Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT)
- Class of 1947
Page 1 of 304
Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 304 of the 1947 volume:
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M, , A 4 Q.,fv,.,f' :jf ,- ' ,Q L N, , 4 ff, ' j , , ' 1-W1 . , Q f f ' , ,l ,ff , V 1 4 ,, 7 ZZ!! if 1 fr Kal ,Ml M MM , W, 'C ' 1 ' ' 1 M f 2 4 w f f f f f' J ,ff I f - fluff MMV, f Ml, gig? Q H1 ty, - f f A '1 ,X f , ,Q 3 I I gg? ,yang ,M 4 af ,V ffwzy, ,ig Q2 . 'Q' f 'f 4 ',w45Vfn?4r Q mf: f ' ' gy M, A--f1v?f'f'f' , , f , Q ' an ,. ,' f ff'- ,ff ,ff 1 f ' ,L ' ,VM w- V , if .gif f W +-ua 1 14, ff gif 4 r, LA QQ? , , pw, X ,. I wr, gnwfh W N. ,M QF: j , Lf M' 1 ,Q 4 Y u,,..,yu9gi K 'S I 3 N N E E 1 f Q I 1 1 0 1 Kill? A'ifE,,33A5f? N E . h',.Q'ml 1l M E BOARD OF EDITORS WVILLIAM E. COBB Cliairmalz, 1946 H ERNEST A. WIEHL, JR. Chairman. 1947 HEYYNVARD TSHAM Vice-Chairman , WILLIANI P. SUTTER Managing Editor 4 ROBERT P, KNIGHT Business Manager x ROY E. WALSH Advertising Manager WILLIAM WV. BETTERIDCE Circulation, Manager lk' SENIOR EDITORS H J- KENNETH NIILLHISER OLIVER BROOKS ' EDITORS GEORGE H. BUNGE WILLIAM J. CLARK DAVID A. CROWELL ROGER G. KENNEDY T EDMUND C. LYNCH. JR. WILLIAM H. OTTLEY STEPHEN K. WEST PHOTOGRAPHY EDITORS FRED KAHN ELLIOTT H. KONE ROBERT J. SPOONER The Nineteen Forty-Seven YALE BANNE 7542 1947 i u I 5 eww 42790 li YALE ANNER f mm 1 :mm - i f FOUNDED 1841 A VOLUME CVI Q Q H I A Published For YALE UNIVERSITY NEW HAVEN CQJNNECTICUT edication Witll an acute and humble consciousness of those who may never return, we dedicate this volume to the thousands who have completed a war-born odyssey to resume the pursuits of peace. To these survivors-their heritage enriched by the sacrifices of their fallen comrades--we offer this con- tinuation of the story of Yale. 1 1. .21 ff -W .71 w,,,LQ,,-,1 SWEWHA Mwww W AwwmsM.agmtwmgmsmegfeaf::4wwm.wm1sa,:ez9mwmm12aFaefa::zmaeamf.-f',:ee:4mwe-w' W-gwfmwwwaawpwymm , N,,-,,Mwm-wmvwawwwimrMMWMVM TABLE UNIVERSITY I947 , , YALE RECONVERTS SENIOR SOCIETIES . FRATERNITIES . . . COLLEGES . . , GRADUATE SCHOOLS ACTIVITIES .... CLUBS , . . ATHLETICS .... FRESI-IMEN .. ADVERTISING .... OF CONTENTS I2 22 38 54 74 136 168 208 226 250 264 F . . . Suinmer Wfinter Y EE UNIVERSITY 1947i 171 e Pl'esillent's Bless-age Yale is back to her peacetime function,-the preparation for citizenship. After live years devoted to direct participation in the defense of the nation during the most perilous period of our history, We have returned to our fundamental academic purpose. The mission of the University is to equip Americans for life in our democracy and provide leadership capable of meeting the issues which must be faced and settled. Our academic obliga- tion goes far beyond a preparation for a livelihood, Whether in business or in any of the professions. It calls for the production of citizens who have assimilated the best in our cultural inheritance from the past, Who with this background can broadly interpret the problems of the present, and fearlessly assume responsibility for the guidance of public opinion and public action. These are times when it is not easy for our students thus to prepare them- selves. College halls here at Yale and elsewhere, are ove1'croWded, living conditions inconvenient, opportunities for personal contact between under- graduate and teacher more difficult of achievement than with a normal-sized student body. But the students themselves have already manifested their ability to overcome the relative hardship characteristic of the transition period from War back to peace. Upon their own determination to make the most of the educational values that Yale offers will depend the quality of the contribution they will bring to the nation during the next generation. No democracy can long continue except the individual citizens carry a sense of personal responsibility for the Welfare of the community as a Whole. Furthermore it must proceed from something more than mere good inten- tions, it must find its basis in a reasoned appreciation of human values, intellectual and spiritual, as they may exist in modern society. This should be the end product of a college education. All of us, faculty and alumni, as Well as students, may worthily strive together in this mission. QQWLMS my Corporation CHARLES SEYMOUR, Ph.D., Litt.D.,'LL.D., President HIS EXCELLENCY THE GOVERNOR OF CONNECTICUT, ex officio HIS HONOR THE LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR OF CONNECTICUT, ex officio EDWARD BELDEN GREENE, M.A. JAMES LEE LOOMIS, LL.D. REEVE SCHLEY, LL.B., M.A. THOMAS DAY THACHER, LL.D. REV. ARTHUR HOWE BRADFORD, D.D. ROBERT ALPHONSO TAFT, LL.D. RT. REV. HENRY KNOX SHERRILL, D.D., LL.D GEORGE VAN SANTVOORD, L.H.D. REV. MORGAN PHELPS NOYES, D.D. DEAN GOODERHAM ACHESON, LL.B., M.A. CHARLES DENSTON DICKEY, M.A. I MORRIS HADLEY, LL.B., M.A. PRESCOTT SHELDON BUSH, MA. FREDERICK TRUBEE DAVISON, LL.D. WILMARTH SHELDON LEWIS, M.A. EDWIN FOSTER BLAIR, LLB., M.A. Alumni Board OFFICERS CLIFFORD R. BEARDSLEY, '05 S. CHARLES G. COOPER, '26 S. DANIEL B. FORD, '19 S. RUSSELL L. BRADLEY, '25 Chairman First Vice-Chairman Second Vice-Chairman Executive Secretary EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE RICHARD HOOKER, '99, Springfield, Mass. LEAVENWORTH P. SPERRY, '02 S., Waterbury, Conn. WILLIAM ROSS PROCTOR, '16, New York, N. Y. MARCIEN JENCKES, '21, Boston, Mass. IRVING S. OLDS, '07, New York, N. Y. SHERMAN BALDWIN, '19, New York, N. Y. RUSSELL H. BOYD, '19 S., Loudonville, N. Y. ARTHUR IVIILLIKEN, '26, Simsbury, Conn. GEORGE SUTHERLAND, '07, New York, N. Y. JAMES B. GRANT, '09, Denver, Colo. CLIFFORD R. WRIGHT, '11, Cincinnati, Ohio THOMAS R. COWARD, '19, New York, N. Y. DEAN WILLIAM CLYDE DEVANE Yale College DEAN SAMUEL WILLIAM DUDLEY The Sclwol of Engineering DEAN NORMAN SYDNEY BUCK The Freshman Year 15 I I. l 2 Officers of Administration CHARLES SEYMOUR, Ph.D., Litt.D., LL.D. President EDGAR STEPHENSON FURNISS, Ph.D., LL.D. Provost CARL ALBERT LOHMANN, M.A. Secretary LAURENCE GOTZIAN TIGHE, M.A. Treasurer HORACE F. ISLEIB HARRY JUDD OSTRANDER MARCUS ROBBINS BOARD OF ADMISSIONS EDWARD SIMPSON NOYES, Ph.D., Chairman YALE COLLEGE WILLIAM CLYDE DEVANE, Ph.D. Dean RICHARD CUSHMAN CARROLL, B.A., Assistant Dean SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING SAMUEL WILLIAM DUDLEY, M.E. Dean LOOMIS HAVEMEYER, Ph.D. Registrar THE FRESHMAN YEAR NORMAN SYDNEY BUCK, Ph.D. Dean ROBERT A. CAMPBELL, B.A. Assistant Dean GRADUATE SCHOOL EDGAR STEPHENSON FURNISS, Ph.D., LL.D. Dean HARTLEY SIMPSON, B.A. Assistant Dean SHEFFIELD SCIENTIC SCHOOL EDMUND WARE SINNOTT Director DIVINITY SCHOOL LUTHER ALLAN WEIGLE, Ph.D., D.D., LL.D. Dean RALPH LEE WOODWARD, D.D., L.H.D. Assistant Dean SCHOOL OF FINE ARTS EVERETT VICTOR MEEKS, Litt.D., D.F.A., A.N.A. Dean CARROLL LOUIS VANDERSLICE MEEKS, B.F.A., M.A. Assistant Dean SCHOOL OF FORESTRY GEORGE ALFRED GARRATT, M.F., Ph.D. Dean SCHOOL OF LAW WESLEY ALBA STURGES, J .D. Dean HENRY ANDERSON FENN, LL.B. Assistant Dean SCHOOL OF MEDICINE FRANCIS GILMAN BLAKE, M.D., Sc.D. Dean DONALD HENRY BARRON, Ph.D. Assistant Dean Assistant Secretary Assistant Treasurer Assistant Treasurer SCHOOL OF MUSIC BRUCE SIMONDS, Mus. D., Dean SCHOOL OF NURSING ELIZABETH SEELYE BIXLER, M.A., Dean ART GALLERY THEODORE SIZER, M.A. Director GEORGE HEARD HAMILTON, Ph.D. Associate Director JOHN MARSHALL PHILLIPS, M.A,, Associate Director PEABODY MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY CARL OWEN DUNBAR, Ph.D. Director UNIVERSITY LIBRARY JAMES TINKHAM BABB, M.A. Librarian DAVID HORACE CLIFT, B.S. Associate Librarian DONALD GODDARD WING, Ph.D. Associate Librarian UNIVERSITY OBSERVATORY DIRK BROUWER, Ph.D. Director CHURCH OF CHRIST IN YALE UNIVERSITY REV. SIDNEY LOVETT D.D. University Chaplain and Pastor STUDENT APPOINTMENT BUREAU ALBERT BEECHER CRAWFORD, Ph.D. Director STUART HOLMES CLEMENT, M.A. Associate Director PAUL SYLVESTER BURNHAM, Ph.D. Associate Director ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION ROBERT JOHN HERMAN KIPHUTH, M.P.E. Chairman of the Board of Control DEPARTMENT OF UNIVERSITY HEALTH ORVILLE FORREST ROGERS, M.D. Director UNIVERSITY DINING HALLS A. MARGARET BOWERS, M.S. Director vw-N34 19 u-Nikhil! e ,: , ' Ii Phi Beta Kappa Alpha of Connecticut DATE OF CHARTER 1779 OFFICERS OF THE GRADUATE CHAPTER VTVILBUR L. CROSS President STANLEY T. WILLIAMS Vice President HOLLON A. FARR Secretary NORMAN S. BUCK Treasurer UNDERGRADUATE MEMBERS Class Of 1946 March GEORGE LUDOVIC ALEXANDER, JR. CROSBY STUART NOYES JAMES PETER BERTINO SAMUEL CLEMENT BURCHE JOHN CAREY CYRIL CRIMMINS JOHN LACKNER DUCKER EMIL LAURENCE GULYASSY LEONARD VOLK LOMBARDI LL, III ALLAN HARVEY RICHARDSON, JR WVILLIAM ADAM RIESENFELD RICHARD DERECKTOR SCHWARTZ BCLKELEY SMITH, JR. ROBERT STEVENS TIPPETT ALFRED GRANT WALTON, JR. ALFRED BURTON WILLCOX Tau Beta Pi Engineering Honor Society THOMAS E. BAILEY JOHN L. BAME RUDOLF L. BENFEY JORGE J. BOSCH STANLEY S. BRONSKI ROBERT W. CORNELL VINCENT M. CREEDON DONALD E. CUMMINGS JOHN C. EVANS, JR. HARTLEY K. FINKEL THOMAS L. FLANAGAN JOEL M. FIIERST WILLIAM GARUNSTON STANLEY R. HARRIS V wa J OFFICERS EUGENE E. LAKSO President DAVID D. MCKENNEH' Vice President ROBERT F. STANSBERRY Secretary ROBERT H. TAYLOR Catalog-ner DAVID P. WELCH Recording Secretary EDWIN A. OLSEN . Treasurer PROFESSOR LESTER C. LICHTY Advisor MEMBERS NIIQNROE C. HAWES, JR. JOHN MCC. HENSKE WALTER F. HOFFIVIAN ELLSWORTH K. HOLDEN DONALD E. HOOPER HOWARD E. IRBY PETER H. JUVILER JAMES KOUVELITES E. GEORGE KRAMER BRADFORD K. KROHA THOMAS R. KUESEL HOWARD S. LAPIN FRANCIS H. LAVELLE RICHARD MCFEE GEORGE J. MARLOWE WILLIAM A. P. MEYER WARREN W. MITCHELL JOHN C. MORRISON HERBERT L. NEITLICH MARK W. NEITLICH GORDON R. PARTRIDGE BERNARD L. PLEVYAK CHARLES P. SAGAR KENNETH S. SCHWARTZ THA GYAW WAI HAROLD M. WAKELEY WILLENI L. WEERTMAN ERSKINE N. WHITE, JR. 19 Senior Class Council LESTER FIELDS BECKER VANDERVEER KIRK HOLT BRADFORD WESTERFIELD THOMAS NATHANIEL CROWLEY, JR. Saybrook GERALD RADLEY DALY Davenport JOHN DORNFIELD DIEHL Calhoun JOHN WALKER FOLLIN Branford STEPHEN CUTLER GREENE Jonathan Edwards Secretary Treasurer Class Book Eflitor GREGORY HUMBERTO lLLANES Silliman CHARLES WESLEY KITTLEMAN, JR. Timozlry Dwight ROBERT JAMES MALLOY Trurnlnull VVILLIAM NlATTHEW ROHRER Berkeley JAMES DAY SHERWOOD Pierson Back Row: Follin, Crowley, Diehl, Greene, Kittleman, Malloy, lllanes. Front Row: Kirk, Sher- wood, Becker, Daly, Rohrer. Back Row: Pinto, Kelly, Caffrey, Geoghegan, Ylvisaker. Front Row: Clarke, Ward, Grimes, Chair- nzang Postlethwaite, Brooks. Junior Promenade Committee DAVID CHARLES CRIMES Chairman EDWARD PHILIP WARD Treasurer FREDERICK RUSSELL POSTLETHWVAITE Floor Manager JOHN EDWARD BROOKS, JR. Braaforfl ROBERT MILET KELLY Saybrook RONALD JANSS CAFFREY Jonathan Eclwarrls RICHARD ANTHONY PINTO Berkeley BIEHL PATRICK CLARKE Timothy Dwight FREDERICK RUSSELL POSTLETHWAITE Calhoun JOSEPH HENRY GEOCHEGAN Silliman EDWARD PHILIP WVARD Davenport DAVID CHARLES CRIMES Trumbull WILLIAM TOWVNEND YLVISAKER Pierson YALE RECONVERTS fn- -gh 'lk wfiffsz . L L 3 i Q'?QJAT.'m., - ,V ., PM w:g..::f--:Q-gm. , I k 2 wf ,ff . ff -, k 7 rv ,..r,-N - . b M .L f , . . .. V ' 'J - R ? 2 W: 7 JV!! F . - . : 3.9 -Q ' , . I - M' ' 'A 1. . .Q . , ,E , , , L, ... , ,,LA L Milf- A f sg 'X f ', ,, Q 4 ' K' 3255? g' V- f ' Y f ' . , ,K az A fill, ' 'T f wf fw IJ?- K L- . x Y fx .. M 4, . ,,,. . ,, my... Q . , -. -NW - w V- 'f m y gg Q . ww , Y mg ek , Y U 2. -1.: , V s . .gif-, . J., .-f.f.,:-,1.,41v, . f 1 H-,.,,..,,, ,ggi - n . 4 ,,. , A 5 ya., ,M is 5 7 lf -Q.. ,f fff g f if f A A - ' : fg, 2- Vyy .. naw- r wg 2 - l if A - 5 x iam ss- ,MM -21 75 .. -wif , AQ, 1 Wf , Qtr: H: . , ,b ,L ... ., x p K . I V 'ng t gf' Zak Handsome Dan, VI HIS year, for the first time since l940,, Yale can look hack on a year, if not of nor- mality, at least of recovery, recovery of delayed ambitions, postponed goals, cher- ished traditions. Yale can he proud of a record, notable through eight Wars, that attained unpre- cedented scope in Wo1'ld War' ll. Her alumni in national service numbered 20,- 000, 500 of Whom gave their lives. For four years she was a training center for thousands of specialists. At Yale, known as the .44West Point of the Ground Forces , l5,000 Air Force ground cadets received Anybody got a match? Gaclaling crowd at halftime instruction in communications, mainte- nance, photography, and armaments, two and three times a week. Some 3,600 V-12's and Marines followed a four-term course to gain degrees and prepare for midship- manls school, while the ASTP turned out 3,400 engineers and linguists. Other Army men were engrossed in lVlilitary Intelli- gence, Civil Affairs, or the Asiatic Staff Of- ficers' School. Meanwhile those members of the faculty who were not in the armed forces or in Washington were equally busy instructing future officers and performing valuable re- search in plastics, gases, synthetic rubber, high altitude flight, and in the nature of life on little-known Pacific islands. And finally, when the job was done, the task of reconversion began. Nor is it too much to say that the job of returning to peace has been done as well as the less pleasant task of war-making. Phases of this reconyersion follow, not necessarily in or- der of importance, but as they symbolize a Yale at peace. One symbol, important to many, was the football weekend. Knights without armor Nassaa's implausible brats in a mild melee 25 -Q, - --X f - ,ai , ft ,f ,f ,f f V , , V foe MYMZWC QQUQJ 66 y f feegwlff Typical Couple Models tor Mattingly Investigation and Banner Photographer Millions of middle-class Americans think of a Yale weekend only in terms of Dorothy Parkerls famous epigram. ls it true? The BANNER,S photographer decided to investi- gate a Yale-Princeton weekend, followed Yaleman Orestes Bfnk and date, Cwladys Eyesore, through various stages of hysteria, intoxication, D.T.'s, sex mania, and final coma. Bfnk, love child of shoelace tycoon Agamemnon Bfnk, went to New England's swank, rank Phillips Escalator Academy. He is now a Freshman, will probably be dropped at end of term. Gwladys, like many Yale dates, is a waitress at the '4Knick'7, exclusive New Haven nightspot. That Bfnk should invite Gwladys is typical of demo- cratic Yale. The pair were deeply in love BETWEEN HALVES, they munch hotdogs. Man in background may be Harold Ickes, or somebody else. by end of weekend. Commented Gwladys later: i'Orestes is a nice type guy, I mean, cul15urecl. Bfnk, recuperating at infirmary, was unavailable for comment. Yale weekends, according to experts, fall into two classes, ubign and Mlittlew. Big weekends are those of Princeton 81 Harvard games, ,lunior Prom, begin on Friday and last till girl or escort drop dead from ex- haustion. Little weekends begin on Satur- day, last just as long. Yale's old-timers, however, told BANNER,S photographer that the current crop of weekends is mild com- pared to those before World War' ll. Long- est weekend in Yale was in fall of l933, lasted 73 days. Girls refused to leave, but were finally persuaded by government troops that the party was over. This led to the much criticized Smith-Conover Act. AT GAME they cheer lustily, inanely. Man in fore- ground suffers from dandruff. Crowd does not notice. GW'-ADY5 AND BFNK enjoy gag at cocktail party. Girl at right learns about Five Year Plan from man in dark suit. THEY DANCE al St. Elmo, fashionable Yale fraternity. But most 1947 Yalis are grateful that an accident of the Gregorian calendar sep- arates one weekend from the next by at least five days. Whereas all is gaiety and charm on Saturday and Sunday, the students, as they are called in New Haven judiciary chambers, have little to say at other times. Many professors, upon consideration, term this good. ,.v:,ax ar THEY DRINK at St. Elmo. Liquid in glasses is tra ditional Sl. Elm0's Fire. Girl at right misses joke LEAVING ST. E L Nl O' S , Cwladys, Bfnk smile happily. LATE NEXT DAY, they say goodbye at train. Train reached Meriden before Gwladys remem- bered she was not Smith girl. OLD-CLOTHES-IVIAN 'Ti-Bitcku is Yale tradition, claims that his real. christened name is Sears and Roe The Princeton weekend began for great majority of Yalemen after the class Sat- urday morning. By noon the New Haven railroad depot was jammed with girls hail- ing from the so-called UBig Sevenw women,s colleges: Smith, Vassar, Holyoke, Welles- ley, Radcliffe, Sarah Lawrence, Burning Stump f0kla.j Female Seminary. Bfnk called for his girl at service entrance of Knick. Dates and escorts gulped down quick Martinis, even quicker lunches, rushed to STUDENT PURCHASES PAPER from Jerry. Pile of magazines shows Jerry overestimated the demand. board quaint, old-fashioned open trolleys which bore them out to the Yale Bowl. These trolleys are generally so crowded that conductor cannot collect fares in the ordi- nary way, but must jump from one couple to the next, hanging on to the girl with vice- like grip as he takes fare from escort. Oddly enough, New Haven youths dream of day when they can be trolley conductors, though job pays only S15 weekly. Once at bowl, the young people fussed Sz fumed until kick-off, paid little attention to game afterwards. Students really inter- ested in game stayed in their rooms and listened to it on the radio. Crowd at bowl watched lazily as football player Levi ,lack- son, spectator Bfnk, made passes. It was a chilly day. Traditional hip Hasks, tra- UNIDENTIFIED VASSAR GIRL tries tricky bank shot. She flubbed il, probably because she is cross eyed ditional racoon coats kept Yalemen warm. Traditional Yalemen kept girls warm. Yale won. After the game, dates 81 escorts hurried back to campus, gathered in various rooms for cocktails. Some parties lasted far into evening, resulting in scenes like that depic- ted by cut on lower right of page. Then, staggering, blind drunk, approximately 3,000 young people tried to get into lVlory's. A lucky few succeeded, most went else- 28 SUNDAY MORNING SHINE. lvy on Wallis Yale variety, will cover a building in twenty-three weeks. where, crowding restaurants from Bridge- port to New London. Bfnk and Gwladys went to Hamburger Heaven on Post Road. Typical menu for Yalemen and their dates Was: Martinis Puree lVlongole Martinis Roast Beef Apple Pie Coffee After dinner lVlartinis Activities in the evening Were diverse. Some went to fraternity dancesg Bfnk and I BFNK AND GWLADYS stroll on Cross Campus. Man in background is carrying his shirts to laundry. Gwladys turned up at St. Elmo hop. Others Went to production of schmaltzy Student Prince at local Shubert Theatre. Most Went right on drinking Martinis till morningls Wee hours. I Next day was more subdued. The more devout roused themselves out in time for eleven ogclock service at Yaleis historic downstate Romanesque Battell Chapel. lVlost were out of hed, sipping pre-luncheon lVlartinis by one. The afternoon was spent in quiet drinking, half-hearted attempts at seduction. By seven all but a handful of Yalemen had put their girls on train and were ready for traditional uglad-theyire GIRLS ARE ATTENDING advanced stage of week end party. Their dates are under table in foreground 29 STUDENT WHO DECIDED to study during weekend buys pencils from campus salesman on Saturday night. gonew party on Sunday evening. Their friends whisked the couple to the railroad station in a l91L7lf3 lVlercury convertible, drove at high speed to avoid arrest. A socialite crowd filled the platform as Gwladys and Agamemnon tendered fare- Wells. Gwladys curtsied, then thanked her lieau eilusively. Said she. HI mean, it was TWO COUPI-ES REI-AX after busy day. Pair at left discuss undifferentiated aesthetic continuum in Burmese. u WHIFFS ENTERTAIN- Average Yaleman Hnds it hard to tell Whiff songs apart, hut experts can dis- lingiush. Couples, who sit placidly on floor, find listen- ing more agreeable than dancing or making conversation. really a line type Weekendf' As fast trains hurtled northward hearing tired college girls and Gwladys remem- liered her duties at the Knick, Bfnk and other Yalemen, settling down to eveningis drinking, could know that weekend was over. -IGNATIUS NIATTINGLY MAN DUST5 HANDS after climbing fence to get into closed dance. Roundabout entrance is exhilerating. 30 dna 90444 HQuick, Watson . . . M application of mass-production methods of preserving group health, dispensing the Army's influenza vaccine in anticipation of the Winter Hu season. Curricula, too, were revised as Yale pio- neered in developing an improved course of study with a definite program for aver- age, brilliant, or individualistic student. Meanwhile, the war-born interest in science continued as the feeling grew that the finest opportunities as well as the greatest respon- sibilities of the post-war era lay in the realm of pure and applied research. The Snake Pit HERE were also signs of an increased awareness of the part Yale must play in developing the leaders of a changed world. Such a role involved diliciculties, however. Existing facilities were stretched to ac- commodate an enrollment twice normal. Even Bob Kiphuth's muscle-factory became home for hundreds while barracks were be- ing erected on Whitliey Avenue. Overcrowd- ing brought many problems, one of which was solved as Yale made its first practical Mountain dew ERHAPS the most unusual thing about Yale as it reconverted was the veteran. Here was a new phenomenon on the college campus, bringing distinct problems for the University to face. The G. l. Bill helped bring hundreds of ambitious eX-servicemen to Yale, along with other hundreds of former students. The ofhce of Yale Studies for Returning Service- men, descendent of the Bureau of Military Information, was established as the chan- nel through which all these veterans would pass on their way to a most important con- sideration, the 3565.00 subsistence check. 205 Strathconag mecca for many '4But Hartford says . . . Mufti madhouse There they filled out inescapable forms, and obtained information about other prob- lems. Set up in Strathcona Hall, Yale Studies served to interpret Veterans, Ad- ministration rules and regulations to stu- dents. By friendly supervision it helped many to shorten the period between appli- cation for and receipt of government aid. For the veteran not wishing to enroll in the regular programs a special course of study was created designed Mto meet his particular needs and further his personal objectives while completing his educa- tion in the shortest possible time. 33 Cauldron bubble! HA heap o'livin, OMEHOW, though, the mere presence of an oflice for veterans doesn,t make any- body very much aware of the change that has taken place. After all, the veteran wears clothes, takes courses, and goes out for teams just like anybody else. But there is one thing in which, if not unique, he is at least substantially ahead of most under- graduates. And that is babies. A With 5572 of the student population vet- erans, and with 2362? of these having wives in New Haven, there is no question but Calcium Night 1 that the diaper problem has attained grave proportions. As it was out of the question for all but a few families to find apartments in the jammed local market, the problem fell to the University authorities. Large numbers of Quonset huts purchased from the govern- ment, were remodeled into double apart- ments by workers who lived in the buildings they were constructing. The result is visible in the two populous communities on Whit- ney avenue, and near the Bowl. Having set the huts in the ground, Yale installed a few community services and said, in effect, NGO to itf, And with typical vigor the veterans and 344 their wives went to it. They made curtains, they laid rugs, the Wives formed bridge clubs, and poker organizations arose among the nominal heads of the houses. Although it is reported that governesses were seen wheeling small Elis among the Quonsets while within maids served Martinis, the prevalence of baby-tending pools indicated that such stories were apocryphal. Baby and the food remained, as always, wornan's concern, to be handled while the dominant male negotiated the intricacies of irregular French verbs. But on his arrival at the en- campment, he fell into the routine of re- pairing doors, setting tables, exercising his prerogative of getting in the way. Scholarship figures show that the men who live in the quonsets and in the many apartments are no better or worse than their bachelor contemporaries as far as academic work is concerned. They took a full part, also in both athletics and extra-curricular activities. Some, even, were able to hold positions on this yearis football squad. Thus, an existence unknown to the foot- loose and fancy-free days of the thrilling thirties has become institutionalized, and, amid books, baby carriages, coal stoves, and a housing shortage, the newest of Yale,s traditions has been launched. Home Work Sleepy-time gal 35 He also serves Silver anniversary SERIES of photographic impressions, however coherent, can at best give only a superficial glimpse of any institution so complex as Yale. Beneath the surface it seemed to this observer that two distinct, often mutually antagonistic trends were at work in the Yale of 1946-7. Reconstruc- tion of a time-honored way of life pro- ceeded concurrently with important, some- times basic changes. The restoration of the pre-war pattern 5'The saddest tale . . .M of living was confirmed by the reappear- ance of many familiar phenomena: summer vacations, a football team to boast of, gleaming new convertibles, weekends launched with a roar on Friday to expire with a sigh Sunday night, long-scarce white shirts and new suits that did not resemble burlapg beautiful importations from the fe- male Big Three,-and astonishingly high bills from local tradesmen. Reassuring as these pacific symbols were, however, the mixture was not quite as be- fore. The huge increase in population, evi- dent on the bustling Cross Campus, in con- gested Yale Station, and in molasses-mov- ing queues, created a housing crisis that in- spired in the average undergraduate an un- dying animosity for double-decker bunks. The University officially took notice of the national inflation by resorting to a tuition rise to offset a substantial deficit. Economy was the keynote, and the guy who had more money than he knew what to do with had become extinct. A new spirit of endeavor seemed to be another characteristic of postbellum Yale. More students made Dean7s List and fewer were dropped than ever before. N0 longer was the 4grind, a social outcast, even the ivy f N ' ' H' V Nfzi TiUL1'fA31E5'7 most immaculate white shoes were regularly seen in the Reserve Book Room. Dufiing off had become unfashionable. Politics, on the other hand, was definitely in style. Eager for knowledge of world af- fairs, undergraduates signed up en masse for courses in international relations, con- temporary history, and political science. They attacked outlandish tongues like Chi- nese and Russian. They needled student opinion for A.V.C., caucused for RU., traveled indefatigably for World Federal- ists, listened thoughtfully to visiting states- men. A medium for authors of all political credos was provided by the new Yale' P0- iitical Journal. Campus circulation of Time, Life, the Herald Tribune and the Times sur- passed more lurid rivals. Topics of dinner table conversation were almost as likely to be Bilbo or Communism as the Yankees or the woman at Vassar. Other developments bespoke Yale's ma- turity. It represented the nation to a greater degree than ever before. The broadening process, initially fostered by the G. l. Bill, would, the University announced, be sup- plemented and continued by an expanded P7'0liigdlS, return self-help program. Among the majority of undergraduates a war-born sense of pro- portion, testing traditions and finding some archaic, sought more valid standards. As the Spring term drew to a close, col- lege life gained in richness and significance. On the lighter side, the sun-drenched May afternoons encouraged wearing seersucker coats and flamboyant neckties, cheering hoarsely for the baseball team,+and reach- ing hoarsely for a restorative quick one. Girls in bright dresses gladdened the eye and reduced the bank account, while fra- ternity dances became even more impos- sibly crowded. The other side of the picture showed most people preparing for finals with unprecedented determination. For the senior especially, Spring was an important time. He had interviews with business rep- resentatives or with graduate school Deans, he ground out page after page of his thesis, and with mixed emotions he contemplated his approaching status of an old grad. Whatever the final outcome of this syn- thesis of reconstruction and change, it was clear that postwar Yale had gained a vital- ity and a resolution that was indeed fitting. 37 SENIUR SUCIETIES Q me ,aww MTW -Q ,Q E Q E PALMER LICHTY BEVIS ALEXANDER CHARLES CORDES EDWARD TELFAIR CREIGHTON NICHOLAS EDWIN DUFE LIVINGSTON FRYER, JR. NEWELL GARFIELD, JR. EUGENE ROSS HANSON THOMAS TRYON HART HEYWARD ISHAM STUART HOLMES JOHNSON, J RICHARD SPERRY KOEHNE HUGH MCLEAN, JR. il ' 1. M -V15 My Agffw t A I J J,I A C. T. I. Berzelius FOUNDED 1848 JOHN ALAN MASTERS PETER VVHEELOCK MORTON DAVID MOXLEY PETER STORMS PARKER VVILLARD COLE RAPPLEYE, JR. VVILLIAM MATTHEW ROHRER EDMUND KNOX SHERRILL BARTON PECK SMITH WILLIAM PIERCE SMITH ERIC VAN CORTLANDT STEVENSON PHILIP HALES SUTER, JR. ROBERT WOOD WITALIAMS, JR. RICHARD CATHERVVOOD ZOLLNER 41 Book and nake JOHN BURCHENAL AULT CARLTON MILLS BADGER ROBERT BALDWIN, JR. ERICSSON BUSHNELL BROADBENT ALEXANDER TENER BROWN EDWARD ROOT BULKELEY JAMES BUFFUM CONGDON JAMES PAUL CONNELLY THOMAS CONNORS EUGENE DINES, JR. RUSSELL FORD WILLIAM TOWNSEND GLIDDEN FOUNDED 1863 JOHN SELMES GREENWAY JAQUELIN SMITH HOLLIDAY, II JOHN HUBBARD HOLLIDAY DAVID LINCOLN LUKE, III RICHARD WESLEY MANVILLE JOHN DABNEY MURCHISON MICHAEL JEROME RICH ROBERT FREDERICK RIGBY BRUCE LEONARD ROBERTS CHARLES PARKER SAGAR RICHARD JAMES VINCENT SLADE HERBERT TERRELL VAN INGEN, JR EDWARD O,MALLEY WELLES 43 JOHN COCKS BIERWIRTH DOUGLASS MORTIMER BOMEISLER, JR. OLIVER BROOKS WILLIAM BRADLEY COLEY, II NEIL WILSON CURRIE ARNOLD GUYOT DANA, II STUART PHELPS DODGE, JR. RATHBKN PAIGE DONHAUSER ROBERT STANLEY DORSEY ALEXANDER CARTER FERGUSSON JAMES STONE GRATTON RANDOLPH CARTER HARRISON, JR. WILLIAM MIANIERRE HENDERSON RICHARD MILTON HOLLINGSHEAD, ROBERT ANDREW JACKSON I Wwifff 2 if Q Q I f Aj 353' 1- f- -' 1 ' -H Elihu FOUNDED 1903 SETH MAURICE KALBERG, JR. ROBERT PERKINS KNIGHT HERMAN LIVINGSTON, II WILLIAM ROSS MCCAIN, JR. WILLIAM PAUL NIIDDELEER JAMES CHURCHILL OWEN, JR. HENRY BARSTOW PLATT SYDNEY HARWOOD ROGERS WILLIAM MOUGHON SCHULER HENRY WATERS TAFT, II JAMES FOSTER THACHER JAMES CHARLES TORMEY, JR. WILLIAM HAYNES TRUESDALE II 9 ARTHUR KITTREDGE WATSON ERNEST ALFRED WIEHL, JR. HENRY JVIARTINDALE WILLIAMS 45 4 C. S. P. fm ,zyxxg g it AJ' 5 ,gf .9 x 5 -xy K gxf ,Q RRR WW isqgaix SIE? Qwnv -I W5 SEARS gig, iigw e'?'Sif: M I ' ,. 1, AV ' - . , 'f ,, ff. If .- i ' -V A I , 'f ' Q , 5 Q, 55, V . I A-' ,A If A EDWARD LEWIS BARTLETT, IV NORBORNE BERKELEY, JR. RALPH HICKOX BROWN JOHN CLARK CALHOUN, JR. HENRY TUTTLE CHANDLER HARVEY CHILDS, IR. HENRY EUGENE COE, III GEORGE GUTHRIE CONYNCHAM STEPHEN WHITNEY DICKEY FRANCIS COOLEY FARWELL, II WRIGHT FERGUSON ALEXANDER HARVEY, II RAY LORENZO HEFFNER, IR. EDWARD KELLEY HUEBER GEORGE MITCHELL ISBELL VANDERVEER KIRK C. C. J. Scroll and Key FOUNDED 1842 SEYMOUR HORACE KNOX, III ROBERT RANLET MACOMBER LEONARD LYON MARSHALL, JR. DONALD LARSON MEDLOCK SAMUEL WILLIAMS MEEK, JR. LEIGH MARTIN MILLER THOMAS EWING NOYES FRANKLIN EDDY PARKER, III ROBERT CLAYTON ROGERS ETHAN ALLEN HITCHCOCK SHEPLEY, JR HENRY WILLIAMS SHERRILL EDWARD FOSTER SWIFT, III WILLIAM SLOCUM TILGHMAN PETER CUYLER WALKER BENJAMIN FRANCIS WEEMS FREDERICK WALLINCFORD WHITRIDGE RAYMOND HENRY YOUNG, IR. 47 J -6-E, , S . , , , . i L I I . I R. I ' 3 QR in 'Vi , ' f A . '- : ' C ' ' RNA f I ' I J ,' , I -SLE I . f . A N ' , A 1 'W' f ' Lffqw 1 - ..., f Skull and Bones ARCHIBALD JOHN ALLEN CHARLES BOOTH ALLING, JR. EDWARD WILLIAMSON ANDREWS, JR. JJGILLAM DORR BLAKE WILLIAM MICHAEL BOULIARATIS DAVID BENNET BRONSON WALTER HENDERSON BROWN LOUIS CONNICK, JR. JOHN CAREY JOHN LESTER HUBBARD CHAI-'EEE EDWIN LYON DALE, JR. ENDICOTT PEABODY DAVISON FRANCIS BOLTON ELWELL, JR. JOHN GEORGE GILPIN FINLEY JOHN WARREN FINNEY WILLIAM SKINNER GOEDECKE ARCHER HARMAN, JR. GEORGE BURGWIN HOLMES GORDON BUCKLAND HURLBUT :F Deceased. FOUNDED 1832 4-9 DONALD LOYAL LEAVENWORTH RUSSELL VINCENT LYNCH BENJAMIN THOMAS NJCELROY GUY ENNNIS MCGAUGHEY THOMAS RIDGWAY MALLON JAMES IVAN MOORE WILLIAM SINGER MOORHEAD, JR FRANK OJBRIEN, JR. PHILIP 07BRIEN, JR. CHARLES EDGAR PALMER RICHARD ROLLINS READ HOWARD COPLAND ROBINSON, JR JRVING SEAMAN, JR. JOSIAH AUGUSTUS SPAULDING WILLIAM SAYER SUMNER CARLL TUCKER, JR. CHARLES PRATT TWICHELI. ELLIOT EVANS VOSE GEORGE UPSON WARREN HENRY HORNBLOWER ATKINS DONALD ADELBERT BOYNTON EDMOND TAYLOR CHEWNING, JR WILLIAM WELCH COLLIN, III WINTHROP PALMER ELDREDGE ROBERT ANDERS EMILE JAMES HINCHMAN GOODENOUGH BENJAMIN AVERY HAMMER WILLIAM FRANCIS HOWE, JR. JULIAN STEVENS KAISER WOlf,S Head FOUNDED 1883 5 I JOHN STUART LOVEJOY JOHN CURTIS MCILWAINE EDWARD GOWLING OAKLEY JOHN HICCINS REMER FREDERIC LINCOLN ROCKEFELLER WILLIAM SUTCLIFFE SAGAR, JR. THOMAS FRANCIS SCANNELL, JR. MICHAEL SCOTT WILLIAM HAMMEL SHANNON ROBERT KASTOR ZELLE ERICSSON BUSHNELL BROADBENT ALEXANDER TENER BROWN WALTER HENDERSON BROWN JOHN CAREY HARVEY CHILDS, JR. WILLIIAM BRADLEY COLEY, II JOHN LORD FERGUSON JAMES STONE GRATTON SPOTSWOOD BRAXTON HALL, JR. JOHN MCCLANAHAN HENSKE GEORGE BURGWIN HOLMES GEORGE MITCHELL ISBELL GILBERT DUTTON KITTREDGE QQ AU ,vm- Civ, SE'S Aurelian University Honor Society FOUNDED 1910 S2 DAVID LINCOLN LUKE, III LEONARD LYON MARSHALL, J R CHARLES PARKER SAGAR SAMUEL KINGSTON SCOVIL WVILLIAM HAMMEL SHANNON BARTON PECK SMITH WILLIAM PIERCE SMITH PHILETUS HOLT STETLER EDWARD FOSTER SWIFT, III EDWARD ,COLES TAYLOR FREDERICK MORRIS THAYER, J ERSKINE NORMAN WHITE, JR. RAYMOND HENRY YOUNG, JR. GAYER DOMINICK BELLAMY XORBORIYE BERKELEY, JR. PALMER LICHTY BEVIS DONALD ADELBERT BOYNTON NATHAN HOLLISTER BUNDY, JR. JOHN CLARK CALHOUN, JR. HENRY TUTTLE CHANDLER WILLIAM EDWARD COBB ENDICOTT PEABODY DAVISON WINTHROP PALMER ELDREDGE FRANCIS BOLTON FILWELL, JR. ALEXANDER CARTER FERGUSSON STEPHEN CUTLER GREENE I .3- wi I lA COAA Torch University Honor Society FOUNDED 1916 53 BENJAMIN AVERY HAMIVIER ALEXANDER HARVEY, II WILLIAM FRANCIS HOWE, JR. JULIAN STEVENS KAISER VANDERVEER KIRK ROBERT RANLET MACOMBER SAMUEL JVOODS MATTHEWS ROBERT EDWARD MERCER FRANK OJBRIEN, JR. JOHN JOSEPH OTNEILL THOMAS FRANCIS SCANNELL, JR. FREDERICK WALLINGFORD WTHITRIDCE ROBERT KASTOR ZELLE FRATERNITIES Q.. Beta Theta Pi I A AVAAL :Aah .ik. , ,,,A.4.L,L,,. . FOUNDED 1392 .If me:-s:.,x,,,, x 7 -an Albert E. Angier, John Athens, John B. Baird, Nathaniel S. Bangs, Jr., William V. Barborka, Barstow Bates, Dallas L. Bates, William M. B. Berger, Hugh H. Birkland, Donald E. Blanchard, Robert B. Bottomley, Samuel C. Burchell, lll, Edwin H. Cham- berlain, Nicholas P. Christy, Alfred M. Clark, Jr., Charles H. Clark, Charles G. Cleaver, William E. Cobb, Richard N. Cohen, John C. Coughlin, Jr., Alexander W. Creedon, Jr., Arnold G. Dana, ll, Severyn S. Dana, Alan P. Danforth, John C. David- son, John B. Davis, Winter Dean, Jr., Joseph J. Dedman, R. Blaise Delaney, Donald L. Deming, Roy H. Dickerson, James B. Dillingham, Ray A. Eusden, Jr., Henry T. Ewald, Jr.. Alexander C. Fergusson, David W. Fisher, Robert M. Fitzgerald. William C. Fownes, lll, William V. Funk, Jr., William M. Furey, John C Gabriel Donald Geary, James C. Gibbens, Walter F. Goodman, Victor W. H. Greenway, B. H. Griliith, John F. Hanson, Jr., David W. Hanway, James N. Heald, ll, William S. Hefferan, IH, Thomas A. Hendrickson, George F.. Herhold, Robert W. Hincks, John G. W. Husted, Jr., Robert F. lves, Jr., Lawrence S. Kelly, Jr., Albert H. Kelsey, Pat- terson S. Kelsey, Roger G. Kennedy, Thomas H. Knowlton, lrwin H. Kramer, An- thony Lavelli, Jr., Robert A. Lawrence, Donald L. Leavenworth, Rutherford P. Lilley, Theodore B. LoefHer, John A. Luke, Richard A. McClave, James F. McHugh, Horatio P. Matthai, Clifford F. Messinger, Jr., William P. Middeleer, Peter M. Molhtt, John C. Moore, Jr. Thomas F. Moore, Jr., Laurence C. Morehouse, Jr., David M. Ogden, Richard B. Ogilvie, John J. 0,Neill, Charles E. Palmer, Girvan Peck, George H. Pfau, Jr., Ed- ward L. Pratt, George B. Proud, Jr., Alan Rabinowitz, George K. Ramsey, Wlillard C. Rappleye, Jr., Theodore R. Robertson, William M. Rohrer, Jr., Karl R. Ross, William J. Schieffelin, Ill, William F.. Scott, Franklin G. Sherrill, ll, Carl Siemon Robert S. Smith, Gardner H. Stern, Jr., Charles G. Stradella, Jr., Robert J. Sutton, King Tolles, Jr., John S. Voorhees, Peter Vought, William M. Walker, Henry W. Wal- lace, Hugh C. Ward, Jr., James W. Ward, IH, Michael B. Weir, James M. White, Jr., Stephen Williams, William G. Williams, Jr., Hogan L. Yancey, Jr., Robert K. Zelle. 57 . A fx -1 -Q 515.12515 ,A f Chi Phi k 11 FOUNDED 1898 wig gigifrff. f- ma-NDS ISU :wfa?.-.fgz 1-in ', ' Lee H. Allen, Edwin C. Andrews, Jr., Robert W. Barney, Dudley B. Batchelor, Rich- ard B. Bevier, Frank E. Block, Thomas C. Breen, Jr., Frank B. Burnham, Bruce M. Cameron, Ellsworth T. Carrington, Nathaniel M. Cartmell, Arthur D. Champlin, Jr., Guy M. Cleborne, Frederick A. Clinton, Francis W. Comminsky, Thomas W. Con- nally, John W. Conwell, Edward T. Creighton, Norbert R. Cristel, Henry E. Damon, Franck G. Darte, H, James C. Duffus, Bruce G. Duncan, Edward T. Dunham, Charles M. Durfee, Robert L. Edens, Jr., James M. Egan, Robert A. Emile, William A. Fa- ville, Stanley E. Flink. Luther D. Gadd, Leslie N. Gay, Jr., James W. Grady, Jr., Myles Greene, Louis P. Greulich, Walter C. Griggs, William T. C. Hannah, Thomas C. Hockersmith, Robert VV. Huebner, Harold G. Jones, Jr., Paul Jones, Jr., Joseph G. Kemper, Edward R. Kovacs, James R. Lengen, Garrison H. McClure, Blake H. McFeely, Wilbur P. McNulty, Jr., Edward W. McShane, Jr., Edward B. Meredith, Seth T. Mechesen, James E. Metzloff, Robert Meyer, Lynn H. Miller, Herbert J. Miner, H, William C. Mohler, William B. Monroe, Harold T. Morley, Jr., James W. Mueller, William B. Murphy. John N. Neal, Robert H. O7Connor, Peter S. Parker, Christian T. Paul, Robert S. Perew, David H. Phillips, Richard W. Radcliffe, Morgan R. Redwine, Jr., Walter R. Reynolds, Roger P. Rice, Jr., Warren B. Riley, Frank J. Roehrenbeck, Jr., Alexander H. Rudd, II, William L. Rudkin, Herbert Shaffer, Jr., William W. Sharon, Howard G. Singer, Mark A. Smith, David Steele, Robert Stokes, Malcolm L. Trayser, Carl A. Vernon, Jr., Roy E. Walsh, Edward P. Ward, Theodore R. Waugh, Philip L. Weaver, Theodore B. Wilcox, Ill, Whitney J. Witteman, Robert D. Wood, Austin A. Yvoodward. 59 f .:g'5??iw,-' , Y ' 'ligff L- ' Q :av Q ' ' f- if f Chl PS1 mf .k,., . ,. if Sing? FOUNDED 134.3 k ykr, ,K It i K i ' '1 'k':i 1 Clinton S. Abbott, Roger A. Bachman, Victor B. Baer, Robert L. Bast, William M. Benjamin, Nathaniel W. Bishop, Robert O. Black, Jr., Henry M. Blackmer, II, VVilliam E. Bliss, Bradford Boardman, Jr., Horace R. Boynton, lll, David F. Bull Anthony D. Bullock, Jr., Orton P. Camp, Jr., Williain G. Carter, Walter' S. Collins. ll.: Richard D. Conant, O. Dexter Covell, Jr., Ronald M. Craigmyle, Jr., Rathbun P. Donhauser, Richard J. Dunn, Jr., Joseph W. Elsinger, John R. Finnegan, W. Michael Giblin, Jr., Samuel B. Gilpin, III, Philip R. Grabfield, John B. Gregory, Ray Harri- son, Jr., Thomas A. H. Hartwell, Norman E. Hascall, ll. William G. Heckman, William M. Henderson, Harley G. Higbie, Jr., Thomas li. Irwin, Oliver B. James, Jr., Raymond L. Jewett, Stuart H. Johnson, Jr., Robert Jones, Frederick J. Kingery, John S. Lampe, George V. Lauder, Paul R. Laurent, Julian T. Leonard, John M. Lewis, Robert V. Lindsay, Huntington Lyman, Edmund C. Lynch, Jr., Laurence D. McCann, A. Charles McGowan, Jr., Paul McGrail, Angus P. Mclntyre, Richard G. Mack, David B. Magee, Robert J. Malloy, Samuel S. Marshall, III, Irving O. Murphy, John O7Brien, James C. Owen, Jr., Charles P. Penney, Jr. Euoene J. Pidgeon, Edmund A. Prentis, III, Waldron YV. Proctor, Schuyler C. Pul- ford, Edwin A. Ramsdell, Fletcher D. Richards, Jr., Robert S. Riche, William A. Riley, Horton C. Rorick, Cha1'les K. Ross, Louis A. Savarese, Boynton Selden, George D. Selden, Joseph L. Selden, Charles A. Shoup, ll, Spyros S. Sliouras, Stephen G. Smith, Dixon F. Spivy, Charles B. Stacy, William P. Sutter, Nelson C. Taintor, Jr., Mason L. Thompson, Jr., John S. Thomson, Philip R. Toohey, Lawrence E. Tuttle, Festus J. Wade, Hl, John P. P. Waldo, Robert A. Wenk, H. Bradford Westerfield. 61 Delta Kappa Epsilon Walter B. Allen, Jr., Charles B. Alling, Jr., Richard D. Anderson, Jr., Thomas YV. L. Ashley, Harold M. Barker, Francis D. Barzilauskas, Bruce Bayne, Norborne Ber- keley, Jr., David A. Binzen, Peter H. Binzen, Eugene R. Black, Ill, Richard R. Blake, Donald A. Boynton, Joseph R. Brown, Jr., Peter A. G. Brown, Reynolds B. Brown, Edwin N. Broyles, Jr., John R. Bryden, Ill, George H. W. Bush, Russell M. Candee, Frederick B. Capalbo, John E. Caulkins, Carl T. Chadsey, John L. H. Chafee, Henry T. Chandler, Edmund T. Chewning, Jr., William L. Clark, Laurence W. Clarke, Jr., Laurence A. Clement, Robie L. Cone, Jr., James P. Connelly, George G. Conyngham, Charles E. Cooney, Jr., Daniel P. Davison, Endicott P. Davison, Frank V. De Nezzo, Eugene Dines, Jr., Robert S. Dorsey, William Draper, Francis B. Elwell, Jr., Wil- liam D. Evers, Stephen C. Eyre. Gordon N. Farquhar, Harry S. Finkenstaedt, Jr., Russell Ford, Henry K. Gardner, James H. Goodenough, John W. Gosselin, Gordon Graham, Robert Greene, Robert R. Greene, John S. Greenway, Thurston H. Hammer, Ralph P. Hanes, Jr., Horace H. Harrison, Alexander Harvey, ll, Samuel St. J. Haviland, Arthur B. Hayes, Totton P. Heffelfinger, ll, Jaquelin S. Holliday, ll, John H. Holliday, William F. Howe, Jr., Coleman W. Hoyt, Maynard T. lvison, Anthony Jackson, Warren F. Kelley, Frank D. Ketcham, Philip R. Kiendl, John S. Laing, Joseph T. Lee, George S.. Leisure, Robert MCA. Lloyd, Jr., Peter W. Lufkin, David L. Luke, Ill, Russell V. Lynch, Thomas A. McGraw, George P. MacNichol, Ill, Roland S. MacNichol, Robert R. Macomber, John W. Madigan, Samuel D. Marsh, John C. Matthiessen, John M. Mills. Joseph B. Montgomery, Ill, Thomas W. Moseley, John F. Murray, Bruce A. Norris, Stuart J. Northrop, Joseph W. Nutter, Jr., Malcolm l. Oakford, David W. O,Brien, Hugh E. O'Brien, Frank O'Brien, Jr., James P. Orr, James E. Osborn, II, Brian P. Randall, Howard C. Robinson, Jr., Marvin H. Rorick, Jr., Robert J. Royle, Clive Runnells, Jr., William M. Schuler, Frank L. Shelley, John W. Soper, Josiah A. Spauld- ing, Christopher A. Squire, Edward M. Stevenson, Matthew C. Stovall, Edward F. Swift, HI, James F. Thacher, Frank S. Treco, Forbes S. Tuttle, John C. Virden, Jr., Elliott E. Vose, William S. Walbridge, Jr., Wayne W. Wall, George Warren, Welling- ton M. Watters, George H. Weber, Jr., Benjamin F. Weems, Edward Welles, David A. Whittaker, Valleau Wilkie, Jr., William T. Ylvisaker. 