Yale University Law School - Yale Law Reporter Yearbook (New Haven, CT)
- Class of 1953
Page 1 of 80
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
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Text from Pages 1 - 80 of the 1953 volume:
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THE YALE LAW REPORTER VOLUME IV, 1953 BY THE STUDENT ASSOCIATION OF THE SCHOOL O YALE UNIVERSITY, NEW HAVEN, STERLING LAW CHAMBERS ,- uf' , 'wk' -Q'f,v'f' , 'f - ,-,, ,N 0 4 ,Yr f A Q- if.-1 L, A -j, A ,, 1 ' wwf. 7 -,,,..-L 'W .,- k,,, tijrdw, 4 0 ' , W- -,df gy MM 6 32:,2: fiagfzffge :vi f 'Y' 'A W. 1 . K .gs L, ' K? w . r 'Wy-,, , . . .fa 1 ,.,i-il wg, . 5+ N.. .IF . .,.,.,Ap. 3 x X ' K '3jnf2.5.. , , qi . i' .. 5 Q . 4' 4, . f w - 1-,ii'iza?'41, .., .., .W Sh .mv .1 . :gy x 5 h 53- ., wi. . 1 1 , W .., 1.51- g X .: ,,m,, . -V+ yy, 'yu dx .ff - 1. 3. 5 ix 4.., - Q.-,.,,f gffj 3 ,e J: 1 f' w 5 rlffu 4 if 'Yi f?12ixsf:..f M r ' JYGJVVALW rffx , 4 mi: .. E. S.. . in It Q Y.-'-iw 1' Q , 1- L U We Q he v ' b-- wfzfzv 'C' Risk ff Wy, ,X .fx ff.- VKP, M. Hi, . 3 I m I fs Qu 5 A 5? f gh 'I' Kia K xx-3V 1. -O Aw Q x 4 THE FACULTY Professor Ad Mueller, overheard in one of those rare moments when he was giving 7 ' out with the straight word, once characterized the essence of the Yale Approach and the strength of the Yale Law School as the complete individuality of every member of the faculty. And Mr. Mueller had something there, even if some of us were a little slow in , realizing that this individuality ever transcended anything more than a more perfect method of obscuring the truth. ,QV ff' ' 4 But, slowly, as the quest for the non-existent certainty began to fade, there came a greater appreciation for the contribution that each was making, in his own stylistic way, to our legal education. For, whether it was the Dean's devastating, ls that Genesis I? or Mr. Kessler's insistent, Say a leetel more! of J. W. Moore's beeming, Talk like a lawyer! each was demanding that we think, question, probe, analyse. FOWLER V. HARPER, Professor of Law, B.A. 1922, LL,B. 1923, Ohio Northern University, M.A. 1925, University of Iowa, S.j.D. 1926, University of Michigan. Before coming to Yale in 1947, Mr. Harper taught at the University of North Dakota, University of Ore- gon, Indiana University, the University of Texas, and Louisiana State University. His career in public service has included the positions of General Counsel, Federal Security Agency, Consultant, Department of Agricul- tureg Deputy Chairman, War Manpower Commission, Associate Member, War Labor Board, and Solicitor, Department of the Interior. He has also been associated with the Bobbs Merrill Publishing Company as edi- torial advisor since 1936. His published works include Treatise on the law of Torts 1933, Give Me Lib- erty 1942, Law and Democratic Society 1945. gg? 9 FRED RODELL, Professor of Law, B.A. 1926, Haverford Col- lege, 1926-1927, University of London, I.L.B. 1931 M.A. CHon.J 1939, Yale University. - l J From 1927-28 Mr. Rodell was Assitsant Literary Editor of the Century Publishing Company, and in 1931-33 was legal adviser to Governor Pinchot of Pennsylvania. He joined the Law School fac- ulty in 1933. He is the author of Woe Unto You, Lawyers, Democracy and the Third Term , and Fifty-Five Men, and is a frequent contributor to American Mercury, Harpers and Life Maga- zines as well as legal periodicals. He was an editor of Fortune magazine, 1937-38, and a contributing editor of The Progressive. FLEMING, JAMES, JR., Lafayette S. Foster P1 fessor of Law, B.A. 1935, LL.B. 1938, Yale Universi Before joining the Yale Law faculty, Mr. Jarr was with Watorus, Hewitt, Sheldon and Gumbart, a1 Assistant Attorney for the New York, New Haven az Hartford Railroad. During 1939-1940 he was acti Dean at Utah Law School. He has also taught at t law school of the University of Chicago and the U1 versity of Colorado. From 1942-1945 Mr. James vs Director of Litigation Division of the O.P.A. He l'1 published with Mr. Shulman, Cases on Torts, and wi Thurman Arnold, Cases on Trials, judgments a1 E Appeals. 5 rw f xi 5 XE S. sr , . ,. te... E3 ,. . Qu. im, 51. ,, ' wr as Gif 1-1, s,,' ' it' ,. ,. f:,1,,A.i,,t...,,. , 2 .. .J.,...., VVV,. ,M 3,735 .4 ,, p a. . . JEROME N, FRANK, JUSTICE, PEB. 1910, JD. 1912, University of Chicago. Judge Frank, a member of the U.S. Circuit Court of Ap- peals C2nd. Circuit? since 1941, has appeared as a Visiting Lecturer at Yale since 1946. After practicing in Chicago and New York from 1912 to 1933, Judge Frank was Special Counsel to the R.F.C. and then the P.W.A. In 1938 he became S.E.C. Commissioner, and later Chairman, a post he held until his ascendancy to the bench. Among his many works are: Law and the Modern Mind, Fate and Freedom and Courts on Trial. rttt t aieie ' FRIEDRICK KESSLER, Professor of Law, j.U.D. 1926, Berl. University, M.A. CHon.J Yale University. Mr. Kessler first came to Yale in 1934 as a lecturer. He r mainecl until 1938 when he left to take a post at the University 1 Chicago. In 1947 he returned to Yale and assumed his prese1 position. Mr. Kessler is a member of the Illinois Bar. x i '- JAMES WILLIAM MOORE, Professor of Law, B.S. Montana College 1924, JD. 1933 University of Chicago, J.S.D. 1935, Yale University. r i,,. un! 'CJ' Mr. Moore came to the Yale Law School in 1938. He has been Chief Research Assistant to the United States Supreme Court Procedure and Advisory Committee on Federal Rules of Civil Special Consultant to the Committee on Revisions to the Judicial Code. He is author of Moore's Federal Practice and Moore's Bankruptcy Manual , co-author of Moore and Ogleby on Corporate Reorganization , editor of Gilbert's Collier on Federal Practice, and Editor-in-chief on the 14th Edition of Collier's on Bankruptcy. -ki' NICHOLAS deBELLEVILLE KATZENBACH, Associate Pro- fessor of Law, B.A. 1945 Princetong Rhodes Scholar, Oxford Univer- sity 1947-49, LL.B. 1947 Yale University. Mr. Katzenbach came to Yale in 1952, after holding the post of Counsel and Consultant to the U.S. Air Force from 1950 to 1952. Prior to that time he was associated with Katzenbach, Gildea and Rudner of Trenton, New Jersey. VERN COUNTRYMAN, Associate Pro- fessor of Law, B.A. 1939, LL.B. 1942, Uni- versity of Washington. Mr. Countryman was associated with the National Labor Relations Board fol- lowing his graduation from law school and later served as clerk for justice Doug- las of the Supreme Court. After serving in World War II for three years as a Lieutenant in the Army, he was appointed Assistant Attorney General for the state of Washington. Before joining the faculty in the fall of 1948, he taught at the Uni- versity of Washington Law School. ts 1 f X f is if l 4. Pig. Y 5 70. gf' We . 'IQ Ji ' Hciicfk 63 8 ADDISON A. MUELLER, Professor of Law, B.A. 1931, University of Wisconsin, LL.B. 1943, Yale Uni- versity. Mr. Mueller did not enter law school until he had gained ten years' business experience in the lumber industry. He is a member of the Wisconsin Bar and has published Contracts in Centextf' RALPH SHARP BROWN, JR., Associate Professor of Law, B.A. 1935, LL.B. 1939, Yale University. Mr. Brown practiced law with Wright, Gordon, Zachry 8z Parlin but left them for government service where he was Price Attorney for the Ofhce of Price Administration. Later, during the war, he served in the Navy aboard a PC and then a Destroyer Escort. DAVID HABER, Associate Professor of Law, B.S. 1942, College of the City of New York, LL.B. 1944 Yale University. Mr. Haber, after graduating from law, clerked first for Circuit judge Charles E. Clark, and then for Jus- tice Hugo Black during the 1945-1946 term. In July 1946 he joined the Yale Law School faculty. He col- laborated with Mr. McDougal in Property, Wealth, Land: Allocation, Planning and Development. 3' ' his WYE? A li 1 A ' W .W 5 r3.5 af' 'L :ga A, if -3 if .., x.,,, ,, ..,. ,,,. E 4 all liz R?-E , . .JS . Q52 5 EU JUN' ' .. fig, ,gf ,:it' 2,25 ASHBEL GREEN GULLIVER, Garver Professor of Law, B.A. 1919, LL.B. 1922, M.A. CHon.J 1935 Yale University. Mr. Gulliver practiced law with Alex- ander and Green in New York from 1922 to 1927, when he joined the faculty. He served as assistant dean in charge of stu- dents 1934-1939, Acting Dean in 1939, and Dean of the Law School 1940-1946. He is a member of the Connecticut State Board of Pardons, and Chairman of the Connecticut Labor Relations Board. -vs ry - THOMAS IRWIN EMERSON, Professor of Law, B.A. 1928, LL.B. 1931, M.A, CHon.J 1946, Yale University. From 1931 to 1933 Mr. Emerson was with the firm of Elgle- hard, Pollak, Pitcher and Stern of New York. Since that time he has held the following governmental positions: Assistant Counsel for the N.R.A.g Principal Attorney for the N.L.R.B. and the Social Security Board, Associate General Counsel, Review Division, N.L.R.B., Special Assistant to the Attorney General, Department of justice, Associate General Counsel O.P.A.g Deputy Administrator in charge of Enforcement, O.P.A.g General Counsel, Office of Economic Stabilization, General Counsel, Ofiice of War Administration and Reconversion. Professor. Emerson joined the faculty of Yale in 1946. scc, . . . 35 tss st' A i i is .af et 1 3 'i iii' ii W? as . 4:1 . f ,,,, -5- H ii 1' versity. Cases on the Constitution. JOHN PAUL FRANK, Associate Pro fessor of Law, B.A. 1938, MA and LLB 1940 University of Wisconsin Sterling Fellow 1940-1941, J.S.D. 1947 Yale Uni Mr. Frank was a law clerk to Justice Black in 1942. He taught at Yale in the summer of 1946, and at Indiana Univer sity from 1946 to 1949. He is the author of Mr, justice Black, The Man and His Opinions , and is editor of Cases and Materials on Constitutional Law and BORIS I. BITTKER, Professor of Law, B.A. 1938, Cornell University, LL.B. 1941, Yale University. Mr. Bittker was clerk to Judge Jerome Frank of the U.S. Court of Appeals in 1941-1942. After a period on the staff of the General Counsel of the Lend Lease Administration, he entered the Army and was attached to the 42nd Infantry Division in France. In 1945 he became Chief of the Liquidation Section, General Counsel's Office, of the Ofhce of the Alien Property Custodian. He resigned this position in order to join the faculty here. vm ..,.. 'Uk 1- -,-H--T---f-, HARRY SHULMAN, Sterling Professor of Law, B.A. 1923, Brown University, LL.B. 1926, S.J.S. 1927, Harvard University. Mr. Shulman has been special counsel for the Railroad Retirement Board, 1942-43. He is Umpire of Labor Relations between the Ford Company and the United Automobile Workers Union, the UAW and the Bendix Corporation, and the UAW and the Wright Aeronautical Company. He was a Reporter of the Restatement of the Law of Torts, and a member of the U.S. Attorney General's Committee of Administrative Procedure. ii! pu.-4'- A RICHARD C. DONNELLY, Associate Pro- fessor of Law, A.B. 1936, Washburn College, LL.B. 19385 Sterling Fellow 1947-1948, j.S.D. 1949, Yale University. After graduation from law school Mr. Don- nelly engaged in private practice, and then served as an attorney for the Federal Land Bank. He served in World War II for three years. Mr. Donnelly joined the faculty in 1951 after teach- ing for two years at the University of Virginia. ARTHUR LINTON CORBIN, Professor Emeritus of Law, B.A. 1894, University of Kansasg LL.B. 1899 Yale University, A.M. CHon.J 1909 Yale University. He was a Professor at the Yale Law School from 1903 until 1943, when he became a Professor Emeritus. He served as Visiting Professor of Law at the University of Michigan, California, and Columbia. He held the position of Special Advisor on Contracts and Reporter on Remedies for the American Institute of Law Restate- ment. His works include: Corbin's Anson on Con- tracts, Cases on Contracts and Corbin on Contracts. HAROLD DWIGHT LASSWELL, Professor of Law, Ph.B. 1922, Ph.D. 1936, University of Chicago. Mr. Lasswell has taught at the University of Chicago, the Wash- ington School of Psychiatry, and the William A. White Psychiatric Foundation. He was Director of War Communication Research, Advisor and Consultant to the Department of Justice and the De- partment of State. He has been a Visiting Professor at California and Western Reserve Universities, and also at Yenching University in Peking, China. His writings include World Politics and Personal Insecurity g Psychopathy and Politics g Propaganda, Communica- tion and Public Opinion and Power and Society. 4. ELIAS CLARK, Assistant Professor of Law, B.A. 1943, LL.B. 1947, Yale University. After graduation from law school, Mr. Clark was associated with the firm of Cleary, Gottlieb, Friendly and Cox from 1947-1949. During World War II he was a lieutenant and pilot in the Army Air Corps. He joined the faculty in the fall of 1949. Mr. Clark is a member of the New York Bar and the Connecticut Bar Associa- tion. 