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PRESIDENT  Wmn  POTTIR  BAKER 


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FOREWORD 

In  unemot-ional,  formal  type  ...  in  photographic   glimpses   .   .   .   must   this   scant 
re-lived,  and   memory   is   a    frivilous   lass  who  may  be  tantalizingly  reticent.     The 


.     .     Veiled  in  autumn  branches. 
Draper  Hall  awaits  the  hungry  diner. 


icord    be    transcribed.       Only    in     memory     can     this     unalterable     history     be 
ditors      present      this      book      as      a      pattern     for     a     diversity     of     memories. 


.     .     Goessman  Hall  .  .  scene  of  laboratory 
experimentation  by  aspiring  chemists. 


D  E  D  I  CAT  I O  N 


This  Index  is  dedicated  to  our  genial  Dean.  In  part,  it  is  a  recognition  of  twenty- 
five  years  of  faithful  service  just  completed  at  Massachusetts  State.  More,  however, 
it  is  on  expression  of  appreciation  on  the  part  of  the  student  body  for  the  friendly  and 
wise  counsel  he  has  given  down  through  the  years. 

It  has  been  the  good  fortune  of  the  college  that  Dean  Machmer  could  serve  it 
in  two  capacities,  both  as  instructor  and  administrator.  His  contagious  enthusiasm 
for  Mathematics,  his  favorite  subject,  coupled  with  an  unusual  knack  for  clear  presen- 
tation of  abstruse  principles  has  won  for  him  a  place  of  high  esteem  among  those 
students  who  have  been  fortunate  enough  to  sit  in  his  classes,  and  also  among  his 
fellows  of  the  teaching  profession.  His  friendly  and  sympathetic  interest  in  all  the 
problems  of  young  people,  on  the  other  hand,  his  patience,  wholesome  optimism  and 
sound  judgment  in  dealing  with  their  many  trying  situations  have  made  him  the  ideal 
choice  for  administrator  of  a  Dean's  Office.  Both  positions,  teacher  and  Dean,  have 
demanded  increasing  amounts  of  his  time,  thought,  and  energy.  To  both  he  has  ever 
been  loyal.  Continued  promotion  is  sufficient  evidence  of  his  success  in  carrying  on. 
Such  promotion,  however,  has  not  meant  the  leaving  of  one  position  for  another. 
Rather,  it  has  required  the  assumption  of  new  responsibilities  in  addition  to  the  many 
already  placed  upon  him. 

That  the  student  body  recognizes  and  appreciates  Dean  Machmer's  enviable 
traits  of  personality  and  untiring  efforts  in  behalf  of  Massachuetts  State  is  evidenced 
by  their  dedication  of  this,  their  1937  Index,  to  him. 

M.  0.  Lanphear 


FERNALD  HALL 


0,  see  the  infant  scientist 

and  how  he  cons  the  frogs  and  bees. 


FRENCH  HALL 


Arts  and  Agriculture  mingle, 
typifying  the  College. 


Temple  of  progress. 

Tribute  to  leadership. 
Tryst  of  students. 


W      ' 

t 

in 

¥--     " 

illi 

i 

IT 

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m  r '       M 

Night  offers  the  solace 

of  concert  and  drama  to  the  weary. 


When  New  England's  beauty  tints  the  campus 
with  spring  and  summer   .    .   .   then  students 
leave  their  books  for  love  and  laughter. 


Between  classes 


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an  invigorating  interval. 


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The  center 

of  student  administration 
and  recreation. 


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THE 
I  NDEX 


THE  TRUSTEES 

ORGANIZATION  OF  1937 
Members  of  the  Board 


MRS.  LOTTIE  A.  LEACH  of  Walpole 
JAMES  F.  BACON  of  Boston      . 
MRS.  LENA  EDGE  WILSON  of  Pittsfield 
HAROLD  L  FROST  of  Arlington 
DAVID  H.  BUTTRICK  of  Arlington      . 
DAVID  J.  MALCOLM  of  Charlemont 
JOHN  F.  GANNON  of  Pittsfield 
DAVIS  R.   DEWEY  of  Cambridge       . 
JOSEPH  W.  BARTLETT  of  Boston      . 
PHILIP. F.  WHITMORE  of  Sunderland 
JOHN  CHANDLER  of  Sterling  Junction 
FREDERICK  D.  GRIGGS  of  Springfield 
NATHANIEL  I.  BOWDITCH  of  Framingham 
WILLIAM  C.  MONAHAN  of  Framingham 


TERM  EXPIRES 
1937 
1937 
1938 


1939 
1940 
1940 
1941 
1941 
1942 
1942 
1943 
1943 


Members  Ex  Officio 

His  Excellency  CHARLES  F.  HURLEY  cf  Boston,  President 
HUGH  P.  BAKER,  President  of  the  College 

JAMES  G.  REARDON,  Commissioner  of  Education 

HOWARD  HAINES  MURPHY,  Commissioner  of  Agriculture 

Officers  of  the  Board  of  Trustees 

His  Excellency  CHARLES  F.  HURLEY,  Governor  of  the  Commonwealth 
NATHANIEL  I.  BOWDITCH  of  Framingham,  Vice-President 
ROBERT  D.  HAWLEY  of  Amherst,  Secretary 

FRED  C.  KENNEY  of  Amherst,  Treasurer 


[18] 


THE  ADMINISTRATION 

HUGH  POTTER  BAKER,  D.Oec,  LL.D.,  President 

Bom  1878.  B.  S.,  Michigan  State  College,  1901,  M.  F.,  Yale  University,  1904,0.  Oec,  University 
of  Munich,  1910,  LL.  D.,  Syracuse  University,  1933.  Spent  several  years  with  U.  S.  Forest  Service 
examining  public  lands  in  Central  Idaho,  Wyoming,  Nebraska;  field  studies  in  New  Mexico,  Washington, 
Oregon.  Assistant  Professor  of  Forestry,  Iowa  State  College,  1904-07.  Professor  of  Forestry,  Pennsyl- 
vania State  College,  1907-12.  Dean  and  Professor  of  Silviculture,  New  York  State  College  of  Forestry, 
1912-20.  Executive  Secretary,  American  Paper  and  Pulp  Association,  1920-28.  Manager  Trade  Asso- 
ciotion  Department,  Chamber  of  Commerce  of  the  United  States,  1928-30.  Dsan,  New  York  State 
College  of  Forestry,  Syracuse,  1930-33.  Fellow,  A.  A.  A.  S.,  F.  R.  G.  S.  (London).  Member,  2nd 
R.  0.  T.  C,  Fort  Sheridan,  Illinois,  August  —  November,  1917.  With  46th  Infantry  and  member  of 
General  Staff,  1917-19     Major,  O.  R.  C.     President  of  M.  S.  C,  1933-     . 

WILLIAM  L.  MACHMER,  A.M.,  Dean,  Member  of  the  Faculty 

FRED  C.  KENNEY,  Treasurer 

Born   1869.     Kappa  Epsilon. 

FRED  J.  SILVERS,  M.S.,  Director  of  the  Experiment  Station  and  Director  of  the 
Graduate  School 

Born  1880.  B.  Sc ,  University  of  Wisconsin,  1910.  M.  S.,  University  of  Wisconsin,  1924.  In- 
structor in  Soils,  University  of  Wisconsin,  1909-1912.  Agronomist,  Milwaukee  County  School  of  Agri- 
culture and  Domestic  Science,  1912-1913.  Superintendent,  1912-1917.  Professor  of  Soils,  State  College 
of  Washington,  1917-1928.  Member  of  the  American  Society  of  Agronomy,  American  Association  of 
University  Professors,  Irrigation  Institute,  International  Farm  Congress.  Fellow  American  Association  for 
the  Advancement  of  Science.  Director  of  Herman  Frasch  Foundation  for  Research  in  Agricultural  Chem- 
istry.    Theta  Chi,  Sigma  Xi,  Alpha  Zeta,  Phi  Kappa  Phi. 

MARSHALL  0.  LANPHEAR,  M.Sc,  Assistant  Dean  and  Professor  of  Freshman 
Orientation 

Born  1894.  B.Sc,  M  S.  C.  1918.  M.Sc,  M.  S.  C,  1926.  U.  S.  Army,  1918.  Instructor  in  Agri- 
culture, Mount  Hermon,  1919  Salesman  with  American  Agricultural  Chemicol  Co,  1919-21.  Instructor 
in  Agronomy,  M.  S.  C,  1921-24.  Member  of  Massachusetts  Soil  Survey  Party,  1922-25.  Assistant 
Professor  of  Agronomy,  M.  S.  C,  1925-26.  Assistant  Dean  and  Assistant  Professor  in  Charge  of  Fresh- 
man Orientation,  1927-36.     Professor,  1936-     .     Phi  Kappo  Phi.  Kappa  Sigmo, 


[19] 


ROLAND  H.  VERBECK,   B.S.,  Director  of  Short  Courses 

Born  1886.  B.  S,  M.  S.  C,  1908.  Principal  Petersham  (Mass.)  Agricultural  High  School,  1908- 
1910.  Headmaster  Parsonfield  (Maine)  Seminary,  1910-1916.  First  Lieutenant,  Air  Service,  Com- 
manding 281st  Aero  Squadron,  American  Expeditionary  Forces,  1917-1919.  Service  in  France,  1918- 
1919.  Director,  New  York  State  School  of  Agriculture  at  St.  Lawrence  University,  Canton,  N.  Y.,  1919- 
1924  .  Director  of  Short  Courses,  M.  S.  C,  1924-  Notional  Education  Association,  Harvard  Teacher's 

Association,   Phi   Sigma   Kappa. 

WILLARD  A.  MUNSON,  B.S.,  Director  of  Extension  Service 

Born  1881.  B.  S.,  M.  S.  C,  1905.  Partner,  Munson-Whitaker  Company,  1905-1907.  Farmer, 
1908-1915.  County  Agricultural  Agent,  1915-1920.  Director,  Division  Morkets,  Massachusetts  Depart- 
ment of  Agriculture,  1920-1926.  Director,  Massachusetts  Extension  Service,  M.  S.  C,  1926-  .  President, 
Massachusetts  Fruit  Growers  Association,  1919-1921.  President,  National  Association  of  State  Market- 
ing Officials,  1926.  President,  New  England  Research  Council  on  Marketing  and  Food  Supplies,  1923- 
1928.     Member,  Association  of  Land  Grant  Colleges.     Phi  Kappa  Phi,  Phi  Sigma  Kappa. 

ROBERT  D.  HAWLEY,  B.S.,  Secretary  of  the  College 

Born- 1895.  B.  S.,  M.  S.  C,  1920  as  of  1918.  Supervisor  of  Extension  Courses,  M.  S.  C,  1920-1921, 
1922-1924.  Extension  Editor,  1925-1926.  Secretary  of  the  College,  1926-  .  U.  S.  Army,  1917-1919. 
Second  Lieutenant  Infantry,  A.  E.  F.,  1918-1919.  Adelphia,  Phi  Sigma  Koppo.  Member,  Eastern  College 
Business  Officers'  Association. 

BASIL  B.  WOOD,  A.B.,  Libranan 

Born  1881.  A.  B.,  Brown,  1905.  Assistont  in  John  Crerar  Science  Library,  Chicago;  Reference 
Librarian,  Pittsfield  and  Springfield  Libraries,  Moss.  Assistant  in  three  camp  libraries  during  the  war. 
Librarian,  Public  Library,  Westerly,  R.  I.     Delta  Upsilon,  Phi  Beta  Kappa. 

GEORGE  E.  EMERY,  B.S.,  Field  Secretary 

Born  1904.     B.  S.,  M.  S.  C,  1924.     Assistant  Alumni  Secretary,  1929-     .     Sigma  Phi  Epsilon. 

FRANCIS  C.  PRAY,  M.S.,  Assistant  College  Editor 

Born  1909.     B.  S.,  M.  S.  C,  1931 .    M.  S.,  M.  S.  C,  1932.    Assistant  College  Editor,  1934-     . 


C20J 


PROFESSORS  EMERITI 

WILLIAM  P.  BROOKS,  Ph.D.,  D.Agr.,  Professor  of  Agriculture,  Emeritus 

B.  S.,  M.  S.  C,  1875.  Graduate  Student  in  Botany  and  Chemistry,  M.  S.  C,  1876.  Ph.  D.,  Halle, 
1897.  Honorary  Degree,  Nogoku  Hokushi,  Japanese  Department  of  Education,  1919,  Professor  of 
Agriculture,  1877-88.  Professor  of  Botany,  1880-83  and  1886-87,  Imperial  College  of  Agriculture,  Japan. 
Professor  of  Agriculture,  M,  S.  C,  1889-1908.  Lecturer  on  Agriculture,  1908-18.  President  and  ad 
interim,  M.  S.  C,  1903  and  1905-06.  Agnculturist,  M.  S,  C.  Experiment  Station,  1889-1921.  Director, 
M.  S.  C,  Experiment  Station,  1906-18.  Decorated  4'th  Order  of  the  Rising  Sun,  Japan,  1888.  Fellow, 
American  Association  for  the  Advancement  of  Science.  Member,  Association  of  Agriculture  Colleges 
and  Experiment  Stations.  Consulting  Agriculturist,  M,  S,  C.  Experiment  Station,  1918-21.  Member, 
Society  for  the  Promotion  of  Agriculture.  Member,  National  Health  League.  Member,  Massachusetts 
Forestry  Association.  Honorary  Member,  Educational  Society  of  Hokkaido,  Japan.  Contributed  to  2nd, 
3rd,  and  4th,  and  Editor  of  5th  and  6th  Annual  Reports,  Imperial  College  of  Agriculture,  Japan.  Con- 
tributed to  Massachusetts  Horticultural  Society  and  to  Agricultural  Reports  of  U.  S.  and  Massachusetts. 
Author,  "Agriculture",  "General  Agriculture,  Dairying,  and  Poultry  Farming." 

HENERY  T.  FERNALD,  Ph.D.,  Professor  of  Entomology,  Emeritus 

Born  1866.  B.  Sc,  University  of  Maine,  1885.  M.  S.,  University  of  Maine,  1888.  Graduate 
Student  at  Wesleyan  University,  1885-86.  Graduate  Student,  Johns  Hopkins  University,  1887-90. 
Ph.  D.,  Johns  Hopkins  University,  1890.  Professor  of  Zoology,  Penn.  State  College,  1890-99.  Stote 
Zoologist  of  Penn.,  1898-99.  Assistant  Professor  of  Entomology,  M.  S.  C.  Experiment  Station,  1910-30. 
Fellow,  American  Association  for  the  Advancement  of  Science.  Massachusetts  Nursery  Inspector, 
1902-18.  Director  of  Graduate  School,  M.  S.  C,  1927-30.  Professor  Emeritus  of  Entomology,  1930. 
Beta  Theta  Pi,  Phi  Kappa  Phi,  Phi  Beta  Kappa. 

JOSEPH  B.  LINDSEY,  Ph.D.,  Goessmon  Professor  of- Agricultural  Chemistry,  Emeritus 
Born  1862.  B.  S.,  M.  S.  C,  1883.  Chemist,  Massachusetts  State  Experiment  Station,  1883-85. 
Chemist,  L.  B.  Darling  Fertilizer  Co.,  Powtucket,  R.  I.,  1885-89,  Student  at  University  of  Gottingen, 
Germany,  1892-95.  M.  A.,  Ph.  D.,  University  of  Gottingen,  1891.  Student  at  Polytechnic  Institute, 
Zurich,  Switzerland,  1892,  Associate  Chemist,  M,  S,  C.  Experiment  Station,  1892-95,  In  charge  of 
the  Department  of  Feeds  and  Feeding,  Gotch  Experiment  Station,  1895-1907,  Chemist,  M,  S,  C, 
Experiment  Station,  1907,  Vice-Director  of  M,  S,  C,  Experiment  Station,  1911-28,  Goessmon  Professor 
of  Agricultural  Chemistry,  1911-  ,  Member  of  the  American  Chemical  Society,  Fellow  in  American 
Association  for  the  Advancement  of  Science,  Member  of  the  Americon  Society  of  Animal  Production, 
Member  of  the  American  Dairy  Association,     Alpha  Sigma  Phi,  Phi  Kappa  Phi, 

JOHN  E,  OSTRANDER,  Professor  of  Mathematics,  Emeritus 

Born  1865,  A,  B.  and  C,  E,,  Union  College,  1886,  Assistant  in  Sewer  construction,  West  Troy, 
N,  Y,,  1886,  Assistant  on  Construction,  Chicago,  St,  Paul,  and  Kansas  City  Railway,  1887,  A,  M,, 
Union  College,  1889,  Instructor  in  Civil  Engineering  and  Mechanic  Arts,  University  of  Idaho,  1892-97, 
Professor  of  Mathematics  and  Meterologist  at  Experiment  Station,  M,  S,  C,  1897-1928,  Member  of 
International  Commission  of  Teaching  Mathematics,  1900-11,     Phi  Kappa  Phi, 

DIVISION  OF  AGRICULTURE 

LUTHER  BANTA,  B,S.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Poultry  Husbandry 

B,  S,  C,  Cornell  University,  1915.  Heed  of  Department  of  Poultry  Husbandry,  New  York  State 
School  of  Agriculture,  1915-18,  at  Alfred  University.  Instructor  of  Poultry  Husbandry,  M,  S,  C,  1918-20, 
Assistont  Professor  of  Poultry  Husbondry,  M,  S,  C,  1920-  .  Summer  School,  University  of  Wisconsin, 
1930,     Poultry  Science  Association,     Sigma  Pi. 

ROLLIN  H,  BARRETT,  M,S,,  Assistant  Professor  of  Farm  Management 

Born  1891,  B,  Sc,  Connecticut  State  College,  1918,  Assistant  County  Agricultural  Agent, 
Hartford  County,  Connecticut,  1918-19,  Instructor,  Vermont  School  of  Agriculture,  1919-20;  Principal, 
1920-25,  M.  S,,  Cornell  University,  1926,  Assistant  Professor  of  Farm  Management,  M,  S,  C,  1926-  , 
Phi  Mu  Delta, 

LAWRENCE  S,  DICKINSON,  B,S,,  Assistant  Professor  of  Agronomy 

Born  1888,  B,  Sc,  M,  S,  C,  1910,  Superintendent  of  Grounds,  M,  S,  C,  1911-30,  Leave  of 
Absence,  1919.  Instructor  in  Horticulture  and  Superintendent  of  Greenhouses,  Walter  Reed  Hospital, 
Washington,  D,  C,  1919-20,  Assistant  Professor  of  Horticulture,  M  S,  C,  1923-31,  Business  Manager 
Academic  Activities,     Assistant  Professor  of  Agronomy,  M,  S,  C,  1931-     ,     Phi  Sigma  Koppo, 


[21] 


DIVISION  OF  AGRICULTURE 

WALTER  S.  EISENMENGER,  Ph.D.,  Research  Professor  of  Agronomy  and 

Head  of  Department  of  Agronomy 

Born  1887,  B  S,,  Bucknell  University,  1912.  M.  S.,  Bucknell  University,  1915.  A.  M.,  Columbio 
University,  1923,  Ph.  D,  Columbia  University,  1928.  Served  in  France  witli  Infantry  of  79th  Division 
and  Chemical  Warfare  Service.  Head  of  Department  of  Chemistry,  Albright  College.  1919-25.  Pro- 
fessor of  Biochemistry,  Florida  State  College,  1926-27.  Instructor  of  Biochemistry,  Hahnemann  Medical 
College,  1927-30.  Research  Professor  of  Agronomy,  M.  S.  C,  1930-  .  Heod  of  Department  of 
Agronomy,  M.  S.  C,  1934-  .  Member  of  American  Society  of  Agronomy,  American  Chemical  Society, 
American  Association  of  Plant  Physiology,  American  Association  for  Advancement  of  Science.  Lombdo 
Chi  Alpha. 

JOHN  N.  EVERSON,  M.S.,  Instructor  in  Agronomy 

Born  1887.  B.  S,,  M.  S.  C,  1910.  M.  S.,  M.  S.  C,  1936.  Member,  A.  C.  S.,  American  Society 
Agriculture.  Instructor  in  Sales  School,  Petroleum  Corporation,  Wood  River,  Illinois,  1910-28.  Chemist, 
Test  Department,  Georgia  Railroad,  1928-30.  Instructor  at  Sales  School,  Wood  River,  Illinois,  1930. 
Instructor  in  Organic  Chemistry  and  Assistant  to  Director,  Sales  School,  Shell  Petroleum  Corp..  Wood 
River,  Illinois,  1930-32.     Chemist,  M   S   C,  1934-     .     Instructor  in  Agronomy,  M.  S.  C,  1936-     . 

RICHARD  C.  FOLEY,  M.S.,  Assistant  Professor  in  Animal  Husbandry 

B.  Sc,  M.  S.  C,  1927.  M.  S.,  M.  S  C,  1931.  Instructor  in  Animal  Husbandry,  M.  S,  C,  1929-36. 
Assistant  Professor  in  Animal  Husbandry,  1936-     .     Sigma  Phi  Epsilon,  Phi  Kappa  Phi. 

JULIUS  H.  FRANDSEN,  M.S.A.,  Professor  of  Dairy  Industry  and  Head  of  Department 
Born  1877.  B.  S.  A.,  lowo  State  College,  1902.  M.  Sc ,  Iowa  Stote  College,  1904.  Assistant 
Station  Chemist,  Iowa  State  College,  1902-04.  Dairy  Chemist,  Hazelwood  Creamery,  Portland,  Oregon, 
1904-07.  Professor  of  Dairying,  University  of  Idaho,  1907-11.  Professor  of  Dairy  Husbandry,  University 
of  Nebraska,  1911-21.  Dairy  Editor  and  Counselor,  Copper  Farm  Publications,  1921-26.  Member, 
American  Dairy  Science  Association.  Member,  Society  for  Promotion  of  Agricultural  Science.  During 
V/ar,  Chairman,  Dairy  Food  Administration  Work  for  State  of  Nebraska.  Founded  and  for  ten  years 
Editor  of  Journal  of  Dairy  Science.  Professor  of  Dairy  Industry  and  Head  of  the  Department,  M.  S.  C, 
1926-         Gamma  Sigma  Delta,  Phi  Kappa  Phi. 

GUY  V.  GLATFELTER,  M.S.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Animal   Husbandry 

Personnel  Officer 

Born  1893.  B.  Sc,  Pennsylvania  State  College,  1919.  M.  S,  Iowa  State  College,  1920.  Teaching 
fellowship,  lowo  State  College,  1919-20.  Assistant  in  Animol  Husbandry,  lowo  State  College,  1920-21. 
Beef  Cattle  Specialist,  U.  S.  D.  A.,  Summer,  1922.  Assistant  Professor  of  An:mal  Husbandry,  M.  S.  C, 
1921-     .     Personnel  Officer,  Placement  Service,  1933.     Kappa  Sigma. 


[22} 


DIVISION  OF  AGRICULTURE 

JOHN  C.  GRAHAM,  B.S.Agr,,  Professor  of  Poultry  Husbandry  end 

Head  of  Department 

Milwaukee  State  Normal  School,  1894.  Student  ot  Chicago  University,  Summers  of  1894-98. 
Teachers'  Institute  work  in  Wisconsin,  1894-1907.  B.  Sc,  Agricultural  University  of  Wisconsin.  Asso- 
ciate Professor  of  Poultry  Husbandry,  M.  S.  C,  1911-14.  Professor  of  Poultry  Husbandry,  M.  S.  C, 
1914-  .  Member  of  the  American  Association  of  Investigators  and  Instructors  in  Poultry  Husbandry. 
Organizer  and  Director  of  the  Agricultural  Department  of  the  Red  Cross  Institute,  Baltimore,  Md.,  for 
the  Training  of  Blind  Soldiers,  1919-20,  while  on  leave  of  absence.  Fellow  of  Poultry  Science  Asso- 
ciation, 1935. 

CHRISTIAN  I.  GUNNESS,  B.S.,  Professor  of  Agncultural  Engineering  and 

Head  of  Deportment 

Born  1882.  B.  Sc,  North  Dakota  Agricultural  College,  1907.  Instructor  in  Mechanical  Engineer- 
ing, North  Dakota  Agricultural  College,  1907-12.  Superintendent  of  School  of  Tractioneering,  Laporte, 
Indiono,   1912-14.     Professor  of  Agricultural  Engineering,  M.  S.  C,   1914-  Phi   Kappa  Phi. 

JAMES  C.  HILLIER,  M.S.,  Instructor  in  Animal  Husbandry 

Born  1910.  B.  S,,  Iowa  State  College,  1934.  M.  S,,  Iowa  State  College,  1936.  Instructor  in 
Animal   Husbandry,   1936-     .     Member  Amencon  Society  of  Animol   Production.     Farm   House. 

BENJAMIN   ISGUR,  M.S.,   Instructor  in  Agronomy 

Born  1911.  B.  S.,  M,  S.  C,  1933.  M.  S.,  M.  S.  C,  1935.  Instructor  Winter  School,  M.  S.  C, 
1934-35.  Instructor  M.  S,  C,  1935.  Member  American  Society  of  Agronomy;  Member,  Society  of 
Plant  Physiologists.     Phi   Kappa  Phi. 

HARRY  LINDQUIST,  M.S.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Dairying 

Born  1895.  B.  Sc,  M.  S.  C,  1922.  Graduate  Assistant,  University  of  Maryland,  1924.  Baltimore 
City  Health  Department,  Summer,  1924.  Instructor,  University  of  Maryland,  1924-25.  Groduate 
Assistant,  Ohio  State  University,  1925-27.  Instructor  in  Doirying,  M.  S.  C,  1927-36.  Assistant  Pro- 
fessor of  Dairying,  M.  S.  C,  1936-     .     Kappa  Epsilon. 

ADRIAN  H.  LINDSEY,  Ph.D.,  Professor  of  Agricultural  Economics 

Born  1897.  B.  S.,  University  of  Illinois,  1922,  M.  S.,  Iowa  State  College,  1923.  Instructor  in 
Alabama  Polytechnicol  Institute,  1923-25.  Fellow  at  Iowa  State  College,  1925-26.  Northwestern 
University,  Summer,  1926.  University  of  Chicogo,  Summer,  1927.  Assistant  Professor,  Iowa  State  College, 
1926-29.  Ph.  D.,  Iowa  State  College,  1929.  Professor  of  Agncultural  Economics,  M.  S.  C,  1929-  . 
Head  of  the  Department,  1936.     Phi  Gamma  Mu. 

MERRILL  J.  MACK,  M.S.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Dairying 

Born  1902.  B.  Sc,  Pennsylvania  State  College,  1923.  Graduate  Assistont  in  Dairying,  M.  S.  C, 
1923-24.  Research  Fellow  in  Dairying,  University  of  Wisconsin,  1924-25.  M.  Sc,  University  of 
Wisconsin,  1925.  Instructor  in  Dairying,  M.  S.  C,  1925-27.  Assistant  Professor  of  Dairying,  1927-  . 
Alpha  Zeto,  Phi   Kappa  Phi. 

MINER  J.  MARKUSON,  B.S.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Agricultural  Engineering 

Born  1896.  B.  Sc,  of  Architecture,  University  of  Minnesota.  Assistant  Professor  of  Agricultural 
Engineering,  Virginia  Polytechnic  Institute.  Non-commissioned  Officer,  210th  Engineers,  10th  Division, 
U.  S.  Army,  1918-19.  Assistant  Professor  of  Agricultural  Engineering,  M,  S.  C,  1925-  .  Author  of 
"Soil  Management  for  Greenkeepers." 

JOHN   B.  NEWLON,   Instructor  in  Agricultural   Engineering 

Born  1884.  Instructor  in  Forge  Work,  M,  S.  C,  1919.  Special  Student  at  Massachusetts  Institute 
of  Technology,  1921,     Instructor  in  Agricultural  Engineering,  M.  S.  C,  1921-     . 

CLARENCE  H.  PARSONS,  M.S.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Animal  Husbandry  and 

Superintendent  of  Farm 

Born  1904,  B,  Sc,  M.  S.  C,  1927,  Manager  of  Farm,  1927-28,  Instructor  in  Animal  Husbandry, 
M,  S.  C,  1928-29.  Assistant  Professor  of  Animal  Husbandry  and  Superintendent  of  College  Farm, 
1931-     .     M.  S.,  M.  S-  C,   1933.     Member,  American  Society  of  Animal  Production,     Q,  T,  V. 

GEORGE  F.  PUSHEE,  Instructor  in  Agricultural  Engineering 

I.  C,  S,,  1906,  Teachers'  Training  Class,  Springfield,  1914-15.  Assistant  Foreman  and  Millwright, 
Mt.  Tom  Sulfide  Pulp  Mill,  1915-16.     Instructor  in  Agricultural  Engineering,  M.  S,  C,  1916-     . 


[23] 


DIVISION  OF  AGRICULTURE 

VICTOR  A.  RICE,  M.Agr.,  Professor  of  Animal  Husbandry;  Head  of  the  Department; 

Head  of  the  Division  of  Agriculture 

Born  1890.  B.  Sc,  North  Carolina  State  College,  1917,  M.  Agr.,  M.  S.  C,  1923.  Farm  Manager, 
1910-12.  Swine  Specialist  for  State  of  Massachusetts,  1916-19.  Professor  of  Animal  Husbandry, 
M.  S.  C,  1919-  .  Head  of  Division  of  Agriculture.  Phi  Kappa  Phi.  Publications:  "Breeding  and 
Improvement  of  Farm  Animals.". 

WILLIAM  C.  SANCTUARY,  M.S.,  Professor  of  Poultry  Husbandry 

Born  1888.  B.  S.,  M,  S  C,  1912,  Acting  Director  of  New  York  School  of  Agriculture,  1924-25. 
Professor  of  Poultry  Husbandry,  M,  S,  C,  1921  and  1925-     .     Kappa  Delta  Phi,  Theto  Chi. 

WILLIAM  H.  TAGUE,  B.S.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Agncultural  Engineering 

Born  1892.  B.  S.,  Agricultural  Engineering,  Iowa  State  College.  Assistant  Professor  of  Agricul- 
tural Engineering,  M.  S.  C,   1929-     . 

CHARLES  H.  THAYER,  Assistant  Professor  of  Agronomy 

Winter  School,  M.  S.  C,  1904.  Manager,  Brooke  Farm,  Amherst,  1908-13.  Manager,  Fillmore 
Farm,  Weston,  Mass.,  1913,  Assistant  in  Agronomy,  Winter  School,  1915,  1916,  1918,  Instructor  in 
Agronomy,  M.  S.  C,  1918-  .  Member  American  Society  of  Agronomy.  Assistant  Professor  of  Agronomy, 
M.  S.  C,  1936-     . 

JOHN  H.  VONDELL,   Instructor  in  Poultry  Husbandry  and  Foreman  Poultry  Plant 
Born    1898.      Instructor,    U.    S.    Veterans'    Bureau,    Baltimore,    1922-23.      Superintendent,    Poultry 
Plant,  M.  S.  C,   1923-29.     Superintendent  Poultry  Plant  and  Instructor  in  Poultry  Husbondry,  M.  S.  C, 
1929-     . 

DIVISION  OF  HOME  ECONOMICS 

MILDRED  BRIGGS,  M.S.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Home  Economics 

A.  B.,  DePouw  University,  1920.  M.  S.,  Iowa  State  College,  1925.  Instructor  in  Home  Economics, 
Upper  Iowa  University,  1920-23.  Graduate  Assistant,  Iowa  State  College,  1923-25.  Summer  School. 
University  of  Nebraska,  1927.  Instructor  and  Assistant  Professor  in  Home  Economics,  University  of 
Missouri,  1925-29.  Summer  School,  University  of  Texas,  1930.  Summer  School,  San  Jose  State  Teachers' 
College,   1931.     Assistant  Professor  of  Home  Economics,  M.  S.  C,   1931-     .     Kappa  Alpha  Theto. 

SARA  M.  COOLIDGE,  M.S.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Home  Economics 

B,  S.,  Michigan  State  College,  1924.  M.  S.,  Michigan  State  College,  1927.  Graduate  work. 
Universities  of  Chicago  and  Wisconsin,  Iowa  State  College.  Instructor  Muskegon  Hockey  Manual 
Training  School,  1915-22.  instructor,  Michigan  State  College,  1927-31.  Nutritionist,  Detroit  Doiry 
and  Food  Council,  1931-32.  Head  of  Home  Economics  Institute,  Detroit  Free  Press,  1932-33  Instructor, 
Chicago  Teachers'  College,  1933-34.  Assistant  Professor  of  Home  Economics,  West  Virginia,  Wesleyan 
College,  1934-35.     Assistant  Professor  of  Home  Economics,  M.  S.  C,  1935-     .     Sigma  Xi. 


[24} 


DIVISION  OF  HOME  ECONOMICS 

HELEN  S.  MITCHELL,  Ph.  D,  Research  Professor  of  Home  Economics 

Born  1895.  B.  A.,  Mount  Holyoke,  1917.  Ph.  D.,  Yale,  1921.  Director  Nulrition  Research, 
Battle  Creek  Sanitarium,  1921-29.  Professor  Physiology  and  Nutrition,  Bottle  Creek  College,  1924-35. 
Research  Professor  of  Home  Economics,  M.  S.  C,  1935-  .  Member  American  Society  Biological  Chemists, 
American  Dietetic  Association,  American  Institute  Nutrition,  Society  Experimental  Biology  and  Medicine, 
American  Home  Economics  Association,  Phi  Beta  Kappa,  Sigma  Xi.  Publications:  Co-author,  "Nutrition 
in  Health  and  Disease." 

HELEN  KNOWLTON,  M.A.,  Associate  Professor  of  Home  Economics 

A.  B.  Mount  Holyoke  College,  1903.  Instructor  Atlanta  University,  1903-05.  Teacher  in  High 
Schools,  1905-12.  Graduate  Student  and  Instructor,  Cornell  University,  1912-16.  Head  of  Home 
Economics,  Dean  of  Women,  New  Hampshire  State  College,  1916-18.  Y.W.C.A.  Secretary,  1919-24. 
M.  A.,  Teachers  College,  1924.    Professor  of  Home  Economics,  M.  S.  C,  1934.    Associate  Professor,  1935. 

EDNA  L.  SKINNER,  M.A.,  Professor  of  Home  Economics;  Head  of  Division; 

Advisor  of  Women 

Michigan  State  Normal  College,  1901.  B.  Sc,  Columbia  University,  1908.  Instructor  in  Teachers 
College,  Columbia  University,  1908-12.  James  Millikin  University,  1912-18.  Professor  of  Home  Econom- 
ics, Head  of  Department,  M.  S.  C,  1919-  .  M.  Ed.,  Michigan  State  Normal  College,  1922.  M.  A., 
Columbia  University,  1928.     Publications;     Co-author,  "The  Family  and  Its  Relotionships." 


DIVISION  OF  HORTICULTURE 

LYLE  L.  BLUNDELL,  B.S.,  Professor  of  Horticulture 

Born  1898.  B.  S.,  Iowa  State  College  of  Agriculture  and  Mechanic  Arts,  1924.  With  Olmsteod 
Brothers,  Landscape  Architects,  1923-31.  Professor  of  Horticulture,  M.  S.  C,  1931-  .  Gamma  Sigma 
Delto. 

WALTER  W.  CHENOWETH,  M.S.,  Professor  of  Horticultural  Manufactures  and 

Head  of  Department 

Born  1871.  A.  B.,  Valparaiso  University,  1902.  Assistant  in  Botany,  Valparaiso  University, 
1902-03.  Head  of  Department  of  Science,  Chillicothe  Normal  School,  Missouri,  1903-10.  Student  at 
Missouri  University,  1910-12.  Secretary  State  Board  of  Horticulture,  Missouri,  1912.  Instructor  in 
Pomology,  M.  S.  C,  1915-18.  Professor  of  Horticulture  Manufactures,  1918-  .  Alpha  Zeta,  Sigma  Xi., 
Phi  Kappa  Phi, 

JAMES  DILLON  CURTIS,  M.F.,  B.A.,  Instructor  in  Forestry 

Born  1905.  University  of  British  Columbia,  1929.  Bachelor  of  Applied  Science,  University  of 
British  Columbia,  1930.  M.  F.  Horvard,  1935.  Geodetic  Survey  of  Canada,  1924-26.  Bloedel,  Stewart 
and  Welch  Logging  Company,  1927.  Campbell  River  Timber  Co.,  1928.  Research  Division,  British 
Columbia  Forest  Service,  1929-32;  Surveys  Division,  1935.  Instructor  in  Forestry,  M.  S.  C,  1935-  . 
Member  Canadian  Society  of  Forest  Engineers,  Society  of  American  Foresters. 

ARTHUR  P.  FRENCH,  M.S.,  Professor  of  Pomology  and  Plant  Breeding 

B.  Sc,  Ohio  State  University,  1921.  M.  Sc,  M.  S.  C,  1923.  Investigator  in  Pomology,  M.  S.  C. 
Experiment  Station,  1921-23.  Instructor  in  Pomology,  M.  S.  C,  1923-28.  Assistant  Professor  in 
Pomology,  M.  S.  C,  1928-36.  Professor  of  Pomology  and  Plant  Breeding,  1936-  .  Alpha  Zeta,  Sigma  Xi, 
Alpha  Tau  Omega,   Phi   Kappa  Phi. 

ARTHUR  K.  HARRISON,  Professor  of  Landscape  Architecture 

Born  1872.  With  Warren  L.  Manning,  Landscape  Designer,  Boston,  acting  at  various  times  in 
charge  of  the  Surveying  and  Engineering  Departments  and  Drafting  Rooms,  1898-1911.  Instructor  in 
Landscape  Gardening,  M.  S,  C,  191 1-13.  Assistant  Professor  of  Landscape  Gardening,  M,  S.  C,  1913-33. 
Professor  of  Landscape  Gardening,  M.  S.  C,   1933-     . 

ROBERT  p.  HOLDSWORTH,  M.F.,  Professor  of  Forestry 

Born  1890.  B.  S.  in  Forestry,  Michigan  State  College,  1911.  M.  F.,  Yale  University,  1928. 
Royal  College  of  Forestry,  Stockholm,  Sweden,  1928-29.  Student  Assistant,  U.  S.  Forest  Service.  Kootenai 
National  Forest,  1911.  Forest  Assistant,  U.  S.  Forest  Service,  1912-13.  Administrative  Assistant  and 
Forest  Examiner,  in  charge  of  White  Top  Purchase  Area,  1913-14,  Secretary,  Stone  and  Downer  Compony, 
Boston,  1914-27.  Captain,  Infantry,  U.  S.  A.,  two  years.  Professor  of  Forestry,  University  of  Arkansas, 
1929-30.  Senior  Member  Society  of  American  Foresters.  Professor  of  Forestry,  M.  S.  C,  1930-  .  Phi 
Kappa  Phi. 


[25] 


DIVISION  OF  HORTICULTURE 

S.  CHURCH  HUBBARD,  Assistant  Professor  of  Floriculture 

Born  1891.  With  A,  N.  Pierson,  Inc.,  Cromwell,  Conn,,  as  Propagator,  Section  Foreman,  Roses, 
and  Superintendent  and  Salesman  of  Retail  Department,  1905-15.  Vice-President  and  Manager  of 
F.  W.  Fletcher,  Inc.,  Auburndale,  Moss,,  1915-16.  Superintendent  in  charge  of  Test  Grounds  of  American 
Rose  Society,  American  Peony  Society,  American  Iris  Society,  American  G!odiolus  Society,  and  American 
Sweet  Pea  Society,  at  Cornell  University,  1916-21.  Greenhouse  Foreman  and  Instructor  in  Floriculture, 
M.  S.  C,  1928-  ,  Assistant  Professor  of  Floriculture,  M,  S,  C,  1928-  .  Author  of  "Roses  and 
Their  Culture." 

WILLIAM  H.  LACHMAN,  M.S.,  Instructor  in  Olericulture 

,       Born   1912.     B.  S.,   Pennsylvania  State  College,   1934,     M,  S.,   Pennsylvania  State  College,   1936. 
Instructor  of  Olericulture,  M.  S.  C,  1936-     .    Gamma  Sigma  Delta,  Phi  Alpha  Xi. 

WALTER  A.  MACLINN,  M.S.,   Instructor  in  Horticultural  Manufactures 

Bom  1911.  B.  S.,  1933,  M.  S.  C,  M.  S.,  1935,  Oregon  State  College  and  M.  S.  C.  Research 
Fellow,  M  S.  C,  1934.  Research  Fellow,  Oregon  State  College,  1935.  Research  Fellow,  M.  S.  C ,  1936, 
Chemist,  The  Murray  Co.,  Boston,  Mass.  Instructor  in  Horticultural  Manufactures,  M.  S.  C,  1936-  . 
Theta  Chi. 

RUDOLPH  0.  MO.MOSMITH,  B.L.A.,  Instructor  in  Horticulture 

Born  1909.  B.  S,  Mississippi  Stote  College,  1929.  B  L  A.,  M.  S.  C,  1933.  Instructor  in  Horti- 
culture, Mississippi  State  College,  1929-30.  Assistant  Professor  1930-31.  Instructor  in  Horticulture, 
Massachusetts  State  College,  1935-     . 

J.  HARRY  RICH,  B.S.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Forestry 

Born  1888.  B.  S.  in  Forestry,  New  York  State  College  of  Forestry,  1913.  Assistant  Professor  of 
Forestry,  M.  S.  C,  1933-     .     Society  of  American  Foresters,  Sigma  Xi,  Pi  Koppo  Alpha. 

OLIVER  C.  ROBERTS,  B.S.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Pomology 

Born  1895.  B.  S.,  M.  S.  C,  1919.  Teacher  of  Agriculture,  West  Lebanon  Academy,  West  Lebanon, 
Maine,  1920-22.  Foremen  of  Pomology  Department,  1922-26.  Instructor  in  Pomology,  1926-35.  Assis- 
tant Professor  of  Pomology,  1935-     .    Theta  Chi. 

JAMES  ROBERTSON,  JR.,  B.A.,   Instructor  in  Landscape  Architecture 

Born  1906.  B.  A.,  Carnegie  Institute  of  Technology,  1930.  Instructor  in  Landscape  Architecture, 
M.  S.  C,  1930-     . 

DONALD  E.  ROSS,  B.S.,  Instructor  in  Floriculture  and  Greenhouse  Foreman 

Born  1896.  B.  S.,  M.  S.  C,  1925.  Instructor  in  Floriculture  and  Greenhouse  Foreman,  M.  S.  C, 
1928-     .    Alpha  Gamma  Rho. 


[26] 


DIVISION  OF  HORTICULTURE 

GRANT  B,  SNYDER,  M.S.,  Professor  of  Olericulture  and  Head  of  the  Department 

Born  at  Kitchener,  Ontario.  B.  S.  A.,  Toronto  University.  M  S.,  Michigan  State  College,  1931. 
Instructor  at  M.  S.  C,  1922.  Assistant  Professor  of  Olericulture,  1925-35.  Professor  and  Head  of  the 
Department,  1935-  Kappa  Epsilon. 

CLARK  L.  THAYER,  B.S.,  Professor  of  Floriculture  and  Head  of  the  Department 

Born  1890.  B.  S.,  M.  S.  C,  1913.  Groduote  Work  in  Floriculture  and  Plant  Breeding,  Cornell 
University,  1913-14.  Instructor  in  Floriculture,  Cornell  University,  1914-19.  Instructor  in  Floriculture, 
M.  S.  C,  Spring  Term,  1917.  Associate  Professor  and  Head  of  the  Department,  M.  S.  C,  1919-20. 
Professor  of  Floriculture  ond  Head  of  the  Department,  M  S.  C,  1920-  .  U.  S.  Army,  1918.  Alpha 
Gamma  Rho,  Phi  Koppa  Phi,  Pi  Alpha  Xi.     Publications:     "Spring  Flowering  Bulbs". 

REUBEN  E.  TRIPPENSEE,  Ph.D.,  Professor  of  Wild  Life  Management 

Born  1894.  B.  S.,  Michigan  State  College,  1920.  M.  S.,  University  of  Michigan,  1932.  Ph.  D, 
University  of  Michigan,  1934.  Farm  Superintendent,  Watkins  Form,  East  Lansing,  Michigan,  1920-24. 
Teacher  of  Biology,  Saginaw,  Michigan,  1924-31.  Teacher  of  Zoology  and  Wild  Life  Research,  University 
of  Michigan,  1931-34.  Wild  Life  Manager,  U.  S.  Forest  Service,  1934-36,  Professor  of  Wild  Life 
Management,   M.   S.   C,    1936-  Member,   Seminar   Botanicus.     Alpha   Zeto,   Phi   Sigma,   Sigma  Xi, 

Phi  Kappa_Phi. 

ALDEN  p.  TUTTLE,  M.S.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Vegetable  Gardening 

Born  1906.  B.  S.,  M,  S.  C,  1928.  M.  S.,  Pennsylvania  State  College,  1930.  Assistant  in  Vegetable 
Gardening,  Pennsylvania  State  College,  1928-29.  Graduate  Assistant  in  Vegetable  Gordening,  Penn- 
sylvania State  College,  1929-30.  Instructor  in  Vegetable  Gardening,  M.  S.  C,  1930-  .  Gamma 
Sigma  Delta. 

RALPH  A.  VanMETER,  Ph.D.,  Professor  of  Pomology;  Head  of  the  Division  of  Horti- 
culture, Head  of  Department  of  Pomology 

Born  1893.  B.  S.,  Ohio  State  University,  1917.  Extension  Specialist  in  Pomology,  M.  S.  C,  1917: 
Served  in  France  with  the  317th  Field  Signal  Batallion,  1918-19.  Assistant  Extension  Professor  of 
Pomology,  M.  S.  C,  1919-21.  Extension  Professor  of  Pomology,  1921-23.  Ph.  D.,  Cornell,  1935.  Heod 
of  the  Division  of  Horticulture,   1932-  Head  of  Department  of  Pomology.     Delta  Theto  Sigma,  Phi 

Kappa  Phi.     Publications:     "Bush  Fruit  Production". 