63 The Fence Club FOUNDED 1830 John W. Anderson, ll, Wendell W. Anderson, Jr., Edward W. Andrews, Jr., Henry H. Atkins, John W. Barnum, David F. Bartlett, Edward L. Bartlett, IV, George deB. Bell, Gayer D. Bellamy, Douglass M. Bomeisler, Jr., Sevier Bonnie, Jr., Winstanley C. Briggs, Orville G. Brim, Jr., David B. Bronson, Alexander T. Brown, Horace S. Brown, Walter H. Brown, Stephen E. Budd, Jr., John C. Calhoun, Jr., John Carey, George K. Conant, Jr., James B. Congdon, John N. Conyngham, George Cook, III, Alexander C. Cordes, William G. Curran, Jr., Lawrence C. Dalley, Jr., Hugh F. Dangler, Stephen W. Dickey, Richard B. Dominick, Philip M. Drake, Notley Y. DuHamel, Jr., Winthrop P. Eldredge, Harry B. Freeman, Jr., Livingston Fryer, Jr., Peter Gagarin, Newell Garfield, Jr., Wyatt Garfield, Charles S. Garland, Jr., James S. Gratton, David T. Guernsey, Randolph C. Harrison, Jr., Walter H. Hart. James S. Herman, Peter Hetzler, Richard M. Hollingshead, IH, George B Holmes Ross K. Hoy, Richard McM. Hunt, George M. Isbell, Heyward Isham, Frank P. Jones, Julian S. Kaiser, Vanderveer Kirk, John L. Koehne, Jr., William B. Lex, Jr., David McC. Lippincott, Charles E. Lord, II, John S. Lovejoy, Douglas G. Lovell, Jr., William R. Manierre, Richard W. Manville, Frank H. Marshall, Leonard L. Marshall, Frank Mauran, Ill, Frank MCC. Mayfield, Jr., Gordon B. Michler, Russell DeW. Morrill, Jr., John G. McCurdy, Richard J. McKim, Richard H. Needham, Edward G. Oakley, Michael J. Paguaga, Herbert P. Patterson, Frederick G. Pearson, Anthony L. Perrin, Ewing R. Philbin, Jr., Russel P. Place, Jr., Henry B. Platt, Thomas C. Platt, Jr., Joseph W. Reisler, John H. Remer, Michael J. Rich, Charles L. Ritchie, Jr., Bruce L. Roberts, Avery Rockefeller, Jr. Godfrey A. Rockefeller, Frederic L. Rockefeller, William S. Sagar, Thomas F. Scan- nell, Jr., John N. Schaffner, Charles H. Schwartz, Michael Scott, Sidney Scott, Jr., William H. Shannon, Roger W. Shattuck, Charles E. Shepard, Ethan A. Shepley, Jr., John Shepley, Henry W. Sherrill, Sanford G. Simmons, Richard J. V. Slade, Gregory W. Spurr, Jr., Allen Mcl. Stack, Alexander C. Stewart, Michael P. W. Stone, Richard E. Sumner, Jr., MacDuif Symington, William S. Tilghman, William H. Truesdale, II, Carll Tucker, Jr., Charles P. Twichell, Daniel O. Wagster, Samuel S. Walker, Jr., Henry P. Warren, Ill, Richard H. Warren, Charles S. Whitehouse, Henry Whiting, Jr., Frederick W. Whitridge, Robert L. Wickser, Harold M. Willcox, Eugene F. Williams, Jr., Robert W. Williams, Jr., Randolph C. Wohltman, Jr., Richard H. Wood, Ray- mond H. Young. 65 Phi Gamma Delta FOUNDED 1843 1 H W Ma,-f 2 ff 2'L-Lai? Jfdfww 1' ' ,v ' W, f af J? QFA X41 9' 1 W1 gym! 4 n I, 5 if ad ' f if fc-X' John M. Allderige, William C. Anlyan, Ettore Barbatelli, Lester F. Becker, Peter VanD. Berg, Richard O. Bierregaard, Carlton D. Blanchard, Jr., Alphonse R. Bona- gura, William J. Boone, Albert C. Bosworth, William H. Bunn, Jr., Alfred F. Burn- side, Jr., William D. Burrows, Frederic D. Carter, Jr., James M. Cleveland, John K. Coleman, Walter M. Conrad, Richard M. Cosgrove, Vincent M. Creedon, Thomas N. Crowley, Jr., William D. Curran, Arthur P. Dakos, Bruce C. Daniels, Paul H. Davey, Jr., Marshall R. Diggs, Jr., Alan H. Dowd, Charles M. Driggs, Donald K. Duvall, Donald R. Eglee, Robert T. Farrell, Joseph H. Flynn, Kenneth Fraureins, Nicholas S. Fusilli, Joseph H. Geoghegan. Thomas R. Good, Joseph L. Gornick, William H. Hagerman, Alan Hall, Jr William W. Hancock, David V. Harris, Eric L. Hedstrom, Jr., Richard B. Hollaman, Arthur P. Hustead, Thomas P. lneson, Richard N. Jennings, Jess M. Johns, Sidney V. John- son, Logan T. Johnston, Jr., James D. Kearney, Robert W. Keenan, Daniel C. Kelly, Oliver B. Kilroy, Charles W. Kittleman, Jr., Marley Kittleman, Gordon F. Knight, Joseph B. Lovett, Richard McFee, David B. H. Martin, William Martin, Samuel W. Matthews, James A. Mclntosh, Randall P. Mclntyre, David D. McKenney, William B. McMillan, Jr., Robert F.. Mercer, Frederick H. Miller. John R. Moses, Bennet B. Murdock, Jr., James P. Murray, Jr., Leo M. Nagle, Edward S. Olcott, Lucius J. Parkinson, Jr., Howard D. Peck, John S. Perryman, Foster M. Phillips, Elijah B. Prettyman, Jr., MacMillan Pringle, David A. Pugh, Richard E. Regan, Stephen J. Regan, Jr., John L. Reith, Jr., Harold L. Richardson, Jr., John R. Roderick, John W. Routh, Joseph F. St. Georges, Philip D. Saxon, Robert F. See- beck, Chester Simmons, John R. Smith, Laurence B. Soper, Jr., Robert F. Stansberry, Harold E. Sutcliffe, Weymouth K. Symmes, James H. Thomas, Peter R. Thompson, Leonard W. Volk, H, Burton F. Weisbecker, William T. Walker, Edward W. Winter, Robert M. Woodside. 67 St. Anthony Hall l Anwvp 6 5 '5xf2 z ,, . iff' xl g- , L 4. Sw wma V ...QV Theodore F. Babbitt, Robert C. Baldrige, Thomas C. Barton, Nathan H. Bundy, Jr., Russell C. Clark, Jr., William E. Conway, Joseph F. Coughlin, Murray S. Danforth, Jr., Robert T. H. Davidson, Donald Van A. Earnshaw, Wolcott G. Ely, James H. Emack, Harold B. Erdman, Fred W. Gage, Jr., Robinson Gaylord, David M. Gillespie, William H. Hanley, Henry U. Harder, Edmund MCK. Hayden, Jr., John L. Hughes, Austin B. Johnson, Jr., Robert M. Johnston. Henry B. Kistler, Gilbert D. Kittredge, Ralph E. Ladue, Jr., Charles A. Lamb, Alex ander M. Laughlin, Charles F. C. Lefferts, Theodore Lilley, Jr., George J. Lincoln, Ill, Barton H. Lippincott, William H. Lord, Ranald H. Macdonald, IH, Richard Mann, Francis W. Martin, John Mason, Nathaniel M. Mclfitterick, John F. Metzger, William J. Mills, II, Murray S. Monroe, William H. Nimick, III, Edward P. Nolan, Joel A. Page, Jr., Peter Van N. Philip. Henry K. Porter, Thomas B. S. Quarles, Philip D. Reed, Jr., Bache McE. Renshaw, Avery Seaman, James B. Seelye, Douglas W. Shook, Alexander Somerville, Charles J. Stewart, Jr., Timothy J. Stone, William D. Stroud, Jr., Perry MacK. Sturges, Jr., Scott L. Taliaferro, Edward C. Taylor, Frederick M. Thayer, Jr., William H. Thorn, Carl G. Torrey, Jonathan S. Tracy, Edward B. Twombly, Jr., Hans W. Wanders, Blakely Wilson, Charles C. Wolferth. 69 St. Elmo Club FOUNDED 1389 M' 163' f z-' g 4, H+' fm :-f nam. if Q 3 .1 . L is q:,' 'Va iw .3 William O. Alden, Jr., .Corey M. Allen, Thomas S. Armour, Charles G. Arnold, Bromwell Ault, J. Burchenal Ault, Roger W. Barksdale, Robert H. Bartlett, Malcolm B. Barton, Barton B. Bassett, Il, Dudley F. Blanchard, Ericsson B. Broadbent, Ralph G. Bulkley, Jr., Richard D. Castle, Wilmot V. Castle, Jr., Charles G. Collingwood, Jr., Neil W. Currie, James C. Dangler, John N. Day, Robert B. Deans, Jr., John H. Deitze, Angus Deming, Richard N. De Niord, John F. Donahue, John R. Evans, Walter G. Farr, Dwight F. Faulkner, Ill, Achille F. Ford, George E. Freeman, Wil- liam A. Galbraith, Jr., William J. Gardner, Richard C. Garretson. William D. Greene, Charles N. Gregory, Jr., David C. Grimes, Francis M. Hall, Spotswood B. Hall, Jr., James D. Harrison, Jr., William D. Harvey, James G. Hell- muth, Thomas S. Hemenway, William Hendrickson, HI, John M. Henske, William H. lmer, Robert A. Jackson, Herbert W. Jarvis, Jr., Richard E. Jenkins, Paul Keat ing, Douglas H. Kerr, James B. Ketcham, Edward A. Kilroy, Jr., William S. Kilroy, William J. Kirst, George E. Klingelhofer, Emery E. Larson, Jr., Alfred J. Luessenhop Malcolm R. MacCurdy, Robert S. Mars, Jr., Henry J. Marshall, Spencer F. Martin Jr., Clifford H. McCall, Jr., John S. McCormick, Jr., Arthur W. Miller, Charles C Miller, Kenneth Millhiser, John Morley. 9 Stephen C. Morris, Edgar M. Nash, Jr., Peter H. Newcomb, lvan Obolensky, Clarke K. Oler, William H. Oler, H, Frederick C. Painton, Jr., David C. Peet, Robert L. Pike, Frederick R. Postlethwaite, Jacob T. Reams, John F. Riddell, IH, Philip L. Rountree, Murray Rushmore, Jr., Charles P. Sagar, Richard F. Sandwick, Lawton G. Sargent, Jr., Samuel K. Scovil, Barton P. Smith, Carter Smith, Roger M. Smith, Jr. W. Pierce Smith, Franklin F. Starks, Jr., Philetus H. Stetler, Donald G. Thomp- son, Joseph H. Torras, John D. Van Norden, John L. Way, ll, Charles B. Webb, Jr. Charles K. White, Erskine N. White, Jr., Henry M. Williams, Robert A. Ziesing, Richard C. Zollner. 71 Zeta Psi FOUNDED 1883 ww: .-U. t ' E 'xl 1 'E 2? Y i 7'i'D6.i.i.5i ,Q fm 0 f f4? W 3? - Q f r w N N Y Richard S. Aldrich, Carlton M. Badger, Robert Baldwin, Jr., John C. Bierwirth, Clarence M. Bishop, Jr., Hiram D. Black, William A. Boyd, Alfred Brittain, Ill, Seth N. Brockway, John Brooks, Jr., Oliver Brooks, John S. Buflinton, Edward R. Bulkeley, John O. Carroll, Donald W. Celotto, Harvey Childs, Jr., J. Mabon Childs, Holland B. Clark, Bayard D. Clarkson, Kent S. Clow, Jr., William W. Collin, HI, Milton Colvin, William J. Connelly, Jr., Henry L. Connors, Thomas Connors, Peter V. B. Crandall, Frederick G. Crane, Jr., John K. Culman, Robert L. Day, Peter S. De Camp, Stuart P. Dodge, Jr., Lewis W. Douglas, Jr., Kingman Douglass, Jr., John R. Doyle, John E. Durand, Henry M. Elliot, Jr., Henry R. C. Elser, John W. Finney, Dean D. Fitzgerald, Robert H. Flato. John .C. Geupel, William T. Glidden, William S. Goedecke, Charles P. G1 iflith Lind say C. Hamilton, John Hand, Lindsay D. Hanna, Edward W. Hellier Jr Richard B. Hemingway, Richard C. Henriques, Frederick T. Holliday, Jr., John B Hollister Jr., William Hughes, Gregory H. lllanes, Gilder D. Jackson, HI, Horace S Kenney Jr., George W. Kittle, Robert P. Knight, Mark Lewis, Seabourn S. Livingstone Ed ward C. Lord, ll, Charles S. McCain, Jr., W. Ross McCain, Jr., John C Mcllwalne Oliver McKee, III, Vincent L. McKernin, Alexander K. McLanahan, John W McLean Malcolm McLean, Michael L. Mandeville, Arthur K. Moher, James l. Moore David Moxley, John D. Murchison, Alexander Murray, Ill, Frank T. Murray Wilson Nolen, Thomas E. Noyes. Philip O'Brien, Jr., Douglas C. Orbison, Jr., Mason Phelps, Warren B. Pond, Jr., Lawrence C. Puchta, Frank W. Quinn, Richard R. Read, John F. Reynolds, IH, Gordon H. Ritz, John G. Rohrbach, Blair Schiller, John HL Scott-Paine, James D. Sherwood, George H. Singer, HI, G. Edward Sinkinson, Gordon P. Small, Richard C. Smith, Jr., Russell C. Stoneham, William W. Sturges, Philip H. Suter, Jr., David S. Taylor, Moses Taylor, James C. Tormey, Jr., Herbert T. Van Ingen, Jr., Dirk V. R. Vreeland, George C. Wagner, IH, Peter C. Walker, William C. Wallace, How- ard S. Weaver, Peter C. Welch, Richard L. Welch, Winthrop R. Wickwire, Ernest A. Wiehl, Jr., Robert G. Wilcox, Henry C. Williams, Donald M. Wilson. 73 CULLEGES VL W BERKELEY COLLEGE MASTER SAMUEL B. HEMINCWAY FELLOWS N. l. Adams, Jr., E. G. Begle, H. G. Cassidy, C. D. Cooksey, S. MCK. Crosby, T. S. Danowski, N. H. Giles, Jr., S. Kent, K. S. Latourette, T. C. Mendenhall, R. G. Pruden, R. L. Purdy, L. G. Reynolds, C. F. Schreiber, J. Sperling, H. F. Williamson, A. M. Witherspoon, W. J. Wohlenberg. ASSOCIATE FELLOWS M. Aubert, F. W. Bronson, T. H. Chappell, C. Day, C. M. Destler, E. J. Dimock, A. G. Feuillerat, B. M. Gill, W. E. S. Griswold, L. L. Hemingway, J. R. Hersey, P. Mellon, C. Nagle, Jr., G. W. Pepper, D. Phillips, O. F. Rogers, Sir G. B. Sansom, J. T. Sheppard, D. S. Smith, T. W. Swan, C. R. Walker, J. K. Whittemore, G. E. Woodbine. BERKELEY COLLEGE is named for Bishop George Berkeley of Cloyne, Ireland, one of Yaleis first benefactors. In 1732 he conveyed his farm to the College to establish graduate scholarships, and a valuable collection of books for the College Library. CERTAINLY our age is retrospective, and there is nothing more delightful or more melancholy than looking back up- on happy days. If left to his own devices, the average student will remember only hour tests and similar abuses of the col- lege system. Again, an equal number will remember the Fall Term only as a murky succession of cocktail parties, interrupted here and there by a football game. These reminiscences will try to create a state of equilibrium in this matter and present a faithful, if brief, picture of Berkeley Col- lege returning to normal, after having been in the Army along with its many sons. Or- derly room signs and khaki have long since disappeared, and only a few battered trench- coats and the ubiquitous tin trays in the din- ing hall served to remind us that we were not always peaceful students in an academic world. Berkeleyls thirteenth year is faced with many more problems than before. For example, we had 292 residents instead of the normal 178, which we all found made things a little compact. But most of these difficulties have been met cheerfully and efficiently. Certainly this has been as much a result of Mr. Hemingway's able direction as of the willingness of Ber- keley men, both old and new. None of these hardened souls would admit openly that Berkeley had cast its spell over them, but 77 c:HdCli6f,, tickles the ivories you can be certain they will look back up- on their years under the Bishopls mitre with just a touch of nostalgia. Looking back over the year, it seems a little difficult to know just where to begin our tour of retrospection. Perhaps it would be well to begin with what the Psychology department delights in calling Hgroup activ- itiesf' Under this category would naturally fall the many cocktail parties, which ran from the more urbane to the more intense tthe famed Martini Meet of 6341-J. The more normal college activities started near Thanksgiving with a Berkeley Beer Party, whose treasured momento is a picture of Mr. Hemingway surrounded by several men happily absorbing nut-brown ale-Messrs. Platt, Williams, Quarles, and Hanson. The most momentous Berkeley festivity was, of course, the Christmas party, following an excellent dinner, which included everything but the Yule Log. Entertainment was fur- nished by a group of strolling players, among whom were Ted Thayer, Lucius Big- elow, and Chuck Stacy, valuable assets the night before at the traditional Beer and Hymns party at the Master's house. This certainly put us all in the holiday spirit and made us feel quite certain that Ber- keley had something-perhaps we felt it was ourselves. Among these group activities were the sherry parties and dinners given by the Fellows, and many of us had the op- portunity of meeting the three new Fellows, Messrs. Chandler, Giles, and Penniman, and renewing our acquaintance with Mr. Sperling of the classics department, who returned during the Fall from military ser- vice in Greece. Mr. Vlfitherspoon gave in- formal talks in his rooms for those inter- ested in the history of Bible study, and Mr. Schreiber's weekly German table gave the dining hall a continental atmosphere. Many of us have gotten to know Bon Crossland, Rolzrilf through Trumbull from King's College, Cambridge, and were very pleased to see that these cordial ex- changes have been renewed, though we were slightly overawed at meeting a classical philologist land Hittite, at thatl. On ,lan- uary tenth Mr. Bruce Simonds gave a piano recital in memory of two Berkeley men of the class of 1943, Kent Arnold and Harry Evans, who were killed in the Pacific. It was splendid to see the large attendance and 78 realize that there were those who would not forget. As usual, extra-curricular activities played a large and enjoyable part in under- graduate life, and there were so many of our men in different activities around the campus that it is impossible not to forget someone. So just a few candid glimpses and random selections: After the first hilarious issue of the Record we were indeed proud of Bob Hardwick, the Owl chairman, and his able room- mate-editor, Harry Berger. Bob Royle helped count the ever-increasing piles of gold and Bob Baldridge was perhaps wor- ried at the extra expense when he saw his boss at a lVlory7s dinner with those witty sophisticates and bon-vivants, Ogden Nash and S. J. Perelman. ln further proof of Berkeleyis executive talents, we found that Phil O'Brien topped the News masthead, aided by such talented correspondents as Childs, Brooks, Twichell, Raschbaum, Pear- '6To Each His Own sall, and lVlattern. As you are turning the pages of the Ban- ner you might be interested to know that during the Fall Bob Knight, Bill Betteridge, and Olly Brooks were some of the multi- tude busy from noon until early morning preparing this worthy publication for grad- uation time. lVlany of the honeyed voices you heard over station WYBC belonged to 79 Berkeley men, Chuck Stacy facing the mi- crophone on many a different night. Many of us followed the melodious Whiffenpoofs around Fraternity Bow and recognized with delight Phil Toohey of the North court and Woll Ely of the South, showing that there are no divided factions in the twin halves of our fair college. ln fact Ely comes from a very musical section of the college: his room - mates are all Glee Club men- Quarles, Livingstone and Biglow. ln fact, Tom Quarles is the new president and Big- low is his assistant manager. Our other rep- resentatives to Marshall Bartholomew would fill several blue-books. Most of us will remember with some pain the Herculean efforts of Blaise Delaney- the Yale Budget Drive captain for Berkeley -and his able lieutenants, who amassed a gratifying total, though not without using some Humphrey Bogart techniques. By the way, Captain Delaney seemed to have been the only Berkeley skating enthusiast, for he was seen doing a figure eight in the court one day on lots of grass and little ice. This naturally seems to lead to the broader field of university athletics: Elwell, Conway, Court Sport! Sunday sitters Pivcevich, and Singer played varsity foot- ball during the Fall and made our smiles even broader on a certain distant day in Boston. Pete Moffitt was a familiar sight at the arena performing his duties as assistant hockey manager. ,lack Finley managed the squash team from a luxurious panelled of- fice in the AA and beamed with approval at the efforts of racquet-men Russ Morrill and Carl Badger. In fact Berkeley men in University athletics could not be crowded onto the playing fields of Eton at one time. ln intellectual matters Berkeley added two more men to the list of Phi Beta Kappa and the footlights of the Yale Dramat re- mained a constant fascination. The mem- bers of Dramat are too numerous to men- tion, and anyway theatrical folk are notoriously averse to publicity. Berkeley plans to outdo these professional folk with a Spring term production of The Taming of the Shrew, which is being put into pro- duction as this manuscript reaches the cen- sors. These certainly have been random jot- tings and may seem to have been washed ashore in a bottle-and a small bottle at that. But perhaps they momentarily touch off memories of a Fall term, which seemed much like old times. Mrs. Hemingwayls tea parties were as charming as ever, though there is some indication that the consump- tion of small and tasty tea-cakes reached an all-time record. For our mistakes we had only ourselves to blame and for our good fortune we had to thank among many others Mrs. Hutchins, the lVIaster's Secretary, and Cocktails for two- fhlblldfgfl lj Ross Hanson and John Sullivan, the chief aides, who solved many of the minor prob- lems of both ex-majors and ex-privates. SAM BURCHELL ATHLETICS Facing Silliman in the initial football contest, Berkeley unleashed a first quarter Morehouse to co-captain Rohrer combina- tion that garnered the first six points ground out before the first half ended. A 20-yard pass from Logue to Rohrer set up a second touchdown, this time on a pass from Logue to Ted Thayer, which proved to be the final score of the game as Berkeley emerged a 14-0 winner. The following tussle with Trumbull was an exciting, give-and-take heart-breaker as the extra point pass at- tempt was broken up and Berkeley bowed, 7-6. Despite the conservative 6-0 score, the lVlitres outclassed T.D. in a game which featured several enviable goal-line stands by the Prexies. ln the last game of the sea- son Berkeley held the earth-shaking power of Calhoun, Yale and Harvard champions, to a scoreless tie in a game dominated by defensive tactics and Bud Rohrerls kicking. In a post-season game with Dunster House, the Mitres outplayed their opponents but fumbles and mud forced a 0-0 tie. Rallying late in the season, Berkeley soc- cermen recorded five wins, three losses, and a tie to vie with Silliman for third place honors in the league. Griffin was the play- maker and center forward, and the team received its spark time and time again from Vernon, Bettridge, and Green. The touch team, captained by Frank Logue, occupied seventh place in the league standings. With a nucleus of Logue, Beach, Doherty, Hodgemann, Kittredge, and Mc- Clure the team suffered from an inability to stop the opponents' last quarter spurts. . . . and malt for Mitres 81 BRANFORD COLLEGE 1 x 'iff SN-'gf x Q Q N vii X I4 7 QE 1 wid! Qx wi Q if xx Q 110 A ,, f N .ff :Jac S-7 ' XX: If NQ I 9 my, ' x si SV ,sig .5 a -gl f x, ,.- j tg Qsgff XS- I. Su! Eg x .-f, Q' Qt' I 2: Q if mmf E -r-1.!!:JSli12L5I1!!IJ2I:L--,,,.- N 1, . , I h ,...,. 1254252152:-,, X. . ' . - . : : ? '-Lf 5 i....f..5 E 4 : S 7 - 1 1: .. ,.,,.,,...,g Emi' . 31 s , , ' .. - 'f.1u.E w. sl? P s -5 S . Aa H--.J.,.: : 1 : -. ., ,,,, 1 ,,,, 4, 'is E 7 5 de? x5x Emi. 5 .-:iw MASTER NORMAN S. BUCK FELLOWS S. D. Bacon, W. A. Borst, K. N. Douglas, C. L. Hendrickson, E. B. Kelsey, T. C. Manning, C. V. L. Meeks, C. W. Mendell, W. C. Moulton, C. H. Nettleton, O. Ore, Capt. P. E. Pendle- ton, U.S.N., H. L. Seward, J. R. Wittenborn, L. L. Woodruff. ASSOCIATE FELLOWS Rear Admiral W. D. Baker, U.S.N., E. F. Blair, E. C. Buckland, C. A. Buttrick, M. Farmer, Ar. E. Foster, H. Hadley, J. L. Hall, C. C. Hincks, C. L. Hull, D. R. Lyman, A. N. Morris, H. H. Odell, J. R. Paul, M. l. Bostovtzeff, E. F. Savage, W. A. Sturges, T. D. Thacher, C. I. Tilden, G. D. Vaill, W. F. Verdi. BRANFORD COLLEGE takes its name from the town where ten Connecticut Con- gregational ministers met in 1701 and founded the Collegiate School which became Yale. It comprises the buildings in the southern half of the Memorial Quadrangle. SHORN of her Navy blues in the Spring, and resuscitated during the Summer, Branford opened her gates to the mass of new and familiar faces which gave authen- ticity to her regained civilian status. Re- cently discharged vets comprised most of Branford's swollen population and they found insistent memories in the form of double-decker cots, steel trays, chow-lines, and those inscrutable Marine T-shirts hang- ing from casement windows. Adjustment came quickly, none the less, and despite the predilection for calling the floor a deck, or the shower a head, rehabili- tation seemed triumphant. The big court- yard which had seen so many traditional Yale ceremonies was being revitalized after the pounding feet of blue-jackets had re- moved the last blade of grass. And before one hardly had time to sign a meal contract, buy a pencil, or find out who those fellows across the hall were, classes had begun and the promising football season was descend- ing. Branfordas perspicacious Council had long foreseen the difficulties of housing dates on the big gridiron weekends, con- sequently, these industrious gentlemen can- vassed the inhabitants of Branford's hallowed Brother's-In-Unity courtyard and found the majority willing to vacate over- night so that the lassies might repose. On S3 October twelfth, the Saturday of the rainy, unfortunate Columbia game, history was made by Branford College. Delegates from Smith, Vassar and Harry Conover signed in at Mrs. Wright,s temporary hotel desk and the place began to look co-ed by lunch time. The gendarrnes patrolled in the vicinity and it became known that Brothers-In-Unity was strictly Moff limitsw for twenty-four hours. That night the staid banquet room was transformed into the scene of terp- sichorean festivities that chased the last clinging echoes of a military atmosphere out of the corner. Thus Branford became the first residential college to offer visiting ladies an on-campus boudoir fsuch as it wasj, and the first college to hold a family dance. The indomitable Bucks, Dean and Mrs. Norman S., were on hand to receive, and recall names and faces with the usual astounding facility of pre-war days. Of course the football season brought the thud of pigskin in Linonia Court: Curley Ford, Gil Collingwood, and company re- enacted the great moments in Yale Bowl history with Larry Day and Smokey Knowl ton helping to run the plays Sunday after noons usually found the disciples of the piano clustered around a temporary key- board artist, or occasionally, a young Gershwin entrancing the tired couples re- cuperating from Saturday night celebra- tions or sorrows, whichever the case. The ever-youthful Chris was always there with the meal checks, a smile, and a compliment for the lady guests at any rate, and Emily could spot Houdini seeking extra butter. The eternal bells of Harkness Memorial Tower fwhich weigh more than twenty-five tons, the guide will tell youj tolled on and managed to dislodge from their beds the men who roomed too close, but Branford wouldn't quite be herself without them. During the week that hour tests were most profuse one young man was heard instruct- ing the bells to desist, but even his loud, disconsolate pleas were of no avail. lnclement weather would send Branford inmates into the labyrinth of cellar passage- ways that might lead them to the dining hall if they followed the compass. How many untried newcomers have wandered aimless- ly through Branford,s subterranean paths will never be known but lt has been said that one fellow descended for a game of squash on a Tuesday afternoon and turned My Cod! Company! Wifs end Mara.uder's return ,,., . . ...... ., ..., .. , . .W i , -1 ,.,. .. -ff'-Wi-ff' sv - -,.,....,:.,...- . if - up, hungry and unkempt, at court number one the following Thursday morning. A busy spot was the game room where Fogarty and Edens fought many a valiant contest with the elusive ping-pong hall, while Swede Larson demonstrated how Wil- lie Hoppe would use a pool table even if the cue had no tip. Hal Goucher dropped in intermittently to push the eight ball around when he could see beyond the band- aid he invariably carried across his nose from an intra-mural football game. Over in 823 Roger Bachman directed the activities of those stalwart mountain goats, the Yale Outing Club. The esoteric Blue Shirts, hierarchy of the outdoor men, met periodically for hot buttered rum in the quarters of Charlie Adams and Art lVlc- Gowan. Here they planned their ski trips, and what have you, incanting muffled oaths to the almighty muscle. lt is believed that at midnight, before the first winter snow, the Blue Shirts, encouraged by Bachman and Mike Weir, scaled Harkness Tower with full pack, trekked across the roof, and dropped silently into unsuspecting Say- brook. Branford's own Press revived the Tower Bulletin under the direction of J im Bertino, Paul Martin and A1 Wilcox. The Press pro- duces, to quote, Hbesides the Bulletin, a col- lege directory, notices, and stationery for the lVlaster,s Oflice, menus for special din- ners, miscellaneous things and stuff, and a considerable amount of noise. lVluch of the Press's acidulous releases are penned by George Vaill, a well-known red-headed fel- low. Of course the college spirit wasn't dying of malnutrition, nor was the ribald sense of humor going without succor. A commentary on modern Machiavellianism was the post- ' 85 Wal, fry mah hide! ing of 'alfnlisted lVlen,' and MOi'licers7' signs in the bathroom used by ex-Naval officers Dick Horchner and Van Katherman, for ex- deck swabber Ned Dunham. Dunham, who always maintained that l-lorchner and Kath- erman would never have been gentlemen were it not for an Act of Congress, survived such persecution and lives to tell the tale. John mllhe Teeth Dietze and that ever - patient Charlie Arnold launched expeditionary trips into the Branford moat that deserve consideration by the Explorerls Club. As for Bob Weeks' rusted Ford convertible, vin- tage '35, there Was noth- ing to do but Wait until a sneeze, or a few foot- steps, precipitated its crumbling into the dust from which it came. George Holmes and the now legendary Har- Rayis room old Mott Wilcox managed now and then to appear from behind their Daily News type- writers, and Tom Castle was seen coming down from his tower one day-for food, it was presumed. Of course the indefa- tiguable George Gill and his better half, Bob Brutcher, maintained madness and mirth everywhere from the lounge to the basketball court, Where uC0ach7, Cahill, the athletic secretary, exhorted the lads in be- half of victory. No one guessed how well sad-eyed Les Becker could sing when he got behind a beer, or how much little John Brooks was going to do for that Junior Prom Commit- tee, but it all came out in the l947 wash. ,lim Wilsoiils camera Was there to record some of it in these pages but capturing Tollls Boston accent, or the chlorine in Charlie Stradella's eyes after live hundred laps in Mr. Kiphuthis bathtub, Wasn't an easy thing to do. For each man there will be recollec- tions of names, and faces, of laughter and conversation, that he may hold in common with others, or find peculiar to himself. Indeed whatever landmarks and legerde- main may appear in the coming years, this one was big enough, crowded enough, and ripe enough for Branford men to remember with at least one dry Yale chuckle. Though the Branford family assumed unusually large proportions, Dean and Mrs. Buck were always at home on Sunday afternoons and at one time or another Branford men re- ceived invitations for beer, or dinner at the lVfaster,s home. lVfr. Buck, besides having one of the handsomest collections of bow ties in the University, also had an excellent collection of remedies for the myriad diffi- culties a student might find himself ing and lVlrs. Buck's scrapbook was tangible evi- dence of how fondly Branford men could look back on the pursuit of the sheepskin. STAN FLINK ATHLETICS Lacking any holdovers from last year, Branford had to build completely new teams for the Fall in football, soccer, and touch football. Coached by Fritz Waterman, former .l V quarterback, and Vance Kather- man, the football team took shape with a dependable line composed of Leo Nagle, Bud Wenk, Bill Leeley, Hal Goucher, Char- lie Cooney, Bill Weukert, Bob lVlcKeaz, and Captain ,lack Walbridge. In the back- field John O,Brien, Gil Collingwood, Mur- ray Falk, Dave Nelson, Anson Gardner, and Ham Goff alternated to harass the opposi- tion. Lacking was a breakaway runner and an experienced passer to combine with the shattering line plunging of big I ack O,Brien, the backfreld standout. Captain- elect Coucher was a veritable rock in back- ing up the line until sidelined at mid-season by an injury. Soccer Captain Art McGowan, a bulwark tT0pj Five Jacks and a fill fB0ttomJ Gothic gameroom of the team, helped transform an inexperi- enced group into a spirited ball club which accomplished an upset of the strong Trum- bull aggregation in the latter's only defeat of the year. Besponsible for this success were Johnny Beddin, Mike Pinto, Bill Sid- ley, Al Williams, Leo Nagle, Phelps Kel- ley, A1 Husted, Bob Weeks, and Ed Cahill. The touch football team was dogged by hard luck as it dropped several games in overtime periods. McGovern, Stanton, and Parker sparked the team. 87 CALHOUN COLLEGE '1+'-i' 'Y' MASTER REV. JOHN CHARLES SCHROEDER FELLOVVS R. J. Anderson, B. Blanshard, W. K. Cornell, M. R. Davie, N. Dunford, F. R. Fairchild, G. S. Haight, D. P. K. T. Healy, R. T. Hill, R. F. Humphreys, H. lngholt, P. G. Laurson, G. Nordmeyer, S. W. Reed, R. S. Rose, F.. T. Silk, A. T. Waterman, S. T. Williams. ASSOCIATE Harding, FELLOWS G. T. Adee, L. Bacon, A. F. Brooks, P. H. Buck, P. S. Bush, S. H, Clement, J. D. Dana, F. D. Grave, J. C. Greenway, Col. W. F. Howe, R. A. Kimball, W. S. Lewis, C. N. H. Long, F. A. lVlcMullan, D. S. Moore, D. W. Orr, C. P. Rollins, R. D. Root, F.. C. Streeter, J. R. Swan, V. Webb, A. Whitridge. CALHOUN COLLEGE is named to honor the statesman, John Caldwell Calhoun, 1804. For many years he represented the State of South Carolina in the House and Senate. He was Secretary of War, then Vice-President, and finally Secretary of State. THE college guard nodded a recognizing welcome when I walked into the Cal- houn archway. Dropping in the Masteris office, I found Masters draped on a chair, polishing his boots and singing one of the many songs about Tulsa. He was the fear- less man who recaptured Burch Aultls mon- key after Broadbent opened the cage a lit- tle too far. Broadbent and the monkey were chattering at each other from opposite ends of the room and, after a few dramatic mo- ments, the Oklahornan had the monkey caged. alt was nothing but brains over brawn,', he later told Mooney and Shapiro at a News interview. l walked over to the Schroedersi for tea and joined a group of politely hungry Sen- ators. Pundit Jerry Rich was telling about the Calhoun Players, spring production of Much Ado that had been staged with Shakes- pearean informality in the Dining Hall. He praised the convincing acting of Bill Todd and Gil Jones and their seductive heroines, Frank Wood and Rudolf Benfey, and Doc Bonnie's inimitable rendition of Ml-ley Nonny Nonnyfl The conversation turned to the parties last spring. After the prom there were a couple of beer parties in the Calhoun court, complete with music and schmaltzy barbershop singing. The big picnic that had been planned out at Pro- fessor Haightis place had to be held in the 89 l The court was empty, barren, bare, ,Til came the Wellesley maidens fair, Now we wish we all were there! INTERCOLLEGE FOOTBALL CHAMPS Back Row: Postle- thwaite CCoachJ , Hart fC.oachX, Barton, Minnerly, DuHamel, Torrey, Zelle, Griflin, Grout fCoachJ, W. Brown CCoachJ. Second Row: Heath, Stroock, Stone, War- ren, Conners fCap- tainl, lVlacNichol, Moseley, Conyngham, Phillips. Front Row: Eldridge, Walters, Wallach, R. Brown, Hendrickson, Lindblad. dining hall because of rain. Lots of beer and Tony Lavelli on the accordion helped to ease the deficiency. After a plate of cakes had momentarily interrupted the conversation Russ Cecil and Bob Williams started talking about the new Dramat production, and Ray Young and Andy Sans Souci argued about the possi- bilities of an organized bridge team. l asked Don Medlock what the College Council had done besides collecting money for beer par- ties. The showing of movies of the Yale Football Team, the poll and organization of the use of Entry NEW for girls on the Princeton week-end, the Christmas Party, and other functions were included in the impressive list. Under the capable hands of the Chief Aide, Broadbent of Wheels, Inc., l gathered that nothing ever went wrong for long. The secret behind the victorious foot- ball team was the cheerleading of Broad- bent and Bob Jackson, and Charlie Sagaris telephone eliiciency as manager. The tea was becoming very crowded and, judging by the change of faces, almost all of Calhoun's 281 residents must have dropped in. A visiting ,l.E. man made the 90 3 mistake of deriding the intellectual side of Calhoun and was snowed with honors won by Senators. Brian Owens was the top man in the Class of 194118, Ralph Caulkins was elected to Tau Beta Phi, Shapiro won the debating prize, Harvey Ginsberg won the Henry Fellowship, George Alexander and Dick Schwartz were Phi Beta Kappa, and Bill Todd won several scholarships. Phil Parkes' pen friend, Aloysius lVlcSnapp, de- serves a prize for getting into every situa- tion possible for a Yale man. Anne Schroeder appeared with a plate of cookies and complimented Rick Pratt on his excellent job of radio announcing for the basketball games. Dean Worcester, father and president of The Miniature Tree Growers' Association, started to tell about a proposal for a miniature dog breeders as- sociation, but was tactfully interrupted by Bush Olmsted who proudly announced that he had a bumper crop of baby guppies. Brooke Brown related the midnight reen- actment of the Dartmouth football game on the fourth floor of Entry UG. That was the time that Ketcham had just completed a field goal with a bottle-filled ash can when Mr. Schroeder had to call the game for un- necessary roughness. That same week-end Guth Gonyngham mixed innocent sea breezes Eternal triangle? 91 fest gestures for the party in 482 and had the whole entry awash by six bells. Charlie Cooper went Pierson by having a white-coated bar- tender, but all the parties had one thing in common, enthusiastic spirit. The crowd at the tea was almost gone by the time Young Duhamel finished the story of how Hank Conners had a mouse hung on him by an ex-Carlson Raider in the wilds of Vermont, and so we thanked the Schroeders and went to supper. There was much about the College that was left unsaid at the tea, but before going further, l want to speak about the Schroe- ders, who are Calhoun College. A newcomer to Calhoun would be immediately aware of the personal interest the Master has for all the Senators, and at the informal get-to- gether for new men, he would get a taste of the genial hospitality and the genuine warmth that is a part of the Schroeders. At all the College functions and athletic events, they are most enthusiastic followers. The parties at the lVlaster's house are numerous, but in particular we must mention the meet- ing of the 4'SiXties, evening get-togethers to which about sixty Senators are invited. Fellows of the College, Dr. Wilmarth Lewis, for example, give informal talks and after- wards, lVlrs. Schroeder treats the guests to refreshments. For Calhoun,s annual Christmas party the dining hall was filled with Yule decora- tions, lVliss Holcombe and her Staff served a grand dinner, there was the traditional Boar's Head Ceremony, and the Calhoun Glee Club sang carols. After dinner, lVlr. Schroeder spoke and introduced Santa Claus flsud Ashleyj. Santa had spent the after- noon getting full of Christmas spirits and was in fine shape. Among the gifts from Santa's bag were a road map to Smith for Burch Ault and Wen Anderson, a picture of Ingrid Bergman for Professor lngholt, and a baby carriage for Tom and Barb Moseley. After Santa's departure, lVlr. Schroeder presented the Permanent Foot- ball Trophy to Hank Connors, captain of the victorious Calhoun football team. The final touch of Yule spirit came at two a.m. when a happy group of Senators serenaded the court with Christmas carols, character- Calhoun cuties 92 istic of Calhoun which through all the months of the year sends its members to bed with a song. HUGH DANGLER ATHLETICS The HounersH' pride and joy was a rough-and-ready group of gridironers that steamrollered through an undefeated season in the intercollege loop and journeyed to Cambridge to defeat Harvardis champions. In their first game the Senators hammered down a stubborn Silliman squad and wrapped it up when wingback Tom Stroock scampered across for the winning six points. Constantly an offensive threat, Dave Phil- lips spun and threaded his way through a gallant Trumbull team to cop No. 2 for the team. A completed pass from Bill Heath to Captain Hank Connors in the last period and the swamping of a lone T.D. man be- hind his own goal in the first quarter en- titled the Houners to an 8-0 victory over the Prexies. A tooth and nail struggle with the Berkeley eleven culminated in a tie, and South League Champion Pierson was downed 13-6 when Frank Ketcham bull- dozed his way into scoring territory from the seven yard stripe and Buzz Torey alert- ly snagged a Pierson pass and galloped forty yards to another tally. ln a Harvard game played in a sea of mud, a fighting Calhoun team gained the eight yard line of undefeated Kirkland House through a long drive sparked by Philipsls and wingback John Walters's flashy running, and the Blue forward wall, led by Guthrie Conyngham, Tom Moseley, Henry Wlarren, Captain Hank Connors, and John Grout outcharged a heavier Crimson line, hauled down a luck- less opponent in his own end zone, and won 2-0. The line-backing of Ketoham and Cen- ter Rolly lVIacNichol was a potent factor in Three punks in a fog the victory, while credit goes to coaches Walt Brown, John Grout, and Walt Hart. The soccer team, led by Captain Hort Rorick, played stubborn ball throughout. Dave Walker, Karl Treffinger, George Reid, and Rorick constantly held the opponents to low scores. The touch football team, called the HSlippery Six, was composed of Cap- tain Larry Schroeder, Chris Hoff, Bill Whiting, Charles Bruno, Murray Egan, Earl Ingmanson, and Bob Smith. Ma, heis makin, e es at me! 5' 3' 93 DAVENPORT COLLEGE MASTER DANIEL MERRIMAN FELLOWS P. E. Corbett, P. B. Cowles, F. S. Dunn, H. T. Engstrom, A. S. Foord, H. Kokeritz, L. W. Labaree, S. Lovett, M. Mack, C. H. Mathewson, M. F. Millikan, G. M. Murphy, G. W. Pierson, F. A. Pottle, T. Sizer, E. F. Thompson, L. E. York. i ASSOCIATE FELLOWS D. G. Acheson, M. P. Aldrich, J. T. Babb, L. Bull, S. W. Childs, N. V. Donaldson, C. P. Fields, E. B. Greene, W. B. Cumbart, C. L. Kirk, A. lVlacLeish, M. P. Noyes, A. E. Parr, H. Shulman, B. Simonds, M. R. Thorpe, C. B. Tinker, J. Viner, F. H. Wiggin, T. Wilder. DAVENPORT COLLEGE commemorates the Reverend John Davenport, one of the founders of New Haven Colony in 1638 and a constant advocate of the establishment of a college in the Colony. IF ALL Davenport men were to express their thoughts about their college and its new Master they would most certainly say that it is still the same great college of past years. Mr. Merriman has not only upheld the traditions and policies set down by the late Mr. Tuttle, but in addition he has given us the warmth of his own person- ality. At weekly beer parties as well as in the ofhce, men of Davenport came to know the man who is carrying on the tradition of King Tut in his own manner. lt has now be- come a familiar sight to see Mr. Merriman and his black poodle, Jais, walking through the paths of this college. The year had not far progressed before it became evident that Mr. Merriman belonged to Davenport and it to him. He reestablished old customs, and he kept intact the old freedom of per- mitting games on the grassy courts. Return- ing from the crudeness of war, Davenport men feel that this college is still their fa- miliar home. Again social events took prominence in Davenportls affairs. The football weekend parties and the Christmas Ball brought hun- dreds of girls through the gates past the watchful eyes of George, Joe, and Jim at the Porter's Office. Some of these females managed to snag a few less wary Hybrids on matrimonial promises resulting in not a few engagement parties, but most Daven- 95 porters kept free from such entanglements and enjoyed their weekends at lVfory's or the fraternity bars in freedom. The most profitable bar-tending of the season was ac- complished by Danny Davison and ,lim Heald who picked up a piece of jewelry outside a New York night club. It was two months before they realized that the bauble, valued at S2,000, did not come from the Co-op but from some little shop in New York called Cartier's. The football season was marked by a pre-war gaiety and a post-war intensity. At lzzeverybody happy? the football games was heard the cry, NPut in the lVloose,,7 as faithful Hybrids urged Howie to put Fred MlVloose Whit1'idge in- to the game. Ben Hammer was also prom- inent on the field, and Davenport was hon- ored to have Cotty Davison chosen next year's captain. ln the lower court there were some parties which at least tied all previous records, and up on the terrace there was an entry to whose four story punch parties flocked hundreds of Elis and their guests. Stu Dodge and Ronny Proctor did their share to help put what they con- sidered the right spirit into all parties, both up on the terrace and elsewhere. There were hundreds who were eager to get back to college life as they had remembered it be- fore the war, and they were all intent to give the biggest parties possible in a Dav- enport room. Under Mr. lVlerriman's guiding hand a committee of five organized a Davenport social event which was so successful that everyone hoped that it might continue as a tradition for many years to come: the Christmas Ball, coming on the weekend be- fore vacation, was preceded by a candle- light Christmas dinner with port and coffee in the common room following the dinner. Complete season decorations including a Christmas tree added atmosphere to a gra- cious and delightful evening. Linds Hanna concocted the punch for the occasion while Harry Hubbard and Roly Howe did away with it. Another very successful event was the picnic at Mr. Sizer's farm in Bethany where cheeseburgers, pie, and baked beans disappeared with amazing rapidity. But weekend gaietywasbal- lanced by the la- bors of the week- day classes. Never before had Dav- enport seen such y aggressive study- l ing by the great majority of its men. There were many who, dreaming of former easy days, complained of not having seen a movie for a week at a time. Even the old Hgutn courses disappeared, and it required hard work to get a 70 in many classes. The grind out down a few and worried many. Most Davenporters, however, straightened their bow ties, tightened their white laces, 96 and survived innumerable hour tests and the brain-wracking examinations. The end of the first term found a large percentage of Davenport men on the Dean's List. Fran- nie Wilson, veteran class-cutter and con- noisseur of drinking spots from New York to Melbourne, came up with an 85 average, Familiar ring while the drolleries of Pete Brown and his incorrigible roommate Gene Dines eased the tension in exam Week. To relieve the pressure of the classroom Davenport men flocked to the gym and to the squash courts. Athletics on the old inter- college basis again came into eminence as the Tyng Cup went up for competition, for Davenport men, holders of the award since l942, were eager to retain its possession. Chuck Alling led the athletic teams success- fully with the old Davenport custom of no high pressure to make men come out. Bob Rogers opened the library to more men than ever used it in previous years, and Speed Johnson as Chief Aide was ever-present with ideas and suggestion for those who had complaints. Davenport had its share of lettermen in every varsity sport, but there were those more casual athletes who exercised only when the spirit moved them. The very fa- miliar old promise of ul'm going to get into shape this termf, was heard as often as, ul'm really going to make the Dean,s List, and was broken by as large a number of men as used to switch from Sheff to Ac every year. The most noticeable difference between the Davenport of this year as compared to pre-war years is the range of ages and former classes. There are men from as far back as the class of 742 and many who started at Yale before Pearl Harbor. These men helped to bring back Davenportis old spirit which the war period and the Navy Our hearts were young and gay influence had lessened. The dining hall, in spite of metal trays and cafeteria service, began to take on its pre-war appearance. Anne and Frieda were on hand as ever be- fore, Davenport's most devoted servants. One of the greatest achievements of this year has been effected by the intermingling of three distinct groups: that group which had been at Davenport before they went to the services, the veterans coming to Daven- port from freshman year, and the new non- vets from prep school. This college made sure that no distinction was felt between 97 Practice makes perfect these widely separated groups. In every entry or at any dining hall table friends might be seen talking, who by age were sep- arated by as much as eight or ten years, yet here they were pulled together by a com- mon way of life and a unity of friendship. Joining lVlr. lVlerriman and the Fellows, the men of Davenport, new and old, have successfully reset the old standards and tra- ditions which make us respect and feel proud of our college. BILL BLISS ATHLETICS Under the direction of Coach Dick Ggil- vie and backfield Coach Sandy Harvey, a large Davenport football squad took shape, with Austin Wvoodward, Bill lVloore, and Tony Perrin showing promise in the line and Lou Parkinson, Lou Bartlett, and Coach Harvey standing out in the backfield. In the first game Davenport suffered a 14+-0 setback by Saybrook, a result of both unfortunate breaks and first game mistakes. Undaunted, the Hybrids adopted a split T formation for their second game with Branford, and though the Towermen ex- hibited a strong passing offense, Davenport scored early on a long pass from Harvey to Larry Tuttle, the big right end, and again on an off-tackle smash by Harvey in the third period to win 13-6. Over Jonathan Edwards, one of the strongest defensive teams in the League, Davenport was once again triumphant with a 6-O victory. Although the Red Team was hard put to score, it finally put over a touch- down and then successfully protected its lead. Bartlett, Spaulding, and Creulich in the backfield and Torrence and Robinson in the line were mainstays in the rugged Hy- brid defense. In the final league game the Davenport men played their hearts out, only to lose 3-O to a strong Pierson team, which thereby clinched the championship. ln a renewal of the 'fsisterf' house games Pied Pipers with Harvard, Davenport's superior line play, coupled with the explosive running of left halfback Lou Parkinson, proved to be the deciding factor in defeating Winthrop House 6-0. The Harvard team was never in possession of the ball on the Yale half of the field and Davenport won easily, Park- inson scoring on a dash around left end. Haynes, Davison, Whetten, Lippincott, Con- nell, Prince, Olmstead, and Robertshaw all played an outstanding game. After a rather inspiring start Davenport,s soccer team fell the victim of coniiicting class schedules and uncoordinated line play, 98 finishing with three wins, three losses, and three ties. If the team couldn't boast of its record, it could certainly take pride in the performance of outstanding center-half Roy Eusden. Taking Eusdeifs passes and carrying the burden of the attack, Steve Eyre played a consistently good game. Other creditable performers were Captain uBarney Durning, George Isbell, Phil Norten, Bunny Freeman and Bob Smith. Davenport concluded its touch football season Winning three games as opposed to six defeats. Led by co-captains Dave Rus- sell and Skip Ordeman, the team combined a hard running attack and a deceptive aerial game. Chuck Alling took on a good bit of the running chores, While Dick Dunn and Stan Loman handled the passing attack, but inability to keep the same unit together throughout the season handicapped the teamis potential ability. The team included Charlie Marshall, Clark Ross, Russell Her- Springtime rold, Dean Fitzgerald, Gardner Stern, Et- tore Barbatelli, Gordon Farquhar, Benja- min Cadwalader, Wilbert Wise, Richard Baird, and John Aldridge. The Hybrid aggregations, sometimes dis- hearteningly slow in starting, throughout showed a spirit and ability for team play which augurs Well for future seasons, when the not-outstanding record of this year can perhaps be bettered. 