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

 - Class of 1942

Page 1 of 354

 

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



Page 6, 1942 Edition, Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT) online collectionPage 7, 1942 Edition, Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT) online collection
Pages 6 - 7

Page 10, 1942 Edition, Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT) online collectionPage 11, 1942 Edition, Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT) online collection
Pages 10 - 11

Page 14, 1942 Edition, Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT) online collectionPage 15, 1942 Edition, Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT) online collection
Pages 14 - 15

Page 8, 1942 Edition, Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT) online collectionPage 9, 1942 Edition, Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT) online collection
Pages 8 - 9
Page 12, 1942 Edition, Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT) online collectionPage 13, 1942 Edition, Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT) online collection
Pages 12 - 13
Page 16, 1942 Edition, Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT) online collectionPage 17, 1942 Edition, Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT) online collection
Pages 16 - 17

Text from Pages 1 - 354 of the 1942 volume:

n n i 1942 BANNER BOARD George M. McCorkle Chairman John C. Stockman Osv ald P. Backus, III Biishwss Manager Managing Editor John K. Tabor Circulation Manager Harold H. Healy, Jr. Assignment Editor Oliver P. LeCompte, Jr. Photographic Editor Associate Editors RussEL H. Downey Richard P. Kahn George McN. Stillman Ernest A. Wiehl, Jr. Russell H. Frye Phtographer ic fif i ■ , ' ■ ' ?: THE IQ4: VOLUME ONE HUNDRED ONE FOU-NDED 184 1 To Major C. Bradford Welles, U. S. Army, Professor of Ancient History, warm friend and brilliant scliolar, vc dedicate this one hundred and first volume of The Yale Biiinnr. In World War II, he was the first Yale professor to be called to active duty in the service of his country. We fervently hope that h;s absence need not be a loni; one. YALE SCENE - 1 1 1 Wn. ham stanch watch 3 ap Day Where honor touched and cniy flared. n athaii Hale, throii} h the years, the symbol of Yale-at-ivar. a winter afternoon li ' s loyal piq I w I ory ' s — good food good fcUowsbip, and tradition J he Whijfeupoofi assembled . . . ADMINISTRATION The President ' s Message idcnl Seymour A YEAR ago, in the Yale Banner and Senior Class Book, I expressed the hope that the undergraduate life of Yale, as we have known it, might continue undisturbed. That hope, we now realize, cannot be fulfilled. Yale, which is con- secrated in a general sense to the service of the nation, must for the time being devote herself to a special service, — helping to win the war. To this end all the resources of the University are pledged. Until the final victory is achieved the effort of the University must be concentrated on aid to the armed forces, whether through the ac- tive service of our faculties, the research of our laboratories, or the training of our students. To those men who go out from this campus to serve in the armed forces, Yale gives her salu- tation, confident that they will acquit themselves manfully and intelligently, showing forth the qualities which life at Yale has developed. Their education here was not designed for war, but we are convinced that it will none the less have pre- pared them for war. Such was the experience of their predecessors who left Yale a quarter of a century ago to fight in the A.E.F. of .1917, and showed the capacities for leadership which the Army and Navy seek. The military and naval authorities today insist upon those same capacities and assure us that they are best developed by the broad and fundamental course of study which is the traditional characteristi c of a Yale education. During the years immediately before us much that has characterized the old Yale life will of necessity be sacrificed. Campus customs will change, traditional student activities will be cur- tailed, the pleasant frivolities of the leisure hours will disappear. All these have their value in an American education. We cannot afford them in war time. But our undergraduates will create new values on the campus. A patriotic purpose will be given to student activities, both curricular and athletic, which will provide new stimulus; if the course of study is more severe, it will also be more closely related to its object; nor can any sort of discipline extinguish the sense of humor and the capacity to adjust himself to circumstances that have always characterized the undergraduate. Thus, although the war will change Yale ex- ternals, I do not think that it will alter, far less destroy, the factors, whether intellectual or so- cial, that have made our education worth while. We are fortunate, also, that even during the war the Government urges an education which will serve also to prepare men for peace. In the hard months that lie before us we shall not forget our ultimate obligation to the nation, our responsibility for the preservation of learning and for the en- lightenment that it brings to all the people. Charles Seymour Corporation Charles Seymour, Ph.D., Litc.D., LL.D., Prcsitlcut FELLOWS His Excellency the Governor of Connecti- Rev. Arthur Howe Bradford, D.D CUT, ex officio His Honor the Lieutenant Governor of Connecticut, cx officio Rev. Henry Sloane Coffin, D.D., LL.D. Edward Belden Greene, M.A. Thomas Walter Swan, LL.B., M.A. James Lee Loomis, LL.D. Reeve Schley, LL.B., M.A. Thomas Day Thacher, LL.D. Edward Earned Ryerson, Jr., M.A. Robert Alphonso Taft, LL.D. Rt. Rev. Henry Knox Sherrill, D.D., LL.D. George VanSantvoord, L.H.D. Dean Acheson, LL.B., M.A. John Wesley Hanes, M.A. Morris Hadley, LL.B., M.A. Frederick Trubee Davison, LL.D. Wilmarth Sheldon Lewis, M.A. Alumni Board OFFICERS John B. Dempsey, ' 11, Cleveland, Ohio Clifford R. Beardsley, ' 0 5 S., New York City Harvey H. Bundy, ' 09, Boston, Mass. Harold L. Fates, ' 3 2, New Haven, Conn. Chairman First Yice-Chairman Second V ice-Chairman Execiitiie Secretary EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE John B. Dempsey, ' 11, Cleveland, Ohio Winthrop M. Crane, Jr., ' 04, Dalton, Mass. Clifford R. Beardsley, ' 05 S., New York City Alexander C. Brown, ' 07, Cleveland, Ohio Harvey H. Bundy, ' 09, Boston, Mass. Harold L. Fates, ' 32, New Haven, Conn. Clifford R. Wright, ' 11, Cincinnati, Ohio R. Mayo Crawford, ' 15 S., Litchfield, Conn. Charles W. Gamble, ' 20, Philadelphia, Pa. Walter G. Preston, Jr., ' 2 5, New York City Mitchell S. Little, ' 07, Hartford, Conn. Albert D. Farwell, ' 09, Chicago, III. George T. Adee, ' 9 5, New York City E. Tappan Stannard, ' 0 5 S., New York City Stuart C. Rand, ' 09, Boston, Mass. Emmert W. Bates, ' 3 2, New York City £.v Officio Gilbert Kinney, ' 0 5 Ogden D. Miller, ' 3 Wm. Ross Proctor, ' 16 Walter G. Preston, Jr., ' 2 5 Officers of Administration Charles Seymour, Ph.D., Litt.D., LL.D. Edgar Stephenson Furniss, Ph.D., LL.D. Carl Albert Lohmann, M. A. George Parmly Day, LL.D. Thomas Wells Farnam, M.A. Laurence Gotzian Tighe, M.A. Ogden Dayton Miller, M.A. Frederic Blair Johnson, M.A. President Proi ' os Secretary Treasurer Associate Treasurer and Comptroller Associate Treasurer Director of Alumni Relations Bursar BOARD OF ADMISSIONS ART GALLERY Edward Simpson Noyes, Ph.D. Chairman Theodore Sizer, M.A. Director THE FRESHMAN YEAR UNIVERSITY OBSERVATORY Norman Sidney Buck, Ph.D. Dean Dirk Brouwer, Ph.D. Director Theodore Babbitt, LL.B., Ph.D. Assistant Dean CHURCH OF CHRIST IN YALE YALE COLLEGE UNIVERSITY William Clyde DeVane, Ph.D. Dean ■ Sidney Lovett, D.D. Richard Cushman Carroll, B.A. Vniirrsity Chaplain and Pastor Assistant Dean SCHOOL OF MEDICINE SHEFFIELD SCIENTIFIC SCHOOL Francis Gilman Blake, M.D., Sc.D. Charles Hyde Warren, Ph.D. Dean Acting Dean LooMis Havemeyer, Ph.D. Assistant Dean George Hathorn Smith, Ph.D., Sc.D. Assistant Dean SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING Samuel William Dudley, M.E. Dean DIVINITY SCHOOL LooMis Havemeyer, Ph.D. Registrar Luther Allan Weigle, Ph.D., D.D., LL.D. GRADUATE SCHOOL Edgar Stephenson Furniss, Ph.D., LL.D. SCHOOL OF THE FINE ARTS n Everett Victor Meeks, Litt.D., D.F.A., A.N. A. Uean RoswELL Parker Angier, Ph.D., LL.D. Associate Dean DEPARTMENT OF PERSONNEL STUDY SCHOOL OF FORESTRY AND BUREAU OF APPOINTMENTS Samuel James Record, M.F., Sc.D. Dean Albert Beecher Crawford, Ph.D. Director Stuart Holmes Clement, M.A. Associate Director of the Department of Personnel Study SCHOOL OF NURSING Effie Jane Taylor, M.A. Dean DEPARTMENT OF UNIVERSITY HEALTH Orville Forrest Rogers, M.D. Director UNIVERSITY LIBRARY Bernhard Knollenberg, M.A., LL.B. Librarian ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION James Tinkham Babb, B.A. Assl. Librarian Ogden D. Miller PEABODY MUSEUM OF NATURAL Chairman of the Board of Control HISTORY UNIVERSITY DINING HALLS Albert Eide Parr, M.A. Director A. Margaret Bowers, M.S. Director 19 Mark McDonald Lindsey Class Secretary SENIOR ' xAS Class Council George Washington Kirchwey, III Btikdcy Patrick McLoskey Westfeldt Pierson Charles Robert O ' Connor Braiifard William Kasson McOwen Sayl ' ruok George Wheeler Wolf, Jr. Calhoun Douglas Shaw Palmer Sillniian Robert Goodwyn Rhett, III Dai cnporf Charles Francis Emery, Jr. Timothy Dwight Charles Purcell Ripley Jonathan EJwarih Frank Alexander Kemp, Jr. TnimbuU Albert James Ingley S jr I Bjck Row: Wolf, Ktmp, Kirchwey, Rhttt, Ripley, WestfeldL Front Row: Emery, Sprole, O ' Connor Lindsey, McOwen, P.ilmer, Ingley. 20 I 5EXI0I :lass Frank Arnott Sprole Trcamrcr Vmn Class Day Exercises Louis Frederick Laun, Jr. John Fackenthal Magee, Jr. William Gardner. White John Thomas Pigott, Jr. John Pauker Edwin Corning Cbahniaii Vicc-Chairmaii Class Historian Class Orator Class Poet Ivy Orator B.tck Rote: Corning, White. Froul Ron : Pigott, Laun, P.iuker. TRIENNIAL COMMITTEE B.ick Row: Lindsey, Sprole, Turner. Vront Rmi : Seymour, Severest, GoJkv. CLASS BOOK COMMITTEE Buck Ron . oi!ii Hicks, Toll, D.wis. Frotil Row: Lindsey. Fisher ( Cliairm.in ), Sprolc 22 mi UNDERGRADUATE CONFERENCE COMMITTEE Back Roll-: Lindscy, Tumkins, Ewald, Ford. From Row: Dean Carroll, Dtan DcVane, Bartholemy. SHEFFIELD STUDENT COUNCIL BiUk Row: Tobey, House, Josephs. Front Row: Greaves, Franzen, McGow.i 23 Back Row: Squire, Moore, Cleary, Van Middlesworth, Coe, Weadock, Gray, Boice. From Row. Nelson, Gould, Myers, Hayes, Hoagland, Lilley, Oscarson. Junior Promenade Committee Webb C. Hayes, III L. B. P. Gould, Jr. Frank W. Lilley, Jr. Chairman Floor Manager Treasurer Nelson R. Boice, Jr. William B. Cleary Chalmers Coe Howard A. Gray, Jr. Donald W. Hoagland George Mills, II James H. Moore, Jr. W. P. Laird Myers James C. Nelson, Jr. David W. Oscarson William S. Squire RicHARX) W. Van Middlesworth 24 I Back Row: Chouteau, oil, H.imlin. Toll, McOwen. From Row: Kemp, Butts, Wyman, Murpliy, McClelland Senior Promenade Committee James Thomas Wyman, 2nd George Kearny McClelland Frank Alexander Kemp, Jr. Oliver Wolcott Toll, Jr. John Read Murphy Chainiiaii Secretary Treasurer Publicity Music Lampkin Herbert Butts Rene Auguste Chouteau George Wright Hamlin, 2nd William Kasson McOwen George Wheelir Wolf, Jr. 25 MILITARY History of the R.O.T.C. at Yale TN 1862 Congress passed an act to donate land an Act of Congress of June 3, 1916, the unit was for the estabUshment of colleges on condition converted from the State National Guard into a that military tactics form a part of the curric- Reserve Officers ' Training Corps. The University ulum. In 18 66 the Sheffield Scientific School gave built Artillery Hall in the rear of the old Gym- military instruction under the above act. This nasium on Elm Street. Under the chairmanship may be said to mark the faint beginning of the of Mr. A. C. Goodyear ' 99, a committee of Reserve Officers ' Training Corps, although Yale Alumni raised $15 S, 000 for the construction of previously had trained military companies during the Yale Armory just west of the Bowl. the American Revolution and the War of 1812. With the declaration of war in April, 1917, Yale became a military school. The unit enlarged to over 1,600 men with instruction provided by Regular Army personnel and some fifty members of the faculty. Of great instructional value was the gift by the French Government of a battery of French 75 ' s. Yale ' s military associations had crystalized into identification with Field Artiller ' . Yale and the Guns, in the words of General Danford was, and still is, the Yale tradition. It was in 1898 that Yale first turned to Field Artillery in the organization of the original Yale Battery. Most of its personnel saw service in the Spanish War, though the unit as such was never engaged. The most famous of the Yale Batteries was organized in 1915 under the direct guidance of Lieutenant Robert M. Danford (now Major General and Chief of Field Artillery). The first battery formed in the fall of that year, was, in early 1916, expanded into a regiment of four This unit, reorganized in January, 1919, was, batteries, manned by 486 undergraduates, and by over two years, the Senior of the Field Artillery designated 10th Field Artillery, Connecticut Reserve Officers ' Training Corps Units established. National Guard. On June 20, 1916, in the midst Major (now Brigadier General) R. E. D. Hoyle of commencement activities, the Regiment was was the first of a distinguished line of Field called into Federal Service, mobilized on the old Artillervmen to head the department as Professor campus, and in July sent to Tobyhanna, Pennsyl- of Military Science and Tactics. Over $500,000 vania, preparatory to service in Mexico. Later, the worth of equipment was made available by the Mexican situation having improved, the Regiment War Department, and with the finest plant in the was returned to the National Guard Camp at countr - the unit had an auspicious beginning. Niantic, Connecticut, and there in September dis- Under Regular Arm - officers detailed by the War charged from Federal Service. The fall of 1916 Department, instruction was offered in Field was a period of reorganization for the unit. Under Artillery, Ordnance and the Engineer and Signal I Corps. Students sucessfully completing the course and a six weeks summer camp were commissioned in the Officers ' Reserve Corps. In recent years the annual encampment has been combined with that of the Harvard unit at Fort Ethan Allen, Vermont. The story of the R.O.T.C. since 1919 has been one of improvement and consolidation. The Polo, Pistol and Rifle teams were fostered by the unit and coached by the officer personnel. The gift in 1926 of Phipps Polo Field by the Guest and Phipps families and the firing range for pistol and rifle teams, gave great impetus to these sports. In 1924 the department was consolidated into units of Field Artillery and Engineers, and in 193S with the withdrawal of the Engineer unit, Yale and the Guns again became traditional. To make wav for the construction of Trumbull College, Artillerv Hall was moved in 1927 to more com- modious quarters in the Sheffield Laboratory of Mechanical Engineering Building at 5 1 Prospect Street, now familiarly identified by the French 75 at its entrance. The unit is at present commanded by Colonel Dean Hudnutt and has an enrollment of 418 students. Since its inception, in present form, more than 3,500 men have received training under its guidance and of these 910 have been com- missioned. This group of qualified officers, now on active duty with the army, personifies the value of a training dedicated to serve for God, for Countrv and for Yale. 29 I Army Reserve Officers ' Training Corps B tljlioii Commander: Cadht Major E. A. Willets, Jr. Battalion Adjutant: Cadtt Captain F. H. Harrison Color Sergeant: George A. Goss, Jr. Color Sergeant: I. E. Ingram am Color Guard: F. W. LiLLEY Color Guard: G. A. BiRRELL 30 . k r ?IHH ' H H  t :M« f f? rf i Si n t tf Battery A ' SQUAD 1 SQUAD 2 SQUAD 3 SQUAD 4 G. T. Churchill H. H. Healy W. V. Washburn R. W. Sanford R. Hamilton F. W. Lilley G. A. Birrell E. W. Cook Alan Cortlandt J. F. BODINE J. B. Peirce B. G. Tremaine C. N. SCHENCK J. C. Coughlin E. H. Magoon H. H. Ketcham H. C. G. Toland E. C. Bannon C. Seelbach S. K. ScoviL J. R. Bamford E. C. Steffen J. Wilson P. R. Thompson C. B. Scott B. H. Douglass J. E. Coxe R. R. Deland R. Jeffery H. Gardiner R. H. Dickerson J. S. Sample J. M. Glvnn S. Haywood W. P. Sutter J. Y. Breuner R. V. Lynch F. R. Whitridge R. L. Gelb A. K. Barton O. McKee, 3rd H. A. Pattison SQUAD 5 SQUAD 6 SQUAD 7 SQUAD 8 C. S. JUDD T. A. Kelly J. B. Vreeland D. R. Harvey J. W. Smith E. G. Goodspeed J. L. Fort D. R. Barber J. T. Lawrence G. S. Greene G. S. Isham J. M. Crane D. P. Atkins R. B. Knight H. W. Walker W. T. Glidden H. M. Baldridge S. Ross W. P. WODELL E. H. Kummel A. D. Bullock A. C. Greene J. M. Symington B. F. MoKROs F. W. COMMISKEY H. A. Conway J. T. Wyman W. McC. HiscocK M. E. Fox R. K. Zelle L. E. Pearce D. A. Boynton G. K. Conant, Jr. J. E. Bassett C. L. Ritchie C. S. Broeman, 2n R. C. Garretson G. K. Dibble r. SlEMON R. H. Ferguson C. R. Holmes H. Noyes, Jr. E. C. Berg J. S. Flint E. C. Wynne Batlery Conn .wJer: ■ FW!!W Cadet Captain W P. Githens ffilfiMw Cddel Lwuletijuli : E. D. Marvin, Jr., J. G. Keller Cjdet First Sergeant: A. O. Miller, Jr. Cadet Serge Jilts: P. D. P.ATTiNsoN, A. C. Madden, W. B. Hume, W. H. Worrilow, C. F. OBrien, Jr.    .1 f  i I onow Battery B SQUAD 1 SQUAD 2 SQUAD 3 SQUAD 4 F. N. Ferguson M. D. Dftwfiler W. B. McFarland J. H. Maclean T. KlENDL W. P. Bird A. W. Selden R. K. Gray G. R. RUEBEL M. C. Dietrich R. E. Traphagen J. P. Gatsos J. W. Riley R. G. Dyke W. D. Thompson J. P. Kebabian T. J. RUDD J. C. KiNEON J S. Brittain C. H. Lyons B. E. Smith L. L. Levy P. E. Carter F. J. OTOOLE E. E. Johnson E. Lord R. Carlton R. M. Smith W. C. Lord, II N. Schaff L. DES Cognets S. R. Maxfiner, Jr. C. H. Mitchell G. D. Blake G. S. Goldsmith R. B. Pyle R. C. Berg R. B. Hollaman D. Wadsworth C. Crimmins W. D. Leary J. P. Connelly, Jr SQUAD 5 SQUAD 6 SQUAD 7 SQUAD 8 H. H. Anderson F. L. Kennard A. J. Stunkard N. R. Boice D. H. DOOLITTLE T. R. iVERS R. T. Gabriel J. R. Lengen J. D. TUMPANE J. B. H. ZlSCHKE N. S. Talbott A. R. BURNAM W. G. Gribbel W. E. Beckjord E. R. Randolph H. E. Drake W. B. Lee M. E. Clark S. T. Castleman F. C. Collier G. Whitehouse I. E. Cross R. S. Clark P. Fleischmann P. C. Walsh C. K. GUIREY T. C. Dickson P. L. Geyelin W. S. Sagar, Jr. W. S. GOEDECKE D. C. Lumb E. G. SUELZER W. B. Belknap, Jr. N. B. Calder E. B. Hawley p. H. Suter, Jr. H. Bfrger, Jr. W. E. Cobb W. H. Lord J. C. Gibbons A. G. Bessfr J. J. Ferguson il. B. Ranken G. T. Adams J. B. Hall E. A. Shepley, Jr. ■■■ ■P ■■H ■■ H B.it ery Comin.inder: FsHjIK; RUliH B H c DET Captain J. F. Clark f. tf 1 ' l l f ..vi- ' -f ' C.i.ici Liciitt ' ii.iiih : D. T. TuTTLE, J. D. Sullivan C.:Jel Fill Strgtaiil: R. F. Malone C.iciet Serge Jilt i : ]. J. Duncan, G. E. Goring, K. J. Barnard, H. B. Schoolfy, G. B. Pffht-fr :■ f -t- I r I H t mafW Battery C SQUAD 1 SQUAD 2 SQUAD 3 SQUAD 4 E. P. Hoffman W. W. Marshall C. G. Whiting R. D. Drain J. LeBoutillier F. K. Sloan F. A. Shea W. C. Grayson W. R. Manny T. M. Healev H. K. Watson D. A. Lederer C. Y. Mead A. Montgomery A. C. Williams J. L. Lyons A. E. Steiger Q. Meyer W. R. Coles H. P. Moore L. Tucker J. G. Sloneker W. J. P. CURLEY W. B. Macomber D. Witter F. B. Diamond N. A. Duke A. C. Martin E. B. Armstrong D. D. Frederick A. B. Ford T. R. Treffinger A. R. Denzer C. B. McGovERN, Jr. G. Peck E. A. Wiehl R. C. Hardwick A. M. Stern W. A. Kaynor M. D. Chesney A. M. Stone J. O. KOSTNER K. DeRenne E. F. SWIET SQUAD 5 SQUAD 6 SQUAD ' SQUAD 8 L. C. FlELDEN G. M. Ellis H. D. Kennedy J. D. Merwin R. W. Adlfr J. W. Conway R. Walker E. Corrigan H. C Sykes R. S. Thurston D. J. Bales J. M. ECKLE R. A. Clapp S. M. HOLCOMBE J. Moment B. A. Manning P. Guernsey J. S. Greacen G. L. Rives C. N. Menninger H. James D. H. Kerr W. F. Seelbach H. B. Moore G. King R. E. Smith J. F. Tilghmann J. H. Freeman, Jr O. P. Camp W. J. Wedemeyfr E. G. Murray D. M. Jacobs W. D. Curran E. H. Andrews, Jr. K. C Clark D. RUOTOLO H. R. C. Elser B. C. Cornish J. B. Congdon, Jr. E. W. TULLY M. G. Mapes A. Harvey, II A, D D ' Antonio Bjttery Commander: ftl A Li AJiltIt 1 Cadet Captain Austin D EVINE C.I Jet Lieiiteiuints : R. D. O ' Brien, J. W. B. NCKER, Jk, Cadet First Sergeant: W. Sherman Cadet Sergeants: G. C. Hass, Jr., W. N. Bouchfk, S. G. Burger, D. C. Wilhelm. G. Harwood i Battery ' ' D SQUAD 1 M. Barnett G. A. Whelan J. H. Daniels M. H. SOKOLOW R. P. Williams W. H. AVERELL W. K. Beatty R. B. Mason H. H. Atkins W. G. Howe R. F. Goodman A. R. Neumunz SQUAD ■) D. C. Cuthell G. B. Markle S. P. Dodge P. S. Hill W. C. Kelly B. Cadwalader N. S. Bemis W. L. Franksen D. Garvin J. J. Goodman SQUAD 2 SQUAD 3 SQUAD 4 W. M. Crockett J. E. PlERPONT W. A. Pugh C. F. Moses W. W. Clark W. P. Arnold R. C. Nuss M. Heidecorn D. B. Bronson W. S. Pepper J. G. Butler W. F. Goodman R. K. Shannon C. Brooks E. L. D. Dies J. A. Skardon J. E. Hewes, Jr. J. C. Edwards M. M. Walker D. L. Smith G. A. Limbach, Jr W. L. Booth R. C. White H. C. Mayer M. Ryerson R. T. Booth R. H. Coons W. H. Sanders R. A. Christopher R. R. Berg A. L. Dean R. R. EcK SQUAD 6 SQUAD 7 SQUAD 8 S. T. Peck W. Ripley R. L. Weil E. Benjamin A. B. White J. P. Miller U. E. Landauer R. S. Davis J. W. McCann L. W. Varney J. S. Garvin F. T. Wilson B. May C. B. Martin R. F. Prann R. KUNTZ W. J. MacDonald E. G. Platt R. J. Collins F. LOBDELL G. Trible W. H. Peck R. Reade M. Wessel W. F. Wheeler, Jr. K. ToLLES, Jr. F. N. Hayes W. A. Wise R. A. Kempner B. H. Foster H. L. Mendel H. S. T. Rodgers D. S. Vaughan S. G. Hall, Jr. B.iltery Command ir : Cadet Captain D. C. Alexander Cadet Lieutenants: L. H. Butts, J. E. Keiran, Jr. Cadet First Sergeant: F. W. Hoenigmann Cadet Sergeants: H. S. Marsh, J. B. Dealy, Jr. A. ■« ' . Cheney, Jr., T. C. Warner, Jr., T. Deland, Jr., A. Saltzstein 34 History of the N.R.O.T.C. at Yale HE Naval Reserve Officers ' Training Corps at ber of the Yale Battalion will be able to complete Yale is one of the six units originally estab- his college work and be commissioned as an ensign iished in the United States. It had its first enroll- in the Navy. mcnt of students in 1926. The growth of the N.R.O.T.C. is a reflection of the increasing im- portance that the Navy is placing on this program for the procurement of officers for the service. In the units themselves increased numbers were authorized, the quota for the Yale Battalion now being approximately 3 00. Those officers who enter the Navy from the R.O.T.C., are first commis- sioned in the Naval Reserve. After one vear if they so request they will be considered for com- missions in the regular Naval establishment. The Navy in recognizing the potential value of Its N.R.O.T.C. students has made it possible for them to be assured of completing their college career. The N.R.O.T.C. course is made up of four academic years ' work. The first two years are in the Basic Course, the last two in the Advanced Course. Members of the Advanced Course were deferred by law from the require- ments of the Selective Service and Training Act. These members have obligated themselves to accept commissions in the Naval Reserve on grad- uation. With the extension of the age provisions There are many phases with which it is desir- able the Naval R.O.T.C. shall have some famil- iarity. In order to cover these it is necessary to break up the work in one academic year into several subjects. Navigation now takes up the entire junior year. During freshman year Elementary Navigation, History, Communications and Seamanship are studied. During sophomore year, Ordnance, Gunnery and a course in Leader- ship is taken. Senior year is divided into courses in Naval Administration, Military Law, Interna- tional Law, Naval Engineering and Aviation. Naval Science is taught by Naval officers ordered to Yale for this dut - by the Bureau of Navigation. With the general expansion of the Navy it has been impossible to provide more officers even though the number of students taking Naval Science is increased. Classes and divisions are growing in size and it is becoming more and more necessary for the student to acquire his knowledge through his own application and studv. (There will be no guiding word when the ship on the starboard hand closes on a steady bearing.) of the Act the Navy made it possible for member of the Basic Course to enlist in Class V-1 of the With the adoption of the accelerated program Naval Reserve in an inactive status. Those who at Yale the Department of Naval Science and so enlist may continue at school as long as they Tactics found it impractical to meet efficientlv the maintain satisfactory records as Naval R.O.T.C. combinations of terms and entrv dates that were students. The whole program insures that a mem- open to students. It has been decided that students }) should be enrolled only from those taking the accelerated program and maintaining it through- out their university careers. The Navy recognizes the value of N.R.O.T.C. training; its members should be made available to their country ' s service as soon as they are trained, and the training should proceed as rapidly as the university ' s program permits. Preparation for service, like shipboard service itself, involves acceptance of responsibility. The student officers of the Nav.il Battalion are selected from the senior class. To them the remainder of the Unit looks for their leadership and example. The officers of this year ' s organization have been excellent in their performance of duty. The step for the Class of 1942 students of the N.R.O.T.C. from Yale to the ships at sea will be a short one. Rarely does the transition from the theoretical to the practical come so abruptly. Yale can be assured that the change-over will be smoothly made by her Naval R.O.T.C. graduates and that they will fill their new billets with a trained appreciation of the duties to which thev are assigned. iiilnr f -fVf f ff f f f 1 - V ' v V ' nr ' v ■ V '  t:.,-.i iv.;. . V L.111, . ii.,i.;., M..11.1, D„ .,l, LL.u,. Kwij.Kk. Li.ilL .c,,., iC-;, . li.,. n, Uhk,. Besse, Lee, Bonsai, Seacrest, Tompkins, Whittemore, Halsey, Dayton, l-ront Rote: Stunzi, Talcott, Campbell, DeSimone, Church, Pigott, Lacouture, Kane, Goodwin, Page, Godley. Yale Naval Society OFFICERS John T. Pigott HoLLis F. Church Ralph E. DeSimone Paul E. Lacouture Thomas P. Kane Walter A. BARRO )i ' s, IV Richard I. Bonsal Robert M. Gill Frederick A. Godley Richard W. Besse George P. Caulkins, Jr. William B. Cleary James F. Collins Burton A. Daugherty George A. Dines Wells T. Brown, Jr. Kenneth N. Dayton K 1942 Eric C. Goodwin William D. Campbell Fred Hirschhorn, Jr. 1943 Philip L. R. Duval Henry W. English Edmund H. Kendrick Bernard Krones Edward J. McDonald, Jr. 1944 James D. Hurd Peter W. Lyall Daulton Mann, Jr. 37 President Vice-President Treasurer Secretary En erfaiinneiit Walter H. Page Joe R. Seacrest Jack R. Stunzi Robert M. Talcott Richard C. Noyes Innis O ' Rourke, Jr. Sterling Tomkins, Jr. Richard W. VanMiddlesworth Robert N. Whittemore Raymond J. Wean, Jr. Webb L. Nimick Barnum Weaver I Naval Reserve Officers ' Training Corps B.iitalioii Commander: Cadet Lieutenant Commander John T. Pigott, Jr.. 1942 B.iIIliUoii Sub-Commander : Cadet Lieutenant Eric C. Goodwin, 1942 Bat tjlion Ad ' jiitjnt: Cadet LIEUTENANT (JUNIOR Grade) Ralph E. DeSimone, Jr., 1942S. B.iti.ilioii Cnmmisuiry Officer: Cadet Ensign Walter H. Page, 1942 Bditjlioii Chief Petty Officer: Cadet Chief Petty Officer George E. Haines, 1942 Bjtt.iliaii Bii hr: Paul R. Levine, 1942 I COLOR GUARD Cadet 1st P.O. George W. Carrington, Jr., 1942; Cadet 2nd P.O. Robert J. Musser, 1942E. Cadet 3rd P.O. Francis B. Trudeau, Jr. 1942; Cadet 4th P.O. Howard O. Wood, 111, 1943E. DRUM AND BUGLE CORPS Le.ider: Cadet Lieutenant (Junior Grade) Jamfs R. Kflsfv, 19.t2E. Cadet 1st P.O. Thomas H. Russell, III, 1942; Cadet 2nd P.O. John D. Atwood, 1943E. Orin Purintun, 1944 Kenneth R. Baur, 1915 William G. Graves, 11, 1945 Ernest F. Stockwell, Jr., 1945 William S. Cowles, Jr., 1945 John P. Kjng, 1945 John M. Allderige, 1945 Norman Bristol. 1945 George F. Huff, Jr., 1945 Bernard G. OShea. 1944 John B. Findlay, Jr., 1945 38 FIRST COMPANY Company Commander: Cadet Lieutenant Frank A. Sprole, 1942 first Platoon Commander : Cadet Lieutenant Alan C. Hall, 1942 Second Platoon Commander: Cadet Ensign Richard W. Meyer, 1942 Company Chief Petty Officer: Cadet Chief Petty Officer Stanley C. Kennedy, 1942 First Platoon First Petty Officer: Cadet Petty Officer Hovey Seymour, 1942S Second Platoon First Petty Officer: Cadet Petty Officer Walter I. Rodgers, III, 1942 CLASS OF 1942 F. P. Sam ford W. A. Aycrigg, II B. Krones D. W. Hoagland E. J. HoRTON, Jr. P. L. R. DuVal R. Arras J. V. Lindsay F. B. Dent S. C. Taft J. M. Lilley G. A. BUFFUM C. L. Posey J. D. Cannon W. S. Masland A. R. DOOLEY R. D. Crowley E. L. Dale, Jr. J. Clark K. Carver J. C. Hamilton F. K. BoswORTH, Jr. A. I. Shapiro P. VC ' . D. F. rley D. O. Green G. W. Welsh, J. R. Lee CLASS OF 19-13 R. D. DUGAN R. E. BuRKE, II J. F. Collins H. W. English R. A. Bakfr I. ORourke, Jr. F. B. Thorne F. Kleeberg, Jr. W. O. Ross J. H. Hamilton CLASS OF 1944 C. C. Goddard W. L. TOBIN S. G. Brown D. Mann, Jr. R. W. Sweet, Jr. J. W. Seabury W. S. Aiken H. A. Peyton C. B. Dayton J. P. FiLLEY D. E. GiLE W. N. Hastings R. W. Brown P. W. Shull CLASS OF 1945 E. P. Carlin R. F. Grose R. O. Wilson R. R. Slaughter W. T. Bacon, Jr. G. H. Blessis R. B. Sheffield R. A. Harris R. B. Judell T. H. Hedene M. L. Trayser G. R. Janas M. Hume T. M. Porter A. C. SCHEER 1. S. DORFMANN H. v. Sherrill D. N. Copp J. E. Carmichael W. S. Squire E. J. McDonald, Jr. H. O. Perry, Jr. H. P. Slane F. L. Rockefeller R. W. COGGINS P. Brophey I. F. Burke, Jr. R. F. Daily J. L ' . Barton J. L. WORRILOW H. J. COOMBE W. B. Althoff G. C. Thayer, Jr. D. H. Jones P. S. Barry R. W. GOLBY A. Harm AN, Jr. 39 .shCUND COMFANV Comp.iiiy Conniuiiider: Cadet Lieutenant Hollis F. Church, Jr., 1942S First Platoon Commander: Cadet Lieutenant Paul E. Lacouture, 1942 Second Platoon Commander: Cadet Ensign Robert M. Talcott, 1942 Company Chief Petty Officer: Cadet Chief Petty Officer Jack R. Stunzi, 1942 First Platoon First Petty Officer: Cadet Petty Officer David P. H. Watson, 1942 Second Platoon First Petty Officer: Cadet Petty Officer Fred Hirschhorn, Jr., 1942 CLASS OF 1942 B. L, Taylor, III J. B. JESSUP D. C. DUGAN F. F. Lee R. T. Bauer L. P. Stack, Jr. R. W. Van Middlesworth B. A. Daugherty J. W. M. LOZIER J. O. Green, Jr. B. B. Hanson W. J. Overlock J. T. Manvel W. J. GOTTE MEYER F. Wallace, Jr. G. C. Burgwin, III ]. J. White R. I. Bonsal H, F. Smith, Jr. R. I. M. Wilson CLASS OF 194. J. D. Greany L. D. Dannenbaum G. P. Caulkins, Jr. J. W. Castles, II I B. Rafferty D. P. McDonnell R. S. Smith R. N. Whittemore CLASS OF 1944 W. L. NiMICK J. B. Robinson A. E. Dohna E. S. Tishman W. S. Clough, Jr. H. P. Converse H. S. Conley, Jr. W. F. Walker, 1r. H. D. Williams . C. Sheldon S. W. Davidson, Jr. C. D. G. King J. K. Brody A. L. W. Niedringhaus I. P. Walker B. Weaver W. D. Campbell R. W. Halsey, Jr. J. H. Simpson R. W. Besse J. H. Reid R. J. MOONEY R. p. Hunt R. T. Jones J. F. Malo L. J. Fagan W. K. Witherbee G. K. Provo J. B. Gahan W. H. Conkling, Jr. R. S. Davis CLASS OF 1945 W. H. O. Kiekhofer R. B. Lowe, Jr. J. L. Macomber, Jr. T. R. Robertson H. C. Rorick K. McDonnell W, S. Mooriifad, Jr. S. S. Schweitzer W, S. Sumner B. J. Van Ingen, J, R. K. Ginsberg W. W. Collin, 111 G. Denegre G. B. Whitehousf R. T. Klein, Jr. H. Knowlton, Jr. L. V. Lombardi R F, Low J G. McCabe, III F. C Lindemann W, R. Macdonald A. H. Christy R. G. Williams D. L LuKv, III R. W. Muzzy J. W. Andrews L. C. Lewis, Jr. THIRD COMPANY Company Commander: Cadet Lieutenant William D. Campbell, 1942 First Platoon Commander : Cadet Lieutenant Thomas P. Kane, 1942 Second Platoon Commander : Cadet Ensign Frederick A. Godley, Jr., 1942 Company Chief Petty Officer: Cadet Chief Petty Officer Robert M. Gill, 1942 First Platoon First Petty Officer: Cadet Petty Officer John McK. Green, 1942 Second Platoon pint Petty Officer: Cadet Pftty Officer Malcolm J. Edgfrton, Jr., 1942 CLASS OF 1942 W. A. Barrows, IV J. R. Seacrest E. R. Frisby J. H. King, Ir. T. B. Hewitt, II W. B. Cleary H. Di:bosquf N. Chandler A. H. Norton M. Le Boutillier P. B. Buck T. D. RowEN J. C. Holt F. F. SouLF, Jr. R. H. Sheen R. F. Quinlan J. B. Ahrens J. C. ViRDEN, Jr. H. D. Wilson H. E. Early, II R. A. Gibnfy, Jr. F. A. Howlftt, Jr. F. P. LOUCHHEIM R. M. Emerson H. B. Smythf R. J. M. Wilson W. Keith, Jr. . R. SCHULHOFF CLASS OF 1943 C. H Dearborn, II S. Tomkins. Jr. W. C. Hayes, III F. J. Zamdoni R. C. NOYES R. Burger CLASS OF 1944 J. T. Tfnneson, Jr. b. C. Fuller R. G. Goodeve D. Kallman R. L. Fullman F. H. Icaza P. W. Lyall J. V. Lindsay R. M. Detwiler A. McClure, Jr. P. S. Mitchell A. D. Richardson, R. C. Long, II S. J. Wagstaff, Jr. H. C. S-Mith, II D. G. Stewart CLASS OF 1945 W. E. D. Friestedt J. Izard, Jr. F. G. Crane, jr. I. W. Sheldon J. R. DiCKFN T. L. Hughes J. D. Robb, Jr. D. L. Carpenter I. Seaman, Jr. I. D. Mcleod b. W. O ' Brien H. H. Perry W. G. Williams, Jr. J. C. Wrightson R. P. Lathrop J. J. Smith, II E. H. Kendrick A. W. Olsen, Jr. G. A. Dines R. J. Wean, Jr. J. A. Wiedemann J. O. Wright, Jr. H. E. Read, jr. J. D. HURD R. L. McKenna R. A. ZlESING R. S. SUKLOFF D. K. Swan L. R. ROSSBACH R. L. Saunders L. H. Black, Jr. W. D, Lamborn D. M. MacSporran I. A. Thomas, Jr. ' . L. McLennan SENIOR SOCIETIES ■ I Skull and Bones FOUNDED 1832 William Anderson Aycrigg, II Alan Edmund Bartholemy William Tompkins Bell Rene Auguste Chouteau William Mitchell Ford Gary Travers Grayson Ralph Wetmore Halsey, Jr. Fred Harold Harrison John Baker Jessup Frank Alexander Kemp, Jr. George Washington Kirchwey, III Howard Freeman Smith, Jr. Frank Arnott Sprole John Stanley Walker William Gardner White 45 I c. s. p. C. C. J. Scroll and Key FOUNDED 1842 Edward Norvell Carpenter Kent Chandltr, Jr. Malcolm James Edgerton, Jr. George Augustus Goss, Jr. Merrill Chapin Krech Louis Frederick Laun, Jr. George Kearny McClelland Walter Gelshenen Rafferty Robert Goodwyn Rhett, TII Vaughn Clark Spalding, Jr. Benjamin Rush Toland Joseph Walker, Jr. Patrick McLoskey Westfeldt Henry Patten Wheeler David Cudahy Wilhelm 47 i C. T. I. Berzelius FOUNDED 1848 Robert Allen Burman John Chandler, Jr. Claude Douthit, Jr. Charles Francis Emery, Jr. Herbert Layland Greaves, Jr. Alfred Mortimer Hunt Arthur Thomas Keefe, Jr. Douglas Maitland Knight Edw ard Haviland Lockwood John Floyd Milliken George Roseman Nichols, III Charles Robert O ' Connor Frank Park Sami ord, Jr. Henry Buist Smythe Oliver Wolcott Toll, Jr. 49 i EUK ' ESK EuoKf Book and Snake FOUNDED 1863 William Herbert Adams, II Douglas Campbell, Jr. John Emery Coxe Churchward Davis Robert Spink Davis Ernesto de Zaldo, Jr. Robert de Liesseline Johnson Paul Edgar Lacouture Everett Dunbar Marvin, Jr. Robert Paul Masland, Jr. Elton Parks, Jr. HoRTON Rortck Prldden Benjamin Anthony Smith Traver Clinton Smith Robert Elder White, Jr. 51 i tot Doxjt ■ ICKM] Wolf ' s Head FOUNDED 1883 Rene Cupples Scudder di Rosa Louis Philip Ew ald. III louis Lee Hemingmcay, Jr. Robert Livingston Ireland, III John Greenway Keller Donald Breck Lamont John Ward Leggett George de Forest Lord, Jr. Philip Ross Neuhaus Livingston Platt, Jr. Richard Hollyday Semple, Jr. Warren McKinney Shapleigh Hugh Virgil Sherrill Edward Philip Snyder, Jr. Caspar Wistar Barton Tow nsend, Jr. 53 liW James Jkeiii Elihu FOUNDED 1903 Beckwith Roger BRONso f John William Buckley James Burns Cavanagh Edwin Corning John Carle Woodruff Dix James Murdock Ethridge, III Francis Bacon Hamlin, Jr. William Brinckerhoff Jackson William Ellery Sedgwick James Benjamin Whitney Lamson, Jr. H Jeremiah Milbank, Jr. William Richard Ohler, Jr. Cliffton Rogers Scudder, III Arthur Kittredge Watson James Thomas Wyman, II 5J Aurelian UNIVERSITY HONOR SOCIETY FOUNDED 1910 William Anderson Aycrigg, II William Tompkins Bell Rene Auguste Chouteau James Randel Cook Malcolm James Edgerton, [k. Frederick Augustus Godley, Jr. Albert James Ingley John Baker Jessup Louis Frederick Laun, Jr. Robert Goodwyn Rhett, III Charles Frederick Seelbach, Jr. Frank Arnott Sprole John Thompson, Jr. Theodore Smith Turner Robert Wallace 56 i Torch UNIVERSITY HONOR SOCIETY FOUNDED 1916 ,un,lll Alan Edmund Bartholemy Robert Spink Davis Eric Thorgny Franzen Fred Harold Harrison Frank Alexander Kemp, Jr. John Ward Leggett John Fackenthal Magee, Jr. William May Pike HovEY Seymour Hugh Virgil Sherrill . « ' ' Hov( ard Freeman Smith, Jr. Vaughan Clark Spalding, Jr. Patrick McLoskey Westfeldt FRATERNITIES h- I Bjck Rotr: Oscarson, McClelland. Front Row: Pugh, Hoagland, Detweilc Interfraternity Council Donald Wright Hoagland Meade David Detweiler, III William Allen Pugh President Secretary Treasurer David Webster Oscarson Meade David Detweiler, III William Allen Pugh Vincent McClelland Donald Wright Hoagland Alpha Sigma Phi Beta Theta Pi Chi Psi Delta Kappa Epsilon Zeta Psi 60 MjStt, Inglcy, Friib , ArnolJy. President ' s Committee Albert J. Ingley Edw ARi) R. Frisby President Secretary John F. Magee, Jr. Albert J. Ingley Edward R. Frisby Wiiliam F. Arnoldy, Jr. St. Anthony St. Elmo Vernon Hall York Hall Al: HJun fillim HowirJ Hamilio Ckirlti Uwii, J Cbrles! DdJl Fot Alpha Sigma Phi -J Q j 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. Griffing, Jr., George W. Hamlin, II, David T. Flarris, William F. Havcmeyer, Treat Clark Hull, Francis E. Jones, Jr., Arthur T. Keefe, Jr., Richard C. Kelly, Albert G. Mager, Jr., Bayard M. Mallery, Raymond D. O ' Brien, Walter H. Page, Carter Palmer, Lowell M. Palmer, Robert K. Patch, Peter I. Roesler, Charles N. Robertson, III, Harry B. Schooley, Jr., William R. Schulhof, William D. Sommervilie, Jr., Walter F. Stafford, Jr., Henry T. Stude, Jr., Jack R. Stunzi, Roderic B. Swenson, Chilton Thomson, David B. Turner, II, Alfred J. Washburn, William S. Webber. 1 n 1 _ Rudolf W. Adler, Lawrence H. Ballou, Clarence E. Barbier, A. Doak Barnett, Lewis C. Baze, William M. Brunet, Lloyd H. Bunting, George S. Burrows, Edward L. Coleman, John P. Egan, Jr., William L. Foertmeyer, Russell Frost, III, Philip S. Good, Ralph C. Gordon, Howard A. Gray, Jr., Philip M. Cuba, Jr., Henry R. Hallowell, Jr., Ralph A. Hamilton, Jr., John C. Howland, Arthur G. Jackson, Frank R. Jeffrey, Jr., Charles W. Kenady, Jr., O. Perr ' Kline, Jr., Robert N. Kohman, James G. Lewis, Jr., Robert A. Lincoln, James J. McCarty, III, John K. McLean, Charles D. Miller, John S. Morgan, Lawrence W. Shenfield, John B. Sutphin, Donald K. Swan, Stephen B. Wellington, Arthur B. White, John C. Wilson. 1944 Robert Anderson, Langdon L. Barber, Robert W. Brown, John S. Clapp, Jr., David S. Conant, Harry P. Converse, George H. Day, Jr., Blake Flint, Norbert B. Flynn, Ross L. Foertmeyer, John P. Gatsos, William G. Gribbel, Edward M. Harris, Jr., William McC. Hiscock, Joseph T. Ingraham, William A. Ingraham, Richard G. Johnson, John J. Keegan, Jr., Benjamin F. Kitchen, Jr., Hamilton R. Large, William J. McDonald, Jr., Thomas L. Marshall, Douglas Midwood, Theodore R. Parker, Edgar R. Randolph, Harold E. Read, Jr., George B. Rossetter, Edward F. Rullman, Robert W. Schull, Peter E. Sloane, Albert E. Steiger, Jr., Lucius N. Thurber, Francis T. Wilson, II, Morris K. Wilson Jr., Walter K. Witherbee. Founded 1845 I Beta Theta Pi I 1Q4.9 . •I ' t ' - ' ' ' A- B-irrows, I ' , William R. Battey, Charles M. Baxter, Jr., Robert L. Brush, Rene A. Chouteau, John F. Clark, Henry V. Crawford, III, Forrest L. Daniels, John C. Davidson, James B. Dcaly, Jr., Hammond B. Douglas, Jr., Philip W. D. Farley, James A. Fisher, Thomas W. Ford, Louis Frank, III, William A. Gamble, Frederick M. Gebhard, Jr., David Gibson, Edgar T. Glass, Jr., Thomas H. Gosnell, William S. Harrington, William 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. Masland, 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, Robert J. M. Wilson. 1 Q 1 Oliver M. Barres, Jr., Samuel Beardsley, Joseph B. Black- burn, David M. Boffey, James H. Boughton, Frederick W. Burns, Jr., Edward P. Clark, II, Robert O. Corley, Edward L. Davis, Meade D. Detweiler, III, Stan D. Donnelly, Jr., Stanley G. Dunwiddie, Jr., David F erguson, Jr., Bruce C. Hammerschmidt, Robert F. Holden, Jr., Walker P. Holloway, Leo R. Johnson, James M. Kemper, Jr., James H. King, Jr., William C. Kurtz, Jr., Joseph A. Lee, Jr., Donald P. McDonnell, Richard S. T. Marsh, Ward Miller, Richard C. Noyes, Charles M. Perry, George K. Ramsey, Frank L. Rogers, Jr., George Rowe, Jr., David M. Saunders, Clyde R. Scott, Arthur A. Seeligson, Jr., Earl F. Slick, Douglas M. Smith, Ralph F. Smith, William S. Snead, Jr., William S. Squire, II, Jack A. Stroube, Edwin C. Town, Jr., Edward J. Waite, II, John C. Weadock. 1 QA.A. Frederick A. Allan, Robert C. Bennett, John H. Bolton, Jr., George A. Buffum, R. Bradford Burnham, David L. But- tolph, Alfred McC. Clark, Jr., Martin B. Clark, Thomas C. Clifford, Willard H. Cobb, Jr., John C. Coughlin, Jr., Ronald S. Davis, Marion C. Dietrich, Jr., Talton H. Embry, Jr., Sherwood H. Finley, Austen H. Furse, Jr., Walter F. Goodman, Edward G. Goodspced, Brewster B. Hanson, Frank J. Hightower, Neal D. Ivey, Jr., Hewette E. Joyce, Jr., Irwin H. Kramer, David Kruidenier, Jr., David E. Leavenworth, Richard C. Long, Jr., James J. McTernan, Jr., Burke Marshall, Raymond N. Plank, Charles F. Robbins, III, Samuel L. Sawyer, C. Newton Schenck, III, John M. Seidler, John G. Sloneker, Edwin C. Steffen, Jr., Donald G. Stewart, B. Henry Sullivan, Jr., Burton G. Tremaine, III, Charles M. Weis, James A. Whitmore, Jr. Founded 1892 6S I Chi Psi 1 Q ' James R. Anderson, Jr., George C. Bermingham, Vincent W. Carpenter, George W. Carrington, Jr., William L. Conyng- h.im, II, Harold L. Defelice, Thorndike Deland, Jr., John H. Denman, Richard F. Donovan, Jr., Claude Douthit, Jr., John C. Duncan, III, Richard N. Dyer, Thomas A. Ennis, Gardner A. Finley, Charles F. Freeman, Jr., Warren T. Furniss, George A. Goss, Jr., Harry T. Greene, Fred H. Har- rison, Douglas B. Houser, Jr., Alfred M. Hunt, Richard S. Kaynor, Frank V. Kreske, Donald A. Kubie, Paul E. Lacouture, William H. Lightner, Charles D. Murphy, Jr., Lee A. O ' Neill, Charles P. Ripley, Herbert F. Royal, Jr., Mason D. Salisbury, Sabin P. Sanger, Joe R. Seacrest, Winchester Sher- man, Grant G. Simmons, Jr., Sumner Smith, Jr., Charles G. Spalding, Robert E. Stevenson, William R. Thayer, Donald Warner, Grant Wilmer, Charles P. Wilson, George W. Wolf, Jr., David J. Williams, II, James T. Wyman. 1 Q ■? Bouvier Beale, George Birrell, Henry B. Bradford, Peter R. Carley, Craig S. Carragan, William B. Cleary, James F. Collins, Richard D. Conant, William C. Coughlan, David C. Cuthell, William T. Dargan, Douglas S. Dodge, George W. Embry, Myron Eastwood, George W. Files, George B. Gilford, Jr., Roger C. Gregory, Alfred W. Hay- wood, Jr., Arthur G. Heidrich, Jr., Thomas B. Hewitt, II, Jabes B. Hollo- way, Jr., Charles W. Jatho, Thomas A. Kelly, Richard M. Ketchum, Frank W. Lilley, Jr., W. C. McCracken, Gordon B. McLendon, Charles G. Paxson, Eugene C. Peck, II, Farwell W. Perry, Jr., Henry E. Pern, ' , Jr., William A. Pierson, James D. Ramsay, Nathaniel P. Rathvon, Jr., William O. Ross, Lee P. Stack, Charles H. Stephens, III, Gordon M. Turtle, Richard W. Van Middlesworth, George C. Vary, Tom D. Vogt, John B. Vreeland, Stuyvesant Wainwright, II, Thomas J. Whclan, Jr. 1 QAA George L. Arnold, Dudley W. R. Bahlrian, H.irry P. Bar- lyn-n ' • ,.,nj_ j Thomas H. Beddall, Jr., Keehn W. Berry, Jr., Conley Brooks, Anthony D. Bullock, Jr., William T. Cahill, Russell A. Clapp, III, George R. Clough, Charles B. Dayton, Chester F. English, Jr., Martin M. Foss, Jr., Robert T. Gabriel, John S. Garvan, Jr., Norwick R. G. Goodspeed, George W. Hauer, Snowden Haywood, John B. Heath, William C. Kelly, II, John S. Kubie, Elmore McN. McKee, Jr., Thomas G. Mairs, William S. Masland, John B. Ottman, John C. Pistell, Waldron W. Proctor, Robert F. Quinlan, Gerard C. Reed, James W. Riley, Jr., Albert W. Selden, Henry P. Slane, Richard S. Spencer, Jr., Robert W. Sweet, Lloyd B. Taft, Seth C. Taft, Victor von Schlegcll, Jr., James B. H. Zischke. Founded 1843 I !?■ dull Claw Wtm Gould, E.Peie Cbrlt! Kmm hm Turner, I Delta Kappa Epsilon 1 Q A ' l William H. Ad.ims, II, Alan E. Bartholemy, William T. Bell, y 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., Gary T. Grayson, Jr., George E. Haines, Alan C. Hall, Edwin A. Hansen, Fred Hirschorn, Jr., Frank A. Kemp, Jr., 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, Edward 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. Wilhclm. 1 Q T C. Morgan Aldrich, Jr., Peter C. Anderson, Kent Arnold, ' ' Robert Berry, Henrw W. Carey, John W. Castles, George P. Caulkins, John B. Chaffee, Emerson T. Chandler, Elias Clark, Stuart H. Clement, John H. Daniels, Osborne A. Day, Jr., Duncan H. Doolittle, Henry W. English, Harry L. Evans, Robert A. Gardner, Lyttleton B. P. Gould, Morgan Hebard, Jr., George R. Hill, Henry W. Hobson, Jr., E. Peter Hoffman, Arthur Howe, Jr., Robert T. Isham, Theodore Kiendl, Jr., Charles J. Kittredge, Vincent McClelland, John H. Maclean, Albert C. Martin, Johnston F. Northrop, Albert W. Olsen, Jr., Stewart T. Peck, Bernard Rafferty, Leonard C. Ritts, Jr., Reginald Roome, Jr., Ralph Sargent, Jr., Zeph Stewart, George N. Stone, William L. Stotzer, Arthur N. Turner, Welbv C. Whitln. IQAA Lester Armour, Jr., Howard M. Baldridge, Jr., Peter M. Brown, Samuel G. Brown, Anthony R. Burnam, III, John L. H. Chafee, Eugene P. C. Constantin, III, John H. Cook, James M. Crane, Jr., Walter J. P. Curley, Jr., Sidney W. Davidson, Jr., Alexander Ellis, Jr., Frank C. Farwell, II, John L. Ferguson, William C. Grayson, A. Crawford Greene, Townsend W. Hoopes, George S. Isham, Martin LeBoutillier, Stuart W. Little, Francis Lobdell, John F. Malo, Lucien Memminger, Jr., William G. Moore, Hugh E. O ' Brien, Willard J. Overlock, William S. Pepper, Sam Ross, Scott W. Scully, Edward C. Spalding, Stephen A. Stack, Joseph F. Tilghman, William D. Twining, Jeffrey P. Walker, Hugh C. Wallace, Edward O ' M. Welles, Richard P. Williams, III, Dean Witter, Jr., Webster P. Wodell. Founded 1844 The Fence Club 1 Q Zl ' 9 Charles M. Boyce, John W. 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 J. Edgerton, Jr., John W. Fcnno, Ralph W. Halsey, Jr., William M. Hunt ' --, Robert L. Ireland, III, William B. Jackson, William E. S. James, Robert deL. Johnson, John G. Keller, John W. Riser, Jr., Merrill C. Krech, Louis F. Laun, Jr., John W. Leggett, Richard S. Mershon, Philip R. Neuhaus, Elton Parks, Jr., Paul D. Pattinson, Livingston Piatt, Jr., Tracy D. Pratt, Clififton R. Scudder, III, Frank P. Shepard, Jr., Benjamin A. Smith, Robert W. Stinchfield, Benjamin R. Toland, Casper W. B. Townsend, Jr., Joseph Walker, Jr. Deceased 1 Q y4 •I Charles L. Bartlett, Anthony J. Bouscaren, Russell E. Burke, II, John G. Butler, Daniel N. Copp, Samuel H. Coxe, Frederick C. Ford, Jr., Walter B. Ford, II, Jonathan H. Hately, Webb C. Hayes, III, Charles R. Hickox, Jr., Austin D. Higgins, Frank E. House, III, Walter E. Lcaman, Jr., John LeBoutillier, George de Forest Lord, Jr., Cord Meyer, Jr., William D. Millett, Spencer D. Moseley, Innis O ' Rourke, Jr., Edward Patterson, John H. C. Peake, Ewing R. Philbin, Jr., George S. Pillsbury, John H. Reid, Henry S. Richardson, Jr., Walter J. Taylor, Francis B. Thorne, Jr., Jacob O. Wardwell, II, Gordon B. Whelpley, Charles F. Culver, Stephen K. Galpin, John H. Hobart, William W. Marshall, William n. Miller, W-irren P. Myers, Frank W. Wall. r __., I -| a A A ' • ' ' ' - Klock, Jr., James F. Bodine, David B. Bronson, William T. Brown, Jr., James L. Buckley, George C. Burg- win, III, Joseph N. Carpenter, III, Nathan Chandler, George L. Chase, Charles B. Congdon, Frederick B. Dent, Alfred B. Ford, Philip L. Geyelin, John O. Green, Jr., Peter E. Guernsey, Albert B. Hilton, IV, James D. Hurd, John T. Lawrence, David A. Lindsay, John V. Lindsay, Walter R. Manny, Jr., Quentin Meyer, Anthony L. W. Niedringhaus, John J. Pascoe, II, Frederick L. Rockefeller, Jay T. Saunders, Hugh Scott, Jr., Rufus C. Stillman, Harry C. G. Toland, Carll Tucker, Jr., Augustus Van Cortlandt, III, Henry K. Watson, Richard H. Webb, Henry J. Wheel- wright, Jr., Charles S. Whitehouse. Founded 1830 Zeta Psi 1 94.9 . ' ' ' A. Aycrigg, II, W. Liscum Borden, Beckwith R. Bronson, James B. Cavanagh, John C. Chapin, Robert MacD. Clark, John S. Cooke, Charle H. Dearborn, 11, Daniel C. Dugan, A. Doug- las Dodge, Charles F. Emery, Jr., James M. Ethridge, III, L. Philip Ewald, III, S. Scott Goddard, Jr., Francis B. Hamlin, Jr., David F. Harris, John B. Jessup, T. Paul Kane, Stanley C. Kennedy, B. Whitney Lanison, Jr., James R. Lee, Edward H. Lockwood, Nathan D. McClure, Jr., Garden R. McLean, John H. Meyer, Jeremiah Milbank, Jr., John F. Milliken, George R. Nichols, II, W. Richard Ohler, Jr., Stanley M. Rumbough, Jr., Warren McK. Shapleigh, H. Francis Shattuck, Jr., Frank J. Sladen, Jr., John C. Stockman, Bertrand L. Taylor, III, Oliver W. Toll, Jr., Francis B. Tru- deau, Jr., W. Gardner White. 1 Q •7 David C. Acheson, Robert F. Bauer, John E. Garmichael, George A. Dines, Richard D. Drain, Richard D. Dugan, Philip L. R. Duval, Frank D. Campion, William S. Creighton, Raymond S. Freeman, John Hamilton, John McM. Harding, Eldon Harvey, Jr., Donald W. Hoagland, Frank H. Hosford, Richard M. Hosley, John W. Hughes, Theodore G. Jewett, Jr., Charles S. Judd, Jr., Allen T. Klots, Jr., Walter Mann, Dudley L. Miller, Gordon Miller, Henry G. Millett, Cornelius F. Moses, John W. PuUeyn, Jr., Sydney H. Rogers, George MacG. Sanford, Harton S. Semple, Clinton B. Sheldon, James McK. Symington, John K. Tabor, Henry L. Terrie, Jr., William VanN. Washburn, Robert S. Wells, Harold L. Williamson, William H. Worrilow. 1944 William P. Arnold, Jr., Hiram D. Black, John S. Brittain,in_ Edward R. Bulkeley, Prescott S. Bush, Jr., Samuel T. Castle- man, Jr., James M. Childs, Merrell E. Clark, Jr., Edward W. Cook, Richard M. Detwiler, Philip S. Duff, Jr., Martin Dwyer, Jr., Shearen D. Elebash, William Evans, Peter F. Fleischmann, David E. Gile, William T. Glidden, William S. Goedecke, Nicholas M. Greene, John M. Holden, Lewis P. Kinsey, Jr., Charles L. Larkin, Jr., Thomas M. Lewis, II, John M. Lilley, Joseph L. McEvitt, Robert L. McKenna, William B. Macomber, Jr., Benjamin M. May, William G. Milliken, John W. Morrison, John D. Murchison, Roderic L. O ' Connor, William M. Parry, Karl D. Pierson, Jr., Arleigh D. Richardson, III, Leroy C. Schwarzkopf, Charles B. Scott, Frank F. Soule, Jr., Samuel J. Wagstaff, Jr., Jefferson A. Wiedemann. Founded 18 8 8 73 Saint Anthony Hall 1 Q A ' Worthington M. Adams, James F. Allen, Charles Carrol Brooks, W. M. Decker, III, Harold Kleiber Dell, Jr., Gardner J. Fabian, Jr., John R. Finch, Eric T. Franzen, Robert M. Gill, Edward L. Hicks, III, Colin H. John, Polk Laffcon, III, John F. Magee, William M. Pike, Hovey Seymour, Llovd B. Smith, Charles P. Stetson, Edmund B. Tobin, Robert Wallace, Gilbert L. l atson, James WoodhuU, Harry F. Wright. i 1 Q - ■? Robert E. Arras, Donald L. Brown, Jr., Henry E. Colton, Jr., Hutchinson DuBosque, Kent Ellis, William M. Fairhurst, George S. Greene, Jr., Crowell P. Hadden, Jr., Claude B. Hart, William B. Jordan, III, Harold D. Kennedy, Jr., John A. Le Van, David D. Munsell, John W. Red, Jr., Charles M. Stoddart, John T. Stoddart, Jr., Walter H. Sykes, III, Nelson S. Talbott, Jr., Henry Z. Urban, John D. Warheld, Charles L. WiUoughby, William H. Wood, Jr. 1 Q lzl -liter E. Beckjord, James F. Burke, Jr., Paul E. Carter, Jr., Horace J. Caulkins, Richard Cooley. Richard C. Davis, John S. Deans, III, Raymond M. Demere, Jr., Harold E. Drake, Jr., Charles A. Jones, Jr., James F. Magin, Waldo Van S. Midgley, Robert S. Morton, Webb L. Nimick, Henry K. Porter, Philippe De M. Register, Brooks E. Smith, Scott L. Talliaferro, Edward C. Taylor, Jonathan S. Tracy, Floyd Wallace, Jr., James O. Wright. Founded 1869 75 St. Elmo Club 1 Q A ' y Dudley W. Burchard, James R. Cook, Robert S. Cumming, David E. Dangler, II, Charles C. Esty, William J. Fleming, George T. Griswold, Stephen W. Harris, John Y. Huber, III, Albert J. Ingley, Howard R. Johnson, Charles A. Kilvert, Jr., Walter E. New- comb, Jr., Charles E. Pynchon, Jr., John M. Quinn, Thomas B. Ross, Charles F. Seelbach, Jr., Omar H. Simonds, Jr., Alexander M. Thomp- son, Jr., John Thompson, Jr., Theodore S. Turner, Arthur W. Wrieden, William C. Witt. 1 Q l John D. Atwood, Franklin L. Burgess, Walter M. Char- man, Jr., Hugh E. Cumming, Don W. Gow, Raymond T. Heizer, Jr., William P. Hilmer, James B. Holloway, Edmund H. Kendrick, Robert A. Kenworthy, III, William E. Laupus, George E. Mallinckrodt. James M. Potts, Douglas Seaman, Jack C. Shay, Pearce D. Smith, John M. Thornton, Stirling Tomkins, Jr., Mark Upson, Jr., George F. Wagonc , Robert N. Whittemore. 1 QAA , Vilmot Vail Castle. Jr., Willis Welles Clark, II, Paul Cox, II, Edwin Baxter Davidge, Edwin Lee Davidson Dils, Floyd Cerelle Fay, III, William James Gardner, Roger Grant Goodeve, John Estaugh Hopkins, Pierson Keating, Douglas Hendrie Kerr, Robert Wallace Kuntz, Archibald McClure, Joseph David Morris, George Leroy Morri- son, Jr., Austin Hart Norton, Jacob Templin Reams, George Richard Ruebel, William Fowler Seelbach, William Pierce Smith, George Dawley Wilcox, III, Robe rt August Ziesing. Founded 18 89 77 Vernon Hall 1 Q j ' George duPont Boomer, Fred L. Born, William E. Coyken- dall, Jr., Eugene J. Curtis, Jr., Alv.ih E. Esser, William E. Fowler, Jr., Edward R. Frisby, Edmund K. Gravely, George Ingram, Jr., Harvey W. Kausel, John J. Kennedy, Jr., Henry E. Kranichfeld, Jr., James P. McGowan, Arthur C. Madden, Russell R. Monroe, John T. Morris, Edward J. Pope, Jr., Thomas B. Turner, Elmore H. Willets, Jr., John P. Wilson, IV. 1 Q I 2 A. John Anlyan, Nelson R. Boice, John A. S. Brown, III, James R. Ellis, John B. Grant, Reuben Hitchcock, Jr., Howard P. Ingels, Thomas L. Kelly, Oliver P. Le Compte, Jr., Robert I. Lyman, Anthony Morse, Jr., William C. FI. Ramage, Walter G. Rodiger, Jr., Wendell L. Smith, Jr., Gilbert W. Stiles, Frederick C. Sutro, Jr., James A. Walsh, George A. Whelan, Frank D. Winder. .r.A. 1 94.4. . ■ ' ° ' Bamford, Reed Bertolette, John W. Braasch, Law- rence B. Brockett, Jr., William H. Conkling, Jr., Tracy C. Dickson, John E. Eggleston, Robert F. Farrell, Clark W. Fisher, Alexander M. Fisken, Denison C. Fuller, John S. Greacen, Richard P. Herman, Thomas C. Jackson, Hamilton James, John E. LeGros, John F. Manvel, William H. Millan, Thomas D. Rowen, Philip Ver Planck, WiUard F. Walker, Jr. Founded 1848 York Hall 1 Q49 V ' illi.ini F. Ai-noldy. Jr., Edward T. Badger, Gaylord B. Barnes, K. Gordon Bond, Spotswood D. Bowers, Jr., Ford W. Brunner, Richard J. Christine, G. Donald Eberlcin, Robert S. House, Howard C. Humphrey, Mark McD. Lindsey, Harbison Meech, Robert J. Musser, Wilson C. Rich, Jr., Harry R. Sage, E dwin L. Scofield, III, James McC. Sessions, Alan B. Spurney, Richard K. Warren, Alexander B Warrick, Thomas L. Weirick, George Welsh. 1943 Benjamin B. Alexander, Lester P. Brundin, Frank J. Carrig, deGanahl, John D. Greany, Klaus P. Hochschwender, Frank W. Hoenig- mann, Ernest J. Horton, Jr., William McC. Jordan, Frank L. Kennard, George Mills, II, Stephen E. Monohon, James H. Moore, Jr., Louis G. Nickell, John C. Robinson, William P. Rowland, Raymond J. Wean, Jr., Richard O. Wilson, Howard O. Wood, II. ' CkAA_ John C. Clement, Francis W. Commiskey, Flenry E. Damon, John B. D. De Wolfe, Jr., Arthur P. Heyer, Joseph H. Holli- day, Jr., Reuben Jeftery, Jr., James R. Lengen, Richard H. Mann, Stephen E. Monohon, Harvey B. Moore, Herbert P. Moore, E. Russell Munson, Julian H. Norton, Jr., Virgil G. Patterson, Hoyt O. Perry, Jr., Gordon A. Pilking- ton, Jr., Harlan A. Peyton, Thomas J. Rudd, John W. Seabury, Howard C. Sykes, Jr., Richard N. Williams, George A. Wiltsee. I Founded 1878 HONORS Phi Beta Kappa ALPHA OF CONNECTICUT 1780 Louis Philip E v ald. III John Stanley Walker Benjamin Rush Toland Rene Auguste Chouteau Oliver Wolcott Toli, Jr. Prci ' idciit Vlrc-Pirsnlfnf Secretary Treasurer Member of Executive Commiftcc Back Row: AAeXheig, Shezviood, I. ■•■ y. Km-hi, I n. ni. ,.;iii hnii.n, ;k.nson, B.irtk-tt. Fourth Row: Wightman, Hansen, Backus, MiJkift, Rccd, Hcaly, Paul. ' I ' irJ R,ur: Laun, Dailey, Stcphan, Auchincloss, Maclean, Allen, Goslm, Willets, Rosen. Second Row: Millner, Alpert, Coleman, Porter, Stommel, Stewart, Ainsworth, Tracy, Barker. Fronl Row: Chouteou, Gessell, Walker, Arnoldy, Ewald, Arcudi, Toland, Kubie, Toll. 84 CLASS OF 1941 (June Elections) David Henry Lane Aron Thomas Trowbridge Church Elliott Ray Detchon, Jr. Alan Francis Dill Richard Bernard Fisher Charles Edward Ford, II Carl Victor Hansen George Oliver Keutgen, Jr. (S.S.S.) William Moses Kunstler Robert Edward Murphy Charles Samuel Muscatine Henry Atwater Preston Robert Janney Redington Nathan Swiss (S.S.S.) Charles Wesley Watson (S.S.S. Harold Bartlett Whiteman, Jr. CLASS OF 1942 Edward Allen Adelberg (S.S.S.) Thomas William Ainsworth George Homer Allen Marshall Benn Alpert (S.S.S.) John Anthony Arcudi William Frank Arnoldy, Jr. (S.S.S.) David Skillman Atkinson Oswald Prentiss Backus, III Lawrence Barker Herbert Hall Bartlett William Roy Battey William Liscum Borden David Gordon Campbell Bridgman Thomas Calhoun Britton Rene Auguste Chouteau Gould Humphrey Coleman Chester Thorne Corse Robert Houde Daley Paul Jacques Roy ditDesjardins Ernesto deZaldo, Jr. Louis Philip Ewald, III Eric Thorgny Franzen (S.S.S.) Carl Albert Gagliardi John Maurice Gessell Andrew Mattei Gleason (S.S.S.) Thomas Stratton GdsLiN, II Elmore Abram Willets, Edwin Adrian Hansen Thomas Baer Hess Albert James Ingley (S.S.S.) Douglas Maitland Knight Donald Albert Kubie Louis Frederick Laun, Jr. James Stewart McDermott Walter Weston Meyer (S.S.S.) Robert Richards Midkiff Robert Anderson Miller, III Bernard Norman Millner Justus Williams Paul, Jr. John Porter, II Howard Alexander Reed Sherwood Hartman Reisner Lawrence Richardson, Jr. Sidney Rosen (S.S.S.) Paul Brooke Stephan, Jr. Henry Melson Stommel (S.S.S.) Edward Adam Tenenbaum Arthur Robert Tobey (S.S.S.) Benjamin Rush Toland Oliver Wolcott Toll, Jr. Paul Spurgeon Tracy, Jr. John Stanley Walker Patrick McLoskey Westfeldt Jr. (S.S.S.) CLASS OF 1943 Joseph Howland Auchincloss, Jr. David Douglas Coffin Harold Harris Healy, Jr. John Helm Maclean Cord Meyer, Jr. Henry Smith Richardson, Jr. Julian Asher Sachs Robert Kilpatrick Sherwood Zeph Stewart Arthur Strong Wightman 8J Tau Beta Pi ENGINEERING HONOR SOCIETY OFFICERS William F. Arnoldy, Jr. Thomas L. Weirick Albert J. Incley William K. McOwen Frederick W. Keith, Jr. President Vice-President Recording Secretary Treasurer Corresponding Secretary Richard I. Bonsal Seymour B. Cohn Frank A. Gaynor Henry B. Gerling Daniel I. Gordon MEMBERS 1942 Geoffery E. Goring Herbert L. Greaves, Jr. Arthur B. Harding, Jr. Warren A. Hindenlang John P. Josephs Joseph M. Kelly ' Conway H. Melcher John P. Murphy Charles F. Seelbach, Jr. Thomas M. War ocick Kent Ellis 1943 David R. Williams, Jr. Jack C. Shay B.nk Ron : Murphy, Gordon, Bonsai, Seelbach. Thir,t Roir: Greaves, Hardini;, Goring, Williams, Shea, Josephs. From Ron : Gaynor, Ingley, Melcher, Arnoldy, Hindenlang, Murphy, Cohn. Cannon and Castle MILITARY HONOR SOCIETY OFFICERS LUSTIN DeVINE Pveshiciit . A. WiLLETS MEMBERS Treasurer F. H. Harrison D. C. Alexander A. O. Miller L. H. Butts W. M. Boucher J. F. Clark W. Sherman P. D. Pattinson W. P. GiTHENS D. C. WiLHELM G. A. Goss J. F. KiERAN, Jr. J. W. Bancker J. G. Keller A. C. Madden F. W. Hoenigmann 87 PUBLICATIONS I B ck Ron: Dui;.in, Dickiiis-i T. W. Furd, Leggett, Smith, Aycrigg. SlKirill. Ji Rosj. SecoiiJ Row: Marsli, Milbank, Major, ' .■ Jessup, White, Borden, W. M. Ford, Davis, Seacrest, The Oldest College Daily- Founded January 28. 1878 wniijm Gardner White. Business Manage, VVilham Anderson Aycrigg. 2nd. Sporls Edit W.lh.im Liscum Borden, Vne-Chahman Ford, Chairman Joe Rushton Seacrest. Managing Editor John Baker Jessup. Assignment Editor Douglas Campbell, Jr., National Advertising Manage i. Local Advertising Manager Editors Norman Par; Rene Cupple Daniel Callahan Dugan Thomas WiUard Ford John Ward Leggett Ralph Hermon Major. Jr. Harold Shepardson Marsl Jeremiah Milbank. Jr. Associate Editors A. G. Altschul J. M. Harding R. L. Weil S. D. Elebash A. McClure C. L. Bartlett E. H. Kcndrick A. C. Williams S. B. Finch W. G. Pearson R. L. Brecker J. H. Maclean T. H. Beddall, Jr. H. R. Flock A. M. Sheldon F. D. Campion T. Z. Stewart I. L. Buckley A. C. Greene W. D. Twining E. Clark G. N. Stone J. M. Childs J. M. Holden R. L. Wickser E. P. Clark, 2d P. Strauss R. G. Clark. Jr. W. C. Kelly, II S. C. Taft R. D. Drain J. K. Tabor E. W. Cook J. A. Kleeman J. B. Zischke J. H. Hamilton S. Tomkms, Jr. P. S. Duff. Jr. S. W. Little Albert Hovey Dickinson. Jr., Photographei George PI McNear. III. Ass. t Photographe. HEAR YE The News takes pleasure in announcing the selection of the following columnists to write for the 1942 Board: sports, Gary T. Grayson, H. Virgil Sherrill, and James T. Wyman II; humor, Richard D. Drain and Richard M. Ketchum; drama, Howard M. Holtzmann and John A. Kneubuhl; tiioiic, Beckwith R. Bronson, Louis P. Ewald III, and John W. Leggett; music, Louis L. Hemingway, Jr., and Jackson B. Wiley; news, Ralph H. Major, Jr., and John H. Maclean; {general, W. Liscum Borden, John S. Walker, Grosby S. Noyes and David G. Acheson, Zeph Stewart, and James A. Fisher. Hillary B. Waugh has been selected as cartoonist . 90 I The Oldest College Daily Founded January 28, 1878 IN RECAPITULATION , !« ' « AT UCH water has gone under the News bridge since that wet January day when the 1942 Board inherited the Oldest College Daily. Our Snidkc uftcu hursts into fire Foot hall ' s fate hung in halan first week was devoted to a campaign of moderniza- tion: an inter-office com- munication system was in- stalled; a cut catalogue and index was devised; a morgue room with be- wildering four-tier metal files was set up; the dark- room was modernized and new photographic equip- ment was purchased. These improvements were made possible by the generosity of Mrs. William Pool, mother of Briton Hadden, whose name the News building bears. Important, too, was our conscious effort at aggres- sive news coverage. This policy, pursued at the cost of much hard work and occasionally strained rela- tions with the Ad- ministration, resulted, we believe, in a more interesting paper. In line with this trend towards yellow journalism certain changes were made in format: a smaller masthead, a larger printed page, stream- lining of headlines by dropping decks, new runovers and captions, and a more concentrated use of pictures which doubled past photography budgets. Several factors made this ambitious program possible: our Managing Editor had insomnia; the Chairman actually showed his face inside the News; our Business Manager was an ardent advocate of New Deal deficit financing; and an unprecedented number of able heelers volunteered. A fifth factor was the ability of John, Harold and Joe, our printers, to endure trial and tribula- tion at the hands of the M.E. In later weeks under the able direction of Jim Cav- anaugh and Jerry Milbank the annual review of un- dergraduate courses was published. To aid the law library fund a special issue was sent to every Law Alumnus. Extravaganza is- sues made their appear- Nctv policy was horn after labor pains {See News, page 93) Deadlock Holds- Strike at 9 I M R..po ibi Fo.ouuo.