FRANK  A.  WAUGH,  M.S.,  D.Sc,  L.H.D.,  Professor  of  Landscape  Architecture  and 

Head  of  the  Department 

Born  1869.  Kansas  State  College,  1891.  Editor,  Agricultural  Department  of  the  Topeko  Capital, 
1891-92.  Editor  of  "Montana  Farm  and  Stock  Journal",  1892.  Editor,  "Denver  Field  and  Form", 
1892-93.  M.  S.,  Kansas  State  College,  1903.  Professor  of  Horticulture,  Oklahoma,  A.  and  M.  College, 
and  Horticulturist  of  the  Experiment  Station,  1893-95.  Graduate  Student,  Cornell  University,  1898-99. 
Professor  of  Horticulture,  University  of  Vermont,  and  State  Agricultural  College,  and  Horticulturist  of 
the  Experiment  Station,  1893-1902.  Horticultural  Editor  of  the  "Country  Gentleman",  1898-1911. 
Hospitont  in  the  Koenigliche  Goertner-Lehronstojlt,  Dahlem,  Berlin,  Germany,  1910.  Professor  of 
Horticulture  and  Landscape  Architecture  and  Head  of  the  Department,  Horticulturist  of  the  Hatch 
Experiment  Station,  M.  S.  C,  1902-  .  Captain  Sanitary  Corps,  Surgeon  General's  Office,  U.  S.  A., 
1918-19.     Koppa  Sigma,   Phi   Kappa  Phi. 


[27} 


DIVISION  OF  PHYSICAL  AND  BIOLOGICAL  SCIENCES 


Assistant  Professor 


918,     Assistant    in 
1913-17,     Curator, 


GEORGE  W,  ALDERMAN,  B,A,,  Assistant  Professor  of  Physics 

Born   1889.     A.   B.,  Williams  College,   1921,      Instructor  in  Physics,   1921-26, 
of  Physics,  M,  S,  C,  1926-     . 

CHARLES  p.  ALEXANDER,  Ph,D,,  Professor  of  Entomology 

Born  1889,  B,  Sc,  Cornell  University,  1913,  Ph,  D,,  Cornell  University, 
Biology  ond  Limnology,  Cornell,  1911-13.  Instructor  in  Natural  History,  Cornel 
The  Snow  Entomological  Collection,  University  of  Kansas,  1917-19.  Systematic  Entomologist  of  the 
Illinois  State  Natural  History  Survey  and  Instructor  at  the  University  of  Illinois,  1919-22.  Assistant 
Professor  of  Entomology,  M.  S.  C,  1922-30.  Professor  of  Entomology,  M.  S.  C,  1930-  .  Fellow, 
Entomological  Societies  of  America  and  London,  Member  of  Entomological  Society  of  France,  Member 
of  American  Association  for  the  Advancement  of  Science.    Sigma  Xi,  Alpha  Gamma  Rho,  Phi  Kappa  Phi, 

HAROLD  D.  BOUTELLE,  B.S.,  Ch.E.,  Assistant  Professor  in  Mathematics 

Born  1898.  B.  Sc,  Worcester  Polytechnic  Institute,  1920.  Ch.  E.,  W.  P.  I.,  1922.  Instructor  in 
Mathematics,  M.  S.  C,  1926-36.    Assistant  Professor,  1936-     . 

LEON  A.   BRADELY,  Ph.D.,  Professor  of  Bacteriology 

B. 'Sc,  Wesleyan  University,  1922.  Ph.  D.,  Yale  University,  1925.  Assistant  in  General  Bacter- 
iology, Yale  University,  1924-25.  Assistant  Professor  of  Bacteriology,  M.  S.  C,  1925-35.  Professor  of 
Bacteriology,  M.  S.  C,  1935-  .  American  Society  of  Bacteriologists.  American  Public  Health  Asso- 
ciation.    Beta  Theta  Pi,  Sigmo  Xi. 

EARLE  S.  CARPENTER,  M.S.,  Secretary  of  Extension  Service 

Born  1902.  B.  S,  M.  S.  C,  1924.  M.  S,,  Iowa  State  College,  1925.  Superintendent  of  Exhibits 
and  Extension  Courses,   1925-29.     Secretary  of  Extension  Service,   1929-     .     Alpha  Sigma  Phi. 

JOSEPH  S.  CHAMBERLIN,  Ph.D.,  Goessmon  Professor  of  Chemistry 

Born  1870.  B.  S.,  Iowa  State  College,  1890,  M,  S,,  Iowa  State  College,  1892.  Instructor  in 
Chemistry,  Iowa  State  College,  1894-97.  Ph.  D.,  Johns  Hopkins  University,  1899.  Instructor  in 
Chemistry,  Oberlin  College,  1899-1901.  Research  Assistant  to  Professor  Ira  Remsen,  Johns  Hopkins 
University,  1901,  Assistant  Chemist,  Bureau  of  Chemistry,  1901-08,  Chief  of  Cattle  Food  and  Grain 
Investigation  Laboratory,  Bureau  of  Chemistry,  1908-09.  Student  at  University  of  Berlin,  1909.  Asso- 
ciate Professor  of  Organic  and  Agricultural  Chemistry,  1908-13.  Professor  of  Organic  and  Agricultural 
Chemistry,  1913-  .  Head  of  Department,  1929-34.  Student  at  Oxford  University,  1930-31.  Goess- 
mon Professor,  1934. 

ORTON  L.  CLARK,  B.Sc,  Associate  Professor  of  Botany 

Born  1887.  B.  Sc,  M.  S.  C,  1908.  Teacher  of  Natural  Science,  Ethical  Culture  School,  New 
York  City,  1908-10.  Student  at  Columbia  University,  1909-10.  Student  at  the  Universities  of  Rostock- 
Munchen  and  Strassburg,  1911-13.  Assistant  in  Botany  at  the  University  of  Sfrassburg,  1912-13. 
Assistant  Physiologist,  M.  S.  C.  Experiment  Station,  1913-27.  Assistant  Professor  of  Botany,  M.  S.  C, 
1915-27.     Associate  Professor,   1927-  Phi  Sigma  Kappa 


[28] 


DIVISION  OF  PHYSICAL  AND  BIOLOGICAL  SCIENCES 

G.  CHESTER  CRAMPTON,  Ph.D.,  Professor  of  Insect  Morphology 

Born  1881.  A.  B.,  Princeton  University,  1904.  M.  S.,  Harvard,  1921.  M.  A.,  Cornell  ,1905. 
Student  at  Freiburg  and  Munich,  1907.  Ph.  D.,  Berlin  University,  1908.  Instructor  in  Biology,  Princeton 
University,  1908-10.  Professor  in  Entomology  and  Zoology,  South  Carolina  State  Agricultural  College, 
1910-11.  Assistant  Professor  of  Entomology,  M.  S.  C,  1911-15.  Professor  of  Insect  Morphology,  M.  S.  C, 
1915-     .     Phi  Beta  Kappa,  Phi  Kappa  Phi,  Kappa  Epsilon. 

WILLIAM  H.  DAVIS,  Ph.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Botany 

Pd.  B.,  New  York  State  Teochers'  College.  A.  B.,  Cornell  University.  M.  A.  and  Ph.  D.,  University 
of  Wisconsin.  Assistant  in  Science,  New  York  State  Teachers'  College  and  Cornell  University.  Pro- 
fessor of  Botany,  Nature  Study  and  Agriculture,  lowo  Stote  Teachers'  College.  Assistant  Professor  of 
Botony,  M.  S.  C,  1922-     .     Sigma  Xi. 

RICHARD  W.  FESSENDEN,  Ph.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Inorganic  Chemistry 

Bom  1902.  B.  Sc,  M.  S.  C,  1926.  M.  Sc,  M.  S.  C,  1928.  Ph.  D.,  Columbio  University,  1933. 
Assistant  in  Chemistry,  M.  S.  C,  1926-28.  Assistant  in  Chemistry,  Columbia  University,  1928-31. 
Assistant  Professor  of  Chemistry,  M.  S.  C,  1931-  .  Phi  Kappo  Phi,  Sigma,  Xi,  Pi  Lambda  Upsilon. 
Member,  American  Chemical  Society. 

GEORGE  E.  GAGE,  Ph.D.,  Professor  of  Bacteriology  and  Physiology  and 

Head  of  the  Department 

Born  1884.  B.  A.,  Clark  University,  1906.  A.  M.,  Yale  University,  1907.  Physiological  Chemist, 
Sodium  Benzoate  Investigation,  U.  S.  D.  A.,  1908.  Ph.  D.,  Yole  University,  1909.  Associate  Biologist, 
Maryland  Experiment  Stotion,  1909-10.  University  of  Michigan,  1910.  Social  Student  in  Pathology, 
University  of  Michigan,  Summer  of  1910.  Biologist  Maryland  Experiment  Station,  in  charge  of  Patho- 
logical Investigation.  Assistant  Professor  of  Animal  Pathology,  M.  S.  C,  1912-20.  U.  S.  Army,  Decem- 
ber, 1917-October,  1919.  Head  of  the  Department  of  Serology,  Centrol  Department  Laboratory, 
A,  E.  F.,  France,  1918-19.  Professor  of  Animal  Pathology  and  Head  of  the  Department  of  Veterinary 
Science  and  Animal  Pothology,  M.  S.  C,  1920-27.  Professor  of  Bocteriology  and  Physiology  and  Head 
of  the  Department,  1927-     .     Kappa  Phi,  Phi  Kappa  Phi. 

MARY  E.  GARVEY,  B.S.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Bacteriology 

Born  1896.  B.  S.,  M.  S.  C,  1919.  Instructor  in  Bacteriology,  M.  S.  C,  1921-35.  Assistant  Pro- 
fessor of  Bacteriology,  1935-     . 

CLARENCE  E.  GORDON,  Ph.  D.,  Professor  of  Zoology  and  Geology;  Head  of  the 
Department  of  Entomology,  Zoology  and  Geology;  Head  of  the  Division  of 
Physical  and  Biological  Sciences 

Born  1876.  B.  Sc,  M.  S.  C,  1901.  C.  S.  C,  Student,  Clark  University,  Summer  Sessions,  1901 
and  1903.  B.  SC,  Boston  University,  1903.  Science  Master,  Cushing  Academy,  1901-04.  Graduate 
Student  in  Zoology  and  Geology,  Columbia  University,  1904-05.  A.  M.,  Columbia  University,  1905. 
University  Fellow  in  Geology,  Columbia  University,  1905-06.  Ph.  D.,  Columbia  University,  1911. 
Assistant  Geologist,  New  York  Geological  Survey,  1906-09.  Assistant  Geologist,  Vermont  Geological 
Survey,  1912-32.  Assistant  Professor  of  Zoology  and  Geology,  M.  S.  C,  1906-12.  Professor  of  Zoology 
and  Geology,  1912-  .  Professor  of  Geology,  ad  interim,  Amherst  College,  1923-24.  Professor  of 
Biology,  ad  interim,  Amherst  College,  1924-25.  Fellow  of  the  American  Society  for  the  Advancement 
of  Science,  Fellow  of  the  Geological  Society  of  America.  Member  of  the  Paleontological  Society.  Phi 
Kappa  Phi,  Sigma  Xi. 

WALTER  H.  HODGE,  M.S.,   Instructor  in  Botany 

Born  1912.  A.  B.,  Clark  University,  1934.  M.  S.,  M.  S.  C,  1936.  Instructor  in  Botany,  1936-  . 
Kappa  Phi. 

JOHN  B.  LENTZ,  A.B.,  V.M.D.,  Professor  of  Veterinary  Science  and 

Head  of  the  Department 

Born  1887.  A.  B.,  Franklin  and  Marshall  College,  1908.  V.  M.  D.,  School  of  Veterinary  Medicine, 
University  of  Pennsylvania,  1914.  Teaching  and  Coaching  at  Franklin  and  Marshall  Academy,  1908-11. 
Assistant  Professor  of  Veterinary  Science,  ond  College  Veterinarian,  M.  S.  C,  1922-27.  Head  of  the 
Department,   1927-     .     Phi  Sigma  Kappo,  Phi   Kappa  Phi. 


[29] 


DIVISION  OF  PHYSICAL  AND  BIOLOGICAL  SCIENCES 

WILLIAM  L  MACHMER,  M.A.,  D.Ed,  Dean  of  the  College,   Professor  of  Mathe- 
matics and  Acting  Head  of  the  Department 

B.  E,  Keystone  State  Normal  School,  1901.  Teacher  in  the  Public  Schools,  1901-04.  A.  B., 
Franklin  and  Morsholl  College,  1907.  Head  of  the  Department  of  Mathematics,  Franklin  and  Marshall 
Academy,  1907-11.  A.  M.,  Franklin  and  Marshall  College,  1911.  D.  Ed.,  A.  I.  C,  1936.  Instructor 
in  Mathematics,  M.  S.  C,  1911-13;  Assistant  Professor  in  Mothemotics,  1913-19;  Associate  Professor 
of  Mathematics,  1919-20;  Professor  of  Mothemotics,  1920;  Assistant  Dean,  1920;  Acting  Dean,  1922-23; 
Acting  Dean  and  Registrar,  1923-25;  Dean,  1926-  .  Federal  Emergency  Demonstration  Agent  in 
Marketing,  1918-19.  Member  of  the  Survey  Staff  of  Land-Grant  Colleges,  1927-30.  Member  of  the 
New  England  College  Entronce  Certificote  Board,  1923-  .  Member  of  the  Advisory  Committee  of  the 
Eastern  Association  of  Deans  of  Men,  1935-  .  Phi  Beta  Kappa,  Phi  Kappa  Phi,  Pi  Gamma  Mu,  Alpha 
Sigma  Phi. 

GEORGE  A.  MARSTON,  M.S.,  Instructor  in  Mathematics 

Born  1908,  B,  Sc ,  Worcester  Polytechnic  Institute,  1930.  M.  S.,  University  of  Iowa,  1933. 
Research  Assistant,  University  of  Iowa,  1932-33.  Instructor  in  Mathematics,  M.  S.  C,  1933-  .  Junior 
Member  of  American  Society  of  Civil  Engineers.  Member  American  Geophysical  Union.  Sigma  Xi, 
Lambdo  Chi  Alpha. 

WALTER  McKINLEY  MILLER,  Ph.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Mathematics 

Born  1896.  Ph.  B.,  Lafayette,  1918.  M.  A.,  Pennsylvania  Stote  College,  1923.  Ph.  D.,  University 
of  Illinois,  1927.  Graduote  work,  Cornell,  1931.  Instructor,  Pennsylvania  State  College,  1920-23. 
Assistant,  University  of  Illinois,  1924-27.  Assistant  Professor  at  Bowdoin,  1927-29.  Assistant  Professor, 
Marquette  University,  1929-31.  Assistant  Professor  of  Mothemotics,  1931-35.  Assistant  Professor  of 
Mathematics,  M.  S.  C.,  1935-  .  Member,  American  Mothemoticol  Association,  American  Associotion  of 
University  Professors.     Phi  Beta  Kappa,  Phi  Kappa  Phi,  Sigma  Xi. 

FRANK  C.  MOORE,  A.B.,  Associate  Professor  of  Mathematics 

A.  B.,  Dartmouth  College,  1902,  Graduote  Student  at  Dartmouth,  1903  Graduate  Student  at 
Columbia  University,  1906.  Instructor  in  Mathematics,  Dartmouth  College,  1906-09.  Assistant  Pro- 
fessor, University  of  New  Hampshire,  1909-17.  Assistant  Professor  of  Mathematics,  M.  S.  C,  1918-33. 
Associate  Professor  of  Mathematics,  M.  S.  C,  19.^3-  .  Member  of  the  Mathematical  Association  of 
America.  Fellow  of  the  American  Association  for  the  Advancement  of  Science.  Chi  Phi,  Phi  Beta 
Kappa,  Phi  Kappa  Phi. 

MIRIAM  MORSE,  B.Sc,  M.Sc,  Instructor  in  Zoology 

B.  Sc,  St.  Lawrence  University,  1927.  High  School  Teocher,  1927-28.  Graduate  Assistant  in 
Entomology  'm.  S.  C,  1928-30.  M.  Sc,  M.  S.  C,  1930.  Technical  Assistant  in  Entomology  and  Zoology, 
1930-32,     Instructor  in  Zoology,  M.  S.  C,  1932-     .     Phi  Beta  Kappa,  Phi  Kappa  Phi. 

A.  VINCENT  OSMUN,  M.S.,  Professor  of  Botany  and  Head  of  the  Department 

Born  1880.  B.  Agr.,  Connecticut  State  College,  1900,  Assistant  Storrs  Agriculturol  Experiment 
Station,  1900-02,  B  Sc,  M.  S.  C,  and  Boston  University,  1903.  M.  Sc,  M.  S.  C,  1905.  Assistant  in 
Botany,  M.  S.  C,  1903-05.  Instructor  in  Botany,  M.  S.  C,  1905-07.  Assistant  Professor  in  Botany, 
1907-14.  Associate  Professor  of  Botany,  1914-16.  Acting  Professor  in  the  Department  of  Botony, 
M  S  C,  and  Experiment  Station,  1914-16.  Professor  of  Botany  and  Head  of  the  Department,  1916-  . 
Q.  T.  v..  Phi  Kappo  Phi. 

RANSOM  C.  PACKARD,  M.S.,  Vocational   Instructor  in  Bacteriology 

Born  1886,  B.  S,  A.,  University  of  Toronto,  1911.  M.  S.,  M.  S.  C,  1932.  Chief  Inspector,  Dairy 
Division,  City  of  Toronto,  1912.  Assistant  Soil  Bacteriologist,  North  Carolina  State  College,  1913. 
Instructor  in  Bacteriology,  M.  S.  C,  1927-     . 

ERNEST  MILFORD  PARROTT,  M.S.,  Instructor  in  Chemistry 

Born  1903.  B.  S.,  Union  University,  Jackson,  Tennessee,  1927.  M.  S.,  M.  S.  C,  1932.  Instructor 
in   Chemistry,   M.   S.   C,    1931-  Associate   Member  of   Division   of  Chemical   Education,   American 

Chemical  Society.     Science  Club.     Gamma  Sigmo  Epsilon,  Phi  Kappo  Phi. 

CHARLES  A.  PETERS,  Ph.D.,  Professor  of  Inorganic  and  Soil  Chemistry 

Born  1875  B  Sc,  M.  S.  C,  1897.  M.  Sc,  Boston  University,  1897.  Assistant  in  Chemistry, 
M.  S.  C,  1897-98.  Graduate  Student  in  Chemistry,  Yale  University,  1899-1901.  Ph.  D.,  Yo  e,  1901. 
Professor  of  Chemistry  and  Heod  of  the  Department,  University  of  Idaho,  1901-1909.  Student  at 
University  of  Berlin,  1908-10.  Exchange  Teocher,  Friedrichs  Wedersche  Oberreolschule,  1909-11.  Grad- 
uote Student,  Yale  University,  1910-11.  Assistant  Professor  of  Inorganic  and  Soil  Chemistry,  M.  S  C , 
191 1-12.  Associate  Professor  of  Inorganic  and  Soil  Chemistry,  M.  S.  C,  1912-16.  Professor  of  Inorgonic 
and  Soil  Chemistry,  M.  S.  C,  1916-  .  Alpha  Sigma  Phi,  Sigma  Xi,  Phi  Kappa  Phi.  Author  of  "The 
Preparation  of  Substances  Important  in  Agriculture." 


[30] 


DIVISION  OF  PHYSICAL  AND  BIOLOGICAL  SCIENCES 

WALLACE  F.  POWERS,  Ph.D.,  Professor  of  Physics  and  Head  of  the  Department 

A.  B.,  Clark  University,  1910.  A.  M.,  Clark  University,  1911.  Associate  Professor  of  Mathematics 
end  Physics,  University  of  Richmond,  1914-16.  Instructor  in  Physics,  Simmons  College,  1915-17.  In- 
structor in  Physics,  New  York  University,  1917-20.  Assistant  Professor  in  Physics,  Wesleyon  University, 
1930-25.  Professor  of  Physics  and  Head  of  the  Department,  M.  S.  C,  1925-  .  Papers  on:  "Experi- 
mental Study  of  Transient  Induced  Currents  in  Cylindricol  Cores."  "Use  of  Continuous  Waves  for  the 
Measurement  of  Diellectric  Constants  of  Liquids."  "Temperature  Coefficient  of  Frequency  of  Quartz 
Resonators."  "Useful  Design  of  Tube  Voltmeter."  "Measurement  at  Radio  Frequency  of  the  Con- 
ductivity of  Liquids  Without  Immersed  Electrodes  "  "Lantern  Demonstration  of  Triple  Point  for  Water." 
"A  Rotatable  Stand  and  Switch  for  Crookes  Tubes." 

NATHAN  RAKIETEN,  Ph.D.,   Instructor  in  Bacteriology  and  Physiology 

Born  1908.  B.  S.,  Wesleyon,  1929.  Ph.  D.,  Yale  University,  1933.  Instructor  in  Bacteriology  and 
Physiology,  M.  S.  C,   1934-  Sigma  Psi.     Papers  in  Physiological   Journals. 

BRYAN  C.  REDMON,  Ph.D.,  Instructor  in  Chemistry 

Born  1909.  B.  S.,  University  of  Kentucky,  1930.  Ph.  D.,  M.  S,  C,  1934.  Graduate  work,  Uni- 
versity of  Berlin  and  Frankfurt-om-Moin,  1934-35.  Instructor  in  Chemistry,  M.  S.  C,  1936-  Alpha 
Chi  Sigma,  Phi  Kappa  Phi 

WALTER  S.  RITCHIE,  Ph.D.,  Professor  of  Chemistry  and  Head  of  the  Department 
Born  1892  at  Ludlow,  Kentucky.  B.  S.  Agr.,  Ohio  State  College,  1916.  A.  M,,  University  of 
Missouri,  1918.  Ph.  D.,  University  of  Missouri,  1922.  Professor  of  Chemistry  and  Head  of  the  Depart- 
ment, M.  S.  C,  1934-  .  Member,  American  Chemical  Society.  Fellow  in  American  Institute  of 
Chemists.     Gamma  Alpha,  Gamma  Sigma  Delta,  Alpha  Chi  Sigma,  Sigma  Xi,  Delta  Tou  Delta. 

WILLIAM  H.  ROSS,  Ph.D.,  Instructor  in  Physics 

Born  1909.  B.  A.,  Amherst,  1929.  M.  A.,  Amherst,  1930.  Ph.  D.,  Yale,  1934.  Instructor  in 
Physics,  M.  S.  C,  1935-  .  Phi  Beta  Kappa,  Sigma  Xi,  Phi  Delta  Theta.  Papers  on  "Magnetic  Properties 
of  Ni-Cu  Alloys"  in  the  "Physical  Review".  Member  American  Association  for  the  Advancement  of 
Science,  American   Physical   Society. 

PAUL  SEREX,  Ph.D.,  Associate  Professor  of  Chemistry 

Born  1890.  B.  Sc,  M.  S.  C,  1913.  M.  Sc,  M.  S.  C,  1916.  Ph.  D.,  M.  S.  C,  1923,  Graduate 
Assistant  in  Chemistry,  M.  S.  C,  1913-15.  Chemist,  New  Hampshire  State  College,  1915.  Assistant  in 
Chemistry,  M.  S.  C,  1916-17.  Instructor  in  Chemistry,  M.  S.  C,  1917-20.  Assistant  Professor  in 
Chemistry,  M.  S.  C,  1920-35.  Associate  Professor  of  Chemistry,  M.  S.  C,  1935-  .  Member  of 
American  Chemical  Society.     Phi  Kappa  Phi. 

HARVEY  L.  SWEETMAN,  Ph.  D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Entomology 

Born  1896.  B.  S.,  Colorado  Agricultural  College,  1923.  M.  S.,  Iowa  State  College,  1925.  Ph.  D 
M.  S.  C,  1930.  Field  Assistant  in  Entomology,  Stote  of  Colorado,  1922.  Bureau  of  Entomology,  U.  S. 
D.  A.,  1923.  Instructor,  Iowa  State  College,  1923-25.  Instructor,  University  of  Minnesota,  1926 
Wyoming  Agricultural  Experiment  Station,  1927-29.  Assistant  Professor  of  Entomology,  M.  S.  C,  1930 
Alpha  Zeto,  Gamma  Sigma  Delta,  Phi  Kappa  Phi,  Alpha  Gommd  Rho.  Publications:  "The  Biolog 
Control  of  Insects," 

JOHN  D.  SWENSON,  M.A.,  Instructor  in  Mathematics 

Born  1909.  B.  S.,  New  York  University,  1932.  M.  A.,  Columbio  University,  1936.  Instructor  in 
Mathematics,  M.  S.  C,  1936-     . 

FRANK  R.  SHAW,  Ph.D.,  Instructor  in  Economic  Entomology  and  Beekeeping 

Born  1908.  B.  S.,  M.  S  C ,  1931,  Ph.  D,  Cornell,  1936.  Graduate  Assistont,  Cornell  University. 
Assistant  Entomologist,  M.  S,  C.  Experiment  Station,  Summers,  1930-34.  Instructor  in  Economic  Ento- 
mology, Cornell,  1934.  Instructor  in  Economic  Entomology  and  Beekeeping,  M.  S,  C ,  1935-  .  Member, 
American  Association  of  Economic  Entomologists,  American  Entomological  Society,  Sigma  Xi. 

RAY  E.  TORREY,  Ph.D.,  Associate  Professor  of  Botany 

Born  1887.  B.  S,,  M,  S,  C,  1912,  A,  M,,  Harvard  University,  1916.  Ph.  D.,  Harvard  University, 
1918.  Grove  City  College,  1912-15  Sheldon  Traveling  Fellowship,  Harvard,  1917-18.  Instructor  in 
Biology,  Wesleyon,  1918-19.  Instructor  in  Botany,  M.  S.  C,  1919-21,  Assistant  Professor  of  Botany, 
M.  S  C.,  1921-23.  Associate  of  Botany,  M.  S.  C,  1933-  .  Author  of  "General  Botany  for  Colleges", 
and  "Science  and  its  Function  in  Education." 


[31] 


DIVISION  OF  PHYSICAL  AND  BIOLOGICAL  SCIENCES 

HERBERT  E.  WARFEL,  A.B.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Zoology 

Born  1902.  A.  B.,  Western  State  College  of  Colorado,  1926.  Teacher  in  Public  Schools  of  North 
Dakota  and  Colorado,  at  intervals,  1920-27.  Assistant  in  Biology,  Western  State  College,  1924-26. 
Assistant  in  Biology,  Rocky  Mountain  Biological  Station,  Summers,  1924-28.  Graduate  Assistant, 
Oklahoma  University,  1927-29.  M.  S.,  Oklahoma  University.  Professor  of  Biology,  Brooddus  College, 
1929.  Mommologist,  Oklahoma  Biological  Survey,  Summers,  1930-31.  Capital  Hill  Senior  High  School, 
Oklahoma  City,   1929-31.     Assistant  Professor  of  Zoology,  M.  S.  C,   1931-     .     Phi  Sigma,  Sigma  Xi. 

GILBERT  L.  WOODS! DE,  Ph.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Biology 

Born  1909.  A.  B.,  DePouw  University,  1932.  A.  M.,  Harvard  University,  1933.  Ph.  D,  Harvard 
University,  1936.  Assistant  in  Zoology,  Harvord  University,  1933-36.  Assistant  Professor  of  Biology, 
M.  S.  C,  1936-     .    Sigma  Xi. 

DIVISION  OF  SOCIAL  SCIENCES 

THEODORE  C.  CALDWELL,  Ph.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  History  and  Sociology 

Born  1904.  B.  A.,  College  of  Wooster,  1925.  M.  A.,  Harvard,  1926.  Ph.  D.,  Yale,  1934.  Teacher, 
Haverhill  High  School,  1926-27.  Instructor  in  History,  College  of  Wooster,  1927-29.  Assistant  Professor 
of  History,  University  of  Nebraska,  1930-31.  Director  of  Altoona  Center,  and  Assistant  Professor  of 
History,  Juniata  College,  1934-35.    Assistant  Professor  of  History  and  Sociology,  M.  S.  C,  1935-     . 

ALEXANDER  E.  CANCE,  Ph.D.,  Professor  of  Economics  and  Head  of  Department 

Born  1874.  B.  A,,  Macalester  College.  Graduate  Certificate,  Wisconsin  State  Normal  School. 
A.  M.,  University  of  Wisconsin.  Professor  of  Greek  and  Literature,  Avolon  College,  1897-99.  Principal 
of  Ashville  Industrial  School,  1901-04.  Supervisor  of  Practice,  First  Pennsylvania  State  Normal  School, 
1904-05.  Fellow  in  Economics,  University  of  Wisconsin,  1906-08.  Ph.  D.,  University  of  Wisconsin,  1908. 
Instructor,  1908-10.  Assistant  Professor,  1910-12.  Associate  Professor  and  Heod  of  Department, 
1912-15.  Professor  of  Agricultural  Economics,  M.  S.  C,  1915-35.  Professor  and  Head  of  Department 
of  Economics,  1935-     . 

HAROLD  W.  GARY,  M.A.,  Instructor  in  History 

Born  1903.  B.  A.,  Williams  College,  1925.  M.  A.,  Harvard  University,  1926.  Instructor  in 
History,  Gushing  Academy,  1926-29.  Graduate  Student  in  History,  Yale  University,  1929-30,  1932-33. 
Instructor  in  History,  Yale,  1930-32.  Instructor  in  History,  M.  S.  C,  1933-36.  Assistant  Professor,  1936-  . 

FREDERIGK  MORSE  GUTLER,  Ph.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  History  and  Sociology 

Born  1875.  A.  B.,  Columbia  University,  Ph.  D,,  Clark  University.  Member,  Columbia  Freshmen 
Crew  which  defeated  Harvard.  Private  Teacher,  Clergyman,  Author,  Social  Worker,  and  Soldier.  Fellow, 
Clark  University.  Professor  of  Social  Science  and  Histor/,  University  of  Porto  Rico.  Professor  of  Social 
Science  and  History,  Massachusetts  State  Teachers'  College,  Worcester,  Mass.  First  Lieutenant,  Head- 
quarters, 55th  Coast  Artillery,  U.  S.  Army,  1917-19.  (Battles:  Aisne-Morne,  Champagne,  Gise-Aisne, 
Meuse-Argonne).  Now  Lieutenant  Colonel,  Reserve,  U.  S.  Army.  Assistant  Professor  of  History  and 
Sociology,  M.  S.  C,  1926-     .     Sigma  Phi  Epsilon,  Pi  Gamma  Mu. 

FRED  G.  ELLERT,  B.S.,  Instructor  in  German 

Born  1905.     B.  S.,  M.  S.  C,  1930,     Instructor  in  German,  M.  S.  C,  1930-     . 

RIGHARD  W.   FESSENDEN,  Ph.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Inorganic  Ghemistry 

Born  1902.     B.  Sc,  M.  S.  C,  1926.     M.  Sc,  M.  S.  C,   1928.     Ph.  D.,  Columbia  University,   1933. 
Assistant   in   Chemistry.   M.   S.   C,    1926-28.     Assistant   in   Chemistry,   Columbia    University,    1928-31. 
Assistant  Professor  of  Chemistry,  M.  S.  C,   1931-  Phi   Koppa  Phi,  Sigma  Xi,   Phi   Lambda  Upsilon. 

Member,  American  Chemical  Society. 

GHARLES  FREDERIG  FRAKER,  Ph.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Modern  Languages 

Born  1888.  A.  B.,  Colorado  College,  1919.  A.  M.,  Harvard,  1920.  Ph.  D.,  Harvard,  1931.  Teacher 
in  Philippine  Islands,  1913-16.  Instructor  of  Romance  Languages,  Colorodo  College,  1918-19  and 
1920-21.  Instructor  of  Romance  Languages,  Harvard,  1922-24.  Assistant  Professor  of  Romance 
Languages,  Northwestern  University,  1924-31.  Tutor  and  Instructor  of  Romance  Languages,  Harvard, 
1931-32.  Assistant  Professor  of  Modern  Languages,  M.  S.  C,  1932-  .  Member,  Modern  Language 
Association;    American   Association   of    University   Professors;    Societe   des   Anciennes   Textes   Francois. 


[32} 


DIVISION  OF  SOCIAL  SCIENCES 

PHILIP  L.  GAMBLE,  Ph.D,  Assistant  Professor  of  Economics 

Born  1905.  B.  S,  Wesieyon,  1928.  M.  A.,  Wesleyon,  1929.  Ph.  D.,  Cornell,  1935.  Instructor, 
Cornell,  1931-32.  Tax  Fellow,  New  York  State  Tox  Commission,  1932-33.  Instructor,  Wesleyon, 
1932-35.  Instructor,  Mount  Holyoke  (Hartford),  1934-36.  Assistant  Professor  of  Economics,  M.  S,  C, 
1935-  .  Member,  American  Economics  Association,  American  Society  of  University  Professors.  Sigma 
Chi. 

HARRY  N.  GLICK,  Ph.D.,  Professor  of  Psychology 

Born  1885.  A.  B.,  Bridgewoter  College,  1913.  A.  M.,  Northwestern  University,  1914.  Instructor 
in  Science,  Woukesho,  Wisconsin,  1914-1915,  and  Freeport,  Illinois,  1915-17.  Manager  of  Form  in 
Illinois,  1917-20.  Graduate  Student,  University  of  Illinois,  1920-23.  Professor  of  Psychology,  M.  S.  C, 
1923.  Ph.  D.,  University  of  Illinois,  1924.  Member  of  International  Congress  of  Psychology.  Phi 
Delta  Kappa,  Kappa  Delta  Phi. 

STOWELL  C.  GODING,  A.M.,  Assistant  Professor  of  French  and  Music 

Born  1904.  A.  B.,  Dartmouth  College,  1925.  A.  M.,  Harvard  University,  1926.  Graduate  Student 
at  Boston  University,  Summer  of  1926.  Instructor  in  French  at  the  Rice  Institute  at  Houston,  Texas, 
1926-27.  Graduate  Student  in  Paris,  Summer  of  1927.  Assistant  Professor  of  French  and  Music, 
M.  S.  C,  1927-  .  Phi  Beta  Kappa,  Phi  Koppo  Phi,  Alpha  Sigma  Phi,  Sigma  Alpha,  Koppo  Phi  Koppo, 
Adelphia,  Alliance  Francoise. 

MAXWELL  H.  GOLDBERG,  M.A.,  Ph.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  English 

Born  1907.  B.  S.,  M.  S.  C,  1928.  Instuctor  in  English,  1928-30.  Graduate  Student,  M.  S.  C. 
and  Amherst  College,  1928-29.  Yale  Graduate  School,  1930-33;  M.  A.,  1932;  Ph.  D,,  1933.  Member, 
Modern  Language  Association  of  America.  Yale  University  Scholar,  1932-33.  Member,  Modern  Human- 
ities Research  Association.     Alpha  Epsilon  Pi,  Adelphia,  Phi  Kappa  Phi. 

VERNON  P.  HELMING,  B.A.,  Instructor  in  English 

Born  1904.  B.  A,  Corleton  College,  1925.  Graduate  Work  at  Yole  University,  1928-32.  In- 
structor, American  University  of  Beirut,  Beirut,  Syria,  1925-29.     Knox  College,  1932-33.     Phi  Beta  Koppo. 

LEONTA  G.  HORRIGAN,  B.S.,  Instructor  in  English 

Born  1914.  B.  5.,  M.  S.  C,  1936.  Graduate  Student  Han/ard  Summer  School,  1936.  Phi  Kappa 
Phi.   Instructor  of  English,  M.  S.  C,   1936-     . 

ARTHUR  N.  JULIAN,  A.B.,  Professor  of  Gsrmon 

A.  B.,  Northwestern  University,  1907.  Instructor  in  Germon,  Elgin  Academy,  Elgin,  Illinois,  1907-10. 
Student  at  Berlin  University,  1910-11.  Columbia  University,  Summers  of  1932,  '33  ond  '34.  Instructor 
in  German,  M.  S.  C,  1911-19.  Assistant  Professor  of  German,  1919-23.  Assistant  Professor  of  Chem- 
istry, 1923-24.  Assistant  Professor  of  German,  1924-25.  Professor  of  German,  1925-  Phi  Beta 
Koppo,  Phi  Koppo  Phi,  Phi  Gommo  Delta. 


[33] 


DIVISION  OF  SOCIAL  SCIENCES 

RUSSEL  C.   LARCOM,   Ph.D.,   Instructor  in  Economics 

Born  1903.  Undergraduate  at  Dartmouth,  1920-21.  B.  A.,  Harvard,  1925.  M.  B.  A.,  Harvard 
School  of  Business  Administration,  1928.  Ph.  D.,  Johns  Hopkins  University,  1936.  Instructor  Lake 
Forest  College,  1928-29.  Statistician,  R.  L.  Doy  and  Co.,  Boston,  1929-31.  Acting  Assistant  Professor, 
Kenyon  College,  1931-32.  Instructor  in  Economics,  M.  S.  C,  1935.  Preparing  book  on  Delaware 
Corporation. 

C.  COLLIS  LYLE,  JR.,  M.A.,  Instructor  in  Department  of  Languages  and  Literature 
Born  1912.     B.  A.,  Cornell  University,  1933.     M.  A.,  Cornell  University,  1934.     Instructor  Depart- 
ment of  Languages  and  Literature,  M.  S.  C,  1935-     . 

ALEXANDER  ANDERSON  MACKIMMIE,  A.M.,  Professor  of  History  and  Sociology 
and  Head  of  the  Department;  Head  of  the  Division  of  Social  Sciences 
Born  1878.  A.  B.,  Princeton,  1906.  Boudinot  Fellow  in  Modern  Languages,  1906-07,  Instructor 
in  French,  Colchester  Academy,  Truro,  N.  S.  Instructor  in  French  and  Spanish,  M.  S.  C,  1908-11. 
Assistant  Professor  of  French,  M.  S.  C,  1911-15.  A.  M.,  Columbia  University,  1914.  Associate  Pro- 
fessor of  French,  M.  S.  C,  1915-19.  Professor  of  French,  1919-24.  Professor  of  Economics,  1924-35. 
Studied  in  Spain  Summer  of  1922.  Head  of  the  Division  of  Social  Sciences,  1928-  .  Phi  Beta  Kappa, 
Phi  Kappa  Phi. 

CLAUDE  C.  NEET,  Ph.D.,  Assistant  Professor  in  Psychology 

Born  1905.  B.  A.,  University  of  California  at  Los  Angeles,  1930.  M.  A.,  Clark  University,  1932. 
Ph.  D.,  Clark  University,  1935.  Instructor  in  Psychology,  University  of  Nevada,  1934-35.  Lecturer, 
Teachers'  Institute,  Rhode  Island,  September,  1935.  Special  Psychologist,  New  Jersey  State  Hospital, 
1931.  Instructor  in  Psychology,  M.  S.  C,  1935-  .  Associate  Member,  American  Psychological 
Association. 

WALTER  E.  PRINCE,  A.M.,  Professor  of  English 

Born  1881.  Ph.  D.,  Brown  University,  1904.  A.  M.,  Brown  University,  1905.  Instructor  in  English, 
University  of  Maine,  1905-12-.  Instructor  in  English,  M.  S.  C,  1912-15.  Assistant  of  Professor,  English 
and  Public  Speaking,  1915-28.  Associate  Professor  of  English,  1928-33.  Professor  of  English,  1933-  . 
Sphinx,  Phi  Koppo  Phi.     Shakespearean  Association  of  America,  Inc.     Koppo  Epsilon. 

ALBERT  WILLIAM  PURVIS,  Ed.M.,  Instructor  in  Education 

Born  1903  B,  A.,  University  of  New  Brunswick,  1931.  Ed.  M.,  Harvard  University,  1935.  Principal 
of  Public  Schools,  1923-28.  1931-32.  Teacher  in  Normal  School,  1933-34.  Instructor  in  Education, 
M.  S.  C,  1936-     . 

FRANK  PRENTICE  RAND,  A.M.,  Professor  of  English  and  Head  of  the  Department 

of  Languages  and  Literature 

Born  1889  A.  B.,  Williams  College,  1912.  A.  M.,  Amherst  College,  1915.  Instructor  in  English, 
University  of  Maine,  1913-14.  Editor  of  Phi  Sigma  Koppo  "Signet",  1914-29.  U.  S.  Army,  1919.  In- 
structor in  English,  M.  S.  C,  1914-21.  Grand  Secretary  of  Phi  Sigma  Kappa,  1919-22.  General  Manager 
of  Academics,  1919-  .  Assistant  Professor  of  English,  1921-27.  Associate  Professor  of  English,  1927-33. 
Professor  of  English  and  Head  of  the  Department,   1933-     . 

HAROLD  W.  SMART,  A.B.,  LL.B.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Form  Law,  Business  English 

and  Public  Speaking 

Born  1895.  LL.  B.  (cum  loude),  Boston  University,  1918.  Boston  University,  1919.  Practiced 
Low,  1919-24.  Instructor  in  Business  Law,  M.  S.  C,  1921-  .  A.  B.,  Amherst  College,  1924..  Phi 
Delta  Phi,  Woolsack,  Delta  Sigma  Rho. 

FRANK  B.  STRATTON,  MM.,   Instructor  in  Music 

Born  1908.     B.  S.,  M.  I.  T.,  1929.     M.  M,,  University  of  Rochester,  1933.     Phi  Sigma  Kappa. 

WINTHORP  S.  WELLES,  M.Ed.,  Professor  of  Education  and  Head  of  the  Department 
Born  1875.  Illinois  State  Normal  University,  1897.  B.  S.,  University  of  Illinois,  1901.  Public 
School  Teacher  and  City  Superintendent,  1897-1907.  Graduate  Work,  University  of  Illinois,  1901. 
Harvard.  1905,  -23,  -24,  -27,  -28.  Teocher  of  Biology  and  Agriculture,  State  Teachers'  College,  River 
Falls,  Wisconsin,  1907-19.  Founder  and  Director  of  Educotional  Agriculture  there,  1912-19.  State 
Supervisor  of  Agricultural  Education,  Wisconsin,  1917-19.  Professor  of  Education,  M.  S.  C,  1919. 
Head  of  the  Department,  1923-     .     M.  Ed,,  Horvard,  1929.     Sigma  Phi  Epsilon,  Phi  Delta  Kappa. 

J.  PAUL  WILLIAMS,  M.A.,  B.D.,  Director  of  Religious  Education 

Born  1900.  A.  B.,  Baker  University,  1922.  B.  D.,  Garret  Biblical  Institute,  1927.  M.  A.,  Columbia 
University,  1928.  Associate  Director,  Wesley  Foundation,  Urbono,  Illinois,  1925-26.  Assistant  in 
Student  Work,  Riverside  Church,  New  York,  1927-28.  Director  of  Religious  Education,  M.  S.  C,  1928-  . 
Kappa  Sigma,  Pi  Kappa  Delta.     Fellow,  The  National  Council  on  Religion  in  Higher  Education. 


[34] 


DIVISION  OF  PHYSICAL  EDUCATION 

LORIN  E.  BALL,  B.S.,   Instructor  in  Physical  Education 

Born  1898.  B.  Sc,  M.  S.  C,  1921.  Coach  of  Freshman  Basketball,  1921-25.  Coach  of  Freshman 
Baseball,  1922-24.  Attended  Superior  (Wisconsin)  Coaching  School,  1924.  Senior  Leader,  Camp 
Enajerog  for  Boys,  1924-  .  Treasurer,  Western  Massachusetts  Board  of  Approved  Basketball  Officials, 
1924-25;  President,  1930-33.  Director  of  Stockbridge  School  Athletics  and  Coach  of  Stockbridge  School 
Football  and  Basketball,  1925-  .  Coach  of  Varsity  Baseball,  1925-31.  Coach  of  Varsity  Hockey, 
1925-     .    Attended  University  of  Wisconsin  Summer  School,  1926.     Varsity  Club.    Q.  T.  V. 

ETHEL  W.  BLATCHFORD,  B.S.,  Instructor  in  Physical  Education 

Born  1910.  Graduote,  Posse  Nissen  School  of  Physical  Education,  1929.  B.  S.,  M.  S.  C,  1934. 
Instructor  in  Physical  Education,   1934-     .     Delta   Psi   Kappa. 

LAWRENCE  E.  BRIGGS,  B.S.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Physical  Education 

Born  1903.  B.  S.,  M.  S.  C,  1927.  Instructor  in  Physical  Education,  M.  S.  C,  1927-36.  Assistant 
Professor  in  Physical  Education,  1936-  .  Springfield  Summer  School,  1927.  Counselor  at  Camp  Ena- 
jerog, 1928.  Secretary  and  Treasurer,  Western  Massachusetts  Basketball  Coaches  Club.  English  Folk 
Dance  School,  M.  S.  C,  1929.  Assistant  Secretory,  Western  Massachusetts  Winter  Sports  Council, 
Audubon  Nature  Camp,  1936.     Varsity  Club,  Theta  Chi. 

ELBERT  F.  CARAWAY,  B.  S.  of  A.,  Professor  of  Physical  Education 

Born  1905.  B.  S.  of  A.,  Purdue  University,  1930.  Graduate  Work,  Purdue  University.  Assistant 
Freshmen  Coach,  Purdue  University,  1930.  Head  Coach,  Edinburg  High  School,  Texas,  1931  and  1932. 
Assistant  Coach,  Lehigh  University,  1933-36.  Professor  of  Physical  Education,  M.  S.  C,  1936-  . 
Lambda  Chi  Alpha, 

LLEWELLYN  L.  DERBY,  Assistant  Professor  of  Physical  Education 

Born  1893.  Unclassified  Student,  M.  S.  C,  1915-16.  Assistant  in  Physical  Education,  1916-17. 
U.  S.  Army,  1917-19.  Returned  as  Instructor  in  Physical  Education,  1919-20.  Varsity,  Freshman  and 
S.  S,  A.  Coach  of  Track,   1921-  Harvard  Summer  School   in  Physical   Education,   1921.     Springfield 

Summer  School  of  Physical  Education,  1925  and  1930.  University  of  Illinois  Summer  School  of  Physical 
Education,  1926.  M.  S.  C.  Summer  School,  1931.  Assistant  Professor  of  Physical  Education,  1927. 
Secretary-Treasurer,  Eastern  Intercollegiate  Athletic  Association,  1926-  .  Recreation  Director,  M.  S.  C. 
Summer  School,  1935-  .  Member  Advisory  Committee,  New  England  Intercollegiate  Amateur  Athletic 
Association,  1932-35.  Member,  Association  of  College  Track  Coaches  of  America.  Member,  National 
Collegiate  Track  Coaches  Association. 

