e (mt ' ti MBs : Bac tow: Engle (Freshman Coach), Schermerhorn (Mgr.l, Loveday. Miller (Trainer). Juhit:, Holt. Humphrey, Wood (Coachj. Second tow: Alter. Cooke, Collins, Marcus (C Wargo, Doonan, Crosby. FTor t row: Bat boy. t Richard F. Marcus Amos E. Schermerhorn Joe Wood Captain Manager Coach Paul G. J. Waruo, ' 38 Monroe A. Jubitz, 39 Harrison Holt, 4()S William J. Loveday, 3Q Ronald W. Ccoke, 40S Albert J. Alter, ' 40S Richard F. M. ircus, ' 38 Edward T. Collins, Jr., 3Q Gregory F. Doonan, 39 catcher pitcher first base second base third base shortstop left field center field right field William J. Albinger, 39 Dudley S. Humphrey, 39 Antonio G. Mendoza, 40S A. Downey Orrick, 40 Vincente C. Aderente, 38 Roy O. Beach, 39 George B. Gascoigne, 39 S James G. Grayson, 40 John T. Blossom, Jr., 40 The 1938 baseball Season BY GEORGE M. V. HOOK (T izxz have been better records m the history of Yale baseball than that displayed by the 1938 vl team, which won but thirteen out of its twenty-seven contests. Yet success came at the end of the season as the Eli nine captured the Big-Three Championship and ended up in fourth place of the Eastern Intercollegiate League. Particularly outstanding were Captain Dick Marcus, a capable leader at all times during the erratic schedule, and Moe Jubitz, around whom the pitching staff was built. The latter was given the credit and penalty award for pitchers, instituted by Joe Wood the previous year, while Captain-elect Eddie Collins received a similar award for the fielders. Others on the pitching staff who turned in good performances were Gordy Hoover, Al Stevens, Bing Crosby, and Dud Humphrey. For the most part Paul Wargo held down the backstop position while the infield was composed of either Ward Tibbetts, Tony Mendoza, or Ronny Cooke at first base, Billy Loveday and Tricky Alter alternating at the second and shortstop positions, and Harry Holt on third base. Dick Marcus played in left field, hard-hitting Eddie Collins at center, and Greg Doonan completed the trio at right field, George Gascoigne and Gordy Grayson being able substi- tutes. The season opened with an auspicious start, Yale taking seven out of the first eight games played. Behind Jubitz and Hoover, the Elis rode to an easy 7-2 opening victory over Springfield, the latter being allowed only one hit. The following game with Columbia was extremely close, but Yale managed to eke out a 4-3 victory. In its third game the team met its initial defeat at the hands of Cornell at Ithaca. Hoover held the Big Red Club to four hits, the same number that Yale garnered off Dodd, the Cornell pitcher, but the Elis suffered from faulty fielding and lost, 6-3. The next four games were then taken in order. Williams was whitewashed 14-2 as Jubitz, in top form, struck out fourteen men, and Holt lashed out the first Eli home run of the season. Trinity was the next to succumb, 5-3, followed by Pennsylvania, 7-1 ; and Story ' s was blanked, 4-0, as Dud Humphrey ' s screwball hurling proved effective. The following game with Brown was disastrous as the Yale pitching staff had trouble finding the plate, the final count seeing the team on the short end of a 15-8 score. The Dartmou th Indians, favorites to win the League title, were stopped cold in the next game to the tune of 4-1, as Jubitz allowed them but two hits. What the Indians failed to do, the Army carried out in their 7-3 victory MARCUS Capiaxn COLLINS Captam-dcct over the Bulldog. Yale collected almost as many hits as the West Pointers, including home runs by Wargo and Collins, but were unable to stop their opponents in the pinches. The team next repeated its earlier win over Columbia, 11-10, in a free-hitting fray, but Cornell again downed the Blue, this time 6-4. Yale reversed the tables in the second game with Brown as the team came through by the score of 3-2. Brown was able to get but five hits off the combined de- liveries of Stevens and Crosby while Yale lashed out fourteen. During the latter part of May and the first part of June the team went into a rather prolonged slump. Holy Cross began the onslaught by downing the Bulldog, 9-4. Providence and Penn also handed the Blue defeats, and Dartmouth took revenge for their earlier defeat by swamping Yale, 10-0, as the whole pitching staff failed to stem the tide. The nine was able to take the next two games, but these were followed by successive defeats at the hands of Holy Cross, Fordham, and California, the first-mentioned shutting out the team 6-0. Princeton, aided by a little luck, managed to eke out a 2-1 victory over the Elis as Jubitz struck out seven men and got two hits in a vain attempt to win his own ball-game. Virginia, with the help of considerable wildness on the part of the Yale pitchers, administered the fifth straight defeat to the team. Success marked the end of the season, however, as Yale snared the Big-Three Championship. In the second Princeton game, the team came to life again to beat the Tigers 2-1, Collins and Cooke helping greatly with three hits apiece. The following two games with Harvard were split. Yale flattened the Crimson in the first encounter, 5-0, only to have the Cantabs come back to drub the Eli forces by a count of 6-3. The final play-off at New London insured the Bulldogs the championship. For a while the outlook was very dark, but Humphrey, relieving Jubit: on the mound, managed to hold the Crimson in check, and with Wargo and Collins leading the way, Yale triumphed after an exciting last few innings, 7-6. Eddie Collins was elected captain for the 1Q39 season while George Hook assumed the manager- ship. I I T5he 1 94 1 Freshman baseball Season Joseph F. Wood George V. M. Hook Clyde Engle Captain Manager Coach ' oach Clyde Engles Freshman Baseball Team added another Big Three Championship to the - ' outstanding athletic record of the class of 1941. The club was characterized by an effective pitching staff combined with strong hitting and good fielding. Paced by Captain Joe Wood, the moundsmen compiled the enviable record of allowing an average of only five hits per game. At the start of the season Kent, Milford, and New Rochelle fell victims in quick succession to the pitching of Roger Hazen and Richard Ames. Next the team traveled to Andover where it met its only defeat and shut-out of the season as Ted Harrison bested Wood in a pitchers ' duel, the score being 1-0. On its return to Eli Town, the hard-hitting nine trounced Collegiate, Choate, Exeter, Cheshire, Dean, Suffield, and a strong Cushing team in a row. With such a successful record behind them the Yearlings went into the Big Three Series with confidence. At Princeton, Captain Wood hurled the team to a 7-5 victory in a game that nearly saw the Tiger club turn the tables m the last inning. On the following Saturday at New Haven, Harvard was completely outclassed, to go down to an 8-3 defeat before Wood ' s pitching and the batting of Wood, Cooke, Krech, Ha:en, and Flinn who thus helped the nine to hang up an average of .341 for the season. Bac row. Hook (Mgr.), Dunbar, Flinn, McClellan, Engle (Coach). Second row: Scfiroeder, Besse, Ha:en, Wood (C), Cooke, Kaye, Ames. Front row: Krech, Kreske. I Back ' ' Miller (Mgr.), Castle, Vested, Pierce, D. Campbell, Kanaly (Coach). Tiii d row: Shields. Smith, Bliss, Watson, Day. Curtis, Holderness, Ferguson. Second row: R. Campbell, Hessberg, Ethrid e, Harding (C), Millett, Brooks, Congdon. Front row: Fox, Kerr. William H. Harding Henry F. Miller Frank Kanaly Captain Manager Coach 120- Yard High Hurdles 220- Yard Low Hurdles 100- Yard Dash 220- Yard Dash 440- Yard Dash 880- Yard Run Mile Run Two-Mile Run 440-Relay Mile-Relay Two-Mile Relay Discus Throw Hammer Throw Javelin Throw Broad Jump High Jump Shot Put Pole Vault Theodore D. Day, ' 41; Jay M. Shields, ' 40S, Theodore D. Day, 41; Jay M. Shields, 40S. Easton Burlingame, 38; Nicholas S. Kerr, ' 39S; Ian C. Loram 39; Gardner W. Millett, Jr., 38, Albert Hessberg, II, 38; Gardner W. Millett, Jr., 38. Frank W. Curtis, 39E; Robert A. Vested, 38S. Donald D. Campbell, 38; Johns H, Congdon, 38. Benjamin S. Holderness, 39S; William B. Watson, Jr., 40. Joseph C. Fo. , 38; Ronald J. Clark, 39S. Easton Burlingame, 38; Wyndham L. Gary, ' 38; Albert Hess- berg, II, 38; Gardner W. Millett, Jr., 38. Frank W. Curtis, 39E; Gardner W. Millett, Jr., 38; William J. RoBB, 39; Robert A. Vested, 38S. Johns H. Congdon, 38; Benjamin S. Holderness, 39S; Lincoln Pierce, 38; William B. Watson, Jr., 40. Taylor Culbert, 39; Malcolm W. Finlayson, ' 39. John H. Castle, 38; Malcolm W. Finlayson, 39. Douglas L, Brooks, 38S; Robert A. Campbell, 38. Edward H. Ethridge, Jr., 39S; John S. Ferguson, ' 39. Samuel P. W. Black, ' 40S; Eugene L. Bliss, 39; John S. Ferguson, 39. Howard Mendel; Anthony Walker, 39. Robert A. Campbell, 38; William H. Harding, 38; Thomas A. LussEN, ' 40S. I! The 1938 Trac Season pening the season, on January 29, 1938, Yale defeated M.I.T. in the one-mile relay in the time of 3:34.2 in the Prout Games at the Boston Garden. Other places for Yale were limited to third in the two-mile intercollegiate relay and fourth in the 50-yard invitation sprint by Easton Burlingame. In the Millrose Games, on February 5th, at Madison Square Garden, Yale ' s pole-vaulting Captain William H. Harding cleared the same height as the Olympic champion, Earle Meadows, of the University of Southern California, at 13 feet 6 inches, with third place a tie between Robert Campbell ' 38 and Wirt Thompson ' 34. The Yale two-mile relay team took third place with the time of 7:56.3. On February 12th, in the Boston Athletic Association games, Ted Day placed third in the 45-yard hurdles event, which was an exceptional performance in view of the fact that he was com- peting against the world ' s greatest hurdlers. Captain Bill Harding tied for second in the pole vault at 13 feet 6 inches. In the annual Harvard- Yale relay. Harvard won in 3:32. An exceptionally close dual meet was held at Ithaca on February 19th, with the final outcome in doubt until after the decision had been rendered in the last event. The final score: Cornell 59, Yale 54. Yale ' s finely balanced team, with performances of high calibre, won a decisive victory in the Third Quadrangular meet in the Boston Garden on February 26. The continual advance that the team showed throughout the year culminated in this meet as Yale amassed a total of 44 points. Cornell placed second with 32i points; Harvard third with 31; and Dartmouth fourth with 27i points. The Intercollegiate Indoor Championships at Madison Square Garden were held on March 5th. Yale ' s points were scored by Bill Harding, who took first in the pole vault at 13 feet 9 inches; Ted Day, who set a new Intercollegiate record of 7.4 seconds in winning the 60-yard high hurdles; Easton Burlingame, who finished fourth in the 60-yard dash; Nicholas Kerr, who trailed him in fifth place in the same event; Jay Shields, who took third in the 60-yard high hurdles; and the two-mile relay team which finished fourth. These places earned the Yale contingent a total of 18 points and third place in the team standings. The indoor season ended with the New York Knights of Columbus games at Madison Square Garden on March 12. Several Yale athletes were invited and made excellent showings. Nicholas HARDING Ca(}tain ETHRIDGE Caf)tain-e ec£ Kerr took third in the invitation 60 ' yard sprint, and Captain Harding, winning the pole vault, cleared 13 feet 9 inches. A dual meet with the University of Pennsylvania at Franklin Field in Philadelphia, on April 23, opened the outdoor season. Turning m several sparkling performances Yale overwhelmed the Quakers 86 to 49. Two new dual meet records were established as Jay Shields raced through the 120-yard high hurdles in 14.8 seconds, and Douglas Brooks threw the javelin 195 feet 5h inches. Nicholas Ke rr equaled the meet record of 10 seconds in the 100-yard dash. The following week at the University of Pennsylvania Relay Carnival, the pole vault was won by Bill Harding, when he topped 13 feet 7h inches. Malcolm Finlayson was third in the 16-pound hammer throw with a heave of 153 feet 45 inches. Fifth place in the javelin was taken by Douglas Brooks with a throw of 196 feet 63 inches. In the 440-yard College relay Yale finished second. In the fourth Heptagonal Games, held at Palmer Stadium on May 21, Yale was able to finish in only fifth place. The Princeton and Yale dual meet was won by the former at DeWitt Cuyler Memorial Track on May 7 by a score of 70f to Yale ' s 64| points. In a furiously contested meet Jay Shields of Yale made a new dual meet record of 14.8 seconds in the 120-yard high hurdles. The annual Yale-Harvard classic at Harvard Stadium on May 14 wa s won by Yale 71 to 63. The keen competition was marked by a new dual meet record of 14.7 seconds m the 120-yard high hurdles by Ted Day. This was also a new record for Yale. The I.C.4-A Outdoor Championship was held at Randall ' s Island in New York City on June 3 and 4. Because of the late date, which conflicted with final examinations, the full team was unable to compete. Yale placed 13th in the team totals. Captain Harding tied for first in the pole vault at 13 feet 6 inches, a fine performance considering the heavy rains that had fallen. Day and Shields warming up. — 278 — Back, row: Ashley, Brooks, Bower, Martin. Peck (Mgr.). Third row: Tighe. Freeman, Shapleigh, Buhrmann, Hutchings. Second row: Pfeiffenberger, Rothschild, Brown, Lohmann, Wagoner, Ord. Front row: Read, Hopkins. he 1 94 1 Freshman rac Season Richard Osborn, Jr. Claude J. Peck Theodore P. Avery Captain Manager Coach A bly led by Captain Dick Osborn, the 1941 Freshman Track Team completed a highly successful season, winning three of its four meets. Princeton was the only team to overcome the Eli Fresh- men, and that by the close score of 70-65. After winter and early spring practice in the cage and on the board track, the freshmen came from their underdog position to upset Mercersburg on April 23. The double victory m the hurdles by Dave Payne and a win in the mile run by Jack Johnson counted strongly tor the Eli Cubs, who gained most of their points on second and third places. Scoring the only double win of the day, m the high and low hurdles, Captain Dick Osborn paced his team to a 78-48 victory over Andover on the latter ' s track. May 7th saw Princeton come to New Haven to give Yale its only setback of the year. Captain Osborn again led his teammates in scoring, but the lack of first places told strongly in the final outcome. Winding up their schedule the following Saturday, the Eli Cubs outscored Harvard ' s highly, rated Freshmen, 77-58. Bob Owen took first in both sprints, but his time of ten seconds in the hundred-yard dash, tying the Freshman record, was disallowed because of a high wind. A second in the high jump left him high scorer for the day. Byers, H. Johnson, Manning, Ruprecht, WeeJ, L. Johnson (Captain), Frost, Brown, Cross. Lewis Johnson, II Albert W. Sherer, Jr. Edwin O. Leader Captain Manager Coach Howard P. Johnson, 38S W. SiNKLER MaNNINO, 40 Stanley Livingston, Jr., 40S James H. Dempsey, Jr., 38 Lewis Johnson, Jr., 38S Granger H. Frost, 40 Charles M. Ruprecht, 40E Frederick C. Cross, 40S Buckley M. Byers, 40 Stroke Seven Six Five Four Three Two Bow Cox Peter B. Thorne, 40 John W. Rannenberg, 40S Clement D. Gile, 39 Paul M. Wick, 39 WiLLARD W. Brown, 38 Francis G. Geer, 38S George F. Vietor, Jr., 40 Theodore A. McGraw, 39 Clifford M. Brown, 39S The 1938 Qrew Season BY RALPH R. BROWNING, JR. T our veterans of the 1937 Varsity crew were back for fall practice. Besides these men, W. J Sinkler Manning, captain and number seven of his 1935 Freshman crew, was again available. Unfortunately, due to uncontrollable circumstances, one of the returning Seniors had to stop rowing, but all in all the prospects for the season were favorable. Unpredictable weather held the oarsmen in the basement of Payne Whitney Gymnasium until the first week in March. This fact alone is significant, for the previous year the boats had been able to take to the water on February sixteenth. After rowing at the harbor for only a few days, the squad moved out to the Housatonic. At this point Bill Brown was at stroke. Sink Manning seven. Bob Black six, Frank Geer five, Lew Johnson four, Rica Frost three, Charlie Ruprecht two, and Jim Dempsey bow. Buck Byers held the tiller ropes. When the crews came back after a week ' s Spring vacation, the line-up was changed to Lew Johnson at stroke. Manning seven, Black six, Wick five, Victor four. Frost three, Ruprecht two, and Dempsey bow. By the time the first race rolled around Coach Ed Leader had again changed this order and had at last found a combination that clicked. Howard Johnson, stroke of the 1937 J. V. boat, was setting the beat of the new boat with Manning, Livingston, Dempsey, Lew Johnson. Frost, Ruprecht and Cross behind him. Byers retained his position as coxswain. Exactly two months after taking to the water, on the afternoon of May seventh, Yale jockeyed into the middle course position in the Schuylkill River to defend her Blackwell cup title against Columbia and Penn. A heavy wind blew up the Henley course as the starting cry was given. The Blue Varsity took the lead, rowing about forty strokes to the minute, but soon dropped to a steady thirty-six. As they approached the mile mark a length ahead of Penn, Johnson dropped the stroke to thirty-four, and the boat swung along with an even rhythm backed by plenty of power. The Red-and-Blue Sweepswmgers had by this time left Columbia two lengths behind. Yale won the race by a good length and a half over Penn in 6:49f. Penn was clocked in 6:55 while Columbia was 7:09f. On May twentieth the same crew that rowed at Philadelphia were at Ithaca to compete against Cornell and Princeton for the Carnegie Cup. As the Varsity boats drew near the starting line on Friday, they found the wind was too strong to race. In returning to the boathouse, the Cornell shell sank, and the Princeton oarsmen rode back on a freight train, having beached their JOHNSON Captain BYERS Cdptam-elect tl shell a mile from the start. The bow of Yale ' s new boat had been damaged and consequently Dick Pocock had to work well into the night before he got her into top racing form. The race finally got off shortly before noon the next day. Princeton jumped ahead at the start but was quickly overtaken by Yale. At the half-way mark Yale had just under a length on Cornell, with Princeton in third place. The boat was swinging and by the finish had opened up a two-length lead over Cornell. Princeton, never really threatening, came in almost six lengths behind the winner. Prolonged cheers went up from the Yale section when times were announced. They had set a new course record, covering the two-mile stretch in 10:23.4, which shattered the former mark of 10:42. On the evening of June twenty-fourth Yale and Harvard lined up at the R. R. bridge on the Thames for an upstream race. The Blue shell had drawn to the eastern lane. Yale jumped into the lead for a few strokes at a beat of thirty-eight, but Harvard, rowing at forty-one, slowly drew ahead. After a few minutes both settled down — Harvard at thirty-two, Yale at thirty-four. At the two-mile mark. Harvard was a length ahead and both strokes had steadied at thirty-two. Twice Yale challenged before the three-mile mark. Then as the last mile stretched out ahead, Howie Johnson raised the beat higher and higher. The boat responded and began to creep up. A quarter length of open water disappeared. But then Harvard, captained by Spike Chace, one of the best strokes in her history, answered with a sprint. With the challenger only three-quarters of a length behind, the Cantabs went up to thirty-eight and hit forty as they shot over the finish line a scant boat length ahead of the Blue. With two exceptions the crew was the same one that beat Penn, Columbia, Cornell, and Princeton. Jim Dempsey was taken ill and George Weed moved into five, and Bill Brown went in at two just before the race. Harvard ' s time was 20:20 and Yale was clocked in 20:23 . Thus the 1938 season came to an end. One long-standing record had been broken and Yale had suffered only one courageous defeat at the hands of a superior rival. Every day is Derby Day tor — 2S2 — The 1938 i o- ound Qrew Season Roger C. Newberry Robert S. Butler Cafitdni Coach CT e year 1938 saw Yale ' s varsity 150 ' pound crew have one of its best seasons. Captained by - ■ Roger Newberry and stroked by Bill Kellogg, the crew not only won the national champion ' ship but advanced to the semi-final round of the Henley Regatta in England. The first race of the season took place on the Schuylkill River at Philadelphia on the seventh of May. The crew showed great promise in easily defeating both Columbia and Pennsylvania. The following week, on Princeton ' s Lake Carnegie, the Yale lightweights won the Joseph Wright Challenge Cup by nosing out Harvard in the finals after placing second to the Cantabs in the first elimination heat. Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Princeton followed Yale and Harvard over the finish line. One week later, however, the Harvard crew took revenge by winning the Goldthwaite Cup on the Charles River. Princeton closely trailed the Yale boat at the finish. On the fifteenth of June, the crew set sail for England and the Royal Henley Regatta. In the first race of this world-famous event, Yale defeated the Trinity College crew by the margin of one length. The second round saw Yale cross the finish line ahead of the British Imperial College Boat Club by a similar margin. These two victories brought the New Haven crew up to the semi-final round. It was here that another Connecticut crew — that of the Kent School — eliminated the Yale lightweights by two-thirds of a length in a heart-breaking finish. This highly successful season, which covered so much territory, was finally brought to a conclusion when the crew was voted the national championship. f f ! I ! Standing: Kellogg, Cross, Nevvberr ' , H,i vc , Mirtin, LittlehclJ, Noble. Thompson. K ' neeli)ig: Smith, (Cox.). Brown, Myers, Rannenherg, Vietor. Wick, Livingston, Geer, Gile, McGraw. The 1938 Junior Varsity Crew Season W 7 ith seven of the nine men who formed last year ' s crew returning, the Junior Varsity had a tairly successful season, losing only to Harvard. The first race of the year took place on the Schuylkill River at Philadelphia on May 7- The Yale crew jumped into the lead at the gun and stayed in front all the way to win easily by five lengths. Penn placed second, nosing out Columbia in a final sprint by no more than two feet. On May 20 the Carnegie Cup Regatta was held at Ithaca under very adverse weather conditions. Prince ton took the lead in the first quarter as one Yale man did not even hear the starting gun. The Yale crew finally forged to the front in the third quarter. Cornell sprinted in the last quarter, but smart coxing by Vilas kept Yale in front for the rest of the race. The unbeaten Yale crew was favored against Harvard in the annual Yale-Harvard Regatta at New London on June 24. Harvard jumped into the lead at the start hut the boats were even at the half-mile mark. Yale then dropped behind but pulled up again at the mile post. Entering the last quarter mile Harvard had a slim ten-foot lead. Yale increased its stroke but could not gain on a good Harvard crew which finally won by three-quarters of a length. Yale rowed a fine race and lost gallantly. he 1 94 1 Freshman Qrew Season Richard N. Gould Ralph R. Browning, Jr. Donald Grant Captain Manager Coach eaptained by Dick Gould, the 1941 Freshman Heavies made an excellent showing against the stiff opposition of Columbia and Pennsylvania at Philadelphia and Cornell and Princeton at Ithaca but finally succumbed to the superior power of a strong Harvard boat on the Thames. Welding together a smooth-stroking crew from a group of young huskies, some of whom have never handled an oar before, and all of whom have rowed under different coaches, is no mean task, and diminutive but vociferous Don Grant is to be complimented for turning out such consistently good freshman crews. On May 7th the Schuylkill River saw the Freshmen dip their oars for the first time m inter- collegiate competition. With John Blair setting the stroke, the crew rowed a steady race finishing a second ahead of Penn and seven seconds before Columbia. The same boatload faced Cornell and Princeton two weeks later on the windswept waters of Lake Cayuga, but despite adverse weather conditions, the Freshmen jumped to an early lead which they maintained throughout the two-mile course, fighting off the challenge of Cornell in the last quarter-mile and sending their prow over the finish line some six feet ahead of the Ithacans. Princeton trailed by twenty-three seconds. Rowing the middle two miles of the varsity ' s four-mile, downstream course on the Thames, the Yale Freshmen were outstroked by Harvard on June 24th in a prelude to the varsity event. Harvard finished nine seconds ahead of the Yale boat, and continued their complete sweep of the regatta. Stevens, Blair, Beard, Smith, Gould (C), Fargo, Pope, Abcrg, Vreeland. — 285 — The 1941 Freshman i o ound Qrew Season Benjamin C. Tilghman Ralph R. Browning, Jr. Robert S. Butler Captain Manager Coach I A. M. Thomas, III B. C. Tilghman, Jr. Stro e N. V. V. Franchot, III Sei ' en A. F. Love JOY Six W. H. O ' Hearn, Jr. Fife Coxst H. C. Field, Jr. Four H. T. BUCHENAU Three G. B. B. LL. ' KRD, Jr. Two H. C. Davis, Jr. Bow fT he Freshman 150-Pound Crew Season, with its record of three defeats and no wins, could - scarcely be called a success. In their first race, on May 7th, the Freshmen engaged in the closest battle of their season meeting the Kent second boat on the Housatonic. Sloppy rowing, however, combined with rough water spelled defeat for the lightweights. On May 14th, on Lake Carnegie, in the American Rowing Association Regatta, the Yale fifties, accustomed to the Henley distance found that the race was to be a mile. The different distance combined with a powerful Cornell crew was too much for the Bantams. Finishing in third place, they were behind Cornell and Pennsylvania with Columbia trailing them and Princeton last. The final encounter, the traditional battle with Harvard at Cambridge was on May 21st. Before this last race, Ben Tilghman, stroke, was elected Captain. In this race the Freshmen were beaten by a length and a quarter, turning in a time of 6:49:2. At the outset Harvard pulled away to a lead of nearly a length with a beautifully-executed racing start and an amazing burst of speed. Throughout the entire race the Cantabs held a higher beat than Yale, rowing 36 to the Eli ' s 33. The crew that faced Harvard was A. M. Thomas, cox; Captain Tilghman, stroke; Nick Franchot, seven; Al Lovejoy, six; Bill O ' Hearn, five; Hank Field, four; Harry Buchenau, three; Bro Ballard, two; and Howard Davis, bow. I Bac TOW. Jones (Manager), Bruce, Stevens, Angleton, Doty, Perry, Emerson, Leeman (Coach). Second row: Feary, Dickinson, Poole, Raleigh (Captain), Carten, Keefe, Bowen. Front row: Brown, Van Pursen. The 1938 Soccer Season William A. Raleigh, Jr. Edwin H. Jones, Jr. Walter Leeman Captain Manager Coach The soccer team linished the season with a fairly good record, winning six games while losing four. But the mere capitulation does not tell what a strenuous season it was; often there were two games a week against really tough opposition, and there were no breathers on the schedule. Furthermore, the team was often handicapped by the absence of Captain Bill Raleigh, who was kept out of sever al games by a bad charley-horse. Being one of the best fullbacks in college soccer, he might have made the difference between defeat and victory in some of the games. The Elis began on an auspicious note by beating Wesleyan 2-1. But the next two games — both away — against Williams and Navy were not so successful, though close; the scores were 0-1, and 2-3, respectively. It was just after these two games that the team hit its stride, shutting out four of its next five opponents. Trinity was the first to succumb, 1-0 on October 25th. As the winning streak continued, Dartmouth (2-0), Brown (1-0), Pennsylvania (2-1), and Princeton (l-O) were beaten in the following three weeks. But all good streaks must end, and Harvard and Springfield took care of this one, winning over the home forces 2-1 and 4-0, to close the season in an unfortunate manner. Shortly afterward, Tom Erickson, who was the outstanding man on the team, scoring over half the team ' s points for the year, was elected to captain the hooters for the 1939 season. T5he Freshman Soccer Season George E. Haines William R. Kitchel Ralph Harris Manager Coach Seven games, seven victories — this was the record of the Class of 1942 ' s championship Soccer Team. Permitting opponents only four points while making twenty-three, the Freshman aggregation was the first since 1923 to go through its season undefeated. Decisive scores of 6-2 and 7-0, marked up against West Haven and Stamford High Schools respectively, indicated the ability of the team. New Haven High School in the next game came close to stopping the Elis, but tight defense play plus a late tally by Milliken saved the day, 1-0. Choate and Taft resisted strenuously but finally had to yield to the superior strength of the Freshmen by 1-0 and 2-0 scores. Princeton ' s team came to New Haven with a well- trained, aggressive team; the best soccer of the season resulted, Yale coming through with a 3-2 win. The Elis were at their peak in the last game of the year, the match with Harvard; a hard-driving, fast-passing attack put the Cantabs on the short end of a 3-0 score. The Freshmen impressed observers not only with their technical ability, which was high, but with their aggressive and spirited playing. Enthusiasm on the whole squad was high. The combi- nation of a close defense plus a powerful offense brought about the success of the season. Another vital factor was the effective coaching of Ralph Harris and the able leadership of Captain Haines. Several of the freshmen are of a sufficiently high calibre to supply Walter Leeman with good material next year. Bac}{row: Hams (Coach), Allen, Thayer, Hart (Asst. Mgr.), Milliken, Myers, Kitchel (Mgr.)