„, oi smu Police Lines Guard Power Plant; D to Halt lighis. Room Service hk ( EDITORIAL EXCERPTS It is not enough to say that a nation that will not be beaten can not be beaten. The intangibles are important, but so are the tangibles. Voltaire ' s comment about God being on the side of the heaviest battalions certainly has relevance today. War is a grim business. It is fought with blood and iron, not knitting needles. Our generation has the blood; can we also expect the iron? Dennis is a law abiding scholar, who has derived a political philosophy which IS the antithesis of the American demo- cratic faith. We firmly believe that Dennis must be defeated if the democratic faith is to survive, but he must be defeated in the realm of the intellect through the force of a superior idea. Democracy is built upon the rock of free thought and free speech ; that rock must not be undermined by the censor ' s pencil under the guise of expe- diency. Unfortunately there appears to be con- siderable support for subsidization. This in our opinion would be the beginning of the end of Yale as a great national iiiiiiersity. If the great educational institutiorts are to survive a period ot social upheaval, they must perfect that one unique contribution which it is theirs to make — the search for truth and the dissemination of knowledge. Nothing must be allowed to interfere with this main purpose. Scholarship — and scholarship alone — is the rock upon which the universities must build. Ml . r ' {Continued from page 91) ance Alumni Day, Junior Prom, and Derby Day. That latter bacchanalian festival was staged by the News ' orgy expert, Howie (Two-phone) Smith. The big story was the steady progress of the United States towards war, and Yale ' s subsequent adaptations. We also were presented with an al- most daily series of journalistic windfalls that kept our M.E. with a satisfied five-column headline look. Changes in University policy were frequent and who knows but what some of our editorial ink was not wasted. One item of sensational news was the CIO strike of Yale service employees. -fslf inirs GIRL CREWS ON HOUSATONIC! No dawn, it snoived As the last pre-war Niw s Board we had un- usual opportunities and responsibilities. But ours was an easy task compared with that facing future Boards. The Yale of this war and after will be a very different institution from the Yale we know. The great problem facing future News Boards is one of adaptation. As was said in our last editorial: The News is an extracurricular activity in a community dedicated to the advancement of learning. In these times first things have a habit of coming first, and the primary purpose of a uni- versity is the creation and dissemination of knowl- edge. This is the contribution upon which the great universities will have to rest their case in future years. Yale can get along without the News, but the News cannot get along without Yale. NAYALBLITLOPENLWAR 1500 MEETNEWS WITH RIOT Seymour Sees Need of Unity l nd Discipline British Follow Empire in War 300 E!is Crowd Recruiting Posts Monday, Tuesday -j Business As Usual In Crisis-Seymour All Over 21 Must Re-Register To 5- ' Committee Maps Air-Raid Preparations, I « ,atse ' shpltprs in llniversitv Buildini HanarJ. Prmccion Oiler Sludmls -yz opportuniiifs F or Dc lm u SctiIci YALE ADOPTS S-YEAR DEGREI Big-3AllAgrt.,, „„, Harvard to Follow • ' - - PrincetoD, Yale :? ?5b. ' All Schools to Operate on Year-round Basi- |r£i ByAddmgj Third Term During Summei :., iSZ WUlriilie Spcaki War effected (sic) the University Bjik Row: Stillman, Frye, Hc.ily, Wichl, Kahn. From Row: Backus, LeCompte, McO.rkle, Tabo Stockman. The Yale Banner A S the Recording Angel of Yale, the 1941 Ban- ■ • • NER Board has had a rare opportunity to sit back and observe the stream of activity, of per- sonalities and pursuits which go to make up a great University. We have, for one year, had our finger on the pulse of Yale, not only as individuals engaged in one of its many activities but also as observers of the whole broad scope of Yale life. But the 1942 Board discovered very soon after it took office that there was more to the publication of a Yearbook than mere observation. Many seem to believe that the Banner, like the soldier of mythology, springs full-grown from some ob- scure Dragon ' s Tooth planted in the fertile dust on the second floor of the Neti ' s Building; this, we beg to assure you, is not the case. From June, 1941, until May, 1942, countless details, of plan- ning, of organization and execution, plagued us. Succeeding Banners, for many years, have re- sembled much-revived plays having as their only distinction an annually-changing cast. The bonds of tradition, so strong at Yale, do not favor too radical departures from established form. So we decided on several minor changes in format and in treatment which would enliven the book and yet maintain its time-honored flavor. But on De- cember 7, 1941, our whole outlook changed. The News had had its War Issue, the RtiorJ its Torrid Total War Tales, and now we too were given an opportunity to mirror a totally new phase of Yale life; not only was the cast new, but this year the whole play was to be rewritten; — Yale was shaken to its very roots by the impact of war. We hope that we have done our bit to chronicle the metamorphosis of Yale in the past year. Our dedication is one to a man not only much re- spected and admired by those who know him, but also a symbol of the impact of war upon Yale. The Military Section of the book reflects the added importance which military and naval train- ing has assumed in the University. Our reviews of the various colleges and organizations indicate a new orientation of thought and of purpose, one which has been absent from Yale for twenty-five years. Entering our second century of publication, we are recording the life of a new and much-changed Yale, one which will probably never be the same as that which the hrst hundred Banner editors saw. But this book is not the only re- sult of our year ' s activity. The O i Caml iis, which rests (we hope) on every Freshman ' s desk, is published each Fall for the benefit of the Freshman Class; it contains pictures and pertinent information about each Freshman and other ma- terial of interest to Freshmen not covered by other publications. The Banner assists the editors of the Class Book in preparing their book for print; financial wastage and much duplication of effort has been avoid- ed by joint contracts with printer and engraver and joint use of some two hundred pages of material. Adhering rigorously to tradition, the Chairman has devoted the past year to brooding and impressing others with the weight of his cares; occasionally, however, he has been known to forget his meditations and participate in the more mundane Stock ami heelers hustled. While the editors planned . . . aspects of yearbook publication. For real results, however, credit must go to the M.E., Ozzie Backus, whose regular and violent eruptions explain not only the chaos of the Banner office but also the fact that the 1942 Yearbook went to press. Board members and heelers alike were spurred to superhuman efforts for fear of his awful wrath. To Johnny Stockman went the managership of the Business Department. Although forced to use red ink, which the Ban- ner has always ordered in copious quantities, for the greater part of the year, he finally discovered a musty bottle of midnight-blue with which to make his final entries in the ledger. Too much credit can not be given to the Junior Board, which capably carried a large share of responsibility. In leaving, we feel certain that the Banner will have next year one of its most brilliant Boards. Behind the Seniors Junior and Sophomore board members, however, were the blessed heelers — both those who succeeded, and those who fought and fell ; they put out the 1942 Yale Year- books. B-ui li. i, : liat-,, Vvjut;li, Uaik, Ltmi , Gibbun.s. Ilm; Run: Fuwlcr, Nithob, ParU-r, Uun, 1 lirsclihorn, Rumbiuieh, Hicks. Yale Record ' I ' HE 1942 board came in back in the days when we were all happy isolationists. From the first meeting when 8,000 cans of beer were consumed and one article was handed in, right through the days when our issues were quietly loathed by our fans, it was all mad, mad fun. Yale ' s first chance to see what the Rccoril men were made of came on Derby Day. Cases of the vilest Bourbon Hirschhorn could buy combined with dandelion greens and mixed by Zeta Psi ' s apprentice bartender made the famed Twin Mul- berry Derby Day Mint Julep Party, Ltd. Fortified with these delayed action Mickey Finns and by the admiring glances of the Neu ' S men ' s dates, we proceeded to the river where thousands watched the annual canoe-race-to-show-how-much-morc- athletic - Record - men - are - than - News - men took place. Parker, the world ' s worst steersman, took stern position; Hirschhorn, so strong he needed a steel paddle, settled himself in the bow, which immediately sank about 3 feet under water; and Laun, utility infielder who could do almost any- thing except paddle, collapsed amidships. Tliree News guys named Ford, Seacrest, and Aycrigg formed the despised opposition. The Record was about 46 lengths in the lead when it was torpedoed and sunk, in spite of the large American flags painted on Hirschhorn ' s pate. Latin ' s body was liiiiikly. I ' m icornvJ 96 OV , take a letter! recovered about 2 hours later and has moved about the campus in a reasonably lifelike condition ever since. Tap Day arrived soon after, and the Record ' s sensational expose rocked the campus. In addition to predicting the election of Ralph Frump Maple- berry to all six societies, the Record accurately predicted rain and picketed Branford Court with large placards advising all classes alike to Go to your mailbox and tap the black-covered Records we had sneaked into the boxes at 5:59, not a moment too soon. After Yale had fought its way through a deadly summer, we began publication again in September, to the joy of our printer, whom we pay exorbitant rates. The Billy Rose in the old Owl came out and Swami tents, 1904 Fords, and eager heelers dotted the campus to amuse Yale and, as a sideline, sell subscriptions. What happened to the Ford was settled just last week out of court, and the advice of our Swami resulted in 6,402 subscriptions, one murder, 2 rapes, and the marriage of a Berkeley student to his waitress, for her money. We hit the college right in the middle of its inhibitions when we published a drawing of Guidi ' s in which the silly fool forgot to draw a wardrobe on the girl he picked after 26 days interviewing 26 models 26. Ex- Chairman Fox sent us a two-word letter of admiration saying My God. Another cartoon questioning the legitimacy of a 5 -headed razor caused Emma Willard to bar our publication, the prudes, and Remington Rand to ship a free shaver to the artist. The Record published life as it saw it, and if it saw life through Rose Sill-colored glasses, that was just the good luck of those 6,402 subscribers. During the fall we got the idea of having The Man Who Came to dinner, and the way Wooley ate through that 5 0-cent dinner was shameful. Among our other illustrious heelers were Rea Irvin, and Franklin Adams. So ends 70 years of service, and since all good things have been written in verse, we make our curtain speech in limping rime: Farewell, oh building, with your mortgage sinister. Farewell, oh campus, with vour chapel that doesn ' t look much like Westminster Farewell, oh Ciel, the noblest secretary of the bunch Farewell, oh Yale, and we ' re so grateful that you read and laughed and held your lunch. (Exit, pursued by an Owl) It ' s a ' Old 97 Mamma, Why Doesn ' t Daddy Stay Home Thursday Nights? THERE are two subjects that you cannot always dis- cuss with perfect propriety; One is sex and the other is so-and-so ' s Secret Society, For although the conversation around you may be in fullest bloom, You just say something about either just a little too loudly and your old Aunt Minnie or that big guy with the crew cut will leave the room. Why in some circles if you even say something about the Bones in your Chicken, You can feel the atmosphere around you perceptibly thicken. I remember once when Joe called Larry a thick Skulled Bonehead — It wasn ' t long before he wished he were off somewhere alone dead. Though it does seem rather foolish to us that some fel- lows join P.A.E. and Y.C.C. and Davenport College and P.U. and Deke Just so that they can get into one of those tombs, about which they can ' t even speak. But in spite of the fact that sometone told us that all they do in there is study, Still twice every week they put on their dark suits and look mysterious and have the laugh on everybudy. And a Senior Society man values its secrecy like life itself. Which he will not part with for passion, position, or pelf. For It seems to us that a great deal of money could be took By someone like L. Kelly selling the story to ' Look, ' And they say a Smith girl would do just ANYTHING to please If someone would only tell her what went on inside of M and H Bs, And all the boys in the Student Guide Agency could live in $325 rooms. If they could advertise that THEIR personally conducted tour included visits to a certain six looms, But still the societies are a subject seldom freely discussed Except by the Juniors until the end of April, after which they don ' t know whom they can trussed. And nobody knows anything about what ' s in them, which for the members makes it nice and cozy, Except that they make concessions in the case of janitors and waiters and cooks and delivery boys and plumb- ers and carpenters and meter readers and Toasty Rozy. ' If ' ; you see Miss Applied Physiology! ■ ' He juU s.iid, ' Walclj ihe hlickhoard. .iiid I ' ll run ihroiinh it .irmii. ' 98 The Yale Mouse and tlie Smith Mouse ONCE upon a time there were two mice who lived in the kitchen of Branford College. They lived on whipped cream and snow pudding. They thought it was terrible too. One day the younger mouse, whose n.ime was Orvil, grew suddenly tired of life in Branford. He told his companion that he was going to leave. Oh, don ' t leave, said Duncan, the older mouse, you may do worse than Branford. How. ' said Orvil, which settled that. Orvil went out into the cold night in search of gaiety, song, laugh- ter. After a long time he came to Timothy Dwight, where he walked right in. After his long walk he was very tired so he crept into a crowded lavatory and fell asleep in a wash basin. When he woke next morning the sun was streaming down upon him. How hungry he was I He looked about him and there, right by him, was a large clean cake of ivory soap. He bit right in and soon his mouth was full of a cool, friendly suds. Mid pleasures and palaces, thought Orvil, though I may roam, the only thing I get to eat is foam, foam, foam. That evening Orvil searched the great diamond-studded halls of T.D. in search of excitement. In one room he found a party going full blast. Eighteen Juniors were drinking beer out of one can. When one of the bon tneiirs dropped his thimble, Orvil scurried over to it and bolted down the contents. Ugh, said Orvil, more foam ! At this point the whole course of Orvil ' s life was sud- denly changed. Peeping out from behind a moth-eaten scrod-grey curtain, there appeared a piebald lady mouse. Call the Campus Cop thought Orvil, but then he con- sidered. After all, there may be some explanation. Orvil walked quietly over to the piebald lady mouse. My name is Orvil, said he. Can I be of any as- sistance? Oh, said she, you can, you can. I need help dread- fully, dreadfully. Mi mmy ' tell us more about P.ipa in the Great W ' nr! I seem to be hearing double, said Orvil, soothingly putting his arm around her waist. Oh, a Yale mouse, eh? Why, you don ' t mind, do you? You seemed to need a comforting arm. Of course I don ' t mind. Oh, a Smith mouse, eh? Why, yes, and that ' s how it started. I came down here from Smith to visit a — a cousin, she lied unskill- fully, and I was unable to find him. He had been stewed for days. They found him at last, being served as the assorted cold meat in Silliman. Orvil took her hand in his. Try not to think of it, dear. What ' s done is done. When was he served? Today. Today! Then he ' s still in the ice box. We had chicken tonight. Nobody takes the cold meat on chicken night. We must go quickly then, she said, sighing with re- lief. We may still be able to revive him. Off they dashed to Silliman, where a mouse ' s life hung in the balance. Up the long back stairs from the basement where they entered, into the dewy black kitchen, up to the great doors of the ice-box they ran. Can you open them? she said. I can try, he replied. I think I can. He put his ear to the lock and listened to the falling tumblers as he spun the dial. Two, three — twelve. Ah, boxcars, said our heroine. The mighty doors swung open. There, sprawled over a pile of roast beef slept the drunken mouse. Orvil went up to the figure, smelled its breath. Mountain dew. said he. A Dartmou th man! Dartmouth! said the piebald lady mouse. And 1 thought he was a Yale mouse ! Are you sure he is — is a Dartmouth mouse? she asked, almost unable to face the dread situation. Orvil threw back the soused mouse ' s coat disclosing the face of a nasty green Indian. Oh, shuddered the lady mouse, take me away, at once. Orvil carefully locked the door of the ice-box. All of us Smith girls, the lady mouse said coyly, prefer Yale mice! They climbed into the bread box and slowly but carefully shut the top. The Yale Literary Magazine ' I ' HE last item in the one-hundred-scventh - yearly volume of the hit was wired at great expenditure of all resources from Douala, French Equatorial Africa. A fitting climax, it recalls to the editors one of the more illustrious excursions of the magazine into the field of original scholar- ship and significant criticism. In the Yeats Issue we proved that our greatest modern poet was not only the creator of myths, but a myth himself, the product of the scheming minds of Esther Kil- ligrew and Dorothy Lheugh. Nor was this the only time that we occupied ourselves with the sources of the sources of poetry. But special issues are not the stuff of the Yale Literary Magazine, for the contributors are, or in- tend to be, writers primarily, and their contribu- tions must be exercises in the standard forms of literature. Sometimes these exercises are finished products, sometimes not; the degree of competence varies from issue to issue, and the forms chosen vary according to the enthusiasms for our more distinguished contemporaries. The last two years Mr. Hemingway has continued to dominate the short story. For example: Feel better, BuJ? asked Jose, trying to be nice. Fine, thanks. Say, you ' re American, aren ' t you Jose nodded. Brooklyn. Look, he said, lowering his voice. I don ' t member much about last night. ' Was 1 with you:-- Jose nodded. We were the first class at Yale to feel the full impact of the New Criticism, and the first to benefit from its methods of teaching. I. A. Richards, therefore, shines through the critical ar- ticles, and our poetry is largely metaphysical in its method, although the method sometimes leads to the most violent extreme: Seeds stand, hands-around-timed for the neigh- ing. Quick to the scent of mounting. Rose, ascended. No glue like tears this corpse exudes, decaying. Yet mourning fends the flowerface now ended. And current fads have full patronage; the Mac- B.id Rint : Griffith, Eddy, Nels Johnson. Shtchan. Vront R, MtLendon, Gardner, Paulcer, HuntL Hail Muse! ' frequent brawls in Hell ' s Kitchen. Roger Eddy writes ghost stories and is now in the ski-troops. Dough Knight never comes to editorial meetings, but is to be found any afternoon in the Eliza- bethan Club. Herb Winer, who is a close friend of Fritz Blitz, is an archeologist. Johnson stooges for the lot, while Chairman Pauker writes, edits, and administers with all the indefatigable concen- tration that makes him popular with the faculty. Now all the preceding verbs must be changed to past tense, for the one-hundred-seventh volume is finished. If we must evaluate what is in that vol- ume, we agree with the man who taught us what we know. I would say that they had been hyper- critical, had invested too heavily in one dialectic, and that their worst work had the speciousness Leish Issue contains three vil- lanelles side by side like three dollars from the same die. The Lit is a great mystery. People wonder what goes on when the editors gather behind the locked doors of the Chi Delta Theta sanctum to judge contributions and concoct an issue. Actually there is noth- ing exotic. We read the copy, pencil our comments on it, wrangle until it is all accepted or rejected, and send it to the printer. Then somebody, usu- ally the chairman, sees it through galley-proofing, dummying, page-proofing, printing, and review- ing. Which sounds easy, but is very arduous. One learns that the art of writing is a craft requiring diligence, that the craft of publishing is an art requiring talent. People also seem :o feel that Lif editors are mysterious. Their comments on rejected manu- scripts have a sort of medieval mystical quality, and they can never be found in their rooms to ex- plain. To themselves, however, editors seem to have no obscurity. Take the seniors on this year ' s board. Jack Porter, who is a poet, is a warm- hearted young man with a propensity for auto ac- cidents. Florrie Alpert, who translates French, be- haves like a Hemingway character and gets into Bchiihl the Scenes that has been seen in coterie writings before. If what he adds is true — that their best work has hardly been rivalled at Yale within my memory — then we have our reward in Heaven. And if we must evaluate the Lit as an ex- perience for us, we would say that through it, as through little else at Yale, we have had the oppor- tunity to expand our knowledge of concrete literary problems and to skill ourselves to a degree in the practical use of literary tools. The one-hundred-eighth volume goes on, as the Lit always goes on, into newer and more trying times. Under John Gardner (to whom, by the way, all success) you will see it change, for every board leaves its individual stamp, but we doubt that you will see any retrogression. The Yale Scientific Magazine TN a noc-too-large, somewhat untidy, plain square room on Strathcona ' s fourth floor . . . So begins the story of Yale ' s smartest looking, furthest reaching publication in last year ' s Ban- ner. The passage of time and the advent of war have done Httle to change the dimensions, ap- pearance, or location of the general office (s) of the Yale Scientific Magazine. In a purely ma- terialistic sense, the members of this year ' s board have benefitted from the tribulations of their predecessors only in the acquisition of one small, extremely unreliable card table, of dubious value, considering its high coefficient of coUapsibility. In other respects, however, we have inherited much from our journalistic forebears, chiefly the responsibility of maintaining the high standards which, last year, won for the magazine the Tcrh Engineering News cup, presented annually to the finest undergraduate scientific and engineering magazine of the year. General appearance, scien- tific and engineering merit, make up and com- position, extent and distribution of circulation, effectiveness of illustrations and editorial excel- lence are the factors considered by the judges, members of the M.I.T. faculty and professional editors and publishers. The recipient is entitled to possession of the cup for one year; it becomes the permanent property of the magazine winning it for three consecutive years. Unquestionably the presence of this valuable piece of silverware has stimulated the unusual activity of those who came to work in the not- too-large, somewhat untidy, plain square room on Strathcona ' s fourth floor, where it resided this year. For, in the dark recesses of the mind, there has always lurked the memory of a similar trophy, once offered by the Yale Scientific Magazine and quickly confiscated by the Tech Engineering Neil ' s; hence, the determination, on the part of every heeler and board member to aid the law of divine retribution in assuring a like fate for the cup now in their possession. The content and editorial policy of the maga- zine has remained much the same as in previous years. All material has been from Yale men, undergraduates, faculty, and alumni. In large measure, the scientific and engineering develop- ments reviewed in the articles have originated in Yale laboratories, or elsewhere under the guidance of Yale graduates. Presented in the first three issues by the ' 42 board were dissertations on labor problems, by E. Wight Bakke, professor of Eco- nomics; on the solar system, by Lyman Spitzer, Jr., instructor of Physics; on beryllium, by C. B. Sawyer, ' 15; on soil mechanics at Yale, by James Hirsch, ' 45. In addition, naval engineering, the spectrograph, relativity, the A.C. network cal- culator, and centrifugal force in marine pro- pellers received attention. As authoritative as they were diverse, the articles came from specialists with considerable scientific and technical experi- ence. We have indeed been fortunate in obtain- ing their services. Established origin.illy as a link between Yale and her alumni, the mag- ; azine has always devoted a large part of its space to the news and activities of the Yale Engineering Association. The organi- zation and preparation of labeled heelers, the lion ' s share of credit is due Ch.iirman Austin Devine for his ability to keep things going when copy was running short and time yet shorter. Hampered by an undersized staff, he somehow managed to get along until fall and a new competition put fresh manpower behind the typewriter and the subscription blank. Of Bill Arnoldy, as Business Manager, it can be said that he was ever quick to collect and slow to disburse, and in both of these functions he was assisted in praiseworthy fashion by Bob Duell. The chief problem of the pictorial department was the acquisition of cover illustrations. By con- certed action, Salem Shaheen and Jim Hirsch, after sending up a few trial balloons, were able usually to provide a solution; but this was no mean task. By far the most encouraging aspect of the year ' s work was the response of the juniors, sophomores, and freshmen. The energy with which thev performed their duties has been equalled by few other classes, the obvious ex- ception being this year ' s senior board. It is hoped that this new enthusiasm will continue during the coming years and that the Yale Scientific Maga- zine will take on a new importance in these urgent times. There is, as never before, a general Dciiiic impiratioii material for this dc partment has been handled admirably b)- Professor Emeritus Charles F. Scott. Twenty-five Years Ago in the Scientific Magazine, and the G. S. Q. Quiz, have remained permanent • • features, while Science in the Headlines and book reviews appeared intermittently. Without attempting to detract from the heroic efforts of those unheralded laborers who, in the curious language of Yale ' s industrial system, are A hi li li in carried the torch uf progress need for such information as only this publica- tion can supply; the policy of the magazine will be determined with this point in mind from now on. In general, it would seem that the future is bright. ORGANIZATIONS i Back Roil-: Dear, Frost, Furniss, Boffey, Fletcher, Day, Shevelove (Director). Fourth Ron-: Helton, Weis, Adler, He-hard, Kehoe, Tremaine, Noyes, McDonnell. Third Row: Flaschner, Anspach, Gordon, Pierpont, Hollister, Ferguson, Sloane, Migliorini, Hein. Second Row: O ' Connor, Palmer, McCormick, Crabtree, Nichols, Leggett, Douthit, Brush, Hess. •)(?« Koi; . ' Holcombe, Hill, Thornton, Brecker, Goodman. The Yale Dramatic Association BEFORE the new board, under President Claude Douthit, Jr., took office, the 1941 Com- mencement play. All foil y and Cleopatra was pro- duced under the old regime. Rehearsals were held on the run between the sweat-box which is the University Theatre during the summer months and the Eta of Zeta lodge, local julep dispensary. Out of all the blood, sweat, and tears which marked the preparation for the opening came a majestic finale to a good Dramat year. Maury Goodman made a luscious Cleo and a charming pitfall to virile Mark Antony, played by George Serries ' 41. Harry D. Wescott, founder of the Dramat, in town for his fiftieth reunion, gave a four-minute prologue for one-half hour before the show. John Hoysradt, well-known mimic, entertained us after the show after practically no persuasion. Phil Peck was not amused. The tempo of the new year was set at the organization beer party held in the Fence Club soon after the beginning of the Fall term. Before the invasion attempt which heralded the rolling out of the barrel, Harry Wright, Howie Smith and Paul Harper came out of retirement to give a more unkempt than uncut version of Amphi- tryon ' 43. Billy Phelps was also on hand to favor us with a few short ones. When the schedule of plays for the year was announced, it was learned that the Dramat would produce eight comedies, each a representative type of its period. The choice was thus made in the hope of making the Dramat an Arsenal of En- tertainment in a world too much with us. The actual number of plays proposed, two more than usual, can be traced only to naive optimism. The first comedy was The Tragedy of Tragedies or The Life and Death of Tom Thumb the Great, by Henry Fielding. The cast was comprised solely of members of the class of 194S and all proved themselves to be true Sons O ' Fun. Louis Connick was as heartless a villain as ever trod the boards, and even Freddie the Freshman Pearson in the role of the Princess Hunca- munca managed to evoke a few grins. The first major production of the year was The Frogs of Aristophanes. Perhaps the biggest production ever attempted in college dramatics, this play was staged in the Exhibition Pool of the Payne Whitney gym- nasium with the cooperation of the Yale Swimming Team and the Apollo Glee Club. This Grecian Aquacade attracted nation-wide publicity and praise through its very magnitude. Although assisted by swimming coach Bob Kiphuth and Glee Club director Duke Henning, Watch the Form the conception and final actualiza- tion of the whole stupendous pro- duction must be attributed to the creative imagination and abiht) ' of Aquamaestro Shevelove. Not the least of the show ' s nian ' amazing features was the presence of Monty Woolley, former director of the Dramat, who acted in an ad- visory capacity throughout much of the rehearsal period. The Beard didn ' t take much to the water angle and between keeping him in martinis and keeping the frog chorus in their loin cloths, it ' s a wonder the show ever went on a t all. Phil Ewald looked nonchalantlv debonair in his Fletcher ' s Friciully Frogs J. Press G-string and as a result of a slight over- exposure was asked to play a cloud in Green Pastures. Life sent a photographer to cover the show; Burt sent him right back. No sooner had the directors and the cast gotten dry behind the ears than casting was under way for coveted roles in the Dramat ' s musical comedy hit of last year. The Waterbiiry Tales, which was scheduled for a two weeks Christmas tour. An anonymous diary of the jaunt will suffice to cover it. Providence: Show opens. Bronson lays first egg. Very Woolley Hciiril But Not Obscene Cast put up in private homes. Fletcher gets lost in luxurious showerbath and almost misses train. Too cold to stay here, so we move on to . . . New York: Hit this town in blaze of obscurity. Played in Waldorf so Bob Brush could be near his family. Dean Fuller and his head late to rehearsal. Freddie the Freshman Pearson operates. Aud- ience of union men and Maury Paul. She Is played. Pittsburgh: Difficulty locating theatre in fog. Bronson lays second egg. Sheidy was sober here. We weren ' t. Gile and Nimick give good performances. Cincinnati: Here for three days over Christmas. Hill gets sick on too much sportin ' life. Stud Stack is made a Kentucky Colonel. Hollister flunks physical test. Hebard gets blood for Christmas. Country Club con- tributes decorations for cast party. Pearson operates. She Is is played. Cast entrains for Chicago — Baker flies. Chicago: Arrived here after seven hours of agony and Shevelove, without sleep or Hill, lank and Spence give good performance. Bronson tries hard, but still lays another egg. Fretwell borrowed from Ballet Russe in exchange for Waldo and two copies of She Is. Cast slept here. Minneapolis: Good town this. Hill and Mor- rison give good performances. Catch train in costume. Cast loses another round to Shevelove. Brush doesn ' t complain about expenses. Detroit: New Year ' s Eve. Bronson lays last egg. Ireland gets his line right. Howie Smith gives good performance. She Is is not played. Not so very long after the Christmas holidays, the Dramat presented — to its infinite credit — The Importance of Being Earnest, by Oscar Wilde; the show went on to become a success. For the amusement of Freshmen and Junior Prom goers and their dates, we gave Too Much Johnson, a comedy by William Gillette. In this gay-nineties farce Jack Leggett took the lead and played the nonchalant role to the hilt. Jim Whit- more grabbed himself a bit of glory as the irate plantation boss, while the Whiffenpoofs, also took part, catapulting exotic Bob Johnson to feminine heights as the lush soubrette. Bv David Boffey B.ic Ron: Zaskahcky, Malkin, Thayer, R. A. Schmidt, Oven, Uurty, Ryan, Jordan, trankel, Jaciib- son, Prichard, Cugell, Huff. Fourth Row: Andrews, Fowler, Sigel, Harvey, Longenecker, Gould, Weaver, Roberts, H,iggard, R. F. Schmidt, Taylor, Merriell, VanVoris, Shriver, Sheldon, Keig, Bloom, Atkins, German. Third Row: Smith, Levine, Barbier, Perrins, Rider, Thomas, Smith, Simmons, McCabe, Goslin, Soderberg, Fox, Belcher, Monroe, Munsell, Chirgwin, Sweet, Clement. Second Row: Lamar, Owen, Hardwick, Speers, Miller, Kelsey, Booth, Soderberg, Scalan, Purintun, Jones, Jacobson. Front Row: Servoss, W ' ohl, Carlton, Leete, Sessions, Ginsberg, blair, A. Spilner, R. Spilner. The Yale University Band Leader Ti Drum Major Lynn C. McCabe, ' 45 Librarian Robert C. Lamar, ' 43 ■pvURING the football season of 1941, the Uni- versity Band displayed a new talent in that it became a singing band as well as merely an instrumental one. Carrying bright blue individual megaphones, the boys rendered popular school songs of both opposing and home teams with great skill. Under the capable staff of five undergradu- ate officers, the sixty-odd members of the organiza- tion showed a pleased body of spectators some new angles in marching and maneuvering. Outstanding formations which evoked con- siderable comment were the revolving V at the opening game, an airplane droning across the field at the Army game, and Eli spelled in script for Dartmouth. The most spectacular was the forma- tion of Hold That Tiger for Princeton, spelled in quick succession to the melody of Tiger Rag rendered in swing time by the trumpets. Musical numbers of note were the ever-popular lOMAs S. Goslin, H, ' 42 Manager Herbert K. Fowler, ' 43 Ptiblicity Jordan Y. Miller, ' 42 medlies of college songs arranged by Norman Leyden, ' 39. These were played at every im- portant game of the season, and the presentation of a rousing collection of Harvard football songs was enthusiastically received when performed in the stadium at Cambridge. In their seven appear- ances during the fall, these blue- and white-clad musicians made an imposing sight and played up to all the rival organizations that appeared against them in the Bowl, often completely surpassing any competition. Guided by Charles F. Smith of New Haven, director of the band since its inception, and Stuart H. Clement, ' 17, treasurer, the band was able to present some real entertainment that everybody appreciated. With these two guiding hands again next year, plus three of the present officers retain- ing their positions, Yale ' s band hopes to carry on where this year ' s exceptional group ended. Bcick Rou : Benson, McAndrews. Cumming, Thompson, Van Middlesworth, Ross, Buck, Joralemon, Schmidt, Nolte, Flournoy, Fitzwilliam, LeBar, Robbins, Clement, House, Foertmeyer, Linley, Brody, Gardiner. Fijth Roiv: Booth, Gile, Desjardins, Miller, Lewis, Dean, Lyons, Fox, Baldwin, Pearson, Doerr, Greene, Baron. Fourth Ron : Aust, Fields, Coffin, Smith, Quinn, Burgher, Conway, Heming- way, Howland, Bird, Burroughs, Wick, Perry. Third Rotr: Barber, Goodman, Kallman, Jones, D. S. Dodge, Howard, Upson, Bellinger, Stearns, Ward, Rumbough, Link, Tellalian. Second Row: Station, deZaldo, Finch, Owen, A. D. Dodge, Gesner, Bartholomew, deCastro e Silver, Griswold, Friedman, Spurney, Carter, W. R. Johnson. From Row: T. R. Johnson, Purinton, Counselman, Hammond, Collins, Martin, Spencer, Elebash. Yale Glee Club I HE 1941-42 season st.irted after the extensive summer tour of South America. In seven weeks, the club had travelled some 13,000 miles, singing concerts in Rio de Janeiro, Sao Paulo, Montevideo, Buenos Aires, La Plata, Rosario, Mendoza, San- tiago, Vina del Mar, Lima, and Panama. The au- diences were primarily students as the purpose of the trip was to spread the doctrine of song and fellowship to our sister republics in Latin America. Life was full of novel experiences — Rio harbour, the pampas, the Andes, parties galore, from night clubs to the famed asados. Those who went on this tour will never lose the benefit of its timeli- ness and value, nor of the friendships, which arc the pleasantest part of the Glee Club. The nucleus of forty-three singers returning to college set to work, preparing for the record- ings to be made by Columbia. Thirteen songs were put on discs, songs for which Yale and the Yale Glee Club are famous. Some of the late graduates returned to do specialties — Al Camp in De Animals, and Ross Taber, the solo voice in Couldn ' t Hear Nobody Pray. The recordings have turned out well, and have had a lively sale all over the country. This is the climax of a dream on the part of our director, Marshall Bartholomew, to get the Club on records for the benefit and pleasure of all those associated with Yale and for the world of music. The veterans of the South American tour ap- peared at a benefit performance for the Inter- America House of New York, in Carnegie Hall on Oct. 28, as the only North American representa- tives in a cast of Latin American entertainers. The joint concert with Princeton was sung on Nov. 17, to a colorful audience of female ad- mirers. The following week at Harvard, the concert was the occasion of the first performance 110 of Richard Donovan ' s new work, Fantasy on Spring vacation. Singing in the Yale Club in New American Folk Ballads, which was met with ap- proval and was sung again at the join concert with the Smith Glee Club on December 13. January saw the loan of Barty to the Army. At Fort Bragg, he and Merrill Knapp, ' 3 6, former president of the Yale Glee Club and now director of the Princeton Glee Club, were detailed to pre- York, the Glee Club started its next extended song fest. Concerts were given in Haverford, Wilm- ington; Washington, D. C; Richmond; Durham, the site of Duke University; Southern Pines; Asheville; Charlottesville, the campus of the Uni- versity of Virginia; Farmville, the home town of Virginia State Teachers College; ending with a pare three hundred and fifty future song leaders nationwide broadcast over the NBC Network in for this section of the army. They were successful in proving once more Barty ' s belief in the value of song especially in times such as these. On Barty ' s return, work was resumed on the Fantasy. It had its orches- tral premiere on Februarv 9. with the New Haven Sym- phony replacing Flarry Ray and Egydio de Castro y Silva. who had previously served as its brilliant accompanists. The Glee Club enjoyed participat ing in these concerts, and the piece was well received by it first New Haven audience. On February H, the club gave another benefit concert in Town Hall, New York, for the American Field Serv- ice. The proceeds were used for the purchase and equipment of an ambulance named for the University to carry on the tradi- tion started in the last war. A concert in Hartford on February 20 ended the winter season before the tour durim; the Wine, Woman, and Song New York the Last Saturday of the vacation. The Washington concert was unique, in that the music was that of the South American Tour, sung in the Pan-American Union. Before us lies the prospect of a summer spent in New Haven. It will be a test of the loyalties of the club mem- bers and of the true worth of the Club as an organization in Yale. Barty has proposed chartering a schooner to be used on the weekends to visit the coastal Yacht Clubs. This will provide pleasant diver- sion and will keep the Club in trim for the auspicious year ahead. Whatever the summer may unfold, the members of the 1941-42 Yale Glee Club feel that they have a rich store of happy memories to carry through the unpromising future. The trips, the parties, new faces and friendships, and the warm, kindly, and helpful acquaintance with Barty — these spell Yale Glee Club to this year ' s squad. ' For God, For Country . Propaganda I Bjii Row: Cherryhumes, Beach, O ' Neill, Stack, Lamar, McCabe, Claus, Spurncy, Murray, Fox, LeBar, Notte, Rowand, House. Fourth Roir: Condit, Maynard, Perry, White, Howard, Comly, Hovland, Benson, Watkins. Third Row: Ross, Rabe, Lyons, Ericksen, Fitzwilliam, Pearson, Bel- linger, Miller, Wilson. Second Row: Ward, Eberle, Devor, Hemingway, Henning, Smith, Collins, Spencer, Hall. From Row: McDonough, Purintun, Stilson, Elebash, Levett, Noss, Johnson, Hammond, Smith, Melcher, Burwell. University Choir A LTHOUGH the war has made even higher ■ the premium on first tenors and second basses, the University choir has had a most successful year. Unfortunately, several members have had to leave, among them Russell Mower, who was for several years the choir ' s baritone soloist. How- ever, in his third year as director, Mr. Noss has kept his choir one of the finest musical organiza- tions at Yale, one which makes a real contribution to the worship in Battell Chapel. Beyond its large basic repertoire of sacred poly- phonic music, including Palestrina, Vittoria, Lotti, des Pres, Bach, etc., the choir has contributed music of a wide range of composers from the 14th century to the present day. There have been sev- eral services in which the music has been entirely Russian, English, etc., and occasionally the service is devoted to music. On Sunday, December 14, there was a special service of Christmas music. The anthems were Praetorius ' Lo How a Rose e ' er Blooming, Swelink ' s Hodie Christus Natus Est, and Constantini ' s Pastores Loquebantus. Among this year ' s additions to the repertoire have been A Benedicite by Milford, a Tebesnecoo Alleluiah, and two very recent motets by Schwarz. The choir has also sung a new anthem by Louis Hemingway, Jr., 1942, one of its own members. In addition to the Battell Chapel choir, Mr. I-rank Bozyan directs a choir of twelve voices at the daily chapel services in Dwight Hall. This choir also sings at the winter term vesper services in Dwight Chapel, and this year contributed to the program in Sprague Hall celebrating the anni- versary of Mozart ' s death. Mr. Bozyan also directs the double quartet which serves at the services during the Christmas and spring recesses. The University choirs provide not only an excellent choral training but one of the finest musical experiences. Bjck Ron : Howard, Howe, Seacrest, Red, Toland. Front Row: Sprole, Jessup, Franzen. University Budget Drive npHE twenty-first University Budget Drive was held in the second week of the fall term in the annual attempt to provide an answer for some part of Yale ' s obligations to charity. Through the combined efforts of some 170 undergraduates and numerous graduate helpers, the University- wide appeal, extended to include the Nursing and Architecture Schools for the first time, reached its total of $22,000 exactly. Thus, despite war and taxes, Yale men responded to the requests made of them, and added another successful chap- ter to the tradition of the Budget Drive. For the first time the total collected was allo- cated by percentages, to ease the division in case the goal should not have been attained. 3 1 r of the funds went to the support of Dwight Hall, the undergraduate Christian Association; 24 ' f went to the Yale Hope Mission, which exists for the shelter and rebuilding of transients in New Haven; 18% went to the invaluable work of Yale-in-China, whose educational and medical labors are one of America ' s most successful efforts in aiding China; X4 ' ' c went to War Relief, to be administered by the American Friends and t he World Student Service; 5% went to the New Haven Community Chest; 3% to the New Haven Boys ' Club; and 1% each to the Grenfell Associa- tion and the Yale Community Council, a new- comer to the Budget ' s list this year. For the ex- penses of the Drive 3 t of the collected sum was absorbed. At the time of the annual Drive in the fall, the question of the Red Cross Drive which had been held the preceding winter was discussed, and it was decided that another such appeal in the Dining Halls would be allowed. This was an- nounced at the time of the Budget Drive, and the yearly pledge of the Budget to be the only door- to-door charity campaign of the college year was maintained. An increase in the allocation for War Relief illustrated the growing desire to give to such causes, while the addition of the Community Council reflected the primary purpose of the Budget: to provide an answer for the needs of charitv in our own communitv. B.ui K,,u : Burnuin, Kiith, Bradturd. ■ ,-« Ruu : White, Burden, Pigott. The Yale Political Union T INDER the administration of the 1942 Execu- — tive Committee the Yale Political Union passed through an active year which featured stormy sessions on the great interventionist-isola- tionist issue. This problem cut squarely across party lines, but the consequent breakdown in tra- ditional party solidarity was more than compen- sated for by the fiery partisanship and eloquent speeches inspired by the dispute over foreign policy. If the 1942 leaders made any unique contribu- tion to the Union, it consisted in bringing about a greater participation by all members. Speakers who refused to yield for questions in the course of their remarks were compelled afterwards to re- main at the rostrum and face a battery of ques- tions from the floor. Thus the debates tended to be more varied and colorful, especially since there was an able clique of Sophomores who seized every opportunity to demonstrate their forensic powers. Attendance, as reflected in the roll call and vote at the close of each session, was greater on the whole than ever before; and indeed, Political Union membership for the first time passed the four hundred mark. Too, the p.irty caucuses which precede every meeting were thronged with partisans eager to mould the strategy of the three major factions. Much credit is due to Liberal Leader Robert A. Burman, Conservative Leader Frank P. Samford, Jr., and Laborite Leader James E. Kuth for their leadership on the floor of the House and for their skilled handling of the party caucuses. At the first meeting in February, 1941, Senator Claude Pepper of Florida was the guest speaker and challenged the packed House and galleries with his advocacy of a strong American foreign policy. After some of the most impassioned speeches, pro and con, in the history of the Union, the interventionists triumphed by a tiny margin. A week later more than three hundred members and guests attended the annual banquet to hear Russell Davenport present his Case Against the Intellectuals , an address which make a lasting imprint upon undergraduate thinking. There followed a debate on the question of sending food to the small democracies, with a ma- jority voting along with guest expert William Henry Chamberlin in the affirmative. Soon after the Spring vacation the famed woman pundit, Dorothy Thompson, visited the Union to speak against a negotiated peace. That evening it was necessary to turn away between two and three hundred individuals desirous of sitting in the gal- lery. Few of the hundreds present will ever forget Miss Thompson ' s barbed eloquence and the siz- zling questions she posL ' d to isolationist student him, ironically enough in light of subsequent events, that the United States should not resort to force in its effort to curb Japan. A burning local issue next occupied the P.U. as John Clark, organizer of the Yale employees, upheld their right to a so-called union shop. On this occasion moderates introduced a compromise amendment to the original resolution and easily carried the day. Finally, the forces favoring a strong, post-war league, spearheaded by Pro- fessor Bronislaw Malinowski, the famous anthro- pologist, successfully overcame die-hard isolation- ists and proponents of the American Century idea. This came shortly after Christmas vacation. During the annual elections, David C. Acheson was chosen to head the Politi- cal Union during the current year. Everything taken into con- sideration, from Treasurer John Pigott ' s conscientious work to the broadcasts of speeches over Station WOCD, the regime of the 1942 leaders can be re- garded as distinctly successful. Bjc.iuse of the war the Union mav face difficult problems ahead, but the Seniors have the utmost faith in the new of- ficers. speakers. She and her supporters won another of the narrow majorities that characterized the votes through the 1942 Board ' s term of office. On a hot Spring evening R.R.R. Brooks, the well-known authority on labor, defended the right to strike in a debate at the height of the national controversy over the labor question. After the summer vacation, the Political Union held what was destined to be its final discussion of foreign policy. The persuasive powers of Repre- sentative John M. Vorys, guest for the evening, effected a close victory for the isolationists. The next meeting, at which Vice-President W. Gardner White presided, related to the Far East, with Professor Kenneth Scott Latourette giving the chief address. A majority agreed with Political Boss B.ui: Roil : Klnts, iMi. AJams, Kenady, Clark, Sweet. From Roiv: Burman, Pigott, Curtis. The Yale Debating Association T EBATING is maintaining and will continue -•- to maintain its position at Yale, only slightly affected by the modified scholastic year. At no time is it more important to continue and strengthen the tradition of formal disputation, than during war, for it is a period in which both dispassionate thought and open discussion, two essentials of America, tend to fade into obscurity. The Debating Association is determined that they shall not so fade here at Yale, and they arc con- tinuing accordingly. With the emphasis upon the troubled world about us, the season opened with a home-and- home contest with Harvard on the question of an immediate declaration of war upon Germany, the negative gaining the decision both in New Haven and Cambridge. Allan, Kenady and Klots were defeated by the Contabs, while in New Haven Borden, Pigott, and Samford successfully con- tended that Japan, not Germany, should be the object of such a declaration. In November, the problem of the incorporation of labor unions re- sulted in a split decision with Brown, Klots, O ' Connor and Puriton handling the affirmative, with Curtiss and Maclendon negating in a radio debate. Before the Christmas reading period, a double battle was fought over the question of universal military training, resulting in two Eli victories — Moffat, Sweet and L. Taft downing Middlebury, and Pigott, Speed and Borden defeat- ing one of Yale ' s oldest debating rivals. Bates College. The remainder of the season was as full and successful as the Fall, with numerous constests scheduled both home and away. The very delicate job of debating with the female of the species was fearlessly undertaken in February, when the Elis met Vassar on the question of a post-war United States of Europe. The male imagination shrinks from picturing the plight of those fearless ones as they battled the weaker sex. Coincidentally, a Yale negative journeyed to Williams College, probing the merits of the same proposition. Shortly after, there was another double debate, the Elis taking on teams from Columbia and Dartmouth, and early in the Spring the dauntless men, after .1 safe return from Pough- keepsie, invaded Mount Holyoke. A New England College lournament, planned for April, was held at Williams College, and the climax of the season was, of course, the annual Triangular Debate between Yale, Harvard and Prince- ton. Judging from the re- sults thus far obtained, Yale stood an excellent chance of gaining top honors, but predictions were as worth- less as in football, and the unexpected is the in- variable rule. The annual banquet of the Debating Associa- tion, at the close of the scholastic year, provided an opportunity for the debaters to hear them- selves (a dubious privilege), and also for the dis- tribution of gold charms to those who, during the past year had participated in three or more varsity contests. The Yale Chapter of the national debating fraternity of Delta Sigma Rho was this year represented by Borden and Piggott. Professor J. C. Adams, director and coach of varsity debating for the past three decades, re- tires this year, and it is impossible to overestimate the seriousness of his loss. One of the prime values of this activity, and the one which will never be forgotten by the debaters, is their associa- tion with Professor Adams. We cannot stress too Con vrat Illations highly the importance of the work he has done, and the deep regret each man feels upon his retiring. He has been the Debating As- sociation since 1914; direct- ing, advising, maintaining its standards, and infusing others with his own enthusi- asm. A substitute will un- doubtedly be found, who will take over his work and train the future debaters of Yale, but he can never be replaced. The Freshman Debating teams, under the di- rection of Donald Schmechel, have been very active, and expect also to continue their work undeterred, despite the drastically altered circum- stances. Three home-and-home debates have been held, with Brown, Kent and Columbia. Against the former, Yale mustered Gibbens, Kaynor and Izard on the affirmative, and Canby, Chapman and Diamond on the negative. The Kent contest, a no- decision debate, was fought by Dooley, Scott and Dean, and Mache, Comisky and Pecker. Shortly before Christmas Columbia engaged two two-man teams, Izard and Kaynor, and Chapman and Diamond. During the course of the winter, two battles were scheduled, with Choate School and Dartmouth, and many others were attempted before the annual Freshman Triangular meet, held in May. Conservative Council 117 B.ick Row: Bullock. Chandler, Clement, Tul,,n.!. . Uinu,nit;Li, l,..,i_i;l,i,,i,. _S,.,.„„ iv ' ,,., . Avercll, Ferguson, Doolittle, Olsen, Midkiff, Chafee. hroiil Row: McClure, Heller, Kelly, Gudley, Angleton, Clark, Cook. The Yale Community Council VTTITH the nation at war, the Yale Com- • ' munity Council finds its job increasing in importance. It has been the purpose of the Y.C.C. since it was founded in the Spring of 193 8 to help fill the needs of local community service work. Nearly three hundred Y.C.C. volunteer members have given much throughout the past year, but have also received a great deal in the form of valuable experience. Such experience has been gained not only from the benefits of their own work, but also from contact with domestic problems of a typical American manu- facturing community. The past year has seen many changes in the Y.C.C. in an attempt not only to meet better the new needs of the community, but also to match its appeal to the Yale undergraduate ' s individual interests and talents. In line with this policy a new plan for closer cooperation between the council and the various New Haven welfare organizations has been adopted. More responsibility was delegated to committee heads. With these and other minor improvements the six established committees carried on their respective programs much as before. Men working on the Athletics Committee served as coaches and referees for various seasonal sports culminating in the Spring Track meet and Winter Basketball league. The most colorful event was the track meet held on the Yale fields where ice cream besmirched New Haven youngsters competed against other House teams for the new silver trophy contributed by the Y.C.C. The enthusiastic response to the fall appeal for new members gave added impetus to the program and led to the combining of the Athletic and Group facilities. However, the men in the latter group continued meeting their clubs of boys ranging in age from six to twenty. The schedule of these group activities became even more varied than before with the addition of dancing and singing clubs. A tool drive among interested 9 - m Watch those peas. Doctor articles in the Freshman weekly, News, and other publi cations bore fruit in the largest Fall Organ- ization meeting in the history of the Y.C.C. At this time the creation of two new committees, Hospital. After the declaration of war on December 7, the Yale Community Council offered to organize undergraduate Defense work. This has resulted in the formation of a new Defense Committee to manage blood donations, entertainments, courses, and jobs. Over a thousand men have offered their services in answer to the preliminary application blanks circulated. To climax the year ' s work, the Annual Banquet was held last May again in the D.K.E. house. Acting as the guest speakers following a sumptu- ous meal were Matt Tierney, one of the directors of the New Haven Boy ' s Club, Mr. John Schroeder of the Yale Divinity School, and Mayor Murphy of New Haven. In essence the Y.C.C. has attempted this year to adapt itself to changing conditions and to in- alumni and undergraduates gave the Handicraft Committee a good start in its work which took on such novel forms of craftman- ship as soap carving. Entertain- ments and Dramatics offered per- formances throughout the year, highlighted this fall with a two- hour variety performance at the Dixwell Community House. Scouting supplied its regular quota of assistant scout masters to local troops, and, for the first time, had the distinction of having its chairman made a member of the City Scout Council. Late in the Spring opportunities for expansion became apparent. A careful publicity campaign was outlined whereby incoming Fresh- men were told of the opportuni- ties offered by the Y.C.C. A number of Council members, alumni of various preparatory schools, returned still more efficiency into its organization. How- to their respective Alma Maters to talk to the ever, throughout all this, its basic ideal has and, prospective Yale men. This, plus the religious it is hoped, will remain the same — namely, the blank filled out by all Freshmen, and many ideal of service to others. Y. C. Camion Fodder 119 B ck Row: Appla.,ii, V , hiu, .Vjue i, i ' .uMiiis, Lilk , C. Holden, McCabe, Barnett, Jackson, Smith, l iont Rrnc. Reckard, Alter. , C.slin. S.i„iiJ Kuu : Gci.scll, Ur.iin, Reed, Curtis, Owen, Reisner, Brown, Sherwood H. Reisner Howard A. Reed Edgar C. Reckard, Jr. Mark H. Curtis Dwight Hall President COMMITTEE HEADS Edgar C. Reckard, Jr. Vice-President Samuel A. Brown Howard A. Reed Secretary Robert F. Appleton Edward F. Parsons Treasurer John H. Owen Yale Hope Mission Missions Committee Bible Study Worship Deputations pvWIGHT HALL is the Yale University - - Christian Association. It is a member of the Student Christian Movement in New England, the National Intercollegiate Christian Council, and the World ' s Student Christian Federation. As the religious center of Yale for over a half a century, it has done much to insure Christianity its place in the University. The program carried on by the Executive Com- mittee and Officers is widely varied in aspect. It maintains a series of forums on widely different subjects, a University Christian Conference in cooperation with the Berkeley Association and the College Chapel, and a series of discussion and Bible study groups. In addition there is a fellow- ship of prayer and a program of work for the Freshmen. To carry out its extensive program there are five standing committees, the work of which is revised and extended to keep pace with the ever growing undergraduate interest in the work of Dwight Hall. A new program of work with young peoples ' groups in New Haven War iicui from all over . . . Churches was launched under the deputations committee. Bible study groups were started in each of the colleges. At the Yale Hope Mission a steady stream of undergraduates spoke at gospel services and participated in the educational and entertainment programs. The high point of the year was the University Christian Conference at which Mr. Reinhold Niebuhr was the main speaker. The principal meetings held in Battell Chapel were crowded with undergraduates. A series of discussion meet- ings in some of the colleges were very well re- ceived. The theme of the conference was the Christian faith. Dwight Hall played an active part in the National Student Christian Movement. Many men served in Commissions, and del- egations were sent to conferences at North- field and at O-At-Ka in Maine. Dwight Hall was strongly repre- sented this past Christ- mas at the National Assembly of Christian _ _ __ Associations at Ox- ford, Ohio. not your fortune In addition to these activities Dwight Hall also provided a non-profit milk bar, a common room, and a music room, for the use of the student body. These facilities were more widely used than ever before and are all in- creasing in popularity. The hardest blow of the year was the loss of the general secretary, E. Fay Campbell to the Board of Christian Education of the Presbyterian Church. At the annual meeting this expression of gratitude was passed: Banquet a la DuigLu Hall A RESOLUTION OF GRATITUDE FOR THE TWENTY YEARS OF SERVICE BY E. FAY CAMPBELL AS GENERAL SECRETARY OF DWIGHT HALL Annual Meeting, Januan, ' 28, 1942 Whereas this is the last annual meeting at uhich Fa) Campbell will be present as General Secretary of Dwight Hall, we arc reminded of his twenty yean of diligence in the performance of the administrative tasks of this place; and of his friendship for all those who have passed through its doors; and most of all of his teach- ing and inspiration for more deioted Christian lives. Therefore, be it resolved that this meeting convey to him, on behalf of itself and its pre- decessors, an unbounded gratitude, along with our best ivishes for continued happiness and success in his new tasks, and an assurance that he will often be remembered in our thoughts and prayers. B.ni Roll-: Tellis, Judson, Pollack, Sullivan. I yiJ Row: Brady, Durhin, Reeves, Kinj;, Conklin, Graff. Second Row: Landauer, Converse, Tenneson, Taylor, Witherbee, Fuld, Piatt. Front Row: Sterling, Guba, Silverstein, Clark, Elgin, Hamilton, Uptegrove. Station WOCD STATION WOCD, now ending its first year, has already established itself as one of Yale ' s more important extracurricular activities. Since its modest debut last fall, a one hour music pro- gram on September 2 3, the Yale Broadcasting System has expanded rapidly, and is now on the air more than five hours a day with a great variety of programs designed to satisfy undergraduate tastes. The radio was first planned by Edward P. Clark II, 1943. The Yale Daily News early gave its full support to the station and assumed the re- sponsibility for its operation. Clark, together with Philip M. Guba, Jr., 1943, also secured partial financial backing from a group of alumni headed by Clinton R. Black, Jr., 1917 S, and Chester J. LaRoche, 1918 S, late in the spring of 1941. When their plans for the station had been approved by the University in June of that year, the University Service Bureau was put in charge of the installa- tion of more than 10,000 feet of shielded wire necessary to carry the power to each undergrad- uate dormitory through the steam tunnels. Dur- ing the summer, Clark and Guba supervised the installation of the wire and constructed the WOCD transmitter which is located beneath Wright Hall. Studios for the Station were equipped on the top floor of the Yale News Building. John W. Leggett, 1942, who had directed a former Yale Ncivs program over Station WELI, ably con- ducted the broadcast through their first three difficult months. WOCD is divided into five departments which include script writing, announcing, business, mon- itoring, and technical work. The work of the an- nouncers and script writers it self evident. Those working on business solicit advertising and write commercials. Members of the monitoring staff supervise the mechanical details of the broadcast- ing such as the placement of microphones, the control and synchronization of sound effects, and the correct timing of the broadcasts. Under- graduates studying electrical engineering attend to the more technical aspects of radio work, such as keeping the transmitter and other equipment in order, and buying and testing apparatus. Since its inception, WOCD has been active ful- filling its capacity as entertainment caterer to Yale undergraduates by introducing a diversity of pro- grams especially planned for student consumption. One of the earliest and most popular of these was the Whiz Kids program, a quiz program modeled after Information Please. Louis Laun, 1942, chairman of the Record, and Howard Smith, 1942, of the Neivs, served as masters of ceremony in weekly programs which pitted members of lead- ing campus organizations against each other. The series ended with an elimination contest between the colleges, which was won by John Kieran, Jr., and Weldon Miner of Trumbull. Two other programs inaugurated towards the middle of the year included the WOCD Forum, a weekly round table discussion of current topics by members of the faculty and undergraduates, and Men About Town which featured interviews of well known campus characters. The Forum, under the direction of Zeph Stewart, 1943, presented such prominent men as Professor Arnold Wolfers who led a discussion on post-war readjustment, whereas the Men About Town program in- cluded Fi-Buck, Jerry, .ind Toasty Rosev among its sruests. One miiiutc to ?o Three Men and a Mike Yale dramatic talent found an outlet in the WOCD Playhouse, a weekly feature. Ralph Levy, 1942, of the School of Drama, directed the plays, which were acted by undergraduates and members of the Drama School. The WOCD Playhouse proved highly successful because of the quality of the production and the careful selecti on of the drama. In February, WOCD received permission to re- broadcast frequency modulation programs from Connecticut ' s pioneer FM station, W6 5H, whose transmitter is located on Meriden Mountain. This arrangement has materially improved both the quality and variety of its symphonic and popular programs and has enabled the broadcast of nation- wide news. WOCD ' s portable equipment has become a common sight at impor- tant events on and about the Yale campus. The first remote broad- cast was made at the Freshman Rally in Woolsey Hall last fall. Since then guest speakers of the Political Union, the Budget Drive Banquet, and the University Chris- tian Conference have been put on the air. Outstanding among the remote broadcasts have been the play by play descriptions of all the home basketball games by Gordon McLendon, Phil Guba, and Jim Whitmore. All these, along with the daily programs of symphonic and popular music, have made 905 KC a favorite spot on the Yale undergraduate ' s radio dial. 123 ' :,,.