HAROLD  M.  GORE,  B.S.,  Professor  of  Physical  Education  and  Head  of  the 

Department  for  Men 

Born  1891.  B.  S.,  M.  S.  C,  1913.  Assistant  in  Physical  Education,  1913-16.  Instructor,  1916. 
Harvard  Summer  School  of  Physical  Education,  1916.  Assistant  Professor  of  Physical  Education,  1917-26. 
Professor  of  Physical  Education,  1926.  Head  of  the  Department  of  Physical  Education  for  Men,  1935-  . 
Q.  T.  v.,  Adelphia. 


[35] 


DIVISION  OF  PHYSICAL  EDUCATION 

MRS.  CURRY  S.  HICKS,  B.A.,  Physical  Director  for  Women  and  Head  of  the 

Department 

Michigan  State  Normol  College,  1909,  B.  A.,  Michigan  Stote  Normal  College,  1925.  Instructor 
in  Physical  Education  for  Women,  M.  S.  C,  1917-27.  Physical  Director,  1927.  Head  of  the  Depart- 
ment,  1935-     . 

CURRY  S.  HICKS,  Professor  of  Physical  Education  and  Head  of  the  Division 

Born  1885.  Michigan  Agricultural  College,  1902-03.  B  Pd,,  Michigan  State  Normal  CoKege, 
1909.  Assistant  in  Physical  Education,  Michigan  State  Normal  College,  1908-09.  Edward  Hitchcock 
Fellow  in  Physical  Education,  Amherst,  1909-10.  Director  of  Athletics,  Michigan  State  Normal  College, 
1910-11.  Assistant  Professor  in  Physical  Education  and  Hygiene,  M.  S.  C,  1911-14.  Associate  Pro- 
fessor, 1914-16,  Professor,  1916-  .  M.  Ed.,  Michigan  State  Normal  College,  1924.  Head  of  the 
Division,  M.  S.  C,  1935-     . 

FLORENCE  S.  JENNEY,  M.S.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Hygiene  and  Student  Health 

Officer 

Born  1909  B.  S.,  Geneva  College,  1930.  M.  D.,  University  of  Pittsburg,  1934.  Instructor  in 
Physiological  Chemistry,  University  of  Pittsburg,  1935-36.  Assistant  Professor  of  Hygiene  for  Women 
and  Student  Health  Officer,  M.  S.  C,  1936-         Alpha  Omega  Alpha.     Zeto  Phi,  Kappa  Kappa  Gamma. 

SIDNEY  W.  KAUFFMAN,  M.Ed.,  Instructor  in  Physical  Education 

Born  1904.  B.  S.,  Springfield  College,  1931 .  M.  Ed.,  Springfield  College,  1934.  Physical  Director, 
Public  Schools,  Newport,  Vermont.  Director  of  Physical  Education  and  Head  of  the  Department  of 
History,  Winisco,  Pennsylvania.     Instructor  in  Physical  Education,  M.  S.  C,  1935-     . 

ERNEST  J.  RADCLIFFE,  M.D.,  Professor  of  Hygiene  and  Student  Health  Officer 

Born  1898.  M  B,  M  D.,  University  of  Toronto,  1923.  Private  and  Clinic  Practice.  Canadian 
Field  Artillery,  1916-19  Professor  of  Hygiene  and  Student  Health  Officer,  M.  S  .C,  1930-  .  Massa- 
chusetts Medical  Society,  American  Medical  Association. 

JOSEPH  R.  ROGERS,  JR.,  Instructor  in  Physical  Education 

Born  1906.  Worcester  Polytechnic  Institute,  1930.  Instructor  in  Physical  Education,  M.  S.  C, 
1931-     .     Member,  American  Society  of  Mechanical  Engineers. 


[36] 


BOOK  TWO 

CHAPTER  1 


THE 
I  NDEX 


CLASS  OF  1937 

« 
OFFICERS 

President  DAVID  PATRICK  ROSSITER,  JR. 

Vice  President HELEN  A,  DOWNING 

Secretary  ELINOR  L  STONE 

Treasurer CARL  P.  SWANSON 

Sergeant-at-Arms ALFRED  W.  BRUNEAU 

Class  Captain ROBERT  P.  HOLDSWORTH,  JR. 

HISTORY  OF  THE  CLASS  OF  1937 


The  time  has  come  when  we,  the  class  of  1937,  must  leave  the  college  we  may 
call  our  own.  The  realization  that  we  were  Seniors  seemed  a  bit  startling  to  us  at 
first.  Four  years  ago  we  thought  of  graduation  as  an  event  far  in  the  future,  but 
those  happy  years  have  passed  all  too  quickly.  We  hove  spent  our  college  days  as 
have  many  other  classes,  participating  in  academic,  scholastic  and  social  activities. 

Our  freshman  days  have  passed,  but  we  can  easily  recall  our  maroon  and  white 
caps,  the  Abby  serenades,  and  our  glorious  victory  over  the  Sophomores  in  the  rope 
pull  and  Razoo  night.  Although,  because  of  our  youth,  we  were  not  given  the  privilege 
of  managing  big  social  events,  we  did  sponsor  a  most  successful  freshman  dance,  and 
several  of  our  number  participated  in  the  Bay  State  Revue,  which  took  the  form  of 
an  original  musical  comedy.  Along  with  these  more  frivilous  memories  comes  the 
recollection  of  the  impressive  inaugural  ceremony  of  our  president. 


[40} 


HISTORY  OF  THE  CLASS  OF  1937 

We  returned  as  Sophomores  determined  to  moke  our  newly  acquired  importance 
felt.  The  first  evidence  of  our  superiority  came  with  our  second  victorious  rope  pull.  We 
again  emphasized  our  spirit  by  contributing  some  of  our  members  to  various  athletic 
teams,  thus  realizing  victory  over  Amherst  in  both  football  and  basketball.  Although 
scholarship  was  ever  our  first  aim,  we  did  not  neglect  our  social  life.  The  Maroon 
Key  formal  and  Soph-Senior  Hop  will  always  be  pleasant  memories. 

As  Juniors  our  college  work  became  more  intensive,  as  we  turned  to  our  mojor 
fields.  Our  appreciation  of  our  college  was  intensified  with  the  completion  of  the 
new  Library  and  Thatcher  Hall.  Our  domination  of  athletics  was  felt  more  keenly 
than  ever.  Realizing  that  this  was  our  most  active  year,  we  contributed  much  to 
extra-curricular  activities,  we  witnessed  the  organization  of  one  of  the  first  college 
bands,  smartly  attired  in  new  uniforms.  Our  social  activities  were  not  slackened,  for 
we  saw  the  inception  of  a  most  successful  Winter  Carnival,  culminating  in  a  Ball, 
which  was  substituted  for  the  traditional  Junior  Prom  and  Maroon  Key  formals. 

Now  we  have  reached  the  end  of  our  college  days.  During  this  post  year,  we 
have  witnessed  several  more  campus  changes.  A  new  Infirmary  has  been  opened. 
The  old  College  Chapel  has  been  renovated  and  its  charm  has  been  enhanced  by  a 
set  of  chimes,  contributed  by  an  alumnus.  During  this,  our  most  important  year,  we 
have  contributed  much  to  our  Alma  Mater.  The  idea  of  a  college  ring  has  material- 
ized through  our  efforts.  Members  of  our  class  have  successfully  presided  over  all 
outstanding  organizations  and  we  have  been  unusually  active  in  athletics  and  extra- 
curricula  activities.  We  maintained  our  scholastic  standing  end  several  of  our  class 
became  members  of  Phi  Kappa  Phi. 

We  look  back  upon  our  college  years  with  pleasant  memories  and  it  is  with  regret 
that  we  realize  they  are  now  at  a  close.  We  hope  that  those  who  follow  may  sense 
the  same  spirit  of  enthusiasm  we  have  felt.  With  our  love  for  our  Alma  Mater  deep 
in  our  hearts,  ws  say,  "Farewell  to  Bay  State". 


[41} 


Ralph  Emerson  Aiken,  Jr. 

Tenny  Street  Georgetown 

Born  1915  at  North  Adams.  Graduate  Lynn 
English  High  School.  Major  in  Economics. 
Cross-Country,  1.  Baseball,  1.  Phi  Sigma 
Kappa. 


Charles  Appel 

42  Brookline  Ave.  Holyoke 

Born  1915  at  Holyoke.  Graduate  Holyoke 
High  School.  Major  in  Distributed  Sciences. 
Mathematics  Club,  3.  Track  1.  Pre-Med. 
Club,  4. 


John  Appel 

42  Brookline  Ave.  Holyoke 

Born  1915  at  Holyoke.  Graduate  Holyoke 
High  School.  Major  in  Distributed  Sciences. 
Mathematics  Club,  3.  Track,  1 .  Band,  3. 
Pre-Med  Club,  4. 


[42] 


Charles  Benea 

Born  1915  at  KlngsTon.  Graduate  Kingston 
High  School.  Major  in  Pre-Medical.  Football 
1 .  Pre-Med.  Club,  3,  4.  Psychology  Club,  4. 
Alpha  Sigma  Phi. 


Alfred  Waiter  Basamania 

60  Union  Street  Holyoke 

Born  1915  at  Holyoke.  Graduate  Holyoke 
High  School.  Major  in  Pre-Medical.  Men's 
Glee  Club,  1,  3.  Football,  1.  Track,  2,  3. 
Pre-Med.  Club,  4. 


Isadore  Barr 

258  Carew  Street  Springfield 

Born  1 91 5  at  Springfield.  Graduate  Classical 
High  School.  Major  in  Physical  Education. 
Football  1 .  Baseball,  1,  2,  3  (M).  Soccer,  3. 
Basketball,  1,  2,  3  (M),  4  (Captain,  M). 
Soph-Senior  Hop  Committee,  2.  Advanced 
Military,  3,  4.  History-Sociology  Club,  4. 
Alpha  Epsilon  Pi.     Lt.  Master,  4. 


[43] 


Nathan  Milton  Berman 

17  Verrill  Street  Mattapan 

Born  1915  at  Boston,  Graduate  Boston  Pub- 
lic Latin  School.  Major  in  Economics.  Men's 
Glee  Club,  2,  3.  Roister  Doisters,  2,  3,  4. 
Menorah  Club,  1 ,  2,  3,  4.  Baseball,  1 .  Fresh- 
man Handbook  Committee,  I .  Sophomore 
Class  Ploy. 


Edwin  George  Bernstein 

29  Olmsted  Drive  Springfield 

Born  1917  at  Springfield.  Graduate  Classical 
High  School.  Major  in  Economics.  History- 
Sociology  Club,  2.  Menorah  Club,  2,  3. 
Sophomore  Class  Play.  Football,  1,  2,  3  (M), 
4  (M).  Burnham  Declamation  Contest,  2. 
Interfraternity  Council,  3.     Phi  Lambda  Tau. 


Franklyn  Doane  Berry 

Main  Street  Dennis  Port 

Born  1915  at  Harwich.  Graduate  Yarmouth 
High  School.  Major  in  Entomology.  Fernald 
Entomology  Club,  3,  4.  Psychology  Club,  4 
(Treasurer).  Alpha  Sigma  Phi.  (Treasurer, 
3,4). 


[44] 


Leroy  Lewis  Blackmer,  Jr. 

1 1   Union  Street  North  Brookfield 

Born  1916  at  Greenwich,  Graduate  North 
Brookfield  High  School.  Major  in  Physics  and 
Mathematics.  Physics  Club,  3,  4.  Radio 
Club,  4.     Kappa  Sigma. 


Ernest  Leslie  Birdsall 

89  Osgood  Street  Lawrence 

Born  1916  at  Lawrence.  Graduate  Lawrence 
High  School.  Major  in  Entomology.  Fernald 
Entomology  Club,  3,  4. 


Robert  Anthony  Bieber 

44  Main  Street  Hatfield 

Born  1914  at  Holyoke.  Graduate  Smith 
Academy.  Major  in  Economics,  Newman 
Club,  1,  2,  3,  4.  Class  President,  1,  2.  Soc- 
cer, 2  (M),  3.  Football,  1.  Track,  1,  2. 
Basketball,  1. 


[45] 


Paul  Frederick  Bobula 

162  Perham  Street  West  Roxbury 

Born   1916  at  Roxbury.     Graduate  Jamaica 
Plains  High  School.    Major  in  Botany. 


Richard  Oscar  Bohm 

405  Adams  Street  Milton 

Born  1915  at  Milton.  Graduate  Milton  High 
School.  Major  in  Entomology.  Outing  Club, 
1.  Fernald  Entomology  Club,  3,  4  (Editor  of 
Fernald  Club  Year  Book).     Phi  Sigma  Kappa. 


Horace  Winfield  Bolton 

East  Northfield 
Born  1913  at  East  Northfield.  Graduate 
Mount  Hermon  School.  Major  in  Animal 
Husbandry.  Dairy  Club,  1,  2.  Animal  Hus- 
bandry Club,  1,  2,  3,  4.  Cross -Country,  1,  3. 
Baseball,  1.  Dairy  Cattle  Judging  team,  2. 
Fat  Stock  Judging  team,  4.     Koppo  Sigma. 


[46] 


John  Poor  Brooks 

■69  Concord  Street  Holliston 

Born  1916  at  Holliston.  Graduate  Holliston 
High  School.  Major  in  Animal  Husbandry 
M.S.C.4-H  Club,  1,2.  Track,  1,2.  Poultry 
Judging  Team,  2.  Dairy  Club,  2.  Dairy 
Judging  Team,  3.  Q.  T.  V.  (Corresponding 
Secretary,  3). 


Louis  Adelard  Breoult 

1 80  Oxford  Street  Auburn 

Born  1916  at  Auburn.  Graduate  South  High 
School,  Worcester.  Major  in  English.  Index,  3 
(Statistics  Editor).  Collegian,  1,  2  and  3 
(Sports  Editor),  4  (Editor-in-chief).  Band,  1, 
2,3.  Press  Club,  2  (President),  3,  4.  Roister 
Doisters,  3.  Carnival  Committee,  4.  New- 
man Club,  1,  2,  3,  4.  Military  Ball  Commit- 
tee, 4.  Advanced  Military,  3,  4.  Lambda 
Chi  Alpha. 


Louis  Bongiolotti 

North  Howland  Avenue  Adams 

Born  1916  at  Adams.  Graduate  Adams  High 
School.  Major  in  Distributed  Sciences. 
Student  Senate,  3,  4.  Informal  Committee,  4. 
Psychology  Club,  4.  Football  Team,  1,  2,  3. 
Basketball  Team,  1,  2,  3.    Sigma  Phi  Epsilon. 


[47} 


Alfred  Washburn  Bruneau 

9  Howlands  Lane  North  Plymouth 

Born  1915  at  Kingston.  Graduate  Kingston 
High  School.  Major  in  History  and  Educa- 
tion.   Football,  1.    Track,  1. 


Malcolm  Suffolk  Butler 

1 1   Putnam  Street  Saugus 

Born  1915  at  Saugus.    Transfer  from  Univer- 
sity of  New  Hampshire.    Major  in  Economics. 


Norman  Wesley  Butterfield 

Beech  Grove  Inn  Pittsfield 

Born  1905  at  Temple,  Maine.  Graduate 
Mount  Hermon  Prep.  Major  in  Floriculture. 
Horticulture  Show  Committee,  3,  4.  Flori- 
culture Club,  1,  2,  3,  4. 


£48} 


Leroy  French  Clark 

830  South  Street  Walpole 

Born  1915  at  Walpole,  Graduate  Dean 
Academy.  Major  in  Animal  Husbandry. 
Animal  Husbandry  Club,  1,  2,  3,  4.  Dad's 
Day  Committee,  2,  3,  4  (Chairman).  Ad- 
vanced Military,  3,  4.  Class  Treasurer,  2. 
Cross-Country,  1,  2.  Military  Ball  Commit- 
tee, 4.  Dairy  Cattle  Judging  Team,  2.  Live- 
stock Judging  Team,  3.  Meat  Judging  Team, 
3.    Q.  T.  V.   (Vice-President,  3,  4). 


Webster  Allen  Chandler 

101   First  Street  Melrose 

Born  1 91 4  at  Newton  Center.  Graduate  Mel- 
rose High  School.  Major  in  Botany.  Outing 
Club,  1 ,  2,  3,  4. 


John  Joseph  Byrnes 

27  Pollock  Avenue  Pittsfield 

Born  1914  at  Pittsfield.  Graduate  Pittsfield 
High  School.  Major  in  Distributed  Sciences. 
Newman  Club,  1,  2. 


[49] 


Melvin  Irving  Cohen 

98  Devon  Street  Roxbury 

Born  1916  at  Boston.  Graduate  Roxbury 
Memorial  High  School.  Major  in  Distributed 
Sciences.  Menoroh  Club,  1,  2,  3,  4.  Index, 
3.  Track,  1 .  Bacteriology  Club,  4.  Phi- 
Kappa  Phi. 


Raymond  Francis  Conway 

2058  Northampton  Street  Holyoke 

Born  1915  at  Holyoke.  Graduate  Holyoke 
High  School.  Major  in  Distributed  Sciences. 
Newman  Club,  1,  2,  3,  4.  Pre-Med.  Club,  3, 
4.  Soccer,  1,  2,  3,  4  (M).  Psychology  Club, 
4.     Basketball  Team,  1 . 


Louis  Elias  Cosmos 

350  Chestnut  Street  Springfield 

Born  1917  at  Springfield.  Graduate  Classical 
High  School.  Major  in  Distributed  Sciences. 
Football,  1,2.    Basketball,  1 .    Wrestling,  2,  3. 


[50] 


Bkfikb 


Leo  Vincent  Crowley 

83  Main  Street  Amherst 

Born  1915  at  Amherst.  Graduate  Amherst 
High  School.  Major  in  Chemistry.  Newman 
Club,  1,  2,  3,  4.  Chemistry  Club,  4.  Basket- 
ball, 1,2,  3,  4.    Q.  T.  V. 


Clayton  Chester  Craft 

South  Street  Ashfield 

Born   1915  at  Sanbornville,  New  Hampshire. 

Graduate    Williston    Academy.  Major     in 

Economics.      Cross-Country,     1,  2.      Spring 
Track,  1,  2.    Q.  T.  V. 


Robert  Emmet  Couhig 

22  Giles  Avenue  Beverly 

Born  1916  at  Beverly.  Graduate  Beverly  High 
School.  Major  in  Entomology.  Fernald  En- 
tomology Club,  1 .  Soph-Senior  Hop  Commit- 
tee, 2.  Baseball,  1.  Track,  2.  Advanced 
Military,  3,  4.    Q.  T.  V. 


[51] 


Francis  Elliot  Cushman 

133  Summer  Street  Kingston 

Born  1916  at  Kingston.  Graduate  Kingston 
High  School.  Major  in  Entomology.  Fernald 
Entomology  Club,  3,  4.  Baseball,  1.  Alpha 
Sigma  Phi. 


James  Frederick  Cutter 

West  Hatfield 
Born  1914  at  West  Hatfield,  Graduate 
Mount  Hermon  School,  Northfield.  Major  in 
Mathematics  and  History.  Maroon  Key,  2. 
Class  Nominating  Committee,  2,  3.  Class 
Captain,  1 ,  2.  Football,  1 .  Swimming,  1 ,  2,  3 
(M),4(M).  Advanced  Military,  3,  4.  Kap- 
pa Sigma   (President,  3,  4). 


Ernest  Kirk  Davis 

Fairview  Street  Lee 
Born  1916  at  Hope  Valley,  Rhode  Island. 
Graduate  Lee  High  School.  Major  in  Dairy 
Industry.  Dairy  Club,  2,  3,  4.  Advanced  Mili- 
tary, 3,  4.  Football,  1,  2,  3,  4  (M).  Baseball, 
2,3. 


[52} 


Henry  George  Dihlmann 

Shutesbury 
Born  1907  at  Glastonbury,  Connecticut. 
Graduate  Mount  Hermon  School,  Northfield. 
Major  in  Distributed  Sciences.  Radio  Club,  4. 
Cross-Country,  1 . 


Richard  Clancy  Desmond 

12  Coolidge  Road  Lynn 

Born  191 6  at  Lynn.  Graduate  Leesburg  High 
School,  Florida.  Major  in  Forestry.  Collegian, 
2,  3,  4  (Editorial  Board).  Men's  Debating 
Team,  4.  Newman  Club,  I,  2,  3,  4.  Phi  Kap- 
pa Phi. 


Frederick  Leroy  Davis 

14  Mabel  Street  Portland,  Maine 

Born  1913  at  Portland,  Maine.  Graduate 
Deering  High  School.  Major  in  Landscape 
Architecture.  Landscape  Club,  2,  3,  4.  Kappa 
Epsilon. 


[53] 


James  J.  Dobby 

31  Wave  Way  Avenue  Winthrop 

Born  1914  at  Winthrop.  Graduate  Winthrop 
High  School.  Major  in  Bacteriology.  Band, 
1,  2.  Roister  Doisters,  1,  2,  3,  4  (Manager). 
Football,  1.  Hockey,  1.  Spring  Track,  1,  2 
(M),  3  (M).  Bactenology  Club,  4  (Vice- 
President).    Alpha  Epsilon  Pi.    (Secretary,  4). 


Trento  Joseph  Domenici 

101  Sergeant  Street  Holyoke 

Born  1916  at  Holyoke.  Graduate  Holyoke 
High  School.  Major  in  Distributed  Sciences, 
Sigma  Phi  Epsilon. 


Howard  Bernard  Driscoll 

213  Lyman  Street  Holyoke 

Born  1916  at  Holyoke.  Graduate  Saint 
Jerome's  High  School.  Major  in  Languages 
and  Literature.  Newman  Club,  4.  Football, 
1.  Basketball,  1.  Spring  Track,  2.  Base- 
ball, 1.  Q.  T.  V.  (Fraternity  Bulletin  Editor, 
3). 


[54] 


Alburn  Lasell  Fargo 

Monterey 
Born  1916  at  Monterey.  Grcduate  Searles 
High  School.  Major  in  Distributed  Sciences, 
Soccer,  1 ,  2. 


Charles  E.  Eshbach 

44  Brookside  Avenue 


Winchester 


Born  1914  at  Winchester.  Graduate  Win- 
chester High  School.  Major  in  English.  In- 
dex, 3.  Collegian,  1,  2  (Sports  Editor),  3 
Editor-in-Chief).  Press  Club,  2,  3  (Secre- 
tary), 4  (President).  History-Sociology  Club, 
3.  Newman  Club,  1,  2,  3,  4  (Publicity  Chair- 
man). Radio  Club,  4.  M.  S.  C.  4-H  Club, 
1,  2,  3,  4  (President).  Football,  1.  Fruit 
Judging  Team,  3.  Alpha  Gamma  Rho. 
(President,  4). 


Moses  Jacob  Entin 

45  McLean  Street  Boston 

Born  1916  at  Boston.  Graduate  English 
High  School,  Boston.  Major  in  English.  Or- 
chestra, 1,  2,  3.     Student  Religious  Council, 

3,  4.  Menorah  Club,  1,  2,  3  and  4  (Presi- 
dent).    Pre-Med.  Club,  4.     Psychology  Club, 

4.  College  String  Ensemble,  2,  3.  Social 
Science  Club,  1 .  Bay  State  Revue,  3.  Phi 
Lambda  Tau. 


[55] 


Edson  John  Ferrell 

47  Bridge  Street  North  Agawam 

Born  1914  at  North  Agawam.  Graduate 
Agawam  High  School.  Major  in  Chemistry. 
Chemistry  Club,  4.     Spring  Track,  1,  2,  3,  4. 


Anthony  Patrick  Ferrucci,  Jr. 

Mellen  Street  Milford 

Born  191 1  at  Milford.  Graduate  Milford  High 
School.  Transfer  from  M.  I.  T.  Major  in 
Chemistry.  Sophomore  Class  Play.  Chemis- 
try Club,  4   (President). 


Austin  Wellington  Fisher,  Jr. 

5  Brae  Burn  Road  Auburndale 

Born  1916  at  Newton.  Graduate  Newton 
High  School.  Major  in  Chemistry.  Chemistry 
Club,  4  (Secretary).  Football,  1,  2,  3,  4  (M). 
Swimming,  2  (M),  3  (M).  Hockey,  1 .  Fresh- 
man Handbook  Committee,  1.  Interclass 
Athletic  Board,  1,  2  (Secretary),  3  and  4 
(President).  Senior  Ring  Committee,  4, 
Theta  Chi   (Marshall,  3     Vice-President,  4). 


C56] 


Hillel  Henry  Friedman 

8  Wardman  Road  Roxbury 

Born  1915  at  Chelsea.  Graduate  Boston  Eng- 
lish High  School.  Major  in  Dairy.  Menorah 
Club,  3,  4.    Football,  1,  2,  3.    Hockey,  1 . 


Joseph  Freedman 

286  Linden  Street  Holyoke 

Born  1916  at  Holyoke.  Graduate  Holyoke 
High  School.  Major  in  Chemistry.  Cross- 
country, ],  2,  3.  Track,  1,  2.  Chemistry 
Club,  3,  4.     Mathematics  Club,  3,  4. 


Edward  Michael  Flavin 

79  Washington  Street  Greenfield 

Born  1910  at  Greenfield.  Graduate  Green- 
field High  School.  Major  in  Landscape  Archi- 
tecture.   Newman  Club,  4.    Camera  Club,  4. 


{57} 


Ralph  Bailey  Gates 

22  Orange  Street  Barre,  Vermont 

Born  1915  at  Barre,  Vermont.  Graduate 
Spaulding  High  School.  Major  in  Landscape 
Architecture.  Academic  Activities  Board,  3. 
Orchestra,  1,  2,  3,  4.  Band,  1,  2,  3  (Man- 
ager), 4  (Student  Leader).  Horticulture 
Show,  4.  Landscape  Club,  2,  3,  4.  Kappa 
Sigma.     (Treasurer,  4). 


Murray  Winter  George 

74  South  Street  Wrenthom 

Born  1 91 3  at  Attleboro.  Graduate  Wrenthom 
High  School.  Major  in  Landscape  Architec- 
ture. Men's  Glee  Club,  3.  Carnival  Commit- 
tee, 4.  Informal  Committee,  4.  Landscape 
Club,  3,  4.  M.  S,  C.  4-H  Club,  4.  Alpha 
Gamma  Rho. 


Frederick  Wells  Goodhue 

Pine  Street  Haydenville 

Born  1915  at  Haydenville.  Graduate  Wil- 
liamsburg High  School.  Major  in  Pre-Medical. 
Pre-Med.  Club,  3,  4. 


[58} 


Guy  Manning  Gray,  Jr. 

15  Russell  Street  Greenfield 

Born  1913  at  Springfield.  Graduate  Deerfield 
Academy.  Major  in  Pre-Medical.  History- 
Sociology  Club,  4.  Psychology  Club,  4.  Foot- 
ball, 1,  2,  3,  4.  Spring  Track,  1,  2,  3,  4.  Theta 
Chi. 


Russell  Thompson  Graves 

236  Grove  Street  Northampton 

Born  191 4  at  Northampton.  Graduate  North- 
ampton High  School.  Major  in  Economics. 
Men's  Glee  Club,  1 ,  2. 


Norman  Wallace  Grant 

66  Manning  Road  Lynn 

Born  1915  at  Lynn.  Graduate  Lynn  Classical 
High  School.  Major  in  Economics.  Men's 
Glee  Club,  1,  2,  3,  4.  Outing  Club,  1 .  Cross- 
country, 1.  Swimming,  1.  Spring  Track,  1, 
2,  3.  Bay  State  Revue,  1,  3.  Operetta,  3. 
Kappa  Sigma.  (Grand  Master  of  Ceremonies, 
4). 


[59] 


Albert  Joseph  Gricius 

16  Fossdale  Road  Dorchester 

Born  1915  at  Boston.  Graduate  Jamaica 
Plain  High  School.  Major  in  Horticulture  and 
Landscape  Architecture.  Football,  1,  2,  3,  4. 
Advanced  Military,  3,  4.    Q.  T.  V. 


Walter  Charles  Guralnick 

1 08  Maple  Street  Roxbury 

Born  1916  at  Boston.  Graduate  Boston  Pub- 
lic Latin  School.  Major  in  English.  Index,  3 
(Associate  Editor).  Collegian,  1,  2  and  3 
(Managing  Editor).  History-Sociology  Club, 
3.  Hockey,  1.  Baseball,  1.  Alpha  Epsilon 
Pi.  (President,  4).  Adelphia,  4  (Secretary- 
Treasurer).  Interfraternity  Council,  4. 
Awarded  Gold  Academic  Medal,  1936. 


Elmer  Winston  Hallowell 

62  Pierce  Street  Greenfield 

Born  1915  at  Greenfield.  Graduate  Green- 
field High  School.  Major  in  Agricultural 
Economics.  Men's  Glee  Club,  4.  Outing  Club, 
2,  3,  4.  Cross -Country,  1 .  Social  Science, 
1,  2.    Sigma  Phi  Epsilon. 


[60] 


Lawrence  Keith  Harris 

177  Walker  Road  Swampscott 

Born  1914  at  Lynn.  Graduate  Salem  Classical 
High  School.  Major  in  Landscape  Archi- 
tecture. Landscape  Club,  3,  4.  Cross- 
country, 3,  4.     Spring  Track,  1 .    Q.  T.  V. 


Erving  Douglas  Hardy 

107  Brookline  Street  Worcester 

Born  1914  at  Worcester.  Transfer  from 
Moryville  College.  Major  in  Distributed 
Sciences.  Football,  3.  Track,  2.  Kappa 
Sigma.     (Vice-President,  3). 


John  Francis  Hanson 

173  Governors  Avenue  Medford 

Born  1915  at  Medford.  Graduate  Medford 
High  School.  Major  in  Entomology.  Outing 
Club,  1,  2.  Fernald  Entomology  Club,  3  (Sec- 
retary), 4  (President).  Cross-Country,  1. 
Hockey,  1.    Social  Science  Club, -1,  2. 


[61} 


Raymond  Lewis  Hart 

62  Linwood  Road  Lynn 

Born  1915  at  Lynn.  Graduate  Lynn  Classical 
High  School.  Major  in  Physical  and  Biological 
Sciences.     Bacteriology  Club,  4. 


Forrest  Dana  Hartin 

141  Summer  Street  Maynard 

Born  1914  at  Maynard.  Graduate  Maynard 
High  School.  Major  in  Dairy  Industry. 
Physics  Club,  2,  3.  Mathematics  Club,  2,  3. 
Football,  1,  2,  3,  4.  Track,  2.  Baseball,  1. 
Phi  Sigma  Kappa. 


Kenneth  Raymond  Higgins 

73  Moore  Street  Fall  River 

Born  1915  at  Holyoke.  Graduate  Durfee  High 
School.  Transfer  from  Rhode  Island  State. 
Major  in  Landscape  Architecture.  Landscape 
Club,  2,  3,  4.  Soph-Senior  Hop  Committee, 
2  Lambda  Chi  Alpha.  (Social  Chairman, 
3). 


[62] 


Robert  Powell  Holdsworth,  Jr. 

49  Amity  Street  Amherst 

Born  1915  at  Stoughton.  Graduate  Amherst 
High  School.  Major  in  Entomology.  Fernald 
Entomology  Club,  3,  4.  Class  Captain,  2,  3, 
4.     Kappa  Sigma.    Advanced  Military,  3.  4. 


Waiter  James  Hodder 

13  Sycamore  Street  Cambridge 

Born  1916  at  Cambridge.  Graduate  Belmont 
High  School.  Major  in  Olericulture  and 
Floriculture.  Horticulture  Show  Committee, 
3,  4  (Chairman).  Soccer,  1,  2  (M),  3  (M). 
Swimming,  1,  2  (M),  3  (M),  4  (M),  (Co- 
captain). 


Merrill  Spinney  Hobart 

634  Webster  Street  Needhom 

Born  1913  at  Schenectady,  New  York.  Grad- 
uate Needham  High  School.  Major  in 
Chemistry.  Chemistry  Club,  4.  Swimming, 
1,  2,  3,  4   Manager,   (M).     Spring  Track,  1. 


[63} 


Harlan  Arnold  Howard 

200  North  Pleasant  Street  Amherst 

Born  19)5  at  Southwick.  Graduate  Amherst 
High  School.  Major  in  Bacteriology.  Band, 
I,  2,  3.     Bacteriology  Club,  4. 


Henry  Nickolas  lacovelli 

11    Pond  Street  Milford 

Born  1914  at  Milford.  Graduaio  Dean 
Academy.  Major  in  Physical  and  Biological 
Sciences.  Newman  Club,  1 .  Mothemat^ics 
Club,  1.    Q.  T.  V. 


Allen  Southworth  Ingalls 

5  Winthrop  Avenue  Methuen 

Born  1 91 4  at  Watertown.  Graduate  Methuen 
High  School.  Major  in  Mathematics.  Physics 
Club,  3.  Mathematics  Club,  2,  3,  4.  Foot- 
ball, 1,  2.  Hockey,  2,  3,  4  (Captain).  Base- 
ball, 1,  2,  3.    Kappa  Sigma. 


[64] 


Lawrence  Sterling  Johnson 

53  Fairfield  Street  Springfield 

Born  1914  at  Springfield.  Graduate  Technical 
High  School.  Major  in  Chemistry.  Alpha 
Sigma  Phi. 


Byron  Taylor  Johnson 

9  Wooster  Heights  Danbury,  Connecticut 

Born  1915  at  Newtown,  Connecticut.  Gradu- 
ate Danbury  High  School.  Major  in  Distri- 
buted Sciences.  Collegian,  1.  Outing  Club, 
1,2,3,4.    Theto  Chi.     (Treasurer,  4). 


Kenneth  Colwell  Irvine 

25  Rollinson  Road  Worcester 

Born  1915  at  Worcester.  Graduate  North 
High  School,  Worcester.  Major  in  Dairy  In- 
dustry. Dairy  Club,  2,  3,  4.  Theta  Chi. 
(Librarian,  3,  4). 


[65] 


William  Vialle  Johnson 

Lexington  Street  Weston 

Born  1914  at  Medford.  Graduate  Weston 
High  School.  Major  in  Landscape  Architec- 
ture. Maroon  Key,  2.  Football,  I.  Hockey, 
1,2,4.    Baseball,  1,2,3.    Theta  Chi. 


Raymond  Benedict  Jordan 

24  Lancaster  Avenue  Revere 

Born  1915  at  Revere.  Graduate  Revere  High 
School.  Transfer  from  Worcester  Polytechnic 
Institute.  Major  in  Education.  Collegian,  3, 
4.  Press  Club,  4.  Newman  Club,  3,  4.  Inter- 
fraternity  Council,  3,  4.  Mathematics  Club, 
3,  4.     Phi  Sigma  Kappa. 


John  Kabat 

South  Street  Hatfield 

Born  1915  at  Hatfield.  Graduate  Smith 
Academy.  Major  in  Economics.  Basketball, 
4  (Manager). 


[66] 


Samuel  Klibanoff 

77  Melba  Avenue  Springfield 

Born  1916  at  Springfield.  Graduate  Classical 
High  School.  Major  in  Distributed  Sciences. 
Phi  Lambda  Tau. 


William  Frank  Kewer 

60  Claybourne  Street  Dorchester 

Born  1916  at  Dorchester.  Graduate  Boston 
English  High  School.  Major  in  Economics. 
Men's  Glee  Club,  2.  Football,  4  (Manager). 
Phi  Sigma  Kappa. 


Joseph  George  Kennedy 

78  Brainard  Road  Brighton 

Born  1916  at  Weirs,  New  Hampshire.  Gradu- 
ate Quincy  High  School.  Major  in  Entomology. 
Men's  Glee  Club,  1.  Fernold  Entomology 
Club,  3,  4.  Newman  Club,  1 ,  2,  3,  4.  Mathe- 
matics Club,  2,  3.  Soccer,  1,  2,  3,  4  (Cap- 
tain).   Baseball,  2.    Q.  T.  V.      (Secretary,  3). 


[67} 


Richard  Berry  Knowlton 

60  Cedar  Street  Maiden 
Born  1914  at  Maiden.  Graduate  Maiden 
High  School.  Major  in  Economics.  Cross- 
country, 1.  Soccer,  4  (Manager).  Kappa 
Epsilon. 


Harry  Frederick  Koch 

384  Main  Street  Greenfield 

Born  1916  at  Greenfield.  Graduate  Green- 
field High  School.  Major  in  Distributed 
Sciences.  Collegian,  1,  2,  3  (Circulation 
Manager),  4.  Band,  1.  Men's  Glee  Club,  4. 
Interfraternity  Council,  2,  3,  4.  Mathematics 
Club,  2.  Pre-Med.  Club,  3.  Baseball,  3. 
Sigma  Phi  Epsilon.     (Vice-President,  4). 


Rudolph  William  Kuc 

33  Queen  Street  Holyoke 

Born  1915  at  Holyoke.  Graduate  Holyoke 
High  School.  Major  in  Chemistry.  Chemis- 
try Club,  4.    Soccer,  1. 


[68} 


John  Edward  Landers 

1 34  Westfield  Road  Holyoke 

Born  1915  at  Holyoke.  Graduate  Holyoke 
High  School.  Major  in  Chemistry.  Football, 
1.  Advanced  Military,  3,  4.  Chemistry  Club, 
4.    Q.  T.  V. 


Laurence  Harwood  Kyle 

East  Main  Street  Huntington 

Born  1916  at  Huntington.  Graduate  Hunt- 
ington High  School.  Major  in  Pre-Medical. 
Football,  1.  Soccer,  2,  3  (M),  4  (M).  Base- 
ball, 1.  Newman  Club,  1,  2.  Pre-Med.  Club, 
3,4. 


Henry  Shoub  Kushlan 

23  Cottage  Street  Boston 

Born  1914  at  Chicago,  Illinois.  Graduate 
Boston  English  High  School.  Major  in  Bac- 
teriology and  Physiology.  Football,  1.  Bac- 
teriology Club,  4. 


[69] 


Wendell  Edward  Lapham 

4  Concord  Street  Carlisle 

Born  1915  at  Carlisle.  Graduate  Concord 
High  School.  Major  in  Economics.  Class 
President,  2,  3.  Adelphia,  4.  Student  Senate, 
3,  4  (Vice-President).  Spring  Track,  2  (M), 
3  (M),  4  (M).  Football,  2  (M),  3  (M),  4 
(M).    Baseball,  2,  3.    Lambda  Chi  Alpha. 


Philip  Dumaresq  Layfon 

37  Shaw  Street  West  Newton 

Born  1912  at  Dorchester.  Graduate  Newton 
High  School.  Major  in  Landscape  Architec- 
ture. Maroon  Key,  2.  Horticulture  Show 
Committee,  4.  Carnival  Committee,  3,  4. 
Informal  Committee,  3,  4.  Outing  Club,  4. 
Landscape  Club,  3,  4.  Interfraternity  Coun- 
cil, 3  ,4.  Football,  1.  Spring  Track,  2.  Theta 
Chi. 


William  Ames  Leighton,  Jr. 

25  Williston  Road  Auburndale 

Born  1914  at  Fitchburg.  Graduate  Newton 
High  School.  Major  in  Psychology  and  Eco- 
nomics. Roister  Doisters,  4.  Maroon  Key,  2. 
Winter  Track,  2,  3,  4.  Theta  Chi.  (Vice- 
President,  2.     President,  3,  4), 


[70} 


Sidney  Liberfarb 

31    Hiawatha  Road  Mattapan 

Born  1915  at  Boston.  Graduate  Boston  Latin 
School.  Major  in  Economics.  Menorah  Club, 
1 ,  2,  3,  4.  Soccer,  1 ,  2,  3.  Basketball,  1 .  In- 
ternational Relations  Club,  4. 


Walter  Fredric  Lewis 

128  Lowell  Street  Andover 

Born  1913  at  Andover.  Graduate  Essex  County 
Agricultural  School.  Major  in  Poultry.  Men's 
Debating  Team,  4.  Cross-Country,  1 ,  2. 
Kappa  Epsilon. 


Morris  Lerner 

92  Woodside  Terrace  Springfield 

Born  1 91 6  at  Springfield.  Graduate  Classical 
High  School.  Major  in  Chemistry.  Men's 
Glee  Club,  2.  Chemistry  Club,  4  (Treasurer). 
Mathematics  Club,  3,  4.  Football,  1.  Base- 
ball, 1.  Bacteriology  Club,  4.  Phi  Kappa  Phi. 
Phi  Lambda  Tau. 


[71} 


Max  Lilly 

39  Linwood  Street  Maiden 

Born  1914  at  Maiden.  Graduate  Maiden 
High  School.  Major  in  Distributed  Sciences. 
Men's  Debating  Team,  1 ,  2,  3,  4.  Menorah 
Club,  1,2,3,4.    Football,  1. 


Leo  David  Lipman 

38  Jefferson  Street  Springfield 

Born  1916  at  Springfield.  Graduate  Classical 
High  School.  Major  in  Chemistry.  Physics 
Club,  3.  Menorah  Club,  1,  2,  3.  Chemistry 
Club,  4.  Mathematics  Club,  1,  2,  3,  4. 
Hockey,  1,  2,  3.  Phi  Kappa  Phi.  Phi  Lambda 
Tou. 


Isadore  Ludwin 

40  Magnolia  Street  Maiden 

Born  1 91 5  at  Maiden.  Graduate  Maiden  High 
School.  Major  in  Animal  Husbandry.  Animal 
Husbandry  Club,  3,  4. 


[72} 


Thomas  Francis  McMahon,  Jr. 

56  Oak  Square  Avenue  Brighton 

Born  1914  at  Brighton.  Graduate  Brighton 
High  School.  Major  in  Forestry.  Phi  Sigma 
Kappa. 


Emil  Marciniak 

16  Adams  Street  Easthampton 

Born  1915  at  Easthampton.  Graduate  East- 
hampton High  School.  Major  in  Chemistry. 
Chemistry  Club,  3,  4.     Mathematics  Club,  3. 


Thomas  Joseph  Maguire 

206  Franklin  Street  Haverhill 

Born  1914  at  Haverhill.  Graduate  Haverhill 
High  School.  Major  in  Economics.  Newman 
Club,  1,  2,  3,  4.  Mathematics  Club,  1,  2. 
Soccer,  1,2.    Baseball,  1.    Q.  T.  V. 


[73] 


Edmund  James  McNally 

36  Park  Street  Palmer 

Born  1916  at  Springfield.     Graduate  Palmer 
High  School.    Major  in  Distributed  Sciences. 


John  Edmund  McNally 

36  Park  Street  Palmer 

Born  1916  at  Springfield.  Graduate  Palmer 
High  School.  Major  in  Distributed  Sciences. 
Basketball,  1,  2,  3   (M),  4. 


Charles  Harold  Meyers 

Log  Plain  Road  Greenfield 

Born  1916  at  Westfield,  New  Jersey.  Gradu- 
ate Greenfield  High  School.  Major  in  Eco- 
nomics. Outing  Club,  1,  2,  3,  4.  Christian 
Federation,  1 .  Cross-Country,  1 ,  2.  Spring 
Track,  1,  2,  3.    Social  Science  Club,  1,  2. 


[74] 


T^ 


i4ii 


Raymond  Arthur  Minzner 

16  Graichen  Terrac?  Lawrence 

Born  1915  at  Lawrence.  Graduate  Lawrence 
High  School.  Major  in  Mathematics  and 
Physics.  Outing  Club,  4.  Physics  Club,  3,  4. 
Radio  Club,  3,  4.  American  Student  Union, 
3.     Mathematics  Club,  2,  3,  4. 


Ivan  Charles  Minott,  Jr. 

West  Deerfield 
Born  1914  at  Greenfield.  Graduate  Deerfield 
Academy.  Major  in  Economics.  Orchestra 
1.  Band,  1,  2,  3,  4.  Men's  Glee  Club,  1. 
Outing  Club,  1,  2,  3,  4.  Cross-Country,  1. 
Track,  1.    Social  Science  Club,  1,  2. 


George  MacLean  Milne 

6  Glen  Road  Lexington 

Born  1915  at  Simsbury,  Connecticut.  Gradu- 
ate Lexington  High  School.  Major  in  History 
and  Sociology.  Index,  3  (Editor-in-Chief). 
Student  Religious  Council,  3.  Christian  Fed- 
eration, 1,  2,  3  (President),  4.  Cross-Country, 
1,2.  Phi  Kappa  Phi.  Kappa  Epsilon  (Assist- 
ant Treasurer,  2,  3.     Secretary,  4). 


[75] 


Gordon  Moody 

30  Sunset  Avenue  Amherst 

Born  1915  at  Bridgeport,  Connecticut.  Grad- 
uate Amherst  High  School.  Major  in  Physics. 
Roister  Doisters,  2,  3,  4.  Outing  Club,  1,  2,  3 
(Treasurer),  4  (President).  Dad's  Day  Com- 
mittee, 4.     Kappa  Epsilon. 


Walter  Benjamin  Moseley 

52  Cooper  Street  Agawam 

Born  1914  at  Glastonbury,  Connecticut. 
Graduate  Agawam  High  School.  Major  in 
Landscape  Architecture.     Men's  Glee  Club, 

1.2.  Bay  State  Revue,  1 .  Class  Sergeant-at- 
Arms,  2.     Football,  1,  2,  3,  4.     Basketball,  1, 

2.3.  Track,  1.  Lambda  Chi  Alpha.  (Vice- 
President,  2).    Advanced  Military,  3,  4. 


William  Henry  Moss 

34  Taber  Street  Foirhaven 

Born  1911  at  Wilmslow,  England.  Graduate 
Foirhaven  High  School.  Major  in  English.  In- 
dex, 3  (Literary  Editor).  Football,  1.  Spring 
Track,  1.  Awarded  Silver  Medal  for  Aca- 
demic Activities.  Phi  Kappa  Phi.  Kappa  Ep- 
silon.    (Vice-President,  3). 


[76] 


Anthony  Joseph  Nogelo 

59  Herbert  Street  Framingham 

Born  1915  at  Framingham.  Graduate  Fram- 
ingham High  School.  Major  in  Mathematics 
and  Geology. 


Elliot  Houghton  Newcomb 

54  West  River  Street  Orange 

Born  1915  at  Chicago,  Illinois.  Graduate 
Orange  High  School.  Major  in  English  and 
History.  Roister  Doisters,  2.  Interfraternity 
Council,  3,  4.  Kappa  Epsilon.  (President,  3, 
4). 


