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

 - Class of 1940

Page 1 of 331

 

Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT) online collection, 1940 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 331 of the 1940 volume:

THE YALE BANNER 1 940 E I A 1 1 2 . K i , V I , A V, W I , , ,,,,, 1 , . , , In ,, ,3,:,gl.'vp-v,,,,1 A A: ,ft V A ,,v..,,Vv,, , i.,,. 6 ,iw .i,c,,.,:f E, H IHI YHH HHNNIH FCDLINIDEID 1841 . I Af.- - .L 11 I X ft 'nl -F-AlgL,Ef2fbEs-J,' ' ' - f . 4' 'f:f',f, 1 K-ix 1,1 1 Q lx I Iggy! Legg: ,.:l,fi,7j :.., -' L, ' IE iQ1V' j3'l7'1fj4' :fr ' ' 1 ...W ju ' . f,, 11I,gf,gm 5 . , ,F fm' 5 ,,- ,f , fTt-'-- W H ' 'i ' g JL. iff! if X - fvilifyfjlffew ' ' 'if P' inf! M7 : 'rw' . il- 4-- u. f wif , serif. 4,3 QE ' '- CHQ: .W my WEL gf? ,gffff : I ' -Kg -!f rI , 1 fx ' ' ' 5 Ia' Em 1 f . -. 11 , -, , ,: : :AI -f ,-.ff, 2 -. ' '- -T 2 EQ!! -il gIA.:qW-Qm1Q '. ' I' ' ll, , :W 14,21 . .All . N, I '- ' L-i A . 5 - W fe l- -I- L-'Q ,WLM -4' I 4.42, -1 :W --'..... ' gi '54 1555? : QM' .. -.- ff - f. - L -if ' 5:-,-ru -- 1, F -R --'-H - 1.1 . ,.--, Q 7 --A fr., - . f-v 12 - ' -Ugg'- 1-21-95545 L :L l QW -if R L VOLUME XCIX PUBLISHED FOR YALE UNIVERSITY NEW HAVEN 0 CONNECTICUT To the memory of Edward Stephen Harkness, whose imag- ination and generosity have enriched our lives, do we gratefully dedicate this ninety-ninth volume. .4 Y. wa, if 56 1 T5 -., W5 vw Y f CQ 4 , I W- sw QM- . :ui 54 4 '1- Msw 1-:-v N.: . - I J. ' ,M qv: ? , xy., ., 10. if 3, ,J S' x Y ' -, ' v 'Q ,. ff f , . s u RC . fx' . ,. . . I -'v14..- f L' Qi 5? -4 Y enwgff, . Xuffr- . x. fl L, . -,J ft X . ..'4 , ' h. Q' . wx - M 1 , v-' , L -. - ,. 1- . 5 , 1.24 - K 'K' V .,,4.h -Q.. , .M- 4 4 '.' .' w R, ,. X 5- J, Aw I 523 . if-3 Y H 2 3353 32 iii -W, Wm ,. ,M E g, M 5' s-'wff-'17 - ,- . w, 'y fi! if 23 ,, sf mi 5 . ,v ww-fl-wr:-?M',4'4 . , ' A gi n 5 . , 5 ' ., v 4, ,iw f -f - '- M Q, M --'- 'V ' 'f1 A .ff if X ' Y 1.,.3 nw? :iii 2 4 n M '- Vx Wm H..- ,N xy ' L . V Q P Xu i, NE N '45 ,V Q. f Q' .bffwv fi ' wr' Q ,X '. W ,.,., i v 'X -: f .W tl. 'N ..f .T 1 .C . 5 - X xii' - Mm -, UW V . ww mf . A!-,f ,. n' tw 'll ' 4 'N ' ' ' oh . vu - ' , aw. E T ,L . . -f. f Ki. ' ' 'F .g Q- Us ul NA, a . .I . , , , v i. 'VO .gn . v' f ,QF O.. f' V ' 0' ' ' ' ', .' .f V' is D- S ',' 'Q' , - .1 ' .- A,,.,.Q.' . .. .. , J n - 8 Q, 'fl 'a I'. J J ' . 50 K.,jd0 u , , , -0. ,- o,. ,, ,Q f.- , K U i 'Q it ' . .Cn ns - le! ' 5 .xv Jr' x 1' 1 ' ' 1 . . A 5 1' ..g- 'Vi 'L in 9 .wf'5 . 5 -' 5 ' Q ' ' ' . f ' ' ' , n ' A ' n. S 5 . V S 'Q -B - g Q N V J ',: 4, gg' Ji Wu 'H iw 3 :M Q .Ui-. ' . ,,-',...vfA Aw -2.5 'I I si KP -,M ,QR -- . b ,A , , . 8 1 Q Ag-qv, r W, .- K-Iibv J., . ' tk: dw W .rl if 'AQ' fiellr. .ff K: igaii If :iff-f :gr,1l kA1 .sg ov wwf., , 'gf'-fsvlf..-.rr . - 2-gy - H s ' l's':Q-'lil' FZ my f ' 4 . . , ', bpxzv fw . ',.A Qeafb,, ' K . fytlfgx 'vt-'ff--1,1 QQ' Y'-3' 2 sf,z'w'2ii.. xv Q2 - fi - v. . ali - -M. . 1 ,f.a.',.zf5figi gvgbt 617539,-1' V- mr-mr-!n'.'r wfi-.. t-.. 1-' , ' f fy- .Bl-'Q 45 .4 -:,....-.w 9 7 !'AEF' '51 fl - :sl -' R ' '11 -:nav-'v 'wi '- ? 2','Y'8 . 17' T-in ri if Inu X ip., ,ll-xv. ss' an 'v 1 5 ,af ',f,.:, A . 5 L .0 3-4-MAJ bug -w3,-tix. 1520.9 ' eff,-1-f o'K. 028 far- 1 Y, f S r 'Q Mal 2+-.gg -,M-.....,......., . ....... ...,.,. ,.,,,.,,,.,. , ,. ...,.-N . . - a P s luqliff w .v-.- , 13,2 weigh 55: MM im :V vilmwiff Jia Y s W, . .JR I ,Q i 109 'ull ww Wm ,ha ww ye' M MP' A sf Qi! M 'unsafe' Qflx wx +4 4 f 'fx f ff! 3, A We ff' vw ax ,riff Q A xv ma.,-1 if 3 1 ff W '4 90 1 if if 4 fa 1 V Q 56s WW! A QW vw?-4 ffqwm, ,f f f N11 my Q, 3.,9 y bility 1. ' - V gl, 4- I. f ' . v 1 2 . 9 I rf? PLVX ET V ERITAS U' Iiuuuuu Iguuum x U M gy XX ' HnMsNus1HH11nN PRESIDENT SEYMOUR o one can define Yale and it is very difhcult to describe her. The outward Yale that nu see and in which you work and play is only partg yet it is much more than a mere shell lclosing the inner Yale, it is necessary as giving ngible form and expression to a spiritual sence. It was thus that St. Augustine thought 'the Church. We must be grateful therefore to the BANNER hich gives far broader service than providing mere catalogue of persons, places, and activi- :s. By its picture of the Yale scene in its varied pects, it sets forth the life of the students as idergraduate members of the Yale family. Its 'inted pages furnish symbols of the expression 'Yale spirit. What is in the hearts and minds 'Yale men cannot be set forth. But the inter- 'etation of the spirit appears in these symbols id will be recognized at once by -every Yale an. As you leave Yale and join the family -of umni you yourselves will be the interpreters of ale to the outside world. When in the future mu turn over the pages of the BANNER, they will rve as 'fstimulants to rerniniscencef' renew the es binding you to the Yale of the past, holding Jur interest in the Yale of the future. These ages portray a life that goes on from generation v generation, from which has sprung the in- ience of Yale and nourished loyalty upon the The President's Message part of her alumni. Upon that loyalty we who serve the University in New Haven must de- pend. Of far greater importance than the material support of the alumni is their active understanding of Yale and their interest in Yale whether critical or appreciative. Faculty, stu- dents, alumni, all three are merged in the University family, responding to the outward symbols of Yale life, held together by the inner spirit. CHARLES SEYMOUR From his Woodbridge retreat x . I 9 Corporation CHARLES SEYMOUR, Ph.D., Litt.D., LL.D., President FELLOWS HIS EXCELLENCY THE GOVERNOR OF CONNECTI- REEVE SCHLEY, LL.B., M.A. CUT' ex who THOMAS DAY THACHER, LL.D. HIS HONOR THE LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR OF CON- REV. ARTHUR HOWE BRADFORD, DD. NECTICUT, ex qjiezo B LL D EDWARD LARNED RYERSON, JR., M.A. N , . . MORTIMER ORTON UCKNER ROBERT ALPHONSO TAFT, LL.B., M.A. REV' HENRY SLOANE COFFIN' DD LLP' RT. REV. HENRY KNOX SHERRILL, D.D., LL.D FRED TOWSLEY MURPHY, M.D., M.A. GEORGE VANSANTVOORD LII-LD. EDWARD BELDEN GREENE, MA- DEAN GOODERHAM ACHESON, LL.B., M.A. THOMAS WALTER SWAN, LL.B., M.A. FREDERICK TRUBEE DAVISON, LL.D. JAMES LEE LOOMIS, LL.D. WILMARTH SHELDON LEWIS, M.A. Alumni Board OFFICERS JOHN MARSHALL HOLOOMBE, JR., 'I I, Hartford, Conn. Chairman JAMES B. GRANT, '09, Denver, Colo. First Vice Chairman JOHN B. DEMPSEY, ,II, Cleveland, Ohio Second Vice Chairman HARVEY H. BUNDY, 707, Boston, Mass. Secretagw GEORGE D. VAILL, '3 5, New Haven, Conn. Executive Secretary EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE GEORGE T. ADEE, '95, New York City E. KENDALL MORSE, '09, Plainfield MITCHELL S. LITTLE, '07, Hartford MORTON C. TREADWAY, '10, Bristol CHESTER T. NEAL, '05, Springiield CLIFFORD R. WRIGHT, '11, Cincinnati CLIFFORD R. BEARDSLEY, 'O5S., New York City R. MAYO CRAWFORD, 'I 5S., New Haven W. MCCORMICK BLAIR, '07, Chicago CHARLES W. GAMBLE, '20, Philadelphia HARVEY H. BUNDY, ,OQ, Boston WALTER G. PRESTON, JR., '2 5, New York City Ex ojicio GILBERT KINNEY, '05 EDWARD J. DIMOOK, 'II 20 Officers Of Administration CHARLES SEYMOUR, Ph.D., Litt.D., LL.D. President EDGAR STEPHENSON FURNISS, Ph.D., LL.D. Provost CARL ALBERT LOHMANN, M.A. Sm-emo, GEORGE PARMLY DAY, LL.D. Tfmguyef 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. Chairman THE FRESHMAN YEAR NORMAN SIDNEY BUCK, Ph.D. Dean THEODORE BABBITT, LL.B., Ph.D. Assistant Dean YALE COLLEGE WILLIAM CLYDE DEVANE, Ph.D. Dean RICHARD GUSHMAN CARROLL, B.A. Assistant Dean 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. Dean ROSWELL PARKER ANGIER, Ph.D.,ALL.D. Associate Dean SCHOOL OF MEDICINE STANHOPE BAYNE-JONES, M.D. Dean DIVINITY SCHOOLS LUTHER ALLAN WEIGLE, Ph.D., D.D., Litt.D., S.T.D., LL.D. Dean SCHOOL OF LAW ASHBEL GREEN GULLIVER, LL.B., M.A. Dean JOHN FOSTER MECK, JR., LL.B. 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 FRANK DONOVAN, MuS.B. Assistant Dean Associate Treasurer and Comptroller Associate Treasurer Director cy' Alumni Relations Bursar SCHOOL OF FORESTRY SAMUEL JAMES RECORD, M.F., Sc.D. Dean ' SCHOOL OF NURSING EFFIE 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 ART GALLERY THEODORE SIZER, M.A. Director UNIVERSITY OBSERVATORY FRANK SCHLESINGER, Ph.D., SCD. Director 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 CRAVVFORD, Ph.D. Director STUART HOLMES CLEMENT, M.A. Associate Director ofthe Department QF Personnel Stuabu DEPARTMENT OF UNIVERSITY HEALTH ORVILLE FORREST ROGERS, M.D. Director ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION CLARENCE WHITTLESEY MENDELL, Ph.D. Chairman QF the Board ryf Control UNIVERSITY DINING HALLS ALICE MARGARET BOWERS, M.S. Director X Www X Q X WM VVXYX W f ' V .J fxfi XX K! l Ill' 0 nl MV? Ill ' Ill N! f Q! QJQ Y 3 X ' Q -I w Y . X9S4QZSg Liu ax g x X X .- !N! ll l , if K -3 xx' EHMMIHHS REUBEN ANDRUS HOLDEN, IV . Secretagl Class COUHCII REUBEN ANDRUS HOLDEN, IV Class Secretagw JAMES HUMPHREY TORREY Class Treasurer PETER GORDON BRADLEY STILLMAN Berkelfgr DAVID IAN THIERMANN Pierson DAVID MCGREGOR MERSEREAU Branford SNOWDEN TERHUNE HERRICK Saybrook CHARLES JOSEPH KENTLER, JR. Calhoun PETER MCNAIR LINDSAY Timothy Dwight HAROLD HOWE, II Davenport THOMAS FRANKLIN ERIOKSON Trumbull EDWARD F. SWENSON, JR. jonathan Edwards STANLEY LIVINGSTON, JR. Shqf Back Row: Livingston, Erickson, Howe, Stillman, Thiermann, Herrick. Front Row: Swenson, Kentler, Holden, Lindsay, Torrey. 24 CLASS JAMES HUMPHREY TORREY Treasurer Class Day Exercises EDWARD FRANCIS SWENSON, JR. GEORGE SMITH WATSON ROBERT DUNKERSON ORR MOGEOROE BUNDY JOHN CASE NEMIAH RICHARD LEON WILCOX Bundy, Nemiah, Swenson, Wilcox, VVatsOn Chairman Vice-Chairman Class Hixtorian Class Orator 1101 Orator Class Poet 25 Triennial Committee Back Row: Flynn, Schmechel, Burr. Front Row: Torrey, Barnes, Holden. Class Book Committee Rannenberg, Schwab, Robinson, Haff, Platt. 26 Undergraduate Conference Committee Glover, Schmechel, Holden, Erickson Sheffield Student -Council l Back Row: Everest, Rees, Kramer, Rewick, Duncan. Front Row: Thiermann, Watson, Hackett. 27 Back Row: Burr, Bissell, Evans, Kramer, Thiermann, Holden. Front Row: Wallace, Paul, Bolton, Stillman, Swenson, F erriss, Erickson. Senior Promenade Committee PETER GORDON BRADLEY STILLMAN NORMAN STARK PAUL DAVID PLATT FERRISS GEORGE PERKINS BISSELL, JR. ARCHER LEROY BOLTON, JR. FREDERIC MOTTET BURR THOMAS FRANKLIN ERICKSON LAURENCE ROBBINS WALLACE 28 Chairman Floor Manager Treasurer HERBERT WILLIAM EVANS, J HENRY THEODORE KRAMER EDWARD FRANCIS SWENSON, DAVID IAN THIERMANN R J Back Row: Maynard, Burnam, Whiteman, Wickwire, Brewster, Detchon, Mead. Front Row: Dem, Weller, Tighe Cole Huffard. unior Promenade Committee LAURENCE GOTZIAN TIOHE, JR. Chairman GEORGE CHOATE HUFFARD Floor Manager JAMES RICHARD DERN Treasurer KINGMAN BREWSTER, JR. ' JOHN THOMAS MAYNARD CAPERTON BURNAM GEORGE HOUK MEAD, JR. JOHN LESTER HILLS COLE GORDON ANSTICE WELLER ELLIOTT RAY ADETCHON, JR. LYMAN GOODRICH WICKWIRE HAROLD BARTLETT WHITEMAN 29 Back Row: Barnet, Alter, Hall, Spiegel, Stillman, Roth, Glover, Todd. Front Row: Flynn, Orr, Holden, Bundy, Grayson, Howe, Ballard. p Yale University Budget Drive HE nineteenth annual Budget Drive was held in the second week of the college year. Some 170 undergraduates worked each evening until only two undergraduates remained un- seen. In the graduate schools also committees of students were at work. These campaigns, to- gether with the generous contributions of the faculty, put the drive safely over its goal of fi522,000. Thus with a minimum of effort and a maximum of cooperation from the whole body of students and teachers, Yale was able to fulfill in some measure her obligations to charity. The money collected was distributed as fol- lows: S8700 went to Dwight Hall, the under- graduate 'Christian Association, 36000 went to the Yale Hope Mission, which exists for the shelter and remaking of transients in New Haven, 5154000 went to Yale-in-China, whose work, educational and medical, has been made more important than ever by the war in the Far East, 31200 went to the New Haven Com- munity Chest, 3500 to the New Haven Boy's Club Camp, and S400 to the Grenfell Associa- tion. About 3800 went for expenses, and the remainder was held against Hcontingenciesu. For the first time in years the approximate allocations of the Budget funds were released during the Drive. They were not actively pub- licized, however, and after the drive the Budget Committee was attacked for evasion and con- cealment, and Dwight Hall was attacked. for receiving too much money. Evasion was the furthest thing from the committeels intention, and as soon as the alloc-ations were definitely made, they were duly announced. The question of Dwight Hall, whose work appeared to have been strangely misunderstood and little studied by some of those who complained, was referred to a new budget committee, enlarged to include a thoroughly representative group of undergrad- uates. This committee will have complete con- trol over all the Budget's affairs, and its conclu- sions on Dwight Hall and other matters will determine the complexion of future drives. nuwnns l Back Row: Gordon, Camp, Dellenback, Welles, Hauser, Finch, Pease, Givan, Horton, Glover, Holden, Eisenberg, R. H. Clark, Thompson. Third Row: Vinton, Galliher, Caplan, Hellmuth, Schiller, Pogorzelski, Merriell, Lavery, Weissman, MacSporran, Dahl, Edlin, Proctor. Second Row: J. S. Smith, Borden, Boardman, Cummings, Van Slyck, Batten, Hought- eling, Williams, Benson, Brewster, Mackenzie, Brueckel, Duncan, H. M. Clark. Front Row: Furniss, Ryan, Madden, Spiegel, Schmechel, Alter, Bundy, Ewing, Lanman. Phi Beta Kappa The Higher Learning in America in 1940 RGING that philosophical studies must be central in a college curriculum, President Robert Maynard Hutchins of the University of Chicago, called on members ofthe Yale Chapter of Phi Beta Kappa, at the annual banquet on February 26, to renounce the triviality, voca- tionalism, obsolescent information, and the chaotic elective system which characterize high- er education in America. That metaphysics is basic in science, ethics, and politics, and hence should be recognized in the field of education was the theme of the argu- ment advanced by President Hutchins. I am interested in education, in morals, in intellect, and in metaphysics, President Hutch- ins declared. Hl even go so far as to hold that there is a necessary relation among all these things. I am willing to assert that without one We cannot have the others and without the others we cannot have the one with which all of us here are concerned, namely, educationf' Our problems, President Hutchins argued, are moral, intellectual, and spiritual, and will not be resolved by technical skill or scientific data, but rather, by wisdom and goodness. Wisdom and goodness, continued Mr. Hutch- ins, 'care the aims of higher education. How can it be otherwise? How can we consider man's destiny unless we ask what he is? How can we talk about preparing men for life unless we ask what the end of life may be? At the base of edu- cation, as at the base of every human activity, lies metaphysics. Metaphysics plays a double part in higher education, insisted President Hutchins. By way of their metaphysics, educators determine what education they shall offer. By way of metaphysics, their students must lay the founda- tions of their moral, intellectual, and spiritual life. By way of metaphysics, I arrive at the con- clusion that the aim of education is wisdom and goodness and that studies which do not bring us closer to this goal have no place in a university. By way of metaphysics, students, on their part, may recover a rational View of the universe and of their role in it. ra f' hi Beta Kappa SGI-IOLASTIG HONOR SOCIETY HMI! W DONALD ARTHUR HARVEY SCHMECHEL President AMES PAYNE ALTER Vice-President HART HUNTER SPIEGEL Seeremqy ,RH .. - V, , Q, ROWLAND BOYD VANCE Treasurer MCGEORGE BUNDY Member Q' Executive Committee I-fl I 'J rl fiw..Y. J I I WALTON FORD BATTERSHALL HOWARD WOELFERT BLAUVELT HENRY MONROE CHILDS,JR. AMBROSE COGHILL CRAMER, III HERBERT JOHN CURTIS AUSTIN ARTHUR HALLE, JR. JAMES PAYNE ALTER WOLCOTT NEWBERRY BAKER LORING WOART BATTEN, III WILLIAM EDWARD BARNES BENSON LANSDALE BOARDMAN ARTHUR MURRAY BORDEN JOHN EDWARDS BREWSTER JOHN BRIDGE BRUECKEL MCGEORGE BUNDY THOMAS JAMES CAMP,JR. IRVING CAPLAN ARTHUR JOHN CUMMINGS JACK GERALD EISENBERG RICHARD TUCKER EWING LEWIS MORGAN BLOOMINGDALE, JR. HERBERT MOTTRAM CLARK RICHARD HAMPTON CLARK JOHN RICHARD DELLENBACK CLAYTON DUBOSQUE, JR. CARLOS JOAQUIN ANGULO LEWIS CURTIS DAHL ANGUS NEAL GORDON, JR. CLASS OF 1939 fJune Electionsj JOHN LEWIS HARVEY,JR. FRANCIS WILLIS HENSLEY WILLIAM WEED KAUFMANN JEROME SEYMOUR KORNREICH KENNETH IRVING LASH CLASS OF 1940 HENRY LEROY FINCH, JR. EDGAR STEPHENSON FURNISS, JR. HERBERT PARRISH GALLIHER,JR. NICHOLAS STEINER GIMBEL WALKER FORREST GIVAN CHARLES CARROLL GLOVER, III WILLIAM FREDERICK HELLMUTH,JR. REUBEN ANDRUS HOLDEN, IV JOHN MACKENZIE, JR. JOHN SAMUEL MACSPORRAN STANLEY JOHN POGORZELSKI MORTIMER ROBINSON PROCTOR, JR. EDWARD RYAN C CLASS OF 1940 S.S.S. RUSSELL PERSHING DUNCAN GILBERT VICTOR EDLIN PAUL MATTHEXV HAUSER AARON WESLEY HORTON JONATHAN TRUMBULL LANMAN CLASS OF 194.1 JAMES LAWRENCE HOUGHTELING, JR. FRANCIS TRACY SYLVESTER LAVERY GERALD ROBINSON MACLANE JOHN BECKWITH MADDEN 33 GEORGE HUGHES PAGE PAUL EDWARD ROGHE TERRY BENTLEY SANDERS, JR. THOMAS ELLSWORTH TONEY, JR. JULES DAVID WALDER RICHARD HOOKER WILMER,JR. ROBERT SAMUEL SALZER DONALD ARTHUR HARVEY SCHMECHEL DANIEL JACOB SHILLER HART HUNTER SPIEGEL PETER GORDON BRADLEY STILLMAN WILLIAM MCDOWELL STUCKY HENRY CLARKE THACHER, JR. HOWARD SHERWOOD TIERNEY, JR. ROWLAND BOYD VANCE WILLARD NICHOLAS VAN SLYCK, JR. WILLIAM HOWELLS VINTON RICHARD MERRITT WEISSMAN OWEN WATKIN WELLES LOUIS WILLIAMS, III TI-IORVOL MARTIN BEN FANKLIN MCCAMEY, JR. MARSHALL CARLETON PEASE, III WALTER ROMANOW JAMES STERRETT SMITH DAVID MCCRAY MERRIELL LOUIS ARTHUR SILVERSTEIN KARL FREDERICK THOMPSON ISI Sigma Xi SCIENTIFIC HONOR SOCIETY UNDERGRADUATE MEMBERS SENIORS IN SHEFFIELD SCIENTIFIC SCHOOL LEWIS MORGAN BLOOMINGDALE, JR. PAUL MATTHEW HAUSER HERBERT MOTTRAM CLARK AARON WESLEY HORTON RICHARD HAMPTON CLARK MARSHALL CARLETON PEASE, III CLAYTON DUBOSQUE, JR. WALTER ROMANOW GILBERT VICTOR EDLIN JAMES STERRETT SMITH SENIORS IN THE SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING ROWLAND SCOTT BEVANS THOMAS REES PETER PAUL GUDAITIS CHARLES THEODORE ROELKE GEORGE ALLEN KOEHLER ROBERT FRANK ROMELL JAMES DAVID LAURITS GORDON BURR SMITH GUNNAR LUND ROBERT HARMAN SMITH NORMAN AARON SPEGTOR SENIORS IN YALE COLLEGE WILLIAM EDWARD BARNES BENSON HART HUNTER SPIEGEL JOHN EDWARDS BREWSTER HENRY CLARKE THACHER, JR. MCGEORGE BUNDY WILLARD NICHOLAS VAN SLYCK, JR JOSEPH JOHN FINLEY CLARK WILLIAM HOWELLS VINTON HERBERT PARRISH GALLIHER, JR. PAUL WINER JUNIORS IN THE SHEFFIELD SCIENTIFIC SCHOOL JOHN LANGDON BROOKS WINSOR CHASE SCHMIDT JUNIOR IN THE SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING ALFRED CARLTON GILBERT, JR. JUNIORS IN YALE COLLEGE ANGUS NEAL GORDON, JR. GERALD ROBINSON MACLANE 34- ENGINEERING HONOR Tau Beta Pi OFFICERS GEORGE ALLEN KOEHLER THOMAS REES ROBERT HARMAN SMITH DONALD EUGENE ANDERSON GUNNAR LUND SOCIETY I 5 President Vice-President Treasurer 3 Recording Secretary Corresponding Seeretagl , Calaloguer - ROWLAND SCOTT BEVANS HALLETT BURTIS ADDOMS DONALD EUGENE ANDERSON ROWLAND SCOTT BEVANS CLAYTON DUBOSQUE, JR. GILBERT VICTOR EDLIN ARTHUR LAURENCE FULLER PETER PAUL GUDAITIS ARTHUR KEMP HOWELL, JR. ALFRED CARLTON GILBERT, R. MEMBERS 1940 THOMAS ADRIAN JONES GEORGE ALLEN KOEHLER JAMES DAVID LAURITS GUNNAR LUND ANGUS AVERY MACDONALD THORVOL MARTIN DONALD DAVID PASCAL 1941 PAUL EUGENE GRAYBEAL THOMAS REES CHARLES THEODORE ROELKE ROBERT F RANK ROMELL CHARLES MATTLAGE RUPRECHT GORDON BURR SMITH ROBERT HARMAN SMITH NORMAN AARON SPECTOR JOSEPH CHURCH SWEET, JR. JOHN MAHLON GREENE Back Row: Roelke, Jones, Pascal, Greene, Gudaitis. Third Row: Howell, Fuller, Romell, Addoms, Macdonald, Marun Second Row: Sweet, Graybeal, DuBosque, Gilbert, Ecllin, Professor Laurson. Front Row: Professor Conrad, Lund, Rees Koehler, Anderson, Bevans, Smith. 35 xi. - -nv In I5-F X M T ' l' Q: X 1 X X 9 R SENNHH SHIIIHIIS 38 f jf I N. 1 -.f y uwwf gy' I I . 2 'I-'yf',.:qg ' ' , ' '. . 721 , I ' 'Q I ' 'ff J'. .' ' I f ' ' ,' 'Q 1'f , 1 -iw' . Z4 NF L aiu-wx :IJ1 'A S I, .Wm ,W I I' . ,fx 1 A - mm., In ,sei -:X W ' ' I-Q56 I A ' if I ,f?Ni if,fJ ' ' A Aw Q ,Y V, I 'J' lgf- ' W In ,. f f ' ' L' fgiiggififg' 'Mel' W 1if5fi5 Im',w3lff, , s WV 1 - 215545 - ' '1 -::1'-w-- I: T51,Lf,,,::'-gym -' ,- 1. 6, - H111 A A I ithxi. fsw ifw- -. I - - 41' , ,'fH m , - 9-,M -if-llqfffgf-1IkfifW2 ' - T' TP A- Skull and Bones FOUNDEDI83g MOGEORGE BUNDY HAROLD HOWE, II THOMAS FRANKLIN ERICKSON CHARLES CARROLL GLOVER, III JAMES GORDON GRAYSON REUBEN ANDRUS HOLDEN, IV ANDREW DOWNEY CJRRIOK ' DAVID BEOKWITH RODD JOSEPH WILLIAM STACK, JR. K ALBERT BENJAMIN STEVENS PETER GORDON BRADLEY STILLMAN sk eceased WILLIAM MCDOWELL STUOKY EDWARD FRANCIS SWENSON, JR. JPETER BRINOKERHOFF THORNE WILLIAM BERKEY WATSON, JR. 39 40 C. S. P. X 7 I, 3 'kwa 7 N I 1,27 ll u 'W gt, ww-1' ' 1 . ,va ' 'M '- -J ff ' . 1' 19- 4 JVm4'ff1,f'1i'5v 1wf:fS'4:91','f-F1will-'f-I: .- -'Ml-.'f.4.'3S 1 ' Jr. '1 4 1 'JL C. C. J. FOUNDED 1842 ELLIS AMES BALLARD, II WILLIAM SPRAGUE BARNES CHARLES DENSTON DICKEY, JR. WILLIAM NOTT DRISCOLL RICHARD TUCKER EWING WILLIAM DICKINSON HART, JR. XCLEMENT CRESSON KITE MICHAEL LEONARD LEJEUNE ROBERT DUNKERSON ORR JUDD LIVINGSTON POLLOCK HART HUNTER SPIEGEL WILLIAM HUTTON STARBUCK EDWARD DALE TOLAND, JR. GEORGE FREDERICK VIETOR, JR. LESLIE WHEELER 'F Deceased 4 I 42 ROBERT ATKINS Li Aw fckqiw, J WL LN ,,, X ,gg sg, r may L, JI 5 , f. ag., S . ,.. f gf: '. rv' :N R -.fw:'u . .A-11 .. 1 4 ,af . .Ll -f--,a-Am., 1. ,af A - ew ' un- ,gg 4-I-':g5,?, W,--4 A f . -,. -. 'T 'fa-v,,,,, ,' Q3 , S' Ara .. ' vyg 2,497 W1 1374- QQ- , -wwfraf? . 41 '.3!?i4a.1f5v'!f fS'i5ffL,3-6 . fgtuaf N--J Fff-in . 1 -ff'-iz ,-,121 ,Qt f A 'Q if 4-jlx M., - ,f:s- ' U.-A .- agua ' -. ix- , ,:4,,.,..m-. 1 'wx f' -, :m bmah Pifiw ilaz- z'u,:1.,1 , I ,,.5L..,.j .-we' laik? AW S ., . ' 'rs -WN - ,- ' ' 41. af' ' :u,5ll.f Wolf 'S Head FOUNDED 1883 JOHN THEODORE BLOSSOM, JR. JOHN HERON BROOKS CHARLES JAMES COLE EUGENE MAX ROB ROY MCGREGO R CONVERSE FRED HEN ALAN LYLE COREY, JR. WELL MOORE NORMAN STARK PAUL WALTE SEABURY A GEORGE SEMLER 43 CYRUS RO ERIC MOTTET BURR RY FRANCIS CHANEY, JR. R RUSSELL HERRICK, JR. HENRY JAMES, JR. BINSON TAYLOR OWEN WATKINS WELLES wfm. fc vi? dfy' fum' 7 Q fp Mania A. . , .I 1+ ,.. - I '1'1' ,I ,1 ,,., - . ,I , ' ' liif i 'Z -Y ,A '1 ,,, I v, gm . , , Lp, V , N S 1- if- . .Zz 1 1' I , , .K ,, f wf-1, ,, H, I Elihu FOUNDED I 903 JOHN LARIMER ARMSTRONG EDWARD WALKER BRIGHTWELL MELVILLE CHAPIN DRAYTON HEARD, JR. CHARLES EDWARD LEARY WILLIAM HARDENBERGH CHISHOLM MAGRUDER DENT, JR. HENRY HOPKINS LIVINGSTON, JR. PHILIP FRANCIS MACGUIRE JONATHAN STONE RAYMOND, JR. THOMAS GEORGE RUTLEDGE SOHUYLER MERRITT MEYER, JR. MCLEOD STEPHENS 45 HENRY STILLMAN TAYLOR JAMES ROWGLIFFE TODD 5 46 aw' FF I-1 Q J N rp H L'-Tf 2-1 C3 U3 ,M , QI I. A 4 14:5 R 1:1115 A ' 1: fy, ff -F5-Jgg -Q -1332 - --A -. A W1 , A, -. '7i32'z-' -'ijgf-mi-1.524-nfi: 4' fi , . .f F OUNDED 1848 WOLOOTT NEWBERRY BAKER AUSTIN CAREY DAVID PLATT DWIGHT GRISWOLD CARROLL BARSE HAFF, JR. ,V PETER MCNAIR DAVID MOGREGOR MERSEREAU NELSON SCHWAB, JR. AUGUSTINE TH 447 FERRISS WILLIAM WARNER FIELD PAUL TROWBRIDGE GILLESPIE LINDSAY JAMES FARLEY MCCLELLAND, JR. JAMES ALEXANDER MACGREGOR OMAS SMYTHE, JR. HOWARD SHERWOOD TIERNEY, JR. RICHARD LEON WILOOX 48 wi .5 . 'iwljw EJ' Book and Snake PAUL BRADFORD BADGER, JR. FOUNDED 1863 BUCKLEY MORRIS BYERS LIVINGSTON GIFFORD GARDNER EDWARD FRANCIS CALLAN, JR. HUGH SCOTT GOODFELLOW RANDOLPH MULFORD JORDAN JESSE ANDREWS DAVIS, JR. HENRY FORD, II ALEXANDER MCKENZIE HAMMER, JR. SUMNER MORAE MACOMBER ALEXANDER HAWLEY ABNER REED HAYES, JR. STEPHEN PATTERSON MOORHEAD JOHN MARBURY NELSON, III 49 JOHN MILTON PERKINS THATGHER, JR 67 Q R NJ' X HEEL. LE Aurelian UNIVERSITY HONOR SQCIETY FOUNDED 1910 WILLIAM SPRAC-UE BARNES. STERLING BROWNLEE BRINKLEY FREDERICK CUSHING CROSS, JR. THOMAS FRANKLIN ERICKSON WILLIAM DICKINSON HART, JR. REUBEN ANDRUS HOLDEN, IV MELCHIOR CHAPLIN JENNINGS ' WILLIAM WARNER FIELD XCLEMENT CRESSON KITE EDWIN FITHIAN POLLOCK , 'FDeccaSed JAY MANVILLE SHIELDS JOSEPH WILLIAM STACK, JR. STANLEY LIVINGSTON, JR. PETER GORDON BRADLEY STILLMAN 50 GEORGE SMITH WATSON ef fiqn Torch UNIVERSITY HONOR SOCIETY ALBERT JERVISS ALTERN FOUNDED I 9 I 6 CHARLES DENSTON DICKEY, JR.- BENEDICT DEVINE FLYNN, JR.' HENRY WILLIAM DODGE, JRJ WILLIAM NOTT DRISCOLL GEORGE JESPER HARDING, III ROBERT DUNKERSON ORR ROBERT THRUSTON I-IOUK, III HAROLD HOWEXII NELSON SCHWAB! JR. - WILLIAM HUTTON STARBUCK WILLIAM MCDOWELI. STUOKY GEORGE FREDERICK VIETOR, JR. 51 I,avf'9wg 5 -r v I w QP t s , sv 9 9, x f , I 1 . 514. y ,,f.A,h 4. . .I 1, .W , Q, 1 A X ,P fp M .C :,,,.. ZW ,122 ,gf 4 2,-QW-fy-.,Ezgi, . , ,T ,.... - i? IL, f f 1 f W efh , ,, WZ, S, fzvgv' x wk 1:2 Marx x mia V: M451 V 5 1z5:'l.R3w?xE 'fxmgko -- f ax KL-'L 051' X I-YI NE Af '- ' , 1 f' 1 I 1 Back Row: Ford, Drake. Front Row: Selby, Tighe, Hazen. Interfraternity Council LAURENCE GOTZIAN TIGHE, JR. HOWARD WILLIAM SELBY, JR. ROGER COOPER HAZEN CHARLES EDWARD FORD, II HOWARD WILLIAM SELBY, J ROGER COOPER HAZEN LAURENCE GOTZIAN TIGHE, PAUL HOWARD CONVERSE CARL BIGELOW DRAKE, JR. R. .l R. President Secretary Treasurer Alpha Sigma Phi Beta Theta Pi Chi Psi Delta Kappa Epsilon Fence Club Zeta Psi Bolton, Flynn, Cross, Collins. President' S Committee BENEDIOT DEVINE FLYNN, JR. Chairman FREDERICK CUSHING CROSS, JR. Secretagw ARCHER LEROY BOLTON, JR. Vernon Hall RALPH GREGORY COLLINS, JR. York Hall FREDERICK CUSHING CROSS, JR. ' St. Elmo BENEDICT DEVINE FLYNN, JR. St. Anthony 55 5 Q, X a E S S 5 X x i K 5 i S K E 5' 5? sv .Q E 5 D? 5? 5 2 gig f s E NS w S S -A 91 ? 573 N 2 E E fl Ii k J w w 1940 Clarence D. Barton . Roswell M. Boutwell, III . Arthur A. Burrows, Jr .... John D. Canale . Robert S. Clark . . . Sven L. Eurenius . . .Julian Ferguson . . . David M. Gerber . Ed- ward M. Graham, Jr. . Harry J. Groblewski . . . Roland B. Hammond, Jr. . 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 . Chauncey D. Mathews . Walter M. Mennel . William C. Mennel . Henry A. Moran, Jr .... James L. Nammack . . . William G. Parrott, Jr .... Carl U. Sautter . Joseph F. Shevelson . . . David M. Wilde . Henry H. Wells, Jr. . Louis Williams, III . Hugh R. Wilson, Jr. llllllllllllHIUIllllllllllllllllllllllIIUIUIIIIllllHlllllillHIIHIlII!illIIllIIIilllII7llIH1llllllllllllllllllllllIllIlllllllllllIllIIWIHIIHIlllllllllllllHllIllHIlHITHllllHlIHllllllHlllllllllllllllIlllllHIIHWNIIllPIIUlllllllllllllllllIIIHIIIllllllIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIllllHIlVIIllllllllllllllllllllllIIIWIlllllNVIIllllIIIUUIIUIUIIUIWIIllUIIUWIWIHIIVIIII Alpha Sigma Phi FOUNDED 1845 IINHIHUHIIVHIWHIIHWIIIIHHlllIllllllllllllVIUIUIIIHIlllllllllIIIHIUHVHIVWIIIIIIlVIHINIHlllllllIIIIIIHIIHIIIH1llllllllllIllIIHHIHIFIIIHEIHH1ilIHl1!IlVHllllllllllllllllIllHIUIUIIIVIHIIIII1IIIHIHI4TIHIIIIIIIlllllllHIHIHIIINHIHIUIHIIIHIUIIHlllllllllIlHIIHI1IllNIUHIllllllilllHWIHIIlIlIIIHIIIHllllllllilllllIllHUIHIINIlllllllIlllllllllllllllll Carlos Angulo . Charles P. Armstrong . Douglas E. Asche . . . Norman Badenhop . Theodore G. Barlow . Edward Bermingham, Jr .... William Carnill, II . Thomas T. Church . . . 'tFirnest M. Daniels, Jr. . Francis C. Donovan, Jr. . Oscar F. A. Douglas, III . John H. Downs . . . Charles E. Ford, II . . . Tracy Griswold . . . Seth Heywood, Jr. . Dan B. Hodgson . Arthur H. Hopkins, Jr. . Philip Huber . . . Henry P. Isham, Jr .... Lewis M. Ja.ck . Tristam B. John- son . . . James M. Kieran . Thomas H. Kingsley . . . Henry C. Pierce . Joseph A. Priory, Jr. . . . George R. Read . David B. Ressler . . . Pierson C. Tator . . . Joseph B. Uniacke, Jr .... Robert Whalen . Blackwell Williams . T. Gartley Wilson . James R. Winburn, Jr. 1 Donald C. Alexander . John H. Allen, Jr .... James W. Bancker, Jr. . Paul A. Banker . Guy K. Benson . Francis R. Blossom, Jr .... William N. Copley . . . Alan F. Daily . Edward K. Du Vivier . . .John Grandin . John M. Green . Stephen F. Grifling, Jr .... George W. Hamlin, II . David T. Harris . William F. Havemeyer . Treat Clark Hull . . . Francis E. Jones, Jr. . . . Arthur T. Keefe, Jr. . Richard C. Kelly . . . Albert G. Mager, Jr. . Bayard M. Mallery . . . Ray- mond D. O'Brien . . . Vtfalter H. Page . Carter Palmer . Lowell M. Palmer . Robert K. Patch . . . Peter I. Roesler . Charles N. Robertson, III . . . Harry B. Schooley, Jr. . William R. Schul- hof . William D. Sommerville, Jr. . Walter F. Stafford, Jr. . Henry T. Stude, Jr. . Jack R. Stunzi , Roderic B. Swenson . . . Chilton Thomson . David B. Turner, II . . . AlfredJ. Washburn . Wil- liam S. Webber - sFDeceased 57 mx. Q., x.,,X 'N ,mam- , 3. 'I X, ' h. I V 1 I-55 1:87, f J x -Ma. Q., , .i Wim- 4, V Wx Dk.. -Q gf Q he .,. Q T .ff . .. if v V L - g . View . .. ,E an Q ,A N , X 3 1 W. .5 .-.. 5 .mf - . ' .' U' ' , 4 J V '1 r. - , -:.,-3, .5-S, -' .ax 42--sffck' ' ' 5:5 'Elf f-- we 4. 'm-.f-X :5:g::g:Qj,31:-- xg, -Q. . .+-W., wmxs:1'-.-1f:g::..?. el W ,B N-:Q-.-XWLC ,,aQ1wf,.,1... -N- MA GN.. 2Yw...N J, 2, :Q:r:Qf?.'QgY.S. -11,-2:1 ' f ew. ' sl ' f ' V... .-.. zm. ,lf- -. N W Q qwfvvw 194.0 Antony Barker . Donald E. Battey,Jr. . Harvey S. Bennett . Holbrook Bradley . Cur- tis R. Buttenheim . . . Thomas Camp, Jr. . Richard B. Campbell . Perry K. Clark . Thomas R. Clark, Jr. . Benjamin E. Cole, Jr. . Allan Crane, Jr .... Robert B. Egan . . . Chester E. Finn . George L. Forman . . . David K. Harrison . John L. Hauer . William H. Hobbs, IH . Grant Hubley . . .Morgan Jones . Richard G. Jordan . . . William R. Kitchel . Robert H. Knight . . . Henry W. Lawrence, Jr .... James A. MacGregor . William H. Mann . David M. Mersereau . Thomas B. Morison . . .Joseph D. Nelson, Jr. . John C. Nemiah . Edward M- Noyes, H . . . James G. Overall . . . Leonard F. Paine . Norman S. Paul . . .John D. Scheuer,Jr. . Frederick L. Seely, H . . . John M. Weeks . Francis R. Wholley IIIIIIIIIIHIIIII4lllllllHIIIIIIIIVIlllllilllHllllH1IIWIIHIHIUIIIlllllllllHIllllllllIllllllIllIlllllIllIIIIIHIIIIllllllIIIHlllllIllHllllllllIIllllllIlllllllllIIHHIIINIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllHlllllllllllllllIllllllllHHIIIIIIllllllllllHIIIIHIIIIIIHIIHINIIUIIllllllllllllllilllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllIllllllllHHIIIHNHllllllllllllllllllIHHWIIIlIIIWIIIIIIIIIIIIIVIIIN S Beta Theta Pi FOUNDEDISQQ IIIIIIllllllllllillllllllllIllPIIIIlllllllIllllllH4HHHlllllllHllHllllilllllllHHIIIIIIHIWIVINHHllHlilllllllllllllIllHIIIIHIIIHNlllllllllllllllllIIIlllllllllllllllHlllllllllllHI!IIIHHIHIHIIIIIIHIIIIUIIHIHINHI!llIIlllllllllIH!IllIHHHHIHINHHHlllllllllllllllllHI!NlVH!IIIHHIIUIVHIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllWIllHIHIVIIIIIIllllIlllIHIIIHIIHIIIIIIIIIIIVIIHIIUIIUHI 194.1 Vlfallace C. Bedell . Rowe H. F. Bisbee . Gordon C. Brown . James O. Buchanan . Kenneth F. Burgess, Jr .... Livingston P. Carroll . Lawrence E. Crowley . . . Alan F. Dill . John F. Dryden, HI . Carl O. Dunbar , Jr .... John D. F. Foskett . William C. Fownes, HI . . . Ray Garrett, Jr. . Williamj. Garvey . George Griswold, jr .... Victor E.Irons, Jr. . . . Robert E. Keat- ing, Jr. . George M. Kelly . . . Franklin A. McWilliam . Thomas H. Mahoney, Jr. .John R. Moul- ton . . .John A. Orb . Robert L. Owen, IH . . . William P. Porter . . . David W. Riesmeyer . . . Edward Schirmer . George G. Schreiber, Jr. . Howard W. Selby, Jr. . Charles S. Smith, Jr. . Herbert G. Smith . Richard C. Stickney . William W. Struthers,Jr. . Stanley A. Sweet, Jr. . . . William L. Westen . Henry Wilson, IH . Sidney S. Wilson . William H. Woolverton,Jr. Walter A. Barrows, IV . William R. Battey . Charles M. Baxter, Jr. . Robert L. Brush . . . Rene A. Chouteau . John F. Clark . Henry V. Crawford, IH . . . Forrest L. Daniels . John C. Davidson . James B. Dealy, Jr. . Hammond B. Douglas, Jr .... Philip W. D. Farley . James A. Fisher . Thomas W. Ford . Louis Frank, HI . . . William A. Gamble . Frederic M. Gebhard, Jr. . David Gibson . Edgar T. Glass, Jr. . Thomas H. Gosnell . . . William S. Harrington . Wil- liarn Harvey . Melvin L. Hawley . Peter Henderson, jr. . Freeman W. Hill . ,Bradley N. Hunt . . . William R. Leathers . . . Edwin C. McDonald, Jr. . Malcolm V. D. Martin . Robert P. Mas- land, Jr. . Richard M. Moore . Donald M. Munding . . .William P. Powning . . . William S. Retherford . John C. Ripley . . . William D. Seidler . James T. Shea . . . John S. Walker . James R. Welch . Robert C.White . Robertj. M. Wilson 59 Q W I , 6,.,,,V.,, K, 5 , A f W v 155 79 ly! fini ini? if? dh 1 f iff? 1 , ,, W f x H, J f , ,f ,UM V f Q? , 'f f7':7 ., ' iff? p.u 'f'f1 '- rg -gmf 'wg'yw-,L 'fx' ,+.'-am' fy -.vvwfbiif 194.0 Randal B. Borough . Edward W. Brightwell . . . Edward F . Callan,Jr .... Theodore D. Day . Bruce B. Dayton . John A. Dillon, Jr .... Alexander M. Hammer, Jr. . Wellington B. Hay, Jr. . Abner R. Hayes, Jr. . William R. Hegeman . . . Raymond C. Jopling, Jr .... Paul F. Kalat . John D. Kausel . . . Robert T. Larkin . William Lippincott, Jr .... John Mackenzie, Jr. . Sumner M. Macomber . . . Arthur Peter, Jr. . William Piper . Philip B. Pool . Robert A. Powers . Mortimer R. Procter, Jr .... Thomas G. Rutledge . . .William F. Schell . 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. . Haven Waters . William A.Wiedersheim, III . Henry C. Wood IllIIIIIIll!llllllllllllllIIIIHIIllHIHIIHHIllHllllIH1llllH!IllIHHI!HlIIIIHHHHIH1lllllllIllHIllllIllIHllIIIIHVIIlHIIIIVIIIIHIllH1IllHIllllIIIIllllllIllHIHllllllllllllllllIIIIlIHHHIHlllllHNllllllllIIIHJHUllIllPIIHIIVH4IllHIllUWMHIIHlllllIllHllllllIIIllllIIIlllHI1HIllllllHNIHIUIIHlIllH4HIllHI!IIIlllllIllllllllllllVIlNHllllIHHlHI!llllllllllllllllllllll Chi Psi C FoUNDED 1843 Ill!ll!lHlIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIllIIIHIIIIHllllllllllllIIIlllIll!HIIlHIIllllIllHlllllillVII!IllHIllllllHIllPIIllllllllllHlIHPIIIH1IllHIHIIIIIIHHIIH1UIlllllllllllllllllIllNlHHIHIllllllllIIIIIllHIIlllllllllllHHHllllHIUllllllllIIIIHIIH!llllllllllllHllllHIHIlllllllllllHIlllllllllllllIIIHIPIIIIlllllllIllIllIHIIIIlllllllllllHIVHIHIIVIIHIIIIIIIIHIIII 194.1 Leavitt B. Ahrcns . Bruce B. Allen . . . William N. Bannard, IH . Gerard C. Besse,Jr. . Robert T. Bower . . .John C. Cobb, III . Walter K. Collins . . . Tyson Dines, Jr .... Robert E. Fagley . John E. Flaherty . James P. Furniss . . . Robert B. Gardner, Jr. . Joseph N. Greene, Jr. . . . Roger C. Hazen . Norman G. Hickman . Benjamin F. Hopkins, Jr. . David H. Hughes . . . James F. Jaffray . Philip L. Jefferson . . . Edwin M. Latson . Nixon Lee, Jr .... Wilbert E. Mc- Clellan, Jr. .- Robert H. Matheson . John G. Matthews . David R. Millard, Jr. . William S. Miller . Malcolm Monroe . Robert D. Moore, Jr .... Lawrence K. Pickett. . . Thomas C. Schuller . Alexander W. Shapleigh, Jr. . John K. Spring . William G. Stewart . . .James G. Taliaferro . John V. Tompkins . William R. Tubbs, H 194.2 james R. Anderson, Jr. .5 . . George C. Bermingham . . . Vincent W. Carpenter . George W. Carrington, Jr. . William L. Conyngham, II . . . Harold L. DeFelice . Thorndike Deland, Jr. . John H. Denman . Richard F. Donovan, Jr. . Claude Douthit, Jr. . John C. Duncan, IH . Richard N. Dyer . . . Gardner A. Finley . Charles F. Freeman, Jr. . Warren T. Furniss . . . George A. Goss, Jr. . Harry T. Greene . . . Fred H. Harrison . Douglas B. Houser,Jr. . Alfred M. Hunt . . .Richard S. Kaynor . Frank V. Kreske . Donald A. Kubie . . . Paul E. Lacouture . William H. Lightner, H . . . Charles D. Murphy, Jr .... Lee A. O,Neill . . . Charles P. Ripley . Herbert F. Royal, jr .... Mason D. Salisbury . .Sabin P. Sanger, H . Joe R. Seacrest . Winches- ter Sherman . Grant G. Simmons, Jr. . Sumner Smith, Jr. . Charles C. Spalding . Robert E. Stevenson . . . William R. Thayer . . . David Williams, II . Charles P. Wilson . George W. Wolf,Jr. . James T. Wyman, II 61 'v A, f'Qff?:g 'Q V I 'Q X if X , lfdg' -iff - 194.0 John L. Armstrong . Robert Atkins. . .Paul B. Badger, Jr. . Wolcott N. Baker . Bowen Blair . John T. Blossom, Jr. . Frederic M. Burr . . . Charles Cole . Rob Roy M. Con- verse . . .Jesse A. Davis,Jr. . William N. Driscoll . . . Livingston G. Gardner . Paul T. Gillespie . Charles C. Glover, III . James G. Grayson . Dwight Griswold . . . William D. Hart, Jr. . Alex- ander Hawley . Drayton Heard, Jr. . Walter R. Herrick, Jr. . Harold Howe, II . . . Melchior C. Jennings . Randolph M. Jordan . . .James F. McClelland, Jr. . George C. Merrick . Richard L. Merrick . . .John M. Nelson, III . . . Robert D. Orr . . .James C. Parsons, Jr. . Sherman P. Platt, Jr .... Nelson Schwab, Jr. . Augustine T. Smythe, Jr. . Joseph W. Stack, Jr. . Peter G. B. Stillman . William M. Stucky . . . fPeter B. Thorne . . . William B. Watson, Jr. . Leslie Wheeler, Jr. . William A. Whitcomb, Jr. . Henry C. Wood lllllllllllllllllllIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllHIUllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllPIllIlllllIH1llHHlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIlllllllllllIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllHIIlllllIllllllllllllllllllllHIIllllllllllIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIHllllllllIllVIIlllllIlllllllllllllllll Delta Kappa Epsilon FCUNDED 1844 llllllllllllllllllllllIIIllllllllllllHllHlllHlllllllllHlllIlIllllllIHIllHlIlllllllllllllllllllllIIllIllIIIlllllllHIIIIllllllllllIIIlllllllIlllllllllllllllllllllllllIllllllHIIIlllllllIlllllHIlllIHIHIHIIHIllllIllllllIIIIIIIIIIHHHIIllIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllHllIIIHIllllIIIIII!HIIIIIHIVIHHllIHHI1IllIIIHI!llllllHI1IllHIlIllIlllllHlllllllllllllllllllllll 1941 Carleton Ashley . . . Robert B. Brooks . Caperton Burnam . . . 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 . William H. Harris, Jr. . Charles E. Hart, III . . . William E. Jackson . . . De- Laney Kiphuth . . . Malcolm R. Maclean . George N. McLennan . William H. McManus . Ed- ward R. Macomber . Quentin Mitchell . . . Richard Osborn, ,Ir .... Thomas Parsons, III . David M. Payne . Philip F. W. Peck, Jr. . Paul S. Pierson . Charles B. Price, Jr .... John R. Sears . Peter O. A. Solbert . William H. Stevens. Jr. . Joseph S. Sweeny . . . William G. Thorn . Lau- rence G. Tighe, Jr. . Richard B. Tweedy . Kinsley Twining . . . Harold B. Whiteman, Jr. . Wil- 1iamA. wick ' 194.2 William H. Adams, II . . . Alan E. Bartholemy . William T. Bell . . . Douglas Campbell, Jr. . Kent Chandler, Jr. . Norman P. Clement,Jr. . John E. Coxe . . . Robert S. Davis . Thomas B. De Mott . Guy C. E. Dempsey . Ernesto de Zaldo, Jr .... William M. Ford . . . Frederick A. Godley, Jr. . Cary T. Grayson, Jr .... George E. Haines . Alan C. Hall . Edwin A. Hansen . Fred Hirschhorn, Jr .... Frank A. Kemp, -Ir. . George W. Kirchwey, III . . . Donald B. Lamont . . . George K. McClelland . Everett D. Marvin, Jr .... George Oleair . . . Brooks O. Parker . Ernest C. Parshall, II . Horton R. Prudden . . . Walter G. Rafferty . Robert G. Rhett, III . Ed- gar A. Riley . . . Hugh V. Sherrill . Henry B. Smythe . Vaughan C. Spalding, Jr. . Edward P. Snyder, Jr. . Frank A. Sprole . . .James N. Thorne . . . Patrick M. Westfeldt . Henry P. Wheeler . Robert E. White, Jr. . David C. Wilhelm ' 'Deceased 63 A ,T-,-,-m.,,w1w.f,,,m I, , . - .+...w.w..m,f,n4.1.p.. ' 1 ,zo 'gg gf, . f If 1.-H, x 4- .1 ., -7 ,... A X Ev S A Mg ,Q Q fa A 1940 William S. Barnes . F. Roberts Blair . john H. Brooks . james Butler, Jr. . Buckley M. Byers. . . Henry F. Chaney, Jr. . William H. Chisholm . Alan L. Corey, jr .... Charles D. Dickey, Jr .... John L. Eyre . . . Serge S. Gagarin . George E. Gillespie, Jr .... sFC1ement C. Kite . . . Charles E. Leary . . . Brooks McCormick . Robert L. L. McCormick . Philip F. Mac Guire . Eugene M. Moore . Stephen P. Moorhead . Efiingham B. Morris, III . . . Joseph R. Neu haus . . . George S. Oliver, II . . .Jonathan S. Raymond, Jr. . David B. Rodd . . . George S. Sea bury . William H. Starbuck . . . Cyrus R. Taylor . Henry S. Taylor . Edward D. Toland, Jr. . john T. Tubbs . . . George F. Vietor,Jr. lllllllllllllHIllllllllllllllllllllllllfllllllllllllIllllllllllllllllllIlllllllllIIllIllHIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll llllllllllllllHIIIHIIVIIlIIIlllllllllHIlllllllllllIIIllllllllllH1PH1lllllllllIlllllllllllllIH1HllllllPIIIllllllllllllIIIUIIHIIHIIIIIIlllllllllllIIlllHIHIIllIH1lllllllllllllllllllllllIHIHIllllllllllIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllllll The Fence Club FOUNDED 1830 lillllllll4HI1HIIINIllIIlllllIIIIIIIllllIlllllllllllllllVH4llllllllllllllllllllIIllllllVHIlllHillIllllllllllllllIIHHIHHHillHIIHIlllIllllllllHHlllllIIlllllllllllllIlllHIllllllllllll!llllllllllllllIIIIlllHIllllIlllllllllllIIHlllllVII!llllIlIHIIHllIllllHIlIIIIllHIHIIHIIIIIlII!IlllllllllllIlllIIllllVH1lllllllllllllllllllllIlllllllllllIlllVllNWIllllllllllllllllllllll 194.1 Edward L. Beard, III . John A. Blair . . . John G. Carhart . Hobart Chatiield-Taylor . John Churchill, Jr. . Paul H. Converse . Wilbur L. Cross, III . . . Howard C. Davis, Jr. . Law- rence H. Dixon . John Dore, Jr. . Robert C. Dye . . . Howard Ferguson . . . Frank H. Good- year, III . . . Charles E. Hewes . George H. Hunt, Jr .... Howard Kaye . Ellis Knowles . Shep- ard Krech,Jr .... John A. MacDonald, Jr. . John B. Madden . John H. Mallory, Jr. . George H. Mead, Jr. . Daniel C. Millett . Paul Moore, Jr. . Coleman W. Morton . . .John B. Oliver . . . Steuart L. Pittman . Wilmot T. Pope . . . John Reid . Howard E. Rogers . . . John P. Schroeder . Hermann C. Schwab . Charles! P. Stevenson . . . Donald K. Taylor . Boyleston A. Tompkins, Jr. 1942 Charles M. Boyce . JohnW. Buckley . . . Edward N. Carpenter . Belton A. Copp, IV . Edwin Corning . James F. Corroon,Jr .... Churchward Davis . Rene C. S. di Rosa . John C. W. Dix . Richard B. Dominick . . . Malcolm Edgerton, Jr .... John W. Fenno . . . Ralph W. Hal- sey, Jr. . William M. Hunt . . . Robert L. Ireland, III . . . William B. Jackson . William E. S. James . Robert de L. Johnson . . .John G. Keller . John W. Kiser, Jr. . Merrill C. Krech . . . Louis F. Laun, Jr. . John W. Leggett . . . Richard S. Mershon . . . Philip R. Neuhaus . . . Elton Parks, Jr. . Paul D. Pattinson . Livingston Platt, Jr. . Tracy D. Pratt . . . Cliffton R. Scudder, III . Frank P. Shepard, Jr. . Benjamin A. Smith . Traver C. Smith . Robert W. Stinchfield . . . Benjamin R. Toland . Casper W. B. Townsend, Jr. . . . Joseph Walker, Jr. 'Deceased 55 fr- y f m y f ,jf W '12 J .um av 7, , , 5 pq? 3 X , Zffvxy 1? 1+,25f'2llQ M P if 4 1 v iff' F 4 ' -1-1115! ,T 1 ' ,, Q-illggf' QW ' V-1geg'f 1 -' -'m v - I, V. 194.0 Reginald L. Auchincloss, Jr .... Ellis A. Ballard, II . McGeorge Bundy.. .Austin Carey . Edward Carr, Jr .... Magruder Dent, Jr. . William L. Dommerich . . .John F. Eagle, Jr .... David P. Ferriss . William W. Field . Henry Ford, H . Granger H. Frost . . . H. Scott Goodfellow. . .Carroll B. HaHa, Jr. . Stevens F. Hammer . Reuben A. Holden, IV . Charles H. Hulburd, H . Henry James, Jr .... Peter M. Lindsay . . .John S. MacSporran . 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. . Henry S. Robinson, Jr. . William Rockefeller . . . Pierre de Saint Phalle . Winthrop D. deV. Schwab . Walter S. Sullivan, Jr. . Edward F. Swenson, Jr .... W. Stuart Thompson, Jr. . Howard S. Tierney, Jr .... Malcolm B. Vilas, Jr .... Andrew Wilson, III lllllllllllllllHHHIIHHllllllllllllllH1llllIIllHlllHlllllllllllllllllllllllHlllllllllllllllIIIHIlllllllHIH1llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllHHllIHlIlllH1illVIIIIllHWIIIHIHIHHlllllHlIllIHIIIIllllIllIIIVIIIHHIIIIHlllllllIHIllIllH1IIIIHIIHIlIllIIIlIIIIlllIIlIIIIIIIIIIIHIlIllPIIIHIllllIllIIIllllIIIHHNIllIIllIllIH1IllII4IIIPII1HIlllllllillllllllllllllllllllIIIUIIUIIHH Zeta Psi FOUNDED 1888 lllllllHIHHIlllllllllllllllllIHlllllllllllIlllIllH!llIllllllllPH4lllllllllllllllllllIII!HIlllVIIIHIIHIIllllHlllllllllllllllllIlIHIIllllllIllIlIlllHllIllII!llllllllIllIllllllllllVHlH1HI!HllHIlllII!lllHIllllllllllIIIIIII1HIlIlllllHIlllIHHHlllIlllllHlIHllllHIHlllHI!HIUI!HHHIlIlllllH4IIIIllllllllIIllllllIlllHlHI1HIlIlllllllllllllllllllHlHllllllllllllllllllil Charles P. Aberg . . . Walter I. Badger, IH . Kingman Brewster, Jr. . John M. But- ler, Jr .... Gordon S. Calder . Wallace Campbell, HI . George W. Cheney, Jr. . Hays H. Clemens, Jr. . Harold T. Clement, Jr. . Edward S. Cooke . William R. Cross, Jr. . . . Carl B. Drake, Jr .... Deane M. Evans . . . W. Dale Fisher . . . Charles H. C. Gerard . . . Edward T. Hall . John L. Hannaford . Lewis D. Heck . . . William P. Jeffery, Jr .... William T. Ketcham, Jr. . Frederick B. Kieckhefer . Everett H. Krueger . . .John Lohmann . Robert F. Loree, Jr. . La Rue R. Lutkins . . . George B. Mallory . . . Newbold Noyes, Jr .... James B. Phillips . John A. Pierce, H . Henry A. Preston . . . Malcolm D. Raworth, Jr. . Harry A. Richards, Jr. . William A. Robinson . Edwin Rooney . Edward L. Ryerson, HI . . . William C. Schwab . Alfred L. Shapleigh, H . Philip Stevens . Eric P. Swenson, H . . . Douglas A. Warner, Jr. . Gordon A. Weller 194.2 William A. Aycrigg, II . . .W. Liscum Borden . Beckwith R. Bronson. . . James B. Cavanagh . John C. Chapin . Robert MacD. Clark . Robert G. Congdon . Samuel S. Connor . John S. Cooke . . . Charles H. Dearborn, H . Daniel C. Dugan . . . Charles F. Emery, Jr. . James M. Ethridge, IH . L. Philip Ewald, III . . . S. Scott Goddard, Jr. . . . Francis B. Hamlin, Jr. . David F. Harris . . .John B. Jessup . . . B. Whitney Lamson, Jr. . James R. Lee . Edward H. Lockwood . . . Nathan D. McClure, Jr. . Carden R. McLean . John H. Meyer . Jeremiah Mil- bank, Jr. . John F. Milliken . . . George R. Nichols, III . . . W. Richard Ohler, Jr .... Stanley M. Rumbough, Jr .... Richard H. Semple, Jr. . Warren MCK. Shapleigh . H. Francis Shattuck, Jr. . Frank Sladen, Jr. . John C. Stockman. . . Bertrand L. Taylor, III . Oliver W. Toll, Jr. . Francis B. Trudeau, Jr .... Arthur K. Watson . W. Gardner White 67 1 -s A-,f rv 'T 4 -Q 17'-xy, , 4. , ' '25 'i , '4 f ' 2 5, 'H ,. . rl. A 4' 1x o 'H v71:A. 'r?I. 194.0 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 .... Atwood C. Ely . . . Benedict D. Flynn,Jr .... Georgej. Harding, III . Benjamin Hinman . Robert T. Houk, III . . . Edward B. Ijams . . . Thomas A. Lussen . . . Ralph A. Mertens . Grant H. Mcssinger . Richard C. Morse, Jr .... Phillip L. Ross, Jr. . Charles M. Ruprecht. . . George S. Smith . . . George S. Watson . Charles C. Wooster llVllllIllllIHHIllIIlIIlllIllIllHHllIIllVHlIllIlllllIVIIlllHIVllillVllllVIlIlllIllIllIHVlllll!IllVllIlllIlllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllWIlllIllIllllllIlIIllillllllIlWIllVIlWilllIllHIlllIIlllllIllllllll!HNlHIWlllllllllllllllllllllIllIHlHIIIIWVHllllllllllllllllllllllllVHlIIlllllIlIll!lIllllllIllIlllIllIHlIlllllNllIllNlIIllllllllllllllllllllllIIllIHlllH!llllll1llllllllllllllllllllllll Saint Anthony Hall DELTA Psi FOUNDED 1869. lllllHHHHIII!III4illPIllIllFIIlIllIllIllIIllHllllIlllllllllllllllllllHI1lllIlllIllIllIlllllllllllllllllllllllllNHIIllHllllINHIHIIIIWIIIIHIIIIIllllillPIIlIllIllIIllIllllllHlllllllllllHIIHIHIIHIHUll!HINHIIIllHHHIIHHillHlllllllllIIlHIJHHHPIUIWIHINIHWIHHHIIllllllHIlillHliIlllHIHINHIlIllllllIlIIllllllillIII!llllIIIIII!HIHHHlllllIINIHVllllllllllllllllllll 194.1 James T. Anderson . Raymond G. Anderson. . . Gustave B. Ballard, Jr. . Harry T. Buchenau . . . William T.1Clark . . . Robert L. Hovis, Jr. . George C. Huffard . . . William B. Lewis . George N. Lindsay,Jr .... Paul B. Metcalii Jr ..,. John W. Owen . . . Burton C. Rowley . . . Arnold C. Saunders, IH . James G. Taylor . Benjamin C. Tilghman, Jr .... Harrison B. Wetherill . William D. Wiggins, Jr .... William C. Zilly 1942 Worthington M. Adams . . . Charles 0. Brooks . . . William M. Decker, III . Harold K. Dell, Jr .... Gardner Fabian . John R. Finch . Eric T. Franzen . . . Robert M. Gill . . . Ed- ward L. Hicks, IH . . . Colin H. John . . . Polk Laffoon, HI . . .John F. Magee, Jr .... William M. Pike. . . Hovey Seymour . Lloyd B. Smith . Charles P. Stetson . Charles Stiassni . . . Ed- mund B. Tobin . . . Robert Wallace . Gilbert L. Watson . James M. Woodhull . Henry Wright 69 'fn QM: I I XX g, K no., g,f,. Ni? fl,-3' - 1.5! . M .5 .f 55,01 -Q., f sq' 4, is ui 1 11' .ff 4 4 ,-'Sfk cy. ,. W jx, in ., f , 9,-1 wt Hgh ga, l'7:,F'Q ,jp ga 2. r, -, .- ,. , ! X-. 'fhlnrf' A v . 4' :fe fx ,. 'kg' nf wr- K. L .,, X. if ff- Sus '+'Ys', SKU, X fl 'a J! .g,,, 97 . 33,1 1 Af, .11 1 Q., 1 ' ..p,A M .5 ,, KK 1- -9 Jn, '. ,. ., xx Q-,E H, 194-O Harry H. Bassett . Robert O. Bassett . Douglas P. Bates . Robert M. Boice . . . Ronald W. Cooke . Frederick C. Cross, Jr .... Russell P. Duncan . . .James D. Emerson . . . Edmund F. Higgins . Harrison W. Holt . . . Thomas A. Jones . . . Lawrence W. Krieger . . . Stanley Living- ston,Jr .... Paul C. Nicholson, Jr .... Harry L. Quinn . . . John W. Rannenberg . . . Truman G. Schnabel, Jr. . John N. Smith, Jr. . Harold C. Strong, Jr. . Benjamin Sullivan . . .James H. Torrey . . . Laurence R. Wallace lllIlllllHIlIHllllIllHIllllIWIIIillll4llilllllIlllllllllllllllllllllllllII4IllllIH!HIIllIllHHlllllIIIHIIIllH1IHlllIlllllIlllllIIIIIllIllIlIllIIIIIlIIIlH1llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll4IIIllllH4IlHIHIUIIIIIIIIIIPIIHIIllIHIllHIIll!HIlllVIllPIIlllllIllllVIllHIllllllllllllllllllHI7IIIlllllllIIIHIllllllIIllllllllIHIlllllIIllIIIlIIIIIHIllllllllllllllllllllll Saint Elmo Club FoUND1-313 1889. llllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllIllllllllllllIllIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIlllllIIIllllllHIIllIllllIllllllHlllllllllllllllllllll!IllllllIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIllHllHHlllllllllllllllllllllIIIHIlllllllllllllllllllHlllllIllllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIlllllllllllllllllllllIllIllllllllIlllllllllllIIIIIIPIlNIllIlllllllllllllllllllH1Illlllllllllllllllllllll Harold R. Brown, Jr. . Gerard L. Buhrman, Jr .... Robert E. Cooke . Edward G. Counselman . . .James R. Dern . Dixon P. Downey. . . Edwin E. Gesner . Thomas F. Gold- camp . . .John S. Hoes . . . Henry S. Kleppinger . . . George W. Lamberson . Wilmer B. Lauf- man, IH . . . David W. Rewick . . . Willis H. Sanburn, H . Richard M. Schreiber . William H. Y. Stevens . . . Ross S. Taber . .I . Robert Wier, III . Bruce S. Williams . Arthur W. Wrieden, Jr. Philip G. Brumder . Dudley W. Burchard . . .Walter M. Charrnan, jr. . James R. Cook . Robert S. Cumming . . . David E. Dangler, H . . . Williamj. Fleming, Jr .... Stephen W. Harris . . . Albert Ingley . . . Howard R.Johnson . . . Charles A. Kilvert, Jr .... John Markell, Jr .... Walter E. Newcomb, Jr .... Charles E. Pynchon, Jr .... John M. Quinn . . . Thomas B. Ross . . . Charles F. Seelbach, Jr. . Omar H. Simonds, Jr .... Alexander M. Thompson, Jr. . John Thompson, Jr. . Theodore S. Turner . . . William C. Witt 71 viii ' my ' fy' Lf QV MW? ff ff X74 WK ffl ,fi , W A ff aw ,gf all XI ?A K Y 'W'-22.1 ' A P11195 f f K.-. 2 , 'r' 2:2535 . if Q51 ,, ,, ,, f 'gff1:.71'Zf'ff'-Z'.M 71,55 'WP' 19440 Albertj. Alter . . . Walter A. Bareiss . Lawrence G. Blackmon . Archer L. Bolton, Jr. . Joseph L. Burns, jr .... Richard B. Caswell . Darrah Corbet, Jr .... Martin L. Davey, jr. . john R. Dellenback . Richard H. Deming, Jr. . Donald P. Dunklee . . . Samuel Field, III . John B. Fuller . . . Donald Gregg . . . Frank W. Hamilton, Jr. . Harris F. Hanscom . . .John E. Sloane . James S. Smith . . . George R. Wilson, Jr. EIlHilllHIIIIllllll!IIIVIIHIIIIIIIHIIllHlHIIlllllIIllIlllllllllllllllllllllllllIHlllIIlllllIlIIlIHlHIH1IllflllHIHIlIIIlIIVHIHlH1llllIllHIlH4llllllllllllllllllllllHIlllllllllllllllllllllIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllHHHIlllllllHIIlllllllllllllllllllllllHIlIIIHIIHIIIIIHIIVIHIIIIIllllllllHIIIlllIHHIlHIllllll4HI7lllilllIlllHlH1ll!lllllllllllllllllllllllIl Vernon Hall PHI GAMMA DELTA FOUNDED 184.8 lllllllllllllllIllllllllllllVIlllllllllIlllllllllIllllllll4IllllllllHIIIIIHIIHlllllllIlllllIlllllllllllllllllllllllVIIIIIHIlIlllllllIllllllllIlllllllllIlllllIllllllllIllllllllllllHIIIIIIllIIHIIIIlllllllllllHllllIllllllllllllllllllHllllllIllllllllllHllllllllIlllllIll!lHlllllllPIlllllllllHHIIlllllllllllllllHllllllllIIHIIIII!IIllllllllIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll 194.1 Edward I-I. Beavers, Jr. . William G. Boynton . Truman L. Bradley . George E. Brun- ner, Jr. . . . John P. Cassilly . George E. H. Comte . james A. Currie . . .John Dickenson, IV . . . William H. Farrell . . . Alfred C. Gilbert, Jr .... John H. Hartman, Jr. . Winthrop A. Havi- land, Jr .... Robert E.jones . . .John W. Lomas . . . Charles F. Malcolm, Jr .... Edmund Ocum- paugh, IV . . .John R. Pettit . . . Kenneth G. Smith . George H. Southworth . . .Joseph L. Tweedy, Jr .... Lyman G. Wickwire 194.2 George duP. Boomer . Fred L. Born . George G. Browning . . . William E. Coykendall, Jr. . Eugenej. Curtis,Jr .... William E. Fowler, Jr. . Edward R. Frisby . . . Edmund K. Gravely . . . Harvey W. Kausel . John Kennedy, Jr .... James P. McGowan . Arthur C. Madden . Russell R. Monroe . john T. Morris . . . Edward Pope, Jr .... Thomas B. Turner . . . Elmore A. Willets, Jr. 73 5 ...4. 4 . 595: -' ff . Vx: .Q , egg. , iii' 9 ,V ,Zi hug.. 5' V ,' A 'f ua. - f- : f ' V - N V V .N-:tziv-'Q f X. : Jaya- 0 V252 'i r I V, Vf ,Wi FS, .N V, Q A ,L-1 . V-v aa -Y V .W W V . E yep- 'i 5 'Kas an K .:,,,xYk,, ,V N 1' wf X. K J... Q . V.-yf5L32gvY F X 32633w ' W V .I V. . 4 ., Lk , X5 : V V p if ww -. 7.11 , V, sm , Q35 2- 1-V: 2 .QV ' Vilfib? 1. ,. .QQ xv .M 43 .Ve .gin V. :vm V ,. . ,, . ,F iff. : ,ml . ,Q . ,N is , Q A VV . 9 S--If AWK -xv 2 .V A Ii i, Ml: f' ., 4 i .V as -1 'X A by x X ' ,. , V ,V-.f A 4' Mxggs ' b A ., -5 i,x.,V5g,. . . V V X Qhgg 'f N95 tiff! VH V , 5 X . Q., . . ,ww 3Q. ,-z. K V ,FA WMQQLS' V.. A f 'X V xx , , , 'H X ,B . sv .V X N . if . V 'Y-2 f ' W. X rf X ' A imfm X .523 Q s' VW .-,..- V V, .V 2.- ::mQQf,'.5:': ...rw , 4. gms ,-1 .,. 5. .. :sw 1. Q2 L . 2' x . V. S., V V 0 M Q 5 MVS . . - - V AZ.-:z 4 W4 9. V .Q fi-Q.. 5 Q .lm +2 X ' , V ,.,-'S , ., .., , . few, .2 -Y uw- fi 52?-If wb. My Y N, 'In' ww-3 f ' X .Ve ,Q ,gif 2? 5 .'fQS3.X. V. ,X - H xT'w ... . X79 ' .. ,fiw5'2?W Z' aj F .- . J. Si' S . -fl -V I V, .L3 33725 3' f '.L3- .L . 4, N ,.V , .V- w?? x Qifwg .V LL fy. . 1-ffm ' , ,.V, 4.4 gym.. fy yi.-V . P 1940 Robert C. Barrett . Cornell B. Blanding . George Bounakes . George L. Brownell, H . Leonard D. Burdett . . . DeFrance Clarke, Jr. . Ralph G. Collins, Jr .... Harold G. Ed- wards, Jr. . Herbert W. Evans, Jr .... Kieran Hackett . Robert B. Hopgood . . . Sherwin Kibbe . . . A. Hicks Lawrence, Jr .... Scott McFarland . Thorvol Martin . . . John D. Reilly, Jr. . Charles T. Roelke . Hugh Rowland llllHIHIIUllllllllllllllllIll4IllIllHllllllllWlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllUllllllUllllllH4HlllllllllllllllllllllVllllllllllllllllllllllHllllllIIUIIHIIHIlllllllllllllHIHIIIIIllllllllHlllHIIIWHWNIHN lIlIllNlPIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllHIHIIIIIHIHIIHIIlllllllllllllUU!llllllllllllllllllllillllllllllVllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIllllllllllillll York Hall CHI PHI FOUNDED 1878 HIVIlIHIIHHllllIHlllllIHHNH!IllIll!illHNHHIlllllVHIHIIHHIIIIUI1HIllllHIllllllllIIHIIHIHIVIIIIIIIllllllIllllllHIlllllliIllHlllllllillVIIIIlllIlllllIIlllllIHHIllllIllIllIIHIlill!II1IHHHIIlIlllllllHIWIIIIIHHHIHHHIllIHIIIIIlJIllIllIllllllHINIIIIIIlIIIllIIINIHI1IIIHIIHIIHHIllHIIllIlllllllllIIIIIIIIIIHIHIIIIlllllIIlNIIIHIIIII!IIINIHIIHIIHIHIIllillllllllllllll 1941 Wiley Blair, III . . . John L. H. Cole . Robert G. Crockett . . . Howard G. Davis, Jr. . . .Roger D. Farnham . Frederick 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 R. Keutgen, Jr .... David C. Martin. . . George R. Shepherd . . . Paul Trautrnan . . . Charles W. Watson . . .James Young, II 1942 VVilliam F. Arnoldy, Jr .... Edward T. Badger . Gaylord B. Barnes . Ford W. Brun- ner . . .James L. Carton, Jr. . William P. Cook, III . . . Felix P. Dzwonkoski , . . Warren A. Hindenlang . Robert S. House . . . Mark MCD. Lindsey . . . Robert Musser . . . Wilson C. Rich, Jr .... James M. Sessions . Alan B. Spurney, Jr .... Thurston Twigg-Smith . . . Alexander B. Warrick . Thomas L. Weirick 75 Sx A PIHHIEHHHNS Back Row: Weissman, Weeks, Robinson, Goodfellow, Eagle, Platt, Snyder, Ballard. Front Row: Finch, Orr, Ferriss, Glover, Holden, Hart, Smythe. The Yale News O matter what Critics may have said when the 1940 News Board staggered out of oflfice, no one can deny that it commenced its regime in good company. On one and the same day Mr. De Vane assumed his duties as Dean of Yale College, and an aspiring group of 1940 newshawks established themselves in the Briton Hadden building for a year's tenure of ofhce. We leave for more objective commentators the de- cision as to which inauguration Yale will re- member the longest. Outwardly, the only evidences of change in management of the O.C.D. were a new style of indented headlines and an ambitious opening editorial discussing Yale's educational oppor- tunities and deploring the current standard of campus values minimizing the importance ofthe intellectual side of university life. Behind the scenes, however, all was revolution and reform. Under the benevolent despotism of Managing Editor Ben Holden, order and system made their appearance in every department. The tradi- tional style book was modernized and stream- 78 lined, a head book was issued containing sample headlines for every possible contingency, the ten o'clock deadline for university notices was enforced for the first time, much to the con- sternation of all managerial competitors, and for the first week at least copy was pedalled across the railroad tracks to the printer in a steady stream as the paper went to bed at un- precedently early hours. The year of the 1940 Boardis tenure provided many important events, local, national, and international, which evoked editorial comment. Overshadowing all other issues, of course, was the outbreak of World War II. The News con- sistently advocated that it was to America's interest to stay out of the European conflict at all costs. Issue was taken with President Sey- mour's matriculation address on the grounds that it overemphasized both the moral issues involved and the importance of an Allied vic- tory. The Pittman amendment was supported not because it was neutral or according to in- ternational law, but because it was drafted in Benevolent despot E the best interests of America. Vice-Chairman Roy Finch prepared a striking series of excerpts from the 1917-18 volumes of the News to show the steady, unthinking trend of campus opinion during those years from neutrality to full-fledged support of Americals entrance into the war. On the campus there was an unending suc- cession of interesting stories. There came an- nouncement of the four-course plan, the aboli- tion 'of the class officers and the creation of the office of Assistant Dean, and the introduction of the alphabetical marking system. on all of these the News had something to say, specifically opposing the four-course plan on the grounds that the university was not adequately prepared to administer it. In other spheres of college life, the News suc- cessfully campaigned for a reform of the chaotic state of the Sophomore Reading Period, and for a shortening of the two-week fraternity rushing period. Fraternities were praised as extremely pleasant eating clubs for those'who could afford them but were criticized for failure to adapt George jones-gf T ale themselves to modern conditions. Tap Day wasg denounced as an unnecessary spectacle which in no way reflected the ideals either of Yale or -the Senior Societies. Hearty approval was given to the President's decision to allow Communist Earl Browder to speak in Strathcona Hall and thus fulfill Yale's obligations as a true university to give a hearing to all shades of opinion. In the Held of athletics there was much to re- port. Frank Kanaly's replacement as track coach by Charlie Hoyt found Sports Editor Hart , x V ' Power cyf the press and the Down the Field columnists refuting Stanley Woodward's charges in the Herald- Tribune that the News was asleep at the switch. Soon thereafter there came the announcement that Marshall Wells had resigned as line coach of football. The O.C.D. was the first to carry the story that Spike Nelson would be his successor. During the football season the News stuck its neck out by criticizing Yale's tactics in the clos- ing minutes of the Army game. Although the avalanche of communications thus evoked was about evenly divided pro and con, certain en- 79 l A Generosiy personqied raged alumni wrote in after each subsequent Yale defeat attributing the outcome to the fact that the News had undermined the team's con- 0 l . ' ..am.f.a....-A To Halt Invasion Today telegrams from the pens of Sports Editor Hart and his side-kick, GeorgeJor1es', Orr. The News took cognizance of the Junior Prom with a mammoth issue which boasted a rull-page spread of pictures and a two-page Society Sec- tion edited under the practiced direction of Bob Q'iLucius Knickerbockernj Orr. Anonymous Prom-goers from Radcliffe, Smith, and Vassar contributed columns giving their impressions of the gala affair. A special Worldls Fair issue featured an un- biased preview of everything Grover Whalen had to offer by Special-Events-Reporter Scott Goodfellow. Derby Day saw the husky crew of Business Manager Ferriss, Editor Platt, the Managing Editor, and the Chairman swamp the Record outfit in a one-sided race across the Housatonic. In 1940 the News took the air with a series of weekly fifteen-minute broadcasts entitled the Newspaper of the Air. The programs were under the direction of Jack Weeks and Larry Harper, and almost every board member was heard impersonating characters ranging from Soviet commissars to U. S. senators. The Course of Study review was published for the first time in separate pamphlet form under the direction of Ted Ballard and Fred Eagle. Reviews were based on a careful poll of all un- dergraduates as well as selected individual Read all about it! fidence. Every angle of the trip to Michigan was colorfully reported in a steady stream of collect Rube and Brood criticisms. The day of the Har- vard game Cambridge was cluttered up with editions of the Crim- son, some bona ,fide and some bogus. Startled Cantabs read in a typographically per- fect facsimile of their own college paper, prepared and person- ally distributed by jokesters Holden, Orr, and Hart, that Coach Dick Harlow had re- signed to become a professor of Ornithol- ogy at Yale, that the Crimson was now encour- aging the growth of tutoring schools, and that the reclzerclw A.D. Club had succumbed to long- standing Hnancial distress. The Record was so lacking in originality that it was forced to follow the O.C.D.'s lead and perpetrate a hoax issue of its own which was suitable only for protection from the inclement Cambridge weather. It is grossly unfair to leave to the last, mention of the Business Department, for without the services of penny-pinchers Ferriss and Smythe not even a single issue could have been pub- lished. Efficient as their financial policies were, they always managed, as Business Departments have done since time immemorial, to call for Cigar salesman a mammoth paper when news was scarce and a meagre four-pager when the biggest stories were breaking. A splendid array of columnists enlivened the pages of the 1940 News. It is impossible to men- tion them all. We can only list in passing Dick Weissman and Bill jackson, whose Cabbages and Kings never failed to be thought-provoking, the excellent movie reviews of John Nelson and Anson Peckham, the accurate coverage of day to day national news by Snow Herrick, Dick Kellogg, and Don Schmechel, in Views on the News, and the sports columns of Bunco Baker, Bob McCormick, and Phelps Platt. CHARLES C. GLOVER, JR. l U-Notice departmenf' 81 Seats fy' the mighty Back Row: McCorkle, Spring, Loree, Bull, Tabor, McKennee. Front Row: Thacher, Morison, Barnet, Martin. The Yale Banner His year's BANNER is the last issue before reaching the century mark. 