- Treat, Reed, Haines (C), Wilson, Deland, Decker, Carnngton. Front row: Clark, Barstow. Second row: Ireland, Haas, Bac}{ row: Kanaly (Coach), Whittlesey, Savage, Cross, Van Sant. Holderness, Shapleigh, Oler. Front row: Mam, Pfeilfenberger, Watson, Clark, The Qross Qountry Season Ronald J. Clark Harvey G. Van Sant Frank M. Kanaly Captain Manager Coach T espite losses to Princeton and Harvard and a not-too-spectacular showing in the Intercollegiates, ■ - Coach Frank Kanaly produced one of the strongest Yale Cross Country teams in years. Led by Captain Ronnie Clark, Yale won five of its seven dual meets, succumbing only in Big-Three compe- tition. Five miles of rough and hilly terrain against Wesleyan University confronted the Yale harriers at the opening of their season, but Captain Clark led his men home in the excellent time of 27:32 to win 19-41. The second meet, with Massachusetts Institute of Technology, was also run over the home course and decisively won by Yale 16-39. The annual Quadrangular Meet in Van Cortlandt Park in New York proved the scene of another Yale triumph as Columbia, Cornell, and Dartmouth were downed 15-40, 26-29, and 19-36 respectively. This contest was scored as a dual meet, with the team making the lowest score being declared the winner. The Triangular Meet, held November 4th in Princeton, saw Yale go down to defeat at the hands of Princeton 25-31 and Harvard 20-36, despite Clark ' s record time of 25:29. Van Cortlandt Park was not so kind to the Elis when they returned to participate in the Inter- collegiates on November 14th, for the team finished ninth, with Ben Holderness crossing the finish line first for Yale. Clark, Bill Watson, Lee Shapleigh, and Mather Pfeiffenberger finished m that order to complete the Yale scoring. I I Freshman Qross Qountry Season John C. Kaynor Harold L. Henkel Frank M. Kanaly Cafstam Manager Coach I A s has been the case in the past, the Freshman Cross Country team was handicapped by the lack - of experienced material and by a small turnout, but, due to rapid improvement during the season, it will undoubtedly serve to take up the slack in the varsity next year resulting from the graduation of Ronald Clark and Ben Holderness. In the initial meet of the season. Captain Kaynor ran a tight race against Holmes of Wesleyan with the latter coming home in the lead, one full minute ahead of the third man. Wesleyan emerged the victor, 21-36. In the second meet against Cheshire the freshmen made a good showing, winning 19-43. Kaynor and Ashton finished one, two, while Aime and Harvey of Yale were third and fourth. Dartmouth then avenged a defeat of the year before by winning a close race 22-33 on a very muddy course, Kaynor but a second apart from Williams of Dartmouth. The Big Three Meet at Princeton was a disappointing performance by the team although Kaynor covered the two and one-half mile course in 16:12 to finish first. Yale trailed both Harvard and Princeton in the scoring. On November 13th the team completed its season in the I.C.4-A meet m New York. Captain Kaynor again proved his worth by finishing seventh in a field of ninety-two. The rest of the team failed to place near the top, doing no better than fourteenth in the final team standings. ( row: Kdinly (.Co.icli I, Shapleigh, Melchcr, Henkel. Front row: Ashton, Aime, Kaynor (C), Harris, Murray. — 291 — A -r ! inrif ' .i!! Bdc row: Bowerman (Mgr.i. V.in Sand, Hamilton, Pollock, Ha Miller (Captain), Frey. Fasanella, Watson. ilton, King (Coach). Front row: Lee, Swenson, Wright, he boxing Season Andrew O. Miller, Jr. Richard H. Bowerman MosE KiNc; Captain Manager Coach Tosing to Army, perennial intercollegiate champions, and to the U. S. Coast Guard Academy, the Yale boxing team emerged from its short but strenuous season with a fifty-fifty record including wins over Queens University and Cornell. The cream of intercollegiate competition at Syracuse proved a little too much for Mose King ' s proteges, with only Charley Wright and Rocky Fasanella reaching the semi-finals, Wright going on to the finals before he succumbed to Hanna of Penn State. On February 10th, two weeks after the tournament. Queens University came to New Haven to face Captain Ott Miller ' s men. Presenting a veteran line-up with the exception of Woodward, Yale made short work of the Canadians and wound up on the long end of a 8-1 score. A week later, however, in their own ring the Army boxers pounded Yale unmercifully as Ott Miller was the only Eli to win his bout. Against the Coast Guards on February 24th, Yale lost a close match 6-3 with Swenson in the 145-pound, Pollock in the 165-pound, and Miller in the 175-pound class scoring Yale ' s points. The last dual match of the season saw Yale break into the win column again as co-captains Goldbas and Steimer were the only Cornell representatives to win. Throughout the season Yale was handicapped by the loss of Woodward in the 127-pound class and was forced to default this weight in the three final matches. In the intercollegiates Yale stood fifth with three points, attributable to the fine boxing of Wright and Fasanella. T3he Freshman boxing Season David J. Williams, II William C. McMillan Gerald Ford Captain Manager Coach W T ith Its record of one loss, one tie, and no wins, the 1942 Freshman boxing team does not appear a striking success on paper, but the season was characterized by a type of enthusiasm and de- termination which does not show up in the won-and-lost columns. The Army may have downed them 7-1 and Cornell tied the Freshmen 4-4, yet there were men on the team who were far better than this meagre record would indicate. Holding elimination tournaments about the same time as the varsity, the successful Freshman candidates, under the able tutelage of Gerry Ford, were molded into a team to confront the Army Plebes on February 28th at West Point. The hitting power and stamina of the Cadets were too much fo r the inexperienced Freshman boxers, and David Williams proved to be the sole Yale winner. Carnngton and Sprole in the heavy classes fought well, while Page Anderson in the 155 ' pound class showed promise. After two weeks of rest and practice, the Freshmen took on Cornell in the Payne Whitney Gym and fought to a 4-4 tie. Frank Sprole in the unlimited class and Anderson m fifty-five won by decision, while Bob Stevenson scored a technical knockout over Fisher m the third round. Smith won by forfeit to complete the Yale scoring. Captain Williams, fighting above his weight, carried Gasmer to the third round only to have the Cornell Freshman Captain score a technical knockout to win the bout. II Bacl row: McMillan (Mgr.), Stevenson, Carnngton, Sprole, Anderson, King (Coach). Front row: Butts, Bromell, Williams (Captain), Sullivan, Webber. Bac row: Manager Burrows, Litt. Hart, Morris, Dimock, Coach Grasson. Auchincloss, Johnson, Barthel, Scully. Front row: Marcus, Parsons, Perlowin, Captain The Fencing Season Reginald L. Auchincloss, Jr.. Belton a. Burrows Robert Grasson Captain Manager Coach eonsidering the high calibre of the opposition encountered and the lack of material, Perlowin and Marcus being the only veterans returning from last year ' s Big Three Champions, the Fencing Team concluded a rather mediocre season winning three of its eight meets. In the season ' s opener, with Cornell, Yale, suffering from inexperience, went down to defeat by the score of 11-16, winning the foil 6-3, but losing both epee and sabre. The team next beat the University of Pennsylvania ig -?!, but the following contest with the Hartford Fencers Club was won by the visitors 18-9, Yale losing in all three weapons. The St. John ' s University of Brooklyn was downed 16-11, with 7-2 victories in epee and sabre compensating for a 2-7 loss to the Brooklyn foilmen. Columbia took the next meet 16-11, and Army proved victorious by the same score, the Elis losing the foil and epee by 3-6 and winning the sabre 5-4. Yale was victorious over Princeton, winning the foil and epee 6-3 and the sabre 5-4, but in the season ' s finale Yale went down to defeat before Harvard 17-10, dropping the foil 4-5 and the epee and sabre both 3-6. In the Pentagonal, at Annapolis, Yale won fourth place in each weapon and in the three- weapon accounting, with Perlowin emerging as runner-up for the foil championship. The Inter- collegiates saw acting-captain Rex Auchincloss win fourth place on the number-one epee strip. 13he Freshman Fencing Season Harry B. Schooley, Jr. George A. Paddock, Jr. Albert Grasson Captain Manager Coach 7 he success of this year ' s Freshman fencing team augurs well for the next few years of Varsity competition at Yale. In spite of the fact that for many of its members this was the first year of fencing, the team was undefeated, scoring over the leading preparatory school fencers and winning the Big Three Championship. The first meet of the year with Hopkins Grammar School was the closest, 14-13, Yale winning in the foil 6-3, losing the epee 3-6, and taking the sabre 5-4. In the following meet the foil was the only event, Yale winning 7-2. The Elis then beat Mt. Hermon 21-6 and went on to win over Taft in all three weapons by the score of 5-4, taking the meet 15-12. Meeting Worcester Academy the succeeding weekend, Yale won 15-12. The meet with Cheshire went to Yale ISj-lli, and Loomis succumbed soon afterward 16-11. Against the Tiger team at Princeton Yale won the foil 6-3, the epee by the sam e score, and the sabre 5-4, to take the meet by the count of 17-10. The concluding contest of the year with Harvard was at once the most important and the most exciting, as Yale lost the foil 4-5, and tied the epee 45-4|, but finally pulled the meet out of the fire by winning the sabre 7-2. i I Bac row: Paddock (Mgr.), MacPherson, Parella, Bode, Wiss, Woodward, SteiFan, Grasson (Coach). Second row: Gordon, Woolf, Douthit, Pannill, Captain Schooley, Nunes, Lynch, Owre, Green. Front row: Steinberg, WiUets. Johnson, Corey, Woolley (Captain), Schiffer. The Indoor olo Season Clarence M. Woolley, Jr. Douglas M. Allen, Jr. Captain William H. Hill, U. S. A. Captain Manager Coach T iding high through their first ten matches, the Indoor Polo Team held Yale ' s only hopes for an - ■ _ undefeated varsity season after the wrestlers and squash men had fallen by the wayside. But March 4th saw Captain Forbes and the Dillinghams of Harvard put an end to Eli aspirations as they drove home six goals in the third chukker to win 13-11. Seeking revenge in the IntercoUegiates, Captain Woolley led his men victorious through the first two rounds only to be defeated in the finals S 7 by the Army riders. Giant Valley and the Hartford Cavalry put Yale in mid-season form to take Princeton 17-9 on January 21st with Corey scoring seven goals. Army proved tougher opposition a week later but bowed 12-9 with Captain Woolley leading the attack. After a return match with Giant Valley, Yale met Harvard at Chicago and downed the Forbes-Dillingham combine 12-7- On the trip home the Ell horsemen stopped off at Cincinnati long enough to trounce the local cavalry 15-11. Johnson, Corey, and Woolley next eked out a 10-9 win over Army, but Washington ' s Birthday saw the same combination drub Princeton 22-12 at the Yale Armory. Hitting their top form against Harvard at Cambridge, Cottie Johnson and Al Corey went on a scoring spree to aid in the 25-6 Yale triumph, but a week later saw the tables turned with Forbes and Gay Dillingham driving home most of Harvard ' s goals. In the IntercoUegiates Yale raced through Norwich University 15-6 in the first round and continued her march at the expense of Pennsylvania Military College, Army, however, blasted Yale ' s championship hopes with an 8-7 defeat on April 1st. T3he Freshman Indoor olo Season Cliffton R. Scudder, III Addison B. C. Whipple William H. Hill, Captain U. S. A. Cafjtdin Manager Coach l z ' oing down to defeat only at the hands of Princeton, the 1Q42 Ind oor polo team won five ot their seven games to give Yale one of the most successful freshman seasons of recent years. Captain Cliff Scudder and Rene di Rosa formed the spearhead of the Eli attack with Davidson and Schooley contributing timely goals and excellent defensive work. A single point proved to be all the margin necessary for the Freshmen to down Avon 16-15 in the season ' s opener. McDonogh School fell easier prey to the Cub malletmen on February 4th, and a return match with Avon a week later definitely established Eli superiority as di Rosa tallied eight goals and Davidson five to account for the Yale end of a 13-9 score. On February 24th LawrenceviUe, perennial rivals of the Freshmen, was sidetracked 15-11 on New Jersey soil. The following day saw Princeton hand the Cub riders their first defeat as fine defensive work on the part of the home team limited the Yale attack to seven goals while the Princeton offensive was accounting for seventeen. The Freshmen hit their stride again against Harvard on the fourth of March with Scudder, Davidson, and di Rosa ringing up fifteen of Yale ' s sixteen points against eleven for the Cantabs. In a return match with Princeton held at the Yale Armory the Eli riders were edged out in an exhibition of hard riding and accurate hitting. HiU (Coach), Scudder (Capt.), di Rosa, Schooley, Davison, Whipple (Mgr.) — 297 — Bacl{ tow: Hook (CoachJ, Kalinowski, Savage (Manager), Jacobson, Buerkle (Coach). Front row: Orthwein, Pilling, Herz (Captain), McCain, Morrison, Nicholson. The fle Season Stephen Herz, Jr. Charles Savage Lieutenant Elmer C. Buerkle, U. S. N. Captain Manager Coach I T 7 inning the New England Intercollegiates and six of their eight matches, Steve Herz ' s Rifle Team made a very creditable showing against the best of eastern competition, including both Service teams and the U. S. Coast Guard Academy. Navy was the only unit to down Yale in a shoulder-to-shoulder match, while the Army and Eli teams shot their way to a 1361-1361 tie. Yale wound up the season in second place at the Nationals, trailing New York University by two points. Firing their first match on the Payne Whitney range, the Elis outshot the Coast Guards 1356- 1346 on January 21st. Navy, however, severely trounced Yale two weeks later at Annapolis by a sixty-seven point margin. M.I.T. fell before the Eli guns at Cambridge 1354-1329, and Harvard was similarly taken by storm on the following day, February I8th, to the staccato tune of 1345-1314. A week ' s practice brought the sharpshooters to their dual-meet high of 1362 against N. Y. U. in the Tower Parkway sub-basement, and a triangular match with the Coast Guards and Connecticut State found Yale still in the win column. The tie with Army on March 11th was followed by a 1361-1325 victory over Connecticut State. In the New England Intercollegiates, Yale carried off top honors over the second-place Coast Guards, Philip Nicholson winning the individual title, but the following day saw N. Y. U. nose the Elis out of the National Rifle Association title. The Freshman ' J{ifle Season Griffith S. Bedworth Benjamin T. Brooks, Jr. Commander Wilder N. Baker, U. S. N. Captain Manager Coach Winning six of their ten postal matches and splitting even in the shoulder-to-shoulder contests, the Freshman Rifle Team went through a better than average season highlighted by the work of Griffith Bedworth, Thurston Twigg-Smith, and Elmore WiUets. Selecting his preliminary squad from a group of thirty-two men, Commander Baker picked fifteen to carry on during the fall and cut this group to ten after the Christmas holidays. The first postal match was shot with V. P. I. on January 14th, and resulted in a 1277-1234 Yale victory. The Freshmen continued their winning streak against Phoenix 1324-1306, but on February 11th, Mary- land set them down with a 1326-1321 defeat. Iowa took the Freshmen ' s measure 1312-1299 before the latter got back in the win column against Illinois. Georgia Tech. was the next to succumb by a 1322-1303 margin. The Yale score of this day was not good enough to defeat Navy, however, and the Middies hung up a 1372-1322 victory. Shooting against Ohio State, Columbia, and St. Johns of New York on March 4th, the Yale score of 1282 was no match for Ohio State ' s 1304 but won out over Columbia ' s 1219. The St. Johns score was based upon five shots from each of four positions, which left Yale with 891 against 850 for St. Johns. Journeying to Cambridge on March 10th, the Freshmen were outshot by M. I. T. 1300-1286, but redeemed themselves against the Harvard Freshmen on the following day, 1289-1277. In the Freshman Intercollegiates Yale scored a total of 1782 which gained her third place. Bacl{TOw: Brooks iMin.igerl, Bott, GaylorJ. Kiul, C ' ,.inipbell. (Captain), Willets, Pigott, Baker (Officer-in-charge). Hook (Co.ichl Churcli, Twii-ij-Smith. Bedworth Bac row: Skillm.in (Coach i Bissell, Houk, Waters. Smith. Schwab, CoHins (Manager). Front roi r: Dickinson, Pittman, Flaherty, Muir (Captain), The Squash P cquets Season Malcolm Muir, Jr. Atwood Collins, II John F. Skillman Captain Manager Coach A Ithough the Squash Team lost its two-year hold on the Intercollegiate Championship, the season • • - was far from unsatisfactory since Yale suffered its only defeat at the hands of Batey Blake ' s Harvard courtmen. Fifteen wins over the best of eastern intercollegiate competition and a good showing in tournament play bear witness to another brilliant squash campaign under the expert coaching of Johnnie Skillman, for several years national professional champion. Beginning informal practice in the fall, matches were held with the University Club of New York, the Yale Club of New York, West Point, and Purdue in all of which the EH squashmen were victorious. After tournament play during the Christmas holidays, the team returned to hand 5-0 defeats to M. I. T. and Williams, and a 7-2 trouncing to the Yale Law School. Princeton next yielded to the Yale onslaught 6-3; and the following week the team journeyed to Philadelphia to down both the Yale Club of Philadelphia and the University of Pennsylvania. After overcoming Wesleyan, a Yale team hopeful of victory went to Cambridge to face Har- vard. Before a crowded gallery Yale dropped the top six matches and the Intercollegiate Champion- ship to emerge on the short end of a 6-3 count. The Princeton team came to New Haven for a return match and was defeated once more, this time by a 7-2 margin. Outstanding was the match between Captain Mai Muir and Pearson of Princeton in which the Yale captain overcame the Intercollegiate Champion in four games. Yale closed its season by triumphing over the Yale Club of New York, Dartmouth, and Amherst. I The Freshman Squash F{acquets Season Daniel C. Dugan Charles E. Lauriat John F. Skillman Ca[ tain Manager Coach p epeatmg last year ' s success in overcoming all opposition, the Freshman Squash Racquets Team - - _ swept through an eight-game schedule, defeating both Princeton and Harvard. Hartford Golf Club offered the Freshmen their stiffest competition as all five matches were forced to five games before the Eli Cubs managed to eke out a 3-2 victory. With the aid of the freshman tournament and ladder challenge matches. Coach Johnnie Skillman rounded out a team of seven men from the numerous possibilities and succeeded in producing several fine squash players, among whom Captain Danny Dugan, Belton Copp, Motley Sawyer, and Francis Trudeau deserve honorable mention. Their first four opponents presented few difiiculties to the 1942 racqueteers as Choate and the Y. M. C. A. were downed 5-0 in the Payne Whitney courts and Pennsylvania and Wesleyan suffered similar treatment on their home stamping grounds. On February 15th the Freshmen met the Hartford Golf Club squash men on the latter ' s courts and managed to bring home the proverbial bacon by the margin of one point, Hunt and Bermudez undergoing their only defeats. Three days later found the Freshmen back in winning form as they swamped Princeton 6-1 in the Tower Parkway arena. Pomfret, a week later, proved to be a breather as the EH Freshmen won all five matches easily. March 4th saw Johnnie Skillman ' s men invade Cambridge seeking the successful completion of their undefeated season, and despite the losses of Dugan to Baker of Harvard and Trudeau to Frothingham, Yale came through with a 3-2 conquest. Bacl( row: Skillman (Coach), Bermude:, Sawyer, Lauriat (Manager). Adams. Front row: Hunt, Trudeau, Dugan (Captain), Copp,  y:x y i y 4 Bac}{ row: Michael (Caich), Wilson, Oat (Mgr.), Shea, Kiphuth (Coach). Third rttw. Kleppinger, Higgins, Burrows, Sanburn, Jones, Belcher, Jalfray, Cooke. Second row: Fennebresque, Mackey, Gesner, J. Good (Capt.), Endweiss, Ferryman, Brueckel. front row: R. Good, Duncan. Larus, Slevin, Mustin, Mahoney, Phillips. The Swimming Season John W. Good D. Beaumont O. ' Kt Robert J. H. Kiphuth K.ARL B. Michael Captdin Manager Coach Dirmg and Assistant Coach Yale s Var.sity swimming team completed its most successful season since the 1936 campaign by winning the Eastern Intercollegiate Swimming League and with it, the mythical Big Three crown. Eighteen dual meet victories and but one defeat by a strong University of Michigan team was the final result. Beside victories over the League members, Columbia, Dartmouth, Harvard, Navy, Penn, and Princeton, the Eli swimmers took the measure of Wesleyan, Amherst, Army, Brown, Rutgers, and others. It is difficult to pick out individual stars, for forty-eight swimmers saw action during the season. It was the whole-hearted co-operation and interest of every member of the squad which led Yale once again to Eastern swimming supremacy. Certainly, John Good should be singled out not only for his excellent performances but for his inspiring leadership. Seniors Bill Moonan, free-styler, and Dan Endweiss, diver, who was forced out of action by an operation after brilliant early season form, should receive praise. Four new records were established during the past season. Johnny Brueckel, Ed Gesner, and Bill Moonan hung up a new Yale mark for the 3(X)-yard medley relay of 2:57.9. Two National Intercollegiate long course (50 yards) records were set at Annapolis when Brueckel, Paul Metcalf, and Moonan navigated the medley event in 3:04.6, and Ed Gesner turned in the fast time of 2:32.2 for the 200 yard breaststroke, which is also an American record. With returning varsity men in all events and an exceptionally strong freshman squad coming up, Coach Bob Kiphuth should again have a successful season in 1940. Freshman Swimming Season Howard R. Johnson Benedict D. Flynn W. Irving Newton Cafitain Manager Coach Admittedly one of Yale ' s greatest Freshman teams, the 1942 natators swept through a season of •• fourteen meets losing none and amassing 749 points to their opponents ' 259. Encountering little opposition, the team defeated Exeter, Hopkins, Pawling, Hartford, Naugatuck and Andover and Lawrenceville in a triangular meet. Mercersburg, most potent foe, felt the full strength of the fresh- man mermen and succumbed 39-27. New Haven High, Montclair, Canterbury, Hotchkiss, and Commercial High then fell. Neither Princeton nor Harvard offered much opposition, succumbing 54-21 and 53-22. Surveying the roster of broken records left by the swimmers, one realizes the full power of the team. The assault was led by Captain Howie Johnson, already one of Yale ' s swimming luminaries, who broke the Intercollegiate Freshman records in the 50 ' , 100-, and 220-yard free-style events. He also aided in the creation of a new 400-yard free-style relay record as the team of Kelly, Mac- Leman, Pope, and Johnson blazed through the distance in the amazing time of 3 minutes 34.7 seconds. The Freshmen also set a 300-yard medley relay record with Smith, Meyer, and Johnson swimming it in 3 minutes 2.4 seconds. Besides these records set in a standard pool, the team also posted six new records in the 20-yard pool. After such a season, Yale ' s swimming future looks very bright, for this was a team not only strong in every department but with excellent swimmers ranking three and four deep in every event including the dive. BucI; row. Coach Newton, Stiefel, Cooke, Kennedy, Ireland, Ponsen, Markle. Third row: Kilvert, Munding, Roesler, Lockwood, Twigg-Smith, Tellalian, Arndt. Second row: Clement, Smith, Meyer, Pope, Captain Johnson, Kelly, Chou- teau, White, Cooke. From row: Cook, Thompson. I Bacl[ row: E. O ' Donnell (Coach), Ely, Mann, Madden, Gilray, A. Latson, E. Latson, Jefferson, J. O ' Donnell (Coach) Second row: L. Pickett, H. Pickett, Hamman, Gerber, H. W. Bird (Capt.), J- Bird, Hauer, Jcplirg. front row Malinowski, Clarke. 