• Kr H ; White, Kirchne , Seacrest, Gudlcy Rhett, M.igee, Smythe, Seelbach S O-ir. luiunt. Walker, Edgerton, Jessup, Westteldt, Ohler, Reckard, Lovctt. Fionl Ron. Ford, Spn.le Toland, Kemp, Halsey, Turner, Masland. The Church of Christ ' I ' HE Church of Christ in Yale University was founded in the year 175 6, in response to a petition of faculty and students. With a century and three quarters of activity back of it, the Church is today the oldest organization on the Campus in which student direction and participa- tion are conspicuous. A Board of Undergraduate Deacons elected each year by the Junior Class, to- gether with a Board of Faculty Deacons and the Chaplain of the University and his associates, di- rects the work and worship of the Church. The officers of the Undergraduate Board of Deacons this year are, Chairman, Frank A. Kemp, Jr., Vice-Chairman, Frank A. Sprole, and Secretary- Treasurer, Theodore S. Turner. Assisting the University Chaplain, the Rev. Sidney Lovett, are Mr. Burton A. MacLean, ' 38, and Mr. David G. Colwell, ' 3 8, both students at the Yale Divinity School. The Church of Christ in Yale University is in- ter-denominational in character. To the regular Sunday morning service, held in Battell Chapel at eleven o ' clock during the academic year, come preachers belonging to various ecclesiastical bodies. In addition to the Sunday morning service a twenty minute noon-day service is held weekdays in Dwight Memorial Chapel at 12:10. At these services members of the University Administra- tion, Faculty and visiting clergymen read the Lesson and give a brief address. Special vesper services are held in Dwight Memorial Chapel on occasion. A general communion service is held in Battell Chapel at twelve o ' clock the first Sunday of each month. With all these formal services the Board of Undergraduate Deacons is intimately associated. Its members serve as ushers in Battell Chapel on Sunday morning and meet from time to time with the Chaplain in an advisory capacity. They par- ticipate with representatives of Dwight Hall and the Berkeley Association in wider religious acti- vities, such as the annual University Christian Conference. The More Club OFFICERS Reverend T. Lawrason Riggs, 1910, Chaplain J. Robert Brisley President Austin Devine Vice-President James J. Keating Vice-President Paul J. R. Desjardins Secretary Edvcard M. Cummings Social Scriice Chairman Back Ron: Father Riggs, Des|arJins, Cummings. Front Row: Keating, Brisley, Devine. 125 COLLEGES HONORARY FELLOWS Charles Seymour, President of the Uniiersity James Rowland Angell, President of the University, Emeritus FELLOWS John M. S. Allison Randolph W . Townsend Professor of History Charlton D. Cooksey Assistant Professor of Physics Sumner McK. Crosby Assistant Professor of the History of Art Clive Day, Seymour H. Knox Professor of Political Economy, Emeritus Albert G. Feuillerat Sterling Professor of French Sherman Kent Assistant Professor of History Thomas C. Mendenhall, II Instructor in History Frederic W. Ness Instructor in English Russell G. Pruden Associate Curator of the Edward M. House Collection Richard L. Purdy Assistant Professor of English Carl F. Schreiber Leavenworth Professor of German L inguage and Liter- ature, and Curator of the William A. Speck Collection of Goetheanj Jerome Sperling Instructor in Classics Charles L. Stevenson Assistant Professor of Philosophy James K. Whittemore Associate Professor of Mathematics Harold F. Williamson Assistant Professor of Economics Alexander M. Witherspoon Associate Professor of English Walter J. Wohlenberg Sterling Professor of Mechanical Engineering ! A Samuel Burdett Hemingway, Master Professor of English ASSOCIATE FELLOWS Marcel Aubert Professor of the History of Art ; Member de I ' Institut; Professor at Ecole des Chartes; and Curator of Me- dieval Sculpture in the Louvre F. Lammot Belin, Ph.B. 19ol Francis W. Bronson B.A. 1922; Editor Yale Alumni Magazine Rev. T. Huntington Chappel, B.A. 1928 Russell H. Chittenden Director of the Sheffield Scientific School and Professor of Physiological Chemistry, Emeritus Edward J. Dimock, B.A. 1911 Harold L. Fates, B.A. 1932, School of Law 1933. Executive Secretary of the Alumni Board Henri Focillon, Professor of the History of Art: Professor at the College de France William E. S. Griswold, B.A. 1899 Frederick S. Jones Dean of Yale College, Emeritus Paul Mellon, B.A. 1929 Charles Nagel, Jr. B.A. 1923, B.F.A. 1926, M.F.A. 1928 George Wharton Pepper, LL.D. 1914 Duncan Phillips B.A. 19o8, Honorary .MA. 1934 Dr. Orville F. Rogers Director of Department of University Health George Dudley Seymour Honorary M.A. 1913 John Tresidder Sheppard M.B.E., M.A., Litt.D.. Provost of Kings College, Cambridge, England David Stanley Smith Battell Professor of the Theory of Music Jl ' dge Thomas W. Swan Felloir of the Yale Corporation George E. Woodbine George Burton Adams Professor of History BERKELEY COLLEGE owes its name to George Berkeley, Bishop of Cloyne and eminent British Philosopher who, although he gave valuable gifts of books to Yale in 1733 and pro- vided the endowment for the oldest scholarships in the country, the Berkeley Fellowships, never saw New Haven or Yale. The actual college buildings are the generous gift of Mr. Edward S. Harkness, ' 37. The corner stone was laid in 1933, and on September 24th, 1934, Berkeley began its active life. This past fall Berkeley reached the tender age of seven. Her eighth year has been full of the usually varied manifestations of her aesthetic and athletic interests. At weekly intervals throughout the fall, Seniors enjoyed sherry in the Fellows ' Common Room followed by dinner in the hall The Master and Mrs. Hemingway entertained in- with the Fellows. Occasional week-night Beer and formally in their home on the two Sunday even- Skittles parties in the lounge gave all members of ings preceding the Christmas holidays with Carol the college an informal opportunity to get better singing and refreshments. ' A qiiar deal my game. acquainted and to learn some of the intricacies of skittles. Ringer Ernie de Zaldo fathomed the secret of this ancient game to run up phenomenal scores. The annual Christmas dinner was held in a fes- tively decorated hall with the Siberian Singers enter- taining. All the Fellows and their wives were present and the whole college sang dur- ing the sumptuous meal. (lilt of this world with Yon Before leaving 1941 be- hind, let it be recorded that it saw the birth of The Apostles, whose members entertained lavishly at some of the finest and largest cocktail parties which any Virginian or Princeton man has ever seen. Some say that Cleopatra ' s Wooers also held clandestine meetings in one of the chimneys, but no incriminating evidence on this insinuation has ap- peared. Swift once had an admirer, Vanessa, who left her fortune to Swift ' s friend Bcrkelev, our patron. A group of Juniors and Seniors lias, each year, organized it- self into the Nephews of Vanessa, who dine together occasionally to hear a talk bv an invited guest. A popular meeting this Janu- ary was that at which Mr. Paul Atkins, eminent journalist, spoke on his re- cent travels in Africa. Under the leadership of Chief Aide Frank House, 130 the Berkeley Glee Club was formed this year and has been rehearsing weekly. Mort Woodhull, George Griswold and Louis Hemingway are Berkeley members of the inimitable Whiffenpoofs. Our thespians, the genial Berkeley Players, pre- sented Friar Bacon and Friar Bungay on the 27th of February and 1st of March. Old peren- nials Art Keefe, John Packard, Al Barney, Rog Baldwin, Dave Beers, Don Clark and Ross Lawler strutted their stuff again. Mr. Beecher Hogan and our own Tom Mendenhall were the guiding genii and, with Mesdames Crosby and Mendenhall radio station. The all-Berkeley quartet of Frank House, Stu Clement, Fran Thorne and John Butler has sung over the air waves. Pianist Rog Baldwin charms his invisible audience each Friday evening. From Polo Manager Ross Lawler to Dramat Star Howie Smith and composer-songster Louis Hem- ingway is an easy step in Berkeley. Incidentally, Louis has been selected along with Bob White, Jim Wyman and other Berkeley men for the Naval Reserve V-7 course. Tim Ireland combines his duties as Crew Manager with those of Berkeley swimming captain. Bill Falrhurst and Bob White Ajt. JUII Ji in the general costuming and morale departments, made the Players tick. Undaunted by the war, Berkeley ' s members are sv. ' are of the serious implications of their work and recreation and seem to be findmg a just bal- ance between the two. Stirling Tomkins is Chair- man of the 1943 News board and Zeph Stewart is Vice-Chairman and has also been elected to Phi Beta Kappa as a Junior. Bill Arnoldy, Bud Cole- man, Ernesto de Zaldo, Tom Ainsworth, Herb Bartlett and Howie Reed made the grade for 1942. Arnoldy is also President of Tau Beta Pi and John Murphy and Is Gordon belong to both Tau Beta Pi and Sigma Xi. Zeph is also M.C. for WOCD radio programs and Deane Uptegrove and Alexis Tellis are on the pioneer board of Yale ' s swim for the undefeated varsity swimming team. Yachtsman C. B. Kennedy ' s sport ought to boom this summer term. Varsity wrestling captain Brooks Parker, Fuzz Perry and Dud Miller lead Berkeley ' s men of brawn, while Dave Beers is one of the bulwarks of a fine Yale fencing team. Worthy Adams plays at number two on the varsity squash team and Ed Logue is currently the only undefeated member of the Badminton Club. Jim Wyman is Chairman of the Senior Prom Committee, while Webb Haves III follows in George Kirchwey ' s footsteps as Chairman of the Junior Prom Committee. Head cheerleader Oz Day will get lung assistance from Fran Thorne next fall. Hank Bradford of the P.U., Bob Weil in the Ten Eyck Prize competition and Derek MacGuire in the Buck Prize finals are upholding Berkeley ' s fame in the forensic world. Don Brown watches finances, Bob Guidi draws and George Stone writes for the Record, when not on over at the News. John Pauker com- pletes a unique two-year Chairmancy of the Lit and manages to enjoy married life at the same time as Howie Reed ends a year as Vice- Chairman of Dwight Hall and Bob Appleton retires from its executive committee. Let us not forget duck hunter supreme Kent Arnold, whose trophies have often hung in the North court to the envy of less talented marksmen, telephone tycoon III ll( Ml III HI III III III I! ill III 11! ' Neither beat iiur cuLl nor sleet nor rail? iinr Bud Coleman and feaster Hump Noyes who helped keep us out of the doldrums of conventionality. Spring prospects for the Mitres look pleasant. We see Harry Evans, Ted Kiendl, Henry English and Killer Kane on the varsity crew squad. Captain Ed Gravely and Bob Quinlan will both swing golf clubs for the varsity, and Bud Talbott, Ralph Sargent and George Greene are on the varsity track team. Seniors Harry Greene and Ted Smith and several others have left to join the services. The college responded quickly to the war crisis and now has a well organized group of men ready for any contingency from incendiary bombs to first aid. The tunnel is an ideal bomb shelter. Mr. Witherspoon will direct all air raid precautions from there. Professor Wohlenberg is on a New Haven Defense Committee, while Fellow Sherman Kent is in Washington in the Office of Co- ordinator of Information and Professor Allison has been invited by the Army to lecture to its personnel. We still enjoy the Wednesday evenings spent in the informal and friendly circle of conversation in Mr. Allison ' s rooms, the inspiration of Mr. Purdy ' s knowledge of the nineteenth century poets, Mr. Witherspoon ' s illuminating remarks on Milton and the Bible, or a touch game and picnic at the Mendenhall estate in Bethany. Mrs. Hem- ingway ' s teas are always delightful, and without the gracious hospitality of the Master and Mrs. Hemingway and their kindness in a multitude of ways the college would indeed be poor. Their home is always open, girls fill it on week-ends and from the gay Thanksgiving dinner ' till the Com- mencement teas it is the social heart of Berkeley. Berkeley College held its annual dinner in honor of Bishop Berkeley on March 13 th, when Professor Webster, graduate of Kings College, Cambridge and now of the University of London, was speaker of the evening. Berkeley ' s under- graduates find in their college all types of men and can develop their own interests and abilities freely and broadly in varying pursuits. Her friendly and distinguished Fellows are here to counsel and inspire; they never impose. Thus, Berkeley is able to retain her spontaneity and to keep alive yet unified because she is not a house divided against herself, but an interdependent community of interests and fellowship. This is the spirit of Berkeley and it enriches all its members. junior Prom Hand-Out ATHLETICS BERKELEY athletics had a very auspicious beginning last fall, as twenty-five potential stars reported to Captain Dick Donovan and Coach Ott Miller for the first practice and organ- ization meeting of the football team. Possessing a clever strategy with which to work — Pomfret, Hotchkiss, Choate and Yale spinners, end runs, passes, etc., the Berkeley team soon shaped up into a strong threat. And despite the complaints of other would-be contenders, the Mitres proved their worth as they finished up the season a ' full game and a half ahead of their nearest rival. Held to a 0-0 tie in the first game by a strong Bran- ford team the Big Red of Berkeley went on to win seven of their remaining eight games. Low mark of the season was the 19-0 drubbing at the hands of Pros from T. D. whose team was suspiciously re- vamped for that crucial game. However, the 1. -6 victory over the highly touted Davenport eleven, the 37-0 route of J. E., and the final L -0 defeat of our traditional rivals, Calhoun, more than made up for any setback we expe- rienced. The internationally famous sleeper pass proved its worth especially in the Trumbull and Silliman games, and bordered on the ridiculous in the J. E. game when it was used for three con- secutive touchdowns. In November, with the Yale championship safely tucked away, the Mitres journeyed to Cambridge to play a team rep- resenting Adams house, the Har- vard champions. Minus the serv- ices of Ted Smith and Bruno Levan, the Berkeley line was a little weak against the hard-charging Adams line. A blocked kick on our two yard line, recovered by Adams for a touchdown meant a 6-0 defeat for Berkeley. It is impossible to single out individual per- formances, for it was rather the teamwork and continued spirit of the entire team that attributed to the successful season. Yet we had our share of all-stars. Levan and Smith were picked as all- college tackles, and Donovan and Miller were chosen as backfield alternates. However, much of the credit is due to the large number of Soph- omores that came out regularly for the games; with special credit to the ability of Dean Witter, Marty Foss, and Red Lobdell. Over on the touch fields Worthy Adams and his cohorts were not meeting with the same marked success. Despite the efforts of such illu- minaries as Ed Hicks, Ernie deZaldo, and Captain- elect Hutch Dubosque, the Berkeley touch foot- ball team did not have that necessary teamwork and scoring punch, and ended up close to the bottom of the league. Howie Reed found time between soccer games The Berkeley hockey team has held its own throughout the season against some real competi- tion. Captain Worthy Adams uncovered a fast- skating sophomore line of Red Lobdell, Roy Manny, and Scott Scully that was a continual scoring threat. Worthy Adams, Hutch Dubosque, and Ozzie Day made up a second line that was almost as effective as the first. Defense men Jim Wyman and Bert Mokros together with goalies Marty Foss and John Hasbrouk were a strong de- fense against all opponents. The Mitres dropped three close ijames to Back Row: Logue, Clement, Holliday, Jordan, Foss, Traphagen, Cox, Roome, Miller (Coach) .Third Row: Miller, Witter, Brown, Donavan, Piatt, Greene, Smith, Waterman. Front Roir; Herman, Pepper, Clapp, Lobdell, Mahoney. First Lady to sweep through the Berkeley tennis tournament, and emerged the victor after a very close finals match with Sophomore Craw Green. Herb Bartlett and his hoopsters have had a hard struggle on the basketball courts. As yet we can claim but two victories; one over J. E., and the other over T. D., but many of the other games were lost by very close scores. Sparked by Pop Arnold and Ross Traphegan, the boys have finally found their shooting eye, and should make it a close race for the top of the second division. The swimming team has also had its difficulties this winter. Lacking any experienced breast- strokers, and often without the services of our only backstroker, Peter Anderson — his weekends usually begin on Friday at noon, Captain Bob Lathrop has had to rely mainly on his freestylers; Tim Ireland, Bill Miller, and Con Brooks. Divers Dick Jones and Johnny Lyons have more than once taken both first and second in that event, but meets can ' t always be won by freestylers and divers alone. Davenport, Silliman, and Trumbull, with T. D. ind tied one The squash team showed the best of prospects at the beginning of the season, but three close de- feats dimmed all aspirations of a championship team. The first loss was to Davenport, and is one that cannot be alibied for, but a skiing trip and a quick jaunt to New York (no names men- tioned) may be blamed for two close defeats by Silliman and J. E. However, led by Captain Jim Wyman, in the number one position, the Berkeley squash team of Brooks Parker, George Burrows, Johnny Quinn, and Charles Esty ended up well near the top with six wins behind them. Berkeley was well represented up in Mosey King ' s Boxing Tournament with Sam Coxe, Ernie deZaldo, Ozzie Day, and Vic Von Schlegel slug- ging it out for the Red and White. At the same time wrestlers Dick Donovan, Art Keefe, Dave Munsell, Johnny Green, and Marty Haber all worked hard for the inter-college titles. HONORARY FELLOWS President Charles Seymour President Emeritus James Rowland Angell FELLOWS Norman Sidney Buck Dean of Freshmen and Professor of Political Economy Robert Woodham Daniel Instructor in English Allen Tracy Hazen Research Assistant in Bibliography George Lincoln Hendrickson Lampson Professor of Latin and Greek Literature, Emeritus Erwin Burr Kelsey Assistant Professor of Chemistry Harvey Claflin Mansfield Assistant Profesujr of Gorernment Carroll L. V. Meeks Assistant Professor of History of Art and Assistant to the Dean. School of Fine Arts William Gamwell Moulton Instructor in German George Henry Nettleton Lampson Professor of English Oystein Ore Sterling Professor of Mathematics Nathaniel Burton Paradise Associate Curator of Manuscripts in the University Library and Assistant Professor of English William Ruff, Jr. Assistant Professor of English Charles Joseph Tilden Strathcona Professor of Engineering Mechanics, Emeritus Larande Loss Woodruff Professor of Protozoology •1 ii ii ill III ill II ' iiii ' Clarence Whittlesey Mendell, Alaster Dunham Professor of the Latin Language and Literature ASSOCIATE FELLOWS Edward Grant Buckland LL.D. (LL.B. 1889, hon. M.A. 1895) Rev. George A. Buttrick D.D. 1932 Malcolm Farmer Ph. B. 19o4 Hamilton Hadley B.A. 1919, LL.B. 1923 John L. Hall B.A. 1894, LL.B. 1896 Carroll Clark Hincks B.A. 1911. LL.B. 1914 David Russell Lyman M.D. (hon. M.A. 1916) A. Newbold Morris B.A. 1925, LL.B. 1928 William Lyon Phelps Lampson Professor of English Literature, Emeritus Michael Ivanovich Rostovtzeff Sterling Professor of Ancient History and Classical Archeology Eugene Francis Savage William Leffingwell Professor of Painting Thomas Day Thacher Fellow of the Yale Corporation George D. Vaill Secretary of Class Reunion Bureau William Francis Verdi Clinical Professor of Surgery John Munro Woolsey LL.D. (B.A. 1898) 137 The general effect should be entirely residential, and as far as possible free from the blighting aspects of the conventional institutional or barracks-like structure. James Gamble Rogers — designer of Branford. 7 T IS, I think, highly indicative that of all the - - colleges Branford alone has no campus police of its own. This complete faith on the part of the administration in the decorum of Branford men is shared by the rest of Yale, which has chosen to call Branford the Oysterbed and speaks, with mingled emotions, of its inhabitants as Oysters. The name, while fundamentally r cussed promptly and frankly by j ' .i the men responsible. This is a tradition which to me is very precious and worth preserving. Three weeks ago some members of Branford in too much of a spirit of elation removed a fire extinguisher from its place and not only did considerable damage to the building but made life most uncomfortable for one of the Fellows for several days. To my complete surprise and keen disappointment they have not reported to me to talk over and .idjust this injury to the tradi- ional friendly atmosphere of the college. I hope that the man or men responsible will realize that the loyalty to Branford which has been so marked is threatened P jL, ' by their action and will see me iy - at once so that the relations that B sas n . J- fc.:.:. have meant so much in the past Candid CaiiflvcU may continue for the future. The name Oyster is fitting in that it suggests the maturity so characteristic of Branford, but it is equally fitting as a suggestion of Branford ' s great modesty, for within its hard and unassuming shell, the Oyster, as we all know, hides a pearl. This is not to suggest that we are all pearls of Apoifa c Angel sound, has however had the unfortunate effect of confusing certain younger members of the Yale community, who realizing that oysters pass their lives sleeping in the ooze, gather that Branford men too are inactive. As we shall soon see, nothing could be more misleading. It is the oyster as a symbol of decorum that is relevant, not the oyster as perenial hibernator. The following line- sent to each student over the Master ' s signature sc well illustrate this restraint and the spirit th.it maintains it, that we may be pardoned a somewh.it lengthy quotation. For seven years there has been no case in which it was necessary for the Master to take drastic action and any accident to the property or morale of the college has always been reported and dis- ' I Iflllhliliil lollt ' l) : lutul. 138 great price, for this could not be the case. It is true that the leader of the band is one of us, but then we must admit too that some our members fail to get on the Dean ' s List. Buttons, of course, as well as pearls come from oysters. Perhaps it is significant that the Outing Club has its headquarters in Branford, for it is impos- sible to discover one corner of the university, how- ever small or remote, which is not graced by a Pearl. It is as though the restlessness engendered by years of inactivity within their ivory flats had made the pearls unusually active. There are pearls on every university team, in every under- graduate organization big or small, and in every field of concentration. Of our bursary students, for example, one catalogs Solomon Island curios at the Peabody Museum, while another feeds a collection of spiders at the medical school. This extreme range in Interests is paralleled by a iJ- ' The jii ' c Boys similar range In tastes. We have the president of Dwight Hall amongst us, but we also have several of the university ' s outstanding beer cans. There are, it is evident, pearls of every description in Branford. It would appear paradoxical, therefore, to suggest that Branford provides the truest norm amongst the Yale colleges. This, however, is the case, for diversity precludes specialization, and the spread of Branford types guarantees an ac- curate cross-section of Yale life. We do not have all the News staff, nor most of the Sheff men, but we have enough of both. As a result, anyone can sit down in the Branford dining hall and eat with some Pearl that shares his interests and tastes. The activity of the Pearls has had another paradoxical consequent. Because they are so active in university life, they have developed few inter- college activities. The Pearls when they do relax, Familiar Scene turn to bridge, to poker, and to easy conversation, but there are no bridge clubs and no discussion groups. After meals a salon of true artists take over the piano in the lounge. Bob Bennett with his boogie-woogie, Dick Gordon with his classical music, and Ted German with that style all his own which is in such demand over W.O.C.D., play regularly and are surrounded by a steady group of admirers and accompanists, yet they have elected no president or secre- tary. Even the Lowell Thomas Club which gathers to absorb the news each evening must be named in quotes, for they would resent even the hint that they were organized. In those college activities which are impossible without some degree of organization, Branford somehow manages to excell anyway. The Bran- ford Press with its annual year-book makes the rest of the college presses look like rubber stamp and ink affairs. It was no accident that the Dramat this year should use The Frogs, a play Branford produced three years ago. For the record, mention should be made of one Branford activity which grew into a university fixture. Last year Bob Spring began doing math assignments for a friend in Saybrook by radio over I Three ' s a Foursome but never Boresome. Gosh! Giih ' s are eorseoiis. a radiator hook-up. b ' spnnt;, Spring w .is playing records regularly, commenting on the news and sports, and scooping such major events as eclipses and penny-pitching contests. This year the Bran- ford Broadcasting System became W.O.C.D. and, of course, Branford men are at the heart of that original and popular adjunct to the O.C.D. Branford commends the Xcu s for following Bran- ford after but a one-year lapse. It has taken the university some twenty years to follow Branford ' s deemphasis of sports, and even the Dramat took three years to follow our lead. If paradox is the key-note of Branford ' s personality, it is perhaps paradoxical that the good Dean, our master Pearl, is the clearest typification of the Branford spirit and at the same time is himself an individual completely free from paradox. More than any other college, the Oyster Pool is a reflection of its Master. The black and gray saddle shoes, the old corn cob, the casual tweeds, the classical disdain for organization and effort symbolize to perfection the qualities which have won for Branford its mollusc reputation. Dean Mendell ' s place in the university, well illus- trated by his selection to manage the A. A. during last year ' s critical period of upheaval, equally well symbolizes the pearl hidden in the Oyster. That the Master himself is the antithesis of paradox is apparent even to the sophomore going to his first tea, who feels at once that he has known Dean Mendell forever. The senior feels that behind that yellowed corn cob, he has a friend as mellowed as the pipe, a source of encouragement and advice worth more to him than any other part of his Oyster life. But all this is not Branford. The 0 ' sterbed is more than a collection of busy Pearls, more, even, than its Master who must some day become just another painting in the dining hall. The real Branford is in stone. When James Rogers fashioned the college he created a personality that the rest of us merely reflect and could not possibly change. It is altogether fitting that the Class Day services, the last formal exercise of each class, are always held in this court, for in sheer quiet beauty Branford has no equal in Yale. The memories of the court in spring with its heavy soft grass and its glorious flowers, of Wrexham tower in the later after- noon sun, of Harkness lighted up by moonlight — these will, I suspect, re- main long after the faces and names in this book I he Mdriiin; After become dim and confused. It is pleasant to realize that the true strength of Branford is locked up in stone and does not depend upon such reassurances as the Tyng baubble. This strength is more than beauty, however, which after all is but skin deep. If the Oyster look carefully enough — more carefully even than he must look to tell the time — he will find in Harkness a far greater strength. There, fashioned in granite and looking out over Branford and the rest of Yale, stand Euclid, Homer, Virgil, Dante, and Shakespeare, suggesting gently that football seasons are not the only test of a uni- versity ' s worth. There, too, stand Noah Webster, John Calhoun, Nathan Hale and the others to remind us of all that Yale has meant to the world in the past. There, finally, above these groups are those sombre figures representing the four wars Yale men have died in. Surmounted by this mass of sober symbolism and surrounded by the empty niches provided for those of us who succeed in serving our fellows best, it is not so surprising that the members of Branford are more restrained and more intent on their jobs than are most. Branford, indeed, needs no campus police, for it has guardians enough already.  ; 141 Cnf ,1 ilriiih ATHLETICS BBRANFORD began the year auspiciously last fall, taking a second in football and cross- country to end the season in second place. Six points only separated her from first place Trum- bull College at vacation time in December. During the winter Fortune ' s smile was frigid by compari- son, and at this writing we occupy fourth position in the All-Around Championship standings. There have been several bright spots, however. In the annual track meet in March, the Tower- men successfully defended their crown, winning by a staggering score to keep the trophy in its present place for another year. The only other championship was ac- cumulated in boxing, when five local boys gained the finals and easily amassed enough points to assure vic- tory. The football eleven had little to hope for at the start of the season. Last year ' s club had made a poor showing, and had ended up very near the bottom of the heap. But Branford turned her back to past defeats, fired her old coach, and put a self-coached team on the field for the opener with Silliman that had plenty of enthusiasm, in spite of doubtful ability. From the opening whistle this doubt vanished, as the rejuvenated Men- dell-men passed and ran their op- ponents silly. Long passes from German to Brooks set up the first touchdown, Fiarris finally scoring and converting. After long gains by Brooks and Roller, Harris again scored to give Branford a 13-0 victory. A disappointing 0-0 tie followed with the cham- pion Berkeley team in a sea of mud. Although we outgained the Mitres throughout the game, it was too wet to vary the offense enough to score. An in-and-out Timothy Dwight next had an in day against Branford, beating us 7-0 on a long pass. Carrying the full offensive burden due to Ted German ' s absence, Footsie Roller played J spectacular game. Success favored our efforts in the next two games as Calhoun and Saybrook were white- washed by 13-0 and 12-0 scores. Creeper Kreske and Roller were the spark plugs in a smooth-running touchdown machine, while the IF ■11 1 L n Ji 5 i sl l 4 1 L. 1 1 i d 0! L i9 Big operators 142 Easy docs it: line, best in the league, was impregnable. After a heart-breaking loss to Davenport by a single touchdown, the Blue and Yellow pounded out three straight triumphs to wind up the schedule. We squeaked by Trumbull, 7-6. Roller and Ted German smashed for an early touchdown, but the Bulls barely missed making up the deficit when Branford weakened in the second half. Pierson succumbed by a 7-0 score to Tower power, added to considerably by the addition of Tom Britton to the backfield. With Britton, Roller, Kreske, and German, Branford now had the best set of backs in the circuit. The finale was a foregone conclusion, Jonathan Edwards offering little resist- ance to the terrific pounding of German, Kreske, and Britton, and a 14-0 win was chalked up. The season ' s record shows six wins, one tie, and two losses, resulting in second place behind Berke- ley. The team did not have its full manpower at any time or the championship might have been ours. The line, headed by Captain McAndrews, and including such stalwarts as Gary Reed, George Hamlin, Jack Heald, Dick Holte, Jack Coward, Bob Stevenson, Ray Heizer, Bill Fleming, and Wells Brown, was as tough as any they faced. The backfield, if they ever played in the same game, was tops for the year. The improvement was astounding, although the crown slipped from our grasp. The basketball team ended in a fourth place tie with seven wins and six losses. An unaccountable failure to connect with the basket hampered the Towermen all season and marred what had been a potentially bright record. Brooks Smith, Spike Brooks, Bill Fleming, Bill McAndrews, Jack Ke- hablan. Bill Chynoweth, Doak, Barnett, and Mel Liverance did most of the playing for Branford. The swimmers also ended fourth with six vic- tories and three losses. Captain Browning, Rich Wilson, Ray Heizer, George Rowe, and Eric Good- win were consistent point winners for the Oysters. Latorre, Quarles, Clement, Hopkins, and Churchill led Branford to the team boxing title, Hopkins and Churchill gaining individual cham- pionships. The track team scored forty-five points to outdistance their nearest rivals by twenty-two points. Jack Hopkins took two firsts and a third to lead the parade, and he was ably assisted by Stern, Curtln, Heald, Countryman, Morse, and Fleming. The brightest moment of the year for the men of the Oysterbed came on January tenth, 1942, when a communique issued from the Athletic Office announced that Branford had assumed first place in the Inter-College standings. Whether we have ever done it before or will again are problems for research vision, but at least we know what it is to have scaled the heights, to have drunk deep from the cup, to have lived life to the full. We Were Dancing 143 ACTING MASTER Rev. John Charles Schroeder Professor of H-imiletics and Pastorjl Theology HONORARY FELLOWS President Charles Seymour President Emeritus James Rowland Angell Rudolph John Anderson Professor of Chemistry Charles Frederick Tucker Brooke Sterling Professor of English Fred Rogers Fairchild Knox Professor of Economics Gordon Sherman Haicht Assistant Professor of English Kent Tenney Healy Assistant Professor of Economics Raymond Thompson Hill Associate Professor of French Philip Gustave Laurson Associate Professor of Engineering Mechanics Frank Monaghan Assistant Professor of History Stephen Winson Reed Instructor in Sociology Robert Selden Rose Professor of Spanish Robert Charles Lewis Scott Instructor in History Edmund Taite Silk Assistant Professor of L.itin Alan Tower Waterman Associate Professor of Physics Stanley Thomas Williams Colgate Professor of English Arnold Whitridge, Master Professor in the Department of History, the Arts, and Letters Entered U. S. Army, April 4, 1942 ASSOCIATE FELLOWS George Townsend Adee M.A. 1931 Richard Steere Aldrich B.A. 19o6 Leonard Bacon B.A. 19o9 Stephen Vincent Benet, M.A. 1937 Allerton Frank Brooks, Ph.B. 1911 Peter Henry Buck Director of the Bernice P. Bishop Museum, Professor of Anthropology Mortimer Norton Buckner Former Felloir of the Yale Corporation Stuart Holmes Clement Associate Director of the Department of Personnel Study James Dwight Dana B.A. 1911 James Cowan Greenway Director of the Department of University Health, Retired Richard Arthur Kimball, B.A. 1922 Wilmarth Sheldon Lewis Fellow of the Yale Corporation Cyril Norton Hugh Long Sterling Professor of Physiological Chemistry, Yale School of Medicine Douglas Stuart Moore, B.A. 1913 John Hill Morgan LL.D. 1929 Douglas William Orr M.F.A. 1927 Rev. T. Lawrason Riggs B.A. 19I0 Carl Purlington Rollins Printer to the University Joseph Rockwell Swan B.A. 19o2 Vanderbuilt Webb B.A. 1913 US T Jolly good Fellow HE O. C. D. has char- actcrized us as the col- lege balanced between scholastics and athletics. Though hardly an adequate roster of our accomplish- ments, the caption will be seen to have its merits. At least it gives us a greater place in the Yale galaxy than the distinction of trol- ley cars and that highly over-rated lone tree, (which can be so annoying when it intrudes Into our football practices and nigger bab games in the court.) And we, and least, know that in spite of the draft, the strike, the fall of Singapore, and Mr. Whitridge ' s island ship- wreck, Calhoun has had an excellent season. Sudden break in Calhoun ' s excellent season came in early April when Calhoun ' s Master, Professor Whitridge, entered the U. S. Army as a Colonel for the duration. Bridging the gap, however, is a faithful and able successor — Rev. Schroeder. Calhoun has always been terribly egocentric when it comes to dramatics. That proud and ex- clusive group. The Players, is now preparing the fourth consecutive annual Shakespeare production. Coriolaniis, Winter ' s Talc, and Loic ' s Lnhoiir ' s Lost, have been chalked up to their credit. And now the good Padre will tempt fate with a first American performance of that extremely bad play, All ' s Well That Ends Well. (The title may be significant.) Actually we don ' t dare to say that it can ' t be done, because he has, by his bril- liant cutting and directing, proven us wrong when we gave the same opinion about the last three plays. Besides, the cast, headed by such Dramat worthies as Jack Fletcher, Bill Scheidy, Dean Worcester, Ed Jaffe, and Bob Burman, seems capable de tout. The spring tour to Smith hangs over everyone ' s head as goad and goal; for many reputations are at stake. Will future generations know Cole Porter only as the roommate of the Reverend Father T. Lawrason Riggs, director of the Calhoun Players? Will the cast bother to boast of its membership in ihe Yale Dramat? The Calhoun Chamber Orchestra too has blossomed into its fullest fragrance this year. Sixteen happy virtuosos swing and sway the classical way under the sable mane of Charley Shackford. Mr. Waterman has been a great asset to the violm section. Jack Wiley, the esteemed r4Piii[l Age of innocence music critic of the News and a member of the New Haven Symphony, slaps a mean ' cello. And Dr. Stommel has been seen to disintegrate into fountains of gurgling ecstasy over the tympani- happy sublimators of a fiendish mind capable of such diabolitries as psychic detection rays, magic keys, and ground swells in entry C. Anna, Charley ' s wife, was a great treat as guest soloist in the first concert. And now we are looking for- ward to hearing Al Hammond (baritone) sing Handel ' s Largo with them. Al has been directing the Calhoun Singers — who boast such Varsity and Choir material as Doerr, Perry, Van Middlesworth, Linley, Baron, Desjardins, Carter, and Lamar (next year ' s Band president) . A very interesting specimen of Japanese frog has anchored for the basses — particularly in an amusing novelty number called Serenade in the Snow. It has been rumored that, besides enliven- ing banquet and beer parties with their college songs and spirituals, the group may accompany the Players to Smith and give the gals some en- tertainment between the acts of All ' s Well. A series of Sunday evening concerts has been a delightful innovation arranged by Mr. Waterman. The oboist Lois Wann was here and did a par- I ticularly fine job on Dr. Hindemith ' s Soiuite. Mr. Dilworth and Mille. Giachino came up from JuUiard to sing to us; and we enjoyed them tremendously. In the last weeks before spring recess we heard the Frank Kneisel String Quartet and Miss Florence Morrison, pianist. In May, the Trapp Singers came back; and all Calhounites who enjoyed them in Woolsey last fall attended the concert again this year, more privately. The famous Tuesday Nights have continued again this winter with unabated vigor; and, thanks to Mr. Whitridge ' s thoughtful planning, they have been appreciated as always. Mr. Ruther- ford Piatt, of Life fame, spoke on color photog- raphy. Mr. Allen Wardwell, newly returned from Russia, gave us some illuminating oflf-the-record information on the Lend-lease Bill and the Soviet ' s part in the war. Dr. Irwin Edman of Columbia paid us his annual visit. A Mr. McCullum of Bajpai, the Indian Ambassador, to discuss the problems of his country. An exceptionally pleasant feature of these college functions has been the institution of a head table at which a dozen or so undergraduates dine with an equal number of fellows and the speaker of the evening. This new arrangement, beside its immediate advantage of providing a nucleus for the later discussion, has had good effects of lasting value: for, by enabling soph- omores to make their first informal acquaintance of the fellows, and upperclassmen to renew theirs, it facilitates and increases contacts between stu- dents and faculty at meals throughout the week. This year ' s council — Baxter Smith, Doerr, Witt, Gessel, Desjardins, and Burns — has passed meas- ures of great moment. Future generations of loyal Calhoun admirers will remember them, both for having founded the Calhoun tie (a natty affair of gold stripes on a blue field), and for having passed new rules concerning regulation of the fair sexpressions which punctuate the dull routine of our existence No more must forsaken damsels await late dates on the wild and wooley sidewalks of College and Elm; they can now simmer in an easy chair and read old Esquires in .1 specially prepared nook of the Porter ' s lodge. As a general concession to national defense, more- over, they may remain within our sacred precincts till scandalously late hours. For a time the council had intentions of pro- moting an anti-noise campaign; but they found the irrepressible spirits of Calhoun too much for them: the orgiastic rhythms of a Lewis or the Koldi ' fiil KctcLi docs it iii aiii! Oxford spoke on the condition of English universities durmg the war. There were two excel- lent travelogues: Dick Van Middlesworth on the Glee Club ' s South American tour; Bob Wil- son and Phil Farley on their ex- pedition to the South Seas. Mr. Schroeder ' s keen analysis of Niebuhr at the time of the Christian Conference occasioned a spirited discussion which lasted well into the night. And we were extremely fortunate in having Sir Girjah Shankar Senatorial Powwow chaste tinkle of a Brown on the common room piano; the wails of Carter ' s notorious quartet strangling on close harmony; the renowned tower bar and consequences; Chairman Kenady har- anguing through the looking glass a prize audience of Liberals with a gusto reminiscent of his predecessor, Bob Burman; the periodic love-c.ills of Lamar; the throbbing silence of Knight bo- mused in Lizzy Club Droolong and Lit piddle; Van Voast ' s buzzers; Wiley ' s excremental recitals in the night; the noisy despair of recurrent fare- well parties; the cheerful chatter and clatter of plates and Rose in the dining hall; radios, phono- graphs, orchestra, players, games in the court, the squeeling and grunting of sportive locals passing by; and the seniors gnashing their typewriters . . . Well, as Brother Gessel would say, What ciiii you do? At least it helps to keep our mind off the follies and trolleys. ' Music hiitli ihiir Most of the unpleasant features of the year, prob- ably, can be traced to the garbled state of flux, which has been its outstandmg characteristic . . . courses altered, new schedules, and the decidedly erratic ebbs and flows of faculty and students. Our accession of two bright new fellows — Mr. Laurson of Engineering Mechanics, and Mr. McMullen of the Drama School — is only an example of the great good inherent in all evil. For the saddest tale we have to tell is of our dear departed brethren in the wars, who are so fre- quent that I can only mention seniors and faculty. Among the first casualties were Bud Stafford, who dashed off to Med School; Dave Gibson, who joined the R. A. F.; Pete Tripp, called up for V-7; Walter Albrecht, operating a radio; and Dick Semple and Johnny Houston, who were, in- cidentally, thus deprived of their managerships. We also lost two good fellows in Jack Noyes, doing government work in economics, and, more recentlv, Mr. Waterman, who is a secret mission- ary in Cambridge. During the vcar Jack Gessell, our esteemed senior aide, went to a C. O. camp; Ab Judd and Roger McCormick are now gun-totin ' Bucks. I ' hil Farley and Bob Wilson disappeared suddenly on some exotic mission after fulfilling their duties on the Keller Dinner Committee. The archi- tecture School was drained of its inimitable Olear. Mott Sawyer is swabbing decks. Frank Hamlin threatens to leave . . . and there is little doubt that the roll will increase. One wonders if there is any constant beneath the vexatious and tur- bulent superficialities — happy or unhappy — of the year ' s activity. Per- haps it lies in the despair of a pacifist generation going out to fight in quiet desperation against the naturalistic forces of a tyrannical chaos in order to maintain, with small hope of amelioration, an unsatisfactory status quo against a worse one. Some may admit the uncomfortable thought that we may not have been so wise in trying to elim- inate the ruthless and complacent struggle of marble hearts against the contamination of merely Candid Portrait conventional blackness; that the treacherous venom of mocking sophistication which has taken the place of the self-respecting hardness and cold- ness of these hearts has only weakened us, individ- ually and socially, and has made virtuous action a hollow mockery, by clotting healthy motives with selfishness and by scorning hope as the opiate of the candid. It is obviously futile to pour out such high- flown generalities; for few like to have them applied to themselves: It must remain for our successors to be glib about undercurrents. One thing, however, which we are all anxious to express requires little interpretation: that is our deep gratitude to those men, like Mr. Whitridge, who so faithfully and considerately performed the uninspiring job of guiding us, even at the times when we most resembled that humble gray quadruped, along the rather tortuous path be- tween work and pleasure. This funereal conclusion doesn ' t really lead to the grave; we are not uninspired by the thoughts of commencement. We are just a mite unen- thusiastic about jumping into the fire after having sizzled comfortably for four years. . gfi - 149 ATHLETICS I ' YNG CUP has been synonomous with inter- college athletics this past year in Calhoun. With a fighting spirit that compares most favor- ably with our famous namesake, the Senators have gone out to win most of the time. On March 14. 1942, we were three points behind Davenport in second place and by now — well you know how it all came out. In Touch Football it was Gordy Gates, our captain (now flying for Uncle Sam), Jack Bir- mingham, Don Rentier, and Dave Tileston who pulled through an undefeated season only to fall Pla-icd to a capacity audience before the Pierson Slaves in the final game. In a prolonged play-off engagement the Slaves defeated our fighting boys after a tied first game by the score of 24-18. This was a heart-breaker. Things had looked quite good for Calhoun in early October. Touch Football seemed to be safely ours and our Football team — well — you must have heard of the powerhouse backfield be- fore whom the whole league trembled in awe! Crusher De Mott, Powerhouse Parshall, and Beer-baron Stotzer really mowed them down. With Captain Ned Lockwood at center and Cap- tain Elect Don Marsden at guard, the center of our line opened gaping holes for these powerful boys. The opposing secondaries were left to the devastating rush of these three bruisers and the results were all pro-Calhoun. Then there came Davenport. The Blue and Gold went down to defeat and never sufficiently recovered their poise to challenge thereafter. On a cold, damp day in the middle of October, the 14th to be exact, three doughty Senators turned out to try the hills of the Yale Cross Coun- try Course. These same hills plus some Timothy Dwight pros combined to set back the challenge of Calhoun. Art Heidrich, Dick Webb, and Freddy Burns chased that demon Jack Tabor into second place in this event. College tennis for the fall championship saw our entrant Gordy Gates work his way to the semi-finals. Gordy was trying to fill the shoes of Ned Lockwood who had won in ' 40. It was too bad but McKenna, a game little fellow from Tim- othy Dwight, won out in five sets. Cold weather snapped the Senators into action. The spirit was there and with a little stimulus it began to show. In Basketball our Elmo brethren led by Co-Captains Bill Witt and Dave Dangler won ' em all except Trumbull. On a bad day when a good set shot was just not amongst our pLu ' ers, a scrappy Trumbull team up and stole the cream. At this early stage of the game things still looked good, however. But — with the second half our boys again fell prey to the injury jinx. Fred Rosi, Don Gow, John Smith, and Dave Dangler all ended up on the disability list. This was too much of a handicap and we lost two heart-breakers in a week. Saybrook and Branford came through to take our measure. Although we played and lost to a strong Lowell House team in the Harkness Trophy competition, our boys did a great job under the conditions and next season a lot will be heard from hold-overs Co-Captains Elect Hugh Gumming and Don Gow, Lew Nick- ell, and Don Marsden. It seems that Basketball was a continuation of a Calhoun jinx. In nearly every sport Calhoun would come right near the top and then fall off in the stretch drive. It had happened in Football and Touch Football. Here it was again. Coming through with the chips down seemed to be one thing that the Senators lacked. Swimming disproved this. After dropping the first two to Silliman and Trumbull, Dick Van Middlesworth led Dick Keating, Charlie Kilvert, Art Heidrich, Bruce Armstrong, Freddy Burns, Jack Van Voast, Charlie Martin, Marty Corse, and Gregg King up through the long and hard way. Hoping for a Salamander set-back which was not forthcoming, the Senators kept nibbling away and lost the Championship only because a better team went through undefeated. Dick Keating became too hot for the league tying the Inter-College I em spring conn ' s tu dilhoun record for fifty yards in 24.4 seconds and estab- lished himself as the outstanding swimmer for the Senators. Bob Kiphuth recognized his talent and imported him to bolster his super-potent ' 42 aggregation. On the frozen surface Calhoun didn ' t do too well. The Jayvees and the Navy took its toll on our ranks. Despite the loss of stars like Cliif Ford, Co-Captains George Herrity and Spence Mosely led a fighting but short-handed team through many a hard-fought, close decision before succumbing to the more talented and larger sextets from Davenport and Trumbull. Spence proved that he can tackle just as well on the ice as he can on the gridiron. Ralph Burr, Bob Daley, Sam Mills, and Hugh Cumming played iron-man roles as a support- ing cast to the two Captain .. Shut-out Johnny Reid did a swell job in the nets and should threaten Frankie Brim- sek one of these days. One trophy did come to Calhoun this winter. The Hicks Trophy for Inter-Col- lege wrestling was won by Ed Jaffe, Bob Mcintosh, Jack Huber, Don Marsden, Spence Moseley, George Ruebel, and Fred Ferguson. To retire this cup in the first year of com petition Calhoun won their first Inter-College champion- ship in any sport for six years. This result coupled with the stretch drive of the swimming team has done much to do away with the Calhoun Clutch jinx. Fencing was somewhat of a disappointment for the boys had this one all sewed up. By taking an inferior team too lightly, they lost to a fighting Spider team from Jonathan Edwards in the final duel match of the year and ended the season in second place. Captain Fordyce Mitchell, George Wolf, George King, Jim Trower, El Pierce, Sam Brown, and Jim Keating all did their bit to help us to a lofty peak in this sport. Marking to a second place in the best bowling competition of many a year, Captain Sandy Lewis led team-mates Ed Cox, Fred Rosi, Steve Olechni- wich. Bob Trask, and Freddy Shephard to their best season for many a year. In Track, with a very small squad, Calhoun did very well to finish fifth. Bill Carter soared to a first in the pole vault to retain his title, while Fuzzy Furse and Bruce Armstrong placed high in the %-mile and 3 50 respectively. On March 15 th Calhoun was in the place posi- tion with 392.3 points, only 3 points behind the leaders from Davenport and one point ahead of the Salamanders from down Sheff way. First place is the goal. Top rung or bust. This must be Tyng year for the Senators. John C. may turn in his grave but we sure would enjoy winning just the same. A bunch of the fclloivs i i HONORARY FELLOWS President Charles Seymour President Emeritus James Rowland Angell FELLOWS Richard Mervin Bissell, Jr. AsshUml Professor of Economics Philip Bishop Cowles Assistant Professor of Immunology Frederick Sherwood Dunn Professor of International Relations Howard Theodore Engstrom Associate Professor of Mathematics Archibald S. Foord Instructor in History and Assistant to the Dean of the Freshman Year Leonard Woods Labaree Associate Professor of History Maynard Mack Assistant Professor of English Champion Herbert Mathewson Professor of Aietallurgy and Metallography Daniel Merriman Instructor in Biology Max Franklin Millikan Instructor in Economics George Moseley Murphy Assistant Professor of Chemistry George Wilson Pierson Associate Professor of History Frederick Albert Pottle Professor of English Harry Shulman Sterling Professor of diw Theodore Sizer Professor of the History of Art William Leonard Stevens, Jr. Instructor in English Chauncey Brewster Tinker Sterling Professor of English Literature Lewis Edwin York Associate Professor of Drawing and Painting Emerson Tuttle, Master Curator of Prints in the University ASSOCIATE FELLOWS Dean Gooderham Acheson Fellow of the Yale Corporation Malcolm Pratt Aldrich, B.A. 1922 Charles McLean Andrews Farnam Professor of American History, Emeritus James Tinkham Babb Assistant Librarian Yale University Ludlow Bull Research Associate in Egyptology Starling Winston Childs, B.A. 1891 Norman Vaux Donaldson, B.A. 191} Thomas Wells Farnam Associate Treasurer and Comptroller of the University Curtis Philip Fields Executive Secretary of the Yale Alumni University Fund Edward Belden Greene Fellow of the Yale Corporation Rev. Sidney Lovett Chaplain of the University Archibald MacLeish B.A. 1915 Albert Eide Parr Director of the Peahody Museum, Professor of Ocean- ography Bruce Simonds Professor of Music Malcolm Rutherford Thorpe B.A. 1913 Frederick Holme Wiggin B.A. 19o4 Thornton Niven Wilder B.A. 192o 153 I O thou, most dreaded TUT, O highest Jove, Fair Venus ' son, that doth in one combine Friend — fisher — scholar — artist — rider — Jove Each part a whole, to each whate ' er his line A total inspiration — king sublime, And with him eke, O goddess heavenly bright, Mirror of grace and majesty divine. Great ladie of the greatest hall whose light Like Phoebus ' lamp excells (I ' is D-port hight) And thou wee rounded impes of highest Jove, Fair nymphlets on tripegasyclet steeds, With shrieks of sun-lit laughter forth and rove From court of Jove ; thou, dampers of most wanton deeds, Congenial George and James and Joe must needs (O unsopped smiling Cerberi) with those So raise my verses awful, aye, too vile, The which if o ' er them mighty TINKER doze — Gad zooks! I think perhaps I ' ll write in prose. DAVENPORT ' S social structure is in the order of an hierarchy. At its apex, subject only to the law of Jove, is a sort of sanhedrin, august body of fellows who confer once a week in black suits and ambrosial glory. Responsible to Jove are three important pon- tiffs: Mulier-est-hominis-confusio Sprole, his chief aide, Mulieris-est-homo-confusio Rhett, his recrea- tional propagandist, and faymous John Chandler, bibliothecan. To Jove, his Incomparable spouse, omniscient Miss Dieffendorf, our illustrious body of Fellows, and these three the preeminence of Davenport is largely due. Si monumentum re- quires, O Pierson, circumpsicc. After these is an elder celestial proletariat A loaf of bread, A jug of wine, And thou, oh babe! i ' vi- ' siin Cldsc [Off the Record) roughly organized into three groups which may be termed, Olympian, Earthy, and Avernal, re- siding in the upper, middle and lower courts of Jove respectively. As it is impossible to say uter insanior horum est, this is merely a residential dis- tinction, necessarily superficial, as any attempt to classify the great body of Davenport ' s individual- istic inmates must be. Indeed, this is as far as one may go with the skeletal structure of the com- munitv. and yet there is some unity of which all of us are aware and which defies the analyst. What is there in common between the man who must accommodate the temptation to throw snowballs into open windows, the man who pul- sates on the piano stool in the common-room to weird syncopations of his own manufacture, the man who with uncanny ingenuity invents varia- tions of nigger-baby to help pass away the long 55ft| boov • twof spring afternoons, and the man who sits in his green over-stuffed chair pondering Ovid ' s aliena optimum frui insania? — Obviously a difficult question. Perhaps if we were to place ourselves at one remove and consider this diversity over a period of time, we should find order in chaos. Consider then the events of year XI in our history. Remembrances of the hearts game before Christmas which featured ' jus ' like lem ' nade ' Billy Bell, of Alibi and Yehudikoper serenely ac- commodating themselves in Ford ' s room (Who is said to have screamed ' Eagles! ' and swooned upon their discovery), of Jove ' s officiation at the planting of the ivy, and of many other incidents will at once flood the minds of Avernal residents, but all these are of another year. In fact, it is difficult to write any account of this year at all, because we lack the historical perspective to select significant data. For instance, whether the fact that Nate McClure stopped drinking beer so as to have more time to smoke his pipe, or that Ruddy Dodge has stopped eating to make a nru- Lazy daze smaller target — whether these facts are as im- portant as permanent situations such as Norm Clement on his way to Vassar, Church Davis laughing like a Model T or scowling like some fierce tyrant in old tapestry, Ewald Milliken discussing or entertaining Power ' s models, or Curly Hirschorn, toddling up and down the entry szzzing arias through his teeth. Few events can be specifically dated and chronologica lly arranged. Probably the first major event of the year was the organization of the Asinaclub Club, Olympian social nucleus whose membership includes Gifford Back to nature (notable for hydra ted rum) H.B.P. Hull, Ber- mudez (Notable for suit-case rum), thought a quiet boy Conway and polygamist Dickerson who variously distinguished themselves over the Princeton week-end, and Peck, Eberlain, and others (notable for rum). The ostensible purpose of this club is to play whist and to advance the gentle art of badinage. Rum fun, what! However, in striking contrast to this organiza- tion, is the sedate T C Club of Avernus which was founded last year and deserves to be recog- nized here though it does disrupt chronology. This gathering includes dynamic Zeb Adams, Goldy Grayson, Moose Inc., Ace Hall, that smooth naval operator who lives just below Duke of everybody-knows-who Wiggin, and others on the third floor. It will take but a moment to observe that though such Olympian and Avernal nuclei exist, among such prominent Earthy residents as Doc Sprole, now skimming cannel novels. Bob Johnson, who is probably sketching the Davenport tower, Legs Godley, getting something together. White Dealy, conferring on the knotty problem of tonsorial conservation — among such luminaries, as I was saying, there seems to be no nucleus To Hell with Hirohito owing, no doubt, to the same diversity of interests which has baffled us heretofore. But to get back to the problems of the his- torical approach, in addition to the foregoing difficulties, we are confronted with the dangers of bias. Good history must be unpartisan, and yet all of us sense our great indebtedness to Mrs. Tuttle for her Thursday and Sunday afternoon teas, to Mary for her Wednesday night banquets, for the rare pleasure of a Fellow ' s company at lunch — for all of this, and to such an extent that we must voice our approval and heart-felt appreciation. Furthermore, though Averbach may be an accomplished fire-eater, it is fortunate, and we like to be able to so opine that his roommate Gottschall is so accurate with his hydrous artillery. Then, there is the overwhelming temptation to digress, a quagmire which it is strenuous to avoid. At this point, we are strongly reminded that it was some time last winter that all Avernus rose in internal water-war, so that for four exciting days it was advisedly unsafe to stir abroad without one ' s mackintosh. Weapons ranging from Toasty Smythe ' s pocket five-shot repeater to Tord Lord ' s 15 5 mm. bicycle-pump struck sudden terror into the viscera and hurled moisture onto the raiment of bystanders and combatants until all Avernus dripped. There are those little matters which occur perennially in Davenport and which should therefore not be stated as being peculiar to this year. Every year there emerge a distinguished few who are fortunate enough to be able to understand and par- ticipate in the myriad games in which Nancy Harriet rejoice but which are generally far too complex for adult apprehension. There is always the group of eight - twenty - niners who fly across the frozen courts, garments fluttering in their wake, to supplicate that gracious but un- bending sentinel behind the dining-room door. Further, there are those many incidents which are so well remembered that it is senseless to record them. Such a one is the Christmas Party. Who can forget Goody Glaus, Southern Sir Cali- dore, clutching his elusive belly with one hand, vociferously and forcefully disseminating the wealth of the North Pole industries with the other while Mr. Tinker, Mr. Pottle, and Mr. Wiggin themselves inscribed their names in Davenport ' s annals by reason of the perfection of their varied talents. Perhaps the historical approach should be aban- doned altogether and topical approach be made in a series of short essays: Grimalkin ' s life was a blissful one in Daven- port until hurled from Olympian heights with Devine fury whence nine days it fell to Avernus where is purred with hypocritical complacency in a corner of Grayson ' s room until its abrupt and I I unaccountable disappearance. Campbell ' s monkey was relatively discreet and enjoyed a consistently pleasant life in its laurel jungle, eating bananas and ahunting the wily ctenocephalus. Fearless Liscum Borden, prominent non-resident, is one of few who can tell you Life is a tragedy and at the same time convince you in the contrary belief. The dining-room is an important part of Davenport life. Mary ' s cohorts are successfully responsible for our alimentary felicity and handle us with forceful tact when we overflow into seats reserved for expected potentates of obscure identity. Here, distracted from our peasant soup and cheeze fondue, we may observe Benson Fowler getting to know each other, or you may follow, if you can, the conversation of medicos Heller, Palitz, and weight-lifter Bancker, and we cannot help but be aware of hilarious Ethridge Goddard provoking one another. If you have noticed some racing breathlessly through lunch, you may be sure that they are only half-prepared for the daily four o ' clock Math Class. Back in Avernus, Lord and Chandler will consult another Chandler who will consult O. H. Miller, an ulti- mate authority on mathematics and the Pittsboig Pirates. By the time we have reached this point, it will be clear that this method is equally fruitless by reason of its hopeless disintegration, and the final objection to any approach will appear, namely, that the year seems but little more than half-over and the rest necessarily a matter of conjecture. Asinaclub Club will shortly empty its Prince Albert deposit box in preparation for a public celebration of rising liquor taxes, whereas the majority of Avernal residents will hasten to Woodstock, thus avoiding the expected deluge of promenading feminity. Probably Gardner White will damage his left knee, and there is little doubt but that Bill Ford will further wrack his now debilitated anatomy. Comes spring, it will appear, in short, As if an hundred briddes had built their bowres And sweetly sung to call forth paramours. Davenport will achieve its usual success. Perhaps the problem was all to simple for solu- tion at the outset. For though many of its stal- warts, under the influence of the season, will be reduced to blushful slaves of fleeting pulchritude, and though many will swell the present ranks of those who are facing the grim realities of life — whatever the individual fates we must meet, we shall carry away Davenport in a great body of joyful thoughts, for it has become a part of us, and we of it. . Aiiufher scholarly goalie ATHLETICS UNDER the dynamic leadership of Athletic Secretary Goody Rhett, Davenport ' s athletic endeavor proved much more successful in 1941- 42 than in former years. Although no champion- ship football team was forthcoming, this year ' s Hybrid eleven proved itself worthy to wear the red and black. With Captain Bud Park ' s services lost to Uncle Sam, Nate McClure was elected cap- tain. In the first game against J. E. the team got off to a slow start, winning by the close score of 7-6. From there on to the final game against Pierson, in which the latter tied the score 6-6 in the final play of the game, the Davenport team had its ups and downs; winning five, losing two, and tying two games, thus gaining a tie for third place in the League standings. Bob Johnson and Moose Chandler proved to be the mainstays of a hard charging line, while Grigs McClelland deserted Billy Bell on the coaches bench in order to direct the team from the quarterback position. The touchfootball team, without its injured captain, Gary Grayson, did not live up to pre- season expectations. In spite of the fact that it won three and dropped two overtime games, the team, with such experts as Eli Brown, Sparky Adams, Killer Ford, Frank Gaynor, and Larry Brody, failed to come through against Siiliman or Pierson. On off days, however, it rendered great service as a cheering section for the football team; thereby spurring it on to greater deeds. The records of these two teams plus the able running of Pete Brown, Randall, and Dodge in a cross- country meet put Davenport in fifth place In the race for the Tyng Trophy. With the arrival of winter, the Hybrids came into their own as evinced by the fact that by February they were edging out Siiliman for top place in the Inter-College League. At this point Athletic Secretary Rhett became Junior Airport Manager Rhett of Pan-American Airways, and John Chandler directed the Hvbrid destiny. On the ice, co-Captains Fritz Godley and Moose Chandler were leading their team to spectacular victories over all opponents except Timothy Dwight, while Alf Ford was leading the Hockey League scoring department with seven goals. The most colorful game of the year was one of three played on Inter-College night at the Arena. This time the Calhoun Senators proved victims to the tune of 4-1; three of the goals being scored by Captain Godley. In spite of the fact that Cal- houn was supposed to have packed its team with members of the Varsity football team, Davenport was not forced to exert itself to obtain victory. The basketball team, led by Captain Hank Smythe, also climbed toward the top of the vic- tory ladder so that by mid-year it was in second place; having won eight and lost one game. Billy Bell and Joe Averback ably assisted Smythe in chalking up the points. After years of patient waiting, the day of revenge came for the team when it whipped the mighty Pierson aggregation Ji A Ihc CoHit oj Kiiiii Tut 3 2-2 5 in an overtime game. The cleanness of the game is attested by the twenty personal fouls that were called. (Only ten of them were against Davenport.) When the team started to branch out into the prep school leagues it suffered a severe setback at the hands of the Taft School as well as Hopkins Grammar. Although it was never supreme in its field, the swimming team did so much better than in former years that the York Street boys regard their mermen as the next best thing to cham- pions. Captain Jack Cooke was the only consistent win- ner; nevertheless, others such as McClure, Godley, Isham and Bellinger also ac- counted for numerous points. The versatility of the team is a legend to all loyal Davenporters. Its members seemed to be capable of swimming any distance, any kind of stroke, or in some instances of diving any dive. The upset of a good Trumbull team was the highlight of the season. True to the tradition of being usually strong in the racket games, the squash team did not fail to live up to advance notices. Various men alternated in the matches, but Ber- mudez, Ethridge, and Captain Symington aided in the victories. Only one match was lost in the early part of the season; that was to Silliman, 3-2. The less said about the bowling team the better. Whether they needed more practice or whether the pins were glued to the floor when the mem- bers of the team bowled their strings are ques- tions the members have not yet answered. It was noticed, however, that Captain Bonsai drew his team from among the Sophomores and Juniors in order that they might get sufficient training for next year ' s matches. In Eddie O ' Donnell ' s emporium, the Davenport wrestling team was being formed around the veteran T. C. Hull at this writing. Whether the Danburv fl.ish would be able to win much needed Lct ' i iinikc incny points was a matter of speculation, but high au- thoritative sources believed it possible. When everything is considered, we repeat, Dav- enport has finally taken her place among the athletic powers-that-be. No longer will the Tyng Trophy reflect the light of those markets of sub- sidy on Wall Street. Rather it is expected to move soon into the realm of pure amateurism; to that edifice on York Street commonly known as Dav- enport College. 