'Perhaps the hundredth issue should logically look back upon the past as well as peer into the new era ahead, but for many reasons it remains the privilege of this year's board to indulge in a little fanciful reminiscing. The BANNER, in short, is an ancient affair, the year 1841 was, after all, in the dim and dark past. It was the year in which Van Buren had succeeded Jackson as President, Mehemet Ali was blasting dictatorially about the sands of the Nile, the Boers had trekked into Natal, Perry had opened up the East. The O.C.D. and the New York Sun were not even gleams in someone's eyes, and Fifty-Second Street was overrun by the Iroquois or one of that bunch. Such were the dynamic days in which the oldest annual in America was founded. The next ninety-eight years can be skipped over brieHy. The BANNER became a little larger, took on some weight, broadened out a bit in scope, and widened in iniiuence. It merged and unmerged a few times and picked up and 82 dropped 'apo pooreei' on the way. Today it is the YALE BANNER, plain and simple, but im- mensely different from a century ago. Yet, at the beginning of this year all was not well. The editors were notably worried by a marked propensity on the part of undergrad- uates to think of the BANNER, whenever they were rudely reminded by some enterprising heeler, as something to hang upon one's wall. Some who were in the know said that for all that went into the book, one could do just that with it. So the editors put their heads together and called in the experts, and abracadabra , things began to happen. That's getting ahead of the story. Before that, deep-laid plans were hatched in the summer months. It was felt that the freshmen needed biographical and photographic information about their classmates early in the year. The Freshman Edition of the BANNER, formerly ap- pearing in May, was accordingly scratched off the record and became a thing of the past, as the Old Campus mushroomed up in its place. De- signed to aid the freshmen as a directory, the ' ' Whereas Tlzaoher? ' new publication was hailed as a pronounced success, both by the authorities and the under- graduates. With such a start, the board ventured into new fields, and for a multitude of obvious rea- sons, combined with the Class Book. Numerous hurdles were in the way, problems of format, layout, and organization, but they were met successfully. After much fussing around, the result was a complicated layer-cake idea, ar- ranged in such a fashion as to satisfy everybody, and two books were produced -A the YALE BANNER and the Class Book. Particular care was taken to insure that the distinctive personality of each book was as far as possible left unim- paired. The BANNER, from the point of View of style, make-up, and general readability has gained immensely. Instead of unwieldy composite photography, interesting snaps with captions have been introduced. A new artistic combina- tion on divider pages is another feature, while the athletic section has at least one action-shot on each page. The book more adequately tells the story of Yale life. Its narrative is greatly en- hanced by the pictorial touch. At the same time, for the powers that be, it remains Yale's official yearbook with a complete coverage of every undergraduate activity. Pulling the various material together that was to go into the book fell on the shoulders of Tom Morison who probably lost more sleep than the rest of the board put together. With the new duties owing to the BANNER,S expansion, he did a remarkable and thorough piece of work. As head of the treasury, Thor Martin ably saw to it that the trade ads were untraded and the heelers percolated into the depths of the uni- versity for book sales. Al Thacher assumed the new position of photographic editor and was greatly instrumental in giving the book just the right flavor, while the chairman ranted nightly between seven and eight, butting into every- thing other than his own affairs. Finally, Harry Robinson, the BANNER7S fifth'7 power, his com- mittee, and Ben Holden were instrumental in Always worgfing getting out a good yearbook as well as a Class Book. Thus, the BANNER gives way, some definite changes and improvements made, to the centennial board which will undoubtedly make great strides as well. SYLVAN M. BARNET, JR. i Sleepless nights Back Row: Link, DuBosque, Cheyney, Sirnonds, Baltz. Front Row: Bassett, Barnes, Nemiah, Alexander , McMullen. The Yale Record T has been a moot point for a year or more whether we grabbed Fate by the horns, or whether Fate grabbed us and rushed us down the headlong and thorny path of convulsing mother Yale by poking her lightly in the ribs. The point perhaps is moot, but the fact remains that we quickly donned long pants over our brand new diapers, caught the reins that were hurled at our eager head, and began our one- way editorial buggy ride. We strode into the office that first day, grabbed a pencil and began to write our initial editorial of Salutation, determined that we had no policy other than hurricane insurance. We secretly resolved that the Record this year was going to be different, that we would be the Hgadfly on the rump of Yalei' Qeuhoe, Socratesjg that conven- tion and her disciples were to be our anathema. The Owl's life was a smooth one through the month of April, but his feathers will have moulted again and again before he forgets the memorable day that Bilgey Barnes pulled his business nose from out of a column of figures and cried, Great heavens, weive got thousands of 84 dollars - thousands! Let's throw a party. And so, nothing daunted by the fact that the adding machine had as usual gone berserk and lied again about the figures, three heads got together, and hatched a Derby Day mint julep party whose traces may be seen even now in our back yard - a party given in honor of the News, prior to our infamous boat race across the Hous- atonic. Hardened dopers, it is said, quailed after three juleps, the News became maudlin after two, and we grew wittier as the Bourbon drained dryer. Came the summer vacation, followed by the tall football season. The ground was hardening, bar bills were soaring, and the thrill of the gridiron had tinged even the sleepy town of Oshkosh, when Alex awoke one morning to find he was without a date for the Princeton game. As the Record is my .entr2e,', he cried at last in desperation, HI shall wire that lovely model agent we wrote about last issue for a 'lovelyw and a Nlovelyi' she was, thanks to the Powers that be. But Alex's mind was far from completely on ANY CRITICISMS? Q Any criticirms or .vuggestionrfor the improvement of tlzzlr book will be greatba appreciated. Quoted from the last sentence ly' the last page of the prqface rj any texlbookyou care to pick up, Qfyou care to pick up textbook.v.j DEAR MR. IVIODHOKZ I have meant to write you before about your book, Moth- ematics-Pure and Simple, but I got lost in your proof of Theorem on page 43, and when I finally got my bearings, it was after midnight, and I came out somewhere below 14th Street. I have since looked at the proof again, and discover that I took a wrong trolley at Step C, which accounts for my not having arrived at the same conclusion as you. But let's get together and criticize your book, shall we? Perhaps I should first give you my qualifications, so that you will have confidence in my judgments. My rise to suc- cess as a book criticizer has been a slow one, but steadily upwards. I began with humbler origins way back in the fourth grade as a Text Grouser. I remember at the begin- ning of that grade, turning to one of my friends when the books were passed out to us during the first class. Hjeez, what a lousy bunch of books, I said. As the year pro- gressed, I began to notice little flaws that I could pick on to grouse about-misspellings were my meat. It was not till the seventh grade that I began writing the authors letters about their books, and telling them what was wrong with them. In the eighth grade I reached what, at the time, I considered the high point in my life, when an author died shortly after I had written him about his text in American History. Since then I have been turning on the heat regu- larly once a year. I hope in the view of what I have just told you, you will place some value on my statements. In the first place I would advise you next year to make your book a little longer so that it will be about a half-inch thicker. Ilve got a table in my room, and one of its legs is just a bit shorter than the others, so that it wobbles behind my back. To obviate this condition and keep the table on the level, I f I , I 5 LL ijgw, l is fewer: co, I 5 I URW Idsf ' 5 ll' iff' 4 I ,+I -ty Xl -Lf I 7 El X I I'll have to look up your thize, Mith Tlzmilhn have had to stick my history book underneath the leg. The history book fits exactly, but sometimes I have to use it, which means that I have to remove it from under the table, which is inconvenient, and furthermore gives the table free rein to wobble, which it will do the minute I give it a chance. Your book isjust a bit too thin to fill the space under the leg, but if you would be willing to increase the size, as suggested, I feel that Mathematics-Pure and Simple, in its new 1940 edition would prove very serviceable to me. I realize that I could of course, put the table against the wall, and in this way prevent it from wobbling. But that would be rather inconvenient, because then I should have to move the divan over to the other wall, shift the armchair into the fireplace, and hang the piano out the window. x are Iles FQ? ee. if ff, ' MTF f-'fr1r..A ill o fy gm M Ar I W 4.44, ,aff 'M Illustrated axiom No. 2. A watched pot never boils This arrangement would be all right, if it were not for the fact that to get the piano hung up outside the window, I should have to carry it all the way down the stairs, and around the outside of the building. This would be rather of a chore, but if you can figure out a way to stick thepiano direatbz out the window, I should be glad to shift my furni- ture around the room, thus removing the necessity of using your volume under the table leg, and saving you the trouble of expanding your book. Another thing I might mention about your book. On page fifty-two under the chapter heading Trigonometry for Gnomesf' you state the following problem: If one horse ate three tons of hay, and another horse ate four tons, how many tons of hay did the two consume between them? I looked up your answer among the answers printed at the back of the book, and discover you have given the correct solution to be seven tons of hay. This is wrong. By the way, most of the answers you have given are wrong. I would advise you, before printing the new edition of your book, to recheck on your figuring. Practically every solution I arrive at differs from yours, and I must confess it rather shakes my faith in you as a mathematician, ,and the book Mathematics -Pure and Simple to work out a problem myseli and then discover that you have been unable to get the correct answer. A pure mathematician should be very accurate in his work-a simple one especially so. To return to the question of the horses. Your answer is obviously absurd. Have you ever heard of a horse eating one ton of hay, let alone three or four? Seriously now, Mr. Modhok, there's a limit to a fellow's patience. I do not dispute you on this matter without having checked up on the question first myself. In fact, I phoned a horse I know up in Albany just last night, and asked him if he could eat a ton of hay. No,', he replied, but, boy, what I couldn't do with a gallon of whiskey! '5Come, come, Donald, I said. Cut out the horseplay- this is a long distance call, and each one of your cracks is costing me a nickel. Tell me frankly if you could eat a ton of hay. Boy, he said, ifI could eat a ton ofhay, I wouldn't be a horse. I'd be a cow! So you can see, Mr. Modhok, that youyare obviously wrong in this matter. I hope you will substitute cows for horses in your 1 94.0 edition. In your chapter Quadratic Equations on the Equator, I find another discrepancy. On page 61 you state: 4'If K equals L, and DY plus OX equals 72, then the cosine of K plus L minus the sine of DY will equal KOX minus 725. From this it follows logically that D is greater than QY plus X equals 72j. I disagree. Theoretically your statement seems to hold true, but if you make practical application of your conclusion, you will find that if your conclusion is true, it would mean that the Lexington Avenue express could not make its run from Grand Central Station to 86th Street in less than seven and one-half minutes. We know from empirical observation that the express makes it easily in five. If you will substitute Erfor D and S for X, wherever they occur, you will find that your conclusion by definition holds a more tenable position, and you will find a nice Wisconsin cheese in the icebox, behind that milk bottle, and left-over roast beef. One last point before I finish my criticisms, which I hope have been destructive enough to deter you from finishing your new book, Mathematics-for Trolls, which is, I believe, in preparation. On page 304, I have found a typographical error. You state: 'kfa is a surdf' Should that not read Habsurdn? Carpingly yours, J. C. N. I X X ffi fr fag J W Sas - it 1- 3- I fflf Z' J 1, , mr.. 1 V he vsgwgpl glx XM Ng M Wi? if X i ll s c illicit ill lg Nx fa, lr A ge: He's going to be a Harvard Diploma his model, for we were then in the midst of hatching and executing a hoaxy plot on the assembled mass of Harvards, through the me- dium of a Yale-Harvard football special issue of the Harvard Crimson. Sporting a genuine Crimson head, but printed in ink that smelled suspiciously of a blue that was not Boston blue-blood, our headlines screamed to the occupants of Soldiers Field that brisk November day the story of Chicago's Hutchins' accession to the throne that President Conant had held so long. Our aim was unparalleled as far as hoaxes go, but unfor- tunately, the News, not content with hacking i Cie! and assistants Yale,s only dailyf' decided that she must try her hand at lowering the moral standard of the Harvard paper too and much confusion re- sulted. Again, the office breathed qnietly and auto- matically. And then one day, after we had read a particularly undesirable bit of Hitler oratory in the daily paper, the Great and Good, Vladi- mir Doig, henchman ofthe late Good and Great Paul Wupper, the Great Emancipator, entered our offices and put us at the disposal of his great emancipating machine 3 so that in the twinkling of a totalitarian cliche, we had put out our scurrilous Gongamuck Corridor issue. A marked copy sent to Hitler himself elicited no more reply than a stiff warning from the Gestapo, a bomb or two in our cellar, and the disappearance of a heeler, whom We never liked very well anyway. We have since learned that 37 Great with humor totalitarianism is a power of evil, but it was fun while it blasted. Alumni Day in February saw us prepared with alwhole stack of copies of our Alumni Day issue that old Record men had most kindly written for us. Their help was inestimable, and served perhaps to make us a bit more keenly aware of what we could have done, at a time when we were drawing our last breaths of edi- torial air and were saying Good-bye to the Owl. But we were through, completely through. If you want us now, you will find us any time at Brubaker,S drugstore, drinking milkshakes with Modhok and Meely and the rest of them. JOHN C. NEMIAH Blind obedience Back Row: Whittemore, Abrams, Angleton, Sullivan,-James, Bundy. Front Row: Thompson, Pauker, Wilcox, Thompson, Cummings. The Yale Literary Magazine N February 1939, when the board of editors took over the Qld Lady, an inventory was taken to determine our joint possessions. The results were not encouraging. Item one, was a subterranean retreat in the bowels of Durfee, its walls blistered with heat, its windows dark with a strange vegetable growth. There was one door which we could never open, try as we might, and even the janitor could not tell whether it hid bones or brooms. But it was nothing to worry about. Then, of course, we had a magazine. The Old Lady had been belabored, traduced and cozened till she could think of nothing but the peace and everlasting quiet of the grave. Carl Rollins was called in as combination physician- modiste, writing out prescriptions for bodily ills and restoring our mistress' vanity by designing an outfit compatible with the needs and station of a lady. We passed to more tenuous things. For some time the Lit had been trying to follow a upolicy' that became more incongruous each year. Former acolytes had used such words as controversial, significant, ustreamlinedi' and modern , It was a great puzzle to us as well as to contributors, no one seemed to be able to define or clarify any of these euphemistic slogans, but all paid passing reverence. Then we made the discovery. In all the scurry and fuss of streamlining, the word Hliteraryi' had been for- gotten. We decided to get back to some sort of bed rock and make literary merit a criterion in the future for all contributions. All that spring we bustled about, popping in and out of our dark warren with papers and ideas, watching the Old Lady return to more graceful ways and to a new life with the spring. But sometimes, on warm afternoons or quiet evenings as we took our mole's-eye view of the old campus through the varied flora of the win- dows, we knew we were not long for that place. We longed for more lofty mansions, more ethereal abodes. So autumn found us in a new haven, snug and content and no longer in danger of suffocation. The business board had moved over on York Street with some owlish neighbors. They liked cellars and it was the only one to be found: we The typewriter is miglztier . . . preferred clearer air. This new Olympus was the Chi Delta Theta room in Connecticut Hall, low of ceiling and rolling of floor. From that room we could look out into the elrns, or down on Nathan Hale's head - whitened with many an avian tribute - or just lean back and talk. There was McGeorge Bundy, sly of wit and with a wicked gleam in his eyes. He came to us in the guise of a book-reviewer but turned out to be much more lethal. Arthur Cummings was quieter and brought sanity into our lives. He was an old hand, having served the Lit through three offices, many formats and more troubles - and still re- mained faithful. Henry James came and babbled of Saroyan, Odetts, Cornell and got ex- cited. Once he wrote a poem - and became rather diffident but he got over that. Walter Sullivan would always forget about us and come ten minutes late. Snowden Herrick and William Stone were late ar- rivals, so we never got to know them. They came and went, paying their respects brieliy and being swept out the door by the younger generation. And so we dwelt in that room, reading, argu- ing, criticizing and talking - always talking. There was not a subject about which we could not find something to say, irrelevant or weighty - and we put out the magazine every month. We found much that was bad, much mediocre and some good, and we made our judgments according to our standards. No thrill was greater than to find a man7s work improving Qthough ever so slowlyj until it had reached the printable stage. We shocked many contributors, but for their own good-we tried, above all things, to be honest with ourselves and to print the best literary pieces we could find. Now there are new men in our chairs, other eyes look out through the leaves and the night to see if that last editor is coming, and the quiet ghosts Hnd different initials under the criticisms of their poetry. But somehow we feel that it is just as if we were all there again, the problems are the same, the goal identical. There will still be the talk and the faded pictures of Lit great, the leaves in the spring, snow on winter eve- nings. Countless chairmen will pull up to the table and hope that the boys will vote something in this month. Some one will always wear a lurid tie. And see that the lights are out before you leave. RICHARD L. Wircox l l Old Laobfs boudoir 89 Dill, Bloomingdale, Smith. The Yale Scientific Magazine HE T ale Scientnic Magazine uttered its birth- cry almost fifty years ago, in 1894. Today its voice reaches further than any other of Yale's undergraduate publications. Quarterly copies are sent to interested subscribers, libraries, scientific organizations and graduate engineers in distant regions of every continent, from pro- gressive South America to undeveloped Asia. In order to increase the scope of the Tale Scientyic Magazine, the 1940 board has made several progressive improvements in its format without radically changing the magazine's general character. Outstanding among these recent improvements are the alterations provid- ing easier readability. This goal has been at- tained with the use of a new three-column page, dull, semi-mat paper, more frequent use of sub- heads, and fresher, clearer type faces. These changes have already proven themselves espec- ially worthy, so much so that the fall issue was used as a mailing piece by the printer. The edi- tors of Architectural Forum called this mailing piece the best they had ever received. Another step toward furthering interest and popularity instituted by the board was the inclusion of new and appealing matter. The G.S.Q,. Quizzes, written by Phil Wootten have demonstrated their worth by being reprinted in several nationally circulated scientific publica- tions. Dean Dudley, in comparing the winter issue to that of his student days, also remarked on the great increase in both interest and the scientific value of the articles. As Dean Dudley discovered, the articles pre- sented in this year's Scientyic Magazine were chosen for generality of appeal as well as for scientific excellence in technical treatment. As usual, articles were written by students, members of the faculty, research specialists not connected with Yale, and executives of industrial organizations. Included in the issues were dis- cussions ranging from transatlantic airplane travel to our own Silliman College. Hardy Cross, Professor of Civil Engineering, in review- ing the summer issue, stated: Animals and autos, plastics and psychology-the summer copy of the Tale Scientyie Magazine, just of the press, reaches the goal of modern education and entertains while it instructs. The climactic point of the year, however, was the special Aviation issue of the magazine. This copy consisted of a symposium of articles written by prominent authorities in various fields of aviation. That the issue was proved highly sat- isfactory is indicated by a jump in circulation to about four thousand copies. A review of the contents of the four issues pub- lished by the 1940 board shows achievement of the ideal distribution of equal contribution from students, from the Yale faculty, and from unafliliated research and industrial organiza- tions. The lirst issue presented an informative, embrasive survey of plastics by K. Hunt of du Pont, new results of the famous electro- biological equipment of the Yale School of Medicine by H. S. Burr, the researches of C. E. A. Winslow also of the Yale School of Medicine, on the heat- ing and ventilation of the home, a descrip- tion of experiments conducted at the Yale Institute of Human Relations under the direction of N. E. Miller which first enunciated in print the important theories of these workers on indecision and conflict in rats, and a paper by H. E. Churchill of the Studebaker Corpora- tion on high-speed propeller shafts. In the fall issue, Capt. B. C. Fowlkes,Jr., of the U. S. Army showed what engineers should ex- pect if the U. S. declared war, A. S. Denton described Sucro-Blanc, a revolutionary sugar process, W. C. Robinson discussed Silliman College, F. C. Mock, of the Bendix Aviation Corporation, presented new developments in carburetion, and H. W. Gillett, of the Batelle Memorial Institute, gave the low-down on research-as a profession. The winter Avia- tion issue gave a symposium of that industry, all the articles being written by executives of air- line, airplane manufacturing, or air research organizations, except for M. R. Prass, Jr., 1941 E. The authors of the spring issue comprised Professors W. W. Watson and H. Lutz, F. Penny-pinclzer QI Pleased Billy Phelps Stugard, H. Wilson of the Goodyear Co., and R. W. Englehart, attorney at law. The T ale Seienzfyic Magazine has this year con- tinued its function as the Lil and News of the Sheff and Engineering Schools. The executive board normally consists of six senior members, but this year the number was reduced to three by sickness and college withdrawals. However, L. M. Bloomingdale, jr., chairman, M. Dill, Jr., managing editor, and R. H. Smith, business manager, have more than borne their double burdens. The success of this year's magazine was best summed up by William Lyon Phelps, who stated in a review: The fall number of the 1' ale Sci- entyic Magazine has an all-star cast, the various authors of articles, undergraduates and alumni and guests, have demonstrated the wisdom and skill of the editorial board. . .I congratulate the young editors of this magazine. It combines learning with entertainment. I wish every under- graduate would read itf' LEWIS M. BLOOMINGDALE, JR. Eimteins in the making In Il mn .xy , f Q 5 Z f n gl Wx W X s i M W M q W - Q -E ww 3 M, ll I .,., t Mmaaw e ? . ,..3Sg.aAv'.4' X---if ,W .,,A . Q, 4.4. iv: . -by -- :Q .x g-gf .5 QQ, ,gg g.:fBw-9 m X 'fvN.Fbi4Q. 5 ,QR ,, H M- - Qxlhi ,- .T-' v N .... . 3 'f-12-2:5E'f-''3'LfIf::E-. - kwa 4 ms ,:,..'-'!ff:1,. '-2 :: 4, ,-X33 M ' .cisa.is3.15:-1:1::1:sNQ::-N151315352231X,gi-39:4-faq, , NN 1g.f,+'izg 0 N -5 gala '2'? Ef.g,:-51: WX H , o:'f:'4.:1:Fff:13-:ff-Sfi'-E531-Gfg--fg'f'f2Q 'fQj'?- 45 Q , 5 1 f 3 A A wr ,ww 1 4 ww :fel WI' I 7 155' w x 1 f I , gfm , fff ff l Bank Row: Griswold, Lanman, Spurney, Roth, Tener, Walradt, McClure, Viets, McVicker, Sieber. Fwh Row: Knight, Wilson, Dodge, Oler, Keating, D. Griswold, Counselman, Benson, Chidester, McMahon. Fourth Row: Harris, Tilley, Taber, Kausel, Lavery, Schluederberg, Lohmann, Dellenback, Winterbotham, jenter. Third Row: Levy, Pearson, Hemingway, Comly, Stafford, Fox, Mennel, Dwight, Manilla, McClintock, Springer. Second Row: Ray, Blossom, Camp, Todd, Gary, Paul, Wallace, Thomson, Haff, Clark, Lee. Front Row: Owen, Devor, Ebel, Schlesinger, Anderson, Fitz- williarn, Lucey, Barske. Musical Clubs GLEE CLUB , KNOW you like beer, sonny, but youire in France now, and youill drink champagne. Yes sir, I will, and Fd be thrilled to meet the Duke and Duchess. Yes sir, they have rolly- coasters in Copenhagen that make Playland seem as exciting as Savin Rock in January. One more curfew missed, Kausel, and there's going to be a Blitzkrieg? Such is a kaleidoscopic im- pression of the Yale Glee Club's European trip last summer. It was on the twenty-first of June, a bright, sunshiny summer morn, that sixty-one Yale Glee Clubbers were ushered into their palatial suites in the bowels of the Queen Maryf' After a brisk five-day crossing, marked by calm weather, two ship's concerts, and several mildly successful attempts at outwitting cabin-class stewards, the Club sang its first concert in Paris before a dis- tinguished audience in the grand amphitheatre of the Sorbonne. Immediately following, the Club was entertained by Ambassador Bullitt at a ball of imposing splendor. The Duke and Duchess of Windsor, whom no one had seen for weeks, were among the guests. The next day in Brussels, following a luncheon at the university, the Club was received by Burgomaster Adolphe Max Qsince deceasedj, Belgiurrfs immortal war Americans in Paris Lqfayette, we are here hero. Here again, at the American Embassy, Ambassador and Mrs. Joseph Davies wined and dined the singers in a style that exceeded all expectations. On the Club went through Germany to Copenhagen, where sixty-one travelling stu- dents made some acute observations on the sub- ject of Nordic beauty, thence to Oslo for a con- cert and radio broadcast. It was here that Chuck Cheyney ventured forth with a series of badly-timed puns concerning f jords and Chevro- lets, and Aust Carey discovered that what works in Farmington doesn't make any sense in a foreign language. Independence Day fthe Fourth of Julyj was celebrated in grand, if fire- crackerless style in Stockholm. Following a re- ception in the magnificent and world-famous City Hall, as guests of the municipality, the Club gave an outdoor concert in the Grona Lund and departed by night boat for Visby. Here, in the town of ruins and roses, the Club sang in the decayed majesty of an ancient cathedral, where an appreciative audience waved their programs in silent applause. High points of an unbelievably active and thrilling three-day stay in Helsinki were a con- cert sung in a maze of wreaths and flowers, a singing dinner with the Y. L. University Chorus QYlioppilaskunnan Laulajat, if you hadn't guessedj, and a visit to Jean Sibelius, greatest living composer. Here, in his garden retreat, the old man, virtually a hermit, spoke in Latin of a symphony in his mind which he was powerless to write, and made every one feel Blew the house down 'W By the dawn? Edfbl light the warmth of uamicitia rnusicorumf' A new world's record in cleanliness was attained when Club mem- bers were treated to a tra- ditional Finnish Hsaunan - a Nordic form of torture in which one is first boiled alive in superheated steam and then thrown into icy cold waters to cool off. While the amazing Finns cheerfully beat themselves around with birch sticks, Jack Blossom, after the operation, became duly concerned over the fact that his heart had stopped for twenty minutes. Filled with high spirits, the Club pressed on into Poland after two exciting days in Riga and Talinn. In the latter the singers saw the faded grandeur of Estonia's capital, while in the former, as guests of the American minister and Mrs. John Wiley, 'they saw some 4.00 bottles of champagne, vodka, Burgundy, and aqua vita consumed by themselves and a few hundred of their more intimate friends. When the Club reached Warsaw, the clouds of war were already on the horizon. Following a tea dance given by Ambassador and Mrs. Biddle in the gardens of the American Embassy, the concert was broadcast throughout Poland, the first and last American student greeting to that unhappy republic. There ensued a long sojourn by rail into Hungary, during which was experienced a four- hour delay until Buck Wilhelmi succeeded, in spite of Nazi protestations, in opening the 96 Hotten Slovakian border. The singers reached Budapest at one A.M., tired, expecting to find their own way to their lodgings. Instead, they were greeted at the station by the entire Budapest University Chorus, which sang the '4Star-Spangled Ban- nerl' in perfect English and drove them in a long caravan of taxicabs to their apartments. Two days later, at the Budapest Zoo, the Club sang 'cShow Me the Scotchmanf, the regular iinal encore, for the last time. At high noon the next day, in a garden restaurant on the shores of the Danube, the Yale singers drank a toast in Tokay to Barty, the United States, and the ever-lasting lessons in hospitality received from singing friends in fifteen countries. It was sometime in April 1939, that the Glee Club gathered in Hendrie Hall to decide who was to guide the destinies of the group in 1940. Norm Paul, whom the writer has known intimately for years, squeezed through on the third presidential bal- lot, and Jim Todd and Lew Thomson were elected man- ager and publicity director. r' r' rx. ti ms rt Ur 1 1- a y 1 .,,, - f , p .Q WH ., Q 7 1 , . , ' . In A j.,:, , . , 9 . 'SP3'h:,.-sig' ' Q ' X .. -- . ' . J ,. ' ,- fit 'J-.,' 4:i-i,',,.-49' . 4--.. v ' H 1' f ' te . - . 7 -'fi' ,4 . 0, t . . . 1 K TX ' + ss ,c .. .i-..Q...,i ssmzsx-mit sastatoiomexpir ip'x twink A as-. :sa 29C--.155-JAZERU-TR. T Amicitia musicorum Spoke in Latin The Club opened the season jointly with the Princeton Club and then travelled to Harvard the next weekend. Never forgetting the happy days a few short months before, Barty was the instigating factor in two Finnish relief concerts, one in Woolsey, the other in Carnegie, in which the Yale Glee Club, the University Glee Club of New Haven, and the University Glee Club of New York, three hundred voices strong, joined in song for a worthy cause. Who among them, when the trials of the Junior Prom and a winter in the stacks were over and gone, did not turn his thoughts towards the soft breezes and sunny shores of Florida? Not one of them, - at least not one of fifty-odd Glee Clubbers who climbed on top of their suitcases on March I3 and started by motor caravan for a two weeks, expedition in the tropics. Before run- ning into flat tires and alli- gators, the Club paid its respects to Baltimore and Charleston. With the scent H of magnolias in their nostrils and the prospect of warmer weather ahead, the Clubbers fought on, emerging two days later at Hobe Sound. Mrs. Davies again honored the Club by entertaining at her palatial home in Palm Beach, and from then on, at Miami, Clearwater, Mountain Lake, Winter Park, and Savannah, the songsters managed to make a singing vacation the most pleasant one imagin- able. With the lone exception of Don Devor, who had better purchase a new rabbitis foot, the accidents were kept down to a minimum, al- though Norm Paul arrived at classes and the Dean's office three days late with some interest- ing and unshakable opinions concerning Yellow Cab drivers. Turning to other musical organizations it seems in order to recall that memorable day in April, 1939, when Popo', jerry Blanchard braved the icy blasts in the wilcls of Siberia, land ofthe Whiffenpoofs. Here, beside a black lake fthe exact whereabouts of which has been concealed because of the menace of autograph- huntersj, he bored a hole in the ice, placed a choice bit of Corgonzola cheese by the aperture, and out scrambled ten squawking little 'Whiffs. This mighty delegation, boasting such names as Whenyaseeitcomin Dodge, Hark-hark-the Clark, Haw Thorne, c'Pitchpipe'l Thomson, Moo Kausel, Hotten Todd, 'lBiggan Strong, Popocatepetl Paul, CashanN Carey, Innocence abroad Back Raw: Magee, A. Chirgwin, Yahn, Kornreich, Schlueter, De Courcy, Sessions, Holt, Kennedy. Fourih Row: Evans, German, Small, Lowenhaupt, Swan, Gifford, Andrews, Spencer, Fischer, Alenier, Birmingham, G. Jacobson, Fox, McCabe, Sweet, Wallace. Third Row: Mr. Smith CDirectorj, Leete, Adelberg, Knowlton, A.jacobson, King, Soderberg, Shull QManagerj, Flickner QDrum Majorj, Faust QLeaderj, Horton, Mannweiler, Kennedy, Levine, Gary, Barbier, Mr. Clement. Second Row: Stock, Schmidt, Levin, Partridge, Atkins, Haggard, Crockett, Gould, Goslin, Golden, Hanee, Merriell, Frankel, Shapiro. Front Row: Cummins, Miller, Williams, Kelsey, L. Chirgwin, Carter, McDonald, Owen, Lamar, Russ. and Peach,' Blossom, have conducted a most active season in the sacred quest of' more and better barbershopping. Though, as ever, they have absorbed the requisite amount of cups and things in the confines of their beloved Moryis, they have conducted informal sorties everywhere from Cafe Society to the Hope Mission, and back again. BAND The reader will be happy to know that the Yale Band didn't break a single drum this year, l Peanut targets 98 not one. True, it suffered minor setbacks. It discovered Cand it wasn't the only onej that News publicity concerning 800 eager Michigan co-eds was the product of a distorted imagina- tion, and it gasped in horror as an artificially stimulated spectator at the game the next day engineered an almost successful attempt at wresting Ed Flickner's acrobatic baton away from him. But with all this, there were no drums broken. As a matter of' fact, the Band, led by Dick Faust, managed by Jack Shull, and drum- majored by Ed Flickner, has had one of its most active years in history. Win or lose, rain or shine, seventy of them shouted and blew them- selves into a state of laryngitis at every football game. Each week those spectators who werenit out spilling mustard and coffee down their neighbors' necks, were treated to a new routine on the field. One week Legs9' Gary, pert drum- majorette, brought out roars of applause and laughter. The next week the Hswing wing beat out Little Brown Jug in the finest G. Miller tradition, giving grandstand alligators a cheap thrill. Despite these shows of levity, of which every college man can use a bit, the Yale Band has maintained a standard of musicianship that is remarkable in view of the handicaps involved, These fellows, who play for the sheer fun of it, held their own against the group at Michigan, where the band is a career. This year, for the first time, a concert division was organized, in cooperation with Mr. Liepman of the Music School, and this is a new field to be encouraged in the future. On the evening of January 23, after a late matinee at the Poli, the annual ban- quet was held, and eight major Band Yis were awarded. CHOIR VVhen Mr. Jepson was feted last spring in a testimonial dinner at one of the local frat houses after his retirement, all who had ever been connected with the Battell Choir, from the lowliest second bass to the most loyal member of the congregation, were filled with regret, for not only had they lost a man that had become a tradition, but it was difficult for them to con- ceive of a possible worthy successor. It was into this atmosphere of doubt and resignation that Professor Luther Noss, the new director, was introduced last fall. Now, with his first full year behind him, Professor Noss has given Choir and congregation ample reason to look forward to every bit as brilliant a future as the Choir has had in the past. As an organist and a leader, he has introduced a variety of new anthems, retaining the master- pieces of Bach, Palestrina, and Brahms as before. It seems a shame that more Yale undergrad- uates have not found their way to the impressive Sunday morning services at Battell. Hearing a large body of well-trained voices, many of whom are fellow students, as a complement to excellent sermons is an experience which none should miss. There is absolutely no fanfare in the Choir, no beer parties, no Florida jaunts, no expeditions to girls' colleges. The personnel is always changing, but the performance is re- tained on the same high level. NORMAN S. PAUL Back Row: Peck, O,Neill, Butler, Tabor, Devor,jacobson, Kramer, Gettell, Harshberger,Beach, Hammond. Third Row: Howard, Anderson, Schlesinger, Martin, Clapp, Fitzwilliam, Birdsall, Lauritz, R. Ebel, Benson, Bellinger, Mower. Second Row: McCabe, Babe, Stillson, Stafford, Comly, Lasell, Pearson, L. Ebel, Springer, Pardee. Front Row: Clark, Grant, Prothero, Levett, Mr. Noss, Pangborn, Smith, Burrow, Gary. 99 l Back Row: Ullman, Palmer, McCormick, Lazarus, Forster, McWilliam. Second Row: Peck, Harper, Brush, Crabtree, Condit, Demingulohnson. Front Row: Healey, Dodge, Tener, Schwab, Paul, Stucky, Herrick, Dill, Heard. The Yale Dramatic Association HE yearls activities of the Dramat began unofficially with the advent in New Haven of George Abbottls musical comedy Too Many Girls, on its way to New York. Norm Paul, Wally Herrick, and Ira Richards, among others, stormed the Taft bar just before the opening and had their photogenic features photographed in the company of such luminaries as Lorenz Hart, Hal LeRoy, Marcy Wescott, and Mary Jane Walsh. The boys then had dinner and attended the performance. Needless to say, an excellent time was had by all, and the Dramat got plenty of free publicity. Soon after this expedition, the IQ4.0 board, consisting of Norm Paul, Wally Herrick, Jim Healey, George Tener, Bill Stucky, Nels Schwab Ira Richards, Steve Hinrichs, and Bill Dodge, swung into action. The board organized the joint faculty-undergraduate advisory board and chose as its faculty members Dean DeVane, Father Riggs, B. D. Henning, G. Leyburn, Laurence G. Tighe, Laurence M. Cornwall, Weyland Williams, Professors C. Adams and Jack Crawford. This board set themselves the task of rewriting the constitution of the Dramat, among other good works. It was decided that the Dramat should hold its annual organization smoker as soon as possible, and that plans should shortly thereafter be made for the year. The Association held its organization meeting for 1939-40 on October 3 at the DKE house, under the auspices of President Paul. Professors Billy,' Phelps and Adams were honored guests at this packed assembly of Dramat members and potential actors. Professor Phelps, in a speech to the neophyte thespians, told of his love for Shakespeare, and expressed the hope that the Dramat would sometime in the near future, give productions of the only three Shakespearean plays which he had not seen as yet. Beer was served soon afterwards and everyone left the meeting with high hopes for the coming season. Under the guidance of the senior organiza- tion, the freshman Dramat opened the season with two one-act plays, which met with great success, on the experimental stage of the univer- sity theatre. Bury the Deadf, Irwin Shawis brilliant anti-war play was ably directed by IOO Burton Shevelove, the Dram- at director, and Bill Stucky's prize-winning comedy Meet You at Roomn was directed jointly by Mr. Shevelove, and Herrick. Later on, in October, preparations were got under way for a Princeton week- end production on the main stage of Patrick Hamilton's thrill murdern play, Rope's Endf, produced for the first time in this country at New York in 1929. Of the senior class only two mem- bers acted in this play, Rich- ards and Albert Ullman, both of four years' experi- ence in the Dramat. The former played Rupert Cadell, a lame poet, one of the leading roles, and the latter acted in the role of Sir Johnstone Kentley, a character part. The cast also included Frank McWilliam, John Talliot, Louis Frank, and two young ladies of the Drama School. jim Healey was production manager of the show, George Tener handled the business end of things, Drayton Heard publicized the performances, and Bill Condit was stage carpenter. These seniors cooperated to make the play a success. Attendance at the performances was increased by greatly controversial criticism, and the production was considered a noble , I . . . and selected short subjects The .vet was good experiment, well done despite wide divergence of opinion. At the beginning of the year it had been decided to discontinue the njayvee' Dramat which had been organized for the purpose of doing experimental playsdowns tairs in the Uni- versity Theatre. The board now determined to expand the experimental field and to give regular Dramat productions on this stage. This arrangement would provide opportunity for more actors to become full members of the Dramat. In accordance with this new policy and Billy,' Phelps' desire to see more Shakes- peare, the Bard's Timon of Athens was chosen as the first experimental production of the sea- son. Well-attended tryouts were held just before Christmas vacation, and Professor Phelps agreed not only to write a prologue for the play, but also to deliver it at one of the performances. The cast was made up almost entirely of freshmen, sophomores and juniors. Norm Paul, in the role of Timon, was the sole senior repre- sentative in it although jack Eisenberg com- posed and played the incidental music. Due to excellent publicity, the opening was exception- ally well attended, and subsequent performances were seen by such dignitaries as Governor Cross, and practically the entire English department. Professor Tinker was one of many who wrote laudatory letters to the Dramat about it. The tremendous success of Timon', was IOI Budding Pavlovas especially marked since the Dramatis produc- tion of this usually dull play was done in modern dress and used dancing girls, obtained through the Drama School. Though the play is consid- ered one of Shakespeare's worst, the' critics were unanimous in their praise of the entire produc- tion, and were especially enthusiastic about Paul's fine acting in the title role. In connection with this production, an ex- hibition, under the Dramatis auspices, was held Out-Carmened Carmen in the rare book room of the library. This exhibition contained some rare Shakespeare- anan including a first folio of the master's works, arranged by Librarian Knollenberg and super- vised by Professor Tinker. The airing of this collection was considered such an occasion that Professor Tinker actually allowed himself to be photographed in connection with it. As February approached, thoughts of the Prom production seeped into the minds of board members, and finally found expression in the election of Bill Stucky's newest offering - the script for a new musical comedy to be called, strangely enough, Too Many Boys. Tryouts began immediately after the iinal performance Pulled the strings of Timon , and a record attendance of over one hundred aspirants shamefacedly sang their way through This Can't Be Lovef' with Jack Eisenberg accompanying on the piano. The cast was soon cut and rehearsals were begun in earnest. Eisenberg's tuneful score was hummed by the thespians both on and off the rehearsal stage. Director Shevelove kept the whole cast very much on the jump, and set a record for the latest rehearsal in Dramat history. Within an unbelievably short space of time, Saturday afternoon of the Prom weekend had arrived, and jack Eisenberg and Dud Felton IO2 My Broadway julie Al' were playing the overture before the first per- formance of Too Many Boys. judging from the applause, the show was even more of a suc- cess than last year's musical. The audiences that attended the three subsequent performances seemed to enjoy the play every bit as much as those who saw the first one. The critics were enthusiastic about the whole cast. Norm Paul played the author of the college show about to be produced on Broadway. He was excellent in the part, but especially so in his two singing numbers. The Beebe-like producer was comically portrayed by Roger McCormick, whose rendition of The Ideal Extra Man was exceptionally good. Phil Peck performed bril- liantly as the lyrically-inclined leading man, and pleased all by his singing. Wally Herrick played the director of the troupe, and gave an amusing lecture called The Secret of Dr. Killdaref' Jack Leggett and George Nichols were excellent as two members of the cast. Perhaps the best individual number in the show was Chuck Wooster's rhumba- eesque imitation of Carmen Miranda. Franny Thorne, Cam Peake, and George Hill nearly stopped the show on several . occasions while singing a song P called Oh New York. Be- sides these principals, the chorus and bit parts were well done by the rest of the cast. Before the last performance of Too Many Boys, elections were held to determine the oflicers for the IQ4.I board. Phil Peck was elected presidentg Pat Deming, vice-presidentg Larry Tighe, sec- retaryg Alan Dill, business managerg and Allen Lovejoy, production manager. By the time the DDU It Up final curtain was rung down on 'KTOO Many Boys, the work of the 1940 board was done, and the juniors had taken over the reins of the Dramat for the ensuing year. WALTER R. HERRICK, JR.: But wherelv thefarmerls daughter? 103 Back Row: Ballard, Jackson, Coxe, Bundy. Front Row: Schmechel, Spiegel, Herrick. . The Yale Political Union OR most of the Political Union members in the Class of 1940, the Union has been a part of their lives for three years. Much of that time has been spent listening, some has been devoted to speaking, or to party caucus work, but it has all been enjoyable. For the Union has something unique to oHier in its form of organization. Patterned after the Union societies of Oxford and Cambridge, it is based upon parliamentary procedure with the accompanying party system. On the left sit the Laborites, charged with the responsibility of defending the interests of the worker, in the middle Qor on the fence, as you pleasej sit the Liberals, tolerant of all things except the other two parties, and on the right sit the Conserva- tives-proud of it. Here in the Union, Yale men are given a chance to express their views on as real a battlefield as possible. On January II, 1939, the annual business meeting was held, it was voted that Schmechel was to have control of the vast resources of the Union, Laborite S. T. Herrick should assume the dignified office of Vice-President, while Ballard, Bundy, and Coxe were to carry the torch for the Conservative, Liberal, and Labor parties respectively. Secretary Jackson would record the plays as he saw them. The first meeting was held in February with Walter Millis of the Herald- Tribune as guest speaker. The resolution, 'cThat the United States should orient its foreign policy in vigorous opposition to the totalitarian powers was de- feated 29-18. With the election of some fifty new members completed, the parties engaged in a test of strength two days later. The question before the house was, 'cThat this house approves of Presi- dent Roosevelt's relief policy. Laborite-leader Coxe starred with a blackboard diagram of re- lief expenditures, while Bundy gave an illus- trated lecture on business cycles, and Hopf won a dollar explaining what Coxe had said. The meeting which followed was a family affair with Mrs. Elinore M. Herrick, Regional Director of the N.L.R.B. in New York State, and Mr. Ernest S. Ballard of Chicago debating the question, UThat the Wagner Act should be amended to protect the employees, right of self- organization from interference from any source. 104 The importance qf beingearnest Returning from the spring recess, members of the Union took part in a debate marked by vitriolic speeches from all sides on the question of Socialized Medicine. Dr. Morris Fishbein, Editor of the journal of the American Medical Association was present to give a solid defense of the present medical system. In the final meeting of the spring the Union held one of the largest gatherings in its history. Senator Robert A. Taft was present to speak in support of the resolution, That the welfare of this country demands the return of the Repub- lican Party to power in 194o. Laborite Gem- mill delivered a humorous speech on the Re- public Clan, worshippers of the great god Bizz-Ness,', Bundy attacked the false liberal- ism of the Conservatives in one of the outstand- ing speeches of the year, and by a vote of 56-37 the bill was defeated. With war raging in Europe and Congress in special session debating the' repeal of the arms embargo, the Union started an eventful fall semester. The initial question was, That this house favors the export of arms and munitions to belligerents on a cash-and-carry basis. August Heckscher, President of the Political Union in 1936 supported the measure with a Liberal and Labor coalition. After nearly three hours of debate, the question was defeated 52-34. The problems confronting America were by this time so multifarious that an Omnibus Bill No. 1 was composed. This measure covered such items as the liquidation of the New York Yankees, the annexation of Bermuda, and the construction of a dike from Florida to Cuba for the purpose of diverting the Gulf Stream and freezing Europe into a peaceful state of mind. The two-hour session included a touching IO speech on the N. Y. Yankees by Alexander, and a thorough snowballing of the Liberals by a Conservative-Labor coalition. The Liberals had a field day later on when, with Professor Ralph H. Gabriel, they passed a resolution supporting National Planning for the United States by a vote of 35-12 with 7 refusing to vote. In the last meeting of the year 1939 the Union Encouraged free speech was host to the Oxford Union Debate Team, the latter defending the British war aims as a sound basis for a lasting European peace. Finis was written to the activity of the year on January 31, 1940, when the Union celebrated the fifth anniversary of its founding with a banquet, and, appropriately enough, speeches. The Honorable Adolph A. Berle, Assistant Sec- retary of State, Dean DeVane, and past luminaries of the Union contrib-- uted to the occasion. To the 150 guests present the words of Mr. Berle seemed to contain the hopes of all those who have worked with the Union. He said, If five years of the Yale Political Un- ion have planted a crop of ideas, ten years will produce a harvest of reality. Teacher ana' pupil HART H' SPIEGEL 5 l Back Row: White, Brewster, Finch, Curtis. F1'antRow: Ballard, Schmechel, Bundy. The Yale Debating Association EBATING at Yale has a well-deserved repu- tation of being an activity in which all the participants are actuated Very much by a love of the sport, and, as a result of this and of the genial coaching of Professor Adams, the ratio of pleasure derived, to energy expended is probably higher than in any other extracurricular activity at Yale. The intellectual satisfaction derived from matching wits and oratory with classmates and with students from other colleges, the joy of learning how to think on one's feet and speak extemporaneously, the memories of Professor Driver's' justly famous speeches at the annual banquets, and, finally, the opportunity to work with one of Yale's most charming and delightful professors, Mr. Adams - these are some of the dividends of debating at Yale. The varsity debating season opened with a home-and-home debate with Harvard on the subject of the repeal of the arms embargo. Bundy, jackson, and Schmechel won at Boston in a debate which was broadcast, while Ballard, Brewster, and Spiegel lost a close decision in New Haven. In a debate in New Haven against IO Bates, Furniss, Watson, and White convinced the judges that a third term for Roosevelt was desirable. Late in November, Ballard, Noyes, and Schmechel travelled to Jersey City where they convinced a battery of seven judges that a third term would be a mistake, in spite of the arguments of the opposing john Marshall Col- lege team. In a double debate with M.I.T. on the subject of U. S. aid for the Allies, both Yale teams were victorious: the affirmative being composed of Bundy, Burman, and Pigott, the negative, of Brewster, Finch, and Samford. Ballard, Furniss, Watson, and White dissected the New Deal be- fore the New Haven Forum in january. In February, Bundy and Schmechel went to Amherst for a Big Three-Little Three debate tournament on the subject of state sales taxes. By winning four debates, with unanimous de- cisions, from Harvard, Princeton, Williams, and Amherst, and losing only a 2-I decision to Wesleyan, Yale was declared winner of the tournament and was awarded a permanent trophy. 