15he V restling Season H. Waldo Bird, Jr. John A. Gilray, Jr. Edward D. O ' Donnell Captam Manager Coach XT ith a wealth of material that would delight the eye of any wrestling coach, Eddie O ' Donnell welded together a strong Yale team which lost only to Lehigh and Princeton by narrow margins. In the Eastern Intercollegiates Yale tied for third place with Harvard, Captain Waldo Bird and Jim Bird reaching the finals before being defeated. Against Columbia on January 14th the Eli grapplers opened their season conspicuously by hanging up a 235 to 6h victory. Cornell presented no greater difficulty as Yale won all but the 128-pound and 155 ' pound classes for a 24 to 6 score. Pennsylvania came to the Payne Whitney Gym to find the matmen in top form, and the visitors were ab le to garner only 3 points to Yale ' s 27. Seeking revenge for last year ' s match which was stolen away before their very eyes, the Lehigh muscle maulers brought a powerful team to New Haven on February 15th to down the Elis 17-11. A week later, despite the efforts of Mallon, Gerber, and Larry Pickett, the Yale forces went down to defeat at the hands of Princeton, 17-13. Brown was whitewashed 28 to two days later, and a 18-6 victory over Harvard concluded the season. In the Eastern A.A.U. Championships, Larry Pickett won the 191 ' pound division while brother Herb was cleaning up in the unlimited class. Captain-elect Dave Gerber was undefeated in dual meet competition as were also Mallon and sophomore Larry Pickett. he Freshman Wrestling Season Walter M. Charman, Jr. Edward W. Brichtwell John ODonnell Captain Manager Coach Oreaking even for the season with three wins, three defeats, and one tie, the Freshman Wrestling ■ - Team put a poHsh on an otherwise rather mediocre year by winning the Big-Three Freshman title. Captain Walt Charman in the 145 ' pound class, Glen Comstock in 135, and Hovey Seymour in the unlimited division were undefeated and formed the backbone of the team, with Brooks Parker and Dick Donovan also compiling enviable records. Oilman, center of interscholastic wrestling circles, handed the Freshmen their first defeat, 17-11, in the season ' s opener on January 21st. The only fall was scored by the youngest scion of the Pickett family, wrestling in the unlimited class for Oilman. Charman, Comstock, and Seymour won for Yale, the latter by default. Choate made it two straight in the cellar for the Eli Cubs by in- hospitably trouncing them 18-14 on the Wallingford mats, although Hull, Parker, Comstock, and Seymour defeated their prep school opponents. Finally against Exeter on February 4th, the Freshmen pulled up even, as each team won four matches for a 16-16 tie. Huber and Seymour pinned their opponents to add to the Yale count. Taft displayed a discouraging show of power in downing the Cubs 18-16 on February 11th, but on Washington ' s Birthday, Princeton went down to defeat by a score of 22-10, providing the Elis with their first victory. This victory was followed by a slaughter of the Brown team, allowing only a draw in the 135-pound class. A week later in the Payne Whitney pit Harvard also succumbed to an improved Yale team 18h 9h as the Cubs dropped only the two heavyweight events. Bacl row: Seymour, J. O ' Donnell (Ckjach), Conard, Brfghtwell (Mgr.), Keefe, E. O ' Donnell (Coach). Second row. Huber, Parker, Hicks, Charman (Capt.), Donovan, Comstock, Juhan. Front row: Hull, Wood. The 1938 Golf Season Paul B. Jamison, Jr. Bernard J. Burke Ben Thomson Captain Manager Coach The 1938 season was very successful for the Yale Golf Team, which lost only two matches while winning the other six. Led by Captain Jamison and expertly coached by Ben Thomson, the team compiled an excellent record until upset by Dartmouth and Harvard late in the season. Yale opened its season by defeating three powerful country club teams in succession. The Woodway Golf Club, the Greenwich Country Club, and the Hartford Golf Club all fell before the victorious Elis. The team then progressed to collegiate opposition, first handing Williams a 6-3 defeat. The following afternoon they continued in full stride and defeated Holy Cross 8-1. The next week-end was the dark spot of the season when the team suffered defeats from Dart- mouth and Harvard, while trouncing Brown. Dartmouth and Harvard, with unexpectedly powerful teams, upset the El is by the respective scores of 6-3 and 7-2. The Yale margin of victory over Brown was 6-3. Captain Jamison was ably helped by an excellent squad, the finest of whom was Ed. Meister. This brilliant golfer was undefeated in intercollegiate play except by Willie Turnesa, who after- wards won the National Amateur Championship. H. Merritt, G. Lauck, F. Borsodi, and W. Verity were consistently good all year and had much to do with compiling the team ' s record. F. Tanner and R. Egan were very capable reserves who saw action in various matches throughout the season. Haines R. Merritt was elected Captain for the 1939 season. 306- The 1 94 1 Freshman Golf Season J. Virgil Scott, Jr. William M. Stucky Ben Thomson Captain Manager Coach Qwinging brassie and niblick alike with deadly effect, the 1941 Freshman Golf Team stroked its way through six matches undefeated and untied. Trouncing the best of schoolboy opposition, the Freshmen went on to down Princeton and Harvard and continue unbesmirched the record left them by their predecessors, the class of 1940. After gaining intimate knowledge of the ravines and crevasses lying in wait for the unsuspecting golfer on the Anthony Thompson Memorial Golf Course, Ben Thomson ' s yearlings found lesser courses to offer few difficulties comparable to their home stamping-ground. Hotchkiss succumbed 8-1 without so much as a stymie, and Choate acknowledged the Elis their betters by the same score in a match featured by a 68 best ball posted by Page and Scott. The Dartmouth Freshmen came to New Haven, only to discover that Birnam Wood had accompanied them, with as disastrous results as for Macbeth at Dunsinane. Loree won his match to insure a Sh-ik Yale victory. The following day Taft offered little opposition, going down to defeat 7-2. Princeton was made of tougher stuff, however, and it was not until Brown and Swenson won the last foursome that Yale emerged with a 5-4 victory. Alien grounds held no terrors for the Eli Cubs at Cambridge, and they turned in a 6-3 sweep over Harvard, Langdon carding a 76 to beat Gottlieb eight and seven and clinch the match. Baci{ row: Watkins (Mgr.i, LanijJoii, Loree, Brown. From row: Page, Swenson, Scott, Blackburn, Coleman. — 307 — Bac row: Root (Coach), Cochrane, Dawbarn, Wrigley (Trainerl, Fuller, Carroll (Manager). Third row: O ' Keeffe, Bolton, Linthicum, Hopgood, Wright, Hamilton, Irving, Latham. Second row: Battey, lason, Henry, Ha ' iland (C), Reiter, Suman, Ott. Front row: Johnson. Roche. The 1938 Lacrosse Season Albert T. Haviland F. Michael Carroll Regin.ald D. Root Ca )tam Manager Coach ' playing a six-game schedule that included some ot the top-notch teams in the country. Army, Navy, and Princeton, the lacrosse team ended the season with a record of two games won and four lost. Coach Reg Root assembled the team for the first practice two weeks before the beginning of the spring recess. During the second week of vacation the team went to Baltimore for further training and played practice games with Mt. Washington. The Yale attack was effectively checked in the first game, which Army won 16 to 0. Although the next game was lost to N avy, 13 to 4, there was a decided improvement in the team ' s play. The first victory of the season took place at Philadelphia, where Pennsylvania was beaten 5 to 4. Penn rallied to nullify Yale ' s early 4-0 lead, but in the closing minutes of the game Don Henry netted the winning goal. In the most exciting game of the year, Dartmouth defeated the Elis, 5 to 4, Yale ' s game rally not quite enough to tie the score. Captain Haviland, at mid-field and Bill Schmeisser, at defense, starred for Yale. Princeton, the next opponent, won 5 to 2. Bob Smith scored both Yale goals; the work of Linthicum in the Yale goal was spectacular. To climax the season the team beat Harvard 12 to 8. Smith ' s passes to Henry accounted for four Eli goals in a rough game that was Yale ' s throughout. The 1941 Freshman Lacrosse Season Joseph S. Sweeney — John B. Madden John E. McPhee Robert S. Mulligan Co-Captdms Manager Coach t T T ith an enthusiastic squad, the 1941 Freshmen Lacrosse Team had a good season, winning five games of a seven-game schedule. Coach Bob MuUigan had a number of prep school stars and several other experienced players on his squad from whom he formed the first team. The season was inaugurated by an easy victory over Stamford High School 8-4. On Saturday of the same week, the team met defeat at the hands of a powerful Manhasset High School squad, 9-5. The Eli Cubs came back strong the next week to win over a fighting Peekskill Military team in an overtime period, 7-4. The following week, a strong Deerfield team, unbeaten in eighteen games, invaded New Haven. The visitors built up an early lead of three goals, only to have the score tied in the middle of the last period. Then, rising to magnificent heights, the blue yearlings captured the game, 7-5. After this brilliant victory, the team outscored the Springfield freshmen in a sloppily- played game, 10-7. The team was far outclassed in their encounter with the Princeton freshmen. An early goal which tied the score was Yale ' s only bright spot in the game. It ended in a 12-3 victory for the Tiger stickmen. Journeying to Cambridge, the team won over the Harvard freshmen, 3-2. In a game packed with thrills, Cy Sweeney scored twice for Yale, while Ed Ocumpaugh sunk the winning shot. 1 - - i % .% J i ' Wj r IMJA ,? „ SS ' . .-. Bac row: Cooke, Mulligan (Coach), Nostrand, McPhee (Mgr.), Glazer, Ocumpaugh, Wyre (Trainer), Heald. row: Aschmann, Stewart, Gebhard, Demming, Madden (C), Williams, Fagley, Kieckhefer, Woolner. Front Bac){ row: Hinchcliff (Coach), Wheeler, Campbell, Krieger, Milnor, M. Stephens. Front row: Kii Hinchcliff (Capt.), Dalrymple, H. Stephens. ,ey. Richards, The 1938 Tennis Season James D. Hinchcliff Harvey H. Bundv, Jr. William E. Hinchcliff Cd 5tdm Manager Coach T spite Its initial defeat, 6-3, at the hands of the Seventh Regiment, the 1938 Hinchcliff ' Captained and Hinchclitf-coached Varsity Tennis team completed a successful season. Throughout the campaign, the doubles combinations were the mainstay of the racquet men, going undefeated for the five matches following the opening encounter. On May 4, in one of the high points of the season, the Yale team upset North Carolina, 7-2, in the first reverse that the Tarheels had suffered in several years. Three days later the University of Pennsylvania netmen scored in five singles matches to upset Yale 5-4. Back at home, the Yale players returned to their winning ways, defeating the University of Virginia, 7-2, and Dartmouth, 6-3. A powerful Princeton team lived up to expectations m giving Yale its closest encounter of the year. In the number one singles match, Howard Stephens defeated Princeton ' s Podesta. Dalrymple of Yale, playing inspired tennis, won at 2-6, 19-17, 6-1. Additional victories by Wheeler and Mac Stephens held Princeton ' s lead to 6-4 at the end of the singles matches. Krieger and McGuire gained one more point for Yale. Captain Hinchcliff and Dalrymple then presented the feature of an exciting afternoon as they won a sparkling victory to tie the team score at 6-6. There it remained, for rain prevented further play. After losing, 2-7, to a strong Army team, Yale defeated Harvard, 9-6, for the second con ' secutive victorious year. I The 1 94 1 Freshman Tennis Season Henry G. Thompson, Jr. Darrah Corbet, Jr. loHN F. Skillman Captain Manager Coach Tjlasting their way through nine out often opponents, the 1Q41 Freshman tennis team lived up to - - ' the high expectations set for it as it concluded a most successful season. Led by Captain Thompson, the Cubs opened their season with 7-2 wins over Kent, Scar- borough, and Lawrenceville. Cheshire and Choate were the next victims of the Eli onslaught, Cheshire submitting to a 9-0 drubbing and Choate being beaten by a 6-3 count, after which Peddie and Taft were both whitewashed to the tune of 9-0. The Dartmouth Freshmen next fell prey to the Yalemen, 8-1, but, playing on alien courts, the Eli victory string was snapped by the Princeton Freshmen, as after a close and bitterly-fought match, the Yearlings succumbed, 5-4. However, the Cubs showed their mettle when, on the next day, they came through with a 6-3 victory over the Harvard Freshmen and thus brought the season to a successful close. Throughout the season, Spalding, Thompson, and Steckler took care of the first three positions while Friedman was undefeated at number four. Lutkins and Kelly played five and six, and Ehrman teamed with Thompson, Tompkins with Spalding, and Kelly with Steckler to form the three doubles teams. Newmyer and Barlow also played at various times throughout the year. Too much credit cannot be given John Skillman for his able and inspiring coaching which had much to do with the team ' s success. Bacl{TOw: Skillman (Coach), Lutkins, Ehrman. Spalding, Manning (Manager). (Captain), Kelly, Steckler. Front row: Friedman, Tompkins. Thompson Bdcl{ row. Tucker, Zimmermdn, W;ttson, Lee, jubitz. Front row: Neale, Troutman, Mitcheti, Albinger, Norris. T3he Inter college Jithletic Qouncil Monroe A. Jubitz, Berkeley William J. Albinger, Branford Stanley E. Zimmerman, Calhoun Paul E. Roche, Davenport Raymond H. Tucker, Jonathan Edwards George B. Norris, Pierson John K. Lee, Sayhroo]{ Warren T. Troutman, Timothy Dwxght RoMER F. Good, Trumhull Thomas G. Watson, Jr., Vanderhxlt Inter college yithletics BY W. H. NEALE W ith each passing year it becomes more evident that the strength of all the college teams is on a higher plane. One factor that has helped to develop the college and team unity is the desire of all colleges to finish in the first division in the standing for the All-Around Championship — a year ' long competition which indicates their relative standing in athletics. The championship football team is awarded 100 points, and all other teams receive a percentage of the number of points given to the championship team according to their respective positions in the football league standing. The points awarded in all other sports are determined by the interest shown and the number participating. This method of scoring gives the college approximately ten additional points if its team in any league finishes the season in the next higher position. The 1937-38 college year was unique in that the standing was so close during the Spring season that all four colleges, namely, Berkeley, Saybrook, Timothy Dwight, and Vanderbilt had a chance to win the championship during the last two weeks of the competition. The results of all contests, in which these four colleges were contestants, were important news to all athletic followers in the University. Berkeley College won the Tyng Trophy by a margin of less than two points, and the final standing showed that only thirty points separated the first and sixth ' place colleges. i The er elcy Football Season Warnek Ct. ( ' ' .i)si;riivk. Jr. Monroe A. luBir: C. ' iifitiim Manager Tn a keenly-contested football league Berkeley emerged victorious owing largely to the excellent leadership of Captain Warner Cosgrove and the spirited coaching of James Hallett of the Law School. Although Berkeley won only five games, losing one and tying three, the team rolled up forty-two points to her opponents six. Kirkland House of Harvard proved too powerful for the Berkeley aggregation and won IS 0, using two well-balanced teams. A scoreless tie with Brantord opened the season none too auspiciously. The Trumbull game remained .scoreless until five .seconds from the final whistle, when Charley Wilson faded back and shot a short pass to Jay Spader who tallied standing up. Against Jonathan Edwards with only three seconds remaining, Wilson and Danny Hogan pulled a Frank Merriwell finish as the latter ' s long arms snagged Wilson ' s pass to score. Phillips and Wilson each scored as the Mitres downed the powerful Saybrook team 14-0. The following Timothy Dwight and Vanderbilt contests resulted 111 .scoreless tics, and then came the first defeat of the season ,it the hands of Picr.son, Ct-i). The cool November breezes startled the Mitres from their scoreless slumbers, and Davenport suffered a J-i) trouncing as Phillips on off-tackle runs reached pay-dirt. The biggest thrill of the season came in the final game with Calhoun. Just before the half, Phillips place-kicked a rain-soaked ball from Calhoun ' s thirty-five-yard line. Later in the game Lamoreaux passed to Hogan for a touch- down, giving the Mitres an impressive victory and the inter-coUege football crown. • ' .T .• ' ' ' P, , f ll iac rnic Schneider ( Ir-uneri. Jiihit: iMjiUKeri. Brown, Zrt:i.sier. Hog.in, i_ yf. iiowerm.ui, Hallett (Co.ich). Second row. Messinger, Chapman, Stringer, Jofinson, Cosgrove (Captain), Dimock, Mackey, Spader, Wilson. Front row. Scnbner, Phillips, Lamoreaux, Lockhart. — 313 — I !,uf( row: Tr.icy, Hutcliinson. Smith. RothchilJ, Jones, McKell.ir (C.ipt.l, McNeil, Henry. Timothy wight Touch Football Season Douglas H. McKellar Warren T. Troutman Gaptam Manager Amassing the terrific total of 484 points in their ten games this year, the Timothy Dwight touch ■ football team was easily the outstanding outfit of the IntercoUege League. The Scions of the Hartford Wit, erstwhile famed Calvinist president of Yale, were all-powerful on the Derby-Road fields, dropping not a single fracas. From the first game when the Calhoun forces were whitewashed by a score of 66-8, to the last when the Harvard champions fell 42-30, there never was much danger that the Prexies would be overcome. What small stakes were wagered against them by the ever-proud Pierson and Davenport backers is thought to have been placed on purely patriotic grounds, rather than from any feeling that it was a sound investment. For, after Calhoun, Trumbull, Jonathan Edwards, and Branford fell m quick order 30-24, 60-30, and 76-6! The poor forces from the Tower district were snowed under that afternoon as the Sheff- town steamroller ran up a new record. The following week, Pierson actually built up a lead on the champs in the first half with long passes, but in the end it was the same old story with T. D. on top 30-24. They then finished off the season in good style winning handily 36-24, 60-24, and 48-12 from Vanderbilt, Davenport, and Saybrook. And from there they went on to take Dudley House into camp. Looking back over the season, it is pleasing to note that it was a whole team that made the record so good, there was no one outstanding man — in almost every game all got an equal share of the points. T3he Sayhroo as ethdll Season John A. Miller John K. Lee Captain Manager 7 :feLiting Pierson IS-Q in the chiimpionship playoff, the Saybrook Basketball Team emerged vic- torious from the intercollege season with a record of nine wins and four losses. Facing Adams House of Harvard at Cambridge, the Seals held the Cantab champions even for the first half and then built up a lead over the fast-tinng Adams men to win 36-21. The opening game saw the Seals nose out the ex-champion Davenport quintet 19-18 m a game that started slowly but ended at whirlwind pace. Berkeley was downed 23-18 before the sharp- shooting of Burych, but Pierson dropped Saybrook from the win column on January l7th. Jonathan Edwards was added to the list of victims, but the Prexy men from Shefftown eked out a 23-18 victory over the Seals. Saybrook ran up their biggest score of the season against Calhoun, 45-12, but Vander- bilt gave Captain Miller ' s men their third setback. Stanford and Trumbull were subdued, 32-23 and 41-20, to give the Seals six wins and three losses for the first half of the season. Downing the league-leading Vanderbilt quintet 37-27, Saybrook began the second half ot their drive for the championship. Timothy Dwight was avenged 29-16, but Pierson came through with a last-minute win, 31-29, on fouls. Davenport was trounced again, 40-33, and in the finale Pierson ' s score was kept below double figures to give Saybrook an 18-9 victory and the championship. A post- season challenge match with the flashy Divinity School quintet finally established the Seals ' superi- ority over the preachers to the tune of 30-26. Bac row: Mr. Mitchell. Sage, Ashley, Lampert, Roos, Lee (Mgr. t Front row Burvch. .Anderson. Miller (Captain I. Daily. Dils. Smith, Zeisler, Johnson (Captain), Creekmore, Freedman. he er eley fowling Season James F. Johnson, III Monroe A. Jubitz Captain Manager TDowing only to the amphibious Seals of Saybrook, the Berkeley bowlers swept through a nine- -•- game schedule to win the inter-college championship. Paced by Murray Freedman, Jerry Creekmore, and Jim Johnson, the Mitres presented a high-scoring front which gave Berkeley their fourth inter-college championship for 1939. Allowing the Davenport devotees of the alley to win only the third game of their match, the Berkeley bowlers downed the Hybrids on January 25th, 3-1. A week later Pierson was handed a 3-1 trouncing with John Zeisler carrying off individual top scoring honors. After dropping the first game of the match, Saybrook came back strong to take the next two and the combined high-pin score for a 3-1 triumph over Berkeley on February 14th. The irrepressible Mitres got on their feet again, however, with a 3-1 win over Jonathan Edwards with Freedman as individual high scorer. March 1st saw Berkeley whitewash Stanford as John Zeisler hung up an individual one-game high of 141 points for the Berkeley season. The following day Calhoun was nosed out in a very close match, the scoring being uniformly high. Trumbull followed suit by succumbing 4-0 to the brilliant work of Creekmore and Freedman. Despite intricate calculations involving the use of the calculus and polyphase slide rule to determine the rate of change of the pitch of the alley, Timothy Dwight went down to defeat on March 9th in a one-sided match, and in the last contest Vanderbilt was soundly trounced 4-0. The Inter college Fencing Season DuNSTAN W. P. Lynch John L. Butler, Jr. Jacques H. Isaacs Foil Epee Sabre Oecause the make-up of the Varsity team was not at all definite at the beginning of the season, - - it was decided to let all members of the team fence in the weekly inter-college tournaments and to declare ineligible for the championships those men who won their letters in the Princeton or Harvard meets. This method permitted everyone on the squad to fence each week under condi- tions of actual competition and gave those who were not fencing regularly in dual meets a chance to win a place on the team. The composition of the varsity foil team was soon fixed except for the number-three position. With the elimination of Dimock and Morris due to participation in the Princeton meet, the inter- college laurels went to Dunstan Lynch, with Cooke as runner-up. Since the varsity epee team was so changed from week to week and since no one could afford to lose his chance at the title, attendance at the tournaments was regular and competition keen. John Butler finally emerged as the winner with John Winslow a close second. In the sabre a situation similar to that in the foil developed, with the number-three position being open to the best man on the inter-college strips, but at the close Litt was fencing regularly with the Varsity and a strictly inter-college struggle for supremacy resulted, with Jacques Isaacs winning out over Frank Wollensack. Lynch, Winslow, Isaacs. Back, row: Juhitz (Mgr.l, Quinn, SliepjrJ, Ha Thompson, Davis. Knowles. IS, Cole, AnJrus Cooke, Stringer, Griggs, Brown (Capt.), The cr eley Hoc ey Season Samuel G. Brown Monroe A. Jubitz Cafytain Manager T etending her inter-college hockey title against all-comers, Berkeley swept through a nine-game - - schedule losing only to Timothy Dwight. In the playoff against the Prexies, after twenty minutes of sudden-death overtime. Captain Gil Brown joined the ranks of Mitre athletic immortals by creasing the twine for a 2-1 victory and the championship. With the promotion of Howell and Pillsbury to the J.V. ' s, the pre-season outlook was none too bright, but Stringer, Davis, and Thompson developed into a high-scoring first line. Brown and Tyler constituted an impregnable wall at defense and ably assisted the second line of Griggs, Cole, and Knowles down the ice. In defeating her first four opponents — Brantord, Trumbull, Jonathan Edwards, and Pierson — the Mitre sextet rolled up twelve goals to her opponents one. In the crucial test with Timothy Dwight, Berkeley drew first blood on Thompson and Cole ' s score, but the Prexies knotted the count and went on to win 3-1 in the final canto. While Berkeley skaters were drubbing Saybrook, Daven- port, and Calhoun, Vanderbilt downed Timothy Dwight, and Berkeley ' s victory over the Skippers left them tied for the championship. Before crowds of loyal fans from both colleges, Mac Muir sank the first goal. Thompson quickly tied the score, but Whale Curry and Neuhaus rained shots at Ronny Cooke whose great saves kept Berkeley in the game. The third period saw T.D. ' s offense bottled up. After twenty minutes of hectic overtime, Gil Brown scored unassisted to blast forever the hopes of Curry- Wickwire and confreres. The er eley Squash Season Charles A. Pillsbury Monroe A. Jubitz Captain Manager (7 he Berkeley squash team was the first in Berkeley history to complete a college schedule untied - and undefeated. H. W. WoUaston, a Cambridge Fellow, won the Berkeley tournim:nt easily, but having won a Cambridge letter he was declared ineligible, and Charles Pillsbury became Captain and No. 1 man throughout the season. In No. 2 position Berkeley had one of the league ' s cleverest players in Gethyn Hewan (Clare Fellow from Cambridge) whose famed drop-shot drove many players frantic. Grant Messinger, who proved himself the best college player by winning the inter- college championship, filled the third place and dropped just one game in the eight straight matches he won. Johnny Brooks took every match in the fourth position as Scnbner and Widdicombe alter- nated in the last position. Davenport and T. Dwight each fell 4-1, and the highly rated Pierson team fell even harder as Pillsbury nosed out Pud Schell 3-2 and Berkeley won 5-0. Branford, J. Edwards, and Saybrook were easily subdued, but Trumbull and Vanderbilt offered some resistance as Berkeley won only by 3-2 margins. Dickinson of Trumbull was the only man to defeat Pillsbury. After Berkeley and Calhoun had each played eight games, they both remained undefeated. Thus arose a perfect climax in the last game with Calhoun which the Mitres won 4-1. On March 11, Berkeley entertained Adams House of Harvard and emerged victorious by a 3-2 score. Pillsbury, Brooks and Messinger blanked their Harvard opponents 3-0, and Berkeley ended a fine squash season untied and undefeated. Scnbner, Hewan, Pillsbury (Captain), Brooks, Messinger. — 319 — Bdc}{ row Coach Burke. Wii m, M.in.iiJer Watson, Parsons. Coach Mat: Larus, T. WiUon. Hechinger. Manice. Viinr ; Berkowitz. (larJner, Shea, Captain T3hc Uanderhilt Swimming Season Charles T. Larus Thomas G. Watson Captain Manager 1 etermined to repeat last year ' s success in copping the inter-college championship, the Vanderbilt ■ - swimming team swept through its eight-meet schedule losing only to Berkeley 34-32. In the swim-off for the inter-college crown, the Skippers came through to trounce their only remaining rivals, Trumbull and Berkeley, and went on to sink Harvard ' s ace Eliot House natators 34-28. Taking the first three meets m their stroke, the Vanderbilt swimmers brushed aside Jonathan Edwards, Calhoun, and Pierson in rapid succession, by the decisive scores of 41-25, 43-16, and 42-24 respectively. The water-loving Bulls of Trumbull offered more opposition, while the Skippers were hard put to it to edge the Saybrook Seals out of their native element. It was bi-partite Berkeley who finally turned the trick and sent Vanderbilt down from the undefeated column in a nip-and-tuck meet which was not decided until the last splash had died away. The Skippers ' final victory over Timothy Dwight, 43-23, left them in a three-way tie with Trumbull and Berkeley for the championship, but the salty extra-college men rose in their might leaving the Bulls and Mitres wallowing in the wake of 35-31 and 36-30 defeats. Even last-minute polar-bear practice in the Charles could not save proud Eliot from the all-conquering Skippers, and Harvard bowed 34-28. Instrumental in this and many other successes during the season were Red Gardner in the fifty-yard freestyle, Thomas Wilson in the century, and Heckinger m the breaststroke. The Inter ' colleoe S rest ino Season SIX challenge m.itches were held during January and February tor inter-college wrestlers with the finals taking place on Washington ' s Birthday. In this series of bouts Stewart of Trumbull threw Taintor of Pierson to win the 165-pound crown, while Bird of Calhoun won by decision over Madden of Berkeley. Babe Ely of Timothy Dwight and Kerr of Davenport fought to a draw in the 121-pound weight, as did Rewick of Timothy Dwight and Smith of Davenport in the unlimited class. Timothy Dwight and Vanderbilt tied for championship honors at the end of the season, each having two successful contestants in the final bouts. In the first series of bouts in mid-January, Ely defeated Kerr, and Welles Eddy threw Zorthian m four minutes, fifty seconds. A week later saw Williams of Saybrook, Eddy of Pierson, Weinberger of Vanderbilt, and Latson of Berkeley victorious, Latson defeating Bird of Calhoun, the eventual champion in the 155-pound class. Ely and Kerr fought to a draw on February 2nd, and Stewart, Leighter, Zorthian, and Schwab of Jonathan Edwards emerged victorious m their respective weights. On