99 TIMUTHY DWIGHT COLLEGE MASTER FREDERICK A. GODLEY FELLOWS R. L. Bradley, R. C. Caroll, F. W. Coker, A. G. Conrad, T. W. Copeland, C. H. Driver, A. W. Griswold, A. G. Gul- liver, H. W. Haggard, L. Havemeyer, R. J. H. Kiphuth, B. B. Owen, H. Peyre, J. M. Phillips, D. M. Potter, E. V. Rostow, R. B. Tennant, J. l. Tracey, F. Zweig. ASSOCIATE FELLOWS E. Borchard, J. R. Chamberlain, H. Chubb, E. C. Cole, J. R. Crawford, W. L. Cross, P. L. Goodwin, B. H. Grant, H. S. Graves, D. Keller, G. Kinney, J. L. Loomis, D. P. Miller, O. D. Miller, W. Millis, O. J. Roberts, G. Rogers, H. K. Sherrill, G. Stewart, H. L. Stimson, H. Thoms, L. Thorne, L. G. Tighe, H. R. Wilson. TIMOTHY DWIGHT COLLEGE is named to honor two presidents of Yale- Timothy Dwight, BA. 1769, eighth president f1795-1817j, and his grandson Timothy Dwight, BA. 1849, twelfth president H886-991. TIMOTHY DWIGHT COLLEGE took its first vacation in four years last summer. lt needed the rest, for during the war it had seen nearly two thousand students come and go, getting as much education as pos- sible before leaving for active service. T.D. was the only college, except Jonathan Edwards, which remained open to civilians throughout the war and thus provided many war-time undergraduates with an opportu- nity to enjoy Yale life under almost nor- mal conditions. The college's successful role during the war was in great part due to the Master and Mrs. Godley. They are both to be congratulated on the excellent job of keeping Timothy Dwight in the fore- front of the Yale scene and in making the college such a pleasant home for so many during the hectic war years. Several changes greeted us as in the Fall of 1946 we returned to the hallowed halls of Timothy Dwight. All the rooms were sparkling from their new coats of paint, and the College's increased population necessitated putting four men in each two- man suite and two men in each single room. Familiar faces appeared, many of whom had not been back to the home of the Big Red Machine for several years. Among the returnees were Eck l-ledstrom, Tee Hem- enway, Terry McGovern, and Hugh Mc- Lean, also Dave Moxley, John Finney, 101 Courtyard corner Dave Martin and Bob Wickser, in addition to Jim Ward, Steve Potter, Nat Bundy, J o- Jo White, Bill Coley, l-lawky Harrison, as well as Bob Dorsey, Boot Kerr, Phil Suter, Ned Sherrill and Bill Clark. With the help of the eilicient Aides, stall, headed by Chief Aide Palmer Bevis, the College rolled underway. The Printing Press, manned by Jay Hulbert, continued to issue notices and even some handsome Christmas cards. College Photographers Bill Berger, Wayne Fey, and John Cowles, popped flash bulbs indefatigably at all col- lege functions, and Athletic Aide Ed John- son was consistently on the prowl for mus- cular talent of the Prexies. ln September the year's first beer party was held in the courtyard, to unanimous acclaim. Thursday evening movies of the previous Saturday's football games were 102 regularly shown in the lounge and evoked large and vociferous audiences. As the fall wore on, we became hardened to a heavy schedule of post-game cocktail parties. The rage of the campus were the milk-punch parties of stalwarts Chuck Ross, Dave Harris and Carter Stovall, the rotgut receptions of 1627, presided over by Messrs. Stone, Clark, Mann and Kerr, and the extravaganzas of Club 1601, which on one occasion offered as part of its floor show an unforgettable soft-shoe by Sam Marshall. Also memorable were the re- markable soirees in 1650, home of icono- clasts Finney and McLean and Father Mar- tin. John Waldo proved he was a nature lover of sorts by his nocturnal enjoyment of the shade of the trees in front of his entry. J oe Brown was busy building little collapsible outhouses from which to hawk the Yale Recorcl and luring his friends to women's colleges on week nights. Rolly Nolen, the college philosopher, acquired another shelf of his own in the Main Read- ing Room. Celebrations of concluded News competitions were held in Managing Editor Bill Rappleye's lair with devastating fre- quency. The results each time, however, were little more than a shattered window or two, or the possible demolition of a door, bookcase or desk. The Harvard weekend provoked a mass exodus north: Hawky Harrison, Nick Farr, Bill Clark and Bart Smith showed amazing grit, pluck and determination bv driving to Bob Day's in Newton with Bob Wickser at the wheel of his intrepid Mercury. Almost everybody returned to T.D. without mishap, except Bruce 'clsucky Pierrev Roberts, who was forced to leave his Rolls Royce in the hands of a repair man in Boston for a few days. Roy Walsh, Terry Kennedy and Hank Wallace demonstrated almost incred- Top: Wal, shet mah mouff Bottom: Prexie supporters look glum ible zest for hunting by arising in the early dawn for a day's sport in the nearby duck marshes of New Haven. ln extra-curricular activities Timothy Dwight did well. Among the Timothy Dwight men on the Varsity football team were Captain Dick Hollingshead, Vandy Kirk, Bill Connelly, Roger Backsdale, and Dan Wagster. The Yale Daily News repre- sentatives were M. E. Bill Rappleye, next yearls Vice-Chairman Bob Wickser and Editors John Finney, Dave Moxley, Bill Coley, Rolly Nolen and John Veach. The varsity soccer team was captained by Paul Laurent, assisted by Tim Stone and Steve Potter. The Wrestling Team's star was Jim Moore and swimming luminaries A1 Stack, 103 John Moore and Jimmie Hassett also served. Stan Peacock and Jay Swift were the Var- sity basketball representatives. The Ban- ner had as its Vice-Chairman Hey Isham, who will edit this manuscript, and there were no less than five major sport managers in the college: Ray Young, Baseball, Kirk Jewett, Basketball, Bruce Roberts, Track, Ed Czarra, Crew, and Tim Fryer, Swim- ming. David B. H. Martin, Jr., was born to Mr. and Mrs. Dave Martin in December and is thus the first T.D. baby of the current aca- demic year. uBish', Sherrill, Don Blan- chard, Len Boasberg and Jack O,Neill were married and Palm Bevis, Mase Phelps, Roy Dickerson, Tony Taylor, Roy Walsh, and Tee Hemenway among others were en- gaged. Wes Kittleman continued to wager and lose fantastic amounts on various athletic ventures, particularly to sly and crafty Ken Franzheim. The enthusiasm of both was tempered by the sombre warnings of staid Kirk Jewett. The Timothy Dwight squash courts saw spectacular action with such stars as Ted Ewald, Sandy Gilpin, Bob Wickser, Bill Co- The ':Big Red Machine scores! Yuletide window clressingn ley, Murray Smith and Bob Day in action. The Christmas party was attended by many and proved to be great fun. After a delicious Christmas dinner, we were en- tertained by Mickey McDougall, the card detective. The Master of Ceremonies, Prof. Whitney Griswold, provided the inevitable quips. The end of the first term saw the loss by graduation of Holly', Hollingshead, HWi1d Will Henderson, J im t the Columbia Law Schoolj, Tom Scannell, Pepe Monte- verde and J oe Kostner. We also bid a teary farewell to Ed Broyles, Jim Harrison, Al Eager, Walter Reynolds and Ken Bitting. Moore fon his way to The opening of the Sp1'ing showed the return of several familiar fa c e s : term Mark Thompson, Mal Ryan, Clinton Elliott and Rupe Thom HS. TIM FRYER. ATHLETICS The fall edition of the Big Red Machine did fair- ly well for itself after a rather slow start. The foot- ball team, coached by Tom Scannell, went scoreless in the Calhoun, Trumbull and Berkeley games to lose three straight, but finally found themselves in the last game. With Bob Bast and Jay Swift scoring, the Prexies beat Silliman 13-0, to retain the hallowed O'Toole cup and finish third in the North League. Swift, Bast and Captain Dave Massey were standouts in the T.D. backfield, while Bill Martin, ,lack Day, Jim Soutter, ,lack Neal and Tony Good did yeoman work in the line. The season was considered a definite suc- cess, however, after beating Leverett House at Cambridge, 7-0. Bast stayed on his feet Oops! Spellbound in the mud long enough to go for 40 yards and a touchdown. The touch football team, headed by Capt. Neil HCrazy Legsv Currie, garnered the most Tyng points of any T.D. aggregation during the fall season. Wining seven games while losing one and tying one, they fin- ished the regular league season tied with Pierson, but lost to the Slaves in the play- off. Main point-makers for the uShoeless Wondersf' were J im Moore, Hugh Birkland, Al Brittain, Phil Suter, Larry Pukta, and John Mcllwaine. The touch team also jour- neyed to Cambridge, and finished a success- ful year by tying Dunster House in a game halted by darkness. T.D.7s soccer team was plagued by tie games all season long. The Prexie booters had lots of defensive power, but seemed unable to score when they most needed it. The final standings in the fall season found them in fourth place, having amassed a rec- ord of three wins, two losses, and four ties. Ted uThin Mani' Wilcox was the captain for the eleven. Other stellar performers in- cluded Dick Jennings and Joe Schiefflin. 105 FX TWT JONATHAN EDWARDS COLLEGE gig f an ' M52 tw MASTER ROBERT D. FRENCH FELLOWS J. C. Adams, E. W. Bakke, H. Bliss, E. J. Boell, H. F. Bozyan, S. R. Brinkley, B. C. Cannon, L. P. Curtis, I. T. Curtiss, E. R. Goodenough, C. B. Hogan, H. Holborn, R. Kirkpatrick, G. A. Kubler, E. .l. Miles, W. R. Miles, E. G. O'Neill, Jr., H. D. Palmer, N. H. Pearson, E. C. Pollard. ASSOCIATE FELLOWS D. H. Barron, H. S. Coliin, A. B. Crawford, E. B. Dale, E. S. Furniss, A. L. Goodhart, R. G. Ham, A. M. Harmon, P. Hindemith, C. A. Lohmann, R. S. Lull, J. G. Magee, S. Neumann, M. E. H. Rotival, R. A. Taft. JONATHAN EDWARDS COLLEGE honors the famous theologian and philosopher who graduated from Yale in 1720. The college includes Dickinson and Wheelock Halls, named in memory of the first presidents of Princeton and Dartmouth. JONATHAN EDWARDS returned to normalcy not with a whimper but with a bang. Veterans discovered that the cherished traditions of the college had been pre- served unbroken throughout the war years. With the resumption of a peacetime sched- ule JE not only continued its distinctive ac- tivities, but set new precedents. The first of these innovations, in keeping with the policy of the college, which seeks to further rap- port between student and Fellow as well as student and student, received great acclaim from all. This was the first annual punch party. Held after the Columbia football game fthe second half of which was played in a downpourj, the party did not turn in- to a mere session of armchair quarterbacks. Rather, reserves were broken down and uDo you remember? was freely bruited about. Again, the Christmas season was made the more memorable by an egg-nog wassail preceding an old-fashioned dinner at which the perennial JE Carolers sang. The punch bowl and the egg-nog cup appear to be per- manent additions to the academic festivities of the college. Contending with the new are those time honored occasions as familiar to the JE man as the stones of the Architecture School brooding over our courtyard. Among these pristine glories may be numbered the Sun- day teas given by the Master and Mrs. 107 French, where the spirit of camaraderie is at its height. Here gather the scientist and Ac man on common ground, vying with one another for the mot juste. The severest com- petition occurs on those evenings when HThe Gamev is in process at the lVIaster's home. Q One never speaks of it with lack of dig- nity as charadesj Anything quotable from Beowulf to Eliot is permissible, and beware those ringers from Chaucer! As usual, the quota of beer parties did not fall below one per term. These events brought together two of the human animal,s finest enjoyments, for singing on or off-key was a dominant fea- ture of these assemblies and Ballantine's flowed uninterruptedly. Singing brings mu- sic to mind, and one cannot think of JE without considering the part music has played in its social functions. The Gilbert and Sullivan Society belied its namesake but not its musical tendencies Fire at willf in taking up the task of presenting John Gay's The Beggafs Opera. Despite the ef- forts of professional producers to put JE's operettas on the road, the actors and di- rectors have remained firm: the perform- ances are to stay exclusively within the province and intimacy of the college com- mon room. Fellows Beekman Cannon and 108 Beecher Hogan, musical and theatrical di- rectors respectively, were enthusiastic about this year's show. Pooh-Bah Irving Robinson predicted a smash hit. With the remem- brance of things past students early started reading Gay and asking about tickets. The Spring concert series began on Feb- rua1y 23, when the London String Quartet Guess again . . . Theyire marbles f rendered a program of Mozart, Debussy, and Beethoven. Each spring the fame of this chamber music series spreads more, until by now the .l E Common Room deserves the title of Carnegie Hall, Jr. lt is necessary to note here that Jonathan Edwards College is holding together many of the liner as- pects of life which are tending to disappear in this accelerated age. Lest this sound like one of our Codfatheips sermons, be it noted that these words are merely an attempt to define JE in its distinctiveness. Because of the limitations of size imposed upon JE, the athletic teams are forced to make up in spir- it what they lack in numbers. ln the arts we are better able to express ourselves on an even basis. Yet J E is not outside in the cold when it comes to athletic competition. The '6A?' team in the inter-college basketball league was in the running for the champion- ship until the graduation of Bill Riesenfeld and Bud Emile in January. The football squad was unable to achieve a victory but managed to salvage a tie in the last game. The other squads, squash, swimming, hock- ey and soccer, have kept J E from the bottom of the ladder by winning at least one apiece from the larger colleges. ln varsity sports I E is well represented. This is particularly true in wrestling, where Norm Hascall, J oe St. Georges, and ,lohn Chafee won three of the eight positions on the team. ln hockey Artie lVloher and Dick Welch are two of the mainstays. With the baseball season ap- proaching lVloher will be battling for the shortstop position he has held the last two years, and Frank Quinn appears to be the number one pitcher again. In all, the Noble Savage can survey the There I was on my back . . . familiar scenes and know that Jonathan Ed- wards is continuing in its best traditions. Under the capable supervision of John Hardie, the in-college stall has kept the aifairs of state running smoothly. ln the 109 3 Crude but cold: the 1947 Frigidaire dining hall Miss Carr and Sadie take good care of the increasing number of guests brought by the fact that ours is the only college not visited by that awful blight, the all purpose tin tray. The visitors from Northampton, Poughkeepsie, etc., keep their gay comments for the opportunities which are sure to arise in any weekend. Marty never loses his smile while he assumes vigil at the front gate. Miss Sturgeon somehow succeeds in keeping ahead of the next com- plaint. And further additions to the family of pigeons, forever fiuttering in the court- yard, prove that we are not the only ones Whose living conditions have become crowded. AL EASINGWOOD ATHLETICS The cloistered tranquility of the Jonathan Edwards green was something entirely apart from the spirit that prevailed with the Spider 1947 eleven. Although the final standings in the South Football league found the Spiders in fourth place and even though past years have seen a better record, ,lE's first team donned cleats in quest of the Tyng Trophy and passed, ran and tackled their way th1'ough a rigorous season. Coach Kim Edwards, assisted by Fred Haeberle, greeted a spirited turnout one autumn afternoon and promptly began the training. The Spiders, first game was with the future championship team of Pierson. JE was at a slight disadvantage for the Slaves had benefited by their mistakes in a previous game while this was ,lE's first tussle. The first half, as might he expected, was dominated by Pierson play. Perhaps it was Coach Edwards' keen half-time analy- sis that made a rejuvenated JE team fight the Pierson power right down to the final whistle. The third quarter was a see-saw period and towards its close was dominated by several Spider pass completions. For the Courtyard deserted for Bromley and Stowe entire last quarter, JE held a team that greatly outweighed them and even though they were never able to overcome the one- touchdown deficit, they struck terror into the opposition when in the last minutes they completed two passes which were good for 70 yards. Time ran out, however, on the Pierson 20. 110 The next game with Saybrook was high- lighted by the excellent and alert play of Greene, Cartin, Chafee, Gelb, Benzen and Bouliaratis. Saybrook made two touchdowns early in the game, but had to fight hard to protect that advantage in the last quarter. The first threat was precipitated when Cha- fee blocked a pass. A Curtin to Gelb pass netted forty yards, whereupon Bouliaratis and Greene plunged to the 4. Here the op- position stiffened but it wasn't long before a pass from Bouliaratis to Benzen almost tallied again. The fact that JE was able to make one more first down than their con- querors indicates that a game lost is often a game well played. The Davenport game also showed good defensive strategy. The Spiders were ham- pered throughout by pass interceptions and it was one of these very reversals that set up Davenport's lone score. Again the Spi- ders racked up four first downs to the Hy- brid's three, but they lacked the polish to push across the necessary touchdown. In the third quarter of a close fought contest with Branford a pass from Boulia- ratis to Curtin, who romped 20 yards to score, accounted for the six points that tied the game. The line did an exceptionally commendable job continuously hammering down any aspiring Tower backs. It was a deserved climax for Captain uRed'7 Gra- ham's boys. Sparked by lVIoher and Quinn and Welch, the touch team had a generally successful year. Except for two unavoidable defaults, the team dropped but two games, one by a 26-24 score. The team played the role of giant killers when they handed the Slaves their only set-hack of the season and stale- mated TD 30-30. TD and Pierson were later tied for first place in the league. Sasser, Zerbey, Redden, Demmon, Riesenfeld, Ben- fT0pl Nobody got a watch? fB0tt01nl Getting tithe wordn from Mr. French zen and Fletcher gave of their best. The soccer team acutely suffered from a lack of experience, although special note should be made of Dave lVlcGee and Jerry Vffagner, whose booting was among the best in the league. During the winter season Bouliaratis sparked the Spider basketball team through a difficult and hard-fought schedule. A highlight of the season was the close game with the Pierson Slaves, which Jonathan Edwards won in the last few minutes of court action. When the league competition was over, it was seen that the consistent scoring of Bouliaratis and the aggressive spirit of the whole quintet gave the Spider- men a record of eight wins and six losses. 111 PIERSON COLLEGE MASTER ARNOLD Womans F ELLOWS F. L. Baumer, W. C. Bennett, J. Boorsch, W. C. DeVane, R. F. Flint, W. T. R. Fox, G. H. Hamilton, C. W. Hendel, G. A. Kennedy, J. C. Leyburn, A. R. Morehouse, B. C. Nangle, P. M. Pickrel, H. R. Rudin, H. Simpson, J. E. Vance, E. M. Waith, W. W. Watson, C. B. Welles. ASSOCIATE F ELLOWS F. Altschul, E. A. Davidson, G. P. Day, B. Frost, J. F. Fulton, W. H. Hamilton, P. Hofer, R. J. Menner, F. T. Murphy, W. Notestein, R. Schley, H. G. Sweet, A. Valentine, G. Van Santvoord, A. O. Vietor, H. E. Winlock. PIERSON COLLEGE bears the name of the Reverend Abraham Pierson of Killing- worth, Connecticut, first rector of the Collegiate School f1701-7J. THIS attempt to give a cross-section of the life at Pierson, though inadequate, may in years to come serve to bring back mem- ories of the year 1946-1947. HWheel Jarvis is not a wheel any more but only a quarter of a wheel now. He got married on January 2, 1947 and what she says goes. Though he still will reside at 1412 for the rest of the term, his room- mates feel that there is something lacking. Worried by the HWheel7s,7 exalted looks and benign rapture, which is augmented from time to time by ecstatic telephone calls or the twice-daily perfumed letter, his roommates, Messrs. Crocker and Obolensky, keep him at bay in a corner of the room roped off by the 4'Mason-Jarvis Line . . . . . . . Flash! Klem Millhiser has just been indicted on a charge of attempting to eradi- cate the International Relations department. A violent snowball fight was in progress in the Pierson quadrangle, Millhiser was tak- ing careful aim at the enemy entrenched behind the wall in front of the main arch- way. lt is rumored that Pete Gagarin, Bill Greene, Jim Osborne, George Pfau, and the 'cDu Andrews were among the anarchist brigade behind the wall. Millhiser let ily a wicked missile of mammoth proportions at the same moment that Mr. Wolfers strolled through the archway. Witnesses maintain that Mr. Wolfers had a snowball in his right 113 Two slaves hand, but he is quoted as saying that if so, it would only demonstrate that he was ob- serving the principle of armed neutrality, and there would be no legitimate basis for the opening of hostilities. Luckily for Mr. Wolfers the large glass lamp prevented the projectile from reaching its objective and it disintegrated at his feet. We predict large bills next term for a certain person. The White Shoe group made a striking appearance at the Pierson Prom. Weaving their way onto the dance floor headed by our own Hockey Hotshot Fred Pearson, they were conspicuous for their dark tux- edos, bow ties, white athletic socks, and brown shoes of the reverse calf variety. The Prom was a big success: Dave Viall and head-of-the-detail Herb Jarvis did a superb job organizing for the festivities. Despite the driving rain outside that necessitated holding the dance indoors, an atmosphere of pleasant warmth was created by candle- light, sultry spotlights, and an excellent punch recipe from Mrs. Wolfers. The lat- ter part of the arrangements was conducted by Ivan Obolensky. Cordon lVlichler, alias fnom d'am0urj George Miller, and Russ Morrill have spent a great deal of their time in the Taft lately. lVlichler says that itis the only place to have a decent game of backgammon, John Sar- Steppin' out gent, Jim Barnhill, and Lacy Seabrook spend most of their time in New York City, and it is reported that a large party there one evening broke up largely because of their efforts. Now they are turning their energies upon Colby Junior College. Sturnpy Crocker with his limousine has interests up there too, but Vassar is still first on his list. Alan Benjamin, abandoning his former motto of Mliiat, drink, and be merry, for to- morrow heads will roll, has achieved a 90 average on the Deanis list. Malicious talk has it that he has been studying the latest edition of Life concerning the easy way of getting through college. He must have taken it literally, for he always wears white shoes. During a cocktail party given by Jim 114- Goodenough, J im Osborne, Bill Greene, Ken Schwartz, and Harry Adams, Bob Lloyd learned a few pointers on anatomy. Appar- ently he said he had an earache because his fallopian tube was bothering him. A deathly silence quickly informed him of his error, and a well-meaning person suggested that he use the world Heustachiann instead. Al Sarnoff, Earl Bronstein, Ed Berg, etc., have established a home economics course in their room which promises to be included in the curriculum next term. The group convenes every morning bright and early at one thirty a.m. More socially-minded Pier- sonites of the entry who return to the fold at that hour have been losing their way due to the heavily laden atmosphere highly impregnated with odors of stale bacon and burning coffee. It has been requested that, for their sakes, a succession of air locks be installed to create a better standard of living and improve health con- ditions in the entry. Dick Manville, Gordy Ritz, and Fred Pearson have been doing a terrific job on the hockey team, as has the basketball wiz- ard of the college, Ted LoeH'ler.iLinton Baldwin, though his French 30 may leave something to be desired, has been making a name as one of the steadiest tennis stars ever produced by Yale, and is following this up with excellent showings in varsity track. ,lim Sherwood seems to have the inside track with the faculty. ln the history of the university no one has ever been monitor more consistently, but it does help in those eight oiclock courses. Nevertheless, Jim has come through, in spite of temptation here and there fpalm Beach in particularj by delivering the Baccalaureate address for the Class of '47, John Scott-Paine, John Brooks and Hen- ry Luce seem to have found their higher 115 calling at Weylister ,lun- ior College. They have come to the conclusion that a pocket flask in the hand is worth two at Wey- lister. An outsider's com- ment on the subject was, uAfter all, it was Valen- tinels Day! The uStud Boomv with its worthy occupants, Bill Ylvisaker, Dick Crooks, Dave Whitaker, and George Weber, have been known for their parties in Pierson. They have a rather unorthodox system of mixing drinks, for they pour in whatever turns up. One of these parties proved to be the nemesis of a chameleon which found its way into the punch bowl. Displaying true Eli spirit, he was enjoying himself immensely until the beginning of inebriation and the natural urge to change color on the appear- ance of each group of guests caused him to become maladjusted, and he had to be fished out. His next ambition is to paddle in a green cup, whose color is more pleas- Comfy? ing to chameleons. The Alabama Hhog- callersf' Bill Schuler, Bill Shannon, and Charlie Webb, have been ujungle bunny hunting. The reb- els all declare that Mjun- gle-bunnyw hunting is the one sport that is always in season and is, of all sports, most ethically cor- rect. Yet there seems to have been some argument about the latter statement, for Ed Fusco, due to his HSoshe', training, consid- ers it scandalous. The hottest news in the Ac group is that Willy fSquashj Collin has just procured a new lVlercury to crack up. Tired of his old one, a veteran of half a dozen brick walls, one telephone pole, two Merritt Parkway embankments, and the center island of the wire bridge at the lVlerritt toll house, Will feels more confident in his new 6'bile.'7 His roommate, Blair Schiller, is the next pros- pective new-car-owner-to-be, having fol- lowed in Willy's footsteps last weekend. Cars these days arenat built the way they used to be. This year, college has been filled with more of the good than ever before. There have been incidents, to be sure, there always are, but a more mature way of college life has been introduced. As a result of the G.l. Bill, a group more truly representative of the nation as a whole may be found in the college. Those who are here now have their feet on the ground, for they realize more than ever the complexity of the modern ex- istence. Those who have not been in the service have profited from the contact with those who have, and vice versa. Life in the 116 IFS the outdoor life that appeals to me! college has, we feel, been a worthwhile one, and has served as a broadening influence upon our attitude to later life. Our thanks go to Mr. and lVlrs. Wolfers for making Pierson what it is today. IVAN OBOLENSKY ATHLETICS Pierson tied the opening game of the sea- son with Branford, but came back the next week to beat ,I.E. by a 7-0 score. In the Slaves, tangle with Saybrook, Wright, Lloyd, and Ylvisaker each tallied once as the Slaves won I9-0. Outstanding line play was turned in by the Slave forward wall of Baker, Young, Welles, Frederick, Mes- singer, Craybill, and Jessup. At the end of a close-fought Davenport encounter, lineman Bill Frederick booted a field goal from the I7-yard line for the winning score. The Slaves bowed to a pow- erful Calhoun team in the championship play-off game the following week. At Harvard, Pierson humbled Lowell House 7-0. Coach Bill Ylvisaker pitched a touchdown pass to lVIal lVlcLean for the football teamls victory in a game dominated by wind and rain. Fullback Hank Wright, work-horse of the Slave backfield, tallied the extra point on an off-tackle smash. Captained by Bill Shannon, the Slave soccer team finished in second place with five wins, one loss, and three ties. Shannon, Crooks, Laing, and Cordes predominated in the scoring, while excellent defensive play was turned in by fullbacks lVIichler and Whitaker. John Scott-Paine and the versatile chief aid, Herb Jarvis, alternated at the goalie position. George Pfau and Bob Greene played consistently well in the halfback slots. INTERCOLLEGIATE TOUCH FOOTBALL CHAMPS Back: Ritz, Tuttle, Cowles, Berglas, Candee Front: Weber, Bulette, Hellmuth, Dorfman, Kaufman The Slave touch football team was the most successful of the Pierson athletic ag- gregations during the fall season with its record of nine wins, one loss, and one tie. Led by Captain ,lim Hellmuth, the team won the Yale championship by defeating T. D. 24-I2 in a play-off game. Mainstays of the touch team were Candee, Cowles, Berglas, Dorfman, Kaufman, Ritz, Bulette, Tuttle, and Weber. IIT SAYBROOK COLLEGE H xg grg'u'N M, M R Nw WRU eww o 4-CQ ki , fd , 1 , 5133353135 o 0 0 A ' o 2 I I SZJYKQZ I I-I Q uf fm iK9?7fVf 15376 if l O ' MASTER BASIL DUKE HENNING FELLOWS J. J. Arrom, A. R. Bellinger, F. E. Brown, R. L. Calhoun, G. K. de Forest, H. C. Dietrich, W. H. Dunham, Jr., J. Eng- lish, Jr., H. R. Fadum, H. D. Hauf, C. E. Hutchinson, D. M. Knight, A. Lipari, L. L. Martz, E. V. Meeks, C. Osgood, C. E. Rickart, C. Robley, R. B. Setlow. ASSOCIATE FELLOWS M. Bartholomew, S. F. Bemis, A. H. Bradford, L. Cannon, Jr., B. F. Dodge, W. Douglas, S. W. Dudley, W. P. Eaton, M. Hadley, S. C. Harvey, H. O,D. Hunter, B. Knollenberg, C. H. Kraeling, S. R. McCandless, A. W. Oughterson, L. Page, E. D. Smith. SAYBROOK COLLEGE is named for the Connecticut town which was the seat of the Collegiate School until it was removed to New Haven in 1716. The college oc- cupies the northern half of the Memorial Quadrangle. THE external face of Saybrook had not changed a bit, as we saw when, early in September, we placed a tentative foot within Killingworth Court and gave a bashful and searching look about us. Everything was there, just as it had been when we left. The lights were on again, but it was still dark in Saybrook! The atom bomb had definitely not landed here. Familiar faces were all about us as we started classes amid the most crowded conditions Yale had ever known, though every time we went to our rooms, we were greeted with the smiling face of a new roommate. But MTom', was still back at the gate, Margaret and Miss Taylor still presided over 4'Meatbrook,7 Hall, Miss Wilmot still had charge of the Master's Office, Professors Bemis and Die- trich, Bellinger and Arrom, Lipari and Bartholomew, and Mr. Bobley, who still contrives to be everywhere with his friendly hand and genial smilekall were at the Fel- low's dinner on Thursday night. ln fact, seemingly, the only changes the war had made in Saybrook was that the use of trays in the dining hall had superseded the old system of maids and waiters-and Army and Navy training had taught us all to bal- ance a mean tray. The only real change in Saybrook, but one which was immediately noticeable, had occurred in the Masterls office, for Dean Meeks was now acting mas- 119 ter of the College, Professor Elliott Dunlap Smith having left Yale in March, 1946, to become Provost and Professor of Social Relations at the Carnegie Institute of Tech- nology in Pittsburgh, Pa. Mr. Smith, the first Master of Saybrook, had been with the College since the beginnings of the college plan, and had seen all the changes of many years. He had been the chief founder of the so-called HSaybrook system. As we at- tended the first Cakes and Ale of the new term, we pondered the crowded Yale to which we had returned, and wondered who would succeed Dean Meeks as permanent Master of Saybrook. In the first weeks that followed the open- ing of college we were witnesses of the un- folding panorama that Yale holds forth to its students. Activities in every conceivable field received attention in the News. And some heights which had never before been reached were scaled as the Miniature Tree Groweris Association unlimbered what has seemed the most far-reaching and humorous philosophy of life yet to come out of the undergraduate mind at Yale. The Glee Club, conducted by Saybrook's own HBarty, again was giving forth the tradi- tional stirring songs of Yale that have thrilled generations. Once again the Rec- ord gave us monthly chuckles, and the foot- ball team our weekly thrills. To some of us who had seen the pre-war type of Yale foot- ball spirit, shock was in order as the first football game came and went without a single good cheer, and the cheerleaders only stood up in shifts! However, one roof- raising rally in Woolsey Hall cured those who were afraid to shout the war cries of the Yale Bulldog rampant on a field of stricken foes! At the cocktail parties which followed the battles at the Bowl, Saybrook blossomed with the laugh of woman, and what the ladies didn,t do for their despon- 120 dent men after the Columbia game, bottled delights did. On October 23, there came the long- awaited appointment of a new Master, in the person of Basil Duke Henning, Asso- ciate Professor of History. A member of the faculty since 1935, Mr. Henning received his Ph.D. in 1937, and was then awarded a Sterling Research Fellowship, which he used to study the personnel in the House of Com- mons in Restoration England. At Yale, lVfr. Henning had been a member of the now- famed class of l932, and he brought to Say- brook excellent scholarship and a record in extra-curricular activity. During his under- graduate days, he was a Whilfelipoof, and President and soloist of the Yale Glee Club. Seals could look forward to days of spir- ited singing under the guidance of lVlr. Hen- ning and HBarty.', ln the war, Mr. Henning served as a Naval Air Combat Intelligence officer in the Pacific, where his fighter squadron held the record of planes shot down in April, 1944. On Friday, October 25, in an impressive ceremony in the din- ing hall, Mr. Henning was inducted into the office of Master. It was not long before pleasing signs of change appeared to show Seals that their new Master was not idle in their behalf. A milk bar was soon in thriving operation in Waite Entry. A group of erstwhile song- sters, borrowing the name of the Alleycats from a previous contingent, banded together to form the first post-war singing group in Saybrook. The College Committee was en- larged, and plans were made to give a dance during the Spring term. And when next we gathered for Cakes and Ale in the lVfaster's house, we discovered that the dark, panelled Supply . . . . . . and demand! Repressed desires ? rooms there had been transformed into graceful, white apartments, where Mrs. Henning ruled graciously as First Lady. During the remaining part of the fall, Seals survived the combined onslaught of mid-term exams, the Harvards, the Repub- licans, and the Budget Drive with admir- able equanimity. Thanksgiving dinner was a real feast, for lVlargaret and lVliss Taylor could touch us all where it counted most, the meat shortage having conveniently end- ed. Just before Christmas vacation began, the College was again treated to a feast, this time in a candle-lit hall. Following this, the College assembled for Gluhwein and Christmas carols in the dining hall. And after Christmas vacation we re- turned soberly to our rooms to prepare for exams, which came upon us in a riot of worry and left us weak in exhausted relief. For another five months, anyway, we should be free to study on our own again. So we looked about us, those of us who were soon to leave, and took our bearings for the last time. We had one more term to go. We had already discovered much of the infor- mation which we had needed so badly when we had returned to Yale in the fall. Yale had given us many of the answers. We had learned to understand some of the war by observing the gradual return of peace. Much was unanswered, much unaccom- plishedg but we felt that Saybrook had not been our home in vain. ln rare moments of detachment, We had realized that we were intimately bound to the red clay of Say- brook Court, to the dark stones which had been our abode, to the fellowship of teach- ers and students which is the essence of Saybrook. We had seen Yale return to the grand scale of peacetime college life, with its cocktail parties and concerts and football rallies and blue paint all over Princeton tigers and Times Square sidewalks. Our musicians could once more pound the piano in the Lounge in peace, and our artists could construct buxom women in the snow without fear of Specialists A. We would be leaving this in June. We felt a debt to Say- brook, and to its Fellows and Master, for they had enabled us to enjoy Yale in its peacetime glory. JOHN HORLBECK ATHLETICS The first football game greatly encour- aged the early prediction of Saybrook's po- tency when the team ripped into an impres- sive Davenport aggregation to the tune of lil--0. Despite a spirited Branford eleven, Ross scored the important touchdown to down the boys from his own backyard in a 122 stubborn tilt 7-6. A valiant but outplayed LE. team was incessantly driven back until the scoreboard showed 12-0 at game's end. But Pierson power proved too much for the fighting Seals as they dropped their only game, 19-0. It was the seven stalwarts of the forward line, Quilty, Kane, Reynolds, Patterson, Cole, Bailey, and Cartmell, coupled with Krall, Lynch, Sul- liman, and Reese in the backfield and a host of deserving and faithful auxiliaries headed by Ross, Kalback, and Pidgeon who contributed so decidely to team's fine showing. Though not always winners, the Seal soccermen were constantly a threat, and squeezed the very best out of their op- ponents. The final tabulation of three wins and six losses fails to tell the whole story of many tightly fought heart-breakers lost in the last few minutes of play. Throughout the season Stansberry, Danforth, and Gadd were consistent performers. The touch football team started the sea- son with four wins and a lone defeat to Silliman. After the defeat by Pierson, however, T.D., Berkeley, and Trumbull racked up wins. The elite meet to eat gl wanna beer . 