6 Yale then took up the cudgels for and against continuation of the New Deal in a series of de- bates, only to encounter a seemingly inexhaust- ible array of unsympathetic judges, Ballard and Phillips lost to Columbia, while Jackson, White- man, Kellogg, and Phillips lost to Brown both at Providence and New Haven. Furniss and Jack- son lost to Princeton in a debate held on neutral territory - in Bridgeport. In March, the de- baters split even with Dartmouth 5 Burman and Pigott losing at Hanover, while Burgess and Spiegel won a decision in New Haven. In the last debate before spring vacation, Finch and White successfully defended free Council cy' War speech against Williams in a debate held before the Salisbury Forum. There are three more debates scheduled for thisiyear which a printing dead line makes it impossible to review. On April 26 the annual Triangular debate will be held on the subject of the New Deal - a topic which seems to have plagued the debaters of the class of 1940 throughout their four years at Yale. The question is worded, Resolved: That the New Deal should be defeated at the polls in 1940? Ballard, Bundy, and White journey to Princeton to uphold the affirmative, while Furniss, Schmechel, and Spiegel uphold the New Deal against Harvard in New Haven. In May, for the last two debates of the year, the debaters meet Vassar and Mount Holyoke and try to disprove the old adage that a woman always gets the last word in an argument. Many of the debaters participated in the prize IO speaking contests. Hav- ing already won the freshman debating prize and the Buck and Ten Eyck prizes, Bun- dy made it a clean sweep by winning the De Forest prize with a speech on The Future of Public Speech. Townsend premiums were awarded to Al- ter, Eyre, Kellogg, Schmechel, and Tilley for having reached the finals. The Ten Eyck contest was won by Jack- son who spoke on Ulysses, and the Lotus- Eatersf' with Finch winning second prize, and White, Foulk, and Phillips as the other com- petitors. The Buck contest for sophomores was won by Burman. Allen, Holtzman, Winer, and Swingle were the other finalists. Under the able coaching of Mr. Whedon, the freshman debaters have an untarnished record to date, having won double decisions against the Brown freshmen and the Choate School, and a victory from Boston University. A non-decision debate was held with Kent. The active freshman debaters have been Henry Bradford, Charles W. Kenady, Jr., Frank F. Lee, Lawrence B. Marthey, Gordon B. McLendon, and Louis E. Speed. At this writing, there are tentative de- bates scheduled with Holy Cross, Wesleyan, and Andover, in addition to the Triangular debate. DONALD A. SCHMECHEL Silver-tongued Impressea' the judges 7 Back Row: Solbert, Godley, Schwab, Simmons, Greene, Tilghman, Second Row: Tighe, Ohler, Worrilow, Haines, Hall, Detchon. Front Row: Herrick, Zorthian, Field, Snyder, Swenson, Campbell, Goodfellow, Arnstein, Mersereau. The Yale Community Council RESH from the delivery room and still smell- ing of talcum powder, the Yale Community Council was handed to the class of 1940 as a one-year old diapered infant. The child has been fed, clothed, it has grown larger, and now walks on its own feet. Chiefly responsible for tending this precocious youngster has been genial Ed Swenson, president of the Council. A year ago Swenson took over the bottles and towels from David Williams organizer and first president of the Council. Under Swenson's guidance, the Council in- creased its size, and over 250 men engaged in its activities. Second in command has been Bill Field in the vice-presidential seat, a new post created this year. Substantially the same line of attack was fol- lowed by this year's board as was inaugurated a year ago. The general purpose was to make social service work attractive and appealing to the undergraduate. The work should at the same time interest undergraduates, beneiit the social service agencies throughout the city, and promote friendly relations between town and 3 IO gown. A fifty percent increase in the number of volunteers this year shows that some progress has been made. Taking time oil' from punning with the Pun- dits, Ace Snyder guided the fortunes of the ath- letic committee. Coaches were provided for kids in sports at the New Haven Boys' Club and five similar institutions. These mentors devoted one hour a week to keeping a semblance of order in everything from basketball games to general rough-housing. Under Snyder's direction the iirst inter-house competition was begun, and reports of civil war were caught drifting through the city as house battled house. Wally Herrick combined a humorous touch and a wealth of stage knowledge to carry through an energetic dramatic program. Plays and short skits were produced at different insti- tutions in the city. Percival Wilde's The Mov- ing Finger was a great hit. The twenty-minute skits were discouraged according to one critic, because of the almost infantile calibre of their subject matter? Taking a serious bent, the dra- matic corps provided a tragedy in 4'Curse You, 8 junior League headquarters' Jack Dalton. As a moral tonic to their youthful audiences, Herrick and crew launched into Fagan the Fink,', Sweetheart of Waikikif, Rudolph the Russianf, and a spine-tingling horror story, Dr. Zacco and the Monster. Another branch of the work involved provid- ing entertainments anywhere in the city at the drop ofa hat. Versatile Dave Mersereau handled this difficult task, and it kept him jumping like water on a hot griddle. It seems to be the annual fate of the groups committee to have a stormy voyage. Again this year, its program included drastic repairs. The Yale Cadet scheme was scrapped as being too rigid. In its place, Scott Goodfellow, fuehrer of the group workers, suggested a more individual- istic plan. Leaders continued to take groups of underprivileged youngsters to the gym and to ball games. Others joined their groups in in- formal discussions. Ax Hammer even managed to get his group of kids, aged ten to twelve, shuffling on the dance floor, and turned out sev- eral budding Astaires accomplished at la Conga. Many new volunteers enrolled under the banners of the handicraft committee. Win Schwab provided them with plenty of work, though he was hindered by a lack of equipment at the various houses. Four or ive embryonic rnedicos accompanied doctors on their rounds, others learned tricks of the trade from nurses in the clinics. To wind up, eagle scouts of former years have brushed up on their knots and good deeds and become leaders of scout troops. At present seventeen undergraduates hold sway over Dan Beard's proteges once a week. Quartets and octets, the Four Twos, and the Whiffs were very popular. A debate on the evils of the New Deal at Downey Or- rick's Yale Hope Mis- sion laid an egg. F irst mate Tomorrowlv presidents The infant of one summer is growing strong. Despite mishaps, appointments not kept, lack of transportation, and a hundred other annoying circumstances, the enthusiasm of the volunteers was keen. Instructive and yet delightful, our work on the Council and our ties with it will not soon be forgotten. WILLIAM W. FIELD 109 Back Row: Reisner, Reed, Martin, Swift, Dun, Pickett. Second Row: Mr. Campbell, Burrowes, White, Hall, Finch, Welles, Bilheirner, Givan. Front Row: Thiermann, Wagoner, Orrick, Toland, Alter, Bahlrnan, Holden, Reckard, Smythe. Dwight Hall . HORTLY after spring Vacation of last year the 1940 officers of Dwight Hall took over leadership of the association at an installation service in Dwight Memorial Chapel. One of the Hrst moves on the part of the new administration was to enlarge the executive committee to a group of twenty, which met regularly once a week during the year and served as the control- ling body of Dwight Hall policy and program. Besides the four officers there were included from the senior class John Burrowes, Cleve Cory, Dave Mersereau, Gus Smythe and Ian Thiermann. The cabinet was also revised, and to introduce the incoming freshmen an outing was held at the Old Mill, at which the group of 100 heard brief reports from the committee chairman. The first formal meeting of the cabinet came some two weeks later, when Dr. T. Z. Koo of China spoke in the common room. The first event of the fall schedule was the annual freshman outing, held at the Old Mill on Friday, September 23. One hundred and twenty- five freshmen and upperclassmen were present. Angus Dun, freshman secretary, and Owen Welles were in charge. The freshman calling program, under the leadership of Willard Van Slyck, started two weeks after college opened. Twelve teams of upperclassmen personally interviewed 320 freshmen, presenting a picture of Dwight Hall activities and questioning them on their interests. The debate over the Budget Drive was, of course, one of the outstanding considerations during the fall. The News was swamped with columns, editorials, communications and articles all of which attempted to deal with the question of whether or not Dwight Hall was one of Yale's responses to human need. So far as Dwight Hall was concerned the discussions were most val- uable, for they checked the association on sev- eral weak points and gave it a stronger sense of its responsibility to the campus as a whole. Bob Bilheimer, President of Dwight Hall in 1939, returned as secretary for the upperclass activities. In the fall these consisted largely of expanding the committees and organizing study groups, The work of the freshman committee has already been outlined. Downey Orrick IIO Head man headed the Hope Mission committee through a very successful year, including speakers at the evening services and an educational committee. Entertainment for the men came in the form of the Whiffenpoofs, movies and wrestling exhibi- tions. There were two old-clothes drives, and the un- dergraduates also helped in the city- wide financial drive for the Mission. The other committees worked in the fol- lowing Helds-dep- utations, social ac- tion, peace, inter- faith, worship and discussion groups. Special projects in- cluded a work-camp during the spring vacation in one of New Haven's slum areas and a pacifist News Letter edited by Roy Finch. Dwight Hall took an active part in the work ofthe New England Student Christian Move- ment. Twenty-live members were present both at the June conference held at Camp Oatka in Maine, and at the Northfield conference for Connecticut valley colleges, early in March. Several of the committee chairmen were mem- bers of the regional commissions and helped to direct intercollegiate programs. Following the tradition of the Buttrick meet- ings of 1939, Father William E. Orchard and Dr. Richard Roberts addressed a University Christian Conference, held early in February in Sprague Hall. Ben Holden brought his experi- ence, gained the previous year, into a three-way Coumellors cy' youth III committee representing the College Church, More Club and Dwight Hall. Sixteen upperclass and six freshman discussion groups started immediately afterward and continued up to spring vacation. Each had a faculty leader and a student secretary and studied religious ques- tions raised by the Conference. This series of meetings of study groups, which formed the largest item in the year's program, presented a thorough and comprehensive survey of the Christian faith to several hundred under- graduates and gave to the campus a new appre- ciation of the vast regions of religious thought and experience which are so often neglected. No summary of Dwight Hall would be com- plete without proper indication of the part played by Fay Campbell in its program. As gen- eral secretary he has given his energy, thought and depth of spiritual experience to counselling undergraduates. And since a group of students who are trying to build a religious association need this advice and cooperation more than blueprints for rigid organization, Fay's work has been indispensable to the maintenance of standards and purpose in Dwight Hall. JAMES P. ALTER A vefy present heQb Back Row: Howe, Cross, Brinkley, Erickson, Swenson, Ewing. Second Row: Mr. Lovett, Bundy, Watson, Field, Livingston, Thiermann, Alter, Mr. Clement. Front Row: Ely, Stack, Mersereau, Holden, Smythe, Grayson, Hammer. Religious CHURCH CF CHRIST INDING together the many individual re- ligious groups ofthe campus into a perman- ent and all-pervasive inHuence is the Church of Christ, presided over by the Reverend Sidney Lovett, university chaplain. Congregational in its origin in 1756, its services are non-denomina- tional and form a cornerstone in the spiritual development so essential to the undergraduate. On Sunday morning in Battell Chapel men of nationwide repute are brought to the pulpit, providing extraordinary opportunities in the variety of their experience and religious thought. The nucleus of this group is the Board of Preachers, each member unofficially represent- ing one of the nine residential colleges: Messrs. Arthur H. Bradford, George A. Buttrick, Henry Sloane Coffin, Angus Dun, Reinhold Neibuhr, Henry Knox Sherrill, Willard L. Sperry, Arthur L. Kinsolving, and Robert R. Wicks. In Dwight Memorial Chapel services were held this year Monday through Friday from 12:10 to 12:30,with members of the faculty and Activities guests reading the lesson or making brief ad- dresses. A departure from the former morning services, these have proved more convenient and the attendance has been far greater than at any time since the abolition of compulsory chapel. In the winter term additional services have been conducted on Wednesdays by preparatory school headmasters,while several colleges have sponsored their own services with an address by the master or one of their fellows. A board of deacons is elected annually to represent the student body and the faculty in the Church of Christ. At first the office was an appointive one, and members were addressed by their fellow-students with their official title, on important occasions they even wore top hats and cutaways. For a time the group was con- sidered as an exclusive society, meeting in the mystery of the basement of an old house, but this phase ended when several neophytes were kidnapped on the eve of their initiation. The members serve as ushers on Sundays and meet from time to time with the chaplain in an advisory capacity. II2 MORE CLUB HE center of religious activity for Catholics at Yale is More House, including the Chapel of Saint Thomas More, now in its second year of operation. The Rev. T. Lawrason Riggs is Chaplain of the More Club. A student choir, under the direction of George Hart ofthe Music School, has been an important added feature and has sung regularly at the later of the two Sunday Masses. Of the senior class, Roger Clarke and Frank Menton have been members. Discussion groups were held during the year and the library of More House continues to grow and has been of increased usefulness. The striking architecture of the chapel continues to arouse interest, and students in architecture have been assigned several times to study the unique effects which have been created. The officers of the More Club were Steve Carroll, President, Art Cummings and Jack Eyre, Vice-Presidents, Roger Clarke, Secretary, and Ted Kalinowski, Treasurer. Eyre has also been in charge of a group who have rendered excellent service in cooperation with the Y.C.C. in the work with the boys at Highland Heights. In February, the Club joined with the Univer- sity Church and with Dwight Hall in organizing the University Christian Conference, conducted by Father W. E. Orchard and Dr. Richard Roberts. Back Row: Father Riggs, Clarke. Front Row: Eyre, Carroll, Cummings. II3 fi f V C32 as ifim f 1 Awww wwf., W, ,ff , V-.Q-'v,5,.,:w. 5, 'f-f f Ij ,,,:,,gi-'f,. 0 ,, Z f f 21' 4, f .wfzmze-,,.:2zmm.41ww'::aus, .Q ewwz- 1 , , -' , if 4 ..f,,...,,, .fr Wh, A-4.4 -, ' qi., I BERKELEY COLLEGE Berkeley College SAMUEL BURDETT HEMINGWAY, Master Przwessor qc English HONORARY FELLOWS PRESIDENT CHARLES SEYMOUR PRESIDENT EMERITUS JAMES ROWLAND ANGELL FELLOWS JOHN MAUDGRIDGE SNOWDEN ALLISON Ralph W. Townsend Prfjessor cyfHistoU1 CHARLTON DOWS COOKSEY Assistant PrcUQzssor Q' Physics SUMNER MCKNIGHT CROSBY Instructor in the History zyf Art CLIVE DAY Seymour H. Knox Prcwssor of Political Economy, Emeritus ALBERT GABRIEL FEUILLERAT Sterling Przwssor :yr French PEARSON HUNT Instructor in Applied Economics SHERMAN KENT Assistant Przwssor qfHistom1 THOMAS C. MENDENHALL, II Instructor in Histogv ASSOCIATE MARCEL AUBERT Przyfessor ry' the Histom cj Art,' Membre de l'Insti- tut,' Przwssor at Ecole des Chartes, and Curator ty' Medieval Sculpture in the Louvre F. LAMMOT BELIN Ph.B. 1901 RIGHT REVEREND GHAUNCEY BUNCE BREWSTER B.A. 1868, D.D. 1898, Bishop fy' the Episcopal Diocese of Connecticut, Retired REVEREND T. HUNTINGTON CHAPPELL B.A. 1928 RUSSELL HENRY CHITTENDEN Director mf the Shrjield Scientihc School and Prws- sor of Physiological Chemistmf, Emeritus HENRI FOCILLON' Prokssor fy' the History ay' Art, Przjessor at the College de France FREDERICK SCHEETZ JONES Dean ay' T ale College, Emeritus PAUL MELLON B.A. 1929 ' I I RUSSELL G. PRUDEN Associate Curator of the Edward M. House Collec- tion RICHARD L. PURDY Assistant Przwssor cyf English CARL FREDERICK SCHREIBER Leavenworth Prqiessor of German Language and Lit erature and Curator of the William A. Speck Collec- tion zyf Coetheana JEROME SPERLING Instructor in Classics JAMES KELSEY WHITTEMORE Associate Przwssor if Mathematics ALEXANDER MCLAREN WITHERSPOON Associate Prcfzssor ryf English WALTER JACOB WOHLENBERG Sterling Prfwssor if Mechanical Engineering FELLOWS CHARLES NAGEL, JR. B.A. 1923, B.F.A. 1926, M.F.A. 1928 GEORGE WHARTON PEPPER LL.D. 1914 DUNCAN PHILLIPS B.A. 1908 DR. QRVILLE FORREST ROGERS Director of the Department cyf Universigz Health GEORGE DUDLEY SEYMOUR Honoragr M.A. 1913 - JOHN TRESIDDER SHEPPARD Provost zyflfingls College, Cambridge, England DAVID STANLEY SMITH Dean Q' the School Q' Music, Battell Przwssor of the Theogz of Music HAROLD STANLEY B.A. IQO8 JUDGE THOMAS WALTER SWAN Fellow Q8 the T ale Corporation GEORGE EDWARD WOODBINE George Burton Adams Prrwssor QS Histogf 7 1TH the beginning of the current academic year, the spirit that is Berkeley fan elusive phenomenon, to be surej had completely unveiled itself for the moment from its former inscrutable character. Berkeley was simply different. At least this fact was all too painfully clear to the nine other residential units of Yale. The Mitres were at a point actually where their competitors would not, or perhaps could not go. They were domin- ating college athletic policy. They had been the first college to win the Tyng Cup for two years in a row. During B the 1938-39 season they had become inter- college champions in football, hockey, squash, crew, golf, and bowling. But there must be a year of upsets. The Mitres cannot go on winning forever. The col- lege will not be charged with addiction to sub- sidization. She will not be pointed to as a minor athletic association Qperish the thoughtlj. Yet Berkeley reluctantly finds herself in a highly un- enviable position. It has been anything but a painless process to relinquish most of the trophies garnered during the previous year. A dining hall without its accustomed silver is in- deed a touching sight. Football, hockey, squash, and bowling - all have been lost. Best-dressed man I 1 At the time of writing there is still a spring season, however. The crew and golf awards are still in the college and Dwight Griswold's po- tentially powerful eight has every intention of keeping the former trophy in its rightful home - rightful, at least, for another year. Although the men of the fairways are in the light of an un- known quantity, Porker Badger isn't com- plaining too much of baseball prospects, and if Captain Harry Moorhead finds his stalwarts well up to the high standards of his own net game, there wonit be much to worry about in the way of Mitre tennis fortunes. Perhaps it would be just as well not to dwell too long on the details of Mitre performances during the fall and winter seasons. Sufhce it to say that for the first time ,in the history of the college, Berkeley finished its football season in last place, along with the Spiders from E. There was no lack of spirit. It was simply a matter of too much illness and too many in- juries. Only six of the men who began the first game were able to see service for the whole sea- son. Despite the rapid turnover of grid candi- dates and the apparent paucity of any standout performances, Ronnie Cooke almost niched him- self a place with the immortals of the gridiron when, on his very first play as a football player, he barely missed a pass that would have meant a touchdown. Porkerl' Badger, he who also has charge of Mitre baseball fortunes, led an inspired Berkeley six against a very uninspired Seal contingent in the season's opener in the race for the touch football title. The result - 60-o for the Mitres, Dean jones andjiend 8 High-pressure tactics but things began to slacken up after that- began to slacken up a great deal. The Hnal re- sult - the Mitres in ninth place for the season. In the realm of individual competition, Harry Moorhead partially resuscitated Berkeley ath- letic policy by advancing to the semi-finals of the intercollege tennis tournament, after first establishing himself as college champion by downing Jim Torrey. Nor did Bill Farrell fail to come in for his share of the points, when he finished seventh in the gruelling competition of intercollege cross-country racing. A definite upswing occurred with the arrival of winter sports. The Mitres have always been feared for their powerful sextets year in and year out. It is true that this year there was not the brand of play associated with last year's cham- Cuddles and cud H 1 I pions, but it was strong enough to bring in a tie for second place with the men hailing from the Casbah stronghold. Da Pork, that all-around Mitre performer, figured very prominently on the attack, as did Ben Cole and Ronnie Cooke, who was somewhat more at home on the ice than on college football fields. A trio of senior natators -Jim Nammack, Ted Higgins, and Don MacGregor-added somewhat to resur- gent Mitre fortunes by taking a fourth in the swimming relay competitions. Only one place behind the swimmers, Berke- ley bowlers came through with better than 'CI broke these sevenw average scores, for jim Johnson kept himself' well up in the high numbers. But the seniors were forced to give way to the men of '41 when it came time for squash play. Led by individual champion Bill Ketcham, the racquetmen from, Berkeley placed third in the college tournament. The Mitre hoopsters alone seemed unable to shake off the ill luck that had so successfully plagued Berkeley athletics in the fall. Here lack of material proved a decisive factor, despite the valiant efforts of veterans Jim Torrey, Goose ' Gosselin, and Carter Dye. Undisturbed by the turbulent rise and fall of athletic policy, the Berkeley calender of social events has brought forth a number of diverting and extremely pleasant experiences within the college dining hall or common room, or Qmore 9 Kept the grass down Chronic condition informally stillj within the Master's house. In the case of the latter, there are always the en- joyable afternoon teas with Mr. and Mrs. Hem- ingway. Less frequently, are the more formal events at the Master's house, of which a Thanks- giving feast fwe cannot forget our junior Phi Betes herej and the annual singing of Christmas hymns are the most famous. The dining hall has come in for its share of colorful festivities with the occasional special dinners. The Whiffen- poofs, attending one of these sessions, were large- ly instrumental in giving a decided impetus to assorted choral effects. Somewhat more serious was the annual birth- day dinner in honor of Bishop Berkeley on March 1 1. Dean Sperry ofthe Harvard Divinity School was guest speaker, and the simple pag- eantry of the occasion as in former years was singularly impressive, particularly with the Master and the fellows donning their academic robes. The dining hall was likewise the scene of per- haps the outstanding social event of the year for Berkeley. As part of the Christmas party held last December, the members of the college were privileged to hear Cornelia Otis Skinner in a performance of several of her famous dramatic sketches. Drama was also the center of attraction in the dining hall just before the spring vacation when the Berkeley Players presented a highly en- tertaining version of Thomas Decker's, The Shoemakers' Holidayf' The evening will long be remembered for the engaging perform- ances of Art Keefe and 4'Chilli Thomson as the shoemaker and his wife, Barney, Baldwin, and Bartlett as the journeymen, and Dave Beers, Herman Wells, and jack Campbell distinctly in Ringer the feminine idiom. It is a great tribute to Mr. Thomas Mendenhall and his associates. Then there was the Alumni Day luncheon, on Feb- ruary Q2, at which Mr. Hemingway, Scott Goodfellow, and Bob Orr spoke briefly. 120 The Berkeley calendar has sought to instruct as Well as to entertain. There was the series of lectures on various aspects of the present war, sponsored by the Economics Club in the com- mon room, and which included among the guest speakers Professors Cole, Wolfers, and President Seymour. In addition, an illustrated talk was given by Lomax Lamb on his eight-months' tour of the world. No dissection of the college year would be complete, however, without some mention of the purely accidental, the purely spontaneous. One remembers, of course, the last day of the Mo- hicans -one hundred and fifteen panes of second Hoor glass-an invalid who was un- fortunate enough to have left his cane in a sec- ond Hoor room. This was combustion of a peculiar sort. More second Hoor glass, but this time it might be any Saturday noon in the fall-a cocktail shaker-and Gordon Stillman. It is still the second floor, and the scene has shifted to the second Friday in March. Here is an enormous occasion. There is an ever-increasing mood of expansion-at least until things get awfully dry about six-thirty - but at eight-thirty there was still room 559. Combustion still continues as the reigning theme, for just as New Haven is beginning to thaw out of the bitterest Winter of many a year, there appear one day no less than eleven fire trucks, all Berkeley-bound. It means lots of water for Bill Trafton falthough it takes almost all of the city's hosing apparatus before he suc- ceeds in getting itj, but it means finally no more than a smoldering couch. Berkeley may not continue the home of champions but it is the home of John Allison, and his informal Wednesday evenings, of Sher- man Kent, who just can't seem to remember about the 'i21 Club, ofa tunnel, the onbl bomb proof shelter in the university Qi.e. for future members of the collegej. Scorr GOODFELLOW 1 I2I BRANFCRD COLLEGE Branford College CLARENCE WITTLESEY MENDELL, Master Dunham Przwssor typ the Latin Language and Literature HONORARY FELLOWS PRESIDENT CHARLES SEYMOUR PRESIDENT EMERITUS JAMES ROWLANDAANGELL FELLOWS THEODORE BABBITT Assistant Dean cyt Freshmen and Instructor in Sloan- ish WILDER D. BAKER Prcwssor Q' .Naval Science and Tactics ANDREW BARR, JR. Assistant Przy?ssor ry' Accounting NORMAN SYDNEY BUCK Dean if Freshmen and Prwssor QF Political Econ- omy ALLEN TRACY HAZEN Instructor in English GEORGE LINCOLN HENDRICKSON Lampson Przfzssor of Latin and Greek Literature, Emeritus FREDERICK BLISS LUQUIENS Street Przyissor of Modern Languages and Curator if Latin Americana ASSOCIATE EDWARD GRANT BUCKLAND LL.D. QLL.B. 1889, hon. M.A. 1895D REV. GEORGE A. BUTTRICK D.D. 1932 MALCOLM FARMER . Chairman typ the Board of Control ofthe T ale Uni- vcrsigr Athletic Association, Retired CARROLL CLARK HINCKS B.A. IQII DAVID RUSSELL LYMAN M.D. Qhon. M.A. 1-9I6'j HARVEY CLAFLIN MANSFIELD Assistant Prwssor qi' Government WILLIAM GAMWELL MOULTON Instructor in German GEORGE HENRY NETTLETON Lampson Prffessor typ English, Emeritus OYSTEIN ORE Sterling Prcfzssor zyf Mathematics NATHANIEL BURTON PARADISE Associate Curator qv Manuscripts in the University Libragr and Assistant Prcy?ssor of English WILLIAM RUFF, JR. Assistant Prrwssor ry? English CHARLES JOSEPH TILDEN J Strathcona Przyissor cyl' Engineering Mechanics GILBERT TUCKER Assistant Przy?ssor If History LORANDE LOSS WOODRUFF Przfzssor of Protozoology FELLOWS WILLIAM LYON PHELPS Lampson Przwssor If English Literature, Emeritus MICHAEL IVANOVICH ROSTOVTZEFF Sterling Prcwssor Q' Ancient Histogl and Classical Archeology EUGENE FRANCIS SAVAGE William Legjingwell Prwssor of Painting THOMAS DAY THACHER Fellow ofthe T ale Corporation WILLIAM FRANCIS VERDI Clinical PTIWSSOT cyf Surgery JOHN RODMAN PAUL JOHN MUNRO WOOLSEY Associate Prafzssor of Medicine I 2 LED. 43.14. I898J 3 N X!! ff xg! Nw SQ 31 gal I MZ' I -1 1 gf 5: SQSQ NQQ. :: , . X R, . s . V .. :s lg Qtslfff ew: f ww 4 .g ,i NSEQQ' Qbgy' XM' :E EE . f - . 1 . - I g V - ' ff t--afwfasgiigfaf :I : I I 5 , : : 2 : 4 5 g: 22 g...,L...S :...,:...g :,,...g....Q 5...,,,...s- :5 x- v V .. .1 ' ' :- 11 e - : ' - : V - . 'F ik 'E i 5 : l E : 4 5 . -- - : I : : 4 : :. 'a a....u--: :,..,l...: 1---..,...s :: 'ig : 1 ' : 7 2 . ' A 5 j E : I : .gr -Q . , - - 1 . ,'. 51 5n:.,n-.2 ,2,ff.,V4.j :,' E. ' ui' lfl ll ll ll ll . rl- - 1 . ,' :lg : ,. ff' HE touring visitor to Branford College who, impressed by its tower, its great beautiful main court, its quiet, serene verdure, concludes in this wise: Aha! I smell classic traditions, the serious life, the University-015Chicago-in-Yale Club,'i makes a dangerous mistake, True, if he looks for scholarship, he will find it, but if he expects only this, he is apt to forget that in appropriating classic traditions we have appro- priated also that classic failing for living the good life. Let him come by night, or by any hour when we are not self-conscious under the gaze of after- M uric-makers noon sight-seers. Then will he discover the all- enfolding virtues of the life of the ancients Qin which our Master, as professor of classics, is fully learnedj. Nor will he find that but for this emphasis, the members of Branford are particu- larly distinctive, unless it be that in general tone, imagination, intelligence, and skill they consid- erably surpass the members of their eight asso- ciate colleges. I2 Our casual visitor, on making a closer in- spection of our college life, may discover that the spirit of good fellowship abides where least expected. It is never stronger for example than when our bomb-throwing friend of the middle court shatters its studious silence, or when a returning party of over-happy inmates shout a 2 A.M. reveille. Nor does it falter when an open window in the snow season receives a shower of snowballs, or when nine of the eighteen panes in oneis casement have been picked out with icy pellets. And when these fail there is always our Abrahams with his drums or Whittlesey slapping The cameraman got away his bass fiddle to break the stillness. For milder entertainment there is always a party in Deanis entry, or a flash-bulb in Phil O,Brien's lamp, Good weather finds touch-football, monopolized by a gang of unmentionable juniors, monopoliz- ing the great court. And lest the beauty of our lawn be at any time unmarred, there is spring baseball or nigger-baby, side by side with our traditional favorite of penny-pitching presided over by the seniors from Philadelphia, just back from Vassar. The spirit of brotherly love receives official encouragement at any number of college par- ties, large and small. :Mendell's Folly, out near Bethany has furnished most all the pleasure of a relaxing afternoon at beer, baseball and sing- ing. In town Mrs. Mendell entertains us cordially at teas, one of the chief attractions of which is the chance to get Mr. Mendell in a corner and hear how the university really operates or one of his choice Yankee stories Qsynonymity?j. 4 Towermanlv press In halln Branford enjoys its beer parties paying keen ear to Mr. Doolittle, the annual college swing band, quartet, or number one good story. This year we have in mind particu- larly the snake dance, led by a politically prom- inent senior, which immediately preceded one adjournment, but was continued afterwards in Gibbs entry. Branford convocates seriously in hall several times a year, among these for its Founders' Day, Christmas, and spring dinners. But most of our gatherings in the dining hall are for daily meals. Up until the middle of this year we enjoyed the particular distinction of numbering among our waitresses the most Venus-like one on the campus. Her shift to a downtown restaurant was a major catastrophe in this year's Branford annals, and it will also be recalled that the day when she attempted to change her coiHlure for the worse was met with true Branford courage and success. Between bites there is always time to enjoy the antics of York Hall in Branford, Inc., or six stories in a row by Whipple, or a lecture by Schlueter on train schedules, town populations and collected facts of all sorts. Between bites also our fellow Commander Baker can be heard holding forth for the navy, or also fellow George Vaill bemoaning the trials of recent fatherhood. Or there is Bill Moulton, whose Princeton background handicaps him remark- ably little. And of course we all recall pleasur- ably the friendly visits to the hall of gay, un- orthodox, enigmatical, talkative Mr. Joseph Hergesheirner during his stay in Branford. For relaxation we use the game room for a rack or so of pool, or better yet, settle down for a session of bridge. Since Half-hour Garnaus left last year the game has suffered, but it is rumored that the rub- bers are practically continuous on the top floor of Gibbs entry. Our low-ceilinged, intimate lounge has become a favorite spot for wasting seconds, though one is all too likely to run into Ger- man, Kennard, Spring and company fighting it out in their latest :guess-what' jazz contest. Occasionally, though by no means so often as in our nervous neighbor- college to the north, our lounge is put to use for a formal event. All of us found Mrs. Luquien,s exhibition of her palette-knife work charming and perhaps reminiscent of our own travels. Tennis expert Explain Wiedersheim 125 Commander Baker on the raising of the Squa- lusi' vied with joseph Hergesheimer on Herge- sheimer at the lectern. And all good Yale men in the college enjoyed especially our reel of the Harvard disaster of last fall. Laurels for the most original large contribu- tion to college life for the past year go unques- tionably to the B.B.S., known fully as the Bran- ford Broadcasting System. With the radio aerial attached to the radiator, the members of Bran- Calming troubled nerves ford, and Saybrook also, it is rumored, can tune in at 550 on the dial at several hours during the day for news and swing. The broadcasters have promoted a number of individualistic programs, featuring entries and personalities about the college. i Hero-worshib Watching and waiting Many of us recall that exciting night when Rossin carried his message to the mike from the nearest telephone, scooping the world on the Yale-Princeton swim meet. And how we all have benefited from 'Professor' Williams' micro- phonic lectures, and improved our knowledge of current events under the tutleage of news- casters McQuaid and Dohme. Fast becoming a tradition is the Branford propensity for taking classical plays and mod- ernizing them to suit the taste, acting talent, and play-producing capacities of the college under the tower. Last year Aristophanes was the victim. This year our company moved onward from Greece to early Rome and chose a play by Plautus, The Amphitryof' With a modern version by Mr. Mendell, spontaneous additions of acts by the individual members of the cast, and some original music featuring words by our own modern fellow George Vaill, the Branford version was an enjoyable success. The hilarity was so nearly continuous that the piano-player, for one, found difficulty in sticking to his assignment between laughing at O'Connor as Mercury playing drunk - the god himself could not have improved - and the unblenched, unflinching purity of Applewhite's Alcmene singing c'She had to go and lose it at the Parthenon. Of all times of the year it was at this that McFarland and Vinton ,came into their own as the great and small of two twins, one by Amphitryo, and one - aha! - by love. Fast losing out as a tradition is the Branford 125 preference for the bottom rungs of the intercol- lege athletic championship ladder. For though Bus Burdett's football team ended up in seventh place, this was chiefly because of bad luck, and indicates in no way the fact that this yearls team spirit and interest hit a new high. The same goes for Captain Sullivan's touch team of last fall. Dave Mersereau and the other basketball ex- perts passed up most of the college field to pull up in third place for the season. The hardest case of the year has been Irv Schlesinger's puck- chasers, who lost only two games, but neverthe- less ended up in fifth place, the victim of three tied games. The swimmers, under Captain Lawrence, turned in a highly creditable season and added to the march of Branford's official athletic prog- ress. That march, we prophesy, will continue this spring, when what is left of the most unac- commodating winter weather New Haven has seen has changed for the better. The crew is said to be carrying its oars to classes, so impatient is it to be using them. And the menace of baseballs flying up and down our long court walks has just come for this year. And with Hicks Law- rence, winner of the fall tennis tournament, warming up, and golf and track unlimbering, the story of our muscular supremacy is told. The spring term, which is spring term of senior year to many others like myself inspires a thoughtful attitude in our minds. We begin to live a little more in the past than we have so far done in life. And we are more sure than ever that the experiences of our college life are price- less. Whether it is a foggy day in Branford's heavy courtyard, or a smooth richly green spring afternoon, whether it is any one of the familiar faces: going-to-get-a-haircut-soon Dryden, Thor Martin blushing, Burdett's foghorn of a laugh, Welles' jar of chocolate syrup for his vanilla ice cream, little Herb Evans, smiling Anderson, or fashion boys Drell and Rubin - they all spell one big happy year under the chimes of Hark- ness. HERBERT P. GALLIHER, JR. I2 7 CALHOUN COLLEGE Calhoun College ARNOLD WHITRIDGE, Master PrcyQ2ssor in the Department zy'HistoU1, the Arts, and Letters HONORARY FELLOWS PRESIDENT CHARLES SEYMOUR PRESIDENT EMERITUS JAMES ROWLAND ANGELL FELLOWS RUDOLPH JOHN ANDERSON Przwssor of Chemistry CHARLES FREDERICK TUCKER BROOKE Sterling Prfwssor Q' English FRED ROGERS FAIRCHILD Knox Przwssor Q' Economics GORDON SHERMAN HAIGHT Assistant Przfzssor zyf English EDWARD BILLINGS HAM Assistant Prwssor Q' French KENT TENNEY HEALY Assistant Prwssor If Economics RAYMOND THOMPSON HILL Associate PVIWSSOT zyf French GEORGE TOWNSEND ADEE M.A. 1931 RICHARD STEERE ALDRICH B.A. 1906 LEONARD BACON B.A. 1909 STEPHEN VINCENT BENBT M.A. 1937 ALLERTON FRANK BROOKS Ph.B. 1911 PETER HENRY BUCK ASSOCIATE Director rj the Bernice P. Bishop Museum, Przwssor zyf Anthropology MORTIMER NORTON BUCKNER Fellow typ the T ale Corporation STUART HOLMES CLEMENT Associate Director yr the Department of Personnel Stuajf JAMES DWIGHT DANA B.A. 1911 I2 FRANK MONAGHAN Assistant Prwssor zyf I-Iistow GUY EMERSON NOYES Instructor in Economics ROBERT SELDEN ROSE Prcfessor If Spanish ROBERT CHARLES LEWIS SCOTT Irzstructor in Histogr RICHARD BENSON SEWALL Instructor in English EDMUND TAITE SILK Assistant Przyfessor cy' Latin ALAN TOWER WATERMAN Associate Przwssor zyf Physics STANLEY THOMAS WILLIAMS Colgate Prcwssor fy' English F ELLOWS JAMES COWAN GREENWAY Director ryf the Department If Unioerszzgr Health Retired RICHARD ARTHUR KIMBALL B.A. 1922 WILMARTH SHELDON LEWIS Fellow QP the T ale Corporation DOUGLAS STUART MOORE B.A. 1915 REV. T. LAWRASON RIGGS B.A. 1910 CARL PURINGTON ROLLINS Printer to the University REV. JOHN CHARLES SCHROEDER Prcfzssor qfHomiletics and Pastoral Theology JOSEPH ROCKWELL SWAN B.A. 1902 VANDERBILT WEBB B.A. 1913 9 ALHOUN has gained great repute as the lone treen college, and members of the other colleges are wont to poke fun at it. A stranger wandering into the Calhoun court some spring evening would see how wrong Calhounis critics are 5 for he would see a spirited game of nigger-baby in progress. The presence of only one tree is considered a great boon by these addicts, for there are fewer branches for the ball to be caught in, and the tree makes a wonderful backstop for the un- fortunate loser to bend in front of. Several members of the Cal- houn nigger-baby teamwere lost by grad- uation, but veterans Zogbaum, Poore, Cul- ver, and Titus carried on, challenging all new-comers. Professor Frank Monaghan joined in on several occasions, much to his discomfort. An innovation this year was the Tuesday night dinners at which the fellows ate with the undergraduates at the latters' invitation. An informal talk by a guest speaker usually followed the dinner. Among those appearing were: Oswald Villard, news- paper correspondent who spoke of his experi- ences inside Germany since the beginning of the new warg Spike Nelson, line coach of the var- sity football team, who showed movies of Yale's 20-7 victory over Harvard, Dean DeVane and Friend Qf the people 1 Professor Fairchild, the latter giving an enlight- ening talk on the finances of the present admin- istration. Another very interesting discussion was led by Irwin Edman on the values of the academic life, which turned into a rather heated argument. This list of speakers by no means covers the variety and number of guests which have been present at the Tuesday night dinners. - The Christmas banquet was a particularly joyous occasion, entertainment being provided by the Calhoun Players who presented the Second Shepherd's Play,', and by the Calhoun Glee Club. The latter also sang a few selections at the frequent beer parties. They seemed to spend a surprising amount of time tuning up and harmony gave away to volume as the supply of beer dwindled. In intercollege athletics Calhoun created a sensation by not having any of its athletic teams finish in last place. This was due to the presence of numerous rookies who starred in their first year in the major leagues. While Captain Lou McMillen spent most of the season on the side lines watching his Calhoun Senators turn giant-killers of the intercollege gridiron. The championship Timothy Dwight eleven felt the brunt of the Calhoun attack in suffering one of its two defeats of the season. Lou McMillen differed from the list of casualties only in the fact that his injured leg was more serious than the others. Nevertheless Calhoun finished the season in fifth place, winning three games, tying live, and losing but one. Rex Titus took over the reins and acted as Song soirie o field captain from his post at fullback. Ross Millhiser, at halfback, bore the brunt of line plunge assignments and gained the most yardage of the tearn's oH'ensive. Bill Witt and Jack Overbagh shared passing honors from the heaving end, whileuFlash Flaherty and Chuck Leary re- ceived the ball with true Irish consistency. Don Camp, tackle, and Ned Lockwood, center, were the Gargantuas of the line. jack Overbagh compiled an enviable record of conversions after touchdowns, failing but three times to bisect the goal-posts. Captain Joe Shevelson with Fred Rosi and Fore! Jim Emerson took honors on the touch football team. Car Counselman specialized in long tosses to a team that failed to snare a suflicient number to finish above eighth place. The teamis spirit, l Christmas pageant exhibited by continued good attendance even through the darkness of defeat, was greatly to the credit ofthe boys. The swimming team had its best season on record, winning four of its meets. Charlie Kilvert and Hal Vreeland were a duo of backstrokers second only to Doug Smith of Vanderbilt. Cap- tain Jim Dill listened to the news of the mermen from a sick bed most of the year, joining the team only in its last two meets. Rufus Zogbaum and Art Aigeltinger swam the breaststroke, while Harvey Blakeslee and Bill Kennard, cap- tain-elect, were sure point-winners in the free- style events. Hank Preston's hockey sextet eked out one victory, over Trumbull, but Sid Wilson and Car Counselman would have been assets to any man's team. In basketball Charlie Kentler swished his quota of baskets as captain of the Casual pose quintet. Bill Witt was high-scorer for the team, hounded closely by ,Tom Traceski. Sid Traceski and Dave Dangler aided and abetted the lads with true Calhoun spirit. The Senators' squash team lost but three matches throughout the duration of the cellar league. Jack Dillon and Bill Bannard alternated at number-one berth on the ladder, Ned Lock- wood, Doug Moore and Rex Titus wielding mean racquets in the remaining team positions. The Calhoun bowling team placed highest of any Senator team in the intercollege competi- tion. Third place was secured largely through the strikes and spares of Fred Rosi and Bert White. The spring season promises to be highly suc- cessful, with Captain Jack Overbagh leading a highly synchronized diamond squad, and cLad- die, de Brun telling the boys how to pull those sweeps at the harbor. In the literary field Calhoun definitely took the lead, for, in addition to the Calhoun Year- 131 book Cnow in its sixth yearj, a weekly paper known as the Calhoun Senator burst forth early in December and has been distributed every Tuesday since that time. The Senator is a two-page mirneographed paper giving a review of important Calhoun events, brief biogra- phies ofthe fellows, and literary contributions submitted by members of the college. Credit for the inauguration of this Senator: at ease publication must be given to Walker Givan and the other aides. The Calhoun Yearbook is par- ticularly valuable because of the surprisingly large number of cuts of the memorable events of the year. Photographers Chuck Roelke and Herb Clark were present at most of the dinners, beer-parties, and intercollege athletic contests with their trusty cameras gathering material for the book. Furthering the feeling of comradeship be- tween faculty and students, to which Mr. Whit- Arnold andfriends ridge has given special emphasis so successfully this year, a French and a German table were organized. Mr. Hill and Mr. Ham gave their help by encouraging all those wishing to Hparler francais to break bread one night a week with them. Interest in this now traditional Calhoun custom has run high. In fact so many have desired to join in, that the table has often had to be enlarged by drawing chairs from other tables. Mrs. Whitridge was seen one night carry- ing on a rather heated discussion with several of the linguists and has shown herself to be so in- terested in the enterprise that she has invited the table to have one banquet a year in the Master's spacious home. Not to be outdone by the French table, the German table, organized by George Wolf, has met once a week to discuss current subjects of interest in the German tongue. As there are no Doublejump 132 fellows of Calhoun on the German faculty, the talent of other colleges is usually drawn upon. Still another informal gathering of fellows and students has been the informal Bible reading and discussion group held with Mr. Sewell, when the spirit so moved those interested. Now in its second year, the Calhoun Council, composed of two seniors, two juniors, two sophomores, and the senior aide, meeting with the Master of the college, served in an advisory capacity. The function of this legislative group has been to make suggestions and sift proposals brought in by other members of the college. Although the Council was not too successful last year due to the fact that the elections were not held until late in the year, this year definite strides forward have been made. At the sugges- tion of Jim Todd and through the legislation of this group, restful dinner music as an aid to digestion was enjoyed by Calhoun diners several times each week. Another important innovation, that of lengthening the hours the fairer sex may enjoy the hospitality of Calhoun, was made through their activities. Suggestions for guest speakers were also made through the Council, the results being more than gratifying. In addition to the Second Shepherd's Play which was presented at the Christmas banquet, the Calhoun Dramat under the direction of Father Riggs, gave the Winter's Talef' Charlie Parcells, Dick Masback, Rufus Zogbaum, and Harv Blakeslee looked like future Broadway material in these productions. Another social event popular with all Cal- hounites was Sunday afternoon tea with Mr. and Mrs. Whitridge. This year the teas were en- hanced by the presence of the Whitridges' daughter jane, and an influx of visitors from other colleges was a very noticeable result. The teas and all the activities mentioned previously helped to bring the fellows and students together in a friendly and informal way and made Cal- houn the one big, happy family every college should be. CHARLES J. KENTLER,JR. I 33 M 3 :fig 'X v 1 .5 ,,-, 8 . ,.,, . K ,wx UQ ' my , if ,.. 'Lx .- f 4' ' ,im F'-Eff' In . A51 -z DAVENPORT COLLEGE Davenport College EMERSON TUTTLE, Master Curator gf Prints in the Unioersigt HCNORARY FELLOWS PRESIDENT CHARLES SEYMOUR PRESIDENT EMERITUS JAMES ROWLAND ANGELL FELLOWS RICHARD MERVIN BISSELL, JR. Assistant Prwssor If Economics PHILIP BISHOP COWLES Assistant PTCWSSOT cy' Immunology FREDERICK SHERWOOD DUNN Przyiessor cy' International Relations HOWARD THEODORE ENGSTROM Assistant Przwssor Q' Mathematics LEONARD WOODS LABAREE Associate Prmssor If Histogf MAYNARD MACK Instructor in English CHAMPION HERBERT MATHEWSON Przwssor cyf Metallurgy and Metallography DANIEL MERRIMAN Instructor in Biology ASSOCIATE DEAN GOODERHAM ACHESON Fellow typ the Tale Corporation MALCOLM PRATT ALDRICH B.A. 1922 CHARLES MCLEAN ANDREWS F arnam Prwssor cy' American History, Emeritus ALLISON VINCENT ARMOUR B.A. 1884 JAMES TINKHAM BABB Assistant Librarian cy' Tale U niversigr LUDLOW BULL Research Associate in Egyptology STARLING WINSTON CHILDS B.A. 1891 NORMAN VAUX DONALDSON B.A. 1915 THOMAS WELLS FARNAM Associate Treasurer and Comptroller rj the Uni- versigz MAX FRANKLIN MILLIKAN Instructor in Economics GEORGE MOSELEY MURPHY Assistant PrqQssor ryf Chemistry GEORGE WILSON PIERSON Associate Prwssor ofHistoU1 FREDERICK ALBERT POTTLE Prwssor cy' English THEODORE SIZER Prmssor zyf the Histogl if Art WILLIAM LEONARD STEVENS, JR. Instructor in English CHAUNCEY BREWSTER TINKER Sterling Prmssor Q' English Literature LEWIS EDWIN YORK Associate Prcyfessor QF Drawing and Painting F ELLOWS I EDWARD BELDEN GREENE Fellow ofthe Tale Corporation REV. SIDNEY LOVETT Chaplain cyf the Universiy ARCHIBALD MACLEISH B.A. 1915 ALBERT EIDE PARR Director cyf the Peabody Museum, Prcfzssor typ Oceanography BRUCE SIMONDS Przfzssor ly' Music MALCOLM RUTHEREORD THORPE B.A. 1913 FREDERICK HOLME WIGGIN B.A. 1904 THORNTON NIVEN WILDER B.A. 1920 135 OMEWHERE in the lower court of Davenport there is a turtle - that is to say, a tortoise - with For God, for Country, and for Yale! painted on its back. Every once in awhile it ploughs out of the bushes on one side of the court and unobtrusively works its way across to the other side. This is the Davenport symbol. It lends its name to the Master, St. Anthony men cry for it in the dead of night, Dave Rodd and Elliott Brown copy its very gait. Casual and un- obtrusive, but persistent and patriotic, it typifies the Davenporter. Contrary to popular rumour it does not wear white shoes. ' Each year some forty new sophomores come to live in Davenport. Usually an entry or so is packed, but for the most part these newcomers find themselves scattered all over the place, from the Black Hole of Calcutta on Park Street to the penthouse atop the senior entry on York. At first they feel like strangers, and are difhdent about dropping in to see the Master and Mrs. Where therelv smoke . . . I Tuttle without formal invitations 5 and they often feel miserable because the Davenport football team never seems to bring home a vic- tory. But it is not long before they get over both failings, and before the year is through, dididence is cast aside as they ind that Sunday tea with Mr. and Mrs. Tuttle is a very pleasant institu- tion, and they learn to treat Davenport ath- letics with the proper amount of philosophic resignation. For Davenport has never been particularly athletically inclined, but once in a while in a tit of absent-mindedness, to coin a phrase, it picks up a championship or two. This last year, as a result of the enthusiasticefforts of Lew Mohr, has s e e n championships and n e ar-champion- I ships in various fields. We take them in our stride, but of course we are proud of them. If any other college thinks they know how to play hockey, let them talk it over with Bill Poole, Clayt Du- Bosque, Bill Parker, John Armstrong, El- liott Brown, or any other of the numerous veterans on our squad. Culturally, of course, Davenport has had a successful season under the leadership of Kendall, Clarke, and Co. Tim Kendallls art club has been a great contribution to the life, not only of Davenport, but of the rest of the university as well. The far-reaching effect of this organization is most evident in that Nels Schwab, admittedly already an artist along other lines, has taken up painting under its leadership. Exhibits have been arranged from time to time throughout the year, including some of Mr. Tuttleas prints, paintings by Mrs. Acheson, wife of one of the associate fellows, as well as many selections by undergraduates. A lot of interest has been inspired, even in such luminaries as Doc I-Iowe, Chief Aide, who was overheard to say, I don't know anything about art, but I know what I like. If last year's Prom did nothing else for Daven- port, it started us on a telephonic career busy Moose 36 The amenities Q' IW enough to make any B.M.O.C. happy. This year found Commodore Nelson, Jesse Davis, and Aust Carey with a private wire to Northampton which kept both ends of the line continually on the alert. Stack's phone in the senior entry and F ord's and Schwab's phones in the lower court were constantly ringing numbers in Cincinnati, Washington, New York, Connecticut State, New Haven, and of course Northampton. Howe had a telephone which in moments of stress had been known to ring bells in Paris and California, but which did most of its work along the New Haven-Poughkeepsie wires. It has long been a Heil! mystery who paid for all these calls, but in spite of various threats from the Southern New Eng- land Telephone Company, service was somehow maintained throughout. It is thoughts of the telephone which naturally bring us to Paul Gillespie whose skill on that instrument has gained him notoriety throughout the area where the toll is no more than five cents. I Whether it was two dozen snow shovels to be delivered to the News or Erf Morris' trees to be cut down under orders from the state agricul- tural commission in Hartford, Gillespie was sure to have both thumbs and eight fingers in the pie. Once in a while he pulled out a plum, but most of the time he just got every one awfully sore. As a matter of fact, Gillespie was always hitting the front page in one way or another. If he wasn't soloing down the ice to score three goals for Eli Yale, he was entering Izzie in the Na- tional Turtle Racing Championship. Izzie pleased the heart of Managing Editor Holden, but failed to place in the final race. For pure colour, nominations would un- doubtedly open with the names of Dave Rodd and Ben Hin- man, both of whom on occasion sent the crowds hog-wild and f kept the New Haven constabulary in a state of the jitters. In the matter of giving informal entry parties, Davenport has never lagged behind the other colleges. It may be a huge entry bust', or a small, intinie affair with a couple of guests and a few cocktails. One of the gayer social affairs of the year was the punch party given by the mem- bers of the senior entry, preceding the annual college Christmas party. Mr. and Mrs. Tuttle were guests of honor. With Mike Jennings prac- ticing up as the ideal host, it was a great success. No one could think of Davenport without Alia'-day recreation K Study in individualism 37 Once upon zz time . . . thinking of Professor Tinker, our odd fellow. His accomplishments are varied and always a source of great interest. There are times when the thin fluid notes of his flute reach across the court to tickle the ears of musical Davenporters. Almost legendary already is the time he ran for a ladder to extricate an incapacitated Mohican from the Davenport moat. QFor the subsequent well-being of the university in general, and Berkeley in particular, it might have been just as well if the Indian had been suffered to remainj A familiar sight is his appearance on the balcony at the far end of the dining room, from which vantage point he picks out a suitable table-place and New Elyah then streaks down the stairs and up the center aisle to establish possession. His reading of the Night Before Christmasv at the annual Christ- mas party at the Master's House has always been something to be remembered, as is also I Stack's impersonation of Santa Claus-a southern Santa Claus, to be exact, who in keeping with his part arrived through the window minus his shoes. Though seldom as am- bitious as some of the other colleges, Davenport prides itself on its dramatic at- tempts. As this goes to press, there has gone into rehear- sal, a melodrama staggering under the name, The Six Degrees of Crime, or Wine, Women, Gambling, Theft, Murder, and the SCAFFOLDP Otis Guernsey has adapted the script to the rather limited facil- ities ofthe dining room, which was unfortunately not built with an eye to theatricals. Howe to waste time Speaking of theatricals, during the spring a good show could almost always be seen after lunch as the lower court was given over to a spectacular game of baseball. With a tennis ball andia fraternity paddle substituting for the cus- tomary ball and bat, a lively game was played in which the frequent errors of the infielders were counterbalanced by the alacrity displayed by the outfielders as they caught the high flies which bounced off the roof Spontaneity is the keynote of life in Davenport. It can be seen in the joy with which in the winter Davenporters build snow trylons and peris- pheres, igloos, and mammoth heaps, and the gusto with which in the spring we play nigger baby. We get things done, but we do them quietly. With a casual eye on Pierson's clock and 38 always with a spare moment to pass the time of day with George, Joe, Bob, and Ell, the guard- ians of our gates, we go our unobtrusive ways. There are always many things to entertain us and stir our interest. Especially do we look for- ward to the concerts given by Bruce Simonds and to the annual Thanksgiving Dinner, the big occasion ofthe year. - The years we have spent in Davenport have certainly been happy ones. It is hard to express just what it is that has made life in Davenport so pleasant for us g one cannot put one's finger on specific characteristics of Davenport which make up its unique atmosphere. All that can be said is that Davenporters cannot conceive of living elsewhere during the latter part of their college careers. MICHAEL L. LEJEUNE I 39 JONATHAN EDWARD S COLLEGE Onathan Edwards College ROBERT DUDLEY FRENCH, Master Prcwssor zyf English HONORARY FELLOWS PRESIDENT CHARLES SEYMOUR PRESIDENT EMERITUS JAMES ROWLAND ANGELL FELLOWS JOHN CHESTER ADAMS Assistant Professor zyf English, Director :yr Under- graduate Literary Activities EDWARD WIGHT BAKKE Prcy?ssor QF Economics ROBERT CHAPMAN BATES Assistant Prmssor mf French STUART ROBERT BRINKLEY Associate PTWSX07 of Chemistmf LEWIS PERRY CURTIS Assistant Prcwssor zyfHistoU1 JOSEPH TOY CURTISS Assistant Prcwssor gf English ERVVIN R. GOODENOUGH Przwssor if the Histomf zyf Religion ASSOCIATE H. FRANK BOZYAN Assistant Prcfzssor ey' Organ Playing REV. HENRY SLOANE COFFIN Fellow of the T ale Corporation ALBERT BEECHER CRAVVFORD Director ryf the Department fyf Personnel Stuibr and Qt the Bureau qv Appointments JOANNES GREGORIUS DUSSER DE BARENNE Sterling Prmssor fyf Physiology EDGAR STEPHENSON FURNISS Provost of the Uniuersigr, Dean ryf the Graduate School ARTHUR LEHMAN GOODHART B.A. IQI2 ROSWELL GRAY HAM Former Associate Prwssor zyf English AUSTIN MORRIS HARMON Lampson Przwssor cy' Greek 141 HAJO HOLBORN ' Paskus Fellow, Associate Prwssor GEORGE ALEXANDER KUBLER Instructor in the Histomr cyf Art EGBERT J. MILES Associate Przyfessor of Mathematics WALTER RICHARD MILES Prwssor ry' Psychology HOLIQINS DILLINGHAM PALMER Instructor in Architectural Design ERNEST CHARLES POLLARD Assistant Przykssor rj Physics HENRY THOMPSON ROWELL Assistant Przwssor if Latin QU-Iistory FELLOWS CHARLES BEECHER HOGAN B.A. I928 ALVIN SAUNDERS JOHNSON Director, the New School for Social Research CARL ALBERT LOHMANN Secretary cy: the University RICHARD SWANN LULL Sterling Prcfzssor mf Paleontology and Director of the Peabody Museum, Emeritus EDWARD BLISS REED Lecturer on Music FRANK SOHLESINCER PTIWSSOT of Astronomy and Director typ the Observa tory ROBERT ALPHONSO TAFT Fellow ly' the T ale Corporation KARL YOUNG Sterling Prwssor if English tgirl? T 1.521 Qfhi, ga? T F We ,.r Y this time, every college has been tagged and neatly labeled by those outside in the know. To Americans, Russia is barbaric, to Republicans, Roosevelt is nuts - and to Yale, Jonathan Edwards is intellectual. It's all very well for us to object, Yes, I know, but . .H J. E. has assumed the angle, been thoroughly dubbed, and will carry the mark till Doomsday. No amount of allocation propaganda, of varsity football captains or championship crews will assuage her reputation as the hot-house of brighties. Yet it is the humble purpose of this piece-if such hack-writing can be conferred the dignity of a purpose - to modify this im- pression at least a little. Promenade 142 Not all who inhabit the precincts of Yale's smallest college are bookworms. Headed by Football Captain Harold X'Vhiteman, a lot of lesser luminaries have contributed their share to varsity athletics. Rex Auchincloss was captain of the fencing team, Harry Holt was goalie on the hockey team and plays second base on the varsity this spring, and Ed Swenson, senior aide, has received his letter in boxing these two years. Win Schwab and Jack Hauer wrestled, and Wendell Wheelock played in the varsity squash matches, to mention but a few of those giving their 'goomph' for Yale. What's more, even in the field of inter-college athletics, Jonathan Edwards proves her interest in things extra- scholastic. Extensive investigation in statistical toines has failed to reveal a single instance of J. E. in the athletic cellar-recently. True, there have been ties for last place, but there can almost always be found a college or two whose Their teas are famous sport rating is just a bit below the ambidextrous Spiders. For a season which was marked with terrible depletion because of graduation and constant injuries, it is truly notable that Grid Captain Ted Ballard and his ten men good and true amassed a grand total of six Qfij points against their opponents. But everyone agreed at the Ianuary banquet in the Master's house when Ballard handed over his captaincy and best wishes to Mac Monroe, that there was never a dull moment as long as Auchincloss could block a kick and there was the chance that a pass might be completed. The touch-football team under Captain Ray Barnum, attained fourth . . . vollegzed and thunderedn place in the college league, anyway, and the cross country was won by Wendell Wheelock, which makes the Fall season a bit creditable, if not outstanding. The athletic scene brightens considerably in the light of winter sports. Hal Whiteman led the basketball team to the inter-college title. The hockey team, with Captain Steve Ham- mer in the nets, capped a creditable season of three wins to five losses by scoring an upset over Pierson, the league champions. John Wilkinson sal- vaged his swimming team, raising it one rung from the inter- college bottom and the squash players, a de- sultory lot at best, were satisfied, I hope, to be one level higher, having won one match. Looking toward the spring, the prospects seem cheerful indeed. Under Captain John Nerniah and with the return of Doug Williams as stroke, the crew stands an excellent chance of repeating the championship victory of two years ago. The tennis team will also report intact as of last year and ought to have little diiiiculty in coming out again on top, with such stalwarts as Budge Schwab, Charlie Noone and Jim New- rneyer in there fighting. C012 headed by Ham- mer, has recruited the services of that champ of Tuxedo Park, Reginald Auchincloss, and ex- pects to sweep the links. Led by Captain Barnum F unnyman I and ace Bill King, the nine young men have stated exclusively that there,ll be no flies on our diamond this year. So much for athletics. Modest but hopeful, J. E. sportsmen stress fun over victory, and let it go at that. Speaking of fun, we must mention that among the highlights of undergraduate enter- tainment Hoat the college beer parties. Held officially once a term, they represent mass meet- ings of exuberance, and can be counted on to give rise to all sorts of interesting fauna and fora. There was a courtyard tree, for example, Short-out 43 which became the repository of a cluster of dark shapes, full of strange owl-like noises. Some seemed to float between the twigs, others to hang suspended from the branches, but even- tually all dropped to the ground with a soft, mellifluous plosh. On a less phenomenal scale, were the cocktail parties that signalized the arrival and departure of a football week-end. A notorious suite that sweeps across two entries and a fire door per- petuated the spirit of hospitality upon the slight- est provocation. Whether or not this kind of celebration was responsible, it was at this time of year anyway that the great in- vasion occurred. Somehow, provoca- tion had been given to the misbegotten who dwell in the Slave quarters across York Street by the inhabitants of the E. grande suite. Returning breathless from the scene of their crime, the perpetrators made ready against a retaliation. Doors were locked and double-locked, and all inhabitants prepared for a state of siege. They were gathered in one room to laugh at any attempted entrance. when suddenly one of the enemy was discovered with a leg over the window sill. Let him come in, the secure shouted, for- getting their classic history. 'CI-Iels only one against many and harmless at thatf' The wall- scaler stood for a moment in the center of the room, blinked once or twice, then rushed to the door, threw it open and admitted ravaging hordes. The second Troy fell and was scattered in widespread demolition. They say bits of Bundy's mattress are still being picked out ofthe moat. It is possible, however, for the Spiders to enjoy more restrained celebrations-at the annual Christmas dinner, for example, when the fel- lows, their wives and children, and undergrad- uates sat down together in an atmosphere of candlelit cheer. There were no speeches, of course, for after-dinner silence is a hard and fast tradition at But there was carol singing Also played the cello 1 Groucho Serenade from the balcony by members of the Gilbert and Sullivan Society. This organization of singers-actors is an estab- lishment of high renown in the field of Savoyard entertainment. With the guidance of a perpetual Pooh Bah lDon Anderson this yearj, under the musical direction of Mr. Beekman Gannon, and because of the ingenious staging and interpola- tions of Messrs. Beecher Hogan and Robert Bates, fellows, the G. 8a S. has been recognized for its outstanding performances. Specializing in such lesser known works as c'The Grand Duke and Princess Ida,', the group is giving The Sorcerer this spring with Rex Auchin- A place in the sun closs as Alexis, the strapping hero. In two impor- tant ways, this already firmly established institu- tion may be said to represent characteristics which those inside in the know have always associated with Jonathan Edwards. 