159 . HONORARY FELLOWS President Charles Seymour President Emeritus James Rowland Angell FELLOWS John Chester Adams Director of Undergraduate Literary Activities, and Assistant Professor of English Edward Wight Bakke Professor of Economics Robert Chapman Bates Assistant Professor of French Stuart Robert Brinkley Associate Professor of Chemistry Beekman Cox Cannon Instructor in Music Lewis Perry Curtis Pasius Fellow, and Assistant Professor of History Joseph Toy Curtiss Assistant Professor of English Erwin R. Goodenough Professor of the History of Religion Hajo Holborn Professor of History George Alexander Kubler Instructor in the History of Art Egbert J. Miles Associate Professor of Mathematics Walter Richard Miles Professor of Psychology Eugene G. O ' Neill, Jr. Assistant Professor in Classics HoLKiNs Dillingham Palmer Instructor in Architectural Design Ernest Charles Pollard Assistant Professor of Physics Robert Dudley French, Master Professor of English ASSOCIATE FELLOWS H. Frank Bozyan Assistant Professor of Organ Playing Allen Buck In charge University News Bureau Rev. Henry Sloane Coffin Fellow of the Yale Corporation Albert Beecher Crawford Director of the Department of Personnel Study and of the Bureau of Appointments Edgar Stephenson Furniss Provost of the University, and Dean of the Graduate School Arthur Lehman Goodhart B.A. 1912 Roswell Gray Ham President, Mount Holyoke College Austin Morris Harmon Lampson Professor of Greek Paul Hindemith Visiting Professor of the Theory of Music Charles Beecher Hogan B.A. 1928 Alvin S. Johnson Director, The New School for Social Research Carl Albert Lohmann Secretary of the University Richard Swann Lull Sterling Professor of Paleontology and Director of the Peabody Museum, Emeritus Maurice E. H. Rotival Lecturer in Town Planning Frank Schlesinger Professor of Astronomy, and Director of the Observa- tory, Emeritus Robert Alphonso Taft Fellow of the Yale Corporation Karl Young Sterling Professor of English 161 I T T ' S only one college ' s opinion, of course, but down Jonathan Edwards way there exists one of the most concentrated and delightf ully unique atmospheres that is to be found. Four buildings have grouped themselves informally around the green, and succeeded in covering themselves with the best in ivy and traditions. A residence in Jonathan Edwards is one of those things that must be experienced to be appreciated fully. It first commands the student ' s devotion with its light touch, and then proceeds to mould it with firm and subtle hand to an attainment of the college ideal that would warm the founding fathers ' hearts. Policies of a college are hard to isolate. Two stand out. The first, contrary to rumor, is not to subsidize athletics. Nevertheless, it has been reported that not infrequently big-league scouts have gathered on the green to watch the Spiders cavort at infor- mal baseball and touch football games, with an enthusiasm to which r :l ucoi tiLii fir Waifor Rcsarfits Big Wig Pigoft every remaming blade of grass will testify. A second policy has been to encourage every ex- pression of undergradu- ate interest. And that ' s a full-time job, for the wearers of the Green have an unbounded source of energy that is only matched by its diversity. Those that have a penchant for French conver- sation betake themselves on Friday to Mr. Bates and the home of the Francisants. Here, ,i I ' heure de I ' aperitif, a warm welcome and several very warming Vermouth Cassis are to be found. The amateur war strategist have their inning, too, when the nine or ten members of Mr. Hol- bern ' s political discussion group meet in the Senior Common room. The policy up to the middle of the year was to mix international affairs with din- ner, and politics with coffee. But as more inter- est was generated, guest speakers were invited to give a short talk open to the college after dinner in the Junior Common room. The small turret-topped building at one corner of the green has mistified many. It is the home of Look! No Hands A Pic-iitc-iip the Jonathan Edwards Printing Press. Three time a year it adds to the hst of Yale pubh- cations the Spider ' s Web, in which is caught as much of the miscellaneous literary products as Chairman Don Sweetman can muster. Poetry, fiction, and book reviews are about equally distributed, with cartoons by Tod Furniss adding a light touch. Fortnightly, also, the press rolls out the Almanack. The Almanack traces the course of the college ' s unsung athletic heroes, and keeps the Spiders posted on what to expect next. Sheltered by the towering Art School, J. E. is fairly quiet. But somehow, music is always within earshot. Usually it is a piano, or perhaps the new victrola that nobody knows how to run properly. On Sunday evenings, it is almost certain to be one of the scries of concerts that highlight the winter season. The objective here has been to get light, unusual music. One evening Mr. Hindemith g.i c a short talk. The Hampton Quartet was well re- ceived. And among the pianists and harpists, Mrs. Hogan, Mrs. Curtis, Anita Brookfield, and Mr. Davenny have appeared. No discussion of the year in J. E. would be complete without mention of the most elaborate of its activities. The Gilbert and Sullivan Society presents each year one of the lesser of the authors ' operettas. This year, under the Poo-bah-ship of Jim Anderson, The Gondoliers was presented. Tlic credit for the excellence of these productions is widespread, but is due in no small part to the direction of Beecher Hogan, and Mr. Davenny, who has stepped into Beekman Cannon ' s shoes on the pedals of the piano. Talbot, Sheehan, Seidner, ind Ripley had the lion ' s share of the parts, with Tod Furniss in charge of production. This year the G. and S. did not have quite as much practice as the D ' Oyly Carte productions, with whom, it is understood, there has been an informal rival- ry. But with tradition- al gusto and the en- thusiastic reception of The Gondeliers even the most prejudiced ob- server was forced to admit that honors were about even. The J. E. Dining Hall Eaiy Way Out 163 is rather dark. But it was at its darkest and gay- est at the Jonathan Edwards birthday party. Can- dles furnished the illumination, and beer the di- version of the annual occasion when the college gathered one hundred and sixty strong to honor its ancestor. By college custom, no speakers are al- lowed, but singing is quite in order. One table by the door was reserved for the more vocal members to lead the singing — Pigott, Anderson, Treat, Rip- ley, et al., and they did a creditable job, while maintaining their amateur standing. The main event of the Birthday parties is the rendering by Mr. Lohmann of A Tuneful and Solemn Ode. The choruses were taken by the college with some solemnity and diverse tunefullness. Much of the ooze ill the Nighf same spirit was recaptured in the Christmas party, with the addition of carols and f.ivors for all the members. The f.ivors consisted of an amaz- ing number of gadgets of all kinds, and the dining hall had much of the mele of a toy shop — proof that the Spiders had not lost their youthful spirits. One of the best explana- tions of what makes Jonathan Edwards run is found in the Sunday afternoon teas of Mr. and Mrs. French. The teas are heavily oversubscribed — so much so in fact that where to put the Increasing attend- Miigwjimj) Siiiiif mill Siinieis ante is a major problem. When weather permits, they overflow into the adjoining garden, but during the winter the mellow Sunday spir- its must be kept indoors, and close association with the master and fellows is at its pleasantest. The rigid self-discipline of the original Jonathan Edwards was observed when the tea-sippers limited them- selves to one lump of sugar or none. There are those activities, too, that don ' t adhere to a rigid sched- ule. Cocktail parties are not un- known in J. E., and entry D was particular about dispelling this illusion. Beer parties oc- cur about six times a year, outdoors when the season per- mits, in the Common Room tor winter quarters. Also un- scheduled are the snowball  M lights with members of the Y V ' It school. These at times take on the proportions of a major sport, and have made those involved familiar with the techniques of pitching and repairing broken win- dows. The old Cork and Bung ( lub has lost its formal ex- istence, but its spirit has been carried on in several infor- mal associations, which usu- ally develop just before din- i ner. There is also the Friday painting group, dedi- cated to the profuse strain of unpremediated art. They do paint — sometimes, but beware of letting the name mislead one from thinking it other than the chief heir of the spirit of the Cork and Bung Club. Not to be left unmentioned is the PBFP. This club is very particular, and won ' t tell what it does. The membership is as vague as its activi- ties, although it is thought that it is devoted to a worthy cause. The achievement of the year was the new por- trait of Mr. French. After much discussion, it was decided to hang it over one of the fireplaces in the dining hall. Thus the year 1942 has passed in Jonathan Ed- wards, and the Senior class makes way for the new. No longer will we pass the noble savage upholding the sun dial at the west end of the court, or be able to decorate him appropriately for Derby Day. No longer will we find all the an atmosphere and a tradition of friendliness that gates locked while Faffy and his afgan rival, Omar has held its subtle sway over us. And as in later of Kahandahar, have the first privileges of the life we look backwards, our years here will be college. Perhaps J. E. is a bit a I ' abri des choses. granted a chief place in the gracious sequel of But nevertheless, its ivory tower is covered with remembrance. M-Da) 165 I ATHLETICS A LWAYS an interested participant in Inter- ■ ■ ■ College athletics, Jonathan Edwards opened this fall season with a football game against Dav- enport. Led by Captain Dave Atkinson, and under the coaching of Brown ' s former star. Norm Dyke (now a law student here), the Spiders were nosed out of a win in the last few minutes. In- deed, with most of ' 3 9s team gone by graduation and the sophomore ball players out working with Spike Nelson, it wasn ' t until the Silliman game that J. E. saw victory. Don Sweetman, Cliff Steinberg were outstanding in this game. After meeting unmerited defeat at the coal- dust stained hands of Branford (have you noticed how that whole college closes up during a game? Their entire bursary staff is picked with an eye to future scores) , the big green was the guest of Eliot House at Harvard, Friday before the varsity game. Our hosts piled us with cider and roast duck, but the first half and most of the second saw a great green wave rolling steadily toward a Yale victory. With J. E. ahead 6-0, Eliot finally managed to push across the tieing touchdown, just as the game ended. Ed Lord dreamed up the plays we used that game. Gene Tunney has been after him for his Navy Muscle-Trust ever since. Once more our sincere thanks to Dr. and Mrs. Merriman for their hospitality on that pleasantest of all week-ends. Meanwhile Jim Anderson ' s touch football team was holding their own, taking almost as many as they gave. Chuck Ripley passed to many a touch- down, with Warren Miluis and Glen Smith scam- pering across with the bacon. The tennis tournament was going great guns, with Phi Beta, Beta Theta Pi, and (ssh . . .) Johnny Walker finally coming out on top for . . . and ladies ' man . . . itudciit J. E. and then going as far as the semi-finals in the inter-college play-offs. John Ashton won indi- vidual honors by winning the cross-country cham- pionship from an imposing field of barriers. Our team as a whole finished in second place. Although J. E. finished within easy reach of the bottom for the fall season (we were tenth, from every other angle it was a very successful season. Despite the fact of being the smallest college, more J. E. men participated in the program than did those of any other college. Many, many thanks to Mr. and Mrs. French, Mr. and Mrs. Adams, Mr. Bozyan, and all the other Fellows of Jonathan Edwards for making the long trip out to the playing fields to cheer our games. I might add that the dinner the Master and Mrs. French gave for the football team quite surpassed in quantity and delectability any of the varsity banquets held at Chi Psi or even Morey ' s. George Mills, ' 43, was elected captain of next vear ' s eleven. Back from a really old-fashioned Thanksgiving, Hockey started off the winter season. There were two games before Christmas, of which we won one. Anderson, Bud Hidenlang, and Phil Wilson skated and slid on their way toward making the necessary goals, while Dave Watson operated at I the end, making as many saves as his teammates did scores. (As a soccer goalie Dave is really good.) Meanwhile Dick Tumen ' s basketball team was practicing daily, and took a trip ' way over to the Medical School to trounce a quintet of doctors with bits of canvas still clinging beneath their fingernails. With Christmas over, we really hit our stride. At the time of writing the hockey team hasn ' t won m.inv more games and the b.isketball team Stoddart and Pete Wolfe form the nucleus. Prac- tice is called every day in the Lounge, and new developments in the overarm sidestroke are vehe- mently discussed. The fencing team, captained by Dunstan Lynch, is so far undefeated. They have won five tourna- ments in a row. Lucien Memminger and Jackson are the only boys still hanging on in the Boxing matches. Dave is so small I could almost take him myself, but Luce picked up some neat tricks Off (III a wcck-ciid dropped nine out of nine (that puts us in the second division), but the others are really hot. Captain Don Sweetman ' s swimming team, with but one member out for varsity, easily routed five teams, including last year ' s champion, Trumbull, only to sink on Silliman, whose team is thinking of going to the nationals. Timothy Dwight was good for no firsts and only one second on their part. George McNear, Amos White, Larry O ' Shaugnessy, Dave Jackson (undefeated). Bob while working with the Y.C.C. and is a hard man to beat. Sid Barr ' s Bowlers have won three so far. And if we could ever get all those squash ringers to- gether, we could show in this league. Wienberg and Golden spark this team. So far it has been a great year for Jonathan Edwards. Crew and Baseball prospects look good, and it has all been a lot of fun. 167 HONORARY FELLOWS President Charles Seymour President Emeritus James Rowland Angell FELLOWS Irston Robert Barnes Aisislant Professor of Political Economy Franklin Le Van Baumer Instructor in History Wendell Clark Bennett Associate Professor of Anthropology Jean Boorsch Associate Professor of French William Clyde DeVane Dean of Yale College and Professor of English William Glover Fletcher Instructor in Government and International Relations Richard Foster Flint Associate Professor of Geology George Heard Hamilton Instructor in the History of Art Charles William Hendel Professor of Moral Philosophy James Graham Leyburn Associate Professor of the Science of Society Theodor Ernst Mommsen Instridclor in History Andrew Richmond Morehouse Associate Professor of French Benjamin Christie Nangle Associate Professor of English Stanley McCrory Pargellis Assistant Professor of History Harry Rudolph Rudin Associate Professor of History John Edward Vance Assistant Professor of Chemistry Eugene Mersereau Waith Instructor in English William Weldon Watson Professor of Physics Charles Bradford Welles Professor of Ancient History Arnold Wolfers, Master Professor of International Relations ASSOCIATE FELLOWS Frank Altschul, B.A. 19o8 Robert Nelson Corwin Chairman of the Board of Admissions and Professor of German, Emeritus Eugene Arthur Davidson Editor, Yale University Press George Parmly Day Treasurer of the University Robert Frost Litt.D. 1924 John Farquhar Fulton Sterling Professor of Physiology Walton Hale Hamilton Southmayd Professor of Law Philip Hofer A.M. Harvard 1929 Robert James Menner Professor of English Garrison Norton A.B. Harvard 1923 Wallace Notestein Sterling Professor of English History Reeve Schley Fellow of the Yale Corporation Henry Gordon Sweet B.A. 1926 Alan Valentine President of the University of Rochester, and former Master of Pierson College George Van Santvoord Fellow of the Yale Corporation Herbert Eustis Winlock Litt.D. 1933 169 TN the files of the Slaie, the only college weekly, may be found a record of the college lives of two hundred and nine of Yale ' s best men, the Pierson Slaves. It is a picture of genuine architecture, a story of fun and achievement and a memory of sincere friendship. From the pages of the Slaie come the follow- ing excerpts and abstracts, indices to a year ' s history too full for comprehension by anyone who has not lived it. It is September: Slaves are busy lamenting the loss of old friends, and welcoming a wealth of new ones. Sophomores have a lot to learn about Pierson: It is a long way from the chem. lab. and the noise of the street, close to the gym., the Toasty, and Mitchell ' s. It has a large court in which everyone spends his time tampling the lawn into a golden mixture of straw and soil; and a smaller court where apple trees and sunbathers live in seclusion. It has four squash courts that are always busy at five o ' clock, a library with a Tower Room convenient for escape from room- mates and radios, a long alleyway, a windy arch- way, a tower, and a clock. Norm Boucher is tempting all sophomores and new fellows into the alcoholic ward with the sudsiest, singingest splurge the beer fund has ever financed. Mrs. Wolfers ' tea and talk on Sunday and Tuesday has already captured a tremendous ; Sl ' iiiifj a Young Man ' s Fancy Turns following; one needs only a German accent to eat with the German table and share in Mr. Momm- sen ' s sherry. October has filled the Pierson Alley full of Fire!! puddles and the puddles full of leaves. Everyone has settled down to sober study to start this year out right. The Dean ' s List shows a tremendous preponderance of Pierson men; the common room was packed for two discussions of the war; the library boasts three hundred new volumes; Louie Laun wearing Pierson ' s colors sallied out into intellectual combat with a horde of Smith ' s bright babies on WOCD ' s children ' s hour — knowsed them all out easily. Midkiff, McCorkle, Lilley, and Kehoe are busy as chairmen of Philosophy, In- ternational Relations, Bible, and Music groups. Librarian Howie Owen is just plain busy. A heartless editor whipped a Slave heeler until he shed the following verse: Cafcgorirally, a Poem, said the ed- itor, hut make it brief. Make it as short as the grass in the court; ice ' re crowded and haie no space as hare as there. Four enthusiastic sophomores refused to forget t was football season, held a cocktail party with 1 hundred and seventy guests, regretted it later. November and Indian Summer are certainly , artiio ' Call of the u iLI tricky. The quinces in the court are in full bloom and eleven Slaves are sniffling from refusing to wear overcoats. Jordan, LaClair, McCorkle and Toland are spending their week-ends in Northhampton and New London parleying over the good neighbor policy. A Slave in the shape of a beer mug is out to proclaim the second of Pierson ' s bachannales. For our four-day vacation and the weather on the week-ends; for our first steak of the season and our fifteen-B classification; for our half- written theses and the half-size butter pats with our dinner for these and all Thy mercies. Lord, make us truly thankful. Nobody knows what is happening this December. Christmas is coming. War has been declared. It is reading period. The SLnc was out for the Christ- mas Party, in three-color printing by Pete Reckard and Bill D. Campbell. Santa Lou Laun presented Ben Toland with a pound of clean liver in token of the life he leads, and Fellow Dean DeVane with a pair of rubber gloves to keep his hands un- soiled by our athletic policy. Mr. Sweet provided Christmas spirit in tall green bottles. Mr. Wolfers interrupts his series on world affairs for a discussion on the College in War Times. Pierson has two hundred and five air-raid wardens, including a man from St. Anthony, and four men to sit in the shelters. In the Common Room is a display of art on military themes, arranged and interpreted by Fellow George ffamilton. Mr. Nangle ' s commentary on the movies of famous football games shown in the Common Room was almost professional. Mr. Ernest Krenek of Vassar addressed the neophyte Music Club on The Role of Inspiration in Music. The Latin-American Conference to which Pier- MHi acted as host had to get along one evening without its prettiest South American delegate: Rog Eddy spoke such lovely Spanish. The Court is still inspiring verse: Collegiate eccentricities. May make the Fellows snort But I would thoroughly approve A diving-board in Pierson ' s court. Carden McLean and Tom Vogt ' s last-minute dashes to breakfast left an interesting Y pattern in January ' s first snowfall, by afternoon it was crossed and recrossed a hundred times, looked like a fancy doodle. Effects of the war are becoming increasingly numerous. The Pierson clock is blacked out; enemy bombers and Davenport men are out of luck. A film in the Common Room taught fifty Slaves the art of extinguishing incendiary bombs. Spotty Bowers, Dave T. Harris, Ed Ost, and George Welsh have developed a game of naval strategy played with model battleships; no one in ' ' Every time it rains 171 the entry can study — no one wants to, anyway. Slaves wept in their beer at the party for parting draftees: Baker, Cooke, Norm and Rog Eddy, Dave F. Harris, PhilHps, Kulikowski, Spalding, and Westfcldt. Pierson men were making the news. Mr. Wolfers and Mr. Fletcher kept the air-waves busy with discus- sions of the war. Fiowie Fioltzmann walked off with the DeForest Medal. George Hill was elected president of the Dramat; Bill Olsen, chairman of the Y. C. C. ; and Frank Lilley, presi- dent of Dwight Hall. His Imperial Highness Archduke Otto von Habsburg discreetly sug- gested a monarchy for Europe might not be such a bad thing. An enterprising Pierson engineer measured the distance on both routes between Pierson and Yale Station. His conclusion; It is three yards, two and one-fourth inches shorter via Elm Street, but a tunnel under Branford would be even shorter. February and Pierson ' s first blackout drill found everyone in the cellar playing bridge by candle light, Mrs. Wolfers set up a first aid station in the cloak room, and Dana Perry refused to let even his boss through the archway. The Slave came out as a valentine, octavo size and m blue and red inks, a strange mixture of I ' amour and I ' armee. The dining hall began serv- ing Danish spaghetti. m ifjic tii 1 Mc,r The Life of a Slave Rev. Reinhold Niebuhr, Pierson ' s representative on the Board of Preachers and leader of the Christian Conference, provoked a follow-up forum in Pierson led by Mr. Baumer. Mr. Leyburn ' s Haitian People won the Saturday Review ' s $1,000 prize for the year ' s best book on race relations; Ned Cook won the Neivs ' s prize for the best reporting of the year. Phil Weld claims the ice in the court is not smooth enough for a decent hockey practice. Spring comes with Florida vacations, the Annual Dinner, kites, tops, and mumbledy peg. The court is beaten to powder. Harry Beastie Carey knocks a few more softballs over into Davenport. The court is ploughed up, reseeded, and coaxed to a beautiful green by Commence- ment time. lolanthe, our Gilbert and Sullivan production brings new credit to Mr. Leyburn and discovers new talent among the Slaves. Tim Carpenter, George Haas, and Dave Wilhelm are seen frequently in polo togs. A few Slaves leave for the armed forces; their farewell parties are riotous — and melancholy. Compulsory athletics make us glad that Pierson is so near the gym. We have a bridge tournament which Backus and Tracy win. Someone comes into the dinlnir hall in shorts, tiles buzz around lamp shades, we have strawberry short cake occa- sionally — not so sweet this year as last. Pierson suffers two losses this year. First during Christmas vacation the familiar Dachshund WtilJi I is run down by an automobile. Slaves are no longer treated to the common sight of Mr. Mommsen strolling with his pet. Secondly Mr. Mommsen is secured by Choate School as a history master for the coming year, thus depriving Yale of a scholar, Pierson of a friend, and the German table of its guiding genius. Howie Holtzmann and Johnny Kncubuhl, who by the way were the writers of a sound and appealing theater column which appeared in the News, are the prime movers of the plan among the residents of Slave Quarters to give Mr. Mommsen, their Master, a new and lively Waldi. Consequently as a testimony of esteem and affec- tion, he is presented with WalJi II. The Slate publishes its last editorial, full of nostalgia and sentiment: To the editors of the Slave it has become increasingly evident that Pierson ' s greatest wealth is the cooperative en- thusiasm of its master, fellows, and students. When we look back over i941-1942, we know that it is not grades, or the war that we shall remem- ber, but a court full of activity, a thous- and hellos in the Pierson Alley, a tower with a librar , a clock and a weathervane. We ' ll remember the way the fellows file in to Wednesday dinners and their gossip with us at the other meals, how Mr. Flint and Mr. Leyburn trimmed us in squash, the times Mr. Mommsen has invited us to Mory ' s, the speakers Mr. Wolfers has brought to Pierson. We have all been Slaves this year, slaves to the heartiest fel- lowship in Yale. ■r r k After the gar, W ! - 173 ATHLETICS ' T ' HE objective eye of re- • - view cannot be cast in the direction of Pierson sports for the past year without noticing that a prospectus would provide better reading than the fol- lowing critique. Tea tables of 1935-36 and even those of ' 3 9 and ' 40 have been turned, and despite a prom- ising outlook at the begin- ning of the year the Slaves have failed to achieve the leadership in sports which has characterized them in past years. Under the tutelage of Spence Use the Dorais Silverthorne a hopeful eleven took the held in Sep- tember. A nucleus of veterans — Captain Page Anderson, Trench Campbell, Bill McCann, and Tiger McKinney in the line and backs Dick Scott and Loopy Laupus — was filled in by Senior end Rog Eddy and Sophs Brooks Fields, Bob Voigt, Phil Geyelin, and Fuz Holbrook. Starting the season with two wins, the Slaves ran afoul of the Berkeley Mitres who defeated them In a heart-breaker, 7-6. The remainder of the schedule was medi- ocre with two wins and two losses. The climax of the season came in the traditional Davenport encounter when a last second pass from Hol- brook to Geyelin was completed to tie the Hybrids 6-6 and drop them from the league race. The highlight of the fall season was the touch team, which steamed through an impressive record of nine wins and two losses. Losing early in the season to Silliman, Captain Boucher and his cohorts fought an uphill battle which was culminated in a decisive 36-12 victory over Calhoun. The passing combination of Wally Embry and Tom Vogt in the playoffs was largely responsible for Pierson ' s second defeat of Calhoun, 24-18. In the finale of the season, the Silliman Salamanders forced the Slaves to be content with second place by a score of 30-6. Charlie Larkin breezed through the tennis lad- der to become the Pierson representative in the Inter-College tournament. His strongest competi- tion came from Spurge Tracy and Don Alex- .inder. An under-rated, slow-starting basketball team compiled a record of seven wins and six defeats Ai aiin a fo[ tcinii to tie Branford for fourth place in the Inter- College standings. After losing the first two games, the Slaves, bolstered by the return of McKinnev and the addition of Stretch Smith, rang up a winning streak of five victories before their record 174 was further marred with defeats by Saybrook and Davenport. In the playoffs the Piersonites main- tained their reputation as giant-killers by defeat- ing Calhoun and Davenport, although losing again to Branford and Saybrook. Deacon Thurber and Boss Fields spelled Captain Boucher, Mor- rie Greenbaum, and Bill Laupus in filling out the quintet. represent a fair estimate of the team ' s true ability because several losses were by the narrow margin of one goal. The Pierson tide reached low ebb in the swim- ming competition when the sadly undermanned team defeated only T. D. while losing to the eight other colleges. Regulars Bob Schmidt, Johnny Robinson, and Captain Cardon along with every m- i tai ilif -tllv Mf ' t? L— r ¥ Lasf mi I? life fie In the challenge matches of the University Box- ing Tournament Page Anderson successfully de- fended his 16 5 lb. title by outpointing Luce Memminger; Jamie Kemper was runner-up in the 175 lb. class when he was decisioned by Jack Hopkins. An inexperienced Pierson hockey team was han- dicapped by a lack of replacements for a strong first line composed of Wally Ford, Franny Shat- tuck, and Capt. Beanie Weld. The sextet was rounded out by Bishop Olsen and ' Big Ed Ost on defense and Tim Carpenter in the nets. The season ' s record of 3 wins and 6 losses does not available draftee were not enough to stem the los- ing streak. High-scoring Captain McGoldrick and Lew McKinney led the bowling team, which climbed rapidly in the closing matches to roll into third place in the league standings. The Pierson Squash ladder was the scene of much activity during a winter season that was marked by the absence of Prof. Leyburn for the first time in many years. Dave Wilhelm and Howie Plummer were tops for the season, closely followed by Franny Shattuck, Charlie Jones, and John Greacen. 175 HONORARY FELLOWS President Charles Seymour President Emeritus James Rowland Angell FELLOWS Alfred Raymond Bellinger L.impso 2 Projessor of L.ithi John Milton Berdan Emily Saiiford Projessor of English Literature Frank Edward Brown Instructor in Classics Robert Lowry Calhoun Professor of Historical Theology Harold Glenn Dietrich Assistant Professor of Chemistry William Douglas Curator of Class and Ceramics in the Gallery of Fine Arts William Huse Dunham, Jr. Assistant Professor of History John Archer Gee Associate Professor of English Richard Glenn Gettell Instructor in Economics Basil Duke Henning Instructor in History Albert Galloway Keller William Graham Sumner Professor of the Science of Society Angelo Lipari Professor of Italian Louis Lohr Martz Instructor in English Everett Victor Meeks Dean of the School of the Fine Arts Sydney Knox Mitchell Durfee Professor of History Cornelius Osgood Assistant Professor and Curator of Anthropology I Elliott Dunlap Smith, Master Professor of Economics ASSOCIATE FELLOWS K. L ASAKAWA Professor of History Marshall Bartholomew Director of Undergraduate Musical Activities Samuel Flagg Bemis Farnam Professor of Diplumalic History Rev. Arthur Howe Bradford Fellow of the Yale Corporation LeGrand Cannon, Jr. Author, B.S. 192o Arthur Linton Corbin William K. Tounsend Professor of Law Samuel William Dudley Dean of the School of Engineering Walter Prichard Eaton Associate Professor of Playivriting Morris Hadley Lawyer. B.A. 1916 Samuel Clark Harvey William H. Carmalt Professor of Surgery Bernhard Knollenberg University Librarian Stanley Russell McCandless Associate Professor of Lighting Ashley Webster Oughterson Associate Professor of Surgery Leigh Page Professor of Mathematical Physics James Gamble Rogers Architect, B.A. 1889 Frederick Ely Williamson Railroad Esecutiie. B.A. 1898 177 I As the year runs out, we begin to realize how the Seniors of other years have felt, how much suddenly needs to be done, and how little time there is left to do it. Especially, in this year of war, we realize just how much Saybrook has meant to us and what the memories are that we will take with us. There are a lot of them, too — the water fights that raged up and down whole entries, the row of bottoms lined up against the courtyard wall as the losers in the raucous niggerbaby games paid off, the geniality and informality of the dining-hall, and the groups just sitting around in the common- room after dinner. We will remember the cakes and ale on Thursday nights with Mr. and Mrs. Smith, and the boys in the back room who always sang, — well, not off key too much. Barry ' s Glee Club and the Junior League girls all serenading us in the dining-hall, and Bill Douglas ' punch on Settlers ' Day and the bagpiper. These are the things that Saybrook means to us. The brightest spots in the fall of this year were, of course, the football weekends and their at- tendant uproar. Saybrook ' s hilarity was never very discreet and this year was no exception. We have heard rumors of several parties-to-end-all-parties that got to the point of necessitating police action in removing human debris. Confidentially, Jack Stunsi and Dick Bain threw a terrific party that filled the entry, and from all we could gather, all the party-goers as well. Lets we become immodest, let it be said that there were parties of all calibers, and no serious casualties have been reported. The dining-hall became Club Saybrook on Princeton weekend as Washboard Eddie and his Htippy Sail Fiimiliiir Fiill Scene jive artists took over, and their music had such charms that the enthusiastic patrons refrained from hurl- ing water and de- voted themselves ex- clusively to the beer. Music of another kind was wildly ap- plauded when Dean Meeks was host to a crowd of Seals at a musicale soiree. It was terrific success and the evening was climaxed by bountiful potations of Dean Meeks ' superlative and renowned punch. During the fall, there were several interesting meetings in the common room, one with Virgil Jordan of the National Association of Manufac- turers who gave us to believe that the country and everything in general was going to rack and ruin. Steinman, the photographer who took the amazing pictures of the crash of the Columbia River bridge, came and showed us his pictures, and gave us the story of why this happened. And there was a gentleman from the Japanese Em- bassy, one Juiji Kasai, who came to us in late Oc- tober and expounded platitudes on the subject of Japan and the war. He failed to convince any- one of anything and the impression he created was one of a large mouthful of teeth. At mid-year ' s, we noted the loss of Guy Demp- scy who went into the Army, Rick Franzen who went into the Naval Air Corps, and Bob Wallace who left to manage an airport in Africa for Pan-American. We saluted them and we ex- tended our best wishes to Russ Frve, who was in- valided home in February. Dick Gettcll came up from Washington, where he is on leave of absence from Yale and working for the Ortice of Price Control. He gave us a cry informative pic- ture of the nation ' s capital a t w a r , and told us at Chcfscrakc? length about his own particular job, the price con- trol of the textile industry. Toward the end of January, we noticed a de- cided briskness and an air of etficiency among Say- brook ' s swarming engineers, and we traced this to the fact that U. S. Steel, Baldwin Locomotive, and Consolidated Corset were stretching their long arms into the minor leagues in search of talent. Bill Hance amazed us by appearing freshly shaved at frequent intervals. There were several competent witnesses to this. We were conscious of an unaccus- tomed air of smugness among these worthies as they gazed upon the frantic efforts of perspiring Ac. men to meet thesis dead lines, and there was much talk among them of the indispensable technican which irked the prospective selectees no little. However, we were able to salve our wounded feelings by remarking on the Bohemian tendencies of these technical roof-dwellers, Aust, Chynoweth, Hance and Melcher and Gehrig, noticing the pro- pensity of these characters to fling water and sun- dry other things from their eyries upon unwary passersby. Also around the middle of the year, three of the prominent members of Saybrook took the first step toward matrimony. Bruce Loomis earned the sobri- quet of Lover by getting engaged and his daily airmail correspondence with California was a prodigous work of devotion. Frank Samford took the same leap at Christmas-time. During the year. Kay Pierson, Werner Stiefel ' s bride-to-be, was a frequent visi- tor to Saybrook, but this apparently had no great far-reaching ef- fect on the efficiency of our Chief Aide, as he watched over and oiled the smoothly- meshing gears of the Student Office ad- ministration, ably as- sisted by Walt Filley and Leo Aust (and Haircut Ivers) . Chuck Huntington kept the library at its best, and Bill Mc- Owen was tops as a playing athletic manager, starring in football, hockey and baseball. Personalities around the college were varied and many, and we contributed quite a few to various activities. Saybrook had three men in the DeForest Prize contest, Ed Waldrop, Frank Samford and John Arcudi. Samford also was spectacular in his handling of the Conservative Party of the Political Union, but no more so than his opponent, dapper Jim Kuth, who held the reins of power in the Labor Party. Sam Phillips and Gay Barnes are supposed to have impoverished the College Toasty by their expert manipulation of the pinball games, but poor Taz Bott fared not so well since crap games were few and far between this year. Joe Sea- crest finished off three successful years at the head of the Ncu ' s and be- gan to be seen around the college leading a normal peaceful life, while Sam Spalding took his place as the foremost keeper of ungodly hours. In the west Eililh- H msclf court, surprised passersby grew hardened to the sight of model airplanes zooming by their heads and came to realize that Freeman Eagleson and his group were no mere whittlers, but accomplished designers. Meanwhile, their far-flung model fleet was the despair and the agony of the maid and janitor service. In the same section, weird sounds coming from the upper reaches were finally traced to Chuck Frankenhoff, who confessed to a well- Hii i )y Warriors . . . nigh overwhelming desire to sing in the shower. However, in the east court, noises of a slightly different category but of a definitely greater strid- ency were traced to Bob House, who denied them. Winthrop Entry had an informal bridge club which played avidly and incessantly led by Dick Pierson and Bob House and by the end of the year they had become qualified experts in the art of snaring fourths. One other feature of Winthrop entry was the music of Julie Cahn who deserted his first love, the bull-fiddle, for the saxophone. He was an assiduous player. Tom Hess and C. D. Blake worked their heads oft on the Dramat production crew and anyone who saw the ' Frogs was willing to testify to their good work. Saybrook had its own Dramat and their midwinter opus, Life Goes to a Fellows ' Meeting — or Who Stole the Iron Maiden from Wrexham Tower? was a smash hit. Jim Fisher authored this production, with able assistance by Staff Campbell, and from the first line when the applause came in a roar, they knew they had a bii; hit on their hands. Jim Whitniore stole the show as John Archer Gee, while Pete Freeman, who played Sidney Mitchell to a T, will go down in history for his rendition of a Fireside Chat. Herb Winer and his portrayal of S. F. Bemis will be remembered, too, also Gessner as Dean Meeks, Boffey, Dwver, Loughney, and others. Then there was the first practice blackout, and the uproar as the Saybrook firefighters under Du- Val went out to battle the flames, and the highly organized air raid wardens herded the others into the cellars where we were del- uged by a horde of pant- ing freshmen. These are the things we will remember: the mass ex- odus of the Messrs. Duncan, Carrington, Warner, and Royal for their four-day week-ends in the haunt of the ski and the boot, Bruce Steere ' s complete inability to face anything but Palm Beach between Thanksgiv- ing and Christmas, Bill Harvey and his table draw- ers full of rocks, the club of sun-worshippers which gath- ered to bask and while away the late spring after- noons on the roof garden of Hadley Tower. Morn- ings in the dining hall as the eternally-damned thought and wrote furiously to get their daily themes done before 9 A. M. And the Christmas Party with hot buttered rum at the Master ' s Bfiil Mr luhin-, 7,i; ' «■ Washhoard house. Amateur baseball in the courtyard, or penny-pitching for the non-athletic, or rather for those who thought compulsory exercise too much. We will remember Margaret ' s efficiency in the dining hall and Mrs. Wilmot ' s geniality in the Master ' s office. We will think about the grand gang of Fellows of Saybrook, LeGrand Cannon, Walter Pritchard Eaton, Jose Arom and Cor- nelius Osgood who were new to Saybrook this year, Bob Calhoun and Harold Dietrich, Duke Henning and Frank Brown, the retirement of bristling Prof. Keller and last but not least, An- gelo Lipari and his famous Italian dinners. We will remember Mr. Smith ' s experimental inter- views, Charlie Rosenthal and his ever-ready thesis, Ed Waldrop ' s questions, the painting exhibit which proved that Ed Betts, Blake and Bill Bro- mell knew how to paint better than we had ever suspected, Shoulders Wallace, Bill Fessenden, and Jack Magee, captains of crew, and Bill Mc- Owen and Bob Masland, roommates who repre- sented us on the Senior and Junior Prom commit- tees. Memories of Talcott, Trowbridge, Lin k and Hume and that incredible old Ford which al- The white foam flowed free ways seemed to need about three hours of atten- tion before it would go anywhere. Bill Heiner who came to us from Wesleyan and Bill Burke, one of the few humans to ever escape from the wilds of Hanover and make a fresh start. Shall we mention the Senior picnic or merely think about it? At any rate, these are the things we will think about when we think about Say- brook, these are the things which are Saybrook, which give it a distinct flavor of its own. ATHLETICS A STRANGER stepping into the cloistered courtyard of Sunny Saybrook last Fall would have noticed at once the quiet look of grim de- termination on the faces of all loyal Brookmen. Not since 1936 had the silver trophy, symbol of all-around Championship, rested within these hal- lowed walls. The time for action was at hand; no longer would the teams of Saybrook be re- garded as soft touches by swaggering sister col- leges. Months of blood, sweat, and tears lay ahead, with only the gleam of the silver mug in Seal eyes. Would the men of Saybrook prove themselves equal to this Herculean task? Victory was the cry as the Fall season got under way. For three long years the Seals had languished in the cellar of the touch football league, but under the inspired leadership of Connie Melcher the 1942 six climbed to within strik- ing distance of the first division. Many took this as a sign of the new order in Saybrook; however, the foot- ball machine which answered the call of Captain Guy Gimme-the- ball Dempsey had what might be termed a disappointing season. Three scoreless ties and a victory over the Spidermen from Jonathan Edwards enabled the Brook to finish three rungs from the bottom of the lad- der. Coach Roche, the legal eagle, and a Princeton man on the side, did his best to whip together a formida- ble team, but the fickle finger of Fate intervened. Guy Dempsey ' s weekly hunting trips into the wilds of Long Island; Lover Loomis ' engagement to a sweet young thing from the west of New Haven; and Deacon Hicks ' broken leg were but a few of the many obstacles which arose during the season. To erase the bitter sting of defeat a few of our gladiators attended the banquets tendered by Silent Tad Eagleson. Yet out of this darkness came a sparkling victory over the Cantabs of Dunster House in a post- season invasion of the Cambridge Sanctuary. The 13-2 win occasioned a Victory Banquet in the Master ' s House, at which time it was announced that Saybrook ' s own Chub McOwen had been elected guard on the All-College team. Squash court keys began to clang through the late Fall air and prospects for a successful team Men (ij Irini Cll[ ft!illS nil seemed very promising. Then came Pearl Harbor! Portsider Rick Franzen wasted no time getting his degree in order to join the Naval Air Corps, and Dapper Dan Lamont signed up with V-7. Without these key men the Seals found themselves be- hind the eight-ball. The result was a series of shut-outs, except for in- frequent games won by default, much to Widdy Neale ' s disgust. As Saybrook merged into the Winter season, those who were in the know predicted that our bowlers were the class of the league, since our qualif)ing scores topped the nine other colleges. Taze Snake Eyes Bott was the Number One man and helped out with a phenomenal string of 137 as Berkeley was whitewashed in the opening encounter, four to nothing. The rest of the season found our keglers in the depths of defeat, and it is indeed difficult to find a plausible reason for this sudden reversal of form. Back Roir: McOwen, Johnston, Frankenhof, Masland. Front Row: Daugherty, Hopper, Chynoweth, Duling, Ellis. Turning next to Saybrook ' s finest achievement so far this year, we salute Captain John Body Chynoweth ' s basketball team, which brought home the championship for the first time in four years. Said referee Pickles Rich- ards at the start of the season, I like Saybrook. They ' re the team to beat, and indeed we were. Drop- ping only two encounters, to Davenport and Calhoun, (both these defeats were erased by brilliant victories in a second meeting) the combination of Dougherty, Chynoweth, Frankenhoff, Dooling and Johnson were the hottest team to be seen on the fifth floor of Payne Whitney in many a year. The other colleges, depend- ing on individual stars, were mystified by the Seals ' pre- cision and teamwork. Cap- tain Chynoweth lived up to his advance notices and was the outstanding player in the loop. Down in Podolofl ' s Palace for Pucksters, Beaver Smith has assembled a sextet who have actually been able to find the cage. With the season in its last stages, the Smithmen have hoisted themselves into the first division, a rarefied at- mosphere never attained by previous Seal blade- men. The stickwork of Hew Joyce and Hans Fadum ' s (Saybrook Fellow and Economics instruc- tor) work in the nets have been a particular joy. hroiisht I ' omc he baron. J—— — Mili|ilTi ' ■. i l ' HONORARY FELLOWS President Charles Seymour President Emeritus James Rowland Angell FELLOWS Theodore Babbitt Assistant Dean of the Freshman Year Alan M. Bateman Projessor of Economic Geology Adolph B, Benson Professor of German and Scandinavian Harold S. Burr E. K. Hum Professor of Anatomy Christopher M. Dawson Instructor in Classics Frederic B. Fitch Assistant Professor of Philosophy Harry W. Foote Professor of Physical Chemistry Marshall Hall Assistant Professor of Mathematics Alois F. Kovarik Professor of Physics Henry Margenau Associate Professor of Physics Donald G. Marquis Associate Professor of Psychology John Perry Miller Assistant Professor of Economics Leslie F. Nims Assistant Professor of Physiology Luther M. Noss Assistant Professor of Organ Playing John C. Pope Assistant Professor of English Richard A. Rathbone Assistant Professor of Drawing and Painting Richard B. Sewall Assistant Professor of English Lyman Spitzer, Jr. Instructor in Physics William K. Wimsatt, Jr. Instructor in English Filmer S. C. Northrop, Master Professor of Philosophy ASSOCIATE FELLOWS Winchester Bennett Ph.B. 1897 Augustus Silliman Blagden 19ol S. Francis Oilman Blake Dean of the School of Medicine, and Sterling Pro- fessor of Medicine John Frederic Byers B.A. 19o4 Henry Seidel Canby Lecturer in History Charles Edward Clark U. S. Circuit Judge. Second Circuit Arnold Guyot Dana B.A. 1883 John Wesley Hanes Fellow of the Yale Corporation Hudson Bridge Hastings Professor of Economics Arthur Joseph Hill Chairman. Department of Chemistry, and Professor of Organic Chemistry Henry Stuart Hotchkiss Ph.B. 19oo Charles Merz B.A. 1915 Edwin Pugsley A.B. 19o8 WiLMON Henry Sheldon Sheldon Clark Professor of Philosophy Edmund Ware Sinnott Sterling Professor of Botany Donald Goddard Wing Head of the Accessions Department, Yale University Library 185 O ' N September 18 the Salamander awoke from his sum- mer ' s sleep and flexed his biceps. It was to be his last snooze for many summers to come. He was now one year old. No longer were quizzical eyebrows to be raised in the direction of this n e w c o m e r to the Yale family, and the question asked, Who is this little monster? for the little monster had established himself. He had come upon the athletic field an infant, and had departed a verit- able titan with the Tyng and O ' Toole trophies tucked under his arm. At home, however, the Salamander is a peace- ful individual, pursuing any one of the various activities that lie before him. The spirit that exists is simply a reflection of that of the Master, and our emphasis is upon the expression of individ- ual ' s personality. To this end the Fellows, in co- operation with the Master, have opened many fields of opportunity and interest to us. Every other Monday night we are permitted to assemble ' The Old Ma All piny and no tvork in the Common Room over coffee for the Fellows ' Workshop hour. At this time one of the Fel- lows talks on the subject of the work in which he is engaged or in which he has a particular in- terest. The result is frequently an awakening on our part to hobbies or interests of which we might never have been made aware. Also to this end the Master has dedicated a number of magnificently equipped hobby rooms in which those who are so inclined may work. We now have an excellent printing press which Professor Bateman acquired for us, and also a fully-equipped photography room. On the athletic field Silliman seems to be well on the way to another suc- cessful )ear. Led by Captain Shorty Simonds ' accurate passing and Legs Murphy ' s tremend- ous speed, the touch football team came through the season at the top of the league. And this was only the beginning. Of course, you ' ll never get a loyal Salamander to talk about football, but excluding that, we can still boast a supreme swimming squad, squash team, and bowling team, as well as basketball and boxing teams that stand right up in the chips. And speaking of chips, who can ever forget those poker games over on the east side of the court? It all goes to prove that you just can ' t do too much studying in Silliman. It seems that all too many of the boys have adopted that old maxim, Never let studying interfere with your education. as their rule of life. Along with expanding second year interests in Silliman came the telephone. It has cost some of the boys almost more to keep their phone pay- ments up to date than it has to pay their term bills. And still the nightcalling goes on endlessly. Northampton and Poughkeepsie seem to be ever more constant — and yet less faithful — conversa- Too much thesis 186 ■r ' tionalists, but it would be a fallacy ' to suppose that the wires are dead to New London, Boston, and even little old New York. There ' s one diehard who even wants a private line between New Haven and Phil- adelphia. And who will ever forget those davs last fall when Chief Aide La- couture found time for the fair sex not only each and every weekend but also regularly in between. How, in addition to this, he ever kept the bursary staff in the top form it is, we will never know. We do know, however, that studying is only an extra-curricular activity as far as he is concerned. Thus, in addition to athletic prowess, the little two year old Sala- mander has shown himself a remark- able connoisseur of women. Our friends over T. D. way must always remember with envy the beautiful blondes — and brunettes — walking primly arm in arm with some loyal Salamander through the Temple Street gateway. Getting down to cases, there is abundant evidence of Dan Cupid ' s activitv in the Silliman halls and boudoirs during the past year. Fall football season saw mass romance sweep the campus. The pink and green powder room might have been the winning factor in the campaigns, but the Sallys claim all laurels for themselves. Dud Burchard was one of the first Silliman victims to go the whole way as he got the Big Yes from Marge Miller, a Kitty Foyle from Gotham. Dud admits that he gained courage from the sterling example set by Ed Frisby, who won Charlotte Hood, the Duchess from Conn. College, during the waning days of Spring a year ago; the wedding bells are slated to ring after Ed receives diploma and naval com- mission. The winter season saw the prom as the great stimulus to romantic extra-curricular action. Prom Day itself, Jim Lee, blonde, blue-eyed Romeo, clinched the deal with the Big Wind from the Windy City, Terrie (as in the Pirates) Gordon ■ it ■ •1- i Dcr Fuehrer koiinnf (as in Flash). May time will be mating time for this blissful pair. Not to be overlooked was the clean cut victory of Elliot Spike Macy; the comment around the campus was nice stroking, Bud. Much of the credit for these enduring triumphs goes by common accord to Mrs. Northrup, whose unbounded hospitality on vital weekends accom- modated the lady loves of up to seventeen Sally- manders. There was a particular rush on the Junior Prom weekend. Conspicuously absent Junior Prom weekend were Squash Court Pat- tinson, who was up in Franconia trying to get the nod from Awkward Audy, and settling for a July wedding; while the best Shapleigh could do in the back room was to get a decision post- ponement. No curfew thai iir ht In the meantime, x few remaining bachelors started looking to the Senior Prom in June. Con- spicuous victory for Pumps Murphy over the highly-touted machine highlighted the election for committeeman. All he now needs is to learn to dance. The ranks are thinning though, and scarcely an entry is without its empty rooms. Cliff Scudder has turned in his polo uniform for the khaki of Fort Riley, and Beck Bronson is now getting his laughs from the Marines. Jack Davidson and Bill Brinton have long since departed for Floyd Ben- nett and their wings. Sandy Mur- ray is at home ex- pecting a call from the Navy any day. Hooker Herrick is at camp at Fort Lee, Virginia. Shorty Simonds has already graduated and is about to enter the Army Air Force. Claude Douthit, another February graduate, has received his commission and de- parted. Before leav- ing, however, he managed to find time in addition to his duties as President of the Dramat to write and produce with Al Seldon and Frank Young a hilarious musical of the Gay Nineties for us. Among the Juniors, Greg lUanes is now Second Lieutenant Illanes of the United States ' Air Force in Los Angeles and expects to leave shortly for points still further west and action. Hamilton, Van S I y c k , Tyner, and Philbin are all in training at Roosevelt Field, and Vic Baer, Bill Coughlan, and Bill Snead are all members of the third Yale Unit which begins training soon at Floyd Bennett. Here at home the old order is undergoing some drastic changes in the interest of defense. The new War Time finds many of us pushing off to that eight o ' clock class at the crack of dawn. Practice air-raids are now part of the routine, and dog fights overhead are not uncommon. The pinball squad is now taking its workout in Bob Kiphuth ' s Tuesday and Wednesday night First Aid classes at the expense of the G. and H. emporium. Equal to the occasion, the latter have llh- (uis jonse Cuiii; 188 installed dime movies to recoup losses, but patriot- ism still seems to have the edge. Some of our num- ber have been peddling hot coffee in the middle of the night to spotters by the harbor. Others of us, with the foresight that we might get it back some day, have been donating blood to the Red Cross. None of us can fail to recognize what an ex- cellent drilling ground the courtyard would be, but we still hopefully look forward to the crack of the bat and the ensuing tinkle of the shattered court lights which inevitably inaugurate the soft- ball season. To all of us who are about to depart there come occasional moments of regret for the days we know will never come again. They have been happy days and we have enjoyed them all thoroughly. We are grateful to many, but especially indebted to a few. To the Fellows we are indeed grateful for their assistance in any problems which we may have taken to them, for their Monday night discus- sions which were always of real interest, and for their great generosity in giving to the College as a Christmas present, the fine radio-victrola com- bination we all have enjoyed so much. To Mrs. Northrup we are deeply indebted for making the College a home for us. We shall take with us lasting memories of her Sunday teas, her genuine charm and sincere interest in all our activities, her contagious enthusiasm, and her kind hospitality to all our guests. To the Master we can hardly hope to express our sincere appreciation of the many opportunities he has made available to us. Although engaged in a variety of fields, he has never failed to make himself available to us at almost any time, and his understanding has always been a source of encouragement t o us. William H. Worrilow ATHLETICS QILLIMAN was the defending intercollegiate athletic champion as the members of the col- lege started on the athletic campaign of 1941 and 1942. The championship had been won in 1941 not by a great many championship teams, but by many good teams, although Silliman had garnered the squash, tennis, and bowling championships. The prospects for the football team were bright as the Red and Green gathered for its first prac- tice. We had an excellent coach in Bill Poteat, an all-conference lineman at Depauw Univeisity. The first game, however, delivered a death blow to Silliman ' s hopes, for it started a string of injuries that was to last the whole season. Co-captain Warren Shapleigh, one of the best backs in the league, was put out for the rest of the season; Dick Long, a two-hundred-pound plunging back, was forced out until the last two games of the season. Kent Ellis, a running back, Paul Lacou- ture, end, Charlie Judd, tackle, and Jack Walsh, our triple threat back, were among the manv other regulars injured throughout the season. Losses to Calhoun and Branford started the season. Our next game was a 6-6 tic with a heavier, favored Trumbull team. We were not to tie another game until the next to last one on the schedule. But after consecutive losses to Davenport, Pierson, Berkeley, and Jonathan Edwards, we outplayed Saybrook, to garner a 0-0 tie. Our climax game with Timothy Dwight, the first contest, that had any bear- ing on the famed O ' Toole Trophy was a moral victory for the Silliman forces. Without the serv- ices of co-captain Dick Ohler, Lacouture, Ellis, the Silliman team outplayed the favored Prexy ag- gregation, and only a fifteen yard penalty kept them from scoring. Outstanding for the Sala- manders in this game were the passing and run- ning of Jack Walsh, the end play of Danny Copp, the line bucking of Dick Long, and the all-around Flasclincr, Neville, Smith (Captain), Tiittk ' , Vi 1 B.ui Rnu : Biirku ((..,ali), Huninid, B.imfc.rd, Xr- boldt. From Row: Tuttit, Swift, Judd, Ttllalian, Cowan, Jacobson, Meech. line play of Bill Crcighton, Ted Olmstcad, and Bud Sweeney. After the game Jack Walsh and Danny Copp were elected co-captains for next year. The touch season was just the opposite of the disastrous football record. Under the able leader- ship of Capt. Shorty Simonds, Silliman ' s gift to intercollegiate athletics, the touch team won the championship. It was a high scoring machine, with Capt. Simonds tossing long passes to trackman Reid Murphy for many scores. Pete Kennedy was the ace of the defensive setup, while Tom Man- ogue, Honus Wagoner, Vic Baer, and Mai Parry all could be counted on to throw many touchdown passes as well as turn back many an enemy threat. Silliman lost just one game in their march to the champion- ship. This was to Calhoun. When Cal- houn was beaten by Pierson, this pre- cipitated a three-way tie. Silliman won the round robin playoff. During their march to the championship Capt. Simonds and the team set a new league scoring record by defeating hapless Branford 122-0. Due to the fact that man - of the team couldn ' t get to Cambridge to pla ' Harvard, we were easily beaten, 3 6-18. Pete Kennedy was elected next year ' s captain. In the cross country race Silliman placed only one man high up. George Caulkins took time out from his soccer duties long enough to place fifth in the run. With reports from the wint;r season almost all in, Silliman has come very close to regaining her B.H k Row: Dyer, Kennedy, Manogue, Ellis, Murphy. Front Ron-: Rosen, Baer, Simonds (Captain), Wagoner, Parry. lead at the top of the Tyng standings. Three championships have already been won: bowling, squash, and swimming. In bowling the Salamanders lost only three points all season, with Frank Flaschner, Charley Smith, Jack Neville, Jack Eckle, and Gordy Tuttle forming the team for most of the matches. The swimming team, captained by Bob Tel- lalian, rolled through nine straight meets unde- feated. Rab Swift was undefeated in back stroke competition. Bob Cowan was the most versatile man on the squad, turning in victories in all events at some time during the season. Charley Judd in the breaststroke, Jack Bam- ford and Gordy Tuttle in the free- style. Pap Meech in the dive all con- tributed to Silliman success. In the meet with Kirkland house for the Harkness Trophy, we were nosed out 29-28 in a close and exciting duel. The squash team also went through nine matches undefeated. The season started with George Caulkins, Danny Copp, Bill Wor- rilow. Bill Clough and Norm Mackie lining up in that order. For a while Caulkins was lost to the varsity and Johnny Hughes and Bill Samford did fine jobs in filling in. The first match was our closest when we defeated a crack Davenport team . -2. The next matches were all clearly won until our last and climax battle with T. D. Everyone played in top form and we emerged with a 4-1 victory. The basketball team had tougher sledding. We finally ended up tied for sixth place with our arch rivals Timothy Dwight, although we lost two straight to that team. The loss of Capt. Shorty Simonds to the air force was never quite made up, although Neil Moses, Capt. Bill Moffitt, Bob Wells, Gordy Miller, and Don Hoagland put up some admirable battles. The hockey team just about split even. Capt. Ed Frisby on defense and all-college goalie Paul Lacouture have been the stalwarts on defense. The Kraut line of George Caulkins, Rab Isham, and George Mallinckrodt did a great deal of scoring, aided by Don McCluskey and Johnnie Hands of the second line. The game with Pierson was the most thrilling of the year, with Silliman behind 2-0 after two periods of play, only to win 3-2 with a minute left to play. This victory plus wins over Calhoun, Branford and Berkeley have been equalized by defeats from J. E. Trumbull, Saybrook, and the championship Davenport six. In Boxing we came in second, with Joe Sullivan fighting out of his class in the 14J division turn- ing in a fine victory. Jake Thornton won a repeat victory in the 13 5-pound class, and Bill Webber fought to a draw in the 128 division. As this goes to press Silliman is only seven points behind Davenport in the race for the Tyng Trophy and bids fair to cop the championship for the second year in a row. Sanford, Mackie, Copp, Wurrilow, Clough, Hughes. HONORARY FELLOWS President Charles Seymour PREsiDENfT Emeritus James Rowland Angell John Williams Andrews Assistant in Instruction in History Richard Cushman Carroll Assistant Dean of Yale College Franos William Coker Professor of Government Thomas Wellsted Copeland Assistant Professor of English Jack Randall Crawford Associate Professor of English CEaL Herbert Driver Associate Professor of Government Alfred Whitney Griswold Assistant Professor of Government and International Relations Ashbel Green Gulliver Dean of the School of L w Howard Wilcox Haggard Professor of Applied Physiology LooMis Havbmeyer Associate Dean of the Sheffield Scientific School Robert John Herman Kiphuth Associate Professor of Physical Education Bronislaw Kasper Malinowski Bishop Museum Visiting Professor of Anthropology Henri Maurice Peyre Sterling Professor of French John Marshall Phillips Assistant Professor of the History of Art Eugene Victor Rostow Associate Professor of Law Kenneth Merwin Spang Instructor in Economics Joshua Irving Tracey Associate Professor of Mathematics James Grafton Rogers. Master Professor of Law ASSOCIATE FELLOWS Edwin Borchard Justus S. Hotchiiss Professor of Lair John Rensselaer Chamberlain B.A. 1923 Hendon Chubb Ph.B. 189} Albert Godfrey Conrad Associate Professor of Electrical Engineering Wilbur Lucius Cross Dean of Graduate School, Emeritus Winthrop Edwards Dwight B.A. 1893. Ph.D.. LL.B. Henry Solon Graves Dean of the School of Forestry. Emeritus Deane Keller Associate Professor of Drawing and Painting Gilbert Kinney B.A. 190} James Lee Loomis Fellow of the Yale Corporation Ogden Dayton Miller Director of Alumni Relations, and Chairman of Ath- letic Association Walter Millis B.A. 1920 Benton Brooks Owen Associate Professor of Chemistry Justice Owen Josephus Roberts A.B., LL.B., LL.D. The Right Rev. Henry Knox Sherrill Fellow of the Yale Corporation Henry Lewis Stimson B.A. 1888 Lewis Thorne Assistant Psychiatrist Laurence Gotzian Tighe Associate Treasurer of the University Mu ' iH Wilson B.A. 1906 193 MEHITABEL BASSET BISHOP (artist un- while toastmaster extraordinaire, Beast Boyce, known) hanging there on the wall must barters potted plants for kisses among the fair have known that the summer invasion of Japanese guests. There Bob Reeve will be found in a wig; Beetles into the Prexie court-yard should not have card-sharp Corning receives his just recognition been ignored. The familiar scenes disarmed us. and Tom Ennis and Dan Dugan (the roughest, The Black boot-boys at the gate, Bob with the latest dope on the World Series, the bicycles in the racks, the onslaught of the Athletic secre- taries shut our eyes to the significance of the brown patches of rotting grass around the court- yard. Now (after Pearl Harbor) as we sit sadly in the Town-hall dining-room, fingering our spinach and idly sniffing the Boston Cream Pie, we see our error, but the valiant spirit of the Red-machine is not daunted. In spite of your stern eye, Mehitabel, we review the year with an eye to the facts of fun and fancy through which we have passed since last September. Thus we have the mid-winter snow-ball bar- rages in the court which force the ever-watchfu! Bob and Jack to cower behind shielding pillars; the occasional bicycle or beer-can marathons around the quadrangle walk; the sun-bathing in the upper-gutters of the dormitories; innocent girls leaping out of windows to make heroes out of Rumboughs; easy relaxation with Larry Barker ' s sun- lamp supplying a ruddy tan to the features pale and wan with hard study; sleeping in the shade of the Magnolia tree and the Master ' s Sunday teas. The spiritual es- sence of unbridled hilar- ity becomes incarnate in the Christmas dinner. There Dr. Haggard, pillow-paunched and hoary, passes out the complimentary presents to Fellows and students. There the doctor receives the traditional and coveted kiss from Mrs. Rogers, toughest men in Yale) swagger away with the compliments of the court. Looking to the menu, we find such delicacies as Suckling Pig, Giblet Gravy and Vina Conchali Special. ' Tis a Bacchanalian Orgv. It is only the first of the I ' BK Buck beams; Rev and Reams orgies which form p.irt of the spirit of Timothy Dwight. rhcn there was Plaster Night dinner (commemorating the collapse of the ceilings in the college ' s early years), the Derby Day Garden Party with lanterned courtyard, Charlie Chaplin movies, beer and hot-dogs, and finally Field Day when ice-cream sticks, steaks and soft-ball were the principle sources of entertainment. A more sober pleasure were the intermittent college dinners after which the college convenes in the lounge to listen to the chosen speaker for the evening. This year we were addressed in- formally by Mr. John Wheeler-Bennet, authority on international affairs; Mr. Harry Flannery who had just returned from a year in Berlin where he had replaced Mr. William Shirer; and Mr. Francis Henry Taylor, director of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City. Probably 194 nowhere outside the university could such privileges be given as small a group as the students in Timothy Dwight. When a thing has been done twice in the Yale Community it becomes a tradition. For the second time Dr. Havemeyer presented the college with a gala Banquet. It is now a tradition and a very pleasant one. In addition to the cigarettes at every table, the after-dinner cigars, delicious wines, pastries and deserts, a ni.igician mumbo- Pitbis Could tij ' n have conic out of a ni ' r jumboed in the lounge after dinner. Where is that little Hindu boy who was found lurking in the audience, later to disappear up a rope never to be seen again. Who doesn ' t know about the catacombs in Timothy Dwight? The long, silent subterranean passages bely their lonely appearance. Be- hind closed doors there is a ceaseless hum of activity in the shop, the printing-press, and the dark-room. Those mysterious figures you saw sneaking about the town-hall in the dark of the night last November were spies (Dave Bridgman and Bush Smith) from the shop. Long months creeping and crawling along the eaves and through the bushes with measuring tape and carpenter ' s square enabled them to turn out an exact replica of the Town-hall modeled to scale with an exact copy in miniature of OUie Toll reading a condensation of UlysH ' s in the library. No less active has been A mail ' s the Printing Press. The press, guided by Pete Hooper and cohorts Dick Neale and Dick Stimson, is voluntarily responsible for Personal stationary, Christmas cards, occasional books of poetry, the college magazine, the Town Hall Bulletin, and the College Year Book which was arranged, printed and distributed to the members of the college. Cooperating with the Printing-Press is the dark- room directed by Al Scher. Many of the interested students have turned out potentially prize- winning pictures. Those lovely pictures in the little book in the lounge were not done by the Dark-room group in spite of the offered assistance of Barney Conrad and his live Manikins down in Entry B. (Let ' s be roommates, Barney!) The library, managed by Ollie Toll, is the largest library of all the colleges, having numerous magazines (ranging from The Yale Record to the latest Scientific Journals), musical records, and a special fund by which to purchase odd books of contemporary interest. Efficiency plus was the esprit de corps. Who was it that spent the night locked in the library and was found in a faint the next morning bent over a copy of Swiss Family Robinson. Bob Clark and the boys, components of the Glee Club and the Grunions, made merry at all the col- lege occasions with harmonic renditions of Little ' Liza Jane, Dark -Town Strutter ' s Ball (It ' s still with us), and an occasional George Bermingham - Wy- oming - warbler - a man — for a ' fhaf! special. Some day maybe Stan Kennedy will give us some Papaya to take home to the girls. He gives it away in the high Hawaiian tenor while little Ed Friedman reaches third bass, or is it first bass, without shifting a gear. (Ed. Note: Mixed metaphor). Congratulations are in H i Waferboy 195 ceaer za ta Cta iac iaae fTtrfWcaE jwb sfc ess Tht aaerrT-aEaiers aa dse sasnasr? ■■ ' ere coEScar- eeaiiS BKac «f 2 Ceatsr iar One .K£ . sas£. hr Ife. C ada Hanrftng;, EBceEdr dzsxx d. Ahsr ytz. Hxdmg mt caffled ib die coJon Gearse I mil III! Ill uiMiLta i «f e gnx naickr Qie «f Mc Ks sL Tfae pocpiMe ot dik armt ' V2S c zfiood 2 isaoss iwfiwtjre cosxucr be- tiie ' ttt ' - ' and de civic fife of tisecr r ' A Ds iBi aad Esnnf abaoc tfa r f2scisi2£ ' ifng add ttiB %9 s coBrc-KwasL. , Tiae znsoisioQ s g wtamm eae zad de puiilf ji w of go«-erEBBexs hzre ie ZB t e tftabiSadaataa. ai 2 labanr w oie bodu aad veriedbralt see deroeed p nat aA r t arte Oc er Mannar cisb ven: die Es gjSdi G?o.: sead dee Var-dbcoMMa Gtoap. The Eji£.