'I1 GRANT GILMORF, Associate Professor of Law, B.A. 1931, Pl'1,D. 1936, LL.B. 1942, Yale University. Mr. Gilmore's law school education was not his first with Yale University for he taught French at the Under- graduate School in 1936. Following his graduation from law, he became associated with Milbank, Tweed, and Hope in New York. He served as Lieutenant with the Oiiice of Judge Advocate General, United States Navy, during the war. JOHN R. THOMPSON, Assistant Professor of Law, B.A., Mellon Fellowship, Cambridge University, LL.B. 1947, Yale University. Mr. Thompson cletked for Chief jusice Vin- son in 1947-48. He was with the firm of Coving- ton, Burling, Rublee, Acheson and Shorb in Washington in 1948. Then in 1949 he joined the Yale faculty. WESLEY ALBA STURGES, Dean of the L School and Edward J. Phelps Professor of Law, Ph 1915, University of Vermont, LL.B. 1919, Columl Universityg J.D. fcum laudej 1923, Yale Law Scho D.C.1. CHon.J, University of Vermont, LL.D., Tula University, 1948. Dean Sturges has taught at the law schools of 1 Universities of South Dakota, Minnesota, Columb North Carolina, Washington, Drake, Northwestern a Kansas. He served as Chairman of the Faculty in 191 In 1946 became Dean of the Law School. He has serv as Executive Director, Distilled Spirits Institute, Ir and is now Chairman, Board of Directors, Americ Arbitration Association. . . . . . r, if MYRES SMITH McDOUGAL, William K. Townsend Professor of Law, B,A. 1926, M.A. 1927, LL.B. 1935, University of Mississippi, B.C.I.. 1940, Oxford, J.S.D. 1941, Yale Uni- versity. Mr. McDougal started his teaching career at the University of Illinois. He has taught at Chi- cago, Northwestern, Columbia and Vanderbilt, and came to Yale in 1934. He has published, with Mr. Haber, Property, Wealth, Land: A110- cation, Planning and Development . He is a member of the Board of Editors of the American journal of International Law and the Journal of Comparative Law. - nr 1 -ir - - - GEORGE HATHAWAY DESSION, Lines Professor of Law, B.A. 1926, M.A, 1927, Cornell University, LL.B. 1930, Yale Uni- versity. Mr. Dession has been at Yale since 1930. He has published a Casebook, Criminal Law, Administration and Public Order. He served as Special Assistant to the Attorney General, Department of justice. Mr. Dession was a member of the U.S. Supreme Court Advisory Committee of Rules of Criminal Procedure. EUGENE VICTOR ROSTOW, Professor of Law, B.A. 1933, Yale University, 1933-34, King's College, Cambridge, LL.B. 1937, Yale University. Mr. Rostow practiced with the firm of Cravath, de Gersdoff, Swaine and Wood, 1937-38. He was ap- pointed to the Law School faculty in 1938, where he has remained since, except for a leave to serve as visit- ing Assistant Professor of Law at the University of Chicago in 1941, for a period of war service as As- sistant General Counsel of the Office of Lend-Lease Administration in 1942, and as Executive Assistant to an Assistant Secretary of State in 1942-44. 13 J' K WILL THE FOLLOWING STUDENTS The Law journal and B.U.l. may have a place in our lives here, but day in, day out, there is no more pervasive influence that that of The Front 'ES' Office. These are the people who keep our records, get us jobs, type our papers, and generally decorate the hallways. Above, Elsa E. Wolf, Registrar. Left, Mollie McCall, Director of Steno- graphic Services. N ,J Above, three little maids from the registrars oHice strike a pose, while taskmaster McCall finds work for mimeographers. At the right, General Coordinator Betty Martin, Placement Director Clare J. Sturges and Doris Boeris, Secretary to the Dean. Q X- WF 9 mm 5 bw, my . ' , , .. gfffff' yf' Liga 'Wx ., K .. 'xg 29155 , GQ 4' . 1' W1 ,. ,, X iw W P' , Kff' 1 Q ,Q M 1 4 '5 'il' ...,.,ns' f M nm ,k,, . 1 :gsm 7, 5,1 :sf f ff--' .ff'zffff?fQwae,- ig, if '21.-,-- K ' '--' , Sf?':ffiiff:gi, f, .-M., g k 1 5 'L Q' ,mv ' ,, 5' 1- f J , K, 4,, H I, .5,. ,T : , , K V A :mx 3 ' K: f Vg K 1 If z K , I ,912-gm :zz vffeewz Q , K, , . .. , f, -X' 1 f : f, .V , . . ar - f. W www ,+..,.,., W.-1 . .1 H 'ZFEET-'. . . ,,,, ,,... X H. ,an.w+..wa+s1+Q:ma,,4f.mm..wsmx:pwws4 .rywfn-E W wwe: 1.-wg Between acceptance and matriculation for the Yale Law Class of 1953, the War in Korea began. The global situation was a dissonant intrusion on the educational process and for a time gave our legal education a peculiar flavor as appellate advocacy was more strenuously stressed before Selective Service Boards than the Yale Moot Court of Appeals. With not an inconsiderable number of our classmates going off to service, those surviving had the feeling that study was not only a betrayal of them but of all Western Culture. ivf 2 CLASS OF 1953 But the Sterling Quadrangle did manage to offer some shelter from the cold war shivers, and, as we made some resolution with the world situation, we took a second look at the immense opportunities around us and were immediately gratified. As Mr. McDougal might phrase it. it was not clear whether we liked what we saw or whether we saw what we liked, but it was certain that the Yale Approach offered all the values that one could demand. From then on legal education became a painless, and oftentimes pleasing, process. And now we depart, completely sophisticated, strolling toward the Bar Exams. PON BAYLIS ALLEN, 190 ames Avenue, Niagara Falls, Iew York, B.A. Yale Uni- ersity, 1950. Moot Courtg egal Aidg Freshman Advi- ar, Chairman Orientation Committee: Student Associ- tion, Treasurer, Barristers' lnion. AUBURN EDGAR BEN- 'ON, JR., 1111 U. 7th Nob Hillj, Colorado prings, Colorado, B.A. Co- arado Colege, 1950. Moot lourt, Director. FOSTER BAM, 47 Ever- green Avenue, Westport, Connecticut, B.A. - History, Yale University, 1950. Moot Court, advisor: Legal Aidg Public Defender. CHARLES R. BERGOFFEN, 2719 Avenue M, Brooklyn, Science, University of Ne- braska, 1950. Law journal, Managing Elitor. MORTON DAVID BAR- ON, 7129 Kingsbury, Uni- versity City, Missouri, B.A. Amherst College, 195 0. For- um, Student Association. GEORGE BERLSTEIN, 780 Riverside Drive, New York, New York, B.A.-Political 1930. Law Journal, Legal Ai . -EQ - T 'Xu , Q if Q i 4.-P nf' 5 HOWARD ROBERT BAR- RON, 8232 South Paxton Avenue, Chicago, Illinois, PBh.-Liberal Arts, Chicago University, 19483 B.A.-Poli- tical Science, Stanford Uni- versity, 1950. Moot Court, Associate Director, Legal Aid, Public Defenderg Bas- ketball Teamg Corbey Court. GEORGE WILSON BER- MANT, 262 North Beach- wood Drive, Los Angeles, California, B.A.-Political Sci- ence, University of South- ern California, 1950. Bar- risters' Union Director. .gg-A tar- I4 z f WILLIAM ELTON BAR- TON, 904 South Center Street, Casper. Wyoming, B.A. Colorado College, 1950. Moot Court, Corbey Court, President. ALBERT L. BERNIER. 7 Elmwood Avenue, Water- ville, Maine, B.A.-History, Colby College, 1950. Moot Courtl Legal Aid. 4-e-' ROBERT PETER BESHAR, 55 Lord Kitchener Road, New Rochelle, New York, B.A. Yale University, 1950, Moot Court, Public Defen- der: Barristers' Union, Di- rector. LEO B. BOZELL, JR., 2 Van Rose Drive, Hamden, Connecticut, B.A.-Economics, Yale University, 1950. Moot Court, Basketball Team: Cor- bey Court, Barristers' Union. ALFRED BRUMMEL, 565 West End Avenue, New York, New York, A.B.-Eco- nomics, Wesleyan University, 1950. JAMES ROBERT BJORGE, 2339 N. E. 51st Avenue, Portland, Oregon, B.S,-Elec- rrical Engineering, United States Naval Academy, 19473 B.E.-Mechanical Engineering, Yale University, 1953. Moot Court, Benj. N. Cordozo Prize for Moot Court, Frosh Counsellor, Corbey Court, Phi Delta Phi. PAUL E. BRAGDON, R. F. D. 5, Portland, Maine, B.A.-Political Science, Am- herst College, 1950. Moot Court, Public Defender, Freshman Advisor. THERON LAMAR CAU- DLE, III, 3 Wanoka Circle, Wadesboro, North Carolina, B.A.-Government, Wake For- est College, 1950. Law Jour- nal, Board Member, Moot Court, Harlan F. Stone Award, Member Inter-Law School Moot Court Team, Yale Bar Association . . . Executive Board, Intramural Football, Corbey Court, Stu- dent Association, Chairman, Social Committee, Phi Delta Phi, President. ALBERT G. BLAKEY, III, Niles Lane, York Pennsyl- vania, B.A.-Political Econo- mics, Williams University, 1950. Moot Court, Advisor, Legal Research, Instructor, Frosh Counsellor, Corbey Court, Barristers' Union, Di- rector. IRVING BRECHER, 21 Green Gardens Court, East Haven, Connecticut, B.A. McGill University, 1943, M. A. Harvard University, 1947, Ph.D. Harvard University, 1951. Legal Research, Prize for Legal Research Paper. YOLANDE HARGRAVE CHAMBERS, 88 Manly St., Portsmouth, Virgina, B.S.- Social Science, Hampton ln- stitute, 1950. Moot Court, Advisor, Legal Aid, Execu- tive Committee, Memo Comm., Chairman, Barristers' Union. 18 SOL BLECKER. 5022 N. 10th Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, B.A.-Political Science, Haverford Colege, 1949. Legal Aid, Public De- fender, Freshman Advisor, Forum. HANS L. BRUHL, 359 George Street, New Haven, Connecticut, Referendar-Law, University of Berlin Law School, 1950. DON MARK CHANG, 35-B So. Kuakini Street, Honolu- lu, Hawaii, A.B.-Political Sci- ence, University of Nebras- ka, 1950. Legal Aid, Forum, Vice-Chairman, Oversextette, Corbey Court, Barristers' Un- ion. .4 233 I LIPPMAN BODOFF, 1 50th Street, Brooklyn, York, B.S.S. College of City of New York, 1 Barristers' Union. DAVID T. BAZELON, Dwight Street, New Hz Connecticut, B.S.-English erature, Columbia Univei 1949. Law Journal, F Advisor. RALPH CHEW, 195 Army Road, Scarsdale, York, B.S.-History and ll ematics, Bowdoin Col 1950. Moot Court, 1 Aid, Student Associatio DI PRETE. lConnecticut, B.A. - History, 1 University of Rochester, 11948. Law Journal, Board. l N PETER PAUL COLADARCI. 70 Central Avenue, New Haven, Conecticut, B.A.-Eco- nomics, University of Illinois, 1950. Corbey Court. KARLA DAVIDSON, 76-36 113 Street, Forest Hills, New York, B.A. - Government, Smith College, 1950. PETER S. CRAIG, Oberlin, Ohio, A.B.-Economics, Ober- lin College, 1950. Law Jour- nal, Corbey Court. WILIAM A. DELANO, 585 Orange Street, New Haven, Connecticut, B.A.-Sociology, Yale University, 1948. Law Journal, Legal Research. ANDREW A. GEORGE D. DULANEY. 4015 Elfm Avenue, Louisville, Kentucky, B.A.-English, Yale University, 1951. Legal Aid, Corbey Court. 1320 Cranston Street, Crans- ton, Rhode Island, A.B.-Gov- ernment, Harvard University, 1950. Moot Court, Cinema Club, President, Barristers' Union. KLAUS DOHNANYI, 334 West Division Street, New Haven, Conecticut, L.L.Bt Munich University, 1949, Y.S.D. Munich University, 1950. Law Journal. JOHN L. ENDICOTT, E-1 Providence Court, Atlantic City, New Jersey, B.A.-Poli- tical Science, Rutgers Univer- sity, 1950. Alumni News Letter, Frosh Counsellor, Bar- risters' Union. WALTER D'ULL, 2160 An- thony Avenue, Bronx, New York, B.A.-Economics, New York University, 1950. For- um, Barristers' Union, Yale Bar Association. JOHN D. FASSETT, 70 Central Avenue, New Haven, WARREN JAMES FOR- SYTHE, Box 137. Madrid. New York, A.B. - Political Science, St. Lawrence Uni- versity, 1950. EDWARD FEITELBFRG. 322 Winthrop Avenue, New Haven, Connecticut, B.A.- English, Yale University, 1945. Alumni News Letter, Editor-in-Chief. JAMES TOMILSON FORT, 2345 Hollywood Drive, Pitts- burgh, Pennsylvania,B.A. Al- legheny College 1950. Moot Court, Legal Aid, Student Association. VICTOR HARRY FRANK, JR., 1800 Pine Street, Phila- delphia, Pennsylvania, B.A. Yale University, 1950. Bar- risters' Union. ROBERT G. FRACASSO, 89 Hill Street, New Haven, Connecticut, B.S. - Science, Fordham University, 1949. -:J 'lb' XC'-H . L3 I Q 1 3 ii. 5- .- 'T' ,fu-r 'S is-f 1' N..- w' ...Q- 52' La! bas ppl' T' 'ef asm., 'sw 'r::,-v 20 CHARLES E. FRASER, East Court Street, Hinesville, Georgia, B.B.A.-Industrial Re- lations, University of Geor- gia, 1950. Law Journal, ARTHUR BERNARD I MMER, 51 Argyle R Brooklyn, New York, New York University, 11 Law Journal, Board. Board Member, Legal Aid, Fresh. Adviser, Corbey Court, Vice-President, Phi Delta Phi. KAYE BRUCE FRIEDMAN, 281 Lincoln Parkway, Buf- falo, New York, B.A. Har- vard University, 1950. Legal Aid. JOHN WALTER FROM- MER, JR., Sycamore Bt Pal- mer Hill Road, Clifton Heights, Pennsylvania, B.A. Swarthmore College, 1950. Law Journal, Case Editor, ALICE B. GILBERT, Riverside Drive, New Y New York, A.B.-Governm Radcliffe College, 1949. Journal, Fresh. Advisor, dent Association, Barrisi Alumni News Letter, Stu- Union. dent Association. TERRENCE DALE GARRI- GAN, 64 S. Portage Path, Ohio, B.A.-Mathematics, Am- herst College, 1950. Moot ourt, Advisor, Frosh Coun- sellor, Corbey Court. LELAND J. GORDON, JR., North Street, Granville, Ohio, B.A. - Economics, Denison University, 1950. Moot Court, Director, Legal Aid, Jewell Prize-1952, Phi Al- pha Delta. THOMAS WALTER P, RICK HACKETT, I7 I- side Street, West Haven, C necticut, B.A. - Econom Yale University, 1950. gal Aid, Frosh Counsel Corbey Court, Student A ciation, Vice-President, cial Chairman. DAVID MARTIN GRAY, 753 St. Joseph Avenue, Rochester, New York, B.A. University of Rochester, I9- 50. Reporter, Moot Court, Legal Aid. CARLETON ALLEN HARK- RADER, P. O. Box 615. Bristol, Virginia, B.A. Vir- ginia Military lnstitute, 19- 40. Moot Court, Associate Director, Public Defender. ANDREW C. HARTZE JR., 219 Rochester Ro Rochester, New York, B. History, Yale University, 50. Law Journal, Note a Comment Editor, Frr Counsellor, Corbey Court. JOSEPH HARRIS, 4 Sum- mit Avenue, Albany, New York, B.A. Cornell Univer- sity, 1950. Moot Court, Leg gal Aid. ANDREW D. HEINEMAN, 175 West 72nd Street, New York, New York, B.A.-His- tory, Williams College, 1950. Law Journal, Business Man- ager, Fresh. Advisor, Corbey Court, Barrisrers' Union. CHARLES E. HOFFHAI 612 State Street, Salina, K: sas, B.A.-Political Scien University of Kansas, 19f Legal Aid, Student Direc and Munson Prize, Corl Court, Student Associatit Barristers' Union, Directl Phi Alpha Delta, Preside JOHN DARWIN HICKS. 500 Clement Avenue, Char- lotte, North Carolina, B.S. United States Naval Aca- demy, 1944. Moot Court. ROBERT COUGHLIN HUB- BARD, 2 7 7 Meadowbrook Road, Fairfield, Connecticut, B.A. Princeton University, 1950. SONDRA KAPLAN, 2516 E. 24th Street, Brooklyn, New York, B.A.