44 It is typical first, in that it illustrates how thoroughly and how delightfully Mr. and Mrs. French concern themselves with the college interests. All the early rehersals take place in the Master's house, which is devoted once a week to that noisy event. Mrs. French, as the cos- tume designer and wardrobe mistress, gives a great deal of her time to creating remarkable effects from O,Malley draperies and curtain material. This interest, which is without any feeling of intrusion, they manage to carry over into all the affairs of the college. Probably this is why their Sunday teas are always so over- crowded and why even the most hack-like re- marks on Jonathan Edwards would be incom- plete without mention of the Master and his wife. In still another way, the G. 8L S. is represen- tative of a college tendency. It would be hard to walk from the High Street to the York Street entrance of E. without hearing some bars ofa melody. It might be phrases from the oft heard Rhapsody inBlue or the jive harmonics of Phil Statton and Charlie Noone, or even the more delicate bars of a Mozart sonata as played by Bob Grinnell. This preoccupation with all kinds of music is well illustrated in the series of con- certs that has been given in the common room every Sunday night during the winter term. Many more incidents could bear relating. There is the unscheduled but regular snow-ball battle between members ofthe college and their arch enemy, the Architecture School, which usually finishes off with beer-cans and quarter- scale models. There is the enlargeable fact that J. E. is the center of such busy activities as the Political Union QBallard and Bundyj, as the Yale Community Council QSwenson and Schwabj, as the Budget Drive CBundyj, as the Lit QDick Wilcoxj, as News columnists CWesis- man, Starr, Harper, Sullivan and Jamesj, etc. There are the wonderful unexpected parties of faculty and undergraduates-but better left unsaid. Anyway, I think I remember some- thing about unwritten stuff being sweeter still. But I'd better go look it up. HENRY JAMES, JR. I 45 PIERSUN CGLLEGE Pierson College ARNOLD WOLFERS, Aflaster Prwssor' International Relations HONCRARY FELLOWS PRESIDENT CHARLES SEYMOUR PRESIDENT EMERITUS JAMES ROWLAND ANGELL IRSTON ROBERT BARNES Assistant PrcyQssor' gf Political FRANKLIN LE VAN BAUMER Instructor in History JEAN BOORSOH Assistant Prmssor' of French WILLIAM CLYDE DEVANE Dean zyf T ale College and Prrw .Y RICHARD FOSTER FLINT Associate Przwssor Qt Geology GEORGE HEARD HAMILTON Instructor in the Histogr QF Art JAMES GRAHAM LEYBURN Associate Prwssor zyf the Science ofSocieQ1 ARTHUR MOORE MIZENER F ELLOWS ANDREW RICHMOND MOREHOUSE Associate Pro essor QF French BENJAMIN CHRISTIE NANGLE Associate Pro essor :yr English Economy STANLEY MGCRORY PARGELLIS Assistant Pro essor cy'HzstoU1 HARRY RUDOLPH RUDIN Assistant Prfwssor ry' Histor y JOHN EDWARD VANCE Assistant Prcwssor :yr Chemrstr y ANDREWS WANNING Instructor in English sor ay' English WILLIAM WELDON WATSON Associate Przwssor :yr Physics Instructor in English THEODOR ERNST MOMMSEN Instructor in History ASSCCIATE CHARLES BRADFORD WELLES Associate Prrwssor :yr Classics FELLOWS FRANK ALTSCHUL B.A. 1908 A ROBERT NELSON CORWIN Prcwssor fy' German and Chair Admissions, Emeritus EUGENE ARTHUR DAVIDSON Editor, T ale Unizrersigr Press GEORGE PARMLY DAY Treasurer fyf the University ROBERT FROST Litt.D. 1924 ' JOHN FARQUHAR FULTON Sterling Przwssor ry' Physiology WALTON HALE HAMILTON Southmayd Przwssor Q' Law PHILIP HOEER A.M, Harvard 1929 ROBERT JAMES MENNER Prwssor qt English man cy' the Board Q' FRED TOWSLEY MURPHY Fellow rj the T ale Corporation GARRISON NORTON B.A. Harvard 1923 WALLACE NOTESTEIN Sterling Prrwssor If English Histor y REEVE SCHLEY Fellow ofthe Iale Corporation HENRY GORDON SWEET B.A. 1926 ALAN VALENTINE President mf the Unrzrerszgr o Rochester and ormer Master cy' Pierson College GEORGE VAN SANTVOORD Fellow If the 1 ale Corporation GEORGE EDGAR VINCENT B.A. 1885, LL D 1911 HERBERT EUSTIS WINLOCK Litt.D. 19333 147 IERSON COLLEGE, cynosure of the Yale cam- pus, towers over the mental and physical landscape of Yale in the same manner that the mighty clock spire hangs awesomely over Davenport, and meets the changing seasons with its irresolute weather-vane ever atop the gold dome that symbolizes the golden age which reigns beneath. So pass the years, and each June finds Pierson still with its back turned on the anomalous domicile of the eclectic progeny of John Davenport. The autumn of 1939 saw the reconvention of the sons of Abraham Pierson, and the annual process of converting the lawn into a thread- bare, grass-fringed tonsure was effected with the usual dispatch amid a plethora of touchball games. Brower McClintock engineered a reductio ad absurdum by introducing a five-inch football Rivalled MOU'J 1 which quickly supplanted the regulation pig- skinjl-Iowever, the Slave eleven thrived on ab- stention from practice and a steady diet of tie games to end up second in the league standings, through the sterling efforts of Bill Driscoll, Reed Hayes, Bob Atkins, Ed Meister, Wally Herrick, Ian Thiermann, and John Burrowes. QAny resemblance to The Seven Dwarfs is purely coincidentalj The burly squad was reckoned like unto a pile-driver, but seemed likewise to emulate the lack of sparkle which characterizes that dainty contrivance. With October coming on apace, the Slave representative on foreign shores finally found his way back to the fold. Tony Barker, after a pow-wow with his British countrymen running the war, was deemed unsuitable for cannon-fodder and shipped back to Pier- son, where he was wel- comed with placards and good cheer. Dick Jordan and Jack Weeks, arrayed in for- mal attire, did the honors, while an ef- , fusion of good spirits nearly carried the whole committee into a volunteer unit ready to set fire to Hitler's moustache. Came the Dart- mouth weekend, and a morbid desire for the bizarre moved Warren Snyder and Charlie Hulburd to alter the skyline by the installation of a clothesline across the court, to which was appended a generous supply of female gar- ments. A peripatetic campus gendarme halted the proceedings with the work only S ing, lzeavenbz muse 48 Allied infuence half done, however, and confiscated the evidence after which a remainder of the rope dangled ht- fully from one chimney for months until parts were claimed by souvenir hunters and the rest succumbed to the elements. But Pierson was not to subside into a rut, for the end of football brought a notable halt to strict training which set the stage for l'ajczi1'e Starbuck. On that notable evening Widder flowed into the court, took in the situation with a quick if uncertain eye, and touched off a sten- torian display of Verbal pyrotechnics which in its target was nearly IOOCZJ inclusive of everyone in the college. The building was undamaged by the percussion, but several students were treated for nervous shock, according to reports sifting in from the Health Department. With the start of the new year, the far-flung Slaves dragged themselves back by their Hnger- nails only to be cast deeper into the sloughs of despond by an exhibition of modern art glaring balefiilly from the dining room walls. Indiges- tion continued for days while the geometric globs of color haunted our gastronomic moments, but Fellow Hamilton soothed congested spleens by an enlightening discourse on modern art trends, after which consumption of food re- turned to normal. The dining hall was set to rights by nifty new pictures as Piersonites purred peacefully. With winter in full swing, the manifold activ- ities of the athletic wing began in earnest, pro- ducing several versatile athletes. The hockey team whipped through seven games without a defeat, led by Brower McClintock, Bunco Baker and Jim McClelland, who were all mem- I bers of the squash team. Although the natators were distinctly on the mediocre side, Captain Snyder of the swimming club upon occasion took racquet in hand and aided the squash con- tingent or the hockey sextet. Captain Jim Par- sons' hoop squad put on an unpredictable per- formance, alternatingly scaling the heights and sounding the depths, but there was no doubt that they struck terror into the opposition, win or lose. The three Furies, Bone-crusher Star- buck, Four-fouls Thiermann, and Rabbit- punch Hayes, effectually protected the Slave basket and forced the enemy players to shoot from their own half of the court. During one game these worthies played good, solid, contact basketball for seven minutes after the end of the game, not realizing that the ball and the referee had been gone for some time. The shaggy showing of the tank squad was counter- balanced by the flashy work of the hockey group in connection with which the good work of Les Wheeler must not go unnoticed, and the basketball and squash teams went re- spectably through - Indian in Zepee Algierr-im Tale, Inc. their schedules without starting any fires. Throughout the year the teas given by Mrs. Wolfers maintained their popularity for the hungry and thirsty Slaves, and mental stimula- tion was dealt out along with the food and charm purveyed by the college's Hrst lady. February was marked by a lecture on James 49 Joyce, the puzzler whose Finneganis Wake started the more erudite students pondering over the codified comments, and the enthusiastic hearers experienced the light dawning in the same manner as the art addicts who were put on an even keel by Mr. Hamilton's talk. Still an- other well-received discourse was on the ques- tion ofthe government versus the doctors, given by our other Mr. Hamilton, the law professor. As though life were not already abundant in Abraham7s bosom, Fellow Mommsen diversified the contents of Pierson still more by the addition of his dachshund. The young and long beast provided an aesthetic contrast with the morose and middle aged airedale owned by Mr. Welles, while the two canines jointly made a positively Qpazfant background on which to project the per- sonality of Shah, the Master's cream-colored Afghan hound. This Alcibiades of the animal kingdom is a sight to behold when he barges into the court and covers the entire length in six bounds, especially when he looms out of the night like a ghost to frighten the errant Pierson- ites into sobriety. Mr. Leyburn, the college's jack-of-all-trades, after dominating the squash horizon for years, finally slipped down to number two position on the team but remained one of the few fellows anywhere to compete in intercollege athletics. This is but one facet, however, for in his off I, ,. . . , Hayes and company moments he is musical director of the annual Pierson opera, an omnicornpetent conversation- alist and pianist at his weekly at-home sessions, ardent Yale rooter, and incidentally Associate Professor of Sociology and Class Officer for I94.I till the office was abolished. Pierson without Mr. Leyburn is incomprehensible, as much so as Slaves to pleasure Pierson without clock- tower or Pierson with- out court, or mous- tache without Hitler. Mr. Alan Valentine, first Master of Pierson and now President of Rochester University T and for whom Valen- tine's Day is named, has been for five years the patron saint of Pierson, consequently the annual dinner on Valentine's Day serves as a touchstone for the Best undressed man t spiritual element of the college. This year the gods observed the day by sending fifteen inches of snow to dis- tinguish the occasion, and after the banquet marked by a complete absence of speeches Qto suit the Lacedae- monian distaste for words which charac- terizes the residentsj, the Pierson Glee Club pre- sented the Sorcerer,', Gilbert 8L Sullivan opera in two acts. This epicolossal production, played against a backdrop painted by artist Bob McMullen, was embellished by the comeliness of the female parts, especially Jack Weeks' role of the unre- 150 quited Constance, and Norm Spector, a win- some lassie if there ever was one. Wes Oler as the melliiiuous parson, Mrs. Morgan as guest artist in the part of Aline, Bob Van Peursem as Sir Marmaduke, and neighbor Tom Tilley as John Wellington Wells were all acclaimed with en- thusiasm. Weeks, virtuoso of the printed page, also kept the Weekbz Slave, abreast of the times, and the Pierson periodical proved a potent informer and laugh-getter under his direction. With rally numbers, communist numbers, James Joyce numbers, and a complete set of numbers appro- priate to the occasion, the Slave has won a per- manent place in the life of the college in only two -years. Pierson attained a measure of reflected glory when Hood Bassett, who had lived among us just like any other mortal, was voted one of the country's ten best dressed men by some authori- tative association of tailors. Julius Widder de- livered a concurring opinion and everything was strictly official, although Best-dressed Bassett expressed considerable mortiiication at the whole business. , When life seemed to ebb again, a new stimu- lus was injected by an impromptu ski week- end engineered en masse by Bunco Baker, Bo Blair, Steve Moorhead, jim McClelland, et al. The odd part of the weekend was that almost without exception the skiers had never been on skis before. The group set out resembling the motley crew with which Napoleon returned from Moscow, and arrived back in the Elm City surprisingly free from the ravages anticipated by the sanguine spectators. After a quick vacation, Pierson had another taste of spring, which was marked by the annual appearance of the outdoor bridge table in the Slave Quarters, known as the Casbah. The Dead End Kids who live there, in their open air swings and chairs, enjoy the life of leisure, '4Mool' Gardner, Stranger,' Burr, c'Russl' Cole, King,' Heard, and the rest of the semi- autonomous buffer state. Sunburn and loafxng in the sun became the cry, and, interrupted only by the hurdles thrust in the way by the unsympathetic faculty, the Pierson group ended the year at Yale, It was great . . . WARREN P. SNYDER 151 SAYBRQOK COLLEGE Saybrook College ELLIOT DUNLAP SMITH, Master' Prfwssor of Economics HONORARY FELLOWS PRESIDENT CHARLES .SEYMOUR PRESIDENT EMERITUS JAMES ROWLAND ANGELL ALFRED RAYMOND BELLINGER Associate Proj?ssor fy' Greek and Latin JOHN MILTON BERDAN Emibl Sargford PTIWSSO7' zyf English Literature FRANK EDWARD BROWN Instructor in Classics ROBERT LOWRY CALHOUN Prwssor of Historical Theology GERALD MORTIMER CAPERS, JR. Instructor in Histogt HAROLD GLENN DIETRICH Assistant Przwssor QS Chemistgr WILLIAM DOUGLAS FELLOWS JOHN ARCHER GEE Associate Prcwssor Inf English JOHN VANBENSOHOTEN GRIGGS Distructor in Italian BASIL DUKE HENNING Instructor in Histogf ALBERT GALLOWAY KELLER ' William Graham Sumner Prrwssor ofthe Science zyt' Society ANGELO LIPARI Prwssor fy' Italian EVERETT VICTOR MEEKS Dean cyf the School Q8 Fine Arts Curator If Glass and Ceramics in the Gallery ryf SYDNEY KNOX MITCHELL Fine Arts WILLIAM HUSE DUNHAM, JR. Assistant Prwssor cyf History Durj52e Prwssor Qjr History JOHN COLLINS POPE Assistant Prrfessor of English ASSOCIATE FELLOWS KAN-ICHI ASAKAWA Prwssor 1yfHisto1y MARSHALL BARTHOLOMEW Director of Undergraduate Musical Activities SAMUEL FLAGG BEMIS Farnam Prfwssor Q' Diplomatic Histogr THE REV. ARTHUR HOWE BRADFORD Fellow cf the T ale Corporation ARTHUR LINTON CORBIN William If. Townsend Prcy?ssor of Law SAMUEL WILLIAM DUDLEY Dean fy' the School If Engineering WALTER PRICHARD EATON Associate Przwssor Iyf Playwriting MORRIS HADLEY B.A. IQI6 SAMUEL CLARK HARVEY William H. Carmalt Prmssor 1y'SurgeU1 BERNHARD KNOLLENBERG Universigf Librarian STANLEY RUSSELL MCCANDLESS Associate Prawssor Q' Lighting ASHLEY WEBSTER OUGHTERSON Associate Prwssor ry'Surge01 LEIGH PAGE Prokssor of Mathematical Physics JAMES GAMBLE ROGERS B.A. 1889 FREDERICK ELY WILLIAMSON B.A. 1898 153 A ,ij git f -- 2213 1-Alf wie. 1 ' if 0 0 0 'II vi' ' O ,A Q z T is a satisfying pleasure to be able to report that since last spring life in Saybrook has moved forward sedately and steadily in spite of European conflict and domestic strife. Joe the porter's ping-pong game has improved consid- erably, and Mac, Willis entry's immortal jan- itor - a veritable triton among minnows - has refurbished his inexhaustible stock of un- printable anecdotes to Hatter the talents of the present inhabitants. Macis salty philosophy and Rabelaisian wit have been balm to many a dis- gruntled and dejected student, but never more so than when he provides a good topic for a daily theme. ' Every day isn't Der- by Day, but there are times when the lid comes off, the intellec- tual Hame is tempor- arily concealed under a handy bushel, and all Saybrook joins in festive rnerriment un- der the spreading branches of our Tree. Such an occasion is the annual Founderis Day celebration, when the anniversary of the establishment of the original Saybrook col- ony is feted in wine and song. The Christ- mas Gluhwein and the bi-monthly Cakes and Ale parties given by SCI' JDM I Mr. and Mrs. Smith are more discreet but none the less delightful, for they provide students and faculty members with an opportunity to ex- change vital ideas while enjoying Mrs. Smith's refreshments. Other notable social events were Colonel Jerry Capers' musical soirees and the historic poker game with one of the local belles, in which our gallant gridiron chieftain demon- strated that poker is not a game of chance when played by an expert. EZ Toms did it Athletics, under the eccentric direction of a rabid advocate of the ancien regime, ranged from the perennially disastrous season of the touchball team, which under the skilful and impassioned guidance of Syl Barnet kept a firm and relentless grip upon the cellar slot for the second straight year, to the powerful gridiron squad of Small Loans Moran which barely missed annexing the coveted league gonfalon and capped its successful season by routing Adams House of Harvard 7-o in the traditional encounter played amid ice and snow on the chilly banks of the Charles. Johnny Brewster, sensational exponent of dorsal piscation, and Dick Clark, the league's outstanding diver, led the swimmers into a 54 A 2:0 'Mfr rw, www 'W WW wg M, aa if ffwxf 't 6 'mfs' ff r . 'f I-1.4:-, rar' 1 4 1111522122 ': ' fr fr'-'-W -'I I 15.--f.-I - i 43, Q::.1:sf,t,.g6 ti. -' 41s,?'1.-mf?-: ix: .. 1 Q 5:51 r 'sq 1, 24:15. f -' .321 1545 t V pg-1' f-v.W,f.jf.ff4f1 -it- a24Af2q!,. 1. -- 4-1:1 H: -:-55:5-'Mg .ia '- 1 bi, - 4 A-' 'MA -V -' ff . 1ettm.w,i: 1. :2 .. , -. - .1 ff -1 1:1 -fzzzq--if -fri-' ,e-,.,w mm , r- Y , 535 , Q 5 it V' ai... ef -La: -f e- 1 . ' -2 254 5 f zwfafffi 'I ' :f1S:e'25i 32' WSL- .w . 11,6 ,-:Q 251 J, fi! fi, , f 'f-Tis. .':f'i:kg,2wg 'g,.,gfZ5p2- 11f'.'f -52' sf Ez? '- Q-N. R: s-ms ' 4,-..,f'i!'-fy - ei X 1 ws., .' ' -.,E119'f'J -'-TW! . 1:15 ,-nf-5:1 :3tP'a::t -. ,Q :inf - gp,-'asa 1.5 -aff' .nfs'.:x.::.e-:mf-'- ' , 4 .l --:ia , :g' ,' .:v- .ry ns, 2 s-fs..syawQ-'- ., : B K. f w fa 7' w v fag? t 'wt ' D 9 f :WW 2 f 1 9 f ' x 1 3: X? ,, gg, J X , xt, t SSWPW I 'V Q7 Eigey, If if ,Ei I files! ft? . Qu 5 f .,.,. . . ..x .1 ,, .1 . . 4.-1,.:.,:-:- -s,4,:. , , ,. -, . . , . V, ,if n ,K yi? Q- ' -b at It -Q-. ,-:.:f,-I. af , ' V ' . , -,J -aff -5 .1 --L, . ,3,T5zJ ,4' ,,ag3 0' Pair fy' Seals strong third place, toppling several favored teams from the running. Dick Schmalzis base- ball outfit is but a glint in the captain's eye as this goes to press, but an amplitude of talent augurs well for a duplication of last year's sensa- tional feats, when John Reed's team captured the pennant with exquisite ease and inundated Harvard by an overwhelming margin. Perhaps the greatest feats, however, have been recorded in less heralded sports. Wild Bill Lautz, T hird term supporter 155 the one-man track team, George Redington, and Joe Manilla were instrumental in winning the track trophy for Saybrook for the second suc- cessive year, despite the fact that the athletic secretary had taken the afternoon off and had gone to the movies, and in road-racing, Gom- mander Thompson led the Equippe Xiran to many a triumphal assault on Poughkeepsie and New York records in his four and one-half-litre, unblown, soft-top sportster. Fred The Legal Eagle led the batmen, including Quinn and Pool, to several victories, while in varsity sports Butch Mertens represented the Seals on the fencing team, Dave Gerber captained the matmen, and Brownie Brinkley starred in foot- ball and track. N0 onefainted Like any well-regulated community, there is a staff of experts. Among them are c'Hats-Offw Jack Doran, naval commander, Steve Hinrichs, terpsichorister and ballroomologist, Steve Gar- roll, ace cameraman, Bruce Dayton, stock market wizard, Chuck Gheyney, master of the schuss and the slush, Bill Dommerich, brilliant but erratic snowballer whose exploits have made their mark, and George Burniston, practicing chemist, who after several attempts has almost perfected a formula that will entirely demolish the Sterling Lab. T hespian talent had an opportunity to mani- fest itself at the annual presentation of a Restora- Best bartenders tion comedy by the Jacobite Club and in the impromptu play staged for the ediiication of President Seymour as the highlight of his yearly visit to the college. This year's drama, with lyrics by John Berdan and an accompanying brass band, had as protagonists the various Presidential candidates, the CIO, and other controversial difficulties now facing the em- battled gentry of these crenellated keeps and His ancestors at Naseby 1 baronial bastions. Bulldog Bowser, erstwhile grid ace, starred in the role of Mars, deas ex dining-hall, whose climactic entrance was the high spot of the eveningis entertainment. Music is yet a seductive muse despite the many other diversions that fill a Seal's time. Aside from the golden tones of Dick Russis melophone and Jim Young's volcanic shower-room opera- tics, it consists mainly of several singing groups, most of which blossom out for special occasions - such as the faculty-student octet, which charmed the returning alumni, and the Christ- l l - Caught bqfore luncheon mas glee club, which in deference to a hallowed tradition of several years' standing, rendered Saybrookis official carol composed by Mr. Jep- son. Featured songsters included Perry Clark, Bill Dodge, Mike Stafford, Van Griggs, and Duke Henning. A permanent octet called the Gleemen, this year under the energetic direction of Bill Sweetman, met once a week in the private dining-room to polish up its extensive repertoire of college songs, American ballads and conti- nental roundelays. The history, medical, and law clubs con- tinued to function in the face of the undermin- ing influences of the present administration and 56 the activities of certain foreign powers. There were said to be a number of foreign agents lurking in this gothic wilderness. It was not sur- prising, then, when on the Russian New Year's Day or on Tsarist St. Patrick's Day the strum- ming of balalaikas could be heard issuing from the lofty fastnesses of Wrexham Tower, punc- tuated by the intermittent tinkle of breaking glass and explosive imprecations muttered in hoarse Slavic tongues. The preservation of a congenial society with a minimum of hugger-mugger has continued to be the general aim. In some vaulted office in the far reaches of Morse entry, Mr. Smith's myrmi- dons under the leadership of efficiency expert Herrick, labor unblushingly and unseen to keep the ping-pong balls from getting lost and the sports trophies from being carried off to Daven- port. A student council functions to protect individual liberty and free speech and to keep all from being dominated by the bus boys. Through the enterprising eHlorts of Mr. Smith there was ample opportunity to stimulate one,s mind by informal discussions with the most ac- tive persons in the current stream of events - Paul McNutt, Kathryn Lewis, Wendell Willkie, to mention but a few. Outstanding among Saybrook's many ser- vices to its inmates is its excellent library, which ranges from the latest fiction to a shelf of sturdy tomes on economics which are replaced as rap- idly as they get out of date. In connection with the library is a comprehensive collection of gramophone records to which are added each year a representative selection of the latest recordings. Everything is pretty well under control over there in the favored half of the Harkness Quad- rangle. Seals still break Windows with snowballs in winter and pitch pennies in the spring. The poker games last till breakfastg the hockey team has yet to make the first division. There is ample opportunity to chew the cud of melancholy for those who will. There are many activities to suit the tastes of the socially minded and always promise of some new ones. Someone even has suggested that intercollege hopscotch would be nice for rainy days. It is difhcult to sum up the overflowing life ofa community like Saybrook in thirteen hundred words of aseptic rhetoric. There is too much behind and beyond those words which is seen as yet but dimly, but which in the future should become ever more meaningful to those fortunate enough to have been members of Saybrook. 'ANSON W. PECKHAM 157 TIMGTHY DWIGHT COLLEGE Timothy Dwight College JAMES GRAFTON ROGERS, Affaster Prcwssor ay' Law HONORARY FELLOWS PRESIDENT CHARLES SEYMOUR PRESIDENT EMERITUS JAMES ROWLAND ANGELL FELLOWS ROSWELL PARKER ANGIER HOWARD WILCOX HAGGARD Professor qfP91chology, Director cj the Laboratory Prwssor cy' Applied Physiology qfP.g1chol0gy LOOMIS HAVEMEYER RICHARD CUSHMAN CARROLL Assistant Dean ofthe Shqielal Scientmc School Assistant Dean Q' 1' ale College ROBERT JOHN HERMAN KIPHUTH FRANCIS WILLIAM COKER' Assistant PTKWSSOV zyf Physical Education Prmssor of Government TOWNSEND MILLER THOMAS WELLSTED COPELAND Instructor in English ' Instructor in English HENRI MAURICE PEYRE JACK RANDALL CRAWFORD Sterling Prmssor of French Associate Prmssor fyf English JOHN MARSHALL PHILLIPS CECIL HERBERT DRIVER Assistant Przfessor zyf the Histogr typ Art Associate Prwssor cyf Government RAYMOND WRIGHT SHORT ALFRED WHITNEY GRISWOLD Instructor in English Assistant Prwssor cf Government and International KENNETH MERWIN SPANG Relations Instructor in Economics ASHBEL GREEN GULLIVER JOSHUA IRVING TRACEY Acting Dean ry' the School :yr Law Associate Prqhessor cy' Mathernatics ASSOCIATE FELLOWS EDWIN MONTEFIORE BORCHARD JAMES LEE LOOMIS justus S. Hotchkiss PTIWXSOT typ Law Fellow zyf the T ale Corporation JOHN RENSSELAER CHAMBERLAIN QGDEN DAYTON MILLER B-A 1925 Director fyffttumnt Relations HENDON CHUBB WALTER MILLIS Ph.B. 1895 B A 1920 CHARLES EDWARD CLARK B ' ' B O B.A. , LL.B., LL.D. ENTON ROCKS WEN ALBERTIQCEQDFREY CONRAD Assistant Prwssor fy' Ghemistmr Assistant Prwssor of Electrical Engineering JUSTICE OWEN JOSEPHUS ROBERTS WILBUR LUCIUS CROSS AB., LL.B., LL.D. Dean '37rGmduatg School, Ememw THE RIGHT REV. HENRY KNOX SHERRILL WZSZHRZP EI13ZVgRDZ LDEJIGHT Fellow typ the T ale Corporation . . I 93, . ., . . HENRY SOLON GRAVES HZNZY IS STIMSON Dean ay' the School zyf Forestry, Emeritus ' ' I DEANE KELLER LAURENCE GOTZIAN TIGHE Associate Prwssor qt Drawing and Painting B.A. 1916 159 xf HE dining hall is lilled with silent and happy faces. The tables have been cleared. The beer is flowing. The last chords of the Glee Club have just died away. The Master is about to speak. The awful moment is at hand. Timothy Dwight comes of age. It was a Friday night ir1 February, the fifth A jier-dinner chat anniversary of Plaster Night-that first time the college met as a unit, to celebrate the return of the students exiled by the falling plaster. The day after this fifth anniversary, the ceiling of the Master's study - the only remnant of the orig- inal plaster - fell to the ground. Surely, Tim- othy Dwight is now of age. This year was its last as the youngest college, for though it seems that its completion anticipated that of Silliman by only a few months, T. D. must relinquish its position of latest-born and join the ranks of the 'fold guard. But it can no longer be spoken of as the suburbs, for with the completion of Silli- man, Temple Street will surely replace Elm as the center of town. The completion of Silliman will also deprive the Prexies of their chief means of diversion. If the members of T. D. have been lax in their studies this last year, the construction job across the street has been largely to blame. The steam- shovels and derricks were such a popular attrac- tion they were held over a couple of weeks - and at the same theatre. Later, the brick- layers had continuous shows from seven to five. It certainly was fun to watch other people work - for a change. There was one field, however, in which the Prexies were far from lax - athletics. The other colleges shudder to remember the defeats handed them by our championship football team. Their fame was spread far and wide when Captain Bob Johnson's boys, with the aid of a ringer named Hank Chaney, successfully thwarted the Winthrop House invasion from Harvard. It was rumored that Coach Wicks would replace Ducky Pond next fall. The hockey team had a beautiful chance of taking top honors until the appearance of Cap- tain Trigger,' Neuhaus' prediction in a local scribe's sports column angered the pucksters from Berkeley into playing way over their heads. At the gym, the basketball team experienced a Hrst-rate year. Cy Taylor, who played head and shoulders above the rest, would place the ball in the basket without so much as a man- Christmas comes but once a year 160 Winning ways? sized jump. The squash team, thanks to the little fellow from the Dean's oHf1ce, proved very hard to beat. We hope that Dick Carroll will continue to win matches for T. D. in future Picnic-err years. If the spring sportsmen hold their own - and at the present writing, the prospects are good-the Prexies may find themselves again in possession of the Tyng Trophy. The members of T. D. have been active in other iields as well. They boast the only function- ing college Glee Club. After hours of weekly practice, it and the venerable Grunyons would harmonize at college gatherings and spread the Christmas cheer to the other colleges with their carolling. Unfortunately for T. D., Ed Clapp completes his legal education this year, and his departure means the loss of our maestro and 161 song leader. How well we remember him trying to keep the college singing in one pitch and one time! How well do we remember Frank Thrush Menton soloing The Old Grey Bonnetl' and Strutters' Ball. Singing at T. D. reached new heights this year, especially when Tom Watson hit high C. The Christmas dinner marked the high spot of the college social activities. It is one of the few occasions on which the fellows bring their wives to partake of the college festivities. Dr. Haggard forgot his arteriosclerosis long enough to don a Santa Claus costume and give some appropriate presents to certain students and fellows for some worthy deed. For instance, a spoon was given to the Griswolds for their third child and to Mr. Havemeyer, just in case. As each gift was presented, an appropriate song was rendered in a humorous vein by a barroom quartet -who should have stayed there. To descend from the sub- lime to the nether regions, we find that the basement of T. D. is used for more than a janitors' loafing ground. The workshopis saws and drills were heard working all hours of the day and some of the night. The results were plaques, ash trays and paper weights marked with the college Sex 63 takes a holiday 1 value of the neutrality act. His was an appeal for a rationalized patriotism, a defense of our rights for the protection of smaller neutrals. The college has been hon- ored by the presence of Dr. Malinowski, one of the fore- most anthropologists in the world. He and his daughters Qask Pete Lindsay and Sam Legg about themj were wel- come guests at the college for several weeks during the winter. At a college dinner on January Penny-,bitching Prexies shield. The products of the print shop would make Currier and Ives blush with shame. The Weathervane, the college magazine, came from its press. The Christmas cards show that the ambition of this year's printers was equalled only by their skill. This year, for the Hrst time, the photography enthusiasts could practice their black magic in an orthodox black roorn. They no longer have to use their closets - or the lower stacks of the college library. A Other organizations, devoted more to the pursuits of the head than of the hand, have been meeting in more comfortable surroundings. The Society of Bull and Bottle has held regular meetings to discuss questions of current interest. A small group of students which has been regu- larly assembling in the Master's study has been closely following the war news with the hope of understanding better the international situation by study and discussions. The discussion of the war has not been, of course, limited to any one group. The dinner- table conversation reveals an attitude of disgust for all parties concerned, with the exception of Finland. The first college dinner of the year, on October 2, was devoted to speeches on the war. Professor Driver, a British subject, gave what he considered the English point of view. Mr. Gris- wold discussed the effect of the war on American foreign relations, whereas the German side was given by the Master. At the Plaster Dinner on February 16, President Baxter of Williams Col- lege, the guest speaker, spoke on the questionable 24, Dr. Malinowski spoke on the anthropological origins of primitive tribal warfare and on the cultural and racial influences on the present war. His talk gave a new and broader outlook on the European situation. The college has al- so been honored by the appointment of Fellow Ashbel G. Gulliver as Dean of the Yale Law School. He succeeded Charles Clark, an associate fellow of Timothy Dwight, who is next fall moving across the street to Silliman. This year T. D. has three new fellows in Town- send Miller, instructor in English, Kenneth Spang, instructor in economics, and Henri Peyre, Sterling Professor in French. Puddlington booster Sun!-:ist products 162 The Christmas 'dinner may have been the official social high-light of the year, but no one who went to the party given after the Princeton game in the adjoining apartments of Mr. Phil- lips and of Seabury, Taylor, and Chaney will admit that they have experienced better hos- pitality. Ample refreshments were served to help us forget the outcome of the game. Entry H, however, in keeping with tradition, was acknowledged to be the loudest and most colorful in the college. These students had found the true fountain of T. D. spirit and did not hesitate to drink of that spirit. The spirit of the other colleges may be found in their traditions or rivalries, but the true T. D. spirit is in the loyalty of its members, one to the other. Never was it better exemplified than at the time ofthe assault upon the Wall Street Restau- rateurs. When two burly Hatfeet started to ap- prehend an innocent bystander, a second mem- ber of T. D. ran to the rescue, sword in hand and stormed the Grecian citadel single-handed. The third musketeer was not long in arriving. Un- fortunately, the three were outnumbered by two squads of mercenaries, who, solely because of their superior numbers and equipment, were able to capture our loyal musketeers and hold them captives in prison for the duration of the night. T. D.'s motto has since been, All for one, and one for all. Even under the most exacting circumstances, the members of T. D. have always stood up for one another. But seriously, if a college can be said to have a spirit, it can only be a spirit of good fellow- ship - of community life on a small scale. Gol- lege life has meant more to us in T. D. than a bed and bath. It has meant the give and take of table-talk, a cup of tea with the Master and Mrs. Rogers, a tough game on the football field, a bull session late at night, or an entry cocktail party. Life in Timothy Dwight has meant doing things together with people we like. GEORGE S. OLIVER, II I 63 TRUMBULL COLLEGE Trumbull College CHARLES HYDE WARREN, Master Dean typ the Shejield Scientyic School, and Prcy?assor of Geology HONORARY FELLOWS P PRESIDENT CHARLES SEYMOUR PRESIDENT EMERITUS JAMES ROWLAND ANCELL FELLOWS RUSSELL LAYMAN BRADLEY Instructor in German RALPH HENRY GABRIEL Larned Przy?ssor if American Histogt FREDERICK WHILEY HILLES Assistant Prokssor typ English HARRY MORTIMER HUBBELL Talcott Prrwssor If Greek HENRY MARGENAU Assistant Przwssor of Physics DONALD GEORGE MARQUIS Assistant Prrwssor of Psychology ALAN VAN KEUREN MCGEE Instructor in English JOHN SPANGLER NICHOLAS Sterling PTIWSSOT qi Biology ASSOCIATE STANHOPE BAYNE-JONES Dean Iyf the School mf Medicine, and Prmssor cyf Bacteriology FREDERICK TRUBEE DAVISON Fellow typ the T ale Gorporation RICHARD FRANK DONOVAN Assistant Dean of the School of Music, and Assistant Prwzssor of the Theogt ry' Music HOLLON AUGUSTINE FARR Associate Przwssor Qt German, Retired SAMUEL HERBERT FISHER Former Fellow zyf the T ale Corporation CLEMENTS COLLARD FRY Associate Przwssor zyfPsychiatU and Mental Hygiene FREDERICK AUGUSTUS GODLEY Associate Prwssor If Architecture ANDREW KEOGH University Librarian and Sterling Przwssor QF Bibliography, Emeritus FILMER S. C. NORTHROP Prmssor ry' Philosophy EDWARD SIMPSON NOYES Chairman tj' the Board fy' Admissions, and Associate Prmssor of English EUGENE ERNEST OAKES Assistant Przfessor cyf Economics JOSEPH SERONDE Benjamin F . Barge Prmssor cj Romance Languages and Literature ROSCOE HENRY SUTTIE Associate Prfyfessor Qf-C1lUil Engineering JOHN ARREND TIMM Assistant Przy?ssor :yr Ghemistgf WILLARD BOULETTE VAN HOUTEN Instructor in Economics FELLOWS WILLIAM RAYMOND LONGLEY james E. English Przwssor typ Mathematics CHESTER RAY LONGWELL Hengt Barnard Davis Prrfassor fy' Geology MARK ARTHUR MAY Director cy' the Institute typ Human Relations, and Prcwssor of Educational Psychology UNDERHILL MOORE Sterling Prcfzssor mf Law ALLARDYCE NICOLL Przwssor If the Histomt cy' the Drama EDWARD LARNED RYERSON Fellow If the Y ale Gorporation GEORGE HENRY SOULE, JR. B.A. 1908 REVEREND ANSON PHELPS STOKES Former Secretagt typ the Unioersigt CHARLES-EDWARD AMORY WINSLOW Anna M. R. Lauder Prrwssor ty' Public Health MILTON CHARLES WINTERNITZ Anthony N. Broth PrcyQssor ry' Pathology 165 4' f' 'X 31, ' or ks- Y W Xffiriif X Pl .g .L f NW 6?-f RUMBULL has had a busy year. A variety of activities have provided the usual tempta- tions for the ready, willing, and able. Competi- tion with the current flickers has even been considerable. On the less commercial side, Trumbull has seen fit to amuse itself in many Aided digestion ways without the aid of the more traditional organizations which have accumulated the name extracurricular. To Payne-Whitney, temple of health, it has gone happily and returned tired. Occasional victories have been duly celebrated. Social life has not been neglected. The Mas- ter's house and the fellows' lounge have been the centers for much of the planning in this direction. At the former, delightful teas and luneheons during the week have made more than a casual connection between the two parts of the college, one totally male, and the other brightened by a perfect hostess, Mrs. Warren. I The common room has had everything happen in it from rather discordant impromptu carol- ling before Christmas to reasonable argument with Fellow lecturers. All this has been reported by The Trum- bullian, which has mixed in some literary and artistic efforts with plentiful and scandalous college anecdotes. Bill Wiedersheim handed a successful sheet to the new board, it promptly remade his chairmanship into a double editor- ship under the direction of Charlie Aschmann and Bob de Veer. They were enthusiastic enough to take on the burdens Bob Alford bore as business manager. Jonathan Trumbull, a Harvard man, gave his name to a Yale college and enjoys there an annual birthday party. Not the least of the guests this year was Munro Leaf the author of the legitimate 'Terdinandf' His explanation of what that famous bull stood for made the epithet quite acceptable to browsers of Elm Street between York and High. At this affair and the next, a Christmas celebration, the Trumbull Glee Club provided music of a high order. It was at the latter function that the fellows presented to the college a fine portrait by Dean Keller of Dr. Bayne-Jones which now hangs in the Trumbull library. It is but a small expression of the feeling the college has for its former Master. - The Christmas party was as gay as ever. It would seem that there was a conspiracy on foot by the staff to provide the dining hall with at least a few traditions. The plum puddings were lit and exhibited as usual. This matter of hand- ing down practices is somewhat complicated by Started windows, richbwdight 66 the existence of as hybrid a one as the spring celebration. This has alternated between variety shows and gymkhana and combinations of both. The grass in the court was spared this year and the new season was loudly welcomed by a mass of stuff called a theatrical production. If its pur- pose was to create a mood of springtime mad- ness, this jumble of impressionism andVictorian- ism might be termed successful. Anyway, Trum- bull liked it. The communal-intellectual life of the college has been guided into the common room T under the direction of the Fellows and Dean Warren. There can never be enough music while Trum- bull has Professor and Mrs. Donovan to lead it. With the t aid of four visiting singers, they pre- l sented some excellent operatic selections. Klaus Liepmann has brought his Yale String Grchestra to Trumbull and contributed a few more hours of enjoyable music: - The common room has also had talking mo- tion pictures in it when Dr. Mark May showed some of the short subjects which he and his associates have taken from Hollywood produc- tions for their educational value. Next Max Amlgf ad Hforking against odds I Shlftowrfs friend Lamb showed some of the pictures he had taken on a trip around the world. All Trumbull lec- turers seem to have to answer a considerable number of questions. Perhaps it is in the breed of the Bull to be curious. When Dr. Haggard came, he was quizzed on questions of medical theory and obviously enjoyed it. However, the finest controversies and queries were bandied about when Dr. Winslow talked on his Federal housing project in New Haven. The discussion didn't seem to have an ending until some econ- omics fellows brought it to a reasonable blind alley. Personal anecdotes have accumulated almost as quickly as traditions. It is unfortunately true that most of these are amusing only to the people involved. It was certainly not the height of amusement to members of Russell Bradley's entry that every time he had the whim to burn a fire in his living room hearth it almost smoked everybody else out of the house. Needless to say, he redeemed himself by being a most pleasant resident fellow who could play with deadly pre-, cision games of hearts, bridge, or Chinese checkers. Also, he seems to have a genius for arranging things, both after-dinner coffee and last chances with the Dean for desperate Trum- bullites. 1 A new source of delight has been given the college in the person of that most colorful resi- dent fellow, Willard Boulette Van Houten. His glorious midwinter tan contributed much to a perfectly tailored appearance. john Hutton came as Henry Fellow all the way from Durham 67 to be alternately I shocked and spoiled by the Yanks. He certainly had some- thing to be amazed at when Jim Link got into LW on the other side of that model from the Art School. It's hard to know what Trumbull would have done for its artistic humours in the past three years without Jas. Linkls swift pen. The Trumbullian can bear wit- ness to this. There is some doubt, too, if romance would have entered the college if he had not been there. The girl problem has worried most of the college most of the time. It is in this department that the word '5Ferdinand has been misused and misunderstood so often. For a line interpretation of the meaning of the word, one is referred to that future legal hazard Gordon Woodruff. Some of the noises of Trumbull beside the latter and his Hpour le sport motor-car should Constitutional Birds ryfprqf be mentioned. It is not certain what good Keith Merrill's repertoire of outlandish bird-calls and dog-fights are going to do him when he is a practicing physician. Any whispering which might resemble them would be sure to give jim Alter, Bill Schell, George Young or Jim Wheeler, his neighbor, a dangerous relapse into advanced I nervous exhaustion. Quietly efficient Jon Lan- man should be able to take the pulse of a crystal chandelier without a tinkle. The deep voices of Vernon Cooke and Rowland Bevans may make windows shake, but they are as the rustle of a Zephyr in the trees to Merrill's enthusiasms. Withal, he is as level-headed as one can expect the type of person who throws firecrackers out of windows to be. Then there is Gus Knight's piano-playing during lunch which has been the most useful source of pleasure in the college. Finally, there is that quietly famous group of New Haven high school admirers led by Tener, Schnabel and Moschzisker whose intentions are pure and honorable but whose organization has earned a most ungentlemanly appellation. Trumbullis varsity squad standing unfortun- ately had little effect on its season in sports. Torn Erickson was captain of soccer and co- captain of basketball. In the former, he had with him Don Pas- cal, in the latter, amongst an almost complete Trumbull- Yale team, Johnny Cobb, captain for 1941. Add various others in varsity foot- ball, hockey, base- ball, and crew, and the standard looked quite high. Captain Bob Powers took a gallant little team of potential football heroes onto the field ten times and Won twice and tied once. The defeats were so close and victories so heartening that the team went to Leverett House at Harvard with dogged intent. Ed Noyes, Tricky Alter, Gus Knight, Bob Alford, and Captain Powers played their last game for Trumbull and were defeated 7-o. Not the least of the compensations for such a poor season was the grand banquet at which Dean Warren soothed a number of broken hearts with kindly humour. Paul Ek- berg's touch team was hardly more successful. The secret of victory seemed to be in getting the people who were destroying the tender grass in the court out in an official game. Bob Boutwell did some very fancy dodging, and Dave Wilde The Thinker 68 and he had much to do with the final upset of a proud Davenport team. During the winter, the basketball team under the leadership of hearty Rowland Bevans had its ups and downs, mostly downs. The phenom- enal rally toward the end of the season was too late, but a lot of spirit was shown in two outside games. The hockey team never quite seemed to be able to find the right combination of its powerful potentialities. The goalie position was not the most popular. Trumbullians seem to develop a kind of claustrophobia near the cage. Weak ankles were no excuse, but there they were. Art Whitcomb's adventures here in the line of duty were complex and perplexing. The squash team stood in the middle of the road and so got nowhere. The bowling team bowled its way up the ladder. John Canale was captain and star. Nobody was quite able to keep up with him. The pride of Trumbull this year was the swimming team. They were champions and have had their names and faces publicized as befits their victory. Again, there was a defeat by Harvard. The peculiar bad luck that fol- I lowed Trumbull teams all year decreed that the swim with Harvard should come the morning after the Prom. This was vicious sabotage be- cause, as every one knows, a Prom doesn't begin until the morning it is supposed to be over. There was a certain natural reluctance in taking to the water in such conditions. Boxing, wrestling and all the spring sports never attained the glory of the swimming team. There were numerous individual victories and brilliant flashes of team work at regular inter- vals. Captains reached emotional and senti- mental crises, and new ones were elected. The crew and its captain, George Tener, got a nice sunburn. A characteristic of the college system is that fate alone chooses the residents of each small community. Next year may see a football team of undefeated giants and a swimming team of water-logged mites. Fortunately, the constant factor is the enjoyment derived from good and bad, strong and weak. The social part of college life follows a like course. Trumbull has a good start in that game. J. GORDON WOODRUFF 69 in V? 'S 1 f E11 9 35 biz? Back Row: Gerber, Duncan, Watson, Dickey, Chaney, Stillman, Chapin, Mersereau, Ford. Front Row: Orr, Butler, Byers, Erickson, Flynn, Shields, Burr. Undergraduate Athletic Association THOMAS F. ERICRSON, President JAMES BUTLER, JR., Secretagr ALBERT J. ALTER, Baseball JAMES BUTLER, JR., Football ROBERT D. ORR, Baseball FREDERIC M. BURR, Hockey ALBERT B. STEVENS, Basketball HENRY F. CHANEY, JR., Honky THOMAS F. ERICKSON, Basketball PETER G. B. STTLLMAN, Squash DAVID M. MERSEREAU, Basketball RUSSELL P. DUNCAN, Swimming BUCKLEY M. BYERS, Crew BENEDICT D. FLYNN, JR., Swimming HENRY FORD, II, Crew JAY M. SHIELDS, Track CHARLES D. DICKEY, JR., Crew MELVILLE CHAPIN, Track WILLIAM B. WATSON, JR., Cross Countmr DAVID M. GERBER, Wrestling JOSEPH W. STACK, JR., Football V BOARD OF CONTROL CLARENCE W. MENDELL, Chairman GEORGE P. DAY, Treasurer MEMBERS CHARLES SEYMOUR DR. ORVILLE F. ROGERS CLINTON E. FRANK DEAN WILLIAM C. DEVANE THOMAS W. FARNAM CHARLES W. LITTLEFIELD DEAN CHARLES H. WARREN GEORGE P. DAY JAMES BUTLER, JR. DEAN NORMAN S. BUCK H. EMERSON TUTTLE JAY M. SHIELDS EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE MALCOLM FARMER, Chairman DR. ORVILLE F. ROGERS H. EMERSON TUTTLE JAY M. SHIELDS JAMES BUTLER, JR. 172 Football s Captain Bill Stack, sixty-five candidates, Ducky Pond and assistants, and other members of Yale's football retinue got down to work on September I5 at Gales Ferry, reports began drifting back that were not too encourag- ing. No rnaterialf' suicide schedulef, green team were a few of the phrases that sprinkled newspaper articles: Elihu's supporters were not very optimistic by the time the opening game with Columbia rolled around. I Yet Coach Pond was to build an eleven that exceeded all expectations. Perhaps it was ten days of ideal weather at the Ferry, perhaps it was through the assistance of two new men, Trainer Charlie Hoyt and Line-Coach Emerson c'Spike7' Nelson, perhaps it was the bulldog tenacity of Bill Stack and his followers. In any case the Blue team won three, dropped four to the nationis top-ranking elevens, and tied one. The squad returned from the banks of the 73 Back Row: Butler QManagerj, Dern, Zilly, Brooks, Brinkley, Magee, Burnam. Second Raw: Taylor, McClelland, Burr, Whiteman, Stack fCaptainj, Wood, Lussen, Starbuck, Seabury. Front Row: Wooster, Macomber, Seymour, Bartholemy, Kaye, Merrick. Thames on September 24, and began a two- weeks, drill in preparation for Columbiais Lions. Despite the fact that the Light Blue was minus its immortal Sid Luckman, who had passed circles around Yale the previous year, the team from Morningside Heights was still to be feared. Rumors were rife concerning the Stansyzk-to-Stulgaitis combination. As for the Elis, the eleven men that trotted out onto the field for the opening game were those who were to carry Yale's burden for most of the season. Sterling Brinkley and sophomore Al Bartholemy covered respectively right and left ends, gargantuan George Seabury and hefty Bob Brooks were at the tackle posts, Cape Burn- am and Jim Dern lined up at left and right guard, Captain Bill Stack, of course, was over the ball. This was the line which Ducky Pond had a few days before said was to be one of the greatest he had coached. But the backfield was the unknown quantity. Freddy Burr was the quarterback and the passer. Hovey Seymour, captain of the 1942 freshman team, was at right half, Harold Whiteman, left half, and Hank Wood at fullback and the blocker. I Yale took that opening game, I O-7. It was a junior, Howie Kaye, who provided the necessary margin by booting a field goal early in the game and who was to maintain an almost perfect record in this department for the rest of the sea- son. One-play Kaye had been a football com- petitor the year before, the next season com- petitors were running around giving his talented toe every consideration. Sophomores Seymour and Bartholemy were luminaries of the en- counter, the middle of the line was outstanding with Bill Stack playing his usual great game and George Seabury proving himself invaluable. Mechanics zyf enthusiasm 74 The following week Pennsylvania came to New Haven and managed to sneak home with a 6-0 victory. Captain Gustafson snagged a pass in the last few seconds of the Hrst half, which was sufHcient. Yale threatened time and again during the second period, but despite the fact that the line put on one of the best performances of the season, no Blue score was forthcoming. Sterling Brinkley, according to end-coach Ivy Williamson, played the best defensive game of any Yale Hankman, but Brownie was operated on for appendicitis two days later, and it looked as if he was lost for the season. Next came Army, who put on its usual show during the game and between the halves, but got no victory. Though the cadets scored first, Fundamentals they were outclassed and trailed 20-7 with four minutes to go. Then came Yale tac- tics that were smart football, but that caused a campus up- roar for days to follow. With only substitutes on the field, over whom Army scored to make it 20-13, Yale took an intentional safety. Score, 20-15, with half a minute to go. Detchon's tremen- dous boot after the safe- ty put the Elis out of danger, and the final whistle was blown with Army in possession of the ball at the mid- stripe. The pot of campus comment which seethed the day following the cadet encounter boiled over on the first of the week in the T ale News and other journalistic sheets. Communications, col- umns, and even editorials appeared condemn- ing the Eli tactics, only to be followed by more of the same upholding the work of Macomber, Bell, and teammates who were carrying out assignments on the field at the time. Meanwhile, Ducky Pond was busy working his squad late Pillar zyf strength Grist for the mill 1 75 Farewell appearance S lfrategy under floodlights in pre- paration for one of the seasonjs toughest tasks, unmindful of the furor. i The following Thurs- day the Yale squad boarded a special train and departed for the mid- West to take on one of the country's outstanding teams, Michigan. Lodged at the famous Dearborn Inn and traveling in three ultra-modern buses sup- plied by Henry Ford, the Blue entourage was well taken care of, yet failed to reach the heights of Harmon and company. While fans shivered in Michigan's colossal sta- dium, the home team chalked up 27 points in the first half. However, refusing to be downed by such a barrage, a bat- tered Blue eleven battled all the way and finished by scoring once itself, as well as refusing to let Winning smiles Michigan tally during the second period. Thus it was a weary crew that took the field in the Bowl a week later to face Dartmouth, and the Indians proceeded to run up 33 points before the afternoon was over + one of the worst lickings ever meted out to an Eli team. There was a lot of discussion about the game during the next week and especially. concerning the poor showing of the Blue eleven. Yet it must be remembered that a team, with mighty few substitutes, had gone through four of the stiffest games, and injuries had caused plenty of trouble. The last game in the Bowl for Captain Stackis team was against Princeton, and Brinkley, showing a speedy recov- ery from his appendec- tomy, was on hand to see action. Early in the con- test Yale took the Tiger powerhouse by surprise and scored with a run by Freddy Burr from the line on a fake kick by Howie Kaye, the field- goal specialist. Kaye, sent in when the Elis had I 76 pushed the ball deep into enemy territory, pretended to boot the ball, while Burr, who was holding, pivoted and scampered around right end for a touch- down. Kaye converted as per usual. For the rest of the half Prince- ton was kept well bottled up. However, in succeeding quarters Princeton opened up its famed passing at- tack and soon evened matters up. Then Rice, a substitute tackle, in- tercepted a partially blocked pass and raced for the winning points. Final score: i3-7. It was a tough one to lose, and it was not until the next day that it was discovered Bill Stack had played the last part of the game unconscious of what he had been doing, having received a nas- ty head bump. Tired, but far from discouraged, the squad got down to work for the Harvard classic. The Cantabs had not an impressive record, but Coach Harlowls team was at its peak. Crimson Captain Torbert Macdonald was back after being on the injury list all season. Matters were further darkened the morning of the game when the medicos judged Captain Bill Stack not physically fit for play, owing to the injury he received in the Tiger clash. It was a pessimistic crowd of Eli supporters that flocked into the colonnaded stadium up at Harvard for the fifty-ninth meeting of the series. Yet Yale went onto the gridiron, rolled up twenty points, ran rough-shod over the Cantabs, and only allowed the Harvard eleven to score once. It was Yalels day entirely, and the final Tlzgf came, thql saw, but . . . ' score was 20-7. Every one and everything clicked with precision. Bill Starbuck, substituting for Stack and playing his last game for Yale, put on the best performance of his career. Hovey Seymour, the sophomore back, cracked into the Crimson line with the momentum of a fast freight, scored two touchdowns, and distin- guished himself in a punting duel with Spreyer and Macdonald with the type of kicking that hadn't been seen at Yale since Dave Colwell. Al Bartholemy was a wonder on snagging passes, once for a tally, Hank Wood carried out his blocking assignments with precision, the line held like cement. In fact it was a team that functioned more smoothly than it had all season. 177 A5 thousands cheer This game concluded a year which, though not spectacular, was far above expectations. Veteran material was scarce at the beginning of the campaign 3 Coach Pond and his cohorts were faced with the task of remolding the team throughout, and the schedule was a tough one. There were men whose services will be sorely missed during the 1940 season. Captain Bill Stack heads the list. Playing practically sixty minutes of every game, except the final one, he was the steadying and rallying force of the eleven. Freddy Burr, the passing back who did quite a bit of running as well, saw his last work- out eat Cambridge. Likewise there are Sterling Brinkley and George Seabury, rangy end and hefty tackle, whose graduations will cause gaps. Hank Wood, the blocking back, letterman of his sophomore year and ineligible the next, came back with a 'bang and will go with regrets on the part ofthe tutoring staff. These were players who saw regular action, but there are others who must be included. Cy Taylor, though handi- capped by injury, was a strong tackle. Jim Mc- Clelland was also held down by injuries, but reached heights in the Army game. Likewise Tom Lussen, the end who worked successfully the end-around play for a score against Army, was invaluable at times to the Blue line. Line- man Dick Merrick and backfield man Chuck Wooster are also lesser luminaries who deserve credit. But while the senior contingent made itself mighty valuable, there were juniors and sopho- mores who proved themselves more than worthy. In the backfield Hovey Seymour was Eli had them fooled I 78 the star continually, doing the greater part of the plunging and practically all the kicking. Harold Whiteman as the wing back was one of the steadiest men of the Varsity aggregation. On the line the guards, two juniors, Jim Dern and Cape Burnarn, will be heard of regularly in IQ4.0 as they were in 1939. Al Bartholemy, Howie Kaye, Bob Brooks, and Joe Zilly, must not be forgotten, nor will be. On the Monday afternoon following the Har- vard game Harold Whiteman was elected to captain the Yale team in the traditional cere- mony at Ray Tompkins House, George Mead stepped into the managerial shoes ofjim Butler. At the annual football banquet that evening Ducky Pond awarded the Ledyard Mitchell punting prizes to Seymour and Ted Harrison, first and second prize recipients, respectively. JAYVEES ALE,S Junior Varsity, the squad that acts as a punch-board for the first eleven all week and then tackles an opponent at the end of it, fared not so well in IQ3Q, winning two and drop- ping three games. Yet it atoned for losses by To the victors . . . reaching heights on those two occasions-waL loping Dartmouth, 39-13, and taking Harvard, 14-6. Coach Gerry Ford's team opened its season against Pennsy1vania,with the Quakers winning, 7-0, on a long pass in the Hrst half. The following week the Army Jayvees came down from West Point and succeeded in routing the Elis for the first time in four years, 20-7. While the Varsity was flayed by Dartmouth, . H A 1 E. . . . belong the spoils I 79 Out-genemlled Captain Bob Hopgood and his team turned the tables on the Jayvee field and came into their own. A Jones-to-Eddy pass clicked for a touchdown early in the game, and the fireworks began. At the half Yale led by 18 points and at the end of the game had amassed 39 to the Indians' I3.JOI1CS, passes couldn't be stopped by the Hanoverians and were responsible for three touchdowns. Dearborn did more than his share at end, intercepting a Green pass for a score as well as receiving those from his own backfleld. Princeton gave the Blue Jayvees the worst drubbing of the season. The Elis could do noth- ing against the superior passing attack of the opponents, which accounted for four of the five touchdowns scored by the Tiger seconds, who ran up a 32-I3 count before the afternoon was over. Outstanding play of the day was con- tributed by Yale,s Cappy Townsend, who inter- cepted a Princeton pass and galloped eighty-five yards through the Tigers for a touchdown. Ford's aggregation wound up its season by taking a scrappy Crimson eleven up on the Cambridge iield. Harvard dominated the initial half and trotted off the field leading, 6-0. Yet the Blue came back with a rush after that and took a 14-6 win, the first victory over the Can- tab Jayvees since 1931. In that all-important second period the passing of Jones, the running of Chuck Wooster, George Kirchwey, and Townsend, as well as the pass-receiving of Eddy and Dearborn produced the goods for Yale. Punclzboaralr At the close of the season Bob Hopgood was awarded the Norman Hall Trophy for the out- standing all-around senior member ofthe Junior Varsity. 180 1 50-pound Football HEN Coach Ken Loeifler marshaled his i bantam-weight football squad together for the 1939 season, it looked as if Yale would flnish in league standings far below where it had the year previously Qfourthj and far from the post occupied by the 1937 eleven Qflrstj. How- ever, though having lost most of his regulars through graduation and though forced to util- ize nine sophomores continuously, Loeffler pro- duced a team which walloped two opponents severely, lost four games by mighty close shaves, and wound up in fifth place. In the backiield two veterans, Captain Steve Moorhead and Shep Krech, coupled with two sophomores, Punky Dell and Don Kubie to form a quartet which carried the brunt of the attack most of the season. Except for Jake Mad- den, the line was almost entirely green. Rabbit Halsey and Pete Saint Phalle were the regular ends, Frank Hamilton and Madden, tackles, Tompkins and Gamble, with Jaffray alternating, took over the guard posts 3 Masland and Davey shared the center duties. The first opponent, encountered on October 14, was Pennsylvania, who pulled the old hidden- ball gag to win, 13-6, after trailing the Blue W 2s'?.,w' , , Optimistic most of the game. The following week Captain Moorhead and Krech led an onslaught against Lafayette that resulted in a 25-7 victory for the Elis. Then followed three defeats in a row. Rutgers intercepted passes all afternoon to win 19-7, Cornell eked out a 7-o victory, Princeton scored on a pass interception to take a 7-o win. But Yale in the final game came into her own by blasting Villanova 25-12. Moorhead supplied the thrill of the afternoon by galloping sixty yards for a score, while Madden was alert in recovering a touched punt over his Own goal. Back Row: Dixon CManagerj, Rigley tTrainerj, Young, Thompsonhlackson, Gebhard, Masland, Loeftier CCoachj. Second Row: Kranichfeld, Dell, Brooks, Krech, Moorhead tCaptainj, Madden, Saint Phalle, Ott, Smythe. Front Row: Jaffray, Halsey, Oakes, Gamble, Kubie, Davey. 