- Gcmp, diffffrrrd br Hed t ashte, pEoride: die Veadicrrjtiic f ccilk aaagame - «f espBcmmm iiK kam mtiAen ■mito -wtsx. ' laeeseiiu in «ripB2] vr: ' Atrmmm gnwp fwafriwwfd for e-b c : die iSsecnon of die inwg w Tliie acure «ca d die tedoHqoe vi var and die : vtvtired in die ate of Ae aaadero w : Kcc Vliile roar corenpondent pja 2 tv MBBan (aiiaaanne coone Ko rt, .(w McOermoK and friea -. 3 . c y predacsisiz die TanoDS traMk of Vodd Var n. Ir ' s aH There oc tbi 332sp rf TOO -BraLE:- ' k k for it. A2 an-grcmp iras proposed 2iad is. at pces- eur. besisakig ro take T r|v doe pnipoK beiog tx scsasoiate j nMMr fr die scod srs. an hasssif. in pictorial expretsuta. Jack Chzpia kas ako CBggested a nntritiosi clid ; vbile 2 l mld-«p Abber Horn: dtd} i bdgag backed br Ted Imui) «■ - HarrJsMi, and BiD Aycrigg weep far £ 0« d-ttiidy habitt group. All are being givtsj due c «n jderation b;. the If ' oole) ' fund ConBnitiee- The Wooley Fund   the subtle source of MJpply for the varitw needt wf the college. TTii Committ : ' , wat organized to administer a gift- fund in memfjry of Mott Woole ' , a Ujfmec memhvr of Timothy I wighr: OJlege, Tl e mooej ' may be used for - - ' -ng •w)riuM may be of use to tK-; hjemtmba- the Oiristma . .:.:,--r Vina Conchali Special. Ke- rnember the M appy jerseys worn b;. the hodury u m} Remember tht errati clock in the dining-room which guarantees at least one missed i£«trr SsarM Hart 5ar i -rr-TT ? ' i- - .T -i  isss jLmiel TaesE  ±:-r -Tg- juar iiss s: TIT lie Vhibct Fnar. r. ui,iii r A jic ac 3E jiiii axsarr jp-t .-gTit-J ; ■jisrss aa a ocots =ie sstt 3r zie T esr. - rf w fli cnesEE st r i ' kr- n; aainic • ji -m. -i t i_, TanMcrr 3  -:?7r - xL ae snecnaHEE 31 MC ATHLETICS I ' HE T.D. teams fall into various categories, - - according to their confidence and ability. Hence, to lapse into fowl terminology, Group 1 is the crowing cock, the confident rooster. Group 2 falls into the classification of the unpredictable, the hen who might lay an egg at any moment, while Group 3 is the wet and drooling just-out- of-the-shell type. There is a fourth group, the ugly-duckling class, which is that of the scorned and sometimes beautiful. Group 1 consists of the moderately dependable sports. Squash, Hockey, and Tennis. The squash team through the efforts of able and enthusiastic Doug Kerr, Stan Rumbough, Spindle-Shanks Chapin, and Bill James, have won three matches and lost one. Occa- sional subs have been Ollie Toll and Bill Ay- crigg, whose enthusiasm particularly conceals his embryonic talents. Like squash, the hockey team, captained by George Bermingham, manages to acquire its share of the spoils. To date, the pucksters have won four games, lost one and tied one. The team is small, but its coordination is as good as that of .iny Prexie „nL il illll Tie for fint . . . Tniic „ul team in the past — and there have been good ones. Mainstays on de- fense and in the for- ward wall have been the recently drafted man-mountain Meredith Boyce, Stan Romeo Rumbough, Tokle Trudeau, Broadway Bert Taylor, and Captain Bermingham. For the past three years the fall tennis tournament has been won by a T.D. racket wielder. This year Bobby McKenna carried on the old tradition set by senior Grant Wilmer. The unpredictable sports include Football, Touch Football, Cross Country, Track, and Bas- ketball. The Footbal team went through a cycle of alternate sin and redemption, finishing the sea- son with four defeates, three victories, and two ties. Captained by Chuck Emery, in the absence of Eddie Pope, the season began with a tie, followed by alternate defeats and victories, was then climaxed in the Berkeley game, when the team covered itself with glory by downing the ultimate league champions 19-0, and concluded in a sinful draw with Silliman. Bowing out of the inter- collcge competition this year were seniors Chuck Emery, Nick Fox, and Elliott Killer Cohen, Get it in . . . stalwart, hard-charging regular center, who has held odwn the position for three years. The Touch Football team started off with a bang, winning its first three games, then it tied one, and turned around and went the other way, losing five straight. Outstanding in combat were Captain Grant Wilmer, who, although plagued by a trick index finger, and a cancerous left toenail, courage- ously led the gentlemen gridsters through a discouraging season. Supporting him were seniors George Bermingham and Eddie Pope, juniors Dick Besse and Flash Whittemore. The fall Cross-Country Mara- thon saw Happy Jack Tabor take a close second place. Racing with him were senior Nick Fox and junior Walt Rodiger. Before the opening game, T. D. anticipated many glorious victories for the Basketball team. Unfortunately the unpredictable hoopsters waited five games before chalking up the first win, which was followed by three more to end the first round. After Captain Don Kubie was drafted, Scratch Kranfield took over, and proceeded to lead the team to several victories, ably supported by senior Melancholy McGowan, iunior Claude Hart, and sophomores Floyd Fay, John Kubie and Jack Ferguson. Two extra-league games with Trinity Parish, and the Pratt and Whitney Training School were lost by narrow margins. Barring draft difficulties, next year the Prexies should have a group of seasoned veterans CO carrj ' on. In Group 3 are Boxing, Wrestling, Fencing, and (with reservations) swimming. Lack of enthusi- asm and subsequent small turnouts accounted for the deficiencies in the first three sports. Swim- ming, however, shows some indications of future promise, and although the team has only won one and lost four meets to date, it should fare much better next year, with such capable natators as Captain Jim HoUoway, junior Dick Battistella, sophomores Larry McEvitt, Hank Szewcynski, Beardy Bill Ingram, and Russ Downey. The lone member of Group 4 is the previously scorned Bowling team. Led by the brothers Zeldes, the T.D. Keglers are, at present, at the top of the league, with four wins and one tie. Seniors who will bow out of the alleys are Charlie Kappler and Karl Hauser. Other pin pulverizers have Down liith BraiiforJ been Bill Ingraham and Dick Morse. Thus the T.D. sports set-up to this point. The Prexies ' future looks bright, and in the meantime Timothy Dwight keeps its eye cocked to the spring season when we expect to crash through to win the coveted Tyng Cup. HONORARY FELLOWS President Charles Seymour President Emeritus James Rowland Angell Werner Bergmann Assislaiil Professor of Chemistry Ralph Henry Gabriel Lamed Professor of Ameiicin History Lansing Van der Heyden Hammond Instructor in English Frederick Whiley Hilles Associate Professor of English Harry Mortimer Hubbell Talcott Professor of Greek George Edward Lewis Instructor and Curator in Vertebrate Paleontology Klaus Liepmann Assistant Director of University Orchestras John Spangler Nicholas Sterling Professor of Biology Edward Simpson Noyes Chairman of Board of Admissions, and Associate Pro- fessor of English Eugene Ernest Oakes Assistant Professor of Economics Joseph Seronde Benjamin F. Barge Professor of Romance Languages and Literature RoscoE Henry Suttie Associate Professor of Citil Engineering Willard Boulette Van Houten Instructor in Economics Charles Hyde Warren, Master Dean of the Sheffield Scientific School, and Professor of Mineralogy ASSOCIATE FELLOWS Stanhope Bayne-Jones Professor of Bacteriology Frederick Trubee Davison Fellow of the Yale Corporation Richard Frank Donovan Associate Professor of the Theory of Music HoLLON Augustine Farr Curator of the Yale Memorabilia Library Samuel Herbert Fisher Former Fellow of the Yale Corporation Clements Collard Fry Lecturer in Psychiatry and Mental Hygiene Frederick Augustus Godley Associate Professor of Architecture Andrew Keogh Uniiersity Librarian, and Sterling Professor of Bibli- ography, Emeritus William Raymond Longley James E. English Professor of Mathematics Chester Ray Longwell Henry Barnard Davis Professor of Geology Mark Arthur May Director of the Institute of Human Relations, and Professor of Educational Psychology Underbill Moore Sterling Professor of Law AHARDYCE NiCOLL Professor of the History of the Drama Edward Earned Ryerson Fellow of the Yale Corporation George Henry Soule, Jr. B.A. 19o8 Rev. Anson Phelps Stokes Former Secretary of the University Charles-Edward Amory Winslow Anna M. R. Lauder Professor of Public Health Milton Charles Winternitz Anthony K. Brady Professor of Pathology My God, Ragout of beef! WT looked out of our window today and saw grass, green grass, in the Trumbull Courtyard, and blue sky overhead. After weeks of the usual drizzling rain, bleak cold sky and the damp cold days that characterize New Haven weather, it was a warming sight to see all these signs of spring. Yet the idea of spring brings with it the remembrance that June 8 is almost here, and Commencement. We ' ve been looking forward to it for four years and now that it is upon us, we ' d like to delay it as long as possible because it also means departure. It means departure from Yale, and from Trum- bull, where we ' ve made our home for three years. Here ' s fa good old Yale! They have been three wonderful years, filled with rich associations, good friends, some study and lots of fun. Memories of Bull sessions in 1179 and cocktail parties in the penthouse will endure for- ever. We suppose it has been an isolated life in a way because there is so much going on in Trum- bull that there ' s not too much inclination to go outside. Perhaps that ' s the source of the con- fusion as to whether the University or Trumbull College is Yale. Trumbull is bounded by the Sterling Library (which no doubt accounts for her pre-eminence in scholarship), the College Toasty (where the pin-ball machines are), the tracks of the Connecticut Company trolley line, and Berk- eley College (where the Master of Trumbull has his garage), and her life is colored by all four. Considering our size, we have more than our share of intellectual giants of Phi Beta Kappa, Tau Beta Pi and Sigma Xi, such as Jud Paul, Tom Weirick and Bert Ingley. Bert has a key from all three, and it is rumored that the American Plane, Crane and Endless Chain Co. is working on a link- steel watch chain so he can wear them all at once. As for athletes, it might be said that we have a monopoly, what with Al Bartholemy, captain of the football team. Chuck Seclbach, captain of basketball, Jim Carton, captain of baseball, and Vince Carpenter, captain of track. When one adds Frank Kemp and Ted Turner of the varsity football team, Rab Halsey of the ISO ' s, Bert Ingley, the sharpshooter of the basketball team, Al Hunter of Bob Kiphuth ' s swimmers and Jack White, varsity baseball catcher, it can be readily seen that the traditions of Bull athletic supremacy, started in the days of Kelley, Colwell and Frank, are still flourishing. Trumbull ' s social season was ushered in with a bang Virginia weekend, when Miner appeared in Siiou bound 202 the Bowl with a blonde bombshell that diverted considerable attention from the game until Yale ' s closing rally. Jerry Harwood found a telephone in his room (which used to be Mr. McGee ' s office) , but unfortunately the University had not over- looked anything — they took it out two days later. The big parties got under way the next weekend, with Dick Howson ' s and Jack Mueller ' s gala in Entry G. Tom Weirick first bared his fangs at this party. Russ Barbour, Bud Hobbs and Steve Beard kept things rolling with a super-party Army weekend, featuring a bartender and a Harlem o rchestra. Meanwhile, of the Trumbull contingent at Vernon, Gene Curtis, Al Esser, Artie Madden and Tom Turner were maintaining Trumbull ' s social prestige in ShefFtown with weekly gather- ings at 370 Temple Street. Jonathan Trumbull ' s birthday party on October 17 brought steak, beer and President Seymour. Bill Johnson ' s Glee Team performed nobly, but left every one waiting for the finish of The Last Cigar. Somehow the center table didn ' t seem the same without Russ Bradley. The familiar click of Irv Percentage Ingra- ham ' s roulette wheel was not audible this year, because, according to Irv, the house didn ' t get a big enough take. But in an effort to alleviate the tedium of week-day evenings, a discussion group was formed by Hank Calnen, Ed Digan, and his conscience — Walt Rodgers, and open forums were held nightly in the back room of the Old Heidel- berg. An all-time record was set during the fall by Trumbull Xiitas Parly Plii flier, lie ' s loaded I Al Bartholemy ' s girl from Oregon, who arrived Wednesday before the Princeton game, and didn ' t leave until after the Harvard game. The term ended with the Christmas Party, at which Bart, playing Santa Claus, presented a well-merited prisoner ' s suit to Lifer Kemp, while Frazier Booth and his ubiquitous camera recorded the event for posterity. The day of departure for Christmas vacation witnessed a radish barrage from which Dean Noyes barely escaped with his life. The dark drear days of the winter term wit- nessed the birth of the Epic, which has long since become a Trumbull classic. These days Cadet-Major Elmore Willets wore a harried look brought on by his responsibilities as head of the Army R.O.T.C. As a result of the activities of the newly elected Trumbull student council, the lounge played an increasingly important part in Trumbull ' s social life, with the addition of a back- gammon board and a collection of swing records. However, the disappearance of a pack of needles a dav was a considerable handicap. By February there was a well- beaten track to Entries F and G, worn by men coming from all over the University to ask Jack LaValla and Fritz Keith how to do their Chemical Engineering, while at the other end of the College, Sabe Sanger and Chuck Murphy revived the lost .irt of pie-throwing, and speaking of Entry F, we feel that Johii Pocock should get some sort of award for livini; across the hall from 1179, and still keeping his sanity. Just before the blackout, for which Fire Fighter Kemp had had some previous preparation with .i mattress fire two floors below, there was a marked swing of Trumbullians in the direction of Con- necticut College, led in great part by Harry Callow and and his Chrysler. Bridge, however, still ret.iincd first place as our favorite pastime. Oi ' ci- the bill . and any one looking for a game could always find one in 1200, home of Bucko Selz and Commodore Part- ridge. As an added allurement there- was usually a crate of oranges in the room. Another highlight of the winter term, and one which in some meas- ure proved Trumbull ' s superiority to the other colleges, was the triumph of Jack Kieran (of Kieran and Son, Quiz Experts), who teamed with Moose Miner to win the Whizz Kid contest of WOCD. The Prom came in March and all Trum- WVc , ln,rf kllou A Bull oil a hi of contmuous after eight hours dancing. With the coming of spring, Huck Bevans began supervising the daily practice sessions of the Trumbull ball club in the courtyard, and Al Daily, who had been grounded by winter ' s inclement weather, was able to get his plane up again. After seven years, Jim Allen decided that Vassar wasn ' t the answer and cast about for greener pastures. Russ Monroe, in the Medical __ , School since September, welcomed _j rij|BM neophytes Chick Sherwood and Ned ' DuVivler. Hank Gerling, a benedict of two years standing, offered con- gratulations to grooms-to-be Chuck Seelbach, Bert Ingley and Stan Martens. Belt Copp anticipated the University ' s compulsory physical training program by inaugurating a new conditioner of his own: crush- ing beer cans bare-handed. Those headaches that bothered Norm Mann for a while were finally diagnosed as the result of trying to read and understand his own student outlines. April saw Harry Hein lead the railbirds out to Elm Street to pass judgment on the Hillhouse co-eds. Of course all these incidents and personalities contributed to our en- joyment of life in Trumbull, but enjoyable as they were, they still were, after all, only incidents, and bull, or at least that part of it which was awake, while we may in the future, in digging through was treated to the sight of weary prom-trotters our memories, uncover these high points first, we and their slightly bedraggled dates at breakfast will eventually come to rest on the solid bedrock 204 of pleasure in memories of the everyday life and routine of Trumbull — Bert Sheppard hunting through the dining hall every noon, trying desper- ately, and successfully to keep track of Trumbull athletics. And Chick Sherwood, who in his quiet, pleasant, yet efScient way, has brought a new and larger meaning to the position of Senior Aide. Every phase of life in Trumbull has benefitted from the sympathetic interest and influence of Dean and Mrs. Warren. It has always seemed amazing to us that Dean Warren could find time to do justice to both his position as Master of Trumbull and Dean of Sheff, but he fills both positions ably and apparently with case. His humor and geniality are always present, whether you find him in his office, in the dining hall or out watching a Trumbull football game. Mrs. Warren ' s grace and charm make themselves especially felt at tea every Tuesday, where she ac- complishes perfectly the double task of entertain- ing and feeding all comers. The record score on Mrs. Warren ' s pin-ball game was held for a while by Lansing Hammond. And so we leave Trumbull and all its associa- tions, but with the hope that we will return again sometime in the future to consult Brother Jonathan. ATHLETICS npHE Trumbull Bulls charged into the Inter- - - college area this fall and gave notice that they were going to be a force to be reckoned with in the race for the Tyng Cup. The footballers, led by Captain Weirick, had a good season, winning five of their games, tying two, and losing two. In the season ' s opener with Pierson, the Bulls were nearly thrown by the brawny Slaves, but managed to hold in the crises to eke out a 0-0 tie. The line, weakened by the absence of Chuck Seelbach, veteran guard, gave up a lot of yardage; the attack, as yet lacking polish and precision, was bottled up by the Slave line. In the next game, a much improved team swamped Jonathan Edwards, 19-0, Fred Sutro gave a brilliant ball-carrying performance behind excellent blocking on the part of the entire team. The next game, with the Berkeley eleven who later became champions, was a heartbreaker. In the first scrimmage play of the game, the Mitres executed a sleeper play that was good for the only touchdown of the day. Though impeded by rain and a muddy field, the Trumbull line, sparked by Seelbach, Jack Shay and Belton Copp, pushed Berkeley around almost at will; unfortunately, the L 205 scoring touch was not there and no touchdown resulted. Again in the SiHiman game the Bulls were caught off their guard by a well-executed sleeper play, and the Salamanders took a lead of six points. The Trumbull attack got rolling, however, and soon the brilliant running of Jack Stroube enabled the Bulls to tie the score at 6-6. Though Trumbull again advanced to the enemy two-yard stripe, two fumbles and a fifteen-yard penalty dissipated the scoring threat, and the game ended in a tie. Timothy Dwight and Cal- houn fell before Trumbul l might in the next two games, by the scores of 13-6 and 7-0 respectively. Leo Novarr ' s interception of a Calhoun pass set up the only score in a hard-fought game. Bran- ford won the next game 7-()., the conversion being the margin of victory. The Bulls went into the Davenport game as decided underdogs, but in a hard-fought battle marked by excellent line play, they emerged 2-0 victors. Saybrook, the last opponent on the schedule, was beaten by a great third-period surge in which Sheppard scored twice and Kennard converted both extra points. Mainstays of the Bull line were Coe and Captain Weirick at the ends, Beard and Pete Smith at tackle, Seelbach and Copp at guard and Shay at center. Sutro, Sanger, Clark and Shep- That Acaml pard were regular performers in the backfield. Last year ' s championship touch football team was greatly weakened by graduation and Captain Al Hunter had to build this year from an inex- perienced squad. Sparked by Captain Hunter, Gig Carton and Bob Krechevsky, the touch men com- piled a fairly good record and ended in fourth place. Losses to Calhoun, Pierson and Silliman, and ties with Timothy Dwight and Berkeley, marred the record. The hockey team, which tied Davenport for the Championship, was the standout of Trum- bull ' s winter season. The only loss of the season was to Davenport. Co-captains Esser and Keith did stellar work, and Esser led the league in scoring. The first line, composed of Esser, Halsey and Bienfait, and the second line of Hein, Bevans and Williams, were responsible for the forty goals amassed by the Bulls during the season. At de- fense, Keith, Sheppard and Wilcox were the nemesis of enemy forwards. Lincoln did a beauti- ful job of tending the nets and allowed the op- position only fifteen goals during the entire season. Last year ' s championship swimming team was hard-hit by graduation and four potential stars were claimed by the Varsity. Building on a small nucleus of vet- erans, the team managed to win four and lose five, to finish in sixth place. Captain Sheppard and Howie Gray did well for Trumbull in the breaststroke and backstroke re- spectively, while Sheppard dove. The freestylers were W. Williams, Alder- man, Cohen, Wie- g a n d , who also swam backstroke, and Richards. A medley relay team of Hammerschmidt, Sheppard and Rich- ards took second honors in the relay _L championship event at the Swimming Carnival. Captain Hank Calnen ' s basketball team showed a decided improvement over last year ' s tenth place team, winning five games and losing eight to finish in eighth place. At times the team worked smoothly as a unit, notably m the Cal- houn game, when the Bulls defeated the second place quintet. In addition to Calhoun, Jonathan Edwards and Berkeley both were beaten twice. All season long Hank Calnen played a superlative floor game and always scored consistently in the clinches. He ranked third in league scoring with eighty-five points. Marty Clark, who was out- standing on rebound shots, dropped in eighty- four points to end up fourth in the individual standings. Four of the losses were by two-point margins, a particularly bitter pill to swallow. The regular line-up was: Calnen and Kieran, forwards, Clark at center, and Novarr and Noves at uard. Eiwrgfiic Sport Perky Darlings Marsh, Adclman and Carey also played regularly. We will miss Captain Calnen and Kieran next vear, but there should be a fine nucleus for next year ' s battle. The squash team won its first match in three years, beating Branford to go into a last-place tie with Saybrook. Hume, Paul, Marsh, Sherwood and Bevans played constently for Trumbull. Captain Curtis ' bowlers had a poor season, finish- ing in last place. Lincoln, Stiles, Gray and Manvel bowled regularly and were supported by Clark, Sheppard, and Paul. In the Gym Kennard annexed the IS 5-pound boxing title, and Merwin, McCann, Parsons, Goldenbloome and Wiss represented Trumbull in the Intercollege Fencing league. All in all, Trumbull has so far had a fair year in sports, and has much to look forward to in the spring competition which is yet to come. 207 Bjik Row: Sheppard, McOwen, Rhett. Emery, Ohle Wolfe. Cooke Brooks, Nealc, Burns, Intercollege Athletics Spring 1941 ' I ' HE 1941 Spring season was far from disap- - ■ pointing to observers and to those who par- ticipated as well. TTiere was rugged competition in all four sports — Baseball, Crew, Tennis, and Golf — and the final ranking was not decided defi- nitely in any one of them until the very last contest. In the race for the Tyng Trophy at the night of the presentation Silliman was ahead of Timothy Dwight by only six-tenths of a point. The Spring was full of thrills in the baseball line. When the dust had begun to clear Berkeley, Davenport, and Saybrook had each dropped two of their seven games, and they were clustered at the top of the league. Saybrook and Berkeley had it out in a play-off game which Saybrook took 1-0. Then the Seals were conquered by the Hybrids in the championship game 5-3. Davenport had several good reasons for its suc- cess on the diamond. One of them was Captain Pete Solbert, who raised the pitching standards of the whole league; he was ably seconded by Phil Ewald. The Hybrid infield was a formidable one for all opponents, and it depended in a great mea- sure on Sparky Adams at third and on George Harrison at first. Harrison is credited with seven assists in one game which is no mean feat. Of- fensively, the combination of Bell and Adams stole many a base between them, while McClelland led the college batting averages during most of the spring and ended up with a .444. In the championship game he came through for Daven- port with the hit that clinched the crown. It came when the Seals had them tied up at three all, with two on, two out, and a count of two and three. The two runs he drove in proved to be just the margin by which Davenport won. The top five or six teams, however, were strong enough to give Davenport a real tussle. Saybrook almost held them in the final game, behind the rugged pitching of Guy Dempsey. Pierson, the winner in 1940, in sixth place, upset the over- confident Hybrids, 8-6, in the last league game of the year. T. D. also flashed at times with Emery and Kubie playing outstanding games; the first triple play of Intercollege ball was made by the Prexies against the Davenport gang. Lowell House of Harvard beat Davenport, 5-3. INTERCOLLEGE BASEBALL STANDINGS 5 2 2 3 4 4 4 4 5 5 80 Savbrook Berkeley ... 5 ... 5 52 40 Sillim.in 20 Iimathan Edwards . . . Piersnn 20 20 Timothy Dwiglit .... ... 3 20 20 Branford Calhoun ... _ INTERCOLLEGE BATTING AVERAGES Guba ( Branfurd ) . . . Kieckhefer (Calhiiun) Cummings (Calhiiun) Lacouture (Silliman) Church (Trumbull) Garvey ( Piersiin ) ... Knapp (T. Dwight) . McClelland (Davenport Bevans (Trumbull) Smionds (Silliman) h pet. 12 .5- ' l 8 .533 8 .500 9 .500 11 .4-8 9 .450 8 .444 8 .444 7 .4 39 9 .424 Heaic Aivay! On the water Trumbull took the honors by virtue of diligent training and hard work. In 1940 thev placed second to Pierson, and this year ap- parent!) ' intended to do no more half-hearted row- ing. Captain Jim Furness and Stroke Gayle Aiken deserve a lot of credit for enforcing such high standards. At the end of the season Weirick, the cox, was elected captain for 1942. Trumbull gained the top at the beginning and repulsed all challengers, not losing a single race. However, there were plenty of boats that pushed them hard. The Calhoun crew was strong and had lots of fight, but they were not steady enough ! Isham, Wiggin, Nash, Wood. 209 to win better than six out of their nine. Daven- port was a favorite and it had a number of men with crew experience, but it could garner only five out of eight. INTERCOLLEGE CREW STANDINGS Won Lost Division Pts. Trumbull 7 I 80 Calhoun 6 3 I 56 Branford 6 6 II 48 Davenport 5 3 II 40 Jonathan Edwards 7 6 III 32 Pierson 6 7 III 24 Saybrook 6 6 III 16 Timothy Dwight. 6 6 IV 8 Berkeley 5 7 IV 4 Silliman 1 12 IV 2 ). , R,,u : ViLts (M.ina.ycr), Diiijan, Clark, Emery. I wnght, Milbank, Rumbough, Kennedy (Captain), South after, while Davenport lost one along the way to T. D. The Presidents, the eventual winners were undefeated until their last match which Silliman won, 4-3. Silliman won the play-off for the honor of fighting T. D. for the Championship, turning back Davenport, 7-0. They fought, but T. D. managed to reverse exactly the score of their former meeting to win, 4-3. T. D. had much the same team that won the Championship in 1940. Rumbough played num- ber one most of the time and was ably supported by Emery, Southworth, Milbank, and Clark. A number of the men were called up to the varsity in the course of the season. Captain Wilmer handed his post to Kennedy, who then was called up too. He passed it on to Rumbough who finished out the year. Rumbough is to play varsity in 1942, and Clark was elected the T. D. captain. The Presidents were unable to i;o to Harvard for the match with Kirkland House and Silli- man was chosen. The Salaman- ders cleaned up. The score was Silliman 7, Kirkland House 0. On the links, Silliman and Pierson finally managed to break the spell which Berkeley had thrown over all golf for the past three years. For the first time since 1937 Berkeley did not win the Championship. R.,ii : W am- worth, Chapm The most colorful occasion of the season was in the race between Branford and Davenport. The day was rough and the contest was important for it decided who was to be in third place. The Hybrids started off smoothly, but, for some rea- son, the shell began to settle and they dropped back. Before long the rowers realized that they were sinking. The cold water left no doubt in anybody ' s mind, and soon all had to take to the lifeboats. Captain Franchot was the first to leave his ship. Trumbull raced Eliot House at Harvard, and from a poor beginning fought valiantly in a start- ling comeback, only to lose by one second. In tennis there was a tie-up at the end of the season, much as in baseball. The top three teams each won eight and lost one. Silliman dropped its first match and staved in the win column there- INTERCOLLEGE TENNIS STANDINGS Won Lost Tie Pts. Timothy Dwii ht. 8 1 70 Silliman 8 1 45.5 Davenport 8 1 45.5 Calhoun 5 4 35 Pierson 4 5 24.5 Saybrook 4 5 24.5 Berkeley 3 6 14 Branford 2 6 1 5.25 Trumbull 2 6 1 5.25 Jonathan Edwards 9 l. 5 It was an unpredictable scramble. Early in the year Pierson took the medal tourney by thirty points. They went ahead to win the title in League I, undefeated and untied. Silliman won in League II, losing none and tying Calhoun. In the Cham- pionship match Silliman beat an erratic Pierson season is B.ick Row: Dickerson, Doolittle, Thomas, Brunet, Rhett, Jordan. Fto ii Rou. ' McClelland, Bermudez, Ewald, Harrison, Solbert (Captain), Smith, Bell, Dealey, Adams. team, 4-2. Starring for Silliman at the first three positions were Bill Wood, Steve Nash, and Bill Wiggin; all were consistent point getters. On the basis of their showing in the medal play, the Slaves were matched with Harvard ' s Kirkland House. The Cantabs were smothered, 8-1. At the end of the season the Tyng Trophy was presented to Silliman for the best total of points for the whole Intercollege sports year. Incidental- ly, this was Silliman ' s first year as a college unit. The Harkness Trophy, presented annually to the winner of the Yale-Harvard inter-house con- tests, had to be disposed of diplomatically. There was a tie, and it was decided that the trophy would spend six months in Cambridge and six months in New Haven. While it resides at Yale, Silliman has possession of it for two months, and Trumbull, Pierson, and T. D. share it for the rest of the time. The O ' Toole Trophy, three-handled symbol of T. D. -Silliman rivalry, went to Silliman at the end of the Spring. This saved the S.ilamanders the trouble of spiriting it away as they did in the Winter. The regularity and efficiency of the whole Intercollege sport program may be attributed to the diligence of W. H. Neale and his staff of College Athletic Secretaries. It is impossible to have such a large scale athletic system function effectively un- less there is some sort of arrang- ing and regulating agency to oversee its thousands of details. Widdy Neale and his staff ran it smoothly, and the successful monument to their excellent work. FINAL INTERCOLLEGE STANDINGS FOR THE T ' NG TROPHl ' Fall and Winter Spring Year Silliman 393 137 530.50 Timothy Dwight . 415 99.88 514.88 Trumbull 259.25 112.75 372 Calhoun 245 121.50 366.50 Pierson 241.66 103.50 345.16 Davenport 144.16 167.38 311.54 Saybrook 181.96 115 296.91 Berkeley 199.25 92.50 291.75 Branford 207 68.75 275.75 Jonathan Edwards 141.50 66.25 207.75 This spring marks a new phase in the intercol- lege sports program. With compulsory atheltics, for all undergraduates, the Atheltic Secretary need no longer be a five-sport man. Due to the Univer- sity War Program, more students compete for the same number of college team positions; conse- quently, the competition is stiffer and better teams are turned out. As the program has been under way for less than two months, it is difficult to pre- dict what the future of intercol- lege athletics will be. However, it is certain that loyalty to the residential college, fostered by spirited intercollege competition among those who are unable to participate in varsity athletics will play a vital role in Yale at war. ■ fe« B.uk Row: Aiken, Mason, FurnibS (Captain), Stewart, Du Vivier, Morris, Callow, Berry. Front Row: Wcirick (Coxswain). ATHLETICS Back Row: Neuhaus, Ripley, Milliken, McClure. Second Row: Hirschhorn, Shapleigh, Harrison, Dugan, Carton. Front Row: Ireland, Wallace, MacLean, Bartholemy, Parker, Johnson, Seelbach. Undergraduate Athletic Association Alan E. Bartholemy, President James L. Carton, Baseball Philip R. Neuhaus, Baseball Charles F. Seelbach, Jr., Basketball Charles P. Ripley, Basketball Robert Wallace, Crew Robert L. Ireland, III, Crcu ' Alan E. Bartholemy, Football Edward N. Carpenter, Football Brooks O. Edward N. Carpenter, Secretary Fred H. Harrison, Hockey John F. Milliken, Hockey Fred Hirschhorn, Jr., Polo Carden R. McLean, Squash Howard R. Johnson, Swimming Nathan D. McClure, Jr., Swimming Ernest C. Parshall, II, Track Warren M. Shapleigh, Track Parker, Wrestling Charles Seymour Dean William C. DeVane Dean Charles H. Warren Dean Samuel W. Dudley Dean Norman S. Buck Dr. Orville F. Rogers BOARD OF CONTROL Ogden D. Miller, Chairman MEMBERS Dean Norman S. Buck Dr. Orville F. Rogers Laurence G. Tighe James G. Rogers EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Ogden D. Miller, Chairman Laurence G. Tighe James G. Rogers Robert A. Hall Edgar T. Glass Edward N. Carpenter Fred H. Harrison Edward N. Carpei jter Fred H. Harrison :i4 Crew 1941 Richard N. Gould, Capi-jin TTALL crew started with only two of last June ' s eight lettermen showing up for prac- tice. Bob Wallace who had stroked the 1940 crew during the early part of the season was put in as stroke, with the veteran Chuck Aberg set- ting the pace for the starboard side. Pete Beard held down his two-year- old position in the bow again, and Phil Stevens handled the rudder ropes. Hopes ran high for a varsity shell which would avenge last spring ' s losses to Cornell and Har- vard. The crew worked out on the Housatonic five days a week, and wound up the season with a practice race against Princeton in early November. George Goss, Jack Ma- gee, and George Pillsbury, members of last year ' s crews, reported for the Captain Gould winter practices, having been busy on the grid- iron during the fall. As is the custom, the Eli oarsmen returned to row after the first week of spring vacation. Captain Dick Gould strained a muscle in his wrist, and Pete Beard was also on the sick list with his ankle in a cast. The crew was also hindered by bad weather. With less than a month to go before the first race with Syracuse at Derby on April 16th, Coach Leader had yet to find a workable combination. On April 7th Gould and Beard had recovered when Vree- land came down with the measles. On April 18th the injuries subsided and the crew was established. Wal- lace was at stroke, Herb Vreeland seven, Chuck Aberg six, Captain Gould five, Jack Magee four, George Goss three, Hank English two, Doc Watson bow, and Phil Stevens cox. Two days before the first race came several changes in the crew. The 163 -pound Sophomore, Spike Macey, stroke for the Javees, won the coveted varsity position, and Wallace was moved up to the number two seat. Ted Kiendl, another Sophomore, replaced Jack Magee at four. The day of the Syracuse race dawned clear, but there was a moderate head wind which brought the current six inches above the splash boards during the race. Yale had drawn lane one, nearest the railroad tracks on a two mile course, and with its untested crew was expecting a close, hard- fought race. Syracuse came out racing and im- mediately took the lead rowing a fast thirty-eight stroke. Yale dropped behind a half a boat length rowing a fast thirty-six stroke. Power was added to the Yale strike of thirty-six and the lead was cut to three men before the quarter mark was reached. Toward the middle of the race the strokes were dropped and Yale held its own with a thirty-two, still trailing by three men. With twenty strokes to go it appeared that Syracuse was going to win the race. But much like the Blackwell Cup Race of the year before, the cox waved the flag for the last sprint. Spike Macey jumped the stroke up to a very fast and powerful forty, and Syracuse couldn ' t quite keep the lead to the finish. The Eli boat, in a strong easy-flowing finish which literally churned up the waters of tlie Housatonic, finished one and one-fifth seconds ahead of the Syracuse boat. The official times were: Yale 10:3 6; Syracuse 1(1:3 7 1 S. Stevens and Macey had indeed timed the race well, conserving the en- ergy for the final sprint and yet holding their own with the pace-setting Syracuse crew. Practice continued on the Housatonic the next week. Coach Ed Leader knew that this next race, The Blackwell Cup Regatta, would be a more thorough test for the Eli crew. With just a week between races Leader kept the same crew in an endeavor to iron out the little flaws which were evident during the Syracuse race. On Friday of that week the Yale crew left New Haven early in the morning for Philadelphia, and the shell was rigged in time for a workout that evening. This race was the shortest scheduled for the season. It was over the Henely distance of one and five-sixteenths miles. Although Yale was not the favored crew, their chances looked good after the workout. There were three boats in the race, Columbia, Pennsylvania, and Yale, and they all got off to a good start rowing a fast stroke. Yale held its own during the first half of the race. At the half Yale made a bid for the lead as their stroke gained power, but the Penn crew soon slipped ahead with a more power- ful stroke. Here Yale lowered its stroke hoping Oil the i ' l)itiny Yacht to sprint ahead on the last few lengths. Columbia paced itself nicely and in the last three hundred yards overtook Pennsylvania to win by half a length. Yale was unable to come from behind as it had done both the week before against Syracuse, and the year before in the same race. The official times were: Columbia 6:24; Pennsylvania 6:25; Yale 6:28 3 5. Two weeks were to elapse before the next scheduled race. The Carnegie Cup Regatta with Regatta was canceled. The Eli crew returned to New Haven without the competitive experience that was so greatly needed for the final and all- important race of the season. The date of the Yale-Harvard crew race at New London was changed to the Saturdav before Commencement in order to make it possible for some members of both crews to compete on the Thames and still report on time for Naval V-7 training. Not since 193 3 had the Regatta been A Rounr u c u ill .sjo Cornell was scheduled for May 17th. Yale ap- proached this race with one close victory and one defeat. Yale needed plenty of workouts. 1 mimg was stressed by Leader as the crew stirred up the Housatonic day after day. The crew seemed to improve and there were no changes made in the first boat. It seemed that Ed Leader had found his combination that clicked. It was a more con- fident crew that left for Ithaca than came back from Philadelphia. There was high wind in Ithaca the dav the race was scheduled and after vain hopes of the wind dying down the race was postponed until Sunday morning. Then, too, the wind was blow- ing up white caps on Lake Cayuga, and the held on this early date. The Yale crew lacked ex- perience, having competed in only two races, and their final practice period was shortened by moving the race date up a week. Soon after arriving at the Ferry the crew was quarantined with the measles. Goss, number three on the varsity was the second man to be disabled. Pillsbury was brought up and put in the vacancy. Although Goss recovered from the measles in time to race, Pillsbury was kept in the number three seat. The final crew chosen to compete against Harvard was: Macey stroke, Vrecland seven, Aberg six, Gould five, Kiendl four, Pillsbury three, Wallace two, Watson bow, and Stevens coxwain. Hopes ran high at the Ferry. Although Har- 217 Yo Ho Heair Ho! vard was the favored, Yale produced the best time trial during practices on the four mile course. Harvard ' s stroke had developed an infected hand and was out at least temporarily. It looked as if Yale might keep Harvard from tying their record of six consecutive wins on three different intervals. The day of the race was beautiful, the water was good for racing, and there was favorable fol- lowing wind. The course had to be changed from that of previous years due to a dam that had been built in connection with the construction of a bridge in New London. It was around six before the conditions were exactly right for the race. It had cooled off a little from what had been a hot day. Mr. Putnam got the crews off smartly with Yale showing no intention of being out-distanced. Not more than a quarter of a mile had been rowed before Harvard pulled ahead with a lead that was never in danger throughout the entire race. Harvard was rowing a thirty- two most of the race and Yale was rowing between a thirty-two and a thirty-three. At the half mile mark Har- vard, with the most powerful crew in the history of the college, had opened up two lengths between the boats. As the Yale-crew passed the two- mile mark at the submarine base it picked up nearly a length on the Crimson. In spite of Yale ' s challenge just before the finish. Harvard won b) ' three and a half lengths. There was a con- siderable mix-up over the race when Clem McCarthy became twisted on the lanes the crews were rowing in and announced that Yale was leading at the half by three lengths. Although Yale was fairly beaten, they showed up very well. They rowed their best race of the season against the Crimson oarsmen and it was some solace to know that it had taken the best crew in the United States to beat them. The Regatta marked the sixth straight defeat of the Yale varsity crew by Harvard and the fourth year that Harvard swept the river. Neither crew has won more than six straight times and each crew boasts six consecutive vic- tories at three intervals. Harvard has won one more contest than Yale by the victory in 1941. Looking forward to 1942, the bright spot is that five of last year ' s Harvard race boatmen will be back in the shell for Yale. More races, more practice, and more experienced oarsmen may tell the storv this year. 218 .iti Skekon (Coxswain), Higgins, Chandler, Bla .iikI, BurJi.ud, Ik.ir. Jayvee Crew. . . 1941 T AST year the Jayvee crew had only three races, the one against Cornell being called off be- cause of two days of rough water on Lake Ca- yuga. Of these they won the first, defeating Syracuse. In the last two, they came in second to Columbia, beating Penn for the Blackwell Cup, and lost to Harvard. On April 26 against a moderate head wind, the Jayvees turned in the time of 11:10 over the two mile course to defeat Syracuse by 14 seconds. Yale took the lead from the start and increased it throughout the race. They started at a stroke of about 3 5 which they dropped to 52. This stroke they held until the end when they again raised it to 3 5. The race was satisfactory as to results, but too one-sided to be really exciting. On May 3, on the Schuylkill River, Yale placed second, ten seconds behind Columbia and nine seconds ahead of Pennsylvania. The race was rowed in faster time than the Varsity race because of different conditions. Yale took the lead at first but did not retain it long. Columbia replaced Yale and remained ahead in spite of a strong chal- lenge by Yale midway in the course. On May 17, four crews journeyed to Ithaca to take part in the Carnegie Cup races. For this Jayvee race Wellington, Pillsbury and Burchard were to have replaced Blair, Evans and English. However, the 150 ' s were the only ones to row, the water being too rough for the longer course out on the lake. At Gales Ferry on June 14, the Jayvee boat lined up as follows: Beard, Burchard, Vreeland, Magee, Goss, Blair, Chandler, stroke Higgins and coxwain Skelton. With this as the final boating the crew improved markedly during the two- weeks practice at Gales Ferry. Austin Higgins, who had not stroked in any of the Jayvee races up to that time, showed considerable ability, and this turned out to be a close race. The race was rowed over the upper two mile course on Satur- day morning directly after the Freshmen had raced. Harvard took the lead at the start and increased it slightly. Yale made a strong effort to close the gap, but was unsuccessful. Harvard won by almost two lengths. 150 Pound Crew. . . . 1941 ' I HE Eli 150 pound oarsmen, captained by veteran Dale Fisher, opened their campaign in the traditional Blackwell Cup Regatta. The con- test, held on May 4th, was over the short mile course of the Schuylkill against the Pennsylvania and Columbia lightweight crews. Yale emerged victorious in a close race which saw Columbia finish second, and the Quakers, third. On May 10th the Blue traveled to Boston to compete in the Goldthwalte Cup Regatta on the Charles River against strong Princeton and Har- vard crews. The race, over the standard Henley distance of a mile and five-sixteenths, was cap- tured by a smooth rowing Crimson crew with Princeton and Yale trailing in that order. The second 150 shell matched the varsity ' s perform- ance by also placmg thud. Ragged rowing was in part responsible for the Elis ' bad showing. By winning both races. Harvard retained its grip on the Goldthwaite Cup for another year. The final contest of the season saw the Blue bladesmen travel to Lake Cayuga for the Carnegie Cup Regatta. Because of extremely poor racing conditions neither the varsity nor the Freshman heavies was able to row, but the durable 150 crew withstood the elements and a strong Cor- nell challenge to score a victory in its best race of the year. The race was rowed over a shortened course on the inlet the following Sunday. The Blue showed definite improvement all through the season under Coach Bob Butler ' s careful guidance. The oarsmen sorely missed the services of Cap- tain Dale Fisher, who fractured his ankle early in the season. His fine spirit and leadership, how- ever, were of tremendous value to the crew. Following the final contest, William Fessenden was elected Captain of the 1942 shell, and later, at Gales Ferry, the managership was awarded to Henry W. Hobson. f f ! f f ? MWi. j-ji y l B.ui Ron: Edgertiin, Fessenden, Liwejoy, Shorey, Turner, Pynchon, Comte. DuBois. Si-iled: Eberlein (Coxswain) Ejck Ron: Jeffery (Manager), Talbutt, Lee, Jackson, Hoyt (Coach). Fourth Rou: Ellis, Greene, Rich, Freeman, Wagoner, Ashton. Third Ron: DeMott, Main, Ord, Carpenter, Owen (Captain), Macomber, Lohmann, Rothschild, Crowley, Parshall. Second Roir: Pfeiffenberger, Osborn. Front Row: Boies, Bird. Track 1941 CaptMit: Robert L. Owen, III TT 7 ORKING under the guidance of Charlie Hoyt, Yale ' s Indoor Track Season was very successful. The team, which was captained by Bob Owen, won the first indoor dual track meets ever held at New Haven. These were with Harvard and Princeton in February. The season ' s opening event was the Prout Games in Boston and it was indeed inauspicious as all the individ- ual entrants in the hurdles and the dashes were eliminated in the semifinals. The two-mile relay team consisting of Main, Ashton, Ord, and Crowley placed second to Northeastern, beirig beaten to the tape by a scant yard. In the Millrose games at Madison Square Garden on February first the Elis could do little better against Ciiptaiii Utiiii top-notch competition. The one bright spot was a second in the 50 Yard Handicap by Jim Roths- child. Yale also took a fourth in this event, which Harvard won. In the mile relay, Yale took another second, in this case to Princeton. Two weeks later came the first Yale-Harvard Indoor Dual Meet. This time running against competi- tion of an eijual calibre Yale showed great promise for a successful season taking the meet 5 6-3 S. The feature of this meet was Yale ' s victory in both the one and the two mile relays. The combination of Jackson, Ord, Crowley, and Ellis took the former Mij|M| while Ashton, Crowley, Main and B Ord won the latter. Placing one, ■ two, three in the one mile run for Yale were Main, Ashton, and Whit- 221 temore while Pfeiflfenberger, Adams, and Bird did the same thing in the two mile run. Vince Car- penter came in second to Frank Kemp ' s win in the thirty-five pound weight event. The Elis won the pole vault through the efforts of Macomber. Fresh from their victory of the previous week, the Elis met Princeton on February 22. This proved to be exceedingly close and the ultimate outcome wasn ' t decided until the last event when Jim Ord, running his second race of the day, brought the Yale two mile relay team home in front giving the Elis a 49-42 advantage. In this meet, Osborn distinguished himself by winning the 60 Yard high hurdles and the 6 5 Yard low hurdles. The same two mile relay team that won Timber To[ pcrs against Harvard again took this event. Parshall took the shot put. The two other firsts that the Elis made in this match were those given by Boies and Macomber, the former by winning the high jump, the latter by tying with Corbett of Prince- ton in the pole vault. On March first Charlie Hoyt ' s forces travelled to New York to participate in the annual I.C. A.A.A.A. Indoor Meet. The Elis in closing their Indoor season only managed to garner four points, but still finished ahead of Princeton and Harvard. Macomber tied for first in the Pole Vault, with Rhoades of Pitt. The only other Yale trackmen who qualified in the finals were Kemp, who took a sixth in the 3 5 pound weight. Main, who ran sixth in the mile, and the two mile relay team, which placed fifth. 