February 9th, Kerr moved up to 128-pound class and was defeated by Wood of Timothy Dwight. Stewart threw Taintor m 165, and Schwab decisioned Rewick. On February I6th Ely drew with Wood, Kerr defaulted to Borough of Davenport in 128-pound weight, and Eddy decisioned Zorthian m 175. The finals on February 22nd saw Ely and Kerr fight to a draw, and Wood, Jefferson (Vanderbilt), Aschman (Trumbull), and Eddy win by default. Bird of Calhoun clearly established his title to the 155-pound class by decisioning Madden of Berkeley. Because of the number of defaults a final series of bouts was held on March 6th in which Ely won from Kerr, Jefferson from Bender (Saybrook), and Smith from Rewick. Weinberger threw Aschman in the 145-pound class. Bac row: Coach O ' Donnell, Smith. Stewart, Manager Bnghtwel!. Front row Jefferson. EdJy, Ely, Weinberger, Wood. — 321 — Bac row: Rodd, Rogers. Stern. Mayer, McCormick, Beach. Front row Ciirtif, Twombly, Nagle, Farren, Lane, Taft, Streusand. The 1938 davenport baseball Season Paul E. Farren Robert E. Carroll Captain Manager 7 rawing inspiration troni their new gold and black uniforms, the 1938 Davenport Baseball Team swept aside intercollege opposition, suffering their only defeat at the hands of Calhoun. Kirkland House, the Harvard champions, were unable to stem the tide of Hybrid runs at Cambridge, and Captain Farren and his men emerged on the long end of a 7-3 score. With Dick Greenleaf on the mound, Davenport easily downed Vanderbilt 17-3 in the season ' s opener. The sixteen walks issued by Stanford pitchers aided the Hybrids in winning 17 9; Berkeley next fell victim to the hitting power of Davenport 2CH). Curtis, Streusand, and Taft continued their good work at bat against Saybrook and paved the way for a 10-7 victory. Unexpected was the rise of Calhoun in their might, and they smote the unwary Hybrids with twenty runs in a field day for all. Greenleaf put Davenport back in the win column again, however, by limiting Pierson to three hits to make the final score 8-3. Facing a play-off with Saybrook, who had also dropped one game, the Hybrids came from behind in the eighth inning to convert a 5-2 deficit into a 7-5 victory, thus earning the right to face Harvard. On May 21st, Davenport journeyed to Cambridge and triumphed over Kirkland House 7-3- At the close of the season, catcher Bill Taft, who had maintained a batting average of .480, was elected captain to succeed Paul Farren. The 1938 Jonathan Edwards Qrew Season Frederick A. Peterson, Jr. James G. Whitney Capuiin Manager pacing stiff competition from the veteran crews of Saybrook and Timothy Dwight, Jonathan Edwards culled from a large and enthusiastic squad a combination of experienced and tyro oarsmen who brought home to the Spider ' s corner, for the first time, the intercoUege crew champion- ship. The superior weight and experience of the Eliot House boat, however, proved too much for Jonathan Edwards, as they finished half a length in the wake of the Harvard House champions. Showing amazing power and stamina, Jonathan Edwards first rowed Saybrook, then considered the best crew on the river, and almost beat the defending champions. The following week the Spiders came into their own by nosing out a smooth-stroking Timothy Dwight eight. Going into serious training, the crew easily won the rest of its races, Berkeley, Calhoun, and Davenport sinking b efore the sweeps of the early Americans. In the crowning glory of the season — the championship race against Pierson at Derby — Jonathan Edwards won its claim to fame by trouncing the Slaves decisively and winning the right to face the Harvard House champions. Never yet beaten by a Yale College crew. Harvard was represented by Eliot House, who emerged the victor by the slim margin of half a length in the mile race. The excellent performances of Captain Fred Peterson, at number seven, Jeff Ferris, Stroke Williams, and Captain-elect Stanley Rowe kept the boat together throughout the season. Williams. Peterson (C), Chamberlin, Ferris, Fuller, Phillips, Elting, Rowe Cox, Whitin. Berger, Shipley, Creekmore (Captain), Co The 1938 er eley Golf Season Edward F. Creekmore, Jr. Monroe A. Jubitz Captain Manager Tate in May last year Berkeley ' s hopes to thwart Vanderbilt and Saybrook for the coveted ■ — ' Tyng Trophy for the all-round championship rested upon the success of her golf team. Vanderbilt and Saybrook had as many points as Berkeley with the outcome hanging on the golf championship. Captained by Jerry Creekmore, the team opened its season defeating Calhoun 4-2. Jonathan Edwards was next and fell by a 4h-lh score. Branford proved a stumbling block and tied the Mitres three-all, but two days later Timothy Dwight was easily defeated 5-1, giving Berkeley the champion- ship of League II. Fortunately Vanderbilt and Saybrook ended in second and third positions respectively in League I, while Trumbull won the championship of that league. At this juncture Vanderbilt led Berkeley in total points, and the playoff between Berkeley and Trumbull was to determine whether or not the Mitres would win the Tyng Trophy. Jerry Creekmore, Jimmy Knowles, Bob Berger, and Wes Potts played for Berkeley. The first foursome ended in a 3-3 tie with Knowles and Bickford (Trumbull) all even. In the sudden-death playoff Jimmy Knowles came through to wm his match and the foursome with a birdie three on the nineteenth hole. With this spectacular shot Berkeley won the golf title and also edged out Vander- bilt for the Tyng Trophy by the hair-breadth margin of fifty three-hundredths of a point. Adams House of Harvard fell 65-25 on May 21st to a six-man team composed of Creekmore, Knowles, Berger, Potts, White, and Gallagher. The 1938 ' Davenport Tennis Team Ernest B. Wright Robert E. Carroll Cdfitiim Manager arrying on in the illustrious tradition of their patron, the tennis team which wears the colors of John Davenport copped the intercoUege tennis crown. But perhaps you have not heard of J. Davenport ' s skill on the courts. Because of his connections with the Church, it was not thought right that he should indulge in the game; so his prowess was not generally known. We have it from the diary of a seventeenth-century professional, though, that J-D. (as he called him) was jolly good with a racquette ; in fact, it is said that if he had not stubbornly insisted upon his old- fashioned continental grip, he might well have been on Olde Englande ' s Davis Cuppe Team. It is also told that his overhead was weak — but a greater proportion of the game was backcourt in those days. Anyway, the Davenport team of 1Q38 started off with 6-1, 7-0, and 6-1 victories over Berkeley, Trumbull, and Vanderbilt. Jonathan Edwards (having a Church ancestry, too) was let down more gently, 4-3. Timothy Dwight, defending champion, Branford, and Saybrook fell to 6-1, 5-2, and 4-3 scores. In a match shortened by rain, Calhoun was beaten next 4-0; then followed Pierson Sj-U, to complete the season, and lastly Harvard ' s undefeated Kirkland House was sent home defeated 5-2, to give John Davenport ' s sons — Captain Wright, Brown, Houk, Bloomfield, Ramsey, Balfour, and Howe — an unmarred record for the year. We saw John ' s picture the other day — and he was smiling. Gillespie. Balfour, Howe. Wright. Bloomfield, Brown, Houk — 325 — Freshman Intramural yithletics BY W. H. NEALE, JR. Tn past years the Freshmen have had a hmited amount of Intramural sport competition, hmited • - mainly because of their scattered residences and the lack of any unit of competition. This year the picture was changed when eight hundred freshmen were housed in the old Yale campus. Judging by the success of college athletics, it seemed reasonable to believe that a unit with approximately the same number of students that belong to a college would be the ideal size for the Freshman units. Thus, the dormitories were divided with respect to their location to give each of the four units, namely, North, South, North Middle and South Middle, approximately two hundred members. The unit names correspond to the names of the dormitories that once formed Yale ' s fiimous Old Brick Row. The Freshman Intramural Athletic Council, which approves all schedules, awards, and trophies and determines the eligibility of all participants, was set up and initiated a fall program of football and touch football. Coaches Hiram Cody of North Middle, Wyndham Gary of South, Bob Luby of North, and David Boies of South Middle found their squads steadily increasing in size during the first week of practice until an average of twenty-five players per squad was reached. The open style, with many forward passes from spread formations, was used resulting in fewer injuries and greater enjoyment for the players as well as for the spectators. Charms were awarded to the championship South Middle football team and the North Middle touch football team at the Christmas party held m Yale Commons. Ten teams with eighty-four players played in eighty-one basketball contests, and seventy-five bowlers competed on the twelve bowling teams during the winter season. Swimming attracted the greatest number with ninety-seven participants in twenty-four meets. Squash racquets, boxing, fencing and wrestling completed our sport program for the winter season with one hundred and ten competing in these four sports. Approximately fifty per cent of the freshman class, or three hundred and sixty-six individuals, took part in the winter-sport program, an amazing number con- sidering that participation is entirely voluntary. The unit gaining the highest number of points throughout the year wins the All-year Cham- pionship. The standing at the end of the winter season is comparatively close and any unit can win this championship, depending on its success in the Spring season in crew, tennis, baseball and golf. The South VYtiddle Football Season Harold K. Dell, Jr. Henry W. Lawrence David Boies Caf)tain Manager Coach fT he first season of Freshman Intramural athletics saw the South Middle football team crush all v- ' opposition; compiling an undefeated, untied record during their six-game schedule. Compiling a total of 106 points to their opponents 12, South Middle conclusively established their claim to the championship. Sound coaching by Dave Boies and admirable leadership by Captain Dell were influential factors in the successful season. The opening encounter resulted in a 24-0 victory over a hard-fighting, but completely out- played North Middle team. The honors went to the backfield in this game, shared by Dell, Hinden- lang, and Brooks. Next came a closely-fought victory over South 6-0, when the sole touchdown was made by Weirick on a pass from Dell. Following this game came a 14-6 triumph over the Northern- ers. Hindenlang garnered the laurels here, scoring the first touchdown and passing to a second one. A South Middle fumble was responsible for the North tally. The starting of the latter half of the schedule was a 36-0 runaway over the hapless North Middle outfit. DelFs running and kicking was of the best, but outstanding was the Hindenlang to Brooks combination, which tallied three touchdowns. A 14-0 conquest of South came next. The line played a very steady game, and throttled any scoring attempts of the enemy. The final game was also the most exciting, a sleeper pass, Hindenlang to Weirick, producing the winning score in the final six seconds of play. His running made Dell a constant threat. Bacl{ row: Manager Lawrence, Leggett, Kilvert, Atkinson, Campbell, Smythe, Lacouture, Beits. Second row: Gcddard, Cheney, McLean, Hindenlang, Captain Dell, Brooks, Donovan. Weinck, Tobin. Front row: Young, Powning, Cook, Ohler. Simon Js (Captain). Foertmeyer. Klacsir.ann, Bonsai, Shand, Spickard, Small (Manager). T5he J iorth VYiiddlc Touch Football Season O. Howard Simonds Eliot G. Small Captain Manager Oefault twice broke into North Middle s winning touch football season, but the effect was negligible as the intramural champions easily won the remaining seven games of their schedule. Outstanding during the season was the passing ability and ball-handling of Shorty Simonds, Peter Roesler, Dick Bonsai, and David Shand. Trouncing South Middle II 60-30 in their first encounter, the North Middle men defaulted the return match on October 19th. North fell before the smooth-functioning running and passing attack of North Middle five days later, and in the succeeding game with South Middle, the Simonds- to-Roesler-or-Bonsa! combination ran up the North Middlers second-high score of 54 points while allowing the unfortunate South Middlemen a lone safety. The return game with South Middle found North Middle on the long end of a 24-12 count, despite the stellar efforts of Murphy for the Choctaws. Roesler, Simonds, and Bonsai participated in the North Middle scoring. The following day saw the Northerners whitewashed 30-0 as again the speed and accuracy of the Sioux attack told in the last half. Sloppy ball-handling held both teams scoreless in the first frame. In the penultimate fracas North Middle rode rough-shod over the Southerners to the tune of 30-8. South led at the end of the first half 8-6 by virtue of Dietz ' s score and tagging a Sioux runner behind the double stripe, but North Middle, with Shorty Simonds doing the tossing, rolled up one touchdown in the third period and three in the fourth to win going away. North Middle ' s default to South in the closing game of the season still left them ensconced in first place. he T orth Twiddle as ethall Season Edwin M. Ost, Jr. Eliot G. Small Captain Manager Although encountering severe competition from other members of the Freshm.m League, this - year ' s North Middle basketball team swept aside all opposition in every gime but the last cf the season, to emerge triumphant over North, South, and South Middle. North Middle played a total of sixteen official games against other teams, losing only the last game of the season. In all other games an aggressive offense together with an ironclad defense proved superior to that of their opponents. In the greater majority of cases the team rolled up large scores against their opposition. In regard to the players and their individual abilities. Captain Ost was an outstanding player in long shots off the backboards, a s well as shots under the basket. Clark was noted for his fighting spirit; Calnen ' s exceptional floor work and unfailing accuracy in shots earned the team many valuable points. Simonds proved to be the best all-around man and steady high-scorer. Miner was excellent in both the offensive and defensive, while Kennedy was dependable as a good ball-handler and play-maker. In addition the team had reliable substitutes in McMorrow and O ' Donoghue. South Middle and South gave stiff competition to North Middle throughout the entire season, so that until the next to last game the final standing of the teams could not be determined. As a whole, the season was one of suspense, good sportsmanship, and excellent cooperation on the part of all teams. Calnen, CKirk, O ' Donoghue, Ost (Capt.l. Miner, Simonds — 329 — The South fowling Season fT wo intramural teams, captained by William Moffitt and Howard Dean respectively, represented v- South in the Freshman Intramural Bowling League. In the final standing for the season the Mofiitt cohorts ranked in first place with twenty-six points, while the Dean alley-men found themselves r,t the head of the second division with fifteen points. South Moffitt mangled McLean in the opening brush of the season and went on to sink their confreres. South Dean. North Middle ' s various aggregations, captained by Witt, Chandler, and Foertmeyer next fell before the attack of the Moffitteers. In North Middle Brumder the southern Misses ran into a stone wall and bit the alley 4-0. North Cook and North Middle Bott were trounced to complete the record of seven victories and one defeat. The Dean compatriots did not fare so well, scoring victories over only three of their rivals — North Middles Foertmeyer and Witt and South Middle Pynchon. The combined standing of its first and second teams, how- ever, was sufficiently high to give South the Intramural Bowling Champion.ship. Hunt, Smith, Moffitt. Kappler. Laun, WiUets. 15 (MM (Ml k3 The 7s[orth Squash Season CT op honors for the first year of Freshman Intramural Squash competition went to the North group, — ' embracing Wright Hall and three entries of Durfee, who succeeded in winning all their matches but one in the double round-robin series. North opened their season auspiciously by overwhelming South Middle 41, and later made their superiority over the men from Welch and Bingham even more evident by a 5-0 victory. North Middle next fell before the Northerners on- slaught 3-2, and in the return match 4-1. South, which finished in a tie for second with North Middle, was the only stumbling block for the champions. The first match between the two was close. North winning 3-2, but at their second meeting. South demonstrated its powe r and edged North out 3-2. John Quinn capably filled the number one slot for North, winning three of his five matches. Cappy Townsend turned in an undefeated record in all six matches, while Jim Ethridge won four out of five contests. Hem, Ethndge, Townsend. Bevans, Quinn, Bradley (Mgr.) T5he J lorth Swimming Season Raymond H. Evans Robert F. Bradley, Jr. Captain Manager (7 he intriimural swimming season was divided into two series of meets. Before Christmas the ■ contests were open to all Freshmen, whereas after the vacation the best swimmers were swimming for the Freshman varsity and were ineligible to compete m the intramural meets. Thus the two groups of meets show entirely different results. In the pre-vacation meets, after a bitterly-contested series of battles, North-Middle ' s swimmers emerged as top team after the swim-off with North, their nearest rivals. This preliminary series was intended largely as a source of practice for the future Freshman varsity team members. After Christmas the real intramural swimming battles began with the entries restricted to non-varsity swimmers. North, with the aid of Gil Burton, sure winner in any free-style event that he chose to enter, and a strong group of supporting mermen, was able to emerge at the top of the heap. In second place, however, South Middle, lacking only the well-rounded strength of the Northern cohorts, gave Captain Evans and his aides many an anxious moment. Proof of the closeness of the two teams is found in the fact that of the four meets between them, two ended as ties. At the end of the season, however, North emerged as the clean-cut victor with six wins, two ties, and no losses, with South Middle in second place with four victories, two defeats, and two ties. South finished in third place followed by the cellar team, North Middle. Back, row: Fawcett, ArnJt, Filley, Cooke, Br.iJley (.M r.i. Front — 331 — AJ.imi, Hunter, Barr, Cook, Evins (Captain). V- ' -ftV ..; T . - FRESHMEN Norman S. Buck Dedn Theodore Babbitt Assistarit Dean The Freshman Tear Allen J. Barthold Franklin L. Baumer Stuart R. Brinkley Thomas W. Cofeland Joseph T. Curtiss John L. Dally Harold G. Dietrich H. Linn Edsall John A. Gee John vanB. Griggs Gordon S. Haight Ernest J. Hall Basil D. Henning Frederick W. Hilles FACULTY COUNSELORS Joseph F. Jackson Dewitt T. Keach Erwin B. Kelsey Sherman Kent George W. Kreye Alan vanK. McGee Maynard Mack Henry Margenau Thomas C. Mendenhall, II Ogden D. Miller William G. Moulton Benjamin C. Nangle Edward S. Noyes John C. Pope Henry T. Rowell Harry R. Rudin Trenton K. Ruebush William Ruff Nils G. Sahlin Richard B. Sewall Edmund T. Silk Paul J. Sturon Fritz Tiller John A. Timm Andrews Wanning William W. Watson C. Bradford Welles Stanley T. Williams RESIDENT COUNSELORS Hiram S. Cody Jose J. Arrom Rynn Berry William A. Borst John M. Gates, Jr. Edwin J. Clapp, Jr. James T. Culbertson Robert W. Daniel Gregory H. Doherty Chej Resident Counselor John E. Ecklund, Jr. Archibald S. Foord John Franklin Richard I. Galland Albert Hessberg, 2nd NoRRis D. Hoyt Edgar W. Lakin Robert M. Luby Kurt H. MacDuffie James H. Nichols Curtis C. Page Peter R. Paladino Eric A. Sturley David E. Swift Eugene M. Waith George B. Young Bdcfj row: Edgerton, Riley, Toland, Sweetman. Front row: McOwen, Gossweiler, Kuth, Reed, Hooper. Freshman Executive Qouncil Mark Hubert Curtis Malcolm James Edgerton, Jr. Davis Given David Allan Gossweiler Peter Hooper, Jr. James Eugene Kuth William Kasson McOwen Edg.- r Carpenter Reckard, Jr. Howard Alexander Reed Edgar Alsop Riley How. RD Fr.ancis Sh. ' vttuck, Jr. Donald Lester Sweetman Benjamin Rush Toland William Gardner White Nathaniel Oscar Abelson 477 Commonwealth Avenue Boston, Massachusetts Prepared at Harvey School, Andover Activities; Rifle John Crawford Adams P. O Box 476 Manila, Philippines Prepared at Manila Central Mount Hermon Activities: Boxing William Herbert Adams. II 103 West Orman Pueblo, Colorado Prepared at St. Albans Worthington Miner Adams 85 Park Row Cedarhurst, New York Prepared at Andover Edward Allen Adelberg 352 West Broadway Cedarhurst, New York Prepared at Woodmere Academy Activities: Band Richard Hopkins Aime 3804 Greystone Avenue New York City Prepared at Horace Mann Activities: Cross Country, Track Thomas William Ainsworth 74 Pennacook Street Manchester, New Hampshire Prepared at Manchester Central High School Activities: Intramural Wrestling Walter Manice Albrecht 24 Mechelschestraat Scheveningen, Netherland Prepared at Deutsches Realgymnasium Yohaneum, L S H (Holzninden, Germany) Yessel Activities: Eli Rundschau, Vif, Outing Club, Photography Club Donald Crichton Alexander 218 West 14th Street Pme Bluff, Arkansas Prepared at The Baylor School Activities: Intramural Tennis, Centro Espanol George Homer Allen 1615 Lake Avenue Pueblo, Colorado Prepared at Pueblo Central High School Activities: Debating, Political Union, Freshman Forensic Forum lames Ferguson Allen. II lefferson Road Short Hills, New Jersey Prepared at Andover Activities: Soccer, Glee Club John Home Allen, Jr. 22 Rob Roy Road Worcester, Massachusetts Prepared at Andover Activities: Intramural Football and Fencing i II Marshall Benn Alpert 280 Whalley Avenue New Haven, Connecticut Prepared at New Haven High School Robert Joseph Alpert 21 Chamberlain Parkway Worcester, Massachusetts Prepared at Classical High School Activities: Crew, Glee Club, Yale Collegians James Robson Anderson. Jr. 121-66th Street Kenosha, Wisconsin Prepared at Los Alamos Ranch School Activities: Yale Community Council, Intramural Swimming Page Morris Anderson Country Club Road Honolulu, Hawaii Prepared at Choate Activities: Intramural Footbal! Boxing John Marston Andrews 290 Park Avenue New York City Prepared at New Hampton School Activities: Vif Hugh Rolla Angleton Corso Venezia 73 Milan, Italy Prepared at Harrow I i Robert Floyd Appleton 175-49 88th Avenue Jamaica, New York Prepared at Lenox School Activities: Dramat, Dwight Hall, Chess Club Harry James Archer. Jr. 888 Bonk Street New London, Connecticut Prepared at Bulkeley School John Anthony Arcudi 84 Franklm Street Westport. Connecticut Prepared at Staples High School Activities: Sola Italiana, Freshman Forensic Forum Walter Reinhold Arndt 1 1 1 Hasting Street Bridgeport, Connecticut Prepared at Warren Harding High School, Bridgeport Engineering Institute William Frank Arnoldy, Jr. 520 Saint Clair Grosse Pointe, Michigan Prepared at Grosse Pointe High School Activities: Intramural Basketball John Ashton 1956 East 75th Street Cleveland, Ohio Prepared at Western Reserve Academy Activities: Cross Country, Track David Skillman Atkinson 8309 Shawnee Street Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Prepared at Germantown High School Activities: Cross Country, Track Leo Gustave Aust 133 Lake Street Winsted, Connecticut Prepared at The Gilbert School Activities: Intramural Touch Football Boxing Joseph David Averback 58 Congress Street Lawrence, Massachusetts Prepared at Lawrence High School, Andover Activities: Intramural Basketball William Anderson Aycrigg. II Christie Hill Road Darien, Connecticut Prepared at Darien High School, Kent Activities: Soccer Clark Aylsworth Bellerive Hotel Kansas City, Missouri Prepared at Pembroke Country Day Activities: Squash Oswald Prentiss Backus, III 261 Westminster Road Rochester, New York Prepared at Monroe High School Activities: V-ii, Tennis, Deutscher Verein lack Louis Bailin 324 Hanover Street Bridgeport, Connecticut Prepared at Bassick High School Richard Carleton Bain 417 Hempstead Avenue Rockville Center, New York Prepared at South Side High School Activities: Photography Club, Spanish Club Harold Page Baldwin, Jr. 62 Hoadley Street Naugatuck, Connecticut Prepared at Naugatuck High School, Crosby High School Roger Poole Baldwin 1224 Astor Street Chicago, Illinois Prepared at St. Mark ' s Activities: Dramat. Intramural Crew James William Bancker, Jr. 133 Hobart Avenue Summit, New Jersey Prepared at Andover Howland Bancroft, Jr. Caixa Postal (970) Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Prepared at Kent, Georgetown University Activities: Fencing, Crew Paul Albert Banker 4717 Kaswick Road Baltimore. Maryland Prepared at Baltimore City College Activities: Undergraduate Med ical Club Russell Chittenden Barbour 656 Prospect Street New Haven, Connecticut Prepared at Hopkins Grammar, Deerfield Robert Daniels Bardwell, I 120 Crofut Street Plttsfield, Massachusetts Prepared at Deerfield Activities: Dwight Hall Ernest Stratton Barker, Ii Fort Monmouth Oceanport, New Jersey Prepared at Brooklyn Poly Prep, Country Day School Lav rence Barker 3300 West Adams Boulevard Los Angeles, California Prepared at Andover Activities: Badminton Club Kenneth Joseph Barnard 34 Queen Street Meriden, Connecticut Prepared at Meriden High School Gaylord Beckley Barnes 66 Riggs Avenue West Hartford, Connecticut Prepared at William Hall High School Activities: Intramural Basketball Albert Wilkins Barney. Jr. Colonial Apartments St. Johnsbury, Vermont Prepared at St. Johnsbury Academy Activities: Vif, Freshman Forensic Forum William Henry Barnum, III Darien, Connecticut Prepared at Kent, Milford Activities: Football Orlando Sydney Barr. Jr. 52 Newton Road Haverhill, Massachusetts Prepared at Haverhill High School, Andover Robert Webb Barr 24616 Winona Dearborn, Michigan Prepared at Dearborn High School Activities: Intramural Swimming Walter Aimer Barrows. IV Orchard Way St. David ' s, Pennsylvania Prepared at Haverford, Lawrenceville, Asheville Alan Edmund Bartholemy 5314 N.E, Mallory Avenue Portland, Oregon Prepared at Jefferson High School Activities: Football, Basketball Herbert Hall Bartlelt 620 East 54th Street Kansas City, Missouri Prepared at Pembroke Activities: Basketball, Tennis Norman William Bassett Madison, Connecticut Prepared at Hand High School Carl Edgar Bates 38 York Street West Haven, Connecticut Prepared at West Haven High School William Roy Battey 144 Overlook Circle New Rochelle, New York Prepared at New Rochelle Senior High School Activities: Soccer Howard lohn Baumgartel. Jr. 309 South Center Street Ebensburg, Pennsylvania Prepared at Shady Side Academy Charles McGhee Baxter. Jr. The Woods South Euclid, Ohio Prepared at St. Paul ' s School, Westminster Stephen Palmer Beard 88 North Main Street Pearl River, New York Prepared at Pearl River High School, Hockley School Activities: Track Griffith Shackleton Bedworth 78 Elmwood Avenue Waterbury, Connecticut Prepared at Taft Activities: Rifle (Captain) David Beers North Wales, Pennsylvania Prepared at William Penn Charter School Activities; Soccer Malcolm Sydney Beinfield 760 Eastern Parkway Brooklyn, New York Prepared at Brooklyn Poly Prep, Country Day Harry Bekish 41 Admiral Street New Haven, Connecticut Prepared at New Haven High School G-,.: William Tompkins Bell Seminary Hili Alexandria, Virginia Prepared at Episcopal High School Activities: Football, Baseball, Intramural Basketball Peter Bennitt 1285 Hope Street Springdale, Connecticut Prepared at St. Luke ' s School, Stamford High School Activities: Crew Guy Kenneth Benson 2 East 61st Street Nevf York City- Prepared at Lawrenceville Activities: Glee Club David Dow Bentley, Jr. 504 Union Avenue Peekskill, New York Prepared at Peekskill High School Activities: Hockey, Intramural Football George Carpenter Bermingham 620 North Mayflower Road Lake Forest, Illinois