181 Squeeze play Soccer EsP1TE a long, hard schedule of eleven games, the prospects for the Varsity Soc- cer Team seemed very optimistic when the sea- son opened. Williams was the first to succumb, 3-1, to a powerful and well-rounded Yale con- tingent. Next Brown and M. I. T. both fell vic- tims in rapid succession. Amherst, however, proved a stumbling block, holding the Elis to a 4-4 tie. Following this rebuflf the Blue came back to sweep Trinity, 9-o, Navy, 3-0, and Dart- mouth, 3-2, before them. A strong kick-and-runi' Wesleyan aggrega- tion broke this impressive string of victories by handing Yale its first defeat, through a single goal in the last period. Although Yale definitely outplayed the Middletown booters, their Euro- pean-style passing-attack proved itself not adapted to the small, muddy Wesleyan field, as they were unable to press their initial hard- earned advantage. Then, in their most brilliant performance of the season, Captain Erickson and his men ral- lied to come back and roundly trounce an un- defeated and untied Tiger team. After scoring twice in the Hrst period, the Blue team reverted to the defensive, goalie Poole's miraculous saves averting all but one Princeton goal. The follow- ing weekend, lacking the services of Ross Brown, Yale suffered its second defeat by a score of 2-1 from an inspired Harvard eleven at Carn- bridge. Both teams scored early in the first half, and Yale managed to hold back repeated Crim- son attacks until the last four minutes of the game, when the deciding goal was sunk. Outstanding throughout the season were Captain Tom Erickson, goalie Bill Poole, and forwards George Haines and Bob VanPeursem. Climaxing two stellar seasons at fullback Ross Brown was elected Captain and William H. Y. Stevens, co-Captain for 1940-41. Back Row: Kitchel CManagerl, Van Peursem, Coursen, MacGregor, Aron, Haines, Leeman CCoachj. Second Row: Peters, Bradford, Hutchings, Stevens, Erickson QCaptainj, Brown, Poole, Carton, Carrington. Front Row: Schlesinger, Bruce. 182 Back Row: Henke QManagerj, Merrill, Farrell, Ashton, Ord, Wheeler. Front Row: Pfeiffenberger, Main, Watson CCap- tainj , Adams, Lohmann. Cross Country OGGED by incessant bad luck, the Yale Cross Country Team finished a rather unimpressive season, beating only Wesleyan in dual meet competition. Injuries to Lee Shap- leigh and Wendell.Wheelock, together with the ineligibility of two men, were more than sufH- cient to mar Coach Ted Avery's first year at directing the harriers. The running of Captain Bill Watson was outstanding, his best perform- ance coming in the Big Three meet with first place in the fastest time of the year, 27:08. I Opening the season on October 13, the har- riers downed Wesleyan by a score of 25-32. In this race Malcolm Main was the first Yale man to cross the line, gaining second place, while Captain Watson, running a fine team race, came in third. After this good showing Yale was rudely set back by the University of Connecticut's strong team, 19-4.1, and in the next meet was nosed out by M.I,T., 26-29. The latter meet was won by Captain Watson, but Yale did not place enough men in the first six to win. ' The Big Three meet was run in New Haven, November 3, but aside from Watsonas fine vic- tory, Yale had little to cheer about. Harvard, placing seven men among the first nine, won I the championship, beating Yale, 20-46, while Princeton finished second, beating Yale, 25-31. In the first annual Heptangular run, Yale surprised all by taking third, beating Princeton, Dartmouth, Penn, and Columbia. Watson, sec- ond in the race, was the first Yale man to finish, followed by Pfeiffenberger, Main, Lohmann, and Adams. The Blue concluded its season with the I.C. 4A meet, garnering twelfth place from a field of sixteen. After the meet Malcolm Main was elected to captain next year's team. Fleetfooted 83 Back Row: Chaney CManagerj, Driscoll, McLennan, Trainer Miller, Rodd, Harrison, Murdoch CCoachj. Second Row: Hazen, Toland, Carton, Pierson, Burr fCaptainj, Gillespie, Barnes, Drake, Seabury. Front Row: Kieckhefer, Holt. Hockey HE 194.0 Varsity hockey season can best be remembered as the one in which Yale re- gained its long-lost position as the best eastern American college team. During the course of the season the Elis annexed the Quadrangular League title with 'ive victories and one tie, gained third place in the International League, and amassed eleven victories against six defeats and four ties. Coach Murray Murdoch, serving his second year as mentor of Yale hockey, was fortunate in having an array of brilliant veteran material, including fourteen returning lettermen, to answer the Hrst practice on November 7. Despite the most optimistic predictions, Yale hockey was soon to feel the loss of George Cur- tis, veteran right winger, and Gig Carton, star and co-captain of the 194.2 freshmen team, because of scholastic ineligibility. In the pre-holiday games Yale managed to win with comparative ease over the New York Athletic Club 9-I, and over the Alumni 8-0, but were hard-pressed to edge a surprisingly im- proved Boston University sextet 5-4., and could I gain no better than a 5-5 deadlock with the fast skating Boston Junior Olympics. The above- mentioned loss of Curtis and Carton, added to the fact that Captain Fred Burr and veteran center George Seabury had difficulty in ac- climating themselves to the ice after a hard campaign on the grid- iron were instrumental in slowing the prog- ress of the rnuch her- alded sextet. The hockey trip over the Christmas Holidays proved one of the most energetic undertaken in years, as the team travelled out West to visit St. Paul and Minneapolis, there engaging the University of Minne- , sota in a two-game series, and returning l sim zyfg 84 Brought home the bacon via Ann Arbor to play the University of Michi- gan. The loss of Clem Kite, brilliant defense man handicapped Yale for the rest of the season. He had been a mainstay of the two previous campaigns and his fighting spirit had been an integral part of the offense. His unfortunate loss coupled with the decision of Doc Howe, also a dependable defense veteran, to drop his hockey activity in order to devote more time to studies, naturally greatly impaired the efficiency of the hockey forces. In consequence, and de- spite rabid Yale alumni sup- port, the Eli sextet was beaten in the two engage- ments by scores of 3-o and 18 7-2, losing, however, to a truly great Minnesota team, which incidentally later annexed the A.A.U. championship and completed an unde- feated season. It can be safely said that had it not been for the sensational and at times miracu- lous goal tending of veteran Harry Holt, the scores would have been much larger. At Ann Arbor, Yale received some consolation by pin- ning an easy 5-3 defeat on the University of Michigan, thereby partially atoning for the Minnesota defeats and gaining some revenge for the Yale football reversal of the fall at the hands of the vaunted Wolverines. Returning to New Haven on January 3 to face the much-heralded Canadian invasion, the hockey forecast was bleak and dismal. The University of Toronto, later winners of the Thompson Trophy, and boasting their best team in years, pinned an 8-2 defeat on Yale. The following Monday, just two days after the Toronto game, Queens University, not to be out- done by her Canadian rival, more than dupli- cated the latter's feat by administering an II-3 lacing to the Elis. In justice to Yale it can be honestly stated that the play of the two games did not justify the lopsided scores, as momentary defensive lapses cost the Blue dearly in both encounters, when up to that time the score had been relatively even. The outlook seemed hardly any brighter a week later when Clarkson invaded the Arena. Yale, however, had learned well their lesson taught so superbly by the Canadians, and hitting the stride that had earlier been prophesied, trounced their up-state New York rivals de- cisively 4-1 , thereby gaining the Elis' first victory Hazen scores another over Clarkson since 1932, This stunning victory, coming when hopes were the darkest, gave Yale a dim but very real chance to accomplish the virtually impossible - upset McGill, the league champions, at Montreal. In this they almost succeeded, the score being knotted at three apiece with but eight minutes of the final period to play. A penalty, however, called against the Blue proved fatal as the more experienced Canadians took quick advantage of the break to push two shots by the sensational Holt into the Yale cage, to gain a hard-earned 5-3 victory. Blue luminaries, proved a temporary stumbling block in the growing avalanche of Yale suprem- acy. The first game played at New Haven resulted in a 5-5 deadlock, while the second played a few days later at the Brooklyn Ice Palace ended up 6-6. A playoff game was, un- fortunately for Yale, arranged at Brooklyn, in which an undermanned and again injury- riddled Blue' sextet was unable to match their rivals, bowing by an 8-5 score. The first of the Quadrangular League games was played in New Haven on January I3 Down the ice This game seemed to mark the turning point in a season which to date had been one filled with bitter disappointments and fatal misfortunes. Full of confidence, Yale returned from Mon- treal to face American rivals, buoyed up by the prospect of the return of Captain Fred Burr to the lineup after a severe case of grippe which had deprived Yale of his services since the Christmas trip. The Bulldogs' first opponent was a stubborn and plucky Brock-Hall team which kept the score close until past the middle of the second period, when Yale's newly found prowess began to prove itself by ramming five well-earned goals into their local New Haven rivals, cage in the remaining minutes of that period, and adding two more in the last stanza to win 7-1. Yaleis ancient rival, St. Nick's, studded with former I against a formidable Princeton team, boasting a veteran and high-scoring first line. Though the outcome of the game was a negligible I-1 tie, Yale showed a somewhat sounder brand of hockey. Four days later Yale embarked for Hanover to play Dartmouth. Before a wildly partisan home crowd, the boys from New Haven proved their true worth by twice coming from behind to top their ancient nemesis by a 6-4 score. This defeat virtually eliminated the latter team from a hope of retaining the Quad- rangular League crown which they had proudly worn for the past two seasons. The next game scheduled, Princeton at Tigertown, proved for both teams the climax of the season, as the out- come ofthe Quadrangular League rested on its outcome. The Tigers, heartily supported by the cheers of their alumni day gathering, were 86 hoping to see the home forces annex their first league title. The Elis themselves, aside from their championship aspirations, were out to gain revenge for the 12-1 humiliation administered by Princeton the previous year. Yale proved far too good for the out-skated and badly out- played Tigers in walking away with a 9-3 vic- tory, in which Rog Hazen, left wing of the second line, proved the spearhead by scoring three goals. Only a return game with Dartmouth on New Haven ice and a home-and-home series with a weak Harvard team now barred Yale from the realization of its ambition. Against Dartmouth the Blue skaters maintained their Princeton stride to win by a decisive 6-2 count. Against Harvard, however, on their own ice with noth- ing to lose and everything to gain, Yale ran into a surprisingly diflicult problem, as the Gantabs managed to keep the obviously superior Blue sextet at bay throughout most of the contest. The Elis, thanks to the individual brilliance of Bill Barnes, managed to eke out a fortunate 4-2 decision with the deciding goals registered late in the final period when the game seemed destined for an overtime. In the final game played at New Haven before a gala Prom week- end crowd, Yale returned to their top form by drawing the curtain down on their most success- ful season since 1935, winning with comparative It shall not ,bass 1 Bowled them over ease, 5-1. In this final game, Barnes, ably aided by his two other graduating members of the first line, again starred, while the line as a whole accounted for four of the five Yale goals. Reviewed in retrospect, Yale hockey can be seen to be emerging from bare mediocrity to a brand of play that in the coming years should ably challenge the Canadians as well as continue the supremacy demonstrated this year over their eastern college rivals. They played hockey that was clever and aggressive, with their victories well earn- ed through coordinated team endeavour. Coach Murdoch was able to develop two outstanding lines, backed up by a defense, which improv- ed steadily as the season progressed. Individual scoring honors were fairly equally divided during the season. Hazen led the Yale forwards in the league totals with Paul Gillespie, Dave Rodd, Bill Barnes, and Gig Garton closely following. Over the course of the twenty-one games Rodd collected scor- ing honors, followed by Gil- lespie. 37 Back Row: Kiphuth QCoachj, Myers, Sanburn, Pope, White, E. Cooke, Briton, Moriarity QAsst. Coachj. Third Row: Chou- teauhlohnson, Kelly, Flynn CManagerj, Gesner, MacLeman, Kleppinger. Second Row: Jaffray, Mustin, Brueckel, Dun- can QCaptainj, Burns, Higgins, Belcher. Front Row: Cooke, Munding. Swimming if HE season of 1939-40 will go clown in the annals of Yale swimming as the brightest in its long and successful history. With swim- ming elevated to the rank of a major sport last spring, the team showed itself to be the greatest aggregation ever to represent Yale in the pool. During the season the Elis met eighteen teams in dual competition and were vanquished but once. The team championship of the Eastern Intercollegiate I League was once again gained, both in dual engage- ments during the season and at the individual cham- pionships at Phil- adelphia, and the Blue swimmers came within an ace of beating Michigan in taking second place in the Na- tional Collegiate I team championship meet held in New Haven. After rubbing out an alumni outfit the team began its dual season in earnest with a one-sided 55-20 win over Franklin and Marshall. In this contest a glimpse of what was to come was gained when the 4.00-yard free-style relay team of Dick Kelly, Ed Pope, Captain Russ Duncan, and Howie Johnson turned in a time of 3131.6 to break the Intercollegiate record of 3: 32.2 held jointly by Ohio State and Michigan. Wes- leyan and Cornell were easily taken into camp, 63-12 and 60-I 5 respectively. On January I9 the Elis met their sole defeat of the dual season at the hands of a great Michigan team by a score of 49-26. Don Munding, one of Yale's star divers, was unable to compete, and the Wolverines had too much well-placed power for the Bulldogs. Sophomore Howie Johnson negotiated the 220-yard free-style in 2:12, the country's fastest time for the event this season. Travelling to Philadelphia the next day, the team completely overwhelmed 'Pennsylvania 57-18. In this meet, the Elis began their success- ful drive for the League championship. 88 Amherst tasted defeat at the hands of the Elis in the next important engagement, 55-20. In this meet the free-style relay quartet of Kelly, Pope, Duncan, and Johnson bettered the world, American, national, and Intercollegiate record for 400 yards in the time of3 :3o.7. The day before and the day after the Brown meet, which the Elis won 45-30, the mermen engaged in a session of swimming over a 20-yard course at the expense of the record book. Eddie Gesner lowered the American breaststroke l s . Rules the waves records for 100 yards and 100 meters the first day, and then followed up with a similar per- formance two days later at 200 meters and 220 yards. A 200-yard free-style relay team of Brit- ton, Kelly, Pope, Duncan, and Johnson set a new world and American mark of 1 :29. 5. Ameri- can records were also achieved in the 400-yard free-style relay with Kelly, Pope, Duncan, and Johnson, at 500 yards with the addition of San- burn, and a noteworthy performance Qunrecog- nized recordj at 600 yards with the addition of Snyder. Burns, Gesner and Johnson also set a new American mark for the 300-yard medley relay at 2:53.6. I The Elis scored their second League triumph at the ex- pense of Navy by a 60-I5 count, and the record-breaking free- style relay quartet lowered the Intercol- legiate time to 3:29.2 for 400 yards in a 20-yard pool. The third League victory was registered over Columbia in the Lionis pool in a 62-13 Hnal reckoning. Cn Alumni Day the Elis took on the mermen of Ohio State. The Yalemen took first in every event except the dive and the breaststroke. Al Patnik and Earl Clark of the visitors and Yale's jimmy Cook put on a beau- tiful exhibition oi? the 3-meter diving board, while Johnson in the 220 and Rene Chouteau in the 440 swam in fine times to win their events and add to the Elis, final total of 55 points to the Buckeyes' 20. Wmwwmxw Practice On the mark 89 , Advice from above Dartmouth was the fourth League victim to lose to Yale, 43-32, in the best League meet the Elis had yet had. Three days later the Spring- field College team fell before the Blue by a 49-26 score. In spite of an array of stars and a clean- cut victory over Ohio State, Wayne was toppled 47M- 27M by the Elis. Entering its Big Three and League championship phase of competition, the team next journeyed to Princeton to defeat the Ti- gers in their lair by the top- heavy score of 61-14. The meet was a complete rout, Captain Al Vande Weghe being the home team's only winner. Burns, Cesner, and Pope broke the Yale mark for the 300-yard medley re- lay set earlier in the season, shaving it down to 2:56.1. Two pool records were erased by the Blue natators, one by Johnson in the 220 and the other by the relay team of Mus- tin, Snyder, Pope, and Johnson. The weekls wait between the Princeton and the Harvard meets was enlivened by another assault on the record book, this time over a 25- meter course in the practice pool. Sanburn, Pope, Duncan, and johnson flashed through a 400-meter free-style relay to set a world and American record at 3: 54.4. Chouteau churned the next 100 meters, and a new American record of 4: 5 5.4 was registered for 500 meters. MacLem- an completed a job well-done, and posted a new American mark of 5:56 for 600 meters. The season's last dual meet was swum against Harvard in the exhibition pool, and once more the Blue natators were victorious, thereby win- ning the Big Three and League championships. Captain Eric Cutler of the Cantabs met defeat for the first time during the season at the hands of Johnson in the 220, and Chouteau, swimming one of the most beautihil races ever seen in the pool, took first place from Cutler in the 440 in the excellent time of 4: 52.4, the best time pro- duced during the nation's dual season for the event. In other departments the Blue outclassed their opponents handily, and ran up a final tabulation of 55-20. The Eastern Intercollegiate League individual championships were held at Philadelphia this year, and Yale recorded more than double the number of points of its nearest competitor in the Out-splashed Ohio unofficial team totals. The unfortunate loss of Joe Burns for the remainder of the season was a hard blow to take, but Yalemen dominated nearly all events. Johnson gained the 220 crown, was second in the 100, and anchored the win- ning free-style relay team. Cook won both the 190 dives, and Chouteau won the 440 and placed third in the 220. Gesner and Meyer placed second and third respectively in the breast- stroke, Mustin took third in the 440, and Pope garnered second in the individual medley and swam on the free-style relay team. Yale was fortunate in being host to 36 colleges and 175 competitors for the National Collegiate swimming championships. Yale and Michigan battled it out for team championship all the way, being tied at 23 points after the first dayls finals. The last event on the program, the free- style relay, decided the national champions, and Michigan's team won by a foot to total 45 points to Yale's 42. High point scorer for the Elis was Johnson who captured first in the 220, third in the 100, and swam on the second place free-style relay team for II points. Chouteau took second in the 1500 meter, second in the 440, and fourth in the 220 for a total of IO points, while Meyer snagged third in the breaststroke, and Munding third in the 1-me- ter diving. The medley relay team of White, Gesner, and Pope garnered third, and the free-style relay tearn of Kelly, Pope, Duncan, and Johnson placed second. Yale qualified for sixteen places in the finals, four more than any other institution com- peting. An indication of the calibre of performance and competition is gained from the fact that in the finals of six events the best college times for the year were achieved. 8-8-8 IQI Back Row: Mersereau fManagerj, Bartholemy, Rhett, Zilly, Callan, Bell, Loefller CCoachj. Front Row: Cobb, Seelbach, Erickson, Stevens, Sullivan, lngley. Basketball Y defeating Harvard in the final game of the season, Yale tied Princeton for the mythical Big Three title and Cornell for third place in the Intercollegiate League, and concluded one of the most successful basketball seasons in recent years. The games were very inter- esting from the spectators' point of view, as shown by the fact that the largest crowds in Yale basket- ball history attended the games, the Cornell game breaking all previous records. On certain nights the Elis looked as if they could have beaten any team, but on other nights they had a natural let-down, which in long basketball seasons is bound to happen. The opening game was with Fordham in New York and Yale gave some indication of her strength by maintaining the upper hand throughout the contest to win by the score of 36-28. This was considered as an upset by all C0-starred sportswriters. The starting line-up comprised co-Captains Al Stevens and Tom Erickson, Johnny Cobb, Bert Ingley, and Chuck Seel- bach, a five which remained comparatively in- tact throughout the season, with Ben Sullivan in the pinch-hitting role. Then followed victories over Trinity, Wesleyan, Pennsylvania, and Co- lumbia, and it was not until February IQ that Yale suffered its first defeat. The Elis easily tri- umphed over Trinity, 66-36, but it was a diHferent story against Wesleyan, when only a last-min- ute surge gave Yale a 40-39 vic- tory. Ingley was high scorer for the Blue with eleven points as the Yale five steam-rollered Penn into submission, 57-29. The Elis hit the basket with deadly accuracy and penetrated the Quaker de- fense almost at will, at the same time exhibiting an almost im- penetrable zone defense. Against 192 Seen at the gym Columbia, the fighting Blue quintet was forced into an overtime period before winning, 37-35, with Sullivan and Erickson swishing the tying and winning baskets, respectively. First defeat came at the hands of Cornell by the score of 33-36. The game was closely-con- tested throughout and the Yale team lost a good opportunity to win by . sinking only six out of seventeen foul chances. Stevens was high scorer with ten points. How- ever, the following week brought a rousing victory over a highly-touted Tufts team, after which Tulsa University was de- feated at White Plains. In both of these games, the Yale live outmaneu- vered, outplayed, and outscored their opponents almost at will, white- washing Tufts, 62-35, and shellacking Tulsa in the Westchester County Cen- ter, 42-33. Ingley took the individual scoring honors in these two games. At Princeton, Yale did not get moving until the second half and lost by a bare two points, 35-37, being unable to over- come the thirteen-point lead amassed by the Tigers during the first half. Yale spirit was not missing. Switching to a man-for-man style of play, the Blis staged a spectacular rally. Behind 13-25 at the start of the second halt, the Blue team narrowed the score to 22-27 after five min- utes of play and had tied the score, 29-29, with- in eleven minutes. Following the Tiger encounter came a close 40-44 loss to Army and a 33-52 defeat at Dartmouthis hands, with an interven- ing 63-43 victory over Brown. Erickson was high scorer in the Army game, while Ingley topped the individual scoring list in the latter two en- counters. Yale then journeyed to Cornell, where the Elis never started to click and were decisively beaten, 41-57, but two days later the Blue managed to recover sufhciently to go to Philadelphia and turn the tables on Penn in an equally decisive manner, 56-34, Cobb and Erick- son each garnering fifteen points. Princeton was beaten in Payne Whitney Gymnasium by a thirteen-point margin, 50-38, and Columbia was defeated for a second time, 52-38. However, another loss was suffered at the hands of the league winners, Dartmouth, 35-60, Broberg and combine running wild. Yale closed its season Not to be denied 193 Playing the backboard with two rousing victories over Harvard, 52-42 and 55-52. The latter encounter was particularly close, going into an extra period. This year's team was very evenly balanced, having height, size, speed and shooting ability. What one member lacked, another supplied 5 so, it is practically impossible to isolate the players in speaking of their performance, for they were exceptionally adept at team play. Co-Captains Erickson and Stevens were powerful factors in the fine defensive performance exhibited this year, and their graduation will mean the loss of men that will be hard to replace both as players and captains. Stevens was without a peer in the league in getting the ball from the backboard, and Erickson, in addition to his defensive play, contributed much opportune scoring and play- making. Cobb and Ingley, high scorers, ex- hibited brilliant basketball throughout the sea- son, and the former was elected to captain next yearis team, an honor he rightly deserved after two years of inspiring play. Ingley, one of the two sophomores on the team, played great ball throughout the season, and in addition to spec- tacular play-making, his exceptionally fine set- shot ability stood out in every game. Along with Cobb, he was the equal of any tbrward in the I league, but they both lacked sufficient height ever to receive the recognition they deserved. Seelbach, the other sophomore on the squad, in addition to being a good set-shot artist, was the best offensive backboard man and provided the proper balance for the rest of the team. His timely shooting was also responsible for several victories and there was no harder fighter on the court at any time. Ben Sullivan, another senior, completed his basketball career by furnishing some of the finest substitute work in the form of opportune shoot- ing that has ever been seen. His uncanny ability to go into close contests and shoot accurately was directly responsible for no less than five victories. Bill Thorne, who was unfortunately ill during the greater part of the season, recov- ered in time to go into the later games and turned in some performances that speak well for his play next year when he will return with Cobb, Ingley and Seelbach to form the nucleus With the greatest qf eaie 94 of the 1941 squad. Al Bartholemy and Bill Bell, as well as Dick Turner and Warren Hindenlang with Zig Owen and Bob Halliday, will all return next year to furnish plenty of competition for the first team berths. Bartholemy entered several games, and only the extremely fine play of Cobb and Ingley kept him in the substituting role. Joe Zilly played in many of the games as a substitute for Seelbach and occasionally showed flashes of fine play. Returning next year, he will aid the team in furnishing some of the height that will be lost by the graduation of Erickson and Stevens. Mac Stephens, Jack Overbagh and Ed Cal- lan played their last for Yale, and their example of team spirit will be definitely missed when the necessary esprit which goes with all winning teams is sought after next year. Space does not permit any other than a few further comments on the highlights of the season. The team probably reached its peak in technical performance at the Penn game in New Haven. The fine uphill bat- tles both at Princeton and at Yale, in which the team shifted defenses and finally went on to victory, were other high points in the season's play. Another factor that marked Yale as a great team with all the characteristics of a championship five was its ability to come back after the Dartmouth defeat to beat Penn and Columbia as well as Harvard away from home. It was altogether I fitting that Captain-elect Cobb should tie the Harvard game with a sensational one-handed shot that changed defeat into victory in the last moments of Yale's final encounter. Many have said it was Yalels greatest basketball team. This season would not be complete without more than a word in recognition of the fine managerial job done by Dave Mersereau. In a Found the mark position that is very difiicult and in one that re- quires the utmost of tact, patience and a sense of fair play there was no one better, and his influence toward making that ofifice continue on a high plane will always be remembered. KEN LOEFFLER 95 EU gets his man y Wrestling His year's championship Wrestling Team has restored the gleam in Coach Eddie O,Donnell,s eye, displacing the despair resulting from the graduation of six regulars from last yearis famous Phi Beta Kappa team. Out of eight dual meets this season, Yale lost only to Lehigh, tied Pennsylvania, and ended a brilliant year by downing both Princeton and Harvard, and gaining second place, together with Prince- ton, in the Eastern Intercollegiates. The Elis journeyed to Philadelphia for their first match where they battled to a 14.-14 dead- lock with a strong Pennsylvania team. A week later Cornell proved Yaleis first reluctant victim, I6-12, with Larry Pickett's fall providing the margin of victory. A colorful Army team next fell before the Elis, 19-9. On February 3, 2,500 howling Lehigh partisans watched the boys in blue taste their only defeat of the season, QOH- IIE. Glory came, however, with falls by both Hauer and Pickett, and a draw for Gerber. Back home again the revengeful Elis mas- sacred in turn Columbia, 27-3, and Tufts, 31-3. Alumni day, the returning graduates saw a Princeton team, boasting two intercollegiate champions, bow to the Blue, 14.-12, by virtue of decisions by Blackmon, Latson, and Pickett, and a timely fall by Jack Hauer. On March 4 at Cambridge, the Elis won the Big Three Title by beating a good Harvard team, 195-iiiyg. In the most bitterly contested Intercollegiates in years, Captain Gerber led his team to second place, himself winning the 145-pound cham- pionship in one of the most thrilling encounters ofthe day. Other Yale finalists were Pickett and Latson, the latter having to default because of injury. In Yalels best wrestling season since 1927, Captain-elect Larry Pickett and Jim Latson re- mained undefeated in dual-meet competition. Back Row: E. O'Donnell CCoachj, Madden, Schwab, Brightwell CManagerj, Latson,-I. O'Donnell fAsst. Coachj. Second Rowhlopling, Parker, Blackmon, Gerber QCaptainj, Ely, Hauer, Pickett. Front Row: Hicks, Green. I 96 Back Row: Fisher CManagerj, Sullivan, Lee, Anderson, Carrington, Dines, King fCoachj. Front Row: vanSand, Swen- son, Munro, Pollock CCaptainD, Millard, Webber, Williams. Boxing ITH the close of the 1940 season, boxing at Yale, as an intercollegiate activity, was suspended, due to lack of Ivy League competi- tion. Despite this harrowing fact, the Varsity team this year punched its way through a short season and emerged undefeated. Queen,s Uni- versity in Canada turned in their gloves for bayonets and were thus unable to box with Yale. Dartmouth also defaulted, but Rutgers and Western Maryland were routed by scores of 5-3 and 8-0. Next the Yale Clubjs Uhoary veterans were hard put to remain in the ring three rounds with the Yale team in some no-decision, exhibi- tion bouts held in New York. The Yale Club meet was particularly successful, due to a capac- ity crowd, plenty of enthusiasm, and the pres- ence as referees of .Mosey King, Eddie Eagan, and Jack Dempsey. Dave Williams, Captain Pollock, and Mac Monroe showed up well. The meet with Rutgers brought forth some of the best boxing, although three men lost to an Eastern Intercollegiate champion, Joe Colonna. Ed Swenson won the admiration of the opposi- tion with his right cross and clever footwork. A week later Western Maryland was shut out. Ralph Millard, for the second time, found his opponent unable to last out more than two rounds with him. i 1 VanSand, Williams, Webber, and Sullivan went to the Intercollegiates and demonstrated boxing as a science and an amateur pursuit. But the slugging of more 'cexperiencedi' boxers won the cheers of the crowd and the gold medals of the oflicials. Boxing at Yale retains the interest and en- thusiasm of at least ta hundred active partici- pants. They will continue to box in the future, and if circumstances again make it possible, will form the basis for more of Mosey King's fine teams. The many art 97 1 Back Row: Aber fAsst. Managerj, Byck, Nunes, Beebe, Winslow, Wollensack, Grasson fCoachj. Front Row: Litt, Marcus, Mertens, Johnson CCaptainD, Auchincloss, Owre, Morris. Fencing INNING six out of eight college meets and whipping both Princeton and Harvard, the Yale Fencing Team met rumors of extinction by rough-riding one of the toughest schedules Yale swordsmen have ever drawn. ' Competition opened inauspiciously in De- cember when a star-studded array of swordsmen from the New York Athletic Club vanquished the Yale squad, I7-IO. On the following Satur- day the Salter Fencing Club handed out an almost similar shellacking. Sabre-rattling I After Christmas, the Elis met their f1rst college opponent, St. John's of Brooklyn, and beat them, 15-12. However, in their next meet, Cor- nell upset the varsity by the same score, but the Blue came back promptly to trounce Pennsyl- vania, 17M - QM. Next victim was the Hart- ford Fencer's Club, which lost, 19-8. Yale's other defeat came at West Point, when a powerful Army team won, I4-I3, despite a desperate eHiort made by the Blue sabremen, who blasted the famous Cadet unit, 6-3, to come within one point of winning the meet. The Philadelphia Sword Club bowed, 16-1 1, next weekend, and on Washir1gton's Birthday the Yale sabre team, composed of Captain Bob Johnson, Ralph Mertens, and Art Litt, placed second in the annual sabre tournament. Later in the season, a hard-lighting Hamilton squad was decisively downed, 17-10, and in the following meet the Elis overrode strong Colum- bia, 14- 1 3, before returning to West Point for the Pentagonal Tournament. Here they placed third to Army and Navy, though topping Harvard and Princeton. A suitable finish for 1940 was the Prom week-end victory over Princeton, followed by the 14-13 triumph over Harvard at Cambridge on the evening of vacation. With the score 7-1 1 in favor of the Cantabs, sabrels Three Musketeers came through to clinch the meet by the narrow margin of one point. 98 Squash NDER the able guidance of Coach Johnny Skillman, the Yale Squash Team once again completed an undefeated season. They re- gained the National Intercollegiate Squash Racquets Team Championship, for which Major Y's and gold charms were awarded. Opening a season of twelve matches, the team defeated the University Club of New York, 4-3. Then travelling to New York for a match with the Yale Club, the team returned with a 6-3 victory. M.I.T., Purdue, and Williams were each a victim ofa 4-I defeat. Later, trips to Hanover and Hartford netted wins against Dartmouth 6-3, and the Hartford Golf Club 5-o. A 7-2 triumph at Princeton continued the string of victories. Entertaining Harvard at New Haven, Yale played their first home intercollegiate match, which ended in a 6-3 victory for Yale. Yale's team, an entrant in the National Squash Racquets Championship, was unsuc- cessful, being eliminated by Detroit, 2-3, in the first round. More successful in the National Intercollegiates, all of the six men entered moved into the second round and four into the quarter finals, only to be put out in close matches. The latter part of the season was marked by victories over Pennsylvania and Amherst, both Skillmen of which were shutouts for Yale, 5-0 and 9-o, respectively. The 8-1 win over Princeton closed the season with a spotless record. Highlights of the year were Captain Still- man's winning of the Connecticut State Squash Racquets Tournament, and Bob Houk's record for individual match play. He lost only one match in his four years at Yale. Equally impressive was the accomplishment of six members of the team, Stillman, Harding, Houk, Bissell, Waters, and Ferguson, who com- pleted four years of intercollegiate competition with only one loss in 55 team matches. Back Raw: Skillman CCoachj, Messinger, Bissell, Dugan, Wheelock, Lauriat QManagerj. Front Row: Waters, Oliver, Stillman fCaptainj, Ferguson, Houk. 199 Checking results Rif le IMING to please the powers that be in the Athletic Association who held the threat of excommunication over its head, as well as to shoot good scores, the Yale Varsity Rifle Team under the direction of Coach William Hook and Captain James M. Dill shattered all its previous- ly existing records and secured a new lease on life. Besides Firing some thirty postal 'matches with teams all over the country, the Varsity took on MIT., Coast Guard, West Point, Annapolis, Connecticut University, N.Y.U., Rhode Island State, and Harvard in shoulder- to-shoulder competition. In the first match of the season, fired on the home range, Yale promptly took the bit in her teeth by breaking her own shoulder-to-shoulder record with a new mark of 1389. In this match William S. McCain set a new individual record for Yale with his 286 out of a possible 300. Both the service teams, Army and Navy, proved their supremacy by handing Yale defeats, Navy with the exception- ally high score of 1401. In the middle ofthe sea- son the Varsity broke its previous record in away-from-home competition, by tiring a 1378 score against Connecticut University at Storrs. With iron fortitude and steady hands the Varsity won the most gratifying victory of the year by outshooting Harvard on the day after the Junior Prom. This victory left Yale unde- feated in the New England College Rifle League. In this circuit William S. McCain was the individual high-scorer, with Paul .Nicholson and Grifhth Bedworth also in the front ranks. Winding up the season Yale travelled to New London to place second in the New England Intercollegiates, yielding first place to Harvard. It then fired at New Haven in the closing match to take third place in the Northeastern Section ofthe National Collegiate Championship shoot. Back Row: Hook CCoachj, Brooks CManagerj, Gaylord, Pigott, McGurdle. Front Row: Church, Rosien, McCain, Dill CCaptainj, Nicholson, Prass, Bedworth. 200 johnson, Meehan, Corey fCaptainj, Chisholm Indoor Polo ITH only one member oflast yearis Varsity returning, the Yale Polo Team looked forward to a hard season. Alan Corey, captain of the team, was in his third year of varsity polo for Yale. Bill Chisholm was drafted from the Junior Varsity, and Dave Wilhelm came up from the freshman team. The first skirmishes resulted in victories over Giant Valley, 14-6, Hartford Cavalry, 23-I 1, and the New York Athletic Club, I7-I 1. Enter- ing the game with Pennsylvania Military Col- lege heavy favorites, the overconfident Blue tasted their first defeat, 14-8. Swamped by Penn M. Cfs Texan Maloney, who accounted for six goals, the Elis, nevertheless, were dangerous until the very last. Twice, Yale defeated Prince- ton, 15-9 and 19-15, and followed this with two more wins by taking the Cantabs, I4-Q and 6-4. With this defeat of Harvard in Boston, Yale won the Big Three crown. Going into the last period with a three-all score, the Elis quickly pierced the Crimson defense for two goals and from then on were never in danger. Going into the closing games of the season, the Eli riders overcame the New York Athletic Club, 22-7, and dropped only two more games, one to the 124th Field Artillery at Chicago, I4-7, QOI and a heart-breaker to West Point, 12-11, the day after the Prom. Unfortunately vacation came between the end of the season and the intercollegiates. Yale drew a Hbyen in the first round, and was defeated in a closely-fought game with Princeton in the second, I4-IO. It was a fairly successful season, with nine wins and four losses. The defeat by Princeton, al- though the Elis had beaten the Tigermen twice before, was the most bitter loss of the season. Follow the bouncing ball Byers CCaptainj, Gile, Aberg, Livingston, Gould, Fargo, Cross, Vietor, Beard. Crew- 1939 1TH the opening of the 1939 crew season Yale's prospects for a successful campaign were not too bright. Only three oarsmen, Fred Cross, Charlie Ruprecht, and Granger Frost, returned from the previous season's boat with coxswain and Captain Buckley Byers. To add to the troubles of Coach Ed Leader, Frost was de- clared ineligible to row. However, a powerful boat was finally moulded and blazed through an undefeated year until the loss suffered at' the hands of Harvard at New London. It took the better part of the winter and early spring for Leader to find a winning combina- tion. The greatest problem was that of the stroke position and it was not until the middle of April that Gile took that berth in which he remained for the rest of the season. Number seven was another problem which was solved by changing Aberg from port to starboard, but only after Turner had been tried there in the first race and Cross in the other two short races. The opening race of the season took place before the usual gay and colorful Derby Day crowd on May sixth. Yale, although an un- known quantity, was favored over the not too strong Pennsylvania and Columbia boats to carry off the Blackwell Cup. The outcome was remarkable, in that Yale not only won the race but also broke the two-rnile record for that dis- tance on the Housatonic. Yale, in the first lane, Captain Byers at the ropes 202 hit a marker and lost a man overboard. Yale finished in 10:46, M.I.T. in 11:27, and Syracuse in IIZ331. That Yale then had the best sprint crew in the country was proved decisively when the Elis defeated Princeton and Cornell and the latter in turn vanquished Harvard the following week. The Carnegie Cup race was rowed at Princeton, and due to the length of the lake was only a mile and three-quarters course. The crew had re- An zgfternoorfs beginning led all the way, except for the first minute, in which Penn was ahead owing to its excessively fast racing start. At the mile, Yale was a length in the lead, and as the crews came into the full view of the excited crowds on the banks near the finish, the Elis increased the open water to a length and a half. It was a great day for the Blue. The times were Yale, 10:11 3-5, Pennsylvania, 1o:16 3-5, and Columbia, 10:27 4-5. One week later, on May 13, Yale raced M.l.T. and Syracuse at Derby. This was the first time that the Blue had ever rowed against either of these crews and the race was therefore viewed with some interest. The line-up was slightly changed in the Yale boat from the previous week, Cross replacing Turner at seven and Aberg taking Cross's place at three. Yale was a decided favorite Watching for flaws ceived instructions to row thirty-eight the first minute and then to drop to thirty-fouruntil the finish. At the start Princeton jumped Yale a quarter of a length with Cornell behind by a and scored an easy win. After a bad start in which Syracuse took the lead until the three - quarter - mile mark, Yale took two tens and jumped ahead. At the mile and a quarter post Yale was a deck length ahead when Syracuse The Blackwell Cup and beer can.: 203 Notfor rpectalorr left with confidence for Gales Ferry on June 9 to prepare for the four-mile varsity race with Har- vard at New London on june 23. It was here that Lady Luck deserted the Yale camp which was beset by a series of misfortunes. The day after the arrival of the crews at Gales Ferry, Ed Leader had his appendix out. He returned ten days later, but was greatly missed, although Don Grant did an excellent job. Moreover, Ruprecht fell ill in the last week. Vietor, who took his place on the varsity, missed two days of rowing before the race due to a cold and consequently was weakened considerably for a four-mile row. The day of the race had seen three victories garnered by Harvard before the varsities lined Ham' practice . . . -4 half a length. In the second minute Yale pulled away from Cornell but could not come up on Princeton which held the lead. Therefore, Yale did not settle but rowed thirty-five and a half the first half-mile. Princeton began to fail and was passed, but Cornell then made her bid. Yale fought the challenge in vain and dropped behind by four feet with about thirty strokes left. At this point Byers pulled out his red Hag for the sprint and put the beat up high. The Yale boat shot out in front as its prow cut the finish line ten feet ahead of Cornell. It was a great race and meant another record for Yale. Time: Yale, 8:54 3-5, Cornell, 8:55 1-5, and Princeton, 9:13 2-5. With two new records and three wins Yale 20 3 X in . M.. 5 - - vs Q' 5 I if - . . . and carqful plum 4 up that evening at the head of the river. Odds favored the Crimson. The crews had to await the arrival of the observation train and this un- nerved both before the start. With the race final- ly underway, Harvard jumped Yale by half a length and increased the lead to a length by the first mile marker. Yale then gave two tens and gained back almost half a length, but Harvard was not to be challenged and pulled away to show open water between the two shells. Yale slightly gained at the submarine base, which is the two-mile mark, and the Crimson replied with an additional surge of power. In the last quarter-mile Yale sprinted and pulled up almost half a length, but the Harvard boat swept smoothly to victory at a lower stroke, as the pleasure boats that lined the course burst out in a chorus of acclaim. It was Harvard's day! The crews were taken from the boats, bundled in great coats, and they then acknowledged the tributes of the spectators as motor-launches car- ried them back down the course and evening fell on a partying Griswold-bound crowd. The line-up for the Harvard race was bow, Pete Beard, 2, George Vietor, 3, Fred Cross, 4, Foster Fargo, 5, Dick Gould, 6, Stan Livingston, 7, Charlie Aberg, stroke, Clem Gile, and Cox, Bucky Byers. --but the Crimson won 2.0 5 Back Row: Kellogg, Cross QCaptainj, Hinman, Fisher, Dickey, Dommerich, Comte, Davis. Front Row: Tooley. I 50-pound Crew HE Varsity 150-pound Crew started the 1939 season in the harbor on September 28 with four boats. Despite the graduation of four men from the Henley boat, there were still eight men returning who had been on the Henley squad. Although the squad was weakened by the loss of Littlefield and Park there were some promising sophomores so that Coach Butler was able to create a first boat which was more Shaving of powerful, but not as well polished as the pre- ceding year's Varsity. The boat was composed of such 1938 Henley veterans as Kellogg and Captain Cross, at stroke and seven respectively. Senior Tooley, as coxswain, manned the tiller ropes, while juniors Hinman, Dickey, and Domrnerich pulled oars six, four, and three respectively, and sophomores Comte and Davis filled in at two and bow positions. By the time of the first race in the spring, that with Pennsylvania and Columbia in the Black- well Cup race at Derby on May 6, this crew was able to demonstrate its power by placing iirst, almost a length ahead of Penn. The following week saw it place half a length behind Harvard for second place in the Goldthwaite Cup Re- gatta at Princeton, although it succeeded in putting over ten lengths of open water between it and the Princeton crew. The season closed with the Wright Cup Re- gatta at Cambridge, where the varsity placed second to Harvard by two lengths, beating Cornell, Pennsylvania, Princeton, Columbia, and M.I.T. The Junior Varsity placed second in the Goldthwaite Cup against Princeton and Har- vard, the latter being the winner. In the Wright Cup the V. boat placed last. Charles Dickey was elected captain of the 150-pound crew for the 1940 season. 206 Jayvee Crew FTER a protracted training season which commenced in September, the Junior Varsity boat had shaped up well. By the spring the crew could face its four-race schedule with deserved confidence. In the first race of the year, in a colorful Derby Day setting on the evening of May 6, Yale easily rowed away from Colum- bia and Pennsylvania to contribute to the Black- well Cup triumph. Starting slowly, but gaining an initial lead, the Junior Varsity boat pulled in front with precision and power to finish three and a half lengths ahead of the rival crews and turned in the best performance of the day. The second race was won the next week against the mediocre crews of M.I.T. and Syra- cuse, thereby adding to Yale's clean sweep. Syracuse, which had conquered Harvard by only eight feet the week before, was the favorite. Yale came from behind at the halfway mark, and with the beat at thirty-six, rowed to victory with the fastest time of the day, 10:44. On Saturday, May 20, the Junior Varsity defeated Princeton on Lake Carnegie, but bowed to the Cornell oarsmen by three and a half lengths. This was rather a disappointment as Yale was favored to win easily, but it rowed l To 1501 Pococklv Zalert too high a stroke and never settled into a steady stride. The hopes for a successful season were crushed as the crew lost to Harvard at New London on June 22nd. The first mile saw the Blue well in the lead, but from there on the Harvard boat came up steadily, and despite Yale's attempts to fight it off, won by a length. The boat for this race was composed of: Berkeley, cox, Meyer, 8, Knowlton, 7 5 Davis, 6, Wick, 5, Smith, 4, Vree- land, 3, Blair, 25 and Pillsbury, Bow. Berkeley, Meyer, Knowlton, Victor, Wick, Smith, Vreeland, Blair, Pillsbury 207 Back Row: Kanaly fCoachD, Wagoner, Shapleigh, Loman, Peck fManagerj. Third Row: Black, Marcus, Morse, Lussen, Rothschild, Freeman, Osborn, Brinkley. Second Row: Mills, john, Shields, Ethridge CCaptainj, Holderness, Clark, Culbert. Front Row: Bliss, Ord. 'Track PENING the 1939 indoor season at the Prout Games in Boston, the Yale Track Team sent a small squad against the usual stiff compe- tition found in the winter invitation meets. Jay Shields won his preliminary heat in the 45-yard high-hurdles, but was disqualified in the semi- finals. The one-mile relay team of Brown, Brinkley, Pierce and Curtis chalked up the only first place by defeating M.I.T. in the time of 3:31.2. On February 4 in the Millrose Games at Mad- ison Square Garden, Yale placed third behind N.Y.U. and Harvard in the Intercollegiate two- mile relay, but failed to place any men in the other events. The following week at the Boston Athletic Association Games, the Elis sent only a one-mile relay team composed of Brinkley, Pierce, Holderness, and Curtis which was de- feated in the race with Harvard. At the N.Y.A.C. meet' two weeks later, Tom Lussen led the Yale cohorts by clearing 13'6 to place second in the pole-vault. Shields gar- nered a fourth place in a fast final heat in the 60-yard high-hurdles which was won in 0:O7.2. 20 1939 In the one-mile relay, Yale picked up a second behind Princeton, while the two-mile relay team of Ord, Main, Watson, and Holderness also bowed to Princeton, beating Penn and Columbia for second. Its strength in the i hurdles and the relay events, the Yale team made a mediocre showing to pick up twenty-four points and a fourth place behind Harvard, Cornell, and Dartmouth in the Quadrangular meet the next week. Shields won the 45-yard high- hurdles in o:o5.8 and Lussen tied for first place in the pole-vault at I3 feet. Other point winners for the Blue included Osborn in the hurdles, Captain Capt. Ethridge 8 Shoestringr Hunt Ethridge in the broad-jump, Curtis in the 300-yard run, and Clark in the two-mile event. The one and two-mile relay outf1ts took third and second respectively. With I2 1-5 points Yale took fifth place in the Indoor Intercollegiates and placed second among the Ivy League entrants. Ethridge was high scorer for Yale with broad-jump at 23 ft. 9 in. and a fourth in the 60-yard high-hurdles. The latter event was won by Jay Shields, who tied the meet record of o:o7.4 set by Ted Day the year before. Walt Wagoner tied for third in the pole-vault to add the final points for Yale. The winter season ended with the Knights of Colum- bus meet at New York where Shields placed second in the 60-yard high-hurdles and Lussen third in the pole- vault. The outdoor season was inaugurated by an unlucky decision against Yale in its a second in the opening meet with Pennsylvania. The original tie score of 67 1-2 to 67 1-2 was altered in favor of the Red and the Blue. Frank Curtis triumphed in the 440-yard run in 0251.2 and Ronnie Clark took a first in the two-mile. However, it was the field events on this day that gave most of the points to the Elis. Yale swept the hammer- throw, won by Bill john with a 147' 1 heave. Al Mills annexed the javelin event with 176' 3 1-21 , while Wagoner captured the only other first place in the pole-vault. The following week at the Penn Relay Carni- val saw Dick Osborn garner a fourth in the 120- yard high-hurdles. The two-mile relay team of Ord, Morse, Watson, and Holderness succeeded in vanquishing six other teams for a fourth place. Marcus performed well in the hammer- throw and Wagoner helped the Blue in the pole-vault. In a closely contested dual meet with Prince- ton on May 6, Yale bowed with a score of 68 I-2 to 66 1-2. Showing their power in the running events, the Elis took four out of a possible eight first places. Osborn won the high-hurdles in o:14.8 which tied the meet record, and Bob Owen annexed the 220-yard dash in 0:22 and took a third in the century event. Holderness was victor in the mile in 4:27.4, while Mills placed first in the low-hurdles. In the field events, John threw the hammer 156' 7 for a first, and Mills and Lussen repeated wins in the Rushing the season U 209 Taking ajirst in the hurdles javelin and pole-vault respectively. Ethridge took a second in the broad-jump and a third in the javelin. Winning only four first places, Yale bowed to Harvard in their annual battle by QI 2-3 to43 1-3. Holderness turned in 4123.2 to take the mile race and Lee Shapleigh won the two-mile in 9:42.8. The other wins were made by Mills in the javelin with a throw of 184' 7 1-4 and the re- liable Lussen again in the pole-vault. At the Heptagonal Games held for the first time in New Haven on May 20, Yale upset all predictions by capturing 40 13-14 points to take a fourth place. Cornell finished only slightly ahead with 46 3-7 points, with Harvard and Princeton closely packed in front of Yale. Shields came through with a triumph in the 120-yard high-hurdles and set a new Yale record with the time of o:14.6. Second places were won by Holderness in the mile, Shapleigh in the two-mile, C-ulbert in the discus, and Lus- sen in the pole-vault. Ethridge took third in the broad-jump with a distance of 23' 4 1-2 , and Brinkley cleared 6' in the high-jump to tie for third place. Mills threw the javelin 179' 9 3-4 for a third in that event, and the 440-yard relay team gained a fourth, ahead of Princeton. In the Outdoor Intercollegiates at Randall's Island in New York City, the Eli contestants placed in six events to make a total of II 3-4 points and thereby secured eighth position in the final scoring. Shields again performed extremely well in the high-hurdles, placing second behind QIO the record-breaking time of o:14.4, and Os- born got fifth. Ethridge placed fourth in the broad-jump with 23' 4 , and Dick Morse ran fourth in the 880-yard run which was won by a Plzotojinish Q, p. g bvv- K 1, V .V V V Q - - . .,., ' , e. ' 1 ., , 'L 5 ' 1 f .- .. 35 --,.,,,.,gI:g- ,.., 1' 7:10-1'1e.if,,:, ,4 -5,-s .- , .,, .,.:,,. f I L. V li 2 A. 11 .,,k i Q I. 7 . . ..'.., T- fini: ,.,, my is . , n f' 'kh' 'Z K - ' , ,... Higher and higher new record of 1:1 5.2. Lussen tied for fifth in the pole-vault at 13', while Marcus and Mills each took fifth places respectively in the hammer and 220-yard low-hurdles. The 1939 track season ended with a combina- tion meet in England between Oxford and Cambridge and Harvard and Yale. As a result of the Harvard dual meet and subsequent com- petition for positions, nine Yale men made the American team - Captain Ethridge, Holder- ness, Shields, Brinkley, Lussen, Shapleigh, Os- born, Ord and Rothschild. Only Hrst places counted in the meet and the English took nine out of a possible. twelve. Of the remaining firsts, Yale took twog Shields in the high-hurdles, and Lussen in the pole-vault. At the conclusion of the season Jay Shields was elected to captain the team through the 1940 campaign, while Melville Chapin was chosen to assume the duties of managership. The team will suffer from the loss of distance runners, but should be strong again in both field and hurdle events with the return of many lettermen. Successive record-holders 211 Back Row: Hook CManagerj, Schroeder, Crosby, Miller CTrainerj, Wood, Stevens, Wood CCoachj. Front Row: Holt, Alter, -Iubitz, Collins fCaptainj, Humphrey, Besse, Hazen. Baseball- 1939 T would be difficult to call the -1939 baseball season anything but poor in view of the fact that the Elis managed to chalk up but eleven victories as against twenty defeats for a .365 average. Opening auspiciously with a host of veteran material, combined with a team full of rookies up from Clyde Engle's championship 1941 edition, and having lost only Captain Dick Marcus and Paul Wargo from the Big Three title-holding aggregation of the year before, joe Wood was all smiles as he assembled his as- pirants early in February. His mound staff included Moe jubitz, hard- ened to league competition by two campaigns, Bing Crosby, Dud Humphrey, and junior, Al Stevens, plus Joe Wood, jr., and Dick Ames up from the freshman outfit. Around Captain Ed- die Collins in centerfield were Greg Doonan, Tony Mendoza, Gordon Grayson, and Bill Mc- Clellan for outfield duty. On the bases were Rog Hazen and Ronnie Cooke at first, Bill Loveday and Downey Orrick at second, Tricky Alter and Shep Krech at short, and Gerry Besse and Harry Holt at the hot corner. The backstop situation was likewise crowded with Tony Mott, jack Schroeder, Dan Millett, and Bill Poole vying during the early season for the nod. But some- how this wealth of ivory failed to prove the means to success, some of the squad falling under injuries and the rest not living up to pre-season predictions. For the first time in four years a Southern trip was granted by the Tower Parkway rnoguls, and the prospect of a tour in the julep circuit served as further impetus for recruits, one of the largest squads in history turning out, The venture into warmer climes developed into a Hasco, however, from the winning column standpoint, the travel- ling Elis falling before Richmond, Virginia, Georgetown, and Navy, in that order. The team seemed jittery, and went down for the count time and again solely from lack of steadiness. A fifth game on the spring vacation jaunt, with Western Maryland, was called because of rain just after Eddie Collins had clouted the year's initial homer. Back in the Elm City, things took a brighter turn for about a week. Against the New Haven 212 Pros Moe Jubitz was equal to the occasion and shut out the opposition, 6-0. Then, in an exciting game, the Elis were nosed out by Tom Yawkeyas Red Sox in the ninth inning by a 6-5 count. Al Stevens was sensational in the three innings he worked, setting down such hickory wielders as Jimmy Foxx, Ted Williams, and Joe Cronin by the strike-out route. Games with Williams and Penn were washed out, but against Trinity, Stevens was again the master of the situation, and the Blue emerged on the long end of a 6-4 score. Following the than a week later proved to be even more dis- astrous with a 9-3 loss. All hope of league success had not been abandoned, however, and the nine went into a Derby Day double-header against Penn full of COHl:lClCl'1CC.JOCJI. served them up for the initial three frames of the opener, and the Quakers were not long in finding his offerings. The ad- dition of seven errors by Yale to their string gave Penn little trouble in tucking away the first, 5-1. The ten-inning night-cap was a thriller, how- ever. Al Stevens mixed up his speed and curves opening league en- counter with Cornell, which Jubitz took, 6-2 allowing but four hits, the brief revival ended. Except for a slim victory over the New 7 Captain Callim Coach Wood 'J mound .vtaj York AC., by a 3-2 count, the Elis lost the next six games and thereby ruined their chances in the league. First Waterloo in this bad streak came on April 26, when the home forces jour- neyed up to Providence, where they were drowned by Brown in a rainstorm, 5-1. Next on the list came Dartmouth, who carried home the proverbial bacon after a tight mound duel, 3-2. jubitz did the honors for the Blue, fanning eleven and otherwise turning in a creditable preform- ance. Numerous errors proved the Elis' nemesis this time as so often during the season. A return encounter with the Indians up in Hanover less 21 beautifully but dropped the game, 3-2, when the Philadelphians pushed over a squeeze play in the tenth. Holy Cross arrived in town on May 9 and dis- posed of the local nine in short order, 19-4, finishing up the job four days later in Worcester by taking the second game, 5-3. Sandwiched in Waiting for warm weather 3 between these two encounters were Cornell, which completed the rout of the Blue in league ranks by administering a I3-2 shellacking, and Brown, whom the Elis took into camp on their home field to the tune of 8-2. Against the Bruins, young Joe Wood meted out a paltry five hits and drove in two runs himself on a long double. At West Point on May 17, both Army and Yale batters had a field day, taking it out on no less than eight pitchers. Twenty-four hits and thirteen errors made a wild afternoon of it, but Elm City one day late in May, brought along his teammates for company, and set the home boys down, 5-o. Joe Jr. had a hot afternoon, allowing the Rams but one earned run, it was four costly boots which dropped the game for the Elis. Though they gathered only six safeties, two of which were Rog Hazen's, the Blue nine managed to set down Tufts, 4-2. Memorial Day found Yale in Middletown, where Wesleyan was downed, 7-6. Coming down the final stretch with hopes of retaining the Big Three Championship now pre- Almost beat the Red Sox when the smoke had cleared, the Blue emerged on the long end of a 17-10 count. Bill Loveday with a circuit clout and Eddie Collins with three hits led the parade in one of the few days of slugging throughout the season. Having found their batting eyes the team went on to take over Columbia on successive days. In New Haven for the first one, a good crowd witnessed a see-saw battle featuring Harry Holt's triple, driving in two of the tallies which accounted for an 8-7 win. The Elis landed on three Lion hurlers next day at Morningside Heights and walked away with an 18-1 1 triumph. Moe Jubitz was never in trouble until the ninth, when with an 18-1 lead, he relaxed to allow the New Yorkers to slip over seven markers. Newark hadn't yet lured Hank Borowy into her fold, and the famed twirler showed up in the 21 eminent in their minds, the Elis squared off against Princeton and knocked them down, 3-2, behind Moe Jubitz, who was up against his old rival Lefty Farber. With the score tied at 2-all in the ninth, singles by Holt, Besse, and Wood accounted for the necessary tally. After a week's lay-off the Elis entertained Providence on June IO, dropping this one, 8-5. Three days later the Blue avenged their spring junket defeat by handing a touring Virginia aggregation a 5-3 setback, which featured a mighty triple by Cap- tain Collins. Having garnered one notch on their Big Three title defense, the Elis entrained for Tigertown on the 17th, primed to stop the Bengals. Farber had his day, however, setting the Blue down, 6-1 , in his final appearance. Al Stevens received the nod from Coach Wood, but lasted only into the 4 second frame, Jubitz taking over from there, with the score 5-o against him. The Reunion Circuit continued the next Monday, Harvard arriving in town for the Yale alumni gathering. The Cantabs seemed to relish the opposition and walked off with the Hrst of the series, 3-0. Jubitz hurled a beautiful game in his farewell appear- ance, giving up but three blows. It was all over but the shouting after the next day's battle, which the Redlegs won, 8-1, before their graduate crowd. On Boat Race Day at Mercer Field in New London, the third game was a mere formality. Al Stevens was effective on the mound, but a slew of errors and weakness with the stick allowed the Harvards a clean sweep, 4-1. After the game Tricky Alter, 19405, who had played two seasons, both at shortstop and second base, was elected to lead the 1940 team. Robert D. Orr assumed the managership, while Lau- rence G. Tighe, was chosen assistant manager. 