Willard  Squier  Munson 

101    Butterfield  Terrace  Amherst 

Born  1916  at  Walpole.  Graduate  Amherst 
High  School.  Major  in  Economics.  Roister 
Doisters,  2.     Football,  1.     Kappa  Sigma. 


[77} 


Jo3eph  Conrad  Nowakowski 

31   Franklin  Street  Easthampton 

Born  1917  at  Easthampton.  Graduate  East- 
hampton High  School.  Major  in  Economics. 
Men's  Debating  Team,  1,  2,  3,  4. 


George  Edward  O'Brien 

148  Crescent  Street  Northampton 

Born  1915  at  Northampton.  Graduate  St. 
Michoel's  High  School.  Major  in  Chemistry. 
Newman  Club,  1,  2,  3,  4.  Chemistry  Club,  4. 
Football,  1,  3,  4.    Spnng  Track,  3. 


Lemuel  Osborne,  Jr. 

17  Park  Street  Tenafly,  New  Jersey 

Born  1 91 4  at  East  Orange,  New  Jersey.  Grad- 
uate Tenafly  High  School.  Major  in  Animal 
Husbandry.  Band,  1,  2,  3,  4.  Outing  Club, 
1,  2,  3  (Secretary),  4  (Treasurer).  Dairy 
Club,  2.  Animal  Husbandry  Club,  1,  2,  3 
(Secretary),  4  (President). 


[78] 


David  Allen  Peterson 

15  Oakland  Avenue  Methuen 

Born  1914  at  Methuen.  Graduate  Staunton 
Military  Academy.  Major  in  Education. 
Band,  1,  2.  Advanced  Military,  3,  4.  Inter- 
fraternity  Council,  2,  3,  4.  Psychology  Club, 
4  (President).  Soph-Senior  Hop  Committee, 
2.  Stowell  Cup  1936  Horse  Show.  Alpha 
Sigma  Phi. 


Robert  Charles  Perriello 

2  Fernald  Terrace  Dorchester 

Born  1912  at  Dorchester.  Graduate  New 
Hampton  Prep.  Major  in  Dairy  Industry. 
Newman  Club,  1,  2,  3,  4.     Q.  T.  V. 


Robert  Bishop  Peckham 

122  Woburn  Street  Medford 

Born  1914  at  Medford.  Graduate  Medford 
High  School.  Major  in  History,  Economics 
and  Sociology.  Senate,  3,  4.  Football,  1  2 
3,  4.    Baseball,  1,  2,  3.    Sigma  Phi  Epsilon. 


[79} 


James  Aaron  Pickering 

43  Bay  State  Road  Boston 

Born  191 4  at  Inibiscene,  Washington.  Gradu- 
ate Boston  English  High  School.  Major  in 
Distributed  Sciences.  Band,  1 .  Men's  Glee 
Club,  1,  3.  Bay  State  Revue,  3.  Football,  1, 
2.     Track,  2.     Basketball,  1 .     Radio  Club,  4 


Alfred  Herbert  Planting 

16  North  East  Street  Amherst 

Born  1914  at  Worcester.     Graduate  Amherst 
High  School.     Major  in  Economics. 


Roger  Kingman  Pratt,  Jr. 

146  Summer  Street  Brockton 

Born  1915  at  Brockton.  Graduate  Brockton 
High  School.  Major  in  Entomology.  Fernald 
Entomology  Club,  3,  4.     Phi  Kappa  Phi. 


[80] 


Prescotf  Langdon  Richards 

44  Maple  Street  Florence 

Born  1916  at  Northampton.  Graduate  North- 
ampton High  School.  Major  in  Chemistry. 
Football,!.   Swimming,  2.   Chemistry  Club,  4. 


Lee  Wilson  Rice,  Jr. 

Main  Street  Wilbraham 

Born  1916  at  Wilbraham.  Graduate  Tech- 
nical High  School,  Springfield.  Major  in 
Pomology.  Horticulture  Show  Committee,  4. 
Cross-Country,  3  (Manager).  Fruit  Judging 
Team,  3.    Phi  Sigma  Kappa.     (Inductor,  3,  4.) 


William  Augustus  Raynes,  Jr. 

103  Milton  Avenue  Hyde  Park 

Born  1915  at  Hyde  Park.  Graduate  Hyde 
Park  High  School.  Major  in  Physics  and 
Bacteriology.     Lambda  Chi  Alpha. 


[81} 


George  Robert  Richason 

Riverside  Turners  Falls 

Born  1916  at  Turners  Foils.  Graduate  Tur- 
ners Falls  High  School.  Major  in  Chemistry. 
Basketball,  1.     Chemistry  Club,  4, 


Louis  Everett  Roberts 

38  Adams  Street  Lexington 

Born  1914  at  St.  Louis,  Missouri.  Graduate 
Huntington  Prep.  Major  in  Landscape  Archi- 
tecture. Index,  3  (Art  Editor).  Landscape 
Club,  3,  4.  Cross-Country,  1 ,  2,  3,  4.  Spring 
Track,  3,  4.    Phi  Sigma  Kappa  (Treasurer),  4. 


Paul  Hubbard  Rosberry 

North  Street  Erving 

Born  1915  at  Gardner.  Graduate  Orange 
High  School.  Major  in  Economics.  Band,  1, 
2.  Newman  Club,  1.  Football,  1.  Track,  1, 
2.     Hockey,  3,  4  (Manager). 


[82] 


fc^._.__.-IjR 


John  Ruffley,  Jr. 

88  Adams  Street  New  Bedford 

Born  1911  at  New  Bedford.  Graduate  New 
Bedford  High  School.  Major  in  Chemistry. 
Men's  Glee  Club,  1/2.  Press  Club,  2,  3.  Ad- 
vanced Military,  3,  4.  Chemistry  Club,  4. 
Soccer,  1 ,  2,  3.  Spring  Track,  1 .  Kappa  Ep- 
silon.     (Vice-President,  3). 


David  Patrick  Rossiter,  Jr. 

22  Ferry  Street  Maiden 

Born  1 91 4  at  Mexico  City,  Mexico.  Graduate 
Kents  Hill  Seminary,  Maine.  Major  in  Dis- 
tributed Social  Sciences.  Senate,  3,  4.  Ma- 
roon Key,  2  (President).  Outing  Club,  1,  2, 
3,  4.  Newman  Club,  1,  2,  3,  4  (President). 
History-Sociology  Club,  2.  Football,  1,  2,  3,  4. 
(Captain).  Hockey,  1,  2,  3,  4.  Soph-Senior 
Hop  Committee,  2  (Chairman).  Mardi  Gras, 
2  (Committee  Chairman).  Winter  Carnival 
Coimmittee,  3  (Chairman),  4  (Social  Chair- 
man). Adelphia,  4  (President).  Student  Re- 
ligious Council,  3,  4.  Informal  Committee,  4 
(Chairman).  Class  President,  4.  Social 
Union  Committee,  3,  4.  Red  Cross  Drive,  4. 
Class  Nominating  Committee,  4. 


Kenwood  Ross 

36  Harkness  Avenue  Springfield 

Born  1915  at  Springfield.  Graduate  Classical 
High  School.  Major  in  Economics.  Interfra- 
ternity  Council,  2,  3  (Secretary).  Collegian, 
2,  3.  Military  Ball  Committee,  3.  Advanced 
Military,  3,  4.  Lambda  Chi  Alpha.  (Secre- 
tary, 2.     President,  3). 


[83} 


James  Marcus  Ryan 

687  Highland  Avenue  Needham  Heights 

Born  1915  at  Needham  Heights.  Graduate 
Needham  High  School.  Major  in  Social 
Sciences.  Honor  Council,  1,  2,  3  (Secretary),  4. 


Robert  Ryer,  III. 

1    Bridgman  Lane  South  Hadley 

Born  1 914  at  Bayonne,  New  Jersey.    Graduate 
South  Hadley  High  School.    Major  in  Zoology. 


Henry  Jerome  Sampson 

Blossom  Road  North  Westport 

Born  1916  at  Fall  River.  Graduate  Westport 
High  School.  Major  in  Animal  Husbandry. 
Cross-Country,  3.  Baseball,!.  Alpha  Siama 
Phi. 


[84] 


Norman  Louis  Sheffield 

Enfield 
Born  1915  at  Nashua,  New  Hampshire. 
Graduate  Mount  Hermon  Prep.  Major  in 
Economics.     Football,   1.     Baseball,  1,  2,  3. 

Kappa  Sigma. 


Stanley  Francis  Seperski 

Parker  Hill  East  Pepperell 

Born  1912  in  Poland,  Graduate  Pepperell 
High  School.  Major  in  Botany.  Academic 
Activities  Board,  2,  3.  Band,  1,  2,  3,  4.  Foot- 
ball, 1,3.    Hockey,  1,2,3.    Q.  T.  V. 


Charles  Leonard  San  Clemente 

40  East  Walnut  Street  Mi  I  ford 

Born  1914  at  Milford.  Graduate  Milford 
High  School.  Major  in  Chemistry.  Newman 
Club,  1,  2,  3,  4.  Mathematics  Club,  2,  3. 
Orchestra,  1,2,  3,  4.     Q.  T.  V.     (Secretary,  3). 


[85] 


Philip  Beryl  Shiff 

Standish  Street  Duxbury 

Born  1914  at  Dorchester.  Graduate  Duxbury 
High  School.  Major  in  Agricultural  Economics. 
Menorah  Club,  1,  2,  3,  4.  Collegian,  2,  .3. 
Track,  2,  3. 


Milton  Silverman 

162  Belmont  Street  Maiden 

Born  1913  at  Boston.  Graduate  Maiden  High 
School.  Major  in  Bacteriology.  American 
Student  Union,  3.     Bacteriology  Club,  4. 


Walter  Simonsen 

196  Shute  Street  Everett 

Born  1914  at  East  Boston.  Graduate  Everett 
High  School.  Major  in  Horticultural  Manu- 
factures. Football,  1.  Baseball,  1.  Horticul- 
tural Show  Committee,  4.  Bacteriology  Club, 
4.    Theta  Chi. 


[86] 


Philip  James  Spear 

Charlemont 
Born  1914  at  Springfield.  Graduate  Charle- 
mont High  School.  Major  in  Entomology.  In- 
dex, 3.  Student  Religious  Council,  2,  3.  Out- 
ing Club,  1 .  Fernald  Entomology  Club,  3,  4. 
Christian  Federation,  2,  3.  Football,!.  Base- 
ball, 1 .     Spring  Track,  2. 


Saul  Stnall 

33  Allendale  Street  Springfield 

Born  1912  at  Everett.  Graduate  Chicopee 
High  School.  Major  in  Chemistry.  Chemistry 
Club,  4. 


Harold  Anthony  Sleeper 

719  Salem  Street  South  Groveland 

Born  1915  at  South  Groveland.  Graduate 
Groveland  High  School.  Major  in  Bacteri- 
ology.    Bacteriology  Club,  4. 


[87} 


Robert   Leroy  Spiller,  Jr. 

44  Western  Avenue  Beverly 

Born  191 5  at  Beverly.  Graduate  Beverly  High 
School.  Major  in  Zoology.  Academic  Activi- 
ties Board,  4.  Band,  2,  3,  4  (Manager). 
Adelphia,  4.  Maroon  Key,  2.  Carnival  Com- 
mittee, 3.  Outing  Club,  2,  3,  4.  Dad's  Day 
Committee,  4.  Class  Sergeant-at-Arms,  3. 
Spring  Track,  1.  Phi  Sigma  Kappa.  (Presi- 
dent, 4). 


Edward  Parsons  Swan,  Jr. 

4  Hoi  lock  St.  Amherst 

Born  1916  at  South  Deerfield.  Graduate 
Deerfield  High  School.  Major  in  Languages 
and  Literature. 


Carl  P.  Swanson 

4  Pigeon  Hill  Court  Rockport 

Born  1911  at  Rockport.  Graduate  Rockport 
High  School.  Major  in  Botany.  Senate,  2, 
3,4.  Maroon  Key,  2  (Vice-President).  Class 
Treasurer,  3  and  4.  Inter-Class  Athletic 
Board  1,  2,  3  (Secretary). 


[88] 


Edward  Jesse  Thacker 

6  Hutchinson  Street  Winthrop 

Born  1915  at  Concord,  New  Hampshire. 
Graduate  Greenfield  High  School.  Major  in 
Chemistry.  Track;  2.  Hockey,  1,  2.  Kappa 
Sigma. 


John  Joseph  Talinski 

1  Fairland  Street  Roxbury 
Born  1916  at  Roxbury.  Graduate  Boston 
Latin  School.  Major  in  Pre-Medical.  Ad- 
vanced Military,  3,  4.  Pre-Med.  Club,  4 
(Vice-President). 


Clifford  Ernest  Symancyk 

26  Nobel  Street  Westfield 

Born  1 91 5  at  Westfield.  Graduate  Westfield 
High  School.  Major  in  Distributed  Sciences. 
Interfraternity  Council,  2,  3.  Collegian,  1,  2, 
3.    Kappo  Sigma. 


£89] 


Albert  Stetson  Thomas 

75  Central  Street'  Brattleboro,  Vermont 

Born  1914  at  Jacksonville,  Vermont.  Gradu- 
ate Brattleboro  High  School.  Major  in  Eco- 
nomics.    Debating  Team,  1,  2,  3,  4. 


Francis  Joseph  Thomas 

167  Montague  City  Road  Turners  Falls 

Born  1916  at  Middleboro.  Graduate  Turners 
Falls  High  School.  Major  in  Physics  and 
Mathematics. 


Robert  William  Thorndike 

6  Strathmore  Road  Lawrence 

Born  1915  at  Medford.  Graduate  Fairfield 
High  School,  Fairfield  Connecticut.  Major 
in  Landscape  Architecture.  Index,  3.  Ma- 
roon Key,  2.  Orchestra,  1.  Band,  1,  2,  3. 
Outing  Club,  1,  2,  3,  4.  Landscape  Club, 
3,  4.  Soccer,  1.  Swimming,  1,  2,  3,  4.  Phi 
Sigma  Kappa. 


[90} 


Haskell  Solomon  Tubiash 

87  Wheatland  Avenue  Dorchester 

Born  1913  at  Boston.  Graduate  Roxbury 
Memorial  High  School.  Major  in  Dairy  In- 
dustry and  Bacteriology.  Outing  Club,  1. 
Dairy  Club,  3,  4.  Menorah  Club,  2,  3,  4. 
Cross-Country,  2  (Ass't  Manager).  Spring 
Track,  1,  2.    Bacteriology  Club,  4. 


Everett  Lowe  Trombly 

3  Hampden  Street  Indian  Orchard 

Born  1912  at  Indian  Orchard.    Transfer  from 
University  of  Vermont.     Major  in  Economics. 


Donald  Frederick  Thurlow 

27  Cleveland  Street  Greenfield 

Born  1914  at  New  York  City.  Graduate 
Deerfield  Academy.  Major  in  Entomology. 
Fernald  Entomology  Club,  3,  4.  Football,  1, 
2.  Swimming,  1,  2,  3  (M),  4.  Spring  Track, 
1,2  (M),  3  (M). 


[91] 


Donald  Kent  Tucker 

85  South  Street    '  Foxboro 

Born  1916  at  Norfolk.  Graduate  Foxboro 
High  School.  Major  in  Psychology.  Men's 
Glee   Club,   4.      Psychology   Club,   4    (Vice- 


President) 
4). 


Lambda  Chi  Alpha.     (Treasurer, 


Harvey  Gay  Turner 

South  Main  Street  Andover 

Born  1 91 5  at  Andover.  Graduate  Phillips  An- 
dover Academy.  Major  in  Dairy  Industry. 
Honor  Council,  3,  4.  Outing  Club,  1.  Ad- 
vanced Military,  3,  4.  Interfraternity  Coun- 
cil, 2,  3,  4.  Soccer,  2,  4.  Q.  T.  V.  (Presi- 
dent, 3,  4). 


John  Albert  Tuttle 

40  Prescott  Street  Torrington,  Connecticut 
Born  1915  at  Winsted,  Connecticut.  Gradu- 
ate Suffield  School.  Major  in  Floriculture. 
Maroon  Key,  2,  Horticulture  Show  Commit- 
tee, 4.    Theta  Chi. 


[92] 


Donald  Edward  Weaver 

1716  Dwight  Street  Springfield 

Born  1914  at  Fort  Wayne,  Indiana.  Gradu- 
ate Classical  High  School,  Springfield.  Major 
in  Economics.  Men's  Glee  Club,  1 .  Bay  State 
Revue,  2.    Football,  1.    Kappo  Sigma. 


Harold  Irving  Watts 

9  High  Street  Amherst 

Born  1914  at  Amherst.  Graduate  Amherst 
High  School.  Major  in  History,  French,  Eng- 
lish. Roister  Doisters,  3,  4.  Outing  Club,  1, 
2.  Sophomore  Class  Play.  Social  Science 
Club,  1,2. 


James  Saul  Waldman 

322  Chopin  Terrace  Springfield 

Born  1916  at  Springfield.  Graduate  Classical 
High  School.  Major  in  Psychology.  History- 
Sociology  Club,  3.  Psychology  Club,  4. 
Menorah  Club,  3,  4.     Phi  Lambda  Tau. 


[93] 


Ira  Bertram  Whitney 

244  Elm  Street  West  Springfield 

Born  1909  at  Ludlow.  Self  Prepared.  Major 
in  Chemistry.  Physics  Club,  3,  4.  Chemistry 
Club,  3,  4.  Mathematics  Club,  3,  4.  Cross- 
country, 1,  2,  3,  4.  (Manager).  Spring  Track, 
1,  2,  3  (Manager). 


Frederick  Winsor  Whittemore 

Bay  Road  Stoughton 

Born  1916  at  Boston.  Graduate  Jamaica 
Plains  FHigh  School.  Ma|or  in  Entomology. 
Spring  Track,  1,2,3,4.    Q.  T.  V. 


Myron  Albert  Widlansky 

193  Fountain  Street  Springfield 

Born  1917  dt  Springfield.  Graduate  Classical 
High  School.  Major  in  Pre-Medical.  Or- 
chestra, 1,  2.  Menoroh  Club,  1,  2,  3,  4.  Pre- 
Med.  Club,  4.  Mathematics  Club,  1,  2,  3,  4. 
Soccer,  1 .     Phi  Lambda  Tau.     (Treasurer,  3). 


[94] 


Karol  Stanley  Wisnieski 

36  Hillside  Road  South  Deerfield 

Born  1913  at  South  Deerfield.  Graduate 
Deerfield  Academy.  Major  in  Dairy  Industry. 
Men's  Glee  Club,  2,  3.  Dairy  Club,  3.  New- 
man Club,  4.  Mathematics  Club,  2,  4.  Foot- 
ball, 1.     Q.  T.  V.     (Recording  Secretary,  4). 


Frederick  Joseph  Wishart 

13  Fourth  Street  Turners  Falls 

Born  1915  at  Turners  Falls.  Graduate  Tur- 
ners Falls  High  School.  Major  in  Bacteri- 
ology and  Physiology.     Bacteriology  Club,  4. 


Sidney  Williams 

120  Main  Street 
Born  1915  at  Peabody.  Graduate  Peobody 
High  School.  Major  in  Chemistry.  Chemistry 
Club,  4, 


[95} 


Raymond  Wyman 

14  Highland  Avenue  Westfield 

Born  1915  at  Blandford.  Graduate  Westfield 
High  School.  Major  in  Distributed  Sciences. 
Index,  3  (Ass't  Business  Manager).  Student 
Religious  Council,  3,  4  (President).  Christian 
Federation,  2,  3,  4  (President).  Interfrater- 
nity  Council,  3,  4  (Vice-President).  Mathe- 
matics Club,  2,  3.  Alpha  Gamma  Rho 
(Treasurer,  4). 


Arthur  Jacob  Zuckerman 

320  Onota  Street  Pittsfield 

Born  1915  at  Pittsfield.  Graduate  Pittsfield 
High  School.  Major  in  Chemistry.  Men's 
Debating  Team,  1,  2.    Chemistry  Club,  4. 


John  William  Zukei 

55  Fort  Street  Northampton 

Born  1916  at  Northampton.  Graduate  North- 
ampton High  School.  Moior  in  Entomology. 
Fernald  Entomology  Club,  3,  4. 


[96] 


Dorothy  Bollard 

Hardwick  Road  Gilbertville 

Born  1914  at  Gilbertville.  Graduate  Hardwick 
High  School.  Major  in  Home  Economics. 
Home  Economics  Club,  1,  2,  3,  4.  Newman 
Club,  1,2,3,4.    Y.  W.  C.  A.,  1. 


Barbara  Edwards  Baggs 

Belchertown 
Born  1915  at  Holyoke.  Graduate  Belcher- 
town High  School.     Major  in  English. 


Rose  Jane  Ash 

22  Belvidere  Avenue 
Born   1914  at   Holyoke. 
High   School.     Major   ir 
Club,  1,2,3,4. 


Holyoke 
Graduate  Holyoke 
English.      Newman 


[97] 


Lois  Brewster  Barnes 

58  Center  Street  Florence 

Born  1913  at  Florence.  Graduate  Mary  Burn- 
ham  School.  Major  in  Home  Economics. 
Home  Economics  Club,  1 ,  2,  3,  4.  Sigma  Beta 
Chi. 


Alice  Barlow  Bevington 

46  Tower  Hill  Street  Lawrence 

Born  1916  at  Lawrence.  Graduate  Lawrence 
High  School.  Major  in  Biological  Sciences. 
Women's  Glee  Club,  4.  Y.  W.  C.  A.,  1,  2,  3. 
Bacteriology  Club,  4. 


Catherine  Martha  Birnie 

7  Howard  Street  Ludlow 

Born  1916  at  Ludlow.  Graduate  Ludlow  High 
School.  Major  in  Home  Economics.  Women's 
Glee  Club,  1,  2.  Honor  Council,  4.  Home 
Economics  Club,  1,  2,  3,  4.  Mother's  Day 
Committee,  3,  4.  Sigma  Beta  Chi  (Social 
Chairman,  4.     Rushing  Chairman,  3). 


[98} 


Alma  Ruth  Boyden 

Boylston 
Born  1915  at  Worcester.  Graduate  North 
High  School.  Major  in  Social  Sciences. 
Women's  Glee  Club,  3,  4.  Lead  Role:  "Trial 
by  Jury",  3.  Utopia  Limited,  4.  Intersorority 
Council,  3,  4.  Women's  Rifle  Team,  1,  2,  3,  4. 
Bay  State  Revue,  3.  Women's  Vesper  Choir, 
3.    Phi  Zeta. 


Mary  Elizabeth  Boucher 

254  East  Street  Easthampton 

Born  1914  at  Easthampton.  Graduate  East- 
hampton High  School,  Major  in  Home  Eco- 
nomics. Women's  Glee  Club,  2,  3.  Home 
Economics  Club,  1,  2,  3,  4.  Bay  State  Revue, 
3.     Newman  Club,  2.    Sigma  Beta  Chi. 


Ruth  Blassberg 

30  Park  Street  Turners  Falls 

Born  1916  at  Turners  Falls.  Graduate  Tur- 
ners Falls  High  School.  Transfer  from  Pem- 
broke College.  Major  in  Economics.  Students 
Religious  Council,  4.  Menorah  Club,  2,  3 
(Secretary-Treasurer),  4  (Vice-President). 
Mathematics  Club,  2,  3,  4.  International  Re- 
lations Club,  4.  Flint  Oratorical  Contest,  4. 
Delegate  to  Model  League  of  Nations,  3.  Sig- 
ma Iota.  (Treasurer  and  Historian,  3.  Sec- 
retary, 4). 


[99] 


Priscilla  Marie  Bradford 

Wilbur  Street  North  Raynham 

Born  1915  at  Boston.  Graduate  Taunton 
High  School.  Major  in  Economics.  Women's 
Glee  Club,  I,  2,  3.  Carnival  Ball  Committee, 
3.  Newman  Club,  3,  4.  Dad's  Day  Commit- 
tee, 4.  Sigma  Beta  Chi.  (Secretary,  3,  4. 
Athletic  Captain,  2,  3). 


Mary  Rebecca  Breinig 

Northfield 
Born  1914  at  Allentown,  Pennsylvania.  Grad- 
uate Northfield  High  School.  Major  in  Eng- 
lish. Y.  W.  C.  A.,  1.  Women's  Rifle  Team, 
2.     Phi  Zeta. 


Lucille  Constance  Brouillet 

51   Dresden  Street  Springfield 

Born  1915  at  Springfield.  Graduate  Classical 
High  School.  Transfer  from  Springfield  Junior 
College.    Major  in  Distributed  Sciences. 


[100] 


Muriel  Elizabeth  Cain 

Conway 
Born  1915  at  North  Adams.  Graduate  South 
Deerfield  High  School.  Major  in  English. 
Bay  State  Revue,  1.     Phi  Zeta. 


Marjorie  Grant  Cain 

Conway 
Born  1915  at  North  Adams.  Graduate  South 
Deerfield  High  School.  Major  in  English, 
Bay  State  Revue,  1 .    Phi  Zeta. 


Dorothy  Imogene  Brown 

West  Street  Feeding  Hills 

Born  1916  at  Agawam.  Graduate  Agawam 
High  School.  Major  in  Home  Economics. 
Women's  Glee  Club,  1,  2,  3,  4.  Home  Eco- 
nomics Club,  1,  2,  3,  4.  Class  Vice-President, 
2,  3.  Psychology  Club,  4.  Sigma  Beta  Chi. 
(Vice-President,  4). 


[101] 


Margaret  Calkins 

Harvard 
Born  1914  at  North  Abington.  Graduate 
Concord  High  School.  Major  in  Home  Eco- 
nomics. Women's  Glee  Club,  4.  Outing 
Club,  ].  Home  Economics  Club,  1,  2,  3,  4. 
M.  S.  C.  4-H  Club,  1,  2,  3,  4. 


Barbara  May  Clark 


Born  1915  at  Charlton.  Graduate  Charlton 
High  School.  Major  in  Languages  and  Liter- 
ature. Christian  Federation,  1,  2,  3,  4 
M.  S.  C.  4-H  Club,  1,2,  3,  4.  Psychology 
Club,  4.     Alpha  Lambda  Mu. 


Barbara  Ruth  Clark 

Ashfield 
Born  1916  at  Ashfield.  Graduate  Sanderson 
Academy,  Ashfield.  Major  in  Chemistry  and 
Bacteriology.  Women's  Glee  Club,  2,  3. 
Y.  W.  C.  A.,  1,  2,  3.  Bacteriology  Club,  4. 
Boy  State  Revue,  3. 


[102] 


Dorothea  Margaret  Donnelly 

William  Street  Chester 

Born  1916  at  Springfield.  Graduate  Chester 
High  School.  Major  in  Home  Economics.  In- 
dex, 3  (Assistant  Editor).  Women's  Glee 
Club,  4.  Honor  Council,  4.  Home  Economics 
Club,  1,  2,  3,  4.  Newman  Club,  1,  2,  3,  4. 
M.  S.  C.  4-H  Club,  1,  2.  Intersorority  Coun- 
cil, 2,  3,  4  (Vice  President).  Y.  W.  C.  A.,  1, 
2  (Treasurer),  3.  Lambda  Delta  Mu.  (Presi- 
dent, 4). 


Elizabeth  Louise  Dodge 

106  Main  Street  Ashland 

Born  1914  at  Ashland.  Graduate  Ashland 
High  School.  Major  in  Home  Economics. 
Home  Economics  Club,  1,  2,  3,  4.  Y  W  C 
A.,  1 ,  2,  3,  4. 


Virginia  Justine  Conner 

71    Franklin  Street  Westfield 

Born  1915  at  Springfield.  Graduate  Westfield 
High  School.  Major  in  Home  Economics. 
Women's  Glee  Club,  2,  4.  Home  Economics 
Club,  1 ,  2,  3,  4.    Y.  W.  C.  A.,  1 ,  2.    Phi  Zeta. 


[103] 


Helen  Anna  Downing 

181  Park  Street  Holyoke 

Born   1916  at   Holyoke.  Graduate   Holyoke 

High  School.     Major  in  English.     Orchestra, 

1,4.  Newman  Club,  1,  2,  3,  4.  Class  Vice- 
President,  4.  Bay  State  Revue,  1,  2,  3.  Phi 
Zeta. 


Esther  Mae  Dunphy 

59  High  Street  South  Hadley  Falls 

Born  1916  at  South  Hadley.  Graduate  South 
Hadley  High  School.  Major  in  Entomology. 
Alpha  Lambda  Mu. 


Angela  Mary  Filios 

Bates  Road  Westfield 

Born  1914  at  Granville.  Graduate  Westfield 
High  School.  Major  in  Home  Economics.  In- 
dex, 3.  Outing  Club,  1.  Home  Economics 
Club,  4.  Newman  Club,  1 ,  2,  3,  4.  M.  S.  C, 
4-H  Club,  1,  2,  3,  4.    Alpha  Lambda  Mu. 


.[104] 


Phyllis  Ann  Gleason 

26  Grant  Street  Springfield 

Born  1915  at  Springfield.  Graduate  Techni- 
cal High  School.  Major  in  Home  Economics. 
Student  Religious  Council,  1,  2.  Home  Eco- 
nomics Club,  1,  2,  3,  4.  W.  A.  A.,  4  (Presi- 
dent).   Y.  W.  C.  A.,  1,2. 


Shirley  Gale 

25  Rockaway  Avenue  Marblehead 

Born  1 91 5  at  Broken  Bow,  Oklahoma.  Gradu- 
ate Marblehead  High  School.  Major  in 
Botany.  W.  S.  G.  A.  Council,  1,  2,  3,  4.  Phi 
Kappa  Phi. 


Lois  Isabelle  Fun 

492  High  Street  Holyoke 

Born  1915  at  Amherst.  Graduate  Holyoke 
High  School.  Major  in  Bacteriology.  W.  A. 
A.,  3  (Cabinet).    Lambda  Delta  Mu. 


[105} 


Sylvia  Shirley  Goldsmith 

1 51 6  Dwight  Street  Springfield 

Born  1915  at  Springfield.  Graduate  Classical 
High  School.  Major  in  Social  Sciences.  In- 
dex, 3.  Women's  Glee  Club,  2.  Menorch 
Club,  1,  2,  3,  4.  Intersorority  Council,  3,  4. 
Sigma  Iota.  (Secretary,  3.  Vice-President,  4). 


Barbara  Ramona  Gordon 

69  Beverly  Hills  West  Springfield 

Born  1916  at  West  Springfield.  Graduate 
West  Springfield  High  School.  Major  in 
Social  Sciences.    History-Sociology  Club,  3,  4. 


Estella  Caroline  Goulding 

River  Street  Leicester 

Born  1916  at  Leicester.  Graduate  Leicester 
High  School.  Major  in  Zoology.  Women's 
Glee  Club,  4.  Psychology  Club,  4.  Alpha 
Lambda  Mu.     (Alumnae  Secretary,  4). 


[106} 


Sarah  Huntington  Hopkins 

Tonsat  Road  Orleans 

Born  1915  at  Orleans.  Graduate  Orleans 
High  School.  Major  in  Home  Economics, 
Alpha  Lambda  Mu. 


Emily  Madeline  Healey 

1 50  Holyoke  Street  Easthampton 

Born  1913  at  Easthampton.  Graduate  East- 
hampton High  School.  Major  in  English. 
Student  Religious  Council,  3.  Y.  W.  C.  A.,  1, 
2,  3  (President).  Women's  Rifle  Team,  1,  2, 
3,4. 


Sandra  Gulben 

19  Wi  I  lard  Avenue  Worcester 

Born  1913  at  Hanover.  Graduate  South  High 
School,  Worcester.  Major  in  Pre-Medical. 
Index,  3  (Editorial  Board).  Collegian,  2,  3. 
Pre-Med.  Club,  3,  4.  Mathematics  Club,  1, 
2.  First  Prize  for  Poetry,  2,  3.  Music  Record 
Club,  4  (President).     Alpha  Lambda  Mu. 


[107] 


Edith  Lillian  Jackson 

Vernon  Street  Middleboro 

Born  1914  at  Somerville.  Graduate  Memorial 
High  School,  Middleboro.  Major  in  Home  Eco- 
nomics. Home  Economics  Club,  1,  2,  3,  4. 
M.  S.  C.  4-H  Club,  1,  2,  3,  4.  Lambda  Delta 
Mu.      (Vice-President,  2), 


Dorothy  Mary  Joyce 

Haverhill  Road  Amesbury 

Born  1915  at  Newburyport.  Graduate  Ames- 
bury  High  School.  Major  in  Home  Economics. 
Women's  Glee  Club,  3,  4.  Home  Economics 
Club,  1,  2,  3,  4.  Newman  Club,  1,  2,  3,  4. 
Lambda  Delta  Mu.     (Secretary  3,  4). 


Barbara  Knox  Keck 

Temple  Street  Boylston 

Born  1915  at  Worcester.  Graduate  Bancroft 
School,  Worcester.  Major  in  French.  Aca- 
demic Activities  Board,  4.  Orchestra,  2,  3,  4. 
Women's  Glee  Club,  2,  3,  4.  (Manager). 
Mathematics  Club,  3.  Choir,  2.  Boy  State 
Revue,  3.  Music  Record  Club,  4.  Phi  Kappa 
Phi. 


[108] 


Katherine  Louise  Machmer 

25  Amity  Street  Amherst 

Born  1915  at  Amherst.  Graduate  Deerfield 
Academy.  Transfer  from  Wheaton  College. 
Major  in  Economics.  History-Sociology  Club, 
3,  4.    Sigma  Beta  Chi. 


Dorothy  Elizabeth  Lonnon 

30  Carlton  Street  Holyoke 

Born  1916  at  Holyoke.  Graduate  Holyoke 
High  School.  Major  in  Languages.  Orches- 
tra, 2,  4.  Y.  W.  C.  A.,  2,  3.  Alpha  Lambda 
Mu.     (Vice-President,  3.    Secretary,  4). 


Ruth  Kinsman 

27  Perrin  Street  Roxbury 

Born  1915  at  Roxbury.  Graduate  Girls'  Latin 
School.  Major  in  Home  Economics.  Home 
Economics  Club,  1,  2,  3,  4.     Sigma  Beta  Chi. 


[109] 


Helena  Clare  McMahon 

56  Oak  Square  Avenue  Brighton 

Born  1916  at  Brighton.  Graduate  Boston 
Girls'  Latin  School.  Major  in  Home  Econom- 
ics. Home  Economics  Club,  1,  2,  3,  4.  New- 
man Club,  I,  2,  3,  4.  W.  A.  A.,  3  (Council). 
Phi  Zeta. 


Lucille  Amelia  Monroe 

13  Coolidge  Avenue  Southbridge 

Born  1916  at  Southbridge.  Graduate  Mary 
E.  Wells  High  School,  Major  in  English. 
Women's  Glee  Club,  1 .     Roister  Doisters,  2. 

3,  4  (Vice-President) .    Dad's  Day  Committee, 

4.  Phi  Kappa  Phi.  Sigma  Beta  Chi.  (Presi- 
dent, 4). 


Joy  Emma  Moore 

38  Center  Street  Leeds 

Born  1914  at  Hartford,  Connecticut.  Gradu- 
ate North  High  School.  Major  in  Home  Eco- 
nomics. Home  Economics  Club,  3,  4.  Sigma 
Beta  Chi. 


[110} 


Rita  Agnes  Provost 

86  Walnut  Street  North  Agawam 

Born  1915  at  North  Agawam.  Graduate 
Agawom  High  School.  Major  in  Chemistry. 
Newman  Club,  1,  2,  3,  4.  Chemistry  Club, 
4.    Alpha  Lambda  Mu. 


Edith  Evelyn  Priest 

74  Parker  Street  Maynard 

Born  1915  at  Maynard.  Graduate  Maynard 
High  School.  Major  in  English.  Sigma  Beta 
Chi. 


Nellie  Mary  Okolo 

Hadley 
Born  1 91 6  at  New  York  City.  Graduate  Hop- 
kins Academy,  Hadley.  Major  in  Chemistry. 
Newman  Club,  1,  2,  3,  4.  M.  S.  C.  4-H  Club, 
1,2,3,4.  Women's  Glee  Club,  2.  Chemistry 
Club,  4. 


[Ill] 


Coroline  Rita   Rogers 

Holliston  Street  Medway 

Born  1916  at  Mec'way.  Graduate  Medway 
High  School.  Major  in  English.  Newman 
Club,  1,2,  3,4.    Phi  Zeta. 


Gladys  Caroline  Sawinski 

15  Warren  Street 
Born   1915  at  Taunton. 
High   School.     Major   in 
Beta  Chi. 


Taunton 
Graduate  Taunton 
Education.     Sigma 


Esther  Elizabeth  Smith 

1 1  Garfield  Avenue  Easthamptorr 

Born  1916  at  Northampton.  Graduate  East- 
hampton  High  School.  Major  in  Distributed 
Sciences.  Women's  Glee  Club,  3.  Bacteri- 
ology Club,  4.  Lambda  Delta  Mu.  (Treas- 
urer, 3). 


[112} 


Ruth  Elizabeth  Todt 

66  Worcester  Street  West  Springfield 

Born  1915  at  Springfield.  Graduate  West 
Springfield  High  School.  Major  in  English. 
Women's  Glee  Club,  2.  Intersorority  Council, 
3,  4.'  W.  S.  G.  A.,  2,  3  (Vice-President),  4 
(President).    Sigma  Beta  Chi. 


Elinor  Leola  Stone 

26  East  Myrtle  Street  Needham 

Born  1915  at  Orange.  Graduate  Orange  High 
School.  Major  in  Economics.  Carnival  Com- 
mittee, 4.  Dad's  Day  Committee,  2,  3,  4. 
Class  Secretary,  2,  3,  4.  W.  S.  G.  A.,  4 
(Treasurer).  W.  A.  A.,  2  (Vice-President). 
Bay  State  Revue,  1 .  Sigma  Beta  Chi. 
(Treasurer,  3,  4). 


Frances  Elizabeth  Stepath 

45  East  Alvord  Street  Spnngfield 

Born  1915  at  Long  Island  City,  New  York. 
Graduate  Classical  High  School,  Springfield. 
Transfer  from  Springfield  Junior  College. 
Major  in  Home  Economics.  Outing  Club,  3. 
Home  Economics  Club,  2,  3,  4.  Newman  Club, 
2,  3,  4.  Mathematics  Club,  3.  Alpha  Lambda 
Mu. 


[113] 


Helen  May  Warner 

Sunderland 
Born  1915  at  Sunderland.  Graduate  Amherst 
High  School.     Major  in  Economics. 


Louise  Isabel  Warner 

Main  Street  Sunderland 

Born  1915  at  Sunderland.  Graduate  Amherst 
High  School.  Major  in  Home  Economics. 
Home  Economics  Club,  3,  4. 


Beatrice  Rivoli  Waxier 

15  Brookline  Avenue  Holyoke 

Born  1915  at  Holyoke.  Graduate  Holyoke 
High  School.  Major  in  Home  Economics. 
Women's  Glee  Club,  2,  3,  4.  Home  Economics 
Club,  3,  4.  MenorahClub,  1,2,  3,  4.  Inter- 
sorority  Council,  3.  Bay  State  Revue,  3. 
Mother's  Day  Committee,  3.  Sigma  Iota. 
(Treasurer,  2.  Vice-President,  3.  President, 
4). 


[114] 


Sarah  Clark  Wilcox 

22  Pope  Street  Hudson 

Born  1916  at  North  Attleboro.  Graduate 
Hudson  High  School.  Major  in  Economics. 
Mother's  Day  Committee,  3.  Lambda  Delta 
Mu.     (Secretary,  3). 


Edith  Lillian  Whitmore 

Forestdale 
Born  1915  at  Brighton,  Colorado.  Graduate 
Henry  T.  Wing  High  School,  Sandwich,  Mas- 
sachusetts. Major  in  Home  Economics. 
Women's  Glee  Club,  2.  Home  Economics 
Club,  3,  4  (Social  Chairman).  M.  S.  C.  4-H 
Club,  1,  2,  3,  4.  Intersorority  Council,  2,  3 
(Secretary-Treasurer),  4  (President).  W.  A. 
A.,  4.    Alpha  Lambda  Mu.     (President,  4). 


Eleanor  Alice  West 

Silver  Street  Sheffield 

Born  1915  at  Hartford,  Connecticut.  Gradu- 
ate Sheffield  High  School.  Major  in  Horti- 
cultural Manufactures.  Alpha  Lambda  Mu. 
(Treasurer,  3). 


CI  15] 


Marian  Kay  Wingate 

232  Green  Street  Fairhaven 

Born  1915  at  Shelton,  Connecticut.  Gradu- 
ate Norwich  Academy,  Norwicin,  Connecticut. 
Major  in  Home  Economics.  Home  Economics 
Club,  1,  2,  3  (Social  Chairman),  4.  Class 
Vice-President,  1.  Intersorority  Ushering 
Chairman,  4.  Phi  Zeta.  (Vice-President,  3. 
President,  4). 


Judith  Gail  Wood 

781  Commercial  Street  Weymouth  Heights 
Born  1 91 5  at  Cohasset.  Graduate  Weymouth 
High  School.  Major  in  English.  Y.  W.  C.  A., 
2,  3  (Cabinet).  Index,  3.  Women's  Glee 
Club,  2,  4.  Christian  Federation,  1,  2,  3. 
Lambda  Delta  Mu. 


Ruth  Elizabeth  Wood 

1 20  Morgan  Street  Holyoke 

Born  1915  at  McKeesport,  Pennsylvania. 
Graduate  Holyoke  High  School.  Major  in 
Home  Economics.  Women's  Glee  Club,  2,  3, 
4.  Home  Economics  Club,  1,  2,  3  (Vice-Presi- 
dent), 4  (President).  Danforth  Sukker  Fel- 
lowship, 1936.    Phi  Zeta. 


[116} 


FORMER  MEMBERS  OF  THE  CLASS  OF    1937 


Philip  Anderson 
Herbert  Atlas 
Carol  Avery 
Arthur  Avery 
Harold   Ballway 
Lois   Barnard 
Philip   Becker 
Warren   Bentley 
Nelson   Betts,  Jr. 
Harry  Blolsdell 
Shirley   Bliss 
Walter  Bliss 
Sam   Boxer 
Frank   Brenno 
Gilbert  Bristol,  Jr. 
Frank  Brox 
Warren   Bryant,  Jr. 
Dorothy  Burnham 
Leo  Carbonneau 
Frank  Corr 
Fred  Carter 
Jessie  Chase 
Carl  Ciosek 
Marie  Cobb 
Howard  Cohen 
Chester  Conant 
William  Crocker 
Lois  Curry 
Edward  Czelusnick 
Frederick  Dame 
Phoebe  Daniels 
Frederick  Dickens 
Leah   Domas 
Nellie  Donnis 
Ellsworth  Easton 
Chester  Eisold 
Kenneth   Farrell 
William  Ferguson 
Frances  Filipkowski 
Sobin  Filipkowski 
Robert  Fisher 


James  Fleming 
Frederick   Foerster,  Jr. 
Edwina  Goss 
Myrtle  Greene 
Herbert  Halpborn 
Virginia   Halvorson 
Herbert  Hatch,  Jr. 
Clarence  Haviland 
Burton  Hess 
Julian   Hodesh 
Priscilla   Horton 
Priscillo   Hutson 
Porter  Jenks 
Howard  Jensen 
Victor  Jones 
Simon   Katopes 
Edmund   Keyes 
William   Kirby 
Max   Kramer 
John   Kulesa 
Richard  Kulya 
Frank  Kuklewicr 
Whitney  Lawrence 
Ivan  Leclajr 
Daniel  Levin 
Walter  Lizak 
Gardner  Lombard 
Frank  Lyon 
Robert  MacCurdy 
Charles  Martin 
Justine  Martin 
Janet  McCorkindale 
Edwin  Moore 
Timothy  Moriorty 
John  Morrison 
Edward  Munson,  Jr. 
William  Munson 
Marion   Nagle 
Barbara  Nice 
Alfred   Novick 
Barbara  Oertel 


Sirkka   Oikemus 
Robert  O'Neill 
Otis  Ovaska 
Lawrence  Pearlman 
Charles  Pederson 
Walter  Perry 
Carl  Pilot 
Tabor  Polhemus 
Alger  Powell 
Milton   Radio 
Warren   Rand 
Lester  Reynolds,  Jr. 
Robert  Richmond 
Beatrice  Rittermon 
Warren   Rivers 
Francis  Rogers 
Robert  Rosenberg 
Charles  Rosenbloom 
George  Sanborn 
Richard  Santucci 

Samuel  Schirch 

Philip  Schneider 

Warren   Scholz 

Bernard  Shea 

John  Sinclair 

Francis  Sovie 

Roger  Smith 

Abraham  Suher 

Mary  Tatro 

Kenyon  Taylor,   II 

Frederick  Theriault 

Emanuel  Toder 

Phila  Vaill 

Alida  Wattles 

John  Weotherby 

Leonard  Webb 

Lucille  Webber 

Howard  White 

Carl  Wildner 
Ruth  Wilmes 
Philip  Winsor 


[117] 


BOOK   TWO 

CHAPTER  II 


THE 
INDEX 


CLASS  OF  1938 


OFFICERS 

President HERBERT  E.  BROWN 

Vice-President RUTH  WOOD 

Treasurer  FREDERICK  J.   SIEVERS 

Secretary  JESSIE  KINSMAN 

Captain DAVID  MILDRAM 

Sergeant  ct  Arms FREDERICK  RIEL 

HISTORY  OF  THE  CLASS  OF  1938 


On  the  seventeenth  of  September,  nineteen  hundred  end  thirty  four,  there 
straggled  together  o  group  of  freshmen  who  were  given,  through  no  act  of  their  own, 
the  chronological  number  Thirty-eight.  Their  first  deliberate  act  of  unification  was 
the  election  of  class  officers;  to  the  posts  of  leadership  they  installed:  Francis  J. 
Riel,  president;  Ruth  E.  Wood,  vice  president;  Frederick  J.  Sievers,  treasurer;  Jessie 
Kinsman,  secretary;  Gardner  Burt,  class  captain;  John  T.  Slocombe,  sergeant-at-arms. 