Prepared at St. Paul ' s School Activities: Glee Club, Hockey, 150-pound Crew Julio Victor Bermudez Varadero, Cuba Prepared at St. Paul ' s School Activities: Squash, Baseball Edward Howard Belts 363 Palisades Avenue Yonkers, New York Prepared at Riverdale Country Day School Activities: Dramot, Record Herbert Miller Bevans 730 West Sedgwick Street Mount Airy, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Prepared at Hill Activities: Intramural Football, Squash, Baseball Robert Parker Bird 12 Stark Road Worcester, Massachusetts Prepared at Worcester North High School, Williston Activities: Intramural Football Ralph Mario Bisaccia Main Street New Hartford, Connecticut Prepared at Gilbert Activities: Intramural Touch-football, Undergraduate Medical Club Edmund Martin Bishop, Jr. 3330 Del Monte Houston, Texas Prepared at San Jacinto High School Activities; Spanish Club Charles David Blake Pelham Manor, New York Prepared at Pelham High School Activities: ' 42 Parker Nutting Blanchard 5 Ravenscroft Road Winchester, Massachusetts Prepared at Andover Activities: Baseball Francis Reynolds Blossom, Ir. 199 Lake Shore Drive Chicago, Illinois Prepared at Chicago Latin School Activities: Intramural Football, Basketball, Baseball, Golf, Tennis Willord Denton Boaz 678 Savin Avenue West Haven, Connecticut Prepared at Hopkins Grammar Activities: Glee Club Robert Harry Bode 3636 Victoria Lane Cincinnati, Ohio Prepared at Hughes High School Activities: Fencing Richard Irving Bonsai 288 Upper Mountain Avenue Upper Montclair, Nevir Jersey Prepared at Montclair High School Activities: Intramural Touch Football, Bovifling, Squash, Goll George duPont Boomer 301 Park Avenue New York City Prepared at Principia, Brovirning School Activities: Intramural Sv imming, Outing Club Charles Frazier Booth 2444 South East Clinton Street Portland, Oregon Prepared at Lincoln High School Activities: Glee Club William Liscum Borden 2910 Woodland Drive Washington, D. C. Prepared at Saint Alban ' s Activities: Political Union, Nevirs Fred Longacre Born 1215 Dev ey Avenue Bartlesville, Oklahoma Prepared at Bartlesville High School, Andover Tazewell Manning Bott 944 Larchmont Crescent Norfolk, Virginia Prepared at Woodberry Forest Activities: Rifle, Golf, Intramural Bovirling, Boxing, Wrestling, Svifimming Norman Ferdinand Boucher 34 Whittlesey Avenue Waterbury, Connecticut Prepared at Crosby High School Activities: Golf, Intramural Basketball Wilfred Maurice Boucher 116 Second Street Hamden, Connecticut Prepared at New Haven High School, Hamden High School John Myer Bowers Lakelands Cooperstown. New York Prepared at St. Mark ' s Activities: Crew, Community Council Spotswood Dandridge Bowers, Jr. Lakelands Cooperstown, New York Prepared at St. Mark ' s, Adirondack-Florida School Activities: Intramural Football, Tennis Leonard Bowman 228 Alden Avenue New Haven, Connecticut Prepared at New Haven High School Charles Meredith Boyce 4102 Green way Baltimore, Maryland Prepared at Gilman John Shaw Boyce, Jr. 1 Vista Terrace New Haven, Connecticut Activities: ' 42 Robert lames Boyle 38 Elizabeth Avenue Teaneck, New Jersey Prepared at Teaneck High School David Gordon Campbell Bridgman 146 Benziger Avenue Staten Island, New York Prepared at Hotchkiss Activities: Fencing William Morck Brinton 188 Lydecker Street Englewood, New Jersey Prepared at Choate Activities: Football John Robert Brisley 2448 Sherwood Road Columbus, Ohio Prepared at Columbus Academy Activities: Intramural Crew Beverly Ward Bristol 15 Manor Road Douglaston, New York Prepared at Loomis Activities: Soccer, Fencing Kenneth Coe Bristol 27 Holmes Avenue Waterbury, Connecticut Prepared at Taft Activities: Intramural Basketball Thomas Calhoun Britton 100-A Amherst Avenue Shanghai, China Prepared at Peddie Activities: Swimming Lawrence Breuer Brody 45 Seaside Avenue Bridgeport, Connecticut Prepared at Bassick High School, Wilbraham Academy Activities: Dramat, Intramural Touch Football, Basketball John Shaw Broeksmit, Ir. 855 East Westminster Road Lake Forest, Illinois Prepared at Deerfield-Shields Township High School, Lake Forest Academy, Hotchkiss William Brunswick Bromell Center Island Oyster Bay, New York Prepared at Friends ' Academy Activities: Boxing Beckwith Roger Bronson 995 Maplewood Avenue Lake Forest, Illinois Prepared at Taft Activities: Intramural Footbal Lacrosse Charles Carroll Brooks 491 1 Roland Avenue Baltimore, Maryland Prepared at Oilman Activities: Intramural Football Basketball, Swimming, Lacrosse Marvin Charles Brooks 426 Prospect Street Nutley, New Jersey Prepared at Nutley High School George Genge Browning State Road Devon, Pennsylvania Prepared at Episcopal Academy Philip George Brumder 2030 East Lafayette Place Milwaukee, Wisconsin Prepared at Milwaukee Country Day Activities; Crew Lester Pierre Brundin 300 South Broadway Tarrylown, New York Prepared at Washington Irving High School, Choate Activities: Boxing, Track Ford Whitman Brunner 5223 Maplewood Avenue Detroit, Michigan Prepared at Western Reserve Academy Activities: Intramural Basketball Hamilton Mabie Brush, Ir. 37 Maher Avenue Greenwich, Connecticut Prepared at Hotchkiss Activities: Photography Club, Fencing Robert Lind Brush 137 East 38th Street New York City Prepared at Hotchkiss Activities: Dramat, Crew I John William Buckley Sharon, Connecticut Prepared at Millbrook School Activities: WrestHng Dudley Woodworth Burchard 620 Boylston North Seattle, Washington Prepared at Lakeside, Shawnigan Activities: Photography Club, Crew Seymour Gross Burger 73 Brook Lawn Street New Britain, Connecticut Prepared at Bassick High School Robert Allen Burman 4347 Paddock Road Cincinnati, Ohio Prepared at Walnut High School, George Washington University Junior College Peter Geddes Burnett 545 Monroe Street Glencoe, Illinois Prepared at New Trier High School, Fountain Valley School of Colorado Activities: Intramural Wrestling George MacFarlane Butcher, Ir. 4131 56th Avenue South West Seattle, Washington Prepared at Rye High School, West Seattle High School Morton Butler, II 1090 Crescent Lane Hubbard Woods, Illinois Prepared at Hotchkiss Lampkin Herbert Butts University, Mississippi Prepared at University High School Activities: Boxing, Prom Committee Julius Hofeller Cahn 800 Bryan t Avenue Winnetka, Illinois Prepared at New Trier Township High School, College de St. Servais Activities: Soccer, Tennis, Glee Club, Yale Symphony Orchestra, Yale Collegians Harry Graham Callow 2614 10th Avenue West Seattle, Washington Prepared at Queen Anne High School Activities: Band, Crew, Yale Collegians Henry Joseph Calnen. Jr- 408 Farmington Avenue Hartford, Connecticut Prepared at Loomis Activities: Crew, Intramural Basketball Douglas Campbell, Jr. Rathbone Place Grosse Pointe, Michigan Prepared at Hotchkiss Activities: Intramural Football, Prom Program Malcolm Edwin Campbell 430 East Fifteenth Street Long Beach, California Prepared at Long Beach Polytechnic High School Activities: Gymnastics William Douglas Campbell Monument Street Wenham, Massachusetts Prepared at Exeter Activities: Debating, Rifle, Dv ight Hall James Belemus Carlin, III 1804 Forrest Avenue Memphis, Tennessee Prepared at Central High School Activities: Fencing Howard Alfred Carlton 3750 Lake Shore Drive Chicago, Illinois Prepared at Chicago Latin School, Hotchkiss Edward Norvell Carpenter Broad Brook Rood Mount Kisco, New York Prepared at Brooks School Activities: Football Vincent Welles Carpenter 2432 Humboldt Avenue South Minneapolis, Minnesota Prepared at Hotchkiss Activities: Hockey, Track, Dramat Craig Seaman Carragan 129 Wellington Road Garden City, New York Prepared at Kent Activities: Crew, Tennis, Intramural Bowling, Swimming, Basketball George Williams Carrington, Jr, 7 Circle Road Scarsdale, New York Prepared at Hotchkiss Activities: Soccer, Boxing, Dramat Richard Herrick Carter 540 North Union Street Fostoria, Ohio Prepared at Culver Activities: Golf, Intramural Basketball, Squash lames Lawrence Carton. Jr. 815 Orange Street New Haven, Connecticut Prepared at New Haven High School, Hopkins Grammar Activities: Hockey (Co-captain) Theodore Willard Case, Jr. 1060 Fifth Avenue New York City Prepared at St. Paul ' s School Activities: Football lames Burns Cavanaugh Glen Head, New York Prepared at St. Paul ' s School Activities: Soccer Justus Chancellor. Ill 1045 Forest Avenue Wilmette, Illinois Prepared at New Trier Township High School John Chandler, Jr. Sterling Junction Massachusetts Prepared at Groton Activities: Glee Club, Crev Kent Chandler, Jr. i East Westminster Road Lake Forest, Illinois Prepared at Groton Activities: Crew, Political Union Lee Lord Chandler. Ill 5016 Amberson Place Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Prepared at Choate John Carsten Chapin 447 Lake Shore Road Grosse Pointe, Michigan Prepared at Los Alamos, St. Paul ' s School Activities: Hockey Walter Miller Charman. Jr. 2684 Ashley Road Shaker Heights, Ohio Prepared at University School Activities: Wrestling (Captain) Alton Willis Cheney. Jr. 21 Howes Street Springfield, Massachusetts Prepared at Classical High School, Wilbraham Activities: Intramural Football, Basketball, and Baseball; Pistol Team Charles Everard Childs. Jr. 408 Bryn Mawr Avenue Bala-Cynwyd, Pennsylvania Prepared at Haverford Activities: Soccer, Track George Peters Chittenden. Jr. La Carchita San Jose, Costa Rica Prepared at St. Paul ' s School Activities: Swimming, Spanish Club Rene Auguste Chouteau 26 Vandeventer Place St, Louis, Missouri Prepared at Roosevelt High School Activities: Swimming Richard Joseph Christine 80 Migeon Avenue Torrington, Connecticut Prepared at Torrington High School Activities: Intramural Football and Baseball Mollis Fayette Church, Jr. South Windsor, Connecticut Prepared at Loomis Activities: Rifle, N.R.O.T.C. Rifle Team, Intramural Bowling John Lyman Chynoweth 130 Morningside Drive New York City Prepared at Fieldston Activities: Soccer, Basketball Cantwell Clark, IV 1200 Riverside Road Old Hickory, Tennessee Prepared at Exeter Activities: Intramural Basketball, Photography Club John Fabian Clark 1130 Vine Street Murray, Utah Prepared at William Penn Charter School Activities: Intramural Football, Basketball and Bowling Robert MacDonald Clark 5033 Castleman Street Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Prepared at Shady Side Academy Activities: Soccer, Intramural Basketball, Squash, Badminton Club, Tennis Norman Parsons Clement, Jr. 390 Linwood Avenue Buffalo, New York Prepared at Hill Activities: Swimming, Apollo Glee Club James Joseph Clittord, Jr. 20 Hillcrest Road Reading, Massachusetts Prepared at Andover, New Prep, Mercersburg Activities: Soccer Benjamin Cohen 426 Washington Avenue New Haven, Connecticut Prepared at New Haven High School, University Prep Elliott Carl Cohen 709 Crown Street Brooklyn, New York Prepared at Boys ' High School Activities: Undergraduate Medical Club, Intramural Football and Crew Martin David Cohen 122 Mercer Place South Orange, New Jersey Prepared at Andover Activities: Intramural Football, Wrestling, Baseball, Anukah Jewish Discussion Group Seymour Bernard Cohn 1041 Summer Street Stamford, Connecticut Prepared at Stamford High School Bertram Dawson Coleman Arborfield Rosemont, Pennsylvania Prepared at St. Paul ' s School Activities: Political Union Gould Humphrey Coleman 33 Rich Street Gardner, Massachusetts Prepared at Gardner High School Activities: Baseball II II George Richard CoUett. Jr. 1020 West 53rcl Terrace Kansas City, Missouri Prepared at Pembroke, Choote Activities: Glee Club Glen Moore Comstock, Jr. 154 College Avenue Beaver, Pennsylvania Prepared at Mercersburg Activities: Intramural Football, Wrestling John Hand Conard 167 Steele Road West Hartford, Connecticut Prepared at Stratford High School, Mercersburg Activities: Wrestling, Crew Guilford Graham Hartley Congdon 1701 East First Street Duluth, Minnesota Prepared at Hill Robert Grosvenor Congdon 87 Cooke Street Providence, Rhode Island Prepared at St. Mark ' s Activities: Cross Country, 150-pound Crew- Samuel Small Connor 1405 Marline Avenue Plainfield, New Jersey Prepared at Hotchkiss Robert Lewis Conway 137 Davis Avenue West New Brighton, New York Prepared at Kent Activities: Apollo Glee Club, Intramural Basketball William Lord Conyngham, II 130 South River Street Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania Prepared at Wyoming Seminary, Hotchkiss Activities: Vif James Randel Cook 6607 Forest Avenue Hammond, Indiana Prepared at Hammond High School Activities: Swimming William Pierson Cook, III 64 South Bay Avenue Brightwaters, New York Prepared at Choate Activities: Swimming, Intramural Bowling, Basketball, and Tennis John Strong Cooke 304 Highland Avenue Orange, New Jersey Prepared at Carteret Academy, Hotchkiss Activities: Yale Community Council, Apollo Glee Club, Intramural Swimming Paul Denvir Cooke 13 Hanscom Avenue Poughkeepsie, New York Prepared at Poughkeepsie High School Activities: Intramural Football William Nelson Copley 434 Downer Place Aurora, Illinois Prepared at Andover Activities: Polo Belton Allyn Copp, IV 1759 Overton Park Avenue Memphis, Tennessee Prepared at Pentecost-Garrison School, Exeter Activities: Football, Squash Edwin Corning P. O. Box 431 Albany, New York Prepared at Groton Activities: Football Chester Thorne Corse Thornewood Tocoma, Washington Prepared at Shawnigan Lake School, Hotchkiss Frank Whitney Countryman 859 Osceola St. Paul, Minnesota Prepared at St. Paul Central High School, Carleton College Activities: Apollo Glee Club Edward Munroe Cox 17 Shoreham Road Morris Cove, Connecticut Prepared at New Haven High School John Emery Coxe 211 East 61st Street New York City Prepared at Andover Activities: Crew William Ellis Coykendall, Jr. 22 Chestnut Avenue Larchmont, New York Prepared at Brooklyn Poly Prep Country Day School Activities; Intramural Wrestling lames Carroll Crabtree 85 Dean Road Brookline, Massachusetts Prepared at Rivers School Activities: Dramat Henry Victor Crawford. Ill 67 Stonebridge Road Montclair. New Jersey Prepared at Kent Activities: Squash, Tennis, 150-Poun d Crew Thomas Walling Crawford Wolt Road R. D. 1 Erie, Pennsylvania Prepared at Strong Vincent High School, Exeter Activities: 150-Pound Crew Lawrence Stearns Crispell 37 Washington Square New York City Prepared at Andover Cyrus Newton Crum, III 216 West 16lh Street Oklahoma City, Oklahoma Prepared at Pembroke Robert Stone Gumming 12 East Boulevard Rochester, New York Prepared at Loomis Activities: Soccer, Intramural Basketball Edward McLean Cummings 1500 Lake Shore Drive Chicago, Illinois Prepared at Chicago Latin School, Hotchkiss Activities: Dramat, Crew- Eugene ludson Curtis, Jr. Hillcrest Clinton, Iowa Prepared at Andover Activities: Intramural Bowling Mark Hubert Curtis 201 East Graham Avenue Council Bluffs, Iowa Prepared at Abraham Lincoln High School Activities: Debating, Political Union, Dwight Hall Alan Fisher Daily 221 Greenleaf Avenue Wilmette, Illinois Prepared at New Trier Township High School, Hill Robert Houde Daley 176 WiUard Street New Haven, Connecticut Prepared at New Haven High School David Edward Dangler, 11 2835 Sedgewick Road Shaker Heights, Cleveland, Ohio Prepared at University School Activities: Soccer, Basketball Donald Mayer Davidson 51 Mason Drive New Britain, Connecticut Prepared at Avon John Charles Davidson 92 Fourth Street Garden City, New York Prepared at Choate Activities: Boxing, Camera Club Charles Clarence Davis, Jr. Essex, Connecticut Prepared at Mount Hermon Churchward Davis 640 South Street Pittsfield, Massachusetts Prepared at Andover Activities: Intramural Football, News Robert Spink Davis Rumstick Point Harrington, Rhode Island Prepared at Moses Brown, Andover Activities: Dramat, Hockey William Townsend Davison 3F01 Duke Hospital Durham, North Carolina Prepared at Exeter lames Bond Dcaly, Jr. 84 Highland Street West Newton, Massachusetts Prepared at Newton High School Activities: Football, Baseball Howard Brush Dean. Jr. 1155 Park Avenue New York City Prepared at Pomfret Activities: Baseball, Intramural Touch Football, Swimming, Bowling, and Squash; Football Managerial Competition. Spanish Club Charles Henry Dearborn, II 529 East 85th Street New York City Prepared at Andover Activities: Hockey Gaston Raoul de Carrera 560 Wilson Avenue Vedado Havana, Cuba Prepared at Belen, Greenbrier Military School, Roxbury Activities: Swimming, Squash, Tennis William More Decker. Ill 671 Lafayette Avenue Buffalo, New York Prepared at Andover Activities: Soccer Richard De Korn 6 West 77th Street New York City Prepared at Andover Activities: Golf, Intramural Swimming Thorndike Deland, Jr. 21 Auterrieth Road Scarsdale, New York Prepared at Hotchkiss Activities: Soccer, Tennis Harold Kleiber Dell. Jr. 523 West 40th Street Baltimore, Maryland Prepared at Baltimore Polytechnic Institute, Gilman Activities: Hockey, Lacrosse, Intramural Football Guy Gary Edmund Dempsey Great River, New York Prepared at Andover John Hopkins Denman 724-52nd Street Des Moines, Iowa Prepared at Blake Activities: Crew Ralph Earl DeSimone. Jr. 69 Faire Harbour Place New London, Connecticut Prepared at Bulkeley Activities: Symphony Orchestra Paul Jacques Roy dit Desjardins 58 Broad Street Plattsburg, New York Prepared at Plattsburg High School Activities; Glee Club Austin Devine 244 Ridgewood Avenue Hamden, Connecticut Prepared at Pacific Row High School, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute William Anthony Devine 403 Pequonnock Street Bridgeport, Connecticut Prepared at Bassick High School Activities: Intramural Basketball Ernesto deZaldo. Ir. Calle 7 y 2, La Sierra Havana, Cuba Prepared at Hotchkiss Activities: Glee Club, Swimming, Baseball Burritt Kent Dickerson 304 North East Avenue Oak Park, Illinois Prepared at Oak Pork High School, Culver John William Dickerson 1 Lincoln Avenue Goshen, New York Prepared at Goshen High School, Williston Academy Albert Hovey Dickinson. Jr. 5720 High Drive Kansas City, Missouri Prepared at Pembroke Activities: News, Photography Club, Intramural Bowling Richard Brooks Dietz 46 Bishopsgate Rood Newton Centre, Massachusetts Prepared at Newton High School, Huntington Edward Cyprian Digan 132 Broadway Rockville Centre, New York Prepared at Bishop Loughlin High School Activities: Cross Country, Intramural Crew Rene Cupples Scudder di Rosa 2301 East Speedway Tucson, Arizona Prepared at Greenwich Country Day, Aiken Activities: Polo, Record John Carle Woodrufl Dix Gordonsville, Virginia Prepared at Hotchkiss Activities: Crew Francis Cook Dixon North Haven Sag Harbor, New York Prepared at Pomfret, Exeter Activities: Soccer, 150-pound Crev Ross Ivan Dixon, Jr. North Main Street Danielson, Connecticut Prepared at Killingly High School Arthur Douglas Dodge 71 Lake Shore Road Grosse Pointe Farms, Michigan Prepared at St. Paul ' s School, Brooks Activities; Glee Club, Crew Richard Bayard Dominick Gregorie Neck Plantation Coosawhatchie, South Carolina Prepared at St. Paul ' s School Activities: 150-pound Crew Richard Frank Donovan, Ir. 157 Armory Street New Haven, Connecticut Prepared at Taft, Westminster Activities: Glee Club, Wrestling, Intramural Football and Basketball Thomas Henry Dooling, Jr. 1121 Palm Avenue San Mateo, California Prepared at San Mateo High School Activities: Intramural Swimming Arthur Rieper Dornheim 15 Hamilton Avenue Bronxville, New York Prepared at Bronxville High School Activities: Intramural Touch Football, ' Eli Rundschau, Deutscher ' Verein, Photography Club Claude Douthit, Jr. Bayberry Ridge Watch Hill, Rhode Island Prepared at Sewanee Military Academy Activities: Fencing James Maxwell Dowling 245 Grove Street Waterbury. Connecticut Prepared at Crosby High School Activities: Intramural Touch Football, Crew Stuart Reiley Ducker. Jr. 52 Mayfield Avenue Fort Thomas, Kentucky Prepared at Highlands High School Activities: Intramural Touch Football Daniel Callahan Dugan 106 Park Avenue Bronxville, New York Prepared at Exeter Activities: Squash (Captain) Alan Andrews Dun 2 St. John ' s Road Cambridge, Massachusetts Prepared at Deerfield Activities: Soccer, Lacrosse lohn C. Duncan, III R. D. 1, Hagaman, New York Prepared at Hotchkiss Activities: Dramat, Golf Edward Keyes DuVivier 115 East 67th Street New York City Prepared at Avon Activities: Crew Richard Nye Dyer 330 Spring Street Portland, Maine Prepared at Holderness School, Andover Activities: Badminton Club Felix Peter Dzwonkoski North Ivy Street Branford, Connecticut Prepared at Hopkins Grammar Activities: Football George Donald Eberlein 226 Adelaide Avenue Highland Park, New Jersey Prepared at Highland Park High School Activities: Crew Norman Cooley Eddy 700 Lincoln Road New Britain, Connecticut Prepared at Pomlret Roger Whittlesey Eddy Newington, Connecticut Prepared at Loomis Activities: Football Malcolm James Edgerton, Jr. Wallack Point Stamford, Connecticut Prepared at Groton Activities: Crew Russell Newell Edwards 164 Fitch Street New Haven, Connecticut Prepared at New Haven High School Merrill Winther Ehler 85 South Orchard Street Wallingford, Connecticut Prepared at Choate John Simpson Eldridge 34 Hillside Road Elizabeth. New Jersey Prepared at Pingry School Paul Bradley Elmore. Jr. 56 Coniston Avenue Waterbury, Connecticut Prepared at Westminster Activities: Intramural Touch Football, Basketball, Vif Charles Francis Emery, Jr. 740 Washington Street Denver, Colorado Prepared at Fountain Valley School Activities; Football James Boyce English 56 Washington Circle West Hartford, Connecticut Prepared at Loomis Thomas Allen Ennis 850 Park Avenue New York City Prepared at St. Mark ' s Alvah Ernest Esser. Jr. 6 Nassau Drive Great Neck, New York Prepared at Exeter Activities: Hockey Charles Cowles Esty 20 Vernon Street Farmingham, Massachusetts Prepared at Andover Activities: Intramural Football James Murdock Ethridge, III 102 Park Avenue Greenwich, Connecticut Prepared at Andover Activities: Intramural Squash, Tennis Raymond Howard Evans 8 Hawthorne Street Hartford, Connecticut Prepared at Bassick High School, Bridgeport Central High School, Hartford Public High School Activities: Intramural Swimming Louis Philip Ewald, III 190 East Pearson Street Chicago, Illinois Prepared at Groton Activities: Swimming, Intramural Touch Football, Apollo Glee Club Gardner Johnston Fabian 1462 Wesley Avenue Evanston, Illinois Prepared at Choate Activities: The Barons Samuel William Fairchild 5 East 59th Street New York City Prepared at St. George ' s Philip Walden David Farley 130 East 67th Street New York City Prepared at Choate Activities: Community Council, Crew, Squash Donald Percival Farquhar Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Prepared at Groton William Beniord Farrington Brewster Road Danbury, Connecticut Prepared at Choate John William Fawcett, III 105 East Main Street Moorestown, New Jersey Prepared at Lawrenceville, Moorestown Friends ' School Activities: Squash, Intramural Swimming George Herbert Feil 2343 Ardleigh Drive Cleveland, Ohio Prepared at University School Activities: Dramat, Intramural Crew Joseph Patrick Fennelly 40 Benham Road Hamden, Connecticut Prepared at New Haven High School, Hamden High School William New ton Fessenden 98 Fair Street Kingston, New York Prepared at Kingston High School, Exeter Activities: Glee Club, Golf Walter Owen Filley, Jr. 136 Cold Spring Street New Haven, Connecticut Prepared at Choate; N.SD, Oberschule (Feldafing, Germany) Activities; Intramural Swimming, Eli Rundschau, Deutscher Verein Gardner Alexander Finley West Hartford, Vermont Prepared at Teaneck High School, Andover Activities: Track James Aiken Fisher 1740 Beech wood Boulevard Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Prepared at Shady Side Academy, Exeter William James Fleming, Jr. 5744 Kentucky Avenue Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Prepared at Exeter Activities: Football William Louis Foertmeyer, II 600 Fairfield Avenue Bellevue, Kentucky Prepared at Culver, University School Activities: Undergraduate Medical Club, Photography Club Thomas Willard Ford 547 Wick Avenue Youngstown, Ohio Prepared at Exeter Activities; ew. Intramural Basketball William Mitchell Ford (R F. D,) Castleton-on-Hudsan New York Prepared at Hotchk iss Activities: News, Political Union, Community Council, Football, Crew Henry Smith Forrest 127 Santa Fe Avenue Hamden, Connecticut Prepared at New Haven High Scliool, Westminster Activities: Glee Club Edward Colton Fowler Washington, Connecticut Prepared at Romlord William Edward Fowler, Jr. 50 Forest Hill Road, Forest Glen Youngstown, Ohio Prepared at Rayen High School, Exeter Martin Nicholas Fox 730 Wellesley Avenue Akron, Ohio Prepared at West High School Activities: Intramural Touch Football, Swimming, Crew, Glee Club, Band Louis Frank, III 1404 South Third Street Louisville, Kentucky Prepared at Louisville Male High School, Taft Eric Thorgny Franzen 4 North Terrace Maplewood, New Jersey Prepared at Columbia High School, Exeter Activities: Centre Espanol, Squash, Baseball Albert Leverett Free 94 Buckingham Road Yonkers, New York Prepared at Roosevelt High School Charles Frederick Freeman, 38 Brentmoor Park St- Louis, Missouri Prepared at Hotchkiss Activities: Squash, Outing Club, Glee Club Edward Warren Friedman 11 East 81st Street New York City Prepared at Collegiate School, Andover Activities: Glee Club, Squash, Crew Edward Ross Frisby 6669 Barnaby Street Northwest Washington, D. C. Prepared at Morristown, Haileyburg College Activities: Football, Intramural Basketball Warren Todd Furniss 6 Henderson Place New York City Prepared at Andover Activities: Eli Rundschau Carl Albert Gagliardi 142 View Street New Haven, Connecticut Prepared at New Haven High School il John Randolph Gait, 11 Hotel Continental Cambridge, Massachusetts Prepared at Hotchkiss, Romford Activities: Football William Anthony Gamble 24 Everit Street New Haven, Connecticut Prepared at Choate Activities: Intramural Football Apollo Glee Club William Minor Gaylord, Jr. 1000 East Grand Street Springfield, Missouri Prepared at Springfield Senior High School Activities: Rifle, Intramural Basketball Frank Arthur Gaynor Bellevue Avenue Rye, New York Prepared at Harrison High School Activities: Intramural Basketball, Squash Frederic Middleton Gebhard, Jr. 625 Park Avenue New York City Prepared at Hotchkiss, Milford, Romford Henry Bernhardt Gerling 508 Vanderbogert Street Schenectady, New York Prepared at Nott Terrace High School Activities: Glee Club Edward Loomis German 39 Oakland Road Maplewood, New Jersey Prepared at Columbia High School, Deerfield Activities: Band, Glee Club, Freshman Octet, Track, Intramural Touch Football John Maurice Gessell 1260 Plass Avenue Topeka, Kansas Prepared at Topeka High School Activities: Dwight Hall George Risen Gibbons, Jr. 5455 Dunmoyle Street Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Prepared at Shady Side Academy, Milton Activities: Intramural Basketball David Gibson 1234 Bennington Avenue Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Prepared at St. Paul ' s School Harry Cortland Frey Gifford 347 Prospect Avenue Mamaroneck, New York Prepared at Kent Activities: Band Robert Maurice Gill 15 Holly Street Providence, Rhode Island Prepared at Kent Activities: Soccer, Hockey, Baseball Robert Harrison Gilpin 568 Ridgewood Avenue Glen Ridge, New Jersey- Prepared at Loomis Walter Philip Githens 11 Jean Street Hamden, Connecticut Prepared at New Haven High School, Hamden High School Davis Given 720 Park Avenue New York City Prepared at St. Paul ' s School Activities: Dwight Hall, Dramot Edgar Toll Glass, Jr. Sunset Farm West Hartford, Connecticut Prepared at Loomis Activities: Fencing, Intramural Crew Andrew Mattei Gleason 21 Howe Place Bronxville, New York Prepared at Roosevelt High School Activities: Rifle Dawson Coleman Glover 175 East 79th Street New York City Prepared at Pomfret, Choate Stanhope Scott Goddard, Jr. Noroton, Connecticut Prepared at Haverford Activities: Intramural Football, Swimming Frederick Augustus Godley, Jr. 265 Grace Church Street Rye, New York Prepared at Hotchkiss Activities: Football Charles Valentine Goelz. Jr. 490 Passaic Avenue Nutley, New Jersey Prepared at Nutley High School, Mount Hermon Michael Leslie Golden 39 Stafford Road Newton Centre, Massachusetts Prepared at Newton High School Activities: Tennis Ulysses Vitelio Golia 316 St. John Street New Haven, Connecticut Prepared at New Haven High School George Sidney Goodspeed, Jr. Governor ' s Lane, Greenfield Hill Fairfield, Connecticut Prepared at Taft Activities: Football Eric Cridlan Goodwin 3 Acacia Terrace New Rochelle, New York Prepared at Peddie Activities: Intramural Swimming, Dramat Ambrose Gordon, Jr. 60 Maddox Drive Atlanta, Georgia Prepared at Avon Activities: Fencing Israel Gordon 315 West Main Street Norwich, Connecticut Prepared at Norwich Free Academy Activities: Lit Geoffrey Edvrard Goring Sherwood Avenue Greenwich, Connecticut Prepared at Asbury Park High School Activities: Football, Intramural Basketball, Baseball Thomas Stratton Goslin, II 7103 Pacific Avenue Wildwood, New Jersey Prepared at Wildwood High School Activities: Undergraduate Committee cf Yale University Christian Conference Thomas Hale Gosnell 195 Vassar Street Rochester, New York Prepared at Peddie Activities: Intramural Swimming George Augustus Goss. Jr. Guilford, Connecticut Prepared at Hotchkiss Activities: Football, Crew Herbert Adrian Gottschall 33-25 74th Street Jackson Heights, New York City Prepared at Fieldston Activities: Fencing David Huntington Gould 238 Madison Road Scarsdale, New York Prepared at Scarsdale High School Activities: Band, Symphony Orchestra, Intramural Squash John Joseph Graham 7 Court Street West Haven, Connecticut Prepared at West Haven High School John Grandin 10 Prospect Street Jamestown, New York Prepared at Jamestown High School, Mercersburg Activities: Crew Edmund Keen Gravely No. 1 Stratford Crescent, Hampton Gardens, Richmond, Virginia Prepared at Woodberry Forest Activities: Community Council, Golf, Bowing, 150-pound Crew 4 Hardin Stuart Marr Graymount Noroton, Connecticut Prepared at Hopkins Grammar, Darien High School, Hotchkiss Activities: Intramural Fencing, Squash, Tennis Cary Travers Grayson. Jr. 3825 Wisconsin Avenue Washington, D. C Prepared at St. Alban ' s Herbert Layland Greaves. Ir 293 Scottswood Road Riverside, Illinois Prepared at St. Alban ' s Activities: Football, Basketball, Golf John McKinlay Green East Fulton Street Gloversville, New York Prepared at Mercersburg Activities: Wrestling. 