21 Alumni at the Harvard game Action at the hot corner Back Row: Kaye, Orr fManagerj, Mead, Dye, Price, Loeffler QCoa.chj, Dunbar. Front Row: Gilbert, Orrick, R. E. Cooke, R. W. Cooke, Schell, Poole, Garvey. ayvee Baseball HE Varsity season was marked by a lack of success. The Freshmen lost only one game in tucking away a championship season. But the Jayvees proved themselves the brightest spot in the 1939 diamond world by emerging from a ten-game schedule without a blemish on their record. For the first time in several years the A.A. allowed a Junior Varsity to function. Its success and the interest displayed by a small but lively band of ball hawks was proof enough of its worth. Pulled it in There was much controversy throughout the spring over the captaincy, both Cookes, Ron and Bob, contesting the honor. When the chips were down, however, Bob graciously stepped aside in favor of his older brother, who was at all times an effective leader. An infield of Captain Cooke at first, Downey Orrick at second, johnny Price at short, and Bob Cooke or Carter Dye at third functioned as a unit throughout the schedule. Howie Kaye, Dixie Dunbar, Bill Garvey, Jake Dore, and once in a while Whale Curry toured the outer gardens. Charlie Gilbert, Gig Gardner, and Pud Schell did all the hurling with Bill Poole, Lou Stanas, and Deuce Mead backing up behind the plate. High light of the season was the victory over Harvard in Cambridge in the final game, which the Elis took 8-2, with Schell on the mound. Kaye and Price led the hitting with two blows apiece. Pud Schell, having had some Varsity experi- ence, was the outstanding mound performer for the seconds. He turned in a skein of five vic- tories. Gig Gardner accounted for two others, with Gilbert and Crosby adding one each. Leading batters included Jake Dore with 364, Bob Cooke 346, Johnny Price and Bill Garvey 41533, and Downey Orrick rattling the apple for 322. 216 Lacrosse- 1939 LAYING one of the most difficult schedules in the past several years, the 1939 Lacrosse Team emerged victorious in only three of their eight contests. Led by Captain and All-American Don Hen- ry, the lacrossemen edged out C.C.N.Y. in their first game, by the slim margin of 6-5. This vic- tory was quickly effaced when Rutgers sent the Elis home on the tail-end of a 6-5 score. Despite the brilliant play of Henry and the many saves of goalie Irving, Army with one of the strongest teams in the country, trounced the Blue, 13-Q. Penn with two scoring sprees, each of which ac- counted for three tallies, nosed Reggie Root's men, 6-4. On May 6 the clouds dispersed and Yale swamped Lehigh, 12-2, Don Henry scoring five times and Sweeney three. The loss to Dart- mouth, 9-8, after a tightly fought game, was a heart-breaker. Down at Princeton on May 16 the Elis, somewhat handicapped by la lack of reserves, found the Tigermen's brilliant defense and elusive offense too much for them. At the end of the first ten minutes the Elis were already trail- ing by six points. The Bulldogs then stiffened their defense, allowing only three more tallies. Whereir the fire? Don I-Ienry's two brilliant solo scores in the closing minutes and the fine work by goalie Irving proved the high spots for the Yale men. The Harvard game, high mark of the season, was a different story, with the Yalemen seeming to have at last come into their own. With a strong defense and an accurate passing offense the Blue scored consistently, to overwhelm Har- vard by I I-5, Captain Henry accounting for six scores. Failing to win the Big Three Lacrosse title, Yale was at least consoled by this outstand- ing victory. Back Row: Riggs fTrainerj, Hopgood, Waldman, Root CCoachj, Fuller, Atkins, MacPhee CManagerj. Third Row: Ste- wart, Madden, Leary, Bolton, Henry fCaptainj, Irving, Cole, Reutter, Ocumpaugh. Second Row: Battey, Ott. Front Row: Smith, Hamilton, Williams, Gebhardt, Dodd. 21 7 Posed by Pachlt Tennis- 1 939 N April 1, the Tennis Team left for a week's trip through some of the Southern States to get in trim for the spring season. In an in- formal practice game at Chapel Hill, N. C., the Yale team was defeated by North Carolina, 9-1. On the way home the Eli courtmen stopped off at Annapolis long enough to down the Mid- shipmen, 5-4. The tennis season officially commenced with the Seventh Regiment match. Although Yale lost its first three singles, and its first two doubles matches, the team managed to come out on top, 8-6. The Elis lost very close matches to their next two opponents 3 first to the Army, 5-4, and again by the same count to the University of Virginia. Then they conquered Columbia quite decisively in their next match, 7-2. The tables were quickly turned, however, as Yale lost to the University of Miami the following week, 7-2. In a very closely contested match, the New Haven team succeeded in winning by one point over Harvard, the final score being 8-7. Yale then came through to beat Williams, 5-4, but were downed in a return match with North Carolina in New Haven, 6-3. The match with Princeton was unfortunately rained out, and as a consequence, Yale and Princeton did not meet during the 1939 season. By finishing the season with a 6-3 triumph over Penn and a 7-2 victory over a weak Dartmouth aggregation the Elis were able 'to boost their average to six wins and four defeats, three of which being suffered at the hands of Southern teams. Captain Campbell was awarded the James Abbott Hutchinson Trophy and together with Bill Thorn and Mac Stephens, he was chosen to represent Yale in the 1939 International Matches held in England. Back Row: Manning fManagerj, Thorn, Spaulding, Ehrman, Freedman, Kelly, Steckler, Hinchcliff CCoachj. Front Row: Wheeler, Rutledge, Krieger, Campbell fCaptainj, Kingsley, MacGuire, Stephens. 218 Back Row: Watkins fManagerj, Stucky CAsst. Managerl, Meister, Callan, Creekmore, Thomson fCoachl. Front Row: Reigeluth, Page, Merritt QCaptainj, Scott, Verity. Golf- 1939 NDER the leadership of Captain Renny Merritt, the 1939 Golf Team looked as if it were destined to go far, with returning letter- men Merritt, Ed Meister, Bill Verity and Fred Borsodi. In addition Coach Ben Thomson had on call Sophornores Virgil Scott and Chauncey Page and former Junior Varsity men Ed Callan and Jerry Creekrnore. Yale got off to an auspicious start by taking Hartford Golf Club, 8-4, and followed that vic- tory with a 75-IM slaughter of Lehigh. The following day Princeton was beaten 5-4. In the first League matches, Yale drubbed Williams easily, 8-1, and then Holy Cross, 7-3. A breather followed with the Woodway Country Club in Stamford, which Yale won, 8-4. That weekend, the team was host to the final round of the Northern section of the League, and entered co-favorites with Dartmouth to carry off the sectional crown. In the first match, Brown was swamped, 9-0, but on the following morning, a rugged Harvard team upset the Eli hopes for a clean slate, with a 5-4 victory. The afternoon match with Dartmouth then became the crucial match of the League, and despite Meister's first defeat of the season, the team eked out a 5-4 triumph and thereby put itself in a tie 21 with Dartmouth for the Northern title. In the play-off Dartmouth won easily, 6-3. Verity and Page won their matches but Dartmouth took the other four matches to clinch the championship. After this blow, Yale bounced back to its feet and defeated Amherst, 65-QM, and then trimmed the Alumni, 9-3, after which Ed Meister was elected Captain of the 1940 team. In the Nationals Renny Merritt was the only member of the team to advance appreciably far in the individual rounds. Power-drive -if ,L , 1 . ity? V4 .f, . , ' ' ' .. .7 4431 ,.,l :z , :All V :ll U , vim A. I, , , .. if 5 - H - '- : :V ,, h as-f ,. . .V .,.g:-ff ' f tv fry' ' S V V, ,Z ' 1' ,:-.2151 , Vim , .V 4: -wmaVt.cfyrft.-.-.11:,:1m:.-,V.,y-wmzfl gm-VI:-' f Y ' 1:-. .V V , .4 f-5-W-,:,,,.,VVV-Z -1fmt.,-,f.t.,.4.?.V-.VM ., -. ,: '- r ' EV? 3 7 .f. - E Hi ' ' ,:g2jVs5:41'?'1: 52Z?1-5?47'Z51?31f2ik'452Zjp5g, 5,214 'wa-.1:i:7o.fjE2i:-Mx-45. - .Vw kr .. 5.'11'I : ,' : -. swf .. 1ra'fr2:1.? to-fx-V1-If-:fri- 'aw 44,211 - 1: 4 2. '- .-:W-a1V.a:', fawa. 'mat ' iw' w!4wr.+'4v4:444V-7. ..4,.-if-fray..V,,V,.,f..-,.tM,,.L.,, 4--W. , .VmV,....,.,,Qt.- I wfw'::1V2 '-ww.-V: -.wr arV'2.1-1-:Z-2 ft:.G+wf.1Wmm.:,::m pin .wc-,V,,ff?nMff,:v.. 12-9-1-. 4.,:.,,fe my -4 ,4,4.Va :,.:4f.. ,Vff,.:t.1. ., ,:,1 9 A. E. Bartholerny '42 S. B. Brinkley '40S R. B. Brooks '41 C. Burnam '41 F. M. Burr '40 J. Butler, Jr. '40 J. R. Dern, '41S H. Kaye '41 T. A. Lussen '40S Major Y Men in College FOOTBALL SWIMMING J. F. Magee, Jr. '42S R. L. Merrick '40 G. S. Seabury '40 H. Seymour '42S J. W. Stack, Jr. '40 W. H. Starbuck '40 C. R. Taylor '40 H. B. White1nan,Jr. '41 H. C. Wood '40 J. F. McClelland,Jr. '40 C. C. Wooster '40S S. M. Macomber '40 W. C. Zilly '41S BASKETBALL A. E. Bartholemy '42 R. G. Rhett, III '42 W. T. Bell '42 C. F. Seelbach, Jr. '42S E. F. Callan, Jr. '40 M. Stephens '40 J. C. Cobb, III '41 A. B. Stevens '40 T. F. Erickson '40 B. J. Sullivan '4oS A.J. Ingley '42S VV. G. Thorn '41 D. M. Mersereau '40 W. C. Zilly '41S J. S. Overbagh '4oE HOCKEY W. S. Barnes '40 F. M. Burr '40 J. L. Carton, Jr. '42S H. F. Chaney, Jr. '40 C. B. Drake, Jr. '41 W. N. Driscoll '40 N. V. V. Franchot. III '41 P. T. Gillespie '40 F. H. Harrison '42 R. C. Hazen '41 H. W. Holt '4oS F. B. Kieckhefer '41 G. N. McLennan '41 P. S. Pierson '41 D. B. Rodd '40 G. S. Seabury '40 E. D. Toland, Jr. '40 A pw pointers R. W. Belcher, Jr. '40S T. C. Britton '42 J. B. Brueckel '40 J. L. Burns,Jr. '4oS R. A. Chouteau '42 J. R. Cook '42S R. P. Duncan '40S B. D. Flynn, Jr. '40S E. E. Gesner '41S E. F. Higgins '4oS C. P. JaH'ray,Jr. '40 C. P. Aberg '41 E. L. Beard, III '41 R. R. Browning, Jr. '39 B. M. Byers '40 F. C. Cross, Jr. '40S F. M. Fargo '41S C. D. Gile '39 S. P. W. Black '40S E. L. Bliss '39 S. B. Brinkley, '40S R.J. Clark, '3QS T. Culbert '39 F. W. Curtis '39E E. H. Ethridge, Jr. '39s J. Ferguson '40 P. R. Freeman '41 B. S. Holderness ,395 W. E. John, Jr. '39 J. Lohmann '41 T. A. Lussen '40S H. R. Johnson '42S R. C. Kelly '42 H. S. Kleppinger 41E E. L. MacLernan 42E J. H. Meyer '42 D. M. Munding '42 G. S. Mustin '4oS E.J. Pope,Jr. '42S W. H. Sanburn, II '41S E. P. Snyder '41S CREW R. N. Gould '41 P. Knowlton '39S S. Livingston, Jr. '4oS C. A. Pillsbury '39 G. F. Victor, Jr. '40 P. M. Wick '39 TRACK M. G. Main '41 R. F. Marcus '40 A. K. Mills, Jr. '39 R. C. Morse, Jr. '4oS J. N. Ord '41E R. Osborn, Jr. '41 R. L. Owen, III '41 C. J. Peck, Jr. '39 J. N. Rothschild '41 A. L. Shapleigh, II '41 J. M. Shields '40S W. D. Wagoner '41 A. Walker '39 BASEBALL A. J. Alter '40S G. C. Besse, Jr. '41 E. T. Collins, Jr. '39 R. C. Hazen '41 H. W. Holt '4oS G. M. V. Hook '39 D. S. Humphrey, III '39 M. A. Jubitz '39 VV. J. Loveday '39 J. P. Schroeder '41 A. B. Stevens '40 J. F. Wood, Jr. '41 SQUASI-I RACQUETS G. P. Bissell, Jr. '40S J. Ferguson '40 G. J. Harding, III '40S R. T. Houk, III '4oF. J. B. Oliver '41 P. G. B. Stillman '40 H. Waters '40 OUTDOOR POLO W. H. Chisholm '40 A. L. Corey, Jr. '40 CROSS COUNTRY W. B. Watson, Jr. '40 Deceased 220 C. Johnson '39 YC. M. Woolley,Jr. '39 WRESTLING D. M. Gerber '40 Minor Y Men in College SOCCER W. P. Hutchings '41S W. R. Kitchel '40 J. J. Angleton '41 D. H. L. Aron '41 G. Bradford, Jr. '40 H. R. Brown,Jr. '41S R. I. Bruce '41S G. WV. Carrington,Jr. '42 C. A. Carton '41 R. D. Coursen '40 T. F. Erickson '40 G. E. Haines '42 E. Fisher '41 D. R. Millard,Jr. '41 M. Monroe '41 E. F. Pollock '40 J. A. MacGregor '40 D. D. Pascal '4oE A. Peter,Jr. '40 W. F. Poole, III '40 I. H. Schlesinger, Jr. '40 W. H. Y. Stevens '41S R. G. VanPeursem '41 BOXING J. D. Sullivan '42 E. F. Swenson,Jr. '40 . D. V. van Sand '40 D. J. Williams, II '42 F ENCING R. L. Auchincloss, Jr. '40 C. D. Beebe '41S L. C. Byck, Jr. '4oE R. M. Johnson '40 4 A. A. Litt '41 J. A. Marcus '4oS R. A. Mertens '4oS J. M. Morris '41E E. V. Nunes '42S A. Owre, Jr. '42 G. A. Paddock,Jr. '40 L. S. Parsons '40 J. Winslow '40 WRESTLING L. G. Blackmon '4oS E. W. Brightwell '40 A. C. Ely '4oS J. L. Hauer '40 R. C. Jopling, Jr. '40 E. M. Latson '41 J. B. Madden '41 B. O. Parker '42 L. K. Pickett '41 W. D. deV. Schwab '40 SQUASH RACQUETS C. E. Lauriat '4oS G. H. Messinger '4oS F. A. Borsodi '39S E. F. Callan,Jr. '40 E. F. Creekmore, Jr. '39 E. L. Meister '40 H. R. Merritt,Jr.'39 S. L. Pittman '41 W. R. Wheelock '40 GOLF C. O. Page '41S R. S. Reigeluth ,39 J. V. Seott,Jr. '41 C. W. Verity, Jr. '39 S. R. Watkins '39S Brothers McClelland CROSS COUNTRY J. H. Adarns,Jr. '41 H. L. Henkel '4oS J. Lohmann '41 NI. G. Main '41 M. Pfeiffenberger '41 LACROSSE R. Atkins '40 D. E. Battey,Jr. '40 A. L. Bolton,Jr. '4oS B. E. Cole, Jr. '40 J. N. Deming '41 A. Dodd '39 J. B. Fuller '4oS K. Gebhard,Jr. '41S F. W. Hamilton,-Jr. '4oS D. W. Henry '39 R. B. Hopgood '4oS F. C. Irving, Jr. '39E VV. H. Chisholm '40 A. L. Corey, Jr. '40 C.Johns0n '39 G. W. Campbell '39 S. M. Ehrman '41 R.J. Freedman '41 G.J. M. Kelly '41 R. Kingsley, Jr. '39 L. W. Krieger '4oS C. E. Leary '40 J. B. Madden '41 J. E. McPhee '39S E. Ocumpaugh, IV '41E R. L. Ott '40 C. E. Reutter, Jr. '39S G. B. Smith '4oE W. G. Stewart '41 J. S. Sweeny '41 G. R. Waldmann, II '41 P. Williams, Jr. '41 POLO K. M. Schiffer '39 C. Simonds '39 'C. M. Woolley '39 TENNIS A. A. Manning '39 T. G. Rutledge '40 C. F. Spalding '41 P. H. Steckler,Jr. '41 M. Stephens '40 W. G. Thorn '41 P. F. MacGuire '40 L. Wheeler,Jr. '40 'Deceased 2 2 I Yale Football Record Since 1883 Record of Yale-Princeton games to 1883 Record of Yale-Harvard games to 1883 1873HPrinceton 3, Yale 0 1875--Harvard 4 f.g., 4 t., Yale o 1876-Yale 2, Princeton 0 1876-Harvard 0, Yale fg. 1877-Princeton 0, Yale 0 I878-HZFVHFC 0, Yale fg. 1878-Princeton 1 touchdown, 1 goal, Yale 0 I879fH3fV3fd 0, Yale 1879-Princeton 0, Yale o 1880-Harvard 0, Yale fig., It. 1880-Princeton 0, Yale 0 1881-Harvard 4 s., Yale o 1881-Princeton 0, Yale 0 1882-Harvard 2 s., Yale Ig., 3t. 1882-Yale 2 goals, 2 touchdowns, 1 safetyg Princeton 1 goal, 1 safety 1883 74 Wesleyan 4 1891 I2 West Point 0 Yale vs. Points 1 2 Princeton o Yale vs. Points I 2 Brown 0 58 Wesleyan 0 1 7 Harvard 8 28 Wesleyan 0 67 Tufts 0 90 Wesleyan 0 26 Crescent A.C. 0 50 Lehigh 0 36 Stevens Institute o 1888 36 Trinity 0 48 Chicago A.C. 0 97 Rutgers 0 Yale vs. Points 46 Williams 1 o I2 Harvard 4 93 Columbia 0 76 Wesleyan 0 30 Staggis Eleven o 24 Princeton 0 64 Michigan Univ. 0 65 Rutgers o 37 Orange A.C. 0 6 Princeton 0 46 Univ. of Penn. 0 36 Lehigh o 1895 23 Harvard 2 46 Wesleyan 0 70 Crescent A.C. 0 Yale vs, Points 39 Amherst 0 76 Wesleyan 0 8 T ' '1 1884 , 30 Williams 0 27 Amherst n 4 Bigxy? 2 Yale VS' Pomts 68 Boston Tech. 0 48 Univ. of Penn. 0 26 Union 0 3 I Wesleyan . O 69 Stevens 0 IO Harvard 0 36 Amherst 0 25 Stevens Institute 0 50 Univ. of Penn. 0 19 Princeton 0 8 Crescent A.C. Q 3 Wesleyan O 28 CTCSCCYHS 0 I 8 26 Dartmouth O IZ? gutgers th I0 70 Amherst 0 Yale VS 92 Points 24 Orange A.C. I2 at mou 0 115 Wesleyan 0 ' ' Wi1l'a 5 0 46 Wesleyan o IO Princeton 0 6 Wesleyan 0 52 Bosth1inA.C. o I8 Graduates 0 26 Sficents O 32 Dartmouth 0 48 Harvard O 1889 32 1 iams 0 8 W t P . t 8 6 PUHCCYOH 4 Yale vs. Points 22 AC' 2 is Caiiilisleom Q 1885 38 Wesleyan 0 53 Orange A-C. 0 6 Brown 6 Yale vs. Points 63 Wfesleyan 5 50 Spring Y.M.C.A 0 Q6 Orange A'C' 0 5 5 Stevens 0 36 Wllhams 0 Tufts Q 0 20 Prmceton I0 18 Wesleyan 0 62 gorgeu O Wesleyan 0 71 Ffesleyftn 0 Tgniiglst 8 48 New York A.C. 0 Y 1 I896 P , 51 USF- 0 Tech. O 6 C I b- 28 Univ. of Penn. 0 3 C VS- 01118 52 Crescems O 22 U?1ii1m0fTenn Ig 6 Harvard O I8 Brown O ' . - ' ' ' - A. . 513 iuJr17g2e?c1nPenn. 3 30 Stevens 8 I2 Princeton 0 C 3 61 Wggleyan 3 73 glgiifgilt A-C4 2 Y I 1893 42 Dartmouth 0 . P ' . '. Y I 1886 3 Qfgfiefsf 0 1386 iiinnwn Omg A.C. 2 ae vs. P ' t 70 1 mms 0 6 C t A.C. 6 W P ' Q 7 5 Wesleyan cmd 52 WeSleYan 0 2 8 Dlairiilfirduth 2 ig Boiigl-1 0 52 Wesleyan o 6 H2ffVaY'd 0 52 Amherst 0 1 8 Brown 6 96 gechnology 0 0 Pfmcefon 10 50 Orange A.C. 0 16 New jersey A.C. O 54- t 8 W'll' 6 P ' 2 .6 Wires.. 2 Y, .890 P, .5 Wiesialgtlmint 3 4 136 W 1 a e vs. 01nts N Y k A.C. 82 Crisgggg 3 8 WC5leY3n 0 Uilliil. dllPenn. 6 1897 . 75 Univ. of Penn. 0 8 Crescent A-C- 6 6 Harvard 0 Yale V51 . Pomts 29 Harvard 4 34 WCSICYZUI 0 0 Princeton 6 I0 Tfmltv O 4 Princeton 0 22 T6Chigh O 8 33 YC5lllCYaF 0 1 range 0 1 94 I Q7 .CYS 0 1887 32 Williams 0 Yale vs. Points 32 Williams 0 Yage I Points I2 Amherst 0 42 Trinity 0 Ig gCWt0I1A-C- 0 3 CS eyan 0 76 Wesleyan o 28 Brown 5 1 rown I4 IO6 Wesleyan 0 52 Crescent A.C. 0 IO Crescent A.C. 0 24 Carlisle. 9 74 Williams o 70 Rutgers 0 34, Lehigh 0 6 West Point 6 50 Univ. of Penn. 0 60 Univ. of Penn. 0 34 Dartmouth 0 16 Chicago A.C. 6 74 Rutgers o 6 Harvard I2 24 Orange A.C. o o Harvard 0 68 Crescents o 32 Princeton 0 23 Boston A.A. o 6 Princeton 0 222 1898 Yale vs. Points 5 Wesleyan 0 34 Amherst 0 2 3 Williams 0 6 Newton A.C. O 22 Brown 6 1 8 Carlisle 5 1 0 West Point 0 1 0 Chicago A.C. o o Princeton 6 0 Harvard 7 1899 . Yale vs. Points 2 3 Amherst 0 46 Trinity 0 28 Bates O I 2 Dartmouth O 6 Wisconsin 0 o Columbia 5 24 West Point 0 42 Penn. State 0 0 Harvard O 1 0 Princeton 1 1 1 900 Yale vs. Points 2 2 Trinity 0 2 7 Amherst 0 3 Tufts 0 50 Bates 0 1 7 Dartmouth 0 30 Bowdoin o 38 Wesleyan o 1 2 Columbia 5 1 8 West Point 0 35 Carlisle 0 2 9 Princeton 5 28 Harvard 0 1901 Yale vs. Points 2 3 Trinity O 6 Amherst 0 2 9 Tufts 5 24 Wesleyan 0 24 Annapolis 0 45 Bowdoin 0 22 Penn. State 0 2 1 Bates o 1 0 Columbia 5 5 West Point 5 . 35 Orange A.C. O I2 Princeton 0 0 Harvard . 2 2 1902 Yale vs. Points 40 Trinity 0 34 Tufts 6 2 3 Amherst 0 35 Wesleyan 0 I0 Brown - 0 32 Univ. of Vermont o 1 1 Penn. State 0 24 Syracuse 0 6 West Point 6 36 Bucknell 5 1 2 Princeton 5 2 3 Harvard 0 1 903 Yale vs. Points 3 5 Trinity 0 1 9 Tufts 0 46 Univ. of Vermont 0 33 Wesleyan O 22 Springlield T.S. 0 36 Holy Cross. IO 27 Penn. State 0 I7 West Point 5 25 Columbia 0 30 Syracuse o 6 Princeton II 16 Harvard 0 1904 Y Yale vs. Points 22 VVes1eyar1 0 42 Trinity 0 23 Holy Cross 0 Penn. State O Springfield T.S. 0 24 6 1 7 Syracuse 9 6 West Point 1 1 34 Columbia 0 22 Brown 0 1907 Yale vs. Points 2 5 Wesleyan 0 1 1 Syracuse 0 I7 Springfield T.S. 0 52 Holy Cross 0 0 West Point 0 44 Villanova 0 II Wash. and jeff. O 22 Brown O I2 Princeton IO I2 Harvard 0 1908 Yale vs. Points 16 Wesleyan 0 5 Syracuse 0 18 Holy Cross 0 6 West Point 0 38 Wash. and Jeff: o In the press-box 1 2 Princeton o 1 2 Harvard 0 1 905 Yale vs. Points 2 7 VVesleyan 0 1 6 Syracuse o 24 Springfield T.S. 0 30 Holy Cross 0 I2 Penn. State o 20 West Point o 53 Columbia 0 1 1 Brown o 2 3 Princeton 4 6 Harvard O 1 906 Yale vs. Points QI Wesleyan 0 51 Syracuse 0 I2 Springfield 0 Holy Cross 0 Penn. State 0 I2 Amherst I0 West Point 5 Brown 0 0 Princeton 0 6 Harvard 0 17 IO 0 6 49 IO II O Yale II 15 I2 6 3 I7 36 34 23 I7 8 Yale 22 I2 17 I2 3 0 19 0 223 Mass. Agr. Brown Princeton Harvard 1 909 vs. Wesleyan Syracuse Holy Cross Springfield West Point Colgate Amherst Brown Princeton Harvard 1 9 1 0 vs. Wesleyan Syracuse Tufts Holy Cross West Point Vanderbilt Colgate Brown College o IO 6 4 Points 0 o 0 T.S. 0 o 0 o 0 0 0 Poi nts 0 6 0 0 9 0 9 QI 5 0 Yale QI 26 I2 33 o 23 28 15 3 0 Yale IO 7 16 16 6 T3 IO 6 O Yale QI IO 0 28 37 o 6 17 3 5 Yale 20 2 1 20 28 7 4:9 I4- I9 0 Yale 37 o 7 9 7 0 0 I3 0 Yale 25 61 I2 19 36 7 6 IO 6 Princeton 3 Harvard 0 191 1 vs. Points Wesleyan 0 Holy Cross 0 Syracuse 0 Virginia P.I. 0 West Point 6 Colgate 0 New York Univ. 3 Brown 0 Princeton 6 Harvard 0 1912 vs. Points Wesleyan 3 Holy Cross 0 Syracuse 0 Lafayette 0 West Point 0 Wash. and Jeff. 3 Brown 0 Princeton 6 Harvard 0 1 9 Y 3 , vs. Points Wesleyan 0 Holy Cross o Univ. of Maine o Lafayette 0 Lehigh 0 Wash. and Jeff. 0 Col gate 1 6 Brown 0 Princeton 3 Harvard I 5 I 9 I 4 vs. Points Univ. of Maine 0 Univ. of Virginia 0 Lehigh Notre Dame Wash. and Jeff. I3 3 0 Colgate 7 Brown- 6 Princeton 1 4 Harvard 36 1 9 1 5 vs. Points Univ. of Maine O Univ. of Virginia IO 6 Lehigh Springfield T.S. o Wash. and Jeff. 16 Colgate I4 Brown 3 Princeton 7 Harvard 4 1 1916 vs. Points Carnegie Inst. 0 Univ. of Virginia 3 Lehigh 0 Virginia Poly. 0 Wash. and jeff. 14 Colgate 3 Brown 21 Princeton o Harvard 3 Yale 7 33 7 Yale 2 0 34 37 3l 14 6 3 Yale 44 QI 13 24 21 14 o o Yale 28 14 34 23 14- 4-5 28 I3 3 Yale 48 I3 18 0 38 7 20 4-5 0 3 Yale 53 40 29 21 31 16 27 13 Yale 27 7 T4- 13 7 4-7 I0 19 Yale 53 35 I 9 I 7 , vs. Points Trinity 0 Naval Base 0 Loomis 0 1 9 1 9 vs. Points Springfield Col. 0 North Carolina 5 Tufts o Maryland 0 Brown 0 Princeton 1 3 Harvard 1 0 1 920 vs. Points Carnegie Tech. 0 North Carolina 0 2 1 Boston College West Virginia 0 Colgate 7 Brown IO Princeton 20 Harvard 9 1921 vs. Points Bates 0 Vermont 0 North Carolina 0 Williams 0 Army 7 Brown 7 Maryland State 0 Princeton 7 Harvard IO 1922 vs. Points Bates 0 Carnegie Tech. 0 North Carolina 0 Iowa 6 Williams 0 Army 7 Brown 0 Maryland 3 Princeton 3 Harvard 0 1923 vs. Points North Carolina o Georgia 0 Bucknell 14 Brown 0 Army IO Maryland 14 Princeton 0 Harvard 0 1924- vs. Points North Carolina 0 Georgia 6 Dartmouth 14 Brown 3 Army 7 Maryland o Princeton 0 Harvard 6 1 Q2 5 VS- Points Middlebury 0 Georgia 7 13 20 28 43 I2 o Yale 55 19 I4- o O 0 7 I2 Pennsylvania Brown Army Maryland Princeton Harvard 1 926 vs. Boston Univ. Georgia Dartmouth Brown Army Maryland Princeton Harvard 16 0 7 14 7 21 I4 16 25 I3 0 6 13 Points 0 Yale o 38 7 40 7 I4- 33 QI 15 7 I0 o 7 66 Georgia Brown Ar-my Dartmouth Maryland Harvard Princeton 1 930 vs. Maine Maryland Georgia Brown Army Dartmouth Alfred S taunch supporter 1 92 7 1 0 Yale vs. Points 0 41 Bowdoin 0 1 o Georgia 1 4 1 9 Brown 0 Yale 1 0 Army 5 I 9 1 9 Dartmouth 0 7 30 Maryland 6 2 7 1 4 Princeton 6 5 1 4 Harvard 0 3 3 1928 52 Yale vs. Points 2 7 lVIaine O 3 2 1 Georgia 6 5 I 32 Brown 1 4 6 Army 1 8 18 Dartmouth 0 Yale 0 Maryland 6 0 2 Princeton 1 2 7 0 Harvard 1 7 2 0 1 929 6 Yale vs. Points 7 89 Vermont 0 1 9 224 Princeton Harvard 1 Q3 1 vs. Maine Georgia Chicago Army Dartmouth St.john,s of Annapolis Harvard Princeton 1 932 vs. Bates Chicago Brown Army Dartmouth Princeton Harvard 15 6 Yale I3 I4 12 I4 13 14 IO 0 o 14 0 6 Points 2 o I3 18 Yale o 6 7 T4 0 37 o 12 7 7 7 ,. I4 Yale 34 31 7 8 .2 55 I4- 7 Yale 23 7 I2 28 7 T4- 26 14 Yale 26 27 15 9 9 7 I9 .3 2g Points Yale 0 I4 23 O 6 Ig 33 6 O 20 O Z, 14 Yale Points IO 0 0 7 20 7 7 20 o 0 I4 7 7 0 20 I 933 ' vs. Points Maine' 7 W. and L. 6 Brown 1 Army 2 3 Dartmouth 1 7 Georgia 9 Harvard 1 7 Princeton 20 I 934 , vs. Points Columbia 1 2 Pennsylvania 6 Brown 0 Army 20 Dartmouth 2 Georgia 1 4 Princeton 0 Harvard o I 935 - vs. Points New Hampshire 0 Pennsylvania 20 Navy 6 Army 1 4 Dartmouth 1 4 Brown o Lafayette 0 Harvard 7 Princeton 38 1 936 r vs. Points Cornell o Pennsylvania O Navy 7 Rutgers o Dartmouth 1 1 Brown 6 Princeton 2 3 Harvard 1 3 I 93 7 . vs. Points Maine 0 Pennsylvania 7 Army 7 Cornell 0 Dartmouth 9 Brown o Princeton o Harvard 1 3 1 938 ' vs. Points Columbia 2 7 Penn 2 1 Navy 7 Michigan 1 5 Dartmouth 24 Brown 1 4 Princeton 20 Harvard 7 I 939 I vs. Points Columbia 7 Penn 6 Army 1 5 Michigan 2 7 Dartmouth 3 3 Brown 1 4 Princeton 1 3 Harvard 7 INTERCQI .LRGE ATHLETICS Back Row: Grimes, Mohr, Roth, Peckham, Torrey, Watson, Kentler. Front Row: Neale, Burrowes, Smith, Greany, Noyes Intercollege Athletics COUNCIL JAMES H. TORREY, Berkelagr LEE GRIMES, Branford CHARLES J. KENTLER, JR., Calhoun LEWIS S. MOHR, II, Davenport MORISON B. ROTH, jonathan Edwards JOHN H. BURROWES, Pierson ANSON W. PEOKHAM, Saybrook THOMAS G. WATSON, JR., Timothy Dwight EDWARD M. NOYES, H, Trumbull ALFRED G. GREANY, Vanderbilt ARTICIPATION in intercollege sports has steadily increased since the inception of this program at Yale seven years ago. During the spring and fall seasons of 1939 and the winter season of 1940, there were 2779 individuals, counting duplication of individuals in more than one season, taking part in the fifteen different sports included in the intercollege program. During the spring season 748 students competed in 136 contests, in the fall 756 were attracted to 109 events, and 1277 contestants took part in the 357 events held during the winter season. A total of 602 contests were held during the three sport seasons. A part of the intercollege program that has had the enthusiastic support ofthe colleges is the Harvard House-Yale College Championship contests. The champion College team from Yale and a similar House team from Harvard com- pete in ten different sports each year, hockey being added this winter. Yale College football teams playing their sister House football teams have increased in popularity during recent years. Four years ago the late Edward S. Harkness, Yale ,Q7, donated the Harkness Trophy to be given to the University that wins the majority of these contests during the year. The Yale College teams have won this trophy for four consecutive years. ' W. H. NEALE 226 l Back Row: Watson CManagerl, McDermott, Stover, Smith, Goring, Seamon, Bullitt, Wick. Second Row: Pittman, Hyde, Hausman, McGowan, Johnson QCaptainQ, Cohn, Emery, White, Curtin. Fran! Row: Josephs, Dunklee, Hooper, Caswell, Viets. Timothy Dwight Football ROBERT M. JOHNSON THOMAS G. WATSON, JR. LTHOUGH the 1939 season was ultimately a successful one for the Timothy Dwight Football Team, it was not without its dark moments. After defeating Davenport, Berkeley, and Branford, the Prexies lost a hard-fought game to Calhoun, 13-6. Immediately after that, Pierson's Slaves won a slippery slithery naval,' battle, 7-o. By virtue of these two defeats, Tim- othy Dwight fell from its position at the head of the League into fifth place. Then started the climb back to the top. The Prexies defeated in order Jonathan Edwards, Saybrook, Trumbull and Vanderbilt. However, it was not until the final day that the Championship was assured. While Timothy Dwight was defeating Vander- bilt, Davenportis Hybrids held their traditional foes, the Slaves of Pierson, to a scoreless tie, thereby enabling Timothy Dwight to win by one-half game. On November 17, John Winthrop House of Harvard sent its interhouse championship team Captain Manager to New Haven. In a game which showed some very ine football on both sides, Timothy Dwight contributed to the defense of the Harkness Trophy by winning, I9-7. The team, coached by Captain Wicks of the ROTC, was well balanced, and what it lacked on defense was made up by a fast and tricky offense built around Chuck Emery, the Prexies triple-threat man. He was ably seconded by Cooke, McGowan, Dunklee, and Curtin. The line was better than average with Capt. John- son, Trudeau, Pittman, and Hyde filling the tackle posts and Josephs, Hauser, and Chaney doing outstanding work as guards. Cohen was at center all season without substitution. The ends were led by Ed Pope, who, together with Chuck Emery, was picked for the All-Col- lege eleven. The pass-catching of Pope and Rothschild and the defensive work of Neuhaus and White were large factors in the success of the season. 227 Back Row: Adams, Hunter, Titus, Worrilow, Brody. Front Row: Murphy, Fox, Simonds fCaptainj , DeKorn, Brush. Vanderbilt Touch Football OMAR H. SIMONDS, JR. ' FREDERICK J. MURPHY, JR. LAY1NG with a high degree of coordination, the Vanderbilt Touch Football Team was only prevented from winning every game on its schedule by a default of the Berkeley team. Four players of the winning Vanderbilt combination, among them Captain Simonds, a shifty-passing back, Bill Worrilow, an elusive pass-receiver, and Reed Murphy, the teamis high scorer, will be playing for Silliman next year, so, the cham- pionship is confidently expected to remain in the vicinity of Temple Street. Jonathan Edwards was the first team to bow to. Vanderbilt, 66-12, the second highest score of the season in the touch football league. The following week Calhoun suffered a defeat, 42- 18. Murphy took the ball over the line three times in the match against Saybrook, in which the Skippers amassed a score of 50 points to their opponents, 14. In turn, Trumbull fell to the Sheiftown machine, 42-20. The closest game, 228 Captain Manager that against Davenport, was won only through the sportsmanship of Clem Kite, who discounted what might have been two touchdowns, and yielded the match to the Skippers, 24-20. Pier- son, Branford, and Timothy Dwight went down successively to Vanderbilt, 18-6, 48-24, and 48- 12, respectively, and the subsequent default of Berkeley cinched the championship for the Skippers. The victors journeyed to Cambridge to play Lowell House, the Harvard champions, and came near to spoiling their record and returning in disgrace. Scoring an early touchdown, Lowell led 6-0 until the end of the first half when the Skippers functioned with their former smooth- ness to score a touchdown. The game was ap- parently slated to end in a draw, but in the final play Captain Simonds intercepted a Cantab pass and ran over the line for a touchdown, winning the game for Vanderbilt and for Yale. onathan Edwards Basketball HAROLD B. WHITEMAN, JR. MORISON B. ROTH HIS year Jonathan Edwards had an out- standing team that proved itself ready to defend with its entire force its position in the intercollege basketball league. On the first team Mac Monroe and Dave Aron played as guards and Hal lNhiteman, Sandy Dietrich, and Jim Newmyer, as forwards. On the second team Mo Henkel, Wen Wheelock, Phil Statton, Ray Barnum, and Tom Ford played so well as to merit charms at the end of the year as members of the team. High scorer for the year was Jim Newmyer, who was outstanding for his off-bal- ance shots. Of the thirteen league games which Jonathan Edwards played only two were lost. Timothy Dwight, the closest competitor, lost only three out of an equal number. It was the last game of the entire season between Timothy Dwight and Jonathan Edwards which decided the league championship, Jonathan Edwards winning, Captain Manager 29-28. By the half Timothy Dwight was six points behind, but at the three-quarter mark they had amassed a two-point lead. With but two minutes left to play jonathan Edwards rallied and in the last thirty seconds of play Dietrich and Aron sank one basket apiece to nose out Timothy Dwight by a single point. Having won the intercollege championship Jonathan Edwards played against Harvard's house basketball champions, Kirkland House. Compared to the Timothy Dwight fracas this was an easy encounter, the boys from Yale win- ning 29-27. Throughout the entire game Jon- athan Edwards maintained a lead, although at times Kirkland came dangerously close. This concluding victory added another leg for Yale to the Harkness Trophy awarded to either Yale or Harvard for the greatest number of victories in the contests between intercollege and house champions. Bark Row: Statton, Newmyer, Wheelock. Front Row: Henkel, Monroe, Whiteman QCaptainl, Dietrich, Barnum. 22 9 Trumbull Swimming JOHN B. FULLER, ROBERTSON F. ALFORD C0-Caplainr EDWARD M. NOYES, II RUMBULL,S swimming prospects at the out- set of the season were good, with several sophomore additions to the third-place team of the previous year. Predictions were fulfilled as the schedule was completed without a loss. The first four meets were won rather easily, but Van- derbilt provided real competition, and the Bulls, due to a victory in the freestyle relay, barely edged them out, 33M-3QM. Three more meets were won by comfortable margins, and Trum- bull faced a good Saybrook team as its final obstacle to the Championship. This meet was tied at 33-all, and a swim-off was scheduled which Trumbull won, 35-31, by clinching it be- fore the final relay, in which Saybrook was par- ticularly strong. The secret of Trumbull's success was balance, rather than individual brilliancy. In the free- style events co-Captains Fuller and Alford shone, along with Dearborn of a former Vander- M anager bilt championship team. Other capable per- formers were Woodard, Heywood, Kibbe, and Stewart. In the backstroke Porter was Trum- bull's best, while he and Knight alternated in the dorsal leg of the medley relay. The team's strongest events were the breaststroke and dive. In the former Sheppard and Turner were almost invariably good for a first and second, while Captain-elect Bick excelled in the dive, Fuller being the other Trumbull entry in this event. Trumbull faced Kirkland House of Harvard on the day after the Junior Prom in a more or less debilitated form, and was beaten 39-18. Yale points were scored by Bickls first in the dive, 'Sheppard and Turner,s breaststroke triumph, Porter's second in the backstroke, and free-style thirds by Dearborn and Fuller. A Prom-weary condition and the fact that four free-stylers were unable to report partially ex- plains the margin of defeat. Back Row: Bradley fAsst. Managerj, Burke fCoachj, Knight, Porter, Noyes QManagerj, Maltz ffloachj. Fronl Row: Bick, Stewart, Dearborn, Fuller, Turner, Sheppard. 230 Back Row: McLean, Mohr fManagerj, Brown, Lindsay, Godley, Chandler, Eyre, Cook. Second Row: Ott, Thorne, Dun, Parker, DuBosque, QCaptainj , Poole, Parks, Swensonjohnson. Front Row: Rawley, Dunbar, Armstrong, Tichnor. Davenport Hockey CLAvToN DUBOSQUE, JR. LEWIS S. MOHR, II INISHING a game and a half ahead ofthe three colleges tied for second place, there could be little doubt of the superiority of the Davenport Hockey Team. Their success was due principally to a well-balanced team, as the three good lines, which scored 33 goals during the season, were supported by three equally capable pairs of defensemen. This does not mean, however, that there were no outstanding stars, for Carl Dun- bar and Elliott Brown both won positions on the All-Intercollege team. There was a large turnout and after a few days practice under Captain DuBosque, Trum- bull was overcome, 4-o, in the opener. The next game, with a strong Timothy Dwight team was one of the best of the season. The Hybrids got the jump in the first period, Fred Godley cir- cling the defense to score unassisted for the only 231 Captain Manager score of the game. In the following Week an underrated Branford squad nearly upset the Hybrids. It was not until late in the third period that Eric Swenson was able to sink the puck to tie the score at one goal apiece. Neither team could break the deadlock in the overtime. A gruelling game with Berkeley's defending cham- pions followed, ending in a two-all-tie. In quick succession the teams of Vanderbilt, Calhoun, Jonathan Edwards, and Saybrook fell comparatively easy victims to the superior Hybrids. The championship was clinched in a hardfought, 2-o, final game with second-place Pierson, Chandler and Dunbar carrying off the scoring honors. The season did not, however, end on quite as high a plane, as the Harvard House champions beat an undermanned Dav- enport team, 6-3, in the Boston Garden. Phillips, Carey, Vietor, Brown, Bermudez Davenport Squash LEWIS S. MOHR, II T was only after a prolonged struggle with two other fine teams, Timothy Dwight and Berkeley, that Davenport was able to come through with the squash championship. Many of the matches were won by narrow margins. Elliot Brown and George Vietor alternated at the two top positions throughout the season and furnished a large part of the team's power, Brown was undefeated while Vietor lost but once. The other members of the team who per- formed capably were Julio Bermudez at three, Austin Carey at four, and Jim Phillips at five. When any of these men were unable to play, Neil Thorne, Bud Parks, and George McClel- land kept up the high standard of play. The Hybrids began the season by shutting out Trumbull, 5-0. Then a narrow victory was eked out over Timothy Dwight, 3-2, with Brown, Vietor, and Bermudez accounting for Manager all the points. Branford was the next victim, again by 3-2. Next came the only defeat of the regular season at the hands of Berkeley's defend- ing champions by a margin of gh-IM. Another hard match followed, this time with Calhoun, and again the margin of victory was 3-2. In rapid succession Davenport took Vanderbilt, 4-1, and Jonathan Edwards and Saybrook, both by 5-0. It was only necessary to down Pierson in order to tie for the championship with Timothy Dwight, whose representatives had also lost once. The Slaves were conquered, 3-2, thus necessitating a play-off with Timothy Dwight. In the play-off Brown, Vietor, and Bermudez again defeated their Prexie rivals to win the match, 3-2, and the championship. Unfortun- ately the top-form Hybrids were unable to go to Harvard to play Eliot House, and Davenport was blanked, 5-0. 232 Intercollege Wrestling JOHN N. DEMING EDWARD AND JOHN O,DONNELL NTERCOLLEGE wrestling this winter had its most successful season since its inception. With over fifty participants entered on the lad- der, challenge matches were held every Thurs- day afternoon in the wrestling room. Helped by Coaches Eddie and Johnny O'Donnell, the wrestlers improved noticeably during the sea- son, Johnny Greene, Glen Comstock, and Ray Jopling all wrestling at least once for the varsity. The class in which the competition was the stiifest was the 165-lb., Jack Mueller finally winning the championship over Jack Huber. Weinberger, in the 145-lb. division, also met strong opposition before winning. The 121-lb. and 128-lb. class, hindered by injuries and grad- uations to the varsity, were won by Julian and Manager Coaches Clark Hull respectively. Glen Comstock carried oif the honors in the 135-lb. division from Phil Jefferson, a close second. George Hamlin gained the crown from the weak I55-pOllI1ClCI'S, while Dave Rewick won in the 175-lb. class finals from Art Keefe, who gave him much trouble the whole season. Ray Jopling domin- ated the heavyweights, flattening all who dared show up in short order. The winners received gold charms with their names and class inscribed. So much interest and talent was shown this winter that it is hoped that a Junior Varsity Team will be established next season as well as continuing the Inter- college matches, for it is from these ranks that most of future varsities are drafted. Back Row: Deming QManagerj, O'Donne1l QCoachj. Front Row: Rewick, Hamlin, Jopling, Mueller, Weinberger. 2, 33 Vanderbilt Bowling CHARLES W. SMITH ALFRED G. GREANY HE Vanderbilt bowlers won eight matches and drew one to win the 1940 champion- ship. Faced by Captain Charlie Smith, Henry Forrest, Charlie Kappler, and Ed Cox, the Skip- pers wrested the league's top honors from the Mitres, champions for the previous four years. The Vanderbilt aggregation defeated Cal- houn, 3-1, in the opener, when Forrest bowled the highest individual score. Three days later, Jonathan Edwards was swamped, 4-o, Captain Smith carrying off the high scoring honors for Vanderbilt. The Skippers defeated Branford, 3-1, the following week, taking the second string by one pin. This narrow victory put them in first place in the league, where they managed to remain for the rest of the season. In the match against Timothy Dwight the next week, the pin- fall for the first string was a dead tie. The Skip- pers took the first two lanes in the play-OHC and won, 4-o, with Forrest again rolling up the Captain M anager i highest total score. By defeating Trumbull, 3-1, on February 6, the Skippers increased their sea- son score to I7 out of a possible 20, four points ahead of their nearest rival. The Davenport alleymen in turn bowed to Vanderbilt, 4-o, with Cox earning individual scoring honors for the victors. Captain Smith starred on February 27, when his team defeated Saybrook, 3-1. The Mitres, erstwhile champions, were cleanly defeated, 4-0, on February 2.8, with Moflitt the high scorer. The Skippers swept away the first two strings in their mateh with Pierson, but the Slaves' attack, led by Henry Vaughan, who bowled the highest total pinfall of the match, won them the remaining games, ending the match at 2-2. As a climax to their championship season, three of the Skippers, Charlie Smith, Ed Young, and Bill Moffitt, will bowl in the National Inter- collegiate Duckpin Championship. Moliitt, Forrest, Kappler, Cox, Smith fCaptainj, Young. 234 Schooley, Stephan, Lynch. Intercollege Fencing HE annual Intercollege Fencing Tourna- ment this year attracted between twenty- five and thirty fencers, with every college repre- sented. A series of seven weekly tournaments was held during the fencing season in order to determine the winners. As is customary a number of men who per- formed well in these weekly tournaments were given a chance to fence in Varsity or Junior Varsity meets. If their fencing was of high enough calibre they remained on the teams. This system provided incentive for the fencers and was responsible in a large measure for the success of the tournament. Each fencer had a chance of making the team as well as a chance to win the tournament in his weapon if he missed the team. Paul Stephan of Vanderbilt was the winner in the foil competition. He is a sophomore this year and in all probability will be on the Varsity Q or Junior Varsity team next year. Harry Schooley of Branford College was high Aman in epee. Harry is also a sophomore and was Cap- tain of last year's undefeated Freshman team. With additional experience he should make good Varsity material. D.W.P. Lynch of Jon- athan Edwards was the winner in the sabre di- vision. He had formerly fenced foil and switched to sabre at the beginning of the season and de- serves much credit for winning out in his weap- on over the stiff competition which he faced. These Intercollege Tournaments have always been a very satisfactory way of developing new fencers at Yale, especially when the number of fencers is large and the coach cannot devote too much time to any one man. Every effort is made each year to interest fencers in the tournament, the 1940 season being particularly successful with a large number of enthusiastic men turning out regularly for the weekly contests. 35 Back Row: Mr. Mitchell, Lee QManagerJ, Washburn, Bowser, Clarence fTrainerj, Chittenden, Rockwood, Peckham fAsst. Managerj. Front Row: Schmalz, Quinn, Capers, Sage, Reed QCaptainj, Kaynor, Ginsberg, J. Miller, R, Miller. 1 939 Saybrook Baseball JOHN S. REED JOHN K. LEE NDER the brilliant leadership of Captain Johnny Reed, veteran third-sacker, the IQ39 Saybrook Baseball Team staged a powerful drive in the closing weeks of the season, defeat- ing the strong Vanderbilt and Davenport nines in the play-offs to gain the league pennant. In the annual game with the winning Harvard House team, the Seals swamped Lowell House by a score of 15-2 on the undulating turf of Yale's Meadow Field. Paced by the stellar mound staff of Dick Schrnalz and Johnny Miller, with laughing Harry Chittenden behind the bat, the Saybrook nine was justly feared for its highly-touted de- fensive iniield of Jack Ginsberg, Ted Sage, Jerry Capers, and Captain Reed. Patrolling the outer pastures were Ace Kaynor, Tom Quinn, and Bulldog Bowser, powerful batsmen and Heet fielders. The Reedmen opened their season with a 2 Captain Manager chilly encounter at the Taft School, losing 3-1 on a windswept diamond. Schmalz turned in a 5-4 win over Branford to inaugurate the regular league schedule. With Johnny Miller on the mound, Pierson was routed I2-2 a week later. This victory was followed by an 8-6 win over Berkeley. Then the Seals handed Trumbull a 12-5 shellacking and whipped Calhoun, IO-3, The Saybrook nine suffered a relapse in their next encounter, losing to Davenport in a loose- ly-played game. The final week of the season found a triple tie for first place. Playing a heavy schedule, the Seals downed Vanderbilt, 5-4, a last minute Skipper rally spoiling Miller's no-hit game, and the following day a favored Hybrid aggregation was whitewashed 4-0, a late drive featuring a titanic circuit blow by Johnny Miller. The next day saw the defeat of Harvard, a record of three wins in three days with two pitchers. 36 I 939 Berkeley Crew JOHN H. NORTON JAMES H. TORREY HE 1939 Intercollege Crew season passed as one of the most successful since the be- ginning of college rowing. With keener rivalry than ever, the urecreationalsv in comparison to the high-powered Leadermen, showed great enthusiasm in spite of the New Haven harbor and its oyster boats. This interest assured the future of intercollege rowing. Facing stiff competition from Davenport and Trumbull, the Berkeley crew had hair-raising experiences on its way to victory. Fortunate to have a combination of weight and experience, the boat usually got under way after a slow start and swept ahead to victory, at la Hollywood, in the last twenty strokes. The climax to this style of racing came in the race with Saybrook, when the Berkeley eight surpassed their rivals by eight- tenths of a second. In none of the races was there a difference of more than five seconds between the first and second boats. So close were they Captain Manager that one might have thought that the contestants were afraid of losing themselves on the river, and therefore kept very close together, - until the finish! K With high hopes and vengeance in their hearts, the Mitres travelled to Cambridge determined to break the Harvard winning streak. Kirkland House, however, decisively out- rowed the less-experienced Berkeley crew. The powerful stroke that marked the Berkeley boat throughout the season may be attributed to the excellent performance of Captain Norton, stroke Kramer, and key-man Mendenhall, the grandfather of Berkeley rowing, all of whom were urged on by their vociferous cox, Gagarin. Only with the backing of a stellar second boat was the complete success of the season as- sured, for the seconds won laurels in their own right by outrowing two first crews from rival colleges. Back Raw: Kramer, Griswold, Norton, Richards, Mendenhall, Taylor, Thomson, Mairs. Front Row: Gagarin. 2 1 939 Berkeley Golf EDWIN ,F. POLLOCK JAMES H. TORREY ERKELEYJS Golf Team was successful in de- fending its intercollege championship, re- taining the crown for the second 'year in a row. The season was opened unoflicially by a trip to Watertown, where the Taft School was defeated in a warm-up match. A week later as the inter- college competition got under way, playing in a steady downpour and high wind, Berkeley scored a 4,-2 win over Vanderbilt. The following contest, with Trumbull, resulted in a 4M-IM Mitre victory. Over their next opponents the team won handily, 6-0, and finished play, as victors in League H, the next week with a 5-1 win over Calhoun. The final match was played against Timothy Dwight, winners in League I, this contest resulting in a tie. In the play-off, a rejuvenated Mitre team scored easily, 6-0, over the Temple Streeters. By virtue of this victory the Berkeley team Captain M anager garnered the honor of playing Lowell House, the Harvard champions. Since this match was played on the Yale course, the Mitres had little trouble in defeating the Cantabs, 8-1. During the regular intercollege competition a four-man team was used which included E. Pollock, Ber- ger, Stillman, and Knowles, Ijams, Scribner or Messinger. Against Harvard a six-man team was mustered consisting of E. Pollock, Stillman, Berger, Ijams, Pollock, and Scribner. In the intercollege competition Stillman proved to be the most consistent winner, amas- sing 6 out of 6 points. Notlfar behind him, how- ever, were E. Pollock with 5 out of a possible 6 points and Berger who gained 45 out of 6. During the entire season Berkeley was unde- feated in eight matches and also captured the team title in the Paul Haviland Memorial Tournament. ' Scribner, Ijams,,I. Pollock, E. Pollock CCaptainj, Stillman, Berger. 2 Back Row: Statton, Roth fManagerj, Lewis. Front Row: Newmyer, Weissman, Wilmer fCaptainj, Schwab, Noone. 1939 Jonathan Edwards Tennis RICHARD H. WILMER MORISON B. ROTH AVING failed to win the Championship the preceding year by only the slimmest of margins, the Jonathan Edwards Tennis Team Won the 1939 crown in another hotly-contested title-race. Led by Captain Dick Wilmer, the Spiders lost only to Saybrook during the regular season. The Seals, too, had one defeat, suffered at the hands of the Timothy Dwight racquet- men, and so a tie for the Intercollege Cham- pionship resulted. In the resulting play-off match, Jonathan Edwards won, 5-2, and there- by gained undisputed possession of the title. In addition to Captain Wilmer, the victor's line-up consisted of Tom Lewis,Jim Newmyer, Win Schwab, Charles Noone, Phil Statton, Don Welter, and Dick Weissman. Excepting the Saybrook loss, the Spiders met with but two close calls when they edged out Pierson and Berkeley by 4-3 margins. The other contests were taken, the champions dropping only one 2 Captain Manager or two matches to each college opponent. As its reward for winning the Intercollege Championship, the jonathan Edwards team journeyed to Cambridge at the close of the sea- son to play the winning Harvard team, Win- throp House. In an exceptionally close and hard- fought match the outfit from New Haven triumphed, 4-3. This final victory gave the Spiders temporary possession of the Silver tray donated by Alfred L. Ripley, and given each year into the custody of the winner of the Yale Intercollegiate Tennis Title. In addition to the away', game at Cam- bridge, outside competition was met during the regular season at the Taft School. There the prep school netmen surprised the Spiders by a 5-4 count. The success of the 1939 team bodes particu- larly well for the future of E., for Captain Wilmer was the sole senior on the squad. 39 KM E 7 QR Q ,fy ' - s n W' 0 x 1 2 .W 1 ., ' ' ' ' ' - , ,Q 'H . ., V 'lr g l'-gif? l- 5 3 :E ,g Eg: 2 V QW -W 3 X N, Nam .wa M6 V :W ww. .ww W.. xvliwx x V-xx x , 5:3 WNMX Wgwi.. , V K, ., ,,,mmsmi+X'm0 m Q X X X X 3 Y vjgxasfffxxwgfv Q X, 'Q A Ns A N asian, MM .,M.,.M.,w,,.M.,M., X , M U M-M. ' H y. ,, . Q iii' 15-: 53? ji A h.. -,I-.-' , fffifhjiw H, 3.-I Q .JZ z . .. P L Q x K -' . z fv-.m::,.ez-+315 2 ' J- 1. . , ,..,+.., ,.: .f -f,'+-Sv'-554W dfffwgfgam ...pffv,,g4v465'Zfx- , .. . - 2 wgwzmcf-:wr r . - -, f, ' gym' ' 7 Q wwf f fgffwfyyg 0' A4223-F ': '4c ' '72 456,46 3 1 -f ':f, 'QYZZ3-H '31-.fwfr-,,fv-ff A- 1. . . ,. , aval Reserve Oflieers' Training COrpS STAFF LIEUTENANT COMMANDER JOHN FRANCIS DORAN Battalion Commander LIEUTENANT MAGRUDER DENT, JR. Sub-Commander LIEUTENANT JAMES DAVID LAURITS Aajutant ENSIGN FRED LORING SEELY, JR. Commissmy Ojioer CHIEF PETTY OFFICER BROWER MCCLINTOCK Battalion C.P.O. COMPANY COMMANDERS LT. JO ZACH MILLER, IV LT. GERARD BRADFORD, JR. LT. GEORGE JESPER HARDING PLATOON LEADERS LT. UCD NELSON SCHWAB, JR. LT. CJGJ JOHN MARBURY NELSON, III LT. UGJ JOHN NORBERT CARLIN ENSIGN ROBERT BROWN HOPGOOD ENSIGN JONATHAN STONE RAYMOND, JR. ENSIGN SOHUYLER M. MEYER,JR. COLOR BEARERS JOHN RANNENEERO JAMES DAYTON VOORHEES, JR. GEORGE EVANS TENER RICHARD GRIFFING JORDAN DRUM AND BUGLE CORPS LIEUTENANT CJGJ AUGUSTUS KNIGHT, JR. Drum Major FIRST PETTY OFFICER TRUMAN L. BRADLEY Mwtering Petgl Ojker J. R. KELSEY T. H. RUSSELL, III W. B. CLEARY J. D. ATWVOOD W. S. SNEAD, JR. P. SNEAD E. B. KRIEGER F.J. ZAMBONI 242 THE CRUISE ' FTER the first impression of confusion upon reporting on board the WYOMING and the BROOME, we soon fell into the routine of gun drills, watches, and cleaning. A short visit to Boston, then we were underway for Cuba. Daily drills at the guns resulted in smooth work- ing crews. Bridge watches were exciting, espec- ially during maneuvers. Searchlight, starshell, and machine-gun demonstrations gave us some idea of the work in the Fleet. Guantanamo was a pleasant break after a week at sea, but shore leave was limited as we were preparing to Ere target practice. As the day approached the tenseness increased. Then the practice-minutes of strain, approaching the target- then the guns firing-over in a few minutes but a thrill never to be forgotten. Havana - and shore leave. Strange faces, interesting sights, pleasant recreation, girls, music. Too soon it ended. New York - after a week at sea - the return to New Haven - disembarkation and farewells. In retrospect, the cruise in the WYOMING and the BROOME, is a confused memory of much manual and mental labor, long watches, spells of mal-de-mer, interspersed with the pleasant memories of shore leave, the thrilling experience of target practice, and the close associations formed with other members of the Unit. The former are fading swiftly from our thoughts, the latter will be with us-always forever a subject of conversation when old friends meet in future years. THE ACADEMIC YEAR Back to the grind - The year started with the Freshman Assembly, with the new battalion officers proudly flashing their shining stripes. The fall quickly passed with new subjects in Naval Science, Freshman drills and Eagle Boat trips, rifle practice, bugle corps organization and special drill squad practice. After the holidays, Monday night drill was in order-With the introduction of the new manual and new formations, many problems were presented to the battalion. Gradually the battalion developed into a smooth working organization with all hands pointing for the Presidentas Review. THE PRESIDENT'S REVIEW The Review by President Seymour was a high light of the year. The Battalion functioned smoothly and earned the many compliments received from the distinguished guests. THE MILITARY-NAVAL BALL The event of the social season. The committee did excellent work, so that, with line music, 2 superb refreshments, and a splendid attendance, it was a most enjoyable occasion. COMMANDANTS INSPECTION Following inspection of the Unit facilities, Admiral Woodward inspected and reviewed the Battalion. As part of these exercises the Admiral presented the Awards to members of the Unit for outstanding performances. This, the most important event of the year, was a fitting climax to a very successful drill season. PRESENTATION OF AWARDS THE UNIT CUP-awarded to the member of the Unit who has contributed most to the ad- vancement and prestige of the Unit. Awarded to Cadet Lieutenant MAGRUDER DENT, '4o THE RAYNHAM TOWNSHEND SWORD - awarded to the Senior who has contributed most to the Military efliciency of the Yale Naval Unit. Awarded to Cadet Lieut.-Commander JOHN F. DORAN, '40 THE ADMIRAL BERRIEN PLATOON CUP - award- ed to the Platoon with best performance during the year. Awarded to First Platoon, First Company - Cadet Lieut. Qj.g.j NELSON SCHWAE, Jr., Platoon Commander THE CAPTAIN T. F. CALDWELL CUP - awarded to the Platoon for greatest improvement in drills during the year. Awarded to Second Platoon, Second Corn- pany - Cadet Ensign JONATHAN S. RAY- MOND, Platoon Commander SONS or AMERICAN REVOLUTION MEDAL - awarded to the Senior who has demonstrated the highest qualities of leadership, military bearing and scholastic attainment. Awarded to Cadet Lieutenant JAMES D. LAURITS, '40 AMERICAN LEGION MEDAL - awarded to the senior who is most proficient in Naval Science, and who contributes largely to the efficiency of the Naval Unit. Awarded to Cadet Lieutenant GEORGE HARDING, 540 NAVAL ACADEMY AND SUBMARINE BASE VISITS During the Spring Recess six Seniors were guests of the Midshipmen at the Naval Academy for three days. The visit was a most pleasant experience. Ten students visited at the Sub- marine Base, New London, for a week. Their experiences in connection with submarines were instructive, valuable and interesting. FINALE The Seniors looking forward to that commis- sion. The Juniors and sixty Sophomores and Freshmen preparing for the Summer Cruise. 43 T 5. . I , R ,WSW 'T f. -4 -4 ,fbi -Qh J J. G. BRADFORD, JR. B. T. BROOKS, JR. J. G. BURTON, JR. J. N. CARLIN T. R. CLARK, JR. M. DENT, JR. W. L. DOMMERIOH J. F. DORAN W. M. Dox, JR. R. F. ARANOW D. H. L. ARON D. E. ASCHE C. D. BEEBE J. M. BOOTS T. L. BRADLEY G. BREED, III R. I. BRUCE K. F. BURGESS, JR. W. A. AYORIGG, II A. BARROWS, IV E G. G. BROWNING W. D. CAMPBELL G. W. CARRINGTON, JR. H. F. CHURCH, JR. H. B. DEAN, JR. R. E. DESIMONE, JR. D. C. DUGAN M. J. EDGERTON, JR. E. T. FRANZEN E. R. FRISBY R. M. GILL F. A. GODLEY, JR. R. C. DRYER F. W. HAMILTON, JR. G.J. HARDING, III R. B. HOPGOOD P. F. KALAT A. KNIGHT, JR. J. D. LAURITS C. E. LEARY J. J. H. MARTIN, JR. G. E. H. COMTE R. A. COOKE, JR. J. F. Cox E. M. DANIELS, JR. H. C. Dow B. R. EGGEMAN, JR. W. H. FARRELL W. D. FISHER D. L. GILLETT, III E. C. GOODWIN J. GRANDIN J. MOK. GREEN G. E. HAINES A. C. HALL R. W. HALSEY, JR. F. HIRSOHHORN, JR. G. R. HOMER J. B. JESSUP T. P. KANE J. R. KELSEY S. C. KENNEDY, JR. P. E. LAOOUTURE J. R. LEE I 94.0 S. M. MEYER, JR. J. O'K. MULLEN F. J. MURPHY, JR. J. M. NELSON, III A. W. PEORHAM R. A. POWERS R. G. QUINN J. W. RANNENBERG J. S. RAYMOND, JR. 1941 B. GLAZER G. GRISWOLD, JR. J. H. KING, JR. J. A. LEE G. N. LINDSAY, JR. W. S. MOCAIN M. R. MACLEAN LER. C. MARTIN J. A. O,CONNOR, JR. I Q42 2 R. W. MEYER R. J. MUSSER W. H. PAGE R. K. PATCH J. T. PIGOTT, JR. W. H. QUITTMAN S. H. REISNER W. I. RODGERS, III T. H. RUSSELL, III F. P. SAMFORD, JR. W. R. SCHULHOF J. R. SEAGREST H. SEYMOUR H. V. SI-IERRILL 44: J. M. SCHLESS N. SOHWAB, JR. H F. L. SEELY, II A. T. SMYTHE, JR. H. S. SWAN, JR. G. E. TENER J. D. VOORHEES, JR. J. M. WALLMAN D. R. WELTER J. G. WOODRUFF E. OOUMPAUGH, IV D. B. RESSLER D. W. RIESMEYER W. G. ROTHENBERG VV. H. SANBURN, II G. A. WELLER M. WESSON H. B. WETHERILL H. Y. WILSON N. E. WOOD, II H. F. SMITH, JR. H. B. SMYTHE- F. A. SPROLE C. P. STETSON J. R. STUNZI R. M. TALCOTT B. L. TAYLOR, III F. B. TRUDEAU, JR. D. PL H. WATSON G. W. WELSH, III J. J. WHITE C. C. WILLIAMS, JR. LER. S. WOLFE, JR. W. N. WOLFE D. G. ACHESON R. EI ARRAS J. D. ATWOOD R. F. BAUER R. W. BEssE R. BURGER R. E. BURKE, II J. E. CARMICHAEL J. W. CAsTLEs, III G. P. CAUI.KINs,JR W. B. CLEARY J. F. COLLINS D. N. COPP L. D. DANNENBAUM B. A. DAUGHERTY, JR. H. BRADLEY G. C. BROWN R. I. BONSAL M. BRATKOWSKY R. F. HOLDEN, JR. G. O. S. HORTON F. H. IGAZA G. A. DINES I-I. DUBOSQUE R, D. DUGAN P. L. R. DUVAL H. W. ENGLISH J. D. GREANY J. H. HAMILTON W. G. HAYES, III T. B. HEWITT, II R. P. HUNT E. H. KENDRIOR F. KLEEBERG, JR. B. KRONES F. F. LEE K. LEWIS I 943 W. H. MANN, JR. E. J. MCDONALD, JR R.J. MOONEY R. C. NOYES I. O,ROURKE, JR. H. E. PERRY, JR. D. E. PIERCE B. RAFFERTY J. R. REID L. G. RITTS, JR. J. C. ROBBINS W. O. Ross R. SARGENT, JR. J. H. SIMPSON R. S. SMITH SPECIAL STUDENTS R. G. JORDAN E.J. KALISKI W. T. CLARK F. E. OSSORIO R. S. DAVIS H. S. FORREST J. H. KING,JR. E. B. KRIEGER I 94.0 B. MOCLINTOCK J. Z. MILLER, IV 1941 G. G. SYMES, JR. 1 94.2 F. W. KEITH, JR. R. P. LATHROP 1943 G. DE F. LORD, JR. D. P. MCDONNELL G. E. MALLINCKRODT W. S. SNEAD, JR. W. S. SQUIRE L. P. STAcIc,JR. J. T. STODDART, JR. J. A. STROUBE D. K. SWAN W. C. THOMPSON, JR. F. B. THORNE, JR. TOMKINs, JR. . N. TURNER . W. VAN MIDDLESWORTH J. WEAN, JR. P. WEED, JR. R. N. WHITTEMORE H. O. WOOD, III F. J. ZAMBONI zpowuhfn L. R. WALLACE J. H. WOODRUFF, II P. R. LEVINE J. J. SMITH, II P. SNEAD J. H. TYNER R. O. WILSON 2 Army Reserve Cflieers' Training Corps Battalion Commander: CADET MAJOR T. J. CAMP, 1940 Battalion Adjutant: CADET CAPTAIN R.R.M. CONVERSE, 1940 AWARDS 1 939-40 Q United States Field Artillegf Association M6ddl-CARL VICTOR HANSEN, 1941 General David Humphrgu' Branoh, Connecticut Sooiegt, Sons ofthe American Revolution Medal- THOMAS JAMES CAMP, 1940 391st Field Artilleiy Saber--SPENCER MATHEWS KING, 1940 T 2 PISTOL TEAM JAMES M. DILL, JR., QCaptainj 19405 HENRY C. THACHER, JR. CManagerj 1940 ARTHUR I. PARVEY, 1940 ROBERT H. BINGHAM, 1941 DAVID C. MARTIN, 1941 ALLEN M. THOMAS QA1st. 4Managerj, 1941 GEORGE M. BUTCHER, 1942 AUSTIN DEVINE, 19425 GEORGE B. MARKLE, 1943 WARREN Y. W. RIPLEY, 1943 Yale 1261 Harvard 1252 46 R. M. BLUSTEIN W. A. CRAWFORD, E. N. CARPENTER J. F. CLARK C. T. CORSE R. I. DIXON, JR. A. G. ALTSCHUL H. H. .ANDERSON, W. P. BIRD G. A. B1RRELL N. R. BOICE, JR. A. T. BOUSOAREN II JR. Cadet Cadet Cadet UU 93 1-1- 1-1- Q 5 X41 33 m Q 2? Ras? 