123 III SILLIMAN V COLLEGE MASTER FILMER S. C. NORTHROP FELLOWS T. Babbitt, A. M. Bateman, M. C. Beardsley, A. B. Benson, J. L. Bower, H. S. Burr, C. M. Dawson, F. B. Fitch, C. l. Hovland, R. Kennedy, A. F. Kovarik, H. Margenau, J. P. Miller, L. F. Nims, L. M. Noss, H. YV. Odum, C. W. Phelps, J. C. Pope, R. A. Rathbone, R. B. Sewall, L. Spitzer, R. E. Turner, J. F. White, W. K. Wimsatt, Jr. ASSOCIATE FELLOWS W. Bennett, A. S. Blagden, F. G. Blake, J. F. Byers, H. S. Canby, C. E. Clark, A. G. Dana, J. W. Hanes, H. B. Hastings, A. J. Hill, H. S. Hotchkiss, C. Merz, E. Pugsley, W. H. Sheldon, E. WT. Sinnott, G. M. Trevelyan, L. Tucker, D. G. Wing. SILLIMAN COLLEGE carries the name of Benjamin Silliman, B.A. 1796, Professor of Chemistry and Geology from 1802 to 1853. To form this college in 1940 the Van- derbilt-Scientijic Halls and Byers Hall were remodeled and arlditions built. WHEN Silliman opened in September 746, after the summer term, we had reached our maximum capacity of 460 souls with the occupants well distributed in numbers from the class of ,46 to that of 749. However the term was officially begun only when Phelps Deerson and uBess7,- direct Uj from California-pulled to a smoking, screeching stop in front of Byers Hall. On the night of the 24th Mr. Harold Laski was a guest of the College at the Fel- lows' Table and afterwards amused us all with humorous anecdotes concerning fa- mous British government advisers and of- ficials. The University's football season and Howie Odellls winning combine brought with them a renewal of the wonderful week- ends we had remembered so well. One of the not-to-be-forgotten parties was that giv- en by Tom Armour and treacherous ol, HDouble Slugsv Emerson. lt is here that Philo Smith, junior partner in uFi-Buck and Smith-Papersf' reached a point of saturation heretofore deemed impossible. Hank Harder, Pete Phillip, and Tony Lamb, with the assistance of Bill Lordls huckster- ing, packed 1802 to maximum capacity with unfulfilled promises of Angiels personal ap- pearance! While the rest of us were com- fortably watching Messrs. Jackson, Kirk, and Nadherny do their trickiest, Jack .- D Hark! The Herald Angels Caulkins, Mike Paguaga and Jack Sloat were sparking the Big Blue Soccer Team to hard-fought victories. November 2 was a day of fiesta for the Salamander as he put on his best bib and tucker to attend the Silliman Promenade. 150 beds were provided in the Tower sec- tion for our fair guests, with Edie Burnham and Kay Hauschild staunchly guarding the entrances and doling out motherly advice. To say only that our Prom was a huge suc- cess would be an understatement. The NCol- legiansi' were smooth and mellow, and the floor was uncrowded. Between intermissions the 4LWhiffe11poofs'7 and Tom McAndrew,s MSalamanders7' gave out with some plain and fancy harmonizing. Mario Lazo, chair- man of the Prom Committee, and Bob Weh- ner, one of the Prom's original sponsors, were both there looking very proud and content with the outcome. December was a banner month for our more cultural side. On the sixth, Senor Valenti-Mestre favored us with a concert on the harpsichord, and ten days later A1 Donnelly presented Oedipus Rex, starring Bill Fischelis, to an enthusiastic and over- flowing audience. The next night we had a welcome respite from hour tests in the form of our annual Christmas Dinner. Because of the over-crowded rooming conditions this year, we had the novelty of eating our meal in two shifts. An excellent spirit of cooperation among the entire college made it possible for the intricate time schedule to run its course smoothly Without a single hitch. Miss Van Cleve really served us a sumptuous spread complete with romantic candle light, Burgundy, fancy menus from Bay JeWett's Silliman Press, and smiles from Celia. Professor and Mrs. Northrup graciously presided over the Fellowis Table while Mr. Noss led the Salamanders in the group singing of carols. The opening of a new year found Hank Sunny side up Stude back with another crew cut and start- ling additions to the most complete stock of hair-grower East oi Chicago. Dick Shelley was still fleecing impecunious scholars by reselling government printings on Inca cul- ture at black market prices. The Recordis highly successful take-oil on The New York Daily News had a profound effect on the Silliman quadrangle. Not only did Dick 126 Cohen buy several gross fcount 'emli of uOwl7' ties, but we understand that Cap- with-a-strapi' Connaughton will no longer sit forlornly in his little out-house on strange feminine campuses in a vain at- tempt to boost sales. Un January 13th, Mr. Manuel Vallarta from Mexico, the former chairman of the Atomic Energy Control Commission, gave an informal and very in- teresting talk in the Common Boom on the possibilities of International Atomic energy control. Earl Davey continued to parade a newer line of MFemmes fatalesl' past the center table of caustic tongues and envious eyes. By February, the Silliman winter athletic season had rounded into fine shape. The basketball team under Coach Frank Ma- honey, and with Captain Charlie Reckard swishing them in from center court, had turned in a performance full of fight and skill. The Silliman hoopsters-consisting of HTexH Cullinan, Bob Fitzgerald, ,lo Gold- berg, Jack Moffett, Bob Rosensweig fSilli- man's all-around athlete! J , Gene Williams, and Jack Weinstein-took the lads from T.D. to the tune of 39-33, and returned the coveted O7Toole Trophy to the proper side 'gWe are poor little lambs . . . 2' S0's your old man! of Temple Street. The advent of Hockey season saw everyone on the ice for Silliman except the janitor in Anthony fadvtj. Cap- tain Pete Roome, uCoach,' Ben Lewis, and Athletic Secretary Ted Hellier were hard put to choose a first squad from the wealth of available material. From our pre-season vantage point it looks as though Johnny Barnum, Kent Costikyan, and Bad Daly- among others-will do yeoman's work for the green and red. The Salamander squash team, of ,lack Sloat, Mac Symington, Bill Wvoodrow, Doug Wells, Toby Murray, and Harvey Childs has suffered only one defeat in five starts. Phil Drake advanced from the Silliman squad to the Varsity. So far, Captain Bob Cowan's Salamander swim- mers, featuring Dick Cosgrove, Harley Hig- 127 by, Fred Keydel, Steve Shanley, Dave Twigg-Smith, and Len Volk have paddled their way to four victories, succumbing by only one point to a powerful Branford ag- gregation. As far as Varsity sports went, Silliman seemed to be doing well too. Captain Alex Brownis crew was starting to work out on the Housatonio river preparatory to their opening race. The Blue Squash Team, with Captain Pete Philip at the helm finished an undefeated season with a crushing 10-0 de- feat of Harvard and won the National Inter- collegiate Team Trophy for the second year in a row. The Yale natators led by that mountain of muscle, Ed Hueber, and as- sisted by Henry Burr, has nothing but a string of impressive wins and broken rec- ords to their credit. In the Yale-Harvard cinders contest, Ed Lucke was a member of the one-mile relay team which set a new meet record, while Linc Thompson won the two-mile run going away at the finish. Before we knew it, the evil scourge of mid-terms was upon us, and many a light glowed desperately far into the night. Mid- terms or no mid-terms, Bob Myer continued to haunt the Silliman squash court as he splintered side wall after side wall and steadily advanced up the ladder. Pete Skala came off with the highest possible laurels when his News column HSkalawag,' re- ceived a blast in Cundelfingefs most recent Sewickley communique. Pete, bulletin board and all, is now firmly enthroned as Silli- man's man of distinction. As the year has progressed, we have be- come increasingly aware that our College is not just a place in which to hang our hat, but that it has a definite part to play in our lives-one that it would be impossible to fill in any other way. The greatest contribu- tion to Silliman has, of course, been made by our Master and his understanding and 128 gracious First Lady. We shall always re- member Mrs. Northrop for her interesting and pleasant Sunday afternoon teas, her en- thusiastic interest in Silliman and all Sala- manders, and last but not least, her charm- ing hospitality to our numerous week-end guests. Suffice it to say of our Master that we have found him to be not only an out- standing philosopher and scholar, but what is more important, a great human being, al- ways available to us with his friendly coun- sel and advice. Silliman7s problems were al- ways his problems and never taken lightly, no matter what quantity of work pressed upon him. GREGORY TLLANES ATHLETICS Captain Jack Pfeiffer, an impressive tackle, led the Silliman football team until Sex-let sidelined by a fractured wrist in the Trum- bull game. The line was the team's strong factor, and often Si Schwartzman, Bob Mackin, and Green caught the ball carrier behind the line of scrimmage. After Pfeif- feris injury, Joe Richardson captained the squad and, with Ted Pratt, Dick Cosgrove, ,lack Moffett, and the rest of the backfield, they fought till the final whistle. ln the last game of the season the Salamanders jour- neyed to Cantab territory to face Eliot House in a downpour. The highlight of the game came when Frank Mahoney plunged through the line for eight yards, pulled himself drippingly out of the quagmire, and announced, MGod, a man could drown out herelv' Clad in his jungle poncho for the Harvard game, Mr. Northrop was a loyal rooter throughout the season. Bob Mackin was elected captain of the 1947 team. Both the soccer and the touch football teams fared better than the footballers. The booters won three, tied five, and 1ost one, tying for third place in the league. Don Notman, center and captain-elect, was the mainstay of the forward line and the teamis high scorer. Outstanding performers in the line were Gallagher, Wehnes, Deerson, Pe- retti, and Metzloif. Led by Captain Rosey Rosensweig and quarterbacked by high-scoring Tennnessee Quinn, the Silliman Six finished third in the league after battling Pierson, the ul- timate touch champs, to an 18-18 tie. The team averaged over thirty points per game, falling short of vaunted Pierson by only one point in game scoring averages. In one of the seasonis best games, Timothy Dwight staved off a 1ast minute Silliman rally to hand Silliman its only defeat, 30-34. The Machine Age z- -..--.,- ..,,.. r ,fma.zuuumw 5 f 5 TRUMBULL J COLLEGE MASTER JoHN S. NICHOLAS FELLOWS W. Bergmann, W. E. Davies, R. H. Gabriel, F. W. Hilles, H. M. Hubbell, J. F. Mathias, Jr., E. S. Noyes, J. Seronde, L. W. Simmons, R. H. Suttie, E. L. Tatum, T. H. Waterman. ASSOCIATE FELLOWS S. Bayne-Jones, F. T. Davison, R. Donovan, H. A. Farr, S. H. Fisher, C. C. Fry, R. M. Fuoss, C. A. Garratt, 1. V. Hiscock, D. Hooker, A. Keogh, G. E. Lewis, W. R. Longley, C. R. Longwell, M. A. May, U. Moore, A. Nicoll, E. L. Ryerson, G. H. Soule, Jr., A. P. Stokes, C. H. Warren, C.-E. A. Winslow, M. C. Winternitz. TRUMBULL COLLEGE was erected from funds given by the trustees of the estate of John W. Sterling, BA. 1864. Its name honors Jonathan Trumbull, LL.D. 1779, governor of Connecticut during the War of the Revolution. AS THE returning students streamed by below him, the little man, seated on his chamber-pot on top of Trumbull Col- lege, knew that he would be in for his tra- ditional patriotic coat of paint in very short order. Football season was approaching and the fall winds were getting rather brisk, so he rather looked forward to it. Sure enough, within a week, a group of stalwart seniors clambered out onto the roof with cans of red, white, and blue paint, and did a job on the little man. However, just fulfilling the tradition was not enough for our incipient Rembrandts and they deco- rated the roof with air-view figures in red and white commemorating the classes of 46M and 47, whose members would shortly venture forth into the cold, cold world. This constituted a direct affront to the Service Bureau, so six stalwart men and true were dispatched to remove the unsight- ly figures. The scrubbers had very little knowledge of tradition and no sooner had they polished off the offending numerals than they began to deprive the little man of his 10002 American protective coat. Be- fore long, an unusually elhcient stroke of a wire brush sent his head hurtling to the ground. But working on the theory that Ha job half done is worse than nonef' they put it back in place and gingerly finished the deed. 131 Soccer trophy for winning Bulls ln spite of this ill omen and the fact that the little man is still coatless and shivering at this writing, the year at Trumbull was not an unsuccessful one. We may quickly pass over the usual functions of a College. The very successful dances with the Col- legians supplying the music, the cheerful beer parties-with songs provided by the Glee Club and the LaWrence-Reynolds- Roseneau-Barstow quartet, and with foot- ball movies accompanied by running com- ments from Jack Roderick, Art Fitzgerald, and Frank DeNezzo. Rather to be noted are the things that distinguish this year from others, and Trumbull from other Colleges. For in- stance, there is Mrs. Nicholas, cooking, with special emphasis on her consummate art in the concoction of Toll House cookies. We must also say something about the gigantic turkey and the twelve apple pies that greeted the twenty-five unfortunate men Who could not make it home over Thanks- giving. ,Tis said that Donn Ruotolo ate a pie and a half all by himself that night and then Went on to beat the company at the ferocious game of UBuzz,,, but that is mere- ly a rumor. If he hounded the food as hard as he hounded people to go out for intra- mural Wrestling or soccer, it is far from an exaggeration. But as Trumbull's athletic teams did well, due in part to Dennis persistence and in part to the interest and ability of the members of the college, another distinctive feature of Trumbull also prospered. This was the Trumbull Student Council, which was instituted in the fall term under the presidency of Tom Barton. The Council drew up a Constitution under which future Councils would operate, and then proceeded to legislate under an uelasticn clause, in- troduced by Ted Creighton. They put on the dances and took over minor disciplinary problems with considerable efficiency, mini- mizing the number of rules and regulations that the Master found it necessary to intro- duce. One of their triumphs Was to arrange for the housing of Hoods of girls in Trum- Polar Bear Club takes a stroll 132 bull on the football weekends. The Milk Bar, colloquially known as MGeorge and Ceorge's, was a source of consistent variety as well as vitamins. Whether it was pin-up pictures, two hotdogs for a quarter, a special on Frisbieis Pies, or Strawberry Royale Ice Cream, Messrs. Kliefoth and Herhold always had something new to offer in the way of nourishment or entertainment. Besides the Milk Bar pro- vided a good place to hide when Library Aide Schofield was hot on your trail trying to collect a two-cent library fine. The other Aides were almost equally ef- Hcient. As a matter of fact, many of them One meat ball? found themselves on the job more than the required sixteen hours a week. But who could call sitting in the Masteris oflice and conversing with Miss Levin work? No won- der they stayed overtime. The Yale News may be the oldest college daily, but the oldest and most respected col- lege monthly magazine at Yale is the Trum- bullian. This year, under the editorship of Fred DeWalt, assisted in the business de- '5Smiffsn on the air! partment by Gunney Bostick, in the editor- ial. department by J. J. Fieldhouse and in the art department by Bob Vickrey, the Trumbullicm maintained the high artistic standards that typify the refinement of civi- lization found in Trumbull College. Fred should really be a farmer. He can tell an ear of corn when he sees one. Artistry was not conlined to the Trumbul- lian alone, however. In the Glee Club, un- der the tutelage of Mr. Donovan, all those who aspired to sing found a chance to war- ble in close, or shall we say near, harmony. The outstanding performance of the year was at the annual Christmas party. The Club sang two numbers which sounded as- tonishingly like music considering the in- frequency of rehearsals. Topping perfor- mance of the evening, however, was Mrs. Donovanis rendition of MO Holy Night with the Clee Club growling in the back- ground. There is space for only a few more of the many scenes and events of the past year that come to mind: Burly Grimes, Trum- bull's contribution to the Junior Prom Com- mittee, selling the last ticket in the Lounge, amidst a bunch of sadly disappointed up- perclass men, and John Choreyeb's piano 133 playing and his recordings of HPeggy the Lobster and other numbers. Also, we must remember the concerted attack upon the stu- dious nature of Trumbull members by Resi- dent Fellows Wally Davies and Talbot Wat- erman and their consistently successful at- tempts to pluck students away from their books for an hour or several of beer, cards or talk in one of the luxurious Fellowls Suites. Nor can we omit mention of Trum- bull's two most persistent guests, Roy De- Marrais' brother Gordon, and, of course, Hazel. These two became so familiar throughout the course of the year that it is said they both voted in the elections for Student Council at the beginning of the sec- ond term. Perhaps the chief characteristic of Trum- bull this past year has been a feeling of normalcy about the place, an informality of association, crowded as it was, which typified the bustling, yet somehow relaxing conversion to peacetime College life of former days. CURTIS FARRAR ATHLETICS In the fall lap of the Tyng Cup race the battling, bruising Bulls foiled most attempts on the part of anyone to play the role of matador and the highly successful pigskin- toters, the splendid record of the soecermen, and the Heet touch team landed Trumbull a second slot in the league. Smarting from pre-season injuries to Johnson, Walsh, Sehackelford, Curry, and Bolin, the Trumbullians proved that the greatness of a football team lay in its ability to Hcome backf, In the opening game the Bull charged madly into a hapless T.D. eleven, and, through the efforts of a little glue-fingering on the part of Ted Olcott, seismographic tackling by J oe Linehan, and Mallow, the Prexies were sent back to Tem- 134 Stony problem? ple street smarting from a 12-0 shellacking. Two fumbles, one by each club, recovered by the opposition set up the only two scores of the Berkeley game. It was, however, the educated toe of Hal lVlcCauley that spelled heartbreak for the lVlitres, who were edged 7-6. It took the best team in the intercol- lege loop to give the Bulls a taste of de- feat. A lone tally by the Senators was the margin of victory. Except for Dave Grimes's dash to the Calhoun 30, the forward wall of the Senators was strong enough to keep this elusive back in constant check. Five days later all eleven enraged Ferdinands held the Silliman team to minus yardage and, through the superior passing and running of Grimes, and the timely bucking of Bill Hen- drickson, Trumbull ap- Champion Trumbull soccermen last fall. Scoring in every game except the muddy and bloody battle with Branford, the for- ward wall of Fredericks, Barton, Tamlyn, King, and Hawley punched fourteen tallies through the opposition while goalie Tom Hearn permitted only two goals to escape him the entire season. As a result of close teamwork and a baffling net-work of short passes, criss-cross maneuvers and constant pressure on the opponent's goal, the booters were able to achieve their highly successful season. The sturdy defensive play of full- backs Hawes and Buotolo and center half Breakell was an important factor in the op- ponent's inability to score. The touch football team suffered for want of a regular squad, but completed the sea- son with a four-win, five-loss ledger to tie Saybrook for fifth place. Captain Knerr, McLean, Kane, Bass, Prior, and Kempner were the most reliable players. ,l oe Walsh was powerful in the last two Trumbull vic- tories against Calhoun and Saybrook at the close of this yearls season. HAWLEYS INTER-COLLEGE SOCCER CHAMPS Back Row: Hearn, Albrecht, Fridericks, Hawes, Buo- tolo, Second Row: lves, Jones, Loughborough, Ruby, Young, S. Barton. Front Row: Gabocy, King, Breakell, Hawley CCaptainJ, Tamlyn, T. Barton, Carstensen. propriately climaxed a successful football sea- son with a 14-0 triumph. Eight victories in nine starts was the rec- ord hung up by the I . GRADUATE SCHO0LS XM 746 Qaclaafte S EARLY as 1732 provision for grad- uate study at Yale was made with the be- quest of Bishop George Berkeley support- ing three resident students reading for advanced degrees. Subsequent income and enlarged enrollment led to formal recog- nition of this new phase of the college cur- riculum in 1847 under the title of the Department of Philosophy and the Arts. Fourteen years later this department con- ferred one of the first Ph.D. degrees in Americag thereafter the award of the high- est scholastic rank became customary in most universities. Direct descendant of the Department of Philosophy and the Arts is the Graduate School as constituted today- a distinct administration with its own dean, faculty, classrooms, and residential quar- ters. Now based in the imposing Hall of Graduate Studies, the School's 300 profes- sors and instructors guide the studies of some 900 students representing 334 insti- tutions, 46 states, and 23 foreign countries. Graduate students, specializing in partic- ular aspects of liberal arts and sciences, are men and women chosen for scholastic ability and proven interest. They enter an atmosphere of spirited competition, vigor- ous debates in the weekly seminars put their knowledge to the test. Chief occupa- tion of the graduate student is, of course, private research in his field. The method- ology of digging out all pertinent informa- tion, assembling, organizing, and analyzing 138 it, and finally presenting the findings in lucid prose is a discipline requiring firm adherence to the aim of mastering onels chosen field. Beyond research, however, is the further principle of making an original contribution to knowledge. Both essential principles are embodied in the distinguish- ing feature of final graduate Work-the doctoral dissertation, which will eventually see print. Of the three main careers most students prepare for-research, teaching, or public service-the latter has recently assumed increased importance. Not only are more men entering public service, but govern- mental agencies have been calling on the Graduate School for the solution of basic problems. During the War most of the School's facilities were devoted to training Army language and government experts, as well as ascertaining scientific data vital to war plans. Of great national importance, many similar projects continue today on be- half of such agencies as the U. S. Public Dean Edgar S. Furniss Health Service and the Veterans' Adminis- tration. Private industry also supports scientific research, examples are the Dupont and Allied Chemical corporations. Social life in the Graduate School is limited by necessity, but remains healthy. Dances and get-togethers are organized by the House Committee and the ubiquitous Yale Dames-the latter a group of graduate Wives Whose energetic promotion of recre- ational opportunities has earned the grati- tude of the Whole community. Clubs associated with various fields of study en- courage more casual discussion and investi- gation. Athletics are pursued on an informal basis, While those with special talents can often find outlets for their surplus energies in the different schools of the University. But while the Graduate School does af- ford some informal aspects of college life to the specialized student, its objective re- mains intensive pursuit of higher learning. 139 Hallmarks of Science: the omnipresent student and fertile friend ie af OF THE many facets of the University's educational scope, none reflects more clearly than the Medical School the altru- istic and humanitarian elements in man7s quest for knowledge. And it is in response to those vitally needed elements that the School has developed into the first-class organization it is today, increasingly con- tributing its science and graduates to the service of mankind. From its inception as HThe Medical ln- stitution of Yale Collegen in 1815, the School has steadily enlarged its facilities for research and instruction. lts association with the New Haven Hospital, recently en- larged as the Grace-New Haven Commu- nity Hospital, has been constantly strength- ened to provide the closest possible coop- eration in obtaining clinical and Ward ex- 1441 I I Dean Francis C. Blake, MD., Sc.D perience. This cooperation-of vital ne- cessity to school and hospital alike-is di- rected and encouraged by the Medical Board of the hospital composed largely of Medical School faculty members. Through such planning, through the generosity of friends, and especially through the devoted Work of such men as former Deans Winter- nitz, Bayne-Jones, and the present Dean Blake, the School of Medicine now offers a medical education of the first rank. The return of many of the staff from war service, together with new research endow- ments, has stimulated an increased interest in medical problems of particular impor- tance in the modern world, including the famed Institute of Human Relations, the Institute of Occupational Medicine, and the ,lane Coflin Childs Memorial for cancer re- search. Among the new fellowships estab- lished were those supported by the James Hudson Brown Memorial Fund for gradu- Four brains get together Lab . . . and years of it ate and student research. ln the latter case, several promising students are given the opportunity of inserting a year of research training between their second and third years at the School. Five men were able to take advantage of these fellowships during the past year. The Borden Undergraduate Research Award in Medicine is an added stimulus to original research and is being offered this year for the first time. The School is justly proud of the fine record of service of its facilities, staff, and graduates during the war. And although the uniforms are gone from the corridors, and ex - General Bayne-,I ones can be reached quite conveniently, vestiges of war can be seen in the fifty-four former service doctors who returned this year to resume interrupted careers and to sharpen their medical talents with graduate research. Among the changes from a wartime sched- ule to the less hectic curriculum of peace was the abolition of the required summer 1412 term and the return to the normal Septem- ber to June four-year course for lVl.D. candidates. In addition, beginning with the class of 1948, senior theses will again be required for graduation, after a wartime lapse in the requirement. And once again the Keese Prize will be awarded to the author of the best thesis. The general tenor of undergraduate life at the Medical School has seen a radical change during the last quarter century. A11 classes are informal, assignments self-im- posed, and all examinations optional, other than the biennial National Board Examina- tions. The obvious outcome of this plan is an increased degree of student indepen- dence, as well as an equally high degree of responsibility on the student,s part for the pursuit of his medical education. Both these factors appear to serve admirably the purpose of providing a latitude and per- sonal interest in education not attainable by stereotyped, less progressive methods. A student's decision to enter medicine is taken as token of his will to obtain a medical education in good part on his own respon- sibility,when the opportunities are present- ed. For this reason, 'Gspoon-fed teaching has seemed out of place for such a stage of post-graduate education. Whatever the methods of medical train- ing may be, no one acquainted with them can deny the fact that with prolonged study in such a specific Held, there is a pro- nounced tendency for one to become nar- rowed in his knowledge of affairs not spe- ciiically related to medicine. Because of this, the student body has made its own effort toward developing a broader view- point-an effort which has been of increas- ing magnitude in the last few years. This has been undertaken by the three fraterni- ties, Nu Epsilon Nu, Alpha Kappa Kappa, and Phi Delta Epsilon, by incorporating into their own programs informal discus- sions on non-medical topics by faculty The tables are turned as pint-sized patient plays doctor 1 St 1443 Clinical experience includes the intricacies of the X-ray members from the undergraduate school. These are occasionally alternated with dis- cussions of medical topics alone. This ac- tion exemplifies the usefulness of the fra- ternities, for with the degree of personal independence extant throughout the student body, such groups form the only lasting source of concerted organization. And it is these groups which are responsible for such convivial activities as dances, beach parties, and softball games. One other organization recently founded is AIMS fAssociation of Interns and Medi- cal Studentsj, a national affair Whose gen- eral function is to promote open discussion of such important subjects as medical eco- nomics, national health legislation, and medical education problems. Common gatherings, however, are not sponsored by the student body alone, for l at the beginning of each school year, the Memwifll 10 fl medical great administration has sponsored a tea to en- able freshmen and upperclassmen to get 144 The original skeleton in the closet to know each other. Throughout the winter season this same plan is pursued, and after- noon teas given daily are open to all clini- cal and research personnel. During recent years a great deal of em- phasis has been placed on research, and a considerable part of the School's activity has been in this Held. In order that the members may benefit from this work, the Yale Medical Society holds open meetings each month at which all recent papers are presented prior to publication. As a corol- lary to this, the Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine offers a means of publication for many of the papers. This journal has recently resumed its prewar status of hav- ing a student board of editors, who do a considerable amount of the work necessary 1415 for its printing. For members of the stu- dent body it forms the best means of pub- lication of research projects or theses. The ,lournal also furnishes to the medical scholar an opportunity to indulge in an ex- tra-curricular activity not strictly connected with medicine. There is no time in the con- centrated program of medical school for diversified activities on a scale approach- ing that offered in undergraduate Yale. But for the energetic or talented student, the publication experience involved in the pro- duction of such a magazine furnishes valu- able extra training and an opportunity for originality. As in any school where students take such an active part in their own education, an agent of liaison between the student body and the administration is required. For this purpose a Student Council exists, and also serves as a governing body for the members of the class. The Council was headed this year by Edward Foord, a graduate of Yale in the Class of 1945W. Beauty is only skin deep The graceful Chapel Spire rises above a delightful quadrangle Z... 1 IKE the other graduate schools of Yale, the Divinity School is a graduate profes- sional school Whose development has been a long process of response to the needs of the times. That spiritual training at Yale was intended by the founders themselves- ministers all-can he proved by their aims as set forth in the original charter drawn up for Yale College in 1701. ln quaint and quotable phrasing, Yale was to he a school 'awherein Youth may he instructed in the Arts and Sciences who through the blessing of Almighty God may he fitted for Puhlick employment hoth in Church and Civil State. With this ideal in mind, Yale has constantly enlarged its facilities for relig- ious instruction, with a Professorship of Divinity in 1746 and the organization of a separate Theological Department in 1822. Dean Luther A. Weigle, Ph.D., D.D 147 The degree of Bachelor of Divinity was first conferred in 1867 and the name of the department was changed to Divinity School in 1887. A big boost in the School's expansion came with the completion in 1932 of the Sterling Divinity Quadrangle. As a unit, the campus and buildings, located high on Prospect Street, are among the most beauti- ful and practical of any in the University. The old New England atmosphere of a green surrounded by rambling Georgian Colonial buildings reflects the serenity and calm purpose of the School. Located in this group, and Hanking the green, are dormitories housing over two hundred men and named after graduates of Yale who became famous as early Amer- ican religious leaders. At the end of the green and on the highest point of ground on the campus stands the graceful Divinity School Chapel, where both worship and stu- Indoor field work for a student preacher dent pulpit training are held. Also available to the hard-working young theologians are ample facilities for recreation. These in- clude a common room, library, gymnasium, and tennis courts. The Yale Divinity School has approached the problem of Christian religious education on a nonsectarian basis, and in this respect is one of the country's few major theologi- cal seminaries of University standing that crosses denominational lines. An indica- tion of this can be found in the make-up of the student body. Hailing from every corner of the country in a proportion ap- proximating the distribution of the Protes- tant population, the students represent over thirty denominations, and claim as alma maters no less than 180 colleges and uni- versities. A further examination of the student body reveals that of a total enrollment this year of 310, including 30 women, 114 were ex-servicemen-an encouraging sign that war has not, after all, produced a genera- tion of cynics. Rather, these men have in- jected into the atmosphere of the School a battle-tested sense of the urgent need of re- ligious convictions in the present-day world. ln addition, some twenty-eight former ser- vice chaplains have enrolled for graduate work this year. Through their discussion group, the Chaplains' Club, they have done much to further the solution of theological problems in the light of wartime experi- ences. For its own role in the war, the School can point to two years of coopera- tion with the Navy in the V-12 program for the training of chaplains. During this time sixty men were enrolled in the program- twice the number that chose any other theo- logical seminary. Of particular interest to postwar divinity students this year were the challenging ser- 148 Bull sessions put religious problems on informal, give-and-take basis ies of visiting lectures on world reconstruc- tion problems-delivered in part hy such Well-known Christian leaders as Emil Brunner and Reinhold Niehuhr. The School also continued to offer its famous Lyman Beecher Lectures, oldest and most cher- ished lecture series in the country, having been instituted in l872. ln keeping with the pioneering, progressive spirit of the Divinity School has been the development in recent years of undergraduate field Work as a degree requirement-a step which has received Wide acclaim and acceptance at all the country's leading theological seminaries. No longer does the Hedgling minister face the cold, cruel World with only aca- demic preparation. For when a divinity stu- dent attains his B.D. at Yale he has already had many months of experience in the pul- pit, in social welfare, and in religious edu- cation leadership. Thus, in a year when the world is so desperately in need of humanitarian recon- struction, the Yale Divinity School has done much to provide the practical idealism so necessary to the task. But, like any educational institution which realizes its responsibility to a world society, the School faces its chief test in the performance of her graduates. At all times reports are coming in to testify to their success. Chinese and American graduates are Working with the Y.lVl.C.A. in stricken Changshag Japanese graduates are leading the Way in the Christian renaissance accom- panying the HlVlacArthur experimentng and in shattered Germany some of the Divinity School's younger men are adding a great deal to the rehabilitation of the students in that demoralized country. Thus the Yale Divinity School is taking an active part in reconstruction, carrying an age-old mes- sage in a helping hand, and leading the way in the difficult, vital job that lies ahead. 149 ie Zak .law ONTINUALLY watchful of its guiding principle that Nthe law is concerned with justice as Well as proceduref, the Yale Law School has Completed its first full- fledged post-War year of legal curriculum. Within the blockwide confines of the Ster- ling Law Buildings, 1946-47 has witnessed a mingled alliance of forward-looking re- vision and time-honored tradition. Al- though the student population has been vir- tually trebled, the Law School under the guidance of Dean Wesley A. Sturges has steadfastly attempted to maintain its aims of small group education and individual instruction. Leafing through the pages of Yale his- tory, one finds the year 1301 as the birth date of legal education at Yale. Seth Staples is the name that stands out among the founding fathers in these early beginnings, and his guidance for almost three decades established a foundation which provides the cornerstone of the present lofty stature of the school. But this century and a half old past was not Without its vicissitudes, for the Mexican-to-Civil War era witnessed a sharp decline in standards and prestige. It was through the efforts of a group of Legal eagle roosts 150 young Connecticut lawyers that the status of the Law School rose from Hthe only place one could get into to an increasingly im- proving position. Since those efforts in 1870, growth has been a keynote, and one of the highlights naturally became the com- pletion of the Sterling Law Buildings in l93l. Within this single housing unit hums the Whole core of activity-from class rooms to bedrooms, from dining halls to libraries. To the present-day occupant in his career as an embryonic legal wizard, the routine is a rigorous one, for few are the partici- Not first but Laski What Moot the question be? Dean Wesley A. Sturges pants who may avoid Hburning the midnight oil'7 in search of the technical details of the judicial traditions of the past. There are mountains of books to read, briefs to pre- pare, cases to plead, advice to give and be given. From the first initiation into the sanctum of the Yale Law School all-or almost all-is aimed toward that day of graduation three years hence. But along with the seriousness of scholas- tic endeavor looms the influence of the extra-curricular activities-the Student Association, the moot courts, the publica- tions, and countless other heterogeneous groups. Hazy memories of the Law School social season highlight a sprightly selection of female forms which advertised informal football Weekends, the initiation of first- termers in 'Gbull and beer , parties, intra- Law basketball teams and squash aspirants plying their daily Wares at Payne Whitney Gymnasium, and the appearance of a coca- cola dispenser and cigarette vending ma- chine in a prominent spot in the smoking 151 l A case for close study room and lounge. Standing above the hierarchy of extra- curricular organizations Was the recently- instituted Law Student Association-a form of self-government which included every student as a member. The executive board, which delved into every phase of school ac- tivity during its monthly meetings, Was composed of two representatives from each of the upper five terms and a single repre- sentative from the first term. It was to a great extent through their efforts that the idea of a Law School dining hall for the first time in 122 years became a reality. Dean of all Law School publications is the Yale Law Journal, Whose Msuccess has been the mark of the vitality of the school itselff' Membership on the board of this periodical is the reward of many ranking scholars, and its 1,400-page output key- notes many of the accomplishments of the legal profession in its particular sphere at Yale. The efforts of the board have been marked by a general gain in readers, in quantity and quality of output, and in finan- cial rating. ,loining the Journal in the literary field I X .. - testi? 4,1 lf: 3 ll? 1. 5 1 Life of the party Dairymcufs dinner 152 is the Yale Reporter 1946 Supplement, which adds its bit to the thousands of law reports which annually record the Ncases and controversiesn arising in the United States. After a 35 year demise the Law School yearbook has also returned to the campus scene. Strolling past the Yale Law Courtroom, one can see neophyte associates taking their initial stance to plead actually litigated cases before distinguished members of the Bench sitting in the capacity of guest Hjudgesv. The Barristers Union has pro- vided an increasing number of second and third year students with an opportunity to try cases under simulated courtroom con- ditions. Finally the Yale Legal Aid Asso- ciation ollers student participation in the disposition of routine legal matters. Bulletin Ballers North Court of Sterling Law Buildings The Four Freedoms by Frances Kells Ze ad of 74254 UF THE hundreds of famished Freshmen who nightly parade under the uhridgev on High Street on their Way to the Waldoi'f, it is doubtful Whether more than a handful are aware that they are passing an institu- tion Which, for nearly a century, has been rated high as a center of the development of latent artistic talent. The contribution of the School of Fine Arts is not limited to providing oggle-eyed Eli undergraduates With their closest approach to co-educationg over the years it has quietly expanded and developed its facilities until today it offers training in such varied subjects as Paint- ing, City Planning, Sculpture, Architecture, and Drama, and has done much to stimu- late America's awakening cultural con- sciousness. Dean Everett V. Meeks . . . Daliance . . . D of774cm'6a7mwZ5caQ6Zwae STUDENT enrolled in either the Depart- ment of Painting or of Sculpture has avail- able hoth expert and sympathetic instruc- tion, and the most modern of facilities. His five-year course is a thorough training in his . . . But just here . . . chosen field, and is designed not only to develop his individual talent to the greatest possible degree, hut to give him an aware- ness of the artistic context in which his work will be viewed. All students are re- quired to attend lecture courses in the His- tory of Fine Arts, and, after the comple- tion of two years of primarily technical training and three of a more individual nature, the holder of the Bachelor's degree may take two additional years towards the degree of Master of Fine Arts. Graduates of this Department are in the front rank of a new generation of American artists, and their works may he found in the nation,s great galleries. Besides the graduate cur- riculum, the School offers courses to under- graduates in the History and Appreciation of Art, and the Gallery is in possession of several renowned collections. 