9 clean Su ' cep With victories over both Princeton and Harvard in the Indoor Season, prospects for a successful outdoor season were promising. A great deal of valuable conditioning had been derived from the Indoor Season and a few of the boys spent their Spring vacation in Florida training. The first competition outdoors was in the Penn Relays. The one bright spot of this trip was Vince Carpenter ' s victory in the Hammer Throw with a tremendous toss of 168 ' 11 . Unfortu- nately Yale ' s favored shuttle hurdle relay team was forced to scratch due to the leg injury of Murphy. Yale was also credited with two fourths, one by Osborn in the Invitation 120 Yard High Hurdles, the other by the Distance Medley Relav Team. This last fourth was mainly due to Main Event the efforts of Main who overtook two teams. In this race, Ellis ran the 440, Ord, the 880, Ashton, the three-quarters mile, and Main, the one mile. The following week, Pennsylvania was defeated by Captain Bob Owen ' s team 73-63. The high- lights of this meet were Owen ' s 9.8 in the 100 yard dash and his 21.4 in the 220. Dick Osborn was another double winner for the Blue, capturing firsts in both the high and low hurdles. Ernie Parshall broke the Yale shot put record in this meet with a heave of 47 10 . Carpenter again won the Hammer. In the two mile run, Adams, Bird, Pfeiffenberger placed in that order, while Boffniin Up Ord took the 88 0, and Greene beat the others across the tape in the 220 Yard Low Hurdles. But even these valiant attempts did not give the Elis the points they needed to take the meet and Princeton ' s jinx over the team, which lapsed only once in the last five years, won. The seventh annual Heptagonal games were held at Princeton. Pennsylvania won with a total of 56 points while the best Yale could do was fourth with 3 3 points. Yale ' s single first place was won by Vince Carpenter by virtue of a 166 ' toss in his specialty. This defeat was most bitter Carryiiii the Mail for Yale Macomber marked up another triumph for him- self in the pole vault. On May 10 Yale met Princeton in the Palmer Stadium and was handed its first dual meet defeat. The Palmer Stadium jinx was too much for the Elis and Princeton eked out a victory 70-6 5. It was a day of upsets with several of Yale ' s best performers being shut out of the scoring. Jackson of Princeton won both dashes. The Blue took both the high jump and the broad jump. A tie between Rich and Boies gave the first to the Elis while Ellis took the latter. Parshall ' s shot put and Macomber ' s pole vault all added points to the Yale score. Osborn won the 120 Yard High Hurdles, M i 7i ' Mill! Parshall 223 Tb ' n one ' s liable to Hoyt He sails fhronglj the air ... as the Blue had taken hrst place in this event the two preceding years. In the Elis ' last meet of the year Harvard won a close victory 70 ' 2 to 64 ' S. Yale ' s one, two, three in the 440 couldn ' t overcome Harvard ' s strength in the hurdles and dashes. Carpenter con- tributed another victory to his string. Those men running and winning in the last race of the season were Pfeiffenberger in the two mile run, Ord in the 8 80, and the trio of Crowley, Jackson, and Ellis, who took the first three places in the 440 in that order. Macomber tied Ford of Harvard in the pole vault while Parshall tossed the discus to a win and Carpenter hurled the hammer to a victory. And thus the outdoor track season was con- cluded. This had not been so good as the indoor one. But much credit is due to the athletes and men who gave such outstanding performances. Those outstanding on the team were Captain Bob Owen, Macomber, Carpenter, Parshall, Osborn, Main, Ellis, Ord, Jackson, and Crowley. spni Jspif pliy, H«ti teiv 224 £.ii- Ruu ; Milkr (Trainer), Sawyer (Asst. Coach), Pope, Tighe (Manager), Schroeder, Ames, Joe Wood (Coach). Second Row: Kaye, Burdett, Besse, Joe Wood, Jr. (Captain), Harrison, Cook, Carton. Front Row; Dore, Hart, Whelan. Baseball 1941 Captain: Joe Wood, Jr. Manager: Laurence G. Tighe, Jr. I N one way the 1941 Baseball Season was a dis- seniors appointing one. Yale seemed, early in the Millett spring, to have the best of chances to win the Eastern Intercollegiate League title. Yet in being defeated on June fourteenth in the second game of the Princeton series, the Blue was forced to give up all such aspirations. When the dust had settled in the indoor cage, the delivery end of the battery staff included Captain Joe Wood, Jr., veteran of two vears ' play, Dick Ames, a veteran senior, also, and Ted Harrison whose pitch- ing during his Freshman and Sopho- more years was well known to all. Backing them up as reserves were Hazen, Pope, and Franzen. At the receiving end of the battery were ]oc WoutI, Jr Schroeder and Burdett, while Jewett and stood ready to be called upon. Jerry Besse found himself at the hot corner for the third year, while in the other infield slots were Gig Carton at short. Bob Cook and Rog Hazen fighting for second, and rookie Tom Whelan on the initial sack. Howie Kaye, Jake Dore, Bill McClellan. and rookie Bill Stotzer volunteered for outfield duty. It was not an inspiring start to be taken into camp, 4-2, by the Green Mountain Boys of Vermont in the first game. Though Wood and Ames each fanned seven men and though the Yale batters came through with twelve hits, the five Eli errors were too much to overcome. Vermont established an earlv lead which it would not relinquish. The second encounter of the year found the Blue team much improved over a rather ragged opener. With Harrison allowing one hit and Ames but two, the Tufts batsmen were unable to eke out a single run. Capitalizing on an error by Tufts ' left fielder, Yale scored three times in the sixth to win the game, 3-0. The team entrained the following Tuesday for Philadelphia to try its strength against Pennsylvania. The defeat at the hands of Captain Frank Reagan ' s team was a poor start toward the coveted League title. In the first Day at Yale Field as the four Woods monopolized sportscribes ' attention. Colgate arrived at New Haven with Steve Wood slated for duty on the mound and Bobby Wood holding down first. Coach Joe had authorized Joe, Jr., to do the twirl- ing for Yale. Though they scattered their runs over eight innings, the Blue bunched five into the seventh. Captain Wood ' s pitching and his three- for-five average at the plate drove the Bulldogs to victory, 11-5. Brown, next opponent on the Yale card, breezed into town the following Wednesday and blew Laying it in Siinifking if out! inning the Elis got off to a fast beginning by belting Leo Kahn, the Blue and Red Moundsman, for five safeties and three runs, but in the Penn- sylvania half of the first inning, Beinstein, lead-off man and reserve pitcher, took Captain Joe Wood ' s first offering for a round trip ticket, and in the fourth and fifth frames the home team scored three times on three singles, an error, and two bases stolen by Reagan. In spite of sixteen hits, the Elis could not garner the necessary tallies, and the Keystone Staters tucked a 6-4 victory under their belts. The Big Blue finally came into Its own at Co- lumbia ' s Baker Field as with thirteen hits it chalked up five runs. In spite of the Light Blue ' s tenacity, it came out the loser, 5-3. Joe Wood and Jerry Besse each connected for three singles, while Bill Stotzer and Bus Burdett were not far behind with two hits apiece. On Monday, April twenty-first, it was Wood back to Providence a 4-3 loser. In a second shot at Penn, Yale drubbed the Philadelphians, 4-1, Ted Harrison capturing his first League win. Allowing five hits, the Jigger hung up ten strike- outs and garnered two singles for himself. On April thirtieth, the Elis broke a Holy Cross twenty-game winning streak by defeating the Purple, 3-2. Pitching a five-hit game, Joe Wood drove in the winning run in the tenth innmg. On May third, however, in a tight 2-3 game with Cornell, despite Ted Harrison ' s spectacular pitch- ing in which he tied the League record of thirteen strike-outs, Walter Sickles, Ithaca pitching ace, scored a victory. The Big Red twirler held the Yale team to six hits, while Harrison allowed ten. A double play choked off an Eli rally in the ninth inning and ended the game. The next game on the schedule was Rutgers. After an all-even inning battle, Smokey Joe won his own ball game when his single scored the Oil Jcck crucial tally. Fanning twelve men, he allowed only five scattered hits. The following Saturday, Yale took the field against Dartmouth on the foreign soil of Hanover. Soph- omore Will Gray of Dart- mouth and Ted Harrison fought a pitchers ' duel that ended in a 2-0 shutout in favor of the Green. Harrison struck out fourteen to Gray ' s nine, while each allowed four hits. But brilliant support by his teammates gave the game to Gray. After four hotly contested games, the team found a breather in the Wesleyan game. The home team was out-classed from the very begin- ning, and succumbed 12-3 to the fast and tricky hurling of Dick Ames who whiffed thirteen. Several days later Georgetown and Yale fought a close game marked by hitting sprees on both sides. With fifteen hits for Yale to thirteen for the Southerners, the Eli machine defeated them, 9-7. As the team sought revenge in Ithaca the sec- ond game of the Cornell series proved much more favorable for Yale than the first encounter. In one inning the Yale batsmen drove two pitchers to the showers, and the inning ended with six runs to their credit. On the whole wet weather made it ragged baseball. Yale led 8-6 at the end of the game. On May twentieth. Trinity was turned back 4-0 by Dick Ames ' three-hit. twelve strike-out pitching. The next day the Army was shut out 2-0 by Joe Wood, who al- lowed only five hits and struck out ten men. Claude Hart, rookie, fresh from the Yale Junior Varsity, was the star of the game, setting out two of the team ' s five hits and making both scores. Howie Kaye made a spectacular catch late in the ninth to save Joe his shut-out. On Saturday Dartmouth came to Yale ' s hunt- ing ground where the Bulldog nipped the Indian enemy 9-8. The hotly fought battle saw three pitchers hurling for the Green and two for the Blue. This win, Yale ' s fourth in league com- petition, put the Eli team within reach of the coveted laurels. When the diamond forces met Colum- bia the next Friday on home ground, they were, conse- quently out for blood. Ed Pope, center fielder, connected four times in as many tries, while Ted Harrison ' s pitching held the Lions to one run, assuring the 3-1 victory. On May thirty-first the usually invincible Fordham Rams swept into town to be swamped by a hard-playing home nine. Repeatedly the Yale infielders blocked the scorching drives which were J II the slot On the sack . . . joy ni-iUiiuc labeled sure hits. Gig Carton had eight chances, Claude Hart and Rog Hazen six, and Tom Whelan seven, and all turned in perfect records. Not to be outdone, center fielder Howie Kaye made a sensational over-the-shoulder running catch. The Elis touched the Ram ' s pitcher for fifteen hits. Carton and Schroeder collecting three each. Con- sidering this, Fordham got off easily with a score of 10-3. On Saturday an exciting game was played with Princeton in which Yale was nosed out in the twelfth inning, 5-4. Breaks decided the game. The first came in the third inning when a stab- bing catch by shortstop Penna caught Howie Kaye off third and foiled an almost certain tally. The second came in the twelfth inning when Hart ' s costly miscue advanced a man to first only to have him immediately advanced to third by Har- rison ' s high throw to Whelan; finally he scored on a long fly. The second Princeton game, a week later, was even more discouraging. Before a reunion crowd at Tigertown, Yale fell a 3-5 loser. Two bungled double plays were the Eli nemesis which handed Princeton the E.I.L. championship on a silver platter. On graduation Day at Yale Field, Captain Joe Wood pitched the best game of his Yale career to blank Harvard, 1-0. Allowing two hits, he fanned twelve batters. When Rog Hazen singled, with two out in the ninth inning Tom Whelan crossed the plate for the only run of the game. At Har- vard, Dick Ames was washed off the mound in the fourth inning by a torrent of rain. Until that time he had struck out nine Cantabs and allowed no hits. The game, postponed until the next day, was finally played and Yale won, 2-1, to take the series. Ames and Harrison limited Harvard to five hits, striking out fifteen men. After the game James L. Carton, who sopho- more year had been drafted off the golf course in mid-season by Coach Joe Wood, was elected Cap- tain of the 1942 nine. As Uncle Sam ' s draft caught Horton Prudden, the managership for the coming season was assumed by Philip R. Neuhaus. Russell Burke was chosen assistant manager. Bicimin the htiiil of the attack 228 Jayvee Baseball -1941 ' y HROUGHOUT the year versatile Ken Loeffler makes a practice of turning out winning combinations — his 1941 Jayvee Baseball team proved no exception. Combining powerful hit- ting with stellar pitching the Elis battered foe after foe to emerge from a fourteen game sched- ule with ten victories and but four defeats. The season opened with Hopkins Grammar School, and in a loosely played, free-hitting con- test the Elis emerged at the top half of a 14-4 score. Then followed rapid-fire wins over the Morris Cove A. A., 4-3, and Arnold College, 10-5. A snappy Hamden High nine, whose pitchers shackled the Blue bats to but four hits, brought about the Jayvee ' s first defeat, 1-7. This proved to be only a momentary setback, however, as the Elis bounced back to take the count of Com- mercial High School, 11-6, and Milford, 13-5, before dropping a heart-breaker to Cheshire, 7-13. At this point in the schedule the Jayvecs moved into high, sweeping Hillhouse High, 4-3, Bay Path Institute, 6-4, and Branford High School, 13-4. Unfortunately this surge was followed by late-season nostalgia which found the seconds dropping return games, first to Hopkins, 2-8, and then to Bay Path, 4-6, and eking out a slim 9-6 victory over the Springfield College Jayvees in the sloppiest contest ever seen on a Yale field. High light of the season was Chuck Seelbach ' s four-hit pitching in the Jayvees ' climactic victory over the Princeton seconds, 10-2. Even intermit- tent showers could not halt the Yale bats as they banged out eleven hits to the chagrin of the two Tiger twirlers. Strong-armed Chuck Seelbach was unquestion- ably the outstanding mound performer for the Jayvees, turning in a perfect skein of eight vic- tories. Leading batters included Jim Symington with a final mark of .410, Claude Hart .369, Chuck Seelbach .348, Snapper Carmichael .342 and Em Chandler rattling the sphere at .320. 229 Rough Racket Lacrosse 1941 Tn the season ' s opener a plucky M.I.T. aggrega- - - tion was trampled, 19-0. A week later the Elis tucked a second victory under their belts by taking a hard-fought game from Syracuse, 8-7. This was the first Orange defeat at the hands of the Blue. A trip to Rutgers brought the Root- men their third win, 8-2, as Dell and Hoagland shared scoring honors. Captain Madden sparked his team to a fourth victory over Penn, 6-2, which was followed by a win over the Crescent A.C., 7-3. Hopes for an undefeated season were shat- tered when a powerful Swarthmore team capital- ized on Yale ' s overconfidence to defeat the Elis, 6-0. An invasion by the Tigermen brought the Rootman a heart-breaking defeat. Yale led the Tigers until late in the third period when an Eli penalty set up the winning Princeton scores. The Nassaumen were never headed and won 7-4. Yale ' s third reverse came when Dartmouth took a 16-S decision on a muddy field at Hanover. In the final game the Elis routed an inexperienced Har- vard team, 17-5. Dell broke all existing scoring records as he passed the Harvard goalie ten times. Many deserve credit for this successful season: Dell, Hoagland, Adams and Sweeney on the at- tack; Captain Madden, Brooks, Hicks and Copp in the midfield; Sherman, Gill, Hammerschmidt and Kennedy on the defense; Dun and Ward in the goal; and above all. Coach Reg Root. Bjci Row: Wesson (Man,igcr), Hammerschmidt, Root, Gill, Ad.iins, King (Trainer). Th iJ Row: Campion, Ward, Huber, Dell, Madden, Brooks, Hicks, Hoagland, Fleming. StcoiiJ Rou - Devine, Aschmann. Front Rote: Bancker, Sullivan. Bjck Ron: Preston (Manager), Rumbough, Kennedy, Welch, Smith, Makepeace, HinchdifF (Coach). Front Row: Thorn, Friedman, Ehrman, Cutler (Captain), Ethridge, Sleekier, Wilmer. Tennis 1941 UNDER the captaincy of Sewall Cutler, Bill Hinchcliff ' s 1941 tennis team overcame a total of seven opposing collegiate teams out of nine who faced the Blue upon the courts. The team dropped a match to the Seventh Regiment Tennis Club 5-4, before facing their first collegiate opponents, the Virginia team, who fell under an 8-1 score. Cornell was met next and likewise toppled with a score of 6-1. The following match ended in a disappointing 6-3 defeat by a strong North Caro- lina team though every match was closely con- tested. The team revived, however, with a 9-0 defeat of Columbia on the opponent ' s courts and traveled north to defeat Amherst 7-2, being forced to cancel the Williams match on account of rain. Back in New Haven the Army team was conquered 5-3, followed by a 6-2 victory over Pennsylvania. The match at Princeton, con- sisting of ten singles and five doubles, was un- fortunately dropped 10-5. The next week saw the season successfully rounded out though, with a sound 7-2 drubbing of the Crimson netmen on the home courts. The winner of the 1941 N.E.I.L.T.A. cham- pionships, which were played at Amherst, was Yale ' s Bob Freedman. He and Captain Sewall Cutler were the two outstanding players of the season while the doubles team of Steckler and Ehrman turned in a series of very fine perform- ances during the season. Sen ice for Yale 231 Don It for a hivJu Golf 1941 ' T ' hf, season began when the varsity subdued the Freshmen 12-3 and then continued to defeat the Hartford Golf Club 9-3. In the Eastern Inter- collegiate League, playing at New Haven, Yale defeated both Williams and Holy Cross by the same score, 7-2. What the Intercollegiate League viewed as an unofficial match resulted in a defeat for the varsity at the hands of Princeton by the close margin of 5-4. Journeying to Providence, the varsity proceeded to down Brown and Har- vard, both to the tune of 9-0, but unfortunately succumbed to a superior Dartmouth team, 7-2. This defeat occasioned a triple tie in the northern division of the Intercollegiate League. In the ensuing playoffs at Woodway, Yale went down to defeat to both Harvard (7-2) and Dartmouth (7 ' 7-1 ' 2), thus losing its chances of playing in the finals of the Eastern Intercollegiate Cham- pionships. The varsity came back strong, taking Amherst 7 ' j-l ' 2 and repulsing a strong Alumni team made up of such former stars as Sherry Munson and Dan England, 9-6. Ed Gravely, in number one position, consistent- ly shot the brand of golf that brings in the points. Gravely and Scott succeeded in snaring many best ball matches through the season. Ace Wil- liams and Chauncey Page, in number three and four positions respectively, were excellent. Alter- nating at fifth and sixth positions, Blackbun, Phillips, Bott, William Kuntz and Mennmger many times contributed to victory. Back Row: Thomson (Coach), Gravely, Williams, Mcnningcr, Keutgen (Man.iger). Bott, Phillips, Scott (Captain), Page, Kuntz, Blackhurn. 1 f t t t,:s 1 t -i KR!b.i. BttB m a l Kfciff B S ' . . ' - i ! «( ' ' B.ick Row: Carpenter (Manager), Potts, Taylor, Miller, Dwyer, Kiendl, Greene, Willoughby, Reid. Fourth Row: Magee, Stack. Third Row: Kemp, Westfeldt, Moseley, Bartholemy (Captain), Seymour, Harrison, Turner. Second Row: Wheeler, Thompson. Front Row: Ferguson, Wallace, Ruebel, Overlook, Hoopes. Football 1941 NCE again Yale returned from the football ■ wars with the short end of the spoils, dupli- cating last year ' s record of but one victory in an eight game schedule. However, while Captain Alan Bartholemy ' s forces never regained their winning stride after a story book finish against Virginia in the opening contest, the 1941 eleven never lost a game by more than two touchdowns, and in view of the suicide schedule and psycho- logical effect of having so poor a season, this fact best discloses the great spirit of the team. A very successful early practice period was held at Gunnery School in picturesque Washington, Connecticut. It seemed as if the squad had quite well mastered Spike Nelson ' s carefully conceived T formation, and the many promising soph- omores were rapidly attaining the poise and assur- ance of varsity men. Hopes were high when Vir- ginia ' s fast team paid its second successive visit to the Bowl. The Blue squad, before the season opened, was wisely pointing toward this game and no further. In the first half Virginia scored three touchdowns, and seemed headed for another victory, boasting a 19 to lead. However, the situation was reversed in true Frank Merriwell fash- ion, and a refreshed Eli team roared back on the field to score three times and make each conversion, winning by a score of 21 to 19. Captain Barthol- emy scored the winning touchdown after sophomore Ed Taylor and versatile Teddy Harrison had gone over. The reliable toe of Hovey Seymour, a block- ing back most of the year, produced the needed extra points, and a rightfully jubilant team and crowd left the Bowl full of expectations for a successful season. On October 11th Yale met Pennsylvania, one of the strongest teams in the east. Smarting from last year ' s devastating defeat, the Blue forces took the field with grim determination, but once again a slow start found them behind by three touch- downs at the half. However, the second half drive appeared again, and Taylor and Johnny Ferguson, another sophomore tailback, passed the Elis to two scores. The second saw Fred Dent, a very prom- Fiic-o ' clock sljadoiv ising sophomore end prospect, go over after a spectacular catch and run, in what proved to be one of his last games of the year because of an in- jured knee cartilage suffered soon afterwards. Yale ' s last minute effort to produce the tying tally backfired, and Penn scored again, winning the game 28 to 13. Still this defeat was hardly dis- couraging in view of Penn ' s strength, which was also manifested in its 19 to defeat of a very strong Harvard team earlier in the year. On the following Saturday, Army, with its colorful retinue of Cadets, came to New Haven, to trounce the Elis 20 to 7. In the opening min- ute of play Captain Bartholemy made a sensational play, blocking a punt, catching the ball in the air, and going the distance without a hand laid upon him. Following Seymour ' s conversion, however, the game was all Army. Yale made one drive in the opening period, and Seymour, taking the ball on quarter back sneaks, got off for a few long gains, but the superior cadets left little in doubt as to the outcome, scoring in each of the first three periods. Thirty ihiinsiDul li ' jpcjnU ■■■■■■I October 2 5 th brought Yale face to face with its time-honored rival, Dartmouth, and once again the Ells met with defeat, 7 to 0. Playing without the services of Magee, Turner, Willoughby, and Potts, Yale nevertheless made three magnificent goal-line stands at which time the backing-up of Seymour and Moseley was excep- tionally fine. For the second consecutive vcar Jupe Pluvius made himself much in evidence at the Brown game. Coach Nelson wisely instructed the team to resort to a kicking game and wait for a break. Until the fourth quarter was well under way, this strategy worked admirably for Ed Taylor ' s good right foot was giving Yale a clear advantage in the punting. However, midway in the last quarter. Brown ' s only completed forward pass netted a touchdown, and the Eli ' s were unable to retaliate. The end play of George Greene highlighted this defensive football game in which practically all the action was between the twenty-five-yard lines. The following week-end Yale ' s cohorts trav- elled to Ithaca where they were overpowered by a very good Cornell Team (though it was not on a par with last year ' s juggernaught) , 21 to 7. This time the Elis played a wide open game, and despite the power that opposed them literally made it a contest up to the last minute, the time they chose to put over their one touchdown. Fumbling was very much in evidence in this game, Yale hobbling no less than seven times. The passing of Ed Taylor again supplied the spark, and the com- pletion of sixteen aerials was climaxed by his pass to another sophomore, Hugh Wallace, for the late score. George Ruebel, still another member of the class of ' 44, was given a trial at guard and played a great game. The rc.illv sad note in the game was the broken leg suffered by Chuck Willoughby, 164-lb. junior full back, who was one of the te.ini ' s leading ground-gainers. The Princeton game, played November 15 th, brought together two teams with amazingly even records. Both had defeated their opening op- ponents and neither had won a game since. After the opening kick-off Yale started a spirited march which terminated with a touchdown on a pass 234 from Taylor to Harrison. Shortly after Yale had gained this lead, Peters came into the game, and before he left (after the final whistle), Princeton had won the game 20 to 6. Following their suc- cessful opening drive, Yale ' s brightest moment came shortly after the second half got under way. PiiyJirf Teddy Harrison ran a reverse around his left end for a 5 2 -yard run which looked like another touchdown, but he was just knocked out of bounds on the goal line by a Princeton back named Peters. Yale was unquestionably outplayed by the men from Nassau, for even after their last score Princeton twice marched deep into Eli territory before relinquishing the ball on downs. The following week brought the Harvard game in Cambridge, and Yale ' s last chance to salvage a poor season. It was, to say the least, a large order, for Harvard had unquestionably one of its hnest teams of the last few years. The happy story was that, while suffering the .ilmost inevitable defeat, Yale rose to its greatest heights and gave a truly great exhibition of foot- ball. Once again the Elis started with a rush, dominating the entire first period. They marched to the two-yard line where Seymour plunged over, only to have the play nullified by a back in mo- tion. Harvard ' s power led to scores in the second and fourth quarters, and the final score was Har- vard 14, Yale 0. However, this was not the same Yale team that suffered defeat at the hands of Princeton, for it threatened right up to the last minute of play. Although he was forced to see the end of the i;ame from the bench. Captain Al Bartholemy capped a brilliant career at Yale with a great ex- hibition of football. It was he who called the sig- nals so clevely during the first half, and had he been able to stay in the game, it is not untoward to say that Yale might well have scored. His task throughout the season as a whole was hardly envi- able. Leading a team through a hard and not too successful season is a burden for any captain, but regardless of the season, Bart played and con- ducted himself in such a way as to be ranged among Yale ' s best captains. Another senior who climaxed a brilliant career on Yale ' s gridiron was Hovey Seymour. He was forced to play most of this season as blocking back, and only for the last three games did he return to his old plunging position. But regard- less of where he played or how the game was go- Scrambhl The Bold ill a iiiifshcll The Army gcti aiiut hi ' man ing he gave only his best the entire game. Per- haps the best offensive back on the field in the Harvard game was Teddy Harrison. Handicapped by not having played football his Freshman year, he did not reach his peak at the close of this season. Playing wing-back, his ball carrying was limited, but his speed and great ability to reverse his field, bolstered by an indomitable spirit, made him an outstanding player in every game, espe- cially in the Harvard contest. Jock Thompson will leave a yawning gap in the end ranks. For four years he was one of the most consistently good players on the team, never failing to excell, especially on defense. Frank Kemp and Jack Magee were both hampered by injuries, the former his junior year and the latter this year. However, they both provided the team with strong tackles. At center Ted Turner had the misfortune to play at a time when one of Yale ' s greatest centers, Captain-elect Spence Mose- ley, was also on the squad. But this very fact, coupled with the realization that Turner was an excellent center, makes one far more appreciative of the tremendous spirit he showed day in and day out. Departing from the guard ranks are Pat Westfeldt and Harry Wheeler, both two-year let- ter men. Despite the abundance of guard material in the lower classes, both these players have given great service in the line. Folloiv the bouncing ball! 236 ' S ft H ' n m - K ' ' ' l M 1 K« IS. -diC Bfl ilU M ' fl|.; J| - ji Jm J |H| r li VV V Ip! I - :- - , ,ij Bji-; i?0!r; Jordan, Goodspctd, Constjntm, Furbe, McClelland, NX ' odcU, Vi ' caduck, Bluck. T jnJ Row: deBeer, LeBoutillier. Second Row: McTernan, Warfield, Burke, Collins (Captain), Gatsos, Macomber, Fay. Front Row: Kubie, Gould. Jayvee Football .... P LAYING under the new system introduced this year by the Spike Nelson regime, the Jayvees functioned during the entire season as members of the Varsity squad. It was only on the day preceding each game that they came together as a team. They opened the season against a strong and hard hitting Pennsylvania team against which the Yale aggregation had great difficulty in making its run- ning attack function smoothly. The one and only score of the game came when the Red and Blue forward wall broke through to smother Dick Noyes as he attempted to run the ball after Penn had been stopped on the Yale two yard line. The result was a disappointing 3-0 defeat. The following Friday a very strong Army Junior Varsity came to New Haven and smothered Johnny Sabo ' s charges with a fast breaking run- ning attack. The Cadets marched up and down the field despite the defensive efforts of Frank Jones, Monk Meyer, and Ed Towne, and the grey team came out of the game on the short end of a 21-0 score. Certainly the most thrilling game of the season came after a three week lapse when Princeton in- vaded Anthony Thompson Field. In a nip and tuck battle which saw first Yale then Princeton ahead the boys from Nassau were finally able to escape New Haven with a 21-20 victory, when a Yale conversion was wide of the mark. The stars for the Blue team in this game were Floyd Fay and Monk Meyer on the offense with Hank Wat- son and Vinnie McClelland shining on defense. The final game of the season saw the Yale team out-played and out-run by a powerful Harvard eleven. Despite the work of Meyer, Fay, Sargent, Collins, and the other Eli stand-outs. Harvard succeeded in pushing over three touchdowns and an extra point to win easily by a 19-0 score. Although the results of the season were dis- appointing, the team ' s spirit was high from Sep- tember through November. All the squad were enthusiastic over Coach Nelson ' s dissolution of the line which formerly separated the Varsity from the Jayvees, and the future of the system was looked to with high hopes. 237 B,uk Row: Anderson (Coach), Kranichfeld, Morns. Scclh.ich, Ish.im ( M,in.ii;er ). Hmdenl.ing, Webber, Wilson, Loeffler (Coach). Third Row: Halsey, Good, Gamble, Pugh, Kubie (Captain), Dell, Smythe, Hart, Esty. Second Roiv: Arnold, Masland. Front Row: Thornton, Castles, Moses, Dines, Barton. 150-Pound Football. . TZlTH the seventy-eight cancJidates reporting for the first practice of the season, Coach Ken Loeffler and Captain Don Kubie were found with the difficult task of duphcating last year ' s championship outfit. The Sanford Trophy hung in the balance with Cornell, Pennsylvania, and Princeton as well as Yale in position to take perm- anent possession of the coveted cup. Although the season was not entirely successful because of the losses to Pennsylvania and Prince- ton, even those games were hard fought. In the backfield, Punky Dell, a veteran of the two previ- ous seasons, was the outstanding offensive spark. He was capably backed up by Claude Hart, and Warren Hindenlang, converted from the end slot which he filled last year. Don Kubie was always conspicuous for his driving blocks and hard tackling. A veteran line of returning lettermen. Hank Smythe, Bill Pugh, Bill Gamber, and Bob Masland, supplemented by Junior Phil Good at guard and sophomore Bill Arnold at end, was de- pendable at all times, and often brilliant. Tackling their first opponents, Rutgers, on Oc- tober 11, the Toy Bulldogs had a field-day. Thirty-nine players saw action in the 40-7 rout, and hopes for a great season ran high. The follow- ing Saturday Cornell came to town and proved to be a somewhat tougher nut to crack, finally bow- ing 7-6 on a Kubie-Dill pass interception and lateral play. At Philadelphia Yale ran up against an inspired Pennsylvania outfit which came back after a long opening quarter run b ' Punkv Dell to win 13-6. On the rebound Yale ran all over Villanova the following week. The game was played in a sea of mud and a driving rain, the only score resulting from Claude Hart ' s thirty-yard end run late in the first half. Villanova was held to one first down while Yale chalked up fourteen. In down- ing Lafayette, 21-7, Yale suffered the loss of its high scoring back, Punky Dell, for the remainder of the season. On the fourteenth of November, the season wound up in a defeat at the hands of Princeton. Trailing at the half by a 13-0 score, Yale returned to the field, a different team, scoring late in the third period and knocking at the door of the visitors at the final whistle. 238 B.uk Ron: Leeman (Coach), Heath, Baker, Spaeth, Anderson, Tolles (Manager). ThnJ Ron : Keith, Meyer, Dangler, Cummings, Haines (Captain), Reed, DeLand, Carrington, Lilley. Second Row: Caulkms, Hoagland. From Roir: Chynoweth, Shepard, Watson, Burgess. Soccer 1941 C PARKED by the record of 1940 ' s undefeated soccer team, the powerful Blue Soccermen blitzkrieged their way to a Big Three Champion- ship. The season started with a bang, Yale beat- ing Williams 3-0. Then the Elis fell afoul of Brown, losing 2-0; Amherst came to New Haven and left with a 1-1 tie under their belts. Thoroughly aroused by the temerity of their past two foes, the Blue team squelched Trinity 5-0, in a game in which every Yale player including the water boy played. Following this victory, Yale traveled to Middletown to out- play a hard-fighting Wesleyan team 2-1. Springfield, who later was to be declared champion of the New Eng- land League, played the Bulldogs next and was fortunate in tying them 2-2. Penn, a hitherto undefeated team, was vanquished in a driving rain 4-0, then a tough team of Jacktars from the H.M.S. Dido was beaten spectac- ularlv 2-1. Princeton fell before tlu Blue o nslaught 2-0 and a week later Yale whipped Harvard ' s cream 2-1 at Cambridge. Coach Leeman ' s splendid system cannot be over- emphasized. He tried each player at almost every position before definitely assigning him a niche, resulting in an astounding versatility on the part of every player that often is able to spell the difference between a win and a loss. Injuries kept Dave Dangler, Don Hoagland, Johnny Milllken and Bob Anderson out of several games and their loss was always keenly felt. Jack Lilley, Hugh Cumming, George Carrington, Phil Spaeth, Dar Heath, Phil Wilson, Howie Reed, Billy Chynoweth,Jack Hopkins, Thorn Deland, George Caulklns. Freddy Shepard, Ching Guirey, George Wil- cox, Frank Burgess, Bob Baker, Dave Watson and J. A. Myers all turned in fine performances. The outstanding player of the year Cal fciiii Hii i cs was without doubt Captain Haines Cross Country THE 1941 cross-country team started its season as potentially the best in Yale history, only to have in|ur ' turn it into an average aggregation. The squad was led by Bill Bird, who was supported by standout sophomores LeRoy Schwarzkopf and Wilmot Castle. In addition Dave Harris, Ralph Fuerbringer, Walt Mann, Bill Gardner, and Charlie Cleaver were to carry Blue hopes. On the Wesleyan home course, Yale won easily 2 3-3 2, Schwarzkopf breaking the course record. On October seventeenth, N.Y.U., led by the great MacMitchell, came to New Haven, and eked out a 27-32 victory. Running second to course-record-breaker MacMitchell, Schwarzkopf turned in a 26:3 2, also breaking the old record, but inability to place fourth and fifth among the first ten men lost the meet. M.I.T. was downed 24-32 in the last home meet with Yale ' s big-three pacing the field. Schwarzkopf again lowered the Yale record. The Elis were top-heavy favorites to cop the Big Three title at Princeton on Oct. 31, but addi- tional injuries weakened the team. Bill Bird won the individual championship for the second con- secutive year, with Jerry Castle second, and in- jured Schwarzkopf eleventh. Cleaver and Gard- ner completed Yale ' s scoring. The resulting defeat at the hands of both Harvard and Princeton was a hard blow for the Elis. Despite the permanent loss of Schwarzkopf, the team set out to redeem itself at the Heptagon- als. Castle and Bird distinguished themselves, coming in fourth and sixth respectively, as the team beat Princeton, their conquerors the week before. The last meet of the season, the ICAAAA saw Yale ' s captain and Jerry Castle place ninth and fifteenth respectively out of a field of 13 0, the team tied Princeton for fourteenth. At the twenty-fifth anniversary banquet. Bill Bird was reelected Captain for the coming season and was made the first recipient of the McCor- mick cup. B.ici Row: McCormick (Manager), Harris, Hoyt (Coach) (Cjptnin), Gardner, Cleaver. From Roll : Schwarzkopf, Castle, Bird, 240 B.ui Row: Riggs (Trainer), Wright, Q. Meyer, Chapin, Milliken (Manager), PilKbury, Thompson, Murdoch. Third Row: LeBoutillier, Roome. Second Row: Guernsey, Carton, Wood, Harrison (Captain), Toland, Davis, Burgwin. Front Row: C. Meyer, Martin. Hockey Captain: FRED H. Harrison jManager: John F. Milliken T T EADED by veteran defenseman, Captain Jigger Harrison and nine other returning lettermen, the Yale 1942 Hockey Team was rapid- ly developed into a high scoring, aggressive unit early in December by Coach Murray Murdoch. Winning fourteen games and losing only to Dartmouth, Princeton, and Boston College, this year ' s sextet showed an improvement over last season ' s near perfect team. The Elis ended up in second place in the newly-formed Pentagonal League and at the same time placed first in the Big Three, splitting the two- game series with Princeton and de- feating Harvard both times. Both the War and the Dean ' s of- fice have accounted for a number of shifts in the Blue lineup this season. Coach Murdoch ' s promising first line, consisting of high scorer John Le- Boutillier, Ace Pike, and Bill Wood, remained intact only for the first half dozen encounters. Pike ' s depar- Cal tain ture to the Pan-American Airways left a vacancy which was ably filled by an improved Reg Roome. This combination, the Freshman first line of two years back, formed the main offensive unit dur- ing the remainder of the season. Jock Thompson, an expert stick-handler, led the all-senior second line; he was flanked by Spink Davis and Ben To- land, who accounted for more crucial goals than any other player. The third line, in spite of suffering more than its share of changes, turned in an admirable record. The initial Sophomore combination of fast-skat- ing Pete Guernsey, captain of his Freshman team a year ago. Colly Burgwin, and Hugh Wallace was soon broken up when the latter left for the Air Corps. Jim Wright then returned to the ice and fitted well into this vacant position. Later the Dean traded Gig Carton, tricky cen- ter of last year ' s first line, for Guern- Harriivn sey, who at that time led in total Gnifsomr, ain ' t it points scored. Guernsey returned a month later to finish off the season with Carton and Burgwin. Captain Harrison was the bulwark of the defense all season, checking expertly and playing a fine offensive game when the opportunity arose. Jack Ch.ipin handled the other defensive post ably, and One iloifit, two to go both George Pillsbury and Monk Meyer provided dependable relief. Cord Meyer was outstanding at the goal all season and was largely responsible for the number of Yale victories. His alternate, Bert Martin, also distinguished himself in the nets. The Yale team opened its season with an im- pressive 8-0 shut-out over Boston University. The second line led the way the entire game and chalked up five goals. However, this elating vic- tory was immediately offset by the 4-3 defeat of the Blue at the hands of Boston College, New England Champions of 1941. Guernsey ' s last period goal was not quite enough to turn the tables. The Yale sextet made up for the loss by trouncing a haggard Colby team. The first period looked slow, but the opponent ' s lack of reserves became evident in the next two periods; LeBoutil- lier and Pike each netted three goals and Colby was held to two points while the Elis piled ap eleven. The pre-Christmas season ended with the traditional Alumni game which ended with a favorable 8-4 score. Returning from vacation the Yale Hockey Team settled down to its rigorous schedule by first shutting out the Queens Victorias Club, 5-0. The first game in the Pentagonal League with Army was a highly favorable omen for the future encounters. Both offense and defense were letter perfect in accounting for the 10-2 win over the West Point Cadets before the first real crowd of the season. Well timed passing and shooting was seen at its best in this game and was used to ad- vantage by Wood, LeBoutillier, and Guernsey. Harrison and Chapin starred at defense. With the loss of Pike, Roomc took a place on the first line, and the Yale team played another one of its last period thrillers to come out on top with a 5-3 score over a powerful Clarkson ag- gregation. The Thompson- Toland combination, which was to bring in crucial points all season, showed its first power in this win. In the St. Nick ' s game. Bill Wood played his best game to date, as the Blues won in overtime. Follow- ing this, the pucksters journeyed to West Point for their second League tilt. As was expected, the game was similar to the first, resulting in an 8-1 Cadet defeat. John LeBoutillier was credited with four goals and one assist. Roome placed second with two goals and an assist, while Bill Wood ' s passes were made to order. The Dartmouth Team came to New Haven 242 with the finest team in its history and with a At Rye, minus the services of Wood who was grudge nursed from last year. The crack soph- out with a bad shoulder, the team stopped St. omore first line proved too much for the Elis, and Nick ' s by a close 4-3 count. Harrison ' s stellar these three were responsible for Yale ' s first major defensive work stood out. defeat. Chances looked bright in the first period g k on home ice .again, the Bulldogs took com- with Yale taking the lead 2-1 through goals netted by Burgwin and Carton; before the end of th.it stanza, however, Riley of Dartmouth tied the count. Again Yale had hopes when Wood pushed in the puck to establish a 3-2 lead in the middle period. Dartmouth put on their reserve pressure in the last, and the final result was 6-4 in their favor. Martin played his best game of the year in the nets, but the loss ended Yale ' s winning streak and dimmed chances for the Pentagonal title. Well into the vital part of the season, the squad was primed to renew its annual rivalry with Princeton. The game got under way after a slow start when LeBoutillier circled the defense and beat the Tiger goalie for the initial point. Toland then furthered the lead to two points with the aid of Thompson. LeBoutillier, playing in top form, netted another puck on a rebound shortly after Princeton had tallied one with a successful five- man rush. Bill Wood drove a long shot in the last period to insure a win in this sluggish game by a 4-1 score. , Hitffl Thii looks close Otic scalp for Yale plete revenge on Williams for the upset of last year. The Purple ' s defense collapsed in the first period, and Yale was able to score a 13-0 shutout. All hopes for first place in the Pentagonal League were shattered with the second defeat by the powerful Dart- mouth six at H anover. Wood, Wright, and To- land were able to tally for Yale, while the real star of the team was Cord Meyer, who was given high praise for his great number of mir- aculous saves. A sluggish game with Colgate, punctuated by twenty penalties, fol- lowed before the final Big Three frays. Yale won this one by a 3-1 count. 243 What arc li ' c ... , .- The game at Princeton was a bitter disappoint- ment to all, after the successful encounter with the Tigers a month before. The Princeton Defense was at its best and repulsed the Eli attack time and again. After Thompson and Toland scored within thirty seconds of each other to take the first period, the Orange and Black tightened up and put on a genuine oflfensive; Yale was unable to beat the net-tender. Even a six-man up play failed to tie the score. The season was brought to a close with the traditional games with Harvard at Boston and New Haven. In the first the Blue was not sure of a victory until late in the last period. Guern- sey had opened the scoring the stanza before with a long low shot from the blue line. Falling to the ice, Roome converted on a fine pass from LeBou- tillier, raising the score to 2-0. A de- termined Harvard sextet then dead- locked the game two all. Pillsburv broke the tie in the final period and Le- Boutillier made it certain with another goal. Cord Meyer did yoeman service the cage by holding the score 4-2, with 42 stops in all. In the second game Yale was closely pressed before winning the Big Three title. Captain Harrison, playing his last game for Yale, was unquestionably the most indispensible player for the Blue that night; he was outstanding both at defense where he consistently broke up Cantab attacks, and at offensive duty in which he scored two badly-needed goals, as Guernsey and Thompson accounted for the other two making the total 4-3. After the game Bill Wood was elected to lead the team next year. On the whole, the season was a good one, with Dartmouth and Princeton caus- ing the only disappointments of real importance. First place in the Big Three and second in the Pentagonal League are welcome additions to Murray Murdoch ' s record of consistently produc- ing outstanding Yale Hockey Teams. Lost from the team by graduation are Captain Harrison and his defense partner Jack Chapin; the entire second line of Jock Thompson, Ben Toland, and Spink Davis; and Gig Carton of the third line. Also, the first line suffers a severe loss in John LeBoutillier ' s leaving to join the Marines. ]ersey Stomli Swimming Captain : Howard R. Johnson . Manager: NATHAN D. McClurE ' I ' HE greatest swimming team in histon,, - - said Coach Matt Mann of Michigan in speaking of this year ' s Yale team. Bob Kiphuth ' s proteges truly deserved this epithet as they swept to their fourth consecutive Eastern League Championship, and completed their second straight undefeated season. In the season opener in December a visiting South American group won three of the events and Yale won three. Returning from vacation, the Blue mermen met the Alumni, winning 39-27. A Yale quartet of Frank Lilley, Dick Kelly, Ed Pope and Howie Johnson set a new American record in the 200-yard freestyle relay of 1 min. 3 3.4 seconds. On the following Friday, the Kiphuthmen journeyed to Amherst where they tamed Mass- achusetts State, 46-29. Captain Howie Johnson set a new pool record of 52.6 in the 100, as well as winning the 220. The next afternoon in New Haven, Pennsylvania took only one first place. losing 5 8-17. The fol- lowing Saturday, a weak Rider College aggregation was con- quered by the Elis, 64- 11, Johnson turning in a 52 second 100, and Kelly negotiating the 220 in 2:16.6. In a preliminary to the meet, Danny Dannen- baum, Ted Davidge, and Ed Pope set a new record in the 15 0- - a r d medley of 1 minute, 19.6 seconds. Journeying to An- napolis the following Saturday, the Ya le natators splashed to a 5 9-16 win over the midship- men. Kelly ' s 2:16.3 in the 220, Johnson ' s 52.7 in CtJpftiiii Johnson Back Row: Kiphuth (Coach), Moriarty, Mann, Lilley, F., Schmidt, Peters, Rowe, Smith, Lilley, J., Stoddard, McClure (Manager). Third Row: Drake, Fairhurst, Ireland, Clement, Ewald, Keating, Davidge, Dannenbaum, Arras, Judd, Pulleyn, Conkiing. Second Row: Hunter, McLeaman, Chouteau, Meyers, Pope. Johnson. Kelley, Britton, Twigg-Smith, White. Front Row: Black, Richards, Blake, Cooke, Jackson, Manvel, Holloway. the century and Dannenbaum ' s 1:38.3 in the backstroke were outstanding, as the Elis went to their second straight league victory. On Wednes- day, February 4, the Bulldogs went up to Spring- field, beating Springfield College, 49-26, in a twenty yard pool. Dannenbaum, Davidge, and Kelly started the meet off by setting a new pool record of 2:57.6 in the medley. Howie Johnson added another pool record to his collection, nego- tiating the 220 in 2:10.9. Jack PuUeyn then tied the pool record in the 60-yard dash, turning in the time of 29.6 seconds. Frank Lilley, Kelly, Pope, 23. Johnson, again starred, and Johnny Meyer returned to his old form, doing 2:25.9 in the 200 yard breast-stroke. Saturday, February 21 was virtually the climax of the season. It was on that day that the two outstanding teams in the country, Yale and Michigan, faced each other in Ann Arbor, the latter having been undefeated for four years. In the opening event, the 300-yard medley relay, it was Dannenbaum, Davidge, and Pope against Michigan ' s Riedl, Skinner and Gus Sharemet. Ted Davidge did the impossible in his breaststroke leg. ' .-■ • ' ' T Loaded for Wolvcriiia and Johnson set a new pool record of 3:29.4 in the 400 yard relay. A well-balanced Army team next met defeat at the hands of the Elis, 62-13; Howie Johnson again shone in the 100, breaking the Yale record, and tying the National Collegiate record, in 51.6 seconds. In the medley Dannenbaum, Twigg- Smith and Johnson set a new Yale record, being timed in 2:55.8. The following Wednesday, the Kiphuthmen turned in a perfect score, defeating Brown 68-7, taking every first and second place. In the final relay, Howie Johnson, Frank Lilley, Dick Kelly, Ed Pope broke all existing marks as they sped through the water in 3:26.6. Howie Johnson, leading off the relay tied the world record for the 100 yard freestyle, and bettered the collegiate, Yale and pool records as he was timed in 51.0 seconds. The Elis were the victors over Dartmouth, 51- Moi ' c over, Mr. Wcismiillcr beating National Champion Skinner to ensure victory for the Yale trio. His split was 1:01.6, almost record time. Howie Johnson and Rene Chouteau finished in that order in the 220, Johnson turning in a 2:09.7 to set a new Yale and pool record. Chouteau, edging out Michigan ' s ace Johnny Patten for second, was timed in 2:11.0. The 50 was a spec- tacular race, Jack Pulleyn nosing out Dick Kelly, with the Wolverine Captain Dobson Burton third. Both Pulleyn and Kelly were timed in 2 3.4 seconds. With the score reading Yale — 21, Mich- igan — 2, Ace diver Jim Cook, won handily over Michigan ' s T-Bone Martin, and Sandy Tompson garnered another point for Yale when he beat Michigan ' s second diver by one-tenth of a point. Howie Johnson took his second first place of the day in the 100, as Ed Pope and Gus Sharemet swam a dead heat for second. In the 150-yard backstroke Danny Dannenbaum nosed out Mich- igan ' s Riedl for first, being timed in 1:37.3. Bob White turned in the fastest time of his career, 1:39, to take third. Taking his cue from Ted Davidge, Senior Johnny Meyer vanquished Champion Skinner in the 200-yard breaststroke. Meyer, victor by sev- eral yards, set a new Yale record as he butterflied the distance in 2:24.7 and Thurston Tvi ' igg-Smith edged out Johnny Sharemet to take third. Rene Chouteau coasted to victory in the 440, turning in a 4:53 as Dick Peters was third. Yale ' s ace relay quartet of Frank Lilley, Dick Kelly, Ed Pope, and Howie Johnson easily defeated Mich- igan ' s best to tie the old world mark of 3:27.7 in the 400-yard relay. Thus Yale was victorious 59-16, the worst defeat Michigan had suffered in 18 years. Returning to New Haven, on Monday the Seniors took on a team com- posed of men from the three lower classes to replace the cancelled Wayne meet. In spite of having just swum Michigan, two Yale records were broken, as the Seniors showed their superiority, de- feating the underclassmen, 41-34. Howie Johnson turned in a 2:10.8 220, and. anchoring the 400 vard relay, was timed in 50.2 seconds. Dick Kellv set a new Yale record in the 5 0. Lniik lihiif ' s ifti- Jnsf a little air The Lc«al Eagle sprinting to a fast 23.0 seconds. Danny Dannen- baum set the other mark, churning through the 150- yard backstroke in 1:36.8. On the following Friday, most of the first stringers taking a rest, the Eli mer- men journeyed to Columbia, winning 52-23. Howie Johnson turned in another 51.6 in the century, setting a new pool record, and Dick Kelly swam his fastest 220 of the season in 2:15.7. The next night the Tenth Annual Swimming Carnival took place. Gloria Callen continued her record breaking, negotiating the 220 in 2:47, and Maria Lenk of South America butterflied a 500-yard breaststroke in 7:31 to set another mark. A Yale sextet composed of Pulleyn, Frank Lilley, Kelly, Johnson, Pope, and Britton set new marks in the 200, 250, and 300 yard free- style relays of 1:32, 1:54.8, 2:18.4 respectively in a match race against the New Haven Swim Club. A unique innovation in the Carnival was the dramatization of the Ugly Duckling. Ed Pope directed the choreography and was outstanding as the Ugly Duckling. Bob White took the role of the Mother Duck, and Howie Johnson, Dick Kelly, Sandy Thompson, and Tom Jackson were the other ducks. A diving exhibition between events completed the program. ■jkiii ' Princeton, publicized as one of the best teams in the country, was next to bow before the EHs, 45-30. The score was not indicative of the com- parative strength of the two teams, as Bob Kip- huth failed to use all his top men. Rene Chouteau set another pool record, as he swam the 220 in 2:12, in a goldfish -laden pool. Howie Johnson set a new pool record in the 50 of 23.5 and returned to win the 100. Danny Dannenbaum shattered Al Van de Weghe ' s pool mark, as well as setting a new Yale record, as he turned in a 1:3 5.5 in the backstroke. Chouteau garnered his second victory as he made his debut in the 200-yard breaststroke in 2:34. Jim Cook easily took the dive. In the final dual meet of the season, the Elis splashed to victory over a mediocre Harvard aggregation, 5 5-20, losing only one first place. A medley relay trio of Dannenbaum, Davidge, and Jim Holloway turned in a passable three minutes to win, Dannenbaum setting a new Yale mark for the 100-yard backstroke of 59.8. Dick Kelly bettered his former 220 best, being timed in 2:13.3. Sandy Thompson rose to one of his best performances to win the dive by a wide margin. and Howie Johnson easily won the lOU. Bob White won the backstroke in 1:39.4, and Johnny Meyer, even with a lack of practice, turned in a fast 2:25.5 in the breaststroke. The 440 provided the thrills of the evening, as Rene Chouteau turned in his season ' s best of 4:47.5 as he more than lapped the field. Ev MacLeman provided the excitement when he pulled one of his typical last- minute sprints to come from behind and take second by several yards. The Elis took the final relay. In compiling one of the best season records of any Yale team, this year ' s aggregation amassed a total of 668 points to the opponent ' s 231 in 12 meets, exclusive of the Alumni and Inter-Squad contests. Out of a possible 108 first places, the Kiphuthmen garnered 93. Captain Howie John- son, unbeaten in dual competition was the team ' s leading scorer, piling up the impressive total of 14 first places, as well as swimming on three victor- ious relays. Another interesting commentary on the success of the season, is that this year ' s Varsity squad broke every Yale record except the 440. 248 Back Row: Ripley (Manager), Milliken, Rhett, Berry, Smith, LoelHer. Front Row: Dils, Ingley Vogt, Scc-Ibach (Captain), Wi-;!itman, Norton, K?arn?y. Basketball C.i n.iiii: Charles F. Seelbach Mwiiger: Charles P. Ripley XTT ITH the graduation of John Cobb, Ray Anderson, Joe Zilly, Bill Thorne and Ziggy Owen, Yale faced the 1941-42 sea- son with not too many bright hopes. From the standpoint of wins and losses the season was only fair, but considering the inexperience of the squad as a whole, many fine things can be said of this team. Handi- capped as to size in most games and burdened with injuries as well as lacking varsity experience, this was a squad that never once lost its grip and in the few decisive defeats suf- fered by superior opposition, this team never once gave up trying. It was a smart team that was never outsmarted but often out manned and outsized. Three pre-season games were played with Williams, Rochester, and Captain Toledo, the game with Williams resulting in a 44 to 3 5 win at White Plains and the game at Rochester ending in a 38-36 victory for the Yellowjackets. Toledo Uni- versity next defeated Yale by a score of 52 to 40, but when it is con- sidered that both Rochester and To- ledo had outstanding teams in the East no prestige was lost in these fine performances. Toledo went on to win the national invitation tour- nament at Madison Square Garden by greater scores against sectional champions. Cornell came to New Haven and went away the winner by an eight point margin over Yale, who played without the team ' s outstanding scorer, Tom Vogt, who suffered a foot infection. Vogt however re- covered in time to join the team in Seelbach defeating Columbia several nights later by the score of 40 to 23. Losses then followed to Penn, Cornell, and Princeton who came up with big veteran teams, but these losses were interspersed with a 5 7- J 6 victory over a good Brown team and another win over the touring Mexico City team. The University of Connecticut came down to the Payne Whitney gym with a band and sev- eral thousand enthusiastic supporters only to be defeated by the score of 53 to 48. Dartmouth ' s great team was met and played even most of the distance, after which Penn managed to win an extra-period game 46-43. Then followed another close contest with Georgetown in which George- town won in an extra period by the score of 53 to 55. Princeton ' s great team came to New Haven and finally managed to break the jinx and win on the P ayne Whitney floor for the first time in seven years. Yale defeated Columbia in New The lioiiiiilcd fi l. ' t on York, and then suffered defeats by Harvard and Dartmouth, both away from home. Returning to New Haven after having lost to Harvard for the first time in eight successive games, Yale rallied and with a great defensive exhibition de- feated Harvard by the score of 37 to 34. Great basketball games were played against Rochester, Toledo, Georgetown, and Dartmouth, teams that are recognized as some of the finest in the country. Most of the losses were suffered at the hands of teams that were physically superior. Jump Princeton Yale won the games she had a chance to win when she was not overmatched and in the final game of the season rose to a peak in defeating a bigger Harvard team which boasted victories over Dartmouth, Penn, and many others. Captain Chuck Seelbach was an ideal leader and it was fitting that he should play his finest game of the season against Harvard in the last game. He has been a great backboard man and a good set shot; these assets together with his natural love of the game have brought many a grand victory to Yale during his three years of varsity play. Yale never had a finer captain. Bert Ingley returned to the squad this year after laying out almost a full year with a bad knee injury, and with a lot of grit and cool thinking he played another season under conditions which would have broken one less gifted with competi- tive spirit. Bert will long be remembered for his fine set shooting and his playmaking. Tom Vogt, undoubtedly one of the finest set shots in basket- ball today as well as an exceptional playmaker 250 and defensive man, led the team in scoring and at the close of the sea- son was unanimously elected captain for next season. In the opinion of many Tom could make any team in the country today with his shooting ability alone. The records alone tell of his scoring ability but only spec- tators can tell of his other fine work. Austie Norton, a sophomore, played great defensive ball all sea- son and the burden of the backboard work fell upon him because of his height. In another season, with more experience, his scoring should im- prove and he will be an invaluable member of next year ' s team. Nor- ton played his best game against Harvard when he held a highly touted opponent to one field goal while scoring three himself. Ed Dils and Frank Kearney, two midget Doiiit with Pciiiisyhaiiia! 251 I sophomores divided the time for the fifth position on the team and although tremen- dously handicapped because of size, both played ex- ceptionally well throughout the season. Kearney ' s shoot- ing in the Cornell game and Dils ' fine all around play in the last Harvard game were especially noteworthy per- formances. Kcehn Berry, a big fellow with a great love of the game, developed throughout the year; he saw some ac- tion and lacked only play- ing experience as did Milli- ken and Averback. These three sophomores have im- proved and should provide good competition for the positions left open by graduation. Chal Coe, handicapped by a knee in- jury, together with Warren Hindenlang, completed the squad which made the trips and played good basketball when injuries and studies did not interfere. Both Hindenlang and Coe are seniors and will be lost to the squad in June. Bear (I own I No basketball team at Yale ever had more courage in the face of physical handicap, more dogged spirit, more devotion to work, more team loyalty and more pure love of the game than this basketball team. Many teams would have broken apart in the face of such opposition but not this team. Fine captain leadership, good managerial handling by Charley Ripley and a sensible group love of a great game and a good contest made this season a success in spite of wins and losses. The seniors graduating have played on M - winners in other years and those re- Ifj I maining will play on winners in the future but no team will have a greater spirit than this team. The iiitiii with the iron leg. 252 Ml Wrestling TN the first dual meet of the year Yale suc- cumbed to a strong Pennsylvania delegation. Still, Jack Castles in the 136-lb. class and Jack Chafee in the 15 5, were outstanding. However, in the next meet the grapplers subdued a strong Lehigh team for the second time in ten years. Army was the next to fall, 14-12. Parker, Castles, Macomber and Brown won with Parker again pinning his man. After an easy practice match with Springfield College the team subdued Cornell, Lehigh winners repeating. Garvan 121, Miller 175, and Seymour Heavyweight lost close matches, the score being 19-9. Princeton handed the wrestlers their second and last defeat. Castles, Perry, and Macomber chalked up the only wins. Captain Parker, 128 and Wea- dock. Heavyweight lost their close matches, each by only one point. The final score was again 19-9. In the last dual meet of the year the team re- deemed its reputation by trouncing Harvard 27-3, Garvan at 121, lost a heart-breaker, but Parker, Castles, Perry, Hauer, Macomber, Miller, and Weadock all won easily. Griiiif, ; rotvi Bolstered by this win the team journeyed to Middletown two days later and won the Intercol- legiates with ease. Parker, Castles, and Perry won firsts. Garvan and Macomber were runners-up and Constantine, Weadock and Green each took a third place, thus ending brilliantly a fairly suc- cessful season. Back Row: J. O ' Donnell (Assistant Coach), Bancker (Manager), Constantine, Brown, E. O ' Donnell (Coach). Second Row: Miller, Macomber, Castles, Parker (Captain), Garvan. Hauer, Weadock. From Row: Green, Wilson. B.iik Row: Haggard (Manager), Masursky, Olmsted, Hamilton, Dappert, Grasson (Coach). Front Row: Markle, Stephan, Birrell (Captain), Steinberg, Beers. Fencing 1941 Caphihi: George A. Birrell Co.ich: Robert Grasson ,vlJj cr: William Haggard npHIS year ' s varsity fencing team had a highly - - successful season — up until the Harvard matches; there a loss marred the total results, but still left Yale as one of the best teams in the east. Since a large number of the Varsity mem- bers were juniors, next year ' s season should be at least equally if not more successful. The opener of the season was with a strong Rutgers team, which Yale defeated 15-12, losing the foil, but winning the epee, sparked by Beers and Captain Birrell 6-3; largely through the ef- forts of Steinberg, the saber upheld its end by a 5-4 count. The following week, the team, still a little green, lost to Brown, 13-14. In the New England Invitational IntercoUegi- ates, Yale swept to first place, and thereby an- nexed the Bob and Al Grasson Trophy for the three weapon championship. The foil team over- came the Engineers by a wide margin, 7-2, and revenged its former loss at the hands of Brown. The epee team likewise drubbed Brown 6-3, but lost to M.I.T., 5-4. The saber team crushed both Brown and M.I.T. by 5-4 and 8-1. In the pentagonals at West Point, Yale ' s foil team took it on the chin from Harvard, Princeton, Army, and Navy; George Dappert proved to be the only foil bright spot, as he won most of his matches. The epee fared much better, however, beating Harvard and Army, tying with Navy, and losing only to Princeton, thus sharing with Navy possession of the cup. In the saber, too, the Elis overcame Harvard and Navy but were edged out by Princeton and Army. In the summaries, Yale placed third, behind Army and Navy. The following week, the team took on an un- defeated Princeton in dual competition. Foilmen Hamilton and Dappert pulled through to a 5-4 win; Stephan and Beers took the laurels in the epee by the same score; Princeton tied the meet up in a knot at 13 all going into the last bout, but Yale ' s Ted Olmstead downed his opponent, and gave the victory to the Elis. In the season ' s concluding meet at Harvard, Yale lost to Harvard 17-10, Harvard winning foil 7-2, epee 5-4, and saber 5-4. TTiis was a dis- appointing conclusion to a very favorable season. 254 ■U Bad Row: McLean (Manager), Copp, Coolcy, Williams, Caulkins, Skillnian (Coach). Iron! Ron. Williamson, R. Dugan, Ethridge, D. Dugan, Adams, Lockwood, Huyt. Squash Captain: DANIEL C. Dugan t Manager: Garden R. McLean ,tar- ' I ' HE Yale Varsity Squash team, under the - ■ capable coaching of Johnny Skillman, had a highly successful season, which lasted from October 2 5 to March 14. After defeating op- ponents in eleven successive matches, including Harvard, Yale lost a heartbreaker to Princeton ' s team on March 14. The Tigers, captained by National Amateur and Intercollegiate Singles Champion, Charley Brinton, and strongly aug- mented by McCoy and Rothermill, edged out the Elis in a hard-fought match which belied the 6-3 score. Thus did Yale ' s squashmen fail in their crucial match to recapture the Intercollegiate Squash Racquets Team Championship. Opening their season by defeating the Univer- sity Club of New York, 5-0, the squash team then won over the Yale Club, 5-2. After Christmas, Williams College lost to the Elis, 8-1, in a match that will be remembered chiefly by the complete winter breakdown of Belton Copp ' s car carrying half the team, including our coach. Copp, with fro- zen feet, dropped the only contest. On January 31, Yale defeated the Hartford Golf Club, 6-1. The following week. Captain Dan Dugan beat Dick Cooley in the finals of the Connecticut State Tournament. Pennsylvania fell to the Blue, 6-0, February 7. After a fine trip to Hanover Yale returned with a hard-earned 7-2 victory. Wes- leyan fell, 5-0, and Trinity by an equal score, in the next week. Yale played host during the National Inter- collegiate Squash Racquets Championship matches, from February 26-28, in the Payne Whitney Gym. Although there were four Elis in the quarter finals, Brinton defeated Dick Cooley in the finals. After the easy 9-0 victory over Amherst, Yale won revenge for 194rs defeat by Harvard when the tight match ended 6-3 in our favor. Next year, however, an impressive, undefeated season will be the goal of such returning lettermen, rich in experience, as: Dick Dugan, Jack Holt, Bob McKenna, Dick Cooley, Hal Williamson, Bob Williams and Doug Kerr, who should be eligible by 1943. Capt. Dan Dugan, Jim Ethridge, Ned Lockwood and Worthy Adams leave Yale after two or three vears of fine playing on the varsity. Indoor Polo CipLiii}: Dave Wilhelm iMjuj er: Ross Lawler T ' AKING the ball off the sidewall in a sudden - - death overtime period, Captain Dave Wilhelm scored the goal which beat Princeton 4-3 and gave Yale the Intercollegiate Polo Championship for 1942. Primarily a defensive game, credit for the victory was due in no small part to the hard- hitting and riding of Bob Johnson, veteran back. Though the winning of the Townsend Trophy puts the stamp of success on the indoor season, the team had an viphill fight most of the time, and prospects of success were often gloomy. Yale succumbed on two occasions to the strong Nassau combination of Hayden, Hayden, and Rose before the final meeting in the Intercollegiates. The first meeting on February 7 in the Princeton Riding Hall saw the Blue on the wrong end of a 19-12 count, and Princeton repeated on Yale ' s home front 20-11 on Washington ' s Birthday. It was the same story when Yale met Pennsyl- vania Military College for the first time at the Pegasus Club in Trenton, and Yale came off the loser to the tune of 18-8. Hard practices under the able auspices of Major Williams left their mark, however, and when the teams met again in the Intercollegiates at West Point, Captain Wil- helm led his team to a 9-5 victory. The high spot was the series with Army. In three preliminary encounters, the Cadets went down before the Blue 12-3, 12-4, and 10-5 re- spectively. It was during these matches that the Daniels-to- Wilhelm combination was perfected. In the Intercollegiates Yale faced a determined Cadet team for the last time, gaining a 7-6 vic- tory. An added game in the war-restricted season was a 13-0 win over Cornell. In retrospect, the season was highly successful and it will be difficult to replace Captain Wilhelm and Bob Johnson who have played their last games for Yale. Tim Carpenter and Dave Wil- liams proved invaluable as substitutes, and also in the less spectacular but vital practices. As always, Frank Butterworth contributed time and spirit, and this year much needed horses for the Inter- collegiates. M.i|ur Williams (Co.icli), Daniels, Willielm (Captain), Johnsim, Lawlor. Rifl( A LTHOUGH beginning the year with most potent team on paper in its history, the Yale Varsity Rifle Team completed only a mediocre season due to coaching and scholarship troubles. None of the scores fired were very good and none were very bad. Three lettermen. Captain J. T. Pigott, H. F. Church, and R. I. Lyman and the best men of the previous year ' s crack freshman team composed this year ' s squad along with sev- eral other veterans under the coaching of Chief Gunner ' s Mate F. E. Wolfe. The team finished in the New England College Rifle League with six victories and three defeats. After only a week ' s practice the Elis journeyed to New York City to fire their best score of the season and to be beaten by a hot N.Y.U. aggre- gation 1398-1363. The next week at New Flaven the LLT. team succumbed to the Yale team 1345-1336 and Columbia came out on the short end of a 13 57-1315 score the following week. Lyman was lost at this time to the books and darkened the team ' s future hopes although two sophomores, Witherbee and Tishman, were show- ing promise. For two weeks in a row the Yale team failed to show power and was beaten in turn by a crack Navy team at Annapolis 1379-13 34 and by the Army at West Point 13 89-1330 but came back the next week at Kingston, R. L, to win a triangular match firing a 13 36 total to beat Connecticut State ' s 1304 and Rhode Island State ' s 1269. In its final shoulder-to-shoulder match of the regular season, Yale tasted defeat at the hands of its third opponent among the service academies. Coast Guard, at New Haven, 13 5 5- 1343. In its final postal match of the New Eng- land College Rifle League, Yale defeated Harvard, 1338-13. It is not known what effect freshman mem- bership will have on future Yale rifle teams for there were times this year when the freshmen could have helped the varsity but the Rifle Team looks forward to a promising season in 1943 with Witherbee, Tishman, Mitchell and Perry return- ing, and it is hoped that the team will not be faced with the ammunition and paper shortages that have hampered several of its opponents this year. B.uk Row: Chief Gunner ' s Mate Wolf, Foertmeyer, Gaylord (Manager), Mitchell. Front Rou. Witherbee, Church, Pigott, Perry, Tishman. 