-Political Sci- ence, Brooklyn College, 19- 51. Moot Court, Advisor, Legal Aid, Barristers' Union. ALEXANDER M. KEITH, 615 Sth Avenue, S. W., Rochester, Minnesota, B.A.- Amherst College, 1950. Pub- lic Defender, Student Asso- ciation, President, EUGENE RICHARD JACK- SON, 5036 Kensington Ave., St. Louis, Missouri, B.A.- History, Roosevelt College, 1950. Corbey Court, Barris- ters' Union, Director. JULIAN M. KAPLIN. 2615 Falmouth Road, Toledo, Ohio, B.A.-Economics, Brown University, 1950. Moot Court, Legal Aid, Corbey Court, Barristers' Union. RICHARD KELTON. 459 So. Camino Drive, Beverly Hills, California, A.B.-Poli- tical Science, Stanford Uni- versity, 1950. Law Journal, Associate Editor, Legal Aid, Executive Board, Public De- fender, Legal Research, Chair- man of Instructors, Corbey Court. g ...,,,,,: gp- Sv 'bf F' sa., S5 can--d ' GIRARD A. JACOBI, 1250 Park Avenue, New York, New York, A.A. University of California, 1948, B.A.- Political Science, University of California, 1950. Legal Aid, Public Defender, Frosh Counsellor, Corbey Court. RHODA HENDRICK KAR- PATKIN, 1653 East 2nd Street, Brooklyn, New York, A.B.-Literature, Brooklyn Col- lege, 1951. Legal Aid, Pub- lim Defender, Barrisrers' Un- 1011. LLOYD C. KIRKLAND, JR., 796 Newell Street, Memphis, Tennessee. B.A.-Political Sci- ence, Yale University, 1950. Basketball Team, Frosh Coun- sellor, Corbey Court. ..-mm.. FREEBORN GARRETTSON JEWETT, JR. 142 Main St., Southport, Connecticut, B.A.- Political Science, Yale Uni- versity, 1950. Moot Court, Advisor, Frosh Counsellor, Corbey Court, Barristers' Un- ion, Phi Delta Phi. DONALD KATZ, 505 Har- rison Avenue, Collingwood, New Jersey, B.A. Rutgers University, 1950. Legal Aid, Munson Prize. WILUAM JAMES KLAUS- NER, 117 Kensington Ave- nue, Jersey City, New Jersey, B.A. Yale University, 1950. Moot Court. C7 if .S 'SQ -'SF' 8, 5 E hr' 117 DAVID H. KLINGES, 144 Holland Avenue, New Mil- ford, New Jersey, A.B.-Po1i- tical Science, Franklin and Marshall College, 1950. Re- porter, Legal Aid, Public De- fender, Fresh. Advisor, In- tramural Footballg Frosh ARTHUR BENNETT KRA- MER, 6040-14th Street, N W., Washington, D. C., B.S. Yale University, 1949, M.A.- English Literature, Yale Uni- versity, 19 51. Basketball Team, Frosh Counsellor, Cor- bey Court, Barristers' Union Counsellor, Corbey Court, Barristers' Union. ALFRED J. KOVELL, Paxi- nos, Pennsylvania, B.A.-Poli- tical Science, Pennsylvania State College, 1950. Legal Aid, Corbey Court. ROBERT T. LAVENDER. 178 Lake Drive, Copiague, Long Island, New York, B. A.-History, Colgate Univer- sity, 1950. Legal Aid, Frosh ARNOLD M. LERMAN, 62 Lehigh Avenue, Newark, New Jersey, B.A.-Philosophy, Hamilton College, 1950. Law journal, Executive Editor. i Counsellor, Corbey Court, 1 Barristers' Union. STUART CHARLES LAW, Northgate Apartments, Bronx- ville, New York, B.A. Yale University, 1950. Law Jour- nal, Note and Comment Edi- IOL CHARLES DAVID LIND- BERG, 1521 Whittier Ave- nue, Springfield, Illinois, B. A. Augustana College, 1950. Moot Court, Inter Law School Competition, Legal Aid. JAMES ROBERT MAGUI- RE, 370 Fourth Avenue New York, New York, B.A. Princeton University, 1948, DAVID LINDSEY, 1140 Stanford Avenue, Baton Rou- ge, Louisiana, B.S. Louisiana State University, 1950. Over- SCX ICRC. JESSE MARGOLIN, 1255 Westervelt Place, Hewlett, New York, B.A.-Political Sci- ence, New York University, 1950. Moot Court, Advisor, Legal Aid, Public Defender, Fresh. Advisor, Forum, Chair- man, Memo Comm, Barris- ters' Union. WILLIAM F. HAROLD LOEB MICHTOM 1151 Grand Concourse, New York, New York, B.A. Har- vard University, 1949. Mc con- MACK, 1 23 Leroy Street, 1 Binghamton, New York, B. A.-Social Science, Syracuse 1 University, 1950. Legal Aid, I Public Defender. 1 RICHARD MILLER, 911 Walton Avenue, Bronx, New , York, B.A.-Philosophy, Uni- versity of California, 1950. Reporter, Art Editor, Moot I court, Advisor, Legal Aid, i Executive Board, Public De- i fender, Chairman, Forum, l Student Association. Execu- tive Board, Barristers' Union. HERBERT EMANUEL MOR- RIS, 1 Eldert Street, New Haven, Connecticut, B.A. Yale University, 1950. 'IN JOSEPH MULLANE, 316 Center Street, Au- 1, Maine, A.B.-Classics, Jdoin College, 1950. In- xural Football, Corbey WILLIAM ROBERT MUR- PHY 1 2 Hobart Street . 9 . New Haven, Connecticut, B. A. Yale University, 1950. Law Journal, Executive, Ex- rt. ecutive Editor, Barristers Union. DANIEL I. MURPHY, 375 Baird Road, Merion, Penn- sylvania, B.S.-Economics, Uni- versity of Pennsylvania, 1950. Public Defender, Corbey Court, Barristers' Union. URICE NORMAN NES- -I, 112 Pleasant Street, okline, Massachusetts, B. Yale University, 1950. ' Journal, Managing Edi- Reporter: Student Asso- Ion. ROBERT C. OSBORNE, East Hampton, New York, B.A. Lafayette College, 1950. Moot Court, Associate Dir- rectorg Legal Aid, Corbey Court, Student Association, Treasurer. MILORAD NIKOLIC, 812 Greenwood Road, Wilming- ton, Delaware, B.A. Gymnase Belgrade University, 1938. LLIS G. PARSENS, JR., Hilltop Drive, West Hart- l, Connecticut, B.A.-Eco- wics, Amherst College, GEORGE CHENEY PRATT. 88 East 5th Street, Corning, New York, B.A. Yale Uni- versity, 1950. Moot Court, 10. Legal Aidg Corbey Public Defender, Munson irt. Prize, Legal Research, Instruc- tor. LEONARD M. POLISAR. 131 East 93 Street, Brooklyn, New York, B.A. - Social Studies, Brooklyn College, 1950. Law Journal, Legal Aid, Public Defender, Forum. THUR LEE PULLEY, 34 PHILIP B. RAUE, 1915 N. 1ton Avenue, New Ro- Prospect Avenue, Milwaukee, lle, New York, B.A.-Vit- Wisconsin, Ph.B.-Economics, ia Union, 1950. University of Wisconsin, 1943. OSCAR C. RAUCH, 1454 University Avenue. New York City, New York, B.S. S.-Economics, College of the City of New York, 1950. Legal Aid, Barristers' Union. NOLD RAYNOR, 1455 wnsend Avenue, Bronx, w York, B.S.-History, C01- 2 of the City of New rk, 1950. Alumni News ter, Barristers' Union. STUART ROBINOWITZ, 6 Hillair Circle, White Plains, New York, B.A. Williams College, 1950. Law Journal, Note and Comment Editor. JAY HARVEY RICK, R. D. 3 Panther Road, Vineland, New Jersey, B.B.S. College of the City of New York, 1950. Public Defender. it .gs .11-f i J' 4 .,, ,, v if g Av- ' if W.. . 9 ' ' . .9 Q? i .L 1 1' ..g. . - X gf .b ., . - I 7 4. . A -.,.. .1 1 . e iis, . 'Ah' . g :X ,N Ak vii . L Qi gb 14' mt -1. , rt i iv p I I 'Gs-5 iif P Gif .... . 1 5 ' I C , K 1 5 . A, , X A, , . f -I ' i .Z Q BEATRICE M. ROSEN- HAIN, 55-40 82nd Street, Jackson Heights, New York, B.A. - Languages, Bucknell University, 1950, Moot ERNEST RUBENSTEIN, 1' 51 East 31st Street, Brook lyn, New York, B.A. Prince ton University, 1950. Lav Journal, Editor-in-Chief. Court, Advisor. JOSEPH ROSENZWEIG, 2296 Grand Avenue, New York, New York, B.S.-Gov- ernment, City College of New York, 1950. Legal Aid, Co- Chairmang Public Defender, Fresh. Advisor, Student Asso- ciation, President, Barristers' Union. HARRY J. RUBIN, High Street Extension, Brownsville R.D. 1, Pennsylvania, A.B.- International Relations, Uni- versity of Pennsylvania, 1950. SAMUEL C. SHEATS. 734 Orchard Street, New Haven Connecticut, B.A. Morehoust College, 1947. Oversextette Barristers' Union. Moot Court, Corbey Court, Barristers' Union. ZEVIE B. SCHIZER, 101 New York University, 1950. Brightwater Court, Brooklyn, New York, B.A.-History, WILLIAM ROYCE SHUT- TLEWORTHZ, 315 Linden Terrace, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, B.A.-State University of Iowa, 1949, M.A. State University of Iowa, 1951. Reporter, Public Defender. RODGER DAVIS SMITH. Box 72, RFD 2, New Paltz, New York, S,B.-Business and Engineering Administration, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1948. Fresh. Ad- visor, Corbey Court. JOHN GERALD SIMON, 151 West 86 Street, New York, New York, B.A. Har- vard University, 1950. Law Journal, Article Editor. WILLIAM S. SMITH, 70 Central Avenue. New Haven, Connecticut, B,A.-Economics, University of California, 1950. JOHN TEMPLE SWING, Spring Farm, Newfane, Ver- mont, A.B.-History, Harvard University, 1950. Moot Court, Public Defender, Oversextette, Legal Research, Corbey Court, Student Asso- ciation, Barristers' Union. DAVID SWING STARR- ING, JR., Greens Farms, Connecticut, B.A.-Yale Uni- versity, 1950. STEPHEN W, TERRY, JR., 2059 S. 72nd Street, Chi- cago, Illinois, B.A, St. Johns College 1MarylandJ, 1948, B,A. Oxford University, I9 50. Legal Aid, Barristers' Union, Director. DAVID ULLMAN TUMIN, 7067 North Ashland Blvd. Chicago, Illinois, A.B.-Eco- nomics, University of Colo- rado, 1950. DANIEL A. TORNILLO, 2160 Main Street, Bridge- port, Connecticut, A.A. Jun- ior College Connecticut, 19 48, B.A. University of Bridgeport, 1950, '50- -an-ar JMAS N. TUTTLE, 15 North Prospect Avenue, raukee, Wisconsin, B.A.- omics. Yale University, J. Corbey Court, Phi a Phi. PRGE WEINSTEIN. 827 Street, New Haven, Con- cut, A.B. - Economics, mouth College, 1949. t Court, Advisor. LDON M. WOOL, 1048 I 36 Street, Los Anglees, ornia, B.A.-Political Sci- Rutgers University, 19 Student Association, Sec- y. H. RICHARD UVILLER, 4 East 74th Street, New York, New York, B.A.-Social Re- lations, Harvard University, 1951. Law Journal, Note and Comment Editor, Barristers' Union. RAY WEISBOND, 120 Har- rington Road, Syracuse, New York, B.A.-Political Science, Syracuse University, 1950. DONALD J. ZEHNDER, 29 Hillcrest Avenue, Naugatuck, Connecticut, A.B. - History, University of Notre Dame, 1950. Legal Aid, Oversex- tette, Basketball Team, lntra- mural Football, Corbey Court, Barristers' Union. KENNETH HOHNE VOLK, Old Branchville Road, Ridge- field, Connecticut, B.S. Uni- ted States Naval Academy, 1946. Oversextette, Corbey Court. JAMES ROBERT WIMMER, 238 Prospect Street, New Haven, Connecticut, B.A.- Amherst College, 1950. IMMANUEL KOHN, 7 Can- terbury Road. Harrison, New York, B.A. Harvard Univer- sity, 1949. Law Journal, Board. MIMI ADOLPHIA OBST- LER, 515 Central Park West, New York, New York, B.A. Connecticut College for Wo- men, 195O. Moot Court. Pub- lic Defender, LaRue Munson Prize. JEROME S. WAGSHAL, 4651 Hertford Place, N. W., Washington, D. C., B.A. George Washington Univer- sity, 1950. Law Journal, Board. LOUISE UNTERMYER WIT, 43 Eldert Street, New Haven. Connecticut, B.A. Radcliffe College, 1949. Not Pictured DAVID MEYER BLUM, Bri- ar Patch, Brooklandville, Maryland, B.A. Haverford College, 1950. CHARLES HERBERT LEE, JR., Madison, New Jersey, B.A. Princeton University, 1949. ALEXANDER B. PORTER, 840 Golf View Road, Moorestown, New Jersey, B. A. - Government, Wesleyan University, 1950. Corbey Court, Barristers' Union, Chairman. LARRY J. WALSH, 1400 Black Horse Pike, Pleasant- ville, New Jersey, A.B.-Poli- tical Science, Rutgers Univer- sity, 1950. Moot Court, Le gal Aid. CALVIN WOODWARD, Watson, Drive, Wilson, N. Carolina, B.A. Virginia Mili- tary Institute, 1948. Moot Court. STANLEY BURTON FEU- ER, 1502 East LaSalle Steer, South Bend, Indiana, B.A. Yale University, 1950. Moot Court, Legal Aid. RICHARD L. LISSNER, 70 Central Avenue, New Haven, Connecticut, B.A. - Political Science, University of Cali- fornia, 1949. Legal Aid. JOHN KRAUS. 6393 Wood- haven Boulevard, Rego Park, Long Island, New York, A. B. Columbia University, 1949. YY,7YY,Y YY , , Y , .IOINDER OF PARTIES . r , We 'X 'W E1 x5g 4,5 HOUSEWARMING ? H' ST ...ML 185' 653' ig, , , :fr 5 A .f , ,Wi k 'Seitl 1 . R Q n AF CLASS OF 1954 The entrance into the second year of study at the Yale Law School has always been marked by a strange but definite feeling of increased security. And for those battle-scarred veterans of the Class of 1954 that survived the examination holo- caust of their first year, this feeling was especially pronounced. Throughout the first year there was that vague uneasiness about that jibe: This is a three-cent classg all you needed was the price of a postage stamp to be admitted. But, any feeling of inferiority quickly disappeared when the inevitable assimilation of the second year fthe upper crust being wafted up to the sacred heavens of the Journal, never to be heard from again, the remainder dispersing themselves among the dank dungeons of Legal Aid or the respectable corners of the Barrister's Union or Moot Courtb went off smoothly in a manner as ancient as the rules of property themselves. In fact, by the end of the second year, there were those - true most of them were in the second year class itself - that felt this was the best class ever. RTHUR A. ABESHOUSE, acebrook Road, Wood- idge, Connecticut, B.S. hio State University, 1948. AL BARASCH, 1104 sucks Avenue, Scottdale, -nnsylvania, B.S. - Finance, -tiversity of Pennsylvania, '51. in DAVID ALBERT, 70 Cen- tral Avenue, New Haven, Connecticut, A.B. - Govern- ment, Ohio University, 1951. WILLIAM BARONOFF, 15 01-55 Street, Brooklyn, New York, A.B.-Political Science, Brooklyn College, 1951. I . WARNER ALEXANDER, R. F. D. 2 Box 509A, Neptune, New jersey, B.A.-Political Science, Rutgers University, 1951. ZIPPORAH BATSHAW, 43 36 Montrose Avenue, West- mount, Quebec, Canada, B.A. Political Science, McGill Uni- versity, 1950. . 5 bpyyvt 2 VJ . 2: 1 W an si 4 if . i tikgliiziiif 1.Q3?f-gf' l' CHARLES HAYDEN AMES. 26 Course View Road, Bronxville, New York, B.S.- General Engineering, Stan- ford University, 1951. WALTER J. BAUM, 4724 Beach 47th Street, Brooklyn, New York, B.A.