156 Modern architecture . . . function and beauty . . . D dffg dddafqpzdltltiltf HE Department of Architecture has de- veloped its course of study with the inten- tion of training men to have an understand- ing of their field far beyond its mere tech- nical aspects. With the tremendous devel- opments in enlightened city planning, slum clearance and low-cost housing which have concerned engineers in this lield in recent years, it has become apparent that a good architect is more than a good technician . . . he must also contribute to the psychological and social well-being of his fellow man. With an eye to contemporary and future social needs, the curriculum is built around a basic four-year course in one of three fields: design, construction, and city plan- ning. After two and a half years of profes- sional work, the student finds in the last year and a half the specialized instruction and advice which will be of most benefit to his individual aptitudes. A11 aspects of design and construction are integrated with courses in theory, historical analysis and the sociological usefulness of the particular problem under examination. The Section of City Planning was estab- lished in 1938 as a recognition of the fact that there is no possibility of bringing order out of the present urban chaos without the organized foresight which planning alone can provide. The value of this sort of train- ing was proven shortly thereafter, when the . . . it's basis is planning . . . Section's first important study, a HlVlaster Plan for Bridgeport, excited national at- tention, and dramatized the necessity for further analysis along the same lines. Since the Bridgeport study was made, its success in drawing the attention of local ofiicials to the underlying causes of unhealthy and 157 cities are requiring the sort of training of- t ,r,, t fered b this section before a candidate if if may be accepted for a major administrative Z job. The value of study in the Department rg 3 it jf , of Architecture and City Planning is now 32 1 , 2 , ' 3? -0 72 I, , . . . Q beginning to be appreciated by undergrad- y uates interested in public administration. ,,' g or to ff fy as riu -I 1 ' G , 3 ,' 344 Q4wf ' fri Model Community: Stage 431 dangerous conditions in many communities has added impetus to the already expand- ing movement for increasing the role of trained personnel in government. Other colleges and universities have made studies of similar problems of zoning, sanitation and housing, and an increasing number of Model Community.. Stage 552 Model Community: Stage 33 158 D a,4z'4eD-mme: HE Department that has perhaps the closest link with its professional field is the Department of Drama. Here are enrolled not only men and Women interested in an academic career, but also many who are al- ready actively engaged in the theater. Spe- cialization in direction, scene and costume design, technical production, lighting, and uspeech and interpretation'7 is integrated with a course of study giving a rounded understanding of all aspects of the field. The entire training, leading to the degree of Master of Fine Arts, calls for three years of study and experience derived from the Weekly productions of the School and the full-scale performances given several times a year. The Department is not confined to dramatic specialists, however, as the under- graduate may enroll in survey courses cov- ering various aspects of the theater. Concentrated talent From an idea of Edgar A. Guest Practice in the Auditorium gEFORE the organization of the Yale University School of Music in 1894, courses in music were given in Yale Col- lege by the Battell Professor of the Theory of Music. Now, housed in Sprague Memo- rial Hall at the corner of College and Wall Streets, the School provides courses in music for the students of Yale College and gives musicians advanced professional training. Its 150 students, of Whom men and Women are in equal ratio, aspire for the degrees of Bachelor of Music and Mas- ter of Music, those interested in the History of Music may take advanced courses in the Graduate School leading to the degrees of Master of Arts and Doctor of Philosophy. Many facilities for the study of music are offered to the students of Yale College: at any stage of advancement they may join classes in applied music, while other courses have modest prerequisites. Applied music furnishes instruction in pianoforte, organ, violin, viola, violoncello, singing, harpsi- chord, Wind instruments, and ensemble playing. College men may major in music, and the courses are divided into the three fol- lowing main fields of study other than ap- plied music: Theory of Music, Composition, and the History and Literature of Music. Elementary courses in theory have been ar- ranged in the Department of Music in Yale College, and additional courses in Theory and Composition are open to qualiiied stu- dents. Courses in the History of Music in- clude general surveys and those dealing with restricted periods. Many other opportunities are provided by the School of Music for the College men. The Library, ranking among the best music libraries in the country, contains all the collected works of the great composers, a fine collection of Works published before 1800, and numerous early scores of operas and chamber music. One of the glories of the Music Library is the original 4'Klavier- biichlein vor Friedemann Bach, a notebook provided by Johann Sebastian Bach for the instruction of his eldest son, Friedemann, when the latter was nine years old. In it 160 appear for the first time the two- and three- part Inventions as well as many of the Prel- udes from the Well-tempered Klavier- compositions long since practiced by aspir- ing pianists all over the world. An excellent collection of phonograph records may be used by College men. ln addition to several practice organs, the School has the use of three large organs, one of which, the Newberry Memorial Organ in Woolsey Hall, belongs among the finest in the country. The Yale Collection of Musical lnstru- ments, which you will Hnd if you start up the stairs just at the entrance to the Fresh- man Commons and walk up as far as you can, contains many antique keyboard and stringed instruments of great interest, many of which are kept in good playing condition. Among the more noteworthy examples are a Kirkmann harpsichord that belonged to Napoleon, an early pianoforte almost cer- tainly played upon by Beethoven, and the Dean Bruce Simonds Bechstein grand piano upon which Wagner composed the Ring operas. The concert life offered by the School is very rich. The annual series of eight con- certs given by the New Haven Symphony Orchestra is conducted by various members of the School faculty, accompanied by em- inent soloists. The Woolsey Hall series comprises several concerts by well-known musicians and organizations. Several organ recitals are given in Woolsey Hall and Dwight Chapel, and there are dozens of student concerts. During the past few years unique concerts of thirteenth, fourteenth, and fifteenth century music have been given by the Collegium Musicum of the School under the direction of Professor Patil Hin- demith, one of the worldls great authorities on music of this period. So far as pos- sible these concerts present the music as it sounded at that time, using contemporary instruments. At present the enrollment in the School itself is about 150, 50 per cent over normal. The main building of the School is the Albert Arnold Sprague Memorial Hall at the corner of College and Wall Streets. It was erected in 1917 in honor of Col. Albert Arnold Sprague, B.A. 1859, and is the gift of Mrs. Sprague and her daughter. 161 ,P Intent foresters usqueeze bloody from a wood specimen 'Me of 7afze40zq HE School of Forestry opened its doors last fall to experience an all-time record in student enrollment, the total registration of 87 men representing the largest attendance in the forty-seven year history of the insti- tution and an increase of more than one hundred per cent over the prewar average. ln addition, ll forestry students were en- rolled in the Graduate School, 9 of them Working for the Ph.D. degree. The student body Was comprised of graduates of forty- four American and ten foreign colleges and universities, the foreign representation in- cluding men from Australia, Canada, China, Denmark, India, Scotland, and South Africa. Eighty-two of the students are former servicemen, five of them having served in the British military service, and no fewer than fifty of the men are married. 163 Dean George A. Garrett, MA., Ph.D Playing with blocks for keeps The past year marked the inception of work leading to the advanced professional degree of Doctor of Forestry QD. Foixj. This degree will be conferred under the direction of the School of Forestry, which has administered the work for the lVlaster of Forestry degree since its establishment in l900. The program of advanced work leading to the D. For. degree parallels that required for the Ph.D. in intensity of train- ing and technical achievement. It differs from the Ph.D. program, which has been available to foresters enrolled in the Grad- uate School for the past sixteen years, chiefly in that it deals with the applied, pro- fessional aspects of forestry as well as the basic theoretical phases. lt applies to work in such fields of forestry as wood tech- nology, applied silviculture, forest man- agement, forest mensuration, and lumber- ing. The summer of 1946 marked the reopen- ing of the summer term of the School of Forestry after a lapse of four years. The work of this eleven-week session, required of all two-year men enrolling for the lVl.F. degree, is conducted at the summer camp in the towns of Canaan and Norfolk in northwestern Connecticut. This camp, built in l94Ll and given to the School by Edward C. Childs, HA. 1928, M.F. l932, is located in the heart of the five thousand acre Great lVlountain Forest, which has also been made available as a field laboratory for instruc- tion and research. The camp was originally constructed for a maximum of twenty stu- dents, but the increased enrollment of re- turning veterans necessitated doubling up on most facilities to accommodate the 33 men in attendance. A total of 28 students also crowded the spring camp at Crossett, Arkansas. This complete field camp was constructed in l94L6 by the Crossett Lumber Company, for the exclusive use of the School of Forestry. The company has also made available for training purposes its half million acres of forest land, operated under sustained-yield management, and its utilization facilities, comprising logging operations, two saw- mills and associated remanufacturing plants, pulp and paper and bag mills, a Wood distillation plant, and a wood preser- vation plant. These combined facilities oifer unexcelled opportunity for effective training in forest management and forest utilization. Throughout the year, field in- struction in several phases of forestry was conducted on the Eli Wvhitney Forest near New Haven. One of the major postwar developments has centered around the School,s program in wood technology, involving extension of both instruction and research in the proper- ties of solid wood, plywood and laminated l64 wood. The scope of this program was in- creased during the past year, with the award to the School of a Navy contract for a study of tropical woods. This project is intended to evaluate the properties and po- tentialities of selected timbers from Mexico and Central and South America, as substi- tutes for teak, oak, and other native and imported hardwoods now in increasing short supply. The School is in a particularly strategic position for work on such a proj- ect, not alone because of facilities for re- search in wood technology, but also as a result of the available information on the woods of Latin America and other tropical regions. This information has been accu- mulated through the program of intensive research on tropical woods conducted over a period of more than twenty years, dur- ing which time there has been assembled the largest and most comprehensive collec- tion of woods in existence. The authentic samples in Yale's Wood Collection today number more than forty-four thousand. During the year the groundwork has also been laid for a program of study in the field of photogrammetry, as related to for- est management. The use of aerial photo- graphs in type mapping, timber cruising, and other phases of forestry work has de- veloped rapidly during the past several years and has become an important aspect of instruction and research in forest man- agement. Extracurricular student activities have centered around the Forest Club, a student organization designed to provide opportu- nities for social contacts and additional ac- tivities not provided for in other ways. The Club met every other week during the year, to hear talks by men who are prominent in forestry and university circles, and also sponsored a series of dances for its mem- bers. An infinite variety of trees and their troubles to learn 165 Learning laboratory technique 7 4644! of Wmzaing QNE of the most recent of the graduate schools at Yale is the School of Nursing, founded in 1923. In the past twenty-three years the University has granted degrees to some eight hundred nurses, representing forty-six states and over three hundred col- leges, who are now giving international scope to their professional ideal of prevent- ing disease, caring for the sick, and build- Dean Elizabeth S. Bixler ing public health and well-being. Impressive as the statistics may be, and thrilling as may be the future ahead, it is the experience of the work itself which holds the interest of the student nurse. From the day when the freshman first un- loads her bags at Nathan Smith Hall, which is to be her home for the beginning months of her two and a half year course, each succeeding day brings new and challenging experiences. She finds her classmates con- genial companions in the exciting business of learning a new profession and the upper class students friendly and sympathetic as she faces new problems. Surrounded by the homelike atmosphere of HNathan Smith , she settles down to the task of reviewing or learning anew the many scientific subjects which will serve her as valuable back- ground in the future months and years of nursing, and makes frequent trips to the practice ward to perfect the newly learned techniques of uNursing Arts. After five months she completes this pre- clinical period and begins her actual work in the wards of the New Haven Hospital. The transition is not a sudden one, however, for she has had simple experience on the 166 wards during preclinical, and studies con- tinue unabated, the review classes being re- placed by doctors' lectures on specific disease conditions being encountered in the daily work, and by nursing lectures on the care of the patients suffering from these diseases. Under careful supervision she learns to nurse patients in each division of the hospital: Surgical, Medical, Pediatric, Isolation, Clinic, Emergency Room, and Operating Room. She observes and takes part in the science of managing diet kitchen, formula room and surgical supply. During this period she moves to Sterling dormitory, adjacent to the hospital, and comes to ap- preciate this proximity as she goes to and from the wards at the irregular hours a hos- pital regime necessitates. All is not study and work for the student during this time, her schedule leaves many hours for play. ln the summer she takes frequent trips with the other students to the Hcottagew on the shore for picnics and swims. There are bicycle rides, hikes up East Rock and tennis on the hospital courts. The Nursing School, the dormitories and the Medical School fraternities sponsor sev- eral dances during the year, and the girls Concentratton in Surgery have many informal dormitory get-to- gethers. Movies, plays, lectures and con- certs in the city round out her days of nursing. The months go by rapidly and the stu- dent suddenly realizes that she is a Senior. She finds she has greater abilities and as- surance to bring to Senior nursing and Ob- stetrics, to affiliations with the New Haven Visiting Nursing Association and with a Psychiatric Hospital. While accepting the responsibilities of ward management and student supervision, she becomes aware that soon she will be no longer a student but a graduate, prepared to fill a place in a world so in need of nurses. The Class of 1947, M. N. 167 l ACTIVITIES X Bach Row: Willcox, Twichell, Mattern, Brooks, McLean. Third Row: Wilson, H. Weaver, Mox- ley, Mooney, Wickser, Loomis. Second Row: Holmes, H. Childs, Wynne, Kostner, M. Childs, P. Weaver, Rohrbach. Front Row: Spaulding, Robertson, Finney. 0'Brien, Tilghman, Rappleye, Rashhaum. A f f - sl , ,, if aaa The Oldest college Daily F - FTJnhrlfZlW,la1QryT28, 1878 Wu Philip O'Brien, Jr., Chairman W'illar1l Cole Rappleye, Jr., Nlauaging Editor Theodore Royen Robertson, Business Maliager Maurice Rashhaum, Jr., Sports Editor William Slocum Tilghman, Vice-Chairman Joseph Ottokar Koslner. Advertising Nlanager James Mahon Childs, Assislant Business Manager Charles Pratt Twichell, Sports Editor Josiah Augustus Spaulding, Assistant Nlanaging Editor Edward Cyril Wiynne, Circulation Zllanager Haney Childs, Jr., Assistant Business Manager EDITORS Oliver Brooks George Burgnin Holmes .lohn W'ashhurn McLean Howard Sayre W'eaver Williaxii Bradley Cnley, II Alfred Wnrlhingtoxi Loomis David Mnxley Robert Livingston Wiekser John Xvarren Finney Henry Luce, Ill John Crandin Rohrbach ASSOCIATE EDITORS Marshall A. Binder Robert Hunlinglon James D. McElroy Wilson Nolen Franklin G. Sherrill, II Henry P. Childs Charles E. Lord, Il Richard E. Mooney Gilbert H. Pcarsall Samuel S. Walker, Jr. Alan S. Garner John Wi. Mnltern Lelloy T. Morgan Richard E. Shapiro Harold M. Willcox Philip Lyman V'eaver, Photographic Editor James Lauris Wlilson, Photographic Editor PHOTOGRAPHERS , Samuel E. Church James C. Cook Edward F. Conklin Noel Fehin Jonathan W. Rogers HEAR YE The News takes pleasure in announcing the selection of the following columnists to write for the 1947 Board: General: James D. Sherwood, Peter H. Skala, Stephen F. Chadwick, J. Curtis Farrar, and George B. Pettengillg Humor: Philip A. Parkes and Ignatius G. Mattinglyg Movie and Drama: Hugh C. Sherwood, Stuart H. Johnson, and George Kearns. 170 i l e s Q' ee,-age as Swear Largest Fr h ssl 5 A - 9? man Class ln Hist - A ss' S Unlverslty Com 0fY Matrlculates T d onts Problems gf .R o ay eeonversion' Q3 fx Q? Ladressggggggggb' ME Y,.,.fse names To New Comp e T Lnpiziizsztirkgta X Fa D Col'r CLgZ2,6f2'i',Dean D '3'ZZ7Zi,Z' 5 ' ' R aelves DUB Toances 'Very Dion Sizzix? Yale Yveilsmlm. e A 3f'1?Hm Rovming S oubfful' Us av Un,esfs,:gg5n'g2ii:,,:g3fs bortage reassess max yrrmas dented lllg Cl Avaqab, From IH may Ave. llnnreee 3 W xsane T oral E2-lfgtmxifie E 1svei5Pl,:iNar Norm 291 G 5 11, Fgiicl To W X Pe d El cify Svnwlws Qyaxew '+ S 9 saws new lessee nnrngei . vqsllv Xl en 2 avg Asks Curbs 00m Rentals 41,9 Ar-5 ml As Scalpers Q, H wt SL ut sm LW'rh Tickets Wettest Week n Results In Fig hind 1371 Yale History, B0 Flood. Black Market I Yfpwaf C n ic 4 Rf s, roberty Damage Open o . amid fl f Names, Pam Pfopag Pmffkes ffl ,Afhlerif A Elm Raulers Paint Zliyir 8131. At ,ff Ragfrmufffiogariorl 1 ln ey lnzer, B men' ,, Nass 'lr er Blue ff-wagons! D 'Y and ' Sean d Te Halt Harvard, 27-14 Yale Eleven Comes From Behln .lunior Prom Qommittesv Reveals Plans For Gala Spring eekenrl - B 5-1 . ' gr Cnlmllll Y Students Fm or NNE nllllnnleaves 'L,5All gel liritishembassarlerl oSneal1 Desne llnnerimmle 0 Y , l Undergrad Mlalebailvllews Banque A me T ., ksn'a:z:Fsi'S2::tf flnounced F mon Inch, Q1eg1rr.p.n2uf.x:'32fg,f-Sly or Acaage emffi Ye ar 171 J 7 AFTER three years of suspended animation the comatose News has been resusci- tated-some little bit of the uoldl' Yale re- vived at the hands of the most polyglot board that lathe Oldest College Dailyo' has ever known . . . Back from parts where knit ties are unknown, we were a board without a paper . . . Somebody suggested cham- pagne and we realized that part of the News tradition was back . . . Chairman Phil O'Brien, Business Manager Ted Rob- ertson, and Managing Editor Bill Rappleye laid the groundwork through the Spring term. By mid-August we were hard at work. Putting out the first issue, a fat 28 pages, was occasion for a bit of exuberant merri- ment which more or less overwhelmed some of the untutored heelers . . . Libations were poured upon the composing stones of Van Dyckis . . . Johnny and Harold Honore grumbled some decorous hopes about early copy, but took no notice of the nocturnal habits of the chairman . . . Rappleye read proof-didnit say anything about uhacksw the next day . . . W6,1'6 off! The OCD under new management. Cris Rashbaum, nuclear energy at the sports desk, roared into a terrific football season, rolled over a roadster and the AA in the process . . . News readers knew more about the players' injuries than the trainer . . . Ticket allocations took an edi- torial beating . . . A comp ended, so Joe Kostner and Robertson reluctantly dug into the exchequer to buy a martini or two and dinner, which, according to the heelers, they never saw . . . New strength gave the post- graduate editors, drafted during the early difficult days, relief from their labor of love and they went their way graced with our gratitude . . . Si Spaulding kept smiling, O,Brien kept peace. John Finney wrapped another roll of ad- hesive tape around the stem of his pipe, furrowed his brow, and wrote a letter . . . The week of the Princeton game brought an all night vigil as Tiger retaliation was ex- pected after a successful Blue raid on the cake-eaters, home grounds . . . Though the raid didn't materialize, everyone did take immunization shots at the Zete bar . . . Sat- urday morning we entertained the Prince- zfonian staff with milk punch and buffet lunch in the lVlemorial Room . . . We all enjoyed ourselves and our fellow editors, dates . . . Shekel-counter Robinson pretend- ed, most convincingly, to enjoy himself . . . Tilghman was there . . . Spaulding and Buckley, the ucider kingsn, about this time were using the front hall of the News to push their business. Editorial crusading had its vogues as usual. We were agin some of the policies of the AA, the Faculty Committee on Un- dergraduate Activities, the AYD, but ufor God, for country, and for Yalef, . . . We pleaded for fraternity dances, a student council, praised the football team and PU, prodded the cheerleaders and AA, and were definitely pro-Dramat in another of the ex- tra-curricular teapot typhoons. Through it all O'Brien,s late edits had Honore threat- ening to resign. Christmas neared . . . Charley Twichell became sports editor . . . Another comp ended with a soiree in Rappleye's room, afterwards his roommates wrung out the rug, lit candles, and resumed their studies . . . We took to carrolling just before vaca- tion . . . Published a picture of a demoniac Santa Claus uprooting Harkness Tower and departed for parts unknown. We were fortunate enough to have Lord lnverchapel, British Ambassador to the U. S., accept our invitation to the annual banquet .... We drooled for the heeling potential in the Class of l95O. 73 Back Row: Crowell, Kennedy, Bunge, West, Ottley, Lynch. Second Row: Kahn, Betteridge, Clark, Milheiser, Walsh, Kone. Front Row: Knight, lsham, Cobb, Sutter, Wiehl. The Yale Banner REBIRTH of the Banner is a story falling into three rough parts. And rough is the word. Original Work of regenesis sprang from the hopes of non-Bannermen Hey Isham, Knight work Bill Cobb, and Roy Walsll who held beery discussions on l946 over the possibility of an annual that year. Time and Tide forced postponement, but the Banner Reorganiza- tion Committee, headed by Bob Knight, eX- editor returned from the wars, laid plans for the l95O Old Campus and the 1947 yearbook. The second part began when late sum- mernights' dreams were put into operation in the fall term. Freshmen were presented an efficient array of forms asking for everything from biography to the promise to buy their own secrets. You can charge! Bill Cobb was elected Chairman in Sep- tember, and the gears Whirred as old men came back to help. Bill Betteridge was Cir- culation Shylock, and Bob Knight put his feet on the powder key labelled NBusiness 174 lVlanager's Deskf' Roy Walsh shepherded advertisers into our fold, while Hey lsham and Bill Sutter, with the help and hindrance of our first blessed group of heelers, put the Old Campus to bed. It was not decently asleep before Yale Banner Publications as the organization is pretentiously known, found that it had a new constitution. Board members were for- bidden to charge at lVlory's unless accom- panied by the Business Manager. The con- stitution had a clause limiting heelers, work to a 24-hour day, and mentioned something about a second publication. We wondered if it were possible .... Cooking an eye at the soaring printing charges, and at the high cost of living with Ted Robertson, we took the plunge into the third phase. Ernie Wiehl was elected Chairman to succeed graduating Bill Cobb, Bob Knight took his feet from the powder keg and, instead, sat on it. The reporlerss report Able and willing photographers Fred Kahn and Elliott Kone snapped pictures of all things in sight, and some not, Ollie Brooks practiced Banner-News metamor- phosis nightly, accepting tirades from both chairmen with equal quiet dignity. Seven new Board Members, remarking that heel- 1 at ll t 541 it s . titi f . r aa . i i ego r- r . X5 . t,s p K2 A ing with nothing like this, turned to and we began to produce. Troubles struck with re- lentless consistency and a professional pub- lishing confusion filled the office air. One sure way to get quiet in the bedlam was to ask c4Who doesn't want a beer?,7 Belying appearances, though, concrete work was ac- complished in the terrible din. From the efforts the first postwar Banner emerged. Volume CVI is our child and we are proud of it, for its faults are our own All Yale reads The Banner 75 f WYALE gounded 117.2 5 ROBERT C. HARDWICK, Chairman RICHARD N. COHEN, Business Manager '47 LOUIS A. WATRES, II, Art Editor ROBERT C. BALDRIGE, Business Manager '46 RALPH G. SODERBERG, Managing Editor WILLIAM M. BENJAMIN, Advertising Manager ,47 WILLIAM A. RILEY, Circulation Manager 747 ROBERT J. ROYLE, Advertising Manager '46 WILLIAM B. CURRAN, Circulation Manager '46 HARRY BERCER, JR., Feature Editor GEORGE H. SINGER, III, Treasurer 2 tt? A X5 P 5 5 3533 3 5 3 z . s 5 . f Back Row: Berger, Sherry, Bohling, Cavell, Kenny, Edens, Baldrigc Kelsey, Suler, Medlock, Parkes. Front Row: Yeager, Soderberg, Watres, Hardwick, Cohen, Curran, Benjamin. 176 EARLY last spring, the groundhog stepped out of his cave, looked about, turned and said ult7s O.K. now, bub, come on outn. The Record Owl then appeared for the first time in three years, and immediately began to organize for a Bigger and Better Oldest College Comic. The difhculties were many-lack of trained personnel, the sobering influence of the great conflict just past, a liquor shortage -but from the ranks stepped the veteran Bob Guidi, closely followed by the veteran Bob Hardwick, closely followed by two process-servers. Nothing fazed Guidi, how- ever, well known throughout California as the Faze on the Barroom Floor. HW'e're starting a new faze of operationsf, he snapped truculently. 46We'll sweep the country-the greatest thing that ever hit the newsstands. Never before will so many have owed so much to so few-we'll be millionaires. And I don7t want any of you guys to get smart and think he can sell us short-7, Record Record . . . Gaidi, Martha, Hardwick . . . ult faze to be ignorantf' interjected Hardwick tersely. One day, the dusty figure of B. G. Soder- berg, another veteran, crept painfully out of a dark bin. Looking quickly about him, he whispered Gals it over?,, and began to tremble violently. Soon reassured, he brightened visibly and began to bark orders at a host of heelers, who barked back. On June the fifth, a glorious day in his- tory, the first post-war Record appeared. The Normalcy Number was a tremendous success, and congratulations poured in. The flood of postcards, special delivery letters, airmail envelopes and boxtops was over- whelming. The summer vacation came and went, and the scattered staff worked desperately to put a Freshman issue together. Wvard and Hardwick in New Haven sweated most frantically, while Parkes, Guidi, Soderberg, Lanin and so on sent contributions in hope- fully from their beaches and mountains. The result was much better than anyone had feared-Slick Cracy, Hardwick's saga of the indestructible copper, knocked the citi- zens out, and the housing shortage and over- crowding staggered and nearly fell under 177 l il 0 l ' T'? -T, if H -E n 6 time. The Record Privy be- li g Q ,nr IE fm, Q ig came a familiar sight at H ier ' 0 Q , 0004 E 1' ng girlis colleges throughout l , ,mm , ffl! Q aa E l wi., l .O 5 egg V B7 I, V N A New England, and a few nu Y :Q ' if , - , U - -s ,gig ml bg-ills si1ig.?5f.Y5g5..s of .56 !q .' F ve of is X Q best men never returned 4-ga Q ' 00 ' from these hunting trips ful 7 ' 4:2959 g X fone remains only a stuffed A 1 Ik I-gl r 0 ' ll L.: -I l nfll - 17:15 L, N49 X t t head on the wall of a Vassar dormj, but circulation sky- rocketed. At a full dayis brilliant activities, Miss x Moryis the impact of the shattering blows dealt it by the Recordis savage humor. Harry Berger, fugitive, appeared fur- tively and began again that particular brand of humor which once got him banned from the mails. At a local beer parlor, he related to a tense group his wartime perils. Hlroam, sweet foam, he babhled happily into his glass. Staring at the tepid liquid, he be- gan to sing softly Ml'll Be Glad When Yotfre Head, You Rascal You and was gone for the night. The Rahliahlilah Rah Issue was notable for the galleries of College types, characters, clans and Martha O'Driscoll charmed the university, and allowed as how Yale Record men combined Ame- che's brains with Einstein's looks. The football game with Columbia was anti- climactic. After tossing off a hilarious Princeton issue, the editors bent all efforts to a parody of the New York Daily News, which ap- peared just before Christmas-Chairman Hardwick dressing as Santa and personally going down two thousand campus chim- neys, while the board carolled drunkenly in the courtyards. Hailed as the best issue in Record history, the News sold like hotcakes, 0.H.-The poor marfs Mory's iiiliiif.ieatuffi5diiii.bHii'iS i i 7 77 YL +- Mtv i - I - Wat1'es were the toast of N j New Haven after this feat, 2' 0 l 5, ' v Ria? K and the collegiate world A f Q O9 , W2 shouted HHuzzah!7' in uni- fx I' 9: I y son at the huge banquet if gf , given in their honor at a W I1 fi nearby boite, at which W iik al T' 'i '- Southern Style Hamburgers Q ,Q 4 were the piece cle resistance. gig 7'i Publicity and promotion X Q' t progressed rapidly all this 52 lt r 'WJNNXW bww 0 Mt txt A NNN ' X 178 Yale... and a premium price was soon oiiered fone man going as high as twenty-five cents in his mad frenzy to obtain a copyj. For this issue the editors voted themselves the fun- niest men in America, and when Life, after a torrid romance, won permission to give the parody a big spread, all America agreed. The Seventy-fifth, or Diamond, Anniver- sary issue, containing the best material from all issues, proved again that for sheer quality and high standards, not to say grit and the American way of life, the Record has always been tops. fadvj With the spring and Junior Prom came l.9 the Spring Issue, as always, hysterically funny. By this time, the campus was bleed- ing at every opening from the uncontrollable laughter produced by the Record, and in a student poll, that famous and worthy pub- lication was elected Lieutenant Governor of Connecticut. Coupled with the emergence of this col- lection of past glories was the Record's an- nual beauty contest. The winner was awarded a contract with R.K.O. pictures and is even now being groomed for the role of Americals sweetheart. She will be Fred MacMurray's sweetheart in her first film, however. And so the year passed in a blaze of Der- by day parties and graduating ceremonies, and the Record finished its first year of peaceful operation with great credit, a faithful and appreciative audience, and a hangover. Tradition was sustained. 1 . 17, ' Mr gg! lx J ii REV? fi W li Xl! I 1 t - at N t 4 ...Sacks Back Row: Wise, Shimony, Hall, Shapiro. Front Row: McMahon, Shattuck, Yafiee. The Yale Literary Magazine BEGINNING the year 1946-19117, the Lit found itself committed to a return to monthly publication and the accompanying burdens. The War years had obliged the Lit to reduce its activity to quarterly ap- pearance, but a series of devoted editors kept the magazine very much alive when all other undergraduate publications had fallen into silence. Several former editors re- turned from the service during the spring and summer and helped to bring out the first issue on the first day of the fall term. Phoenix-like, the Lit had been reborn. After the first issue, the magazine in- creased its size and the number of its con- tributors. A special Christmas number de- voted to criticism of American authors re- ceived excellent comment. The traditional Freshman Competition Was revived, and the results were of high quality. There is little doubt that the Lit was justified in returning to a full publication schedule in view of the wide interest in creative Writing and criti- cism to which it has been able to give ex- pression. Inevitably, editorial difficulties were encountered, often in the form of fic- tion writers who had subscribed too long to the New Yorker or poets who had read too much Eliot. No editor likes to reject mate- rial, Whether he has too much or not enoughg nevertheless, a great number of manuscripts had to be rejected With the con- structive criticism that was deserved. lt is just this opportunity for careful crit- icism that has been too often lacking at Yale. In the past, manuscripts have been occasionally rejected Without comment, and this procedure is no contribution toward the 180 development of writing ability within the student body. This year the editors have made an effort to discuss the manuscripts with their authors and to explain the basis for the decisions made in each case. The policies that guided the editing of the Lit are amply expressed in the Leader of the first issue: MThe tone which perme- ates this writing will we hope not be char- acterized by its undergraduate origin. There is to be found here now no uniformity of attitude, adolescence, of prejudice which can be so easily classified under this one word. We are not the voice of Yale Uni- versity. There are five thousand men who can write for the Lit and whose infinite need for individual communication is our justi- fication. The communication must be both within this huge body and with as many readers outside as can be found .... The value of this magazine does not rest with the imposing aspect of its format, the length of its history, or the fatness of its issues. It rests with the extent to which it can find and publish the best undergraduate writing and assist in its improvementf, The business affairs of the Lit were well cared for by a board whose numbers swelled in two heeling competitions from one to seven. Viforking in a new ofiice in the News Building, the business board more than tripled the circulation of the magazine and increased the advertising to a point where the Lifs financial condition is thor- oughly sound. The work involved in these two accomplishments was tremendous, and upon them the magazine depends for its physical existence. A crisis suddenly arose in February because of the closing of the regular printer, but the printing was trans- ferred to the S. Z. Field Co. of this city and the March issue appeared on schedule. Peter l. l-lershman was the business mana- ger, and the members of the business board were: Bill, Doolittle, Klimczali. Smith, Steinberg, and Volk. Chancellor of the exchequer Through these type- writers have passed 181 Back Row: Davis, Hansen, Johnston, Pratt, Piel, Vetault, Michalove, Mellor, Mitchell, Colleran, Daniels, C. Noyes. Third Row: Moliit, Schwalbe, Simon, Riche, Neufeld, lsham, Lindblad, Howe, Vining, Shurnan. Second Row: Mr. Corrigan, Nolen, Pastore, T. Noyes, Cecil, Carter, Williams. Front Row: Rabinowitz, Kearns, Spokes, Burr, Bonnie. Sloat, Morrill. The Yale Dramatic Association N KEEPING with the policy it has followed since its founding in 1900, the Yale Dramat has continued to produce plays sel- dom seen elsewhere and theatre of high cal- ibre that has received less attention than it merited. Reorganizing the Dramat after a three year hiatus was not easy. lt required the combined efforts of old Dramat members, interested newcomers and ever-faithful pa- trons and friends to put the Dramat on its feet again. The natural curtain raiser was . . . And For Yale, perennial Yale favor- ite. Complete with hisses, dastardly work at the cross-roads, and the yin de siecle Yale Crew, Dave Daniels, Hey Isham, and others provided the cheers and jeers that launched the Dramat in its first post-war season. Following their initial success, the Dra- fue been framed mat produced a play that many college dra- matic groups would long hesitate before at- tempting to tackle. Beggar on Horseback, which scored its first success on Broadway in the roarin' twenties, was the next offer- 182 ing. Involving a fantasy sequence and an intricate musical score which called for a ballet, written by Deems Taylor, the play was successfully put over by a competent cast composed of such veterans as Lou Frank, Tom Noyes, Art Pastore, and Ann Noyes and Rely Howe. A difhcult show to produce at any time, the Dramat displayed admirable ambition by producing such a The light brigade show at this early period of its reorganiza- tion. Much of the credit for its success goes to George Serries, who directed it with fine theatrical sense of values. Repleted with many old Dramat mem- bers, the Spring Term prospects looked Listless, Iegless, laughless bright. Elections were held with the of- fices going to Tom Noyes as President, Russ Cecil as Vice-President and Art Pas- tore as Secretary, with Holy Nolen and Pete Mofiitt capably filling the posts of Business Manager and Treasurer respectively. Bob Wlilliams was appointed Production Man- ager. For the Spring Show, many possibilities were considered, but Clifford Odetsi Goi- cien Boy was the final selection. Difficult to Cast, the well-known fight saga of the boy who had to choose between a pugilistic ca- reer and the life of a concert violinist, was produced with remarkable results. Chuck Crisis in New Amsterdam A bunch of lhe boys were whooping' it up- Nolte as Joe Bonaparte, Tom, Crosby and Ann Noyes all added to the dramatic im- pact of the moving play. They were assisted by an admirable supporting cast which in- cluded Morris Tynes, Lou Connick, Art Pastore, and Julia Harned. So successful was this unusual produc- tion of Golden Boy, that it was decided to give the same play for graduation. As well received as it was when first presented, the Dramat gave a send off to the Class of '46 and the Reunion crowd with a magnificent cast of what has now become a modern clas- sic. With its original cast and few changes Golden Boy must be considered one of the truly memorable Dramat plays ever pre- sented. Making his Dramat debut, Bill Corrigan, the new director, presented for the Fresh- man show the exciting melodrama, Irwin Shaw's The Assassin, which had enough cloak and dagger elements to make up a fine play. Plaudits are in order for ,lon lsham and Ann Noyes who contributed fine playing to a wonderfully staged production. Climaxing a wonderful post-war year, the Dramat decided to try its luck at a mu- sical. Instead of an original book, the old Maxwell Anderson-Kurt Weill satire of 1811- New York in Dutch breeches, Knickerbocker Holiday, was revived for the Princeton week-end production. Introducing Yale wives in the feminine roles, Knickerboclfer Holiday was an instantaneous hit. Tom Noyes as the caustic peg-leg Pieter Stuy- vesant and Walt Goodman as the comical Dutch Mayor deserve special mention for fine performances. Adding to a colorful Sultry Sentry production, Bob Vetault and Verna Fred- erickson blended voices on the many beau- tiful duets scattered throughout the score. The Dutch Council composed of Seidner, Wveinig, Pastore, Barnhill, Buske, Mellor, Goodman, Kearns and Burr did much to add to the general nierriment of the play. Walter Huston, who created the role of Pieter Stuyvesant on Broadway gave the play his heartiest approval, being the guest of the Dramat later on in the season. Coming to the close of another year the Dramat looks back with pride on its first post-war season. Looking forward, the Dra- mat has planned for its spring play the ever popular old American William Gillette dra- ma, Sherlock Holmes, which harkens back to the Baker Street diggings of the London sleuth of meerschaum pipe and hound's tooth cap, shadowed by the ubiquitous Dr. Watsoii. Shortly after Knickerbocker Holiday, elections were held for office and depart- ment heads. Bob Vetault was chosen Presi- dent, Gil Carter, Vice President, and Dick Mooney, Secretary. Amos Morrill was ap- pointed Production Manager and Dave Piel took over control of the Publicity Depart- ment. Boly Nolen and Pete Moffitt remained as Business Manager and Treasurer respec- Y l Midnight macabre H Spotted tively. This newly elected board will serve only until after the Spring Experimental production when a new board will be elect- ed to serve throughout next year. At the time of writing the Dramat is pre- paring for the ,lunior Prom production of Anna Cora Mowattls comedy, Fashion. Orig- inally produced in the l84LO7s, Fashion is a gay, rollicking satire of haul monde fads, foibles, and fancies in nineteenth-century New York. Playing leading roles in the pro- duction are Eleanor Evans, Leila Piel, Sam Burchell, Dave Piel, ,lim Barnhill, and Ethel Boyd. Everything indicates that the Dramat's Fashion will contribute greatly to the gaiety of this yearls gala Prom week- end. The Spring Experimental and the Com- mencement play will round out the Dramatls production schedule, and complete it for the year. 185 The Yale Political Union POST-WAR enthusiasm for a return to the peacetime standards in the suspended or curtailed undergraduate activities is per- haps nowhere better exemplified than in the Political Union. Less than a month after its opening fall meeting the Union swelled to a membership of 350, the higl1- est in its history. Three hundred over- flowed Room 201 Harkness at the organi- zation meeting in September and heard the Conservative Party lead off with Party Leader Irving Murphy outlining his groupis program. He was followed by John Mc- Intosh, leader of the atom-born Federalists, a party which was new to most of the audi- ence, new-comers and pre-war P.U. mem- Ely at Eli cedure of the Political Union, and to acquaint them PUli15ics hers alike. Frank Logue, Labor Party leader then expressed his party's aims and principles. The final speaker was Jim Owens, leader of the Liberals, who com- pared the three other party platforms with his own. The purpose of the organization meeting was to familiarize the prospective members with the organization and pro- 18 with the program of the va- rious parties. Mr. Norman Thomas, na- tional leader of the Social- ist Party, addressed the iirst regular meeting of the P.U., supporting the resolution: Hiiesolved that the Union favors a greater degree of Socialism in the United L Statesf' Denying the concept of Heconomic mann, Mr. Thomas outlined the enrich- ment to all human values which he believes will result if America achieves Hpublie ownership of the commanding heights of industryf, Mr. Thomas received an ample demonstration of his persuasive powers when several members of the conservative party supported his proposition. uliesolved that the P.U. favors the 6 Back Row: Mclntosh, F. Logue, Murphy, Owens. Front Row: Livingston, Binder, Shapiro, Rubsam, G. Logue. Truman-Byrnes foreign policy , the sub- ject for the October eighteenth meeting, was opposed by guest speaker Mr. John Marsalka of the Yale history department. United States-Russian relations was again the focal point in the next meeting at which the topic: Hfiesolved that the P.U. favors the adoption of the aQuota Force, plan for UN reformw, was supported by Ely Culbertson, a sponsor of the plan. Continuing in an International Vein the P.U. next debated: Resolved that the Union urges the immediate immigration of l00,000 Jews into Palestinef, which was followed by an informative and stimulating address by Dr. Sindarum, Indian delegate to the UN, as a feature of the Union's next meeting, at which the speaker supported the resolution: uliesolved that the P.U. favors the immediate establishment of an inde- pendent and unified lndiaf, As the year's program indicates, the Political Union is fulfilling its double pur- pose of presenting political matters for un- dergraduate consideration and stimulating the exchange of ideas among those of vari- ous political leanings. Congratulations 187 Back Row: Warnke, Knapp, Reynolds, Hodge, Schneider, Neufeld, Twitchell, Fey. Third Row: Wilson, Rockefeller, Ranney, Barstow, Gradison, Gimbel, Bush, Walker. Second Row: Sawyer, Dowling, Chapman, Johns, Berry, Pratt, Strong, Weil. Front Row: Stroock, Morse, Clarke, Lam- horn, Greenfield, Damon, Donworth. WYBC ALE,S own Radio Station entered its sixth year of operation and successfully adapted itself to the needs and likes of the Universityis huge peacetime enrollment. Reaching a larger audience than ever be- fore, the station found itself in a position of influence on the campus that marked its emergence from adolescence into maturity. Under the leadership of Chairman Bill Lamborn and his Executive Committee, the 1947 Board joyfully accepted back into the fold former staff members who had been in the service, and it was a large and ex- perienced group that put the MVoice of the Yale Campusl' on the air. The most important event of the year was the eXodus from the quarters at l93 York Street to the gleaming, brand new studios in Hendrie Hall. With greatly enlarged facilities which include two studios, a spa- cious control room, a suite of offices, and permanent broadcast lines to most of the important University halls and auditoriums, as well as such places as the Arena, Payne Whitney Gym, and Yale Bowl, WYBC is able to present a more complete, greatly improved program service. The old quarters will be kept for future use so that the atmosphere of steep, narrow steps, ancient doctors, crowded monitorgs booth, and musty cellar will not be lost. Under the direction of Speed Johnson and Art Greenfield, a well-rounded program schedule was designed to meet the tastes of the station's college fans. In addition to the regular music programs and the ever- popular HStardust Timew, there were many special and feature programs. Many stu- 188 dent organizations,-The Yale Band, The Glee Club, The Whiffenpoofs, Student Fed- eralists, E1 Centro, The Collegians, and others-used the station's facilities and presented good shows. Outstanding events were the play-by- play descriptions of all University sports events. For the first time WYBC was able to broadcast the Yale Football Games, in- cluding the away contests with Cornell and Harvard. At Ithaca, announcer, sports- caster, and monitor were almost swept into Cayuga's waters from their perch on top of the press box, but at Cambridge and in the Bowl we were in the big time with a private booth all our own. The Hfiollege of the Airw lecture series was a big step forward in educational pro- gramming, and all Yale precedent was bro- ken when President Seymour gave his open- ing welcome address to the students over the station. This was one of the high spots in a year of eventful occasions. With hordes of heelers scurrying through town, and with J im Damon at the controls, business had a banner year. A need of an adding machine was felt as Reynolds, Bar- stow and Ranney stacked the bars in the corner and Blake Wilson pored over the books. 