Meanwhile  the  fraternities  had  been  busily  selecting,  cajoling,  and  enticing  the 
various  freshmen  to  join  the  various  fraternities;  one  hundred  and  twenty-six  fresh- 
men succumbed  to  their  temptations.  At  the  same  time  the  class  had  set  itself 
to  athletic  attainment;  though  discouraged  a  trifle  by  the  loss  of  the  opening  en- 
counter, a  rope  pull,  with  their  opponents,  the  sophomores,  they  showed  their  superior 
ability  by  winning  not  only  Razoo  night,  but  all  of  the  diverse  sports  events  in  which 
they  were  matched  against  their  traditional  opponents.  Victory  came  to  them  in 
the  football,  soccer,  basketball,  and  swimming  meets. 


[120} 


HISTORY  OF  THE  CLASS  OF  1938 

In  spite  of  all  these  distractions,  the  members  of  the  class  found  time  to  worry 
over,  and  to  study  assiduously,  their  many  subjects.  In  spite  of  rumors  at  Thanks- 
giving time,  and  in  spite  of  a  growing  conviction  of  intellectual  ineffectuality,  the 
class  managed  to  present  a  bruised  contiguity  to  the  approving  eye  of  the  Dean; 
final  examinations  left  it  rebuked  and  slightly  diminished,  but,  nevertheless  exalting 
in  its  partial  adaptation. 

The  spring  brought  with  it  assurance;  the  class  had  now  won  a  certain  prestige 
which,  it  knew,  would  soon  grow,  by  accretion,  to  senioric  splendor.  To  the  Maroon 
Key,  it  elected  its  first  student  representatives:  Richard  Towie,  president;  David 
Mildram,  vice  president;  Cyrus  French,  secretary-treasurer;  Francis  Riel,  Herbert 
Brown,  Norman  Blake,  Rex  Avery,  John  Slocombe,  William  MacPhail,  and  Fred  Sievers, 
members.  Soon  to  its  laurels  it  had  added  supremacy  in  track  sports,  and  victory  in 
the  Sophomore — Freshman  Day  contests.  Martha  White  brought  further  honor  to 
the  class  by  winning  the  Burnham  Declamation  Contest.  So,  on  the  eighth  of  June, 
the  class  of  '38  left  for  its  summer  vacation;  it  left  with  relative  inconspicuousness, 
but  none  the  less  it  was  secretly  proud  of  its  attainments. 

In  the  following  fall  the  class  returned  to  have  the  taunt  of  "sophomoric  wis- 
dom" flung  at  it,  and  to  face  the  taunt  with  sophomoric  cynicism.  The  class  en- 
couraged its  timid  athletic  opponents,  the  freshmen,  by  condescending  them  victory 
in  the  rope  pull,  football  and  soccer  events.  To  its  class  offices  it  elected:  Francis 
Riel,  president;  Ruth  Wood,  vice  president;  Frederick  Sievers,  treasurer;  Jessie  Kins- 
man, secretary;  David  Mildram,  Class  Captain;  Frederick  Riel,  sergeant-ot-arms.  At 
a  later  election,  necessitated  by  the  withdrawal  of  its  first  two  officers,  it  installed 
Herbert  E.  Brown  as  president  and  Elthea  Thompson  as  vice  president.  As  its  senate 
members  it  elected  Frederick  J.  Sievers,  Herbert  E.  Brown,  and  Richard  Towle.  In 
the  Burnham  Declamation  Contest,  John  Hoar  and  Frank  Brox  won  first  and  second 
places  respectively,  to  bring  all  honors  to  the  class  of  Thirty-eight. 

As  a  finale  to  its  sophomore  year  the  class  made  its  debut;  it  rose  to  social 
prominence  in  undertaking  the  Sophomore — Senior  Hop  successfully.  Then  it  passed 
on  to  the  dignity  of  its  Junior  year. 


[121] 


HISTORY  OF  THE  CLASS  OF  1938 

To  its  posts  of  honor  in  tine  Junior  year  the  class  elected:  Herbert  E.  Brown, 
president;  Ruth  Wood,  vice  president;  Frederick  J.  Sievers,  treasurer;  Jessie  Kins- 
man, secretary;  David  Mildram,  Class  Captain;  Frederick  Riel,  sergeant-at-arms.  To 
the  captaincy  of  the  nineteen  thirty-eight  football  team  came  Frederick  J.  Sievers. 
The  class  was  furthered  in  its  assumption  of  power  and  prestige  by  the  accession  of 
its  members  to  the  INDEX  under  the  leadership  of  George  Rozwenc,  and  to  the 
COLLEGIAN  under  the  leadership  of  editors  Frederick  B,  Lindstrom,  Stanley  A.  Flower, 
and  Julian  H.  Katzeff. 

The  Winter  Carnival,  which  merciless  nature  decreed  should  not  be  a  winter 
carnival,  brought  some  disappointment  to  the  members  of  the  committee,  but  to 
the  representatives  of  the  Junior  class,  Jessie  Kinsman,  Mitchell  Jackson,  end  Craw- 
ford Adams,  was  given  the  consolation  that  all  within  their  power  had  been  success- 
fully fulfilled. 

So  had  progressed  the  class  of  Thirty-eight  when  this  premature  history  was 
written. 


MEMBERS  OF  THE  CLASS  OF  1938 


Crawford  William  Adams 

65  Leyfred  Ter. 
Born    1915   at   Springfield. 
High    School    Pre-Medical 
Club,  1,  2.     Cheer  Leader, 
Boseboll,    i.      Soccer,    2. 
Pre-Med.  Club  3. 


Springfield 

Graduate   Classical 

Student,       Newman 

1,  2,     Swimming,   1. 

Hockey,    1,    2    (M). 


Robert  Edward  Alcorn 

69  Hampden  St.  West  Springfield 

Born  1916  at  West  Springfield.  Graduate  West 
Springfield  High  School.  Major  in  Chemistry. 
Mathematics  Club,  2.  Track,  1,  2.  Alpha 
Gamma  Rho.     Chem.  Club  3. 


William    Blodgett   Avery 

Born     1917    at    Charlemont. 
Academy.    Major  in  Agriculture. 
M.   S.    C.   4-H   Club,    1,  2,    3. 


Orchestra, 
Epsilon. 


Shelburne   Falls 

Graduate    Arms 

Outing  Club,  2. 

Band,    1,   2,   3. 

Soccer,  1.     Baseball,  1.    Sigma  Phi 


Warren  Sears  Baker,  Jr. 

Spring  St.  Hanson 

Born  1917  at  Fort  Lauderdale,  Florida.  Graduate 
Whitman  High  School.  Major  in  Distributed 
Sciences.     Q.  T.  V.   (Treasurer,  2). 


Royal  Phillip  Allaire 

26  Dickinson  St.  Northampton 

Born  1915  at  Northampton.  Graduate  North- 
ampton High  School.  Major  in  Mathematics. 
Radio   Club,    3.  Mathematics  Club,    1,   2,   3. 

Marshall  Bigelow  Allen 

Grafton 
Born  1915  at  Worcester.  Graduate  Mount 
Hermon  School.    Major  in  Economics.   Theta  Chi. 

Arthur  Chester  Avery 

45   E.   Pleasant  St.  Amherst 

Born  1915  at  New  London,  Connecticut.  Grad- 
uate Amherst  High. 

Rexford    Hanson    Avery 

1 1   Loring  St,  Shrewsbury 

Born  1916  at  Worcester.  Graduate  Worcester 
Academy.  Major  in  Economics.  Maroon  Key,  2. 
Cornivol  Committee,  2.     Theto  Chi. 


Elinor  Prescott  Boll 

19    Rockville    Park  Roxbury 

Born  1917  at  Boston.  Graduate  High  School  of 
Practical  Arts.  Major  in  Home  Economics. 
History-Sociology  Club.  2,  3.  Home  Economics 
Club,  1,  2,  3. 

John   Frederick  Bargfrede 

Pearl  River,  New  York 
Born  1916  at  Pearl  River,  New  York.  Graduate 
Pearl  River  High  School.  Major  in  Dairy  Hus- 
bandry.    Outing  Club,   1.     Soccer,  1. 

Elizabeth    Sherwood    Barton 

25  Spring  St.  South  Amherst 

Born  1916  at  South  Amherst.  Graduate  Amherst 
High  School.  Major  in  Home  Economics.  Home 
Economics  Club,  3.  (Administrative  Board). 
Phi  Zeto. 


[122} 


MEMBERS  OF  THE  CLASS  OF  1938 


Richard   Wallace   Barton 

51  Amity  St.  Amherst 

Born  1916  at  Providence,  Rhode  Island.  Graduate 
Deerfield  Academy.  Major  in  History  and 
Sociology.     Soccer  1. 

Davis  Wortham   Beaumont- 

101    Pleasant   St.  Amiierst 

Born  1917  at-  Amherst.  Groduate  Amherst  High 
School.   Major   in   Chemistry.     Cross-Country,    1. 

Edgar  Sidney  Beaumont 

51   Amity  St.  Amherst 

Born  1915  ot  Ithaca,  New  York.  Graduate 
Amherst  High  School.  Major  in  Landscape 
Architecture.  Band,  1,  2.  Cross-Country,  1, 
2  (M).  Spring  Track  Team,  Bay  State  Revue, 
2.     Theto  Chi. 

Marion   Rose   Becher 

53  Pleasantview  Ave.  Longmeodow 

Born  1917  at  South  Hodley  Falls.  Graduate 
Classical  High  School,  Springfield.  Major  in 
Home  Economics.  Y.  W.  C.  A.,  I.  2,  (Cabinet, 
2,)..  (World  Fellowship,  Chairman).  Home 
Economics  Club,  1,  2.  (Vice-Pres.  3.)  Lombdo 
Delta  Mu.  (Vice-Pres.)  W.S.G.A.   (Vice-Pres)  3. 

Harry  Louis  Belgrade 

10  Wilson  Ave.  Northampton 

Born  1914  at  Eoston,  Pennsylvania.  Graduate 
Bulkeley  High  School,  New  London,  Connecticut. 
Major  in  Languages  and  Literoture. 

Mederic   Howard   Beloin 

32  Elmwood  Ave.  Holyoke 

Born  1914  at  Holyoke.  Graduate  Holyoke  High 
School.  Major  in  Economics.  Men's  Glee  Club, 
1,  2,  3.  History-Sociology  Club,  3.  Newman 
Club,  3.     Psychology  Club,  3.     Q.  T.  V. 

Kenneth   Ellis   Benson 

312  Washington  St.  Winchester 

Born  1916  at  Winchester.  Groduate  Winchester 
High  School.  Major  in  Horticulture!  Manufactur- 
ing. M.  S.  C.  4-H  Club,  1,  2,  3.  Alpha  Gamma 
Rho. 


Edwin    Alexander    Bieniek 

9  Ivy  Avenue  Holyoke 

Born  1915  at  Holyoke.  Graduate  Holyoke  High 
School.  Major  in  Chemistry.  Chemistry  Club, 
3.    Swimming  Teom,  1,2,  3. 

Irving  Binder 

188  Walnut  Avenue  Roxbury 

Born  1916  at  Somerville.  Graduate  Boston  Latin 
School.  Major  in  Physical  and  Biological  Sciences. 
Band,  1,  2.  Interfroternity  Council,  3.  Pre-Med. 
Club,  3.  Cross-Country  Team,  1.  Phi  Lambda 
Tou,   (Scribe,  2,  3.) 

Ruth   Lydia   Bixby 

Sunderland 
Born  1916  at  Sunderland.  Graduate  Amherst 
High  School.  Major  in  Longuoges  and  Literature. 
Index  (Assistant  Art  Editor),  3.    Sigma  Beta  Chi. 

Harry   Linwood    Blaisdell 

37  Forest  Avenue  Greenfield 

Born  1915  at  Dedham.  Graduate  Greenfield  High 
School.  Major  in  Landscape  Architecture.  Hor- 
ticultural Show  Committee,  3.     Outing  Club,   1, 

2,  3.  Landscape  Club,  3.  Interfroternity  Coun- 
cil, 2,  3.  Psychology  Club,  3.  Soccer  Team,  3. 
Phi  Sigma  Koppo. 

Norman  Perkins  Blake 

15  Wilson  Avenue  Maiden 

Born  1914  at  Maiden.  Graduate  Bridgton  Aca- 
demy. Major  in  Economics.  Maroon  Key,  2. 
Carnival  Committee,  2.     History-Sociology  Club, 

3.  Newman  Club,  2.  Advanced  Military,  3. 
Football,  1.  Hockey,  1.  Baseball,  1,  2.  Soph- 
omore-Senior Hop  Committee  (Chairman). 
Lomdo  Chi  Alpha. 

Earl  Alfred  Blomberg 

97  Boutelle  Street  Leominster 

Born  1915  at  Leominster.  Graduate  Leominster 
High  School.  Major  in  History  and  Economics. 
History-Sociology  Club,  3.  American  Student 
Union,  3.  Football,  1,  2,  3.  Spring  Track,  I. 
Q.  T.  V. 


William  Erving   Bergman 

30  Church  St.  Shelburne  Falls 

Born  1916  at  Lourinburg,  North  Carolina.  Gradu- 
ate Arms  Academy.  Major  in  Chemistry.  Men- 
oroh  Club,  1,  2,  3.  Chemistry  Club,  2,  3.  Math- 
ematics Club,  2,  3.  Phi  Lambda  Tou  (Sergeant 
at  Arms,  2). 


Esther  Lillian   Bloom 

21  Allendale  Street  Springfield 

Born  1917  at  Springfield.  Graduate  Classical 
High  School.  Transfer  from  Springfield  Junior 
College.  Major  in  Home  Economics.  Women's 
Glee  Club,  2,  3.  Home  Economics  Club,  3. 
Menoroh  Club,  2,  3.     Sigma  .Iota. 


Joseph   Raymond   Bianco 

46  Quincy  St.  North  Adams 

Born  1914  at  North  Adams.  Graduate  Drury 
High  School.  Tronsfer  from  Syracuse  University. 
Major  in  History  and  Sociology.    Newman  Club,  3. 


Fred  William  Bode 

220  Corleton  Street  Lawrence 

Born  1915  at  Lawrence.  Graduate  Lawrence 
High  School.  Major  in  Agricultural  Economics. 
Mathematics  Club,  1,  2.  Cross-Country,  I. 
Baseball,   1. 


[123] 


MEMBERS  OF  THE  CLASS  OF  1938 


Carl  John   Bokina 

7  Prospect  Street  Hatfield 

Born  1916  at  Hatfield.  Graduate  Smith  Academy. 
Major  in  Social  Sciences.    History-Sociology  Club, 

2.  Football,  1.  Baseball,  1.  Basketball,  1. 
Alpha  Sigma  Phi. 

Stanley  Milton   Bozek 

19  Franklin  Street  Easthampton 

Born  1916  at  Hazleton,  Pennsylvania.  Graduate 
Easthampton  High  School.  Major  in  Economics. 
Band   (Drum  Major),  2,  3.     Football,  1. 

Richard   Irving   Broy 

388  Essex  Avenue  Gloucester 

Born  1916  at  Gloucester.  Graduate  Gloucester 
High  School.  Major  in  Chemistry.  Chemistry 
Club,  3.   Mathematics  Club,  2,  3.   Cross-Country, 

1 .  Spring  Track,  1 . 

Warren   Clarence   Bray 

East  Street  Granby 

Born  1913  at  Granby.  Graduate  South  Hadley 
High  School.  Transfer  from  Springfield  College. 
Major  in  Economics  and  History.  History-Sociol- 
ogy Club,  2,  3  M.  S.  C.  4-H  Club,  2,  3.  Model 
League  of  Nations,  2,  3.  M.  S.  C.  4-H  Club, 
Representative  American  Country  Life  Con- 
ference at  Michigan,   1936. 

Fronk  George   Brenna 

43  Beach  Street  Milford 

Born  1912  at  Milford.  Graduate  Milford  High 
School.     Major  in  Distributed  Sciences. 

Elinor  Brown 

7  Pleasant  Street  Leicester 

Born  1917  at  North  Adams.  Graduate  Leicester 
High  School.  Major  in  English.  Intersorority 
Council,  3.  Debating  Teom,  1,  2.  Lambda  Delta 
Mu. 

Herbert  Earl   Brown 

98  Main  Street  Ashland 

Born  1914  at  Attleboro.  Graduate  Ashland  High 
School.  Major  in  Economics.  Student  Senate,  3. 
Maroon  Key,  2.  Student  Religious  Council,  3. 
Carnival  Committee,  2.  Newman  Club,  2,  3. 
Dad's  Day  Committee,  2,  3.     Advanced  Military, 

3.  Class  Officer,  2,  3.     Football,  2,  3. 

Francis  Michael  Brox 

412  Broadway  Drocut 

Born  1913  at  Drocut.  Graduate  Lawrence  High 
School.  Major  in  English.  Roister-Doisters,  2,  3.- 
Football,  1,  2,  3. 

Warren   Estey  Bryant 

Andover  Road  Billerica  Center 

Born  1915  at  Ayer.  Graduate  Howe  High  School. 
Major  in  Forestry.     Football,   1.     Cross-Country, 

2.  Spring  Track,  1,  2  (M), 


William  Augustine  Bullock 

35  Everett  Street  Arlington 

Born  1914  at  Cambridge.  Graduate  Bridgton 
Academy.  Major  in  History.  Newman  Club,  1, 
2,  3.  Football,  1,  3.  Hockey,  1,  3.  Spring 
Track,   1. 

John  George  Bush 

82  4th  Street  Turners  Falls 

Born  1916  at  Turners  Falls.  Graduate  Turners 
Falls  High  School.  Major  in  Education.  Football, 
1,  3.     Basketball,  1,  2,  3.     Baseball,  1,  2. 

Robert  Daniel  Buzzee 

104  East  Street  Easthampton 

Born  1917  at  Easthampton.  Graduate  East- 
hampton High  School.  Major  in  Chemistry. 
Dad's  Day  Committee,  3.  Advanced  Military,  3. 
Soccer,  2,  3.  Interfraternity  Council,  3.  Kappa 
Sigma. 

Helen  Virginia  Carew 

35   High  Street  Monson 

Born  1917  at.  Palmer.  Graduate  Monson  High 
School,  Major  in  History  and  English.  History- 
Sociology  Club,  2.  Index  (Statistics  Board)  3. 
Alpha  Lambda  Mu. 

Cynthia  Ellen  Carpenter 

Sterling 
Born  1916  at  Auburn.  Graduate  North  High 
School.  Major  in  Social  Sciences.  Girl's  Glee 
Club,  2.     Alpha  Lambda  Mu. 

Frank  Fairfield  Carr 

32  Coolidge  Rood  Medford 

Born  1915  at  Newtonville.  Graduate  Newton 
High  School.  Major  in  Economics.  Advanced 
Military,  3.  Swimming,  1.  Hockey,  1.  Cheer 
Leader,  1.     Visiting  Committee,  3.     Theta  Chi. 

Edward  Francis  Caruso 

16  Potton  Street  Springfield 

Born  1917  at  Springfield.  Graduate  Springfield 
Junior  College.     Mojor  in  Distributed  Sciences. 

John  Bernard  Casazza 

1  Abbott  Street  Merrimac 

Born  1915  at  Merrimac.  Graduate  Merrimac 
High  School.     Transfer  from  Norwich  University. 

Arthur   Daniel   Casey 

1 14  School  Street  Franklin 

Born  1910  at  County  Cork,  Ireland.  Graduate 
Dean  Academy.  Major  in  Economics.  Men's 
Glee  Club,  I,  2,  3.     Radio  Club,  3. 

Florence   Mildred   Cederberg 

821   Centre  Street  Jomaica  Plain 

Born  1915  at  Rockport.  Graduate  Girl's  Latin 
School.  Major  in  Social  Sciences.  Y.,  W.  C.  A., 
1.     History-Sociology  Club,  2. 


[124] 


MEMBERS  OF  THE  CLASS  OF  1938 


Jessie  Josephine  Chase 

81  Craiwell  Avenue  West  Springfield 

Born  1913  at  Fitzwilliam,  New  Hompshire.  Grad- 
uate West  Springfield  High  School.  Major  in 
Home  Economics.  Outing  Club,  2.  Home  Eco- 
nomics Club,  2.    Alpha  Lambda  Mu. 

Phillip  Botcheiler  Chase 

223  Fort  Pleasant  Avenue  Springfield 

Born  1916  at  Pittsfield.  Graduate  Classical  High 
School,  Springfield.  Pre-Med.  Student.  Honor 
Council,  2,  3.  Student  Religious  Council,  2,  3. 
Christian  Federation,  2,  3,  Pre-Med.  Club,  3. 
Swimming  Team,  1,  2.    Lambda  Chi  Alpha. 

Edward  Theodore  Clapp 

20  Pine  Street  Florence 

Born  1915  at  Northampton.  Groduote  North- 
ampton High  School.  Major  in  Chemistry.  Or- 
chestra, 1.     Band,  1,  3. 

Norman   Clark 

107  Billings  Street  Sharon 

Born  1915  at  Sharon.  Graduate  Sharon  High 
School.  Major  in  Mathematics.  Roister-Doisters, 
2.     Advanced  Military,  3.     Mathematics  Club, 

2,  3.     Baseball,   (M),  3. 

Charles  Wilson  Collins 

215  Forest  Street  Medford 

Born  1916  ot  Medford.  Graduate  Medford  High 
School.  Major  in  English.  Football,  1,  2  (M),  3 
(M). 

William  James  Collins 

24  Essex  Street  Solem 

Born  1913  at  Salem.  Graduate  Solem  High 
School.  Major  in  Distributed  Sciences.  Roister- 
Doisters,  2,  3.  Newman  Club,  1,  2,  3.  Pre-Med. 
Club,  2,  3.  Football,  1.  Soccer,  2.  Spring 
Track,  1.     Q.  T.  V. 

Chester   Cook   Conant 

Cherry  Street  Greenfield 

Born  1915  at  Greenfield.  Graduate  Deerfield 
Academy.  Major  in  History.  Dad's  Day  Com- 
mittee, 1,  2,  3.  Psychology  Club,  4.  Football, 
1,  3.  Soccer,  2.  Basketball,  1,  2.  Baseball,  1. 
Theta  Chi. 

Leon  Winston  Cone 

314  North  Moin  Street  North  Brookfield 

Born  1914  at  Worcester.  Graduate  North  Brook- 
field  High  School.  Major  in  History  and  Sociol- 
gy.     History-Sociology  Club,  3.     Newman  Club, 

3.  Football,  2,  3.  Basketball,  1.  Baseball,  1. 
Alpha  Gamma  Rho. 

Gladys  Martha  Corkum 

30  Lincoln  Street  Methuen 

Born  1917  at  Lawrence.  Graduate  Methuen  High 
School.  Major  in  Psychology.  Christian  Federa- 
tion, 1,  2,  3.  Psychology  Club,  3.  Y.  W.  C.  A,, 
1,  2.     History-Sociology  Club,  2   (Secretary). 


Henry  Vincent  Couper 

Littleton 
Born  1916  at  Littleton.  Graduate  Littleton  High 
School.  Major  in  Entomology.  Bond,  1,  2.  Fer- 
nald  Entomology  Club,  3.  Soccer  (M),  2,  3. 
Hockey,  1.    Baseball,  2.    Phi  Sigma  Kappa. 

Vernon   Francis  Coutu 

Erving 
Born  1916  at  Orange.  Graduate  Orange  High 
School.  Major  in  Chemistry.  Orchestra,  1 . 
Band,  1,  2,  3.  Chemistry  Club,  3.  Mathematics 
Club,  2,  3,     Kappa  Epsilon   (Sergeant  at  Arms). 

Stella  Ida  Crowell 

Bernordston  Road  Greenfield 

Born  1915  at  Greenfield.  Graduate  Greenfield 
High  School.  Major  in  Home  Economics.  Home 
Economics  Club,  3.  Intersorority  Council,  2,  3. 
Y.  W.  C.  A.,  1.     Sigma  Beta  Chi. 

Kathleen  Teresa  Curtin 

Tyringham 
Born  1917  at  Tyringham.  Graduate  Lee  High 
School.  Major  Home  Economics.  Home  Eco- 
nomics Club,   1,  2,  3.     Newman  Club,   1,  2,  3. 

Clifford  Alvin  Curtis 

75  East  Main  Street  Hopkinton 

Born  1916  at  Walthom.  Graduate  Woltham 
High  School.  Major  in  Distributed  Sciences. 
Advanced  Military,  3.  Psychology  Club,  2,  3. 
Chemistry  Club,  2.  Football,  1.  Basketball,  1. 
1.     Lambda  Chi  Alpha. 


Frank  Melvin  Cushman 

63  Porter  Street  Maiden 

Born  1916  ot  Maiden.  Graduate  Maiden  High 
School.  Major  in  Distributed  Sciences.  Band,  1. 
Soccer,  1,  2.    Alpha  Epsilon  Pi. 

Edward   William   Czelusniak 

69  Parsons  Street  Easthompton 

Born  1912  at  Easthompton.  Graduate  Williston 
Academy.  Major  in  Distributed  Sciences.  Foot- 
ball, 1,  2,  3.  Basketball,  1,  2,  3.  Sigma  Phi 
Epsilon. 

Albert  Alan  Davidson 

1 12  Belle  Street  Springfield 

Born  1916  at  Springfield.  Graduate  Classical 
High  School.  Major  in  Chemistry.  Psychology 
Club,  3.     Motion  Picture  Film  Editor. 

Robert  Clifford  Dewey 

30  Cross  Street  Gordner 

Born  1915  at  Gardner.  Graduate  Gardner  High 
School  and  Williston  Academy.  Transfer  from 
Syracuse  University.  Major  in  Horticulture. 
Outing  Club,  3.     Sigma  Alpha  Epsilon. 


[125] 


MEMBERS  OF  THE  CLASS  OF  1938 


Frederick   Leiand   Dickens 

Fountain   Street  Ashland 

Born  19] 4  at  Ashland.  Graduate  Ashland  High 
School.  Major  in  Physical  and  Biological  Sciences. 
Boseboll  Manager,  ]935.  Cross -Country,  1,  2. 
Q.  T.  V. 

Marguerite   Elizabeth    Dolliver 

10  Bellevue  Road  Belmont 

Born  1917  at  Cambridge.  Graduate  Belmont 
High  School.  Transfer  from  Mills  College.  Mojor 
in  Entomology.  Orchestra,  2,  3.  Fernold  Ento- 
mology Club,  3. 

John  Thistle  Dunlop 

62  Grape  Street  Chicopee 

Born  1916  at  Springfield.  Graduate  Chicopee 
High  School.  Major  in  Landscape  Architecture 
and  Horticulture.  Floriculture  Club,  3.  Base- 
ball, 1.  M.  S,  C.  Representative  in  Inter- 
collegiate Golf  Tournament.     Lombda  Chi  Alpha. 

Joseph  Francis  Dunn 

4  Leicester  Street  Brighton 

Born  1915  at  Boston.  Graduate  Brighton  High 
School.     Major  in  Agricultural  Economics. 

William   Eaton 

173  Main  Street  •  WoJtham 

Born  1916  at  Waltham  Graduate  Waltham  High 
School.  Major  in  Economics.  History-Sociology 
Club,  2.  M.  5.  C.  4-H  Club,  3.  Advanced 
Military,  3.      Index   (Statistics  Board),  3. 

Charles  Grant  Edson 

37  Thornton  Street  Springfield 

Born  1916  at  West  Springfield.  Graduate  South 
Hodley  High  School.  Major  in  Mathematics  and 
Physics.  Physics  Club,  3.  Newman  Club,  1,  2,  3. 
Mathematics  Club,  1,  2,  3. 

Theodora   Elizabeth   Edson 

39   Liberty  Street  Braintree 

Born  1916  at  Braintree.  Graduate  Braintree 
High  School.  Major  in  English.  Outing  Club,  1. 
Index    (Statistics  Board)   3. 

Nicholas  Daniel  Eliopoulas 

143   Primrose  Street  Haverhill 

Born  1915  at  Greece.  Graduate  Haverhill  High 
School.  Major  in  Dairy  industry.  Football,  1. 
Spring  Track,  1,2.     Q.  T.  V. 

Henry  Byron  Elkind 

Hollet  Street  North  Scituote 

Born  1917  at  Worcester.  Graduate  Boston  Public 
Latin  School.  Major  in  Horticulture  Manufac- 
tures. Roister  Doisters,  1,  2,  3.  Alpha  Epsilon 
Pi. 

Lloyd  Howard  Ellegard 

17  Washington  Avenue  Holyoke 

Born  1914  at  Hartford,  Conn.  Groduote  Holyoke 
High  School.     Major  in  Mathematics. 


Charles  Edward  Elliot 

24  Whitney  Avenue  Beverly 

Born  1917  at  Beverly.  Graduate  Beverly  High 
School.  Major  in  Entomology.  Fernald  Ento- 
mology Club,  3.  Advanced  Military,  3.  Kappa 
Sigma. 

Norman  Alfred   Emery 

5  Lloyd  Avenue  Lynn 

Born  1916  at  Lynn.  Graduate  Lynn  English  High 
School.  Major  in  Pre-Dentol.  Men's  Glee  Club, 
2.  Pre-Med.  Club,  2,  3.  Cross-Country,  1 . 
Kappa  Epsilon   (Assistant  Treasurer,  3). 

Walter  Nathan  Epstein 

49  Angell  Street  Dorchester 

Born  1916  at  Roxbury.  Graduate  Boston  Latin 
School.  Major  in  Chemistry.  Band,  1.  Men's 
Glee  Club,  2.  Menoroh  Club,  1,  2.  Pre-Med. 
Club,  3. 

Robert  Earle  Evans 

21   Summer  Street  Northampton 

Born  1916  at  Northampton.  Graduate  North- 
ampton High  School.  Major  in  Entomology. 
Fernald  Entomology  Club,  3.  Spring  Track,  1,  2. 
M.  S.  C.  Commuter's  Club,  1,  2,  3. 

Virginia  Mary  Fagan 

67  Westfield  Road  Holyoke 

Born  1917  at  New  Haven,  Conn.  Groduote 
Holyoke  High  School.  Major  in  Languages  and 
Literature.  Newman  Club,  1,  2.  M.  S.  C. 
Commuter's  Club,   1,  2,  3. 

Eleonor   Dorney   Fahey 

133  Highland  Avenue  Winthrop 

Born  1917  at  Winthrop.  Graduate  Winthrop 
High  School.     Major  in  English.     Newman  Club, 

1,  2,  3.  Sophomore-Senior  Hop  Committee.  Phi 
Zeta. 

Albert  Humphries  Farnsworth 

31    Chesterfield  Rood  Worcester 

Born  1916  at  Boston.  Graduate  Worcester 
Academy.     Mojor  in  Entomology.     Outing  Club, 

2,  3.  Fernold  Entomology  Club,  3.  Phi  Sigmo 
Kappa. 

Robert  Sidney  Feinberg 

108  Woshington  Street  Brighton 

Born  1916  at  Boston.  Graduate  Brighton  High 
School.  Major  in  Economics,  Soccer,  2,  3. 
Hockey,  2.  Spring  Track,  1,  2.  Alpha  Epsilon 
Pi. 

William   Bragdon   Ferguson 

7  Park  Place  Ludlow 

Born  1916  at  Ludlow.  Graduate  Ludlow  High 
School.  Major  in  Economics.  Collegian  (Business 
Department,  1,  2,  3,  Subscription  Manager,  3). 
Outing  Club,  1.     Basketball  (Assistant  Manager) 

3,  Theto  Chi   (Assistant  Treasurer,  3). 


[126] 


MEMBERS  OF  THE  CLASS  OF  1938 


Frances    Polo    Filipkowski 

East  Whotely 
Born  1915  at  Whately.  Graduate  Deerfield  High 
School.  Major  in  History  and  Sociology.  Alpha 
Lambda  Mu 


Betty    Fronces   Gaskell 

•■14  Graves  Street  South  Deerfield 

Born  1917  at  Groton,  Conn.  Groduate  Deerfield 
High  School.  Major  in  English.  Psychology  Club, 
3.    Y.  W.  C.  A,  1,  2,    Sigma  Beta  Chi. 


Sabin  Peter  Filipkowski 

East  Whately 
Born  1912  at  East  Whately.  Graduate  Deerfield 
High  School.  Major  in  Dairying.  Football,  1 
(M),  3{M).     Basketball,  1,  2.     Boseball,  2. 

Jacob  Finkel 

3  Algonquin   Place  Springfield 

Born  1917  at  Worcester.  Graduate  Worcester 
Classical  High  School.  Major  in  Chemistry. 
Chemistry  Club,  3. 

Richard   James   Fitzpatrick 

Rochdale 
Born  1916  at  Rochdale.  Groduate  Leicester 
High  School.-  Major  in  Animal  Husbandry.  Ani- 
mal Husbandry  Club,  1,  2,  3.  Newman  Club, 
2,  3.  M.  S.  C.  ^-H  Club,  1,  2,  3.  Swimming 
Team,    1 . 

James  Appenzellar  Fleming 

40  Clinton  Avenue  Arlington,  N.  J. 

Born  1915  at  Holyoke.  Graduate  Holyoke  High 
School.  Major  in  History  and  Sociology.  History- 
Sociology  Club,  3.     House  Committee,  2. 

Stanley  Allen   Flower 

164  Dresser  Street  Southbridge 

Born  1915  at  Worcester.  Graduate  Mary  E. 
Wells  High  School.  Major  in  English.  Collegian, 
2,  3,  (Editorial  Deportment).  Roister  Doisters,  2. 
Press  Club,  2,  3.  Swimming,  1.  Secretary,  Press 
Club,  3.     Alpha  Gamma   Rho   (Secretary,  2,  3). 

Alfred  Merton   Forbush 

98  Edgewood  Avenue  Longmeadow 

Born  1915  at  Amherst.  Graduate  Technical  High 
School,  Springfield.  Major  in  Landscape  Archi- 
tecture. 

Cyrus  Edwin  French 

266  Vermont  Street  West  Roxbury 

Born  1915  at  Chesterville.  Graduate  Mechanics 
Art  High  School,  Boston.  Major  in  Chemistry. 
Band,  1,  2.  Carnival  (Dance)  Committee,  2. 
Maroon  Key,  2.  Advanced  Military,  3.  Chemistry 
Club,  2,  3.  Mathematics  Club,  2,  3.  Swimming 
Team,  1 .  R.  O.  T.  C.  Rifle  Team,  2.  Sopho- 
more-Senior Hop  Committee,  2.  Theta  Chi 
(Secretary,  2). 

Robert  Wilcox  Gage 

58  Grant  Street  Needhom 

Born  1917  at  Concord,  Graduate  Needhom  High 
School.  Major  in  Distributed  Sciences  (Pre-Med. 
Student).  Men's  Glee  Club,  2.  Student  Reli- 
gious Council,  3.  Christian  Federotion,  2,  3. 
American  Student  Union,  2,  3.   Pre-Med.  Club,  3. 


Berthier  Lyman  Gibbs 

79  Vine  Street  Sougus 

Born  1916  at  Saugus.  Graduate  Sougus  High 
School.  Major  in  Agriculture.  M,  S.  C.  4-H 
Club,  1 .     Soccer  Team,  1 . 

Lane  Giddings 

45  Toconic  Avenue  Great  Barrington 

Born  1916  at  Great  Barrington,  Graduate  Seorles 
High  School.  Pre-Med.  Major.  Orchestra  1 
Band,  1,  2,  3.  Pre-Med.  Club,  2,  3.  Soccer,  1, 
2,  3.  Amherst  Camera  Club,  1,  2,  3.  Index,  3 
(Student  Photographic  Editor). 


Eugen   Pierre   Karl  Lucien   Gierlnger 


Cambr 


Born  1914  at  Boston.  Graduate  Rindge  Tech- 
nical School.  Major  in  Physical  Education.  Car- 
nival Committee,  3  (Chairman  Winter  Sports). 
Newman  Club,  3.  Football,  1.  Hockey,  3  (Assis- 
tant Manager).  Baseball,  1,  2.  M.  S.  C.  Ring 
Committee,  3.     Koppo  Sigma. 

Ann  Louise  Gilbert 

Belmont 
Born  1914  at  Ithaca,  New  York.  Graduate  Bel- 
mont High  School  ond  Northfield  Seminary.  Major 
in  Landscape  Architecture.  Index  (Art  Editor), 
3.  Women's  Glee  Club,  1,  2,  3.  Landscape 
Club,  3.     Phi  Zeta    (Assistant  Treasurer). 

Joseph  Stanley  Gill 

1 1   Spring  Street  Bondsville 

Born  1915  ot  Pittsburgh,  Penn,  Graduate  Palmer 
High  School.  Major  in  Distributed  Sciences. 
Mathematics  Club,    1.     Soccer,    1.     Track   1,  2. 

Edward   Hadley  Glass 

36  East  Street  Lexington 

Born  1917  at  Wolthom.  Graduate  Lexington 
High  School.  Major  in  Entomology.  Fernold 
Entomology  Club,  3.  Swimming,  1.  Kappa  Epsi- 
lon,   (President,  3,  4.     Treosurer,  2,  3). 

Robert   Patrick  Gleason 

82  Mossasoit  Street  Northampton 

Born  1917  at  Northampton.  Groduote  North- 
ampton High  School.  Major  in  Chemistry.  Radio 
Club,  3.     Chemistry  Club,  3.     Baseball,   1. 

Abraham   Bernard  Goldman 

81    Devon  Street  Dorchester 

Born  1917  at  Boston,  Graduate  Roxbury  Mem- 
orial High  School,  Pre-Med.  Major.  Menorah 
Club,  1,  2,  3.  Pre-Med.  Club,  3.  Mathemotics 
Club,  2.  Soccer,  1,  2,  3,  (Manager).  Phi  Lamb- 
da Tou. 


[127] 


MEMBERS  OF  THE  CLASS  OF  1938 


Samuel  Joseph  Golub 

94  Cass  Street  Springfield 

Born  1915  at  North  Middleboro.  Graduate  Class- 
ical High  School.  Major  in  Botany.  Soccer, 
1,  2,  3.  Baseball,  1.  Editor-in-Chief,  Freshmon 
Handbook,  1 .     Phi  Lambda  Tau. 


William  Hughes  Harrison 

566  Haverhill  Street  Lawrence 

Born  1916  at  Lawrence.  Graduate  Methuen 
High  School.  Major  in  Chemistry.  Collegian 
(Business  Boord),  1,  2.  Basketball,  1.  Swim- 
ming, 2.     Phi  Sigma  Kappa. 


William    Butterworth   Graham 

14  Robinson  Court  North  Andover 

Born  1916  at  Providence,  Rhode  Island.  Gradu- 
ate Johnson  High  School.  Major  in  Dairy  In- 
dustry. Collegian  (Business  Board),  1,  2,  3. 
interfratemity  Council,  2,  3.     Q.  T.  V. 


Philip   Hanley  Haskins 

Berlin  Rood  Williamstown 

Born  1915  at  North  Adams.  Graduate  Williams- 
town  High  School.  Major  in  Mathematics. 
Cross -Country,  1.  Spring  Track,  1,  2.  Theta 
Chi. 


Julio  Tice  Graves 

16  Main  Street  Sunderland 
Born  1917  at  Sunderland.  Graduate  Amherst 
High  School.  Major  in  Economics.  Lambda 
Delta  Mu. 

Walter  Albert  Green 

17  Bellevue  Road  Lynn 
Born  1916  at  Lynn.  Transfer  from  Tufts.  Major 
in  Agriculture.  Outing  Club,  1.  Football,  1. 
Track,  1.    Theta  Chi. 

Saul  George  Gruner 

17  Prospect  Street  Pittsfield 

Born  1916  at  Pittsfield.  Graduate  Pittsfield  High 
School.  Major  in  Chemistry.  Menorah  Club,  1, 
2.  Freshman  Handbook  Committee,  1 .  Soccer, 
1.    Track,  1.    Alpha  Epsilon  Pi. 

George  Henry  Guenard 

Forest  Avenue  Dracut 

Born  1913  at  Lowell.  Graduate  Lowell  High 
School.  Major  in  Languages  and  Literature  and 
Education.  Psychology  Club,  3.  Track,  1,  2,  3. 
Member  Relay  Team  taking  First  Place  in  B.A.A. 
meet,  1936. 

Gertrude  Josephine  Hadro 

37  Clark  Street  Easthampton 

Born  1915  ot  Easthampton.  Graduate  Easthamp- 
ton High  School.  Major  in  Chemistry.  Newman 
Club,  1,  2,  3.  Chemistry  Club,  3.  Mathematics 
Club,  1,  2.  Bacteriology  Club,  3.  Lambda  Delta 
Mu. 


Russell  John  Hauck 

56  Winslow  Avenue  Norwood 

Born  1915  at  Norwood.  Graduote  Norwood  High 
School  and  Hebron  Academy.  Major  in  Econom- 
ics. Carnival  Committee,  3.  Informol  Committee, 
3.  Football,  1,  2,  3.  Basketball,  1.  Baseball, 
1,  2,  3.     Kopoa  Sigma. 

Saul   Heller 

5  Westminster' Terrace  Boston 

Born  1916  at  New  York  City.  Graduate  Roxbury 
Memoriol  High  School.  Major  in  Distributed 
Sciences. 

Conrad  Joseph  Hemond,  Jr. 

43  Pearl  Street  Holyoke 

Born  1916  at  Holyoke.  Graduate  Holyoke  High 
School.  Major  in  Mathematics.  Bond,  1,  2,  3. 
(Assistant  Manager,  3).  Press  Club,  1,  2,  3. 
Alpha  Gamma  Rho. 

Harold  Crean  Hemond 

43  Pearl  Street  Holyoke 

Born  1917  at  Holyoke.  Graduate  Holyoke  High 
School.  Major  in  Distributed  Sciences.  Bond, 
1,  2,  3.  R.  O.  T.  C.  Rifle  Team,  1,  2.  Alpha 
Gamma  Rho. 

Thomas  Hennessey,  Jr. 

29  Carver  Rood  Newton  Highlands 

Born  1917  at  Brookline.  Graduate  Newton  High 
School.  Pre-Med.  Major.  Swimming,  1 .  Hockey, 
1.     Baseball,   1. 


Herbert  Milton   Halpern 

1774  Northampton  Street  Holyoke 

Born  1916  at  New  York,  New  York.  Graduate 
Williston  Academy.  Major  in  Economics.  His- 
tory-Sociology Club,  2.  Menorah  Club,  1,  2,  3. 
Football,  1.     Phi  Lombda  Tau. 


Edward  William  Higgins 

78  Scituote  Street  Arlington 

Born  1916  at  Skowhegon,  Maine.  Graduate 
Arlington  High  School.  Major  in  Physical  ond 
Biological  Sciences.  Men's  Glee  Club,  1.  Rifle 
Team,  1,  2. 


Edward    Handverger 

Village  Street  West  Medway 

Born  1915  at  West  Medway.  Graduate  Medway 
High  School.  Major  in  Animal  Husbandry.  Ani- 
mal Husbandry  Club,  2,  3.  Menorah  Club,  1,  2, 
3.  Football,  1.  Spring  Track,  1,  2,  3.  (Assis- 
tant Manager). 


Kathryn    Hill 

20  Craiwell  Avenue  West  Springfield 

Born  1916  at  Springfield.  Graduate  Ridgewood 
High  School,  Ridgewood,  New  Jersey.  Transfer 
from  New  Jersey  State  College  for  Women. 
Major  in  Home  Economics.  Home  Economics 
Club,  3. 


[128] 


MEMBERS  OF  THE  CLASS  OF  1938 


John  Sherman  Hoar 

33  East  Pleasant  Street  Arlington,  Virginio 

Born  1917  at  Delta,  Colorado.  Graduate  Wan- 
watosa  High  School,  Wonwatosa,  Wisconsin. 
Major  in  English.  Roister  Doisters,  1,  2,  3. 
Men's  Debating  Team,  1,  2,  3.  Spring  Track,  1. 
President,  Roister  Doisters,  3.  Flint  Contest,  1. 
Burnham  Contest,   1,  2. 

Leiand  Worthington  Hooker 

31    Hawthorne  Street  Springfield 

Born  1917  at  Springfield.  Groduate  Classical 
High  School.  Major  in  Forestry,  Outing  Club, 
1,  2.     Swimming,  I.     Phi  Sigma  Kappa. 

Leroy  Kingsbury  Houghton,  Jr. 

25  Richwood  Street  West  Roxbury 

Born  1916  at  West  Roxbury.  Graduate  Boston 
English   High  School. 

Benjamin  Gordon   Hurwitch 

50  Bloomfield  Street  Dorchester 

Born  1917  at  Boston,  Graduate  Boston  English 
High  School.  Major  in  Economics.  Carnival 
Committee,  3.  (Transportation  Committee  Chair- 
man). Menoroh  Club,  1,  2,  3.  Freshman  Man- 
ager Football,  1.  Sophomore  Manager  Football, 
2.  Assistant  Manager  Football,  3.  Manager, 
Football,  '35-37.  Advertising  Manager,  Fresh- 
man Handbook,  2.  Phi  Lambda  Tau  (Historian, 
2,  3). 

Ralph  Ingram 

75  Queen  Street  Falmouth 

Born  1915  at  Bonne  Bay,  Newfoundland.  Grad- 
uate Falmouth  High  School.  Major  in  Entomol- 
ogy. Fernald  Entomology  Club,  3.  Cross- 
country, 3.     Spring  Track,  2.     Kappa  Sigma. 

Richard  Rondlett  Irving 

42  Summer  Street  Methuen 

Born  1915  at  Lawrence.  Graduate  Methuen 
High  School.  Major  in  Landscape  Architecture, 
Academic  Activities  Board,  2,  3.  Orchestra,  1, 
2,  3.  Men's  Glee  Club,  1 .  (Assistant  Manager, 
1,  Manager,  2,  3).  Horticultural  Show  Com- 
mittee, 3.  Landscape  Club,  2,  3,  Advanced 
Military,  3.  Swimming,  1,  2,  3  (M).  Kappa 
Sigma. 

Mitchell   Irving  Jackson 

24  Linden  Avenue  Fairhoven 

Born  1915  at  Maiden.  Graduate  Fairhoven  High 
School,  Major  in  Economics.  Carnival  Com- 
mittee, 3  (Treasurer).  Menoroh  Club,  1,  2,  3. 
Football,  1,  2.  Basketball,  1.  Freshman  Hand- 
book Committee,  2.  Phi  Lambda  Tau  (House 
Man,  2,  Treasurer,  3). 