-Political Sci- ence, Brooklyn College, 19 51. JOHN F. ASHTON, 28 Ridge Croft Road, Bronx- ville, New York, A.B. Phys- ics, Harvard University, 19 51. ROBERT HOWARD BECK- ER, 64-25 83 Street, Forest Hills West, Long Island, New York, B.S.S.-Govern- ment, City College of New York, 1951. K . ..t,.,,RM 2. RICHARD K. BERG, 225 Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn, New York, B.A.-Government, Harvard University, 1951. DAVID BOTWINIK, 535 West 110 Street, New York, New York, A.B.-Government, Cornell University, 1951. CLIFFORD N. CARLSEN. JR., 3427 N. E. 20th Ave- nue, Portland, Oregon, B.A.- Hisrory, Stanford University, 1951. mf 1. 'W . ROBERT F. BERGAL, 70 Central Avenue, New Haven, Connecticut, B.B.A.-Account- ing, Bridgeport University, 1952. ROBERT B. BOWLES, JR., 5821 Potomac, Dallas, Texas, B.A.-Business Administration, Rice Institute, 1951. HERBERT CHANNICK, 59 39 Woodcrest Avenue, Phila- delphia, Pennsylvania, B.A.- PsychologY. University oi Il- linois, 1951. -r- ' 1 K' '-EI? BERL ISAAC BERNHARD, 5 Prince Willow Lane, Ma- maroneck, New York, A.B.- Government, Dartmouth Col- lege, 1951. EDGAR H. BRENNER, 113 Howe Street, New Haven, Connecticut, B.A. - Govern- ment and Internationl Re- lations, Carleton College, 1951. EVERETT ELLIS CLARK, 519 East 16th Street, Brook- lyn, New York, A.B.-Econo- mics, Amherst College, 1951. 30 DAVID L, BERNSTEIN, 257 Church Street, New Haven, Conecticut, B.A.-Eco- nomics, University of Cali- fornia, 1951. MARSHALL L. BURMAN. 1143 Woodbine Avenue, Oak Park, Illinois, B.S.-Finance, Northwestern University, 19 51. ALVIN JAY COHAR, 3235 Grand Concourse, New York, New York, B.A.-English, Cornell University, 1951. HOWARD S. BORO. Riverside Drive, New New York, B.A. New University, 1951. JEROME E. CARLIN. Commonwealth Avenue cago, Illinois, A.B.-Soci lations, Harvard Univ 1949, M.A.-Sociology, versity of Chicago, 19 LEWIS G. COLE. 175 93rd Street. New York York, B.S.-Business, L sity of Pennsylvania, ICI-IARD WILLIAM COL- INS, 13 Westway, Bronx- lle, New York, B.S. His- fy, Georgetown University, 51. MORRIS JONATHAN DEAN, 636 West Burnham Road, Philadelphia, Pennsyl- vania, A.B. Economics, Uni- versity of Pennsylvania, 1951. BENJAMIN CORNELIUS, 941 Ashland Avenue, Detroit, Michigan, B.A. Philosophy of Science, FRANKLIN Yale University, 1951. EEORGE DE GENARO, 70 .ntral Avenue, New Ha- 'n, Connecticut, B.A. Gov- nment, Wesleyan Univer- RUSSELL C. DILKS, 348 Roslyn Avenue, Glenside, Pennsylvania, A.B. English, Dartmouth College, 1951. Iv. 1951. X ROBERT H. DIEDOLF, 35- 50 75th Street, jackson Heights. New York, A.B. Political Science, Bucknell University, 1951. JHN RICHARD DUNNE, 30 Oxford Boulevard, Gar- 'n City, New York, A.B. tonomics, Georgetown Uni- rsity, 1951. JAY 731 New LOUIS EMANUEL, III, 547 North President Avenue, Lancaster, Pennsylvania, A.B. Public and International Af- fairs, Princeton University, 1951. IRWIN EDELSON, Oakland Place, Bronx , York, B.A. History, New York University, 1951. LAUS EPPLER, mth Street Rego ing Island New A Social Science, 63-13 Park, York, Union RICHARD LEWIS EP- STEIN, 151 West 86 Street, New York, New York, A.B. Political Science, Amherst College, 1951. ROBERT ALLEN EPSTEIN 34 Eaton Street Bridgeport Connecticut. BA Jurispru dence. College of William and Mary, 1951 RANT D. ESTERLING, 2 Lincoln Way East, assillon, Ohio, B.A. His- 'y, Yale University, 1951. KENNETH H. FAST, 23 Midland Boulevard, Maple- wood, New Jersey, B.A. Government. Lafayette Col- lege, 1951. IVAN A. EZRINE. 822 Fourth Street, S.W., Wash- ington, D. C., A.B. Classics, University of Cincinnati, 1951. g 'GI' JOSEPH EUGENE FAZ- ROBERT ARNOLD F ZANO, 124 North Main MAN, 101 Warrii Street, West Hartford, Con- Drive, Rochester, New necticut, B.A. Brown Univer- A,B. Government, Ha sity, 1951. University, 1951. NATHAN BLANE FEIN- STEIN, 1709 West Grange Avenue, Philadelphia, Penn- sylvania, B.A. Political Sci- ence, Pennsylvania State Col- lege, 1951. BERNARD FINKELSTEIN, 3172 Rochambeau Avenue, New York, New York, A.B. English, New York Univer- sity, 1951. ROBERT ANTHONY I GERALD, 300-A Prc Street, New Haven, Co ticut, B.A. Literature Philosophy, Yale Univc 1951. ROBERT EMANUEL FISCHER, 35 West 92 Street, New York, New York, B.A. Political Science, Syracuse University, 1951. JAMES CHARLES FOLEY. 65 Hill Street, Walden. New York, A.B. Political Science, Colgate University, 1951. FREDERICK FREEDMAN, Road, Stepney, SAMUEL SUMNER FR MAN, 60 Calhoun I Bridgeport, Connecticut, Foreign Aihirs, G Washington University, 1 ARTHUR Hattertown Connecticut, B.A. Psychology, University of Connecticut, 1951. RICHARD WITMER FUNK, 131 1 Lee Street, Des Plaines, Illinois, B.A. Liberal Arts, University of Chicago, 1950. JOSEPH BERNARD DENHORN. 3943 IN chusetts Avenue, If Washington, D. C., Business Administr: University of Mary 1951. THOMAS JOSEPH GAR- RITY, 1574 Leland Avenue, New York, New York, A.B. English, St. Peter's College, 1951. ROBERT THOMAS GIL- HULY, 150 Wakeman Road, Fairfield, Connecticut, A.B. Economics, Holy Cross Uni- versity, 1951. ALAN GLADSTONE, 1 49th Street, Brooklyn, York, B.A. Brooklyn lege, 1951. JEROME CHARLES GIL- MAN, 263 West End Ave- nue, New York, New York, B.S. New York University, 1951. EQ, WARD ALAN GLICK- IN, 5611 Henry Hud- Parkway, New York v York, B,A. History tmouth College, 1951. IMOND BURT GREEN Homec test Street, New- on, Connecticut, B.A osophy, Yale University 1. VIS EMANUEL HAASE Belmont Avenue, Spring- l, Massachusetts, B.A tical Science, Yale Uni ity, 1951. MORTON DAVID GOLD- BERG, 118 Millet Street, Boston, Massachusetts, A.B, Social Relations, Harvard University, 1951. CARL VICTOR GREEN- BURG, 488 Passaic Avenue, Passaic, New Jersey, B.A. Economics, Yale University, 1951 ROBERT OBERNDOER FER HARRIS, 55 Central Park West, New York, New York, A.B. Columbia Uni- versity, 1951. ELIZABETH J. GOLD- BLATT, 184 2 Sedgwick Avenue, New York, New York, B.A. Bryn Mawr College, 1951. JOSEPH RAYMOND GRO- DIN, 212-19th Street, Oak- land, California. B.A. Uni- versity of California, 1951. MATTHEW PHILIP HAY- MAN, I6 Queen Anne Drive, Shrewsbury, New Jer- sey, B.A. American Studies, Syracuse University, 1951. 33 . ---- , s'-. ' ' . A rf' , if i i ., t I R, 'Vg - -1 ,if Q- NORMAN STANLEY GOLDSMITH, 565 West-. minster Road, Brooklyn, New York, B.A. Political Science, New York Univer- sity, 1951. ANNE GROSS, 505 West End Avenue, New York, B.A. Government, Antioch College, 1951. JAMES THOMAS HEALEY, Center Road, Orange, Con- necticut, B.A. Yale Univer- sity, 1951. HAROLD GRABINO, 65 Sea Street, New Haven. Con- necticut, B.A. Political Sci- ence, Syracuse University, 1951. JOHN CHARLES GRUND, 185 7 Walworth Avenue, Pasadena, California, B.S. International Trade and Re- lations, University of Cali- fornia, 1949. EDGAR FRANCIS HEIZ- ER, JR., 780 Lincoln Ave- nue, Winnetka, Illinois B.S. Northwestern Univer- sity, 1951. - BERNARD I. HERMAN. 21-10 33rd. Road, Queens, New York, B.S.S.-Political Sdience, City College of New York, 1951. ROGER A. HORNSTEIN. 220 Park Street, New Ha- ven, Connecticut, B.A.-His- tory, Princeton University, 19413 Histor y, Harvard University CArts and Sci- encej, 1950: Certif. Ful- bright, Faculte des etudes politiques, Strasbourg, France. FRED ALAN JOHNSTON, 2505-18th Street, Bakers- field, California, A.B.-Eco- nomics, Stanford University, 1951. RICHARD HOWARD HILLEREN, Benson, Mine- sota, B.A.-Speech, Univer- sity of Washington, 1951. WILLIAM ALLEN HUNT, 8243 North Main Street, Dayton, Ohio, B.A. Wes- leyan University, 1951. LESLIE THOMAS JONES, JR., 640 Washington Road, Grosse Pointe, Michigan, A.B.-English, University of Arizona, 1951. -W , - ,Y .. ELLIOT LEE HOFFMAN, 68-64 Yellowstone Boule- vard, Forest Hills, Long Island, New York, B.A.- Government, Harvard Uni- versity, 1951. WALTER JACOBUS HUN- ZIKER, JR., 241 Lawrence Street. New Haven, Con- necticut, A.B.-English, Am- herst College, 1951. STUART NICHOLAS JOSEFSBERG, 6220 Bay Parkway, Brooklyn, New York, B.A.-Political Science, Syracuse University, 1951. 65 ANTHEA JANE HOLMER, Kentiield, California, B.A. Stanford University, 1951. DAVID R. HYDE, 25 Wil- ton Avenue, Norwalk, Con- necticut, B.A.-History and Economics, Yale University, 1951. SUSAN RUTH KARELITZ, 1225 Park Avenue, New York, New York, B.A.- Government, Smith College, 1951. GEORGE M. HOPFEN- BECK, JR., 855 Vine St., Denver, Colorado, B.A.-Poli- tical Science, Williams Col- lege, 1951. DONALD JAY IRWIN, 70 Central Avenue, New Ha- ven, Connecticut, B.A.-His-' tory, Yale University, 1950. i RUSSELL HAROLD KARP, 37 West 72 Street, New York, New York, B.A.-Poli- tical Science, Washington Usiiversity of St Louis, 1 51. L. 1 a ,M W .. 4 'UM' OWEN KASANIN. Washington Street, irancisco, California, ilitical Science, Stan- CHARLES JOSEPH KEL- LY, JR., Route 2, Wayzata, Minnesota, B.A. Stanford University, 1951. niversity, 1951. JOHN PORTER KELLEY. Jasper, New York, B.A.- Political Science. College of Wtioster, 1951, I A S R O C K W E L L 202 S. Berkeley , Pasadena, Califor- LB.-English, Univer- rf North Carolina, JERRY H. KETOLA. 517- Sth Street, South Virginia, Minnesota, B.A.-Political Science, Macalester College, 1951. CHESTER SAWYER KET- CHAM, Brandon, Vermont. B.A. University of Vermont, 1951. DN KING, 200 East ':et, New York, New A.B.-Political Science, e University, 1951. LEONARD M, KLEIN. 1 Stonelea Place, New Ro- chelle, New York, B.A.- English, New York Univer- sity, 1951. REIGH FREDRICK KLANN, 5583 North Lake Drive, Milwaukee, Wiscon- sin, B.A.-Literature and His- tory, Yale University, 1951. IAN KREVOLIN, 63 FRANKLIN THEODORE Street, New Haven, ticut, B.A.-Political ', Yale University, LASKIN, 1118 South Orange Avenue, Los Angeles, Cali- fornia, B.A. Dartmouth Col- lege, 1951. EDWARD JAY LANDAU. Pleasant Ridge Road, Harri- son, New York, B.A.-Busi- ness Administration, Duke University, 1951. LT LAWRENCE MONTE LAZARUS, 51 ', 410 Eastern Park- Buchanan Place, Bronx, 3rook1yn, New York, New York, B.A.-Economics. overnment, Harvard University of Wisconsin, sity, 1951. 1951. ROBERT LAYTON, 32-11 Parsons Boulevard, Flushing. New York, A.B.-English, University of Michigan. 1951. PE? Q--f- CID 'Wav 3 1 5 .,,,o . 1- ' 1' 4 x K i,.. , ,, . M K 43 1 , if F 51' X 71 a ,, ,. 4 V is E V A -Q , -'.- N ! ... 35 far-f g EDWARD A. LEBOWITZ, 1 Bergholz Drive, New Ro- chelle, New York, B.A.-Poli- tical Science, University of Michigan, 1951. ROBERT JAMES LEM. 1945 Market Street, Ca Hill, Pennsylvania, B. Political Science, Syrat University, 1951. ARNOLD HERBERT LEl- BOWITZ, 2769 Matthews Avenue, Bronx, New York, 1898. Columbia College, 51. ALAN BURTON LERNER, 4701-15th Avenue, Brook- lyn, New York, B.B.A.-Eco- nomics, College of City of New York, 1951. FRANK SALVATOI LIBASSI, 64 Linden Strf Brooklyn, New York, B. Political Science, C015 University, 1951. ROBERT FREDERICK LEWIS, 924 Linwood Road, Birmingham, Alabama, B.S.- Accounting, University of Alabama, 1951. CHARLES JU LES LlP- TON, 1491 Grand Con- course. New York, New York, A.B.-History, Syra- cuse, 1 9 5 1 . EVERETT A. LOWE, .l 371 Madison Avenue, 1 ron, Ohio, B.A.-Politi Science, University of 4 ron, 195 1 . THEODORE ALAN LOB- SENZ, 10 West Parkway, Clifton, New Jersey, A.B.- lnternational Relations, Brown University, 1951. ALLARD KENNETH LO- WENSTEIN, 51 Dane Cir- cle, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, B.A. University of North Carolina, 1949. MARK HUME MC CC MACK, 1640 East Street, Chicago, Illinq B.A.-French, College of W liam and Mary, 1951. DEAN AMES MC CAL- LUM, 560 Ridge Road, Wetherslield, B.A.-Economics lege, 195 1 . JOHN WILLIAMS MC- GRATH, 199 Moore Ave- nue, Freeport, New York, B.A. Amherst College, 1951. Connecticut. , Trinity Col- BIRNEY JENNISON M13 CHANT, 1627 We Avenue, Evanston, Illini A.B.-History, Princeton U versity, 1949. WILLIAM ALEXANDER MACOMBER, JR., 1 1 School Street. Augusta, Maine, B,A.-Mathematics, Yale University, 1951. iUL MARKS, 2139 'and Avenue, Bronx, New ark, B.A.-History, New rrk University, 1951. H. DAWSON MARTIN. 510 Lombardy Road, Drex- el Hill, Pennsylvania, B.A.- Economics. University of Pennsylvania, 1951. AIG MATHEWS, 4895 entangy Boulevard, Co- 'nbus Ohio B.A.-History, ile University 1951. JOHN BERNARD MAR- SHALL, Hughes Lane, Watchung, Plainfield, New Jersey, B.A. Yale Univer- sity, 1951. 1951. JEROME S. MATUS, North Conway, New Hampshire, B.A.-Government, University of Maine- 1951- as im' uw , . I JULIAN ISAAC MAZOR, 3601 Connecticut Avenue, N. W., Washington, D. C., B.A. Indiana University, 4 e Q P I? 1 I ft, ,ii ,J J ,,g tx lr xl J YA ' , ERALD J. MEHLMAN. I01-9th Avenue, N. W., 'ashingron, D. C., B.A. miversity of Michigan, 151. SIDNEY M. MILLER, 70 Central Avenue, New Haven, Connecticut, B.A.-Political Science, Brooklyn College, 1951. GLORIA DORA MESSING- -- 'in ER, 245 East 178 Street, New York, New York, B.A.- Government, Smith College, 1951. ERBERT MORRIS, 11 15 iuth LaPeer Drive, Los ngeles, California, B.A. niversity of California, 151. MARTIN LOUIS NIGRO. 33 Lewis Street, Greenwich, Connecticut, B.A.-English, Fairfield University, 1951. RICHARD STOUMEN NAIR, 108 Adams Street, New Britain, Connecticut, A.B.-Political Science, Bates College, 195 1. -IIRLEY LEWIS OAKES, Westbournef' Nassau, N. , Bahamas, B.A. Vassar mage, 1951. S T U A R T M O R T O N PALEY, 195 West 179 Street, New York, New York, B.A.-Business Admin- istration, Dartmouth Col- lege, 195 1 . THOMAS DANIEL O'BRl- EN III, 65 Fairfield Avenue, Holyoke, Massachusetts, B.A. -English, Yale University, 1951. 