'fd 2355 50235 2352 RFK F' as WW-U EEES O A E235 LSI P, .239 I-3 L-IZ 4 '71 b D 2 5 E? 3 do '-I W V m 3 -1 . -1 R U7 7-7 IP IE 3' 3 Y' F tr' 'U O CI M P-I O F. C. DONOVAN, JR. R II CLASS OF 1940 C. A. ALEXANDER, JR. CLASS OF I94,I S. HEYWOOD, JR. . B. PR1cE, JR. H. H. VREELAND, III W EO 3' RZ pw FS :E IS! E. F ORSTER, C. V. HANSEN C. DOUTHIT, JR. W. M. GAYLORD, JR. W. P. GITHENS G. A. Goss, JR. W. B. HUME G. T. CHURCHILL S. H. CoxE W. T. DARGAN M. D. DETWEILER D. F. R. H. DOOLITTLE N. FERGUSON HAMILTON W. P. KENNARD E. F. MYERS CLASS OF 1942 A. E. HUNTER I. E. INGRAHAM E. SMITH W. H. WOOLVERTON, JR IP wewHHQHQ2+R 2wr?wwFgUOF ... .- . Q E5EW?E?3Z5O 1-'U2ff.'mn..1 or-'Z grzriggcclgi J4L,E':3S'4 ve-c 5E:v Q'U L 55 F F -1:-L' ww FFFRDSS wow? ?2m?mww UWC Cfmpillggr' QUQZ HP 'nbos -:wiv ,g2 U?UO,.rj ' 4757, mmmgryf ,..,,,4 OWZWWL4 Zrn... WF :pn-'71 322 Um 29. ZLL 5 PF E. TENENBAUM E. B. TOBIN S. E. TRACESKI D. T. TUTTLE A.J. STUNKARD N. G. W. THORNE J. B. VREELAND J. N. WALS1-1,JR. J. O. WARDWELL, II W. V. WASHBURN W. H. WORR1Low 247 Battery Battefy Commander: CADET CAPTAIN S. M. KING Cadet Lieutenants: N. H. BENNETT, D. S. CAMPBELL Cadet Ist Sergeant: J. M. DILL, JR. Sergeants: H. C. THAOHER, JR., C. D. MATHEWS, J. G. CAMPBELL P. H. CONVERSE K. J. BARNARD G. M. BUTOHER, JR. J. H. CAHN R. W. ADLER M. BARNETT S. BEARDSLEY R. E. BOIES L. H. BUNTING, JR. J. B. CI-IAFEEE H. M. COBB,JR. R. W. FULLER, JR. R. GARRETT, JR. M. D. COI-IEN W. E. COYKENDALL W. CRAWFORD . M. DEOKER, III EH EFHQPUEQT QQQPUEUQQ ESU UQQ 31111551503 2gc:Kg..:: rmcmzni mza IU' w o gf: z ZF J cLAsss OF 1941 J. W. HECHINGER A. H. HOPKINS,JR. CLASS OF 1942 J. C. DUNCAN, III G. E. GORING F. H. HARRISON G. HARWOOD CLASS OF 194.3 E. P. HOFFMAN J. B. HOLLOWAY, JR. F. H. HOSEORD R. M. HOSLEY H. D. KENNEDY, JR. H. R. KNOWLTON, JR. J. LE BOUTILLIER, JR. R. W. MGBRIDE ggB7J R. C. BARRETT, A. I. WELLS, J. C. HINDLEY L. M. JACK E. KNOWLES R. F. LINK R. F. MALONE R. D. O,BRIEN H. B. SCHOOLEY, JR. W. W. MARSHALL C. G. PAXSON E. R. PHILBIN, JR. I. L. POTTER J. N. SILVERMAN J. S. SWEENY J. D. SULLIVAN T. TWIGG-SMITH D. C. WILI-IELM E. A. WILLETS, JR F. K. SLOAN H. S. STOLOFF H. L. TERRIE, JR. R. VONMEHREN W. C. H. RAMAGE, JR. E. J. WEBSTER C. L. REED,JR. R. T. SGHMIDT C. G. WHITING 248 J. D. ARONSON,JR R. H. BINGHAM D. C. ALEXANDER J. W. BANOKER, JR. W. M. BOUOHER S. G. BURGER F. A. BESSE, II W. M. CROORETT, JR. D. C. CUTHELL J. H. DANIELS E. L. DAVIS, JR. H. EDSON, JR. Batter Battery Commander: CADET CAPTAIN W. F. HELLMUTH, JR. Cadet Lieutenantx: J. T. HEALEY, B. STUBBS Cadet Ist Sergeant: J. L. NAMMACK Cadet Sergeants: C. M. PARR,JR., A. I. PARVEY, C. A. PARCELLS, Jr. J. B. DEBRUN R. M. KEEFE L. H. BUTTS A. W. CHENEY, JR. J. B. DEALY, JR. T. DELAND, JR. G. W. EMBRY R. C. FUERBRINGER F. W. HOENIOMANN W. P. HOLLOWAY D. W. JACKSON W. H. KEOGH CLASS OF 1941 J. M. KIERAN D. C. MARTIN C. O. PAGE CLASS OF 1942 A. DEVINE G. C. HAAS, JR. J. F. KIERAN, JR. H. S. MARSH CLASS OF X943 G. B. MOLENDON G. B. MARKLE, IV E. R. MINOR C. F. MOSES J. J. MURPHY, III S. T. PECK F. W. PERRY cc 99 A. S. PARR D. E. SHARTON R. H. SKELTON, II J. P. MILLER J. L. MITCHELL A. MURRAY, III P. A. PLOTKIN J. E. PIERPONT, JR. W. A. PUGH T. J. RAINEY W. Y. W. RIPLEY C. B. SHELDON A.L. SOLOMON A. M. THOMAS, III J. L. WOOLNER C. N. ROBERTSON, III A. SALTZSTEIN W. SHERMAN T. C. WARNER, JR. D. J. WILLIAMS, II I. D. WATERMAN, JR R. L. WEIL G. A. WHELAN A. B. WHITE N. S. WINIK W. F. WOLFF Q49 Stubbs, Campbell, Camp, Converse, King, Nammack. Cannon and Castle MILITARY HONOR SOCIETY OFFICERS THOMAS JAMES CAMP, JR. President DANIEL SIEBERN CAMPBELL Secretary- Treasurer MEMBERS ROB ROY M. CONVERSE SPENCER M. KING CHARLES M. PARR, JR KIERAN J. HACKETT ROBERT H. KNIGHT BARRY STUBBS JAMES L. NAMMACK 2 50 Back Row: Hannaway, Handy, Rees, Romanow, Hayes. Third Row: Tifft, Carlin, Hackley, Romell, Andrews, Macpherson. Second Row: Kentler, Murphy, Laurits, Lund, Ord, Bates, Anderson. Front Row: Morris, Barr, Maynard, Hamel, Webb, Alpha Chi Sigma, PROFESSIONAL CHEMICAL FRATERNITY Wallace, Hooker, Vinton, Fenelon. JOHN SCHURR WEBB Master Alchemist JEAN MORTON MORRIS Recorder WILLIS OLIVER HOOKER Vice-Master Alchemist STANLEY F ENELON Treasurer JOHN THOMAS MAYNARD Reporter HAROLD ROBERT HAMEL Monster :gf Ceremonies 1940 MIGUEL ALFREDO ALFONZO JAMES PAYNE ALTER DONALD EUGENE ANDERSON CARLETON THOMAS HANDY GEORGE STANLEY HANNAWAY LEONARD RUSSELL HAYES WILLIS OLIVER HOOKER CHARLES JOSEPH KENTLER, JR JAMES DAVID LAURITS GUNNAR LUND THOMAS REES WALTER ROMANOW ROBERT FRANK ROMELL WILLIAM HOWELLS VINTON 1941 ALFRED WINCHESTER ANDREWS, R. JEAN MORTON MORRIS STANLEY FENELON JAMES NEWELL ORD FRANCIS MERCER HACKLEY PAUL LAWRENCE SILLIMAN HAROLD ROBERT HAMEL JAMES LLOYD WALLACE ARTHUR JOSEPH HILL, JR. JOHN SCHURR WEBB JOHN THOMAS MAYNARD ' 1942 ROBERT WEBB BARR CARL EDGAR BATES JAMES BELEMUS CARLIN, III 251 JAMES DOUGLAS MACPHERSON JOHN PAUL MURPHY AUSTIN HEATHCOTE TIFFT The Yale Corinthian Yacht Club Commodore JOHN MAREURY NELSON, III Vice-Commodore Rear Commodore RICHARD HENRY DEMING, JR. GEORGE EVANS TENER Race Committee Secretary and Treasurer HENRY THEODORE KRAMER Jo ZACK MILLER, IV 4 1940 E. A. BALLARD, II C. C. GLOVER, III J. M. NELSON, III R. S. CLARK O. L. GUERNSEY, JR. P. C. NIOHOLSON, JR. D. CORBET, JR. W. S. HOWARD, II W. ROCKEFELLER R. H. DEMING, JR. H. H. JESSUP, JR. G. E. TENER W. L. DOMMERIOH H. T. KRAMER W. S. THOMPSON, JR. W. W. FIELD J. Z. MILLER, IV 1941 J. MARKELL, JR. R. H. MATHESON J. H. WARE, JR. 1942 R. M. GILL T. H. GOSNELL S. M. RUMBOUGH, JR R. S. MOCORMIOK 1943 R. W. BESSE S. CAMPBELL B. H. DANLY 252 2 Back Row: Popocatepetl', Paul. Second Row: Whenyaseeitcomin Dodge, I-Iottenl' Todd, 'iPeach,' Blossom, Moon Kausel, Cashan Carey. Front Row: I-lark-hark-then Clark, Pitchpipe Thomson, L'Biggan Strong. The Whiffenpoofs PONTANEOUS organizations for informal sing- ing have appeared on the Yale scene from time to time. Some of the groups, like the Growlers, the Cup Men, and the Hogans, have flourished for a time and passed on. At least one, the Whiffenpoofs, has weathered the storms and sometimes questionable but always interesting harmonies of thirty years. Its vitality today promises to carry it well into the future. The public is ever clamoring for information as to the origin of the name Whiffenpoof and our Department of Fuller Explanation has delved deep into the musty files of the ancient and honorable organization and has managed to uncover the following salient facts: It seems that in the far reaches of Siberia there is a lake where the Whiffenpoofs live. Only one of the strange animals has ever been caught and that was ac- complished by boring a hole in the ice, placing a piece of Gorgonzola cheese by the aperture, and sure enough, a hungry old Whiffenpoof clarn- bered out, did away with the morsel, and squawked with delight. The connection is ob- vious -- give a Whiffenpoof enough food at Mory's and he will squawk with delight, or more properly, sing with finesse. The 1940 Whiifenpoofs, in addition to the usual Monday evenings at Mory's, have travelled far and wide in the sacred cause of more and better barbershopping. An avid interest in erudite matters has behooved them to make sorties to Smith, Vassar, and Sarah Lawrence, and unbiased reports from the scene of activity indicate that the results were nothing less than cataclysmic. They have invaded Cafe Society in New York, the Yale Hope Mission, the Payne Whitney swimming pool, and Hartford, where appreciative audiences have marvelled at the clock-like precision and subtle harmonies. Sad indeed is the day when nine old Whiffenpoofs, after a vigorous June week at 'fPitchpipe Thomsonis mountain retreat in the wilds of Ohio, fill their dorsal fins with Gorgonzola and dive under the ice forever. 254 The Mohicans BIG CHIEF ToTEM-Two-POLESM TOLAND BRAVE HBUFFALO-BRAINs,' BARNES MEDICINE MAN SHEET-IN-BLANKETM BUTLER PALEFACE UPULL-THEN CHANEY BRAVE PIG-IN-WIGWAMH DAVIS BRAVE CUT-UM-4-SKINs', DICKEY A BRAVE EENO-POKE-UM-SMOKE-UM,, JORDAN SQUAW USLENDER MAID OF T1-1E APACHESEB KAUSEL SQUAW CLGIVE-ME-SOME,i MOORE BRAVE ciEAT-UM-IRON,, QRR BRAVE 4'ToTEM PAUL BRAVE GCBEAT-UM-TOM-TOh1,9 ED POLLOCK PAPOOSE 'CRUMBLING-WINDSB' RODD SQUAW CCTEPEE FULL OF CooKIEs,' STUCKY THE LAST OF THE MOI-IICANS By PAPOOSE LGRUMBLING-WINDS,, EL MOROCCO! O Great Spirit! Hear from the latest and the least of the last and latest, greatest of Mohican tribes. Hear the tale of youthful papoose, kid-in-bundle, Rumbling- Winds. Hear of braves of passing passing, hear of squaws of noble bearing, hear of medicine and wampum, hear Of flight from reservation. Hear of trip in covered wagon, hear of tepee-full-of bars. Hear of wreck of Berkeley long-house and of York Street reservation. These, these last we helped, not led in. Then the blast of Dean How-could-you, Pale- face agent on Old Campus, putting blame entire on red men, questioning survival right. Huns, like Attila, he called us 5 we the friends of pig and field mouse. Leaves us, leaves us defunct red men, tribal rights and customs gone, Took away one reservation, took 'our squaws and our firewaterg left us notes on worthless paper. Tribe is scattered, passed or passing, noble hunters, noble archers. O great spirit, Geta- hookah, open gates of last great prairie, hear the names of these Mohicans. Chiqf Totem-two Poles, not on Warpath, under bearskin down in sweat box, hole in side and grievous fever, .No-poke-um-smoke-um, Harlem warrior, stripped a bearing, pulled a prone, since gone west with Squae, Nokomis. Beat-um- tom-tom, under lamp shade, built a pressure hydrostatic, Squaw Tepeefull, in bravels regalia, laid an egg in Fence Club wigwam. Pilgrim 2 Back Row: Pollock, Chaney. Second Row: Stuckey, Dickey, Orr, Moore, Paul. Front Row: Kausel, Butler, jordan, Barnes. Absent on Tribal Business: Toland, Rodd, Davis. father Pull-the Chang fractured noggin mounting pulpit, dropped on kisser, losing molar. Squaw Slender-Maid, with shapely chassis, stopped a depth-bomb, resurrected. Brave Eat-Um-Iron, Kid High Explosive, let in air before retiring, also dropped in sunken garden, corpse reclaimed' by Dr. Johnson. Pig-in-Wigwam, fearing jaun- dice, helped to spring a sorry papoose, out of tepee-full-of-bars. Totem Paul, a noble savage, lost voice and vision with his trousers, gracefully withdrew. Brave Cut-um-4 lno morej suffered damage to his dish but was not unwell as well. Squaw Give-me-some, age fifty summers, smiled on young braves, but went home alone, made noise in own room and went to bedn on floor of tepee. Bujalo-Brains, a sober warrior, on head nothing but a scalp lock, wore a grin of evil meaning, leaning on the floor. Medicine Man! O Sheet-in-Blanket, lost-um job on morning after, due to spirits wouldn't leaving out of tribesmen's aching squash. Opitchee-Manitoo, O Sussistinnako, O Mas- amasalonik. We must go where john, Hold the Enemy Towle, john, Hold the Enemy Alsop, john, Hold the Enemy Danielson, john, Hold the Enemy Boies, and others, hold the happy hunting ground for us. Wle are, I think, the Last of the Mohicans. 55 WILLIAM SPRAGUE BARNES DAVID BECKWITH RODD MCGEORGE BUNDY WARREN PHILIP SNYDER GEORGE JESPER HARDING, III PETER GORDON BRADLEY STILLMAN JOHN MARBURY NELSON, III WILLIAM McDOWELL STUCKY NORMAN STARK PAUL EDWARD DALE TOLAND, JR. Back Row: Bundy, Rodd, Harding, Still man, Toland, Barnes, Snyder. Front Row: Nelson, Professor Crawford, Professor Phelps, Paul, Stucky. 256 M 5' 5. E Q-1: iv ,ips .gm .741 E, if 1 - P-'V . FTE? -A - 1IZ'iQfj,- wus. ,aff A I Qpzez- '-335-112- 1..1i.- N c , - MYR ,, 113, T -113' fx tzfaf . - 1 ' -- ,RgEE ,, , , , w 35-,111 , 1, . 1 A Il WTI wmmmmvmmmxwk P Chi Delta Theta LITERARY HONORARY SOCIETY FOUNDED IN 1821 1940 MOGEORGE BUNDY HENRY JAMES, JR. ARTHUR JOHN CUMMINGS WILLIAM VINCENT STONE SNOWDEN TERHUNE I-IERRICK WALTER SEAGER SULLIVAN, JR RICHARD LEON WILCOX 257 W1 M 1 . ! f ff Mory's Association OFFICERS FOR 1940 BOARD O OV . T 9 L G 8 P 'd 25 .I 99 J D G S 9 M B 9 5 V P a' H 4 W , 9 4 T T 1 C C 9 C os F. STODDARD, JR., 1926 Secretagl W S Q G 9 6 T G T 9 7S B. 4 A. S C. W 9 O O E. S T. D ,I 8S O. P 9 ADMISSIO S COM J. F. BAKER, 1 Clzairm T. BABBITT, 1918 HOUSE CO F. D. GRAVE, IQIIS, Cha D. .HEMINGWAY 191 L. . 9 6 258 l Back Row: Moore CManagerj, johnson, Toll, Knapp, Taylor, Townsend, Wyre CTrainerj, Knowles QAsst. Managerl. Second Row: Barnes, Starbuck, Seabury, Butler CCaptainj, Hessberg, Rafferty, Wheeler. Front Row: Smith, Keefe, Sey- mour, Driscoll.- Rugby Association HE Yale University Rugby Club began its 1940 season with four matches in Nassau with the Nassau Rugby Club. Because of an upset in the regular boat schedule to Bermuda, the traditional Easter-Week Rugby matches were called off Through the courtesy of the people of Nassau, Yale was invited to play four matches there, for which a special grandstand was constructed and many other thoughtful steps taken for the entertainment of the players during their stay. The Nassau team proved itself too experi- enced for the more rugged Yale fifteen. In spite of the hard and, at times, brilliant play of the Elis, who improved consistently with each game, they were beaten in all of the four matches, 20-35 I7-5, I5-O, 7-6. With Hovey Seymour and Captain Jim Butler as mainstays of the backs and with Sin, Harry Wheeler outstandingly aggressive among the forwards, the Yale team struggled against the too great odds of playing a 2 game in which they had had little practice. The home season consisted of games with Long Island University, Queens Rugby Club, Cornell, Harvard, Princeton, and the New York, Chicago, and St. Andrews Rugby Clubs. With the return from Nassau, the team was strengthened by a few stars from the Yale Law School, including Charley Toll, 1937 Captain of the Princeton Football Team, Al Hessberg, of the Yale Football Team, and f'Whizzer White whose fame as an All-American from Colorado University is known to everyone. An innovation this year was the trip to Chica- go where a game with a team which has achieved acclaim in the growing sport of American Rugby was played. The proceeds of the game were for a Yale Scholarship. Another sign of the growth of American Rugby was the donation of a cup to be played for by members of the Eastern Rugby Union of which Yale is a member. 59 Back Row: I-Iinrnan, Hart, Smith. Front Row: Starbuck, Houk. The Cup Men WILLIAM DICKINSON HART, JR. 'I' Deceased BENJAMIN HINMAN' ROBERT THURSTON HOUK, III HICLEMENT GRESSON KITE GEORGE STEVENSON SMITH 260 WILLIAM HUTTON STARBUCK Canterbury School Club 1941 JOHN A. O,CONNOR, JR. 1942 JAMES F. CORROON, JR. ROBERT B. SEFTON 1943 ANTHONY T. BOUSOAREN JOHN L. MCHUGH DONAL PETER MODONNELL MORGAN HEBARD, JR. ROBERT D. SMITH GRADUATE SCHOOLS HARLAN J. SWIFT R. SARGENT SHRIVER, JR. 261 Cheshire Academy Club HOWARD W. BALDWIN ALLAN J. CRANE, JR. JOHN T. HANEY, JR. JOHN H. ADAMS, JR. HENRY B. ARMSTRONG, III IRVING H. BERKOWITZ GASTON R. DE CARRERA JOHN H. HELLER VICTOR L. BAXTER WILLIAM C. CAMPBELL PHILIP S. GOOD JOHN D. GREANY 1940 ROBERT J. LEVINSOHN JOHN J. H. MARTIN, J GRANT H. MESSINGER 1941 WILLIAM G. BOYNTON WILLIAM GARVEY NIXON LEE, JR. ROBERT L. METZGER 1942 R. JOHN A. INGERSOLL, JR. RICHARD N. NELSON 1943 JOHN K. MISKIMMIN, JR SPENCER D. MOSELEY WILLIAM L. NEAL ROBERT W. NORTH THOMAS A. PERLS 262 PHILIP O,BRIEN, JR CYRUS R. TAYLOR HAVEN WATERS STANLEY A. SWEET, JR ALAN B. TULIPAN WILLIAM C. ZILLY SHEPARD F. PALITZ JOHN J. WHITE F. KEENAN SLOAN PARKER SNEAD WILLIAM S. SNEAD,JR. WILLIAM L. STOTZER Groton School Club REGINALD L. AUCHINCLOSS, JR, WOLCOTT N. BAKER BOWEN BLAIR WILLIAM R. CROSS, JR. TYSON DINES, JR. CHARLES H. C. GERARD JOHN CHANDLER, JR. KENT CHANDLER, JR. EDWIN CORNING MALCOLM J. EDGERTON, JR. LOUIS P. EWALD, III DAVID C. ACHESON JOSEPH H. AUGHINCLOSS, JR. JAMES H. BOUGHTON EMERSON T. CHANDLER STUART H. CLEMENT, JR. 1940 MCGEORGE BUNDY JOHN F. EAGLE, JR. JAMES F. MCCLELLAND, JR. , 1941 FRANK H. GOODYEAR, III SHEPARD KREOH, JR. 1942 WILLIAM E.. S. JAMES MERRILL C. KRECH ROBERT S. LEWIS GEORGE K. MCCLELLAND ROGER S. MCCORMICK JEREMIAH MILBANK, JR. I 943 THOMAS N. CROSS GEORGE A. DINES PHILIP L. R. DU VAL AUSTIN D. HIGGINS .7-...f-1,-an A, , BROOKS MCCORMICK WALTER S. SULLIVAN, JR ARNOLD N. WELLES HOWARD E. ROGERS PETER O. A. SOLBERT BOYLSTON A. TOMPKINS, JR MASON D. SALISBURY WILLIAM W. SHELDEN PETER F. TRIPP JOSEPH WALKER, JR. DAVID P. H. WATSON LOUIS H.HOLLISTER COMAN LEAVENWORTH GEORGE DEF. LORD, JR. VINCENT MCCLELLAND JAMES MCK. SYMINGTON 263 Gunnery SchOO1 Club 194.0 FREDERIC M. BURR CHARLES M. PARR,JR. 1941 G. BREAUX BALLARD, JR. FRANK T. CLELAND ALEXANDER S. PARR WILLIAM S. MILLER 1942 FORREST L. DANIELS ROY L. PETERSON, JR. WILLIAM B. SIMMONSMIR CHARLES N. ROBERTSON, HI T943 RODERICK M. BRUSH YVILLIAM B. LUSK,JR. 264 Hill School Club I ROBERTSON F. ALFORD ROWLAND S. BEVANS GEORGE P. BISSELL, JR. JOHN A. BLEAKLEY ARTHUR A. BURROWS, JR. JOHN L. BUTLER, JR. FREDERIC ACHELIS WILLIAM N. BANNARD, III LAWRENCE D. BRAGG, JR. H. ROSS BROWN, JR. GERARD L. BUHRMAN, JR. HENRY P. ISHAM, JR. HERBERT M. BEVANS NORMAN P. CLEMENT, JR. ALAN F. DAILY FREEMAN T. EAGLESON, JR. FREDERICK W. KEITH, JR. JOSEPH B. BLACKBURN GEORGE S. BURROWS GEORGE P. CAULKINS, JR. RICHARD J. CLARK F. CLIFFORD FORD, JR. WALTER B. FORD, II JOHN MCM. HARDING WILLIAM P. HILMER JOHN H. HOBART 1940 ALLAN J. CRANE, JR. ROBERT D. DALZELL, JR. RAYMOND M. DEAN WILLIAM N. DRISCOLL EDMUND F. HIGGINS JAMES F. JOHNSON, III 1941 WILLIAM T. KETCHAM, JR. W. JARED KNAPP, JR. GEORGE W. LAMBERSON MALCOLM R. MACLEAN JAMES B. PHILLIPS IQ42 POLK LAFFOON, III B. WHITNEY LAMSON, BAYARD M. MALLERY ALVAN MARKLE, III ERNEST C. PARSHALL, II 1943 FRANK W. HOENIGMANN JOHN W. HUGHES RICHARD P. HUNT ROBERT T. ISHAM T. PAUL KANE RICHARD A. KENWORTHY, EUGENE B. KRIEGER GORDON I. LINDEMANN JOHN H. MACLEAN GEORGE B. MARKLE, IV JR. I KEITH MERRILL, JR. GRANT H. MESSINGER GORDON S. MUSTIN GEORGE P. PILLING, IV G. STEVENSON SMITH GEORGE S. WATSON EDWARD L. RYERSON, III J. VIRGIL SCOTT, JR. LAURENCE G. TIGHE, JR. LEW WALLACE, III DOUGLAS A. WARNER, JR JOHN R. WINTERBOTHAM, III H. VIRGIL SHERRILL VAUGHAN C. SPALDING, JR JOHN A. TALBOT, JR. GILBERT L. WATSON LEROY S. WOLPE, JR. SPENCER D. MOSELEY EDWARD T. MULLIGAN WALTER G. RODIGER, JR. LAWRENCE W. SHENFIELD CHARLES M. STODI:-ART JAMES S. WALTON IRA D. WATERMAN, JR. ROBERT N. WHITTEMORE C. EMMETT WILSON, JR. If .wgp,rs:. 5491 - 'X5z,.5: -'RT' -' 9.95, .,,,-Pays-1. farm... -F - ff ' ' fwfr -:.2-2:41 S55i??Q-ffg?Pwff lI-ff 3535QfewfISe F52 : -- 4. 9 'Vlfffga .7 .. - ' Y --L . f-.?'7f' .lf A-.S fif 57f,'4v 'f'f--57KU -E-gb M5 - K f -5.4. I .: ., . . f 1 , .- A . . 319.4 -,fy -A af , f. .V , . E in I Sv' - 12, . -3 r . 1 ., ,. , , bql, .. I , 4 . A ,N ., . , , . K 4 .V ,,.,4,.. Ac. .Ea A , , I.?wSe -Gig? 'fpegfffzy-v8'?r -. S - ', ig' I 4 - ' . ' :A ' Z HP A- -fn S B -1- ', .m 4,-.,'..f'. .. . . ., '.,.,- 1. 4. Q: A I h .- - -. ge QL at-..,,w,,.,,j 2 f ' 1 R- . . . ' ' RPA?-PSEJA I' I J ' vp '1' . A IP-' ,I,,,'.l, , - 'vw '. 1 y. ' . ' .- -W, H .. '. A . A 1-Iwi. F1-? 'f1 I 1 I ' u . . 1. ?':'s55g..'?Gf-.341 f'j 'I :Jig ' ., .wg ' ' fi , -ffl ' l ' ' ' ' 1 I 2 .. ,':1.I,f 4 www I A Aff.-Aww ,cg . - Y. - I gy .2 ,-I I .'2:P.:eS:5f'Lg544.24f ::.- 'AI e.:-y5,wf....-'f+,LifH'-9rzp4aw2- .w4.M-51. v vwbalipzfzf 4. '-I +?1-wf1gEa..- 1- ae 541, :V :eia -xbrzfi-4af'fXs6 4v iifwzwiyfsfszfgf-ifa. IH'-W1-' I - 1 1 I' I . -- I I vi '-75' ,M-7 .37 I uf- 4'--ii, -iw' . , , .-WS' -1 -- V.f - -fn :-.P :lf :E ' .... f . , A I 'f fn 'w2ff'F :'f' V 4' 1 A ' '. 1 I. af I.-5...f,,,g,, ,M::.,44gwg'g- .4 . .S L: . . . .0 f - f. 1 A V6 4 1 1 ' ' WT: 'fe',.'5-Ly ' 131651 f ffiij'-P ff ., -' ' . . ' ' - - '7 f . A X' -s.. - 1 - . ' . A. ff , ., ,f - -.4,IIg.f.--,fa - , - V. V. fr. -. A.-A:.. ,.w I--..-.:I.f+f1..w,.y vfwf .I-V-W1-.1.-fffff f-- If .2 .1 ml 2' '..+19f.f4.:S12 f .a:f2.2f.-'2Q?Vff-4f'rfff3.- . Ii -f-'f3:l'. I , '359 ff 'f f - ' ?'i52fff1I f ' .S A 265 -+ - f .Sf f....c':: Hotchkiss School Club PAUL B. BADGER, JR. HARRY H. BASSETT JOHN L. BEHR LANSDALE BOARDMAN JOHN BUTLER, JR. RALPH G. COLLINS, JR. ROB ROY M. CONVERSE EDGAR M. CULLMAN RICHARD H. DEMING, JR. WILLIAM L. DOMMERICH CLAYTON DUBOSQUE, JR. WILLIAM W. FIELD HENRY FORD, II EDGAR S. FURNISS, JR. HUGH S. GOODFELLOW DWIGHT GRISWOLD I 940 CARROLL B. HAFF, JR. CHARLES H. HULBURD, II HENRY H. JESSUP, JR. JONATHAN T. LANMAN ROBERT T. LARKIN WILLIAM J. LIPPINCOTT, JR. HENRY H. LIVINGSTON, JR. JOHN S. MACSPORRAN RALPH H. MATTHIESSEN, JR. JAMES L. NAMMAGK JOHN C. NEMIAH PETER K. OGDEN ROBERT D. ORR ANDREW D. ORRICK ADOLPH B. ORTHWEIN 266 ANSON W. PECKHAM EDWIN F. POLLOCK JUDD L. POLLOCK PHILIP B. POOL HARRY L. QUINN WILEY R. REYNOLDS, JR. HENRY S. ROBINSON, JR. LOUIS M. STARR, II HAROLD C. STRONG, JR. GEORGE E. TENER WILFRED S. THOMPSON, JR HOWARD S. TIERNEY, JR. FREDERICK G. WACKER, JR LAURENCE R. WALLACE GEOFFREY R. WIENER ANDREW WILSON, HI THURMAN W. ARNOLD, JR. WILLIAM W. BLACKBURN, II JOHN M. D. BRION JOHN M. BUTLER, JR. JONATHAN W. CLARK PAUL H. CONVERSE EDWARD S. COOKE LEWIS B. CULLMAN ELLIOTT R. DETCHON, JR. PHILIP R. FREEMAN ROBERT B. GARDNER, JR. LAURENCE S. GARLAND, JR. DAVID G. C. BRIDGMAN JOHN S. BROEKSMIT, JR. HAMILTON M. BRUSH, JR. ROBERT L. BRUSH MORTON BUTLER, II DOUGLAS CAMPBELL, JR. VINCENT W. CARPENTER GEORGE W. CARRINGTON, JR. SAMUEL S. CONNOR WILLIAM L. CONYNGHAM, II JOHN S. COOKE CHESTER T. CORSE EDWARD M. CUMMINGS THORNDIKE DELAND, JR. ERNESTO DE ZALDO, JR. JOHN C. W. DIX ROBERT W. BAKER RICHARD H. BEARDSLEY PETER F. BELLINGER DANIEL F. CANNING JOHN D. CANNON ROWLAND E. COCKS, JR. DAVID D. COFFIN DAVID L. DEAN HUTCHINSON DU BOSQUE RAYMOND S. FREEMAN RUSSELL FROST, III STEPHEN K. GALPIN MAURICE GOODMAN, JR. LYTTLETON B. P. GOULD, JR. EDWARD E. GREENE GEORGE S. GREENE CHARLES L. GRISWOLD 194.1 DARWIN L. GILLETT, III JOSEPH N. GREENE, JR. GEORGE GRISWOLD, JR. RICHARD L. HATCH NORMAN G. HICKMAN WILLIAM P. JEFFERY, JR. EDWARD R. KEMP WILLIAM S. LAMBIE, JR. CHARLES T. LARUS ROBERT F. LOREE, JR. ALLEN F. LOVEJOY JAMES G. K. MCCLURE, JR. 1942 JOHN C. DUNCAN, III WILLIAM M. FORD CHARLES F. FREEMAN, JR. FREDERICK A. GODLEY, JR. GEORGE A. GOSS, JR. HARRY T. GREENE GEORGE E. HAINES ALAN C. HALL RALPH W. I-IALSEY, JR. DAVID F. HARRIS DOUGLAS B. HOUSER,-JR. JOHN B. JESSUP ROBERT DEL. JOHNSON WILLIAM R. JOHNSON JOHN C. KAYNOR JOHN W. KISER, JR. EDGAR LOCKWOOD, JR. I 943 CROWELL P. HADDEN WEBB C. HAYES, III JOHN H. HIRSH EDGAR P. HOFFMAN ARTHUR HOWE, JR. HOWARD P. INGELS, JR. WILLIAM S. INGRAHAM THEODORE C. JEWETT, JR. WILLIAM B. JORDAN, III JOSEPH A. LEE, JR. JOHN A. LE VAN JOHN W. LUCE, III DUDLEY L. MILLER WARD MILLER ALBERT W. OLSEN, JR. INNIS O,ROURKE, JR. STEWART T. PECK 267 GEORGE N. MCLENNAN GEORGE H. MEAD, JR. COLEMAN W. MORTON THOMAS PARSONS, III PHILIP F. W. PECK, JR. MARC R. PRASS, JR. WILLIAM A. ROBINSON ARTHUR J. ROSENTHAL, JR WILLIAM M. SCHUTTE, JR. GORDON A. WELLER BRUCE S. WILLIAMS HENRY R. WILSON, III NATHAN D. MCCLURE, JR GARDEN R. MCLEAN RICHARD W. MEYER EDWARD V. NUNES HORTON R. PRUDDEN JOHN M. QUINN HOWARD F. SMITH, JR. TRAVER C. SMITH FRANK A. SPROLE ROBERT W. STINCHFIELD ROBERT W. TAYLOR EDWARD R. TITCOMB ARTHUR K. WATSON GEORGE W. WELSH, III CHARLES P. WILSON JAMES M. WOODHULL CHARLES M. PERRY FARWELL W. PERRY CHARLES L. REED, JR. MARCEL A. SMITH ZEPH STEWART WALTER I-I. SYKES, III NELSON S. TALBOTT, JR. DAVID E. TILESTON JOHN W. TITCOMB STIRLING TOMKINS, JR. HENRY Z. URBAN JOHN C. WEADOCK ARTHUR B. WHITE WELBY C. WHITIN WILLIAM WILLIAMS HOWARD O. WOOD, III JOHN O. YOUNG, JR. 'iii ' J ffig ' . 1 -.5 5 E 5 Kingswood School Club 194.0 BENED1oT D. FLYNN, JR. 1941 WINTHROP A. HAVILAND, JR. WILBERT E. MCCLELLAN, J 1942 HENRY A. HASTINGS ROBERT S- HOUSE 1943 THOMAS G. HUDSON 268 Lawrenceville SehOOl Club SYLVAN M. BARNET, JR. ROBERT M. BOICE JESSE G. BURTON, JR. WILLIAM CARNILL, II JEREMY R. COLPITTS DONALD M. EHRMAN JOHN H. HARTMAN,JR. TRISTAM B. JOHNSON GUY K. BENSON JOHN W. FAWCBTT, III MALCOLM M. ADAMS ROBERT F. BAUER NELSON R. BOIOE, JR. HARRY L. EVANS, JR. DARWIN W. HEATH EDGAR L. LASSETTER 1940 JOHN A. DILLON, JR. DONALD GREGG HENRY T. KRAMER LEONARD S. PARSONS IQ4I ROBERT E. JONES WILLIAM S. MILLER H. AMES RICHARDS, JR. PHILIP H. STECKLER, JR. 1942 STEPHEN F. GRIFFING, JR. HARRY B. SOHOOLEY, JR. I 943 WALTER E. LEAMAN,JR. WILLIAM C. MCCRACKEN JOHN K. MOLEAN LOUIS P. MAHLER CORNELIUS F. MOSES CHARLES G. PAXSON JOHN H. C. PEARE OWEN RICHARDS WILLIAM F. SCHELL JOHN T. TUBBS WILLIAM D. WIGGINS, JR. SIDNEY S. WILSON TALMADGE G. WILSON WILLIAM N. WOLFE ARTHUR W. WRIEDEN, JR. OMAR H. SIMONDS, JR. RODERIC B. SWENSON DAVID M. SAUNDERS WENDELL L. SMITH, JR. ROBERT D. STERN NEWELL P. WEED, JR. CHARLES L. WILLOUGHBY WILLIAM H. WORRILOW, JR Q69 HOLBROOK BRADLEY WALTER R. HERRICK, JR. GEORGE W. CI-IENEY, JR. HAYS H. CLEMENS, JR. HAROLD T. CLEMENT, JR. FRANK C. DIXON NORMAN C. EDDY SAMUEL BEARDSLEY JOHN G. BUTLER HOWARD B. DEAN, JR. Pomfret School Club I Q40 BENJAMIN HINMAN STEPHEN P. MOORHEAD RAYMOND E. OSTBY, JR 1941 ROBERT C. DYE SETH B. FRENCH, JR. I 942 EDWIN A. HANSEN I 943 FRANK E. HOUSE, III WILLIAM M. JORDAN CHARLES KING WILLIAM P. ROWLAND 270 HUGH ROWLAND RICHARD A. STURLEY ERIC R. HANSEN MALCOLM D. RAWORTH, J WILLIAM C. SCHWAB CHARLES E. HUNTINGTON RICHARD K. WARREN LEE P. STACK, JR. FRANCIS B. THORNE, JR. NEIL J. WATERMAN 'f Portsmouth Priory School Club 1940 EDWARD F. CALLANMIR. PHILIP F. MAGGUIRE WILLIAM G. PARROTTMIR 1941 FREDERIC E. OSSORIO JOSEPH B. UN1AoKE,JR. 1942 RAYMOND D. 0,BRIEN EDMUND B. TOBIN 1943 THOMAS S. VAN WINKLI-3 271 Saint GI-:Orge's School Club JOHN A. DILLON, JR. ROBERT W. JOHNSON, FRANCIS B. HAMLIN,J JOHN Y. HUBER, III NIGEL L. ANDREWS RALPH C. GORDON JR. JOHN A. DILLON, JR. President I 940 GEORGE L. FORMAN LOUIS A. MOMILLEN 194.1 DAVID C. MARTIN I Q42 CHARLES A. KILVERT, JR. EDWARD H. LOCKWOOD 1943 ROBERT F. HOLDEN, JR. WALKER P. I-IOLLOWAY REGINALD ROOME, JR. 272 RUFUS F. ZOGBAUM, JR KINSLEY TWINING JOHN F. MILLIKEN RICHARD H. SEMPLE, JR. HARTON S. SEMPLE FRANK W. WALL Saint Louis Country Day School Club OFFICERS THOMAS G. RUTLEDGE MCLEOD STEPHENS DAVID P. FERRISS ROBERT E. GRoTE,JR. ARTHUR K. HOWELL,JR. FREDERICK T. GOLDBERG DAVID W. RIESMEYER HOWARD T. BLAND I 94.0 PETER M. LINDSAY ADOLPH B. ORTHWEIN 1941 ALFRED L. SHAPLEIG1-1, H IQ42 WARREN M. SHAPLEIGH 1943 Presiden! Secrelaqy LAWRENCE K. Roos THOMAS G. RUTLEDGE MCLEOD STEPHENS A. WESSEL SHAPLEIGH, JR JOHN K. SPRING CHARLES H. STEPHEN, III 273 Saint Paul Academy Club ROBERT S. CLARK CARL B. DRAKE, JR. FORREST L. DANIELS ROBERT A. KENDALL JOHN H. DANIELS I 940 I 941 JOHN L. HANNAFORD I 942 WILLIAM H. LIGHTNER, II 1 943 2 74 BENJAMIN C. THOIVIPSON, JR HOWARD J. SEESEL., JR. JOHN C. MURPHY WILLIAM G. WHITE STAN D. DONNELLY, JR. Shady Side Academy Club OFFICERS JOHN B. OLIVER President ROBERT M. CLARK Vice-President JOHN K. TABOR Secretagf 1940 ROBERT D. DALZELL, JR. CHARLES A. HAAS 1941 JOHN D. BAUM JOHN B. OLIVER GEORGE P. SCHOYER WILLIAM B. LAUFMAN, HI PETER WRIGHT I942 HOWARD J. BAUMGARTEL, JR. JOHN D. ATWOOD JOHN P. EGAN, JR. DON W. Gow ROBERT M. CLARK ALFRED M. HUNT 1943 WILLIAM G. HEINER RICHARD M. KETCHUM AARON R. LEVIN JAMES G. LEWIS JOHN H. MUELLER, III ROGER E. LOUGHNEY, III JOHN K. TABOR PAUL J. URQUHART, JR. 275 University School Club LEE B. BRODY CHARLES W. BILLINGSLEY JOHN T. CLARK WILLIAM T. CLARK GEORGE E. H. COMPTE WALTER M. CHARMAN, JR. DAVID E. DANGLER, II ARTHUR C. MADDEN JOHN P. ROTH 1940 I94I JOHN DICKENSON, IV GEORGE H. FEIL PHILIP G. FULSTOVV 1942 WALTER E. NEWCOMB, JR DONALD E. PIERCE THOMAS B. Ross CHARLES F. SEELBACH, JR. 1 943 GLEN O. SMITH, JR. JAMES E. SPEARMAN 276 WILLIAM B. CONDIT BENJAMIN F. HOPKINS, J EVERETT H. KREUGER ARNOLD C. SAUNDERS, III JOHN R. SLOSS ALAN B. SPURNEY, JR. CHARLES H. TOOMEY WILLIAM C. JNITT RAYMOND J. WEAN, JR. Westminster School Club LEAv1TT B. AHRENS CHARLES M. BAXTER, JR. RICHARD F. DONOVAN, J HENRY S. FORREST BOUVIER BEALE PETER S. BURR ROBERT O. GORLEY GEORGE P. ELMORE 194O RICHARD H. DEMING, JR. 1941 1942 GEORGE T. GRISVVOLD R. BRUCE LOOMIS 1943 HORACE L. HOTCHKISS, IV H. RANDOLPH KNOWLTON, JR. JOHN H. MCCLEMENT ROBERT D. MOORE, JR. LEE A. O,NEILL DONALD F. SHARP ROBERT P. WILLIAMS FRANK G. ROGERS, JR. DONALD M. SOMERS STUYVESANT WA1NwR1GHT G. ANDREZ, WHELAN 277 If y 1 5 Un 1 hmf T SS' i cg M an 3 U h ll I by ff 4 VC :ff 4 .14 2 .90 'D' , I gains: M, Y W, .pq fl Back Row: Brecker, Tabor, Creighton, Drain. Front Row: Miller, Symington, Ford, Hayes. -Freshman Promenade Committee JAMES MCKIM SYMINGTON FREDERICK CLIFFORD FORD, DUDLEY LIVINGSTON MILLER WEBB COOK HAYES, III RICHARD LEE BRECKER WILLIAM SMYTH CREIGHTON RICHARD DALE DRAIN Q80 Chairman Secretafjf Treasurer Floor Manager JOHN KAYE TABOR Back Row: Dodge, Burrows, Bird, Thompson, Flournoy, Elmore, Sutphin, H. Perry. Fourth Row: Burger, Robbins, Wick, Nolte, Spaeth, Le Bar, Frye, Doerr. Third Row: Cardon, Young, Baldwin, C. Perry, Stocking, Howland, Barber, Sweeney, Howard. Second Row: Verseput, Coffin, Upson, Van Middlesworth, Fields, Olsen, Aldridge, Goodman, Davis. Front Row: Miller, Daniels, Spencer, Greene flvlanagerj, Klots, Hammond flyresidentj, Ward, Wachsman, Eastwood, Wells, Gesner. Freshman Glee Club ARTHUR E.. HALL, '24 Mas. ALDEN W. HAMMOND GEORGE S. GREENE, JR. HE Yale Freshman Glee Club was formed in 1930 to remedy an increasing need for organized freshman singing. Since that time, it has grown steadily in favor and prestige until it now ranks as one of the most popular freshman activities at Yale. Each year the Club is painstakingly recon- structed by the director, Arthur Hall, who chooses a tentative membership on the basis of voice trials in October and sets to work drilling the group during the winter in preparation for the concerts later on. A large and promising squad was selected from the fall applicants this year and given an extra-long training period before its initial appearances. The wisdom of this policy was made evident in. the Clubis very creditable showing at the Hillside School in the early part of March. The trips continued after spring recess with 281 Director President Manager the feature attraction of the season-an ap- pearance at Dwight School in Englewood, New Jersey, in which the Dwight Glee Club joined with the Freshmen to give a rendition of the Polovetzian Dance and Chorus from Borodin's opera, Prince Igor. The entire club spent the night in Englewood as the guest of the members of the school, after having enjoyed a dinner before and a dance after the concert. Other concerts at Hopkins School, Larson Junior College, and Low-Heywood saw varia- tions in the program provided by soloists and a quartet which, combined with the club's fine singing attracted enthusiastic response from the large audiences. With the final trip to Wykeharn Rise, in May, the 194.3 Yale Freshman Glee Club passed out of existence after having successfully brought to a close one of the most active and colorful seasons in its brief history. Back Row: Gordon, Heim, Griffith, Barnett. Front Row: Deeble, Jackson, Plummer. The Yale Freshman Weekly ARTHUR G. JACKSON Chairman EDITORS ' A. DOAK BARNETT RILEY DEEBLE, III DAvxD GORDON HE T ale Freshman Weekbf 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 Hexible policy inevitably attracts. In select- ing material A for publication the editors are governed not by a majority opinion as such, but by the provocative and stimulating effect upon Freshman readers. The magazine is unique in PAUL GRIFFITH WARREN HEIM HOWARD PLUMMER that its scope is not limited to the literary, nor is it confined to duplicating the function of a newspaper. We have printed sincere Freshman contributions of every typeg we have not pre- sumed, by soliciting material of a specific nature, to shape the character of the Weekbl. We have established no traditions to restrict future Boards. And we hope they will strive to be a vital force, skeptical, and exasperatingly critical. 282 THE YALE . THE RAINBOW Trackless like the worm that arcs From crystal, vein-cut leaf Shining in the sunls glass sparks? Sourceless as the hurricane Prepared in bulbous pots Moored upon a tree-reft plain? Woven, strand by strand, by lanes Of clay-red lingers baked Brighter than the brilliant skeins? Or sprung from swarming tetrad-spores That germinated on Some exotic-sanded shores? wk 14 bk They stood there in the twilight together. A brilliant summer sun had just slipped over the grey horizon, and the dusty loess hills of Shensi were tinged with a blend of pink and orange. The scene was full of silent grandeur, and these two, man and woman, stood stiffly, speechless, leaning against the crumbling wall of a mud hut and surveying the scene far below. ' as if wk D-N YS MITTEL ANGLYSH Whan Ghausir hadde a booke y-writte, Ye Gaunterbury Tayles to witte, Lyttel dyd ye gude manne knowe, Yatte yt wolde causen sich grete woe, To me, who yn my ignoraunce, Essaied, withoute ye slightest chaunee, To lern enow yat worke of hys, . To passe ye damn tenne-minnit quizze. 2 FRESHMAN WEEKLY There's a liquor party going on upstairs, Bob said. Why don't you get in on it? I-Iow? I answered. I don't know any of the guys. I can'tjust pop in and ask for a drink. Take up what's left of my cake, Bob said. Food will get you in anywhere around here. I had a cold and I figured a few drinks would go well. Also, I like the stuff. I carried the cake up and walked in with a fellow who was carrying some bottles. Ilve been trying to get rid of this cake for days, I said. Any of you guys want to help me out? A nice-looking guy who seemed to be host said, swell, join us and have a drink. There were four other fellows there besides him and me. They introduced themselves and I told them who I was. The host's name was Bill. What'll it be Tom, he said. Scotch, Rye, Tom Collins, anything you like. Pk Ik Ik We cannot analyze the results of this control by trying to think how we Americans would react if we were so subjected. There seems to be an essential difference between our nature and that of the German people. Where Americans would rise in arms against the advance of a leader who seemed bent on gaining all power, on controlling their lives, the Germans seem to prefer having their lives controlled to stirring about and Hghting for their freedom. Where the American would stand on his inalienable rightsi' to the last gasp, the German moves over and takes what is given to him. It's easier that way. 83 Freshman BY W. H. NEALE, JR. N reviewing Freshman Athletics during this past year, of the I7 sports, Yale teams won 105 contests, with one tie, of the total 144 played. The swimming, wrestling, golf fencing, baseball and track teams won the Big Three Championship and the first three named sports completed the season without a single defeat. Yale's powerful swimming team, coached by Irving Newton and captained by F. W. Lilley, Jr., accomplished what is considered the most remarkable record by completing the second year without a defeat. Their strongest opposition was Mercersburg, Yale winning 36-30. The golf team was well up to the usual standards under the able direction of Coach Ben Thomson. Captain S. Phillips, Jr. led his team against seven opponents without a loss, includ- ing victories over Princeton and Harvard. Wrestling was the other sport which completed the season with all scores in Yale's favor. Exeter, Gilman, Choate, Wyoming Seminary, Taft, Princeton and Harvard, the strongest array of preparatory schools and Freshman teams in the East, were defeated in the order named. The able coaching of John O'Donnell and the leadership of Captain John Castles, II should be highly commended for the team's remarkable record. Captain T. D. Olmstedls fencing team won the Big Three Championship with impressive Athletics victories over Princeton and Harvard. The Grasson-coached team went through a difficult schedule of eleven contests undefeated, being tied by the Columbia Freshmen. Due to the illness of the late Coach Clyde Engle, the coaching of the baseball team was handled by Ogden Miller, ,QQ during part of the season. Andover was the only opponent to gain a victory against the Freshmen in a thirteen- game schedule. Captain Ted Harrison did yeoman service on the mound as did Pope, Franzen and Seelbach. Coach Ted Avery's track team, with victories over Princeton and Harvard, has a number of outstanding performers who will undoubtedly strengthen the varsity track team in the near future. Of the other Freshman sports, the hockey, tennis and lacrosse teams won from Harvard and lost to Princeton while the football team won from Princeton and lost to Harvard. Intramural athletics in fourteen sports are available for all Freshmen who are not members of the Freshman squads. The Freshman dormi- tories are divided into four units, namely, North, South, South Middle and North Middle, with approximately 200 students in each unit. 4'Sports for Allw is actually a reality at Yale, as it is possible for all students, regardless of ability, to become a member of some athletic team and thus gain the benefits of athletic competition. Upper classmen are appointed as athletic secretaries of each of the four Freshman groups. The main function of their position is to organize and direct all the teams in their unit. During the college year 1938-39, 735 students, including duplication of those who were in more than one sport, played on these intramural teams. Crad- uate school students offer their services for the coaching of football and crew and in some sports the Freshman Coaches help, if coaching is essential. Interest in the year-round program is kept alive by a point system wherein the unit teams are awarded points for their position in the leagues. The unit which garners the highest total points at the end of a college year wins the All-Year Championship. 284 Back Row: Root fCoachj, Moseley, Greene, Patterson, Sargent, Mead QManagerj. Fourth Row: Reed, Lindemann, Mil- ler, Noyes, Le Van, Collins, Willoughby. Third Row: Freeman, Talbot, Hayes, Martin, Seaman, Dines, Aldrich, Pills- bury. Second Row: Vary, Jordan, Kiendl, Potts QCaptainj, McClelland, Carey, Weadock. Front Row: North, Town, Peck, McCann, Armstrong, O'Rourke. Freshman Football JAMES M. Porrs GEORGE M. MEAD, JR. INNING only three out of its six scheduled games, the 1943 Freshman Football Team did not make a very impressive showing. The teamls ups and downs could only be ac- counted for by the greenness of the material with which the coaches had to work. However, it became evident in the course of the campaign that there would be a wealth of individual stars, such as Captain Potts and Sargent, who would see varsity experience next year. The former, a blocking back whose defensive work was highly praised by both coaching staffs, was the out- standing player of the season. Handicapped as usual by the fact that they had never played together, the team had exces- sive early trouble with Andover and Exeter, losing to the former, 21-7, and falling before the latterls power, 20-7. The coaches, great problem was that of building a line, and the fruits of their 2 Captain Manager efforts were seen in the successive games, when the team soundly beat Worcester by a 26-7 score, and then emerged victorious over Mercersburg, 15-6, in an erratic game in which a blocked kick and one long run provided the margin. The seasonls climax was reached when they won from a favored Princeton eleven, I3-O. With two weeks of intensive practice after their last spotty game, an improved Yale team was put on the field and, by playing together as a unit, successfully blanked the Tigers. The team seemed to have at last found itself after many discouragements. But the following week up at Cambridge the team started off on the wrong tack and never got a chance to prove its real worth. Harvard left the field victorious by 50-18, netting eight touchdowns whereas the Yale Cubs were able 7 to score only three times. . Back Row: Harris fCoachj, Spearman, Nevins, Tolles QAsst. Managerj, Vernlund, Grant, Fagley fManagerQ. Third Row: Gow, Altschul, Young, Heidrich, Millett, Spaeth. Second Row: Turner, Dugan, Ferguson, Hoagland QCaptainj, Conant, Atwood, Baker. Front Row: Burgess, Morse, Cumming, Brown, Caulkins, Chynoweth, Shepard. Freshman Soccer DONALD W. HOAGLAND ROBERT E. FAGLEY LTHOUGH the year ended disastrously with defeats at the hands of Princeton and Har- vard, the Freshman Soccer season cannot be considered a failure, for in the eight games played Yale won five and lost three. The teams they played included some of the best prep and high school teams in Connecticut and western Massachusetts. The Hrst game with Stamford resulted in a 7-0 triumph for the Blue. The outcome of this game as well as the second game, a Yale victory over West Haven, 6-0, seemed to indicate an- other exceptional team. This prediction was substantiated by a third straight victory, over Williston Academy, I-o. The Freshmen kept their record intact by winning a hard fought Q-I victory over Choate. Then disaster overtook the team with a 2-0 loss to Taft. The next game with Hillhouse was in reality a practice game, Yale 2 Captain Manager running up a 6-o score, in a one-sided match. The Princeton 2-0 defeat was the result of better team play and less ragged shooting on the part of the Tigers. The periods were lengthened to twenty-two minutes which also proved a telling handicap to Yale. In the Harvard con- test a serious injury to Gow, forcing him out of the game, may be said to have meant the differ- ence between victory and defeat, as Harvard subsequently sunk a side shot for the only score of the game. Individual excellence should not be men- tioned, as soccer is primarily a team sport, but as in all cooperative action, certain individuals stand out. This year's freshman team boasts of several players who are expected to see plenty of playing with next year,s varsity. They are Gow, in the line, Atwood, in the goal, and Cap- tain Hoagland, in the fullback position. 86 Freshman Cross Country WILLIAM C. COUGHLAN HAROLD L. HENKEL HILE the season was not exceptional, the Freshman Cross Country Team, under the coaching of Fred Avery, revealed, before the last meet, th-at they had the spirit and ability which would provide good material for the var- sity in the next three years. The team was well- balanced and all the runners were fairly evenly matched, the last man on the squad never fin- ishing far behind the one who was leading the the pack. Rating the team by the order in which they finished in the dual meet with Princeton and Harvard and in the Intercollegiates, Cap- tain Bill Coughlan, John Tabor, and Ralph Fuerbringer were the First runners among the Cubs, the first two vying for the number one position on the team. Opening the season auspiciously on October 13, the Cubs beat the Wesleyan Freshmen at Middletown, 2 5-32, with Mann, behind Fergu- son of Wesleyan, leading the Yale squad in. Next Captain ,Manager the University of Connecticut Freshmen, a powerful aggregation, visited New Haven and left the victors by 2 5-30. The Big Three Meet on the Yale three-mile course again brought defeat to the Yearlings, Princeton winning the meet and Harvard taking second. Coughlan, Tabor, Fuerbringer, Belling- er, Fields, Pierpont, Foster, Quarles, and Mann represented Yale. A bright spot in the season was created by the trouncing given Dartmouth, 22-44, Tabor, second, leading the Yale runners. On November 20 the team closed its season successfully at the I.C. 4.-A. meet in Van Cort- land Park, placing sixth out of the fifteen col- leges represented, avenging its defeat by Prince- ton in the Big Three Meet. Out of the competi- tors, numbering nearly 150 on the entry list, Tabor in twenty-fifth place, Coughlan in thirty- second, and Fuerbringer in thirty-ninth were the 1'irstYalemen to cross the line. Back Row: Henkel, Mann, Tabor, Fields, Bellinger. FrontRow: Rogers, Fuerbringer, Coughlan QCaptainj , Pierpont, Quarles. 287 Freshman ToM D. Vocr LEAv1'rr B. AHRBNS HE Freshman Basketball Team had only a fair season this year, winning eight out of their seventeen games and dropping both of the crucial Princeton and Harvard contests. Outstanding by far was Captain Tom Vogt, who was high-scorer in nearly every game, his long set shots rolling up a season total of 175 points. Lanky Phil Cuba came next with 116. To round out the team, Coach Ivy Williamson alternated Wightman, Cumming, Whelan, Nick- ell, and Daugherty, along with Creenbaum, Jatho, Gordon, and Hoagland. The Freshmen easily won their first two games with Neighborhood House and Nichols,--but Hebron Academy outplayed them, 33-27, in the .next contest. A very successful first half in the Cheshire Academy game enabled Yale to win, 26-22, in a close one. Hillhouse then sneaked away with a 29-26 victory, one almost might say away from Cuba and Vogt instead of Basketball Captain Manager the Freshmen, as these two were responsible for 21 of Yale's points. The Cubs remained in the defeat column after being outscored by a crack Lawrenceville five, 31-2 5. Then the Elis came back with two victories over Junior College of Connecticut and Peekskill Military Academy, by scores of 29-21, and 4.3-39, only to be set back easily by both Exeter and Bridgeport Central in the following two games. Before facing their college opponents, the Freshmen managed to nose out Horace Mann and An- dover, but were then defeated by Junior College of Commerce and Milford. ' Down in Tigertown the Princeton Yearlings, hitting the top form of their season, handed the Elis a decisive 4.0-18 defeat. Concluding a mediocre season, the Cubs were defeated by an invading Cantab aggregation, 47-39, despite a last-period Yale rally in which the visitors were outscored. Back Row: Williamson fC0achj, Gordon, Wightman, Guba, Jatho, Ahrens CManagerj. Front Row: Nickell, Cumming, Whelan, Vogt fCaptainj, Daugherty, Greenbaum, Hoagland. 288 Back Row: Wrigley fTrainerj, Urban, Washburne, Solbert, Pillsbury, Chandler, Kittridge, Badger CCoachj. Second Row: jewett, Philbin, Le Boutillier, Meyer, Roome, Wood, Wardwell. Front Row: Aldrich, Martin. Freshman Hockey AUGUSTUS F. BROWN PETER SOLBERT N the basis of wins and losses the 1939-1940 Freshman Hockey Team turned in a fine record, winning ten games while losing only three. A defeat by Princeton prevented the team from winning the Big Three title, but triumphs over Harvard, Dartmouth, and the New Haven All-Stars climaxed the season more than successfully. The team began a long list of wins by crush- ing an inexperienced Kent team, 6-o. Johnny Le Boutillier led the scoring procession with five goals and an assist. Following this, Andover and- Choate were the next victims. Journeying to Waterbury, the Yearlings experienced a little difficulty in subduing the Taft School. After mastering the outdoor ice, however, they fmally came out on top, 2-1. Hotchkiss, Exeter, and a weak Cheshire team were the next to fall before the Eli onslaught. By running up thirty-seven points to the seven of these first opponents, the 2 Captain .Manager Freshmen really showed their worth. The first defeat was handed the Blue at Con- cord, N. H., by a fast skating St. Paul's sextet, 3-o. After successive defeats by the Princeton Frosh, 4-2, and Hebron Academy, 3-1, Coach Badger's men returned to the win column by topping the New Haven All-Stars, 5-3, before an excited audience. Dartmouth went down before the freshman pucksters in a very tight game in which the fine play of Captain Pete Brown and Bill Wood was decisive. Yale then ended the season in a blaze of glory by edging the Harvard Cubs, 3-2, in New Haven. Captain Brown stood out at defense with Pillsbury, Jewett, and Wardwell, while Cord Meyer played superb hockey in the nets all season. The majority of the scoring went to the first line of Wood, Roome, and Le Boutillier, a fine combination that. played effectively all season. 89 1 Back Row: Crawford CManagerj, Gray, Bauer, Tomkins, Tuttle, Szewczynski, F. Smith, Colman, Newton fCoachj. Third Row: Holloway, Rowe, Battistella, E. Smith, Welch, VanMiddlesworth, McBride, Aldrich, Heidrich. Second Row: Browning, Talbott, Fairhurst, Dannenbaum, Lilley, Pulleyn, Harras, Peters, McNear. FrontRow: Burns, Anderson, Bradford, Birmingham, Hitchcock, Alexander, Schuman. Freshman Swimming FRANK W. LILLEY, JR. WILLIAM A. CRAWFORD, II INDING up its second undefeated season, Coach Newton's Freshman Swimming Team again successfully overcame the Harvard and Princeton yearling aggregations to emerge a championship club. Pawtucket, Hartford, Public High, Haverford, Exeter, Andover, Mont- clair, Hotchkiss, and Lawrenceville all went down before the powerful Eli squad. Mercers- burg, as in previous years, offered the stiifest opposition. Their strong contingent carried the meet to the final relay, but they were unable to defeat -the quartet of Captain Frank Lilley, Bob Arras, Jack Pulleyn, and Bob Browning, who brought the Cubs through victors, 36-30. Jack Pulleyn set a new Freshman record in the 50-yard free-style, to pace the Yearlings to a 47-29 triumph over Princeton. The rest of the squad ably carried out their assignments, gar- nering six firsts in the nine events. An even more decisive drubbing was handed the Cantab na- Captain Manager tators the same week, the Blue turning in a score of 50-25. The Yearling squad presented a well-bal- anced line-up, rather than a few individual stars. In addition to those free-stylers already mentioned, Nelson Talbott and Jack Vreeland held forth in the sprints. The 200-yard relay team of Pulleyn, Vreeland, and Lilley set a new pool record for that event of 1:35.6, Dick Peters, George McNear, and Bob Bauer capably filled the middle-distance roles. The backstroke found Danny Dannenbaum well out in front, setting a new Yale Freshman record of 1 140.6 for the 150 yards. Howie Gray and Pete Anderson alternated in the other place in this event. Supremacy in the breaststroke was hotly contested by Bill F airhurst, Art Heidrich, and Fred Burns. .Claude Hart, John Birmingham, and Reuben Hitchcock exhibited their capabil- ities in the fancy dive. 290 Freshman Squash RICHARD D. DUGAN JAMES B. PHILLIPS LTHOUGH the Freshman Squash Racquets Team finished the season with only four victories, the team played many fine games against the most difhcult opposition in a number of years, with an eight-match schedule. Under the able coaching of Johnny Skillman, the com- paratively inexperienced Cubs showed great improvement in their ability to handle diflicult opponents. Cpening the season against the Y.M.C.A., the Racquetmen gained an easy 4-1 victory. In their next match with Choate the team en- countered its closest opposition of the season. For a while the score stood at two-all, but in the closing minutes Choate cinched the match by a margin of five points in a 13-18 final game, winning 3-2. This loss was partly made up for by the defeat of Haverford, 7-o, the following Sat- urday. Dugan, Wainwright, and Symington were outstanding, the latter defeating his oppon- Captain Manager ent in three straight games with extreme ease. With no let-up in the calibre of play, the Wesleyan V.'s were overwhelmed by a score of 5-o. Copp and Evans were playing in top form, the former using his forehand shots to up- set his opponent in three straight games. The Harvard match saw the tables turned, as the Cantabs took the measure of the Cubs by a score of 4-1. In the next game, however, they regained their form, defeating Pomfrct, 6-1, This victory can be credited to the skillful play- ing of Caulkins and Harvey, who overcame their opponents by scores of 4-1, and Smith, who turned in a straight three-game win. Travelling to Princeton on the day following the Freshman Prom, the team went down to defeat in an upset 6-1 score. The season ended with a poor showing against the Exeter contin- gent, who took the Freshmen by the lop-sided count of 5-0. Back Row: Skillman CCoachj, Smith, Symington, Phillips QManagerj. Front Row: Caulkins, Copp, Dugan fCaptainj, Harvey, Wainwright. QQI Freshman Boxing F. CLIFFORD FORD WARREN H. WAGNER - HOUGH limited to a very short and incom- plete schedule, the 1940 Yale Freshman Boxing Team proved its strength and all-round ability in the few opportunities offered. Because Freshman boxing teams, especially in the Ivy League colleges, are increasingly rare, and few prep schools have representative teams, an in- formal match with Choate was the only meet in which the team participated as a unit. A sched- uled match with Rutgers was cancelled. The tournament held to make the final selec- tion ofthe team's members led to several rousing bouts in the finals, including an exciting draw between Al Armstrong and Bob North in the 165-pound class, and Cliff Ford's knockout of John Luce in the 14.5-pound division. Cliff Ford and Jake Thornton, boxed with the varsity at the New York Yale Club, and their very creditable performances against older and more experienced alumni gave an indication of Back Row: King fCoachj, Thornton, Podheiser, Churchill, Quarles, Armstrong, Ford fCaptainj, Kennard, Semple. Captain M anager the caliber and the potential possibilities of this cub team. The Choate meet, a non-decision exhibition, was featured by the clever aggressive boxing of the freshmen in all weight divisions, and particularly by Captain Ford's sparkling second-round knockout of his schoolboy oppon- ent. George Churchill and Frank Kennard also scored heavily in this meet. The scarcity of competition was untimely because Mose King with the help of his two freshman coaches, Gerry Ford and former Yale captain Dick Galland, had moulded inexperi- enced material into a yearling team which was Yale's best since the days of the Olympic cham- pion, Eddie Eagan. Every man was potential varsity material. Captain Cliff Ford, Jake Thornton, and George Churchill were particu- larly outstanding during the season, while Julie Podheiser, Don Quarles, and Howie Semple were consistently excellent. Galland CAsst. Coachj, Wagner fManagerj. Front Row: 292 Back Raw: J. O,Donnell CCoachj, Niewenhous, Haber, Deming CManagerj, Heizer, Rathvon, Carey, E. O'Donnell QCoachj. Middle Row: Vary, Perry, Miller, Castles CCaptainJ, Mallinckrodt, Minor, Moseley. Front Row: White, Bellinger. Freshman JOHN W. CASTLES, III JOHN N. D1z1v11NG ALEgS Freshman Wrestling Team completed a seven-match schedule undefeated, and again the grapplers, under Coach Johnny O,Donnell, triumphed over Harvard and Prince- ton for the Big Three Championship. Meeting a strong Exeter team in the opener, the wrestlers won a 19-15 victory, Jack Castles and Dud Miller throwing their men, while Ed Minor, George Mallinckrodt, and Bill Niewen- hous came through with decisions. In the follow- ing meet, with four new men in the line-up, the team nosed out Gilman, 19-15. Again Minor, Castles, and Niewenhous defeated their oppon- ents, but hero of the day was 165-pouncler Tom Hewitt who threw his man in 2:30. The Blue won its third consecutive meet of the season by decisively trimming a weak Choate squad. Wyoming Seminary and Taft were nosed out next by scores of I6-I4 and I5yZ-MIM, respec- tively. In the latter closely-contested meet, Pete 2 Wrestling Captain zlffanager Rathvon, in the 165-pound class, drew a deci- sion with Roche, while Miller and Moseley took their matches decisively. Princeton, a heavy favorite over Yale, trav- elled up to New Haven to find the Blue outfit determined to win. In a match that saw both teams risking their undefeated record, Yale gathered a total of I5 points, while Princeton had difficulty in garnering 1 1. The Eli grapplers dropped only three matches, one by George Vary who lost an extremely close one in the un- limited class after only four days of wrestling ex- perience. Up at Cambridge, in the last meet of the sea- son, the Yearlings massacred Harvard, 25-3. The Elis swept through the first seven bouts, although all were closely fought, and then barely lost an overtime decision in the eighth, thus keeping a spotlessly clean record for the entire season. 93 Back Row: Birrell, Aber QManagerj, Flournoy, Hamilton, Baxter, A. Grasson CCoachj,Miskimmin. Front Row: Somers, Markle, Smith, Olmsted fCaptainj, Sloan, Wachsman, Dappert. Freshman Fencing THEODORE D. OLMSTED R. KENNETH ABER OR the second consecutive year the Freshman Fencing' Team, under the direction of Coach Albert Grasson, went through its schedule of eleven meets undefeated. The majority of the men on the squad had no previous fencing ex- perience, but the steady improvement of the team was evident as the season progressed. Yale opened against the Mt. Hermon School team and won a 1 5-9 victory. On the following Saturday the Freshmen barely managed to de- feat the Hopkins team 14.5-IQMZ. The team was evidently over-confident and it was only due to line work of the sabre team, consisting of Cap- tain Ted Olmsted, Joe Smith, and Bob Schmidt, that they won this meet. The next meet with Commercial High School, Connecticut Inter- scholastic champions, was probably the hardest fought meet of the season. With the sabre team winning seven out of nine bouts,.Yale came out on top by a 14-13 score. The Freshmen went 2 Captain Manager into enemy territory for its next two matches, defeating Taft, 15-12, and Choate, 17-10. Then followed a comparatively easy 2-O-7 victory over the Dartmouth Freshmen. On February 24, although they were without the services of Coach Grasson, the team returned from a trip to Worcester Academy with a 15-12 win. In the next meet Yale came very close to defeat, the final score being Yale, 135, Columbia, QM. The Freshmen defeated Loomis, 18-9, in their last match before taking on their traditional Big Three rivals, Princeton, and Harvard. The team won a comparatively easy 155-1 IM vic- tory over the Princeton Freshmen and went to Cambridge the next week with the expectation of a similar victory over Harvard. The Cantabs however, took the foil matches 6-3. It was only by Winning both epee and sabre by 6-3 scores that the Yale Freshmen were able to iinish their season undefeated. 94 Freshman Indoor Polo JoHN H. DANIELS MICHAEL S. JACOBS OING down to defeat at the hands of Prince- ton and Harvard, the 1943 Polo Team won only five of their eight games, to give Yale one of their most mediocre seasons in recent years. Captain John Daniels and Dave Williams formed the spearhead of the Eli attack, with Kemper and Baze contributing timely goals and excellent defense work. The season opened on January 20, when the team sent Avon down to defeat by a score of 15-7. McDonough School fell prey to the Cub malletmen on February 4 by an even more de- cisive score of 17-8. A return match with Avon a week later definitely established the Eli su- periority, when they garnered 16 points to their opponents 5. On February 16, Lawrenceville, the perennial rival of the Freshmen, was easily downed 12-5 on NewJersey soil. Captain M anager The following day saw Princeton hand the Cub riders their first defeat in a hard-fought contest, in which a second-period rally failed to overtake the Tiger's early lead. The fine defense work of the Tiger team limited the Yale attack to eight goals, while they managed to garner twelve. In a second game with Princeton the Cubs were no more successful, receiving a 7-16 setback in New Haven. The same after- noon the Eli team was defeated for the second time in the same afternoon, this time by Har- vard. In spite of the fine team-work of Captain Daniels, Williams and Kemper, the Cantab trio nosed them out by one goal in the final game of the regular schedule. However, a post-seasonal game with Cornell clirnaxecl the season more successfully when the latter succumbed to the Eli attacks by a score of IQ-II. Back Row: Jacobs fManagerJ, Baze. Front Row: Williams, Daniels CCaptainJ, Kemper. 2 Freshman Rifle ROBERT I. LYMAN WALWORTH B. W1LL1AMs HE Freshman Rifle Team went through a successful season, with six wins and four losses on its postal schedule, and victories in two of its three shoulder-to-shoulder matches. The opening of the season saw the largest turnout in Yale rifle history, twenty-one of the thirty-nine aspirants being chosen for the squad. The team was consistently paced by Captain Lyman, W. H. Sykes, R. T. Wilson, and R. T. Heizer. The team started off with a bang, turning in three straight victories. V. P. I. succumbed in the first postal match on january II, 1255-1234. On the following week end ,although it was early in the season and they were still badly in need of practice, the team made a pilgrimage to Brooklyn and defeated the St. John's V.'s, 1282-1231. Then a strong team from Indiana went down under the Yale fire, in a postal match, 1328-1283. Captain fllanager Although they shot their best score ofthe year, 1343, the Yale team bowed to Maryland, who reported an impressive 1363. On February 24, in a shoulder-to-shoulder match on the home range, the Freshmen were defeated by M.I.T., 1276-1313. Then the boys in blue pulled them- selves together and took over Columbia, Army, and Ohio State in a single postal match, with a score of 1308. Columbia reported an ignomini- ous 1164, Army a 1298, and Ohio State, failing to send in any score, defaulted. Yalels 1308, however, was topped by Iowa State's 1338. The last match unfortunately ended in defeat at the hands of Phoenix Junior College, 1331-1358. Sending two teams to the Connecticut State Open Match, the Freshmen captured 29th and 66th places out of 1 1 5 entrants. It was with this good showing that the Cubs faced with con- fidence the Intercollegiate later in the season. Back Row: Hook fCoachj, Markle, Wfilson, Nevins, Williams CManagerj, Fuld, Balensweig, Smith QCoachj. Front Row: Thompson, Cleary, Waterman, Hewitt, Lyman QCaptainj, Sykes, Willstatter, Rubin, Heizer. 296 Back Row: Simonds, Smith, Orr CManagerj, Pope, Lacouture. Front Row: Adams, Witt, Halsey, Harrison CCaptainj, Ingley, Ross, Carton. 1 94.2 Freshman Baseball FRED H. HARRISON ROBERT D. GRR HE Freshman Baseball Team, the last coached by the late Clyde Engle, won the Big Three Championship and twelve of its thir- teen games. The season was marked by excep- tional left-handed pitching, good catching, and adequate, timely hitting. Ted Harrison, the sterling left-hander, captained the team and is accredited with seven of the victories. Franzen, another port-sider, accounted for the other five. The only regulars, hitting better than the ac- cepted .3OO standard, were Bert Ingley, catcher, and Ed Pope, one of the defensive bulwarks in the outfield, The games with the neighboring prep schools were handled easily. The Yearlings took Ches- hire, Choate, Milford, Suffield, Cushing, Peek- skill and Kent into camp by convincing margins, the scores soaring to io-o and 20-o over Worces- ter and Suflield, respectively. Exeter proved powerful, but timely batting by Shorty Simonds and Captain Ted Harrison earned a 5-2 victory. 2 Captain Manager Phelan and Chase, Andover's pitchers, proved too much for the Yale batteries, defeating the Freshmen, 4.