150-pound Crew lulius Green 50 Cleveland Avenue Bridgeport, Connecticut Prepared at Central High School Harry Talbott Greene Houk Road Dayton, Ohio Prepared at Oakwood High School, Hotchkiss Activities: Fencing, Glee Club, Intramural Basketball, Bowling I Stephen Fanning Griifing. Ir. East Main Street Westhampton Beach, New York Prepared at Lawrenceville George Turnure Griswold 240 West 7th Street Erie, Pennsylvania Prepared at Westminster Activities: Glee Club, Crew, Symphony Orchestra, Intra- mural Wrestling George Charles Haas, Ir. Mount Kisco, New York Prepared at Brooks Activities: Football Robert ICalman Haas. Jr. Dromore Road Gcarsdale, New York Prepared at Deertield Activities: Soccer Theodore Raymond Haddad 36 Jackson Street Willimantic, Connecticut Prepared at Windham High School Holland Hagar 68 South Street Dalton, Massachusetts Prepared at Talt William Henry Haggard, II Newton Road Woodbridge, Connecticut Prepared at Hopkins Grammar Activities: Band George Eddison Haines Ardsley-on-Hudson, New York Prepared at Hotchkiss Activities; Soccer (Captain), From Committee, Yale Com- munity Council Alan Chase Hall 2500 Soutii College Avenue Grand Rapids, Michigan Prepared at Central High School, Hotchkiss Activities: Football, Crew Ralph Wetmore Halsey, Ir. 250 Irving Avenue South Orange, New Jersey Prepared at Hotchkiss Activities: Hockey, Baseball, Glee Club Francis Bacon Hamlin, Ir. 2! Chestnut Street Garden City, New York Prepared at St. George ' s George Wright Hamlin, II 22 Dogwood Drive Summit, New Jersey Prepared at Choate Activities: Wrestling William Edward Hance 352 North Grove Street East Orange, New Jersey Prepared at East Orange High School. Peddle Activities: Intramural Football, Baseball Edwin Adrian Hansen 1 100 Pork Avenue New York City Prepared at Pomfret Activities: Record Arthur Burt Harding. Jr. 7 Church Street Beverly, New Jersey Prepared at Severn School Activities: Football, Track Herbert Spencer Horned, Jr. 207 Armory Street Hamden, Connecticut Prepared at New Haven High School, Hamden High School Paul Church Harper, Jr. 1617 Judson Avenue Evanston, Illinois Prepared at Fountain Valley School Activities: Dramat, Fencing, ' 42 David Farnam Harris Four Winds Salisbury, Connecticut Prepared at Hotchkiss Activities: Cross Country, Ski Team, Track, Outing Club David Tilghman Harris First and Pennsylvania Avenue Rehoboth, Delaware Prepared at St. Andrews School Activities: Basketball Prom Committee, Glee Club, Baseball Stephen Welsh Harris 5300 Belleview Kansas City, Missouri Prepared at Pembroke, Andover Fred Harold Harrison 18 Nesmith Street Lawrence, Massachusetts Prepared at Lawrence High School, Andover Activities: Baseball Robert Warren Hart 21-31st Street North Bergen, New Jersey Prepared at Peddie Activities: Swimming William Harvey 301 West Carroll Macomb, Illinois Prepared at Kokomo High School, Exeter Activities: Cross Country, Outing Club Gerald Harwood 239 Central Park West New York City Prepared at George Washing- ton High School Henry Anstice Hastings 4 Bainbridge Road West Hartford, Connecticut Prepared at Kingswood William Frederick Havemeyer Groton, Massachusetts Prepared at Arizona Desert School, Evans School, Andover Vernon David Hedin 4626 Schenley Road Baltimore, Maryland Prepared at New Hampton Preparatory, Eastern High School Activities: Cross Country, Track, Dwight Hall Harrison Peckham Hein 15105 Lake Avenue Lakewood, Ohio Prepared at Lakewood High School Activities: Dramat, Baseball John Edward Heisler 135 South Lake Avenue Albany, New York Prepared at Albany Academy, Andover John Herbert Heller Belden Hill Wilton, Connecticut Prepared at Staples High School, Cheshire Activities: Fencing, Undergrad- uate Medical Club, Vif, Eli Rundschau Louis Lee Hemingway, Jr. 151 Everit Street New Haven, Connecticut Prepared at Hopkins Grammar, Deerfield Activities: Glee Club Peter Henderson, Jr. Cot Rock Road Cos Cob, Connecticut Prepared at Saint Paul ' s School Activities: Apollo Glee Club, Undergraduate Medical Club Harold Edward Herrick, Jr. 935 Smith Lone Woodmere, New York Prepared at Choate Thomas Baer Hess 550 Park Avenue New York City Prepared at Deerfield Edward Deacon Hicks 65 Cottage Street New Bedford, Massachusetts Prepared at New Bedford High School Edward Livingston Hicks, III 7 Thorne Tree Lane Winnetka, Illinois Prepared at North Shore Country Day, Exeter Activities: Football, Wrestling, Record Warren Arthur Hindenlang 68 Carpenter Street Foxboro, Massachusetts Prepared at Wilbraham Academy Activities: Intramural Football, Basketball, Hockey, Baseball Fred Hirschhorn. Jr. 417 Park Avenue New York City Prepared at Exeter Activities: Football Howard Roberts Hobbs 103 Main Street Binghamton, New York Prepared at Andover Frank William Hoenigmann 1032 North Austin Boulevard Oak Park, Illinois Prepared at Oak Park High School, Hill Howard Marshall Holtzmann 671 East 17th Street Brooklyn, New York Prepared at Polytechnic Preparatory Country Day Activities: Dramat, Crew George Raymond Homer Matahambre Pinar del Rio, Cuba Prepared at Stearns School, Blair Activities: Wrestling, Track li Peter Hooper. Jr. 392 Reedsdale Road Milton, Massachusetts Prepared at Milton High School Activities: Cross Country, Dwight Hall Robert Schunack House 34 Birch Road West Hartford, Connecticut Prepared at William Hall High School, Kingswood Activities; Intramural Crew, Golf Douglas Barlow Houser, Ir. 6470 Ellenvirood Avenue St. Louis, Missouri Prepared at Hotchkiss Activities: Intramural Squash, Tennis, Photography Club lohn Burton Houston 1835 Beersford Road East Cleveland, Ohio Prepared at Shaw High School Activities: 150-pound Crew Richard Howson, Jr. Parks Run Lane Ithan, Pennsylvania Prepared at Radnor High School Activities: Intramural Touch Football, Swimming, Glee Club John Yateman Huber, III Gulph Road Haverford, Pennsylvania Prepared at Lower Merion, Haverford, St. George ' s J .ctivities: Wrestling, Lacrosse Treat Clark Hull 131 Deer Hill Avenue Danbury, Connecticut Prepared at Danbury High School, Exeter Activities: Wrestling, Debating Wilson Burr Hume Londonville, New York Prepared at Milne High School Howard Convers Humphrey 500 Shuttle Meadow Road New Britain, Connecticut Prepared at Taft Activities: Golf Alfred Mortimer Hunt 4875 Ellsworth Avenue Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Prepared at Shady Side Academy, St. Paul ' s School Activities: Crew Bradley Nichols Hunt Bayberry Lane Westport, Connecticut Prepared at Hotchkiss, Fairfield High School, Choate Activities: Squash William Martin Hunt 567 Aspen Road Birmingham, Michigan Prepared at Cranbrook, Andover Activities: Hockey i« Alfred Edward Hunter 352 78th Street Brooklyn, New York Prepared at Blair Charles Ellsworth Huntington 38 Kildeer Road Hamden, Connecticut Prepared at Pomiret, Cranbrook Albert James Ingley 70 Chatiield Drive Painesville, Ohio Prepared at Painesville High School, Mercersburg Activities: Basketball, Baseball Irving Edward Ingraham 72 Prospect Place Bristol, Connecticut Prepared at Point Loma High School, Thacher Activities: Intramural Football, Crew George Ingram, Jr. 209 Morris Avenue Mountain Lakes, New Jersey Prepared at Boonton High School, Andover, Morristown School Activities: Lit Robert Livingston Ireland, III 19100 North Park Boulevard Cleveland, Ohio Prepared at Andover Activities: Soccer, Swimming Edward Lee Ives. Jr. 900 Chestnut Avenue Wilmette, Illinois Prepared at New Trier High School Activities: Chess Club, Intramural Touch Football, Football, Swimming Elwood Fletcher Jackson Main Street Oxford, Massachusetts Prepared at Oxford High School, Mount Hermon Activities: Intramural Crew William Brinckerhofi Jackson 871 Prospect Street New Haven, Connecticut Prepared at Kent Activities: Track William Ellery Sedgwick James 106 East 85th Street New York City Prepared at Groton Activities: Track Howard Sheffield Jeck, Jr. 12 Ray field Place Westport, Connecticut Prepared at Hunter College Model School, Staples High School Martin Earnest Jenter 316 Loring Avenue Pelham, New York Prepared at Pelham Memorial High School, Milford School, Wesleyan University Activities: Dramat, Glee Club, Freshman Octet, Intramural Basketball, Tennis John Baker Jessup Lake Avenue Greenwich, Connecticut Prepared at Hotchkiss Activities: 150-pound Crew, Prom Committee, News, Corinthian Yacht Club Colin Hagerman John 556 Tooting Lane Birmingham, Michigan Prepared at Cranbrook Activities: Rifle, Intramural Football, Bowling, Crew Robert de LiesseLine Johnson EUiston Far Hills, New Jersey- Prepared at Hotchkiss Activities: Football William Raymond Johnson 764 Lincoln Avenue Loveland, Colorado Prepared at Hotchkiss Activities: Glee Club, Debating, Freshman Forensic Forum Francis Edward Jones 22 Maplewood Avenue West Hartford, Connecticut Prepared at Loomis Activities: Football, Basketball John Hale Jones 200 South Barnes Street Tonkawa, Oklahoma Prepared at University Preparatory School Activities: Boxing John Pearson Josephs 738 North 26th Street Allentown, Pennsylvania Prepared at Fountain Valley School Activities: Football PierponI Abbott Judd Hotel Minden Providence, Rhode Island Prepared at Palo Verde Ranch School, St. Paul ' s School Jacob William Julian Indianapolis, Indiana Prepared at George School Activities: Wrestling, Crew Thomas Paul Kane 9 Adriance Avenue Poughkeepsie, New York Prepared at Hill Activities: Soccer, Boxing Charles Theodore Kappler 3202 Klingle Road Washington, D. C. Prepared at St. Alban ' s Activities: Community Council, Intramural Bowling Philip Robert Kasimer 378 Sherman Avenue New Haven, Connecticut Prepared at New Haven High School Irwin Arnold Katz 34 Russell Street Brookline, Massachusetts Prepared at Brookline High School Activities: Intramural Football, Squash, Lit Harvey Weppler Kausel 25 Sumner Street Beach Bluff, Massachusetts Prepared at Andover lohn Chapin Kaynor Edgewood Gardens Springfield, Massachusetts Prepared at Hotchkiss Activities: Cross Country (Captain), Track Richard Smith Kaynor 168 Buckingham Street Waterbury, Connecticut Prepared at Hotchkiss, Gow, Berkshire Robert Aertsen Keasbey. II 140 East 19th Street New York City Prepared at Choate Activities: Dramat, Glee Club James Joseph Keating 20 Cohawney Road Scarsdale, Nevir York Prepared at Scarsdale High School Activities: Fencing, Baseball Arthur Thomas Keefe, Jr. 16 Hillside Road New London, Connecticut Prepared at Taft; Downside School, England Activities: Wrestling Charles Joseph Keegan 946 Broad Street Meriden, Connecticut Prepared at Meriden High School Frederick Walter Keith. Jr. Box 1908 Sarasota, Florida Prepared at Hill Activities: Soccer, Intramural Bowling, Squash, Baseball John Greenway Keller 2930 Foxhall Road Washington, D. C. Prepared at Andover Activities: Football, Track Harry Deacon Kelsey, Jr. Elm Street Madison, Connecticut Prepared at Hand High School Activities: Band James Robert Kelsey 2111 Fairmount Avenue Saint Paul, Minnesota Prepared at University High School Activities: Band Frank Alexander Kemp, Jr. 1515 East Ninth Avenue Denver, Colorado Prepared at East Denver High School, Choate Activities: Football, Wrestling, Intramural Basketball Robert Alden Kendall 404 North Mississippi River Boulevard Saint Paul, Minnesota Prepared at Saint Paul Academy Activities: Basketball Edmund Thomas Kennedy, Jr. 1800 Leahy Avenue Pawhuska, Oklahoma Prepared at Andover, Pembroke lohn Joseph Kennedy. Ir. 325 McKinley Avenue New Haven, Connec ticut Prepared at New Haven High School Stanley Carmichael Kennedy, II 3048 Hibiscus Drive Honolulu, Hawaii Prepared at Choate Activities: Swimming, Tennis, News lohn Edward Kenny 37 Truman Street New Haven, Connecticut Prepared at New Haven High School, University Prep John Francis Kieran, Jr. 4506 Riverdale Avenue New York City Prepared at Barnard Activities: Intramural Football, Wrestling, Dramat Charles Alexander Kilvert, Jr. 15 Charles Field Street Providence, Rhode Island Prepared at Saint George ' s Activities: Swimming, Intramural Football. Glee Club, Photography Club George Washington Kirchwey, III New Canaan, Connecticut Prepared at Exeter Activities; Football, Intramural Basketball, Prom Committee (Chairman), Crew John Boyd Kirkpatrick, II Bar Cliff Avenue Chatham, Massachusetts Prepared at Tabor John William Kiser. Jr. 300 Park Avenue New York City Prepared at Los Alamos Ranch School, Hotchkiss Activities: Crew, Undergraduate Medical Club, Record John Anthony Klacsmann 262 Beech Street Arlington, New Jersey Prepared at Kearny High School Activities: Intramural Touch Football John Alexander Kneubuhl Pago Pago, Samoan Islands Prepared at Punahou Academy Activities: Track, Dramat Douglas Maitland Knight 1736 Rhodes Street Arlington, Virginia Prepared at Exeter Activities: Photography Club Noah Louis Krall 15 Dwight Street New Haven, Connecticut Prepared at Nevir Haven High School Donald Albert Kramer 39 Cliftwood Street Springfield, Massachusetts Prepared at Classical High School Activities: Intramural Crew, Apollo Glee Club Henry Charles Kranichfeld. Jr. 825 West 187th Street New York City Prepared at Andover Activities: Basketball Merrill Chapin Krech 1060 Fifth Avenue New York City Prepared at Groton Activities: Football ilV V 1 Eugene Brewer Krieger Poughkeepsie, New York Prepared at Hill Activities: Football Donald Albert Kubie 285 Central Park West New York City Prepared at Horace Mann, Andover Activities: Football, Basketball, Baseball Leon Terrell Eulikowski 237 East Delaware Place Chicago, Illinois Activities: Intramural Swimming James Eugene Kuth 1250 Gladys Avenue Lokewood, Ohio Prepared at Lakewood High School Activities: Dwight Hall, Crew, Fencings Sydney Seymour Labovitz 19 Judson Avenue New Haven, Connecticut Prepared at New Haven High School Paul Edgar Lacouture 100 Anawan Avenue West Roxbury, Massachusetts Prepared at Roxbury Latin Activities: Intramural Football, Hockey, Baseball ._ Polk Laffoon, III Turkey Foot Road Covington, Kentucky Prepared at Hill, Asheville Dean Pattison La Field 30 Elniwood Place Bridgeport, Connecticut Prepared at Seabreeze Private School, Central High School Activities: Banner Donald Breck Lamont 150 Central Park South New York City - Prepared at Exeter Activities: Intramural Basketball Marvin Hertz Lamport 315 Central Park West New York City Prepared at Peter Stuyvesant High School Activities: Soccer, Intramural Swimming Benjamin Whitney Lamson, Jr. Madeira, Ohio Prepared at Hill Activities: Football, Dromat, Track Robert Pen eld Lathrop 105 Beacon Street Bridgeport, Connecticut Prepared at Moses Brown School Activities: Intramural Swimming Victor Thomas Latorre 69 Hill Street New Haven, Connecticut Prepared at New Haven High School Louis Frederick Laun. Jr. 71 Faber Avenue Waterbury, Connecticut Prepared at Tatt Activities: Intramural Bowling lohn Raymond LaValla 2 Chestnut Street Bethel, Connecticut Prepared at Bethel High School, Pawling Activities: Intramural Football, Baseball Ross Lawler 916 North Crescent Drive Beverly Hills, California Prepared at Catalina Island School Activities: Soccer Walter Edward Leaman, Jr. Long Ridge Road Stamford, Connecticut Prepared at Andover, Lawrenceville Activities: Dramot, The Barons John Edward Ledan 27 Elizabeth Street Bethel, Connecticut Prepared at Danbury High School ' I lames Rush Lee 620 Runnymede Road Dayton, Ohio Prepared at Andover Activities: Boxing, Golf Bernard Denison Leete 615 Cherokee Road Chillicothe, Ohio Prepared at Chillicothe High School Activities: Band John Ward Leggett 311 Chicago Boulevard Sea Girt, Nev Jersey Prepared at Andover Activities: Dramat, The Barons, Intramural Football Philip Leserman, III 131 Riverside Drive New York City Prepared at Riverdale Activities: Symphony Orchestra, Social Problems Committee Paul Reed Levine 60 Parkman Street Brookline, Massachusetts Prepared at Boston Latin Activities: Band Ralph Leon Levy. Jr. 900 Sunset Street Scranton, Pennsylvania Prepared at Keystone Junior College and Academy; Exeter Activities: Glee Club Garner Lennon Lewis 336 Westside Avenue Haverstraw, New York Prepared at Haverstraw High School, Taft Robert Shippen Lewis 52 Trumbull Street New Haven, Connecticut Prepared at Groton Activities: Outing Club, Community Council Mark McDonald Lindsey 208 East 4th Street Rome, Georgia Prepared at North Fulton High School, Darlington Activities: Vif Robert Frederick Link 15 Ridgecrest West Scarsdale, New York Prepared at Scarsdale High School, Riverdale Activities: Glee Club Dickinson Lipphard 88 Franklin Avenue Yonkers, New York Prepared at Riverdale Activities: Die Eli Rundschau Edward Haviland Lockwood 1760 South Quincy Avenue Tulsa, Oklahoma Prepared at Fulsa High School, St. George ' s Edward loseph Logue, Jr. 2045 North 62nd Street Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Prepared at Overbrook High School Activities: Badminton Club Bruce Loomis Granby, Connecticut Prepared at Westminster; Institut Gabriel Rauch, Lausanne Activities: Intramural Touch Football, Vif, Spanish Club, Goll George deForest Lord, Jr. 159 East 65th Street New York City Prepared at Groton Endicott Remington LovelL Jr. 5005 Linwood Street Hubbell, Michigan Prepared at Calumet High School, Exeter Robert Wentworth Lucey 202 South Main Street Manchester, Connecticut Prepared at St. Petersburg High School, Manchester High School William Dean Lynch 75 Santa Fe Avenue Hamden, Connecticut Prepared at Hopkins Grammar, Andover Activities; Undergraduate Medical Club, Fencing William loseph McAndrews 2440 Lakeview Avenue Chicago, Illinois Prepared at Francis W. Parker High School Activities: Intramurol Football, Intramural Basketball George Kearney McClelland Fairfield Avenue Greenwich, Connecticut Prepared at Greenwich Country Day School, Groton Activities: Football Nathan Dixon McClure, Jr. Pine Orchard Geneva, Illinois Prepared at St. Alban ' s School, Hotchkiss Donald Shephard McCluskey 500 Townsend Avenue New Haven, Connecticut Prepared at New Haven High School, Hopkins Grammar George Maston McCorkle 440 Thurston Road Rochester, New York Prepared at West High School Activities: Golf, Deutscher Verein Roger Simon McCormick St. James Farm Naperville, Illinois Prepared at Adirondack-Florida, Groton Activities: Track, Corinthian Yacht Club, Dramat, Debating I John Thomas McCready 297 South Main Street Wallingiord, Connecticut Prepared at Taft loseph McCrary McCune, Jr. 5322 Sunset Drive Kansas City, Missouri Prepared at Pembroke lames Stewart McDermott 223 Woodlawn Avenue Topeka, Kansas Prepared at Topeka High School Activities: Intramural Swimming Edwin Charles McDonald, Jr. 12 Sunnybrae Place Bronxville, New York Prepared at Asheville, Bronxville High School, Choate James Perce McGowan 359 Brookway Merion, Pennsylvania Prepared at Episcopal Academy Activities; Basketball Garden Ralph McLean Pleasant Ridge Road Harrison, New York Prepared at Hotchkiss Activities: Intramural Football, Glee Club, Prom Committee Everett Louis MacLeman 25 Cormel Street Hamden, Connecticut Prepared at New Haven High School, Hopkins Grammar Activities; Swimming Thomas Evers McMorrow 1734 D Street Washington, D. C. Prepared at Choate Activities; German Club, Track, Intramural Football, Basketball William Kasson McOwen 131 Purchase Street Rye, New York Prepared at Rye High School Activities; Lacrosse, Intramural Football, Basketball lames Douglas Macpherson 565 South High Street Denver, Colorado Prepared at South High School Arthur Crane Madden 1885 Rosalind Avenue East Cleveland, Ohio Prepared at University School Activities; Football, Track John Fackenthal Magee, Jr. 613 Paxinosa Avenue Easton, Pennsylvania Prepared at Exeter Activities: Football, Intramural Basketball, Crew Albert Gordon Mager. Jr. 415 West 20th Street Oklahoma City, Oklahoma Prepared at Classen High School, Pembroke Ralph Hermon Major. Jr. 6105 High Drive Kansas City, Missouri Prepared at Pembroke Activities: Political Union, ' 42, Vif, Deutscher Verein, Centre Espanol, Die Eli Rundschau Bayard Marshall Mallery 9006 Crefield Street, Chestnut Hill Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Prepared at Hill Activities: Intramural Crew Raymond Francis Malone 55 Terry Place Bridgeport, Connecticut Prepared at Central High School Norman Morton Mann 44 Stonington Street Hartford, Connecticut Prepared at Bulkeley Activities: Undergraduate Medical Club, Kohut Forum Robert Phillips Marcus 944 Park Avenue New York City Prepared at Horace Mann Activities: Lit Alvan Markle. Ill 120 North Church Street Hazleton, Pennsylvania Prepared at Hill Activities: Swimming, Rifle Harold Shepardson Marsh 645 Hill Road Winnetka, Illinois Prepared at North Shore Country Day School Stanton Curry Martens 122 Nelson Avenue Peekskill, New York Prepared at Peekskill High School Activities: Intramural Touch Football: Track Everett Dunbar Marvin, Ir. Woodbury, Connecticut Prepared at Lenox School Activities: Glee Club, Intramural Football; 150-pound Crew Robert Paul Masland. Ir. 355 Graham Street Carlisle, Pennsylvania Prepared at Carlisle High School, Peddle Activities: Glee Club, Intramural Basketball Frederic Ogden Mason. Jr. 857 Ash Street Winnetka, Illinois Prepared at North Shore Country Day School Activities: Glee Club, Wrestling, Record Francis Joseph Mayers 194 Ocean Drive West Stamford, Connecticut Prepared at lona, Andover Activities; Squash, The Barons Pentield Comstock Mead New Canaan, Connecticut Prepared at Nev Canaan High School Activities: Intramural Football, Basketball Harbison Meech 1105 Fourth Street Red Wing, Minnesota Prepared at Andover Activities: Crew, Apollo Glee Club Abraham Richard Mekelburg 97 Fuller Street Brookline, Massachusetts Prepared at Boston Latin Conway Hillman Melcher 77 Central Avenue Montclair, New Jersey Prepared at Montclair High School Activities: Cross Country, Intramural Basketball John Joseph Mendillo 119 Ridgewood Avenue Hamden, Connecticut Prepared at New Haven High School, Hamden High School John Hornblower Meyer 60 Patterson Avenue Greenwich, Connecticut Prepared at Milton Activities: Swimming Richard WyckoH Meyer West Shore Road Great Neck, New York Prepared at Hotchkiss Activities: Crew Walter Weston Meyer 1020 Midland Road Birmingham, Michigan Prepared at Cranbrook Activities: Tennis. Vif Robert Richards MidkiH 2207 Oahu Avenue Honolulu, Hawaii Prepared at Punahou School Activities: 150-pound Crew Jeremiah Milbank, Jr. 16 East 67th Street New York City Prepared at Groton Warren Freund Milius 336 Central Park West New York City Prepared at Birch Couthen School Activities: Lit John Palmer Miller 1606 East 65th Street Seattle, Washington Prepared at Broadway High School, Roosevelt High School Activities: Dwight Hall, Boxing, Pistol Jordan Yale Miller 211 North 18th Street Manhattan, Kansas Prepared at Manhattan High School, Kansas State College Activities: Undergraduate Committee Robert Anderson Miller, III 1211 Carlisle Street Tarentum, Pennsylvania Prepared at Har-Brack Union High School, St. Paul ' s School Activities: Football, Baseball John Floyd Milliken 951 Madison Avenue New York City Prepared at St, George ' s School Activities: Glee Club, Soccer Bernard Norman Millner 19 Atterbury Avenue Trenton, New Jersey Prepared at Trenton High School Francis Weldon Miner 120 Bissell Street Manchester, Connecticut Prepared at Loomis Activities: Intramural Basketball; Baseball John Lewis Mitchell 48 Sherman Street Hartford, Connecticut Prepared at Bacon Academy, Hartford Public High School William Henry Mofiitt, IV 94 Churchill Road Bridgeport, Connecticut Prepared at Fairfield High School Activities: Glee Club, Intramural Basketball, Bowling, Golf, Band Russell Ronald Monroe 203 Sheridan Road Winnetka, Illinois Prepared at Roosevelt High School, New Trier Activities: Outing Club, Track Charles Hudson Moore 15 Concord Avenue Larchmont, New York Prepared at Momaroneck High School Activities: Intramural Touch Football, Swimming, Tennis Richard Meredith Moore 369 Humboldt Street Denver, Colorado Prepared at Asheville Activities: Prom Committee John Thomas Morris 17 Tudor Place Buffalo, New York Prepared at Nichols Country Day, Andover Activities: Crew, Intramural Bowling, Outing Club f| Charles Dure Murphy, Jr. Harrington, Deleware Prepared at St. Andrew ' s School John Campbell Murphy 56 Arundel St. Paul, Minnesota Prepared at St. Paul Academy lohn Read Murphy 100 East Palisade Avenue Englewood, New Jersey Prepared at Englewood School, Dwight Morrow High School. Andover Activities: Track Alexander Murray, III Mason ' s Island Mystic, Connecticut Prepared at Andover Activities: Cross Country Robert John Musser 2087 Wiegand Place New York City Prepared at Mercersburg Activities: Intramural Basketball and Swimming lohn Alden Myers 1247 West Exchange Street Akron, Ohio Prepared at Worcester Academy Activities: Dramat. Soccer Richard Gordon Myers 605 West 69th Street Terrace Kansas City, Missouri Prepared at Pembroke Activities: Record, Squash, Chess Richard Louis Myerson 83 Beals Street Brookline, Massachusetts Prepared at Boston Latin School Activities: Intramural Touch Football and Swimming Robert Henry Nagel 8 First Street Red Bank, New Jersey Prepared at New Hampton Academy Activities: Basketball, Swimming Stephen Edward Nash 520 East 86th Street New York City Prepared at St. Mark ' s Activities: Crew James Martin Nelson. Ill 1 Claremont Lane Clayton, Missouri Prepared at Asheville, Taylor School, Andover Richard Norman Nelson 951 East 24th Street Brooklyn, New York Prepared at James Madison High School, Peddie, Cheshire Activities: Swimming Philip Ross Neuhaus 9 Remington Lane Houston, Texas Prepared at St. Mark ' s Activities: 150-pound Crew, Intramural Squash George Roseman Nichols, III 1550 North State Street Chicago, Illinois Prepared at Choate Activities: Recor d, Squash, Community Council Francis O ' Donnell Northrup 1901 Market Street Parkersburg, West Virginia Prepared at Hill Edward Vernon Nunes 249 East 71st Street New York City Prepared at Hotchkiss Activities: Fencing, Dramot Charles Francis O ' Brien, Jr. 24 W yman Street Waterbury, Connecticut Prepared at Crosby High School Activities: Intramural Football, Basketball; Chess Raymond Devitt O ' Brien 70 Larchmont Avenue Larchmont, New York Prepared at Portsmouth Priory Charles Robert O ' Connor 71 Elm Street