Seymour  Theodore  Jacobson 

20  Saratoga  Street  Springfield 

Born  1915  at  Paterson,  New  Jersey.  Graduate 
Classical  High  School,  Springfield.  Major  in 
Chemistry.  Menoroh  Club,  1,  2.  Chemistry 
Club,  2,  3.  Mathematics  Club,  3.  Football,  1. 
Basketball,  1.  Swimming,  1,  2,  3.  (M2).  Fresh- 
man Handbook,  1 .  Phi  Lambda  Tau  (Sports 
Captain,  3). 


Joseph  John  Javorski 

5  Alden  Avenue  Thompsonville,  Conn. 

Born  1916  at  Thompsonville,  Conn.  Graduate 
Enfield,  Conn.,  High  School.  Transfer  from  A.I.C. 

Ruth  Rita  Jefferson 

660  Main  Street  West  Springfield 

Born  1915  at  West  Springfield,  Tronsfer  from 
Springfield  Junior  College.    Major  in  Distributed 

Sciences. 

Doris  Wynn  Jenkins 

491   Main  Street  Shrewsbury 

Born  1914  at  Mineola,  L,  I.,  New  York,  Graduate 
Shrewsbury  High  School,  Major  in  Londscape 
Architecture.     Phi  Zeto. 

Herbert  Harry  Johnson 

25  Metcolf  Street  Roslindale 

Born  1915  at  Roslindale.  Graduate  Mechanic 
Arts  High  School,  Boston.  Major  in  Landscape 
Architecture,  Landscape  Club,  3.  Floriculture 
Club,  3.  Football,  1.  Hockey,  1,  2,  3.  Theta 
Chi. 

Kirtley  Leverett  Judd 

50  Burton  Street  Springfield 

Born  1915  at  Springfield.  Graduate  Classical 
High  School,  fvtajor  in  Economics.  History- 
Sociology  Club,  2.    Soccer,  1 . 

Carol  Julian 

4  Foirview  Way  Amherst 

Born  1917  at  Amherst.  Graduate  Amherst  High 
School.  Major  in  Social  Sciences.  Lambda  Delta 
Mu. 

Eleanor  Burton  Julian 

4  Foirview  Way  Amherst 

Born  1915  at  Amherst.  Graduate  Amherst  High 
School.  Major  in  Education.  W.  S.  G,  A., 
1,  2,  3.  Freshman  Handbook  Committee.  Assis- 
tant Advertising   Board.     Lambda  Delta  Mu. 

Martha   Dorothy  Kaplinsky 

306  Chestnut  Street  Holyoke 

Born  1916  at  Holyoke.  Graduate  Holyoke  High 
School.  Major  in  Home  Economics.  Women's 
Glee  Club,  1.  Home  Economics  Club,  3.  Men- 
oroh Club,  1,  2,  3  (Secretary).  Intersorority 
Council,  3.     Sigma  Iota   (Treasurer,  3). 

Julian  Herman   Katzeff 

16  Strothmore  Road  Brookline 

Born  1917  at  Dorchester.  Graduate  Boston  Latin 
School.  Pred-Med.  Major.  Index  (Literary 
Editor),  '37.  Collegian,  (Sports  Editor,  36-31, 
Associate  Editor,  '37-'38).  Student  Religious 
Council  (Vice-President),  2.  Menoroh  Club, 
1,  2,  3.  Pre-Med.  Club  (Secretary),  3.  Fresh- 
man Handbook,  '35.  Religious  Council  Repre- 
sentative, '36.  Senate  A.  B.  Degree  Committee, 
'35-'37.     Alpha  Epsilon  Pi. 


[129} 


MEMBERS  OF  THE  CLASS  OF  1938 


Thomas  Francis  Kelley 

37  Beal  Road  Waltham 
Born  1917  at  Concord.  Graduate  Waltham  High 
School.  Major  in  Entomology.  Fernald  Entomol- 
ogy Club,  3  (Secretary).  Newman  Club,  1,  2,  3. 
M.  S,  C.  4-H  Club,  3.  Football,  1.  Baseball,  1. 
Lambda  Chi  Alpha. 

Marleta  Gibson  Kenyon 

East  Douglas 
Born  1915  at  East  Douglas.  Graduate  Douglas 
Memorial  High  School.  Major  in  Home  Econom- 
ics Y  W.  C.  A.,  1,  2.  Home  Economics  Club, 
1,  2,  3. 

Richard  Coleman  King 

38  Walnut  Place  Newtonville 
Born  191.5  at  Boston.  Graduate  Newtonville  High 
School.  Major  in  Economics.  Men's  Glee  Club, 
1,  2,  3.  Advanced  Military,  3.  Football,  1. 
Cheer  Leader,  1,  3.  Bay  State  Revue,  2.  Rifle 
Team,  1,  2,  3.     Theta  Chi. 

Frank  William  Kingsbury 

Sterling 
Born  1916  at  Sterling.  Graduate  North  High, 
School,  Worcester.  Moior  in  Animal  Husbandry. 
Animal  Husbandry  Club,  1,  2,  3.  K.  0.  Club, 
1,  2,  3.     Alpha  Gamma  Rho. 

Helen  Kingsbury 

Sterling 
Born  1915  at  Sterling.  Graduate  North  High, 
School,  Worcester.  Major  in  Home  Economics. 
Home  Economics  Club,  3. 

Jessie  Kinsman 

27  Perrin  Street  Roxbury 

Born  1917  at  Roxbury.  Graduate  Girl's  Latin 
School,  Boston.  Major  in  Economics.  Women's 
Glee  Club,  3.  Carnival  Committee,  2,  3.  His- 
tory-Sociology Club,  2.  Class  Secretary,  1,  2,  3. 
Sophomore-Senior  Hop  Committee,  2.  Sigma 
Beta  Chi. 

Rowland  Klaucke 

612  Plantation  Street  Worcester 

Born  1915  in  England.  Graduate  North  High, 
School,  Worcester.  Major  in  Physical  and  Bio- 
logical Sciences.  Football,  I,  2,  3.  Alpha  Gam- 
ma  Rho. 

Maxwell  Irving   Klayman 

540  East  7th  Street  South  Boston 

Born  1917  at  Boston.  Graduate  Boston  Latin 
School.  Major  in  Economics.  Collegian  (Edi- 
torial Board),  1,  2,  3.  History-Sociology  Club,  3. 
Menorah  Club,  1,  2,  3. 

Ruth  Elinor  Kodis 

Henshaw  Street  Leicester 

Born  1917  at  Leicester.  Graduate  Leicester  High 
School.  Major  in  Distributed  Sciences.  Or- 
chestra, 1,  2,  3.     Christian  Federation,   1,  2. 


Bernard  Lester  Kohn 

168  Ruthven  Street  Roxbury 

Born  1916  at  Boston.  Graduate  Boston  Latin 
School.  Major  in  English.  Academics  Activities 
Board,  3.  Men's  Glee  Club,  1,  2,  3.  Roister 
Doisters,  1.  History-Sociology  Club,  2.  Men's 
Glee  Club  (Assistant  Manager,  2,  Manager,  3). 
Alpha  Epsilon  Pi    (Sentinel,  3). 

Frank  Peter  Kuklewicz 

179  Avenue  A  Turners  Falls 

Born   1916  at  Turners  Falls.  Graduate  Turners 

Falls  High  School.     Major  in  Physics. 

David  Alleson  Lamb 

5  Burnett  Avenue  South  Hadley 

Born  1915  at  Holyoke.  Graduate  Mount  Hermon 
School.     Major  in  Chemistry.     Alpha  Sigma  Phi, 

John  Lavrokas 

59  Elton  Avenue  Watertown 

Born  1915  at  Watertown.  Graduate  Watertown 
High  School.  Major  in  Landscape  Architecture. 
Football,   1.     Baseball,  1.     Hockey,  1,  2. 


James  Donovan  Lee 

Chester 
Born  1915  at  Niagara  Falls,  N.  Y.  Graduate 
Chester  High  School.  Major  in  Distributed 
Sciences.  Christian  Association,  1,  2.  Bay  State 
Revue,   1 .     Alpha  Gamma  Rho. 

Lawrence  Levinson 

26  Dorothy  Rood  Arlington 

Born    1916  at  Somerville.  Graduate   Somerville 

High    School.      Major    in  Distributed    Sciences. 

Menorah     Society,     1,    2.  Debating     Club,    2. 

Roister  Doisters,  1,  2.  Burnham  Declamation 
Contest,   1 . 

Solveig   Utne  Liljigren 

102  Kemper  Street  Wolloston 

Born  1911  in  Sweden.  Graduate  Quincy  High 
School.     Major  in  English. 

Norman  Elliott  Linden 

22  Summit  Avenue  Everett 

Born  1915  at  Everett.  Graduate  Everett  High 
School.  Major  in  Distributed  Sciences.  Ad- 
vanced Military,  3.  Football,  1,  2,  3  (M). 
Hockey,  1,  2   (M).     Baseball,   1,  2.     Theta  Chi. 

Frederick   Burgess  Lindstrom 

34  Rockview  Street  Palmer 

Born  1915  at  Palmer.  Graduate  Palmer  High 
School.  Major  in  Chemistry.  Collegian  (Edi- 
torial  Board,   1,  2). 

Melvin  Theodore  Little 

615  North  Street  East  Weymouth 

Born  1915  at  Dorchester.  Graduate  Weymouth 
High  School.  Major  in  Social  Sciences.  Track, 
1.  Cross-Country,  2  (M).  Wrestling,  1.  Q. 
T.  V. 


[130] 


MEMBERS  OF  THE  CLASS  OF  1938 


Elmer  Ralph  Lombard 

70  Stratford  Avenue  Pittsfield 

Born  1916  at  Springfield.  Graduote  Pittsfield 
High  School.  Major  in  Distributed  Sciences. 
Swimming,   1,  2.     Alpha  Gamma   Rho. 

William  Francis  Lonergan 

35  West  Alvord  Street  Springfield 

Born  1916  at  Springfield.  Groduate  Cathedral 
High  School.  Pre-Med.  Major.  Carnival  Com- 
mittee, 3.  Newman  Club,  1,  2,  3.  Interfraternity 
Council,  2,  3.  Pre-Med.  Club,  2,  3.  Football,  2. 
Sigma  Phi  Epsilon  (Historian,  3). 

Clifford  Norton  Luce 

59  Granville  Avenue  Worcester 

Born  1914  at  Danvers.  Graduate  South  High 
School.  Major  in  Floriculture.  Band,  1,  2,  3. 
Theta  Chi. 

Frank  Merton  Lyon 

2625  Dixwell  Avenue  Hamden,  Conn. 

Born  1912  at  Pittsfield.  Graduote  New  Haven 
High  and  Williston  Academy.  Major  in  Econom- 
ics. Men's  Glee  Club,  1,  2,  3.  Maroon  Key, 
(Secretary  and  Treasurer),  2.  Soccer,  1,  2,  3. 
Hockey,   1.     Baseball,   1.     Theta  Chi. 

Robert  Stephen  Lyons 

20  Goodrich  Street  Springfield 

Born  1916  at  Springfield.  Graduate  Classical 
High  School.  Major  in  Economics.  Newman 
Club,  1,  2,  3.  Advanced  Military,  3.  Inter- 
fraternity Council,  3.  Football,  1,  2.  Basketball, 
1.  Baseball,  1,  2  (M).  Military  Ball  Committee, 
3.     Lambda  Chi  Alpha  (Secretary,  3). 

Richards   Lockwood   Mabie 

39  Pleasant  Street  Sharon 

Born  1916  at  Boston.  Graduate  Mount  Hermon 
School.  Major  in  Distributed  Sciences.  Band, 
1,  2.    Soccer,  1 .    Track,  1 . 

Robert  Douglas  MacCurdy 

214  Orchard  Street  Wotertown 

Born  1914  at  Wollaston.  Graduate  Wotertown 
High  School.  Major  in  Dairy  Industry.  Roister 
Doisters,  2,  3.  Carnival  Committee,  2,  3.  Ad- 
vanced Military,  3.  Football,  1.  Swimming,  1,  2. 
Hockey,  2. 

Lois  Rogers  Macomber 

5  Cottage  Street  Fairhoven 

Born  1917  at  Fairhoven.  Graduate  Fairhoven 
High  School.  Major  in  Psychology.  Roister 
Doisters,  1.  Burnhom  Declamation  Contest,  1,  2. 
Sigma  Beta  Chi. 

Lillian  Russell  Mann 

18  Holland  Avenue  Westfield 

Born  1916  at  Homer,  New  York.  Graduate  West- 
field  High  School.  Major  in  Home  Economics. 
Home  Economics  Club,  3.  Christian  Federation,  1. 


Walter  Charles  Mayko 

163  Walnut  Street  Holyoke 

Born  1911  at  West  Springfield.  Graduate  West 
Springfield  High  School.  Transfer  from  Univer- 
sity of  Texas.  Major  in  Chemistry.  Chemistry 
Club,  3  (Vice-President).    Alpha  Sigma  Phi. 

Donald  Sanford  McGowan 

320  Pleasant  Street  Holyoke 

Born  1914  at  Holyoke.  Graduate  Mount  Hermon 
School.  Major  in  Economics.  Advanced  Military, 
3.     Spring  Track,  2,  3.     Kappa  Epsilon. 

David  Elliot  Mildram 

74  Myrtle  Avenue  Greenwood 

Born  1915  at  Greenwoo(f!  Graduate  Brighton 
Academy.  Major  in  Landscape  Architecture. 
Maroon  Key,  2.    Class  Captain,  1,  2,  3.    Hockey, 

2,  3.     Baseball,  2,  3.     Phi  Sigma  Kappa. 

Elaine  Helen  Milkey 

16  Main  Street  Montague  City 

Born  1916  at  Turners  Falls.  Graduate  Turners 
Falls  High  School.  Major  in  English.  Sigma 
Beta  Chi. 

Carol    Frances   Millard 

Stockbridge 
Born  1916  at  Stockbridge.  Graduate  Taunton 
High  School.  Major  in  Home  Economics.  History- 
Sociology  Club,  2.  Home  Economics  Club,  1,  2,  3. 
Women's  Rifle  Team,  1,2.     Y.  W.C.  A.,  1. 

Barbara  Mitchell  Miller 

38  Virginia  Street  Springfield 

Born  1916  at  Springfield.  Graduate  Central  Hgh 
School.  Transfer  from  Americon  International 
College.  Major  in  Economics.  International 
Relations  Club,  3. 

Edward  Theodore  Mish 

North  Main  Street  South   Hadley  Falls 

Born  1915  at  South  Hadley  Falls.  Graduate  South 
Hadley  High  School.  Major  in  Forestry.  Foot- 
ball,  1.     Alpha  Gamma  Rho. 

Walter  Kimball  Mitchell,  Jr. 

16  Miles  Rood  Newton  Highlands 

Born  1916  at  Milton.  Graduate  Newton  High 
School.  Major  in  Landscape  Architecture.  Men's 
Glee  Club,  1,  2.     Horticultural  Show  Committee, 

3.  Landscape  Club,  3.  Floriculture  Club,  3. 
Football,    1.     Theta   Chi. 

Joy  Emma  Moore 

58  Center  Street  Leeds 

Born  1914  at  Hartford,  Conn.  Graduate  North- 
ampton High  School.  Major  in  Home  Economics. 
Home  Economics  Club,  3,  4.    Sigma  Beta  Chi. 

Frances  Lillian  Morley 

Mount  Pleosont  Amherst 

Born  1916  at  Grand  Rapids,  Michigan.  Graduate 
Amherst  High  School.  Major  in  Languages  and 
Literature.     Phi  Zeta. 


[131} 


MEMBERS  OF  THE  CLASS  OF  1938 


Robert  Karl  Morrison 

54  Strong  Avenue  Pittsfield 

Born  1914  at  Pittsfield.  Groduote  Pittsfield 
High  School.  Major  in  Distributed  Sciences. 
Advanced  Military,  3.  Baseball,  1.  Kappa 
Epsilon. 

Laura  Edison  Morse 

63  Kilburn  Road  Belmont 

Born  1916  at  Belmont.  Graduate  Belmont  High 
School.  Transfer  from  Lasell  Junior  College. 
Major  in  Bacteriology. 

Roy  Hepworth  Moult 

22  Oneida  Street  Lynn 
Born  1913  at  Long  Island  City,  New  York.  Grad- 
uate Lynn  Classical  High  School.  Major  in 
Chemistry.  Men's  Glee  Club,  1,  2,  3.  Roister 
Doisters,  2,  3.     Chemistry  Club,  3.  Swimming, 

1.  Kappa  Epsilon. 

Mitchell  Francis  NeJame 

21  West  Main  Street  North  Adams 

Born  1916  at  North  Adams.  Graduate  Drury 
High  School.  Major  in  Mathematics.  Academic 
Activities  Board,  3.  Index  (Business  Manager), 
3.  Collegian  (Business  Board),  1,  2,  3.  (Sub- 
scription Manager)  3,  4.  Newman  Club,  1,  2,  3. 
Mathematics  Club,  1,  2,  3.  Cross -Country,  1,  2 
(M),  3  (M).  Spring  Track,  1,  2  (M).  Fresh- 
man Handbook  Committee,  1. 

Phyllis   Louise   Nelson 

110  Wildwood  Avenue  Lexington 

Born  1917  at  Arlington.  Graduate  Arlington  High 
School.     Major  in  Social  Sciences.     W.  S.  G.  A., 

2.  Home  Economics  Club,  2.  Bay  State  Revue 
1.     Phi   Zeta. 

Edward  George  Newman 

40  Spring  Street  North  Brookfield 

Born  1916  at  North  Brookfield.  Graduate  North 
Brookfield  High  School.  Major  in  Distributed 
Sciences.  Football,  1.  Track,  1,  2.  Kappa 
Sigma. 

George  Niden 

12  Highland  Circle  Needham 

Born  1917  at  Oshkosh,  Wisconsin.  Graduate 
Needham  Senior  High  School.  Transfer  from 
Ohio  University.  Pre-Dental  Major.  (Distributed 
Sciences).  Football,  2,  3.  Hockey,  3.  Kappa 
Sigma. 

Kenneth  Gordon   Nolan 

7  Spruce  Street  Danvers 

Born  1914  at  Peabody.  Graduate  Danvers  High 
School.  Major  in  Social  Sciences.  Alpha  Sigma 
Phi. 

William   George   Noonan 

96  Cedar  Street  Haverhill 

Born  1916  at  Haverhill.  Graduate  Haverhill  High 
School.  Major  in  Distributed  Sciences.  Baseball, 
1 .     Cross-Country,  1 .     Hockey,  1 . 


Mary  O'Connell 

20  Foirmount  Avenue  Wakefield 

Born  1916  at  Wakefield.  Graduate  Wakefield 
High  School.  Major  in  Languages  and  Literature. 
Newman  Club,  1.  2.  History-Sociology  Club,  2. 
Collegian  (Editorial  Board),  2.  Phi  Zeta  (Assis- 
tant Treasurer). 

Helen  Esther  O'Hearn 

1 1  Woodbridge  Street  Cambridge 
Born  1914  at  Cambridge.  Graduate  Cambridge 
High  and  Latin  School.  Major  in  Distributed 
Sciences.  Newman  Club,  1,  2,  3.  Alpha  Lambda 
Mu. 

James   Barnes  Olivier 

118   Lincoln   Street  Holyoke 

Born  1917  at  Pittsburg,  Penn.  Graduate  Holyoke 
High  School.  Major  in  Distributed  Sciences. 
Football,  1.  Baseball,  1.  Track,  2.  Hockey,  1. 
Kappa  Sigma. 

Donald  Osley 

Chestnut  Street  Hatfield 

Born  1916  at  Hatfield.  Graduate  Smith  Academy. 
Major  in  Chemistry.  Soccer,  2,  3.  Basketball,  1. 
Alpha  Sigma  Phi. 

Alfred  Sylvester  Page 

Shay  Street  Amherst 

Born  1915  at  Springfield.  Graduate  Classical 
High  School.  Major  in  Economics.  Baseball,  1. 
Kappa  Sigma. 

Evelyn   Maude  Parker 

12  Howe  Street  Orange 
Born  1916  at  Greenfield.  Graduate  Orange  High 
School.     Major  in  History  and  Sociology. 

Robert  Cowan  Perkins 

262  Sunderland  Road  Worcester 

Born  1916  at  Worcester.  Graduate  Worcester 
High  School.  Major  in  Entomology.  Fernald 
Entomology  Club,  3.  Football,  1,  2,  3  (M). 
Phi  Sigma  Kappa. 

Barbara   Sanborn    Phillips 

25  Shottuck  Street  Greenfield 

Born  1916  at  Bridgeport,  Conn.  Graduate  Green- 
field High  School.  Major  in  Home  Economics. 
Women's  Glee  Club,  1.  Roister  Doisters,  3. 
History-Sociology  Club,  1.  Home  Economics  Club, 
1,  2,  3.    Y.  W.  C.  A.,  1. 

Virginia  Mabel  Pond 

12  Miles  Street  Greenfield 

Born  1917  at  Greenfield.  Graduate  Greenfield 
High  School.  Major  in  Economics.  Home  Econ- 
omics Club,  1. 

Paul  Sears  Putnam 

189  Silver  Street  Greenfield 

Born  1916  at  Greenfield.  Graduate  Greenfield 
High  School.  Major  in  Landscape  Architecture. 
Outing  Club,  3.  Football,  1,  2,  3.  Basketball, 
1,  2. 


[132] 


MEMBERS  OF  THE  CLASS  OF  1938 


Maxwell   Pyenson 

North  Otis 
Born  1916  at  North  Otis.  Graduate  Lee  High 
School.  Major  in  Poultry  Husbandry.  K.  0.  Club, 
2,  3.  Poultry  Judging  Team,  2.  Alpho  Epsilon 
Pi. 

Wenrworth   Quast 

6  Concord  Street  Natick 
Born  1916  ot  Haverhill.  Graduate  Natick  High 
School.  Major  in  Psychology.  Outing  Club,  1,  2. 
Christian  Association,  1.  History-Sociology  Club, 
2.  Combined  Chorus,  1,  2.  Band,  1.  Men's 
Glee  Club,  1,  2  Orchestra,  1.  Soccer,  1,  2. 
Spring  Track,  1,  2,     Phi  Sigma  Koppo. 

Sylvia  Arline  Randall 

Taylor  Street  Granby 

Born  1917  at  Belchertown.  Graduate  South 
Hadley  High  School.  Major  in  Home  Economics. 
Intersorority  Council,  2,  3.  Psychology  Club,  3. 
Alpha  Lambda  Mu. 

Horace  Hillman  Randlett 

Boston   Road  Palmer 

Born  1914  at  Palmer.  Graduate  Palmer  High 
School.     Major  in  Distributed  Sciences. 

Frances   Bullard    Rathbone 

21    Rutherford  Avenue  Haverhill 

Born  1916  at  Newton.  Graduate  Haverhill  High 
School.  Major  in  Botany,  Outing  Club,  1,  2 
(Secretary),  3.  W.  A.  A.,  (Vice-President,  2, 
Cobinet,  3).     Sigma  Beta  Chi. 

Theodore  Albert  Rice 

7  Harvard  Street  Wellesley 
Born  1916  at  Boston.  Graduate  Wellesley  High 
School  Major  in  Economics.  History-Sociology 
Club,  3.  Football,  1,  2,  3.  Baseball,  1.  Phi 
Sigma  Kappa. 

Frederick  Charles  Riel 

11    Fourth  Street  Turners  Falls 

Born  1914  at  Shottuckville.  Graduate  Turners 
Falls  High  School.  Major  in  Distributed  Sciences. 
Class  Sergeant  ot  Arms,  2.  Pre-Med.  Club,  2. 
Mathematics  Club,  1.  Football,  1.  Basketball, 
1,  2.     Baseball,  1,  2. 

William  Charles  Riley 

21    Fairfield  Avenue  Holyoke 

Born  1917  at  Holyoke.  Graduate  South  Hadley 
High  School.  Major  in  Dairy  Industry.  Student 
Senate,  3.  Advanced  Military,  3.  Interfroter- 
nity  Council,  2,  3.  Football,  1,  2.  Basketball, 
1,  2,  3.  Spring  Track,  1,  2.  Sophomore-Senior 
Hop  Committee,  2.  Kappa  Epsilon  (Vice-Presi- 
dent, 3.  4). 

William  Edward  Roberge 

91   Montgomery  Street  Westfield 

Born    1916   at   Westfield.  Graduate   Westfield 

High    School.      Major    in  Distributed    Sciences. 

Football,  1,  2.    Track,  1.  Sigma  Phi  Epsilon. 


Charles    Rosenbloom 

145  Essex  Street  Holyoke 
Born  1915  at  Holyoke.  Graduate  Holyoke  High 
School.  Major  in  History  and  Sociology.  History- 
Sociology  Club,  3.     Phi  Lambda  Tau. 

Dean  Leonard  Rounds 

6  Honscom  Avenue  Reading 

Born  1915  at  Reading.  Graduate  Reading  High 
School.  Major  in  Entomology.  Fernald  Ento- 
mology Club,  3.  Football,  1.  Swimming,  1,  2, 
(M),  3,   (M).     Koppo  Sigma. 

George  Stephen  Rozwenc 

5  Franklin  Court  Northampton 

Born  1916  at  Boonton,  N.  J.  Graduate  North- 
ampton High  School.  Major  in  Distributed 
Sciences.  Swimming,  I,  2,  3,  (M).  Index  (Edi- 
tor-in-Chief, 3). 

Robert  Jacob  Rustigan 

146  Solem  Street  Medford 
Born  1915  in  Armenia.  Graduate  Medford  High 
School.  Major  in  Bacteriology.  Menorah  Club, 
1,  2,  3.    M.  S.  C.  4-H  Club,  1,  2,  3. 

Louise  Baldwin  Rutter 

1 77  Weston  Street  Wolthom 

Born  1916  at  Woltham.  Graduate  Waltham 
High  School.  Mojor  in  Home  Economics.  Home 
Economics  Club,  1,  2,  3.     Dad's  Day  Committee, 

1,  2,  3.  Lambda  Delta  Mu  (Portal  Guard,  2. 
House  Chairman,  3). 

James  Harvey  Savage 

Chestnut  Street  Lynnfield  Center 

Born  1913  at  Lynnfield  Center.  Graduate  Coburn 
Academy.    Major  in  Distributed  Sciences.    Track, 

2,  3.     Football,  2,  3. 

Elizabeth  Terry  Scace 

Cascade  Street  Pittsfield 

Born  1917  at  Pittsfield.  Graduate  Pittsfield  High 
School.  Major  in  Home  Economics.  Outing  Club, 
1 .  Home  Economics  Club,  1 .  M.  S.  C.  4-H  Club, 
1.     Alpha  Lambda  Mu    (Treasurer,  2). 

Jane  Elizabeth  Schopfer 

120  Hillcroft  Avenue  Worcester 

Born  1916  at  Passaic,  New  Jersey.  Graduate 
North  High  School,  Worcester.  Major  in  Home 
Economics.  Home  Economics  Club,  1,  2.  Lambda 
Delta  Mu. 

Ethel  Frances  Seal 

81    Beaconsfield  Rood  Worcester 

Born  1916  at  Worcester.  Graduate  Clossicol 
High  School.  Major  in  Home  Economics.  Wo- 
men's Glee  Club,  1,  2,  3.  Home  Economics 
Club,  2,  3.     Choir,  1.    Y.  W.  C.  A.,  1. 


[133] 


MEMBERS  OF  THE  CLASS  OF  1938 


Morion  Shaw 

Belchertown 
Born  1917  at  Belchertown.  Groducte  Belcher- 
town High  School.  Major  in  Distributed  Social 
Sciences.  Women's  Glee  Club,  1,  2.  Christian 
Federation,  1,  2,  3.  Student  Union  (Secretory), 
2. 

Frederick  John  Sievers 

35  Fearing  Street  Amherst 

Born  1916  at  Milwaukee.  Graduate  Amherst 
High  School.  Major  in  Economics.  Men's  De- 
bating Team,  2.  Student  Senate,  2.  Carnival 
Committee,  3.  History-Sociology  Club,  3.  Dairy 
Club  2,  3.  Class  Officer,  1,  2,  3.  Football, 
1,  2  (M),  3  (M).  Basketball,  2  (M),  3  (M). 
Spring  Track,  2  (M).     Kappa  Sigma. 

Donald  Lawrence  Silverman 

54  Elm  Hill  Avenue  Roxbury 

Born  1917  at  Roxbury.  Graduate  Boston  Public 
Latin  School.  Major  in  Economics.  Collegian, 
(Assistant  Business  Manager),  2,  3.  Interfro- 
ternity  Council  (Treasurer),  3.  Football,  1.  Soc- 
cer, 2,  3  (M).  Basketball,  1.  Hockey,  2.  Spring 
Track,  1,  2,  Alpha  Epsilon  Pi  (Historian,  2,- 
Exchequer,  3). 


Russell  Eaton  Smith 

Smith  Lone  Methuen 

Born  1917  at  Methuen.  Graduate  Mount  Her- 
mon  School.  Major  in  Animal  Husbandry.  Inter- 
froternity  Council,  3.  Soccer,  2.  Alpha  Sigma 
Phi. 

Phyllis  Maude   Snow 

320  Prospect  Street  Brockton 

Born  1915  at  Brockton.  Graduate  Thayer  Acad- 
emy, Braintree.  Major  in  Home  Economics. 
History-Sociology  Club,  2.  Home  Economics 
Club,  1,  2,  3.    Phi  Zeta. 

Harry  Miles  Snyder 

12  Sherwood  Rood  Arlington 

Born  1916  at  Bellefonte,  Penn.  Graduate  Ar- 
lington High  School.  Major  in  Forestry.  Dad's 
Day  Committee,  2.  Freshman  Play,  1 .  Koppa 
Sigma. 

Kathryne  Ida  Speight 

124  Sumner  Avenue  Springfield 

Born  1917  at'  Springfield.  Graduate  Agawam 
High  School,  Major  in  Home  Economics.  W.  S. 
G.  A,,  1.     Lambda  Delta  Mu. 


Stephen  Israel  Silverman 

208  Blue  Hill  Parkway  Chelseo 

Born  1917  at  Chelsea,  Graduate  Roxbury  Mem- 
orial High  School.  Major  in  Social  Sciences. 
Football,  1,  2,  3.  Basketball,  1.  Baseball,  1,  2. 
Alpha  Epsilon  Pi.    Chapter  Reporter. 

Frank  Alphonse  Slesinski 

40  Meadow  Road  Northampton 

Born  1916  at  Northampton.  Graduate  North- 
ampton High  School.  Major  in  Chemistry.  Foot- 
ball, 1,  2,  3.     Basketball,  2,  3.     Spring  Track,  2. 


Edna  Angie  Sprague 

Bridge  Street  Hamilton 

Born  1917  at  Hamilton.  Graduate  Hamilton 
High  School,  Major  in  Distributed  Sciences. 
Christian  Federoton,  1,  2,  3.    Alpha  Lambda  Mu. 

Christine  Alan  Stewart 

Cook  Street  Boylston 

Born  1915  at  Boylston.  Graduate  Worcester 
High  School  of  Commerce.  Major  in  Home 
Economics.  Home  Economics  Club,  3.  Lambda 
Delta  Mu. 


Jack  Tibbets  Slocomb 

158  Spring  Street  Brockton 

Born  1916  at  Providence,  Rhode  Island.  Grad- 
uate Brockton  High  School.  Major  in  Forestry. 
Maroon  Key,  2.  Class  Sergeant  at  Arms,  1. 
Sigma  Phi  Epsilon. 

Philip  Smardon 

564  Forest  Avenue  Belfast,  Maine 

Born  1915  at  Portland,  Maine.  Graduate  Crosby 
High  School,  Belfast,  Maine.  Major  in  Land- 
scape Architecture.  Landscape  Club,  3.  Cross- 
country,  1 . 

Rodger  Chapman  Smith 

West  Street  Amherst 

Born  1915  at  Holyoke.  Graduate  Kimball  Union 

Academy.  Major  in  Agricultural  Economics. 
Collegian    (Editorial   Department),   2.     Christian 

Federation,   2.      M.    S.  C.    4-H    Club,    1,    2,    3. 

Freshman  Handbook,  1.  Phi  Sigma  Kappa 
(Auditor). 


Mary  Elizabeth  Streeter 

83  Wellesley  Road  Holyoke 

Born  1916  at  Holyoke.  Graduate  Holyoke  High 
School.  Major  in  Home  Economics.  Outing  Club, 
1.  Home  Economics  Club,  1,  2,  3.  A.  B.  De- 
gree  Committee,   3.      Phi    Zeta    (Secretary,   3). 

Barbara  Jeanette  Strode 

10  West  Street  Marblehead 

Born  1917  at  Lynn.  Graduate  Marblehead  High 
School.  Major  in  English.  Women's  Glee  Club, 
1,2,3.  Roister  Doisters,  2,  3.  Christian  Federa- 
tion, 1,  2,  3.  Assistant  Manager,  Women's  Glee 
Club,  3.     Phi  Zeta. 

Alfred   Milton   Swiren 

33   Kenwood  Terrace  Springfield 

Born  1917  at  Springfield.  Graduate  Classical 
High  School.  Major  in  Social  Sciences.  Mathe- 
matics Club,  2.  Menorah  Club,  1,  2.  Colle- 
gian, 1,  2.  Debating  Club,  1,  2.  Burnham 
Declamation   Contest,    1 .     Soccer,   1 .     Track,    1 . 


[134] 


MEMBERS  OF  THE  CLASS  OF  1938 


Emma  Mother  Toft 

North  Avenue  Mendon 

Born  1914  at  Mendon.  Graduate  Gushing  Aca- 
demy, Major  in  Home  Economics.  Home  Eco- 
nomics Club,  1,  2,  3.    Alpha  Lambda  Mu. 

Winifred  Hope  Taylor 

51   Strong  Avenue  Pittsfield 

Born  1917  at  Pittsfield.  Graduate  Pittsfield  High 
School.  Major  in  Home  Economics.  Orchestra, 
1,  2,  3.  Psychology  Club,  3.  Alpha  Lambda  Mu 
(Pledge  Secretary,  2.  House  Chairman,  2.  Vice- 
President,  3). 

Herbert  Arthur  Tetreault 

174  West  Street  Northampton 

Born  1917  of  Northampton.  Transfer  from  St. 
Anselm's  College.  Major  in  Distributed  Sciences. 
Index  (Statistics  Editor),  3.  Chemistry  Club,  3. 
Newman  Club,  3.  Kappa  Epsilon  (Secretary,  3,  4. 
Social  Chairman,  3,  4). 

Edith  Gwendolyn  Thayer 

180  East  Street  West  Bridgewater 

Born  1916  at  West  Bridgewoter.  Graduate 
Howard  High  School.  Major  in  English.  Orches- 
tra, 1.     History-Sociology  Club,  2.    Y.  W.  C.  A., 

1.  Phi  Zeta. 

Frederick  Russell  Theriault 

18  High  Street  East  Weymouth 

Born  1915  at  Dorchester.  Graduate  Weymouth 
High  School.     Pre-Med.  Major. 

Elthea  Thompson 

75  Day  Street  Norwood 

Born  1916  at  Boston.  Graduate  Methuen  High 
School.  Major  in  English.  History-Sociology 
Club,  2.     Intersorority  Council,  3.     Class  Officer, 

2.  Sophomore-Senior  Hop  Committee.    Phi  Zeta. 

John  William  Tindale 

3  Hampton  Rood  Brockton 

Born  1916  at  Brockton.  Transfer  from  Univer- 
sity of  Virginia.  Major  in  Agriculture.  Foot- 
ball, 2.    Theta  Chi. 

Maurice  Tonkin 

89  Horrison  Avenue  Fitchburg 

Born  1918  at  Hartford,  Conn.  Graduate  Revere 
High  School.  Major  in  Languages  and  Literature. 
Menorah  Society,  1. 

Richard  Washburn  Towie 

Cohasset 
Born  1915  at  Cohasset.  Graduate  Osgood  High 
School.  Major  in  Educotion  and  Economics. 
Student  Senate,  3.  Maroon  Key,  2.  Football, 
1,  2,  3.  Advanced  Military,  3.  Hockey,  1,  2,  3. 
Spring  Track,  1,  3.  Baseball,  1,  2,  3.  Lambda 
Chi  Alpha   (Vice-President  2,  3). 


Louisa  Elsie  Towne 

Rockwood  Road  Norfolk 

Born  1917  at  Norfolk.  Graduate  Walpole  High 
School.    Major  in  Home  Economics.    Outing  Club, 

1.  Home  Economics  Club,  1,  2,  3  (Treasurer, 
3).     K,  O.  Club,  I. 

Floyd  Woyne  Townsley 

Ashfield 
Born  1916  at  Ashfield.  Graduate  Sanderson 
Academy.  Major  in  Distributed  Sciences.  Honor 
Council,  2,  3.     Advanced  Military,  3.     Football, 

2,  Spring  Track,  1.  Baseball,  1,  2.  Lambda 
Chi   Alpha. 

Frank  Lewis  Umansky 

86  Chapin  Terrace  Springfield 

Born  1916  at  Springfield.  Graduate  Central  High 
School,  Transfer  from  Springfield  College. 
Major  in  Social  Sciences. 

Phila  Kellogg  Vaill 

Monson 
Born  1915  at  Monson.  Graduate  Monson  High 
School.  Transfer  from  American  International 
College.  Major  in  Distributed  Sciences.  Lambda 
Delta  Mu. 

Nicholas  Jack  Valvanis 

I   Central  Street  Haverhill 

Born  1915  at  Haverhill.  Graduate  Haverhill  High 
School.     Major  in  Chemistry.     Swimming,   1. 

Osgood  Louis  Villaume 

134  Pierce  Street  Maiden 

Born  1913  at  Boston.     Graduate  Norfolk  County 
Agricultural  School.    Major  in  Animal  Husbandry. 
Dairy  Club,   1,  2.     Animal   Husbandry  Club,  2. 
K.    0.    Club,    3.      Cross-Country,    1,    2.      Alpha 
Gamma   Rho. 

Delia  Roberta  Walkey 

High  Street  South   Hanson 

Born  1916  at  North  Hanson.  Graduate  Whitman 
High  School.  Major  in  Home  Economics.  Colle- 
gian Reporter,  2.  Home  Economics  Club,  1,  2,  3 
Newman  Club,  1,  2,  3.  K.  0.  Club,  1,  2,  3.  Phi 
Zeta    (Historian). 

William   Fuller  Welcker 

95  Lincoln  Street  Holyoke 

Born  1917  at  Holyoke.  Graduate  Holyoke  High 
School.  Major  in  English.  Psychology  Club,  3. 
Football,!.  Swimming,  1,  2,  3.  Index,  3.  Asso- 
ciate Editor. 

James  Francis  Wheeler 

Worcester  Street  Natick 

Born  1915  at  Natick.  Graduate  Natick  High 
School.  Major  in  Landscape  Architecture.  Alpha 
Gamma  Rho. 

Walter  Augustus  Whitney 

Ashfield 
Born  1916  at  Ashfield.  Graduate  Sanderson 
Academy.  Major  in  Distributed  Sciences.  Cross- 
Country,  2.     Spring  Track,  2.     Baseball,  1. 


[135} 


MEMBERS  OF  THE  CLASS  OF  1938 


Stanley   Hopkins  Wiggin 

1 1   Morton  Rood  Newton  Center 

Born  1917  at  Hyde  Park.  Graduate  Hyde 
Park  High  School.  Major  in  Animal  Husbandry. 
Men's  Glee  Club,  1,  2,  3.  Outing  Club,  1,  2,  3. 
Animal  Husbandry  Club,  1,  2,  3.  Christian  Fed- 
eration, 1,  2,  3,  Soccer,  1,  3.  Alpha  Gamma 
Rho. 

Carl   Richard  Wildner 

Belchertown  Road  Amherst 

Born  1915  at  Holyoke.  Graduate  Amherst  High 
School.  Major  in  Dairy  Industry.  Orchestra, 
1,2,  Men's  Glee  Club,  1,  2.  Advanced  Military, 
3. 

DeVoe  Holmes  Willard 

206  Goodwood  Gardens  Baltimore,  Md. 

Born  1916  at  New  York,  N.  Y.  Graduate  Epis- 
copol  High  School,  Alexandria,  Vo.  Transfer 
from   Hamilton  College. 

Margaret  Dorothy  Wilson 

69  Sycannore  Street  Holyoke 

Born  1917  at  Holyoke.  Graduate  Holyoke  High 
School.     Major  in  Languages  and  Literature. 

Fritz   Albert  WInblad 

Chelmsford 
Born  1915  ot  East  Wareham.  Groduote  Con- 
cord High  School.  Major  in  Distributed  Sciences. 
Q.  T,  V. 


Douglas  James  Wood 

97  Chestnut  Street  Florence 

Born  1916  at  Greenfield.  Graduate  Mount  Her- 
mon  School.  Major  in  Distributed  Sciences. 
Pre-Med.  Club,  2,  3.     Football,  1,  2,  3.    Q.T.V. 

Lois  Virginia  Wood 

West  Upton 
Born  1917  at  West  Upton.  Graduate  Upton  High 
School.  Major  in  Home  Economics.  Outing  Club, 
1,2,3.  Home  Economics  Club,  1,  2,  3.  M.  S.  C. 
4-H  Club,  1,  2,  3.    Alpha  Lambda  Mu. 

Ruth   Elizabeth  Wood 

28  Sycamore  Street  Springfield 

Born  1917  at  Springfield.  Graduate  Technical 
High  School.  Major  in  Floriculture.  Class  Vice- 
President,  1,  2,  3.    W.  S.  G.  A.,  1,  2.    W.  A.  A., 

1,  2.     Lambda  Delta  Mu. 

Marjorie  Helena  Woodin 

18  Grand  Avenue  Millers  Falls 

Born  1916  at  Adams.  Graduate  Turners  Falls 
High  Echool.  Transfer  from  Our  Lady  of  the 
Elms  College.     Major  in  English.     Newmon  Club, 

2,  3. 

Clare    Pauline   Youngren 

15  Blodgett  Street  Orange 

Born  1917  at  Orange.  Graduate  Orange  High 
School.     Major   in   English.     Lambdo   Delta   Mu. 


[136] 


FORMER  MEMBERS  OF  THE  CLASS  OF  1938 


George    Bruce   Adorns 

Myron  Alpert 

Carl    Edward   Anderson 

Marjorie  Delphine  Annis 

Dorofhy  Bollord 

Lois  A.  Barnard 

Lewis  K,   Bartlett 

Barbara  Bassett 

Wallace  Beckmon 

Max   Belgrade 

Abraham    Bercovitz 

Nelson  Betts 

Joseph   Bloler 

Earl   Blake 

James  H.  Bolton 

Bertha  B.  Boron 
Gerard    Bourdeau 

Pauline  Brett 

Harold  M.  Broderick 
John   Burns 
Gardner  Burt 
Lydia  T.  Carpenter 
Herbert  Collins 
Vivian  Cook 
Hilda  C.  Crosby 
Beatrice  Davenport 
Edward   Day 
Samuel  DeForest 
Terence  A.  Denehy 
Debriddhi   Devakul 
George  B.  Dinan 
Helen   Downing 
James  Downs 
Richard  Eddy 
Alfred    Eromo 
Carl  Estes 
Richard  Fitzpatrick 
Kathleen  Fletcher 


Herman  Frcedman 
Freeman   Frost 
Agnes  Goughon 
Lillian   E.  Gemme 
Elaine  Geraghty 
Joseph  Gibson 
Froncis  Gillis 
Margaret  Goyette 
Lourence   Grimard 
Kenneth  B.  Gunn 
Thomas  Handforth 
Elizabeth   Hanson 
John  Harris 
Norma  Harry 
Nancy  Hayes 
Harold   Higginbotham 
Benjamin   Hirsch 
Robert  Hirst 
Dorothy  Hughes 
Donald  Jackson 
John  Kabat 
William  Kaynor 
Everett  Kneeland 
Eva  Knight 
Walter  Knight 
Dorothy   Koehler 
Hilda  Kreyssig 
Sidney  Kurnitsky 
Miles  Leavitt 
Parker  Lichtenstein 
Gardner  Lombard 
Anna  Lovett 
Margaret  Lovett 
Thomas  Lyman 
Robert  Marsh 
William  McKinney 
John  McMahon 


Horry  Metaxas 
Frederick  Meyer 
Edward  Munson,  Jr. 
Willard   Munson 
George  O'Brien 
William  O'Donnell 
Robert  O'Neill 
Walter  Perry 
Ruth  Philip 
Muriel  Phillips 
Pauline  Podlenski 
Harland   Pratt 
Sally  Pratt 
Frances   Riel 
John  Rice 
Fronces  Richmond 
Viola  Rock 
Francis  Rogers 
Hiliiard  Rosenberg 
Edward  Rudzki 
Lee  Sannella 
Philip  Schneider 
Frank  Sherman 
John  Sinclair 
Emil  Smaha 
Felix  Soderman 
Leo  Tannenbaum 
Harvey  Tripp 
John  Tuttle 
Norman  Walker 
Ruth  Walker 
Elizabeth  Wastcoat 
John  White 
Martha  White 
Jean  Whitney 
Roy  Wiggin 
Edmund  Wilcox 
Edith  Williams 


[137] 


BOOK   TWO 

CHAPTER  III 


f/r 


THE 
I  NDEX 


CLASS  OF  1939 

• 

OFFICERS 

President GORDON  NAJAR 

Vice  President  .....' CONSTANCE  FORTIN 

Secretary  DOROTHY  NICHOLS 

Treasurer ROBERT  GLASS 

Captain HOWARD  SLEFF 

Sergeant-at-Arms  CHARLES  RODDA,  JR. 


HISTORY  OF  THE  CLASS  OF  1939 

The  class  of  '39  returned  to  the  campus  this  year  with  a  great  deal  of  antici- 
pation. Many  members  had  made  names  for  themselves  in  varied  fields  and  the 
promise  of  the  coming  year  was  one  of  great  accomplishments. 