18 Slassen Mike-happy 640 On your dial 9 Tlzulzder-Slroock With competitions and gala heelers7 parties adding spice to the year, Vice- Chairman Lynn lVliller added up points and glared at Freshmen with the ferocity of a Master Gunnery Sergeant. Bundy Clarke and an unknown Larchmont lawyer of sin- gular character plastered the place with efficiency notices and procedure notebooks on every phase of human activity. Heeler Keeler won the Mr. Eager Beav- er award hands down. Bog Gimbel rivalled the Watch other occasions are being planned. In the public relations division, Ted Sawyer wore through two pair of shoes wandering from studio to printer, Joe Stevens shouted from his soap-box, and Dick Bush and Art Beach painted like fiends while Tom Stroock watched with wary eye. As the year wore on, WYBC made its mark outside the confines of New Haven. As a member of the intercollegiate broad- casting system, a confederation of all the college radio stations, it rose to a position of importance. With plans for a telephonic hookup of all collegiate stations on the East Coast and in New England, the station looks forward to a series of network programs. In closing, the old Board wishes the best of luck to Hal Sutcliffe as Chairman for 1948, with Tom Stroock, ,less Johns, Bob Donworth, ,lack Kelly, Erase Morse, and Roger Cimbel as the new executive com- mittee. Under this leadership WYBC will continue to growl and Wa1'd Society in maintaining the pristine purity of the air waves at 640 kilocycles. The party given by the station in the swank state suite of the Copley Plaza in B o s to n after the Harvard Game, op- ened the WYBC so- cial season. As this goes to press two 190 Monitor Twitchell The Yale Debating Association EBTBARKING upon a full-fledged forensic program this year, the University De- bating Association met with marked suc- cess. The varsity debate squad was loaded with experienced men, six being former Thacher Prize winners. The Freshmen team was studded with outstanding prep and high school orators. Under the able tutoring of Professor John C. Adams, and aided immeasurably by lVlr. Rollin G. Osterweis, the Yale de- baters compiled a five win and one loss rec- ord during the fall season. Clashing with Harvard in a home-and- home series on the 1946 elections, Bill Cra- ham and Brad Wvesterfield took a 2-l deci- sion in Cambridge, supporting the election of a predominantly Republican Congress. Meanwhile, Leo Graybill and Dan lVlcElroy were notching another 2-l victory on the other side of the question in New Haven. Arguing over the merits of laboris hav- ing a direct share in management, Yale tangled with Dartmouth in two debates. Don Bivkin, Dick Shapiro, and .lim Sher- wood garnered a 3-0 decision on the afhrmative side in New Haven, while Mar- shall Binder, Bill Emerson, and Al Wessen bowed 2-l to the Dartmouth affirmative in Hanover. The Freshman debaters trounced Taft on both ends of a home-and-home debate on limiting presidential terms of office. Planned for the spring were an extem- poraneous speaking contest at West Point, a debate with a traveling team from Cam- bridge University, the traditional Triangu- lar, the Buck, Ten Eyck, and DeForest Prize competitions, and several additional freshman and varsity debates. Back Row: Meek, Wessen, Rinden, Rivkin, Kurth, Graybill, Emerson. Front Row: Shapiro, Binder, Westerfield, Sherwood, Graham. 191 Back Row: Escher, Kurth, Shapiro, Moore, Schultz, Chadwick. Second Row: Peaslee, lodice, Arnold, Farrar, Stevenson, Blair. Front Row: Thurlow, Leserman, Larson, Hostage, Beggs, Rice, Reiche. Student Federalists ALE Chapter, Student Federalists, was a product of the merger of the Yale League for Wo1'ld Government and the National Student Federalists. Since the inception of the group, there has been an unrelenting attack on the prob- lem of convincing as many men as possible that there is no real peace without law and government, and that there shall be no world peace until there is world law and World government. The Chapter has brought to Yale numerous eminent men Who, on the basis of this analysis, call for a world sov- ereignty to supplant the jungle of interna- tional relations. The Yale Chapter has begun work to- ward a referendum which will enable vot- ers to register their desire that the United . . or IIOITBH Nations be given real power through amendment. This work shall have a basis in study and organization in as many schools as possible. lt will become increas- ingly evident that existing institutions are not solving the problem of recurrent war. Student Federalists are working toward a Wider appreciation of the problem and to- ward the initiation of true world govern- ment. University Budget Drive THE most successful chapter in the tradi- tional Budget Drive history was written this year when the annual door-to-door ap- peal had as its goal a record 325,000 The huge thermometer in front of Yale Sta- tion showed the goal surpassed by the third day of the Drive. After the six-day canvass of every student and faculty member, a rec- ord 342,000 was subscribedviE3l9,000 more than had ever been given before. Held during the first week in December, the Drive functioned smoothly. Over 4400 students contributed much time and energy in order to make the effort a success. Head- quarters for the Drive were in Dwight Hall. For the first time, student opinion about the money to he donated was consulted in a noon-time poll in the college and Univer- sity dining halls. The result of the poll, which was also the basis of distribution of the subscriptions, was: World Student Be- lief, 3071, Yale-in-China, 25Wg United Ne- gro College Fund, 1872, Dwight Hall, 1096, Yale Hope Mission, 971, Community Chest, 605g Yale Nursery School Program, ZW. Since l921l-, when the Budget Drive was founded, the Budget Committee has fur- nished the only opportunity in the Univer- sity for students to be solicited for chari- ties. It has had similar yearly problems: determination of the total, enlisting captains and solicitors, publicizing the needs, select- ing charities to give to, and conducting the Drive. The tremendous increase in student subscriptions indicates a significant post- war response of the student body. Back Row: Gillespie, Morris, West, Ennis, Northrop, Nagle, Johnson. Second Row: Sherwood, Bentley, McLean, Kock, Pfau, Heffner, Dickey. Front Row: Cohen, Middeleer, Dangler, O'Neil, Lapin, Bush, Kelsey. 193 Dwight Hall To MANY Elis the mention of Dwight Hall, the Yale University Christian Associa- tion, conjures up visions of a monastic re- treat crowded with the human equivalent of the praying mantis. But to those men who took the interest and time to participate in Dwight Hall activities during 1946-47, the Christian Association proved to be a live organization filling a unique and necessary place in undergraduate life. Aims for 1946-1947 The emphasis for the 1946-47 academic year has been on reaching a larger group of students in the expanded undergraduate population. The program has started from an unabashedly Christian basis which de- clares that both personal and world issues find their solution in a living faith in God as experienced in the person of Jesus Christ. A new system of college representatives was set up with one in each college. The MCR,s7, were responsible for contacting men interested in Dwight Hall and sponsoring religious activities within the colleges, in- cluding a series on vocations. A11 phases of the community service program were placed in the hands of the YCC, including activi- ties like deputations and the Yale Hope Mis- sion, which have been exclusive Dwight Hall concerns in the past. Taking a Look at the Record During the year Dwight Hall has spon- Back Row: McCollester, Allen, Olmsted, Greene, Isbell. Second Row: Peck, McClain, Sturges, Schrieber, Coleman, Sherrill. Front Row: Bowen, Cobb, Holmstrup, Beach, Persons, Moore, Thomas, 194 sored open meetings on Christianity and the cam- pus. 200 men crowded the Common Boom in Novem- ber to hear Sam Shoemaker speak on what Christianity has meant to him .... Prof. Andrew Morehouse has held weekly sessions of his inspirational S c h o o l of Prayer .... A group of graduate students has met to consider the role of re- ligion in higher education. . . . The International Club has provided fellowship for foreign students in the University .... A clothing drive for Greek students was successfully undertaken by the Wo1'ld Relatedness Commission .... The record Freshman class was welcomed with a pic- nic and open house. Later on a Freshman Cabinet was elected and given responsibility for planning the program for their class- mates. A School for Sceptics was among the activities conducted especially for Freshmen. l Music for the millions Dwight owls Dwight Hall's program this year has been under the direction of a capable group of ofhcers: Brewster Y. Beach, 1947, presi- dent, Vanderveer Kirk, 1947, vice-presi- dentg William E. Cobb, l91L6M, vice-presi- dent, Roswell O. Moore, l,94L7N, secretaryg and Charles R. Bowen, l9417N, treasurer. The Cabinet has been responsible for spon- soring and coordinating the many activities that have meant Dwight Hall to the campus. As a member of the Student Christian Movement in this country and in the world, Dwight Hall sent delegations to many con- ferences. In the New England region, there were meetings at Wesleyan, Northfield and O-At-Ka. Delegates from Yale went to the quadrennial National Assembly of the Stu- dent Christian Association Movement at the University of Illinois. Yale was represented at the conferences of the Wo1'ld's Student Christian Federation in Europe last sum- mer. In all her activities Dwight Hall has held high the motto of student Christians around the world-Ut Omnes Unum Sint. 195 Back Row: Klinck, Shepard. Chaffee, Lassole, Calhoun. Quarles, Olmsted, Allen. Front Row: McCollester, Beach, Sherwood, Cobb, Bronson. Sturges. Daily. The Yale Community Council THE Yale Community Council, Dwight l-lallis most active arm in the commu- nity of New Haven, got off to a lively start early in the college year. The YCC has kept the system inaugurated several years ago of dividing the members into departments ac- cording to the agency for which they work, with the addition of three administrative departments: Membership, Entertainment, and Publicity. The Boys' Club, the Friends of Boys, the Boy Scouts, and their older brothers, the YMCA and Farnam House, all find that the leadership of Yale students in athletics and in club activities is helpful and enthusiastic. Vlforking with Dwight Hall and with social agencies in the area, the Dixwell Group has served effectively in many practical matters lmetween racial groups in the city. Yaleis work through the Yale Aides in the New Haven Hospital was begun during the war, and is in full swing this year, with many energetic pre-medical students assisting the hospital staff. lt is often overlooked that the YCC offers the only opportunity for Yale men to prac- tise leadership in community work. The original turn out in l941-6, the sustained in- terest, and the plans and hopes of all the members for the rest of the year and for the future show that the YCC is good fun as well as good work. This has been amply proven for the cur- rent memhers, and it seems likely that henceforth this yearis campaign slogan, MOut of the ivory towern, will stick. 196 The Church of Christ THE present organization of formal reli- gious activities in Yale University began with the establishment in 1757 of the Church of Christ in Yale University. This ecclesiastical body, Congregational in pol- ity, was formed by act of the Corporation, as the result of a petition presented by a group of tutors and students. Three Chapels have served to house the Church of Christ in Yale University. The first edifice was completed in 1763, the sec- ond dedicated in 1824. Two years after the Civil Wa1', a group of graduates and mem- bers of the faculty inaugurated a solicita- tion of funds with which Uto provide a Memorial Chapel in honor of those who fell in the Civil W31'.,, After nine years of fund- raising, Battell Chapel was completed and dedicated by President Noah Porter in 1876. In 1931 the Dwight Memorial Chapel was fashioned and beautifully ap- pointed to serve as a place for smaller and more intimate services of worship. A Board of Undergraduate Deacons, to- gether with a Board of Faculty Deacons and the Chaplain of the University and his associates, directs the work and worship of the Church which is interdenominational in character. Today no less than in the past, the Church of Christ in Yale University pro- vides its worshippers with rich opportu- nities for the development of intelligent in- sight and moral courage. Back Row: Eusden, Bowen, Lynch, Smith, WesterHeld, Bevis, Whitridge, Elwell. Second Row: Mr. Clement, Rappleye, Dickerson, Newcomb, Beach, Alling, E. Sherrill, Mr. Lovett. Front Row: Spaulding, Chafee, Bronson, H. Sherrill, Ferguson, Currie, Berkeley. 197 Back Row: Baar, Hiltner, Wilson, Benson, Edwards, Frederick, Munro. Fifth Row: Seaton, Brown Stevens, Loewus, Hall, Murray, Mower. Fourth Row: Mapes, Hine, Macfarren, McCabe. Daitz Carter, Desjardins, Pease, Salisbury. Third Row: Camp, Collins, Quarles, Farrar, Kupfer. Xlelcher Searles, Sly, Schrieher, Tracy. Second Row: Smith, Hastings, Greene, Cates, Phillips, Hawkins Harris, Wliiltemore, O7Neal, Rogers, Burwell. Front Row: Purintun, Conant, Vining, Gaul Schieffelin, Mr. Noss, Dill, Peck, Erhart, Rodes, Mitten, Adams. University Choir OR the first time in almost four years, the Battell Chapel Choir last fall was hack at its full strength of sixty voices. The hlue- rohed singers continued to present each Sunday morning during the academic year two anthems chosen from the great choral literature of all periods. Maintaining its high standard of performance, the choir of- fered a wide variety of fine sacred music: l6th-century motets, Bach chorales, Baro- que choruses, l9th-century anthems, Rus- sian liturgical pieces, and representative modern compositions. Among the contem- porary composers represented were Profes- sors David Stanley Smith and Hope Leroy Baumgartner of the Yale School of Music. Professor Luther M. Noss, having re- turned from over two years, service with a 19 B-29 unit, resumed his duties as director and organist. During his absence, Profes- sors Marshall Bartholomew and H. Frank Bozyan were in charge of the chapel music. The choir was maintained in spite of the greatest difficulties, singers were chosen from the few remaining civilian students and whatever military personnel availahle. By September l911-6, enough men had re- turned, including many former members, so that the choir could once again function with its full complement. Plans for the year included a vesper service February l6 un- der the auspices of the New Haven Chapter of the American Guild of Organists, with the hoys of Trinity Church choir in New Haven as soloists, and a special service of music May 41. 8 The Yale C ee Club ITH the rest of the University the Yale Clee Club suffered a return to normal- cy this fall. The smile on Bartyis face as more than 500 men reported to the second floor of Hendrie Hall early in October at- tested louder than words to his pleasure at the return of the Clee Club to its pre- war basis. . The first concert was sung with Prince- ton to a sold out Woolsey Hall audience to celebrate the football weekend. This concert was followed by a similar one at Harvard the following week. The football games over, the Club sang its way to Meriden and Hartford and back. The shock of seeing 3600 faces in Hart- fordis Bushnell Auditorium was enough to unnerve the heartiest singer, but the con- cert was a great success. To wind up the fall season Sarah Law- rence College played hostess to Yale for a joint concert, dance and overnight stay. February 8 the Smith College Clee Club came to New Haven for a joint concert, and for the revival of the Junior Prom weekend, the Clee Club gave its third New Haven concert March 7. Spring vacation was the highpoint of the year, when the Club paid its respects to cities along the Eastern seaboard as far south as Miami. The Commencement con- cert brought to a close a year which returned the Clee Club to its place of eminence in the field of student singing. Baci: Rauf: Mattern, Tuttle, Edwards, B. Smith, Frederick, Miller, Wolf, Somerville, Gordes, Thayer, Clark, Oler, Babbitt, Horlbeck. Fifth Row: Stansberry, W. W. Harris, Sundean, Penne- baker, Brace, Upper, Davey, Heath, Bonnie, Exon, Meyer, Stacy, Spencer, Gard, Daitz. Fourth Row: Rogers, Crandall, Clarke, Weisman, Riley, Macfarren, Craybill, Whittemore, Tracey, Bliss, R. Smith, Collins, White, Lippincott. Third Row: Adams, W. H. Harris, Hanes, Selden, Jacobson, McCain, Schrieber, Schaufele, Conwell, Rodie, Harrison, lVlcAndrew, Arnold, Kiraly, Garner. Second Row: Cans, Loewus, Olmsted, Joyce, Potter, Foulds, Lewis, Coodenough, Klopowitz, Ely, Doutre, Holmes, Sidley, Nierendorf, Martin. Front Row: Geary, Stone, Lawrence, Parker, Thomp- son, Quarles, Mr. Bartholomew, Penney, Biglow, Mapes, Bunn, Browning, Camp. Back Row: Kimm, Berlstein, Kone, Smith, Phillips, Beard, Pantzer, Riggs, WCl1DCI, Pace, Bouton, Kummerlowe. Front Row: Peterson, Sill, Maidment, Mr. Hastings, Dean Dudley, Mumford, Freed, Weiss. lpha Phi Ome a CHAPTER of Alpha Phi Omega Was in- stalled on the Yale campus December 15, 1946. Alpha Phi Omega is a national service fraternity for members and former mem- bers of the Boy Scouts of America. One hundred and twenty chapters are now in existence, actively living the ideals of Leadership, Friendship, and Service-the virtues which they were founded to foster. The Yale chapter sent a delegate to the National Convention in Kansas City, Mis- souri, December 28 and 29, 1946, in- stalled a new chapter at the University of Connecticut at Storrs, January 12, 19475 and, as its first campus-service project, undertook the arrangement and control of the bulletin board in Yale Station. Admitting that the social fraternities have much to offer, Alpha Phi Omega bases its claim for recognition on the quantity and quality of service rendered by the mem- bers to the University, the community, and, as a consequence of these, to themselves. December Investiture Ceremony 200 Back Row: Mellor, De Tarr, Waiigh, Scott. Front Row: Buckley, McBride, Graham, Cornish, Pastore. The Yale Film Society ITH the films off to the sup- Ceneral, and High and Dizzy in f fjrfrx Ikfddx ,,'.. l l plying agencies and a de- KC the comedy tradition, The Count serted hush settled over the Law 0 of Monte Cristo, Mutiny on the School auditorium, the 1947 board of the Yale Film Society sneaked off to the Lincoln The- ater for more of its favorite indoor pastime. The cinematic finale had been unreeled for the first full post-war year. Because of the larger motion picture companies, increasing fondness for calling in all old prints, the year was a trial for program directors Art Pastore and Bruce Cornish. But despite obstacles a full pro- gram Was the order of the day: D. Wi. Criflitl1's Intolerance illustrating the basis of modern technique, The Navigator, The l f ,LZ a t X 1 Bounty, and Good Earth repre- senting adaptations of novels, and s s. in addition, the mystery Maltese Falcon, the biographical Life of Emile Zola, documentaries Moana, Song of Ceylon, and Rien Que Les Heures, a movie version of Shakespeare's As You Like It, and a Hfruitfuli' sociological study, Mae Westis She Done Him Wrong. As for film production, Ed Feil and his little coterie of cinematographers were kept dejectedly fingering the buttons of their cameras due to lack of suitable script. But the creative contingent has hopes for the future. 201 The Yale Colleglans THE Yale Collegians, HAmerica7s Num- ber One College Dance Orchestraw, is a student organization made up of Yale men selected from the entire University. Be- established after the war under University supervision, the band became unionized and began a series of one night engagements throughout New York and New England. ln the past the Yale Collegians have been under the leadership of many Yale men who later became HNames,, in the entertainment field. Among these are Barry Wood, Lanny Boss and Rudy Vallee. The present leader of the Collegians is Robert Jay Cinq-Mars who will direct the band through l94L9. He spent his under- graduate days at Bowdoin College where he directed his college dance orchestra for foul years. After two years of Army service Cinq-Mars entered the Yale School of lVlu- sic and in the Spring of l946 organized the present Collegians. Personnel of the first band was as fol- lows: Saxes-Cinq-Mars, lVlaslen, Clark, Serwer, Biggs and Coyneg Trumpetsf Brooks, Wi11dso1', Doren, Carey, Hattemar and Zudekoilg TrombonegCrumpg French l-lorns--Robison and Mcflrailg Bass----de Villafrancag Drummer-Kneeng Pianist- Howellg Guitar-,leynesg Personnel lVlana- ger-Gerard Berry. Featured soloists with the Collegians this year wereg Trumpet-,lack Brooksg Alto Sax-Dean ,leynesg Tenor sax-,lack Clo- thierg French Horn-Chuck Heimsathg and Stan Broza at the drums. Back Row: l-leimsath, Moench, Brooks, Windsor, Colden, Broza, de Villafranca. Front Row: Scur- lock, Clothier, D. Jcynes, Pustell, P. Jeynes, Cinq-Mars, Mann. 202 l Back Row .' Andrew, Conklin. Aker, Farrant, Oberembt, Phillips, Seeheck. Third Raw: Allderige, Johnston, Davis, Blanchard, Carter, Weberus, Mr. Hastings. Second Row: Thompson, Shatswell, Donahue, Hamilton, Knight, Weilbacher, Wright, Zimmerman. Front Row: Austin, Singer, Vernon, Schindler, Schwartz, Kimm, Wallace, Squire, Cavell. Society for Advancement of Management HE Yale Student Chapter of the Society for the Advancement of Management was started again this year after a lapse during the War. It seeks to supplement class room and text book knowledge with plant visita- tion and informal talks with men in indus-- try. Its purposes are: lj to stimulate in- terest and understanding of the social, psy- chological and economic implications of scientific principles of modern manage- ment, 25 to create and develop the highest ethical conception of individual and collec- tive social responsibility on the part of stu- dents of management, and 33 to encourage study and research in the advancement of our standard of living by the application of scientific principles and methods of man- agement to all fields of human endeavor. All students of industrial administration and applied economics are encouraged to join this professional society in order that they may get a deeper understanding of the practical problems of management. Under the guidance of Professor Hudson B. Hastings, the student chapter was organ- ized this fall with the assistance of the New Haven Chapter of S.A.lVI. After a brief pe- riod of organization, officers were elected, the charter presented, and industrial visits and guest speakers were scheduled. Such periodicals as Modern Management and Advanced Management are made available by the society to the student members, and the student members have the opportunity of continuing their membership in S.A.lVl. after graduation. 203 Hillel Foundation ITH the huge influx of veterans and new freshmen, the Yale Hillel Foundation has once again assumed its peacetime role in the lives of the Jewish students on cam- pus. As the membership has expanded from a small nucleus during the war to a sizable and growing group, so has the scope of the program. Hillel this year has offered the campus a variety of activities in the cul- tural, social, religious, and educational as- pects of Judaism. Tuesday evening meetings have had re- peated success, the program committee has arranged for many excellent speakers from on and oil the campus, and Friday evening services have been offered continuously throughout the season, after which Rabbi Sandmel, our advisor, has held open house at his home. For those students who were unable to return home for the High Holy Days, this year services were observed in Battell Chapel. Two projects scheduled for the Spring term were the collection of funds for over- seas Jewish relief, and a joint meeting held at Yale with the Harvard Hillel Founda- tion. These and many other activities, such as the Hillel Publication, the classes in Jew- ish studies, and the new Zionist group, have occupied fully the time of our members. So, as the season closes and the Hillel Keys are awarded to the deserving, the Yale Hillel Foundation looks back upon a year of great growth and important gains. Back Row: Farber, Jacobson, H. Neitlich, Stern, Cheplin, Kaplan, Poplin, Rabbi Sandmel. Second Row: M. Neitlich, Scher, Klatsky, Schine, Josolowitz, Greenberg, Israel, Serwer. Front Row: Man- delbaum, Wagner, Falk, Brandt, Slepian, Newman, Davidson. 2041 Back Row .' Father O'Brien, North. Front Row: del Corral, Kelly, Witteman. The More Club THE More Club serves as the center of Catholic activity for 'undergraduates at Yale. The Rev. Edwin B. O'Brien, 1931, serves as chaplain for the group. Special attention is given to the religious develop- ment of Catholic students. There are Masses daily and Sunday at the Saint Thomas More Chapel on Park Street with sermons filling the religious needs of uni- versity students. Discussion groups and lec- tures are held weekly to help students make the necessary adjustment of religion to their secular knowledge. Students are able to consult a library of religious books for their studies. A retreat is held each year under the direction of outstanding preachers to recall to the minds of the students the rich- 20 ness of their religious life and to revive their religious zeal and fervor. Social gatherings are arranged throughout the year to provide opportunity for broadening college friendships. Special attention is given to the religious growth of the stu- dents through a richer knowledge of the liturgy of the Church. Conference with the .individual students is an important part of the work at More House. In a word, the work of the More Club is to integrate faith with secular knowledge to produce the Christian gentleman. John Fleming Kelly is the president of the More Club. Jaime del Corral, Donald Hogan, Paul North and Whitney Witteman make up the executive committee. f- O Flutes and Piecolos: Schuster, Greene, Hansen, Courtwright, Hendrickson, Stevens. Clarinets. Kaye, Jeynes, Clothier, Coyne, Hale, Kaplan, Schultz, Potter, Cavell, Jackobson, Myers, Stevens Rosenblum, Tisdale. Alto Sexes: Hattemer, Alkins, Green, Garrett, Clark, lVlcNeish. Tenor Saxes: Serwer, Maslen. Cornets and Trumpets: Brooks, Doren, Aker, Roberts, Windsmir, Quarles, Nilson Roth, Wolff, Heron, Moench, Rector, Curtis, Baldocci, Bidwell, Davis, Ramsey, Barnhydt, Robinson Neidle. Horns: Davies, VanArsdel, Lourie, Cooper. Trombones: Adams, Lichenstein, Leonard Campbell, Andrews, Kelsey. Baritones: Hoover, Olver, Rider, Stewart, Twitchell. Basses: Ryan de Villafranca, Duncan, Sachs. Drums: Duncan, Setldon, Zook, Nissen, Gipple, Goldberg, Blank Glock: Seymour. Drum, Major: Blankenship. Twirlers: Plag, Eagle. Manager: Kassimer. Assistants Schwartz, Allen. The Yale Band HE Yale Band is now organized on a year-round basis, Whereas before 1942 it functioned only during the football season. But of course it was during the fall that the Band had its busiest and most spectacular season, playing for eight of the nine sched- uled football games. A new program of music and formations to be presented dur- ing half-time was Worked out for each game. Following the football season the Band Was reorganized into a concert group. Con- certs were given in Sprague Memorial Hall and in various college courts. The director of the Band this year was Keith L. Wvilson, eminent arranger of band music and former band conductor at the University of Illinois and army bandmaster. Strive ! 206 1 i The Yale Key OR many years there has been great need at Yale for an undergraduate institution the purpose of which would be to extend the hospitality and services of the Univer- sity to visiting athletic teams. With Yale athletics back on a prewar basis, this need for an organization such as the old Yale Key became increasingly ap- parent last fall. Because of the war, the old Key, just formed in 1942, was discon- tinued along with many other University activities. Under the guidance of the Yale Athletic Association and with the coopera- tion of previous members, the Key was re- organized and elections to it were held early in September. The Yale Key began to function officially with the first football game of the season. Since then members of the Key have ac- corded a friendly reception to all visiting teams and have supplemented the arrange- ments already made by the Athletic Asso- ciation. The responsibility for the success of the Key lies upon the cordiality and in- itiative of its members. Towards this end elections were held to obtain a membership representative of the university. Each col- lege, fraternity, and campus organization selected members from the junior class with this in mind. ln precedenting future policy this year, the Yale Key has attempted to provide the answer to the needs for better and longer- lasting relationships between Yale and the athletic teams which come to New Haven to compete. Back Row: Miller, Carter, Buckley, Waugh, Logue, Yancey, Strong, Hansen. Fourth Row: Davi- son, Clark, Squire, L. Kelly, Nolen, Small, Roberts. Third Row: McCann, Gagarin, Collingwood, Jenkins, Jewett, J. Kelly, Morrison, Weaver. Second Row: Fryer, Duncan, Postlewaite, Hall. Lovett, Torrey, Dangler. Front Row: Hascall, Wiehl, Jennings, Warren, Murray. 7 CLUBS ,M 3 ' ,Q H--f:e,,3,Qwf,M :W A-bw.. 3M M W5 -WN K Q. . ' ,M K f 'Y' M ,M 14 :- -Q, The Elizabethan Club GEORGE PARMLY DAY President GEORGE KUBLER Vice-President 1946M SAMUEL C. BURCHELL, III JUNIUS B. CLOSE, JR. ROBERT T. H. DAVIDSON RANALD H. MACDONALD, HI DAVID B. H. MARTIN THOMAS E. NOYES HARVEY I. SHAPIRO 1911-7 .J OHN M. BATES PALMER L. BEVIS DAVID B. BRONSON F. EUGENE DUEFEE, JR. ALAN D. FERGUSON HEYWARD ISHAM STUART H. JOHNSON, JR. ALFRED W. LOOMIS IGNATIUS G. MATTIXGLY HUGH MCLEAN, JR. CHARLES M. NOLTE HENRY OTTO POLLAK H. BOONE PORTER. JR. ROGER W. SHATTUCK EDMUND K. SHERRILL ERIC V. C. STEVENSON PETER C. WALKER PHILIP D. WALKER H. BRADFORD WESTERFIELD GEORGE W. WILLIANIS, IV 191L7N ABNER E. SHIMONY A ERNEST A. WIEHI., JR. BENJAMIN C. NANGLE Graduate Secretary-Treasurer JGNATIUS G. MATTINGLY Undergraduate Secretary-Treasurer 1947M W. GILBERT CARTER WILLIAM R. EMERSON WALTER G. FARR, JR. RAY L. HEFFNER, JR. THOMAS B. MCMAHON WILSON NOLEN PHILIP OJBRIEN, JR. HUBERT D. SAAL SAMUEL S. WALKER, JR WILLIAM A. WISE JAMES M. YAFFEE 1948 RICHARD M. HUNT R. ALAN POLLOCK 210 Back Row: Tilghman, Ashley, Lippincott, Brown. Front Row: Macdonald, Rev. Schroeder, Thomas Connelly. The Pundits REV. JOHN C. SCHROEDER THOMAS W. ASHLEY PETER A. G. BROWN JAMES P. CONNELLY EUGENE DINES, JR. JOHN R. DOYLE DAVID M. LIPPINCOTT RANALD H. lVlACDONALD, III RICHARD E. SUMNER, JR. JAMES H. THOMAS WILLIAM S. TILGHMAN HERBERT T. VAN TNGEN, JR. ' 211 The Whiffenpoofs F YOU go down any Monday night to the tables at lVIory's, you will find at the deep-scarred, tear-varnished tables Where the Whiilenpoof hird roosts, a scene that only such as you and l, gentlemen song- sters, can fully appreciate. There you will find the round-shouldered circle of men, cleaning their vocal plumbing with a special gargle ftwo parts lVlory,s ale to one part Green Cupj and, like true black sheep, going chromatically astray. The Whitten- poofs!-singing for the sheer enjoyment of hearing the notes lit together and drift off through bubbles of ale, and for the pleasure of imparting to the harmony a heery lustre. Gentleman S01zg'sZie1'.s and 07Drisc0ll Back Row: 6'Roll mel' Oler, Do it then Hemenway, HZuyder Ziesing, '41 need youw Jackson, Hot-sn Pringle, 'LPussy in the Koehne, Sunzab Richards. Second Row: Fire at Williams. Bfrrrt Toohey, Gladi', Oler, Pitchpipe Emile, 'Tester-1 Ely. Front Row: Popocatapetl Collins, The Village Black Smith, 'Td rather he Wong tlianl' While. Back Row: McCabe, Mapes, Bigelow, Tuttle, Livingston, Rodie, Tully. Front Row: Quarles, Carter, Koplowitz, Schaufele, Lewis, Foulds, Conwell. The Society of Orpheus and Bacchus THE Society of Orpheus and Bacchus, like many other organizations, experi- enced the pangs of reorganization last fall. First organized by Irving HPitchpipe7' Wal- radt in 1941, the O 81 B's have always been dedicated to the best in music and the finest in wine. Following the demise of this and most other civilian organizations in the spring of 1943, this past fall a small nu- cleus of men began casting about for twelve singers who shared enthusiasm and joy in exercising their vocal cords. Satisfied by the end of September that they formed a group of some of the best voices on campus, the twelve went into strenuous rehearsals in preparation for what they hoped would be an active sing- ing season. Things went smoothly after the first struggle over the pronunciation of the words of their traditional theme, gala vi elsker,', the Norwegian national anthem, and they felt that they were ready to offer their wares to the public on the Dartmouth weekend. Received with considerable suc- cess at three fraternity dances that night, the O 81 B's went on to become one of the most popular singing groups on the cam- pus. In addition to appearances at a series of fraternity dances on football weekends, other performances have included the Record milk punch party Princeton week- end, two house dances and the WYBC Dance in Cambridge Harvard weekend, and two appearances in Hartford for the Hart- ford Touchdown Club and the Royal Order of Jesters. 213 MOry's Association . , 1, ,ffftw H , ,ff t?.l924k3?1m'f4llW . it A f . .L M9 f 4194+ y gf wt f .,fI lfiflff ll 7 ff l al! tiff f XMZW ff 6 ffyfffwf jfr J ff X ,M wtf H .J X I. ,I I, ,fp j,, T iffy' at f N fqmgim NWN' ' l'lf !ff7!M'! ' If 'vlffi'5.il4lWu? ,l'! , ff' 'llillll' CW ffl I! ll' Ur tzmvaf lv'f'5?!Q7lf'! Ifvlyiflr infill ! X Dffffyfff Hd ff!! J . ff' gt' f V 3 'ff, f vjgj f .c 5?y',f V fy. ,hw ,1 'f',f,n,f W fi ,ffm QWff'f, fl I ,f 1 ,,' jf ' ff, 4 2Vf:4f.dtif7jy'f', 1,1 ff' ff M, 'W!,f,'-,Al '1ff!f f ' 7 ff X f J X C ',V' Wfffifffwf 7 .tWtyt,agi5Lff0,If ,f , f ft+Sma, ff,f all ZWW f 'WQT WX if f, ff v 1 f f my yffff yygsflf vi, ,,' I fp 1 , if !,7f,5i1,',rVfQ !,Lf,, t'f' 'Vr, 'f 1,4 f ' ,ff'f,fE'fy,rfj Q Wt 11' I W' fl 1 if fm, Mb if, ,fy If f f ,f gfwnf, ,my , fy I x ,,,', If, ,,, my ffl ! f 'Cy41 if If t lf ,WI t italy' ,gn V - ,f . , ,H 3, I I iff, ,, I H! . , rf' Milf- , ff ff 1 l ff llf I, v l ff I1.I ja fllwfl If t 5437 Q 6 f f f j ff ff X 'lif V .I.. I , a t . ff MMWX OFFICERS FOR 1946 President FREDERICK D. GRAVE 1911 S. Vice President CHARLES M. BAKEWELL 1905 H. Treasurer BURNSIDE WINSLOW 1904 Secretary CARLOS F. STODDARD, JR. 1926 214 lf. f. BOARD OF GOVERNORS To serve until 1947 J. FREDERICK BAKER 1909 ARTHUR L. CORBIN, IR. 1923 GEORGE H. TOWNSEND 1908 WILLIAM F. HOWE 1913 S. T0 serve until 1948 WILLIAM HAMILTON 1925 CARROLL C. HINCKS 1911 LAURENCE G. TIGHE 1916 S. R. SELDEN ROSE 1909 To serve until 1949 GRAHAM F. THOMPSON 1907 S. BURNSIDE WINSLOWN' 1904 CLARENCE W. MENDELL 1904 LOUIS L. HEMINCWAY 1908 ADMISSIONS COMMITTEE J. FREDERICK BAKER 1909 Chairman R. C. CARROLL 1932 DEANE KELLER 1923 HOUSE COMMITTEE ARTHUR L. CORBIN, JR. 1923 Chairman LAURENCE G. TIOHE 1916 ALLERTON BROOKS 1911 S. The Yale Outing Club ONE of Yaleis first organizations to be af- fected by the war, the Outing Club re- turned this year to full-time campus ac- tivity. With a membership of nearly two hun- dred men, the Club, under the guidance of its executive committee, the Blue Shirts, served as the focus and clearing house for a great deal of undergraduate outdoor ac- tivity. The ski team, headed by Dave Fisher, operated through the Club and in addition to a Christmas trip to Sun Valley had a full schedule of Eastern competition. Opening the school year was a weekend Barn Dance at the Yale Engineering Camp, to which came contingents from Smith, Vas- sar, Mt. Holyoke. and Wellesley. The next operation came during the Thanksgiving vacation when fifteen members traveled to Crag Camp in the White Mountains and climbed Mt. Washington. Skiing occupied the spotlight during the winter months. The new year was ushered in by skiing parties with Smith and Holyoke delegations at Stowe and North Conway. ln February, members journeyed to Skidmore for par- ticipation in their annual Topsy Turvy Car- nival, and up to Mt. Moosilauke for the Hacker's Inferno of the lntercollegiate Out- ing Club Associationls winter carnival. The snow enthusiasts carried right through un- til spring vacation. l-liking, canoe trips, camping, and sailing on the Sound rounded out the Spring term. Back Row: N. Adams, C. Adams, Olmsted. Front Row: Chapman, Bachman, Weir. 5 The Yale Aviation Club TEN frustrated birdmen formed the Yale Aviation Club in June, 1945, in an effort to release their urge to, MSit down behind the controls of some flying horsepower, pull it i11to the blue and settle it down, easily, very easily . . . 97 A preliminary discussion of aims and ambitions was followed by the election of ofhcers. ln September, l945, '6Yale Aviationw became an ofhcial organ- ization, Dean Havemeyer and the Board of Trustees having received the club consti- tution and charter. Yale Aviation entered inter-collegiate competition early in 1946 at Northampton in a meet with Holy Cross, Princeton and Smith. The meet, won by Princeton, fea- tured spot landings, paper cuttings, balloon breaking and flour bag bombing. ln June, l946, Yale Aviation sponsored the Eastern Inter-Collegiate Flying Meet and invited Holy Cross, Holyoke, Princeton, Smith, Vassar and Williams to participate. Al- though the Flying Bulldogs won all but one event, they bowed to Smith-the judges ruled, HToo many contestants for Yale. The purchase of a l946 Piper Cub Trainer in June commenced a successful summer flying season. The club plane Hew the entire summer, making a substantial profit and cleansing the ubooksw. The biggest event during l91L7 was the Eastern lnter-Colle- giate Air Meet which saw the inauguration of the Howard L. Mack Trophy. Aided by the splendid cooperation of all involved, Yale Aviation has a record of no casualties and looks to a bright future. Back Row: Mack, Phillips, Dillon, Straub, Eusden, Dohna, Sproule. Second Row: Fey, Ross, Dunn, Gianos, Rosenthal, Albrecht, Hippler, Wilson. Front Row: Berglas, Wankow'icz, Biram, Cochran, Reynolds, Mann, Seaton. 216 Der Deutscher Verein Back Row: Warnke, Sarmiento, Culyassy, McC0ubrey, Obluda, Holm, Cochrane. Front Row: Gleason, Larson, Sullivan, Dowling, Weisman. McClave, Hagerman, Emack, Schieffelin. 217 The Bulldog uartet Back Row: Beckett, Higgins, Littell, Young, Kiser. Front Row: Shuman, Hanway, Levenson, Stradella, Weir, Morrill. Ale, Quail, Chowder and Marching Society THOMAS BECKETT DAVID W. HANWAY ' 'VN IBEND EDGAR D. HIGGINS PEIRCE KISER THEODORE C. LEVENSON ,ff- fz . 6 E r Fm' I l..-L s ' A E x,. 4 ,J X ELAINE LITTELL Q HIC ALLAN MGLANE, JR. AMOS MORRILL EARL S. SHUMAN CHARLES G. STRADELLA.. JR. MICHAEL B. WEII: RAYMOND B.. YOUNG 218 El Centro Espanol VIDENCE of a movement toward a pro- gram of Latin American solidarity at Yale first appeared October 29, 1920, when a group of students of Spanish met in Leet Oliver Memorial Hall and organized the Spanish Club of Yale. The main purpose of the MCentro is to stimulate interest in the language, customs, culture, history, and literature of all Span- ish-speaking countries, with particular em- phasis on an understanding and apprecia- tion of our Latin American neighbors in this hemisphere. This purpose is attained by Weekly meetings which are conducted en- tirely in Spanish, featuring programs con- sisting of lectures, movies, informal discus- sions and debates, travel talks by members who have visited Latin American countries, Spanish American musicals, joint meetings with Spanish clubs of girls' colleges, and international debates with teams from La- tin American universities. ln 1923 the Spanish dramatist, Jacinto Benavente, Nobel Prizewinner of that year, was entertained by the MCentro77. Members of the Centro Espanol have acted as guides around the University for such visiting groups as the lnter-American Commission for the Bolivia-Paraguay boundary dispute, the Pan American Medical Congress, and the University of Puerto Rico debating team. ln the spring of l946 the uCentro took part in entertaining the noted Argen- tine statesman, Enrique Gil. Thus, the Centro Espanol de Yale, through its intel- lectual and social activities, serves both the University and the cause of Latin American solidarity. Back Row: McBride, Rohrer, Flato, Laventhol. Front Row: Mr. McNamara, Mr. Buendia, Mr. Bunnell. 