3 C i C f ff I 1 . f. K of 7 M ' V! ti 1 Mba., X, 1 t f lil fwiiimxfi-ff Y -5.2. 5.232 Is -225, 'w.,'. ' 3 nl E . f' 1 1 4 N. . 4 3 , I w .J m tg.. 21 1,6 ffl! ZS , ,rw It ,., -1. '-L.. .- 1 is l ,T TI, Agijo 1 E ,M -1 1 1 l IC' 4P 1 lRVlNG HAROLD PERL- MUTTER, 9702-25rd Ave- nue, East Elmhurst, New York, B.S.-Government and Public Law, Columbia Uni- versity, 1951. GEORGE NICHOLS RAINSFORD, Katonah, New York, B.A. University of Colorado, 1950. JAMES WARREN RICH- ARDSON, JR., Bogalusa, Louisiana, B.S. United States Military Academy, 1948. QVUW 'ir'- E-' X . ELLEN ASH PETERS, 290 Riverside Drive, New York, New York, B.A.-Economics, Swarthmore College, 1951. EZRA JACOB REGEN, 66 Denton Avenue, East Rocka- way. New York, B.A.-Jour- nalism, University of Ari- zona, 1951. HOWARD JACOB RIDG- WAY, JR., 7846 Forrest Avenue, Philadelphia, Penn- sylvania, B.C,S. Temple Uni- VCfSifY, l949a M.B.A. Tem- ple University, 1950. Y ll ez if J -. ,-'A' ,. - A 1 0.5, ' .sw-N .Z 'Uls- 73? ,sw JOHN F. PHELAN, JR., 56 White Street, Water- bury, Connecticut, A.B.- English, Holy Cross College, 1951. THOMAS FREDRICK REHME, 6557 Ridge Cir- cle, Cincinnati, Ohio, B.S.S. History and Government, Georgetown University, 1951. RICHARD HOWARD ROEMER, 320 West End Avenue. New York, New York, A.B.-International Re- lations, Brown University, 1951. 38 . . Vs, JOAN POTASHNICK, 925 Prospect Place, Brooklyn, New York, B.A.-History, New York University, 1951. E D W A R D J O S E P H REILLY, JR., 241 East Kings Highway, San An- tonio, Texas, B.S.-Finance, University of Pennsylvania, 1951. EDWARD ROOK, 510 University Avenue, Syracuse, New York, B.A.-Psychology, Syracuse University, 1951. RICHARD MARLIN Club Road, Rosslyn Carnegie, Pennsylvania Allegheny College, 1 STEPHEN REINH. 2320 Bowmont Driv Angeles, California, Government, Pomona versity, 1951. MORDECAI ROSEIN 1439 Ocean Avenue, lyn, New York, E ternational Relations, 1 University, 1951. 1 JOSEPH WIEDER SALUS, 614 South llth Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, A.B,-Economics. University EDWARD HENRY SCHIFF. 118 West 79th Street, New York, New York, A.B.-Poli' tical Science, Marshall Col- of Pennsylvania, 1951. lege, 1951- RICHARD ANSELL SCHATZ, 1550 Asylum Avenue, West Hartford, Connecticut, B.A. Amherst College, 1951. ALVIN HAROLD SCHUL- MAN, 141 East 3rd Street, New York, New York, A.B.- Latin, New York University, 1951. ANN LOUISE SCHULZ. 153 South Street, Auburn. New York, B.A.-Economics- Political Science, Vassar Col- lege, 1951. GERALD GIDEON SCHUL- SINGER, 80 Clinton Ave- nue, Newark, New jersey, B.A.-Economics, Swarthmore College, 1951. ROBERT W. SCULL, 16 Channel Road, South Port- land, Maine, A.B.-Econo- mics-History, Bowdoin Uni- versity, 1951. M A R VIN SEGAL. 729 Philadelphia, B.A. Have 1949. 1AUL SHILKOFF, 215 Nlational Boulevard, Long Beach, New York, A.B.vEco- tomics, New York Univer' ity, 1951. LEONARD ALVIN SHEFT. 1075 Grand Concourse, New York, New York. B. A.-Economics, New York University, 1951. BERNARD Snyder Avenue, Pennsylvania. rford College, FREDERICK S1 EGMUND. 2020 Albemarle Road, Brook- lyn New York, B.A. Gov- ernment, Brooklyn College, 1951. RICHARD AARON SIE- GAL, 5417 North Bernard Street, Chicago. Illinois, A. B.-Political Science, Antioch College, 1951. IICHARD SHERIDAN SIMMONS, 1088 Park Ave- nue, New York, New York, 3,A.-Economics, Princeton. I951. JOHN ANTHONY SMITH, 9358 Hollis Ct. Boulevard, Queens Village, New York, B.A. Yale University, 1951. DANIEL SINGER, 113 Howe Street, New Haven. Connecticut, A.B.-Political Science, Swarthmore College, l95l. WO' M J -Y, 2 Q: Rafi in 13 I I ' t .. I X j -, .. .. was . - I - J 21. ' :ffsayzlgii U- ini. Yr 'Y' W 4!'iii L ,pue- H as ti WILLIAM ELLERY SMITH, 185 Blake Road, Hamden, Connecticut, B.A. Harvard University, 1951. BRUCE MARVIN STI GATT, 485 Pelham Rc New Rochelle, New Yt B.A.-English, University Vermont, 1951. LEONARD MORTON SPERRY, JR., Los Angeles, California, B.A. Yale Uni- versity, 1951. BRUCE MORTON STEIN- BERG, 455 East Beech Szreet, Long Beach, New York, A,B.-Political Science, Syracuse University, 1951. STUART HENRY STOI 975 Walton Avenue, Bro New York, A.B.-Histt Syracuse University, 19 JAMES STOTTER, II 148 McCarty Drive, Beverly Hills, California, B.A.-His- tory, Yale University, 1951. HAROLD G. 110 Goodwin Avenue, New- ark, New Jersey, B.S.-For- eign Trade and Transporta- tion, New York University, 1950. STERLING. WILLIAM Schenectady lyn, New Y cal Science, lege, 1952. CAROLINE TAYLOR, 431 East 20 Street, New York, New B.A. Barnard College, CHADWICK TAYLOR, 4 Avenue, Bro ork, B.A. Pol Brooklyn C ARTHUR GERARD TEB- BENS, 32 Crocker Srreet, Rockville Centre, New York, B.S.-Industrial Administra- tion, Yale University, 1951. EREDRICK ALTON 'l BOUT, I5 Fordham Aven Wilmington, Delaware, B.-Economics, Duke Univ sity, 1951. HAROLD HILGARD TITT- MAN, III, U, S. Embassy, Lima, Peru, B.A. Yale Uni- versity, 1951. WILLIAM LEONARD VAN LENTEN, 652 Clear- mount Drive, Youngstown, Ohio, A.B.-History, Colum- bia University, 1951. JON WALTZ, 300 Wt Street, Delta, Ohio, B. Political Science, College Wooster, 1951. STANLEY PHILIP WAG- MAN, 438 Ocean Parkway, Brooklyn, New York, B.B. A.-Accounting, City College of New York, 1951. no- lov' AREL WESTERLING. ommeerweg 3 5 , Aalsmeer, he Netherlands, B.A.-Poli- :al Science, Colorado Col- ge, 1 9 5 0. C R A I G R I D D L E 'RlGHT, 314 South Rose- lle, Lima, Ohio, A.B.-Poli- :al Science, University of entucky, 1951, HARLES L. STEWART, L., 45 Carrol Avenue, Nor- ich, Connecticut, B.A., Am- :rst College, 1950. JOHN COBB WILLIAMS. 824 Boal Parkway, Winne- tka, Illinois, B.A.-Philoscr phy, Wesleyan University, 1951. A. JAMES WRISTON, JR., 2048 Nuuanu Avenue, Honolulu, Hawaii, B.A.-Eng- lish, Yale University, 1951. HARRIS LLEWELLYN WOOFORD, JR., 9 Wayside Lane, Scarsdale, New York, B.A. University of Chicago, 1948. MELVIN COHEN. 2187 Cruget Avenue, Bronx, New York, B.S.S.-Government, City College of New York, 1 51. LEONARD MORRISON HUGHES, 2840 South Vic- tor, Tulsa, Oklahoma, B.A. Stanford University, 1951. ALICE CATHERINE SCHUCK, 75 Corning Boule- vard, Corning, New York, B.A.-Political Science, Vassar College, 1951. FREDERICK WISEMAN. 98 Williston Road, Brighton, Massachusetts, B.A.-Political Science, Williams College, 19 51. ROBERT CARMINE ZAM- PANO, 20 South Street, East Haven, Connecticut, B. A.-History, Yale University, 1951. ROBERT WITTE, 711 Wal- ton Avenue, New York, New York, B.A.-English, New York University, 1951. HERBERT K. ZEARFOSS, 411 Queen Street, Northum- berland, Pennsylvania, A.B.- Social Sciences, Bucknell Uni- versity, 1951. Nor Pictured WALTER BRESLAV, JR., 1207 Valley Road, Fairfield, Connecticut, A.B. Yale Uni- versity, 1951. BURTON HARRINGTON HALL, 316 Glenside Road, South Orange, New Jersey, B.A.-Political Economics, Williams College, 1951. RICHARD JEROME IS- RAEL, 59 Rachel Street, Woonsocket, Rhode Island, A.B.-English, Brown Univer- sity, 1951. DAVID R. TILLINGHAST. Ridgefield Road, Wilton, Connecticut, A.B.-Philosophy, Brown University, 1951. B Y R D R O W L A N D BROWN, 744 Anaheim Street, Pittsburgh, Pennsyl- vania, B.A.-American Studies, Yale University, 1951. ROBERT BONTZCOU HAYNES, 1088 Park Ave- nue, New York, New York, B.A. Harvard University, 1950. MARVIN KATZ, 4449 Ger- mantown Avenue, Philadel- phia, Pennsylvania, B.A. Uni- versity of Pennsylvania, 1951. CHARLES RUMFORD WALKER, lll, 204 Prospect Street, New Haven, Connec- ticut, B.A.-History, Yale Uni- versity, 1951. PAYSON RICHARD WOLFF, Worthington, Min- nesota, B.S. Harvard Uni- versity, 1942. H. PETER STERN, 215 East 79th Street, New York, New York, B.A. Harvard University, 1950. ROBERT ALLEN BUR- MAN, 4347 Paddock Road, Cincinnati, Ohio, B.A.-Soci- ology, Yale University, 1950. ORLANDO STERLING HOBBS, 4 5 O9 Church Street, North Brentwood, Maryland, B.A. Dartmouth College, 195 1 . ALAN JEROME MOSCOV. 28-24th Street, Troy, New York, A.B.-Political Science, Syracuse University, 1951. SANDRA WEINSTEIN, 220 East 56 Street, Brooklyn, New York, B.A.-Economics, Vassar College, 1951. ,iibf 1,fJWf?KIMQy :gy Tad i lggtfmwfl fi 4 L ' W'f 'L ,ffflf - M . ? - , N .3 gg? . -' -,fr-:A Aff: ' 'f I xg, , . 6 - ia, , ,Nm 991 f1'i Q :pw f 1 ,amwsmeew-fwffff -- V 1. ,-v -- - --- v-- CLASS OF 1955 The Yale undergraduates have their Whiffenpoof Song, but the only sheep in the Law School are the lost ones that comprise the first year class. As they wandered the SLB halls in a dazed fashion, the mind of each was a phantasmagoria uncertainties: the mind-emptying moment when Mr. Muel1er's finger came to rest on his name in the class list, the awful uncertainty of a Torts examination, the first dry-mouthed May it please the Court that was addressed to the Moot Court justices. There were things like vested remainders subject to divestment, like Last Clear Chance, like the Rule in Shel1ey's Case, like Proximate Cause, like the dicta of Mr. Justice Cardozo, before which the brain fled whimpering. At some point each asked himself what abysmal error in judgment had involved him in a legal career. But the inventiveness of the first year student discovers way to blunt the pain. Music and voices in the lounge on a dance night, the clink of glasses in a room, evening expeditions across the Green to New Haven's Gay White Way. When, in spite of it all, the Law had to be looked squarely in the eye, there was a growing feeling of competence that even an experience with Mr. Countyman could not pulverize. By the end of the first year it sometimes even bordered on 11, rfb . wa, enthusiasm. ERNEST PETER ABELSON, 424 Oakdale Avenue, Chi- cago, Illinois, B.S.-Political Science, Northwestern Uni- versity, 1952. MORTIMER PARKER BARNES, 109 Edgefield Av- enue, Milford, Connecticut, A.B.-Economics, Brown Uni- versity, 1945. 5.h...,,,,..,. 'F . ,4 Aria' .QQ . Q: fi ii 5 X . : JOSEPH ROBERT APTER, 152 Diamond Street, New Haven, Connecticut, B.A.- Political Science, Yale Uni- versity, 1952. JOHN WELLINGTON BARTO, 2021 Park Road, Washington, D. C., A.B. Sociology, Dartmouth Col- lege. 195 2. il ' - .... Rgttief Jw.-. mr.-me THOMAS MICHAEL AR ON, 72-38 115 Street, For- est Hills, New York, B.A.- History, Weslyan University 1952. ROBERT WILLIAM BER- END, 80 Winthrop Street, Brooklyn, New York, A.B. History, New York Univer- sity, 1952. PATRICIA AUERBACH, 84 Hicks Lane, Great Neck, New York, B.A.-Political Science, University of Wis- consin, 1949. SARAH W. BIEDENHARN, 56 Homeland Terrace, Ham- den, Connecticut, B.A.-PoIi- tical Science, Wellesley Col- lege, 1950. GEORGE WILLIAM BAL- KIND, 11 Denman Place, Mt. Vernon, New York, B. A.-Political Science, Williams College, 1952. JOHN THOMAS BIEZUP, 84 Center Street, Kingston, Pennsylvania. B.A.-Marine Transportation, United States Merchant Marine Academy, 1951. 4---,. T -5 , . , . ...Ji 55351 fi .9-H' HOWARD DAVID BLANK, 263 West End Avenue, New York,, New York, A.B.-His- tory, Brown University, 1952. SETH OLDRIN LACY BRO- DY, 45 Seaside Avenue, Bridgeport, Connecticut, B. A.-European History, Yale University, 1950. LUCIAN C. CANEPA, Buck- ingham Apartments, Scars- dale, New York, B.E.-Elec- trical Engeering, Yale Uni- versity, 1950. JOHN MCGREGOR BLEW- ER, 17 East 89 Street, New York, New York, B.A.-Ori- ental Languages, Princeton University, 1952. BERNARD WALTER BROOKS, Marlboro, Ver- mont, B.A.-Histoty, Marlboro College, 1952. THOMAS NEELY CARRU- THERS, JR., 129 South Bat- lina, A.B. Woodrow Wilson tery, Charleston, South Caro- School of Public and Inter- national Affairs, Princeton University, 1950. JOSEPH BLONSKY, 270 Parkside Avenue, Brooklyn, New York, B.A.-History and Political Science, Alfred Uni- versity, 1952. RUSSELL FRANCIS BRU- NO, 114 East Main Street, Torrington, Connecticut, B. A.-English, Yale University, 1952. WILLIAM BERNARD CHASTEEN, 1902 Rivet Street, Pueblo, Colorado, B. A.-Economics, Yale Univer- sity, 1952. 44 DOLYN BRANSTON- COOK, 1528 Midland Ave- nue. Bronxville, New York, B.A.-Economics, Sarah Law- rence College, 1952. FRANK BERALL, 255 West 102 Street, New York, New York, B.S. Yale University, 1950. JOHN W. COLLERAN, I9 Ridgewood Avenue, Hamden, Connecticut, B.A.-Economics, Yale University, 1952. MURRY D. BROCHIN, 1 Lexington Avenue, Pass' New Jersey, B.A.-Histt Yale University, 1952. BARRY BRYAN, 27 Bro lawn Drive, Short Hills, h Jersey, B.A.-History, Y University, 1952. RICHARD BRUCE DI NENBERG, 27 Lotus Str, Cedarhurst, Long Island, IN York, A.B.-Political Scier Duke University, 1952. uBERT T. H, DAVID- N, 82 Remsen Street, xoklyn, New York, B.A.- Elish, Yale University, 5. RICHARD ARLING DICE, Marion, Iowa, B.A.-Econo- mics, Sate University of Iowa. 1950. WILLIAM HENRY DEMP- SEY, JR., Summit Avenue. New Ulm, Minnesota, A.B.- Political Science, University of Notre Dame, 1948. iVID MORTON DOL- INOS. 3817 Laurel Ave- 2, Brooklny, New York, I.A.-Accounting, College the City of New York, 52. KATHERINA S. GORDON ELKINS, 5001 North Rorer Street, Philadel- phia, Pennsylvania, B.S.-Eco- nomics, Temple University, 1952. SCHWAET- ZER DRESBACH, 101 West H5 Street, New York, New York, B.A.-Sociology, Tem- ple University, 1952. PBERT WILLIAM ERDOS. 5 North Marshall Street, irk, Pennsylvania, B.A.- Story, University of Penn- rvania, 1952. MARTIN R. FLUG, 27 E1- dert Street, New Haven, Con- necticut, A.B.-Economics, Harvard University, 1952. i JOEL MARTIN FEINBERG. 1 285 Central Park West, New ' York, New York, A.B.- American Studies, Amherst College, 195 2. QMES REUBEN FOSTER, '8 Vine Avenue, Highland 'k, Illinois, B.A.