-1. The 1942 nine started down the home stretch auspiciously, defeating the Wesleyan Freshmen, 5-1. Franzen handled the pitching assignment and after permitting an early home-run, held the Middletowners to two hits, and struck out an even dozen. Although behind 1-0 in the sixth inning of the Princeton game, the Cubs quickly bunched three walks, a single, and successive triples by Hindenlang and Ingley, thus assuring Captain Harrison his sixth win ofthe year by the comfortable score of 6-1. The next week at Cambridge, the Cubs closed the season by defeating the Cantab Frosh, 3-2. Wittis home run and Cartonls triple drove in the winning tallies. Harrison, in his most spectacular performance of the year, struck out twenty men, allowing but three hits during the entire game. 97 Ford, Edgerton, Wallace, Magee CCaptainj, Salisbury, Oleair, Watson, Thorne, Parks 1 942 Freshman Crew JOHN F. MAGEE, JR. HENRY FORD, H HE Freshman Crew, after having spent the winter on the man-made rivers of the Payne Whitney Gym, met their first test of the season on the Housatonic against the schoolboys from Kent. Up until several days before the race no satisfactory combination of oarsmen had been found, which seriously handicapped the crew, as they had rowed together only once before the race. Nevertheless they made a brave try, but were just nosed out by the Kent crew over the one-mile course. A week later at Derby there were high hopes for Don Grant's much improved crew, but they proved to be unfounded, the Pennsylvania crew beating them by twelve seconds. The race was however not a total defeat as they managed to eke out a victory over the Columbia Freshmen. On May 13, the crews of Yale, Syracuse, and M.I.T. met for the first time on the Housatonic. 2 Captain Manager The Blue crew, stroked by Jack Magee, beat both of its competitors in a thrilling race, no open water showing between any of the shells at the finish. Yale took the lead at the start, main- taining it throughout the race, followed by Syra- cuse and M.I.T. The Carnegie Cup Race proved to be a real disappointment to the Cubs after their brilliant performance at Derby. In this race they were defeated by the superior Cornell and Princeton crews. Following this poor showing, the Freshmen had about five weeks before their last and most crucial race with Harvard. On June 23, they seemed in splendid condition, but were unsuc- cessful in a valiant attempt against the Cantabs. The more powerful Harvard boat won easily by almost three lengths, thus ending a not too successful season for the Yearling crewmen. 98 1942 Freshman 150-pound Crew ROBERT G. CONGDON ARNOLD N. WELLES 1TH a. freshman squad of seventy men turning out in September at the start of the crew season, the outlook for a successful year seemed good. However, as the months passed by the number of aspirants dwindled to just two boatloads at the conclusion ofthe races. The first race ofthe spring against Kent found Quinn at the tiller ropes with Shattuck from St. Paulis stroking. Two more St. Paul's men, Bermingham and Dominick,were at six and two, respectively. Neuhaus at four, and Congdon at seven were both from St. Markls, and Pynchon from Asheville rowed at five. Houston in the bow and Shorey at three were the only men in the boat without previous experience. In the closest race of the season, Kent edged out the freshman fifties by a deck-length. On May I3 the same boat, except for three changes-Palmer at four, Dixon at stroke, and Caplain Manager Hunt as coxswain, lost to Princeton in the an- nual Goldthwaite Cup Race. The crews were fairly evenly matched, but poor steering by the Yale shell gave Princeton its five-second win- ning margin. The crew journeyed to Cambridge on May 30 for the A.R.A. Regatta. Yale, with the same oarsmen who rowed against Princeton and with Ford as coxswain, got olf to a poor start and ended by beating M.I.T. for fourth place. Cor- nell took Hrst honors, followed by Harvard and Princeton. just before this race, Bob Congdon was elected Captain of the fifty-pounders. Although the freshman record was not alto- gether satisfactory, the yearis experience prom- ised to give the varsity some capable and experi- enced men. Pynchon and Houston both ought to go far in the ranks of Yale rowers in the 150- pound class. Back Row: Shattuck, Congdon, Berrningharn, Pynchon, Neuhaus, Shorey, Dominick, Houston. Front Row: Quinn. 299 1 942 Freshman Track ERNEST C. PARSHALL MELVILLE CHAPIN N February 18, 1939, the Freshman Track Team inaugurated what was to be an ex- cellent season by a relay victory over Andover. The team of Ashton, Jackson, Murphy, and Madden covered the 1200-yard distance in 2:2o.Q. Continuing the winter campaign, the Yale Freshmen vanquished Dartmouth, Har- vard, and Cornell in a special one-mile relay at the Quadrangular meet with a time of 3:34.0, and Art Madden won the half-century dash in o:o5.8. In the freshman relay at the Intercol- legiates, Yale placed fifth in a field of twelve teams. The outdoor track schedule was opened by a meet with Mercersburg which gave Yale its only defeat of the year, overpowering the Fresh- men by 77 to 49. Captain Ernie Parshall ac- counted for nineteen points by winning the jave- lin, shot, and discus events, and by placing in Captain Manager the high jump. Next Yale defeated Andover on the home track with a 73-43 victory. Parshall was again the Eli high scorer with sixteen points including firsts in the broad jump and the javelin. Murphy captured the low hurdles, while Madden won the 440-yard and 220-yard dashes. In the dual meet with Princeton on May 6, the Freshmen swept to triumph, Q0 to 45, taking ten of the Hfteen first places. Parshall again was brilliant in the field events, taking firsts in the javelin, shotput, and broad-jump, while Read Murphy made a sweep in the hurdle events. To close the campaign, Yale vanquished Har- vard 77M to 485 on May 13, and thereby annexed the Big Three Championship. Eleven firsts were garnered by the Yearlings. Captain Parshall climaxed his season's performance with a triple win, while Madden turned in a remark- able o:51.1 for the 440-yard dash. Bark Row: Chapin QManagerj, Lamont, Eddy, Griiling, Rich, Munro, Avery ffloachj. Front Row: De Mott, Murphy, Harding, Madden, Parshall fCaptainj, Page, Finley, jackson, Keller. 3 OO Back Row: Skillman CCoachj, Wilson, Schulhof, Rhett, Wilmer, Corbet QManagerj. Fran! Row: Rumbough, Bowers, Milbank, Wilhelm, CCaptainD, Lockwood, Deland, Kennedy. I 911.2 Freshman Tennis DA.VID C. WILHELM DARRA1-1 CORBET, JR. LTHOUGI-I the Freshman Tennis Team lost to both the Harvard and Princeton first- year men, it succeeded in topping seven out of ten opponents to conclude a successful season. In its initial game the Freshman team de- cisively beat the Kent team, 7-2, in New Haven. The following week, however, it met its first defeat at the hands of the Scarborough team, losing to them 55-35. Returning to the win column, Yale blasted Taft by a score of 8-1, losing only one singles match. The team re- peated this victory in New Haven when it van- quished Peddie by the same score. The dark spot on the Freshman team's record was the loss to a good Princeton Freshman team. Yale, dropping every match, came out on the very short end of a 9-0 score. Immediately following this defeat by Princeton, the Elis trounced the Cheshire School team, 9-0, and, 3 Captain Manager paced by Captain Dave Wilhelm and Jim Eth- ridge, it eked out a tight 5-4 victory over Choate. The Dartmouth Freshmen, followed by the Cornell yearlings, were the next teams to fall prey to Coach Skillman's boys, both by a 7-2 score. The season ended against the Harvard Freshmen in Cambridge, where despite the 6-3 score, the Yale Frosh were edged in a very closely contested match. In his match with Wilson of Harvard, Captain Wilhelm came from behind to gain a close decision, 5-7, 6-4., 6-1. The Yearlings also won the first doubles match. Outstanding singles players for the Yale team were Captain Wilhelm, Jim Ethridge, G. Wilmer, and Milbank. Wilhelm and Eth- ridge, and Rumbaugh and S. C. Kennedy were two top-flight doubles teams. Credit must also be extended to Johnny Skillman for his excellent job of coaching. OI Back Row: Thomson fCoachj, Sernple, Ewald. Front Row: Boucher, Gravely, Phillips CCaptainj , Bott, Fessenden I 942 Freshman Golf SAM PHILLIPS, JR. WILLIAM M. STUCKY NCE again the Freshman Golf Team, under the expert eye of its coach, Ben Thomson, swept through its spring schedule undefeated, all the players receiving gold charms in recogni- tion of their perfect record. The neighboring schoolboy teams offered little opposition to the Yearlings who first conquered Hotchkiss 9-O and then Andover by the same score. Next to fall before the superior Blue team were Choate, by 8-I, and then Taft, by 6-3. The latter en- counter, including two tied matches, was closer than the score indicates. Traveling down to Princeton, the Yearlings lost no time in handing Nassau's representatives a 6-3 drubbing. The outstanding man of the day was Ed Gravely who, playing number one, defeated Zimmerman, Princetonls former inter- scholastic champion. Phillips, Taz Bott, and Dick Semple captured individual points for the Cubs, while Gravely and Phillips won the first 3 Captain Manager foursome, 2 and 1, and Boucher and Semple eked out the third foursome, 2 up. Next, an unknown Harvard Cub team stormed into the Elm City, only to return to the Yard cha- grined with an 8-I defeat, Phillips dropping the only match. With a very successful campaign behind them, the Yearlings in their final match defended their spotless record successfully with a 75-IM win over Exeter, Fessenden dropping the only match. During the entire season Ed Gravely, in number one position, played beautiful golf The number two berth was hotly contested by Cap- tain Phillips and Taz Bott, each sharing about evenly the honor of playing in the first foursome during the season. The remaining members of the team deserve no small amount of credit for the excellent golf they played. Norm Boucher Phil Ewald, Dick Semple, and Bill Fessenden made the team strong from top to bottom. O2 194.2 Freshman Lacrosse CHARLES C. Bkooks LEWIS MOHR oAcH MULLIGAN had a bare two weeks before the first game to whip the Freshman Lacrosse aspirants into shape. The job was well done, for a team was soon molded that com- pleted a very successful year. The Cubs garnered four victories, which included two shut outs, and suffered but two defeats during the 1939 season. Handicapped at the outset by the loss of Punky Dell and as yet lacking experience and coordination as a team, the Cubs were handed a 6-4. set back by the militiamen from Peekskill Military Academy. The following Saturday the Yearlings, led by the newly-elected Captain Spike5' Brooks, defeated a powerful Deerfield Academy team 6-5. Next the Freshmen shut out Army by the overwhelming score of 7-0. Gap- tain Brooks led the attack with four goals. The following week Stamford was crushed when the Yearlings rained in II goals and allowed their Captain Manager opponents not a single tally. Credit must be to goalie Dun who saved many potential scores. Entering the race for the Big Three Title with high hopes the Cubs journeyed down to Prince- ton. In a closely-fought contest in which Bob Gill at defense for Yale did great work, the Tigermen stopped the invaders 7-3. Captain Brooks and Poynter accounted for the three Yale tallies. The brilliant defense work of Gill and Hicks plus the numerous saves of Dun spoiled many of Princeton's savage attacks. When the Gantabs arrived in New Haven the Yale Cubs were thirsting to avenge their defeat at the hands of Princeton. Using Eddie Hicks, Poynter, and g'Spike,' Brooks as a midfield com- bination with which to spear-head the Yale attack, the Bulldogs swamped Harvard I3-I. Captain Brooks fattened his scoring average by netting the ball 5 times. Back Row.' Wyre fTrainerj, Hicks, Battey, Cassman CTrainerj, Chancellor, Mohr fManagerj. Second Row: Fleming, Devine, Poynter, Hirschhorn, Brooks fGaptainj, Sherman, Adams, Gill, Boyce. Front Row: McOwen, Bronson, Ohler, Buckley, Bancker. 3 03 Back Row: Gary CCoachj, Heirn, Gauvreau, Titcomb, Wieboldt, Whittington, Ellis, Teevan fManagerj. Front Row: Miller, Luce, McCarty, Winik, Mahoney, Nichell, Waterman QCaptainj. South Football NEIL WATERMAN Captain JAMES F. TEEVAN Manager CCASIONALLY outplayed, but living up in every way to the long line of Southern victories established by their predecessors last year, the Colonels were the decisive winners of the Freshman Intramural Football Champion- ship. They coasted with ease through a six- garne schedule, marred only by one o-o tie, and were scored upon only once. The Hrst game foreshadowed what was to be the rule for each succeeding contest, North falling, 12-o. A blocked punt by Johnny Ma- honey on the five-yard line was the cue for the first score by Norm Winik, who easily swept across the goal-line. Hank Gauvreau plunged eight yards through the line for the second tally. But South Middle was not so easily overcome. Once the champions fumbled on their own three- yard line and three times their opponents were within the ten-yard stripe, but lacked the needed drive to carry further. South Middle could console themselves at best with a scoreless tie. Next, in an aerial battle, North Middle was plowed under, 19-0. Once more the Northmen felt the Southern heat, this time, however, only by a 6-o score. A return engagement with South Middle again nearly proved disastrous, but in the absence of any concentrated offensive by the enemy, a vic- tory was eked out by a single safety, 2-0. The last game of the season with North Mid- dle, saw Southis goal-line crossed for the first time. Relaxing for a moment after a six-point lead, the Southerners fumbled and lost the ball on the 20-yard line. A few seconds later the North eleven had scored and converted. In a breath-taking final period, South's Hart tallied the marginal touchdown to bring a climax to an undefeated season, 13-7. 304 South Middle Touch Football GoRDoN T. GATES, RICHARD J. GATES Co-Captains HENRY VV. LAWRENCE, JR. OUTH MIDDLE gained the title in the touch football division of the Freshman Intra- mural Competition last fall with five victories and one defeat. The series was a hotly contested one between South Middle and North Middle, the runner-up with overtime periods in their games deciding the championship. Getting off to a flying start, South Middle's Patriots won the first three games, and at the half-way mark were definitely in the stellar position. Starting the final round with a fourth victory it looked as though nothing could stop them. Second place North Middle, however, provided an opportunity for a play-off by hand- ing an upset to the league leaders in the tune of I8-12 after an overtime struggle. With third place South, the final opponent for both teams, a play-off seemed certain between North Middle and South Middle. However, South upset these predictions by defeating the favored North Manager Middle, thus leaving them as the only team to contest the Patriots' title. The difference be- tween a quick victory and a play-off depended upon the outcome of this game. Playing on a soft field, the Gates brothers, co-captaining the Patriots, inspired their team into early scoring which gave them a command- ing lead at the end of the half. The powerful steam-roller efficiency of the team continued through the second half every man of the Patriots scoring during the course of the game. As the final whistle blew South Middle had definitely established itself as the league cham- pions by the decisive score of 52-12. The team, spark-plugged by R. Gates and G. Gates as the co-captains, consisted of: Mc- Kinney, W. Laupus, P. Cardon, Birmingham, L. Mahler, and H. Riech, all of whom re- ceived their victors' charms at the annual Fresh- man Christmas Dinner. Reich, Mahler, G. Gates, R. Gates, Laupus, Cardon, McKinney 305 South Middle Basketball NEXVELL P. WEED, JR. Crlplain HENRY W. LAWRENCE, JR. .Manager HE South Middle Basketball Team, led by Captain Newt Weed, won this year's fresh- man Intramural crown by virtue of their thir- teen victories in sixteen games. Although in second place after the first round of play, South Middle Weed fought its way to final victory over South Middle Oscarson and South Greene, the chief threats to the team's success. Defeated, 17-1 3, in the first game of their sea- son by North Middle Tabor, South Middle Weed started dismally on their road to glory. Save for one defeat by South Greene, the team went ahead to win the remainder of the games in the first round. In the second round, Weed's team won six of its seven games. It avenged its former defeat at the hands of North Middle Tabor by routing them, 45-13. South Greene was also set down decisively in the return game. With the title clinched, South Middle lost the final game of the season to South Waterman to close their season in the same way it had begun. In a post-season game, Jonathan Edwards, Basketball Team, the intercollege champions, was successful in putting down South Middle Weed's threat to their intramural supremacy by a score of 39-527, in a contest which was not as one-sided as the score would indicate. Although several others of the stalwart squad participated early in the season, the iinal squad was narrowed down to eight men. Laupus, Field- en, and Collins counted for many of the teamis points as forwards. Arnold, Captain Weed, and Smith also added to the team's scoring and greatly contributed to the outfitis success with their passing and stellar all-round work. Shay and North were highly-dependable guards and succeeded in holding down the opponents' scores. Back Row: Laupus, Collins, Shay. Front Row: North, Fielden, Weed fCaptainj, Arnold. 306 Jackson, Whalen, Kiendl CCaptainj, Marsh, Fahey, Cooke CManagerj. North Swimming THEODORE KiENDL, JR. Captain PAUL D. CooKE Manager OLLOWING the same procedure as last year, the Freshman Intramural Swimming season consisted of two separate and distinct series of meets. The first of these, held in December, was open to all members of the Class of 1943 and furnished an excellent opportunity for the Freshman varsity V-swimmers to practice under competitive conditions. A strong North Middle aggregation took first honors in this series, with North a close second. After the Christmas recess the second series got under way, with the Freshman varsity men ineligible. In this group of meets seven events were contested, the 25, 50, and too-yard dis- tances in the freestyle, the 50-yard breaststroke and backstroke, the dive, and the too-yard free- style relay. North, with a powerful and versatile group 'of swimmers, took the league lead at the very outset and never relinquished its hold, win- 3 O ning the first five meets and losing only its sixth and last to a fighting South Middle team. The latter swimmers finally Hnished in second place in the league standings, with North Middle, third and South, fourth. Although the North team was small in numbers, it was built around a nucleus of able swimmers, all of whom could be counted upon in two or three events. Captain Kiendl always rolled up points in the freestyle and breaststroke and was admirably supported by Whelan, Rowe, Fahey, and Marsh in the freestyle events, Wilson in the backstroke, and Jackson in the dive. The meets were run OH' with great enthusiasm on the part of all the teams and the competition was keen throughout the season. A humorous touch was added by Starter Harry Burke, whose blazing revolver and ready wit kept the meets lively and interesting at all times. 7 North Bowling VENGING itself of a fruitless fall season, North found solace in placing both North Stiles and North Flasehner among the three winning teams of the bowling league, but only after the lead had been held intermittently by Reid of South and Sweeney of North Middle. Cooke fManagerj, Field, Spilner, Kelley, Eckle, Stiles So close was the contest throughout that a play- off was necessitated between the latter and Stiles' pin-men, the outcome of which saw the Postmen victors by a 4-0 decision, giving them a season total of 29 points. The Reid team made a promising bid at the very outset of the season by sweeping its first two opponents from the alleys, but fell before the Stiles' tide which threatened to engulf all until it met defeat at the hands of the strong but in- consistent Flaschner quintet. Meanwhile a steady Sweeney combination was busy taking over the lead by victories over the less powerful but frequently surprising teams under Captains Brunet, Thompson, Weadock, and Hornstein. Receiving a default from Joraleman, Stiles seemed a certain winner until fate took a hand and dealt a similar card to Sweeney as Reid defaulted. The Sweeney team then went on to cop the play-off from the Stiles men. South Squash HE South Colonels paraded through a winter racquet campaign to add to the point they had garnered from their victory in football and thereby drew nearer to another All-Year Championship. Although some matches were closely con- tested, the Colonels were never headed and Van Slyck, Hosley, Tyner, Haywood, Sanford swept through their season undefeated in the six-match schedule. Minus the services of their number-one man, Forest Van Slyck, South barely bested North Middle, 3-2, and nosed out South Middle by the same count in its opening matches. Subsequently paced by Van Slyck, Johnny Tyner, and Rowland Cocks, all of whom were undefeated throughout the entire campaign, South's Racquetmen made short work of the remaining four matches. With the aid of Dick Hosley, George Sanford, Alf Hay- wood, and Maurie Goodman, other consistent winners who completed the team, North was the next victim of the Van Slyck-led aggrega- tion, 4-1. In its return match with the North Middle Deacons, contenders for first place, South clinched the championship, winning by the same decisive score. Coasting through to end their season brilliantly, the Colonels admin- istered a 5-o waxing to South Middle and de- feated North, 4-1. 308 ADVERTISEMENTS COLLEGE LISTS INDEX ! X Vs Clofhes 0 ndividualizyf if be Vs l777Z'U67'5ZQ! fllefa V2 O . . 1 . 1 ' or ehanzefer ana' zndzfuzdualzfy zn eezmpuf, ffofwn and w . . . . V5 J'jD07'f.f wear, Y rzpler C latfzef are Zfze ehozee gf zmzfuer.r11fy l ' .rfyle-.rez'Zer.r ffze counffiy afver V X , .: H ere, in our Hung M e7z'f Department, zffzezr elotfzzng ' x z'a'ea.f are reyfeefed and ifzeir fiyfe reguz'1'emenf.r ,reztzlyfed v 4 . . . inf EXCZHIZTJE, fpeezafg fwofven woolen: . . . both imparted lg and domefiie . . . failored fa Trzfler JPECQQ-CdfZ'077J' fwiffz X V e . . . ff exezefzng zzffenfzon to every defezz! . . . fhefe garmenzir ' X repreferiz' excellem' z'n-veftmentf in clothing .fLll'ZwlC'fZ-072 V z :Q 'Ll 14523 gg fl lv -, l -QI V4 Popular three-button, single-breasted ? 4 211 5. model . . featurmg the new stripes, . y dizlgonnls :mtl Herrlngbones. A cur- 'V 'Lf 'Ex . 5 rent preference :muon g university men x el e' e fe .. lf 5. . 41 l ' .5-l X POLO COAT of Camel Han--a most ' ,f' p?,,g'-lg ,, ,ggi desuable coat for all-year-1 ound wear f ,,', l is 4, H' LI N 1 N G S1 6 7 ', L lLm, : 2 ' ' : Q in .,ll I ko 310 I A , fri? I 11317 SUITS, 1fS6etlaml Pfbal, 342 X cJizeJ I0 4-43 c f Sai R ,GAQVQW gray, brofwn or green 3 ARDE N s H 1 RT, gf' Chwwr, 52.7 5 :A .f bution-do-'wn collar, plum blue or muhzte 3 I- A Repp Szlk T I E, from 34 I . 5 0 f Q A ' . . i. : ' SA SUITS, ffnzported Strzped Flannel, X.: ,, '42 QA A :MZ . 'f.Z?'2 ir 9 blue orgray CIZZEJ to 44, QZQ 3, I S H IRTS, gl Broadclotn Q F fy' 'azfk 'vx , A I and Striped Madras 52. 50 to 593.50 ' E, 3 We Foularel TIE, from 392 FA 1'-fvxygkfiilf ,.l. 'A ' f . 'f f ,F , ' ff - E ff : ll' VCV ff ' - A . . ff . , .. R51 -' If x f I 'fl , Ya, f-ef z C 0 SUITS for Campus and Town 342 10 548 3 I HARRIS TWEED SUITS for Campus and Country 348 QA . . I IMPORTED SHETLAND SUITS, Coal and Yrouxers 6 to be worn with Sweater 345 ff- SPORTS JACKETS qfIn1p0rleelSlzetlanel 535 I . . g COVE RT COATS wzilz Slzlclwel Sleeves and Boilam 345 IA' POLO OOATS QfC6Z1'l16l Hair 555 3 I C XA a RIP ER Sc U JI ERI I, E 6 OUTFITTERS TO GENTLEMEN FA X Eflezblzffzed I 8 8 6 3 C MADISON AVENUE AT 46 STREET - NEW YORK ,.,. -,, vs. vo. fu. fu. f'lQ fn' .1 fvq fvog 0 UU CTBS,JCIT?-S,,0ifTKS,6ffK,,'iIT3i:S,'ifT5Ls,,0iiT?i:S,vif?5S,4 .ZTi5:,, iIT55SS,0i3,,'iIT55sS,1nIIz I - - I 311 ADDOMS ANGEL . L. ATKIN B. BADGER, JR. BEETZ, JR. J. T. BLOSSOM, JR. A. M. BORDEN J. H. BROOKS A. A. BURROWS, JR. J. F. CARNEY M. CHAPIN B. E. COLE,JR. R. R. M. CONVERSE S. M. COVIN J. A. DUNCAN J. G. EISENBERG J. A. M. FAUX Tfftvcnpp F1 ww R. K. ABER C. P. ABERG C. S. ALLYN,JR. C. J. ANGULO D. E. ASCHE I. H. BERKOWITZ C. W. BILLINGSLEY H. J. BOWEN E. F. BREWER J. M. BUTLER, JR. J. S. CAMPBELL, JR. R. E. CHAPMAN P. H. CONVERSE, JR. W. A. CRAWFORD, II N. B. DALY H. C. DAVIS, JR. E. R. DETCHON, JR. R. C. DYE C. B. FINCH T. W. AINSWORTH W. F. ARNOLDY, JR. R. P. BALDWIN A. W. BARNEY, JR. H. H. BARTLETT D. BEERS F. W. BRUNNER F. E. CHAFFEE J. F. CLARK G. H. COLEMAN J. H. DENMAN E. DE ZALDO, JR. W. M. ADAMS J. T. ANDERSON J. S. BROERSMIT, JR. J. P. GASSILLY R. W. COOKE F. C. CROSS, JR. R. F. DONOVAN, JR. W. H. FARRELL A. C. GILBERT, JR. Berkeley College W. W. FIELD H. L. FINCH, JR. R. J. FITZWILLIAM S. S. GAGARIN H. S. GOODFELLOXV D. GRISWOLD C. B. HAFF, JR. H. HUBBELL J. F. JOHNSON, III E. J. KALISKI W. P. KARSTEN J. D. KAUSEL H. T. KRAMER D LAURITS J. . H. H. LIvINGSTON,JR. J. B. LOCKHART, JR. D. MACGRECOR G. A. FINCK W. D. FISHER C. E. FORD, II J. A. FORD, JR. S. B. FRENCH, JR. J. W. GERSTER A. N. GORDON,JR. G. GRISWOLD, JR. W. H. HARRIS, JR. C. E. HART, III J. W. HEOHINCER T. T. HELDE C. E. HEWES B. F. HOPKINS, JR. VV. P. JEFFERY, JR. R. R. JENNEY R. W. JOHNSON, JR. W. T. KETCHAM, JR. G. O. KEUTGEN, JR. A. GORDON, JR. I. GORDON E. K. GRAVELY H. T. GREENE H. HAGAR S. W. HARRIS L. L. HEMINOWAY, JR. R. L. IRELAND, III A. T. KEEFE, JR. J. G. KELLER R. A. KENDALL I 940 J. J. H. MARTIN, JR. C. D. MATHEWS E. M. MOORE H. C. MOORHEAD J. O. MULLEN J. L. NAMMACR J. D. NELSON, JR. W. NEUSTADT, JR. R. D. ORR A. D. ORRICR S. F. PARHAM, JR. A. I. PARVEY M. C. PEASE, III S. P. PLATT, JR. E. F. POLLOCK R. G. QUINN I. RICHARDS, JR. I94,I E. KNOWLES W. M. KUNSTLER W. S. LAMBIE, JR. E. M. LATSON F. T. S. LAVERY R. F. LOREE,JR. E. D. LUCEY P. J. MACCARTHY J. G. K. MCCLURE, JR. G. N. MCLENNAN B. F. MCMAHON, JR. J. B. MADDEN G. B. MALLORY H. C. MANLEY, JR. G. H. MEAD,JR. R. T. MEEHAN E. M. MILLER P. MOORE, JR. R. E. MURPHY IQ42 G. W. KIRCHWEY, III R. LAWLER R. S. LEWIS A. OWRE, JR. J. M. PACKARD F. C. PANNILL, JR. B. O. PARKER J. PAUKER G. PHILLIPS L. PLATT, JR. H. M. POYNTER, JR. NON-RESIDENTS E. W. GOSSELIN J. GREEN G. T. GRISWOLD W. A. I-IAVILAND,JR. F.. F. HIGGINS J. S. HOES E. B. IJAMS J. R. KELSEY H. S. MARSH E. D. MARVIN, JR. G. H. MESSINGER J. P. MURPHY H. R. PRUDDEN J. M. QUINN R. M. SCHREIBER L. B. SMITH J. G. TAYLOR B. C. TILCHMAN, JR. 312 F S. ROBINSON, JR. R. F. ROMELL T. G. RUTLEDCE R. S. SALZER J. M. SHULL J. L. SIMONDS M. STEPHENS P. G. B. STILLMAN W. V. STONE A. SULMAN H. S. TAYLOR L. C. THOMSON S. TIERNEY, JR. . A. TRAFTON, JR. R. B. VANCE G. R. VVIENER H. W W. J. NOLAN, JR. T. PARSONS, III M. R. PRASS,JR. D. B. RESSLER H. A. RICHARDS, JR. W . C. ROBINSON E. L. RYERSON, III H. J. SEESEL, JR. G. R. SHEPHERD S. G. SPADER V. R. SPADER, JR. F. A. SWENARTON K. F. THOMPSON L. WALLACE, III I. F. WALRADT G. A. WELLER H. M. WELLS J. R. WINTERBOTHANI JR C. E. PYNCHON, JR. H. A. REED R. C. SEIPP H. F. SMITH, JR. M. SNOW R. W. STINCHFIELD C. THOMSON A. B. WARRICK T. H. WATKINS, II C. C. WILLIAMS, JR. J. T. XVYMAN, II J. H. TORREY G. S. WATSON R. E. WHITE, JR. J. M. WOODHULL SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE J. T. BRUGGER, JR. B. GROPP ax Lfitf Digg fa K sms Eurnfshingzligis fsfiggihnei 5 MADISON AVENUE con. ronrv-rounm smsn , i NEW Yomc 4' ! COLLEGE LTNDERGRADUATES 4 i XT A will jimi in our H 2 - Af YOUNG i.VIEN'S DEPARTMENT V ' w Suits, 342 to 347 :V 'L I ik 5 gy ' A Overcoats, S37 to 352 GMM 'ol,lr' Q f FMT., Camel 's Hair Overcoats, 360 Odd Jackets, Flannels, Shirts Furnishings, etc. at proportionate prices BRANCHES NEW YORK: ONE WALL s'rnEE'r BUSTON: NEWBURY con. BERKELEV STREET f .,,i 313 G. C. ANDERSON H. W. BALDWIN J. L. BEYER,JR. J. F. BOLAND H. BOLTON H. BRADLEY J. L. BUTLER, JR. E. Q. CARR, JR. H. J. CIBEL E. H. CULVER R. M. DEAN C. L. DOI-IME W. M. Dox,JR. L. B. DRELL H. W. EvANs,JR. E. L. FORER H. J. ABRAHAMS M. P. AMES E. J. APPLEWHITE, JR. C. P. ARMSTRONG J. L. BAGG, JR. J. F. BARNARD P. D. BARTLETT, JR. J. M. D. BRION J. B. BUNNELL L. D. BURDETT W. CARNILL, II L. D. CHIRGWIN, JR. F. T. CLELAND W. K. COLLINS C. R. COOPER, JR. L. F. CROWLEY L. B. CULLMAN H. G. DAVIS, JR. J. H. DOWNS J. F. DRYDEN, III P. A. BANKER R. W. BARR R. C. BARRETT, JR. R. J. BOYLE T. C. BRITTON C. C. BROOKS M. BUTLER, II R. H. CARTER G. CLARK, IV J. H. CONARD W. L. CONYNGHAM, II C. T. CORSE L. S. CRISPELL R. S. CUMMING W. A. BAREISS W. G. BOYNTON F. W. COUNTRYMAN H. V. CRAWFORD, III Branford College G. L. F ORMAN H. P. GALLIHER,JR. I. A. GOLDNER M. A. GUNST, JR. C. A. HAAS J. T. HANEY, JR. G. S. HANNAW.AY L. R. HAYES J. T. HEALEY R. B. HOPGOOD H. M. KENNARD, JR. W. R. KITCHEL R. H. KNIGHT B. L. KUEERT E. A. LANDAU A. H. LAWRENCE, JR. B. R. EGGEMAN, JR. G. J. FISHER R. E. FORSTER, II D. FOSTER, JR. W. C. FOWNES, III R. S. FOX, JR. D. M. FRENCH R. B. GARDNER, JR. R. W. GOLDMAN M. E. GOTTLIEB C. GREENE, JR. L. GRIMES J. F. HOGERTON A. H. HOPKINS, JR. V. E. IRoNs,JR. J. H. ISAACS T. B. JOHNSON R. N. JORGENSEN A. KOMMEL N. R. LYI-:Es H. K. DELL, JR. 71 . E. DESIMONE, -JR. J.. C. W. DIX S. R. DUCKER, JR. F. P. DZWONKOSKI J. B. ENGLISH G. A. FINLEY W. J. FLEMING, JR. E. L. GERMAN E. C. GOODWIN T. S. GOSLIN, II G. A. Goss, JR. S. F. GRIFEING, JR. E. A. HANSEN I 940 W. J. LIPPINCOTT, JR. S. LOWENHAUPT . LUND C. MCCARTY . L. L. MCCORMICK MCFARLAND A. MACGREGOR G. MCQUAID . M. MERSEREAU Uwvwwvmm H. C. NEARING M. J. NEIDITZ C. M. PARR, JR. N. S. PAUL G. P. PILLING, IV PU . U. PLANT, JR. J. D. REILLY, JR. IQ4I W. S. MCCAIN . C. MARTIN . C. MARTIN M. MERRIELL . G. METZLER H. T. MORRIS J. C. NEVELOEF P. J. O,BRIEN, JR. J. A. O,CONNER, JR. J. N. ORD R. L. OWEN, III J. S. PENNEY, JR. H. G. PIERCE J. A. PRIORY, JR. A. A. ROSSIN W. G. ROTHENBERG J. M. SCHREINER M. I. SHARON P. SILVER R. H. SKELTON, II OQNO 1942 E. L. HICKS, III B. N. HUNT R. S. KAYNOR J. B. KIRKPATRICK, II F. V. KRESKE P. E. LACOUTURE R. L. LEVY, JR. E. LOCKWOOD, JR. P. C. LUTKIN, II D. S. MACKAY J. Y. MILLER J. C. MURPHY J. A. MYERS R. N. NELSON NON-RESIDENTS D. P. DOWNEY G. R. GIBBONS, JR. G. W. HAMLIN, II J. J. HEYMAN W J. W. LOMAS W. J. MCANDREVN'S T. MARTIN F. L. SEELY, II 4 O. RICHARDS D. L. RUBIN I. H. SCHLESINGER,JR . F. SCHLUETER . H. SPIEGEL . G. SPRING PUEFU H. W. STEANE A. B. STEVENS A. D. ULLMAN W. N. VAN SLYCK, JR W. H. VINTON O. W. WELLES A. B. C. WHIPPLE 75 F TIRPTFRSPRPTRRNR .. , Q Wawwwzfnwfzdgfwi 2' H' 522252.4.q1OAsgSz2z1 OFFFSZEZEEECE SF PSSSwgwggwzSP NE ?Z?mF M2 ZF? 2 . H Q, : E EP . E. WHITTLESEY, II C. WILLIAMS W. H. WOOLVERTON, J J. M. WUNDERLE J. YOUNG, II C. F. O,BRIEN, JR. . O,BRIEN w D C. R. O,CONNOR W. R. OHLER, JR. W. P. POWNING S. H. REISNER R. E. ROSIEN H. B. SCHOOLEY, JR. G. G. SIMMONS, JR. C. C. SPALDINC- R. E. STEVENSON E. B. TOBIN R. K. WARREN J. R. WELCH D. J. WILLIAMS, II W. D. SEIDLER B. J. SULLIVAN J. L. TWEEDY, JR. A. W. WRIEDEN, JR. CCL., NINE O'CLOCK CLUB 125 EAST 54TH STREET NEW YORK CITY gk , TI-IE SIVIART NEW RENDEZVOUS OPENS NIOI-ITI-Y AT 7 R. IVI. IExcept SuncIay.I 'fir SERVINC5 A TABLE DII-IOTE DINNER FOR 515150. sir REGARDLESS OF WHAT YOU ORDER OUR CI-IARGE IS ONLY 6Oc A DRINK. fir NEVER A COVER if UNDER PERSONAL DIRECTION or CONTINUOUS MUSIC FRED ARMOUR 315 A. AIGELTINGER, JR. D. E. BATTEY, JR. F. B. BECK H. S. BENNETT H. D. BLAKESLEE, III L. M. BLOOMINGDALE, B. T. BROOKS, JR. W. E. BURNETT J. R. CALDWELL D. C. CAMP E. B. CHAPIN, JR. H. M. CLARK R. W. COMERY R. D. COURSEN A. J. CRANE, JR. H. P. CULVER W. N. BANNARD, III C. A. BEMIS J. D. BERMAN J. M. BOOTS B. H. BRINTON, JR. J. L. BROOKS J. R. COLPITTS P. CRANE L. R. CUMMINS R. C. CURREY C. M. CURTIS C. F. DALTON, JR. M. DASH J. B. DEBRUN W. B. DE LUCA O. F. DOUGLAS, III T. D. DYER R. D. BARDWELL JR. H. J. BAUMGARTEL, JR. E. M. BISHOP, JR. G. DU P. BOOMER H. M. BRUSH, JR. R. A. BURMAN J. R. COOK D. E. DANGLER, II T. B. DEMOTT P. J. R. DESJARDINS A. R. DORNHEIM W. M. ALBRECHT E. H. BEAVERS, JR. R. M. BOICE A. L. BOLTON, JR. J. L. BURNS, JR. Calhoun College 1940 J. M. DILL, JR. J. A. DILLON, JR. R. C. DRYER R. T. EWING F. N. FOWLER XV. F. GIVAN J. B. GRANT, JR. H. J. GROBLEWSKI R. B. HAMMOND, JR. A. W. HORTON C. P. JAFFRAY, JR. H. H. JESSUP, JR. C. J. KENTLER, JR. L.J. LAPIDES C. E. LEARY L. J. FISCHER, JR. E. FISHER J. E. FLAHERTY B. S. FORD A. J. FRIEDMAN C. H. C. GERARD J. E. HART R. L. HATCH W. E. W. HOWE P. J. I-IUBER D. H. HUGHES W. P. HUTCHINGS P. L. JEFFERSON W. P. KENNARD F. B. KIECKHEFER A. H. LANDAY R. C. LEWIN M. EDGERTON JR. J- , C. A. FENTON J. R. FINCPI J. M. GESSELL D. GIBSON F. B. HAMLIN., JR. J. B. HOUSTON Y. HUBER, III A. JUDD C. A. KILVERT, JR. D. M. KNIGHT J. P. E. T. LITTELL, JR. R. J. MAGLAURY S. M. MACOMBER J. A. MARCUS E. R. MASBACK, JR. T. B. MORISON J. S. OVERBAG1-I C. A. PARCELLS, JR. J. R. PBARSON, JR. J. B. POORE M. R. PROCTORLJR. T. A. REES C. T. ROELKE T. ROGERS D. A. SCHULTE, JR. 1941 R. L. MACKLIN E . W. MANDEVILLE, JR. J. M. MARTIN R. R. MILLI-IISER R. D. MOORE, JR. A. A. MUDGE,JR. C. S. MUSCATINE G. J. NOLAN J. A. ORB R. H. PETERS J. E. POPE H. A. PRESTON H. B. RAY D. W. RIESMEYER W. A. ROBINSON H. E. ROGERS R. L. ROY IQ42 W. R. LEAT1-IERS, JR. E. H. LOCKWOOD R. S. MCCORMICK B. M. MALLERY W. W. MEYER B. N. MILLNER W. E. NEWCOMB, JR. L. M. PALMER F. D. ROS1 T. B. ROSS M. SAWYER NON-RESIDENTS J. G. BURTON, JR. D. S. CAMPBELL W. T. CLARK E. G. COUNSELMAN R. H. DEMING, JR. J. D. EMERSON E. E. GESNER D. GREGG A. C. SAUNDERS, III J. S. SMIT1-I 316 J. F. SHEVELSON J. M. SHIELDS,JR. R. M. S1LLS,JR. R. H. SMITH A. W. STEISEL ' R. W. TITUS, JR. J. R. TODD T. C. TRACESKI J. T. TUBES H. WATERS T. C. WEBER A. E. WERE P. WERNER B. B. WHITE R. F. ZOGBAUM, JR. G. G. SCHREIBER, JR. C. R. SHACKFORD A. W. SHAPLEIGH, JR. N. SIVIN H. B. SPENCER L. A. STARR M. STEINER P. N. STROBELL W. R. TUBES, II I-I. H. VREELAND, III W. D. WAGONER J. L. WALLACE N. W. WALZ S. S. WILSON T. G. WILSON J. R. WINBURN, JR. W. R. VV RAY R' H. SEMPLE, JR. A. B. SPURNEY, JR. W. F. STAFFORD, JR. H. M. STOMMEL S. E. TRACESKI P. F. TRIPP B. B. VIRSHUP T. M. WARWICK J. B. WILEY W. C. WITT G. W. WOLF, JR. G. R. WILSON, JR. SCHOOL OF THE. FINE ARTS L. A. MCMILLEN ISEN ERG BRQTHERS DISTINCTIVE CLoTH1NG for UNIVERSITY MEN Styled and Tailored to Isenberg Brothers' standards of correctness, individuality and quality. ISENBERG BROTHERS 1086 CHAPEL STREET a7ap0:mZ'5 YALE ART MUSEUM The management of De Rose Garage Wishes to express its apppreciation to the students of Yale University who have so kindly given their patronage and support. Each year We make the acquaintance of more students who in time depend more and more on our service. VVe hope that you, too, will stop in to see us soon. PETE and LOUIS DE ROSE owners and operators of Ze Raw Qafmqe Corner Crown and High Streets Where students have kept their cars for 13 years JERRY CAPP1ELLo PRIVATE TAILOR wif if Domestic and Imported . Woolens A11 Work Custom Tailored iff 795 515 ORANGE STREET I M. 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. COKE, JR. M. L. DAVEY, JR. J. A. DAVIS,JR. T. D. DAY C. D. DIGKEY, JR. C. DUBOSQUE, JR. H. V. DWIGHT F. ACHELIS J. S. ACKERMAN R. L. ARNSTEIN W. T. BAHLMAN, JR. F. F. BAKER R. M. BLUSTEIN R. B. BROOKS W. T. BROWN R. I. BRUCE D. M. BRUSH S. R. BURROUGHS H. CHATFIELD-TAYLOR J. W. CLARK H. T. CLEMENT, JR. P. A. COHEN J. L. H. COLE E. S. COOKE W. R. CROSS,JR. H. C. DOW W. H. ADAMS J. W. BANCKER, JR. W. T. BELL J. V. BERMUDEZ R. I. BONSAL W. L. BORDEN R. T. BOWER D. CAMPBELL, JR. T. W. CASE, JR. J. CHANDLER, JR. K. CHANDLER, JR. B. D. COLEMAN J. D. AVERBACK D. P. BATES W. R. BATTEY G. K. BENSON, JR. H. C. BERKELEY, JR. H. R. BROWN, JR. J. W. BUGKLEY A. W. CHENEY, JR. N. P. CLEMENT, JR. Davenport College J. L. EYRE H. FORD, II S. A. FRIEDMAN R. R. GANDELMAN P. T. GILLESPIE C. C. GLOVER, III J. G. GRAYSON O. L. GUERNSEY, JR. I Q40 A. MCK. HAMMER, JR. W. HARVEY A. HAWLEY W. B. HAY, JR. R. A. HOLDEN, IV H. HOWE, II J. L. ISRAEL M. C. JENNINGS T. H. KENDALL M. L. LEJEUNE J. S. MACSPORRAN B. F. MARTIN J. L. MATTHEWS G. C. MERRIGK R. L. MERRICK L. S. MOHR, II J. M. NELSON, III H. F. NEWELL, JR. R. E. OSTBY, JR. R. L. OTT W. M. PARKER, JR. R. A. PEATTIE,JR. F. S. PIERCE W. F. POOLE, III 1941 C. B. DRAKE, JR. C. O. DUNBAR, JR. D. M. EVANS R. D. FARNHAM N. V. V. FRANCHOT, III F. T. GOLDBERG J. M. GREENE M. GROSSMAN J. L. HANNAFORD G. R. HARRISON H. L. HARWELL J. J. HITCHCOCK T. A. JUDGE, JR. R. E. KEATING, JR. J. M. KIERAN F. D. LANE N. LEE, JR. W. A. LEVIN I. LEVY S. S. CONNOR R. L. CONWAY J. S. COOKE F. L. DANIELS H. L. DEFELICE W. A. DEVINE A. D. DODGE R. B. DOMINICK L. P. EWALD, III W. M. FORD E. C. FOVVLIZR NO R. G. CONGDON J. C. CRABTREE C. DAVIS C. H. DEARBORN, II A. A. DUN, JR. J. M. ETHRIDGE, III B. D. FLYNN, JR. F. A. GAYNOR, JR. J. LOHMANN LAR. R. LUTKINS M. R. MAGLEAN E. R. MAGOMBER C. F. MALCOLM, JR. J. V. MINOR, JR. R. L. MYERS C. M. NEWHOUSE T. L. NILES N. NOYES, JR. R. OSBORN, JR. A. S. PARP. J. B. PHILLIPS C. B. PRICE, JR. M. D. RAWORTH, JR. W. C. SCHMIDT T. C. SGI-IULLER W. C. SGHWAB P. L. SILLIMAN I Q42 H. C. F. GIFFORD F. A. GODLEY, JR. GRAYSON, JR. G. . HAINES A. . HALL J. H. HELLER R. DE L. JOHNSON G. K. MCCLELLAND N. D. MCCLURE, JR. R. A. MILLER, III J. F. MILLIKEN Q Omg N-RESIDENTS 31 H. A. GOTTSCHALL HINMAN FU R. T. HOUK, III T. C. HULL L. W. KRIEGER HF? N. LINDSAY, JR. . A. LUSSEN J. J. MCCORMICK, JR. 8 D. B. RODD H. ROWLAND J. M. SCHLESS N. SGHWAB, JR. J. W. STACK, JR. J. STEIN E. A. STEPHENS, JR. H. C. THACHER, JR. L. F. TICHNOR T. C. TILLEY G. F. VIETOR, JR. J. D. VOORHEES, JR. G. R. WALLACE, JR. C. T. WILSON, JR. H. C. WOOD, JR. D. T. SMITH P. O. A. SOLBERT C. F. SPALDING, II L. H. STANAS E. P. SWENSON, II G. G. SYMES, JR. W. R. TEPPER W. D. THOMAS L. G. TIGHE, JR. A. F. VARS, JR. P. W. VECKER A. D. WALKER, JR. D. A. WARNER, JR. P. C. WARNKE L. M. WERBLIN M. WESSON R. J. WI-IALEN F. E. WOLLENSAGK B. ZORTHIAN S. F. PALITZ E. PARKS, JR. L. C. PECK R. G. RHETT, III M. D. SALISBURY D. W. SHAND, JR. H. B. SMYTHE F. A. SPROLE J. N. THORNE J. WALKER W. G. WHITE L. M. WIGGIN J. W. OWEN C. R. PASCOE B. C. ROWLEY VV. H. SANBURN, II R. S. TABER SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE E. F. BROWN ROGERS PEET CLOTHING Exclmiffe Accefsorief Ss Q ' f as 2 A A K ,f ff . .15 . 144411 W 1 0 vnouounnruflnnloiw 5z 2 x 0 Mawr., R A' ,jf p mf , , if : WGS? Q ' E Ei ?,, .cf.f 7 ' V 1,,U.s.rmmr:a-. ul ,-a , 414, QUE' A of ' ' ff ,,,,f , ,,,,, .f 15:14 G. o mari R ' Z. E swam MPDQI 1 records 1048 Cha el St. or IB .gf ., ,. L9 ,, . :, 4 p . f ,-165fM.,4sg355 NEW HAVEN srrrr LAWRENCEVILLE PRINCETON 262 York Street 5 Palmer Square W i M Opp. Saybrook At Nassau St. I I NEW HAVEN PRINCETON 400 CROW N STREET ' 'I 7- 3 69 3 M o ING' Seiberiing Tires and Tubes Qefeifffff Studebaker Sales and Service Delivery Service - No Exim Charge Washing and Simonizing Complete Auto Service Qcfnifenicnza vqgli ora C . and JLm41fLc cfm 82 Mt. Auburn St. 341 Madison Ave. KCEVERQFTHING Cor. Dunster St. Cor. 44th S12- F OR THOSE WHO DRI VEH CAMBRIDGE NEW YORK 319 D. E. ANDERSON R. L. AUOHINOLOSS, JR. E. A. BALLARD, H R. F. BARNUM, JR. A. A. BEAL F. M. BLOUNT L. BOARDMAN J. B. BRUECKEL MOG. BUNDY C. R. BUTTENHEIM R. M. CALDWELL R. B. CAMPBELL J. N. CARLIN R. DONHAUSER K. P. DONOVAN awp? Q OF F EE 5 EE Z W 39? L4 E . W. ANDREWS, JR. . H. L. ARON G. M. AVAKIAN N. BADENI-IOP E. T. BADGER R. BEEMAN E. J. BERMINGHAM, JR. R. F. BISBEE E. E. BLOCH G. S. CALDER J. G. CAMPBELL D. W. CLARK, JR. J. T. CLARK H. H. CLEMENS,JR. E. P. COLES J. R. ANDERSON, JR. O. S. BARR, JR. F. L. BORN J. CHANCELLOR, III A. CHOUTEAU M. COMSTOCK, JR. . DELAND, JR. HQ? C. DOUTHIT, JR. T. W. FORD R. F. ARANOW . S. ATKINSON . D. BEEBE W. M. CHARMAN, JR. OU Jonathan Edwards College 1940 A. L. FULLER C. B. LAURIAT, III E. S. FURNISS, JR. T. W. LEWIS S. F. HAMMER W. R. MCKELVY L. R. HARPER D. M. MENNEL J. L. HAUER G. S. MUSTIN H. L. HENKEL J. C. NEMIAH J. C. HINDLEY G. M. NOONE H. JAMES, JR. G. A. PADDOCK, JR. R. C.JOPLING,JR. W. G. PARROTT, JR. B. D. KAPLAN, HI L. S. PARSONS B. V. KETCHAM W. PIPER L. M. KING, JR. R. J. POUST S. M. KING J. D. ROGERS G. A. KOEI-ILER M. B. ROTI-I W. T. KUHLMEY R. SAMUELS 1941 J. R. S. CONYBEARE K. M. KELLEY R. A. COOKE, JR. W. A. KING L. C. DAHL W. E. KLINE,JR. A. P. DAIGNAULT W. E. LERNER E. M. DANIELS, JR. D. W. P. LYNCH L. R. DAVEY W. H. MCMANUS S. R. DIETRIGI-I M. J. MAKRANSKY' E. J. DOYLE M. MALTBY D. P. FELTON R. H. MATHESON R. W. FULLER, JR. M. MONROE G. S. GOODRICH, JR. J. M. NEWMYER H. C. HABER F. E. OSSORIO F. M. HAOKLEY D. M. PAYNE W. W. HARPER, JR. R. L. ROSE J. M. HODGSON E. K. SANDERS K. L. JACOBS F. SOHILLINEERG J. F. JAFFRAY R. S. SCHLUEDERBERG 1942 W. E. FONVLERLJR. R. H. MAJOR, JR. A. L. FREE J. T. PIGOTT, JR. W. T. FURNISS E. A. RILEY D., GIVEN C. P. RIPLEY C. V. GOELZ, JR. W. H. SCHUBART, JR. H. L. GREAVES, JR. E. H. SIEBER A. B. HARDING, JR. R. A. STATTON W. F. HAVEMEYER H. T. STUDE, JR. W. A. HINDENLANG D. L. SWEETMAN NON-RESIDENTS H. DARBEE H. S. KLEPPINGER J. M. DOWLING B. D. LEETE T. R. HADDAD W, B, LEWIS H. W. HOLT C. G. MARCHANT yo J. D. SCHEUER, JR. W. D. DEV. SGHWAB V. J. SCULLY, JR. T. SMYTHE,JR. . M. STARR, II B. STATTON STUBBS W. S. SULLIVAN, JR. E. F. SWENSON, JR. WWW? J. M. P. TI-IATOHER, J wgwww F TUTEQEQQTWPWZTTF WQWREREEFQEHEZOQ fssssgzsggfffgwgfix -151:-fmmrrslvngf-10 mgmm mgaggggfnassm R2 wz HmgEQPPz5Q Q wgvzbdv Ze-'ww EVM 2 Q w F5 FF' .Z rv' E R : . V. VAN SAND . M. WEISSMAN . R. WELTER R. WHEELOCK . L. WILCOX R. WILSON, JR. J. A. TALBOT, JR. W. B. TREAT R. J. TURNER T. TWIGG-SMITH J. S. WALKER A. I. WEINBERG C. P. WILSON L. S. WOLFE,JR. J. A. PREKOP J. W. RANNENEERG H. N. TOWER P. J. VEOOHIONE ATCH YOUR EYES HE EYE is a long suiering organ of the human body. It will often stand, apparently Without complaint, more abuse than any other organ- but that does not mean that it is not registering its unhappiness. Any one of a number of ills, having no apparent connection with the eyes, may result from eye strain. Public educators know that practically one student in every five has defective sight and that the wearing of properly fitted glasses in all such cases tends to eliminate low grades and failures in college Work. Any person who is straining his eyes probably needs glasses quite as much as the individual who can not see plainly. The latter needs help to obtain clear vision, the former needs help to relieve the strain and make seeing easier. Why not rind out the exact condition of your eyes at the beginning of each college year? The longer eye strain is neglected, the harder it is to overcome. If our eye examination shows that the need for glasses exists with the student's eyes, We will supply the correct lenses in strong, sturdy and modern frames. Remember, every student's eyesight should be guarded and cor- rected novv for the Work in years ahead-and to you falls this duty. MACY H. BATTALIN Qtbfomefiftsi 865 CHAPEL STREET Cor. CHURCH POR DAY OR EVENING APPOINTMENT TELEPHONE 7 0681 321 C. A. ALEXANDER, JR. R. ATKINS R. E. AUGUST W. N. BAKER A. BARKER W. S. BARNES J. L. BEHR D. W. BERMANT C. N. BERRY, JR. B. BLAIR F. R. BLAIR E. W. BRIGI-ITWELL F. M. BURR J. H. BURROWES J. BUTLER, JR. B. M. BYERS E. F. CALLAN, JR. W. H. CHISI-IOLM C. J. COLE A. L. COREY, JR. C. C. CORY C. M. ALLEN J. L. ANDERSON J. J. ANGLETON W. R. ARNDT W. I. BADGER, III J. D. BAUM E. L. BEARD, III J. A. BLAIR K. F. BURGESS, JR. C. BURNAM G. E. H. COMTE R. B. CONNORS W. L. CROSS, III S. C. CUTLER J. N. DEMING J. DICKENSON, IV A. F. DILL T. DINES, JR. I. L. DRAEKIN J. DUNLAP J. I. EVEREST J. W. ADAMS, JR. P. M. ANDERSON O. P. BAOKUS, III N. F. BOUOHER L. I-I. BUTTS W. D. CAMPBELL P. D. COOKE M. H. CURTIS R. S. DAVIS H. B. DOUGLAS, JR. M. L. ARMISTEAD H. H. BASSETT W. R. BENSON S. D. BOWERS, JR. P. G. BRUMDER G. E. BRUNNER, JR. E. MCL. CUMMINGS G. J. HARDING, III Pierson College ..2i'4TU7U5 F fUTEg? FQZQFww5Fpg5WQQ5mzgZ '1-.' CJ '11 FPFSEEEEWPQSEQSIEEE E.'1'5gSggi1,3Sf,'Ea Nigga Egaizcgiwin' P5521 O75 FO Eg4'a'jF 'V' wg ,C w 7 HLNE .- U, - W 5373 DPPUPUPUOQQUBP R. FINCKE B. FISI-IER J. FLOCK G. FOULK P. R. FREEMAN W. J. GARVEY E. J. GARVY R. N. GOULD J. N. GREENE, JR. J. C. HENSEL N. G. HIOKMAN R. M. KEEEE G. J. MOC. KELLY J. J. KENNEDY H. W. KENNER T. H. KINGSLEY G. J. KLEMAN E. H. KRUEGER R H . . LOOKWOOD W. E. MCCLELLAN, JR. G. R. MACLANE N. C. EDDY R. W. EDDY R. M. GILL P. C. HARPER, JR. H. A. HASTINGS D. B. HODGSON H. M. HOLTZMANN W. B. JACKSON J. A. KNEUBUHL L. T. KULIKOWSKI 1940 H. W. LAWRENCE, JR. R. E. LEI-IMAN C. A. LELAND, III F.. S. LIPSITZ J. C. LOBENSTINE J. F. MCCLELLAND, JR. B. MCCLINTOCK P. F. MACGUIRE J. MACKENZIE, JR. R. F. MOMULLEN W. H. MANN E. L. MEISTER S. M. MEYER, JR. S. P. MOORI-IEAD E. L. NEWBERGER R. W. OAKES W. M. OLER, III G. H. ORGELMAN A. B. ORTI-IWEIN J. G. OVERALL 1941 C. MAECHLING, JR. M. G. MAIN J. H. MALLORY, JR. R. J. MATI-IIAS G. H. MEAD,JR. E. L. METZ R. L. METZGER C. W. MORTON J. R. MOULTON E. R. MURKLAND T. J. PATTON P. F. W. PECK, JR. R. S. PEEBLES M. PEEIFFENEERGER P. S. PIERSON W. T. POPE R. J. REDINGTON E. J. ROONEY W. SOHEFT E. SGHIRMER A. L. SHAPLEIGH, II 1942 L. F. LAUN, JR. G. M. MGCORKLE J. D. MAOPI-IERSON R. R. MIDKIPF R. G. MYERS J. M. NELSON, III J. H. OWEN J. PORTER B. L. RAMSING H. SEYMOUR NON-RESIDENTS D. T. HARRIS C. S. HARTLEY J. H. HARTMAN, JR. J. B. JESSUP R. E. JONES C. R. MOLEAN N. E. OSBORN F.. M. OST, JR. C. M. RUPRECHT H. V. SHERRILL W. B. SIMMONS, JR. B. A. SMITH V. C. SPALDING, JR. W. H. Y. STEVENS W. R. TI-IAYER A. K. WATSON 322 J. O. PARSONS, JR. W. R. REYNOLDS, JR. E. RYAN D. A. H. SCHMECHEL D. J. SHILLER W. P. SNYDER N. A. SPECTOR W. H. STARBUCK A. L. STEPHENS, JR. MCD. STUGKY . I. TI-IIERMANN . TOLAND, JR. . VANDERBILT, JR. H. . VAUGHAN, JR. W. B. WATSON, JR. J. M. WEEKS L. WHEELER, JR. M. WHITAKER L. WILLIAMS, III J. WINSLOW WFWE '-:II-JU J. R. SLOSS M. E. SPATT J. K. SPRING P. H. STECKLER, JR. S. A. SWEET, JR. C. R. SWIFT, III N. SWISS J. F. TEEVAN F. TOWNSEND, JR. R. M. TWEEDY R. G. VAN PEURSEM W. H. WAGNER C. W. WATSON T. C. WEDEL W. B. WHITE E. R. WI-IITTEMORE, JR S. M. WHITTLESEY P. WILLIAMS, JR. W. N. WOLFE P. H. WOOTTON, JR. H. F. SI-IATTUOK, JR. J. T. SHEA E. P. SNYDER, JR. E. A. TENENBAUM B. R. TOLAND P. S. TRACY, JR. T. E. WANNING P. MOL. WESTFELDT D. C. WILHELM P. B. WELD H. P. WHEELER R. WIER, III H. J. WRIGHT SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE P. K. OGDEN FOR ARISTOCRATIC APPEARANCE! S P O R T C O AT S oi Hand Woven Sl-IETLANDS! M ..ei25 +e.,,,,,,,,af Hand Tailored by Langrock in unusual, original patterns, that are eye-arresting and distinctive. Authentically styled for com- fort and to give that athletic look. 35 and more LANGROCK Meet the Winner! T H E 'CGREGSONU A White Broadcloth SHIRT WITH A BRAND NEW FEATURE GUARANTEED LIFE- TIME COLLAR S .29 4 for 35.00 0 Made expressly for us! 0 Will give excellent service! 0 Try one, and be convinced! MEN'S SHOP, WEST STORE FRONT A GAMIBILIEK J 'i IDIESAAONID 9 The Reliable Store of New Haven Trade Mark Registered by us. JAMES J. MCDoNNELL IMPORTER and ROASTER of the Finest Caffe Approved fand served at Yale by The,Col1eges, Dining Halls, Fraternities and Clubs V 139 MEADOW STREET NEW HAVEN - CONN. 323 R. ATHERTON V. A. AUTUORI S. 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, JR. S. CAPLIN S. C. CARROLL C. H. CHEYNEY P. K. CLARK R. H. CLARK B. B. DAYTON B. B. ALLEN C. ASHLEY C. BACON J. K. BOSEE, III G. BREED, III G. C. BROWN F. T. BURYcH,JR. F . CALLAHAN C. B. CI-IIDESTER T. R. CLARK,JR. B. N. CLUNE D. B. COOI-ILAN K. M. COLBY P. L. COLEMAN R. G. CROCKETT G. CURTIS R. J. CURTIS J. W. DAILY J. F. DEMPSEY, JR. F. C. DONOVAN, JR. J. A. ARCUDI . . AUST F' CD R. C. BAIN G. B. BARNES E. H. BETTS C. D. BLAKE T. M. BOTT P. G. BURNETT J. H. CAHN G. W. CARRINGTON, JR. J. L. CHYNOWETH G. C. E. DEMPSEY J. C. DUNCAN, III G. J. FABIAN W. N. FESSENDEN W. O. FILLEY, JR. J. A. FISHER G. B. BALLARD, JR. T. L. BRADLEY S. B. BRINKLEY H. T. BUCI-IENAU Saybrook College A. S. DENTON W. L. DOMMERIOH J. F. DORAN J. F. EAGLE,JR. J. A. ELLIOTT R. H. FAUST E. A. FLICKNER, JR. D. M. GERBER A. J. GOLDEN J. E. GRAHAM A. G. GREANY N. HAFLICH J. S. HAMILTON C. T. HANDY S. T. HERRICK J. S. HINRICHS R. R. EARLE R. H. FAIRCHILD E. S. FENELON,JR. J. D. F. FOSKETT R. J. FREEDMAN L. S. GARLAND,JR. S. F. GINSBERG W. F. GIPS,JR. B. GLAZER J. Q. GORMLEY T. GRISWOLD N. W. HALLAS R. W. HALLIDAY H. R. HAMEL A. J. HILL, JR. G. R. HOLAHAN, III L HOUGHTELING R. J- . ' .J G. H. HUNT,JR. H. P. ISHAM,JR. W. L. FOERTMEYER, II J. D. F. FOSKETT E. T. FRANZEN, III C. F. FREEMAN, JR. D. A. GOSSWEILER W. E. HANCE W. HARVEY T. B. HESS E. D. I-IICKS R. S. HOUSE W. B. HLIME W. M. HUNT C. E. HUNTINGTON M. E. JENTER, JR. C. H. JOI-IN J. H. JONES I 940 G. W. HURLBUTT R. C. IAMS W. LAUTZ P. A. LEVIN A. A. MACDONALD J. N. MANILLA R. H. MATTHIESSEN, JR S. L. MIMS,JR. ' H. A. MORAN, JR. J. F. PARTRIDGE A. W. PECKHAM P. B. POOL G. O. REDINGTON, JR. L. K. Roos R. B. RUSS E. P. SACKETT 1941 M. S. JACOBS P. E. H. KAIN P. F . KALAT E. R. KEMP H. T. KINc,JR. C. T. LARUS J. A. LEE A. A. LITT K. J. LYNCH S. W. MCLEOD D. S. MAGEE J. G. MATTHEWS J. R. MONTGOMERY, JR. J. M. MORRIS E. F. MYERS W.J. O,HEARN, JR. G. A. PERRYMAN, II J. R. PETTIT W. B. QUIRK 1942 J. E. KUTH D. B. LAMONT R. F. LINK B. LOOMIS W. K. MCOWEN J. F. MAGEE,JR. R. P. MARCUS R. P. MASLAND, JR. MAYERS C. H. MELCHER R. W. MEYER L. A. OINEILL W. H. PAGE R. PEARSON L. RIcHARDSON,JR. C. L. ROSENTHAL NON-RESIDENTS G. J. DIETZ H. W. DODGE,JR. T. F. GOLDCAMP G. W. LAMBERSON 32 J. J. MCNAMARA R. A. MERTENS E. OCUMPAUGH, IV H. L. QUINN 4 R. A. SCHMALZ T. R. SHAPIRO M. D. STAFFORD H. S. SWAN, JR. J. C. SWEET, JR. W. R. SWEETMAN 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, III J. N. YOUNG,JR. R. A. RAVICH W. M. SCHUTTE P. C. SCRIBNER J. R. SEARS H. W. SELBY, JR. H. V. SMITH E. P. SNYDER P. LEB. SPRINGER W. H. STEVENS, JR. J. S. SWEENY J. G. TALIAEERRO J. C. WASHBURNE R. F. WEIS H. H. WELLS, JR. M. Z. WILK W. B. WILLIAMS J. P. WILSON, IV J. L. WOOLNER R. ZUCKER H. F. ROYAL, JR. F. P. SAMEORD,JR. J. R. SEACREST S. K. SHAHEEN S. SMITH, JR. S. C. SPALDING, JR. B. M. STEERE C. P. STETSON W. K. STIEFEL J. R. STUNZI R. M. TALCOTT J. R. TROWBRIDGE E. W. WALDROP R. WALLACE R. P. WILLIAMS H. I. WINER J. N. SMITH, JR. H. C. STRONG,JR. L. R. WALLACE A. I. WELLS arse.-P ' ' rcsolw . ' P ,mgl To pomp 4 SL 1-I lparseqll are 'U' mio N PHS ' - nrcnCC. K ment! HS 3 SC 1 arts Ol elC evera P, me Ou' mae Fheir relaitfm 'O - eech Hn ich Owe YOU KNUW' THE LA WV . . . BUT CAN YOU PARSE IT? ir Every lawyer knows the rules of law generally. His law school and his bar examiners have checked each other on that. But knowing the law is not enough in these days of many laws and many cases. The lawyer today must be able to resolve into its elementsi' so that he may see how it fits his case. For this task a work written from the viewpoint of the law and its applications, limitations, and exceptions, with cita- tion to the highest acceptable authorities,-a work which carefully states the majority and minority rules and the reasons which caused their adoption,-has found a ready use in thousands of law offices. This work is AMERICAN .JURISPBUDENCE-in every sense a legal parser-it has achieved a record subscription list in the short time since its announcement. 'K' 'k 'lc Published Jointly and For Sale By BANCll0FT-WHITNEY C0. - - San Francisco, Calif THE LAWYERS C0-0P. PUBLISHING C0. - Rochester, N Y 325 in S. E. BALTZ G. BRADEORD, JR. W. E. BRADFORD O. J. L. BRADLEY L. B. BRODY S. H. CADY H. F. CHANEY, JR. R. D. DALZELL, JR. F. W. DITTMAN, JR. R. B. EGAN B. H. EVANS, JR. D. P. FERRISS J. FORSYTH W. W. GIBSON, JR. A. P. GREENBLATT R. E. GROTE,JR. H. B. ARMSTRONG, III T. W. ARNOLD,JR. W. A. BARKER, II W. C. BEDELL W. W. BLACKBURN, II W. BLAIR, III L. D. BRAGG, JR. K. BREWSTER, JR. R. K. BRODIE, JR. D. M. BULL, JR. C. S. BULLITT D. CAMPBELL W. CAMPBELL, III J. G. CARHART F. L. CARLIsLE,JR. C. A. CARTON G. W. CHENEY, JR. J. CHURCHILL, JR. P. G. COTTELL A. C. CURTIN W. DAVIS, II E. A. ADELRERG W. A. AYCRIGG L. BARRER G. C. BERMINGHAM D. G. C. BRIDGMAN J. C. CHAPIN R. M. CLARK S. B. COHN E. CORNING C. F. EMERY, JR. A. M. GLEASON D. H. GOULD G. H. ALLEN R. O. BASSETT P. C. BRAINARD G. L. BUHRMAN, JR. R. B. CASWELL J. B. CAVANAGH E. C. COHEN R. E. COOKE D. CORBET, JR. J. R. DELLENBACK J. R. DERN Timothy Dwight College C. HARPER . R. HEGEMAN . S. HOWARD, II . D. HOYT G. HUBLEY R. P. HUMPHREY R. W. HYDE W. F. HYLAND R. M. JOHNSON M. JONES F. E. KERNOCHAN T. D. KINGLSEY G. K. KLOSE E. L. KROCHALIS S. B. LEGG J. W W W D. S. DEVOR, JR. L. H. DIXON F. H. ELLIS, JR. P. W. EMERY H. FERGUSON R. C. FOWLER C. GIBSON, II D. L. GILLETT, III F. H. GOODYEAR, III P. E. GRAYBEAL J. H. GREEN,JR. R. P. GUTTERMAN E. T. HALL C. G. HAUSER J. S. HAUSMAN L. D. HECK H. K. HOCHSWENDER R. B. HUNT P. B. JACKSON W. E. JACKSON W. H. HAGGARD, II F. H. HARRISON P. HENDERSON, JR. P. HOOPER,JR. A. M. HUNT J. P. JOSEPHS S. C. KENNEDY, JR. H. C. KRANICHEELD, JR. M. C. KRECH J. W. LEGGETT W. D. LYNCH J. S. MCDERMOTT I 940 W. E. LEVY P. M. LINDSAY B. F. MCCAMEY, JR. B. MCCORMICK H. R. MANCUSI-UNGARO F. J. MENTON J. Z. MILLER, IV F. P. MORRISON F. J. MURPHY, JR. J. R. NEUHAUS G. S. OLIVER, II A. PETER,JR. M. POLLOCK H. H. QUINT J. S. RAYMOND, JR. 194.1 H. KAYE J. I-I. KING, JR. D. KIPHUTH W. J. KNAPP, JR. S. KRECH, JR. A. LESLIE A. F . LOVEJOY J. A. MAODONALD, JR. R. T. MCNAMARA J. T. MAYNARD D. C. MILLETT Q. MITCHELL J. O. MORRIS J. B. OLIVER T. C. OLIVER, JR. C. O. PAGE J. A. PIERCE, II S. L. PITTMAN J. REID A. J. ROSENTHAL, JR. I Q42 C. P. MCVIOKER, JR. J. MARKELL, JR. A. MARKLE, III J. MILBANK, JR. P. R. NEUI-IAUS S. PHELPS W. M. PIKE P. A. PLOTKIN W. G. RAFEERTY R. M. REEVE J. C. RIPLEY S. M. RUMBOUGH, JR. NON-RESIDENTS R. C. S. DI ROSA D. C. DUGAN R. P. DUNCAN D. DUNKLEE A. C. ELY T. A. ENNIS S. FIELD, III E. W. FRIEDMAN A. N. B. GARVAN G. E. GORING F. W. HAMILTON, JR. 32 G. C. HUEPARD W. E. S. JAMES T. A. -JONES D. A. KUBIE W. B. LAUPMAN, III S. LIvINGsTON,JR. J. P. MCGOWAN J. H. MEYER R. C. MORsE,JR. P. C. NICHOLSON, JR. E. J. POPE, JR. 6 W. ROCKEFELLER J. B. S. ROUSSEAU G. S. SEABURY R. M. SEAMON G. B. SMITH A. D. SOKOLOW A. M. STOVER C. R. TAYLOR H. E. TERHUNE A. B. THACHER T. G. WATSON, JR. A. N. WELLES R. A. WEYBURN J. F. WHITE P. WINER J. N. ROTHSCHILD G. P. SCHOYER H. C. SCHWAE, JR. B. E. SMITH J. P. SPILLANE C. P. STEVENSON R. C. STICKNEY W. W. STRUTHERS, JR. W. G. THORN B. A. TOMPKINS, JR. J. V. TOMPKINS R. K. W. H. B. TWEEDY TWINING T. VIETS T. WARE, JR. J. H. WARE, JR. W. A. WICK L. G. WICKWIRE N. B. WOOD, II C. W. WOODRUFF J. H. WOODRUFF, II A. M. SCHER F. P. SHEPARD, JR. W. SHERMAN F. J. SLADEN, JR. C. STIASSNI B. L. TAYLOR, III R. W. TAYLOR A. R. TOBEY O. W. TOLL, JR. F. B. TRUDEAU, JR. J. G. WILMER D. W. REWICK A. SALTZSTEIN J. E. SLOANE G. A. SMITH G. H. SOUTHWORTH C. W. B. TOWNSEND, JR H. ZELDES W. C. ZILLY SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE WILLIAM H. HARRISON, III mronmn 1943 CUURTESX NEW KIRK HERALD 'li W 7 Alf . i. Q Q eww EXTICISE 454 X '47 J, ine 6539 ance The Shelton has been New York Head- quarters for college men and women for years . . . and there's a reason. The Shelton provides club facilities, with- out dues. You can relax in the solarium or the library, work-out in the gym, use the game room, and take a clip in the famous Shelton pool, all these fea- tures without any charge other than that for your pleasant room. The Shelton's unique location-on the edge of the Grand Central Zone-makes it a con- venient 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. SINGLE ROOMS, 52.25 to 54.00 DOUBLE ROOMS 54.50 to 57.00 sumo Under KNOTT Management A. R. WALTY, Manager 27 I R. F. ALFORD J. P. ALTER C. D. BARTON L. W. BATTEN, III W. E. B. BENSON R. S. BEvANs N. H. BIGELOW R. M. BOUTWELL, III L G. . BROWNELL, II T. L. BUCKY L. C. BYCK, JR. T. J. CAMP, JR. J. D. CANALE R. S. CLARK D. CLARKE, JR. L. B. AHRENS J. G. AIKEN, III R. C. AMES J. D. ARONSON, JR. . G. ASCHMANN, JR. G C T. . BARLOW D. H. BERNING G. C. BEssE, JR. C. R. BICK H. BINGHAM . G. BONGIORNI . F. BRADLEY, JR. J. O. BUCHANAN A. T. CAMP L., P. CARROLL T. T. CHURCH wraps J. F. ALLEN, II J. H. ALLEN, JR. R. C. BARBOUR A. E. BARTHOLEMY H. M. BEVANS J. S. BOYCE,JR. H. J. CALNEN, JR. B. A. COPP, IV J. F. CORROON, JR. A. J. ALTER S. P. BEARD L. G. BLACKMON G. J. BRUNAKES R. G. C0LLINs,JR. J. A. CURRIE Trumbull College J. N. COMPTON V. W. COOKE F. C. CUNNINGHAM H. G. EDWARDS, JR. J. P. EKBERG, JR. T. F. ERICKSON S. L. EURENIUS J. FERGUSON A. L. GLUCKIN E. M. GRAHAM,JR. D. K. HARRISON P. M. HAUSER W. H. HOBBS, III A. K. HOWELL, JR. N. H. HURWITZ F. B. CLARK J. C. COBB, III J. A. CO1-IEN H. H. COMLY L. D. EEARBORN R. K. DE VEER J. J. DORE, JR. F. N. EVERARD R. E. FAGLEY G. N. FRENCH P. G. FULSTOW J. P. FURNISS R. GARRETT, JR. K. GEBHARD, JR. E. T. HART R. C. HAZEN E. J. CURTIS, JR. A. F. DAILY A. E. ESSER, JR. G. H. FEIL H. B. GERLING D. C. GRANT,JR. R. W. HALSEY, JR. G. HARWOOD H. R. HOBBS N E. K. DU VIVIER S. M. EHRMAN R. H. FERST J. B. FULLER H. F. HANSCOM I 940 L. H. KAPLAN S. KIBBE A. KNIGHT, JR. J. T. LANMAN T. R. LAZARUS H. A. LEAR R. J. LEVINSOHN J. W. LINK E. D. LYNCH, JR. W. C. MENNEL W. M. MENNEL K. MERRILL, JR. E. M. NOYES, II L. F. PAINE D. D. PASCAL 1941 G. W. HESTON S. HEYWOOD, JR. S. C. HOLADAY, JR. R. W. HOLMES, JR. R. L. HovIs, JR. L. M. JACK T. E. J. KEENA H. H. KNIGHT R. T. LARKIN G. B. MANNWEILER R. E. MANSFIELD F. A. MCWILLIAM P. H. MEHRTENS D. R. MILLARD,JR. B. L. MIMS W. M. ORCUTT I 94,2 A. J. INGLEY I. E. INGRAHAM F. W. KEITI-I,JR. F. A. KEMP,JR. J. F. KIERAN, JR. N. M. MANN R. R. MONROE J. T. MORRIS C. D. MURPHY, JR. ON-RESIDENTS T. G. SCHNABEL, JR. A. I. SHEPPARD C. E. SHERWOOD, II J. W. SWINGLE T. B. TURNER 328 S. J. POGORZELSKI' R. A. POWERS R. E. RHOADS, JR. P. DE SAINT PHALLE W. F. SCI-IELL R. STEWART G. E. TENER M. VON MOSCHZISKER F. G. WACKER, JR. J. E. WHEELER, JR. F. R. WHOLLEY W. A. WIEDERSHEIM, III D. M. WILDE E. A. WILLETS, JR. J. G. WOODRUFF G. W. YOUNG L. K. PIGKETT W. P. PORTER G. R. READ C. U. SAUTTER J. P. SCHROEDBR H. W. SHEPPARD E. G. SMALL J. D. STEIN W. G. STEWART P. C. TATOR D. K. TAYLOR W. B. VAN HORNE J. S. WEBB W. A. WHITCOMB, JR. P. WRIGHT G. H. PARTRIDGE J. W. PAUL, JR. J. G. POCOGK S. P. SANGER, II C. F. SEELBACH, JR. S. E. SELZ T. C. SMITH T. L. WEIRICK H. E. WOODARD, JR. R. W. WEINBERGER A. J. WOLESON, II SCHOOL OF FINE ARTS E. Z. STEEVER IV Kg ' AHN AND OLLIER AGAIN i x 1 iii 4 'LL wi Repeated acceptance by discriminating Year Book Boards has inspired and sustained the John 81 Ollier slogan that gathers increas- ing significance wifh each succeeding year. 329 IN THE FIVE HUNDREDTH ANNIVERSARY OF THE INVEN- TION OF PRINTING FROM MOVABLE TYPES CJOHANN GUTENBERG, MAINZ GERMANY 14402, THE FOUR HUN- DREDTH ANNIVERSARY OF THE INTRODUCTION OF THE FIRST PRESS TO AMERICA CMEXICO CITY 15391 THE THREE HUNDREDTH ANNIVERSARY OF THE FIRST BOOK PRINTED IN COLONIAL AMERICA QCAMBRIDGE 16402, THE TWO HUNDRED AND FIFTIETH YEAR SINCE THE FIRST PAPER MILL IN THIS COUNTRY QGERMANTOWN 1690D AND SINCE THE FIRST NEWSPAPER CPUBLICK OCCURRENCES, BOSTON 16901 THE HUNDREDTH YEAR AFTER THE INVENTION OF THE CAMERA CDAGUERRE 18395, THE SIXTIETH FOLLOW- ING THE DEVELOPMENT OF PHOTO-ENGRAVING, AND THE FIFTIETH AFTER THE PERFECTION OF THE MONOTYPE CASTING MACHINE TMJ Book zum Printed in May 1940 BY THE ANDOVER PRESS IN ANDOVER MASSACHUSETTS ESTABLISHED 1798 INCORPORATED 1887 330 Acknowledgments THE editors wish to express their thanks and appreciation to the many contributors to the 1940 YALE BANNER and in particular to President Seymour, Mr. Carl Lohmann, Messrs. Barnett and Neale, the coaches and the authors of the various college and activities articles that appear in the book. They also wish to thank Mr. James Tompkins for his personal inter- est and good advice, Mr. M. Ramus, ex-'40, for his excellent drawings, Mr. Peter S. Gurwit of Jahn Sc Ollier Engraving Company and Mr. Harold Johnson of the Andover Press for their patient and valuable assistance in planning the book and their ever-present aid in the engraving and printing respectively. For the photographs, the editors wish to extend their thanks to Pach Brothers, the Student Picture Agency, the Yale Alumni Magazine, the Class Secretaries Bureau, the Daibl News, and particularly to Mr. Jack Brown, Mr. Dan Mulvey, Mildred Morgan for her views, and to the innumerable individuals who have contributed their time and energy in making the informal photographs which appear throughout this edition. 331 Administration . . . Administration, Ofhcers of Advertising . . . Alpha Chi Sigma . Alpha Sigma Phi . Athletics . . Aurelian . . Band .... BANNER, The Yale . Baseball Varsity ,Jayvee . . Freshman . Basketball . . . Basketball, Freshman . Berkeley College . . Berkeley College Members Berzelius .... Beta Theta Pi . Book and Snake Boxing . . . Boxing, Freshman . . Branford College . . Branford College Members Budget Drive . . . Calhoun College . . Calhoun College Members Cannon and Castle . Canterbury School Club Cheshire School Club . Chi Delta Theta . Chi Psi . . Choir .... Church of Christ . Class Book Committee . Class Council . . Class Day Exercises . Clubs .... Colleges . . Committees . . Community Council . Corinthian Yacht Club . Corporation . . . Crew Varsity . 150-POllI1d , Jayvee . , Index 17 21 309 251 56 171 50 98 82 212 216 297 192 288 116 312 46 58 48 197 292 122 314 30 128 316 250 261 262 257 60 99 112 26 24 25 241 115 23 IO8 252 20 202 206 207 33 Freshman . . . Freshman 150-pOU.I'1d Cross Country . . . Cross Country, Freshman Cup Men ..., Davenport College . . , Davenport College Members . Debating Association . Dedication . . . Delta Kappa Epsilon . Dramatic Association . Dwight Hall . . Elihu . . Fence Club , Fencing . . . Fencing, Freshman . Football Varsity Jayvee . . 1 50-pound . Records . Freshman . Fraternities . . Freshmen ..... Freshman Athleticsn . . Freshman Intramural Champions Football .... Touch Football Basketball . . Swimming . Squash . . Bowling . . Freshman Promenade . Glee Club . . . Cleel Club, Freshman '. Golf .... Golf, Freshman . . Groton School Club . . Gunnery School Club . Hill School Club . Hockey . . . Hockey, Freshman . Honors .... Hotchkiss School Club . 2 298 299 183 287 260 134 318 IO6 6 62 100 110 44 64 198 294 173 179 181 222 285 53 279 284 304 305 306 307 308 308 280 94 281 219 302 263 264 265 184 289 3X 266


Suggestions in the Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT) collection:

Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

1937

Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

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Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 1

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Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 1

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Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 1

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Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 1

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