The  second  week  of  school  found  the  freshmen  serenading  the  co-eds  at  6:30 
A.  M.  every  morning,  under  the  tutelage  of  the  Senate,  aided  and  abetted  by  the 
Maroon  Key.  They  were  successful  in  teaching  the  freshmen  the  college  songs  and 
in  cultivating  in  them  a  respect  for  the  traditions  of  the  college.     The  next  week 


[140] 


HISTORY  OF  THE  CLASS  OF   1939 

the  calm  waters  of  the  college  pond  were  violently  disrupted  by  the  resounding  slops 
of  a  huge  rope  as  the  Sophomores  lost  to  a  heavier  freshmen  combination  in  the  sixty 
man  rope  pull  after  a  titanic  struggle. 

Elated  by  the  victory  in  the  rope  pull,  the  freshmen  were  becoming  rather  con- 
fident and  cocky;  but  in  October  came  Razoo  Night.  The  rout  of  the  freshmen 
forces  was  complete  and  final.  Regardless  of  any  future  victories  in  interclass 
struggles,  the  class  of  '40  retained  a  healthy  respect  for  the  fighting  prowess  of  the 
men  of  '39.  Crippled  by  the  loss  of  many  good  men  to  varsity  squads,  the  Sopho- 
mores lost  a  football  game,  a  basketball  game,  and  a  swimming  meet  to  the  fresh- 
men, but  they  lost  none  of  their  reputation  since  they  were  making  noble  contributions 
to  varsity  sport. 

This  year  the  annual  Carnival  was  planned  as  a  larger  more  organized  event 
with  greater  facilities  for  winter  sports  than  last  year,  when  added  funds  were  needed, 
the  class  of  '39  backed  the  committee  nobly  by  increasing  its  contribution  fifty  per- 
cent. Only  the  lack  of  snow  and  ice  prevented  it  from  enjoying  the  rewards  of  its 
faith  in  the  Carnival.  However,  all  the  weekend  was  not  lost.  The  Maroon  Key  and 
the  Junior  Prom  Committee  collaborated  in  presenting  a  highly  successful  Carnival 
Ball  which  was  climaxed  by  the  choice  of  a  Sophomore,  Miss  Marjorie  Demon,  as 
Carnival  Queen. 

The  class  of  '39  has  token  a  large  place  in  the  life  of  M.  S.  C,  both  in  athletics 
and  academics.  It's  members  are  conspicuous  in  every  activity  on  the  campus  and 
with  the  coming  years  will  be  much  more  so,  making  many  real  contributions  to  M.S.C. 


[141] 


MEMBERS  OF  THE  CLASS  OF  1939 


Alexander  Alexion 

Fairhoven 
Born  1917  at  New  Bedford.  Graduate  Fairhoven 
High  School.  Major  Chemistry.  Football,  1. 
Track,   1.     Phi  Sigma  Kappa. 

Mario    Paul   Alfieri 

Amherst 
Graduate  Amherst  High  School. 

Robert  Searle  Allen 

Montgomery  Road  Westfield 

Born  1918.  Graduate  Westfield  High  School. 
Major  in  Horticulture.  Spring  Track  Team,  1 . 
Phi  Sigma  Kappa. 

Rita  Anderson 

61    Northampton  Street  Eosthompton 

Born  1917  at  Proctor,  Vermont.  Graduate  Eost- 
hompton High  School.  Major  Home  Economics. 
Sigma  Beta  Chi. 


Newton  Center 


Henry  Gardner  Anderson 

Graduate  Newton  High  School. 


Milton   Edward  Auerbach 

26  Commonwealth  Avenue  Springfield 

Born  1917  at  Springfield.  Graduate  Classical 
High  School,  Springfield.  Major  Physical  and 
Biological  Sciences.  Men's  Glee  Club,  1,  2. 
Menorah  Club,  1,  2.  Soccer  Teom,  1,  2.  Bay 
State  Revue,  1,  2.     Phi  Lambda  Tau. 

John  Murray  Balcom 

124  Greenleof  Street  Quincy 

Born  1918  at  Boston.  Graduate  Quincy  High 
School.  Major  Chemistry.  Christian  Federation, 
1,  2.    Cross-Country  Team,  1,  2.     Kappa  Epsilon. 

Harvey  Ellis  Barker 

Plymouth 
Born  1917  at  Plymouth.  Graduate  Plymouth 
High  School.  Major  Floriculture.  Football,  1. 
Baseball,   1.     Alpha  Sigma  Phi. 

William   Francis   Barrett 

6  Orchard  Street  Adams 

Born  1917  at  North  Adams.  Graduate  Adorns 
High  School.  Maior  Mathematics  and  Chemistry. 
Maroon  Key,  2.  Mathematics  Club,  2.  Football 
Team,  1.  Basketball  Teom,  1.  Baseball  Team, 
1.    Sigma  Phi  Epsilon. 

Lawrence  Matthews  Bortlett 

41   Lawrence  Road  Medford 

Born  1916  at  Concord,  N.  H.  Graduate  Dean 
Academy  and  Medford  High  School.  Major 
Entomology. 

Sidney  Harold  Beck 

106  Harvard  Street  Maiden 

Born  1916  at  New  Haven,  Conn.  Graduate  Hill- 
house  High  School,  N.  H,  Maior  in  Dairy  In- 
dustry. Basketball,  1.  Baseball,  1  (Manager). 
Freshman  Handbook,  2   (Business  Manager). 


Wallace  George  Beckman 

Springfield 
Born  1915  at  Springfield.  Graduate  Classical 
High  School.  Major  Entomology.  Alpha  Gamma 
Rho. 

Max  Belgrade 

Northampton 
Born  1915  at  Easton,  Pennsylvania.  Graduate 
Bulkeley  High  School,  New  London,  Connecticut. 
Major  Social  Sciences. 


Hadley 


John  Bemben 

Graduate  Hopkins  Academy. 
George  Cobb  Benjamin 


Born  1916  at  Pittsfield.  Graduate  Lee  High 
School.  Maior  Pre-Medicol.  Soccer,  2.  Phi 
Sigma   Koppa. 

James  George  Bennas 

Amherst 
Born  1916  at  Boston.  Graduate  Amherst  High 
School.  Major  Physical  and  Biological  Sciences. 
Soccer,  1. 

Robert  Elmer  Berry 

894  Hickory  Street  Springfield 

Born  1915  at  Machias,  Maine.  Graduate  Ecole 
Internationale,  Geneva,  Switzerland.  Major  in 
Landscape  Architecture. 

Stanley  Bettoney 

776  Central  Street  Stoughton 

Born  1918  at  Philadelphia,  Pennsylvania.  Gradu- 
ate Stoughton  High.  Major  in  Floriculture. 
Q.  T.  V. 

George  Herman   Bischoff 

Holyoke 
Born  1917  at  Holyoke.  Graduate  Holyoke  High 
School.  Major  Chemistry.  Mathematics  Club, 
2.    Chemistry  Club,  2. 

Lawrence   Hubbard    Bixby 

Sunderland 
Born  1917  at  Sunderland.  Graduate  Amherst 
High  School.  Major  Agriculture.  K.  O.  Club, 
1,  2.  Football,  2.  Cross-Country,  1.  Spring 
Track,  1. 

Irving   Blassberg 

30  Pork  Street  Turners  Falls 

Born  1917  at  Turners  Falls.  Graduate  Turners 
Falls  High  School.  Major  in  Chemistry.  Menorah 
Club,  1,  2    Chemistry  Club,  2.    Phi  Lambda  Tou. 

James  Henry  Bolton 

East  Northfield 
Born  1915  at  East  Northfield.  Graduate  Mount 
Hermon.     Major  Pre-Medical. 


[142] 


MEMBERS  OF  THE  CLASS  OF  1939 


Charles  Leiand  Branch 

8  Dona  Street  Amherst 

Graduate  Amherst  High  School. 

Mobelle  Booth 

1 1    Bentwood  Street  Foxboro 

Bom  1919  at  New  York  City,  N.  Y.  Graduate 
Foxboro  High  School.  Major  in  Social  Sciences. 
Women's  Glee  Club,  2.     Lambda  Delta  Mu. 

Geroldine  Irene  Bradley 

48  Pleasant  Street  Amherst 

Born    1918    at    New    Haven,    Conn.  Graduate 

Amherst    High   School.     Major  Social  Sciences. 

Carnival  Committee,  I.  Outing  Club,  2.  K.  0. 
Club,  2. 

James  Louis  Brann,  Jr. 

High  Street  Westwood 

Born  1913  at  Norwood.  Graduate  Dedhom  High 
School.  Transfer  from  Boston  University.  Major 
Physical  ond  Biological  Sciences. 

Pauline  Jean  Brett 

Franklin   Street  Duxbury 

Born  1916  at  Forest  Hills.  Graduate  Duxbury 
High  School.  Major  Home  Economics.  Informal 
Committee,  2.  Home  Economics  Club,  I,  2. 
Women's  Athletic  Association. 

Beryl  Frances  Briggs 

Ashburnham 
Born  1918  at  Fitchburg.  Graduate  Gushing 
Academy.  Major  Home  Economics.  Roister 
Doisters,  1,  2.     Lamba  Delta  Mu. 

Pauline  Amelia  Brisset 

895  Hampshire  Street  Holyoke 

Born  1917  at  Holyoke.  Graduate  Holyoke  High 
School.     Major  French. 

Arthur  David  Broadfoot 

130  Pleasant  Street  Amherst 

Born  1918  at  Amherst.  Graduate  Amherst  High 
School.     Major  Social  Sciences. 

George  Brody 

67  Brunswick  Street  Roxbury 

Born  1918  at  Boston.  Graduate  Roxbury  Mem- 
orial High  School.  Major  Genetics.  Bond,  I,  2. 
Dairy,  1.  Mathematics,  2.  Cross-Country,  1,  2 
(Manager).  Spring  Track,  1,  2  (Manager). 
Bacteriology,  2.     Editor  Freshman  Handbook. 

Donald  Emerson  Brown 

19  Wallis  Street  Beverly 

Born  1918  at  Germantown,  Pennsylvania.  Grad- 
uate Beverly  High  School.  Major  Physical  and 
Biological  Sciences.  Outing  Club,  1,  2.  Radio 
Club,  2.     Kappa  Epsilon. 

Philip   Eugene  Burgun 

37  Chapel  Street  Canton 

Born  1917  at  Jamaica,  New  York.  Graduate 
Canton  High  School.  Major  Economics.  Car- 
nival Committee,  2.  Newman  Club,  1,  2.  Foot- 
ball, 1.     Sigma  Phi  Epsilon. 


Rosamond  Morgot  Burke 

78  Baker  Avenue  Beverly 

Born  1917  at  Beverly.  Graduate  Beverly  High 
School.  Major  Home  Economics.  Newman  Club, 
1,  2.     Phi  Z^ta. 

Karl  Henry  Burnett 

Feeding  Hills 
Donald   Winslow   Cadigon 

53  Beacon  Street  Greenfield 

Born  1916  at  Greenfield.  Graduate  Deerfield 
Academy.  Men's  Debating  Team,  1 .  Maroon 
Key,  2.  Outing  Club,  1 .  Dad's  Day  Committee, 
1 .    Q.  T.  V. 

Robert  Emery  Coin 

Conway 
Born  1916  at  North  Adams.  Graduate  Deerfield 
Academy.  Major  Physical  and  Biological  Sciences. 
Orchestra,  2.    Soccer,  1,  2.     Kappa  Sigma. 

Donald  Calo 

149-18-41   Avenue  Flushing,  New  York 

Born  1919  at  New  York  City.  Graduate  Mc- 
Burney  School.  Major  Chemistry.  Class  Officer, 
1.  Mathematics  Club,  2.  Soccer,  1.  Swimming, 
1,  2. 


Abraham  Carp 

96  Elm   Hill  Avenue  Roxbury 

Born  1918  at  Roxbury.  Graduate  Boston  Public 
Latin  School.  Major  Physical  and  Biological 
Sciences.  Collegian,  I  (Business  Board) .  Fresh- 
man Handbook  (Business  Board).  Alpha  Epsilon 
Pi. 

Wellington  Elmer  Cassidy 

North  Andover 
Born  1917  at  New  Brunswick,  Canada.  Graduate 
Johnson  High  School.   Major  Chemistry.   Q.  T.  V. 

George   Roger  Coyer 

234  Girouard  Street  St.  Hyacinthe,  Canada 

Born  1913  at  St.  Hyacinthe.    Major  Dairy. 

Ronald    Hale   Chapin 

21   Linden  Avenue  Greenfield 

Born  1916  at  Greenfield.  Graduate  Deerfield 
Academy.  Major  Physical  and  Biological  Sciences. 

Charles  Frederic  Christie 

2  Tyler  Place  Amherst 

Born  1916  at  Everett.  Graduate  Waltham  High 
School.     Major  Chemistry.     Spring  Track,   1. 

Leon  Stanley  Clereszko 

80  Maple  Street  Holyoke 

Born  1917  at  Holyoke.  Graduate  Holyoke  High 
School.     Major  Chemistry.     Chemistry  Club,   2. 


[143] 


MEMBERS  OF  THE  CLASS  OF  1939 


Elizabeth  May  Clapp 

8  Harvard  Street  Springfield 

Born  1917  at  Springfield.  Graduate  Classical 
High  School.  Major  Home  Economics.  Sigmo 
Beta  Chi. 


Shelagh  Agnes  Crowley 

32  Beauview  Road  West  Springfield 

Born  1917  at  Springfield.  Graduate  West  Spring- 
field High  School.  Major  Home  Economics. 
Lambda  Delta  Mu. 


Lester  L.  Cohen 

25  Coss  Street  Springfield 

Born  1917  at  Springfield.  Graduate  Central 
High  School.  Transfer  from  Michigan  State 
College.     Major  Pre-Dental. 

Robert  Salisbury  Cole 

20  High  Street  Westfield 

Born  1918  at  Springfield.  Graduate  Westfield 
High  School.  Maroon  Key,  2,  Carnival  Com- 
mittee, 1,  2.     Outing  Club,  1,  2.     Radio  Club,  2. 

Doris  Colgate 

Concord  Road  Billerica 

Born    1919   at  Billerica.      Graduate   Howe   High 

School.     Major  Entomology.     Outing  Club,  2, 

Grace  Battell  Cooper 

West  Stockbridge  Road  Stockbridge 

Born  1918  at  Stockbridge.  Graduate  Williams 
High  School.     Home  Economics  Club,  1. 


Lloyd    Bardwell   Copeland 

R    F.  D. 


Col  rain 


Marjorie  Louise  Copeland 

R.  F.  D.  Colrain 

Born  1918  at  Shelburne.  Graduate  Arms  Acad- 
emy. Major  Physical  and  Biological  Sciences. 
Outing  Club,  1. 

Ivan  Roper  Cousins 

110  Franklin  Street  Greenfield 

Born  1918  at  Fitchburg.  Graduate  Greenfield 
High  School.  Major  Pre-Medical.  Men's  Glee 
Club,  1,  2.  Roister  Doisters,  1,  2.  Newman 
Club,  1,  2. 

Donald    Harry   Cowles 

24  Colborne  Road  Brighton 

Born  1917  at  Westfield.  Graduate  Brighton  High 
School.  Major  Physical  and  Biological  Science. 
Collegian  (Business  Board).  Carnival  Committee, 
2.     Football,  2.     Lambda  Chi  Alpha. 

William  Hayward  Cox 

192  Summer  Street  Bridgewater 

Born  1916  at  Bridgewater.  Graduate  Bridgewater 
High  School.  Major  Physical  Education.  Swim- 
ming Team,  1.    Theto  Chi. 

Justina  Cotta  Crosby 

49  Clinton  Place  Newton  Centre 

Born  1917  at  Newton  Centre.  Graduate  Newton 
High  School.  Major  Home  Economics.  Home 
Economics  Club,  2.    Sigma  Beta  Chi. 


Eleanor  Save!  Curtis 

96  Stafford  Street  Worcester 

Born  1917  at  Worcester.  Graduate  South  High 
School,  Major  Home  Economics.  Women's  Glee 
Club,  1,  2. 

Mildred   Ann    Czajkowski 

R.  D.  Box  107  Amherst 

Born  1918  at  Hadley.  Graduate  Hopkins  Acad- 
emy.    Major  Home  Economics. 

Marjorie  Eva  Damon 

Haydenville 
Born  1917  at  Florence.  Graduate  Williamsburg 
High  School.     Major  English.     Sigma   Beta  Chi. 

Beatrice  Louise  Davenport 

North  Avenue  Mendon 

Born  1913  at  Mendon.  Graduate  Gushing  Acod- 
emy.  Major  History.  Alpha  Lambda  Mu  (Social 
Chairman,  2). 

Dorothy  Mary  Decatur 

Draper  Road  Wayland 

Born  1918  at  Wayland.  Graduate  Wayland  High 
School.  Transfer  Radcliffe  College.  Major  Home 
Economics.     Newman  Club,  2.     K.  O.  Club,  2. 

Roger  Herman  Decker 

34  Hampden  Street  Westfield 

Born  1919  at  Westfield.  Graduate  Westfield 
High  School.  Major  Chemistry.  Men's  Glee 
Club,  1,  2.  Radio  Club,  2.  Chemistry  Club,  2. 
Mathematics  Club,  2.     Alpha  Gamma  Rho. 

Raymond  Alphonse  Degraff 

188  South  Street  Holyoke 

Born  1918  at  Holyoke.  Graduate  Holyoke  High 
School. 

Edgar  Wellwood  Dimock 

Carlton   Street  Oxford 

Born  1917  at  Worcester.  Graduate  Oxford  High 
School.  Major  Dairy  Industry.  Men's  Glee  Club, 
1,  2. 

Ethel  Winnifred  Dixon 

Leverett 
Born  1917  at  Monmouth,  Maine.  Graduate  Am- 
herst High  School.  Major  Home  Economics. 
K.  O.  Club,  2. 

Joseph   Anthony   Doherty 

20  Warren  Street  Revere 

Born  1917  at  Boston.  Graduate  Revere  High 
School.  Major  in  Biology.  Basketball  Team,  1. 
Spring  Track  Team,  1.     Phi  Sigma  Kappa. 


[144] 


MEMBERS  OF  THE  CLASS  OF  1939 


Kenneth   Ronald   Dorman 


Graduate  Hordwick  High  School. 


Gilbertville 


Doris  Hopkins  Dyer 

63A  Mom  Street  Sougus 

Born  1917  at  Sougus.  Graduate  Saugus  High 
School.    Major  Social  Sciences.    Sigma  Beta  Chi. 

Elizabeth  Dockman  Eaton 

487  Pleasant  Street  Holyoke 

Born  1916  at  Holyoke.  Graduate  Holyoke  High 
School.  Major  Distributed  Languages.  Christian 
Federation,  2.     Lambda  Delta  Mu. 

Eva  Margaret  Eldridge 

Wood  Rood  Boss  River,  So.  Yarmouth 

Born  1918  at  South  Yarmouth.  Graduate  Yar- 
mouth High  School.  Major  Longuages  and  Lit- 
erature.    Outing  Club,  1.     Sigma  Beta  Chi. 

Everett  Warner  Eldridge,  Jr. 

31  Converse  Street  Palmer 

Born  1917  at  Springfield.  Graduate  Palmer  High 
School.  Major  Economics.  Basketball  Team,  1. 
Theta  Chi. 

Richard  Duncan  Elliott 

16  Stevens  Street  Winchester 

Born  1916  at  Winchester.  Graduate  Winchester 
High  School.  Major  Agriculture.  Outing  Club, 
1,  2.  Dairy  Club,  2.  Animal  Husbandry  Club, 
1,  2.  K.  0.  Club,  1,  2.  Cross-Country,  1. 
Kappa  Epsilon. 

Thomas  Joseph  Enright 

81   Porker  Street  Pittsfield 

Born  1916  at  Pittsfield.  Graduate  Pittsfield  High 
School.  Major  English.  Collegian  (Campus  and 
Sports).  Newman  Club,  1,  2.  Freshman  Hand- 
book  (Editor-in-Chief).     Lambda  Chi  Alpha. 

Morjorie  Harrold  Esson 

127  Foirmount  Street  Dorchester 

Born   1917  at  Dorchester.  Graduate  Dorchester 

Girls'  High  School.     Major  Home  Economics. 

Frederick  Dickinson  Estabrook 

14  Pork  Street  Florence,  Northampton 

Born  1916  at  New  Britain,  Connecticut.  Grad- 
uate Mount  Hermon  School.  Major  Mathematics 
and  Physics. 

Froncis  Thomas  Fanning 

Milton 
Born  1914  at  Milton.  Graduate  Kent's  Hill  High 
School. 


Paul   Richard  Fanning 

Graduate  Kent's  Hill  High  School. 


Francis  John  Farren 

7  Burt  Street  Adams 

Born  1915  at  North  Adams.  Groduote  Adorns 
High  School.  Major  Pre-Medical,  Radio  Club,  1. 
Soccer  Team,  1 .     Phi  Sigma  Kappa. 

Leo  Daniel  Fay 

28  Aldworth  Street  Boston 

Born  1917  ot  Boston,  Graduate  Jamaica  Plain 
High  School.  Major  Vocational  Agriculture. 
Menoroh  Club,  1,  2. 

Maurice  Featherman 

9  Elm  Street  Natick 

Born  1916  at  Natick.  Graduate  Natick  High 
School.  Mojor  Economics.  Football  Team,  1. 
Basketball  Team,  1.  Hockey  Team,  1.  Spring 
Track  Team,  1 .  Freshman  Handbook  (Associate 
Editor).     Alpha  Epsilon  Pi. 

Myron  Wolf  Fisher 

325  Shirley  Street  Winthrop 

Born  1918  at  Hudson.  Graduate  Winthrop  High 
School.    Major  Dairy  Industry.    Phi  Lambda  Tau. 

Eleanor  Frances  Fitts 

East  Main  Street  Northboro 

Born  1917  at  Northboro,  Graduate  Northboro 
High  School.  Major  Home  Economics.  Women's 
Glee  Club,  1,  2.  Home  Economics  Club,  2  (Social 
Committee). 

William   Henry  Fitzpatrick 

Graduate  Amesbury  High  School. 

Elizabeth  Peer  Flynn 

Belchertown  State  School  Belchertown 

Born  at  Springfield.  Graduate  Classical  High 
School,  Springfield.  Major  Physical  and  Biological 
Sciences. 

Wilma  Ruth  Foerster 

45  Lawler  Street  Holyoke 

Born  1918  at  Holyoke.  Graduate  Holyoke  High 
School.    Major  Social  Sciences. 

Bertram  Fogel 

4  Maple  Street  Roxbury 

Born  1916  at  Lynn.  Graduate  Boston  English 
High  School,     Alpha  Epsilon  Pi. 

Constance  Claire  Fortin 

18  Gates  Street  Holyoke 

Born  1917  at  Holyoke.  Graduate  Holyoke  High 
School.  Roister  Doisters,  1,  2.  Student  Religious 
Council,  1,  2  (Secretary).  Newman  Club  1  2 
Class  Officer,  1,  2.     Phi  Zeto. 


Amesbury 


Ralph  Longwell  Foster 


Col  rain 


Donald  Maxwell  Fowell 

61  Woodlown  Avenue  Northampton 

Born  1916  at  Columbus,  Ohio.  Graduate  Uni- 
versity of  Toronto  Schools.  Major  Chemistry. 
Roister  Doisters,  2. 


[145] 


MEMBERS  OF  THE  CLASS  OF  1939 


Arnold  Elliot  Freedman 

271   Normandy  Street  Roxbury 

Born  1918  at  Boston.  Graduate  Boston  Latin 
School.  Major  English.  Roister  Doisters,  1,  2. 
Men's  Debating  Team,  2.  Menorah  Club,  1,  2. 
Football  Team,  1    (Manager). 

Harry  Friedman,  Jr. 

50  Grafton  Street  Newton  Center 

Born  1916  at  Nashville,  Tenn.  Graduate  Newton 
High  School.  Transfer  from  Northeastern 
University. 


John  Joseph  Galvin 

Graduate  St.  Michael's  High  School. 


Northampton 


Richard  Alden  Giles 

Main  Street  Cummington 

Born  1917  at  Cummington.  Graduate  North- 
ampton High  School.  Major  Botany.  Outing 
Club,  2.  Freshman  Handbook  (Business  Board). 
Kappa.  Epsilon. 

Robert  Butterfield  Glass 

92  Appleton  Street  Arlington 

Born  1916  at  Somerville.  Graduate  Belmont  High 
School.  Major  Economics.  Class  Officer,  1,  2. 
Football  Team,   1.     Theta  Chi. 

John  Feral  Glick 

6  North  Hodley  Road  Amherst 

Born  1917  at  Freeport,  Illinois.  Graduate  Am- 
herst High  School  and  Kimball  Union  Academy 
Major  Economics.  Band,  1.  Maroon  Key,  2. 
Psychology  Club,  2.  Football  Team,  I .  Basket- 
ball Team,  1,2.  Kappa  Sigma.  Burnham  Decla- 
mation Contest. 


Lewis  Lyman  Glow 

Graduate  Pepperell  High  School. 


East  Pepperell 


David  Goldberg 

276  State  Street  Northampton 

Born  1917  at  Newark,  N.  J.  Graduate  North- 
ampton High  School.     Major  Mathematics. 

Florence  Sylvia  Goldberg 

28  Quint  Avenue  Allston 

Born  1918  at  Boston.  Graduate  Brighton  High 
School.  Major  Physical  and  Biological  Sciences. 
Women's  Glee  Club,  1,  2.  Menorah  Club,  1,  2. 
Chemistry  Club,  2.     Sigma  Iota. 

Sylvia  Goldman 

9  Lamar  Avenue  Worcestec 

Born  1917  at  Worcester.  Graduate  Classical 
High  School.  Major  Physical  and  Biological 
Sciences.  Women's  Glee  Club,  1,  2.  Menorah 
Club,  1,  2.     Psychology  Club,  2.     Sigma  Iota. 

Frederick   Dickinson  Goode,  Jr. 

Auburndale 


Harold  Thomas  Gordon 

71   Center  Street  Holyoke 

Born  1918  at  Holyoke,  Graduate  Holyoke  High 

School.     Major  Physical  and  Biological  Sciences. 

Chester  Allen  Gove 

239  School  Street  Walpole 

Born  1916  at  Walpole.  Graduate  Walpole  High 
School.  Major  Economics.  Collegian,  1,  2. 
(Business  Board).  Soccer  Team,  1.  Hockey 
Team,  1 .     Phi  Sigma  Kappa. 

Emerson  Wallace  Grant 

Bridge  Street  Middleboro 

Born  1917  at  Boston.  Graduate  Vermont  Acad- 
emy .  Major  Farm  Management.  Animal  Hus- 
bandry Club,  1.     Phi  Sigma  Kappa. 

James  Oliver  Stanley  Graves 

16  Foirview  Terrace  Greenfield 

Born  1916  at  Hatfield.  Graduate  Greenfield 
High  School  and  Deerfield  Academy.  Major 
Animal  Husbandry.  Spring  Track,  1.  Alpha 
Gamma   Rho.  ' 

Charles  William  Griffin 

934  Dwight  Street  Holyoke 

Born  1917  at  Holyoke.  Graduate  Holyoke  High 
School.  Major  English.  Football  Team,  1.  Spring 
Track,   1. 

Marion  Elizabeth  Gunness 

105  Butterfield  Terrace  Amherst 

Born  1918  at  Amherst.  Graduate  Amherst  High 
School,  Major  Distributed  Sciences.  Outing 
Club,  2. 

Bettina  Hall 

75  Carpenter  Street  Foxboro 

Born  1918  at  Foxboro.  Graduate  Foxboro  High 
School.  Major  Pre-Medicol.  Dad's  Day  Com- 
mittee, 2.  Pre-Med.  Club,  1,  2.  Women's  Ath- 
letic Association    (Secretary). 

Helen   Hottie   Hollos 

56  Paul  Street  Newton  Center 

Born  1915  at  Hyde  Park,  N.  Y.  Transfer  from 
Sargent  College  and  Miss  Wheelock's  School. 
Major  Education. 

Thomas   Edward   Handforth 

101  Main  Street  West  Medway 

Born  1915  at  Quincy.  Graduate  Medway  High 
School.  Major  Economics.  Band,  1,  2.  Newman 
Club,  1,  2. 

William  James  Hanigan 

249  White  Street  Springfield 

Born  1914  at  Ludlow.  Graduate  Cathedral  High 
School,  Springfield.  Transfer  American  Inter- 
national College,  Springfield.     Major  Chemistry. 


[146] 


MEMBERS  OF  THE  CLASS  OF  1939 


Marjorie  Eulalo   Harris 

Leominster 
Born  1915  at  Leominster.  Graduote  Leominster 
High  School.  Major  Home  Economics  ond  Flori- 
culture. Home  Economics  Club,  1,  2,  Outing 
Club,  2.  4-HCIub,  2.  Glee  Club,  1,  2.  Lambda 
Delta  Mu 

George  Joseph   Hoylon 

13  Broad  Street  Pittsfield 

Born  1917  at  Pittsfield.  Graduate  Pittsfield 
High  School,  Major  History  and  Sociology.  New- 
man Club,  1,  2.  Dad's  Day  Committee,  2.  A.  B. 
Degree  Committee,  2.     Lambda  Chi  Alpha. 

Paul  Harlow  Haynes 

155  High  Street  Southbridge 

Born  1918  at  Worcester.  Graduate  M.  E.  Wells 
High  School.    Major  Mathematics. 


Frank  Clifford  Healy 


Buckland,  Conn. 


Jeanette  Herman 

73   Ruthven  Street  Roxbury 

Born  1917  at  Boston.  Graduate  Memoriol  High 
School.  Major  Chemistry.  Women's  Glee  Club, 
1,  2.  Menorah  Club,  1,  2.  Chemistry  Club,  2. 
Sigma  Iota. 

Harold  Garland  Higginbotham 

18  Hastings  Avenue  Worcester 

Born  1914  at  Worcester.  Graduate  Classical 
High  School.  Major  Languages  and  Literature. 
Men's  Glee  Club,   1,  2,  3. 

David   Winford   Hornbaker 

31   Indion  Hill  Road  Worcester 

Born  1917  at  Worcester.  Graduate  North  High 
School.     Major  Physicol  and  Biological  Sciences. 


Baseball  Team, 


Theta  Chi. 


Iro  Lee  Jackson 

Fairhaven 
Born  1917  at  Maiden,  Graduate  Fairhaven  High 
School.  Mcjor  Economics.  Assistant  Footboll 
Manager,  2,     Phi  Lambda  Tau, 

Elizabeth  Shirley  Jasper 

76  Virginia  Street  Springfield 

Born  1916  at  Springfield,  Graduate  Classical 
High  School,  Major  Home  Economics.  Home 
Economics  Club,  1,  2.  Christian  Federation,  1. 
Lambda   Delta  Mu. 

Rose   KrisHne  Jensen 

20  Royal  Rood  Worcester 

Born  1916  at  Worcester.  Graduate  High  School 
of  Commerce.  Moior  Chemistry.  Women's  Glee 
Club,   1 ,     Lambda  Delta  Mu. 

David  Hammond  Johnson 

40  Mapleton  Avenue  Suffield,  Conn. 

Born  1917  at  Springfield.  Graduate  Suffield 
School.  Transfer  University  of  Colorado.  Major 
Economics.     Sigma  Phi   Epsilon, 

Lawrence  Edward  Johnson 

598  Dwight  Street  Holyoke 

Born  1916  at  Springfield,  Graduate  Williston 
Academy  Mojor  Economics,  Soccer  Team,  1. 
Basketball  Team,  1.     Kappa  Sigma. 

Charles  Nelson  Julian 

Amherst 
Born  1914  at  Amherst.  Graduate  Amherst  High 
School.  Major  Physics.  Radio  Club,  1,  2  (Presi- 
dent, 2).  Band,  1,  2.  Honor  Council,  1,  2.  Phi 
Sigma  Kappa. 

Coleman  Katz 

Boston 
Graduate  Boston  Public  Latin  School. 


William  Wallace  Howe 

4  Mom  Street  Dalton 

Born  1917  at  Pittsfield.  Graduate  Dalton  High 
School.     Major  Pre-Dental.     Football  Team,  1,  2. 

Herbert  Shurtleff  Howes 

8  Rice  Street  Middleboro 

Born  1917  at  Middleboro.  Graduate  Memorial 
High  School.  Major  Economics.  Swimming 
Team,   1 ,     Kappa  Sigma, 


Stephen  Malcolm  Jablonski 

Graduate  Greenfield  High  School, 


Greenfield 


Donald  Bolles  Jackson 

57  Lincoln  Avenue  Amherst 

Born  1915  at  Amherst.  Graduate  Amherst  High 
School  and  the  Lebanon  School.  Major  English. 
Men's  Glee  Club,  2.     Phi  Sigma   Kappa. 


Arthur  Milton   Kaplan 

56  Marlboro  Street  Chelsea 

Born  1918  at  Chelsea.  Graduate  Chelsea  High 
School.     Major  Bacteriology. 

Anne  Fern   Kaplinsky 

306  Chestnut  Street  Holyoke 

Born  1918  at  Holyoke.  Graduate  Holyoke  High 
School.     Major  Social  Sciences.     Sigma   Iota. 

Mary  Margaret  Keefe 

42  Jefferson  Street  Westfield 

Born  1918  at  Westfield.  Graduate  Westfield 
High  School.  Major  Social  Sciences.  Newman 
Club,  1,  2,     Lambda  Delta  Mu, 

Katherine   Eleanor  Kerivan 

959  Chestnut  Street  Newton  Upper  Falls 

Born  1917  at  Newton  Upper  Falls,  Graduate 
Newton  High  School,  Mojor  Social  Sciences^ 
Newman  Club,  1,  2,     Lambda  Delta  Mu, 


[147] 


MEMBERS  OF  THE  CLASS  OF  1939 


Louis  Kertzman 

]0  Magnus  Avenue  Somerville 

Born  1919  at  Somerville.  Graduate  Somerville 
High  School.  Major  Physical  and  Biological 
Sciences.  Menorah  Club,  1.  Hockey  Team,  1. 
Alpha  Epsilon  Pi, 

Edmund  MacKeyes 

R.  F.  D.  No.  2  Amherst 

Born  1916  at  Pelham.  Graduate  Hopkins  Acad- 
emy. Major  Social  Sciences.  Soccer  Team,  1. 
Baseball  Team,  1.     Kappa  Epsilon. 

James  Sumner  King 

32  Brooks  Street  Maynard 

Born  1917  at  Bath,  Maine.  Graduate  Lawrence 
Academy.  Major  Mathematics.  Lambda  Chi 
Alpha. 

Alleen  Louise  Kingsbury 

109  River  Street  Brointree 

Born  1903  at  Brointree.  Graduate  Brointree 
High  School.  Transfer  Plymouth,  New  Hampshire 
Normal  School.    Major  Home  Economics. 

Louis  Carl   Knarr 

49  Parkside  Avenue  Springfield 

Born  1914  at  Chicopee.  Graduate  Lynn  Classical 

High  School.     Transfer  University  of  Tennessee. 


Stanley  Joseph  Krowka 

Graduate  Northampton  High  School. 


Northampton 


Everett  Milton  Kruger 

24  Arlington  Street  Newton 

Born  1918  at  Winthrop.  Graduate  Newton  High 
School.  Major  Physical  and  Biological  Sciences. 
Roister  Doisters   (Assistant  Manager). 

Donald  Seabury  Lawson 

18  College  Form  Rood  Wolthom 

Born  1916  at  Wolthom.  Graduate  Wolthom 
High  School.  Major  Physical  and  Biological 
Sciences,     Band,  2.     Soccer  Team,  1. 

Leopold  Joseph  Lecloir 

1 1   South  Pleasant  Street  Amherst 

Born  1918  at  Amherst.  Graduate  Amherst  High 
School.     Major  English. 

Richard  Everett  Lee 

96  Morgan  Street  New  Bedford 

Born  1915  at  New  Bedford.  Graduate  New  Bed- 
ford High  School.  Major  Chemistry.  Football 
Team,  1,  2.  Rifle  Teom.  Sergeant-at-Arms, 
Lombda  Chi  Alpha. 

Charles  Edward  Lehr 

68  Parkside  Street  Springfield 

Born  1915  at  Chicago,  Illinois.    Graduate  Cathe- 
dral   High    School.      Transfer    American    Inter- 
national College.    Major  Economics. 


Leonard  Maurice  Levin 

35  Maple  Street  Northampton 

Born  1917  at  Northampton.  Graduate  North- 
ampton High  School,  Major  Physical  and  Bio- 
logical Sciences,  Men's  Glee  Club,  1  (Violin 
Soloist).    Soccer  Team,  1. 

Parker  Earl  Lichtenstein 

66  Sargent  Street  Melrose 

Born  1915  at  Somerville.  Graduate  Melrose  High 
School.     Major  Physical  and  Biological  Sciences. 

Clifford  Ellwood  Lippincott 

104  Laurel   Street  Lee 

Born  1917  at  Philadelphia,  Pennsylvania.  Grad- 
uate Lee  High  School.  Major  Landscape  Archi- 
tecture. Men's  Glee  Club,  2.  Swimming  Team, 
1 .     Phi  Sigma  Koppo. 

Phillips  Edward  Luce 

16  Event  Avenue  Frominghom 

Born  1917  at  Frominghom.  Graduate  Froming- 
hom High  School.  Major  Entomology.  Psychol- 
ogy Club,  2.  Cross-Country  Team,  2.  Hockey 
Team,  1.     Alpha  Sigma  Phi. 

Thomas  Graves  Lyman 

8  High  Street  Eosthompton 

Born  1916  at  Easthompton.  Graduate  Williston 
Academy.  Major  Social  Sciences.  Roister 
Doisters,  2.  Soccer  Team,  2.  Hockey  Team,  2. 
Phi  Sigma  Kappa. 

Julia  Mary  Lynch 

38  Mill  Street  Westfield 

Born  1918  at  Westfield.  Graduate  Westfield 
High  School.  Major  English.  Orchestra,  1,  2. 
Newman  Club,  1,  2.  String  Ensemble,  1,  2. 
Lambda  Delta  Mu. 

Margaret  Phyllis  MacDonald 

Huntington 
Born  1917  at  Northampton.  Graduate  Hunt- 
ington High  School.  Major  Home  Economics. 
Outing  Club,  2.  Home  Economics  Club,  2. 
(Sophomore  Representative).  Christian  Federa- 
tion, 1,  2  (Secretary,  2).  K.  0.  Club,  1,  2. 
Lambda  Delta  Mu. 

Margaret  May  Madden 

17  Annis  Street  Methuen 

Born  1918  at  Methuen,  Graduate  Edward  F, 
Seorles  High  School.  Major  Home  Economics. 
Women's  Glee  Club,  2.  Home  Economics  Club, 
1.     Christian  Federation,  1,  2. 

Isaac   Edward  Malkin 

Chelsea 
Born  1915  at  Boston.  Graduate  Chelsea  High 
School.     Major  Pre-Dental,     Bond,   1,  2. 

Justine  Gordon  Martin 

31  Banfint  Road  Jamaica  Plain 

Born  1915  at  Arlington  Heights.  Graduate  Rox- 
bury  Memorial  High  School.  Major  Bacteriology. 
Bacteriology  Club,  1.  Women's  Rifle  Team,  1,  2. 
Lambda    Delta   Mu. 


[148] 


MEMBERS  OF  THE  CLASS  OF  1939 


Marian   Isabel  Maschin 

8  Ook  Street  Westtield 

Born  1918  at  Westfield.  Graduote  Westfield 
High  School.  Mojor  English.  Women's  Glee  Club, 
1,  2.  Student  Religious  Council,  2.  Christian 
Federation,  1,2.     K.  O.  Club,  1,  2. 

Donald  Stewart  Mayo 

421   Mollis  Street  Framingham 

Born  1917  at  Framingham.  Graduate  Framing- 
ham  High  School.  Major  Forestry.  Psychology 
Club,  2.     Hockey,  1.    Alpha  Sigma  Phi. 

William  Blake  McCowan 

70  Berwick  Street  Worcester 

Born  1916  at  Springfield.  Graduate  North  High 
School.  Major  Economics.  Psychology  Club,  2. 
Alpha  Sigma  Phi. 

William  James  McKinney 

493  Central  Street  Sougus 

Born  1914  at  Turtle  Creek,  Pennsylvania.  Grad- 
uate Saugus  High  School,  Major  Economics. 
Soccer  Team,  1,  2.  Football  Team,  1.  Basket- 
ball Team,  1.  Baseball  Team,  1.  Sigma  Phi 
Epsilon. 

James  Meehan 

Lawrence 
Graduate  Lawrence  High  School. 

Mary  Theresa  Meehan 

61   Brookline  Avenue  Holyoke 

Born  1917  at  Putnam,  Connecticut.  Graduote 
Woodstock  Academy.  Major  Social  Sciences. 
Collegian,   1,  2. 

Seoton  Crawford  Mendall 

89  Pierce  Street  Middleboro 

Born  1917  at  Middleboro.  Graduate  Middleboro 
Memorial  High  School.  Major  Entomology.  Kap- 
pa Sigma. 

Frances  Somerville  Merrill 

North  Main  Street  Raynham  Center 

Born  1917  at  Manhattan,  Kansas.  Graduate 
Taunton  High  School.  Major  Social  Sciences. 
Women's  Rifle  Team.     Sigma  Beta  Chi. 

Harry  Louis  Metaxes 

59  Conway  Street  Greenfield 

Born  1915  at  Mytilene,  Greece.  Graduate  Green- 
field High  School.     Major  Social  Sciences. 

Ethel  Meurer 

Springfield 
Born  1917  at  Springfield.  Graduate  Springfield 
Technical  High  School.  Major  Physical  and 
Biological   Sciences.     Lambda   Delta   Mu. 

Clara   Evelyn   Mickelson 

Old   Cannon    Road  Millbury 

Born  1917  at  Millbury.  Graduate  Millbury  High 
School.  Transfer  from  Framingham  State  Teach- 
ers' College.  Major  Physical  and  Biological 
Sciences.     Christian  Federation,  2. 


Alexander    Andrew   Miller 

88  Sterling  Road  East  Hartford,  Conn. 

Born  1918  at  South  Windsor,  Conn.  Graduate 
Rockwell  High  School.  Major  Chemistry.  Chem- 
istry Club,  1.    Hockey  Team,  1 

Douglas   Duncan   Milne 

6  Glen   Rood  Lexington 

Born  1917  at  Simsbury,  Conn.  Graduate  Lexing- 
ton High  School.  Major  Physics.  Radio  Club,  2. 
Swimming  Team,  1. 

Fulton  Albert  Moorehead 

16  Glen  Street  Melrose 

Born  1916  at  Belmont.  Graduate  Melrose  High 
School.     Major  Forestry.     Hockey  Team,  1. 


Clifton  Wentworth  Morey 


Belmont 


Edward   Lawrence  Morin 

Amherst 
Born  1915  at  Northampton.  Graduate  Amherst 
High  School.    Major  Social  Sciences.    Baseball,  1 

Robert  Harold  Muller 

3  Birch  Road  Dorien,  Conn. 

Born  1918  at  New  York  City.  Graduate  Dorien 
High  School.  Major  Economics.  Carnivol  Com- 
mittee, 2.     Lambda  Chi  Alpha. 

John  Joseph  Murphy 

Lynn 
Graduate  Lynn  Classical  High  School.    Phi  Sigma 


Robert   Joseph    Murphy 

222  King  Street  Springfield 

Born  1918  at  Springfield.  Graduate  Springfield 
Technical  High  School.  Major  Mathematics. 
Mathematics  Club,  2.  Hockey  Team,  1 .  Base- 
ball Team,  1,  2.  Football  Team,  1.  Phi  Sigma 
Kappa. 

Alvan   John   Myerson 

83    Beals   Street  Brookline 

Born  at  Cambridge.  Graduate  Brookline  High 
School.  Major  Physical  and  Biological  Sciences. 
Alpha   Epsilon   Pi. 

Gordon  Ellery  Nojar 

Highland   Street  Housotonic 

Born  1915  at  Housotonic.  Graduate  Searles 
High  School.  Major  Chemistry.  Men's  Glee 
Club,  1,  2.  Maroon  Key,  2.  Outing  Club,  2. 
Class  Officer   (President,  2).     Phi  Sigma  Kappa. 

Shirley  Elizabeth   Nestle 

Triangle  Street  Amherst 

Born  1918  at  Northampton.  Graduate  Amherst 
High  School.  Major  Economics.  Outing  Club,  1. 
Newman  Club,   1. 


[149] 


MEMBERS  OF  THE  CLASS  OF  1939 


Dorot-hy   Elizabeth    Nichols 

64  King  Street  Westfield 

Born  1917  at  West  Wilmington,  Conn.  Graduate 
Westfield  High  School.  Major  English.  Student 
Religious  Council,  2.  Christian  Federation,  1,  2. 
Class  officer  (Secretory,  2).  Women's  Student 
Government  Association,  2.     Lambda   Delta  Mu. 

Olive    Freeman    Norwood 

15  Eureka  Terrace  Worcester 

Born  1915  at  Worcester.  Graduate  South  High 
School.  Major  Home  Economics.  Ring  Com- 
mittee, 2.     Sigma  Beta  Chi. 

Grace  Patricia  O'Donnell 

Granville  Road  Granville 

Born  191 8  at  Westfield.  Graduate  Westfield 
High  School.  Major  Languages.  Newman  Club, 
1,  2.     Lombda  Delta  Mu. 

William  Gregory  O'Donnell 

38   Thayer   Street  Milford 

Born  1916  at  Milford  Graduate  Milford  High 
School.  Major  English.  Bond,  1.  Newman 
Club,    1,   2      Baseball   Team,    1.    (Manager). 

Elizabeth   Janet  Olson 

188  School  Street  Manchester 

Born  1917  at  Beverly.  Graduate  Story  High 
School.  Major  Distributed  Sciences.  Christian 
Federation,    1,   2. 


Holyol<e 


Samuel  Orlen 

Graduate  Holyoke  High  School. 

Robert   Wesley   Packard 

Worcester 
Graduate  Worcester  South   High   School. 

Tracy  Omar  Page 

51   Knox  Street  Springfield 

Born  1915  at  Putney,  Vermont.  Graduate  Clos- 
sicol  High  School,  Springfield.  Major  Pre-Med- 
ical.     Swimming  Team,  1. 