-Govern- nt, Trinity College, 1952. WILLIAM ROY GINS- BERG, 145-15 Bayside Ave- nue, Flushing, New York, Certif. English Studies-Eng- lish History and Government, University of Nottingham, England, 1951, B.A,-History, Antioch College, 1952. JOHN PHILIP FRAY JR., 162 Colony Street, Fairfield, Conecticut, A.B.-Government, Fairfield University, 1952. HIARLES SHERMAN IIGHT, JR., 530 East 86 eet, New York, New irk, B.A.-English, Yale iiversiry, 19 5 2. IRA AY HERTAN 115-05 J , Mayfair Road, Kew Gardens. New York, B.A.-Govern- ment, Indiana University, 1952. IAN BRUCE HART JR,, 332-25th Street, N. W., Canton, Ohio, A.B.-English, Mt. Union College, 1952. '7-Q... gy , ' f i'5f -'R , .221 - L , tw 3 .-, ALEXANDER PETER HOFFMANN, 19 Bucking- ham Street, Cambridge, Mass- achusetts, A.B.-Economics, University of California, 1950. ALEXANDER JAMES JAF- FURS, 903 Center Street, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, B. S.-Finance, University of Pennsylvania, 1952. THOMAS A. T. JACK, Litchfield, Connecticut, A.B. Yale University, 1952. JOHN STEPHEN JOHN- SON. JR., 70 Laughlin Ave- nue, New Haven, Connecti- cut, B.A. Yale University, 1952. LAWRENCE KAUFMAN, 3513 Overbrook Road, Pikes- ville, Maryland, A.B.-Amer- ican Civilization, Brown Uni- versity, 1952. PAUL STEPHEN KATCH- ER, 180-11 Tudor Road, Jamaica, New York, B.A. Queens College, 1952. RAYMOND WYANT KIN- ZIE, 2044 West 110 Place, Chicago, Illinois, B.A.-His- WILBUR JEROME LAND, 462 Westheld Avenue, Bridgeport, 1952. tory, Carleton College, 1952. EDWARD LABATON, 1946 -East 4 Street, Brooklyn, New York, B.B.A.-Econo- mic Analysis, College of the City of New York, 1952. PAUL EDMUND LEVEN- SON, 4 Everett Paine Boule- vard, Marblehead, Massachu- setts, B.A.-American Civiliza- tion, Brandeis University, NOEL ARNOLD LEVIN, 161 West 86 Street, New York, New York, B.A.-Poli- tical Science, Williams Col- lege, 1952. 1952. RICHARD DONALD LEVI- DOW, 41-50 78 Street, Jack- son Heights, New York, B. S.-Industrial and Labor Re- lations, Cornell University, 1952. STANTON LINCOLN LEVY, 44 High Street, Perth Amboy, New Jersey, B.S. Economics -- Accounting, University of Pennsylvania, 19 5 2. PATRICIA LYONS, 180 Fairview Avenue, Rutherford, New Jersey, B.A.-English Ifgeigiture, Wheaton College, 5 . . JAMES BURROGHS LYON, 25 Bishop Road, West Hart- ford, Connecticut, B.A.-His- tory, Amherst College, 1952. 'a in .Q - VIL 'of' ff, 'E' apo' METCALF MC- LL, 1115 Forest Road, od, Ohio, A.B. Co- University, 1952. AS FOWLER NEL- Lucas Point, Old ich, Connecticut, B. :ical Science, Amherst , 1952. JR E. OTTEN, JR., Vest Grimsby Road, 2, New York, B.A.- phy, Political Science, Jn College, 1952. EDWARD HUGH MC GEE. 8110 North 6th Street, Allen- town, Pennsylvania, B.A.- Government, Lehigh Univer- sity, 1952. GEORGE CHRISTIAN NEWLIN, 8 Heathcote Road. Scarsdale, New York, A.B.- Special Program in Human- ities, Music, History, Prince- ton University, 1952. JAMES COVINGTON PAR- HAM, JR., 1 East Charlotte Avenue, Sumter, South Caro- lina, A.B.-History, Prince- ton University, 1952. PALMER SCOTT MCGEE, JR., 706 East Main Street, Roaring Spring, Pennsylvania, B.A.-Political Science, Dick- inson College, 1943, B.S.- Military Science, United States Military Academy, 1945. LAWRENCE NEWMAN, 3433 DeKalb Avenue, New York, New York, A.B.-His- tory, Dartmouth College. 1952. RICHARD HANDLER PEL- Ll, 62-98 Saunders Street. Forest Hills, New York, B. A.-Political Science, Queens College, 1952. 47 JOSEPH JOHN MAGER, 219 North Street, Milford, Connecticut, A.B.-History, Dartmouth College, 1950. ARTHUR SEYMOUR OLICK, 808 Adee Avenue, New York, New York, B.A.- Government, Yale University, 1952. ANDREW SANTO POLI- TO, 540 Clifton Avenue. Newark, New Jersey, B.A.- History, The Johns Hop- kins University, 1952. CHARLES STANLEY MECHEM, JR., 209 West Washington Street, Nelson- ville, Ohio, A.B.-Govern- ment, Miami University of Ohio, 1952. ROBERT BRUCE ORR, 150 Hudson Street, Phillipsburg, New Jersey, B.A.-Govern- ment, Lafayette College, 1952. ARTHUR WYMAN PROC- TER, JR., 215 Loring Ave- nue, Pelham, New York, A. B.-Philosophy, Williams Col- lege, 1952. ERNEST PRUPIS, 277 Wil- liamson Avenue, Hillsdale, New Jersey, A.B. Brown University, 1952. WILLIAM DUDLEY BER- NARD RILEY, 8814 Dan- te Avenue, Chicago, Illinois, A.B.-English, University of Notre Dame, 1952. JACK BAER SCHMETTER- ER, 7227 Thomas Avenue, River Forest, Illinois, B.A.- Government and Internation- al Relations, Yale University, 1952. grin JOHN THOMAS QUINN, 5626 Massachusetts Avenue, N. W., Washington, D. C., A.B,-History, Georgetown University, 1952, MARION GORDON RO- BERTSON, 502 Highland Road, Lexington, Virginia, A.B. Washington and Lee University, 1950. SOL SCHREIBER, 731 Hege- man Avenue, Brooklyn, New York, B.A.-Political Science, College of the City of New York, 1952. if vi . X 1,2 . ,,. L. Emi. K L? s cr 'N-1 LEO JOSEPH RASKIND, 1208 South Plymouth Boule- vard, Los Angeles, Cali- fornia, A.B.-Economics, Uni- versity of California at Los Angeles, 19425 M.A. Uni- versity of Washington, 19493 Ph.D. London School of Economics, 1952. EDMUND THOMAS ROSS. 1721 Elm Street, Stratford, Connecticut, B.A.-History, Yale University, 1952. EDWIN MICHAEL SCHUR. 2 Knollwood Drive, Latch- mont, New York, B.A.-Poli- tical Science, Williams Col- lege, 1952. fauna.. iii' E s LYLE L. RICHMOND, JR.. 720 Roger Avenue, Kenil- worth, Illinois, B.A.-Govern- ment, Wesleyan University, 1952. ZDENEK SADILEK, 2319 Lincoln Street, Evanston, Il- linois, B.A. Northwestern University. 1952. DAVID E. SCHWAB, 860 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York, B.A.-Political Science, Bard College, 1952. DAVID PAUL RIC1 MANN, 3352 Perry Aver Bronx, New York, B.S. dustrial and Labor Relatii Cornell University, 1952 ELLEN SCHLIECHER, 4 West 163 Street, New Yq New York, B.A.-Econom Barnard College, 1952. l PAUL Y. SELIGSONJ East 86 Street, New Y New York, A.B.-Econon' Oberlin College, 1952. 5? ., nm f 1 I ., , 1 ' . 4 . , if , I jf -rf' . . V , -. -' W ., .. I ' ,iffizikiifit 2 li ew. 1 . I . - , v w- 'HS . 'S We, 4 1' .. fs, f- ,f 11 02 - , - . tit-Mt. - ,. '- .-1--Q, 1- f -. ,f f if :vm -,safes-faf.. ,xt 4 --I e,.,5...4:5,,-, I -- - .. .4 .-.,.ia,i,..i fr.-fb ,fwfr .xv -ff . W, we 1 ., ff . 64 ,- , . Q , I ff' - 3 ARLES JAMES SERNS, J Mechanic Street, Jeffer- , Wisconsin. A,B. Liberal s - Industrial Relations, MONROE SILVERMAN. 1300 East 21 Street, Brook- lyn, New York. B.S. Psy- chology, Union College, iversity of Chicago, 1950. 1952. JEANNE SILVER, 530 South Compo Road, West- port, Connecticut, A.B. Eng- lish Literature, Brown Uni- versity, 1952. PHILIP SMITH, 5001 h Street, N.W., Wash- ion, D. C., A.B. English, umbia University, 1952. GORDON BERNARD SPI- VACK, 36 Carmel Street, New Haven, Connecticut, B.S. Economics, Yale Univer- sity, 1950. ARNOLD SPELLUN, 2888 Grand Concourse, New York, New York, B.A. Economics, Michigan State College, 1952, LVIN STEIN, 388 South Street, Brooklyn, New 'k, A.B. Social Sciences, lege of the City of New k, 1952. ALVIS LEE TINNIN, 12 Minerva Place, White Plains, New York, B.A. French, Carlton College, 1949. JAMES DONALD SUTTER, 53 Dunning Avenue, Web- ster, New York, A.B. Politi- cal Science, University of Michigan, 1952. LLIAM EDWARD TOO- CORNELIUS BUSHELL Y, 219 Chestnut Street. WATSON, JR., Box 525, yoke, Massachusetts, A.B. E. Wharf Road, Madison, nomics, University of Connecticut, B,S. Yale Uni- re Dame, 1952, versity, 1952. GERALD WALPIN, 1726 Davidson Avenue, Bronx, New York, B.A. Political Science, College of the City of New York, 1952. JART DAVID WECHS- 700 Ocean Avenue, oklyn. New York, B.S. keting, University of DAVID WEILD, Ill, 3823 Farragut Road, Brooklyn, New York, B.A. English, Yale University, 1952. nsylvania, 195 2. RUSSELL LEE WEHNER. JR., 1930 Niagara Street, Denver, Colorado, B.S. Yale University, 1952. .7 A T ,.,, ,,,, 3, g,.,, ,W W., -, , - . I , 45 'P I ' mg.- , 1. 4 , .V .. .1 ,., . - 'jgislm ig if ' se ' ii 7 iff ike f:'ff , J T E ' ' 1 5 If EF 1. ,.. ,..f ' TT' ' f-'ng 5' 1-9,31 2 ililgigg Os ,pu- I -hr' '- 'luv' ir Dr' Nu- Se ip' 49 A 'l,, . ,ov ,lf M STANLEY WEISS, 756 Brady Avenue, New York. New York, B.S. New York University, 1952. GEORGE CLIFFORD ZACH- ARY, 2276 Creston Avenue. New York, New York, B.A. Government, College of the City of New York, 1952. MALLIN CARPE, Putnam Valley, New York. B.A. Bennington College, 1951. DAVID ALAN DREXLER, 10 Byron Lane, Larchmont, New York, A.B. Business Administration, Dartmouth College, 1952. JOSEPH EDWARD EVANS. 148 Park Avenue, Wilkes- Barre, Pennslyvania, B.S. Economics, ' University of Pennslyvania. 1952. JOSEPH MYRON FIELD, 351 Mallwyd Road, Merion, Pennslyvania, B.A. Political Science, University of Penn- sylvania, 1952. WILLIAM EDWARD GLAD- STONE. 2501 Watkins Road, Birmingham 9, Ala- bama, A.B. English, Wash- ington and Lee University, 1952. DONALD LANDSMAN. 214-41 29th Avenue, Bay- side, New York, B.A. His- tory, Franklin and Marshall College, 1952. LAWRIiNCE WEITZER. 1111-'i Avenue J, Brooklyn, New York, B.A. Philosophy and Political Science, Brook- lyn College, 1952. EDWARD SHELLY BON- NIE, 18 Brownsboro Hill, Louisville, Kentucky, B.A. Yale University, 1952. KNO? PicluredJ RICHARD D. CUDAHY, 2-1115 E. Wyoming Place, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, B.S. Military Engineering, United States Military Academy, 19-IH. I FREDERICK H. DUNN- BIER, 1 184 Chapel Street, New Haven, Connecticut, B.A. Social Science, Michi- gan State College, 1952. ROBERT FAIN, 15 Astral Avenue. Providence, Rhode Island, A.B. Government, Harvard University, 1952, HOWARD DAVID GAL- PER, 5750 Lake Shore Drive, Chicago, Illinois, B.A. Eng- lish, Yale Ilniversity, 1952. DAVID RICHARD HAR- RISON, 259 Fox Meadow Road, Scarsdale, New York, B.A. Literature, Yale Univer- sity, 1952. GRANT C. LESCHIN. 40 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York. A.B. English, Amherst College, 1952. PAUL R. WELTCHEK. 1112 Coolidge Road, Elizabeth. New Jersey, B.A. Political Science. University of Ne- braska, 1950. PHILIP WELLINGTON CLARK, 114 Birchall Drive, Scarsdale. New York, B.A. Yale University, 1952. PAUL DAVIDOFF, 880 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York, B.A. History - Political Science, Allegheny College, 19 5 2. LOUISE DURFEE, 262 High- land Road, Tiverton, Rhode Island, A.B. Government, Connecticut College for Wo men, 1952. RICHARD ANDERSON FALK, 1 West 64 Street, New York, New York, B.S. University of Pennslyvania, 1952. MELVIN GITTLEMAN. 5500 Park Avenue, West New York, New Jersey, B.S. Economics, Ohio State Uni- versity, 1952. ISAAC HOWARD KAISER, -I-10 West Beech Street, Long Beach, New York, B.A. His- tory, Franklin and Marshall College, 1952. JUDSON LEWIS LEVIN. Franklin, Michigan, B.A. Economics, Bard College, 1952. EDWARD EARL WRIGHT, 436 South Pascagoula Street, Pascagoula, Mississippi, A.B. Philosophy, Tulane Univer- sity, 1951. HARRY LEWIS NEWMAN. 7831 Essex Avenue, Chicago. Illinois, B.S.M.E. Mechanical Engineering, Purdue Univer- sity, 1952. RALPH NORMAN MEN- DELSON, 3602-25th Street, San Francisco, California. B.A. Latin - American Area Studies, University of Minnesota, 1952. JAMES MADISON NAB- RIT, III, 530 College Street. N.W., Washington, D. C., A.B. Government, Bates Col- lege, 1952. HARLAN TRAGLE OLSON. 69 Plymouth Street, Mont- clair, New Jersey, A.B. Franklin and Marshall Col- lege, 1952. ROBERT CHARLES PER- RIN, 2201 Bryden Road, Columbus, Ohio, B.S. Gen- eral Business, Miami Univer- sity, 1952. ALEXANDER S. REIN- HARDT, 235 Sherman Ave- nue, New Haven, Connecti- cut, Dr. Jur.-Law. Peter Pax- many University of Buda- pest, Hungary, 1930. ROGER ANDREW WELCH. Fryeburg, Maine, A.B. Gov- ernment, Bowdoin College. 1952. ROBERT W. C. BROWN. 12 Wall Street, New Haven, Connecticut, B.A. Economics, Hobart College, 1949. J O H N N E W R I WRINKLE, 725 Dallas R Chattanooga, Tennessee, 1 Economics, Vanderbilt 1 versity, 1951. JAMES EVANS THO SON, Ewing, Kentucky, i Political Science, Unive of Kentucky, 1952. ALAN JEROME COH 59-A Garden Drive, Ros New Jersey. B.A. Yale 1 versity, 1951. DOUGLAS FRANKI WILLIAMSON, JR., Tr' North Carolina. A.B. Pc cal Science, Amherst ' lege, 1952. JOHN BELDING WI Clifton Avenue, Toms Ri New Jersey, B.A. Haver College, 1952. WILLIAM GEORGE ZA GLEIN, Hucklebarney 1 ners, Chester, New Jet B.A. Yale University, IE HAROLD J. ROTHW. 