219 Back Row: Miller, Cowles, Frost, Evers, Forenson, De Tarr, French, Rudd, Young. Sefonrl R011 Rosenfeld, Spencer, Abbot, Day, Eldred, Kent, Sebring, Alexander, deF0rest. Front Roux' Brown Lapin, Rosen, Frost, Chapman. Joyce, Cochrane, Kim, Hobbs. The California lub fel-..i. ff vu ! H if f 4, l - . 5' A Z..-iff -. E 1 1 X f E: l S , 1 jf.. 5 Ai, f - E HOL ll f ' Q E , lk, ve ?,,Z A f Q5 0 GS N i fa A 'X 43 , ax X e V92 2 .Z4li g Q T LL M CQ e W? E pl , 5 X is i A gg - Zg , T 'i, CND ff if ego e QA W ll 2: ' U Fo Q , if'- :: ,1 -fiii f P viii ee - :fe ' sa . -2 -fi' ? via? W ?- -is -f? ? in 1.5 - '2 , Q' -3? 'S' cans C L U 9 X xvNs.gX ,Am f f - - ? H 220 Yale Corinthian Yacht lub PARKED by the addition of several Freshman racers, the Corinthian sailing team came into its own in the fall season, having placed consistently in its Spring meets without carrying off top honors. The season opened with a large turnout of experienced yachtsmen tempered with neophyte sailors, and the pre-season sailing showed promise. The Elis re-established their name in the sailing world by winning the lnter-Collegiate Yacht Racing Associa- tion's Freshman Championship with Yale skipper Bob Monetti taking a second place in the individual honors. Two weeks later the same Yale crews took the Danmark trophy, symbol of ICYRA supremacy. Sev- eral dual, triangular and invitation meets Completed the season with the Corinthians maintaining a better than average record after their two spectacular victories. It was a season darkened only by the final meet when Yale lost to its traditional Cambridge rival in a frigid race on the day after the Yale-Harvard football game. Constantly at a disadvantage without its own fleet, the Corinthians have had a busi- ness committee of fireside sailors hard at work drawing up the now completed plans for a Yale lleet of 20 Dyer MDM twelve foot dinghies. Enlisting the support of Yale's nautically inclined alumni, the club wants to raise enough money to provide for the lleet, a boathouse, and most important, sail- ing at Yale for all interested, with instruc- tion for the beginners and racing for the more experienced men. Back Row: Kremenlz, Tuttle, Burns, Dwight, Brown, Charles, Hinton, Cressy. Third Row: Coulson, Wells, Daly, Simmons, Bellamy, Hayes, Ulian, Hume. Second Row: Thomson, Waters, Harrison, Leach, Childs, Fardelmann, Carter, Monetti. Front Row: Donohue, ScottAPaine, Reynolds, Caffrey, Schwartz. 221 Canterbury School Club JOHN K. CULMAN ROBERT M. FITZGERALD FREDERICK D. KING HAROLD R. LABONTB, JR. JOHN E. AIKEN DAVID D. HUME WILLIAM J. C. CARLIN DONALD W. HOGAN 1947 ROBERT W. BARNEY 1947N 194-7M 194-8 WILLIAM B. D,ALTON 1949 DONALD J. MCALEEMAN DAVID MCDONNELL COLIN T. MOORE 1949M MAURICE B. KEADY, JR. 1950 THOMAS HUME 222 STEPHEN N. HUME PHILIP E. RUPPE AIDAH 1. MULLETT JOHN F. MURRAY JAMES F. MCHUGH JAMES H. ROWVLAND CHARLES R. C. STEERS, CHARLES H. VEJ VODA J Gunnery School Club 1947 DONALD L. DEMING DELACEY H. SEABROOK KENNETH C. ACKLEY SAMUEL R. CALDWELL WILLIAM S. HILLMAN 1948 EDWARD C. KELLOGG 1949 MATH ER C. WALLIS 1 91L9M CHARLES E. ARNTSEN HENRY VAN DYKE 1950 ROBERT G. MURRAY PAUL M. RUSS 223 WILLIAM A. BOOE DAVID C. SANFORD, III WILLIAM W. WORCESTER Milwaukee Country Day School Club LOUIS AUER, V BRYANT BANNISTER DEAN D. FITZGERALD RICHARD L. GOLD HAROLD E. HANDS, JR. JACK R. KLOPPENBURC JOHN C. MERWIN, JR. 1 946M THOMAS F. SCANNELL, JR. 1 947 1947M GEORGE H. PFAU, JR. 194-8 194.9 JAMES B. LEEDOM, I1 CLIFFORD F. MESSINGER 1950 THOMAS R. PAPENTHIIZN EMANUEL L. PHILIPP 224 HAROLD W. SCOFIELD JOHN C. WINDSOR, JR. WILLIAM M. THOMPSON DAVID C. VIALL JOHN S. SAMMOND JOHN H. SPROULE THOMAS N. TUTTLE Thacher School Club CHARLES H. CLARK EDWARD E. EYRE SHERMAN EWING ANTHONY ARNOLD PETER ARNOLD MESNARD P. AYCRIGG l946M FREDERICK S. LAMB l947M GEORGE H. PFAU, IR. 1943 KELLAM DEFOREST 194-9 1949M 1950 DONALD M. GREGORY, JR. WILLIAM KENT, HI JAMES H. NOYES 225 THEODORE B. WYILCOX GEORGE W. KITTLE JONATHAN G. KITTLE SCOTT H. RUSSELL DENNISTON L. SLATER FREDERICK B. WELLS, III ATHLETICS Q H f me, . , Mal 5 In ML'4'Yf9f:2ffz4gQ.,,1g7 , was , 2 fiffgaagiwa fiaezm 1-isa aX:gr1?l,551zig'i-f . :E A?HAf5H!Qf2:31,iLi:iG,i?i.Q,E1fi' uwmwfv fl Y ,gp mffwlgif 5i'.f-iixmfigs' 'B51f555'fQ1i21if5i925551551 F151 fi i1-iw ? Q-m,.a-V md fmfQ.M.21w,M Qgfwwm-f:-MWVw---fy. ' ' :m.fz.swA 'W Ifsaff ,I ,S 7 - fmf,m i'5f,'i?fV9?i9f51x 'W -V f .4125 :ffs Nagar i 3,5 5 -f 7466 Mmm - Three Big Three championships, three capacity crowds in the Bowl, and unprece- dented wealth of material heralded the re- turn of athletics on a pre-war scale during the fall of 1946. It was a season of gala football weekends, of 313,000 fans elbow- ing their way into the Bowl, of 272 points scored by a Yale eleven, and of a host of backiield and line luminaries crowding the headlines for nine consecutive Saturdays. And in the background soccer and cross country performers added to the humbling of Harvard and Princeton. ? Q Fortified by a 210-pound forward wall of seasoned veterans and a handful of freshmen backiield performers, Coach Howie Odell moulded a team which carved out seven wins and a tie against one loss, tied Harvard and Pennsylvania for the lvy League title, captured the Big Three cham- pionship, and landed twelfth spot in Asso- ciated Press national rankings. l The Bowl is perkin' To be sure, the not-too-impressive shel- lacking of Kings Point by a 33-0 count gave little hint of the latent power, but it provided an auspicious debut for dSatur- dayis childw Levi Jackson, who unreeled a 58-yard touchdown sprint, and for the Tex F urse-.I ack Roderick battery, which brought back fading memories of a Frank-to-Kelly combination of a decade ago. The home forces were beset by a case of major-opponent jitters during the first half Back Row: Kirk, Setear, Prclilik, Pivcevich, Nadlierny, Sagar Klilanageri. Fourth Row: Frank Conway, Whiting, Roderick, Fitigerald, Hansen, Weiner. Third Row: Jackson, Wagstier, Hammer Cipolaro, Jenkins, Florentine, Robertson, Larson. Second Row: Carey, Whitridge, Elwell, Davison, Hollingshead CCaptainJ, Lynch, Ferguson, Gillis, Ernst. Front Row: Montano, Furs-e, Connelly, Booe, Barksdale, Jablonski, DeNezZ0. 1 Time to retire of the Colgate battle a week later, but Roderick's one -handed leaping catch, ,lacksonis 23-yard dash, and Vandy Kirkis juggling touchdown provided three last half scores and a 27-6 triumph. It was here that Captain Dick Hollingshead and company showed their first conclusive evidence of a behemoth line two and three deep in re- serve strength. But the weekend of October 14 was to stand as a Mldlack Saturdayi' in Yale foot- ball fortunes, when an apparently be- draggled Columbia Lion rose up in right- eous wrath and perpetrated a 28-20 out- rage before 65,000. Ferd Nadhery, with a pair of first half scoring plunges, and Jackson, with an unbelievable 86-yard touchdown ballet, provided a fourteen point margin, which disappeared under the ruth- less ministrations of Don Kasprczak, Gene Rossides, and company during the waning minutes. It was a thriller and a heart- breaker at the same time. Another tense afternoon was to be in store against Cornell the following Satur- day. It was a see-saw battle in which Kirk f20j scores against Colgate 229 Jackson dashes 10 yards for score Jackson provided six points on an eleven yard off-tackle drive, bu t Cornell bounced back to deadlock the game at 6-6. With less than a minute left, the Big Red directed two tremendous drives from less than a yard out at the Blue goal line, but the line hung on des- perately and Sue- Captain Hollingshead cessfully. Sighs of relief were breathed the follow- ing Saturday when the second team was able to provide most of the impetus to power a 47-14 victory over an out-classed Coast Guard aggregation. It was the warm-up for another capacity throng on November 2, which was treated to a tremendous dis- play of Yale power in a 33-2 crushing of Dartmouth. ln spite of a couple of lndian threats, the story was entirely a Yale one, with Furse, Roderick, Nadherny, Dick Jen- kins, John Ferguson, and the educated toe of Billy Booe producing the points. Yale unleashed their most impressive scoring parade against Brown with a 49-0 wing Jackson fthree touchdownsj, Nad- herny, Kirk, John Setear, Vinnie Lynch, and Booe fseven extra pointsJ composed the scoring column. This gave ample warning for the looming battles with the Tigers and the Cantabs. On November 16, no less than 70,000 people crammed every available seat in the Bowl to watch the Yale eleven establish its unquestioned superiority over Princeton, 30-2. For thirty minutes the Tigers were in the game, thereafter it was all Yale Suturdayis child 230 thanks to Furse's aerials, Jackson-Nad- herny running, and the charging of Bill Schuler, Fritz Barzilauskas, ,lohn Prchlick, and Hollingshead. Passes, running plays, and defensive tactics clicked as never he- fore, and, as a result, made the Elis a fourteen-point favorite over Harvard the following week. The Blue saw Red t Camera conscious With a Big Three and lvy League title in sight, Yale's foothall forces, along with a vociferous contingent of undergraduates, invaded Soldiers Field in Cambridge on November 23 and manufactured a 27-141 triumph in what stood as the highlight hat- tle of the campaign. For fifteen minutes 57,000 shivering spectators saw Cleo O,Donnell and Chip Gannon capitalize on Coach Harlow's MLM formation to mark up two touchdowns against the Elis. But with the wind at their hack the Bulldogs shaved the margin to one point during the next period hy virtue of a ,lack- son-Art Fitzgerald scoring pass and an eleven-yard touchdown plunge by Nad- herny, who also added another in the second half. Roderick's catch of a Furse aerial and his toe dance down the side lines provided the other touchdown. The line? notably Cotty Davison, Schuler, Prchlick, Barzil- Tlte Red felt Blue auskas, and Hollingshead -was a major factor in the victory, with l,000 un- dergraduates playing a starring role in the demise 1 of the Harvard goal posts after the final gun. 231 front Row: Biram, Diggs, Van Ingen, Broadbent CI-lead Cheer- Prose or pros? leaderl Williams, Maziarz, Potter, jackson. A handy catch And when the Anderson statistical bu- reau had totted up their final results for the season, records showed that Jackson had set the pace in scoring with sixty points, in rushing with a net gain of 806 yards from scrimmage, and in punting with a 40.6 average. Roderick established a new pass catching record with his seasonls total of twenty-seven, and Furse set the aerial pace by completing fifty out of lOl passes. 1946 was indeed a banner year, and Captain- elect Cotty Davison and a host of returning lettermen can point their sights high in an effort to match that record in the coming campaign. Under Odellis watchful eye the prospec- tive 1947 performers worked out for three Weeks during the spring. Qczqaee ?aaz'Za!Z - Five days a week it was the fate of Coach Phil Moonves' jayvee football team to per- form their customary role as uguinea pigs for the varsity, but the sixth day was game day. No less than five times in seven out- ings the jayvees trotted off the field with a victory under their belts, while losing one and tying one. Only a severe 26-0 jolting at the hands of a Harvard eleven stood in the way of an undefeated season. Billy Kirstis two touchdowns led the way to the inaugural 33-6 victory over the Columbia seconds. With Bill Connelly crossing the goal line, Yale deadlockecl Scalping the Indians 232 Brzck Row: Moonves fCoachj, Liechty, Hitchcock, Jones, Goodwin. Third Row: Mapes, Hollister, Campbell, Mauran, Paspales, LaBonte. Second Row: Biglow, Clark, Cramer, Chamberlain, Heffel- finger, E. Kilroy, Ashley, Bremser, W. Kilroy. Front Row: Conway, Colver, Smith, Gorman, Stanley, Regan. Cornell, 6-6, on the following weekend. In the 25-12 win over the Rutgers seconds, it was Boh Raines' two tallies that set the pace. Raines and lVlope Miles were the wheel horses in the next two triumphs445-O over Dartmouth and 20-7 over Brown. The aerial artistry of George Loh was a major factor in a 20-7 humbling of the Princeton Tiger, and then came the Harvard fiasco. Emu Gamma ' Coach Billy Queal faced a diffi- cult prospect in Yaleis return to the cross country trails hecause he was faced with the prohlem of moulding a comparatively inexpe- rienced collection of runners into an effective team. But the record substantiated his efforts, as the Elis Back Row: Penney fhlanagerl, Lucky. Adams, lngelin, Harrison, Queal CCoachD. Front Row: Upper, Thomp- son, Randall fCaptainD, Baldwin, Os- trcicher. achieved the status of Big Three champion over the Harvard and Princeton harriers. Captain ,lim Randall showed his heels to the entire field in the Cantah-Tiger race, and set the stage for a 24-31 margin over Harvard and a l9-33 margin over Prince- ton. No less than five Yale runners placed in the first ten. The other victorious foray was the opener against Columhia, in which Yale registered a 23-32 victory. Randall was the top Yale runner in taking second place over the three-mile course. Captain-elect Lint Bald- win landed in fourth spot. The Elis ven- tured into the Heptagonals at New Yorkis Van Cortlandt Park and came away with a third in the individual honors-Randall againfand fifth in team totals. 066610 On paper two victories, three losses, and three ties does not constitute an impressive record, but Coach Walter Leemannls charges, plagued though they were hy an endless succession of injuries, clicked when it counted and captured a Big Three cham- pionship. A thrilling 3-2 victory on a mud- spattered field at Cambridge was the key to success, when Blair Hawleyns two goals and one by Ned Andrews provided the margin that edged Harvard. The previous week had seen the underdog Yale soccermen hat- tle Princeton to a scoreless deadlock and in fact almost emerge victorious in the hec- tic minutes of an overtime session. The other hright spots were another O-0 Boots and mud verdict with a vaunted West Point aggre- gation and a 3-2 win over Wesleyan in which ,lack Sloat and Carter Fergusson pro- vided the scoring. ln their other games Captain Paul Laurent's men deadlocked Brown, l-l, and dropped decisions to Springfield by a l-O count, to Dartmouth hy a 5-2 count, and to the Naval Academy hy a 4-0 margin. Dame Fortune was a continuous thorn in the side of Yale's soccer efforts, with as many as five key performers being absent from the line-up for one game, thanks to the inroads of injury and illness. Back Row: Wagner CManagerJ, Caulkins, Leeman fCoachi. Third Row: Richardson, DeVenis, Symington, Farrar, Keating. Second Row: Hilliard, Wall, Phillips, Sloat, Andrews, Rabinowitz. From? Row: Nierendorf, Soule, Seabrook, Laurent QCaptainj, Buchanan, Hawley, Fergusson. wma f-414661544 - Blue campaigning in winter sports cir- cles was productive of four Big Three titles, a pair of Eastern Intercollegiate League championships, and one national crown. The enjoyable privilege of defeating Har- vard became the reward of no less than five of the six varsity teams in a long sea- son that heralded the return of winter ath- letics to their pre-war eminence. gaaketdczil - Rocky was the road of the 1947 edition of the Yale basketball team, which rose to the heights of a 22-point walloping of Har- vard and fell to the depths of an eight- game losing streak, during the course of the campaign. But the overall season rec- ord of seven victories and eighteen setbacks was tempered by the fact that the Blue cagers captured Big Three title honors. The educated eye of Tony Lavelli, who carried the brunt of offensive point-collecting and Will iL or w0n,'t it? defensive backboard-cleaning, was the brightest spot, the talented pivot man es- tablished a new Yale scoring mark of 419 points. lmprovement was the keynote for Coach lvan Williamsoifs men, as they collected four triumphs in their last seven outings, and all three losses of the series were of the last-second variety. ln addition to La- velli, Captain Bill Rohrer, Gordy Davis, Back Row: Williamson tfloaehl, Thomas, Swift, Behrens, Rohrer tCaptainl, Mahoney, Jvewett fltflanagerl. From' Rolf: Peacock, Nadherny, Joyce, Lavelli, Loeffler, Davis. Ferd Nadherny, Stan Peacock, Art Fitz- gerald, and Captain-elect Tuck Bedden carried the bulk of the competitive chores. Despite 24 tallies by Lavelli, Yale dropped its opener to Vermont by virtue of a last-minute score, 61-59, while three days later the late minute slump again proved to be a nemesis and the Blue suc- cumbed to Penn, 48-45. The Yale victory banner first waved after the battle with Kings Point which saw Lavelli pump in 32 points to lead the way to a 56-38 rout. A none-too-1'ewarding Christmas Vaca- tion road trip sandwiched in between league losses to Cornell, Penn, and Columbia left the Elis in the ruck of an eight-game losing streak. But the jinx was dispelled in spec- tacular fashion when the Bulldogs upset the league-leading Cornellians thanks to one of their finest defensive performances of the year. Three more defeats left the Bulldog gnawing hungrily for the Tiger Peacock lays one up Tony and the Tigers scalp on February 12, and that game was almost entirely a Blue story. Lavelli, Pea- cock, and Rohrer combined to score thirty- three points and set the pace for a 49-36 upset win. After a pair of heartbreaking defeats by Dartmouth and Connecticut, the Elis added another Tiger victory to their sparse string in one of the most thrilling battles of the year. Lavelli fwith 24 pointsj, Davis, and Bedden were the heroes of a 57-56 uphill struggle. Two more defeats and a win over Brown left Yale facing the crucial first Harvard battle. Underdogs though they were, La- velli and company completely shackled the Cantab offensive and humbled their rivals, 60-38, to clinch the Big Three title. Lavelli was little short of phenomenal in sinking 32. This peak performance of the year left the win over Trinity and the return loss to 236 Harvard as only an anti-climax. With the conclusion of the cage season Coach Wil- liamson ended his Yale coaching career to take over as head football mentor at Lafayette. Completing his second season of Yale basketball with an aggregate of 739 points, Lavelli was graced with a host of All- American and All-Eastern honors at the season,s end. Qfackeq ' Hockey established itself as the headline sport of the 1947 winter season, for this was a ranking Yale sextetg but more im- portant, the Yale-Dartmouth race for Pen- tagonal League honors was one of the closest in the history of the Hobey Baker com- petition. The issue was not decided until the gloomy night of March 11, when the boards of the Boston Arena resounded to the clash of the two eastern hockey giantsg Dartmouth speed paid off to the tune of a 5-2 victory, which tumbled the Bulldogs' hopes. Coach lVlurray Murdoch was faced with a difhcult problem in reconversion and co- ordination at the outset of the seasong that ':Scramblef it was successfully solved is attested to by the fact that Captain Terry Van lngen and mates fashioned a thirteen-game winning streak and a goal-producing average of close to six per contest. There were three major milestones along the 1947 hockey trail. The first of these took place on January 15, when Murdoch adopted the strategy of scattering his scor- ing punch by shifting Fred Pearson to the second line and leaving Artie Moher and Cordy Ritz on the first lineg Barry Wood Back Row: Wrigley CTrainerD, Kittredge, Connors, Warren, Calhoun, Manville, Eusden, Murdock fCO3Cl11. Second Row: Pearson, Mars, Welch, Wood, Sturges, Mcllwaine, Boynton, Howe, Allen. Front Row: Swift, Davison, Moher, Van lngen, Ritz, Soper, Bartlett. V f-W HM MMM MWMEdv ?fN fMWmmWWm iQ9WFWm93ifMWE?WE2L4f?W 4i31ZFiWEl?iSi3MWB,2K9KE75,'65!WQ'2E'?M M72!i?kYWLWWifiS5?W3543?4T3 3755323lZ4'R3i'9iE5S??i9't!a7AV?S2'+ifi?i95?Y4?5?h15?i?i became the third man. The decision paid off that night as witness the 7-1 rout of Clarkson Tech which ensued. Then on February 22, the Elis and the Indians staged their thrilling 6-5 battle on New Haven Arena ice, the capacity throng screamed it- self hoarse while Van lngen turned away 53 shots, while Yale was manufacturing six goals in the first two sessions, and while they clung des- perately to their lead in the waning, pres- sure-packed minutes. The third and last stepping-stone which led to a playoff hattle with the Hanoverians was the second Harvard game, which was played before a capacity Prom-trotting crowd. Seven days hefore Yale had snatched a 6-114 victory from a hard-pressing Cantab sextet in a battle that left Yale adherents squirming in the seats. But the Bulldogs Courtesy of Life Magazine Terry-fc save Gopher Bites the Bulldog fV6UTLilldCl'?S nemesis were more workmanlike in the return en- gagement, as they piled up a 4-1 edge and left little doubt of the eventual outcome. Pearson contributed his hit to the spec- tacularity of the occasion hy ramming in two goals in the space of one minute. Overall the Yale skaters compiled a rec- ord of fifteen victories, five defeats, and one deadlock. After preliminaries with 238 Courtesy of Life Magazine Ritz plays the boards Dunne, Needham AC, and Boston AA, they departed on a vacation tour that bred three defeats and only a one win of the spec- tacular 6-5 variety over Minnesota. It was after the 7-4 first Dartmouth defeat that the lengthy winning skein was launched. Artie lVloher, captain-elect, set the scor- ing pace, and he was followed hy Ritz and Pearson. Forward wall breakdowns show the lVloher-Ritz-Barry Wood line as the top goal producing unit-followed hy Pearson- Don Boynton-Al Clapp and Perry Sturges- Bill Howe-Dick Manville. Flanking Van lngen, who marked himself as the top net- minder in the league, were defensemen Walt Allen and Jack Calhoun. s ' - Operating with the efficiency of a well- trained robot, Coach Bob Kiphuth's swim- ming team outsplashed all available eastern competition on its way to an Eastern lnter- collegiate League championship, a Big Three title, and another undefeated season. Un a practical basis of seconds and split seconds the 1947 aggregation may not rank with the all-time greats of Yale,s illustrious swimming history, but the seasongs dual scores give evidence of a power-packed lineup. This was a year of Yale's return Kiphulh QQ Co. 239 Back Row: Burke fAsst. Coachl, Volk. Loekery, Duncan, Girdes, Moriarty CAsst. Coachl, Selden, Moore, Lazo, Kiphutli CCoachJ. Fourth Row: Heston, Meyers, R. B. Smith, Ratkietwich, Broadbent, Prince, Thropp, Parker, Gradisou Aglietti, Third Row: Davidson, Wagner, Howard, Stradella, Ham, Deacon, Shook, Torras, Freed. Second Row: Fryer fManagerJ, Morgan, Weiss, Stack, Hueber LCaptainJ, Gillet, Baribault, Hellelfinger. Front Row: Owens fseated leftl, Wells, Burr, F. Mason, Hulberson, Clement, Knowles. to eastern swimming competition, and any doubts about that return were answered by a 62-13 trouncing that was the reward of the defending titlist Navy mermen. By the end of December both Brown and Kings Point had bowed before the power- ful Yale team. It was on January ll. that the Elis made their first appearance against an Ella foe-in this ease, ,lack Medica's Penn swimmers. During the course of the meet the appearance of Captain Ed Hueber on the starting block for the 50-yard free- style brought howls of protest from Medica. Thus began the temporary saga of the miss- ing swimming captain, for Hueber was kept out of the Springfield meet f50-253 . Eligi- bility problems were temporarily resolved, t and Hueber donned the suit again to help Monster of the deep 2440 the Elis humble Navy. After a 53-22 trouncing of Army, Kip- huth's men ventured into intersectional competition long enough to crush Duke, 62- 13, with A1 Ratkiewicz, Paul Girdes, and Hueber slicing 1.4 seconds from the World mark in the 300-yard medley relay. A star-studded cast of alumni greats and near-greats returned to the Payne Whitney exhibition pool the following Weekend to match strokes with the 1947 Kiphuth lumi- nariesg the scale was Weighted in favor of the varsity, 52-13. Into the wild blue yonder Yale staged a whirlwind finish by cap- turing their remaining Ell. meets in the same mechanical fashion: Columbia Q66- 9J, Dartmouth Q51-245, Harvard Q49-26y, and Princeton Q64-11j. Highlight of the Indian meet was the freshman-record- breaking performance of Girdes in the 220- yard freestyle, he clocked a time of 2:11.0, and just four days later in a triangular meet against LaSalle and NYAC, he shaved the standard to 2:10.6. The staging of the Fifteenth Annual 2 i Not a second to lose Swimming Carnival proved more than any- thing else that the Water sport was back to a peacetime basis. With Joe Verdeur, Mil- ler Anderson, and a host of members of the Yale team providing the technical interest, the Nacettes esthetic interest, and I oe Hul- verson 81 Co. the comic interest. No less than eighteen Yale freestylists collaborated to shatter one relay mark. Hefelfinger hurlles J-1 Back Row: O'Donnell fCoachl, Firouz, Smith, Marcus Ulanageri, DeVitt, LaCroix, Hall. Wyre fTrainerl. Second Row: Baldridge, Mohler. Front Row: Swire lsealed leftl, Hascall, St. Georges, Stovall, Barker, Chafee. Stenger, Pulford, Hastings Seated rightr. Grunt ,II groan, artists I I An even split in their eight contests was the not-uncreditable record of the Yale wrestling team during the 747 mat wars, as Coach John O7Donnell's men capped their seasonls efforts with a 1111-13 shading of the Cantahs. Seasoifs beginnings foretold an auspicious campaign when Dartmouth Q22-6j, Columbia Q16-lllj, and King's Point Q28-BJ fell victim in that order, hut Army, Lehigh, Penn, and Princeton proved insurmountable hurdles as they chalked up four straight decisions in the delicit column. 165-pound John Chafee, who advanced to the finals of the eastern intercollegiates and marked up a 1:08 pin along the route, Was a consistent performer, as was 1948 captain-elect Norm Hascall, who had a mark of tive victories in eight tries. Also included in the list of Harvard match per- formers were Bill Swire, Schuyler Pulford, Joe St. George, Bob Bast, John Stenger, and Boh DeVitt. Prospects for next year show that five of these grapplers will he wearing the Blue livery again. Chafee was given the James Getz Trophy and Stenger the Frederick Gleason award in recognition of their seasonas efforts. Mohler da' bumv 242 l Second Row: Skillman fCoachl, Abbott, C., Carter, F., Blair, P., Finley, J. ihlanagerj, Drake, P., Van Slyck, P., Hedstrom, E. Front Row: Fergusson, C., Badger, C., Philbin, E., Philip, P., Ewald, T., Bayne B., Vought, P. g66dd40 , The year 1947 was another banner year for the highly-tutored squashmen of Coach John Skillman as they swept through thir- teen matches in undefeated fashion-eight of them via the shutout route. Climaxing their activities with a 10-0 humbling of Harvard, Captain Pete Philip and mates captured not only the Big Three racquet title but also national intercollegiate team honors. Carter Fergusson, who maintained a spot- less record in his number one position dur- ing the course of the campaign, advanced to the finals of the national intercollegiate championships at Hanover, a late surge on the part of his former victim, Pete Landry of lVlcGill, was all that kept the Blue stal- wart from the country-wide title in a five- set battle. Bruce Bayne and Ewing Phil- bin also participated. a . Coach Robert Grasson faced an impos- ing task in rebuilding the delicate art of the foil and the epee on the Yale campus. Fencing had been a wartime casualty, but in spite of two victory-six defeat record, there is no doubt that the sport is back to stay. Two hairbreadth losses to Army and Back Row: Hasselman lhlanagerl, Lifland, Winters, Grasson lCoachP. Front Row: Mcliirahan, ltliskimmin, Reid lCaptainJ, Daly, Ertell. 1 Back Row: Pearson, Hueber, Davison, Robrer, Jewett. Second Row: Laurent, Roberts, Jenkins, Ylvisaker, Weir. Front Row: Williams, O'Brien. Brown fPresidentJ, Sagar, Czarra. Navy initiated the campaign, the Bulldogs losing 14-13 both times. The two bright spots on the record were a 14-13 shading of Columbia and a 16-11 triumph over the Mercado Club. In the Harvard match Captain Roy Ried,s men Were saddled with a 6-3 deficit in the foil at the outset and lost, 16-11. Double vic- tories Went to John Miskimmin, Robin Ertelt, Bill Lifland, and Gene Spencer. Other consistent performers Were Frank Daley and Frank Commiskey. I 1 Crasson guidance f4,4- The Undergraduate Athletic Association, which became extinct during the War years, was finally reorganized in January of 1947. Student protest at YAA policy during the fall term had given clear proof of the need for an Undergraduate AA, and under the leadership of president Alexander Brown and treasurer Frank O'Brien, the group embarked on its assorted tasks. 111 addition to the two officers the mem- bers were as follows: Endicott P. Davison fFootballj, Charles P. Sagar CFootballj, Paul R. Laurent fSoccerj, William M. Rohrer fBasketballj, Richard K. Jewett QRasketballj, Herbert T. Van Ingen, Jr. fblockeyj, Robert W. Williams fllockeyj, Edward K. Hueber fSWimmingj, Living- ston Fryer, Jr. QSWimmingj, Peter V. Philip fSquashj, Michael R. Weir CRiflej, Richard F.. Jenkins fTrackJ, Bruce L. Rob- erts fTrackJ, Charles K. Pearson fBase- ballj, Edgar P. Czarra, Jr. fCreWj, and William T. Ylvisaker fTennisj. 244 ,dung 14545623644 ' Facing her first array of peacetime spring athletics in tive years, Yale was be- set by the inevitable obstacles of reorgani- zation in the spring of l91L6. Yet the record was a bright one, with the baseball and tennis teams setting the pace by capturing Eastern lntercollegiate honors as well as their respective Big Three titles. With the groundwork laid, the Elis faced a full slate of l94L7 spring events, fortified by a wealth of material and by the addition of two new head coaches. mega!!- A record of fifteen victories in nineteen starts, including seven EIL wins, was the worthy contribution of Captain Mike Sti- mola's edition of the l94L6 baseball team. Under the tutelage of Coach Ethan Allen and under the impetus of the strong arms of hurlers Walt Gathman and Frank Quinn the Elis chalked up two triumphs each over their rivals from Princeton and Harvard- adding to their laurels by making it ten in a row over the Ti- gers, which stands as the longest consecu- tive winning streak in the seventy-nine year old rivalry. Only a 3-l re- verse at the hands of Cornell marred the baseball team's EIL record, and that de- feat was avenged on the same afternoon in the second half of y a double header. Co- Capt Ovgrien lumbia was humbled ' twice by l-O and 5-3 counts, and sandwiched in between these wins were a pair marked up against Dart- mouth. ln two non-league encounters the same medicine was delivered to a vaunted nine from West Point. lt was the lirst Princeton game, however, which proved the clincher of EIL honors. With Quinn performing the mound chores, the Elis built up an 8-0 eighth inning mar- gin and coasted in to victory. Gathman fashioned a three-hit shutout in the next Back Row: Moonves CAsst. Coachl, H. Wrigley fTrainerJ, Young ClVlanagerl, Goodyear, Brock- way, Osborn, Kraus, Allen CCoachD. Second Row: Stimola fCaptainJ, Rohrer, Howe, Heath, Lilley, Rosensweig, H. 0,Brien, Libby. Front Row: Bush, F. O'Brien, Elwell, Catliman, Quinn, Moher, James, Sulliman. Seated in Front: P. Wrigley fBatboyl. outing against Harvard final score: 8-OJ and accounted for another Win against the Tigers, 7-4, before a capacity throng of l2,000. Bolt Elwell and Harry Reese col- lected 1'ive hits between them to lead the attack. Gathman compiled a season,s record of seven wins and no defeats, Quinn paced the league in strikeouts, and ,lunie O,Brien was elected 1947 captain. 6600 'Yale,s unheralded 1946 return to rowing circles provided a host of difficult problems for Head Coach Ed Pocock. With only the Harvard races in prospect, the crew aspir- ants, many of whom boasted little previous experience, rather belatedly launched prep- arations for the June lst contest over the one and three-quarter mile course on the Charles River. Three previous Cantab de- feats had left considerable room for Yale Back Row: Williams, Magnon, Brown, Salisbury Cflaplainr. Hicliox. Front Row: Reynolds Cfloxswainj. :Take me out L0 lhe ball game Wade. Rockefeller. O'Brien. 246 Back Row: Walker, Boynton, Wellington, Nangle, Palmer, McCloud, McLannan, S. Brown. Front Row: Beggs tCoxswain,l. Skipper and first mate hopefulness, but the competitive experience of the men from Cambridge proved too much of a handicap. Captain Mason Salisbury's varsity eight, with stroke Hank Williams and coxswain Bob Reynolds setting the pace, tasted de- feat by better than four lengths with a time of 9:36 as against their rivals, 9:18. Bow- ing ata pace of 32, Harvard had open water by the quarter mile mark and had built up a three length margin at the mile. Coach Tom Bolles of Harvard unveiled his 150- pound crew-one of the finest in history- for the jayvee race, and they proved equal to the occasion by defeating the Yale sec- onds in the time of 9:12. Alec Brown, who held down the number six position, was elected captain of the 1947 crew, which has operated under a new coaching staff, Allen W'alz from Wvisconsin, and his assistants, Roy Rom and Joe Burk, who has a host of single sculls titles to his credit. ln facing what was touted to be a new era in Yale rowing, the oarsmen plied the waters of the Housatonic until the un- precedented date of December 16 this year, with an eye toward a full-scale 1947 sched- ule. The slate was one which brought back Derby Day to its pre-war eminence, with Penn and Columbia as the visitors, and also saw the resumption of Yale-Harvard competition at its traditional site on the Housatonic. 'make Coach Charley Hoyt faced an imposing task in launching Yaleis 1946 return to the track wars. The cindermen's first efforts were overshadowed by the advanced calibre of the competition, and but for a few high points such as Captain Sherwood Finley's heptagonal high hurdles triumph, Hal Bar- l Capt. Brown. Capt. Jenkins 247 keris IC4-A title in the discus, and the over- all better-than-expected team performance in the dual meet against Harvard, the season was a disappointing one. The seasonis finale, however, which wit- nessed a decisive 88-47 trouncing of Princeton gave promise of hopefulness for the future. Finley, Dick Jenkins, Frank Martin, Arnold lngelin, George Cook, Vin- nie Lynch, Bill Coedecke, Homer Stanley, Barker, Francis Hall, Dave Crimes, and Irv Bouten accounted for first places to clinch the verdict. With the retirement of Coach Hoyt and the arrival of Bob Ceigengack track showed promise of a full-fledged return for the 1947 campaign. From a date early in the winter Coxe Cage became the scene of heated preparations for cinder battles to come, and the indoor season, which was designed mainly to plug the gap of in- experience, saw Yale entrants in many of the major meets-including the lVfillrose AA Games, the Knights of Columbus meet, and the Boston AA events. emofa- Sweeping through an eight-match sched- ule in undefeated fashion, the tennis team established itself as one of the outstanding aggregations in Yale racquet history. Coach John Skillmanvs forces brought both the Eastern Intercollegiate League and Big Three titles to New Haven. With Bolor Bay leading the way in number one position, Pennsylvania, Columbia, Dartmouth, Kings Point, Connecticut, Princeton, Williams, and Harvard were conquered in consecutive order. High points of the campaign were the Back Row: Garner fManagerD, Stanley, Grimes, P. Smith, Fyfe, R. Smith, Hall, Cook. Roberts CAsst. Managerl. Third Row: Davis, Bouten, Martin, Burdick, Ingelin, H. Johnson, Wilson, Livingston. Second Row: S. Johnson, Goedicke, Barker, Jenkins, Finley fCaptainJ, Lynch, Alling, Treco, Toms. Front Row: Dangler, Read, Evans, Kaynor, Thompson, Bensley, Brown. 1 24-8 Back Row: Firouz, Kiam, Boyle, Peterson, Ritchey, Boocock, Hunt, Skillman fCoachj. Front Row: Carroll, Geller, Ray, Ylvisaker, Kittleman fCaptainJ, Baldwin, Suchin, Sutton, Bell. upset of a highly favored Columbia team, a crucial 5-4 victory over Princeton, and a l3-2 trouncing of Harvard in which twenty men saw action. Bill Ylvisaker was named captain for the 1947 season. 604 ' The golf team, suffering only one setback in collegiate competition, compiled an over- all season record of four wins and three losses during the spring of 1946. Bright spots included the 9-0 shutouts of Exeter and the University of Connecticut, as Well as a hard-fought 5-4 victory over West Point and a 6-3 triumph over lVllT. Princeton was the only barrier in the way of an 'unbeaten collegiate record, but in the final match of the season the Tigers col- lected a very decisive 815-IQ win over the Elis. Earlier in the season the Hartford Golf Club and then the alumni, in a very close battle, had been victorious. Coach .loe Sullivanis first call for l947 golf aspirants was met with a large turnout, and the linlcsmen faced a bright prospect for the impending campaign. Back Row: Demmon, Lord, Ramsey, Welles, Sullivan lCoachD. Front Row: Donnelly, Neithamer, Lee lCap- tainl, Alden, Dewalt. 249 FRESHNIEN W IH 1 vf I I v i E One Member 0 Yale s Largest Class Writes a Letter Recording His New Haven Impression for a Harvard Friend Dear George : JUDGING from your last letter, which you say Was smuggled out of Harvard Yard by a Red Cross Worker, life there makes Dachau sound like a Cape Cod summer colony. Yours is, indeed, a tale that brings large tears to these old eyes, lout in com- parison to us who inhabit Sachem Woods fnthe Valley Forge of New Englandnj you have little to complain of. Crossing the ice- floes of the Charles like Little Eva may seem very heroic, but at least it is not necessary for you to depend on relays of dog teams and an Eskimo guide to assure your presence at eight o,clock classes. Then again, after you have reached civilization, l i you have only the Finians of the Cam- bridge Police Force to cope with, while we face a cabal of Gaelic Sadists and the OGPU maintained by the university. This latter group is reputed to operate directly under the orders of a little-known man whose office is situated in a heavily-guarded Commissariat on Elm and High streets. His name is whispered hoarsely as black limou- sines with down-pulled blinds screech around corners. I dare not say more. Then of course you speak of the subway. This is hardly a threat to my peace of mind, since for the last two months at least one motorman employed by the New Haven Street Railway Company has relentlessly pursued me in hopes of carving another notch on his transfer-punch-it is rumored, indeed, that a prominent traction magnate fPrinceton 7035 is offering handsome boun- ties on every pelt brought in. The Old Campus num., JI'- fack . . . Perhaps the most trying feature of life here, however, and something which no other university can offer, is the splendid training in sales-resistance afforded by the first hours of Freshman life. As the some- what bemused neophyte struggles with his bags and take his first cautious step into the Old Campus, he finds his left foot caught by an ingenious contrivance of the Student Pressing and Shrinking Agency. Small men armed with contract pads refuse to release his numbed extremity until he signs for a life membership in the HYale Protective Associationw. This institution, devised by A1 Capone in his undergraduate days, binds one contracting party fthe Fresh- manj to pay 325 and the other fthe Agencyj to mangle, trample, and debutton as many pieces of personal linen as the party of the first part fnow hobbling to the Health De- partment in search of a knee tourniquetj desires to entrust to its tender mercies. However, before he is able to find relief beneath Dr. Rogers' scalpel, he finds him- self sprawling on the ground as the result of a length of piano-wire artfully stretched 53 across his path by another student agency. This process is repeated until he is rescued by his Freshman counselor, a prematurely- grey sylph of eighteen who is taking his third Ph.D. because he finds college life so entrancing. l should hate to give the impression, how- ever, that life at Yale is without its lighter moments. l had a light moment only last week when I first savored the exquisite satisfaction of an Abbott and Costello opus Fence sitters before an hour exam. Although this form of diversion can best be appreciated on a sleepy Sunday afternoon, there is some- thing of the joy of tripping an old lady to be found in forcing oneis roommate into such wayward paths on study nights. And then again, George, there is the plumbing. Even for those of us who live on the Old Campus fa masterpiece of New England understatementl there is some- thing somehow spine-tingling in the icy trickle of water which consistently inun- dates the back of the neck whenever one ventures toward the wash-basin. lf, per- haps, when Noah Webster' was putting in the appliances for Durfee and Farnham, he had placed the water tanks in some less strategic 2 54 Returning from Commons spot, he would have spared seven genera- tions of Freshman this most maddening of tortures. There are other palaces of pleasure to be found in this ravioli center of south-west Connecticut. There is the institution known simply and somewhat enthusiastically as Wllhe Paradisen, which boasts a select group Paradise lost On an autumn afternoon of sub-debs in addition to a covey of charm- ingly elusive native dancing girls many of Whom would Warm the heart of a Gila Mon- ster as they merrily perform their quaint traditional ceremonies. Then there is the MPoor lVlan's Mory's,w Ye Clubbe Knicker- bocker, which has a clientele comparable only to the Tabard lnn in its palmy days and features brimming iiagons of nut-brown Schlitz. But, George, all is not beer that bubbles. Even the formal duties of education have their compensations for all the terrors of Elm Street, the attacks of the purveyors of miscellaneous services, and the ever-present menace of ptomaine, we have come to have a dog-like devotion to this, our university and our home. There, standing eternally before Connecticut Hall, is Nathan Hale, and beside him, his hand outstretched and his flipping-finger twitching, is the faithful Fi-Buck. All's well with the world. Your friend, Mike figs. Toast and cojee Freshman sing' 255 FRESHMAN PROMENADE COMMITTEE. Back Row: Thayer, Haerle, Meyer, Tataranowicz, Wade, Kreh. Front Row: Moses, Cowan, Setear, Brown, Shay. Activities of 1950 HE Class of 1950 was subjected from the moment of its arrival to a barrage of propaganda making the Nash-Kelvinator advertisements seem like Bowman and Bach at their dreariest. Dozens of reviving or- ganizations sought to lure the new man into joining or heeling by means of stunts and posters offering a range of inducements, from very tangible cheesecake to inanimate attractions such as Hprestigea' and urespon- sibilityw. To many men who had suiiered an acute lack of all three for several bleak years, and also to the non-veteran, activities were a welcome relief from study routine, and the response was all that the upperclass moguls could have wanted. Activities other than athletics fcovered in a later sectiony were in two main divi- sions. First, there were the ones open to Freshmen only, such as the Freshman Dwight Hall Cabinet, The Freshman Clee Clubs, Freshman Debating groups, and the Freshman Promenade Committee, whose works are shown here. Through these, the huge class began to demonstrate its soli- darity and special character. Second, there were the organizations of interest to all stu- dents and which Freshmen entered by en- rollment or by heeling for a short period of ignominy. These included. the various publications and such activities as WYBC, the Political Union, and the veterangs or- ganizations. Though dominated by upper- classmen, these offered Freshmen another means of expressing individual talent. Next yearys Sophomores are well aware of their opportunities, and graduating grey- beards may look to them in confidence. 