Belmont, Massachusetts Prepared at Worcester Activities: Dramat Mortimer John O ' Oonoghue 4723 Springfield Avenue Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Prepared at St. Joseph ' s Preparatory School Activities: Intramural Basketball Adrian Edward Offinger Route 1 Norwalk, Connecticut Prepared at Pelham Memorial High School Activities: Intramural Bowling William Richard Ohler. Jr. 57 Orchard Street Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts Prepared at Roxbury Activities: Hockey, Lacrosse, Intramural Football, Community Council George Oleair 2923 Cleveland Boulevard Lorain, Ohio Prepared at Lorain High School, Exeter Activities: Football Stephen Michael Olechnowich 18 Fifth Street Ansonia, Connecticut Prepared at Ansonia High School John Joseph O ' Looney. Jr. 1194 East Main Street Bridgeport, Connecticut Prepared at Warren Harding High School Lee Albert O ' Neill Rua Canning 31 Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Prepared at Westminster School Activities: Intramural Football and Bowling, Centro Espaiiol Edwin Max Ost, Jr. 85 Penn Drive West Hartford, Connecticut Prepared at Loomis Activities: Intramural Football and Basketball; Track John Howard Owen 710 Dakota Street Seattle, Washington Prepared at Grover Cleveland High School Activities: Debating, Band, Symphony Orchestra, Dviright Hall Alfred Owre, Jr. 411 East 52nd Street New York City Prepared at Avon Activities; Fencing John Mallory Packard 142 Park Avenue Saranac Lake, New York Prepared at Toft, College of St Columb, Dublin, Ireland Walter Harriman Page 899 North River Road Manchester, New Hampshire Prepared at Andover Activities; Track Shepard Francis Palitz 755 West End Avenue New York City Prepared at Stuyvesant High School, Cheshire Activities: Fencing Carter Palmer 60 Stimson Avenue Providence, Rhode Island Prepared at Moses Brown Activities: Dromat, Intramural Crew Douglas Shaw Palmer 6 Altamont Court Morristown, New Jersey Prepared at Morristown High School, Peoria High School Activities: Crew Lowell Mason Palmer Crosshighway Fairfield, Connecticut Prepared at Brooks, Thacher Activities; Intramural Football William Warren Palmquist 961 Wood Avenue Bridgeport, Connecticut Prepared at Bassick High School Fitzhugh Carter Pannill, Jr. 51 Avon Road Bronxville, New York Prepared at Bronxville High School, Deerfield Activities: Fencing. Spanish Club Brooks O ' Connell Parker Birch HoUov Halesite, New York Prepared at Exeter Activities: Soccer, Wrestling, Record Elfon Parks, Jr. Alderbrook ' Katonah, New York Prepared at Lenox, St. Paul ' s School Activities: Crew Ernest Chapin Parshall, 11 330 West 9th Street Erie, Pennsylvania Prepared at Hill Activities: Track, Community Council George Henry Partridge, III 1010 Mount Curve Avenue Minneapolis, Minnesota Prepared at Blake School, Andover Charles Robert Pascoe 304 North Stadium Way Tacoma, Washington Prepared at Jason Lee Intermediate High School, Stadium High School Activities: Christian Conference Robert Kennedy Patch 4 Barrett Place Northampton, Massachusetts Prepared at Williston, Avon Activities: Bach Cantata Paul Day Pattinson 1144 Rancho Road Arcadia, California Prepared at Catalina Island School, Andover Activities: Polo John Pauker 1 Blackstone Place Riverdale-on-Hudson, New York Prepared at Fieldston School Activities: ' 42 (Chairman), Bach Cantata, Political Union Justus Williams Paul, Jr. 108 Kenyon Street Hartford, Connecticut Prepared at Loomis Activities: Rifle Charles Gillingham Paxson Edgewater Point Mamaroneck, New York Prepared at Lawrenceville Activities: Football, The Barons John Hugh Cameron Peake Westchester Avenue Rye, New York Prepared at Andover, Rye High School, Lawrenceville i Richard Pearson Fancher Road New Canaan, Connecticut Prepared at Newtown High Activities: Intramural Crew Roy Leonard Peterson, Jr. Washington. Connecticut Prepared at Gunnery Activities: Intramural Football and Basketball George Robert Pfeiifer 29 58 Waldo Avenue Bayside, New York Prepared at Kent Activities: Squash, Baseball Sheffield Phelps Westbury, New York Prepared at St. Mark ' s Activities: Crew Sam Phillips, Jr. 3526 Lenox Road Birmingham, Alabama Prepared at Ramsay Technical High School Activities: Golf Donald Edward Pierce Hotel Cleveland Cleveland, Ohio Prepared at University School Activities: Fencing John Thomas Pigott, Jr. 3343 Washington Street San Francisco, California Prepared at Lowell High School, Thacher Activities: Soccer, Glee Club William May Pike Derby Line, Vermont Prepared at Stanstead, Quebec College, Andover Lawrence Frank Pisani 14 Bradley Street New Haven, Connecticut Prepared at New Haven High School Livingston Piatt, Jr. 135 Grandview Avenue Rye, New York Prepared at Asheville Activities: Football Paul Aaron Plotkin 91 Southfield Avenue Stamford, Connecticut Prepared at Stamford High School Activities: Freshman Discussion Group, Intramural Touch Football John George Pocock 171 Seaside Avenue Milford, Connecticut Prepared at Milford High School, Choate John Ponsen 45-37 41st Street Long Island City, New York Prepared at Bryant High School Activities: Swimming Edward Julius Pope, Jr. 3321 East 149th Street Shaker Heights, Ohio Prepared at Western Reserve Academy Activities: Swimming, Basebal! Spanish Club Russell Horton Pope 141 Bright wood Avenue Stratford, Connecticut Prepared at Stratford High School, Milford Activities: Undergraduate Medical Club William Pope 16 Sycamore Road Hartford, Connecticut Prepared at Kingswood, Exeter Activities: Dramat John Porter 169 Cold Spring Street New Haven, Connecticut Prepared at Oak Lane Country Day School, Hopkins Grammar Activities: Eli Rundschau, Vif John Stebbins Porter 113 Cassilis Avenue Bronxville, New York Prepared at Theodore Roosevelt High School Activities: Crew William Percivol Powning 97 Whalley Avenue New Haven, Connecticut Prepared at New Haven High School Activities: Football Tracy Danaher Pratt 4 Highroad Bronxville, New York Prepared at Romford, Taft Activities: Football James Anthony Prekop Mountain Road Sulfield, Connecticut Prepared at Sufiield Academy Edward Brewster Prindle, Jr. 114 Grandview Avenue Rye, New York Prepared at Lowrenceville Horton Rorick Prudden 171 Clarke Avenue Palm Beach, Florida Prepared at Hotchkiss Activities: Intramural Swimming, Crew, and Baseball Charles Edward Pynchon, Jr. 2021 Belmont Rood Washington, D. C. Prepared at Asheville Activities: 150-Pound Crew John Morgan Quinn The Heights Lebanon, Pennsylvania Prepared at Hotchkiss Activities: Squash, Intramural Tennis and Crew Donald Baker Quint 45 Whalley Avenue New Haven, Connecticut Prepared at New Haven High School, University Prep. William Harold Quittman 134 Grand Avenue New Haven, Connecticut Prepared at New Haven High School, Stamford High School Walter Gelshenen Rafferty Old Glenville Road Greenwich, Connecticut Prepared at Andover Activities: Football Edgar Carpenter Reckard, Ir. 810 Sixth Street Huntington. West Virginia Prepared at Huntington High School Howard Alexander Reed 180 Lincoln Avenue Pomona, California Prepared at Andover, Wellington College (Berkshire, England) Activities: Soccer, Football Managerial Competition, Dwight Hall, Community Council Robert Morris Reeve 51 Euclid Avenue Maplewood, New Jersey Prepared at Columbia High School, Exeter Activities: Dramat, Eli Rundschau Sherwood Hartman Reisner 77 Greeridge Avenue White Plains, New York Prepared at White Plains High School Activities: Northfield Christian Conference, Intramural Basketball William Stewart Retherford 3550 Ridgewood Road Toledo, Ohio Prepared at Asheville Charles Henry Retz South Nyack, New York Prepared at Taft, Romford Activities: Football Robert Goodwyn Rhetl, III 2220 20th Street Washington, D. C. Prepared at Episcopal High School Activities: Basketball, Crew Wilson Corey Rich, Ir. Watchung Fork Westfield, New Jersey Prepared at Westfield High School Activities: Track, Intramural Football Lawrence Richardson, Ir. 21 Sewall Woods Road Melrose, Massachusetts Prepared at Melrose High School Edgar Alsop Riley 171 East 71st Street New York City Prepared at St. Paul ' s School Activities: Crew, Community Council, Political Union, Dwight Hall Committee, Intramural Squash Charles Purcell Ripley 5555 Sheridan Road Chicago, Illinois Prepared at New Trier High School, Los Alamos Ranch School Activities: Apollo Glee Club John Clark Ripley Edgewood Avenue Smithtown Branch, New York Prepared at St. Paul ' s School Activities: Crew Charles Noble Robertson, III Aspetuck Avenue New Milford, Connecticut Prepared at Gunnery Activities: Glee Club Walter Irving Rodgers. Ill 33 De Mott Avenue Rockville Centre, New York Prepared at South Side High School Activities: Intramural Touch Football and Basketball Peter Imlay Roesler 130 Kings Point Road Great Neck, New York Prepared at Storm King School, Andover Activities: Swimming, Intramural Touch Football and Tennis, B anner Morton Allen Roseman 16 Johnson Avenue Newark, New Jersey Prepared at Newark Academy Activities: Intramural Football and Squash Sidney Rosen 111 Greenwood Street New Haven, Connecticut Prepared at New Haven High School Charles Leopold Rosenthal 17 Davis Street Binghamton, New York Prepared at Binghamton Central High School Activities: Kohut Forum, Intramural Swimming, Inter-Faith Discussion Group Fred David Rosi 82 Foster Street Meriden, Connecticut Prepared at Meriden High School Activities: Intramural Touch Football and Basketball Thomas Butler Ross 18,301 Shaker Boulevard Cleveland, Ohio Prepared at University School Activities: Baseball, Golf 4 Edward Morris Rothchild 96 Scranton Street New Haven, Connecticut Prepared at New Haven High School Herbert Franklin Royal, Jr. 1423 Buckingham Road Birmingham, Michigan Prepared at Baldwin High School, Exeter Activities: Glee Club, Golf Stanley Maddox Rumbough, Jr. Lloyds Neck Huntington. New York Prepared at St. Marks Activities: Hockey, Glee Club, Tennis, Corinthian Yacht Club Ernest Wells Russ 119 Woodland Street Hartford, Connecticut Prepared at Hartford Public High School Thomas Hubbard Russell, III 19 Edgehill Rood New Haven, Connecticut Prepared at Hopkins Grammar Activities: Intramural Wrestling Harry Rogers Sage 10 Westwoy Bronxville, New York Prepared at Bronxville High School, Toft Donald Ambrose Salisbury c o Cerro de Pasco Copper Corporation, Oroya, Peru Prepared at Peddie Activities: Intramural Football and Tennis Mason David Salisbury 1023 Post Road Scarsdale, New York Prepared at Groton Activities: Football, Glee Club, Crew Burton Davy Salmon 16 East 69th Street New York City Prepared at St. Mark ' s Activities: Squash Arthur Saltzstein 4942 North Woodburn Street Milwaukee, Wisconsin Prepared at Whitefish Bay High School Activities: Undergraduate Medical Club, Kohut Forum Frank Park Samiord, Jr. 2633 Heathermoor Road Birmingham, Alabama Prepared at Ramsay Technical High School, Alabama Polytechnic Institute Activities: Fencing Sabin Pond Sanger, II 42 Broadway Bangor, Maine Prepared at Exeter Activities: Lacrosse Motley Sawyer Lowder Street Dedham, Massachusetts Prepared at St. Paul ' s School Activities: Squash Lawrence Alder Schafer 488 Prospect Avenue Hartford, Connecticut Prepared at Loomis Activities; Undergraduate Physics Club Allen Myron Scher 22 Castleton Street Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts Prepared at Boston Latin School Harry Barnum Schooley, Ir. 245 South River Street Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania Prepared at Lawrenceville Activities: Polo, Fencing, Community Council William Russell Schulhof 19 Groton Street Forest Hills, New York Prepared at McBurney School, Andover Activities: Squash, Intramural Basketball and Tennis Edwin Lewis Scofield, III Pinehurst, North Carolina Prepared at Talt Cliffton Rogers Scudder, HI 701 South Warson Road St- Louis, Missouri Prepared at St, Paul ' s School, Andover Activities: Polo, Intramural Bowrling Joe Rushton Seacrest 2753 South 27th Street Lincoln, Nebraska Prepared at Lincoln High School, Exeter Charles Frederick Seelbach, Jr. 17834 Lake Avenue Lakewood, Ohio Prepared at University School Activities: Football, Basketball (Captain) Robert Browne Sefton 444 79th Street Brooklyn, New York Prepared at Canterbury William Dickson Seidler 16 Plymouth Street Montclair, New Jersey Prepared at Montclair Academy, Kent Activities: Intramural Squash and Tennis Robert Conrad Seipp 237 East Delaware Place Chicago, Illinois Prepared at Chicago Latin School Activities: ' 42 Richcrd Hollyday Semple. Ir. Chestnut Road Sewickley, Pennsylvania Prepared at St. George ' s Activities: Football, Track, Badminton, Golf lames McCall Sessions 308 Main Street Bristol, Connecticut Prepared at Bristol High School, Williston Activities: Intramural Football, Basketball, and Baseball Hovey Seymour Porchuck Road Greenwich, Connecticut Prepared at Andover Activities: Football (Captain), Wrestling Norman Keith Shachnow 195 Bennett Avenue New York City Prepared at Cheshire Activities: Squash, Swimming William Fahnley Shafer 2901 North Meridian Street Indianapolis, Indiana Prepared at Short Ridge High School, Talt Salem Ealeel Shaheen 421 Madison Street Fort Wayne, Indiana Prepared at Central High School Activities: Intramural Basketball, Vif David Woolverton Shand, Jr. 819 Michigan Avenue Evanston, Illinois Prepared at Evanston Township High School Activities: Intramural Touch Football and Bowling Warren McKinney Shapleigh 23 Fordyce Lane Clayton, Missouri Prepared at St. Louis Country Day School Activities: Cross Country, Basketball Donald Fell Sharp 359 Webster Avenue New Rochelle, New York Prepared at Westminster Howard Francis Shattuck, Jr. 160 East 78th Street New York City Prepared at St. Paul ' s School Activities: 150-Pound Crew William Warren Shelden 2550 Iroquois Avenue Detroit, Michigan Prepared at Groton Frank Parsons Shepard. Jr. 1021 Park Avenue New York City Prepared at St Paul ' s School Winchester Sherman Boston Post Road Rye, New York Prepared at Andover Activities: Lacrosse Hugh Virgil Sherrill P. O. Box 85 East Beach Gulfport, Mississippi Prepared at Gulf Coast Military Academy, Hill Activities: News Charles Eugene Sherwood. II 125 West 16th Street New York City Prepared at Syracuse Central High School Activities: Track William Douglass Shorey 601 North Euclid Avenue Oak Park, Illinois Prepared at Oak Park and River Forest Township High School Grant Gilbert Simmons. Jr. Lake Avenue Greenwich, Connecticut Prepared at Deerfield Activities: Glee Club William Barton Simmons. Ir. 221 Nassau Avenue Manhosset, New York Prepared at Manhosset High School, Gunnery Activities: Photography Club, Yale Collegians, Band Omar Howard Simonds, Ir. 431 Ridge wood Avenue Glen Ridge, New Jersey Prepared at Lawrenceville Activities: Community Council, Intramural Basketball, Touch Football, and Baseball Frank Joseph Sladen. Jr. 2209 Seminole Avenue Detroit, Michigan Prepared at Detroit University School Activities: Glee Club, Intramural Basketball and Tennis Benjamin Anthony Smith 704 Greenhill Avenue Wilmington, Delaware Prepared at Deerfield Activities: Glee Cliib, Freshman Octet, Dramat Charles William Smith 115 Southwood Road Bridgeport, Connecticut Prepared at Bridgeport High School, Roger Ludlowe High School Activities: Band Howard Freeman Smith, Jr. 174 Provencal Road Grosse Pointe, Michigan Prepared at Hotchkiss Activities: Football News James Jay Smith. II P. O. Box 68 Clinton, Connecticut Prepared at Asheville Lloyd Bruce Smith 2220 North Terrace Avenue Milwaukee, Wisconsin Prepared at Thacher Activities: Football Sumner Smith, Jr. Sandy Pond Road Lincoln, Massachusetts Prepared at Andover Activities: Intramural Football, Crew Traver Clinton Smith 410 East 57th Street New York City Prepared at Hotchkiss Activities: Football Henry Buist Smythe 31 Legare Street Charleston, South Carolina Prepared at Charleston High School, Episcopal High School Activities: Intramural Football, Basketball MacVicker Snow 3312 Menlo Avenue Cincinnati, Ohio Prepared at Walnut Hills High School Activities: Boxing, 150-Pound Crew Edward Philip Snyder. Jr. 57 Beverly Road Great Neck, New York Prepared at Taft Activities: Football William Douglas Sommerville. Jr. 167 Broadway Bangor, Maine Prepared at Andover Activities: Wrestling Charles Cooke Spalding CO C. M. Cooke Ltd. Honolulu, Hawaii Prepared at Punahou School, Deerfield Samuel Clyde Spalding, Jr. 1825 Nova Scotia Hill Road Watertown, Connecticut Prepared at Taft Activities: Apollo Glee Club, Rifle Vaughan Clark Spalding. Jr. 255 Mayflower Road Lake Forest, Illinois Prepared at Hill Activities: Hockey, Baseball, Spanish Club Herbert William Speight 21 Sachem Road Greenwich, Connecticut Prepared at Greenwich High School Donald Elliot Spickard 1303 3rd Avenue West Seattle, Washington Prepared at Queen Anne High School Activities: Intramural Touch Football, Basketball, Bowling, Apollo Glee Club I Frank Arnott Sprole 807 West End Place Cranford, New Jersey Prepared at Hotchkiss Activities: Football, Boxing Alan Benjamin Spurney 1843 Formington Rood East Cleveland, Ohio Prepared at University School Activities: Record, Apollo Glee Club, Track Walter Fleming Stafford. Jr. 1 1 Niagara Street Buffalo, New York Prepared at Andover Activities: 150-Pound Crew, Undergraduate Medical Club, Community Council Robert Arthur Slatton 913 Potomac Avenue Hagerstown, Maryland Prepared at Mercersburg Activities: Intramural Football, Bowling, Apollo Glee Club George Donald Steele 166 Ridgewood Avenue Hamden, Connecticut Prepared at New Haven High School, Hamden High School, Loomis Activities: Intramural Touch Football, Dramat, Radio Club Bruce Middleton Steere 34 Sunnybrook Road Bronxville, New York Prepared at Hotchkiss, Loomis, Clifton College Activities: Freshman Forensic Forum, Debating, Political Union David Samuel Stein 51 Colbourne Crescent Brookline, Massachusetts Prepared at Andover Activities: Lit, Baseball Clifford Steinberg 5 Cedar Street South Norwalk, Connecticut Prepared at Norwalk High School Activities: Fencing Paul Brooke Stephan, Jr. 150 Warron Avenue Kenmore, New York Prepared at Mount Hermon Activities: Fencing Charles Pate Stetson 117 East 72nd Street New York City Prepared at Choate Activities: Crew, Prom Committee Elbridge Stratton Stevens 21 Parsons Avenue Hoosick Falls, New York Prepared at Choate Activities: 150-Pound Crew, Symphony Orchestra Robert Emmett Stevenson 4347 East Avenue Rochester, New York Prepared at Allendale Country Day School, Exeter Werner Koch Stiefel P. O. Box 53 Preston Hollow, New York Prepared at Montclair High School Activities: Swimming, Chess Club Robert Whitney Stinchfield 1021 Harvard Road Grosse Pointe, Michigan Prepared at Holchkiss Activities: Crew John Caldwell Stockman 151 Sherwood Place Englewood, New Jersey Prepared at Englewood School Activities: Intramural Football, Lacrosse Henry Melson Stommel Leonardo, New Jersey Prepared at Townsend Harris Hall, Freeport High School Activities: Deutscher Verein Henry Talbot Stude, Jr. 1448 Lakeshore Drive Chicago, Illinois Prepared at Los Alamos Ranch School, Taft Activities: Undergraduate Medical Club, Camera Club, Intramural Football Jack Ralph Stunzi 300 South Broadway Tarrytown, New York Prepared at Scarborough Activities: Undergraduate Medical Club, Intramural Football, Crew Joseph Daniel Sullivan 522 George Street New Haven, Connecticut Prepared at New Haven High School Frederick Charles Sutro, Jr. 575 Westminster Avenue Elizabeth, New Jersey Prepared at Pingry Activities: Football, Lacrosse Donald Lester Sweefman Jackson Road Bnarcliff Manor, New York Prepared at Briarcliff High School, Mercersburg Activities: Dwight Hall Roderic Burwell Swenson 62 Eagle Rock Way Montclair, New Jersey Prepared at Lawrenceville Activities: Glee Club John William Swingle 4793 Reservoir Road Northwest Washington, D. C. Prepared at Western High School Activities: Freshman Forensic Forum, Christian Conference, Intramural Crew Robert Morris Talcott Lisbon Center, Maine Prepared at Edward Little High School, Exeter Bertrand Leroy Taylor, III 333 East 57th Street New York City Prepared at St. Paul ' s School Activities: Hockey Robert Drescher Taylor 1166 Clover Street Rochester, New York Prepared at Asheville Robert Walter Taylor 208 Arleigh Road Douglaston, New York Prepared at Hotchkiss Activities: Dramot (President), ' 42, Fencing Robert Suren Tellalian 30 Bennett Street Bridgeport, Connecticut Prepared at Bassick High School Edward Adam Tenenbaum 417 East 89th Street New York City Prepared at Stuyvesant High School. Ecole Internationale (Geneva) Activities: Outing Club, Vii William Ross Thayer Hotel Tulsa Tulsa, Oklahoma Prepared at Taft Activities: Soccer, Baseball Alexander Mackenzie Thompson, jr. 5215 2nd Avenue South Minneapolis, Minnesota Prepared at Blake Activities; Swimming John Strappe Thompson, Jr. 2008 Humbolt Avenue South Minneapolis, Minnesota Prepared at Blake Activities: Football, Hockey Chilton Thomson 5907 Belmont Avenue Cincinnati, Ohio Prepared at Walnut Hills High School, Asheville, Cranbrook lames Neale Thorne 472 Boston Post Road Rye, New York Prepared at Brooks Activities: Crew, Glee Club Austin Heathcote Tiiit 210 Maple Street Seymour, Connecticut Prepared at Seymour High School Edward Rodman Titcomb 502 North Stadium Way Tacoma, Washington Prepared at Lakeside, Hotchkiss Activities: Crew, Undergraduate Medical Club jsiah Hornblower deWift Titus Buttonwood Lane Red Bank, New Jersey Prepared at Exeter Activities: Intramural Touch Football, Basketball Arthur Robert Tobey 2116 Northeast 39th Avenue Portland, Oregon Prepared at Grant High School Activities: Intramural Wrestling, Undergraduate Physics Club Edmund Booth Tobin 60 Manning Boulevard Albany, New York Prepared at Portsmouth Priory Activities: Intramural Football Community Council Benjamin Rush Toland Ash Brook Farm Concord, New Hampshire Prepared at St. Paul ' s School Activities: Hockey (Co-captain) Oliver Wolcott Toll, Jr. 2007 Old Georgetown Road Bethesda, Maryland Prepared at Woodrow Wilson High School, London School Caspar Wistar Barton Townsend, Ir. Merion and Greystone Roads Merion, Pennsylvania Prepared at St. Mark ' s Activities: Football, Prom Committee, Baseball, Intramural Squash Sidney Edward Traceski 96 Cook Avenue Meriden, Connecticut Prepared at Meriden High School Activities: Intramural Basketball Martin Trachtenburg 75 White Street Danbury, Connecticut Prepared at Danbury High School Paul Spurgeon Tracey, Jr. 1208 Race Street Denver, Colorado Prepared at East Denver High School Charles Hughes Treat 1556 Wendell Avenue Schenectady, New York Prepared at Nott Terrace High School Wyllys Baird Treat Ojai, California Prepared at Thacher Activities: Soccer, Apollo Glee Club Peter Francis Tripp 250 Milton Road Rye, New York Prepared at Groton Activities: Crew, Glee Club James Rutherford Trowbridge 126 Cooper Avenue Upper Montclair, New Jersey- Prepared at Solebury School, Loomis Frank Berger Trudeau, Jr. Saranac Lake, New York Prepared at Northwood School St. Paul ' s School Activities: Football, Squash, Dwight Hall David Bryant Turner, II 209 2nd Avenue Warren, Pennsylvania Prepared at Exeter Activities: Soccer, Glee Club Frederick John Turner 165 Piatt Street Ansonia, Connecticut Prepared at Woodbridge Country Day School, Ansonia High School Richard Joseph Turner 52 Edgewood Avenue Nutley, New Jersey Prepared at Newman School Activities: Basketball Theodore Smith Turner 116 Floral Way Stratford, Connecticut Prepared at Stratford High School Activities: Football Thomas Bedford Turner 430 West 116th Street New York City Prepared at Horace Mann Activities: Glee Club Donald Trowbridge Tuttle 38 North Whitney Avenue Hartford, Connecticut Prepared at Hartford Public High School Activities: R.O.T.C. Pistol Team Thurston Twigg-Smith 122 Bates Street Honolulu. Hawaii Prepared at Roosevelt High School. Punohou School Activities: Rifle, Swimming James Teller Van Voast 6226 Robison Road Cincinnati, Ohio Prepared at Walnut Hills High School, Culver Activities: Intramural Swimming, Crew Pasquale Joseph Vecchione 88-33 187th Street Hollis, New York Prepared at Jamaica High School Activities: ' 42 Warburton King Ver Planck 21 Chestnut Street Salem, Massachusetts Prepared at Exeter Activities: Soccer, Intramural Wrestling, Outing Club Bernard Boris Virshup Somers, Connecticut Prepared at Rockville High School Activities: Intramural Crew John Charles Vorrath, Jr. Crescent Avenue Ramsey, New Jersey Prepared at Ramsey High School Richard Ripley Waite 1909 Day Street Ann Arbor, Michigan Prepared at Asheville Edwin Weaver Waldrop 29 Clifford Avenue Pelham, New York Prepared at Pelham Memorial High School Activities: Photography Club John Stanley Walker 3579 Washington Avenue Cincinnati, Ohio Prepared at University School Activities: Intramural Basketball Joseph Walker 164 East 72nd Street New York City Prepared at Groton Activities: Crew John Clements Wallace 527 6th Street Oakmont, Pennsylvania Prepared at Oakmont High School Robert Wallace 432 North Main Street Wallingford, Connecticut Prepared at Choate, Tabor Academy Activities: Crew Donald Ticknor Warner Salisbury. Connecticut Prepared at St, Paul ' s School Activities: Intramural Swimming, Apollo Glee Club Thomas Clark Warner, Jr. 71 East Brown Street West Haven, Connecticut Prepared at West Haven High School Richard Kearney Warren 151 Courtland Avenue Stamford, Connecticut Prepared at Pomfret Alexander Bowen Warrick 64 Franklin Street Englewood, New Jersey Prepared at Hockley School Activities: Soccer, Football Thomas Machell Warwick 800 State Street Schenectady, New York Prepared at Nott Terrace High School Robert Dale Wastrom 186 Bayard Avenue Hamden, Connecticut Prepared at Technical High School. A. B. Davis High School, Hamden High School Arthur Kitlredge Watson 778 Park Avenue New York City Prepared at Hotchkiss Activities: Crew, Community Council David Paul Hamendt Watson 1125 5th Avenue New York City Prepared at Groton Activities: 150-Pound Crew Hillary Baldwin Waugh 74 Hubinger Street New Haven, Connecticut Prepared at New High School Activities: Football Paul Webb, Jr. 1801 Whitney Avenue Hamden, Connecticut Prepared at New Haven High School, Andover William Sloan Webber 418 Walnut Road Ben Avon, Pennsylvania Prepared at Ben Avon High School Activities: Football Edward Jerome Webster. Jr. 1124 11th Street Northwest Washington, D. C. Prepared at Central High School, Sidwell Friends ' School lohn Rogers Wechsler 30 West 54th Street New York City Prepared at Choate Activities: Squash, Intramural Basketball, Golf John Leopold Weil 211 Central Park West New York City Prepared at Townsend Harris High School, Loom is Arthur Irwin Weinberg 900 Grand Concourse New York City Prepared at Andover Thomas Lowry Weirick 3342 Tica Drive Los Angeles, California Prepared at Hoover High School Activities: Intramural Football, Crew Lawrence Weisburg 1348 East 21st Street Brooklyn, New York Prepared at lames Madison High School Activities: Intramural Fencing, Crew, Outing Club, News Photographer lames Robert Welch 18 Rose Hill Avenue New Rochelle, New York Prepared at Choate Activities; Squash, Golf, Bowling Philip Brownlie Weld Taft School Watertown, Connecticut Prepared at Taft George William Welsh, III 1030 Park Avenue New York City Prepared at Hotchkiss School Activities: Intramural Touch Football, Tennis Patrick McLoskey Westfeldt 5225 Pitt Street New Orleans, Louisiana Prepared at Taft Activities: Football Henry Patten Wheeler 20 South Mayflower Road Lake Forest, Illinois Prepared at St. Mark ' s Activities: Football. Hockey John Joseph White 546 Howard Avenue New Haven, Connecticut Prepared at New High School, Cheshire Activities: Football Robert Charles While Pineacre Niles, Michigan Prepared at Niles High School, Exeter Activities: Glee Club, Gymnastics Robert Elder White, Jr. 2320 Nuuanu Avenue Honolulu, Hawaii Prepared at Punahou, Thacher Activities: Swimming, Community Council Warren Benton White 3133 West 25th Street Oklahoma City, Oklahoma Prepared at Classen High School, Oklahoma University William Gardner White 767 Goodrich Avenue St. Paul, Minnesota Prepared at Hotchkiss, Lenox Activities: Political Union, Dwight Hall, Crew Frederick Corwin Whitney, Jr. P. O. Box 821 Savannah, Georgia Prepared at Exeter, Lawrenceville Lewis Merriam Wiggin, Jr. 232 Bradley Street New Haven, Connecticut Prepared at Andover Activities: Glee Club, Dramat lackson