2526-63rd Street, Brook New York, B.A. Hist College of the City of I' York, 1952. ale lain bnhuul Qssnniatiun The purposes of the Yale Law School Association are to acquaint all Yale men in law with the progress of the School, to serve as a clearing house for suggestions from those interested in the development of the School, and to aid graduates in obtaining suitable positions. It is not necessary that members hold Yale law degrees, all Yale men in law are invited to become members of the Yale Law School Association. The classes of membership are as follows: Life membership, a single payment of 8200, including subscription to the Yale Law Journal. Memorial membership, a single payment of 3100. Supporting membership, including subscription to the Yale Law Journal, annually S25. Subscribing membership, including subscription to the Yale Law journal, annually 89.50, during the First three years after graduation 37.50. Annual membership, without the Yale Law journal, 33.00, during the first three years after graduation S1.00. OFFICERS AND COMMITTEES OF THE ASSOCIATION Chairman of the Executive Committee: XVILLIAM DEAN EMBREE, '02, '05L. President: Honorary President: SIDNEY W. DAVIDSON, '16, '18L. ARTHUR L. CORBIN, '99L. Treasurer: Vice-Presidents: GERHARD A. GESELL, '32, '35L. ANTHONY F. ARRAIA, '21, '23L, EDWIN F. BLAIR, '24, '28L, Seerctary: CARL H. MCCLURE, 3D, '39L. Excutive Committee: VYILLIAM DEAN EMBREE, '02, 05L. RoswELL L. GILPATRIC, '28, '31L. :XRTHUR W. CHAMBERS, '09L. KENNETH RusH, '32L. CHARLES E. CLARK, '11, '13L. P. CORBIN KOHN, '30, '33L. XXYILLIAM B. GUMRART, '15L. JAMES R. STEIVART, '31, '3-LL. SIDNEY VV. DAVIDSON, '16, '18L. ARTHUR E. PALMER, JR., '30, '35L. .XNTHUNY F. ARPAIA, '21, '23L. GERHARD A. GESELL, '32, '35L. IIAROLD S. SHEFELMAN, '25L. JOHN Q. TILsoN, JR., '33, '36L. ROBERT B. FISKE, '24, '26L. OSCAR M. RUEBHAUSEN, '37L. XVILLIAM T. CALDWELL, 26L. CHARLES P. WILLIAMSON, '34, '38L. CECIL F. TRAVIS, '26L. JONATHAN B. BINGHAM, '36, '39L. RICHARD JOYCE SMITH, '27L. LLOYD N. CUTLER, '36, '39L. l :DVVIN F. BLAIR, '24, '28L. CARL H. BICCLURE, 3D, '39L. BUIST M. ANDERSON, '29L. PETER H. DOMINICK, '37, '40L. IIENRY C. COKE, JR., '26, '29L. POTTER STEWART, '37, '41L. ROGER M. BLouGH, '31L. ARCHIE E. ALDRIGI-IT, JR., '48L. RICHARD H. LovELL, '48L. Honorary Members Executive Committee: EDWARD G. BUCKLAND, '89L. CHARLES SEYMOUR, '08 ARTHUR L. CORRIN, '99L. ASHDI-:L G. GULLIVER, '19, '22L. THOMAS W. SWAN, '00 WESLEY A. STURGES, '23L. RICHARD C. HUNT, '08L. FREDERICK C. HIcRs, '28 Hon. A. WHITNEY GRXSWOLD, '29 Committee on Memberships: Yale Low Llbfafy PIIWUW'-ff Chairman: JOHN Q. TTLSQN, JR, Chairman: ANTHONY F. ARPAIA 205 Church Street, New Havgn, Conn, Interstate Commerce Commission, Washington, D.C. Committee on Yale Law School Fund: Chairman: CARL H. MCCLURE, 3D 165 Broadway, New York, N.Y. 51 Q GRADUATE FELLOWS Graduate students in the Law School carry her influence around the world. It is hoped that students here may encourage understanding of American attitudes, and that American techniques may find useful application furthering world peace. To that end some forty graduate students have been working this year in the Law School. Many of them are law school professors in their own countries - Germany, India, England, France, Italy, Korea, the Philippines, as well as the United States. Thus our Alma Mater is breeding new generations of Policy Scientists, carry- ing the Gospel According to Harold to the farthest corners of the earth. What hath God wrought. YLVAN BROWN, 5339 hbert Avenue, Baltimore, 'yland, B.S. Biol0gY, Loy- College, 1948: LLB. versity of Maryland, 2. DRENTINO P. FELICI- O, 658 Pasajp Rosario, J, Manila, Philippines, . International Law, Uni- ity of the Philippines: 3. International Law, Uni- ity of the Philippines. tt U 5 .r 1 Y-21 RAIMUNDO SILVA CAV- ALCANTE, Senador Alen- car 1285, Fortaleza, Ceara. Brazil, LL.B. Faculdade de Direito do Ceara, 1947. FRANCIS VICTOR FLASKA, 2421 Wesley Avenue, Ber- wyn, Illinois, B.A. Univer- sity of Illinois, 1952, LLB. University of Illinois, 1934. if ,jar FREDERIC CHARTIER, 85 Rue de Sevres, Paris, France, Licence-Internatioinal Law, Paris University, 1947: Doc- torate-lnternational Law, Paris, University, 19525 Bar Ex- amination, Paris University, 1948. FRANCESCO GENTILE, Via Cappuccini 60, Torre del Greco, Italy, LL.B. Interna- tional Law, Naples Univer- sity, 1947. I f ' l Ii i' K, A Q, p , r it HARRY COHEN, 417 Focis Street, Metarie, New Orleans, Louisiana, B.A. Tulane Uni- versity, 1948g LLB. Tulane University, 1951. CONSTANTINE C. HAD- JIDIMOULAS, 53 F. Roose- velt Street, Salonica, Greece, Degree Economics, Highest School of Economics and Commercial Sciences, Athens, Greece, 1943, Degree Law, University of Salonica, Greece, 1946. WILTON HAROLD FAIR, P.O. Box 689, Tyler Texas, B.S.C. General Business, Southern Mehtodist Univer- sity, 1941, LLB. Southern Methodist University, 1947. GEORGE DENYS HUB- BARD, Nod Hill Road, Wil- ton, Connecticut, B.S. Har- vard University, 1945g LLB. Yale University, 1952. Ga x MAHABIR PERSHAD JAIN, 1719 Kucha Lattoo Shan, Dariba, Delhi, India, LL.B. Delhi University, 1945: I.L.M. Delhi University, 1947. T. G. T. LAWRENCE. 39 Melbury Court, London, Eng- land, B.A. Political Science, Oxford University. JOSE V. MELO, Calle H10- 79, Bogota, Columbia, B.A. Mayor Rosario University, 1945, LL.M. Mayor Rosario University, 1952. VBA, MARVIN MOSES KARPAT- KIN, Brooklyn, New York, B.A. Brooklyn College, 1949, LL.B. Yale University, 1952. TAI HEE LEE, 206 lst Ka Dongdaisinclong, Pusan, Ko- rea, LL.B. Law, Tohoku University, 1938. MASA-AKI OKA, 228, 1- Chome, Amanuma, Sugin- ami-Ku, Tokyo, Japan, LL.B. Public Law and Political Sci- ence, Tokyo University, 1952. DAVID R. KOCHERY, l 219 Atwater Avenue, Bloomington, Indiana, A.B. Law, Indiana University, 1946, J.D. Indiana Univer- sity. 1949. JUAN L. LUNA, JR., Col- lege of Law, University of the Philippines, Quezon City, Philippines, LL.B. Uni- versity of Philippines, 1948. WALTER PROBERT, 3138 N.E. 32nd Street, Portland, Oregon, J.D. Law, Univer- sity of Oregon, 1951. 54 Y WALTER R. KOEING, 5 Barenweg, Reinach BL, Switzerland, Dr. Jut. iDoc- tor of Lawj Law, Basel 1 Switzerland? University, 1948. HENRY G. MANNE, 2095 Poplar Avenue, Memphis, Tennessee, B.A. Economics, Vanderbilt University, 1950, J.D. Law, University of Chi- cago hw School, 1952. GREGORIO R. PURUGA- NAN, Dingras, Ilocos Notre, Philippines, A.B. Law, Uni- versity oi the Philippines, 19493 M.A. and LL.B. Law, University of the Philippines, 1952. SALVADOR H. LAUI 383 Orange Street, I Haven. Connecticut, I. University of Philipp 1952. JEROME MANNING. ' Sterling Street, Brool New York, B.A. Poli Science, 1950, LL.B. New York University, I' DAVID J. MANDEL, 62 Cromwell Crescent, Fi Hills, New York, B.A. I osophy, New York Un sity, 19503 LL.B. New ' University, 1952. .w?'0I'Ms. . JHN G. STEPHENSON. I, 528 Hardee Road, Coral ables, Florida, A.B. Clas- Zs, Princeton University, H13 LL.B. Harvard Univer- ty, 1934. HENRY T. TROETSCHEL. JR., 345 SW 26 Road, Mi- ami, Florida, A,B. English, History, University of Miami, 1946, LL.B. University of Miami, 1952. MAUNG NYUN TIN, 12. Martin Avenue, 6th Mile Rome Road, Rangoon, Bur- ma, B.A. English Lit. and Mathematics, University of Rangoon, 1946, LL.B. Uni- versity of Rangoon, 1949. DHN ROBERT WEST- KKE, 329 14 Street, South ethbridge, Alberta, B.A. niversity of Alberta, 1942, LB. University of Alberta, 943, LL.M. University of oronto, 1952. WOLFGANG P. ZIMMER- MANN, 13 Leopoldstrasse, Ludwigshafen, Rhein, Ger- many, Referendarexamen fLL.B.7 International and Commercial Law, University of Heidelberg, 1952. PHILIP K. YONGE, College of Law. University of Flor- ida, Gainesville, Florida, A.B. English, Washington and Lee University, 1939, LL.B. Uni- versity of Florida, 1942. Not Pictured WILBUR F. BOWKER, 10925 85 Avenue, Edmon- ton, Alberta, Canada, B.A. University of Alberta, 1950, LL.B. University of Alberta, 1932. OTTO C. H. KRAUSE, 81 Alivel Street, Bloemfontein, Union of South Africa, B.A. Latin and Roman Dutch Law, Stellenhosch University, 19493 B,A. Law, Oxford University, 1952, WILLIAM MCINTYRE LEWERS, 6115 Oak Street, Kansas City, Missouri, B.S. University of Illinois, 1949, ID, with Honors, Univer- sity of Illinois, 1950. DAVID E. NICHOLSON. 71 Cedar Street, Halifax, Nova Scotia, LL.B. Dalhousie University, 1952. JOSEPH W. R. PARKS, 18 Daniel Road, St. Louis 17, Missouri, B.S., B.A. Business Administration, Washington University, 19521 LL.B. Law, Washington University, 19521 B.A. Legal, Washington Uni- versity, 1952. JOHN N. SINGLETARY, 2560 Dalrymple Drive, Ba- ton Rouge. Louisiana, B.S. Louisiana State University, 19505 LL.B. Louisiana State University, 1952. ,Q 1 . :fs 11, ii,-, . 11 N M-iid 'fl--H 'f .5.5,- tr .- q ,E-.rx vw 7, N, any 1 .QTQI53 ' 'W' T 4 sw- 35?-'R' ,,gffl',.E1 ,, if pf' 55 ,xg x -H PRESENT ENJOYMENT any an ' j jj xxx . LN v ,magna A r I 'f f my ' if if . J, if 1. , , Q . funk, Y-la 1. X iv 'bd' fl ,rl 5,5 Q M ,, A THE STUDE T ASSOCIATIO To you, band of heroes, whose soles are scarred with service on the Board - wleze! The dark despair of the dance budget, the long grim struggle for fruit juice, the heady wine of minutes written, and fierce joy of a successful motion to table a motion to table: all these are gone, but they were yours. How can the others know what old wounds throb at certain names: Mr. Milano, Mrs. Hoefer, the Service Bureau, the Law Wives, Fred, the Front Office, the New York Practice Course. You were together, you know how it was, when the loud-voiced legions from the graduate schools came up against us in the Dining Hall, fierce and hungry. If fortune should bring two of you again together, murmur garbage cans - and old pain makes you brothers. Gather around you your children's children, and tell them of the ladies' fire escapes, or the suggestion box without a key. They will marvel, but they can never understand. A long farewell, brave men and women, remember all these things, and shun government. 101 dl ll l, 'Ill 0 -1 . If ' W 2 s 4 Sul? Q l 4 x f S is STUDENT ASSOCIATION EXECUTIVE BOARD, FALL TERM QLeft to rightjz Z. Batshaw CSCC'yD, H. Sterling Ctreas.J, j. Rosenzweig Cpresj, T. Hackett fv. pres.J, A. Hooker, R. Epstein, M. Robertson, H. Newman. STUDENT ASSOCIATION EXECUTIVE BOARD, SPRING TERM fNot Picturedjz S. Keith Cpres.J, C. Fraser Cv. pres.J, H. Sterling Ctreas.j, S. Wool Csec'y.J, T. Fort, N. Feinstein, A. Lowenstein, B. Bernhard, A. Proctor, J. Barto, H. Newman, L. Durfee. 58 -M12 H, THE L W JOUR AL ff r r iifkfn fl? 31 'IV 5 T To some, perhaps to many, the Yale Law Journal is a grey bound magazine with blue type across the front. Something you can see and touch. It is perhaps the collection of more or less legal writings that comes out more or less eight times a year, duly mailed to a more or less unfelt, more or less reading audience: a collection of footnotes to read, or if one is in the habit of reading slowly or out loud, the narrow block of printing above the footnotes. But to those who put it out, the Journal is not a magazine. The magazine is more the result of the journal than the journal itself. The journal is a process. It is the process of tending a large and inconsiderate animal. The outstanding feature of the animal is its appetite. The beast is sustained by a bottomless quantity of words, each carefully trimmed and Htted together to make a fatless, if often spiceless meal. Remarkably, the beast has a certain charm, for all the exasperation which the constant foraging and preparation of sustenance causes the caretakers. It has shape and personality, the journal, and these the caretakers come to know, and with the knowing grows a certain loyalty, a certain devotion to the beast. Admittedly, its friendliness and gratitude and somewhat concealed under the tyranical domination it exercizes over those who would meet its dietary demands. It is the purposes of the beast's existence which gives it its attraction. Partly, of course, its purposes is solely continued, healthy existence so that those who pause to examine it may remark on the sleekness of its coat, the fme precision of its gait. Partly too, the reflection of its glory upon its caretakers justifies the life of the beast. But the real purpose of the beast's existence, is to force, by the very excess of its demands, a kind of work from those who would feed it which will nourish the feeders as well as the fed. I Editors W. R. Murphy, J. Simon, E. Rubenstein and S. Iaw contemplating food for the beast, Fin! row: C. Fraser, A. Frommer, T. Caudle, W. Bradner, G. Berlstein, A. Heineman, M. Nessen. Second row: A. Hartzell, W. Delano, P. Craig, K. Dohnanyi, R. Kelton, J. Frommer, D. Bazelon, C. Bergoffen, J. Fassett. Third row: R. Uviller, A. Lerman, W. R. Murphy, E. Ruben- stein, J. Simon, S. Law. The Israeli consular ofhcial discussing his country's position in near Eastern politics. THE FORUM ' Under the leadership of jesse Margolin, the Yale Law Forum has explored new vistas in lectures. Lloyd Paul Stryker, a noted defense attorney, delivered a series of 13 lectures on various aspects of trial and appellate advocacy, drawing on his wide experience and that of other dilligent Demosthenians. The non-legal portion of the Forums fulminations were devoted to the theme of Positive Approaches to World Peace. The Middle East and its relation to world tensions was the topic of a talk by a representative of the Israeli govern- ment. Rom Landau, author of several works on Morocco, spoke of the repressive French colonial regime and of the nationalistic aims of the Moroccan native population. In February Ambassador Gaganvihari Metha of India explained his country's attitude toward the Cold War and other international problems. The well known author and banker, james P. Warburg, lectured on developments in United States foreign policy under the Eisenhower administration. yn Lloyd Paul Stryker pauses to make a point while ex- plaining court room tactics. Directors frrrt mu S Freeman j Margoli Second mu P Shilkoff E Wright D Bernstei I. Perlmutter '-- -- - wr THE YALE MOOT COURT Four views of this tradition encrusted institution: The catalogue: Training in appellate practice under the direction of a group of upper-term students with collaboration of the faculty and members of the bench and bar. E l Second semester student: How can they expect me to work so hard when Th' L I've just flnished exams and when, for all I know, I may've flunked out? Advisor: If I order a steak at Mory's, how many cocktails can I have? Director Cto Advisorjz In order to make the program run smoothly we must follow each last instruction and fill in completely each form. Alright, so why didn't you put the eraser back in the box marked eraser ? Fortunately everyone gets a free, cold brew or two to climax his labors: everyone, that is, but the catalogue. Foster Bam, Ed Benton and jim Got don busily preparing an evening per formance. Your tirst argument - and Your harden- Directors for the year were: R. Osborne, H. Barron, I.. Gordon, A. Benton, C. Harkrader. Opposing counsel approaching the bench to explain a questionable point to the Judge. X THOMAS SWAN BARRISTERS UNION While others played catscradle and wrote about the vertical integration of the oil industry, the Beef 'n Gin Society tried three cases of horizontal rape -- plus five other criminal and six civil cases. The atmosphere was glutinous with clotted blood, dew-eared counsel mutinous. But ageless justice triumphed and twelve defendants were freed. But the well-oiled machine ran in spite of itself and evil conquered good. Astute counsel unmercifully pruned the underbrush from hiring partners lured from their Wall Street factories. No Portia she, Miss Goldblatt dispensed with pants and opened to court and jury wrapped in Chanel No. 5. She won, but the People lost. Senor josephsberg, the famous South American seducer, successfully defended himself Cagainb D in a paternity suit on the grounds that every Tho-mas, Deeck, and Hairry savoired his beloved in addition to himself. With dirty hands and a bloody knife Witness Tinnen explained away the blood fand the murder rapj by shyly allowing that this knife was his jack of all - used to peel potatoes, slice apples, and cut personal corns. Thus it was with stout hearts and strong stomachs we muddled Justice. The defendent, accused of rape, apprehen- sively awaits the decision - acquitted? Patrolman Schiff explains the true nobility of New York's finest to the court. So why shouldn't I hit him if he lies? Prosecutor Fazzano displays bloody underclothes - but with infinite delicacy. Perhaps this will refresh your memory? Counsel elicits the details of the filthy attack, while the relentless prosecutor demands justice. Jail is not good enough for this brute . CORBEY COURT Corbey Court is an informal organization of about 150 law students, who can satisfy their gastronomic values under the efficient administration of Max Hoefer. Today the little house on Wall Street is pretty overcrowded in the winter season, but in April and May the adjoining patio is opened up, and graduates- to-be eat under spring sunshine and gaily-colored umbrellas, discussing the com- ing Bar exams and the few girls they know who are old enough to vote. Corbey also holds occasional dances on football weekends, which emphasize staying power above all, the participants making up in volume what a three- piece orchestra lacks. Dances, and other sedentary activities effectively divert the members' attention from the unpleasant fact that the statute of limitations on the 1890 furnace has run . . . the whole building is likely to go up in a puff of smoke any day now. Corbey Officers: Fin! row: W, Barton, C. Fraser. Second faux' D. Allen, J. McGrath, R. Laven- der, D. Klinges. Max watching his charges, as they reify their gastronomic values. PHI ALPHA DELT It has been said year-in and year-out that the only activity of the Paddys is beer drinking, This is a canard of the basest order - there is indisputable evidence that in addition, they munch pretzels while consuming said beer. Admittedly, the range of endeavor, beyond these strenuous activities, is somewhat limited, but they did manage to send a delegate to their national convention this year, just to prove to those worthies that they had not seccumbed to barbarian in- fluences. This emissary returned with the startling news that PAD was celebrating its golden anniversary year, and in a fitting nocturnal seance, call to celebrate, this momentous occasion, it was decided that it was time for the local chapter to really do something. Prostrated by this near brush with constructive activity, the members left it at that and returned to their beer and pretzels. Phi Alpha Delta Ofhcers: Front 'faux' j. Endi- cott, R. Joyce. Rear mir: C. Hofifhaus, L. Kirk- land, W. Parsons. PHI DELTA PHI Phi Delta Phi is the oldest legal fraternity at Yale. The local brotherhood meets at Mory's to reify things - such as the inroads made into the knotty pretzel business by the vertical integration of the powerful straight pretzel cartel. The discus- sions are occasionally accompanied by liquid refreshment and it is rumored that individual standing in the chapter is measured more by capacity than by his contribution to the discussions. These tireless topers have hundreds of secrets, but unfor- tunately or for that matter, fortunately, no one seems to be able to recall any of them, The sole tradition of the chapter is a rather moth-eaten, but highly revered old, stuffed owl, which was contributed in lieu of dues by a member of the class of '96 for was it '06?J. 65 fr Phi Delta Phi's Officers: D. Allen, D. Klinges, T. Caudle and J. Hicks. XXX M LEGAL AID ASSOCIATIO because it is the only organization which, by hook or crook, manages to offer up real live people to be sacrificed on the alter of legal education. The better to carry out this scheme, the Association deployed it's forces, sending its operatives into every legal field. One large contingent spent the year romping around in their newly redecorated Municipal Legal Aid Bureau. Some of the older hands were so - 6 taken aback by all the new glitter and glamour - and by the fact that the age of Cooneyism had really passed - that they wandered about aimlessly and were mistaken for clients by JN n 1 L f' f The popularity of the Association's activities continued apace this year - largely L lf 1, iw N N .K Q some of the bright-eyed newcomers. Only the quick intervention of Miss Bosse saved the day. 'Q v ld, A second group, operating under the euphonious alias of Public Defenders, divided their time between clandestine meetings to foster a crime wave in New Haven and mutual hate sessions when these plans went awry and they had no criminals to Cmisj advise. A specially trained cadre took over the difficult task of properly confusing persons from surrounding areas who had the affrontery to pester the Association with requests for memos. Brandeis briefs were promptly whipped up for all requests, the highlight of the season being a monumental memo on artificial insemination. Three minutes for this question: There once was a teacher named Fred Who wished that Felix were dead. 1- Said the court is so lax I was ,- In these matters of tax f ,, 1 , ' A . fComplete in twenty-five words or less.l ' , -nz Legal Aid Directors: Front row: J. Rosen- sweig, C. Hoffhaus, R. Miller. Rear row: K. Eppler, R. Lissner, R. Lemer, Y. Chambers. Where in the world but in America? 31111175 mlinmliimz larsl lrmx l M-,uf W Y Y Xfi wx, . 7 'av 9? ll' T Y ,,, THE OVERSEXTETTE Institutionalization of the shower-room singing, which reverberates thru the inner court-yard so often in the fall and spring took place in the spring of 1948 with the emergence of the Law School Oversextette, composed of about twelve men singing about four parts - simultaneously. The group now takes its place among other famous Yale singing organizations, consenting to render a few songs during the course of Student Association dances - but only after much strenuous urging on the part of dance committees. Since its humble origin, growing from a mere quartet formed over a few brews at George and Harry's, the group has made its fame known to as diverse institutions as Vassar and Smith and other whistle stops on the girls' college prom circuit. The Oversextette under the guidance of Concertmaster Bjorge still carries on the finest traditions of the barbershop quartet, only slightly sullied by the demands of the public. Concertmaster Bjorge, D. Lindsay, H. Zearfoss, D. McCallum, D, Zender, S. Sheats, G. Newlin, L. Sperry, E. Bonnie, G. Pratt, D. Tumin. foons. 67 Lydia taking her usual beat ing from Bjorge's Barroom Buf - -nf THE YALE LAW REPORTER Camera shy to the end, and replaced because of the need to fill up space by our man Hoflmans composite of the staff, we pay homage to the young ladies and gentlemen who shuffled this yearbook into its present, haphazard form. They labored to include in these pages all thats immaterial, irrelevant and incompetent in the abnormality of law school life. So carefully have these reporters searched into each arcanum of student life that, these pages reflect only the epistemic correlates of all that's transcendental, The Reporter Staff deserves endless glory for here mating deathless prose with death-like image. Harold G. Sterling Thomas R. Kerr John C. Williams Edward H. Schiff Sheldon Wool X Elliot Hoffman john Quinn Monte Lazarus W , J T Qgllll f ilbzzi X HQ 68 Editor-in-Chief Managing Editor Literary Editor Historical Editor Copy Editor Art Editor Business Manager Photography Editor Pictures Pictures MOST PEOPLE WANT TO SAVE MONEY When you need Law Books, the Yale Stu- dent Store, WHITLOCKS INC. is the place to go. l. Under contract with the Yale Law School Student Association, WHITLOCK'S is respon- sible for the operation of the Student Book Exchange. Under this plan, the student leaves his used texts with WHITLOCICS and specifies the price at which they are to be sold. The Student Store charges nothing for sales service. In this way, the law student may purchase texts at a large saving. 2. The Yale Student Store Profit Sharing Plan offers a 13.04 7. discount on all purchases. This is the highest discount offered by any store in the area. There is no membership fee at WHITLOCK'S. 3. WHITLOCK'S has the finest selection of stationery, books, greeting cards, typewriters, and records in New Haven. 4. When shopping in New Haven, re- member: 'A' YOUR DOLLAR BUYS MORE AT THE YALE STUDENT STORE 1304! MORE ir ill 0631! ESTABLISHED IDOO 15 BROADWAY 276 YORK NEW HAVEN MOVING STORING COHEN 81 POWELL, INC. 33 OLIVE STREET NEW HAVEN, CONN. Telephone UNiversity 5-3181 MORRIS WATSTEIN AT THE PIANO and his Orchestra FOR YOUR DANCES AND PARTIES Bert Wirher to the Yale Law School 23 CHURCH ST. NEW HAVEN, CONN. Phones: LO 2-8462 - LO 2-5566 C omplimentr 0f COCA COLA BOTTLING CO. NEW HAVEN, CONN. Compliment! of BO-MAR ENTERPRISES 67 GREENWAY STREET HAMDEN COFFEE MACHINES BOB ScHLossER JH 61611-0 ' f-0' f-01' 10'0f0N0v f01' G 510'0Wf610v0s?1700L?'061l?k72?s7010l006P01?0'l70K?6Y0'6N?001W'0N0K 2 5 E 5 5 S S 9 S 5 9 5 9 9 S 5 6 9 5 6 6 9 S 5 6 6 9 5 5 9 10152 Q THE LARGEST AND MOST COMPLETE S S STOCK OF LONG PLAYING RECORDS Fdggfd? Q IN THE STATE. S Take a drag! PAY CASH OR CHARGE-30W OFF LIST G CUTLER'S RECORD SHOP if 43 BROADWAY Q CIGARETTE MACHINES S 102 01 9 BOOKS 2 STATIONERY h SCHOOL SUPPLIES CIRCLE VENDORS, INC. S TOILETRIES 5 TYPING SERVICE MA 4-9006 All AT THE if CAMPUS SHOP 86 WALL STREET JOHN DELLA VALLE Tel. UN-51041 Open Evenings 8: Sundays 4016 101' 5 E 3 A 5 2 5 A 2 3 2 5 E 2 3 E, 'k Compliments Of C 0 R B EY C 0 U RT 'k 70 710N0N0P'0'10N?f0'l7402Q0N710210N76'47'0s02s0f17L0f401'0K7 lv wr . K. shop co-op - A YALE TRADITION FOR 67 YEARS - 15 You can save time by letting our special order department locate hard-to-find You can save trouble by letting our mailing department wrap and send your bulky You can save money by renewing your membership and ordering by mail after 5 E and out-of-print books. Q 2? 5 packages at a nominal charge. 37 graduation. o PAPERS NOTORIZED 3 o CHECKS CASHED YALE CO-OP SINCE 1885 L I G G E T T ' S THE LAWYERS DRUG STORE Drngf -- Tobacco - Food - Liquor TOP QUALITY LOW PRICE Lawyers Like Booze We've got it! McBIRNEY'S LIQUOR fNear Arenal 544 ORANGE UN 5-7055 ROSEY'S TAILORS Est. 1888 82 Wall St. Opp. Silliman College LO 2-8336 Altering - Repairing - Rewaterprooying Reweaving - Cbarnoise Elbow: COLD STORAGE Fur coatf, alpaca, blanketf, rugf, Jaitx and pillowi cleaned and Jtored Dernozbing Inrurance Irraed to Every Student xwwffawlovafawvoftatcmmtaoawtmeaviwiwwfawataviwfwwwifatovaoi S 6 S 5 E 2 5 43 17616117 101' '0'f01'-02f0f xy 63. 5 Who 3 Did ii? .4 I V I E'- f f- iw that snapped these handsome law students . . . it was our own Big Brownie. But, honestly, we had to take these pictures so fast it was like a movie reel! Imagine what we can do with a little more time! Thumb through these pages and pick out a pose you like. We'll make it look even better on you. Phone us for an appointment today. We do... portrait: application picture: Darfport and identihcation work SUTTON STUDIO 1241 CHAPEL STREET UN. 5-2361 THE BEST FOOD IN TOWN at AL and BARNEY'S RINGSIDE RESTAURANT JOE MILANO, JR. brings you Cookier, Candy, Gum, Fruit juicer and Cigarette! AMERICAN VENDING COMPANY CONVENIENCE: AS NEAR AS YOUR DOOR Have you checked our complete list of services? - LAUNDRY - CLEANING 8: PRESSING - MAGAZINES - N. Y. TIMES - N. Y. TRIBUNE - COURSE OUTLINES - STATIONERY - NOVELTY SALES - DRUG SUNDRIES - CAPS 8: GOWNS FOR GRADUATION ASSOCIATED STUDENT AGENCIES 137 WALL STREET EXT. 2446 S I E 5 9 6 5 5 9 9 9 5 2 E S 5 9 5 5 S 5 5 5 6 43 61617 '02 10f01f0'1040Q0N0'Y ' 101' G S H0N0X0K0'i0V04?476KQf?'JfQ1?k7fQ00f020W'6N?0X7270I0'6Y06N0'0'0'0K76x
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