256 f Back Row: Wrigley fTrainerJ, Sayre, Bishop, Meyer, O'Connor QMgr.l, Linehan, Huffman, Potter De Angelis QCoachJ. Fourth Row: Bartnett, Hart, Sayre, Armstrong, Naffziger, Lunt, Gaull, Carr, Montgomery. Third Row: Jones, W. Johnson, Berg, Keller, Thalheimer, Murray, Tippet, Connoly, Second Row: Bowers, W. S. Johnson, Mellon, Grider, Luckey, Lovejoy CCaptainJ, Anderson, Shay, Cirillo, Van Calbrath, Gieb. Front Row: Davis, Calhoun, True, Phelps, McAfee, Belew. 7 Amm- Steeped in potential athletic manpower from the depths of their record-breaking 1800 number, the classes of 1949M and 1950 could look forward to a bright pros- pect for the impending campaign. This was a year that foretold keen competition for coveted berths on the yearling teams. And in retrospect the picture was still bright, with a definite preponderance of figures in the win column, in addition, the cubs could look to a host of their classmates wearing the Blue varsity regalia in almost every field of activity. When Coach Jimmy DeAngelis issued his first call for freshman football candidates on September 12, no less than one hundred, stalwarts climbed into their padding for the first session. By October 5 DeAngelis, along with assistants Delaney Kiphuth, Mac Whiting, Paul Walker, and Stu Clancy, had moulded together a unit that pinned a 7-0 defeat on Andover on the strength of a Har- 25 lan Davis-Paul Shay first period touchdown aerial. The yearlings outdid their bigger varsity brothers the following weekend, when they proved more effective mudders than the C0- lumbia Lions to the tune of a 19-0 victory. Dick Bowers produced a 55-yard scoring sprint to start the Blue machine rolling, a Davis-Shay pass and a Bill Meyer plunge Back Row: March CCoacl1l, Dorain, Lambert, Schelpert Felix, Matlhicssen, Dwyer, Haskell fMgr.5. Second Row Edwards, Hodge, Dunne, Clemensliaw, Dulaney, Bradford Ewing, Van Marx. Front Row: Hoy, Griggs, Cruner, Ford Wright fCaptainJ, Stannard, Joline, Dupree, Bova. 3 Future Bowl luminaries produced the rest of the damage. The cap- taincy election of center Winnie Lovejoy found the cuhs on the eve of the Brown battle, which became another stepping stone on the victory route, 27-0. Two weeks later Dartmouth exposed the yearlings to the in- dignity of yielding their first touchdown, hut Sandy McAfee and Jim Mellon hoth tallied for the Elis in a 13-6 win. A mid- week clash with Cheshire again found Yale on the long end of a 20-0 count. Scoring was the order of the day in the Princeton battle, but the Bulldogs scored more fre- quently to sew up a 32-19 margin. Bowers, Chappy Belew, and Dick Phelps all pro- vided long touchdown jaunts, while Bowers, again, and Joe Calhoun also charged over from close in. But Harvard was to stand as the lone stumbling block on a previously unhlemished trail, when DeAngelis, men Back Row: Jacobs, Neisser, Osborne, Calvert. Baxter, Frank, Liechty, E. Allen fCoaehiJ. Front Row: Davidson, Lynch, Lambert. Ladd, Grider, Anderson, Shay, Bishop, Rubin, Gault, Pratt, Upjohn. 259 Sr U ffitlm its S? ,,, , i lit - rgiittfii 7 Q5 iilllli S 'll W X ! ,,.,, , Il 1, . :i mir E ri E it g'fg,rft? E 5 1 A 'iz' , U X 5. ,g,,,,,,v, lag., 1 Y X t i 5 can it ,r iff: 'S' lil, U N ri ie , if L , ,fl s M 2, pi 5 digg! 1 ' 'F , if ' K i A mf X 1 3 2' , f 'fywff . ' 'Wi i 'FGA .if Anderson, Lay-up all succumhed, 12-6, Bowers provided the lone touchdown. At the same time Coach ,lack lVIarshall's freshman soccermen enjoyed somewhat more success in a mud-splattered ahfair with Harvard, when Dick Griggs, one goal provided them with a 1-0 victory that pro- tected an unmarred escutcheon. Center Curly Ford was the primary offensive threat, and he set the seasonis scoring pace. Included in the list of victims were Hopkins Grammar Q6-lj, Weslyan Q6-lj, Taft fl- Oj, Fieldston Q6-OD, and Navy Q2-lj. A 1-l deadlock with Princeton was the major threat to the Blue record, but Fordis game- tying goal saved the day. W'inter7s belated arrival found no less than six cuh teams carrying the Blue colors into a full schedule of contests. In hockey, swimming, and squash heated intramural competition had given the potential team performers an opportunity to show their mettle. Coach Harry Erdman piloted the 1950 Back Row: Moifett Cmanagerl, Murray, Guernsey, Hastings, Shepard, Brown, Wilson, Ross, Sea- man, Hart, Lee, Erdman fC0achJ, Kuczo CTrainerD. Second Row: Kelly, Clapp, White, Coulson, Yan Dyke, Raines, Johnson, Sellwood, Clappenburger, McLeod. McCracken, Gruner. Front Row: Knox, Bray, Sedgewick, Swift, Welles, Calhoun, Folan, Meyer, Holmes, Reid, Lord. 260 Back Row: D. Kiphuth CCoachJ, Rubican, Pantzer, Chamberlain, Barnum CManagerl, Damon, Douglas, F. Mantz fCoachJ. Fourth Row: Griggs, Mater, Demere, Mittet, Emery, Steffan, Smith, N. D. Third Row: Breckenridge, Bridston, Fleischmann, Valentine, Fitzgerald, Hodes, Ezrow, Far- rell. Second Row: Merritt fCaptainl, Skene, King, Lazo D., Cox, Brooks, Heald, Brokaw. Front Row: Pitler fseatcd leftl, Stanley, Rolfing, Saltonstall, Dye, Tyler, Pomeroy fseated rigbti. hockey team through an undefeated seven- game campaign, that was marked by a cli- mactic 5-2 defeat of a Harvard sextet that was highly touted as one of the best in the East. Captain Bob Raines, Dick Hart, and Dave Bull all provided critical counters. During the early part of the season A1 Clapp had established himself as a scoring sensation, but mid-season found him firmly Second Row' Ahlber Stewart Folsom Risle Conklin A - gv 1 Y, 5 Mr. Grasson fCoachl. Front, Row: Fleming, Lesder, Haddon, White, Wachsman. esconced on the second line of the varsity puck-chasers. Norty Knox handled the goal-tending chores, while Scotty Welles, Vern Armour, and Mac McCracken were on the First line. Ten wins and three defeats was the en- viable record of Coach Ethan Allen's fresh- man cagers, Who despite a succession of critical injuries produced an efficient brand of Winning basketball. Only hairbreadth losses at the hands of the Tigers and the Cantabs-47-44 and 57-56 respectively- served to blacken the overall picture, for Back Row: Zeiglcr fAsst. Coachb, Wyre QTrainerJ, Laub beib Thompson CManagerJ, O7Donnell fCoachJ . Front Row: Leeds i eated lcftl, Smith, Rinehart, Beach, Carr fCaptainJ, Mansell Carey Kramer, Porter fseated rightl. Captain Brot Bishop and his teammates. Altitudinous center Ted Anderson, with a 17-per-game average, was an early season scoring pacesetter, but when he was plagued by a collection of injuries, his scoring man- tle was handed to Jim Gault and Jim David- son. The yearling swimmers splashed through a twelve-meet season, with a 43-32 loss at the hands of Harvard as the only major blot. They, however, salvaged considerable sol- ace from the Cantab reversal by defeating Princeton a week later, 44-31. Captain Tom Merritt, Don Irwin, Don Lazo, Ted King, and ,lack Brooks were the most fre- quent occupiers of the point-collecting brackets. Captain Stuart Hadden led the fencing team through a seven game schedule with only one defeat, and he was ably seconded by Dave Wachsman, Joe Fleming, Ken Vin- cent, Hank Folsom, Bill White, Frank Bis- ley, and Foster Conklin. On the wrestling mats Captain Buck Carr's aggregation dropped only one and tied both Princeton and Harvard in their eight-match season. Carr, Larry Leeds, and Frank Mansell all had spotless records. The freshman squash team emulated the efforts of their varsity counterparts by chalking up an unbeaten record with Mike McLanahan, Tom Kemp- ner, Hank Fox, Sonny Wainwright, and Back Row: Early. Toshach, Philips, Wilcox, Bull, Mahoney, Reinhart, Halfner, Bertrand fCoachJ. Front Row: Austin, Vandell, Henry, Koeninger, Mamis, Woodhouse, Albachten, Kline, Lamoure. Second Row: White, ,l. tManagerJ, Fox, H., Cleveland N Weeks, C., Denham, W., McLean, R., Aymar, C., Skillman CCoachJ. Front Row: Dodge, M., Kempner, T., Wainwright C., Mclsanahan, A., Chandler, B., Pettit, J., Long, D, Carnes Weeks carrying the bulk of the action. In its debut under the Yale athletic pen- nant the class has served notice that there are potential stars in its midst, to supple- ment the efforts of classmates who have already made their mark in varsity circles. fzeadmcm 7057601667664 Under the guiding reins of William H. t'4Widdy',j Neale, intramural athletics shed their wartime cloak of inactivity and again assumed their proportionate role on the Old Campus. In spite of the seemingly vast reserves of avoirdupoids available, the initial attempts received a rather varied re- action-from South,s large Notre Dame- like squad to a far less populated eleven from North. At any rate, teams there were, and the intramural athletes embarked on the opening phases of their campaigns in early October. The league football wars witnessed a down-to-the-wire struggle which was not decided until the seasongs final whistle on the eve of the Princeton football game. The title-deciding battle pitted the South team 262 with a record of four wins and a single loss against South Middle with a three-and-two record. On the strength of an intercepted pass by .lack Mamis and a short plunge by Rudy Albachten, the South Colonels had contrived a six-point edge, but their rivals bounced back with a touchdown jaunt by Jerry Elliot. The extra point that didrft ma- terialize cost the Patriots a deadlock for the title. 'Whizzer' White was the major offen- sive threat of the championship team, and his mates Mamis and Bill Bull developed the finest passing combination in the circuit. Chalking up an impressive record of nine straight wins, North Middle had a field day in the touch football race. The Deacon juggernaut, paced by Captain Frank Kline and Ted Anderson, rolled through their nine games without a serious threat and included a 72-6 shellacking of North in their repertoire of high-scoring parades. Wintertime intramural activity brought with it a host of athletic contests, with team champions being crowned in no less than four sports. Highlight of the long season was the 56-game basketball schedule, the playoff battle in the hockey league, and two separate title races in swimming. With positions on the freshman team as the reward for the cream of the crop, four freshman sextets put on an abbreviated race during December and early January. Dead- locked for first place at the end of the six- game season, North and North Middle hooked up in a playoff clash, that saw Al Clapp,s Postmen six emerge the winners by a 3-2 margin. Ed Bigelow and Phelps Swift accounted for all the North scoring, while Jack Armstrong connected twice for the Deacons. In addition to Clapp, other team captains in the league were: Phelps Kelly fNorth Middlel, ,Mac McCracken fSouthl, and Bill Meyer fSouth Middlej. South Middle made a runaway contest of the intramural basketball championship by qualifying one of its teams for top hon- ors and the other for the third place spot. SM Sinclair, with a record of twelve vic- tories and a pair of defeats, clinched the title well before the conclusion of activities, and their captain, Hugh Sinclair, added to the team's laurels by taking top intramural scoring honors with l69 points, one more than North's Charley Keller. Swimming also became a South Middle monopoly, since the Patriots took both halves of the title competition-the first race being won with the aid of future var- sity performer Paul Girdes and a large con- tingent of future Freshman squad members. ! Back Row: Bass, Randall, Hickmott, Perkins, Learned, Singer, fC0achD. Front Row: Fajnor, Morrow, Kline, Newlands, VanSlyck. Feature of the first race was the 27-24 last- ditch affair between South Middle and North Middle, it was this meet that decided the title. Cordie Knox, Gordon Aymar, and Sandy Reed paced the Patriots to a squash title. This racquet race also rbquired a play- off match to decide the outcolme, since South Middle and South were knotted at five wins apiece. 263 ' ADVERTISING 'SQ .I Q -,.2g5rg, 2 , , ' my I A h H ' ,X fx -. R m ' fi my 5 s it Q f , L ki 4 W : L 2 f.,. ' 1 J- - i 3' A X 1 5' v f' S n mn Q 5' Q 5 Hi yy Q . BERKELEY COLLEGE Class of 1947 Dudley B. Batchelor Robert A. Behrman William B. Belknap. Jr Richard B. Bevier Thomas C. Breen, Jr. Stanley S. Brotman Samuel C. Burchell, lll James M. Childs Laurence B. Clarke Stephen G. Daitz Ralph E. Decker Robert B. Delaney Alfred B. Doutre Francis B. Elwell, Jr. Wolcott G. Ely John C. G. Finley Francis E. Flaherty James C. Gibbens Donald E. Hagemann l-larry E. Hamilton William G. Heckman John E. Helseth George W. Hughes Daniel D. Karasik Gilbert D. Kittretlge John C. Leary Paul B. MacCready. J r Walter MacDonald. Jr Charles S. McCain. Jr. Roger S. McCollester Randall P. Mclntyre John Morrison Frank R. Natarn Donn A. Pennebaker Henry B. Platt Thomas C. Platt, Jr. Thomas B. S. Quarles William M. Rohrer Richard B. Rosenthal Charles G. Sclxoenfelfl Roger L. Schwab Robert Stokes John G. M. Stone, Jr. Edgar M. Streat John J. L. Sullivan Henry W. Taft Class James F. A. Biggs Morton A. Binder Jorge J. Bosch Milton Colvin William B. Cooper John K. Culman Alan F. Daily Charles B. Farrar Donen Gleick Donald R. Green. Jr. Eugene R. Hanson Robert C. Hardwick Philip R. Tooliey James C. Tormey, Jr. Charles P. Twichell Richard N. Verdery Carl A. Vernon. Jr. Milton Westphal Lee H. Wigren Alfred S. Wise, Jr. Robert D. Wood 1947N Charles W. Landefelrl Gerard R. Lawrence Joseph G. Lioon James C. Logue Frank M. McClain John W. Mattern John D. Morrison. Jr. Frank 0,Brien. Jr. James R. Owens. Jr. William B. Pratt Howard G. Singer Albert F. Wessen Non-Resident Harold B. Erdman William F. Howe, Jr. Chilton Thomson George Uihlein Maxwell P. Aley J-.,figsQz.N Picture after picture in old yearbooks at the best known . 3 X I 1 W schools and colleges in the East prove how long. . . and pho- Snaususuli tographs in today's undergraduate and alurnni publica- tions prove how consistently. . .Brooks Brothers have been a familiar and favored part of the traditional scene. ESTABLISHED 1818 46 NEWBURY STREET, 5X g, j Q fgx , BOSTON 16, MAss. if lx Qlff-Xxfw Y ill ifl2lfSlIf.2 Sli... PHS Ellrhihhillga, Eats 235511 U25 OFFICERS' UNIFORMS, FURNISHINGS AND ACCESSORIES 1 1 1 SUTTER STREET, SAN FRANCISCO 4, CALIF 346 MADISON AVILNUE, COR. 44TH ST., NEYV YORK 17, N. Y. ' t IFTUW S 1 L, 6 'pgffii 1 ,,,, eb I fffiwenty Que 'west Qzfry Second ,Street tc h in gs E? 5? ' l l :II il I lid U1 ln S' -giggggggg I MERXNfIN,S ART SHOP I C I 64 y 282 York Room 2 2 267 BRANFORD COLLEGE Class of 1947 Robert L. Addis Greer Allen Roger A. Bachman John Nl. Bates Lester F. Becker Charles A. Blake, Jr. James W1 Bracnaro Edward A. Cahill, Jr. Harold P. Cahill, Jr. David L. Carpenter John D. Chapman Frank R. Chapman. Jr. John J. Cisco, Jr. George J. Clark. Jr. James C. Cook Bruce WV. Cronrnilier, Jr. John ll. Deitze Wesley A. Estabrook Sherwood H. K. Finley Thomas L. Flanagan a John W. Follin Frank L. Gillis William J. Graham Frank P. Holman George B. Holmes Donald E. Hooper Richard S. Horohner Theodore C. Levens 4'v1 1 Robert T. Mclieag David D. MeKenney Rowland L. Mitchell. Jr. Edwin A. Olsen Morris J. Pinto Louis A. Savarese Theodore A. Sawyer Raymond C. Scnssell Robert F. Seebeck John C. Setright VVilliam A. Shanklin, l Joh n Sherry , , f t Q -- . Q ' 0 4 L' -P 3 , 9' v U 49,1 QAQX ,., axe! Wx? Ont no 5-nf' Gybvl , 1 0 JGQQ V-7 - ' -' P9 in V ' 1 4 0 n 1 Q W A . l , 268 Earl Shaman William F. Sidley Carl Siemon Arnold Simon Charles G. Stradella, Jr Edward P. Strype Harris Toll Class John WV. Anderson, ll Everett J. Bickford Lester E. Brion, Jr. Daniel C. Cady Robert B. Deans, Jr. Carl W . Dykerna Glenn S. Evensen Richard N. Felske David N. Flood John C. Gabriel Ge t:1' ge R. Gill Robert L. Grant Alan M. Harris William VV. Henderson .Xrth iir' P. Heyer John L. Hughes 0 Robert J. Turner George S. Upson John S. Voorhees Thomas C. Walsh Edward D. Weakley Michael B. Weir Harold M. Willcox, Jr. 1947N Vance E. Katherman Norman H. McCabe Richard B. Morgan James L. Randall Theodore R. Robertson Karl R. Ross Edward H. Thomas Pasquale J. Vecohione John W. Vogt, Jr. Daniel P. Weinig David L. Wltittetrioie Henry C. Williams James L. Wilson William R. Wilson George A. Wohl Non-Resident Stanley S. Bronski H. A. Ryan Raymond D. Campbell Gerald R. Sims Robert H. Merrill John E. Tormey. Jr. Frank J. Morgan David J. Williams, II BIUYULE UE 'I' R Agents for RALEIGH foreign cycles and SCHWINN domestic cycles Bicycling is the quickest, most economical, most Convenient campus transportation Bicycles Rented, Sold and Repaired 1129 Chapel Street, Corner York New Haven, Conn. BERT! ll'S GAIIAGE. PARKING DOWNTOWN GARAGE 280 Crown Street Tel. 7-1822 24 HOUR SERVICE PARKING LOTS AT 220 Crown Whitneyf and :Xurlohon 42 High C. W. B IQ A li E S l E E S: SUNS, INC. Athletic Field Excavations Foundations Driveways R. R. Work Ready Mixed Concrete Bridges 'lr 5 8 WAVERLY STREET NEW HAVEN, CONN. COHEN 82 POWELL A' 'ei is C H as A gfd! 1'.- ':- '3'E . grim, siopfmt je ' I idk - Vnmlf-Safe Vans! Household goods are as safely stowed as in a vault, in our modern vans. Moreover your most intimate home furnishings are as sani- tarily cared for, as though they were still in your own rooms. Your articles are almost magically picked-up-and-set-down, with no care on your mind, when we Move or Store your effects! 3 3 OLIVE STREET Phone 8-3181 CALHOUN COLLEGE Class of 1947 Allan G. Anderson Robert Mck. Hudson Samuel P. Arnold. ll Vance Eldon Humphreys John B. Ault Arthur L. Baldwin. Jr. Raymond YV. Beckwith Rudolf L. Beniey Eugene R. Black. lll Atwell L. Bohling. Jr. Ericsson B. Broadbent Richard J. Browne Gerard J. Bitter. Jr. Edward N. Chappell Charles P. Cooper. Jr. Thomas E. Creight 1'r1 i .lohn D. Diehl N. Young Dullamel. Jr. James Ernlen Hugh W. Escher William Flemer, Ill David W. Cow John E. Grout William W. Harris. ll Robert A. Jackson Philip G. Keating Vincent Lamherti Francis H. Lavelle Maurice Leon. Jr. Kurt H. Loewus John D. McBride lgnatius G. Mattingly Donald L. Medlock Bruce A. Norris Philip A. Parkes Jeremy H. Peirce Henry O. Pollak Andrew Price, Jr. Arnold T. Reiche John W. Routh Stephen F. Ryan, Jr. Charles P. Sagar Burton S. Sherman .John E. Smith jcj G Lim., L-C7 if? fl! U .f I Alexander C. Stewart William D. Templeton, Guido L. Vidale John A. Villano, Jr. Elliott E. Vose Harold M. Wakeley Wayne W. Wall Class Ramon E. Aharca William MCE. Black Walter ll. Brown John C. Calhoun, Jr. Frederic D. Carter, Jr. Patrick J. Colleran Roger B. Colton Rohie L. Cone. Jr. James G. Damon, Jr. Robert B. Donworth. ,Ir J. Murray Egan Winthrop P. Eldredge Christopher lloff David L. Hott William L. Jacob, Jr. Arthur N. Johnson ll. Gilbert Jones, Jr. William G. Kiefer Cordon F. Knight Robert H. Leary Sanford R. Loewe Kenneth M. Weil Blakely Vllilson Carey A. Wilson Dean K. Worcester, Jr. David E. Vlfright Richard C. Zollner of 194'7N W. Ross McCain, Jr. John S. Mclntosh Edward L. Marcus Charles B. Martin, Jr. Richard E. Mooney Roswell O. Moore Fraser W. Morse Edward C. Oakley John A. Plag Alan Rahinowitz Andrew L. Sans Sottci Ahner E. Shimony William K. Simpson Allison M. Stern James M. Stormont Tha Gyaw Wai John D. Walter David P. Welch William E. Whiting Robert W. Williams, Jr Raymond B. Young Non-Resident Peter M. Cody James A. Mclntosh Viiallace B. Dorain Edward Sowinski Interior Decorating SEE MORT Draperies 62 Glass-Curtains FOR THAT SNORT Upholstering . Slip-Covers V I ' I Bl' d enxxlldowlghcides C O LIQUOR FINE FABRICS AVAILABLE - HOP Zlaarnlh Zlaulmgrzn, lint. Ben. PAUL HENKEL, Prop. 316 Elm Street, New Haven Phone 6-9433 0 1042 CHAPEL STREET QOPP. XTANDERBILT H,8LLll The Gluunhzg gifquite jhm KILLINGWORTH, CONN. ffnncheons and dinners daily except Monday Service from a bar dating back to 1790 Early Anierican Grill Roonz Outdoor Dining Pavilion For reservations, call Clinton 686 .Located on Route 80, just east of Killingwortb Traffic Circle 22 niiles from N ew H aven ROBERT GLENN, Proprietor , ' I, E Q9 e lf E QJ 5054 L 1 ,A - 4- 1 Ta: L A T A 4 if 3' F JJUVP, --E' and your host. 271 DAVENPORT COLLEGE Class of 1947 John S. Aldridge Charles B. Alling, Jr. John L. Bame Harold M. Barker Edward L. Bartlett. ll' Gayer D. Bellamy Donald A. Boynton William D. Bt 11'1' ows Henry T. Chandler Robert G. Chapman Roland Christian John N. Conyngham Gerald R. Daly Elvin L. Dickinson Stuart P. Dodge, Jr. Daniel H. Erickson Ray A. E iisf len, Jr. Joseph M. Fee Alexander C. Fergusson Alexander Harvey, II Russell P. Herrold, Jr. Raymond J. Hobson Gifford O. S. Horton Thomas P. lneson Oliver B. James, Jr. Donald R. Larson Stanley S. Loman Edward C. Lord Robert W. Lowell James D. McElroy Richard MeFee Walter J. McNerney Philip C. de J. Narton Joseph W. Neubert Richard S. Nutt Sheldon R. Perler o 95:8 ex 4 X4 Edward G. Platt, Jr. Rhodes W. Polleys Mclllillen Pringle Richard F. Raymond Fletcher D. Richards. J Robert C. Rogers Donald G. Schine Josiah A. Spaulding Class Edward W. Andrews, Jr. Ettore Barbatelli Frank P. Berg John R. Cheshire Lafayette R. Chism Endicott P. Davison Stephen W. Dickey Arthur D. Emil Stephen C. Eyre Henry K. Gardner Donald H. Garlock Henry J. Glazewski Mas rwri L. Thompson, Jr Robert B. Todd David S. Vaughan Rennold Vlfacht Lambert R. Walker, Jr. Frederick W. Whitridge Francis T. Wilson. II 194-7N William F. Guinan, Jr. Elliot Haynes Richard W. Kelley David L. Luke, HI Edmund Miller Richard N. Prince Waldron W. Proctor George Sivy Maurice R. Smith. Jr. David Q. Steele Edward S. Stiteler ' X Non-Resident X pb , 5 A f' ' f fs:-L.32i3 i f - so o ' 1 ' '55 Joseph S. Sample 7Ze YALE 40-0-,2. . . . eww INSTITUTION A corporation without capital stock, serving the University CY communit . 273 JONATHAN EDWARDS COLLEGE Class of 1947 Norman I. Adams, lll William O. Bateson Brewster Y. Beach David A. Binzen Peter H. Binzen Bradford Boardman, Jr. William M. Bouliaratis William T. Bowker. Jr. David B. Bronson Henry G. Bronson, Jr. Robert, P. Bushman. Jr. Edmond T. Chewning, Jr. Franck G. Darte, H Norman A. Doenge Alhert E. Easingwood Kingston Fletcher James A. Frankel Gordon H. Frederick Benjamin E. Gaynes, .lr Stephen C. Greene Arthur J. Greenfield Robert L. Hall George R. Halpern Wdlliam C. Hamilton John R. Hardie William R. Harris Edward H. Hastings Loring S. Hayden Theodore B. Hodges Ellsworth K. Holden Russell V. Lynch David J. McGown Rolsert R. Macomher Mark W. Neitlich E3 F 2 '!: ei e.. ':5'.1 X 7 fc ' NX Q g::'zo. 'et IYRP1 I I E S , Q f -2 X bv 9 .LT r lf' Q , Q' J :F Y-.2 J 3 4. y JJ 'si 'ifh Q - I V' hx' A H ?l 'E'Q James C. Owen. Jr. Charles P. Penney. Jr. Philemon A. Robbins lrving L. Robinson Frederic L. Rockefeller Frank C. Rogers, Jr. Datid Rosenbaum Francis Rourke Allan E. Shapiro Hans A. Steinherz Lawrence E, Ste 1'11 Class Rudolph W. Be i'11 ard John L. Booth Charles R. Bowen John G. Bowen George Brabner Franklin C. Brooks John L. H. Chafee Donald S. Conklin Herbert S. Dayton. Jr. Paul C.. Devney John F. Donohue E. G. Ekinan Alexander Firouz f Donald W. Stevens Charles J. Stewart, Jr. Theodore L. Tarson Peter R. Thompson Donald C. Thompson Patrick A. Toensmeier Dudley H. Towne James C. Walker Hans WV. Wanders Charles S. Whitehouse George W. Williams 1947N Murray Cell-Mann Gordon Graham He 111' y L. Laventhol Carteret Lawrence Joseph T. Lee Xnthony D. Lefkowitz Edwin B. Michalove George M. Nolan Gilman W. Ordway Robert B. Palmes Robert G. Soderherg Paul H. Spencer Arthur F. Steeves, Jr. FRANK THE BROTHERS STYLE SHOES IS ARE BUILT THE IN FINEST NOT SHOES ADDED MADE ON FRANK BROTHERS SHOES 583 FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK, N. Y. BRANCH AT 1fENx.1-'EINSTEIN 264 YORK STREET, NEW HAVEN HLE T9 CLEANERS DYERS 188 YORK STREET AT CHAPEL O Q U A L 1 T T REWEAYING TAILORINO WATERPROOFINO O TELEPHONE 5-1939 ll TRY 82 Yllll 'G CONN. 84 MASS. Radio and Electronic Supplies for Industrial Plants, Dealers, Amateur and Radio Technicians C Laboratory Electronics Q Ampliiers - Parts - Tubes Paging and lntercommunicating Equipment T7 BROADWAY New Haven-7-5923 WHOLESALE ONLY T5 PIERSON COLLEGE Class of 194-7 John B. Ayer James O. Barnhill James H. Beckman Alan K. Benjamin Edward N. Benjamin Clinton C. Boone John O. Bozell Warren C. Bulette, Jr. Edward R. Bulkeley James D. Burgoen Orton P. Camp, Jr. Edward S. Chase, Jr. Malcolm M. Chesney, Jr. David E. Connor Alexander C. Cordes Weyman S. Crocker, Jr. James W. Dahline Donald L. Demin R. Paige Donhauser Irvin S. Dorfman Edward R. Doyle Robert A. Driscoll Edwin J. Farrell Philip R. Crabfield Leo C. Graybill William D. Greene William Hilbert Karl A. Hochsehwender Kenneth C. Holmstrup G. Russell James Herbert W. JarviS, JI. Wilfred D. Koplowitz Raymond L. Lucas Huntington Lyman Walter A. Machette, Jr. James D. Madigan, Jr. John C. Mallon Richard W. Manville Bennet B. Murdock. Jr. lvan Obolensky Allen MCC. Pargellis Frederick C. N. Pearson , B5 ls. lvl Qghqv :wr t i .. K 1 ju: R.. I . . - 'Llp s.4 Tl M I 10 5 l A il u ,w XIV! ll 6 t lf' 'C George L. Rives George B. Rossetter Stanley E. Rotman Albert Sarnoff del.acy H, Seabrook Thomas D. Seidman James D. Sherw x'fJ4 J d W. Pierce Smith Leavenworth P. Sperry. Jr. Class of Harry B. Adams Edward C, Berg, lll James R. Biram Charles S. Bissell. Jr. Earl A. Bronsteen George M. Butcher. Jr. Frederick B. Capalbo William W. Collin, lll Edmund J. Fusco Charles E. Cennert James H. Coodenough Robin W. Goodenough Robert R. Greene Norman James John F. Kelly Albert H. Kelsey Horace S. Kenney, Jr. William J. Kirst Eric V. C. Stevenson H. Terrell Van Ingen, Jr Peter C. Walker Philip D. Walker Bruce A. Weatherly James R. Whittemore Avril xlll' D. Wolf Robert E. Young 1947N John C. Kleyn John S. Laing Dcnald L. Leavenworth Robert MCA. Lloyd Henry Luce, Hl John D. Mattern, Jr. Mario Maurin Robert H. Meyer Charles C. Miller John D. Murchison John H. Remer David W. Savage John H. Scott-Paine William W. Sturges Trygrve R. Tholfsen Robert Tholfsen Donald R. Weisman Edward K, Welles, Jr. Non-Resident Nicholas E. Duff F. Eugene Duffee. Jr. H. Boone Porter, Jr. William E. Scott Roger W. Shattuck Frederick L. Wyckoff mmf BE AHEAD wm-I SALES SERVICE Phone 74281 ' FARNHAM-OSTRANDER MOTORS 215 WI-IALLEY AVENUE NEW HAVEN, CONN. STEP ON IT BROTHER! YOU'LL GO PLACES ON THE MILK VVAGON g..2 X 2 ? CONNECTICUT DAIRY 81 FOOD COUNCIL, INC. 277 SAYBROOK COLLEGE Class of 1947 Vincent P. -Xdley Thomas E. Bailey William E. Bardelmeier Robert VV. Barney Gerard J. Berry Dudley F. Blanchard Rohert F. Boot .Xlhert C. Bosworth Frank deS. Brady George Breed Cordon Bronson Alvin C. Buchherger Gordon W. Burrows Robert V. Cauchon Donald Cecil Fred F. Chellis Guy M. Clehorne Frederivlc A. Clinton. J WVillian1 T. Cloon Thomas P. Clough Norman B. Cohen Richard D. Cotter John K. Cowperlhwaite James O. Crosby Thomas N. Crowley Bryant Cushing Arthur P. Davis Harold E. DeRoehn. Jr. Donald W. Drew William H. Dunkak, Jr. Charles M. Durfee Clarence E. Eckhart John C. Evans. Jr. Joseph Favorite Herbert D. Feinberg James J. Fenesy John H. Flagg Ross L. Foertmeyei John H. VV. Gesell W'illia1n B. Gillard Gilbert Goldwasser James E. Hagan Alexander Harhula. Jr John Heron, Jr. Robert H. Heydt Wkilter F. Hoffman John M. Horlheck James L. Hurley Paul Hllsellila Arthur E. Jackson Llilder D. Jackson Donald Jaeohs Ric-hard Johnson Charles YY. Jones Leo lf. Kane Harold E. Kaufhold James D. Kearny Joseph Kiraly William Koles Bradford K. Kroha Jean R. LaCroix Robert A. Lawrence Morton S. Levin John P. Lihhey 'Z' 'F-.A-i' i ll NZ' M days t qwfa AJ ? 7 :I C1 I, dx Q -' sf w 1 1 ,, ul 11 278 John A. Lindlof William E. Lowry James A. Lynch Thomas F. Lynch Malcolm R. MacCurdy .Harold L. McKaig, Jr. John D. McLeod James D. Marshall Harlan M. Mechelson Charles R. Mellor Warren W. Mitchell Frederick A. Morgan, Jr. James P. Munger Roy A. Nierendorf Alfred H. Ostrand, Jr. Donald B. Paulsen Vllilliain H. Peek Alfred D. Potter Donald Rappaport .Joseph A. Resca Daniel R. J. Riecio Class Henry M. Bell, Jr. Howard M. Benedict. Jr. Lewis W. Bowden. Jr. Arthur C. Bulger .James F. Cantwell, Jr. James W. Crowell Charles M. Danzer, Jr. John B. Findlay, Jr. Joel M. Fuerst Stanley R. Harris William F. Healey, Jr. George W. Jones, Jr. Robert H. Kalhach Victor K. Kiam f Seymour Richman Joseph L. Rubsam Edwin A. Savelly Maxwell R. Singer John R. Smith Donald E. Soule James S. Spero Douglas H. Springer Robert F. Stansherry John R. Stenger Carlton M. Strong, Jr. George S. Sulliman Robert H. Taylor Pierre J. Theve Kenneth E. Van Sise Willem L. Weertman War1'ei1 C. Willig l1'VlI1g J. Winters. Jr. Wlhitney J. Witteman Wilford H. Wright, Jr. John L. Zimmerman 1 947N Bernard A. Kraeunas John L. Lanham John S. Libbey Carl F. Luedemann Richard W. Murphy John F. Peterson Gerard J. Phaneuf John W. Phillips Bennet Riley Lionel V. Rogosin John B. Ross Harold T. Wvoerner, Jr R. James Yandell N on-Resident Class of 47 Arthur H. Burnett S. James Colangelo James W. Grady, Jr. Robert J. McCollom Peter W. Morton Richard H. Ross Class of 47N John N. Cassella Q f- mftgi Lgf 340 OLD LYME, CONN. W We take this opportunity to advise you that our Shop will be located in Essex, Connecticut alter July of this year. if Our Shop will continue to feature the exclusive nierchanclise that has made us so Widely known. if Of special interest is a large stock of beautifully executed designs in English and American Silver serving dishes and flat-ware. 'A' You will Hnd it a good investment to visit us for your important gift purchases. ONLY FOLCR MILES For Quality and the FROM SMITH Best of Workmanship SUPERL JTIP' FOODS Thick. .luicy Steaks, Lohsters Broiled Over Hickory Log STAR SHOE REPAIRING ' Dancing Nightly to CLIFF CA1:n7s Nlusic 54 COLLEGE STREET O Route 5 Holyoke-Nortllaniplou Highway 279 SILLIMAN COLLEGE Class of 1947 Nathaniel W. Bishop Vincent A. Breglio, Jr. James E. Bridgman Harvey Childs. Jr. Richard J. Christine Richard N. Cohen Francis W. Cornrninskey .John N. Curtis Joseph P. Evans Willialn E. Fischelis, Jr. Jerome S. Freedman Richard C. Garretson Walter B. Gleason. Jr. Lawrence A. Goldmuntz John W. Harper Randolph C. Harrison, Jr Charles J. Hickey, Jr. Milton H. Hirsch Edward K. Hueber Gregory H. lll anes Richard E. Labov Frederick Lamb Gerhard E. Lenski, Jr. .-Xlfred W. Loomis A. Franklin Mahoney George E. Manno Roswell P. Mason Frank MCC. Mayheld, Milton W. Meyer Herbert L. Neitlich Michael J. Paguaga Peter V. Philip Karl A. Piez Douglas S. Powell David H. Preus Albert A. Raphael, Jr. Robert M. Raymond Williaili D. Rider Lawrence ft. Schafer Richard C. Shelley J in ir lag Y tt k X X N all W , X51 4- g - tp QV, +o ti 'Q f 72.-PWA? K, A i ,,.. ,, ilu!! J ' ix vi F H1 X Ethan A. H. Shepley, Jr. Robert R. Slaughter Peter E. Sloane Hamilton Smith Aidan M. Stone Alvin Strasburger Class Merle J. Baughman George deB. Bell Charles S. Broeman, Jr. Alexander T. Brown Frederick R. Burkhardt Richard M. Cosgrove Phelps Deerson Rodman D. deKay, Jr. Robert M. Fitzgerald E. Frederick Flindell, lll Lindsay C. Hamilton Jaquelin S, Holliday Slater K. lsenberg Saul H. Libby L rwii is A. McCarten Richard P. Malkin Miles B. Suchin Theod fii' e R. Trefhnger Erskine N. White, Jr. William F. Wolif Edward C. Wynne 1947N George A. Nleinsen Robert B. Meyer, Jr. Alexander Murray lll Peter H. Newcomb John VV. Pfeiffer Charles H. Reckard Charles L. Ritchie, Jr. Frank J. Roehrenbeek, Robert H. Seinfeld Ralph L. Shearer. Jr. Chester Si 1r1111 one Peter H. Skala Henry T. Stude. Jr. Wlilliam H. Truesdale, ll Eugene F. Williams, J Hogan L. Yancey. Jr. Non-Resident Class of 1947 Alan D. Ferguson Robert Goelz Harold E. LaBelle Class of 194-TN Raymond L. Jewett 6lCiW Bros. 1024 CHAPEL STREET NEVV HAVEN, CONN. Photographer to Yale Sinoe 1878 The Traditional Yale Snack Spot for a Quarter of a Century The Original GEORGE AND HARRY 'S RESTAURANT WALL STREET PHll'S BARBER SHOPS For 20 Years a Tradition to Yale Men 825 WALL 284 YORK IHISEYE TAILUR 86 WALL STREET Opp. Silliman College . Reweaving Repairing Altering Reweatherproofing Chamois Elbows . TIMOTHY DWIGHT COLLEGE Class Clinton S. Abbott Thomas T. Amatruda. Jr. Roger W. Barbey Wlilliam F. Berliner Palmer L. Bevis F. Steele Blackall, HI Henry M. Blackmer. II Charles A. Blank Gilbert Clotar Neil W1 Currie Theo. Dachenheusen, Jr. Arnold G. Dana, II Robert Danforth Roy H. Dickerson Thomas L. Donnelly Morton P. Eanet Henry T. Ewald, Jr. Robert J. Feeney Wayne A. Fey John W. Finney Henry W. Foulds, Jr. William J. Gardner Bevier Hasbrouck Eric L. Hedstrom, Jr. John O. Henry of 1947 Richard L. Hillman William P. Hilmer J. Burton Hulbert Heyward lsham Richard K. Jewett Ernest E. Johnson Stuart H. Johnson, Jr. Walter E. Joyce, Jr. Julian S. Kaiser Grafton S. Kennedy. Jr. Charles W. Kittleman. Jr Paul R. Laurent Philip A. Levin Grenville B. Lloyd. Jr. Richard A. McClave Coleman B. McGovern. Jr' Oliver McKee, HT Hugh McLean, Jr. W'ilbur P. McNulty. Jr. Samuel S. Marshall. Ill William Martin Arthur A. Meyerholi John A. Milici Harold J. Mor fmww' itz XL I tt. 9 ,Val 5 api, '92 :Rf 5 4 t i-. 0 ' ,.,. . 1' A 4 A V9 J L J I David Moxley Arthur L. Peterson Ned R. Powley, II Willard C. Rappleye, Jr. Richard R. Read Jacob T. Reanis Robert Riche Bruce L. Roberts Charles K. Ross David E. Rush Edmund K. Sherrill Charles A. Shoup, H Barton P. Smith Robert S. Smith Glass of Lee H. Allen Joseph R. Brown, Jr. Frank S. Carey George R. C. Cavell William B. Coley, H Charles ll. Driggs Theodore W2 Dwight. Jr. JW. M. Frankenberger, J Livingston Fryer, Jr. Richard H. Graham Spotswood B. Hall, Jr. David Y. Harris Thomas S. Hemenway, Jr. Richard N. Jennings Leonard S. Jones Wallace F. Smith George B. Snell John F. R. Stevenson Philip H. Suter, Jr. Jolm MCK. Sutherland, Jr Scott L. Taliaferro James C. Talley Eberhard H. Uhlenhuth Roy E. Walsli H. Bradford Wesleriield Richard Wolfe Raymond H. Young, Jr. George Dana Younger, Jr. 1947N Douglas H. Kerr Yanderveer Kirk Noel A. Lonschein Carleton L. Marsh. Jr. William P. Middeleer Richard D. Miller Donald M. Pearlman Robert H. Roth A. Halley Rudd, ll Richard Schuster Jarvis J. Slade Richard J. V. Slade James T. Soutter John P. P. Waldo Loring C. Vlfhite N011-Resident Class of ali Richard E. Bartlett David A. Pugh John B. Russell Henry WY. Sherrill Eugene F. Smith, Jr. Benjamin C. Stevens, Jr. Class of 47N Stanley A. Abelson Joseph C. Houghteling Eli H. Kasimer Edward J. Walehli Compliments of T I-I E WALKER- BUY SPORT COATS BY WESTBROOK 66 lfyf V,i07C00A' 4 BUT... 6 . as HAS THE RE XL DARK FI AYYLL m A v , . 4. A . 1 5 oxF0RD GRAY S l'I'S O z R CHI-IFF J A I5 3 BUTTON NATURAL SOFT 2 it SHOULDERS ' A E VVITH RE-AL HORN BUTTONS'-CENTER VENT 5 al YEP .V .V No Pleuts in Trouser 2 a for only .... S SPORT COATS .... of Genuine Loomcd Shetland E N' C SLACKS from .... 514.75 W E S T B R 0 O K 944 CHAPEL ST. NEW HAVEN, CONN. suv swear cons sv wssrsnoox , Qlcl and Rare Books The Vozce l n of the M3HUSCT1ptS punts Yale Campus YBC ' . ' L' 540 01. CA. giltnnehxll, gint. On your dial ROBERT J. BARRY, Manager ' 0 A .Merilbell of qw H -L5 St. ,Iames's Place 262 York Street Intercollegzate Broadca-sung bystem ' London SUWJ New Haven England Connecticut l 283 TRUMBULL COLLEGE Class of 1947 Louis Auer, V Donald L. Barstow Ce rm1' ge Bernard Georges M. Boyer John T. Brealcell Henry D. Brigham Robert. Buddy Charles F. Bnnnell. Jr. Chai-leS J. Dillon William M. Eastwood Henry R. C. Elser William J. Gle 1111 ie William C. Godfrey John G. Goodrivh Rupert N. Gresham Richard B. Hasselman James J. Carey. Jr. George Herhold Robert A. Christoplier Paul P. lves. llf Enrico J. Cipolaro Richard A. Jansy Charles C. Cleaver Robert H. Coons Vincent M. Creedon Edward T. Creighton Frank V. DeNezzo Howard F. Didsbnry. Jr. Joseph E. Dierlies Lawrence ll. Jones Robert M. Kelly George C. Klieloth Lester D. Kurth Gerard H. Lavoie Th 1'1r nas ll. Lawrenfe Jerome Levy fjfpvagmm vgh, ' 2 x 1 QQ ., t 'I fealwr U' llllll 124 ihllwf' Mig' i I 90 C J X rg ' Q X 'Wins Q fl' 'Ll' f 05,2 'Jr .li .,-Ji ' N .19 I if l i Q li 1 'D A ' l 'l misss r B or , Robert J. Malloy Joseph R. Marosz Leonard L. hlarshall John C. Mr .fwt 1 Q. Jr. C. George Niebank, Jr. Joseph W, Nutler, Jr. Robert F. Ohrensehall James P. Reynolds ,Klan l.. Robertson XJ illis D. Robertson John J. Robinson William A. Rosenan Ce til' E. Ruby Do ttri R ttca tolo lla 1'ir ld W. Sc-ofield Cedric 'l'. Severn Class of William M. Bertles, Jr. Ce fii' ge A. Bohniann Carl E. Bolin Glyn Bostick William D. Co 1111r J lly Philip C. Dehnicli George W. cle Villafranea Frederic B. Dewalt Norman P. Singer Carleton H. Sitz Peter B. Sperry James P. Stemple Howard Stoertz, Jr. William P. Sutter Bruce O. Tamlyn Charles B. Teal Robert B. Tracy' Robert Vetanlt Robert Vivlqrey lla 1'wf in Wadkins .Joseph Walsh llarolfl C. Yeager, Jr. lfmlward K. Young. Jr 194i7N arthur J. Fitzgerald Warren J. Cottemeyer Vance R. Hood nam-rr A. Kempna' .Xlberl J. Lemclie James B. Marine John L. O'Brien, Jr. .lay G. Stephens, Jr. Non-Resident my tl ll-. H' I lfrnian G. Kramer John J. Nester FOR DISCRIMINATING YALE MEN I PERSONALIZED TAILORS QE. Zntti 84 gifnnss U15 T 0M TAILDRS-IMPORTERS 1026 CHAPEL STREET QND FLOOR NEW' HAVEN PRINCETON fambkzmy DISTINCTIVE QUALITY SKILLED WORKMANSHIP INDIVIDUALIZED SERVICE 0 Wy Lgziwm Sfudb Sw CHURCH STREET NEW HAVEN, CONNECTICUT Telephone 6-6282 RPHEUM DANCE PALACE B yCr46thSkN Y l:C1.y 79e utz ul g rls y 1 S appy mu: yo: e ce T PI :SEE 16 YEARS T dx b N 'rms LOCATION V if-, E 'WI . ew or i 1 4 i ou love to danre uilb--- 5 n ic 4 lov to dan io - - - Collegian Contest f A Rendezvous for j zvznv mom NITE I Au. course MEN , he ace o A I an o e SEE , Y f CMlim4au:D41ui:g8p.::. 34.1. , ' ' A ' :. , ,I . f 511 n I A- E M. J. BOYLE 81 COMPANY BUILDERS UHAPEL Llll 011 lllll' OLDEST LIQUOR STORE SERVING YALE MEN O QUALITY MERCHANDISE LOW7 PRICES C All Beverages for Any Occasion l Llse Our Free Delivery Service 1128 Chapel Street at York New Haven 6-0600 Dave Stahl Bill Green OAKDALE TAVERN The only Inn in New England at which Washington flifl not stop Famous for Southern fried Chicken . . . . . . also charcoal lyroilefl steak and lobster dinners Old Hartforfl Turnpike Wlallingford, Conn. Telephone 513 Thomas E. Conlleacly, Proprietor Couzplimenzfs HOWARD JOHNSON'S RESTAURANT 1' Noted for Fine Foocl and Howlmn JOHNsoN,s Famous Ice Cream 'lr BRANFORD, CONN. Une lnile from East Haven Green on Route Jil Looking For A 9 Good Show. Go To The PARAMOUNT THEATRE Always The Best ln Screen Entertainment 237 WAR DEVELGPED PARA PRDDUCTS CUT FOUNDRY COSTS IN ' SCRAP LOSSES ' CLEANING TIME ' DIRECT MAN HOURS ' INCREASED PRCJDUCTION P ARACOAT PARASPRAY BONISPRAY F d yP p d d 1 p d p p ll 1 I I fl d y h 1 00 foundrles FOUNDRY RUBBER, Inc. 1052 30th STREET, N. W. - WASHINGTON 7, D. C. .Slwx K wr Plzzffcfgraplzcr 288 YORK STREET IIUPS Natzonal ,s P11665 Keep Ion ln X ,f .f ,I A Good Spzrzts PQ, ' Aff A rl K A S-' 405 stare Sn-een 19 Dixuell Ave, W3 20 Tel. 6-0754 Te1.6-1679 ,ifflimn NEW HAYEN N 'I HABIDEN 1650 Whitney Avenue Te1.2-1482 . ' and His Music COMPLETE PARTY SERVICE HERE . QUANTITY DISCOUNTS FAMOUS AT YALE PROMS . WIDE SELECTIONS . QUICK DELIVERY . ADVICE ON PLANNING . HOW TO BUY FOR A SPECIFIC NUMBER OF GUESTS 56 Church Street New Haven, Conn. Oihce 5-6104 Home 6-7871 PERSONALIZED Wreck Ulm Pay your bills by checks writ- ten in the comfort Of your OWII home or room. Then let the mailman do your errands. Cancelled checks are your re- ceipts. Your name on every check and stamped in gold on checkbook No minimum balance required 10c a cheek your only cost Open your account today IHEsfugygElgAjjyErALHANK l35 CHURCH STREET Gkight next to the Post Office! Member Federal Deposit Insurance Cornoratinn Member Federal Reserve System King Leer A toast to beauty Ulll LYIVIE HAND WEAVEH5 INCORPORATED OLD LYME, CONN. I Nl.-SKERS OF THE FINEST CLOTH SPECIALTIES FOR MEN AND XVOMENVS SPORT FABRICS TOWN AND COUNTRY WEAR Eggo The Szgn of Happy M0t0rz'ng ESSO DEALERS IN NEW HAVEN QRS ' B Y - 0911 H7425 I s A T 5 TE E S 'Q 3' if --r QQ S lint Qt 0 QV' ' av-P3 THE following florists in New Haven and vicinity are bonded mem- bers of the internationally known FLUHISTS' lELEEHlPH l1ElIllEHYl5EllI3lAlIl1N, INII. INlEHNllillNll and are in Contact with every good florist in every part of the world. They can be entrusted with your orders for flowers, plants. corsages, etc., to be telegraphed or delivered locally. Look for the WINGED MERCURY EMBLEM, promiizerztiy displayed in every good flower shop, as that is their badge' of membership, and your guarantee of finest jiozvers and eji- cienl sei vice. Country Club Florist, 1212 Whitney Avenue G. Ginter Sons Co., 131 Sylvan Avenue Lincoln Flower Shop, 12 Atwater Street J. A. Long Co., 154 Dodge Avenue, East Haven John J. McQuiggan, 127 Church Street The S. H. Moore Co., 1054- Chapel Street Morelli Greenhouses and Flower Shop, 171 Elm St.. Wvest Haven Myers Flower Shop, 28 Whitney Avenue Nyren, the Florist, 530 Townsend Avenue Race Brook Gardens, Derby Turnpike W. D. Thomas 81 Sons, Inc., 322 Circular Ave., Hanulen Tufts Florist, 7443 Legion Avenue Washington Flower Shop, 1 Washington Avenue West Haven Flower Shoppe, 562 Campbell Ave.. West Haven Meyer Wilson, Florist, 32 Congress Avenue SAY IT WITH FLOWERS 292 EXW L-'-,..--f' 3 xg I CHAS I HOEB5 Agreeable disagreement BALDWIN PIANCS Todafs Great Piano ii Sold by METTLER PIANO SHQW ROOMS INC 32 WHITNEY AVENUE NEW HAVEN, CONN. HOME OF GOOD FOOD O Your Guests Will Enjoy E , E E Dinner at ' tlll O ff ' f - N M CERIANl'S -1 - 9 ' J I eefff k 4 s Q eafe .1 K, Q Q . U -23:7 .15 ' , if ' kk , 2 204 CROWN STREET 1 S7-9 git. If V 4 if no nigga? 293 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS HE editors of the 1947 Yale Banner Wish to express their thanks and appreciation to: President Charles Seymour for his introductory messageg Mr. Robert B. Wylaiid for his loyal assistance and guidanceg lVlr. Albert B. Crawford for his able adviceg the College Masters and other faculty members for their interest and aidg the Yale University Graduate Schools for their cooperation in this yearas special section, the many student authors and photographers who lent their talent freelyg Charles A. Hobbes, l950, for his art Work, for valuable photographs, Roy A. Dye, 1950, the Yale Athletic Association, the Yale University News Bureau, the Yale Alnrnni Magazine, the Yale Daily News, the Yale Record, the Yale Calendar, Life Magazine, the Minneapolis Morning T ribune, and the New Haven Registerg Mr. Lewis R. Pratt of Pach Brothers Studio for his diligence, lVlr. Willard H. Schilling of the Mail and Express Printing Company and lVlr. Peter S. Gurwit of the Jahn and Ollier Engraving Company for their technical instruction, and the many other persons and agencies who helped in the planning and execution of this edition. Without their generous contributions and excellent counsel the publication of Volume CVI would not have been possible. 294 MAIL 65 EXPRESS PRINTING Q0 INCORPORATED 0MIe , wmffmfy 160 VARICK STREET NEW YORK WILELARD H. SCHILLING, Elanager COLLEGE ANNUAL DEPARTMENT 295 J 2 ii , J w 4 gs vi m If , 9 X ll!!! WRAQKIXX X x A' ERVICE R siollllik ENGRXQ F CHICAGO Y 2 ' N I or new i l S !II: iCff W K M ,Q 751 f Sqivrnggx Q W I be 1 SET L ..... 'lorqimm X X e rn hi s 'sg id ' ------4-- -------- -,,----.---,--- --' df 9 -I X :..i V 17 ,iff 'XIAHN S CLLIER AGAIN The slogan tI1at's iaaclzeri ivy genuine goociness in quality anti service,tI1e result of 43 years successful experience in the yearlaoole tieicl. We tinci real satisfaction in pleasing you, the year- lnooiz publisher, as Well as your photographer anti your printer. JAHN S OLLIER ENGRAVING C0 Makers of Fine Printing Plates for Black or Color Commercial Artists - Photographers 8I7 W. WASHINGTCDN BLVD., CHICAGO 7, ILL. Q I W V i KJ M if ' ' ff X 7 XM 1 ' H.. y, 7 , f f ,., , N548 1. Nw.. ., . .Q w. wx ,AJ ,Wm we A X xfzv 1 ,psf it
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