Brainerd Wiley 17 Georgian Road Morristov n, New Jersey Prepared at Morristown High School Activities: Crew, Intramural Football David Cudahy Wilhelm 2430 Lake View Avenue Chicago, Illinois Prepared at Arizona Desert School, Andover Elmore Abram Willels. Ir. Woodland Road Sewickley, Pennsylvania Prepared at Sewickley Academy, Andover Clem Gary Williams. Jr. 3922 Ingomar Street Northwest Washington, D. C. Prepared at Woodrow Wilson High School Activities: Political Union David John Williams. II 45 Academy Avenue Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Prepared at Andover Activities: Boxing (Captain). Dramat John Grant Wilmer 1815 24th Street Washington, D. C. Prepared at St, Alban ' s Activities: Political Union, Soccer Charles Philip Wilson 125 Edgemont Road Scarsdale, New York Prepared at Bronxville High School, Hotchkiss Activities: Soccer, Swimming, Tennis John Burr Wilson, II 12 Aspetuck Avenue New Milford, Connecticut Prepared at New Milford High School, Taft Robert James Montgomery Wilson Pickwick Arms Hotel Greenwich, Connecticut Prepared at Choate Activities: Community Council, Squash Herbert Isaac Winer 258 Westchester Avenue Mount Vernon, New York Prepared at A. B, Davis High School Activities: Political Union, ' 42 Thomas Martin Winwood 1652 East High Street Springfield. Ohio Prepared at Springfield High School, Oberlin College Activities: Intramural Football, Basketball Norman Frederick Wiss, Jr. Oaklawn Road Short Hills, New Jersey Prepared at Andover Activities: Fencing, Crew James Clinton Witt 2830 Ambleside Place Cincinnati, Ohio Prepared at Taft Activities: Football William Charles Witt 2589 Euchd Heights Boulevard Cleveland Heights, Ohio Prepared at University School Activities: Basketball, Baseball George Wheeler WoU, Jr. Chatsworth Gardens Larchmont, New York Prepared at Cranbrook Activities: Fencing, Spanish Club LeRoy Samuel Wolfe, Jr. 4 Soldiers Place Buffalo, New York Prepared at Lafayette High School, Hill, Woodberry Forest, Park School Henry Eli Woodard. Jr. 2455 Madison Road Cincinnati, Ohio Prepared at Thomas Jefferson, Withrow Activities: Fencing, Intramural Basketball, Swimming James Morris WoodhuU 1 1 1 Springhouse Road Dayton, Ohio Prepared at Taft, Los Alamos Ranch School. Hotchkiss Activities: Football, Glee Club, Freshman Octet, Boxing, Crew Robert John Woods 505 College Avenue Lincoln, Illinois Prepared at Lincoln Community High School Activities: Apollo Glee Club William Henry Worrilow, Jr. Brasenhill Lebanon, Pennsylvania Prepared at Fessenden, Lawrenceville Activities: Community Council, Squash, Tennis James Thomas Wyman. II 215 West 22nd Street Minneapolis, Minnesota Prepared at Blake Activities: Hockey Coulter Dabney Young, Jr. 617 Webster Avenue New Rochelle, New York Prepared at Choate Activities: Football Edwin Charles Young 59 Church Street Ansonia, Connecticut Prepared at Ansonia High School Activities: Intramural Football, Bowling Franklin Burton Young 8 Hill Street Portland, Maine Prepared at Portland High School Activities: Glee Club Harry Zeldes 115 Belden Street New Britain, Connecticut Prepared at New Britain High School John Willard Adams, Jr. 219 East Saint Charles Road Elmhurst, Illinois Prepared at York Community School Activities: Intramural Football, Basketball, Swimming, Tennis Irwin Mayo Alperl 87 Kensington Street New Haven, Connecticut Prepared at New Haven High School Henry Fairfax Ayres. Jr. Manursing Lodge Rye, New York Prepared at Kent lames Stuart Barstow, Ir. 15 East 87th Street New York City Prepared at Groton, McBurney Activities: Soccer, Intramural Fencing, Squash Michael Bratkowsky 95 Balsam Avenue Bridgeport, Connecticut Prepared at Central High School Activities: Football Morrison McKelvy Bump P. O. Box 686 Wilmington, Delaware Prepared at Andover Activities: Squash, Glee Club Gillette Burton Spring Hill Mobile, Alabama Prepared at Aiken, Lawrenceville Edward loseph Cecarelli 64 Hawkins Street Derby, Connecticut Prepared at Derby High School James Francis Corroon, Jr. 268 South Long Beach Avenue Freeport, New York Prepared at Canterbury Thomas Balfe DeMott Hope Ranch Santa Barbara, California Prepared at Laguna Blanco School, Taft Activities: Football, Track Albert Blake Dick. Ill 1050 North Greenbay Road Lake Forest, Illinois Prepared at Hotchkiss Activities: Hockey Freeman Thomas Eagleson, Jr. 152 North Drexel Avenue Columbus, Ohio Prepared at Columbus Academy, Hill John Warren Fenno Lenox, Massachusetts Prepared at St. Paul ' s School, Brooks Activities: Track John Ridley Finch 46 East 47th Street New York City Prepared at Buckley, Andover William Flinn, II 5558 Aylesboro Avenue Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Prepared at Hotchkiss, Avon Activities: Football, Baseball David Allan Gossweiler 64 South Maple Avenue East Orange, New Jersey Prepared at East Orange High School Activities: Political Union Roswell Gray Ham, Jr. Mount Holyoke College South Hadley, Massachusetts Prepared at Hotchkiss, Roxbury Activities: Swimming, Dramat John Crull Herman, III Greenwood Dauphin R. D., Pennsylvania Prepared at Valley Forge Military Academy, Salisbury Activities: Swimming Walter Robinson Howell, Jr. 311 Sound Beach Avenue Old Greenwich, Connecticut Prepared at Exeter John Avery Ingersoll, Jr. 1109 Prospect Avenue Hartford, Connecticut Prepared at Wassookeag School, Andover, Cheshire Henry Keyes Jeck 12 Ray field Place Westport, Connecticut Prepared at Townsend Harris High School, Staples High School Howard Bobbins Johnson 326 Shelton Avenue Now Haven, Connecticut Prepared at New Haven High School, Mercersburg Activities: Swimming (Captain) -402- Richard Marvin-Clarke Johnson 450 Riverside Drive New York City Prepared at Trinity Richard Carlisle Kelly LoUe Street Litchfield, Connecticut Prepared at Mercersburg Activities: Swimming Frank Vincent Kreske 95 Gilbert Street New Haven, Connecticut Prepared at West Haven High School Activities: Football, Baseball William Hurley Lightner, II 506 Summit Avenue St. Paul, Minnesota Prepared at St- Paul Academy Edgar Lockwood, Ir. Round Hill Road Greenwich, Connecticut Prepared at Hotchkiss Activities: Glee Club lohn Francis Lott 1411 Inverness Avenue Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Prepared at Shady Side Academy Activities: Soccer Edwin Warren MacWilliam Skiff Street North Haven, Connecticut Prepared at New Haven High School Frederic Price Merrels 179 Kenyon Street Hartford, Connecticut Prepared at Kingswood Activities: Football, Baseball Richard Sellwood Mershon 1730 East Superior Street Duluth, Minnesota Prepared at Taft Activities: Intramural Football Frederick Wilier Meyer, Jr. Capiz, Capiz, Philippine Islands Prepared at Capiz High School, Manila Central High School, William Horlick High School Activities: Crew (coxswain). Undergraduate Medical Club Donald Marvin Munding 327 Selye Terrace Rochester, New York Prepared at Aquinas Institute, Mercersburg John Paul Murphy 1003 Prospect Avenue Janesville, Wisconsin Prepared at Janesville High School Walter Edwin Newcomb, Jr. 19213 Shelbourne Road Shaker Heights, Ohio Prepared at University School Activities: Soccer; Intramural Bowling, Squash; Community Council Robert Day Parsons Irvine Hill Farm Granville, Ohio Prepared at Western Reserve, Choate Activities Swimming Lyman Colt Peck R. R. No. 2 Lebanon, Ohio Prepared at Lebanon High School Edwin Horace Pickus 596 Third Avenue West Haven, Connecticut Prepared at West Haven High School Horace Martin Poynter, Jr. 6 School Street Andover, Massachusetts Prepared at Andover Activities: Swimming, Lacrosse Sidney Hollis Hadner 293 Walnut Street Holyoke, Massachusetts Prepared at Worcester Activities: Community Council Frederick William Schueler, Jr. 20 Maple Avenue Bethel, Connecticut Prepared at Danbury High School William Carson Schwab P. O. Box 2751 Tucson, Arizona Prepared at Pomfret John Markell, Jr. 10 Grade Square New York City Prepared at Gilman Malcolm Van Dyke Martin 163 East 71st Street New York City Prepared at South Kent High School Activities: Hockey Robert John O ' Neill 42 First Avenue East Haven, Connecticut Prepared at New Haven High School, Collegiate Prep, Milford Alfred Theodore Parrella 231 Forbes Avenue New Haven, Connecticut Prepared at New Haven High School James Thomas Shea 8 Walnut Street Nanticoke, Pennsylvania Prepared at Andover Albert Irving Sheppard 291 Lenox Street New Haven, Connecticut Prepared at Branford High School, New Haven High School -403- Douglas MacKenzie Smith 401 Sth Avenue Belmar, New Jersey Prepared at Asbury Park High School, Mercersburg Robert Downs Smith Congress Street Fairchild, Connecticut Prepared at Roger Ludlowe High School, Canterbury John Alden Talbot, Jr. Greenbrier North Street Greenwich, Connecticut Prepared at Hill, Thacher Activities: Glee Club Nicholas Gracian Ward Thome 815 Whitney Avenue New Haven, Connecticut Prepared at Eaglebrook, Avon Robert Stevenson Tolles 227 Elm Street West Haven, Connecticut Prepared at ■ Vest Haven High School Charles Hugh Toomey 105 Nicholson Avenue Lakewood, Ohio Prepared at University School Edward Joseph Walcek 218 Myrtle Street Shelton, Connecticut Prepared at Shelton High School Alfred James Washburn North Main Street Gloversville, New York Prepared at Mercersbur g Activities: Intramural Wrestling, Crew Thomas Hamer Watkins, II 7040 Hampden Lane Bethesda, Maryland Prepared at Choote Gilbert Lorin Watson. II 700 Ardsley Road Winnetka, Illinois Prepared at North Shore Country Day, Hill Activities: Boxing, Glee Club Harry James Wright Cliff Place Pelham Manor, New York Prepared at Deerfield Activities: Glee Club, Freshman Octet, Intramural Basketball John Miles Zucker P. O. Box 53 Riverdale, Maryland Prepared at St. Alban ' s ADVERTISEMENTS RANDOM PHOTOGRAPHS INDEX Every student ought to patronize those tradesmen who patronize their annual register in preference to those who fill their poc}{ets with students ' ' custom and yet refuse to advertise in College Publications ' ' TALE BAHKER, 1870 Formal Day and Evening IVear from our New Department for Young Men Styled and tailored to Tripier standards of correctncsR, individuality and c|iiality JTiGURE ON THE I. E F T : Tliis cutawav coat and waistcoat, correct tor every formal day dress occasion, is ot Oxford Grey Cheviot, 45 The separate grey waistcoat is a new backless model with style features that add to its comfort and appearance, 10. Also comes in white linen, io. Trousers in anew medium striped grey worsted, ! 5 FIGURE IN UPPER CENTER: Evening coat and trousers in midnight blue em- bodying the style features originated by leading tailors, 45. Backless evening waistcoat of white pique, 6 FIGURE ON THE RIGHT: Double-breasted dinner jacket and trousers styled to give the younger man a garment of ease and comfort for informal evening dress for the club, theatre, or any other informal occa- sion, 45. Midnight blue, backless ribbed silk evening waistcoat, 7.50 The shirts and ties illustrated are the latest styles in quiet good taste, all of depend- able quality and are to be found in our furnishing department on the main floor. Shirts 3 to 5. Evening ties from i.Ties for formal day wear, 81.50 to 50 vtLa i«len Also Forinal and Infoi ' tual Attire tailored for lis by H i f K e ' - f K k E M A N - 75 to - iio F-R-TRIPLER ' CO- Madison Avenue at 46 Street ■ Neiv York II ■ .•: , Suits for University Men from our New Department for Young Men Styled ana lailorecl to Tripler standaras of correctness, inoiviciuality and c|uality PiGURE ON THE LEFT: Singlc-breasted suit of bird ' s-eye Slietland. Three-button coat of soft construction allowing for ease and comfort in the shoulders and through- out the body. Pleated trousers, worn with belt or suspenders. In many exclusive patterns and colorings, 42 FIGURE IN THE CENTER: Important details are the length of the coat and the low close fit at the collar and the ease across the shoulder and chest. The correct suit tor town, business and day dress. The material is an excellent quality of flannel that will hold its shape and give good ser- vice; it is to be had in a variety of specially woven patterns, 42 Also Suits tailored for us ' 55 f ' FIGURE ON THE RIGHT: This model is styled on easier lines, yet the detail ot cut gives the suit every important stvle feature required by the younger man. The material is of a good quality worsted Saxony, and is to be had in a variety ot exclusive patterns and colorings, 48 accessories: The shirt is a new style cross stripe bosom at 2.75. The button- down collar shirt is of Oxford cloth, our popular Arden style, ®2 .75.The ties are of a heavier quality rep silk that are woven exclusively tor us in the popular colorings preferred bv university men and sports- men, i.75.The hose are imported light weight wool to be had in an extensive variety of new patterns, • 1.50 hy H I C K K ' - F R E K MA N IOO Outfitters to Gentlenieu ■ Est cihli shed 1SS6 F III R. TRIPLER M CO JJLne Jy ance The Shelton has been New York Headquarters for college men and women for years . . . and there ' s a reason. The Shelton provides club facilities, without dues. You can relax in the solarium or the library, work-out in the gym, use the game room, and take a dip in the famous Shelton pool, all these features without any charge other than that for your pleasant room. The Shelton ' s unique loca- tion — on the edge of the Grand Central Zone — makes it a conven- ient point for all of New York ' s most interesting places. A well known orchestra plays nightly in the Shelton Corner for dinner and supper dancing. DAILY RATES Single from $2.50 ro $5 00 Double from $4.50 to $10.00 SHEUON HOTEL LEXINGTON AVENUE at 49th STREET, NEW YORK IV ESTABLISHED 1818 Mm ' 5 ;urm5hing5,Hat5 J)hot5 MADISON AVENUE COR. FORTY-FOURTH STREET NEW YORK Our New Department For Young Men Speci ilizi-s in Clothrs and Furnishinys for Undergraduates at School Sc College at reasonable prices Suits, $42 to $47 Odd Jackets, Flannels, Shirts Furnishings, etc. at Proportionate Prices BRANCHES NEW YORK: ONE WALL ITREIT BOSTON: NEWBURT COR. BERKELEY STREET Yes, we have No Bananas. BUT WE DO Deliver your Newspaper Replenish your Firewood Handle your Luggage Frame your Diploma Tutor your Wearied Brain Provide other equally Indispensable Services EFFICIENTLY ECONOMICALLY CONVENIENTLY Accommodations, Banner, Blotter, Cop S Gown, Xmas Calendar, Xmos Card, Desk Calendar, Diploma Framing, Distributing, Eli Book, Index, Magazine, Newspaper, N. Y. Times, N. Y. Sun, Herald Tribune, Outlines, Pipe, Print, Stationery, Student Food Supply Service, Trans- fer, Tutoring, Wood, Yale Directory, Student Laundry, Student Suit Pressing and Yale Banner. THE ASSOCIATED STUDENT AGENCIES 111! CHAPEL STREET II GUARANTEE SHIRTS LAUNDERED EXCLUSIVELY BY MONARCH 1. Will last longer than a year 2. Missing buttons replaced 3. Smooth-edged collars 4. Correct amount ol sizing 5. Money back if not satisfied MONARCH LAUNDRY BRANCH: 260 YORK STREET (Discount for cash and carry) I VI MONARCH Services Laundering Pound or piece rate. Mending, buttons replaced, socks darned Dry Cleaning Individual attention cleaning and pressing. No extra charge for minor repairs Moth-Proof Storage Garments, rugs, blankets, drapes insured and protected in fire-proof and theft-proof vaults Rug Shampooing Grit, smudge and moth larvae removed. Nap revived and colors brightened Blanket Laundering Gently washed and fluffed by hand brushing. No fading, shrinking nor running of colors PILLOWS SANITIZED, HAT CLEANING, LEATHER JACKETS AND GLOVES CLEANED AND REPAIRED GUARANTEE The quality of work, price and service must please or you will not be asked to pay. MONARCH LAUNDRY BRANCH OFHCE: 260 YORK STREET Ten Percent Discount for Cash and Carry II YOUR OWN SPORT CRUISER Makes J acations More Fun H ' oii don ' t have to be a plutocrat (ir io is ) to enjoy cruising and sport fishing these days. The new Elcoette 30. for instance, can be maintained and run at an annual cost that amounts to less than $1.00 per day ! This trim sport cruiser (pictured here) is inexpensive, fast and seaworthy ... a perfect boat for summer fun. She boasts an extra- large cockpit, 13 9 long, and a roomy cabin forward that sleeps two com- fortably and contains complete galley and lavatory. Any or all of Klco ' s fa- mous Angler sport fishing gear can be installed. Priced from $2,850. - 1939 ELCO FLEET - Elcoette 30 Cruisette 34 Cruisette 44 Marinette 30 Cruisette 39 Motor Yacht 53 Various models are available on all the above lengths Cruise while you pay — on Elco ' s liberal Deferred Payment Plan See the new Elcos at Port Elco or write for new 1939 catalogs Address inquiries to: wZ ' PORT ELCO THE ELCO WORKS, BAYONNE, N. J. 247 Park Ave. (at 46th St.) N. ) ' . C. Office and Warehouse 33 OLIVE STREET Phone: 8-3181 — University Movers for 20 Years — COMPLETE AUTO SERVICE 24 HOUR SERVICE DeROSE GARAGE STORAGE— PERMANENT TRANSIENT PHONE 7-1445 CROWN AND HIGH STREETS NEW HAVEN, CONN. VIII INDIVIDUAL! CERTAIN HOTELS TAKE PRIDE IN THEIR LOCATION . SOME CAN BOAST OF THEIR SELECT CLIENTELE . . OTHERS MAKE A POINT OF THE CHARM AND SPACIOUSNESS OF THEIR ROOMS . . OR THEIR MAGNIFI CENT PA RK VIEWS PERHAPS HOTEL PIERRE IS NOTED FOR ITS SUPREMACY BECAUSE IT COMBINES All. THESE FEATURES INTO A PLEASANT, HARMONIOUS SETTING. The Pierre Roo is open for dinner and supper dancing, €otd Usie ixe FIFTH AVENUE AT bist STHEET, NEW YOBK EDWARD H. CRANDALL PRESIDENT IX STORAGE DELIVERY CLEANING WASHING GREASING POLISHING We give the most for the money!! Y. M . GARAGE 400 CROWN STREET Abraham Rosenfeld — Manager SWING THE YOUR PARTNER ROSENBAUM TUTORING Into Manhattan ' s Swank, SCHOOL All-Night Rendezvous ♦ • Thirty-fourth Year HEAVENLY FOOD $. AT UNEARTHLY HOURS We Refer You To Any Upperclassman I RESTAURANT lONOCHAMPS Madison Ave. at 59th St. ABEL G. CUGELL, 19I2S— Director THE SMEDLEY COMPANY MOVING PACKING -- STORAGE Serving Yale University Since 18G0 Phone: 5-6 181 JAMES J. McDonnell IMPORTER AND ROASTER ol the Finest Coffee Approved and served at Yale by The Colleges, Dining Halls, Fraternities and Clubs 139 MEADOW STREET NEW HAVEN - CONN. XI Patronize our Advertisers u J. F. RIDDELL OIL COMPANY All AMATO SHOE REBUILDING SHOP 19 BROADWAY Tel. 5-3339 We Call For and Deliver Shoes 20 Years Service at Yale LAWLER ' S GARAGE STUDENT ' S CAR STORAGE 250 CROWN STREET Phone: INdependence 3-1200 J. I. O ' ROURKE, Inc. READY MIXED CONCRETE SAND GRAVEL :-: BROKEN STONE Plant ROOSEVELT AVENUE JANET PLACE FLUSfflNG, N. Y. Xlll DIRECTLY FACING THE PARK New York ' s only truly Continental hotel featuring . . . diplomatic service . . . good food . . . sensible prices Home of the world-famous RESTAURANT DE LA PAIX CAFE DE LA PAIX AROUND THE WORLD BAR RUMPELMAYERS HOTEL ST. MORITZ 50 Central Park South Personal Direction of S. Gregory Taylor XIV Country Life Press Corporation GARDEN CITY, NEW YORK TELEPHONE GARDEN CITY 800 PRINTERS BOOK MANUFACTURERS NEW YORK OFFICE • 450 SEVENTH AVENUE TELEPHONE LA ckawanna 4-(5s-21 DIRECT LINE; NEW YORK TO GARDEN CITY Vigilant 1-0433 XV Handsome Dan is a Hot Dog Now! He bought his . . . Kerry-Keith Suits Manhattan Shirts Lee Water Bloc Hats Interwoven Sox at LONG ' S, Inc. 61 Church St., New Haven ORIENT A Cultured Pearls are irresislibly beautiful — lustrous and PERMANENTLY GUARANTEED S. H. KIRBY SONS, Inc. NEW HAVEN, CONN. LiiiEmi ' iiii ii PORTABLE AUTOMATIC PHONOGRAPH — RADIO TURNOVER RECORD PLAYS 8 RECORDS — - „ _ , ,.„-..0 VOLTS, AMERICAN AND EUROPEAN BROADCAST BANDS; TUNING EYE; BUIIT-IN AERIAL, DYNAMIC SPEAKER LIIKKItTV 3irsir SHOPS XVI LEADERSHIP In working with the BANNER Staff for the past year, it has been our aim to help produce an annual which is the leader in its class. We hope that we have been successful to the end that, year after year, the advice of each retiring BANNER Staff will be REPEAT WITH LOTZ Engravers and Designers of Nearly 100 Year Books Annually PHOTO £ncRftvinc COmPftHY ll-rti ond CHERRY STR€€TS PHILflDELPHIfl Makers of Cnqravinqs in this Publication xvu NATE LEVETT SINCLAIR STATION York and Crown Street —ONLY PLACE IN TOWN- Free Grease Job With Every $1.00 Wash Job Also Wash. Grease and Simonize $3.85 XVIII CHIDNOFF OFFICIAL PHOTOGRAPHER for the 1939 YALE BANNER CHIDNOFF STUDIO 550 Fifth Avenue New York MX A Cross Section of what makes a well-groomed man can be found in the selection of Fine Custom-Fabric Clothing at Isenberg Brothers The Isenberg Brothers Label Definitely Identifies the Weil-Dressed Man. ISENBERG BROTHERS 1086 CHAPEL STREET Yale art museum It ' s just like having a personal valet! You can rely on WHITEY CLEANERS — PRESSERS — TAILORS 188 YORK STREET (at Chapel) On the Campus since 1912 FINE QUALITY FOOTWEAR IMPORTED and DOMESTIC Specially Made For This Establishment iarrie, Htb. 260 York Street Cambridge New Haven Princeton Gentlemen ' s Tailors and Furnishers 262 York Street 45 Palmer Square West New Haven Princeton 82 Mt. Auburn Street 341 Madison Avenue Cor. Dunster Street Cor. 44th Street Cambridge New York JERRY CAPPIELLO Private Tailor Domestic and Imported Woolens All Work Custom Tailored 245 FRANKLIN ST. Phone 55729 XX Compliments of Ydle Alumni Magazine XXI CLEANING PRESSING REPAIRING ALTERING REWEAVING CHAMOIS ELBOWS ROSEY ' S TAILORS ESTAB. 1890 86 WALL STREET Opp. Van Sheff RACCOON COATS, ETC. We offer the most reasonable cleaning and pressing contracts HOUSE FOUNDED 1879 5 GAMIBILE DEPARTMENT STORE NEW HAVEN, CONN. Chapel, Gregson and Center Streets ROGERS PEET CLOTHING EXCLUSIVE ACCESSORIES ' a 1048 CHAPEL STREET PRINCETON NEW HAVEN XXII JTor forty-one years the name Langrock has meant to Yale Men the store where gentlemen could acquire complete ward- robes of clothing and furnishings that would reflect the true character of correct attire. It is with sincere feeling that we acknowl- edge the consideration given to our service in the past and pledge ourselves to renewed efforts along the same lines in the future. ELM STREET AT YALE CAMPUS Other stores at PRINCETON BROWN ANDOVER WILLIAMS PENN NEW YORK CITY Salitz Bros., Inc. 1 341 F St., Washington, D. C. XXIII ETCHINGS PICTURES for that Lasting Gift iMeri,;tn ' s AKT $H€P 294 YORK STREET i,i tSi II ' fr-iirrrni nARK;ENINi; skv imcmNDo XXIV LOOMIS TEMPLE OF MUSIC 837-839 CHAPEL STREET ESTABLISHED 1865 STEINWAY PIANOS RADIOS AND RADIO PHONOGRAPHS R. C. A. VICTOR PHILCO MAGNA VOX CAPEHART EMERSON STROMBERG-CARLSON RECORDS R C, A VICTOR BRUNSWICK COLUMBIA Largest Stock of Records in Connecticut RECORDS MAILED AROUND THE CORNER OR AROUND THE WORLD Everything in Music Patronize our Advertisers XXV — LABOR ' S PROBLEMS — Will Be Settled at the Lawyer s DESK TODAY lawyers are advising clients . . . . . . On National Labor Relations Act Questions . . . On Wages and Hours Questions . . . On Railway Pension Questions TOMORROW. . . . . . Social Security Questions must be answered . . . Other Social Legislation will arise These questions suggest the present and future need for — UNITED STATES SUPREME COURT REPORTS LAWYERS ' EOITION THE POPULAR SET SINCE 1882 Write US to tell you about the many exclusive service features that make Law. Ed. the outstanding set in the field THE LAWYERS CO-OPERATIVE PUBLISHING COMPANY Rochester, New York XXVI Acknowledgment (T he editors wish to express their thanks to the many contributors to the 1939 YALE BANNER, without whose aid its publication would have been im- possible — in particular to President Seymour, Messrs. Farmer, Neale, Barnett, and the coaches, and the authors of the college articles. They also wish to thank Mr. R. C. Carroll for his timely advice; Mr. A. H. Miner for his excellent drawings; Mr. A. J. Fisher of the Country Life Press Corporation for his invaluable assist- ance and personal enthusiasm; Mr. H. C. Firth of the Lots Photo Engraving Com- pany for his aid with engravings; Pach Brothers, the Chidnoff Studios, and the Student Picture Agency for their photographs. The photographic contributions of the Tale Alumm Magazine, the Class Secretaries Bureau, and the Tale Daily Hews have proved especially valuable. To the innumerable individuals who have contributed their time and energy in making the informal photographs which appear throughout this edition, the editors wish to extend their appreciation, in particular to R. P. Arms, S. C. Carroll, C. Clark, IV, J. S. Copley, M. A. Gunst, Jr., D. E. Hogan, Jr., C. N. Hoyt, B. F. McCamey, Jr., T. B. Morison, J. C. O ' Keeffe, W. R. Reynolds, Jr., K. H. Roberts, C. T. Roelke, B. von Wettberg, C. W. Watson, and A. W. Wells. XXVII Index Administration Administration, officers of Advertising Alpha Chi Sigma . Alpha Sigma Phi . Alumni Board . Asheville School Club Athletics .... Aurelian .... Band BANNER, The Yale . Baseball .... Baseball, Freshman Basketball .... Basketball, Freshman . Berkeley College Berzelius .... Beta Theta Pi . . . Book and Snake Boxing Boxing, Freshman . Branford College . Budget Drive . Calhoun College . Cannon and Castle Canterbury School Club Cheer Leaders . Cheshire Academy Club Chi Delta Theta Chi Psi . . . Choir . . . Church of Christ Clubs . . . Colleges Collegians . Contents, Table of Corinthian Yacht Club Corporation Crew University Junior Varsity 150-Pound . . Freshman Freshman 150-Pound Cross Country Cross Country, Freshman Cup Men . Davenport College Dean ' s Conference Group Debating Association Delta Kappa Epsilon . Dramatic Association Dwight Hall .... Elihu 25 29 I 111 70 28 151 244 64 129 92 272 275 264 267 172 52 72 54 292 293 180 33 188 140 152 247 153 103 74 112 113 143 171 130 5 144 28 280 284 283 285 286 290 291 146 196 34 120 76 124 114 56 Fence Club Fencnng Fencing, Freshman Football University Records Junior Varsity 150-Pound Freshman Foreword Fraternities. Freshman Biographies (m Fresh: only) Freshman Executive Council Freshman Intramural Athleti H. Neale, Jr. . . . Freshman Intramural Champions Football . Touch Football Basketball Bowling . Squash Swimming Freshman Promenade Freshman Weekly, The Freshman Year, Officers of Glee Club Glee Club, Freshman . Golf Golf, Freshman .... Groton School Club Hill School Club .... Hockey Hockey, Freshman Honors Horace Mann School Club Hotchkiss School Club Iktinos Intercollege Athletics by W Jr IntercoUege Athletic Champions Football Touch Football . Basketball ... Bowling Fencing Hockey Squash Swimming . . , . Wrestling Baseball . . . Crew Golf Tennis IntercoUege Athletic Council Interfraternity Council Edi by ' W. Neale, 78 294 295 252 258 4 67 336 335 326 327 328 329 330 330 331 41 109 334 126 128 306 307 154 1.55 268 271 43 158 156 141 312 313 314 315 316 317 318 319 320 321 322 323 324 325 312 68 XXVIII Index (continued) Jonathan Edwards College 204 Junior Promenade 38 Kingswood School Club 159 Lacrosse 308 Lacrosse, Freshman 309 Lak« Forest Academy Club 160 Lawrenceville School Club 161 Literary Magazine, The Yale ... 96 Mercersburg School Club 162 Mohicans 147 Mory ' s Association 150 Heii ' s, The Yale 100 Organizations 91 Perry, Newton Band 131 Phi Beta Kappa 44 Pierson College 212 Political Union 122 Polo, Indoor 296 Polo, Indoor, Freshman 297 Pomtret School Club 163 Portsmouth Priory School Club .... 164 Presidents Committee 6Q Pundits 149 Record, The Yale 104 Regatta Committee 40 Reserve Officers Training Corps Army 136 Navy 132 Rifle 298 Rifle, Freshman 299 Saint Anthony Hall 82 Saint Elmo Hall 84 Saint George ' s School Club 165 St. Louis Country Day School Club 166 Saint Mark ' s School Club 167 Saint Paul Academy Club 168 Saint Thomas More Club 118 Saybrook College 220 Scholarship Honors School of Engineering 49 Sheffield Scientific School .... 49 Yale College 48 Scientific Magazine, The Yale .... 106 Scroll and Key 58 Senior Class Class Council 30 Class Day Exercises 31 Triennial Committee 32 Senior Promenade 36 Senior Societies 51 Sheffield Student Council 35 Sigma Xi 46 Skull and Bones 60 Soccer 288 Soccer, Freshman 289 Squash 300 Squash, Freshman 301 Swimming 302 Swimming, Freshman 303 Tau Beta Pi 47 Tennis 310 Tennis, Freshman 311 Timothy Dwight College 228 Torch 65 Track 276 Track, Freshman 279 Trumbull College 236 Undergraduate Athletic Association 249 University School Club 169 Vernon Hall 86 View Section 8 Vif 108 Whiffenpoofs 148 Wolfs Head 62 Wrestling 304 Wrestling, Freshman 305 Y Men in College Major 250 Minor 251 Year m Athletics, The, by Malcolm Farmer 246 York Hall 88 ZetaPsi 80 XXIX L HI


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