257 Major Y Men In College BASEBALL Carton, J. L., Jr., 19-42 S Harrison, F. H., 19-42 Hart, C. B., 1943 E Pope, E. J., Jr., 1942 S Whelan, T. J., Jr., 1943 BASKETBALL Bartholemy, a. E., 1942 Bell, W. T., 1942 INGLEY, A. J., 1942 S Rhett, R. G., 3d, 1942 Seelbach, C. p., Jr., 1942 S VOGT, T. D., 1943 WiGHTMAN, A. S., 1943 CREW Goss, G. A., Jr., 1942 KiENDL, T., Jr., 1943 Macy, E. E., 1943 PiLLSBURY, G. S., 1943 Wallace, R., 1942 S Watson, A. K., 1942 FOOTBALL Bartholemy, A. E., 1942 Bell, W. T., 1942 Dwyer, M., Jr., 1944 Ferguson, J. L., 1944 Greene, G. S., Jr., 1943S Harrison, F. H., 1942 HOOPES, T. W., 1944 Kfmp, F. a., Jr., 1942 KiENDL, T., Jr., 1943 Magee, J. P., Jr., 1942 S Miller, G. S., 1943 MosELEY, S. D., 1943 Overlook, W. J., 1944 Potts, J. M., 1943 E Reid, J. H., 1943 Ruebel, G. R., 1944S Seymour, H., 1942 S Stack, S. A., 1944 Taylor, E. C, 1944 S Thompson, J., Jr., 1942 E Turner, T. S., 1942 E Wallace, H. C, 1944 Westfeldt, p. M., 1942 Wheeler, H. P., 1942 Willoughby, C. L., 1943 S Carpenter, E. N., 1942 HOCKEY Carton, J. L., Jr., 1942S Chapin, J. C, 1942 Davis, R. S., 1942 Harrison, F. H., 1942 LeBoutillier, J., 1943 Meyer, C, Jr., 1943 Pike, W. M., 1942 S Thompson, J., Jr., 1942 E TOLAND, B. R., 1942 Wood, W. H., Jr., 1943 S SOCCER Haines, G. E., 1942 SQUASH Dugan, D. C, 1942 SWIMMING Britton, T. C, 1942 Chouteau, R. A., 1942 Clement, N. P., Jr., 1942 Cook, J. R., 1942 S Dannenbaum, L. D., 1943 Fairhurst, W. M.. 1943E Johnson, H. R., 1942S Kelly, R. C, 1942 MacLeman, E. L., 1942 E Meyer, J. H., 1942 Munding, D. M., 1942 Peters, R. M., 1943 Pope, E. J., Jr., 1942 S PuLLEYN. J. W., Jr., 1943 Twigg-Smith, T., 1942 E Vreeland, J. B., 1943 White, R. E., Jr., 1942 TRACK Ashton. L. 1942 Bird. W. P., 1943 Boies, R. E., 1943 Carpenter. V. W.. 1942 DeMott, T. B., 1942 Ellis. K., 1943S Greene, G. S.. Jr.. 194 3 S Jackson. W. B.. 1942 Kaynor. R. S.. 1942 Madden. A. C, 1942 S Murphy. L R.. 1942 Parshall, E. C. 2D. 1942 Rich, W. C. Jr.. 1942 E Talbott. N. S., Jr., 1943S 58 Minor Y Men In College LACROSSE Adams, W. M., 1942 S Bancker, J. W., Jr., 1942 Battey, W. R., 1942 Brooks, C. C, 1942 E Campion, F. D., 1943 Copp, D. N., 1943 Dell, H. K., Jr., 1942E Devine, a., 1942 S Dun, a. a., 1942 Fleming, W. J., Jr.. 1942 S Gill, R. M., 1942 S Hammerschmidt, B. C, 1943 Hicks, E. L., Ill, 1942 S Hoaglund, D. W., 1943 HuBER, J. Y., Ill, 1942 S Kennedy, H. D., Jr., 1943 S LeBoutillier, J., 1943 BoYCE, C. M., 1943 Sanger, S. P., II, 1942 Sherman, W., 1942 Sullivan, J. D., 1942 Ward, D. A., 1943 TENNIS Ethridge, J. M., Ill, 1942 Wilmer, J. G., 1942 Kennedy, S. C, Jr., 1942 RUMBOUGH, S. M., Jr., 1942 Welch, H. P., 1943 Smith, P. D., 1943 Makepeace, J. V., 1943 GOLF Williams, A. C, 1943 KuNTz, W. R., 1943s Menninger, C. N., 1943 s Phillips, S., Jr., 1942 INDOOR POLO Wilhelm, D. C, 1942 Johnson, W. R,, 1942 Daniels, J. H., 1943 Haas, G. C, Jr., 1942 OUTDOOR POLO Daniels, J. H., 1943 Johnson, R. DeL., 1942 Wilhelm, D. C, 1942 SOCCER Carrington, G. W., Jr., 1942 Deland, T., Jr., 1942 Myers, J. A., 1942 Rffd, H. a., 1942 Watson, D. P. H., 1942 Baker, R. W., 1943 Caulkins, G. P., Jr., 1943 Shepard, F. D., 1943 Burgess, F. L., 1943 S Chynoweth, W., 1942 E Anderson, R., 1944 Lilley, J. M., 1944 Wilson, C. P., 1942 Dangler, D. E., II, 1942 S Keith, F. W., Jr., 1942 E ToLLES, R. S., 1942 Heath, D. W., 1943 Hoaglund, D. W., 1943 Gumming, H. E., 1943 S Spaeth, P. G., 1943 S Hopkins, J. E., 1944 S Wilcox, G. D., IH, 1944 S CROSS COUNTRY Bird, W. P., 1943 Castle. W. V., Jr., 1944 S Schwarzkopf, L. C, 1944 Cleaver, C. G., 1944 Gardner, W. J., 1944 S Mann, W. H., Jr., 1943 Fuerbringer, R. O., 1943 Harris, D. F., 1942 McCormick, R. S., 1942 259 CLUBS ' The Pundits Rene Cupples Scudder di Rosa James Aiken Fisher William Mitchell Ford Fred Harold Harrison Louis Frederick Laun, Jr. John Ward Leggett George Roseman Nichols, III HovEY Seymour Burton Shevelove Howard Freeman Smith, Jr. William Gardner White Back Row: Shevelove, Nichols, Ford, di Ros.i, White, L,iun. From Ron : Harrison, Crawford, Phelps, Seymour, Smith. I B.iii Row: Lamson, Woodhull, Simmons, German. Wright, Fabian. Front Rou : Smith, James. SecoiiJ Run : Gnswold, Johnson, Krech, The Wiffenpoofs ' I ' O commence by relating how many visits the ■ ' - Whiffenpoofs made to Smith would be inter- esting but it would hardly be starting at the be- ginning, for seven of this year ' s songsters enjoyed a three year embryonic period of singing together before being ordained into the Ancient and Honor- able Order of Whiffenpoofs. These seven, with five additions, became the thirty-third annual set of Whiffs to embark upon a career of vocal wanderings. Needless to say, no one would be foolish enough to draft a Whiffenpoof, so the group remained in- tact most of the year, mobilizing at the drop of a cork and singing wherever they found themselves. Frequent rehearsals were held and many were the songs that a casual velvet cup brought forth. Carrying on an interest started long ago in fem- inine institutions of higher learning, an intensive cross-cultural survey was executed throughout the year. This included research at Vassar, Sarah Law- rence, and Connecticut College, not to mention work done in collaboration with the Smiffenpoofs in Northampton. All efforts were not confined to this one field, fruitful though it was. The Whiffs spent many a pleasant evening singing around the campus, at various fraternity dances and, of course, the Junior Prom. Perhaps the most mem- orable day was Friday, February thirteenth, when the Whiffs journeyed to the Columbia studios in New York to make the first Whiffenpoof Souvenir Album. It is sincerely hoped that these records will serve as a permanent memento to whatever following the Whiffenpoofs may claim. Plenty of singing and some drinking gave everyone lots of fun. The memories of many a pleasant evening to the tables down at Mory ' s will never be forgotten. And so the poor little lambs who have gone astray pass on . . . bah, bah, bah. The 1942 Whiffenpoofs were: Olsenan John- son, Battleship-with-a Woodhull, Up-the-well- known Krech, Home James, Do-it-the Hem- ingway, Pitch-pipe Griswold, Messen German, Granz Lamson, Peckaper Simmons, Am Fabian, I ' d - rather - be - wrong - than Wright, Popocatapetl Smith. 263 I Mory ' s Association OFFICERS FOR 1942 John L. Gilson, 1899 Praiiicnt Charles M. Bakewlll, 1905 Vicc-Prcsiilciif BuRNSlDE WiNSLOw, 1904 Treasurer Carlos F. Stoddard, Jr., 1926 Secretary To serve unlil 1943 G. F. Thompson, 1907S B. W.iNSLow, 1904 A. F. Brooks, 191 IS C. W. Mfndell, 1904 BOARD OF GOVERNORS To seree until 194 i S. F. Baker, 1909 A. L, CoRBiN, Jr., 1943 F. D. Grave, 1911S R. C. Sargent, 1911 To ierie uiil l 1945 W. Hamilton, 1925 C. C. HiNCKS, 1911 L. G. Tighe, 1916 R. S. Rose, 1909 HONORARY MEMBERS E. S. Bronson, 1900 T. A. D. Jones, 1908S O. M. PL ATT, 1899 ADMISSIONS COMMITTEE J. F. Baker, Chjirm.in T. Babbitt, 1918 B. Henning, 1932 HOUSE COMMITTEE F. D. Grave, 191 IS, Chairman L. G. Tighe, 1916 R. C. Sargent, 19U COMMITTEE ON ART AND MEMORABILIA A. L. Corbin, Jr., Chairman BjcI Ron : Smith, U-Bar. Lyon Stii„:J R..u Owen, Friedman. Front Ron F..x, Levy, D.S.Dodge. Orpheus and Bacchus Society ' I HE O B ' s this year have continued to up- hold the traditional high standards of song and enjoyment set by last year ' s club and the original group who first organized in the spring of 1940. Having lost most of last year ' s mem- bers through graduation, the club had to replace good men and good voices with an eye not only to the present but also with the future in view. After a good bit of trouble landing a second of those rare and wonderful animals, first tenors, it emerged after Christmas vacation with the octet composed of Ralph Levy and Charlie Lyons on the soprano end of the scale, Nick Fox and John Owen as second tenors, Doug Dodge and Paul Smith as the rich and mellow baritones, and Frank LeBar and Ed Friedman holding down the anchor. Starting off its melodious career by singing at the Aurelian Club banquet in January, the club continued by singing for the Scotsmen ' s celebra- tion of Bobbie Burns ' birthday, assisting in a concert at Greycourt College, and singing at the York Hall dance after Junior Prom. Trips to sing at various girls ' schools and colleges followed spring vacation and many enjoyable engagements were undertaken with much success. Meetings are characterized by cocktails and then the mixing of song and food in one of the college dining halls. Thus the club ' s name aptly covers the wine and song; the third element of the old phrase, though unmentioned, is neverthe- less well taken care of. As only three of the present O B ' s, Fox, Levy, and Friedman, are scheduled to graduate this June, there will be no problem of extensive re- placement next year. Concentrating on the musi- cal side of life, the club has won a reputation for its melody and harmony. Received with much favorable comment by both students and others, the club has increased both its repertoire and its list of engagements. This year has been highly successful and next year should prove even more 265 ll I. I Bjci Roil ' .- Hardy, Clejver, Keith, Williams. ThnJ Rou : Spilncr, Holtcm, Ritdel, Stiefel, Taylor, Treat, Tifft. Second Row: Hoffman, Bates, Carlin, Wastrom, Macpherson, Murphy, Spencer, Barr. Front Row: Hargreaves, Soderberg, Burger, Fahey, Verseput, Russell, Drucklieb. Alpha Chi Sigma PROFESSIONAL CHEMICAL FRATERNITY Roci Gerald R. Fahey, Master Alchcmhf Paul A. Drucklieb, Jr., Vice-Master Alchemist Chester A. Hargreaves, II, Reporter Herman W. Verseput, Recorder Charles A. Russell, Treasurer Robert C. Soderberg, Master of Ceremonies J0H. Pmji Robert W. Barr C. Edgar Bates Marvin C. Brooks James B. Carlin, III 1942 Frederick W. Keith, Jr. James D. Macpherson Stanton C. Martens John P. Murphy Werner K. Stiefel Austin H. Tifft W. Baird Treat Robert D. Wastrom Richard F. Battistella Stephen P. Beard Robert Burger Charles S. Cleaver 1943 Joseph W. Convcay, Jr. Robert A. Hardy, Jr. Richard A. Hoffman John H. Holton, Jr. Robert W. Riedel Robert T. Schmidt Walter B. Spencer, Jr. Robert W. Spilner William Williams 266 : Chi Delta Theta LITERARY HONOR SOCIETY FOUNDED IN 1821 Irving M. Alpert Roger W. Eddy 1942 X ' iLLiAM R. Johnson Douglas M. Knight John Pauker John Porter, 2d ( John G. Gardner Paul Griffith 1943 Douglas Hartshorne, Jr. Dudley L. Miller Arthur T. Nelson Richard Sheehan 1944 Robert Hunter HONORARY MEMBERS 1942 Howard M. Holtzmann Thomas H. Watkins Avon Old Farms Donald M. Davidson 1942 Edward K. DuVivier Ambrose Gordon, Jr. Alfred Owre, Jr. 1943 Douglas Harts Lorne, Jr. James E. Hewes, Jr. 1944 David L. Mitchell, Jr. Alexander M. Sturm Canterbury School Club 1942 Robert B. Sefton 1943 Anthony T. Bouscaren Morgan Hebard, Jr. DoNAL P. McDonnell John L. McHugh 1944 W. Burke Harmon, Jr. John Burk Thomas Burk 1945 Kenneth McDonnell 269 John Glynn Michel Hume The Fountain Valley School of Colorado Charles F. Emery, Jr. 1942 Paul C. Harper, Jr. John P. Josephs GiFFORD Phillips Samuel G. Brown Stuart P. Dodge, Jr. 1944 Charles A. Johnson, Jr Eaton H. Magoon, Jr. Hugh Scott, Jr. Harry M. Blackmer, II 1945 Charles F. Brush, III Pierre Chappell Harold Kountze, Jr. 270 I — -■ A- . ■ado Groton School Club taun ,,lx - John Chandler, Jr. Kent Chandler, Jr. Edwin Corning Malcolm J. Edgerton, Jr. Louis P. Ewald, III Donald P. Farquhan Joseph H. Auchincloss, Jr. James H. Boughton Emerson T. Chandler Stuart H. Clement, Jr. Nathan Chandler James E. Cross William S. Cowles, Jr. Endicott p. Davison Stuart H. Johnson, Jr. 1942 William E. S. James Merrill C. Krech Robert S. Lewis George deF. Lord, Jr. George K. McClelland Roger S. McCormick Jeremiah Milbank, Jr. 1943 Thomas N. Cross George A. Dines Philip L. R. DuVal Austin D. Higgins 1944 John B. Goodenough Stuart W. Little 1945 Hugh Knowlton, Jr. George F. Lawrence, III William J. Schieffelin, III Mason D. Salisbury William W. Shelden Peter F. Tripp Joseph Walker, Jr. David P. H. Watson David C. Acheson Louis H. Hollister CoMAN Leavenworth Vincent McClelland James McK. Symington George L. Rives Richard H. Webb John G. M. Stone, Jr. Frederick W. Whitridge Richard Zahner . 271 Hill School Club Herbert M. Bevans Norman P. Clement, Jr. Alan F. Daily Freeman T. Eagleson, Jr. John B. Blackburn George S. Burrows George P. Caulkins, Jr. Walter B. Ford, II John McM. Harding William P. Hilmer John H. Hobart Frank W. Hoenigmann John C. Alford John W. Braasch Robert F. Daily George T. Adams, Jr. Frank K. Bosworth, Jr. Edwin L. Dale, Jr. Duncan P. Forbes, Jr. Robert A. Gibney, Jr. Charles B. K. Gillet, Jr. Alexander Harvey, II William A. Hawk 1942 Thomas P. Kane Frederick W. Keith, Jr. Bayard M. Mallery 1943 John W. Hughes Richard P. Hunt Robert T. Isham Richard A. Kenv(orthy, III Benjamin W. Lamson, Jr. John H. Maclean Walter H. Mann, Jr. George B. Markle, IV 1944 John S. Deans, III Alfred B. Ford George S. Isham Alexander Montgomery 1945 John McC. Henske Edward H. Hilliard, Jr. George W. Hughes Garrison H. McClure Thomas A. McGraw James A. McIntosh Donald M. MacSporran Ernest C. Parshall, II Hugh V. Sherrill Vaughn C. Spalding, Jr. LeRoy S. Wolfe, Jr. Spencer D. Moseley Edward T. Mulligan Walter G. Rodiger, Jr. Law rence W. Shenfield Charles M. Stoddart James S. Walton Ira D. Waterman, Jr. Robert N. Whittemore Edward C. Smith, II Edward C. Spalding Webster P. Wodell Haskell Noyes, Jr. Richard Rollins, Jr. John W. Routh J. V. Richard Slade Albert H. Swett King Toles, Jr. Joseph A. Williams Iames S. Wiser Davi ]m Hiji Robe MoH Doi ' G Hot Vkc! Gewj SsMU « ' iui JOH.V Chbi Em ' ai Thoi: E«XES JoH, 272 Hotchkiss School Club David G. C. Bridgman John S. Broeksmit, Jr. Hamilton M. Brush, Jr. Robert L. Brush Morton Butler, II Douglas Campbell, Jr. Howard A. Carlton 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. Albert B. Dick, III 1942 John C. W. Dix John C. Duncan, III William M. Ford Charles F. Freeman, Jr. Frederick A. Godlev, Jr. George A. Goss, Jr. Harry T. Greene George E. Haines Alan C. Hall Ralph W. Halsey, 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. 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 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 1943 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, Jr. Charles L. Griswold Crowell P. Hadden Webb C. Hayes, III John H. Hirsh Edgar P. Hoffman Arthur Howe, Jr. Howard P. Ingels, Jr. William S. Ingraham 273 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. G. L. Arnold H. M. Baldridge, Jr. R. R. Bellinger K. W. Berry, Jr. L. E. Brion, Jr. F. H. Brownell, III E. R. BULKELEY J. D. Cannon M. E. Clark, Jr. R. E. Cocks, Jr. H. P. Converse E. W. Cook C. P. Cooper, Jr. C. F. English, Jr. W. Evans C. M. Fauci, Jr. P. F. Fleischmann M. E. Fox W. F. Goodman John W. Anderson, II Palmer L. Bevis Alexander T. Brown John R. Bryden, III Samuel C. Burchell, III Thomas J. Carter Henry A. Chase William W. Collin, III Louis Connick, Jr. Harry J. Coombe Edward R. Cunniffe, Jr. Rawle Deland Norman F. Furniss Leslie N. Gay, Jr. Robinson Gaylord Richard F. Goodman Alexander R. Gordon John C. Gregory 1943 — Continued Stewart T. Peck Charles M. Perry Farwell W. Perry Charles L. Reed, Jr. Marcel A. Smith Zeph Stewart Walter H. Sykes, III Nelson S. Talbott, Jr. David E. Tileston 1944 C. L. Griswold C. K. GUIREY A. B. Hilton W. S. Ingraham W. C. Kelly, II H. H. Ketcham, Jr. M. Le Boutillier E. Lord, Jr. A. McClure, Jr. J. A. McCurdy, II C. L. McMillan B. M. May, Jr. S. W. Mills, IV J. W. Morrison R. S. Morton J. D. Murchison J. B. Ottman W. J. OVERLOCK 1945 Tyler G. Gregory, Jr. Christian R. Holmes, Jr. Thomas L. Hughes John Izard, Jr. Wilson A. Jaicks, Jr. Harold Kountze, Jr. William G. Lord, II David L. Luke, III William S. Lyles William L. McLennan Richard K. Miles, Jr. Theodore G. Northrop Michael P. Olmsted Hugh B. O ' Neill Charles P. Penney, Jr. Ned R. Powley, II Eugene C. Roberts, III James J. Robison HoRTON C. Rorick 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. H. O. Perry, Jr. C. F. Robbins, III W. P. Roberts, Jr. C. N. SCHENCK A. W. Selden R. S. Spencer, Jr. D. G. Stewart E. M. Streat H. C. Sykes, Jr. E. C. Taylor B. G. Tremaine, III H. Z. Urban V. VON Schlegell, Jr. S. J. Wagstaff, Jr. C. McC. Weis E. O ' M. Welles W. K. Witherbee D. Witter, Jr. J. O. Wright, Jr. Joseph S. Sample Richard L. Saunders Robert L. Seitner, Jr. Josiah a. Spaulding William R. Strong William G. Strong Miles B. Suchin William S. Sumner Edward F. Swift, III William H. Truesdale, II John C. Virden, Jr. Jonathan S. Warner Murray W. Warner Wellington M. Watters Arthur B. Williams William E. Williams William G. Williams, Jr. John L. Worrilow John C. Wrightson 274 Kingswood School Club 1942 Robert S. House Reed Bertolette George H. Day, Jr. NORBERT B. FlYNN Carl M. Green Ward V. B. Hart, Jr. Samuel St. J. Haviland William F. Powell, III Allyn Seymour 27 J I Lawrenceville School Club Guy K. Benson John W. Fawcett, III Robert F. Bauer Harry L. Evans, Jr. Darwin W. Heath Edgar L. Lassetter 1942 Stephen F. Griffing, Jr. Harry B. Schooley, Jr. 1943 Louis P. Mahler William C. McCracken Cornelius F. Moses Charles G. Paxson David M. Saunders Omar H. Simonds, Jr. Arthur W. Wrieden, Jr. Wendell L. Smith Robert D. Stern Stuyvesant Wainwright, II William H. Worrilow, Jr. Cmi ' s AlBEK Robert A. Baker John R. Bamford Sidney W. Davidson, Jr. William Flemer, III John O. Green, Jr. Arnoldo p. Barbaresi George Barrie, II Henry Berg, III Peter H. Binzen William C. Dages John A. Eckert, III 1944 John B. Heath Charles A. Higgins, Jr. Charles H. Lyons, Jr. John Moment 1945 Richard F. Low Philip G. Mi les James C. Monteith, II SiGOURNEY F. NiNINGER, Jr. James W. Powell James A. Peck, Jr. Sam Ross William D. Thompson Jefferson A. Wiedemann Henry C. Woods, Jr. Robert F. Rigby Harold C. Spear Adam G. Thomson, Jr. Odell McC. Thomson William A. Wise Edward C. Wynne Haroii Bf f.( Pembroke-Country Day School Herbert H. Bartlett Cyrus N. Crum, III Albert H. Dickinson, Jr. 1942 John K. Goodman Stephen W. Harris Albert G. Mager, Jr. Ralph H. Major, Jr. Richard G. Myers Robert A. Kendall | „ ■ n ■, i c, , a i r ; Sen I Hi! in United Sfa cs Arnica ton Joseph M. McCune | William M. Hall, Jr. 1943 James M. Kemper, Jr. George Mills, II C. Richard Scott 1944 Samuel L. Sawyer Harold J. Brownlee, Jr. 1945 Leonard V. Lombardi John K. Major Ralph L. Smith, Jr. Ben F. Stapleton, Jr. Graduate Students Lewis S. Mohr, II Poly Prep School Club Ernest S. Barker, Jr. Richardson Buist Edward P. Clark, II Edwin B. Armstrong David L. Carpenter Victor A. Machcinski 1942 Malcolm S. Beinfield William E. Coykendall, Jr. 194. ' Martin W. Haber George F. Herrity 1944 James Z. Gladstone Millard Rothenberg 1945 Robert D. Mandel Theodore R. Robertson Thomas C. Scanlan Howard M. Holtzmann Stanley L. Hirsch Mortimer B. Marcus Roui RT B. Wyland JuDsoN L. Streicher John S. Voorhees 278 Pomfret School Club Norman C. Eddy 1942 Edwin A. Hansen Charles E. Huntington Richard K. Warren Samuel Beardsley John C. Butler Frank E. House, III 1943 William B. Jordan, III William P. Rovcland L. Prather Stack, Jr. Francis B. Thorne, Jr. Neil J. Waterman I tfcilDi. - Francis C. Farwell, II Nathaniel S. Howe John T. Lawrence William B. Coley, II Erskine H. Courtenay, Jr. Edward McC. Gaillard, Jr. 1944 Thomas H. Mitchell David S. Moffitt Edward F. Parsons 1945 William T. C. Hannah Eric L. Hedstrom, Jr. George S. Hoagland Robert E. Hunter, Jr. Waldron W. Proctor James W. Riley, Jr. Jeffrey P. Walker Albert F. Millet Rodney H. Mills, Jr. John B. Russell, III 279 Portsmouth Priory School Club Raymond D. O ' Brien Edmund B. Tobin 1943 Thomas S. van Winkle Francis W. Commiskey Richard P. Cooley Henry M. Elliot, Jr. 1945 Joseph K. Kelly John L. Lawless Saint George ' s School Club Samuel W. Fairchild Francis B. Hamlin, Jr. 1942 John Y. Huber, III Charles A. Kilvert, Jr. Edward H. Lockwood John F. Milliken Richard H. Semple, Jr. Nigel L. Andrews Ralph C. Gordon 1943 Robert F. Holden, Jr. Walker P. Holloway Reginald Roome, Jr. Harton S. Semple F. William Wall Charles B. Congdon 1944 W. Donald T ' x ining Hiland G. Batcheller, Jr. James B. Congdon 1945 Robert N. Kreider Charles L. Ritchie, Jr. George H. Singer, III Saint Louis Country Day School Club 1942 Warren M. Shapleigh Howard T. Blap 1943 Charles H. Stephens, III Edward S. Funsten, Jr. 1944 Walter B. Harris Euw AiiD G. Platt, Jr. Edwin C. Steffen, Jr. William D. Currat William H. Lord 194J Owen H. Mitchell, Jr. Robert Rainey Richard B. Rosenthal Ethan A. H. Sheplev, Jr. 282 Saint Mark ' s School Club OFFICERS Caspar W. B. Tovcnsend Philip R. Neuhaus President Secretary Roger P. Baldwin John M. Bowers Robert G. Congdon Thomas A. Ennis David Baldwin Charles L. Bartlett 1942 Stephen E. Nash Philip R. Neuhaus Sheffield Phelps 1943 Allan V. N. Goodyer Eldon Harvey, Jr. Area B. Marvin, III Stanley M. Rumbough, Jr. Burton D. Salmon Caspar W. B. Townsend, Jr. Henry P. Wheeler William D. Millett Edward Patterson Lester Armour, Jr. Francis Lobdell 1944 Arthur R. Lowe Charles B. Martin, Jr. James B. Pierce Hugh C. Wallace David Haven Jones Henry H. Landon, Jr. 1945 Russell B. Lowe, Jr. Jeremy H. Pierce William S. Sagar Thomas Schweizer 283 Shady Side Academy Club Robert M. Clark 1942 Alfred M. Hunt John H. Mueller, II John D. Atwood John P. Egan, Jr. Don W. Gow 1943 William G. Heiner Richard M. Ketchum Aaron R. Levin James G. Lewis, Jr. Roger E. Loughney, III John K. Tabor Paul J. Urquhart, Jr. Thomas A. Dunn, II Robert K. Gray 1944 William A. Kirkpatrick Thomas J. Rudd Henry K. Watson, II William J. Connelly, Jr. 1945 Edward J. Diamond, Jr. James W. Ward, III Raymond F. Hunt, Jr. 284 Saint Paul ' s School Club George C. Bermingham Theodore W. Case, Jr. James B. Cavanagh John C. Chapin Rene C. S. di Rosa Richard B. Dominick David Gibson 1942 Davis Given Peter Henderson, Alfred M. Hunt Pierpont a. Judd Robert A. Miller, Elton Parks, Jr. Edgar A. Riley John C. Ripley Jr. Motley Sawy ' er H. Francis Shattuck, Jr. Frank P. Shepard, Jr. Bertrand L. Taylor, III Benjamin R. Toland Francis B. Trudeau, Jr. Donald T. Warner .: tl«- C. Morgan Aldrich, Jr. George W. Barber Donald L. Brown, Jr. Charles F. Clilver Edward D. Dunn, Jr. Charles R. Hickox, Jr. Reuben Hitchcock, Jr. James F. Bodine James T. E. Bridgman David B. Bronson George C. Burgwin, III Joseph N. Carpenter, III Thomas G. Chittenden Frederick B. Dent Percival S. Hill James D. Hurd Allen T. Klots, Jr. John Le Boutillier Cord Meyer. Jr. Robert B. Meyer, Jr. Crosby S. Noyes George S. Pillsbury 1944 David A. Lindsay John V. Lindsay Daulton Mann, Jr. Walter R. Manny, Jr. QuENTiN Meyer Keith M. Moffat William G. Moore Anthony L. W. Neidringhaus RoDERic L. O ' Connor Frederic L. Rockefeller Howard A. Plummer, Jr. H. Smith Richardson, Jr. Walter J. Taylor Frank W. Wall Jacob O. Wardell Gordon B. Whelpley Harold L. Williamson, Jr. Scott W. Scully Irving C. Sheldon Joe Speidel, III Joseph F. Tilghman Malcolm M. Walker WiLLARD F. Walker, Jr. Henry Wheelwright, Jr. Charles S. Whitehouse Frank R. Whittlesey William O. Bateson Maxwell M. Belding John R. Bermingham Gilman D. Blake, Jr. Thomas M. Carnegie, III Frank B. C VANAGH Peter Darlington Douglas W. Franchot 1945 Archer Harman, Jr. John C. Hays, Jr. William M. Henderson Robert P. Howard John P. King William R. Macdonald Coleman B. McGovern, Jr. John C. McIlwaine Thomas E. Noyes John G. Ordway, Jr. Harry B. Porter, Jr. Ralph S. Richards, Jr. Blair Schiller Roger W. Shattuck Francis E. Storer, Jr. WiLMOT F. Wheeler, Jr. George B. Whitehouse 28J I University School Club Walter M. Charman, Jr. Arthur C. Madden Charles F. Seelbach, III David E. Dangler Walter E. Newcomb, Jr. Alan B. Spurney, Jr. George H. Feil Thomas B. Ross 1943 William C. Witt John P. Roth Glen O. Smith, Jr. 1944 Raymond J. Wean, Jr. Willis W. Clark, II Charles N. Loeser Baldwin Sawyer 194 5 William F. Seelbach James A. Frankel Robert R. Harris Samuel K. Scovil Thomas H. Castle William C. Talmage •HLSO)j Haul,, 2S6 Western Reserve School Club John Ashton 1942 Ford W. Brunner Edward J. Pope, Jr. Eugene C. Peck, II Brooks Shepard, Jr. Nelson Sykes Harlan Pomeroy, II John H. Holton, Jr. William R. Deeble, III 1944 David E. Leavenworth Alfred McC. Clark, Jr. 1945 Kenyon Stevenson, Jr. Philip C. deJ. Narten 287 Walter H. Thompson Joseph L. McEvitt Sherman St. C. Hasbrouck Donald McG. Marshman, Jr. Westminster School Club BouviER Beale Henry P. Barrand, Jr. President Secretary Charles M. Baxter, Jr. Richard F. Donovan, Jr. Henry S. Forrest George T. Griswold Bruce Loomis Robert P. Williams Bouvier Beale Peter S. Burr Robert O. Corley Henry P. Barrand, Jr. George P. Elmore Horace L. Hotchkiss, IV 1944 Martin M. Foss, Jr. Robert T. Gabriel John H. McClement Frank C. Rogers, Jr. G. Andre Whelan William B. Lee, III John B. Ahrens Boyd E. Brodhead 1945 Jocelyn Clark Edward J. Crane Edv(tn N. Mead George W. Freeborn p f lUWi ,lLa. f f|£IBO ' FRESHMEN i..,.,.., R.ni : bl.ikc, Kistler, Barton, Bassett, KnowltL.ii, W .iILli, Bruphy. Front Row: Berger, HarvL-y, Franchcit (Chairman), Wheeler, Swift. Freshman Prom Committee Douglas Warner Franchot, Cl.iairinan Alexander Kirkland Barton Alexander Harvey, II James Edward Bassett, III Harry Blakmer Kistler Harry Berger, Jr. Hugh Knowlton, Jr. Oilman Dorr Blake, Jr. Edward Foster Swift, III Theodore Frederick Brophy Blake Mitchell Walker Wilmot Fitch Wheeler, Jr. 292 B u ' k Row: Crane, Scliicffclm, BrmJlicad, JuJson, Hunter, Gregory, Duxle, Brown. Fuurth Ruu : Hannah, Rudolfs, Koehne, Swett, Russell, Parker, Luntz, Furniss, Bevis. Third Row: Warner, Brace, Bridston, McDonnell, Rockwell, Aiken, Maxeiner, Frederick, Fuller, Penney. Second Row: Eberle, Worrilow, Meyer, Monroe, Scanlan, Brown, Rothschildes, Helman, Dean. Front Row: Bodycombe, Jones, Peirce, Foulds, Thompson, Gaillard, Kitchen, Mapes, Manilla. Freshman Glee Club GLEE CLUB activity dates back to the time when it was part of the Glee Club and Mandolin Society of Yale. Ever since that time undergraduate music has been sponsored by the Glee Club and of late its growth was so rapid that the separation of the freshman class as a unit of activity was deemed necessary. The first formal organization took place in 1930 when the Freshman Club was formed with a separate schedule of concerts under the direction of its own coach, Arthur Hall. This organization has been of greater importance than was originally con- sidered possible, for through it the opportunity is presented to undergrates to sing in the same unit throughout their college years and after a few years the potentialities of such a well-coodinated group are almost limitless. This year one hundred and seventy-eight candidates were present at the organization meet- ing held early in the year. A thorough voice trial was given to each candidate. After these trials, of the original candidates, seventy-eight were placed in the first squad and the same number made up the second. In January further voice trials were given, followed by anotl r purge. The remaining members of the second squad were divided up between the first squad and the Apollo Glee Club. TTie club made its first appearance at the fresh- man Christmas party in Commons. The first for- mal concert of the year was held at Gray Court College in Ridgefield. The concert was preceded by a buffet supper, with a dance at the school afterwards. Other concerts scheduled were at the Low-Heywood School in Stamford, the Dwight School in Englewood, N. J., and the Hopkins Grammar School of New Haven. Also at the Wykeham Rise School, Washington, Conn., and the Wcstover School in Middlebury. Added to the usual repertoire of sea chanties, negro spirituals and college songs were a group of Latin-American songs which were among those brought back by the Varsity Club from their trip to South America. 293 B,ick Roil : Wolil, Castle, Moore, Emerson, Christopher, Slade. Front Row: Gibney, Berger, Diamond, Bradley, Kostner. The Freshman Weekly TT 7 ITH the exception of two or three rather lean literary weeks, the 1945 Freshman Weekly came out with surprising regularity, ap- pearing almost once weekly. This is a more glori- ous achievement than it seems, since due to pro- bation and various other forms of inertia, each Sunday night saw only a small handful of the ap- proximately thirteen editors at the weekly meet- ings. As a dispenser of Freshman news, the Weekly was rather a failure; this the board will frankly admit. Towards the end of the year it improved in this respect, due to the noble efforts of Chair- man Frank Diamond, but with only five men covering campus activities, the standard was not that which it would have been with full coopera- tion. However, by keeping the Weekly on the lighter side, a fair degree of stability was achieved. The Weekly featured i-egular music columns, both classical and le jazz hot, and the usual dirt columns with names, names, names. Sports were covered with reasonable success, a large part of the credit going to Jimmy Hamilton, who really stuck his nose into Frosh Athletic activities. The majority of the corn humor featured throughout the year was contributed by Bob Hendrickson, and those two fabricators of fol-de-rol, Tom Cas- tle and Harry Berger, who claim to have a Pulitzer prize ready for Broadway in two years. Much praise goes to Dick Rothschild for his scrupulous judgement of music in the modern manner. Although one of the pet topics of disgust among Freshmen along with food at Commons, the 194S Freshman Weekly, posterity please note, was not at all the ignominous publication that it was made out to be by the class of the same year. Although it did not, perhaps, meet the standards of those accustomed to scanning the Reader ' s Digest, or The Yale Lit, the attempt to assemble into a congruous whole, its meagre news content, along with more fertile bits of originality, was successful, and was certainly equal to the Weekly of past years. jfiESHKEj , Ki. Bji-i Rou: Sawyer (Cuach), Kubie, H. O Bncn, Stack, Prudjen (Manager), McCall. Farwell, Wyre (Trainer). Second Ron-: Cahill, Goodspeed. Heath, F. O ' Brien (Captain), McTernan, Isham, Fay. Frot2t Row: Averback, Arnold, Irwin (Batboy), Congdon, Neville. Freshman Baseball Captahi : AUnager F. O ' Brien H. R. Prudden COACH JEFF SAWYER, a great Yale pitcher of the early twenties, directed his first team to the best season a Freshman ball club has seen m many a year. Batting was weak in the season ' s opener, a prac- tice game with Hopkins Grammar, lost 6-7, and pitching showed a lack of confidence in the pinches. But in the next game, the Elis won over Milford 12-5, a scoring spree in the eighth fore- told bigger things to come. The contest with New Haven High drew the best crowd of the year, and the Freshmen put on a good show, winning 6-2. With five alumni on the Freshman team, the Andover game was heated and colorful. Good- speed ' s scoring a homer with Averback on in the first gave the Freshmen a lead never relinquished. They won 9-2. Choate ' s team was much harder to defeat; they tired out four pitchers, but lost 8-1. Holy Cross won ten out of eleven games last year, lost only to the Freshmen, 7-4. The teams were 4-up in the last of the ninth, when Good- speed saved the day by knocking out a homer with two men on. Cheshire eked out a 7-6 victory over the Freshmen with two last-stab runs in the ninth. Jack Neville allowed Princeton only three hits in the next game. They managed to score one run, but the Elis put themselves out of danger with a rally in the sixth which brought in all three of their tallies. After losing, 12-5, to a snappy, professional- looking Providence College nine, the Freshmen came back to make a spirited finish to a success- ful spring against the Harvard Freshmen. Pitcher Neville allowed only five hits; the Elis gained fifteen, won the game 9-3. For their handsome showing in collegiate com- petition the team was awarded silver baseball charms. 29J t O ' Connnr (Coxswain), Lindsay, Chandler, Van Cortl.indt, Dcmere, Taliaferro (Captain), Buck, Walker, Lozier. Freshman Crew .1941 Scott L. Taliaferro, Captain Robert L. Ireland, Manager Tj ' ROM a win-and-lose standpoint, the 1944 - - Freshman rowing season was unsuccessful, but credit is due the team for the fine spirit shown throughout the whole year. The crew, captained by Scott Taliaferro, was able to race in only two of its three races because of an unfortunate can- cellation. Rowing began early in the fall at the Harbor, and there was keen competition for seats in the first boat. The first race was on May 3 when the Yale boat met Pennsylvania and Columbia at Philadelphia. Penn took an early lead in the race over the Henley distance and was never headed. Columbia finished second with Yale just a length behind them. Two weeks later the crew travelled to Ithaca to meet Princeton and Cornell on Lake Cayuga. The race was first postponed until Sunday because of the rough water. It failed to quiet down, and the race had to be called off. The Freshmen had high hopes of breaking the long string of Crimson victories at the race on the Thames at New London. John Lindsay was chosen for stroke, and the rest of the boat lined up with Nat Chandler, Gus Van Cortlandt, Ray Demere, Captain Scott Taliaferro, Pete Buck, Jeff Walker, and John Lozier. On the upper two miles of the course Yale had the lead. But Harvard caught up and slowly forged ahead, and Yale was never again in the lead. Despite a desperate sprint over the last half mile, the Elis were three lengths behind at the finish. The Freshman Crew for the Class of 1944 is expected to furnish much real material for the Varsities of the next two speed-up years. They were the second heaviest of the eights on the water at New London, being outweighed only bv the Crimson Varsity; in addition, each man pulled enough water to make many of the 1942 and 1943 men a little anxious on their sliding seats. Front Row: Scully (Captain), Whcxlwright, Shorty, Perry, Wliitchuuse, Nimick, Gliddcn, Cox, Lowe (Coxswain). Freshman 15 Pound Crew 1941 WITH a record of three victories and but one defeat, the freshman 150-pound crew, stroked by Captain Scott Scully, came through the year with a very successful season. Unable to break the Harvard jinx, however, the Cubs were able to finish the spring with but three victories. In the first race at Kent, the Yale lightweights showed an immediate superiority. Gaining the lead at the outset by a higher stroke, the Blue managed to keep ahead of the Kent boat the entire distance of the one mile course, winning by a length. Times were good, under the existing conditions, 5:15 for the Yale boat and 5:18.5 for the Kent second crew. In the most important race of the season on May 10, the Yale boat was outclassed from the beginning by the smooth rowing Harvard shell on the Charles River at Cambridge. The occasion was the Goldthwaite Cup Regatta, and the race was over the Henley course of one mile and five- sixteenths. Harvard, turning in the fast time of 7:22.6, was nearly ten seconds ahead of both Yale and Princeton. The finish for the second place, how- ever, was a close one, the Elis nosing out Prince- ton at the last moment with a time of 7:31.3 to the Princetonian ' s 7:32. In the final race of the season, this time at Derby on May 17, the ' 44 lightweights won a victory over Penn in a race which was not decided until the last sprint. The Yale boat turned in a time of 5:12.8, while Penn ' s time was 5:13.5. With this last race of the season, the Freshman one-fifties ended the most successful year they have had for a long time, setting a goal for next year ' s light-weights to equal. The crew of the Cub one-fifties remained un- changed all season. Coxed by Art Lowe and stroked by Captain Scully, the shell was manned by: H. J. Wheelwright at number seven oar. C. E. Shorey at six, H. O. Perry at five, C. S. Whitehouse at four, W. L. Nimick at three, W. T. Glidden in the number two slot, and C. P. Cox holding down the bow position. 297 Back Row: Shaplcish (M.in.igcr), Guernsey, Ross, UBoutillicr, Rullm.in, Castle, Hoyt (Coach). Second Row: Beard, Detwilcr, Milliken, Schwarzkopf, Clark (Co-captain). Morris, Carter, Finley, Tohind. Front Row: Haver, Gardner, Buffura, Hopkins, Wiedeman. Freshman Track . . . 1941 . Willis W. Clark William S. Goedecke, Co-Captains Warren Shapleigh, Manager AT the Andover Interscholastics the Freshman ■ - Track Team inaugurated its season inauspici- ously by losing to an Andover Relay team. Fol- lowing several indi vidual performances at various indoor meets, a Medley Relay team of Goedecke, Rullman, Clark, and Schwarzkopf ran fourth at the Intercollegiates after a hopeless pole position of twelfth. The outdoor season, one of the most successful in Yale annals, began on April 26 when a visiting Andover team was vanquished 86-40. Yale took ten firsts and tied for another. Beard ' s double in the shotput and discus were outstanding. On May 3 the team journeyed to New York where N.Y.U. was completely outclassed 97-3 8, Yale losing only two first places. Detwiler ' s double in the hurdles and Clark ' s double in the dashes were among the highspots. The next week Princeton was defeated 8 5- ' ;- 49, ' on their own field, and on May 17 Harvard was defeated 86J ' 3-48 ' .; bringing the Big Three Championship to Yale for the third year in a row. This last meet resulted in three records — Beard in the discus, Schwarzkopf in the mile, and Finley in the high hurdles. Clark tied the 100 yard dash record. The undefeated season was due to the outstand- ing performances of many men. Detwiler and Finley took all the 1st and 2nd places in the hurdles in all four meets. Clark was a consistent winner in the dashes, as was Rullman in the 440. Beard, Goedecke, and Guernsey were undefeated in their respective events, the discus, the 880, and the broadjump. Schwarzkopf and Castle were steady point scorers in the long distances. In the other field events Flauer stood out in the pole vault, Carter in the high jump, and Beard in the shotput. This season indicated a bright future for Yale Track. 298 Back Row: Treat, Schaff, Holt, LeGros, Joyce, Kirkpatrick, Skillman (Coach), front Row: Braasch. Malo, Ford, McKenna (Captain), Burgwin, Williams, Cooley. Freshman Tennis 1941 OACH SKILLMAN brought his Freshman Tennis team through one of the most success- ful seasons in recent years. The team completed an undefeated campaign, beating both Princeton and Harvard decisively in the last two matches of the year. The season opened with an 8-1 conquest of Kent on home courts. The following week a visit- ing Cheshire team was trounced, 9-0. The Fresh- men then journeyed to Lawrenceville and white- washed the Red and Black, 9-0; however, several of the singles matches went to extra sets. In the next meet the squad scored a 5-1 victory over a strong Scarborough team in a match which was cut short by rain. The one-sided score does not indicate the closeness of the struggle as several of the Elis were hardpressed to turn the victory. Choate met the same doom as all the other Blue opponents, winning but one doubles match, to lose 8-1. The Cubs took on their last prep school opponent in Taft, and the team from Watertown was snowed under, 8-1. A visiting Dartmouth squad was too weak to weather the Blue tide and was swamped, 9-0. After sweeping six singles against Princeton, the Blue dropped three doubles to ring up a 6-3 win. The last obstacle to an undefeated season was brushed aside when the Bulldogs steam-rollered a fighting Harvard team, 7-2 on the Cantab courts. The Blue was almost robbed of victory when rain broke loose with the score 4-2 in Yale ' s favor. Play was continued, however, in the rain and the visitors swept the three doubles for a muddy 7-2 victory. The team as a whole was very well balanced, which was evidenced by the fact that the first four singles men, Cooley, Captain McKenna, Burgwin, and Ford, did not lose a match the entire season. Braasch and Malo also contributed their share of victories. Other lettermen were Hugh Joyce, Dick Williams, Jack Holt, Bill Kirk- patrick, Johnny LeGros and Norm Schaff. r-iuiit Rijw: Klceman, Harris, Lewis, Kuntz, Quinlan (Captain), Welles, BeckiurJ, Bardwell. Freshman Golf. . . . 1941. RoBRET Quinlan, Captjin RoHERT D. Bardell, Jr., Manager TED by the consistently brilliant playing of - — ' Captain Robert Quinlan, Walt Beckjord, and Bob Kuntz, the Freshman Golf team swept through its eight match schedule with a perfect record, except for the first match against the Varsity. This match the Varsity won easily against the inexperienced Freshmen by the count of 12 to 3. For this first meet, the teams were composed of ten men each, contrary to the usual Intercol- lege rules requiring a six man team. Coming back strong the following week, the Freshmen beat the New Haven Municipal Golf Team with a score of 10 to 2. Sweeping onward, they whitewashed a weak Choate team 9 to and then subdued a fighting Hotchkiss team 6 to 3 on the New Haven Golf Course. Leaving New Haven, the Freshmen traveled down to New Jer- sey to play Princeton at the Springdale Golf Club. Although the victory score of Z ' j to I ' i seems to indicate a one-sided match, the truth is that every match was hotly contested, with four of the six two-games ending on the eighteenth green. Adding another scalp to their belts the Frosh smothered the Dartmouth yearlings 9 to at the Yale Golf Course, in preparation for the final match with Harvard. In the final contest the Freshmen subdued a strong Harvard team S to 1 on the home links. Losing only one best ball match, the team added a fine finishing touch to an almost perfect season. Three of the matches were carried to extra holes with Yale winning two of the three. Beckjord and Kuntz carded a 72 apiece. The final score showed that for the entire sea- son ' s playing Beckjord and Kuntz, playing number 1 and 2, lost only three singles and one best ball match. 300 Back Row: Straus, Black, Durning, Hiscock, Dixon, Henry (Coach). Second Row: Brown, Rowen, Healy, Macomber, Burnam (Captain), Read, Clark, Chafee, Kirkpatrick. Front Row: Cadwalader, OShea, Fuller, McCann, Van Arsdale. Freshman Lacrosse . . .1941 Anthony R. Burnam, Captain Robert Fuld, Manager 8(di«i QLAYING a five game schedule, a very enthusi- ■ - astic Freshman Lacrosse Team ended the season with one victory, one tie and three defeats. Be- ginning practice early in April, Coach Don Henry formed his team around a nucleus of prep school stars and several other experienced players. Accu- rate stick handling was stressed from the start with a gradual leading up to a series of well worked-out plays. In a preseason informal match with the Law School stickmen, the Eli Cubs were defeated 4-3 in a hard fought battle. The first official game of the season on April 26 saw the Yearlings defeat a usually stubborn Peek- skill Military Academy team 6-3, exactly dupli- cating their 1940 win. Wednesday of the follow- ing week they lost to one of the best prep school teams in the East, Deerfield, by the score 8-1. The Yale attack was effectively checked by a far superior team. Against the Springfield Freshman a Yale rally in the closing minutes of the second half created a 9-9 stalemate, and in the over time both teams tallied once more, resulting in a final tie of 10-10. Invading Princeton on May 10, the Blue team again found itself outclassed. The final score was 4-1, Yale ' s lone tally being made by Chafee who played the first attack position. A lack of scoring punch on the part of the Blue Freshmen and the offensive brilliance of the Princeton team ac- counted for the hitter ' s victory. The final encounter with the Harvard Fresh- men unfortunately ended with a 7-2 victor) ' for the Cantabs. Healy and Van Arsdale playing out home and in home respectively shared the scoring honors for the Eli men, while Captain Tuck Burnam, Hi Black, and Tom Rowen were brilliant on the defense, frustrating many of Harvard ' s formidable plays. 301 Bjck Roiv: Wyre (Trainer), Nelson, Cole, Root (Coaeli), Ferguson, Powell, Olsen (Manager). Fourth Row: Ellis, Lynch, McKee, Brittain, Noyes, Whittridge. Third Row: Atkins, Mendoza, Tormey, Stock, Blake, Reinhart, Wilkie. Second Row: Elwell, Scovil, Dwyer, Connelly and Knowl- ton (Co-captains), White, Davison, Palmer. Front Rott ' : Miles, Curtin, Thomas, Muzzy, Kirst. Fresh man Football 1941 . , CTARTING with one of the longest pre-season practices in the history of cub football, the team was still unable to escape a shaky start and succumbed in the opening game to a hard-hitting Andover team. A field goal just before the whistle clinched the game. A long trip to Exeter the following week failed to tire the team, and before the afternoon was over they had come off the field with a 19-0 triumph. Hugh Knowlton sparked the attack with two touchdown runs, one of sixty yards after an intercepted pass, the other of seventy-five yards around right end. The defensive stars of the day were Bill Connelly and Blake Walker in the backfield and Billy Kirst and Bob White in the line, who stopped many an Exeter threat. Two weeks later a revamped Eli team traveled up to Providence to play Brown in a heavy rain. Early in the second period Connelly and Elwell caught a Bear ball carrier behind the goal line, but a second half Brown rally produced two touchdowns and sent the Blue home on the short end of a 12-2 score. The following Saturday brought Cheshire Academy to New Haven, and Reg Root ' s charges sent them back with a 54-0 drubbing which saw every man on the Freshman squad playing at some time. Everything that was tried produced a score, and defensively the Elis held Cheshire to a stand- still. Princeton next invaded New Haven, and passed its way to a 20-6 victory. Late in the final quarter the Yale team pushed over a touchdown to save itself from a shut-out. The climax of the season with an 19-13 triumph over the Harvard Freshmen at Cam- bridge. Trailing 13-12 with only four minutes of playing time. Captain Knowlton unleased a pass- ing attack that found receivers in Blake Walker, Mopey Miles and Vinny Lynch and finally pro- duced the winning touchdown. Also starring were Co-captain Billy Connelly, Bill Kirst, and Cutty Davison, who smothered many a Harvard running play. B.ick Row: Kaufman (Manager), Hughes, Tucker, Deland, Harris (Coach), Eyre, Stone. I-omth Rou-: McLennan, Haviland. Third Rote: Harrison, Hedstrom, Congdon, Boynton, Hawley, Chappell, Wolfe. Second Rou-: Rorick, Truesdale. Front Row: Belknap, Kelsey, Blum, Olmsted, Swan. Freshman Soccer Earle B. K. ufman, M.tiijger Donald Boynton, C.iptain ■ifiH A FTER st.irting the season with a strong team ■ ' - ■ - which won its first four games and tied one, the Freshman Soccer team was deserted by Lady Luck. Journeying to Lakeville for their first game, the team defeated Hotchkiss 2-1. Blair Hawley scored Yale ' s first tally, and was followed by Wolfe who took a splendid cross from left wing Haviland. On Oct. 1 1 coming from behind in the second half, Yale took Williston into camp. Dick Wolfe and Don Boynton scored while Hawley, Chappell, Hughes and Connick also starred. Fol- lowing the game Don Boynton was elected Cap- tain. Oct. 20 was a field day for the squad which took Cheshire into camp S-0. In their next game, the team played its best soccer to date, but could only eke out a 1-1 tie with a strong Springfield Freshman eleven. Boyn- ton scored Yale ' s only tally and his fellow half- backs Connick and Chappell starred. Yale ' s next game was Choate, but previously Captain Boynton chipped his ankle. Deland scored first and Congdon put in the final goal after tak- ing a pass from McDowell. On Nov. 1 the team sustained its first defeat in a driving rain which turned the field into a sea of mud. The final score was Andover 4, Yale 0. The next game was against Taf t on Nov. 1 3 ; both teams were unable to score. Against Princeton the Freshmen played their finest soccer, but the breaks were with the in- vaders and the game ended Princeton 2, Yale 1. The Haviland to Wolfe combination scored again. The final game against Harvard was played on a wind-swept field on which passing was difficult. After holding the Crimson scoreless for the first half, Harvard ' s Forster and Cate shot the ball past goalie McLennen to sew the game up. Rorick scored for Yale in the last minutes but before the Yale attack could again click the game ended with Harvard the victor to the tune of 2 to 1. 303 BiJ. R u: HoM (Cojch), King, Henske, Fro it Row: Siemans, MacSporran, Schwei; Kluij Jv (Manager), er, Randall, Pomeroy. Freshman Cross Country . Thomas Schweizer, Captain Cornelius B. Kennedy, Manager VT THILE the season was not as good as was ex- ' pected, due to injuries, the Freshman Cross Country Team, under the coaching of Track Coach Charlie Hoyt for the first time, revealed that they had the spirit and ability which would provide good material for the Varsity team for the next three years. The season opened auspiciously for the Fresh- men on October 10 when they beat their tradi- tional opening rivals, the Wesleyan Freshmen, 25 to 3 5 on the Wesleyan course. Siemans lead for Yale. The next meet was against the famed New York University Cross Country Team. Here the Cubs came off second best, losing 45 to 18. Con- necticut University invaded New Haven the next week and left victors by the same score they did two years ago — 2 5 to 30. Harvard, Yale and Princeton met on Princeton ' s three mile course for the Big Three championship. This was won by Princeton which finished the first five men. Yale was defeated by Princeton 15 to 4 5 and by Harvard 27 to 36. Back in New Haven again the Freshmen met Dartmouth on the home course, which was still muddy from several days of rain. Considering this, Schweizer ' s winning time of 17:52 was very good. In this race too, Randall, who had been constantly improving all season, edged out Siemans by half a minute. The Elis lost however 21-27. The final meet of the year was the I.C.A.A.A.A. Cross Country Run in New York. It was held on the Van Cortlandt Park three mile course. As a team Yale placed twelfth out of fourteen. Schweizer finished thirty-seventh in 17:17. He was followed by Siemans, fifty-first; Randall, sixty-first; Pomeroy, seventy-seventh; and Mac Sporran, eighty-sixth. Climaxing the season was the banquet held at the Yale Club after this meet. This was the twenty-fifth anniversary of Cross Country at Yale, duly celebrated with champagne and a birthday cake. 304 1 Back Row: Williams (Coach), Elwell, Hunt, Bassett. Oscarson (Manager). From Ron: Breuner Miles, Noyes, McGaughey, Gabriels, Currie, Haviland. Freshman Basketball Citptain: Guy E. McGaughey . Un.iger: David W, Oscarson ' I ' HE 1941-42 Freshman basketball team, cap- - - tained by Guy E. McGaughey, enjoyed an extremely successful season with a total of fifteen victories and three defeats. In the first game of the season the Freshman quintet defeated Trinity Parish, 36-26. The next two games were easily taken from Branford High School and Collegiate Prep. One of the high points of the early season was the Choate game; high scorer was Guy McGaughey with sixteen points. The following four games were with the Junior College of Commerce, Cheshire Academy, Horace Mann, and Commercial High School. All these matches were easy wins for the Elis. Yale lost its first game to a speedy Exeter dele- gation. In spite of the 58-43 score, Yale account- ed for itself very well during the first half, and only after a long struggle did the Exonians pull ahead to win. Guy McGaughey and Charlie Hunt tied for top scoring honors with thirteen points each. Meeting Connecticut on the rebound from this loss, the Cubs won easily, 69-5 2. The Fresh- men suffered their second defeat at the hands of a fighting Andover quintet; this was the closest game of the season with the final score 34-31. The Yearlings won their next five games with Hillhouse High School, Bridgeport Central High, the Alumni, Milford, and Hopkins Grammar School. This winning streak was broken by a powerful Princeton team, which gave the Fresh- men their worst beating. In this game Yale ' s usual fight was less conspicuous and the final score was 46-2 5. In the season ' s finale, the Harvard Fresh- men felt the weight of Blue fury and, in a game marked by excellent performances on both sides, finally bowed to Yale 50-40. The team was an aggressive outfit, with plenty of spirit and ability. It had a lot of height as well, with eleven out of seventeen squad members well over the six-foot mark. Haviland, Noyes, and Hunt played in every game. Captain McGaughey was the high scorer with a total of 178 points; he was followed by Sam Haviland, Hack Noyes and Charlie Hunt. 305 ' : 7 . iiW 5 Back Row: Campbell, Driscoll (Trainer), Davison, Kistler, Howe, Pyle, Porter, Holt (Coach). Third Row: Bacon, Franchot, Mcllwaine, Pearson, Harman (Captain), Blake, Ordway. Cavanaugh, Billings. Second Row: Swift, Bresky. Fro tt Ron: Eberley, Wheeler. Freshman Hockey Captain: Archer Harman, Jr. Manager: Stafford Campbell ' I HE 1941-42 Freshman hockey team, coached . by Harry Holt, went through its season un- defeated. Many old-timers around the Arena maintained that it was the best Freshman team in a long time. The team was unusually well- balanced; it had two fast, scrappy lines, reliable defensemen, and able goalies. Tlie Freshmen opened the season by nosing out an untried St. Paul ' s team 7-6 in Madison Square Garden, before Christmas. The cubs won the next four games easily, defeating Kent 14-1, Choate 3-0, Andover 7-0, and Hotchkiss 18-0. After journeying to Exeter, they were unable to play because of poor ice. They next trounced Cheshire 15-0, Taft 7-0, and Deerfield 10-1. Against eight prep schools the Yearlings had averaged better than ten points per game. In Princeton they met stern opposition but came through to win, 3-0. The Freshmen were lucky to get a 4-4 tie in their next encounter, with Dartmouth, knotting the count on a long shot in the closing minute of play. Harvard was tied by the same score, and the dead- lock could not be broken by an overtime period. For most of the year the first line was com- posed of Gil Blake, Jack Ordway and Fred Pear- son. Punchy Pyle, the scrappy center of the sec- ond line, was well flanked by John Mcllwaine and Bill Howe. Places on the third line were hotly contested by Jim Parsons, Doug Franchot, Tom Porter, Dick Bacon, and George Billings. The Freshman defense was certainly no problem to Coach Holt. Arch Harman, former St. Paul ' s captain, was a perfect leader for his teammates; not only did he defend his zone well, but also he contributed many goals on sparkling solo dashes. Harry Kistler was his partner until he was put out with injuries near the end of the season; Cot- tie Davison then took over his position. Bill Eberle and Frank Cavanagh were the other de- fensemen. Guarding the net exceptionally well was Ed Swift, whose understudy was Otto Bresky. Many of these 1945 hockey stars should prove to be valuable varsity material next year, if not snatched up by Uncle Sam before December. 306 ii.il Koii-: V .liters, Rudulfs. Gillet. Forbes, Gans, Bridstun, Cutlir.iii, Mcrling. jiuJ Rati-; Hall, Burke, Brandow, Andrews, Inskip, Van Ingen. Second Row: Newton (Coach), Mapes, Lewis, Congdon, Spear, Barrie, Calder, Virden, Tolls, Semple. Front Row: Collins, Darlington, Sherrill, Roberts, Lyons, Kline, Crane, Fine, Jones. Freshman Swimming . . . . Cjptaiii: Richard Lyon Manager: HartoN S. Semple ■21 ' I HE 1945 swimmers captained by Richard - - Lyon of Pasadena, California, completed a successful season of eleven wins and one defeat. Getting off to a good start on January 17, the Elis easily defeated both Pawtucket and Hartford Public High Schools in a triangular meet. Stay- ing in the winning column, the Freshmen then went on to defeat Andover, 37-29, and Exeter, 40-26. Following this, the Freshmen met their only defeat of the season at the hands of a championship Mercersburg team. This fine team coached by John Miller is easily the outstanding prep school team in the country. It is composed of such stars as Allen Ford and Berribault who finished the 100 in a dead heat in the outstanding time of 5 3.9. Considering this the Eli Cubs made a remarkable showing. For the rest of the season. Coach Irving New- ton ' s squad maintained a perfect record. Among those who bowed before the yearling natators were Naugatuck YMCA, led by their well-known coach Gimbo Sullivan, Hill House High School of New Haven, and the much vaunted Lawrence- ville School of New Jersey, which meet was high- lighted by Perryman ' s fine performance in the dive. After this the Yearlings traveling to Mil- ford decisively defeated Canterbury 5 5-11, win- ning every first and six of the second places. Returning home, the mermen defeated Hotch- kiss 51-15. In their final two meets, the 1945 bulldogs conquered their chief rivals, Princeton and Harvard. On March 7, the Blues invaded Tiger Town, and easily swamped Princeton 5 5-20, garnering seven out of nine first places. The fol- lowing week the team returned to New Haven to hand the Crimson invaders a 5 8-17 defeat. The team thus retained the Big Three Championship for the fourth straight year. Outstanding performers were Captain Lyon, whose consistent victories in the freestyle sprints and able support in the relays added greatly to the team ' s success, Charlie Gillet, who was a big factor in the season ' s success with his fine perform- ances in the back stroke; Fred Crane, Harold Inskip, and Randy Klein were all excellent in their events. John Ferryman was also a consistent point winner with his fine exhibitions in the dive. is B.uk K ' .!, : [)i.r,in,l, IIim;t-n ( Man.ii ii ) . Hedstrun, Tuttk, Wycr, B.ilhctt, Junes. Freshman Squash . . . (Coach), Seymour. From Ron. Ciptjhi: James Wver M.m.iger: Eldon Harvey, Jr. T N the opening game of the season on January 10th the YMCA raqueteers were swept aside 5-0; to be followed by another 5-0 victory over Choate in the Wallingford courts. On February 18th, with Art Tuttle replacing Jim Wyer in the number one slot, the team increased its rapidly growing reputation by topping the Wesleyan J. V. ' s 5-0, subsequently electing Jim Wyer cap- tain. On February 20th the YMCA came back for more, but were again turned back 5-0, this time without the loss of a single game, behind the now well established team of Wyer, Tuttle, Russell, Durand, and Balliett. After a night ' s rest the same team blanked Seton Hall, also without any- one losing a game. Johnny Russell gave his op- ponent precisely five points in this match. The following Wednesday the team ran into stifFer competition against the New Haven Lawn Club on the latter ' s courts, Jim Wyer losing the only match of the day to Walter Camp, Jr., son of the football player; Fargo Balliett and Art Tuttle out- fought their opponents in five game matches, while Durand and Russell finished off their op- ponents in four games to give the rapidly improv- ing team its sixth win, 4-1. Saturday found the team facing Exeter, always the Freshman ' s big- gest worry. The match proved to be a close one, the Elis winning 3-2, only after Art Tuttle man- aged to outfight Buchannan in a four-game match. Captain Jim Wyer turned in a clean-cut three-game victory, while Johnny Russell clinched the match with the same. Durand came out on the short end of a gruelling five-game match, while Balliett lost in four games. Saturday, March 7th, saw the team successfully seeking its eighth straight win, this time against Harvard, with a definite 4-1 triumph. Balliett almost made it 5-0, but went down fighting to Harvard ' s Sturgis in a five-game match. Again Captain Wyer led the Cubs, defeating Foster in four games, while Art Tuttle blanked Young, three love. Johnny Russell overpowered Zinssen in four games, and John Durand succeeded in de- feating Tufts 15-6 in the decisive fifth game. All credit is due to John Skillman for turning out such an excellent team; to Captain Jim Wyer who only lost one match, and especially to Art Tuttle and Johnnv Russell, who, playing steady squash the whole season, came through undefeated. Bjck Rou : J. O ' Donnell, Sykes, Wyre, Suter, Bancker, Dwyer, E. O ' Donnell. Second Rou : Lewi Day, Eshelman, Moore (Captain), Smith, Dean, Richter. From Row: Hughes, Rashbaum. Freshman Wrestling Capt.iin: James I. Moore t Manager: James W. Bancker .t I ' OACH John O ' Donnell ' s Freshman Wrestlers rounded out their schedule this year with a resounding victory over Harvard and a first place for their division in the New England Intercol- legiates. Although blighted with injuries in some of the key positions, the team acquitted itself well with triumphs over Choate, Exeter, and Taft. It was topped after the closest competition by an extremely strong Gilman team and the well bal- anced Tiger Cubs of Princeton. Captain Moore, a Taft alumnus, came through the season with a clean sweep of individual triumphs. The other bulwarks of the team were Rashbaum and fJughs, in the 121 pound class; Lewis and Dean, in the 128 pound class; Day in the 145 pound class; Eschelman and Sykes, in the 155 pound class; Smith in the 165 pound class; Dwyer in the 175 pound class; and Richter in the Heavyweight class. Individual champions in the New England Intercollegiates were: Rashbaum, Day, Eschelman, Smith, and Richter. The Freshmen displayed a full measure of courage, determination, and competitive spirit. For example in the Exeter meet a strong opposi- tion managed to grasp the lead after half the matches were over. In the end, however, the final Yale wrestlers came through to swing the balance in favor of their team. Behind each victory, there were eight men struggling with every ounce of strength for their team. Thus, in both the Taft and the Harvard meets, the Freshmen showed their competency as a group rather than as individual stars. In both, the opposition was permitted to achieve but one victory; seven were brought home by the Blue. Characteristic of the attitude of the team was the spirit shown by Chris Rashbaum, who won victories in his first two matches, suffered an injury which kept him out for most of the season, and returned in time to win over Harvard, and in the New England Intercollegiates; Cliff Lewis, who was forced into an overtime match a short while subsequent to his return to practice after an injury, and came out victorious; and Tom Dwyer, who fought on in spite of great physical difficulty to win over his Taft opponent. Back Row: Markle, Fusco, Davis, Harvey, Grasson (Coach). Front Roii - Winter, Christopher, Vastola, Conte, Dorain, Reiche, Cook. Freshman Fencing Captain: Bernard L. Conte Mana er: George B. Markle, IV ' I HE Freshman fencing team of the 1942 season, coached by Bob Grasson, was eminently successful, being undefeated and vanquishing all its opponents by top-heavy scores. The cubs opened their season with a tough bout against a strong Hopkins Grammar team, but took them into camp, 17-10. The bulk of the score was tallied by the foil team led by Bernie Conte; the blue cubs won the epee 5-4, but dropped the saber 4-5. The following week the team gave the Loomis team an 18-9 drubbing, the foil men again piling up the high points, this time winning 7-2, the score in epee was 5-4 and in saber 6-3. Continuing their winning ways, the team drubbed a strong Worcester aggregation 16-11. Despite a loss of the epee, 3-6, and a close win in the saber, 5-4, the victory came again from the 8-1 triumph in foils. The next encounter was an abbreviated one with Choatc, and the cubs man- aged it by a 12-5 count. In what threatened to be a streak-breaking match with Riverdale High School, the yearlings again came through with a clean slate, triumphing 11-6. The breakdown here was a 7-2 win in the foils, and a 2-2 tie in both saber and epee. The crucial meet of the year came in the Princeton tangle; the Nassau cubs were also un- defeated, and numbered among their victims the outstanding teams in the east. From the begin- ning it was a close match, the foils being pulled out of the fire by Dorain and Vastola. A surprise followed when Yale won the epee by a 7-2 score, thanks to the performance of Reiche and Win- ter. The epee, too, turned out satisfactorily, Christopher and Cook winning all three of their bouts, thereby putting the Blues in front 6-3 in this department, and by 18-9 for the whole meet. The last meet of the year, and the climax for the Blues, was the Harvard encounter at Cam- bridge. The freshmen licked the Cantab yearlings lS-9, taking the foil epee and saber, each by 6-3. 310 Back Row: Flaschner (Manager), Canby, Rossbach, Wolf (Coach). Front Roic: Cohen, Warner, Weir, Ver Nooy, Ruotolo. Freshman Rifle Capuin: Michael B. Weir t Manager: F. N. Flaschner ' I ' HE competitive season began in the third - - week of January in which a spUt was gained in two postal matches, a win over Minnesota and a loss to Rutgers. During that same week, the team copped their first shoulder to shoulder match against New Haven High. The team was not much of a match against the national junior champions, the Quinnipiac Jrs., whom it met in shoulder to shoulder competi- tion, but a turn of fortune took place in three postal matches during the next two weeks, as Ohio State and Washington and Lee went down to defeat while the Army Plebes won out by a small margin. In the next three weeks, the best freshman rifle teams in the country were encountered in postal matches and consequently, though Yale ' s scores were nothing to be ashamed of, defeats were suf- fered at the hands of Indiana, Navy Plebes, Texas A. and M., Georgia Tech, and Illinois. Victor) ' over Bowdoin and Columbia, however, was pleasing, as a 1290 score was chalked up, the team ' s highest three position score of the season. In this same week when everyone was shooting so well, the New Haven High School sharp- shooters knocked the Freshmen over at the Win- chester Range, and a rubbei match was an- nounced, from which the Freshmen emerged victorious, not without a battle, however. On March 7 the team journeyed to New London to meet the Harvard Freshmen in their traditional match. Captain Weir whose sensa- tional shooting had led the team all year was taken ill with appendicitis before the trip. Har- vard won only by a close margin, and Yale can console herself with the fact that both her score and Har ' ard ' s score in this match were consider- ably lower than any one Yale had recorded all year. This indeed was the most unfortunate event of the year, but in retrospect the season was a fair one, and many riflemen have seasoned for what looks like a great varsity team next year. Among these, the most promising men are Capt. Weir, Warner, Ruotolo, Cohen, Canby, Janas, VerNoov, and Rossbach. 311 Freshman Indoor Polo T EAD by the hard riding and able teamwork ■ of the two Thomson brothers, Yale ' s Fresh- man Indoor Polo team completed the season with a record of three victories and two defeats. In the opener at the Armory on January 31 the freshmen fell 20-9 to a mixed aggregation of the Junior Varsity. The weaknesses revealed in the first game were soon rectified, and when the team next appeared at West Point on February 14, they took the Army Plebes into camp 7-4. Able defense on the part of Russell Ford and th- ' superior shooting ability of the brothers Thomson gave the Freshmen a well earned victory. The highlight of the season occurcd in the Armory on February 21. Under the auspices of newly-elected Captain Tommy Thomson the team handed their rivals from Princeton a stinging 2 5-4 defeat. Don Thomson set the tone for the Yale attack by chalking up a total of 13 points from the forward post. The following Saturday, overcoming the e ffects of the Freshman Prom, they journeyed to Nassau and repeated their performance; this time winning 12-7. The final game of the season was played against the McDonogh School in Pikesville, Mary- Siipcrc jitr};c land. In this game D. G. Thompson replaced Captain Tommy Thomson at the Number 2 posi- tion. Though well mounted by their hosts, the Freshmen bowed in defeat 14-7. Bad Row: Major Williams (Coach), Lawlor (Manager). Thomson, D. Thompson. Front Row: Ford, T. Thomson, VC ' . 312 Intramural Sports, 1944 Spring A LTHOUGH South dominated the spring intra- mural competition by winning titles in crew and tennis, North Middle added another title to its list and with its fall and winter points man- aged to clinch the all-year championship. The baseball title was won by South Middle as they swept through their schedule losing only one game, an upset victory by last-place South, 11 to 7. The champions combined good pitching and hard hitting with decisive results. The star of the team was Captain Hank Porter, who was the league ' s leading pitcher and batter. Porter struck out fifty-eight opposing batters and also Ghidstone, Mumn Martin. Coffin, Fitt (Captain), Outerbridge, Twining, Cooley and Warren Booth, assumed a starring role. North Middle barely eked out a four to three victory over South in the last game of the season to gain a tie for second place with North. The team possessed the league ' s best infield, with Cap- tain Jim Skardon starring at second base. Billy Seelbach, at first base, and catcher George Greene also played outstanding baseball. Last place South won only one game but oddly enough proved to be the toughest opponents for South Middle ' s champions, as shown by their upset victory. The Colonels ' greatest weakness was lack of pitchin g strength; this, coupled with erratic batting, spelled defeat. The team was captained by Sam Sawyer. North Middle clinched the tennis title by finishing the season with five victories and one defeat. As in the baseball competition, the champion- ship team ' s only defeat came at the hands of the last-place team, in this case North. The competition for the title was very close, and four of the Deacons ' matches were won by the slim margin of one point. The championship was not decided until the last match of the season when North Middle beat South Middle managed to keep a batting average close to .5 00. Other Patriot stars included Jack Barton, Porter ' s bat- tery mate, Randolph, a defensive ace at first base, and Karl Pierson, hard-hitting outfielder. There was a tie for the runner-up position between North and North Middle. Both teams had a record of three wins and three defeats. North was potentially of championship calibre but failed to do better be- cause of defensive weaknesses. In the first game of the season against South Middle, Dick Cooley, the Postmen ' s pitcher, hurled a no-hit game, yet he was the losing pitcher because of costly errors by his teammates. The team was captained by Ralph Hepler who, along with BMi Row Randolph, Bronson. Large, Pierpoint, McGoldrick, Barton, Ruebel. From Row: Grayson, Shull, Porter (Captain), Pierson, McClure, four to three, with Jim Mumma, Johnny Holt, Alf Fitt and Ira Outerbridge providing the mar- gin of victory. These same players were con- 313 sistent winners throughout the season. North Middle, with one victory and two de- Second place South Middle ended the season feats, ended in third place despite the fine efforts with four victories and two defea ts. Charles of Frank Shea and Norm Bemis. Their only vic- Bienfait, Hugh Scott and Norm Schaff were re- tory came when they beat North four to two. sponsible for the Patriots ' strong showing. North, the cellar team, failed to win a match; a South, led by George Register, Charles Scott tie with South Middle was the best that the and Les Brion, had a record of two wins and Postmen v ' ere able to do. The team was led by four losses, while last place North had only their George Hall and Bob Ziesing. upset of the North Middle champions to show South won its second spring title when the in the victory column. Prominent in the Post- Colonels ' powerful boat stroked its way to the men ' s lone victory were John Hands, Mather j-rew championship. Captained by Tom Chitten- Cleveland and Francis Commiskey. Jen and stroked by Sidney Davidson, the Colonels In golf the Southern Colonels garnered top climaxed their winning season by defeating North honors by stroking to an undefeated season. The Middle on Derby Day for the championship. The matches were conducted between teams of four title race was run in a drenching downpour of men each; in each match there was a possibility rain. South led most of the way, sprinted well of getting six points, four for individual match and turned in the fastest time of the year for a winners and one for the best-ball in each foursome. The Colonels ' su- premacy was never seriously chal- lenged. They swept through their schedule with the loss of only twii points. The team was led by Walt Curley and Tony Niedringhaus, both of whom were undefeated through- out the season. South Middle, in second place, had the erratic record of one win, one tie, and one loss. They were the only team to score any points against South. Most credit for the team ' s showing can be attributed to Tom Marshall, Al Sheldon, and Arch McClure. Hill, Curley, Niedringhaus, Cross. Back Row: Davidsiin, Bodine, Moore, M.inn, ' Wall.LCL-, Fox, Chittenden (Capt.Tin), Haywood. Ftoiil Ron: Levison, Reg.in (Man,igcr), Cinip- bell. Freshman boat. Members of the team who received gold charms in- cluded Coxswain Bill Davidge, stroke Davidson, Snowden Hay- wood at two, Ed Harris at three. Bill Wallace at four, Daulton Mann at five, Harvey Moore at six, Jim Bodine at seven and Captain Chit- tenden at eight. Following the Colonels and Deacons in the stand- ings were South Middle in third place and North in last place. The Patriots won their only race from victoryless North. 314 I k Intramural Sports, 1945 . . . Fall Winter npHE cream of this year ' s intramural crop of sons and Fred Postlethwaite also greatly aided the - ' - gridiron monsters seems to be situated around team. North Middle did not begin practice until and above Yale Station, with the left half of some days after the other teams, due to a coach- Durfee thrown in for good measure, as the North ing mix-up, and this somewhat hindered them. unit went through the season undefeated, with The South gridsters found themselves con- only one tie to mar their record. Sparked by the tinually on the wrong end of the score, and as a passing and running of quarterback and Captain result, they finished at the corresponding end of Jimmy Edwards, the Postmen won five games, and the standings. However, some fairly able players ended the season way out in front. Supporting turned out for the team, the stars being Boyd Edwards nobly were Jimmy Mcintosh, Ed Swift, Broadhead and Jack Ordway on offense, and and Dick Rosenthal in the backfield; and in the Mac Trayccr, at center, on defense, stalwart line which yielded only seven points all Contrary to tackle football, the touch season season, the stars were Bob Mandel, ace pass- was a very close one. North and North Middle receiver, Fr.ink Cavanagh, and Dave Ghormley. battled neck and neck all the way through the Choate Huffard, former varsity end, co.iched the team. Competition for the title was rather close in the first stages of the league, as South Middle turned out a strong team which was led by the great plav of Fred Pearson, who was assisted by Bjck Row: Huffard (Coach), J. Cole, Flint, Robb, Cavanagh, Brim, Adams, Unger, Bales (Athletic Secretary). Second Row: Mcintosh, Rosenthal, Dean, Edwards (Captain), Silver, Swift, Mandel. From Rou : M.icDonald, Sasser, Ritter, Streicher. Bill Sumner and Dick Saunders in the backfield, as well as hard-running Buzz Torrey and Ed Dale. The North Middle Deacons had a little time getting started, and their season was rather erratic. They hit their stride in one game, in which they overwhelmed South, 39-0, amassing the highest score of the season. Captain Doug Franchot was consistently outstanding for the Deacons, and combined with Jack Lynch to make an effective passing combination. The running of Jim Par- regular schedule, and then had to play a deciding contest. This game was captured by the North taggers, 18-6. The deciding factor of the game was the pass combination of Bill Hoge to Bunny Berkeley. Captain Zandy Harvey also had a large hand in the victory. These three players, along with E. H. Courtenay and Ed Hilliard, sparked the Postmen to top position in the final standings. North Middle, which was a close second, was the best defensive team, yielding an average of only nine points a game during the regular season, which is very good play in touch football. The Deacons also rolled up the highest score, when they defeated South, 42-18. Cap- tain Will Jaicks led the team, ably assisted by George Bernard, Jean Wilinsky, Dean Vittum, Hugo Smith, and Jack Walter. South Middle did not fair too well, managing to grab one win in five games. Otto Bresky, Duncan Forbes, George Gill, Ed Hooker, and Paul Devney were the most consistent players for the South Middle unit. South had some difficulty putting a full team on the field on a few occasions, which caused them to default twice, and otherwise hindered them. The outstanding men on the team were Jack Virden, Russ Ford, Jack Deutsch, P. L. Boardman, Harold Mayer, and Tom Castle. North and South Middle shared honors in the winter term intramural competition. Both units 315 the sensa- all scoring Allyn Seymour, placed second. The Postmen lost only to South Middle. South occupied third place by virtue of its two victories over victoryless North Middle. South ' s principal players were Pat Kelsey, Randolph Har- won three titles. North by viture of two titles in the fall added to these appears to be a cinch to cop the all-year championship. Averaging fifty-six points a gami tional North Powell quintet broke records in parading to the basketball championship. Led by the high scor- ing forward combination of Captain Powell and Paul Lashnits, the team five times netted over seventy points, once running the total up to eight in a phenomenal performance. John Glynn, Dave Lockart, and ince Adley combined with Lashnits and Powell to make up the undefeated five which showed its strength even in college circles by walloping Say- brook, the college champs, 65 to 2 . South Hawley edged South Yancc for the runner-up spot by finishing the season with a record of thirteen wins and three losses. The rest of the league with the exception of fourth place North Middle Jung won less than rison, and Russ Lynch while North Middle was B.u ' k Ron : Hcppenhiemcr, Storer, Hugue. Front Row: Milliard, Omrtncy, Harvey, Chewning, Berkeley. half of their games and thus were never in a con- tending position. A good idea of the best players of the league can be gained from an all-star team picked at the end of the season. Lashnits and Powell held the forward posts. Hogan Yancey, captain of the third place South Five, was picked at center while Blair Hawley captain of the runner-up South team and Bob Brutcher of South Middle were at the guard positions. The second team in- cluded Jack Glynn of North .u center, Henry Jung of North Middle and Dick Saunders of South Midd le at the forwards, and Guy Bates and Bob Miller both of South at the guards. By completing an undefeated season South Middle won the squash title. The Patriots however did not win the title without a hard fight. Sev- eral of the five-man matches were won by the champions by only 3 to 2 margins. Dave Jones, Hugh Knowiton, and Art Christy were largely responsible for victory in the close matches. North, paced by Bill Coley, Zandy Harvey, and represented mostly by Gordon Graham, Mac Walser, and Dave Carpenter. The Intramural swimming competition was divided into two separate series of meets. The Vittum, IzarJ. Barton, GayUud, .Stillin.in. first series was completed before Christmas and allowed swimmers who were out for the freshmen team to compete, while the second series took place during the winter term. Six meets were in- cluded in each series. North was the first winner while South triumphed in the second. Captain Lyon and Randy Klein were principal figures in North ' s win. They combined with Al Stern and Hamilton Goff to score the impor- tant points of the Postmen ' s five victories and one ,«  ' Adiey. Glynn, Lockart Skinner, Wolfe, Powell, Lashnits, Meyer defeat. South was the onlv team that was a threat to North and ended in second place. They handed the Postmen their only defeat. Captain Roots, John Virden, and Tom Burke were the Colonel standouts. South Middle and North Middle failed to show much power but Captain Forbes and Fred Crane for the third place Patriots and Captain Rudolp and Charlie Gillete for the Deacons, were among the best swim- mers. The second series found South Middle replacing North as champion when the Patriots led by Captain Reinhardt, Fred Pearson a nd Doug Forbes won all of their six meets. North suffering greatly by the loss of swimmers to the Freshmen team wound up in second mostly through the efforts of Captain Stern, Bill Sagar, and Bob Low. South captained by Dan Bloom ended in third and North Middle captained by Jim Whitehead placed fourth. The Bowling title was hotly contested for by three teams, North Middle Barton, North Middle Wilinsky, and South Middl ' Reinhardt. North Middle Barton finally won the title by defeating North Middle Wilinsky in a play-off by the slim margin of five pins. Both teams had finished the season with one defeat marring their records, thus necessitating the play-off. Captain Barton proved to be the most consistent performer for the champions while Jack Izard bowled sensationally in the closing frames against the Wilinsky team to save the match and win the title. Bob Gaylord, Dean Vittum and George Stillman completed the team. The second place North Middle Wilinsky team rallied spectacular scores in several meets but failed to be in on the all-important play-off. High point men were Captain Wil- insky, Milton Carmen and Charlie Elliott. South Middle Reinhardt lost the closest match of the season when North Middle Barton won by the margin of a single pin. Led by Captain Reinhardt, Henry Atkins and Clem Amory, the team ended in third place in the standings. The Boxing Team title was won by North with North Middle second, and South third. Highlight t 9- aMiii ' yi V U ) Chnsty, Knuwlton, Schietflin, Richards, floward, Jones. was the 1 3 5 pound fight between Frank Bosworth of North and Phil Keating of South in which the former ' s outstanding aggressiveness, cleverness, and experience won out. The champions crowned were King Tolles of North at 145, Pete Reinhardt of South Middle at 15 5, Alden Painter of North Middle at 16 5, and Dwight Wadsworth at 175. South Middle copped the wrestling final by piling up 19 points to beat South and North both of whom had 16. North trailed with 8. Champions were Archie Dean of North at 128; Bill Moorhcad of South Middle at 13 6; Ernie Weekl of North Middle at 145; Bull Sutter of South at 15 5, Pete Reinhardt of South Middle at 165; Ted Robertson of South Middle at 175, and Mai Trayser of South in the unlimited class. 3,H-k Row: McCollester, Sterling, Koeline, Scciville, Pea (Coach). From Row: Acherman, Perlman, Forbes, Lewis South Middle emerged with top honors in the squash competition as the Patriots swept through the winter racquet campaign without suffering a defeat. In completing the undefeated season how- ever, the dwellers of Welch and Bingham were faced with some stiff competition. In three of the matches on their six match schedule, they barely eked out victories, winning by the slim margins of 3 to 2. Hugh Knowlton, Dave Jones, and Bob Howard were the consistent winners for the team holding down the first three positions. It was mainly through their efforts that the Patriots came out on top in the close contests. Ralph Richards and Jim Monteith also played for the team. North landed in second place as the result of their season record of four wins and two losses. The Postmen were the masters of all except the champion Patriots to whom they succumbed by scores of 3 to 2 and 4 to 1. Principally responsible for the Postmen ' s ending in the runner-up spot and thus adding more points to their tremendous season total were Bill Coley, Allyn Seymour, and Bill Heppenheimer. The Southern Colonels finished in third place with only two victories over victoryless North Middle to show in the win column against four losses. In spite of this very unimpressive record, the Colonels oddly enough proved to be Champion South Middle ' s toughest hurdle in its champion- ship drive. In both matches with the Patriots, the Colonels lost by scores of 3 to 2 in very hotly contested matches. Randy Harrison, Max Belding, Russ Lynch all contributed victories during the Colonel ' s season with Lynch and Belding particularly effective against South Middle. North Middle had only a large goose egg to show at the end of the season for its victories. The Deacons were greatly handicapped by a lack of manpower as they lost many of their matches because of defaults. Dave Carpenter, Gordy Graham, and Mac Walser were the most consistent players. All in all the fall and winter competition prov ed again to be very successful. Under the guidance of director Widdy Neale the Freshman intramural program engulfed nine sports, providing athletic competition for several hundred Freshmen. In spite of the fact that North holds a commanding lead in the race for all-year honors, rival units are muster- ing strength for an all-out spring offensive. Win or lose however. Freshmen participating on the various teams have a splendid opportunity to become acquainted with their fellow classmates. Also, the intramural program makes it possible for all students, regardless of athletic ability, to become a member of some athletic team and thus gain the benefits of athletic competition. With the added impetus that has been placed upon physical fitness, the intramural athletic program will be greatly expanded in the coming months. The fact that every student will be required to take some form of exercise will insure perfect attendence at all contests and result in keener competition. The university is fortunate indeed to have a fine intramural system as a means of conditioning its students for the rigors of militarv life. 318 Advertising Section College Lists and Index A DOUBLE-BREASTED SUIT 0 v:orsleri flannel . , . in the newer siripings, plain greys, and glen plaids. Embodying the distinctive details of cut and styling for which all TRii ' LER clothes are noted S42 DISTINCTIVE CLOTHES for University ten The preference of man.y uni- versity men, this three-button SINGLE-BREASTED SUIT... is available in Scotch tweed, Shetland, unfinished worsted, flannel, and cheviot . . .fabrics representing weavers in .■Imerica a :d Great Erilain S42 0S55 Ix ottr Department for Men an Young Men, ice ojfer an abundai selection oj suits for year-roun icear . . . suits in exclusive p, terns, many of them speciall ivoven jor us . . . all of them pre sen ting the neiv, longer jackets an easier icaist ine Great favorites icith youn men of our leading universitu and business executives, these stii, represent clothing value that - outstanding y ; 320 oca ' ' iiumlYm ' li ' .wietji tit (III dm fisjirA htm ' ' nil rm, ' ' ' ' TRlpi I M, s ? ' ' :.:j :.istC ' .:f Z ' y :: . j i:: j :.- : : NCTIVE )THE8 rtwi J!r ' !r mt!Jvm ' -i ? j tkm r frsmii ■ ■■ 9 lakl ' ' ■ SPORTSWEAR for Campus Style-Setters A.S a ivays, our Department for . en cuui 1 ' oiing Men o ers a com- ' te variety of sports-wear styled th an alert understanding oj c npus problems and preferences JJhatever spectator sports- ii ar you require, whether it he a p r oj socks or a polo coat, you will tainly Jind the latest, smartest This new sports jacket is cut hngerthcm the ordinary length and also cut with straight hack and tailored with either a center vent or one on each side — your choice. Avail- able in exclusive, imported shetlands, new overplaids, glen plaids, and hounds-tooth checks towSj; TROUSERS of covert and flannel front Si 2. 50 m ret at tripler ' s No university man ' s wardrobe is complete with- out a COAT FOR SPEC- TATOR SPORTSWEAR. Our polo coats and covert coats represent the ultimate in smartly styled coats for campus and stadium New SHORT-LENGTH RAINCOATS — also a ne- cessity in the university wardrobe. Combiningpro- tection wi:h distinctive appearance from S 1 0.50 FrTripier Ij. Outfitters to Gentlemen . Established 1886 D I S O X AVENUE AT 46 S T ] E E T • NEW YORK I = C!ii; ;3C .3 ; .3i; ;: ; c!ii;iv.::5Ji;- 5 -;.r.::?ii;v ! Dc s;i% 321 Berkeley College T. W. AiNSWORTH R. F. Appleton W. F. ARNOLnv, Jr. A. W. Barnev, Jr. H. H, B. RTI.ETT D. Beers F. W. Brunner C. S. Carracan J. F. Clark G. H. Coleman C. N. Crum, III E. deZaldo, Jr. R. F. Donovan, Jr. A. Gordon, Jr. D. I. Gordon J. M. Green J. Green. H. T. Greene L. L. Hemingway, Jr. R. L. Ireland, III. T. P. Kane A. T, Keefe, Jr. J. G. Keller J. R. Kelsey G. W. KlRCHWF.V, III R. P. Lathrop R. Lawler E. J. LOGUE H. S. Marsh E. D. Marvin, Jr. J. P. Murphy H. F. ovES J. M. Packard B. O. Parker G. Phillips L. Platt, Jr. R. H. Pope H. A. Reed H. F. Smith, Jr. M. Snow J. C. Stockman I. Trachtenburg T. H. Watkins, II L. Weisiiurc R. E. White, Jr. C. C. Williams, Tr. J. T. Wyman, II P. C. Anderson K. Arnold R. P. Baldwin R. U. Bernstein J. B. Blake H. B. Bradford R. E. Burke, II P. S. Burr G. S. Burrows .T. G. Butler J. R. Carney A. B. Chirgwin S. H. Clement, Jr. S. H. CoxE O. A. Day, Ir. B. McG. Dear, Jr. S. G. DuNwiDDiE, Jr. G. M. Ellis H. W. English H. L. Evans, Jr. W. M. Fairhurst T. N. Flournoy S. K. Galpin M. W. Haber J. McM. Harding J. deP. Hasbrouck t. H. Hately W. C. Hayes, 111 A. W. Haywood, Jr. E. P. Hoffman F. E. House, III W. McC. Jordan E. B. Kaufman C. B. Kennedy T. Kiendl, Jr. C. J. Kittredge, Jr. S. S. Labovitz F. M. LeBar, Jr. R. S. Lewis R. L. Lippe V. McClelland 1. E. Mahoney B. 1). Miller D. L. Miller I. O ' RouRKE, Jr. T. A. Perls F, W. Perry J. S. Raskin R. RooME, Jr. M. Rubin R. Sargent, Jr. J. .SCHULMAN, Jr. H. N. SCHYCO.N Z. Stewart G. N. Stone F. B. Thorne, Jr. E. C. Town, Jr. D. H. Uptegrove, Jr. N. J. Waterman R. L. Weil W. C. Whitin B. M. Winer 1944 L. Armour, Jr. W. H. . verell, Jr. H. M. Baldrige, Jr. E. C. Bannon J. U. Barton K. W. Berry, Jr. C. Brooks J. M. Childs I. S. Clapp, Jr. R. A. Clapp, 111 E. Corrigan J. M. Crane. Jr. H. E. Damon S. W. Davidson, Jr. C. F. English, Jr. R. T. Farrei.l S. B. Finch M. M. Foss, Jr. R. T. Gabriel N. R. G. Goods peed T. W. Gordon, II C. M. Green H. T, Green A. C. Greene R. P. GuiDi B. B. Hanson M. Heald R. P. Herman J. E. Hewes, Jr. A. B. Hilton, I ' T. H. Hor.i.iDA -, |i(. j. C. Holt T. W. HooPES R. T. Jones F. G. Kearney J. J. Keecan, Jr. i. H. Kramer M. J. Kunstler J. E. LeGros F. LOBDEl.L J. J. LOGUE A. R. Lowe J. P. Lucas D. C. Lumb f. L. Lyons J. A. MCCURDV, II 1. D. MacGuire t. G. Mairs W. R. M. NNY, Jr. B. F. Mo KROs H. A. Moody. Jr. A. H. Norton R. C. Nuss F. O ' Brien, Jr. J. Pennywitt, Jr. W. S. Pepper O. S. Purintun R. F. Quinlan T. R. Reeves J. T. Saunders B. Sawyer D. T. Schneider R. B. Scullin S. W. SCL ' LLY J. W. Seaeuhv C. p.. Shorev, Ik. R. W. Shull R. S. Spencer, Jr. R. C. Still.ma.x W. L. Stone H. J. Swift H. C. Sykes, Ir. A. V. Tellis J. F. Tilghman R. E. Traphagex, Jr. L. W. Tucker V. von Schi.f.cell, Jr. H. C. Wallace F. Wallace, Jr. G. a. Wiltsee D. Witter, Jr. NON-RESIDENTS W. M. .Adams G S. Greene, Ju. P. T. MacCakthy VV. H. Sykes III D. L. Brown, Tr. G. T. Griswold D. D. MUNSF.LL N. S. Talbott. Jr. H. DuBosnuE S. W. Harris C. E. Pyxchon, Ir. K. F. Thompson C. C. ESTY T. T. Helde J. M. QUINN S. ToMKiNS, Jr. R. J. Fitzwii.liam E. L. Hicks, 111 1. McC. Sessions C. L. Willouchby E. G. GOODSPEED I. A. LeVan ' L. B. Smith F. D. Winder E. K. Gravely R. 1. Lyman W. y. Stone J. M. WOODHULL 322 ESTABLISHED 1818 MADISON AVENUE COR. FORTY-FOURTH STREET NEW YORK Oiittits tor Summer Sports Send jar Krooks-I lluslratid New Illustrated Military Price List and Illustrated Folder of Seersucker and Linen Suits BRANCHES NEW YORK: ONE WAL BOSTON: NEWBURY COB BE Before You Buy a ] ew Car — Be Sure to See the New 1942 CHEVROLET BIGGER — BETTER — MORE BEAUTIFUL THE SAFEST PLACE IN TOWN TO BUY A USED CAR 5 DAY TRIAL 30-90 DAY GUARANTEE LIBERAL ALLOWANCE LARGEST SELECTION LOWEST PRICES SERVICE AS YOU LIKE IT Regardless of what make of car yoiS drive — visit our Service Station — All work guaranteed — Low Prices — Most Modem and Complete in City. COOLEY CHEVROLET CO. 158 Whalley Avenue At the Sign of the Clook 4 Blocks up Whalley Ave. from Harkness 323 Branford College 1942 P. A. Banker R. W. Barr C. E. Bates R. J. Boyle T. C. Britton J. B. Carlin, III R. H. Carter L. D. CHiRr.wiN, Jr. C. Clark, IV J. H. Conrad W. L. CONYNGHAM, II C. T. Corse J. B. English G. A. FiNLEY W. A. Gamble E. L. German G. R. Gibbons, Jr. E. C. Goodwin t. s. goslin, 11 G. a. Goss, Jr. S. F. Grifeing, Tr. G. W. Hamlin, II E. A. Hansen B. N. Hunt R. S. Kaynor J. B. KiRKPATRICK, II F. ' . Kreske V. T. Latorre R. L. Levy, Jr. E. LocKwooD, Jr. VV. J. McAndrevvs J. Y. Miller j. C. Murphy r. A. Myers R. D. O ' Brien C. R. O ' Connor E. H. PicKus W. P. PowxiNc S. H. Reisner H. B. Schooley, Jr. W. D. Seidler G. G. Sim.mons, Jr. C. C. Spalding R. E. Stevenson P. Vanamee R. K. Warren J. R. Welch R. J. Wood 1943 B. B. Alexander G. F. Curtin, Jr. W. F. Allen B. H. Danly D. K. Anderson, Jr. G. F. Dappert H. L. Andrews, Jr. P. L. DeRosa C. E. Barbier I. P. Egan, Jr. A. D. Barnett G. P. Elmore M. Barnett L. A. Fazzano V. L. Baxter H. K. Fowler C. Baze P. S. Good L. Biel, Jr. R. E. Gordon G. W. Blow P. M. GuBA, Jr. R. A. Browning, Jr. R. Hamilton F. J. Carrig J. B. Heald D. M. Carson K. P. Hochschwender W. Chynoweth E. J. Horton, Jr. G. T. Churchill A. G. Jackson B, W. Clark F. R. Jeffrey, Jr. E. P. Clark, II P. JORALEMON R. T. Claus J. p. Kebabian O. P. Kline, Jr. E. L. Lassetter J. G. Lewis, Jr. M. P. Liverance L. A. McCabe J. J. McCarty, III D. W. Maclean J. K. McLean -■ . G. Mager, Jr. L. P. Mahler R. H. NOLTE C. F. O ' Brien, Jr. R. C. Ortner D. W. OsCARSON H. M. Preston D. . . Quari.es, Jr. J. H. Redfern, Jr. G. RowE. Jr. R. W. Sanford W. K. Severin E. B. Sheldon F. K. Sloan R. W. Spilner R. D. Stern R. M. Thompson, Jr. P, J. L ' rquhart, Jr. J. B. Vreeland A. L. Wachs.man, Jr. J. S. Walton R. J. Wean, Jr. T. J. Whelan, Jr. D. R. Williams, Jr. J. F. Williams K. O. Wilson F. I. Zamboni 1944 R. Anderson G. B. -Arfken, Jr. A. S. Barnu.m T. H. Beddall, Tr. D. W. Belcher E. B. Ben.iamin, Jr. R. C. Bennett, Jr. T. H. Bolton, Tr. j. V. B. Brady L. E. Brion, Jr. R. W. Brown T. S. Brush, Jr. P. B. Buck R. B. Burnham, Jr. W. T. Cahill P. E. Carter, Jr. W. V. Castle, Jr. C. E. Clark, Jr. J. C. Clement W. H. Cobb, Tr. M. D. Cohen W. R. Coles W. H. Cox, Jr. H. H. Davidson H. E. Drake, Jr. J. L. Ducker R. G. Dyke C. M. Fauci, Jr. D. Ferguson, Jr. S. H. Finely A. B. Fitt J. L. Fort, Jr. j. G. Frev.mann J. S. Garvan, Jr. T. J. E. Glasson J. F. GONTARSKI E. M Harris, Jr. G. W. Hauer A. P. Heyer J. E. Hopkins R. -M. Hume, Jr. T. F. Jackson H. G. Jacob, Jr. P. Kashanski F. J. Keliher R. B. Knight W. L. Lincoln D. W. MacEachron J. A. McKee R. T. McCi.uskey P. M. Miller W. G. MiLLIKEN R. L. Mitchell, Jr. J. D. Morris J. B. Mu.MMA T. H. Norton, Jr. T. P. O ' Brien A. R. Pastore, Jr. L. E. Price G. K. Provo G. K. Ramsey R. Reade G. C. Reed A. D. Richardson, HI A. E. Roberts, Jr. W. P. Roberts, Jr. E. F. RULL.MAN S. L. Sawyer J. M. Seidler R. H. Sheen G. C. Shively B. E. Smith R. E. S.mith M. H. SOKOLOW E. S. Stiteler W. Strvker W. L. ToBiN A. Van Cortlandt, III P. C. Walsh, Jr. C. C. Brooks S. G. Burger W. K. Collins R. S. CUMMI.VG NON-RESIDENTS H, K. Deu., Jr. W. J. Fleming, Tr. R. T. Heizer, Jr. . . IvTorse, Jr. . K. Roller S. Shindell E. B. Tobin J. A. Walsh, Jr. A. W. Wrieden, Jr. It ' s A hears Open Season fur Distinctive Apparel! LANGROCK Fine CLOTHES CiistoiiiPcl-to-Measure or Ready to Don Smart Imported Accessories Elm Street at Yale Campus Read The Yale Alumni Magazine The Illustrated Magazine of Yale Published fortnightly duriny the College year Calhoun College R. D. Bariiwi;i.l, In. R. M. BisACCiA H. M. Brush, Jr. R. A. BURMAN H. F. Church, Jr. R. H. Daley T. B. De Mott P. J. R. DESJARtUNS A. R. DORNHEIM M. T. Edgerton, Tr. p. W. D. Fari.rv J. M. Gessell J. K. Goodman F. B. Hamlin, Jr. I- A. Ingersoll, Jr. P. A. JUDD J. J. Keating ' [). M. Knight G. L. Lewis D. Lipph. rd K. H. LocKwoon R. S. McCoRMicK 11. M. Mallery I. i Mendillo W. ' W. Meyer B. N. Millner G. Oleair S. H. Olechnowich L. M. Palmer E. C. Parshall, II R. H. Peters W. C. Rich, Jr. F. D. Rosi M. Sawyer A. B. Spurney H. M. Stommel J. T. VanVoast B, B. ViRSHUP T. C. Warner, Jr. T. M. Warwick T. B. Wiley R. J. M. Wilson G. W. N ' 0LF, Jr. T. F. Abelt H. D. Balensweig M. R. Baron F. A. Besse, II J. L. Birmingham R. H. Bode H. D. Brown S. A. Brown F. W. Burns, Jr. C. W. Carter H. M. Cobb, Jr. J. F. Collins W. M. Crockett, Tr. W. F. Doerr R. J. Falvey I ). W. Kantler N. Ferguson R. M. Ketch UM D. Fletcher, Jr. G. G. King ■p. M. Eraser, Jr. W. R. Kuntz G. T. Gates R. C. Lamar 1). R. GiNSBURG T. W. Leavenworth, Jr J. Hafitz F. F. Lee A. W. Hammond W. C. McCracken W D. Hart.man T. R. McGuiRE A. G. Heidrich, Jr. D. D. Marsden G. F. Herrity C. N. Menninger C. S. Hoar, Jr. C. D. Miller F. W. HOENIGMAN T. L. Miller C. W. Kenady, Jr. S. D. Moseley L. G. XlCKELL H. E. Perry, Jr. I. D. Ramsay J. H. Reid D. M. Saunders H. S. Semple W. P. Sheidy F. D. Shepard R. W. Sterling W. L. Stotzer I). E. TiLESTON R. W. Van Middi.esworth W. F. Wolff J. J. Zaskalicky M. Y. Alderman J. C. Aleord E. B. Armstrong J. F. Baxter A. E. Becker, Jr. J. S. Blair J. F. Bresnock W. L. Briscoe A. U Brooks R. C. Burr L. C. Carroll N. Chandler M. J. Corse E. B. Davidge E. L. n. Dies N. A. Duke V. FLE.MER, III R. L. Pullman K. K, FuRSE W. R. Gennert H. H. GiNSEURG W. M. Hall, Jr. W. N. Hastings J. T. Ingraham E. . . Jafee W. R, Keagy, Jr. R. P. Keating C. D. G. King R. W. Kuntz F. S. Lamb T H. Ltnley, Jr. C. N. LOESER P. W. Lyall R. A. McIntosh F. H. McLenaghan H. T. Mandeville M. M. Marsden C. B. Martin, Jr. L. R. Martin, Jr. H. Masursky S. W. tILLS, IV F. W. MiTCHEL S. E. MONOHON H. B. Moore J. B. Peirce E. S. Pierce T. V. PURCELL, Jr. i ' . E. Ress ' . L. Ross, Jr. G. R. RUEBEL C. B. RUTTENBERG J. A. Skardon J. Smillie J. E. Smith k. M. Stevenson R. Straus D. K. Swan J. T. Tenneson, Jr. R. F. Trask R. H. Webb H. D. Williams H. C. Woods, Jr. D. K. Worcester, Jr. R. B. Wyland NON-RESIDENTS G. DuP. Boomer F. L. Burgess J. R. Cook H. E. Gumming D. E. Dangler, 11 H. L. Everett R. T. EwiNG I. R. Finch b. W. Gow J. Y. HUBER, III 1 ' . A. Ku.vert. Jr. (). P. Le Compte, Jr. R. Macklin W. E. Newcomb, Jr. W. C. H. Ramage, Jr. H. B. Ray T. A. Reeds T. B. Ross C. M. Stoddart . . J. Trower, Jr. M. Upson, Jr. A. J. Waring, Jr. W. C. Witt The ATLANTA BILTMORE HOTEL Make the Biltmore your home when in Atlanta The South ' s Supreme Hotel STORK CLUB 3 East 53rd Street New York City No Cover or Minimum • Two Orchestras • Dress Requested ♦ NO EXTRA CHARGE OF ANY KIND FOR YALE MEN .... CLEANING PRESSING ALTERING REWEAVING CHAMOIS ELBOWS RE-WEATHERPROOFING ROSEY ' S TAILORS Established 1888 86 WALL STREET— OPPOSITE SILLIMAN COLLEGE ♦ ♦ ♦ CONTRACTS MOST REASONABLE ON CAMPUS GOOD THROUGHOUT SUMMER IF SIGNED NOW ♦ ♦ ♦ REWEAVING— RE-WEATHERPROOFING DONE ON SHORT NOTICE 327 In Davenport College 1942 W. H. Adams, II J. D. AVERBACK J. W. Bancker, Jr. W. R, Battey W. T. Bni.i, G. K. Benson J. V. Ber.mudez R. I. Bon SAL W. L. Borden L. B. Brody J. W. Buckley D. Campbell, Jk. J. Chandler, Jk. K. Chandler, Jr. X. p. Clement, Jr. E. C. Fowler. G. K. McClelland K. L. Conway F. A. Gaynor N. D. McClure, Tr J. S. Cooke H C. F. GiFFORD R. A. Miller, III ]. C. Crabtree C. E. Gilbert J. F. MiLLlKEN C. Davis S. S. GODDARD, Jk. S. F. Palitz T. B. Dealy, Jr. F. A. GoDLEY, Jk. C. R. Pascoe V. A. Devine H A. GOTTSCHALL L. C. Peck I W. DiCKERSON C. T. Grayson, Jr. R. G. Rhett, III A. D. Dodge A. C. Hall H. B. Smythe A. A. Dun I. H, Heller F. A. Sprole G. D . Eberlein F. HiRSCIIHORN, Jr. R. C. White 1. M. Ethridce, III T. C. Hull W. G. White L. P. EWALD, III K. DE L. Johnson L. I. WiGCiN, Jr. V. . Ford G. DE F. Ford, Jr. 1943 D. C. ACHESON J. H. AucHiNCLOSs, Jr. B. Badgley A. F. Brown W. M. Brunet D. F. Canning J. W. Castles, III j. B. Chaffee E. T. Chandler T. N. Cross L. D. Dannenbaum C. H. Dearborn, II I ). H. Doolittle K. D. Drain L. C. Fielden R. S. Freeman R. -A. Gardner, Jr. M. Goodman, Jr. M. Hebarii. Jr. R. R. Hessberg, Jr. C R. HicKOX, Tr. A. D. Higgins R. Hitchcock, Jr. L. H. HOLLISTF.R J. AI. Howard, Jr. . . Howe, Jr. A. T. Klot ' s, Jr. B. y. Lamson, Jr. J. Le Boutillier J. H. AIaclean D. P. AEcDonnell C. Meyer, Jr. E. R. Minor W. P. L. Myers C. S. NOYES G. S. Pillsbury S. H. Rogers K. Rosenberg J. H. Simpson E. S.mith, Jr. P. D. Smith J. M. Symington W. J. Taylor J. O. Wardwell, II C. G. Whiting H. L. Williamson, Jr. B. Woodruff D. W. R. Bahlman R. R. Bellinger N. S. Bemis J. F. Bodine A. B. Brook S. G. Brown F. H. Brownell, III B. R. Cadwalader R. K. Carlton J. N. Carpenter, III S. T. Castle.man, Jr. G. L. Chase R. A. Cheney, Jr. T. C. Clifford W. H. CONKLTNC, Jr. H. P. Converse C. P. Cox, II J. S. Deans, III F. B. Dent S. P. Dodge, Jr. B. J. Dlrmng M. DwYER, Jr. R. Evans, Jr. F. C. Far WELL, II A. B. FoKD L. H. Freiberg, Jr. D. E. Gile R. G. GOODEVE C. H. Granger, II W. C. Grayson J. O. Green, Jr. P. E. GlTEKNSEY W. B. Harris C. A. Higgins, Jr. r. M. HOLDEN N. S. Howe G. S. Isham R. G. TOHNSON R. P. Kahn DA, P. Kennedy H. H. Ketcham, Jr. M. KiRKPATRICK D. Kruidenier T. T. Lawrence W. B. Lee, Jr. C. G. Lindsay D. A. Lindsay C. H. Lyons, Jr. W. L. Maguire W. M. Manger Q. Meyer J. AFOMENT K. T. MURDOCK A. L. W. NlEDRINGHAUS F. J. O ' TOOLE J. B. Ottman J. J. Pascoe, II H. O. Perry, Jr. E. G. Platt, Jr. W. W. Proctor R. I. Randall H. E. Read, Jr. T. D. Rowen N, ScHAFF, Jr. C. N. SCHENCK, in R. M. Smith F. H. SOMMER, III E. C. Spalding H. Ten Eyck C. Tucker, Jr. J. P. Walker M. M. Walker W. F. Walker, Jr. R. H. Williams R. P. Williams, III W. K. WlTHERBEE W. P. WODELI. R. A. ZlESING NON-RESIDENTS H. T. Clement, Jr. T. A. Judge, Jr. I. R. Pearson, Jr. M. E. Fox P. M. Kennedy, Jr. j. W. Red, Jr. W F. Goodman R. B. Mason .s B. Rich C. P. Hadden D. L. Mitchell A McC. Sturm w B. Jordan, III B. H. Sullivan, Jr. I. D. Warfield F. T. Wilson, II I. B. H. 7.ISCHKE 328 Watch Your Eyes r„ HE EYE is a long suffering 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 probabh ' needs glasses quite as much as the individual who can not see plainly. The latter needs help to obtain clear ision ; the former needs help to relieve the strain and make seeing easier. Why not find out the e.xact condition of your eyes at the beginning of each college year? The longer eye strain is neglected, the harder it is to over- come. 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 corrected now for the work in years ahead — and to you falls this duty. MACY H. BATTALIN Kyototn etriA t 865 CHAPEL STREET Cor. CHURCH FOR DAY OR EVENING APPOINTMENT TELEPHONE 7-0681 329 Jonathan Edwards College J. R. Anderson, Jr. J. ASHTON D. S. Atkinson O. S. Baku. Jr. J. Chanxellor, III R. A. Chouteau G. M. Co.MSTOCK, Ju. T. Delanh, Jr. B. K. Dickerson A. H. DicKixsoN, Jr. J. M. DOWLING A. L. Free W. T. Furniss D. Given C. V. GoELZ, Jr. M. L. Goi.iiEN C. S. GoouuicH, Jr. H. L. Greaves, Jr. G. Griscom T. R. Haudad A. B. Harding, Jr. V. D. Hedin W. A. Hindenlang J. A. Klacsmann D. A. Kramer B. D. Leete P. R. Levine 1). V. P. LVNXH R. H. Major, Jr. W. F. MiLius R. L. Myerson F. E. OssoRio J. T. PicoTT, Jr. E. A. Riley C. P. Ripley D. F. Sharp W. W. Shelden R. A. Statton C. E. Steinberg P. B. Stephan, Jr. D. L. Sweetman R. S. Tolles W. B. Treat R. J. Turner T. Twigg-Smith J. C. Vorrath, Jr. J. S. Walker D. P. H. Watson A. I. Weinberg C. P. Wilson L. S. Wolfe, Jr. 1943 J. McB. Aldridge S. J. Baker W. P. Bird R. E. Boies H. A. Carlton D. D. Coffin W. A. CONKLIN H. A. A. Conway W. R. Deeble, III D. R. Divine W. E. Fears W. D. Geoghegan J. B. Grant P. H. Griffith R. A. Hardy, Jr. C. A. Hargreaves, 2d D. Hartshorne, Jr. J. Hennig, Jr. K. A. Hoffman S. M. Hoi.combe J. H. Holton, Jr. H. L. Hotchkiss, IV D. W. Jackson H. B. Kellogg W. H. Keogh R. C. Laing, Jr. C. R. Leslie IX W. Lynch I. L. McHugh G. P. McXear, III k. L. Madsen J. k. Mason L. . MiGLIORINI J. P. Miller W. Miller G. Mills, II W. W. Phillips F. C. Rogers, Jr. S. Schachter R. T. SCH.MIDT R. G. Sheehan G. O. Smith, Jr. J. A. Talbot, Jr. W. C. Tho.mpson, Jr. Y. H. Tho.mpson, Jr. A. H. Underwood R. B. von Mehren J. C. Weadock A. S. Wichtman J. N. Worcester R. Bertolette A. B. Ford K. M. Moffat K. W. Blum G. L. Gordon E. R. MUNSON W. T. BowKER, Jr. C. K. Guirey H. E. O ' Brien ]. T. E. Bridgman J. A. Hall, Jr. R. L. O ' Connor M. I. Brody W. C. Hamilton L. M. O ' Shaughnessy R. Buist L. Hicgins H K. Porter R. P. Bushman, Jr. J. D. Hurd C. W. Price, HI J. L. H. Chafee N. D. Ivey, Jr. R. M. Prosser F. C. Collier J. P. K. Keating C. F. Robbins, III R. J. Collins J. V. Lindsay F. L. Rockefeller E. iP. C. Constantin, 3d C. H. Long, Jr. F. P. Rose W. S. Czehura E. Lord, Jr. W L. Schofield R. C. Davis F. H. Mt G R. lit. 1 A. Sears C. B. Dayton W. B. [A Mlil;u, Jn. A. j. Sl-.lliNER A. Ellis, Jr. L. Me.m.mixger, Jr. U. P. Shedd N. B. Flynn I. C. Sheldon B. Shepard, Jr. J. H. Sl.OTNICK R. H. Spencer C. S. Stearns R. S. Stoddart, Jr. S. C. Taft E. S. Tishman H. C. G. Toland W. J. Wedemeyer, Jr. J P. Weitzel A. McN. White G. W. Williams, IV I. Wilson R. [. Youngs, Jr. NON-RESIDENTS W. A. Armstrong R. P. Grinnell L. Krieger H. L. Roberts W. M. Charman, Jr. K. L. Jacobs F. E. Meloy, Jr. T. W. Swingle W. E. Fowler, Jr. J. H. Kennedy R. D. Powell T.-Y. Yan(; S. A. Fried.man COHEN and POWELL, Inc. MOVERS Storaste Warehouse Office and Warehouse 33 OLIVE STREET, NEW HAVEX Phone 8-3181 Unii ' ersity ] Iovers for Over 20 Years NEWMAN ' S School of Dancing EXPERT YOUNG LADY TEACHERS Oldest Established School in I eiv Haven Gamble - Desmond Bldg. 4th floor - ELEVATOR - 8-3834 BICYCLE CENTER FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC CYCLES RENTED, SOLD AND REPAIRED Parts and Accessories For All Makes The bicycle is still the quickest, most convenient, and cheapest way to get around the University. CHAPEL YORK STREETS established 1937 JAMES J. McDonnell IMPORTER and ROASTER of the Finest Coffee Approved and served at Yale by The Colleges, Dining Halls. Fraternities and Clubs 139 MEADOW STREET NEW HAVEN - CONN. Pierson College D. C. Alexandkr P. M. Anderson O. P. Backus, III N. F. Boucher S. D. Bowers, Jr. M. C. Brooks L. H. Butts W. D. Campbell E. N. Carpenter P. D. Cooke T. E. CoxE E. McL. Cummings M. H. Curtis D. M. Davidson R. S. Davis N. C. Eddy K. W. Eiii.v R. H. Gilpin G. C. Haas, Jr. H. S. Harned, Jr. P. C. Harper, Jr. D. F. Harris D. T. Harris H. A. Hastings H. M. HOLTZ.MANN H. C. Humphrey G. Ingram, Jr. J. B. Jessup F. E. Jones, Jr. J. E. Kenny T. .• . Kneubuhl L. T. KULIKOWSKI H. V. Sherrii.i. L. F. Laun, Jr. W B. Simmons, Jr G. M. McCorkle B. A. Smith J. T. McCready ' . C. Spalding, Jr. I. I). Macpherson H. W. Speight R. R. MiDKIFF E. A. Trnenbaum R. G. Myers W R. Thayer G. R. Nichols, HI B. R. Toland E. M. OsT, Jr. P. S. Tracy, Jr. J. H. Owen A. K. Wat.son I. Porter, II P. B. W ' nw E. C. Reckarp, Jr. G. W. Welsh. Ill H R. Sage P. McL. Westeeldt H F, Shattuck, Jr. H P. Wheeler T. T. Shea D. C. Wii.helm A. G. Altschul R. O. FUERBRINGER H. H. Anderson, Jr. D. C. Gordon P. W. Asher M A. Greexbau.m L. Atkins E. E. Greene R. Burger G. R. Hill G. MacF. Butcher, Jr. G. B. Hunt W C. Campbell R. P. Hunt P. V. Cardon R. G. Kehoe H W. Carey T. M. Kemper. Jr. P. R. Carley C. J. La Clair, Jr R. 0. CORLEY L. M. LlBERMAN C. F. Culver F. W. Lilley, Jr. K. E. Elgin R. L. McBride G. W. Emery W H. McCann W . B. Ford, II G. E. McGoldrick R. Frost, HI L. W. McKinney G. B. McLendon A. C. Martin H. p. Melcher, Jr. D. Meltzer R. Nevins A. W. Olsen, Jr. S. T. Peck R. M. Peters H. A. Plummer, Jr. T. L. Potter W. A. PUGH R. MacL. Quinn H. S. Richardson, Jr. J. C. ROBBINS W. P. Rowland R. F. Schmidt E. L. Scofield, III C. R. Scott A. A. Seei.ii. son, Jr. M. a. S.mith A. L. Solomon H. L. Terrie, Jr. G. W. Thomson A. X. Turner P. H. Valdes H. W. Verseput T. D. Yo(-,T E T. Waite, II H. b. Wood, III M. McN. Adams R. Baker H. D. Black P. G. BOEL J. S. Brittain, III E. R. BULKELEY .■ . D . Bullock, Jr. I. F. Burke, Jr. A. R. Burnam, III M. E. Clark, Jr. H. ?. CoNLEV, Jr. E. W. Cook J. E. Dayan K. N. Dayton R. M. Detwiler T. C. Dickson, III R. H. Donald S. Drinker P. S. Duff, Tr. T. A. Dunn, I r J. H. DuRRiN, Jr. S. D. Elebash J. E. Epstei_n W. Evans, III W. B. Fields, Jr. P. F. Fleischmann G. E. Freeman H. Gardiner P. L. Geyelin W. T. Gudden R. C. Graff J. S. Greacen X. M. Greene S. H. Hensel W. E. Hilbert R. G. HOLBROOK .S. Howe, Jr. C. A. Jones, Jr. W. I. Torden W. C. Kelly, II [. I). Kennedy L. P. KiNSEY T. C. La Mar C. L. Larkin, Jr. S. I. LlEBOWITZ J. M. Lilley H. C. LiTT W. J. McDonald, Jr. A. A. AIarvin C. Y. Mead G. Merriam G. LeR. Morrison, Jr. ] W. Morrison R. R. :Moss j. d. murchison p. A. Peterson R. S. Phillips K. D. Pierson, Jr. T C. PiSTELL R. X. Plank R. !• . Prann W . Rall G. L. Rives J. B. Robinson G. B. Rossetter M. Rothenberg I). Sayre R. A. Schmidt A. M. Sheldon, Jr. W. P. Smith F. F. Soule, Jr. A. E. .Steiger, Jr. C. H. Sttllivan R. W. Sweet L. B. Taft W. S. Taylor L. X. Thi ' rber J. D. TUMPANE R. R. ' 0IGT H. W. Walker, II R. . . Weinerman H. C. Wells W. E. Laupus J. M. Potts NON-RESIDENTS k. T. .Schalasny H. Sevmoih H. R. Stroube, Jr. J. Thompson, Jr. H. J. Wrd.ht ORPHEUM DANCE PALACE BROADWAY 46th ST. NEW YORK CITY Beautiful girls you love to dance ivith . . . Smooth music you love to dance to Collegian Contest EVERY FRIDAY NITE A Rendezvous For ALL COLLEGE IVIEN The Place to SEE AND to be seen 17 Years At This Location Continuous Dancing 8 p.m. to 3 a.m. THE TOPS . . FOR VALUE The GREGSON White Broadcloth SHIRT WITH GUARANTEED LIFE-TIME COLLAR $1 .29 4 for S5.00 • Made expressly for us! • Will give excellent service! • Try one, and be convinced ! men ' s shop, west store front The gamble DESMOND Co. The Reliable Store of New Haven •Trade Mark Registered by Gamble-Desmond Co. C. W. blakeslee and SONS, Inc. General Contractors ATHLETIC FIELDS EXCAVATIONS FOUNDATIONS BLAKESLEE READY-MIXED CONCRETE 58 Waverlv St., New Haven, Conn. 333 Saybrook College J. A. Arcudi L. G. AusT R. C. Bain G. B. Barnes E. H. Betts C. D. Blake R. W. Booth T. M. BoTT J. R. Brisi.ey V. B. Bromell W, H. Burke J. H. Cahn G. W. Carrington, Jr. J. L. Chynoweth G. C. E. Demi ' sey J. C. Duncan, III F. T. Eagleson, Jr. W. N. Fessenuen W. O. Filley, Jr. J. A. Fisher C. F. Freeman, Jr. W. E. Hance W. Harvey T. B. Hess E. D. Hicks R S. House W. B. HU.ME C. E. Huntington E. L. Ives, Jr. I. A. Katz J. H. KUTH D. B. Lamont R. F. Link B. Looms W. K. McOwEN K. I ' . Masi.anh, Jr. C. H. Melcher R. W. Meyer W. H. Page R. Pearson S. Phillips, Jr. L. Richardson, Jr. C. L. Rosenthal H. F. Royal, Jr. F. P. Samforii, Jr. J. R. Seacrest S. K. Shaheen S. Smith, Jr. S. C. Spalding, Jr. B. M. Steere D. S. Stein W. K. Stiefel J. R. Stunzi R. M. Talcott J. R. Trowbridge, II E. W. Waldrop D. T. Warner R. P. Williams H. I. Winer 1943 O. M. Barres, Jr. J, U. Blackburn T. Blauvelt D. M. Boffey J. H. Boughton A. T. Bouscaren E. R. Bucklin .S. Campbell E. C. Clune W. T. Dargan B. A. Daugherty C. F. deGanahl L. A. Dibble, Jr. G. A. Dines P. L. R. DuVal J. E. DwvER, Jr. J. R. Ellis G. R. Fahey C. P. Fields W. L. Foertmeyer, II C. A. Frankenhoff, Jr. R. H. Frye J. M. Gesner, Jr. b. A. Gossweiler L. B. P. Gould, Jr. W. G. Heiner, Jr. J. R. Helmsderfer J. G. Hirsch J. H. Hobart T. R. Ivers L. R. Johnson S. A. Johnston F. Kleeberg, Jr. E. H. Ku.M.MEL R. E. LouGHXEY, Jr. J. H. McClement R. M. Magoun W. V. Marshall T. H. Moore, Jr. E. C. Peck, 1 1 R. W. RiEDEL W. Y. W. Ripley a. e. scherr, 111 R. K. Sherwood J. W. Smith R. C. Soderberg L. E. Speed A. G. Stocking H. S. Stoloff T. S. vanWinkle G. C. Very M. E. Wiener R. Willstatter 1944 W. .A. .Alhaugh H. R. Flock W. A. Kirkl ' atrick R. W. Scott W. P. Arnold, Jr. W. L. Foert-meyer, 11 M. Kittleman P. R. Shriver F. G. Aschmann J. R. Fox, Jr. R. N. KOHMAN H P. Sl.- ne R. A. Baker J. P. Gatsos K. C. Lamott B. S.MiTH, Jr. L. L. Barber J. H. Gerberding U. E. Landauer A. J. Spilner W. L. Booth J. Z. Gladstone J. R. Lengen G. C W. Stahi.sch.midt JR L. N. Bricham W. R. Gold J. J. McTernan, Jr. ) G. Stewart J. K. Brody G. A. Green J. J. Markey S. B. Tanner . . J. Campbell W. G. Gribbel B. Marshall R. C. Terrill G. P. Chambers S. Haywood D. Midwood R. B. Thomas, Jr. M. McC. Chesney, Jr. R. A. Hepler W. H. MiLLAN T. S. Tracy R. W. Coggins V. J. Hightower .• . Montgomery B. G. Tremaine, III J. C. COUGHLIN, Jr. G. B. Hodges P. Oren, Jr. L. G. Underwood W. J. P. CURLEY, Jr. H. M. Hoover F. Oyen 1 ' . ' :r Pi.wck. Jr. G. H. Day, Jr. B. J. Hopper, Jr. T. R. Parker R. J. ' ( LLR- T1I R W. DoiicE R. [. HUBER H. Poll A K, II P.. Weaver O. E. Duling, Jr. D. H. Hunter E. R. Randolph B. . . Webster M. Eisenstaut W. A. Ingram 1. D. RoBiNsnx I. A. Whitmore, Jr. L. I. Pagan H. R. James D. E. Roche R. N. Williams J. P. Fir.LEY H. E. Joyce, Jr. T. T Rudd M K. Wilson, Jr. E. J. Flanagan G. J. Fabian E. T. Franzen J. M. Garber W. B. Harmon, Jr. NON-RESIDEXTS R. W. Husher, Jr. H. p. Ingels, Jr. C. H. .John J. F. Magee, Jr. D. Seaman C. P. Stetson 334 R. Wallace G. A. Whelan I. P. Wilson, IV OS ■ k -V. FERRETI ii OIT CASE L AW ONCL a lawyer spent the majority of his time patiently ferreting out the case law on the point he was investigating. FINDING • READING UNDERSTANDING WRITING UP THE CASE LAW TODAY the time spent in this matter can be greatly re- duced by the use of AMERICAN LaW REPORTS ANNOTATED. owi ERsiiip OF Qmeiican £.aw KebCits mka. s I. Quick access to 13,000 exhaustive briefs, each kept to date bv the most flexible system ever devised. II. A means to guard against overlooking cases which control and are painstakingly discussed in these great annotations. III. Availability in your own office of over 15,000 well-reasoned cases fully reported. Each annotation has one or more of these guid- ing cases faithfully reported. IV. Reliable answers to legal problems so authentic that many lawyers and judges make it a rule to turn first to A.L.R. when seeking authorities. Attractive terms are now available. Write either publisher. THE LAWYERS CO-OPERATIVE PUBLISHING COMPANY, Rochester, New York New York Office, 30 Broad Street BANCROFT-WHITNEY COMPANY, 200 McAllister Street, San Francisco, California 335 Silliman College N. O. Abelson R. J. Alpert H. R. Angleton H. J. Archer, Jr. W. A. Barrows, IV G. S. Br.nvvoRTH M. S. Beixiiei.u P. Bennitt J. S. Broeksmit, Jr. B. R. Bronson R. L. Brush M. E. Campbell A. W. Cheney, Jr. C. C. Davis, Jr. G. R. deCarrera R. De Korn A. Devine R. I. Dixon, Jr. C. Douthit, Jr. B. Baer C. L. Bautlett R. F. Bauer R. H. Beardsley P. F. Bellinger H. T. Bland R. O. Brooks J. E. Carmichael G. P. Caulkins, Jr. W. C. Chamberlain W. B. Cleary C. S. Cleaver E. Coffin T. E. Cooper D. N. Copp W. C. Coughlan W. S. Creighton D. C. Cuthell T. H. Daniels O. M. Davey P. A. Drucklieb, Jr. K. N. Dver I. S. Eluuiuge J. W. Fawcett, III r. w. FoRii W. . [. Gavlord, Jr. E T. Glass, Jr. R. W. Hart C. W. Hendel, III H. K. Jeck H. S. Jeck, Jr. P. E. Lacouture J. R. Lee W. H. Lightner, II M. M. LiNDSEY I). S. McCluskey E. C. McDonalp, Jr. R. F. Malo.n ' e H. Meech F. W. Meyer, Ir. R. C. DUELL M. L. Eastwood, Jr. ). P. Faruuhak F. N. Flaschner L. R. FooTE R. H. Foss J. G. Gardner G. B. GiFFORD, Jr. R. H. Godfrey E. W. Hartzei.l, Ir. L). W. Heath S. A. Heath S. L. HiRSCH D. W. Hoagland B. A. Hornstein R. M. Hosley J. W. Hughes R. T. I SHAM T. C. Jewett, Jr. C. S. JuDD, Jr. C. J. Keegan 1943 W. H. Moffitt, I ' R. B. Sefton C. H. Moore N. K. Shachnow R. . I. Moore W. M. Shapleigh I. R. Murphy W. D. Sommerville, Jr. S. E. Nash J. D. Sullivan A. E. Offinger K. .S. Tellalian W. R. Ohler, Jr. A. H. Tifft C. Palmer F. I. Turner D. .S. Palmer D. T. TUTTLE F. C. Pannill, Jr. W. K. Ver Planck P. D, Pattinsox J. C. Wallace J. S. Porter A. J. Washburn D. B. Quint H. B. Waugh S. Rosen V. S. Webber E. W. Russ T. R. W ' echsler T. H. Russell, III J. L. Weil D. A. Salisbury J. B. Wilson, II W. R. Schulhof E. C. Young C. R. SCUDDER, HI F. B. Young 3 T. H. KixG, Tr. G. M. Sanford E. E. Macy H. P. Schedl G. E. Mai.lixckrodt R. Schoenberg T. J. MANOr.lF W. . . Sharon W. E. Marshall, Jr. W. W. Sharon G. .S. AIlLLER C. B. Sheldon H. G. Millett L. W. Shentield R. T. MooxEY C. W. Smith C. F. Moses R. S. Smith A. T. Nelson, Jk. W. S. Snead, Jr. R. NlMMAXAHAE. IIND. C. H. Stephens, III J. F. Northrop A. J. Stunkard T. D. Olmsted, Jr. D. Sweeney E. Patterson G. M. Tuttle C. M. Perry R. J. Vernlund M. R. Post J. N. Walsh, Jr. T W. Pulleyn, Jr. W. Van N. Washburn L. C. Ritts, Jr. ■ H. P. Welch T. C. Robinson R. S. Wells W. 0. Ross R. T. Wilson, Jr. W. L. J. RowE W. H. WoRRfLow, Jr. R. C. Abbott F. A. Allan B. A. Arcudi G. L. Arnold D. P. Atkins E. A. Atwood, Jr. L. Averback D. J. Bales J. R. Bamford J. R. Barber W. E, Beckjord R. F. Birdsall K. M. Block, Jr. J. W. Braasch W. L. Bro.mberg D. B. Bronson W. T. Brown, Jr. G. A. BUFFUM G. C. BURGWIN, HI P. S. Bush, Jr. D. L. BUTTOLPH D. V. Campbell H. J. Caulkins J. A, S Brown, III D. W. Burchard H. E. CoLTON, Jr. W. E. COYKENDAI.L, Jr. K. Ellis W. S. Clough, Jr. G. S. Coffin C. B. CONGDON J. H. Cook R. H, Cowan I. N. CURTISS R. F. Daily J. B. D. DeWolf, Jr. M. C. Dietrich, Jr. J. M. Eckle B. Flint J. B. Gahan W. S. Goedecke L. A. Goldmuntz I. H. Haddad ' ]. L. ?il. Hands W. V. B. Hart, Jr. P. LeS. Hartsburg T M. Healy T. B. H ' -.witt, H W. y cC. HiscocK I. C. Holt, TI C. E. Hu.m.mel R. E. Jacoeso.n M. LeBoutillier T. M. Lewis, II M. de F. Lockwood, III R. C. Long, II [. W. M. LOZIER N. S. Mackie, Jr. J. F. Magin H. Margolin A. R. Merritt, Tr. A. H. Meyer P. S. Mitchell R. S. AIORTON J. F. Neville, Jr. W. L. NiMICK E. B. Nutt, Jr. W. T. OvERI.OCK W. M. Parry G. Patterson H. -A. Peyton W. T. Pd.ott, hi NON-RESIDENTS E. R. Frisby T. H. AFitchell E. H. Kendrick H. M. Schott H. D. Kennedy, Jr. O. H. Simoxds. Jr. R. . . Kfxworthy, III J. T. Stoihiart, Jr. 336 G. A. PiLKINGTON, Jr. C. L. Posey P. DE M. Register J. M. Rescue R. N. Reyxoliis J. W. Riley, Jr. . . Schilling w. schwanfelder H. Scott, Jr. A. W. Selden W. T. Sloe R. P. Straus A. M. .Swift G. B. Trible, Jr. L. I. Tulin A. Van .Alstyne L. W. Varney W. C. Wallace E. O ' M. Welles J. L. Whitbeck B. Whitestone E. F. Wieboldt, Tr. A. M. Thompson, Jr. T. . Thornton H. 7. I ' RBAN G. I Wm.oner W. H. Wood, Jr. For Complete Coverage of Athletics Fraternities Societies Organizations Administration and Colleges Consult — The YALE BANNER ♦ ♦ ♦ PUBLISHED YEARLY BY THE YALE BANNER BOARD 337 Timothy Dwight College 1 2 E. A. Adelberg G. H. Allen W. A. Aycrigg, II L. Barker G. C. Bermingham W. M. Boucher C. M. BOYCE D. G. C. Bridcman J. C. Chapin K. M. Clark E. C. Cohen S. B. Cohn E. Corning R. C. S. ni Rosa D. C. Dugan C. F. Emi;ky, Jr. T. A. Ennis M. N. Fox E. W. Friedman A. M. Gleason G. E. Goring D. H. Gould W. H. Haggard, II F. H. Harrison C. G. Hauser P. Hooper, Jr. A. M. Hunt W. E. S. James J. P. JOSEPH.S C T. Kappler S. C. Kennedy, Jr. VV. A. KoEHNE H. t . Kranichfeld, Jr. At. C. Krech D. A. KuBiE J. W. Leggett R. W. LUCEY W. D. Lynch J. S. McDermott J. H. Meyer }. Milbank, Jr. P. R. Neuhaus G. R. Pfeiffer P. A. Plotkin E. J. Pope, Jr. R. M. Reeve J. C. Ripley S. M. RuMBOUCH, Jr. A. Saltzstein A. M. SCHER E. p. Shepard, Jr. W. Sherman W. D. Shorkv J. J. Smith, II G. D. Steele B. L. Taylor, III R. W. Taylor A. R. Tobey O. W. Toll, Jr. C. W. B. TOWNSEND, Jr F. B. Trudeau, Jr. J. G. WiLMER 1943 X. L. Andrews R. W. Baker D. Baldwin R. F. BaTTI STELLA B. BEAIJt R. W. Besse G. A. Birrfll R. J. Brady R. L. Brecker B. B. Brussel T. B. Burgher F. D. Campion E. Clark R. D. Conant E. B. D.wis D. S. Dodge E. Du Bois R. D. DucAN S. A. Frankel R. FULD E. J. Gibson R. C. Gordon T. H. Hamilton b. R. M. Harvey E. Harvey, Jr. H. H. Healy, Jr. H. W. Hobson, Jr. F. H. Hosford, Jr. W. C. Kurtz, Jr. W. B. McFarland W. H. Mann, Jr. W. T). Millett J. S. Morgan G. M. Mudge E. T. Mulligan M. C. Myers, Jr. R. L. Neale J. C. Nelson, Jr. C. C. NUTE B. Rafferty ' E. R. Rosen, Jr. F. J. Sladen, Jr. G. B. Smith L. P. Stack, Jr. P. Strauss J. B. SUTPHIN H, J. Szewczynski T. K. Tabor F. C. Taylor R. S. Thompson R. L. Ungvary Harry Zeldes W. S. . ikfn D. R. Barber P. M. Brown J. L. Buckley J, P. Caulfield T. G. Chittenden R. G. Clark, Jr. F. W. CoiMmiskey B. Conrad, Jr. R. P. Cooley R. DE LA G. COUNSFLMAN J. E. Cross iRoNALD S. Davis F. .S; deBeer, Jr. R. McA. Demere, Jr. R. H. Downey, Jr. P. H. Elicker F. C. Fay, III J. L. Ferguson C. W. Fisher P. A. Freeman W. J. Gardner C. C. Goddard .1. B. GOODENOUGH k. GUNTHER-MOHR J. C. Harris i. B. Heath ■p. S. Hill J. H. Hirsh R A. Hunter W. . . Tngraham R H. Jacobs ( ' . . . Johnson, Jr. r. Keating I ). H. Kerr 1! F. Kitchen, Jr. I. . . Kleeman ' S. KtTBIE S, W. Little I. F. Lynch A. McClure, Jr. I. L. McEvitt E. McN. McKee, Jr. R. L. McKenna W. N. McPhee I-;. H. Magoon, Jr. D. Mann, Jr. L. Mantle, Jr. W. S. Masland W. VanS. Midgley D. S. Moffitt W. G. Moore Iv K. Morse W. ( ■. Pearson . 1. H. Pease, Jr. I. A. Peck, Ir. C. H. Peek, Jr. P. Pifrpoint T. T. Reams B. T. Ryan, Jr. H. M. Sage C. B. Scott R. K. .Shannon S. A. Stack R. A. Stimson S. L. Taliaferro E. C. Taylor W. D. Twining R. Van . rsdale S. W. Van Voorhis H. K. Watson, II S. B. Wellington M. R. Wessel H. J. Wheelwright, C. S. Whit::house F. R. Whittlesey R. L. Wickser I. O. Wright, Ir. R. B. YouNc; R. E. Arras J. D. Atwood W. K. Christerson G. R. Clough B. H. Douglass NOX-RESIDENTS C. B. Hart W. P. Hilmer J. B. HoLLOWAY, Jr. H. R. Iohxson C. L. JoN ' ES, Jr. T. L. Kelley I I ' . .McGoWAN K . . M WKK B. G. O ' Shea W. M. Pike W. G. RoDiGER, Jr. R. N. Whittemore 338 v. S. Army, ISaval and Marine Corps OFFICERS ' UNIFORMS AND REQUISITES Regulation officers ' outfits are expertly supplied at J. PKh SS for all branches of the V. S. Seriice. either made to indi- vidual measures or in st }ck, ready to icear. Illustrated brochure mailed on re- quest. ' ' i i 262 York St. NEW HAVEN Mt. Auburn St. Cor. Dunster CAMBRIDGE Palmer Square W. at Nassau PRINCETON 341 Madison Ave. Cor. 44th St. NEW YORK Gentlemen ' s Tailors and Furnishers WHEN YOU Come To Town TO Go-To-TowN — why waste flme and money on the mediocre when the finest costs no more if you DINE AT WORLD-FAMOUS LONGCHAMPS Admittedly, no fresher, finer food served anywhere. THERE ARE TWELVE I RESTAURANTS loiftiCHAMPS NEW YORK CITY Offering Yale Men • ECONOMY SECURITY • CONVENIENCE ASSOCIATED STUDENT AGENCIES 1111 CHAPEL STREET Authorized Undergraduate Salesmen for NEWSPAPERS TOILET ARTICLES FIRE WOOD PRESSING SERVICE STATIONERY MAGAZINES YEAR BOOKS LAUNDRY PICTURES OUTLINES Under Supervision of Yale University Bureau of Appointments M.uliiig Address: Dr. 1003A Yale SlMivn 339 Trumbull College A. E. Ijaktiuh.emy H. M. Bevans C. F. Booth H. G. Callow H. J. Calnen, Jr. B. A. Copp, IV A. F. Daily E. C. DiGAN E. K. Du ViviER H. B. Gerling K. W. Halsey, Jr. G. Harvvood H. P. Heix H. R. HoBBS R. HowsoN, Jr. A. E. Hunter I. E. Ikcraham V. R. Johnson F. W. Keith, Jr. F. . . Kemp, Jr. J. !• ' . KiEKAN, Jr. I. R. LaX ' alla N. M. Mann S. C. [ARTE •S I . VV. Mixer J. H. Mueller, III C. D. Murphy, Jr. G. H. Partridge J. W. Paul, Jr. j. G. POCOCK W. I. RllllI.ERS. II) S. p. Sa.nger, II L. A. SCH, FER S. E. Selz A. I. Sheppard C. E. Sherwood, II R. D. Wastrom T. L. Weirick T. T. White N. ' F. Wiss, Jr. 1943 H. AllELMAN D. S. Goldexbloome I-. E. Maestrone H. E. Schmidt R. W. Adler H. A. Gray, Jr. M B. Marcus p. F. Smith D. Alderman H. R. Hallowell, Jr. C B. Markle, IV W. E. Smith A. A. Anspach B. C. Hammerschmidt H F. R. Mason, Jr. p. G. Spaeth G. W. Barber W p. Holloway E. J. McDonald, Jr. B. I. Spinrad R. C. Barbour 1- C. HOWLAND M H. NiEMAN W. S. Squire S. P. Beard b. HU.ME L. J. Novarr A. R. Stevens, Jr S. Beardsley F. S. Jones R. C. NOYES C. B. Sullivan E. S. Bentley, Jr. F. L. Kennard A. B. Racan D. A. Ward H. L. Berry r. J. G. Kennedy T. J. Rainey A. B. White C. COE G. M. Kilpatrick C. R. RiGGS P. A. Wick A. H. Cohen [ Korach ). p. Roth . C. Williams A. M. Cohen R. L. Krechevsky e ' . A. Russell W. Williams E. L. COLMAN i . A. Lincoln j. A. Sachs J. C. Wilson M D. Detweiler, III R. B. Yahn 1944 H. P. Barrand, Jr. C. F. Beard C. C. A. BiEXFAiT, Jr. A. B. Blake L. B. Brockett, Jr. P. H. Butterfield J. D. Cannon J. J. Carey, Jr. W. W. Carlton A. McC. Clark, Jr. M. B. Clark W. W. Clark, II C. G. Cleaver D. S. Con ant G. C. Coombs E. F. HE ViLLAFRANCA J. E. F.GGLESTON F, Elliot 1. W. McCann A. McE. FisKEN R. H. Mann D. C. Fuller B. A. Manning E. S. FuNSTEN, Jr. I. T. Manvel A. H. FuRSE, Jr. R. S. T. Marsh W. T. Gottemeyer T. L. Marshall R. K. Gray 1) B. Mason M. Heidecorn A C. Mayer L. W. Hunt, Jr. T. D. Merwin F. H. ICAZA H P. Moore R. Jeffery, Jr. C. A. Norton D. Kallman D A. Parsons H. R. Large 1-.. F. Parsons D. E. Leavenworth R T. Richards J. R. Lee, Jr. C. Richardson W. P. Levi SON, Jr. Li R. C. Schwarzkopf W. F. Seelbach F. A. Shea, Jr. R. C. Sloan P. E. Sloane J. G. Sloxeker E. C. Smith, II R. L. Smith E. C. Steffen, Jr. W. D. Thompson S. J. Wagstaff, Jr. R. M. S. Walker W. L. Wallace C. McC. Weis R. C. Whittington F. G. Wiegand G. D. Wilcox, III A. S. ' 1LS0X ART SCHOOL W. A. Maguire NON-RESIDEN ' TS J. F. Allen, 11 A. J. Ingley N. R. BoicE, Jr. . C Madden J. S. BoYCE, Jr. R. L. Maresca J. L. Carton, Jr. R. R. Monroe E. J. Curtis, Jr. J. T. Morris A. E. EssER, Jr. C. F. Seelbach, Jr. T. C. Shay W. L. Smith, Jr. W. R. Spencer, Ir. G V. .Stiles J. A. Stroube F. C. SUTRO, |r. T. S. Turner ' T. B. Turner E. A. Wiu.ETS, Jr. 340 J-lie cluliuia teii 137 C. 25tli Mted, y lln ' IhtL HIGHLY specialized publishing service for discriminating editors of college year- books. The unqualified approval of more than one hundred Eastern schools and colleges is yoiir guar- antee of the ultimate in books finely made. 341 CHIDNOFF STUDIO 500 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y. Official Thotographers to the 1942 Yale banner 342 Ind ex Administration Administration, Officers of Advertising Alpha Chi Sigma Alpha Sigma Phi Athletics Aurelian 14 19 3 266 62 212 56 Avon Old Farms Club 268 Band 109 Banner, The Yale 94 Baseball Varsity 22 5 Jayvee 229 Freshman 29 5 Basketball 249 Basketball, Freshman 305 Berkeley College 128 Berkeley College Members 322 Berzelius 48 Beta Theta Pi 64 Book and Snake 50 Branford College 136 Branford College Members 324 Budget Drive 113 Calhoun College 144 Calhoun College Members 326 Cannon and Castle 29 Canterbury School Club 269 Chi Delta Theta 267 Chi Psi 66 Choir 112 Church of Christ 124 Class Book Committee 22 Class Council 20 Class Day Exercises 21 Clubs 260 Colleges 126 Community Council 118 Corporation IS Crew Varsity 215 150-pound 220 Jayvee 219 Freshman 296 Freshman 150-pound 297 Cross Country 240 Cross Country, Freshman 304 Davenport College 152 Davenport College Members 328 Debating Association 116 Dedication 6 Delta Kappa Epsilon 68 Dramatic Association 106 Dwight Hall 120 Elihu 54 Fence Club 70 Fencing 2 54 Fencing, Freshman 310 Football Varsity 233 Jayvee 237 150-pound 238 Freshman 302 Fountain Valley School Club 270 Fraternities 5 8 Freshmen 290 Freshman Intramural Spring Sports 313 Freshman Intramural Fall and Winter Sports 315 Freshman Promenade 292 Glee Club 110 Glee Club, Freshman 293 Golf 232 Golf, Freshman 300 Groton School Club 271 Hill School Club 272 Hockey 241 Hockey, Freshman 306 Honors 82 Hotchkiss School Club 273 Indoor Polo 256 Indoor Polo, Freshman 312 Intercollege Athletics Intercollege Spring Sports 208 Berkeley 134 Branford 142 Calhoun 150 343 JAHM OLLIER AGAIN JAHIV OLLIER EIVICR WIIMC CO. Makers of Fine Printing Plates for Black and Color Artists and Photographers 817 W. WASHINGTON BLVD. CHICAGO, ILL 344 Davenport 158 Jonathan Edwards 166 Pierson 174 Saybrook 182 Silliman 190 Timothy Dwight 198 Trumbull 206 InterfraternitN ' Council 60 Jonathan Edwards College 160 Jonathan Edwards College Members 3 30 Junior Promenade 24 Kingswood School Club 275 Lacrosse 230 Lacrosse, Freshman 301 Lawrenceville School Club 276 Literary Magazine, The Yale 100 Major Y Men in College 258 Minor Y Men in College 259 More Club 12 5 Morv ' s Association 264 Naval Society, Yale 37 Naval Reserve Officers ' Training Corps 3 5 Neu ' s, The Yale 90 Organizations 104 Orpheus and Bacchus 26 5 Pembroke Country Day Club Phi Beta Kappa Pierson College Pierson College Members Political Union Poly Prep Club Pomfret School Club Portsmouth Priory School Club President ' s Committee Publications Pundits 277 84 168 3 32 114 278 279 280 61 88 262 Keconi. The Yale 96 Reserve Officers ' Training Corps 28 Rifle 257 Rifle, Freshman 311 Saint Anthony Hall 74 Saint Elmo Hall 76 Saint George ' s School Club 281 Saint Louis Country Day School Club 282 Saint Mark ' s Club 283 Saint Paul ' s School Club 28 5 Saybrook College 176 Saybrook College Members 3 34 Scientific Magazine, The Yale 102 Scroll and Key 46 Senior Promenade 2 5 Senior Societies 42 Shadyside Academy School Club 284 Sheffield Student Council 23 Silliman College 184 Silliman College Members 3 36 Skull and Bones 44 Soccer 239 Soccer, Freshman 303 Squash 255 Squash, Freshman 308 Swimming 245 Swimming, Freshman 307 Tau Beta Pi 86 Tennis 231 Tennis, Freshman 299 Timothy Dwight College 192 Timothy Dwight College Members 3 38 Torch 57 Track 221 Track, Freshman 298 Triennial Committee 22 Trumbull College 200 Trumbull College Members 340 Undergraduate Athletic Association 214 Undergraduate Conference Committee 2 3 Universitv School Club 286 Vernon Hall Weekly, The Freshman Western Reserve Academy Club Westminster School Club Whiflenpoofs W.O.C.D. Wolf ' s Head Wrestling Wrestling, Freshman 78 294 287 288 263 122 52 253 309 York Hall Zeta Psi 72 345 Acknowledgment npHE editors of the 1942 Yale Banner wish the express their sincere appreciation to the following: To President Charles Seymour for his intro- ductory message; to Mr. James McLane Tompkins for his sound counsel; to Mr. James A. Fisher for his wholehearted collaboration; to Mr. Peter S. Gurwit, of the Jahn Oilier Engraving Company for suggestions and practical aid in the planning of this book; to Mr. Willard H. Schilling, of The Schilling Press, for his careful and intelligent co-operation; to Mr. Lewis R. Pratt, of Pach Bros. Studio, and to C. F. Booth, manager of the Student Picture Agency, for their efficiency; to Mr. Harrison W. Holt and the Bureau of Appointments staflf for their miscellaneous aid; to the Messrs. R. H. Frye, C. W. Hunt 2d., J. G. Robinson, Jr., Yale Alumni Magazine, Kaiden Keystone, Inc., Yale Daily Neiis, for the use of their photographs; to all the other photographers who contributed generously to these pages; and finally to the many authors who gave their time and talents to the writing of the various articles, without whose assistance publication of this book would not have been possible. Especial thanks for the writing of the longer college articles are due to: Howard A. Reed, Berkeley College; Thomas C. Britton, Branford College; Paul J. R. Desjardins, Calhoun College; George K. McClelland, Davenport College; John S. Walker, Jonathan Edwards College; J. Howard Owen, Pier- son College; Edward D. Hicks, Saybrook College; William H . Worrilow, Silliman College; Charles F. Emery, Timothy Dwight College; and Justus W. Paul and F. Weldon Miner, Trumbull College. 346 :• i U! ;;!H m M {0,i] ' m mi 1 m m m m m ' MM liii ii I i=;?= ' ; Wii- ' uia-i?iM« ' mm ' - iil s


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

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

1939

Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 1

1940

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

1941

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

1945

Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 1

1947

Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT) online collection, 1948 Edition, Page 1

1948


Searching for more yearbooks in Connecticut?
Try looking in the e-Yearbook.com online Connecticut yearbook catalog.



1985 Edition online 1970 Edition online 1972 Edition online 1965 Edition online 1983 Edition online 1983 Edition online
FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES GENEALOGY ARCHIVE REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today! Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly! Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.