John  Alfred    Parker 

Ashby 

Nancy  Parks 

Century  Farm  Sherborn 

Born  1918  at  Boston.  Graduate  Newton  High 
School.  Major  Physical  and  Biological  Sciences. 
Women's  Athletic  Association,  2.  Sigma  Beta 
Chi. 

Ray  Pormenter 

466  King  Street  Franklin 

Born  1917  at  Franklin.  Graduate  Franklin  High 
School.  Major  Physical  and  Biological  Sciences. 
Psychology  Ouh,  2.    Alpha  Sigma  Phi. 


Joseph  Paul 

359  Bridge  Street  Northampton 

Born  1917  at  Northampton,  Graduate  North- 
ampton High  School.  Major  Mathematics  and 
Londscope  Architecture,  Band,  2.  Spring  Track 
Team,  1 

George  Anthony  Pereira 

1657  Northampton  Street  Holyoke 

Born  1918  at  Holyoke.  Graduate  Holyoke  High 
School.     Major  Pre-Medical.     Pre-Med.  Club,  2. 

Ellsworth  Phelps,  Jr. 

135  Crescent  Street  Northampton 

Born  1917  at  Washington,  D.  C.  Graduate 
Northampton  High  School.  Major  Physical  Educa- 
tion. Outing  Club,  2.  Basketball  Team,  1. 
Baseball  Team,   1. 

Laurence  Kent  Pickard 

Elm  Street  Salisbury 

Born  1917  at  Rowley.  Graduate  Amesbury  High 
School.  Major  Farm  Management.  Men's  Glee 
Club,  1,  2.  Cross-Country  Team,  1,  2.  Spring 
Track  Team,   1 ,  2. 

Stanley  Podolak 

76  Maple  Street  Easthampton 

Born  1916  at  Easthampton.  Graduate  Williston 
Academy.  Major  Social  Sciences.  Chemistry 
Club,  2.  Soccer  Team,  1,  2.  Basketball  Team, 
1.     Kappa  Epsilon. 

Richard  Lyman  Powers 

1574  Westfield  Street  West  Springfield 

Born  1918  at  Springfield.  Graduate  West  Spring- 
field High  School.  Major  Physical  and  Biological 
Sciences.    Soccer  Team,  1,  2.    Sigma  Phi  Epsilon. 

Frederick  J.  Purnell 

2  Tyler  Place  Amherst 

Born  1917  at  Agowam.  Graduate  Amherst  High 
School.     Major  English. 

Virginia  Pushee 

North  Pleasant  Street  North  Amherst 

Born  1917  at  Northampton.  Graduate  Amherst 
High  School.  Major  Home  Economics.  Women's 
Glee  Club,  1,2.     K.  0.  Club,  2. 

Irvin  Douglass  Reade 

66  Dewey  Avenue  Whitman 

Born  1917  at  Brockton.  Graduate  Whitman  High 
School.  Major  Economics  and  History.  Cross- 
Country  Team,  1,  2.  Spring  Track  Team,  1. 
Q.  T.  V. 

Milton  Paul  Reiser 

318  Clifton  Street  Maiden 

Born  1917  at  Chelsea.  Graduate  Maiden  High 
School.     Major  Economics  and  English. 

Eunice  Moore  Richardson 

Boldwinsville 
Born  1916  at  Natick.  Graduate  South  High 
School,  Worcester.  Major  Horticulture.  4-H 
Club,  1,  2.    Y.  W,  C.  A.,  1. 


[150] 


MEMBERS  OF  THE  CLASS  OF  1939 


Francis  James  Riel 

Turners  Falls 
Born  1914  at  Colroin.  Graduate  Turners  Falls 
High  School,  Major  in  Distributed  Sciences. 
Maroon  Key,  2.  Class  President,  1,  2.  Football, 
1,  2  (M).     Baseball,  1.     Basketball,  1. 

Everett  Roberts 

293  Franklin  Street  Quincy 

Born  1915  ot  Quincy,  Graduate  Quincy  High 
School  ond  Norfolk  County  Agriculturol  School. 
Major  Vocational  Education  ond  Animal  Hus- 
bandry. Dairy  Club,  2.  Animal  Husbandry  Club, 
1.     Soccer  Team,  1,  2.     Q.  T.  V. 

Charles  Rodda,  Jr. 

18  Manchester  Terrace  Springfield 

Born  1917  at  Springfield.  Graduate  Springfield 
Technical  High  School.  Major  Chemistry.  Col- 
legian, 2  (Business  Board).  Class  Officer,  2. 
Captain  Freshman  Soccer,  1.  Soccer  Team,  1,  2 
(M).     Lambda  Chi  Alpha. 

Mary  Rogosa 

55  Cherry  Street  Lynn 

Born  1917  at  Lynn.  Graduate  Lynn  English  High 
School.  Major  Social  Science.  History-Sociology 
Club,  2.     Menorah  Club,   1,  2.     Sigma  Iota. 

Harold  Davies  Rose 

26  Bailey  Street  Medford 

Born  1916  at  Medford.  Groduote  Medford  High 

School.     Major  Physical  and  Biological  Sciences. 

Sidney  Rosen 

32  Abbott  Street  Dorchester 

Born  1916  at  Boston.  Graduate  Boston  Latin 
School,  Tronsfer  from  Massachusetts  Institute 
of  Technology.  Major  Languages  and  Literature. 
Menorah  Club,  2. 

Morris  Rosenthal 

87  Fairview  Avenue  West  Springfield 

Born  1916  at  New  York  City,  Groduote  West 
Springfield  High  School.     Major  Chemistry. 

Albert  Henry  Ross 

101   Westville  Street  Dorchester 

Born  1917  at  Boston.  Graduate  Boston  English 
High  School.  Transfer  from  Tufts  College. 
Major  Social  Science. 

Henry  Arthur  Salmela 

112  Parker  Street  Moynard 

Born  1915  at  Duluth,  Minn.  Graduate  Moynard 
High  School.  Transfer  Michigan  State  Normal 
College.     Major  Mathematics. 

Lee  Lawrence  Sanborn 

Holyoke 
Graduate  Charles  E.  Gorton  High  School,  Yonkers, 
New  York. 

Donald  Lincoln  Songster 

181    Locust  Street  Holyoke 

Born  1917  at  Holyoke.  Graduate  Holyoke  High 
School,     Major  Chemistry. 


Joan    Rosina   Sonnella 

120  Moplewood  Terrace  Springfield 

Born  1917  at  Springfield.  Graduate  Classical 
High  School.  Major  Social  Science.  Women's 
Glee  Club 

Vincent  Raymond  Schmidt 

622  Summer  Street  New  Bedford 

Born  1914  at  New  Bedford,  Graduate  New  Bed- 
ford High  School,  Mojor  Chemistry,  Radio  Club, 
2,  Chemistry  Club,  2.  Rifle  Team,  1,  2,  Kappa 
Epsilon. 

Charles  Schwartz 

24  Homesteod  Street  Roxbury 

Born  1918  at  Boston.  Graduate  Roxbury  Mem- 
orial High  School.  Major  Economics,  Menorah 
Club,  1,2. 

Ernest  Schwartz 

72  Lebanon  Street  Springfield 

Born  1916  at  Holyoke.  Graduate  Springfield 
Technical  High  'School.  Major  Chemistry, 
Chemistry  Club,  2,  Soccer  Teom,  1 .  Phi  Lambda 
Tou, 

Bernice  Sedaff 

10  Nevada  Street  Winthrop 

Born  1917  at  Boston.  Graduate  Winthrop  High 
School.  Major  Home  Economics.  Women's  Glee 
Club,  i,  2,  Home  Economics  Club,  1,  2.  Menorah 
Oub,  1,  2.     Sigma  Iota   (Historian). 

Eleanor  Louise  Sheehan 

Holyoke 
Born  1918  at  Holyoke.  Graduate  Holyoke  High 
School.     Major  Social  Sciences. 

Chester  Sherman 

35  Lincoln  Avenue  Amherst 

Born  1915  at  Chicopee.  Graduate  Chicopee  High 
School.     Moior  in   Botany.     M.  S.  C.  4-H  Club, 

1,  2.  Men's  Glee  Club,  1,  2,  3.  Carnival  Com- 
mittee, 3.     Bay  State  Revue,   1,  3. 

Lee  Charles  Shipman 

57  Copperfield  Rood  Worcester 

Born  1916  at  Worcester.  Graduate  Classical  High 
School.  Major  Distributed  Sciences.  Men's  Glee 
Club.     Psychology  Club,  2.    Alpha  Sigma  Phi. 

Belva  Marie  Sinclair 

33  Prince  Street  Northampton 

Born  1918  at  Northampton.  Graduate  St. 
Michael's  High  School.  Major  Home  Economics, 
Newman  Club,   1,  2.     Sigma  Beto  Chi. 

Charles  Edward  Slater 

Tyringham 
Born  1917  at  Pittsfield.  Graduate  Lee  High 
School.     Major  Animol  Husbandry.    Outing  Club, 

2.  Animal  Husbandry  Club,  1,2.  K.  0.  Club, 
1,  2.  Cross-Country  Team,  1,  2.  Spring  Track 
Team,  1 , 


[151] 


MEMBERS  OF  THE  CLASS  OF  1939 


Raymond   Elmer  Smart,  Jr. 

67  East  Pleasant  Street  Amherst 

Born  1918  at  Springfield.  Graduate  Amherst 
High  School.  Band,  2.  Newman  Club,  1,  2, 
Swimming  Team,  1.     Baseball  Team,  1. 


Francis  Eliot  Smith 


Graduate  Arlington  High  School. 


Arlington 


Bethany  Parker  Snow 

54  Kenneth  Street  West  Roxbury 

Born  1917  at  Boston,  Graduate  Jamaica  Plain 
High  School.     Major  Social  Sciences. 

Franklin  Wallburg   Southwick 

49  Jefferson  Avenue  White  Plains,  N.  Y. 

Born  1917  at  Boston.  Graduate  White  Plains 
High  School.  Major  Pomology.  Maroon  Key,  2. 
Football  Team,  2.  Basketball  Team,  1,  2.  Lambda 
Chi  Alpha. 


Philip  Solar 


Graduate  Lynn  English  High  School. 


Lynn 


George  Joseph  Spelman 

35  East  Pleasant  Street  Amherst 

Born  1917  at  New  London,  Conn.  Graduote 
Amherst  High  School.  Major  Physical  and  Bio- 
logical Sciences.    Q.  T.  V. 

Inez  Evelyn  Spofford 

18  Winchester  Street  Haverhill 

Born  1917  ot  Haverhill.  Graduate  Haverhill  High 
School.  Major  Home  Economics.  Women's  Glee 
Club,  2.  Home  Economics  Club,  1,  2.  Christian 
Federation,   1. 

Edmond  Joseph  Stawiecki 

4  Brandon  Road  Dudley   (Webster) 

Born  1918  at  Jewett  City,  Conn.  Graduate  Bart- 
lett  High  School.  Major  Languages.  Men's 
Glee  Club,  1.     Newman  Club,  1,  2. 

Jacob   Steinberg 

255  Spruce  Street  Chelsea 

Born  1918  at  Chelsea.  Graduate  Chelsea  High 
School.  Major  Pre-Medicol.  Cross-Country 
Team,  1.   Freshman  Handbook.   Alpha  Epsilon  Pi. 

Courtney  Junior  Stetson 

43  Trovers  Street  Athol 

Born  1916  at  Erving.  Graduate  Templeton  High 
School.  Major  Economics.  Swimming  Team,  2. 
Theta  Chi. 

Howard  Newton  Steff 

Old  County  Road  North  Dartmouth 

Born  1915  at  North  Dartmouth.  Graduate  Dart- 
mouth High  School.  Major  Physical  and  Bio- 
logical Sciences.  Maroon  Key,  2,  (Vice-Presi- 
dent). Class  Officer,  1,  2,  (Captain).  Cross- 
Country  Team,  1,  2.    Baseball,  1.    Theta  Chi. 


Edward  Forrest  Stoddard 

Cochituote  Road  Fromingham 

Born  1916  at  North  Abington.  Graduate  Fro- 
mingham High  School.  Major  Physical  and  Bio- 
logical Sciences.  Bond,  2.  Psychology  Club,  2. 
Cross-Country  Team,  2.  Baseball  Team,  1. 
Alpha  Sigma   Phi. 

Marian  King  Stomberg 

56  South  Street  Florence 

Born  1917  at  Bridgeport,  Conn.  Graduate  North- 
ampton High  School.  Major  Home  Economics. 
K.  0.  Club,  2.    Alpha  Lambda  Mu. 

Norman  Edward  Stone 

30  Babcock  Street  Brookline 

Born  1917  at  Boston.  Graduate  Newton  High 
School.  Major  Pre-Dentol.  Freshman  Hand- 
book, (Business  Board).  Hockey  Team,  1. 
Swimming  Team,  1.  Baseball,  1.  Alpha  Epsilon 
Pi. 

Arthur  Ellis  Sullivan 

63    Park   Street  Palmer 

Born  1917  at  Palmer.  Graduate  Palmer  High 
School.  Major  Physical  and  Biological  Sciences. 
Football  Team,   1,  2.     Theta  Chi. 

Martti   lllmari  Suomi 

Box  335  Wellfleet 

Born  1917  at  Wellfleet.  Graduate  Wellfleet 
High  School.  Major  Animal  Husbandry.  Ani- 
mal Husbandry  Club,   1.     Kappa  Epsilon. 

Robert  Warren  Swonson 

Rockport 
Graduate   Rockport   High  School. 

David  Scott  Tappan 

Room  1040,  53  State  Street  Milton  (Boston) 
Born  1914  at  Spruce  Pine,  North  Carolina. 
Graduate  Cambridge  School.  Major  Physical  ond 
Biological  Sciences.    Men's  Glee  Club,  1,  2. 

Gordon   Franklin  Thomas 

8  Pleasant  Street  East  Bridgewater 

Born  1918  at  Brockton.  Graduate  Brockton  and 
East  Bridgewater  High  School.  Major  Agricul- 
ture. Dairy  Club,  1.  Animal  Husbandry,  1. 
Christian  Federation,  2.  Hockey  Team,  1.  Base- 
ball Team,   1. 

John  Vincent  Townsend 

South  Hadley 
Graduate  South  Hadley  High  School.  Alpha  Sig- 
ma Phi. 

Margaret  Elizabeth  Truron 

33  East  Pleosant  Street  Amherst 

Born  1919  at  Stockbridge.  Graduate  Williams 
High  School.     Major  Home  Economics. 

Rodney  Charles  Turner 

Falmouth 
Born  1917  at  Stonehom.  Graduote  Lawrence 
High  School.  Major  Chemistry.  Alpha  Sigma  Phi. 


[152} 


MEMBERS  OF  THE  CLASS  OF  1939 


Robert    Edgerton    Ullman 

Northampton 
Graduate  Northampton  High  School. 

Morrill  Thayer  Vittum 

Haverhill 
Born  1919  at  Haverhill.  Graduate  Haverhill  High 
School.  Major  Chemistry.  Outing  Club,  1,  2. 
Radio,  2.    Swimming,  1,  2.    Kappa  Epsilon. 

Ruth  Eugenie  Waddell 

351   Summer  Street  Arlington 

Born  1917  at  Medford.  Graduate  Arlington  High 
School.  Major  Home  Economics.  Outing  Club,  1. 
Sigma  Beta  Chi. 

Walter  Thompson  Wakefield 

9  Ball  Street  Worcester 

Born  1917  at  Worcester.  Graduate  South  High 
School.  Major  Physical  and  Biological  Sciences. 
Men's  Glee  Club,  2.  Pre-Med.  Club,  2.  Swim- 
ming Team,  1,  2.     Theta  Chi. 

Eleanor  Ward 

162  Bowdoin  Street  Springfield 

Born  1917  at  Springfield.  Graduate  Classical 
High  School.  Major  Home  Economics.  Collegian 
Board.     Alpha  Lambda  Mu. 

Elizabeth   Rose  Warner 

Main  Street  Sunderland 

Born  1918  at  Sunderland.  Graduate  Amherst 
High  School.     Major  Social  Sciences. 

Francis  Albert  Warren 

Ashfield 
Born  1917  at  Ashfield.  Graduate  Sanderson 
Academy.  Major  Physical  and  Biological  Sciences. 
Lambda  Chi. 

Ervin  Leonard  Welch 

Melrose 
Born  1917  at  Melrose.  Graduote  Melrose  High 
School.  Major  Social  Sciences.  Hockey,  1,  2. 
Phi  Sigma  Kappa. 

Mary  Lees  West 

202  Clinton  Street  New  Bedford 

Born  1917  at  New  Bedford.  Graduate  New  Bed- 
ford High  School.  Major  Social  Sciences.  Lambda 
Delta  Mu. 

Ralph  Wilfred  White 

45  Hunneweil  Avenue  Brighton 

Born  1916  at  Boston.  Graduate  Boston  Latin 
School.     Major  Chemistry.     Football  Team,  1. 

Edmund  Gillette  Wilcox 

Stockbridge 
Born  1915  at  Stockbridge.  Graduate  Williams 
High  School.  Major  Landscape  Architecture. 
Outing  Club,  2.  Football  Team,  1 .  Spring  Track 
Team,   1 . 


Morjorie  Frances  Wilcox 

207  Pomeroy  Avenue  Pittsfield 

Born  1916  ot  Orange.  Graduate  Pittsfield  High 
School.    Major  Home  Economics.    Lambda  Delta 

Mu. 

Horace  Bradstreet  Wildes 

Glade  Road  Dartmouth 

Born  1918  at  New  Bedford.  Graduate  Dartmouth 
High  School.  Major  Poultry  and  Agronomy. 
Band,  1,  2.  Outing  Club,  2.  Cross-Country 
Team,  1.  Poultry  Judging  Team,  2.  Kappa 
Epsilon. 

Gerhard  Max  Wilke 

600  Canal  Street  Holyoke 

Born  1918  in  Germany.  Groduote  Holyoke  High 
School.     Major  Languages.     Soccer  Team,  1. 

Edward   Back  Willard 

17  Cheriton  Rood  Quincy 

Born  1917  at  Hartford,  Conn.  Graduate  North 
Quincy  High  School.  Major  Landscape  Archi- 
tecture. Outing  Club,  1,  2.  Soccer  Team,  1. 
Kappa  Epsilon. 

Elliot  Tilden  Wilson 

34  Summer  Street  Weymouth 

Born  1917  at  Weymouth.  Groduote  Weymouth 
High  School.  Major  Distributed  Sciences.  Math- 
ematics Club,  2.  Soccer  Team,  1,  2.  Spring 
Track  Team,  1.  Freshman  Handbook.  Kappa 
Epsilon. 

Merton    Frederick   Wilson 

32  Bardwell  Street  South  Hadley  Falls 

Born  1915  at  South  Hadley  Falls.  Graduate 
South  Hadley  High  School.  Major  Chemistry. 
Chemistry  Club,  2.  Basketball  Team,  1.  Kappa 
Epsilon. 

Jay  Henry  Winn 

20   Hozelton   Street  Mattopon 

Born  1916  at  Dorchester.  Graduate  Boston  Public 
Latin  School.  Transfer  Providence  College.  Major 
Physiological  and  Biological  Sciences.  Collegian, 
1,  2.  Bond,  2.  Menorah  Club,  2.  Alpha  Epsilon 
Pi. 

Leonard  Charles  Wirtanen 

Quincy 
Born  1917  at  Quincy.  Graduate  Quincy  High 
School.     Major  Bacteriology.     Q.  T.  V. 

John  Joseph  Witek 

Graduate  Greenfield  High  School 

Henry  Wojtasiewicz 

44  Park  Street  Chicopee 

Born  1918  at  Turners  Falls.  Graduate  Chicopee 
High  School.  Major  Chemistry.  Football  Team, 
1,  2. 

Celia  Mary  Wojcieszek 


Greenfield 


{153J 


MEMBERS  OF  THE  CLASS  OF  1939 


Frank  John  Yourga 

Greenfield 
Born  1916  ot  Montague.  Graduote  Greenfield 
High  School.     Mojor  Chemistry.     Koppo  Epsilon. 

Walter  Andrew  Zajchowski 

10  Nonotuck  Avenue  Chicopee 

Born  1917  at  Chicopee.  Graduate  Chicopee  High 
School.  Major  Distributed  Sciences.  Football 
Team,  1,  2.     Hockey  Team,  1. 


Lucy  Ann  Zaskey 

R.  F.  D.  Amherst 

Born  1918  ot  Hadley.  Graduate  Hopkins 
Academy.  Major  Social  Sciences.  Newman 
Club,  1.     K.  O.  Club,  1. 

Stanley  Frank  Zelazo 

42  North  Summer  Street  Adams 

Born  1917  at  Adams.  Graduate  Adams  High 
School.  Football  Team,  1,  2.  Basketball  Team, 
1.     Baseball  Team,   1. 


[154] 


FORMER  MEMBERS  OF  THE  CLASS  OF  1939 


Willis  E.  Allen 
Clyde  L,  Becker 
Sidney  M.  Boice 
Wilfred  A.   Bourque 
Richard   N.   Bowler 
Rita  M.  Buckley 
Edna   M.   Chaffee 
Kenneth    Cohen 
Julia   B.  Colby 
Vivian  R.  Cordes 
Henry   L.   Daly 
Charlotte  L.  Donahue 
Joseph  P.  Donoghue 
Michael  C.   Doolan 
Mary  Rita   Doyle 
John   R.  Edwards 
Gertrude  H.  Fay 
Paul  T.    Ferriter 
Richard  J.   Fitzpatrick 
Maurice  Fogel 
Herman    S.    Freedman 
W.  R.  Goffney 
William  A.  Garside 
Philip  C.  Geoffrion 
Kenneth  W.  Gould 
Robert  B.  Haskins 
Frank  D.  Hawthorne 


Vivian  V.  Henschel 
Sumner  L.  Horwitz 
Frederick    K.   Hughes 
Albin    F.    Irzyk 
Robert  Jenney 
William   K.  Koynor 
Thomas  C.  Kenney 
Elizabeth  Kenyon 
Anthony   Kieliszek 
Richard   W.   Kilburn 
Herbert  King 
John    E.   Kitson 
William  M.  Knott 
Carl  E.  Kokins 
Stephen   Kosakowski 
Abraham  E.  Landsman 
John  R.  LePage,  Jr. 
Walter  R.  Leslie 
Marjorie  Litchfield 
Lewis  G.  Luchini 
Robert  K.  Marsh 
John  F.  McMahon 
John   Manna 
Eleanor  C.   Nugent 
Harry  W.  O'Connell 
Peter  P.  Pastuszak 
William  L.  Poole 


Poul  W.  Prescott 
Hymon   Raiklen 
Bertha  A.    Randall 
Virginia  M.  Reid 
Roy  R.  Reisinger 
Blanch   P.   Richmond 
Muriel   Scarborough 
Nancy  V.  Scaltrito 
Evi  C.  Scholz 
Ella  G.  Shevenell 
Priscilla  M.  Smith 
Robert  A.  Smith 
Milton  A.  Stafford 
Frank   R.  Stanisiewski 
Frank   E.  Stone 
Charles  W.  Stratton 
Norman  T.  Thomas,  Jr. 
Pauline  J.  Todd 
Wilma  G.  Valentine 
Jock  Woldman 
Isabelle  P.  Walker 
James  Walsh 
Orrin   E.  West 
Marciene  Whitcomb 
Julia  M.  Whitney 
Thomas  J.  Wilcock 
Melvin  Wintman 


[155] 


BOOK   TWO 

CHAPTER  IV 


THE 
INDEX 


CLASS  OF  1940 

• 

OFFICERS 

President  FRED  WATSON 

Vice  President MARJORIE  SMITH 

Secretary VIRGINIA  GALE 

Treasurer  ROBERT  JONES 

Captain  LARRY  REAGAN 

Sergeant  at  Arms  AL  SMITH 

HISTORY  OF  THE  CLASS  OF  1940 


On  a  balmy  Sunday,  the  20th  of  September,'a  queer  collection  of  great  high 
school  seniors  assembled  on  the  Massachusetts  State  Campus  in  their  various  dormi- 
tories. That  first  day  and  night  they  arranged  their  rooms  and  met  their  roommates. 
The  next  few  days  were  spent  in  arranging  programs,  in  receptions,  and  in  a  number 
of  assemblies.  Dr.  Glick  gave  us  some  "very  interesting"  examinations  to  find  out 
whether  we  had  enough  vacuum  in  our  heads  to  hold  our  freshman  hats  on.  Professor 
Lanphear  welcomed  us  all  to  our  campus  and  seemed'  pleased  to  usher  in  the  first  of 
the  '40'  series  of  classes.  Then  we  decided  to  elect  temporary  class  officers.  Several 
glorified  neophytes  were  nominated  and  after  the  ballots  were  counted  we  found  that 
a  toil  youth  from  Springfield,  Fletcher  Prouty,  had  been  elected  President;  and  a 
pretty  brunette  from  Pittsfield,  Betty  Bates  had  been  elected  Vice  President.  A  non- 
golfing  "Bobby"  Jones  from  Princeton  was  elected  Treasurer,  and  Virginia  Gale  from 
Marblehead  was  elected  Secretary.  Our  captain  was  Larry  Reagan  from  Dorchester, 
and  our  sergeant-at-arms  was  Al  Smith  from  Newton. 

As  our  classes  were  just  getting  under  way  the  fraternities  and  sororities  started 
after  us,  and  didn't  let  us  go  until  they  had  introduced  us  to  the  glories  of  their 
respective  palaces. 

After  this  came  a  very  "enjoyable"  week  of  serenading.  Persuaded  by  the 
tireless  M.oroon  Key  and  Senate  the  freshman  carolers  appeared  each  morning  at 


[158] 


HISTORY  OF  THE  CLASS  OF  1940 

6:00  o'clock  to  sing  and  dance  for  the  Abbey  girls.  The  stirring  solos  and  aesthetic 
dances  were  the  features  of  the  week.  The  next  week  the  boys'  efforts  were  rivaled 
by  the  early  morning  serenading  of  the  freshman  girls. 

The  Senate  proved  its  power  when  it  selected  certain  fortunate  freshmen  to  wear 
natty  pie-plote  hats  and  to  scrub  numerals  on  the  sidewalk. 

Meanwhile  mother's  delicious  cooking  was  being  forgotten  as  the  ravenous 
students  gorged  (?)  themselves  with  the  delicious  Hash  House  food.  The  old  bread- 
line became  a  daily  routine,  but  not  such  a  daily  occurence  was  the  sudden  appearance 
of  the  Amherst  football  posts  the  day  before  the  game.  They  were  artistically  draped 
over  the  Draper  entrance.  On  another  memorable  occasion  a  new  friend  appeared 
on  the  front  lawn.    Old  Prudence  was  back  among  us  with  her  little  Prudy. 

The  freshmen  also  were  an  athletic  crowd.  They  took  the  lowly  sophomores 
over  in  the  rope  pull  and  then  took  a  royal  beating  Razoo  Nite.  However,  this  was 
avenged  when  the  freshmen  footballers  chalked  up  a  victory  while  the  sophomores 
cluttered  up  the  grass.  Back  in  the  tank  the  freshmen  were  brushing  up  on  a  few 
tricks;  and  when  they  finally  met  the  sophomores  it  was  just  a  ducking  as  the  fresh- 
men splashed  their  way  to  glory.  The  little  girls  in  blue  whacked  the  sophomores' 
shins  OS  they  tagged  an  easy  field  hockey  defeat  on  them,  but  the  Juniors  gave  them 
a  little  lesson  to  take  them  down  a  peg. 

Meanwhile  we  elected  our  new  officers  and  our  diving  champion  with  the  curly 
red  hair,  Fred  Watson  of  Jamaica  Plains  was  elected  President,  Marjone  Smith  from 
Springfield  was  elected  Vice  President.  Robert  Jones,  Larry  Reagan,  Al  Smith  and 
Virginia  Gale  retained  their  respective  offices.  Under  their  management  the  class 
(or  most  of  them)  have  sailed  along  through  the  Dean's  Boards,  and  Mid-Years,  and 
possibly  there  will  be  a  few  left  to  graduate  in  1940. 

Socially  the  class  has  been  a  bit  better  off  than  scholastically.  The  Military 
Ball  was  our  first  taste  of  a  College  formal.  Later  the  "Winter"  Carnival  Ball  pro- 
vided a  pleasant  release  from  study.  We  have  attended  the  informals  to  keep  in 
step  and  have  occasionally  been  seen  at  the  fraternity  dances.  Of  course,  a  few 
have  mistakeably  stepped  off  to  Mt.  Holyoke  or  Smith,  but  these  misguided  ones 
are  all  accounted  for  and  can  be  found  at  the  infrequent  Thatcher  Hops. 

And  so  it  goes.  We  came  here  to  study  and  are  still  thinking  about  studying. 
Maybe  we  will  someday 


[159] 


MEMBERS  OF  THE  CLASS  OF  1940 


Sidney  Abramovitz 

7  Riverview  Avenue 

Betty  Vignes  Abroms 

126   Harvard  Street 

Arthur  Adelson 

14  Cottage  Street 

Erma  Stuart  Alvord 

8  Stevens  Street 

Jean  Marie  Archibold 

Leverett   Road 

Priscilla  Bales  Archibald 

46  Polfrey  Street 

George  Leonard  Atwater 

2  Linden  Avenue 

Mildred  Marion   Bak 

Miadle  Street 

Anna  Matilda  Banuzkewic 

45  Longfellow  Avenue 

Vincent  Jason  Barnard 

201   East  Main  Street 

Charles  Henry  Barney 

13  Hodley  Street 

Beryl  Hazel  Barton 

1077  Massachusetts  Avenue 

Joseph  Bartosiewicz 

51  Maple  Street 

Mary  Elizabeth   Bates 

247  First  Street 

Bernard  James   Beagarie 

21    Beacon  Street 

Geoffrey    Hamilton    Beames 

Robert  Allan  Beattie 

285  Foster  Street 

Robert  Lorenzo  Benemelis 

236  Sargeant  Street 

Charles  Wilbur  Bennett 

39  Bridge  Street 

Robert  Harold   Bernstein 

29  Olmstead  Drive 

Deane  Allen  Beytes 

430  Court  Street 

Richard  Franklin   Bloke 

Southville   Road 

John  Edward  Blasko 

174  Sunset  Avenue 


Beverly 

Springfield 

Chelsea 

Turners  Falls 

North  Amherst 

Watertown 

Westfield 

Hadley 

Pittsfield 

North  Adams 

South  Hadley 

North  Adams 

Northampton 

Pittsfield 

Greenfield 

South  Woodstock 

Lowell 

Holyoke 

South  Hadley  Foils 

Springfield 

North  Plymouth 

Southville 

Amherst 


Harris  Blauer 

142  Fuller  Street 

Charlotte  Esther  Bluemer 

128   Nonotuck   Street 

Earl  Kenneth  Bowen 

67  Armstrong  Street 

Louise  Bowman 

39  Early  Avenue 

Glenn   David   Boyd 

16  Fearing  Street 

Marie  Tullner  Brodshow 

33  Lincoln  Street 

Clement  Edmond  Brault 

3541    Acushnet  Avenue 

Roger  Whittemore  Brown,  Jr. 

36  Outlook  Drive 

Harold  Arnold   Brunner 

277  High  Street 

James  Bernard  Buckley 

31   Carver  Street 

Rita  Marie  Buckley 

38   Cross   Street 

Morris  Hyman  Burakoff 

137   Walnut   Street 

Herbert  Vane   Burns 

3  Colonial   Street 

Janet  Whittemore  Campbell 

24  Amherst  Street 

Pauline   Isabel  Corew 

19  Homer  Street 

Jean   Pauline  Carpenter 

503  School   Street 

Millicent  Carpenter 

17  Medfield  Street 

Leo  Gary  Carol! 

367  Pleasant  Street 

Thomas  Allen  Casey 

1220  Riverside  Avenue 

Robert   Norman   Cashman 

22  Seorle  Avenue 

Melvin  Harold  Chaifen 

125  Peterboro 

Hazel  Ruth  Chopin 

Robert  Morgan  Chapman 

42  Lorimer  Road 


Brookline 

Holyoke 

West  Springfield 

Medford 

Amherst 

Chicopee  Falls 

New  Bedford 

Lexington 

Webster 

Springfield 

Beverly 

Chelsea 

Gloucester 

Springfield 

Worcester 

Webster 

Worcester 

Bridgewoter 

Somerset 

Easthompton 

Boston 

Sheffield 

Woverley 


[160] 


MEMBERS  OF  THE  CLASS  OF  1940 


Edith   Marjorie   Clork 

Sunderland 

Robert  Allen   Ducy 

18  Commercial  Street 

Thorndike 

Ralph   Grames  Clark 

Enfield 

Agnes  Armstrong   Dunham 

Volatie,  N.  Y, 

Isadore  Cohen 

82  Floyd  Street 

Dorchestei 

Robert  Francis  Dunn 

23  Adams  Street 

Pittsfield 

Frederick  John  Cole 

1608  Carew  Street 

Springfield 

Robert  Bowker  Eaton 

173  Moin  Street 

Woltham 

Kathleen  Freda  Cooper 

105  Butterfield  Terrace 

Amherst 

Evelyn  Dennison  Ellery 

42  Dennison  Street 

Gloucester 

Anne   Katherine   Corcoran 

5  Myrtle  Street 

Stoneham 

Reaetto  Barbara  Farnsworth 

31   Chesterfield  Road 

Worcester 

Douglas   Hodfield   Cowling 

126  Commonwealth  Avenue 

West  Concord 

John  Edward  Filios 

Bates  Road 

Westfield 

Lorraine  Creesy 

Sandy  Valley  Road 

Westwood 

Stanley  Theodore  FInik 

20  North  Main  Street 

South  Hodley  Falls 

Robert  Miller  Creswell 

8  Creswell   Road 

Worcester 

Margaret  Asquith  Firth 

38  Swan  Street 

Lawrence 

George  Morton  Curran 

17  Madison  Avenue 

Northampton 

George  Francis  Flanagan 

55  Clark  Street 

Easthampton 

Gerald  Michael  Dailey 

10  Atherstone  Street 

Ashmont 

Urban  Cyril  Fleming 

53   Howard  Street 

Holyoke 

Frank  Robert  Lee  Daley,  Jr 

58   Nonotuck  Street 

Holyoke 

Robert  Thomas  Foley 

6  Burnett  Street 

Turners  Falls 

Frank  Herbert  Dalton 

15  Woodleigh  Avenue 

Greenfield 

William  Gregory  Foley 

20  Hanson  Street 

Salem 

George  Godfrey  Davenport, 

North  Avenue 

Jr. 

Mendon 

Willard  Olcott  Foster 

65  Main  Street 

Marion 

Franklin  Milton  Davis,  Jr. 

1 46  Trapelo  Road 

Wolthom 

Horvey  From 

8  Shannon  Street 

Worcester 

Ida  Bessie  Davis 

84  Stevens  Street 

East  Taunton 

Paul  From 

82  Fox  Street 

Worcester 

Anne  Sophie  Dec 

8  West  Street 

Hadley 

Lawrence  John  Freeman 

149  Everett  Street 

Southbridge 

Emile   Eugene   Deneoult 

101    High  Street 

Greenfield 

Virginia  Gale 

25  Rockawoy  Avenue 

Marblehead 

Edmond  John   Dereg 

16  View  Street 

Holyoke 

Ruth  Virginia  Garipay 

554  Western  Avenue 

Lynn 

Charlotte  Lee  Donahue 

2332  Washington  Street 

Newton  Lower  Falls 

Philip  Carl  Geoffrion 

56  Hampden  Street 

West  Springfield 

Joseph   Poterick   Donoghue, 

63  Liberty  Street 

Jr. 

Newburyport 

Vern  Winslow  Glllmore 

5  Summit  Road 

Gilbertville 

Katherine   Hazel   Doran 

26  Lincoln  Avenue 

Amherst 

Arnold    Irving   Glashow 

23   Brookledge  Street 

Roxbury 

Currie  Hayes  Downs 

38   Tucker   Street 

Lynn 

Thelma  Nellie  Glazier 

Leverett 

[161] 


MEMBERS  OF  THE  CLASS  OF  1940 


Charles  Leslie  Gleason,  Jr. 

1 13   Broadway 

Richard  Russell  Glendon 

4  Ware  Rood 

Carl  Ambrose  Goodrich,  Jr. 

749   Hampden   Street 

William  Francis  Goodwin 

15  Wheelock  Street 

Evelyn  Atherton  Gould 

6  Hartshorn  Road 

Myra  Campbell  Graves 


Burton  William  Gregg 


Westr 


Harold  Emory  Griffin,  Jr. 

7  Adonac  Avenue 

Arthur  Alexander  Hagelstein 

194  School  Street 

Myron   Dexter  Hager 

127  Main  Street 

Frieda  Lillian  Hall 

152  Hawthorne  Road 

John  Walton  Hall 

Webster  Street 

Robert  Edward  Hall 

Grove  Street 

Robert  Hayes  Hanley 

17  Bancroft  Park 

Malcolm  Bennett  Harding 

84  Court  Street 

Frank   Douglass   Hawthorne 

South  East  Street 

David  Elliott  Hennessy 

197  Auburn  Street 

Thomas  Waldo  Herrick,  Jr. 

Tremont  Street 

Ralph    Brewer   Hill 

26  Summer  Street 

Stanley   Haskell    Hitchcock 


Paula   Yvonne   Holmes 

239  Pleasant  Street 

Franklin  Adelbert  Hopkins 


Arthur  Fenner  Howe 

1    Rockland  Street 


Hanover 

Winchester 

Holyoke 

Wmthrop 

Walpole 

Sunderland 

linster  West,  Vt. 

Boston 

Stoughton 

South  Deerfield 

Braintree 

Marshfield 

Upton 

Hopedale 

Westfield 

Amherst 

Cherry  Valley 

South  Duxbury 

Ipswich 

Gilbertville 

Winthrop 

Leverett 

Brockton 


Elizabeth  Margaret  Howe 

19  Dexter  Street 

Howard  Mason  Hoxie 

44  North  Elm  Street 

Fredrick   Kenneth   Hughes 

134  Dartmouth  Street 

John  Stanislaus  Ingham 

43  North  Street 

Marjorie  Buck  Irwin 

469  North  Main  Street 

Olive  Georgina  Jackson 

54  High  Street 

Priscilla  Jacobs 

Washington  Street 

John  Chester  Jokobek 

Middle  Street 

Richard   Herbert  Jaquith 

48  Massasoit  Street 

Eleanor  Frances  Jewell 

48  Barnard  Road 

Louis  Fingal  Johnson,  Jr. 

7   Hillside  Court 

Margery  Dean  Johnson 

Ashland  Street 

Robert  Lincoln  Jones 


Richard   Peters  Joseph 


Robert  Arthur  Joyce 

291    Locust  Street 

Albert  Irving  Kelfer 

15  Lewis  Avenue 

Dorothy  Mildred   Kelly 

567  Main  Street 

John  Howe  Kelso 


Robert  Charles  Kennedy 

16  Macomber  Avenue 

Loretta  Christine  Kenny 

17  Rockview  Street 

Elizabeth    Kenyon 

342  Winter  Street 

Francis  Bartholomew  Keville 

7  Porter  Street 

James   Herbert  King,  Jr. 

65  Charlotte  Street 


Pittsfield 

Northampton 

Holyoke 

Ludlow 

Palmer 

Monson 

Holliston 

Hadley 

Northampton 

Worcester 

Gloucester 

Southboro 

Princeton 

North   Truro 

Florence 

Winthrop 

Wotertown 

Chester 

North  Dartmouth 

Palmer 

Wellesley 

East  Lynn 

Worcester 


[162] 


MEMBERS  OF  THE  CLASS  OF  1940 


Rosa   Frieda   Kohls 

31    Bultonwood  Street 

Carl  Ernesf  Kokins 

Munroe  Street 

Herbert   Krouss 

Monterey  Road 

Ruth  Morguerita   Kuusela 

132  Washington  Street 

Ruth    Daisy   Lamon 

1701  Massachusetts  Avenue 

Everett  Walter  Langworthy 

Middlefield  Street 

Raino   Kullervo  Lanson 

681  Burncoat  Street 

Joseph  Phelps  Larkin 

215  Arsenal  Street 

Vasilis  Lavrakos 

59  Elton  Avenue 

Catherine  Marin  Leete 

Maple  Rood  Bi 

Arthur  Joseph   Lepine 

243  Mom  Street 

Gerald  Joseph  Levitch 

98  Conway  Street 

Roma   Dina   Levy 

37  Springside  Avenue 

Sumner  Charles  Levy 

13  Marie  Avenue 

Roger  Hurlin  Lindsey 

114  Church  Street 

Sidney  Samuel  Lipshires 

12  Fruit  Street 

Marjorie  Litchfield 

75  Central  Avenue 

Barbara  Little 

50  Marlboro  Street 

Nancy   Elizabeth   Luce 

388  Main  Street 

Mary  Elizabeth  Moddocks 

48  South  Street 

Donald  John  Mahoney 

89  Pearl  Street 

Dana   Harold  Malins 

8  Nottinghill  Road 

Irma  Isabel  Malm 

15  Chadwick  Street 


Dorchester 

Ashland 

Great  Barrington 

Gardner 

North  Adams 

Chester 

Worcester 

Watertown 

Watertown 

iarcliff  Manor,  N.  Y. 

Holyoke 

Greenfield 

Pittsfield 

Cambridge 

_Wore 

Northampton 

Hyde  Park 

Newburyport 

Fitchburg 

Foxboro 

Holyoke 

Brighton 

Worcester 


John  James  Mango 

West  Upton 

Charles  Francis  Mansfield 

8  Jenny  Lmd  Street  Taunton 

David  Mordecai  Marcus 

490  Blue  Hill  Avenue  Roxbury 

Helen  Alison  Marshall 

Pelhom   Road  Amherst 

Robert  Ansel  Martin 

37  Pleasure  Avenue  Pittsfield 

Victoria   Katherine  Motuszko 

Box  166,  R.  F    D  Amherst 

Gerald  Edward  McAndrew 

James  Street  Barre 

John  Joseph  McCarthy 

29  Arlington  Street  Worcester 

Robert  Joseph  McCartney 

233  Lafayette  Street  Salem 

Charles  LeGro  McLaughlin 

4  Nutting  Avenue  Amherst 

Dorothy  Merrill 

47  Florence  Avenue  Norwood 

John  Edward  Merrill,  Jr. 

16  Newell  Avenue  Southbridge 

Genevieve  Evelyn  Messer 

15  Irving  Street  Spencer 

Roland  Gerald  Meunier 

28  Amaron  Street  Springfield 

John  Calvin  Miller 

Dodge 

Norman  Miller 

25  Washington  Street  Springfield 

Carolyn  Emma  Monk 

Champney  Street  Groton 

Roger  Whitmore  Morgan 

35  Grand  View  Avenue  Medford 

Dorothy  Ruth  Morley 

Mount  Pleasant   Inn  Amherst 

Herbert  Irving  Morris 

164  Rossiter  Street  Dorchester 

Roy  Earl  Morse 

683  Washington  Street  Bostorf 

Maynard  Fowie  Moseley 

10   Imne   Road  Allston 

Robert  Henry  Mosher 

2  Westfield  Road  Holyoke 


[163] 


MEMBERS  OF  THE  CLASS  OF  1940 


Richard  Kenneth  Muller 

Blue  Hills  Road 

Michael    Neznayko 

Box  215,  R.  F.  D. 

Dominic  Edward  Nietupsl<i 

Miller  Street 

Lewis  Franic  Norwood,  Jr. 

125  Main  Street 

G.  David  Novelli 

116  High  Street 

Arthur  Alfred  Noyes 

367  Woodward  Street 

William  Brown  Nutting 

Temple  Street 

Daniel  John   O'Connell 

47  Bardwell  Street 

Priscillo   May  Oertel 

Washington  Street 

John  Ravmond  O'Neill 

220  Sargent  Street 

Edward   Elliot  Oppenheim 

388  Spring  Street 

John  Vincent  Osmun 

16  Northampton  Rood 

Ralph  Francis  Polumbo 

312  Lancaster  Street 

Christopher  Paul 

332  Talbot  Avenue 

James  Warren  Payson,  Jr. 

Main   Street 

Morton  Joseph  Pearlman 

62  Columbia  Street 

Virginia  Helen  Pease 

13  East  Pleasant  Street 

Helene  Elizabeth  Pelissier 

Russell  Street 

Lester  LeRoy  Phillips,  Jr. 

44  Holmes  Rood 

Dorothy  Blanche  Phipps 

High   Street 

Kenneth  Vernon   Pike 

23  Westminster  Street 

George  Thomas   Pitts,  Jr. 

5  Herrick  Street 

Richard  John  Plichta 

Strong  Street 


Amherst 

Amherst 

North  Wilbraham 

Rockport 

North  Agawom 

Wabon 

West  Boylston 

South  Hadley  Falls 

South   Hanson 

Holyoke 

Brockton 

Amherst 

Leominster 

Dorchester 

Millis 

Brookline 

Amherst 

Hadley 

Pittsfield 

Holliston 

Pittsfield 

Beverly 

Amherst 


Edwin  Michael  Podolak 

Middle  Street 

Charles  Arthur  Powers 

68  Robinson  Avenue 

John  Joseph  Powers 

47  Onoto  Street 

Esther  Pratt 

8  Kingmont  Street 

Leroy  Fletcher   Prouty,  Jr. 

Barney  Estate 

Elizabeth   Helen   Purdy 

116  High  Street 

Lawrence  Hunneman  Reagan 

31  Colonial  Avenue 

Mia  Reinap 

Nobscot  Road 

Melvin  Reisman 

1 1   Cummings  Road 

Helen  Elizabeth  Reynolds 

134  Woodland  Street 

Katherine  Louise  Rice 

103  Westford  Circle 

Leonard  Irwin  Rice 

32  Sewoll  Avenue 

William  Henry  Richards 

406  Elm  Street 

Patricio  Jane   Robbins 

29  Laconia  Road 

Shirley  Palmer  Robbins 

69  Hancock  Street 

Robert  Rodman 

949  Blue  Hill  Avenue 

Rino  Joseph  Roffinoli 

97  South  Street 

Anthony  Stanley   Rojko 

East  Street 

Sidney  Walter  Rosen 

42  Sanderson  Avenue 

Walter  Albert  Ross,  Jr. 

24  Johnson  Street 

Edwin  Malcolm  Rossmon 

50  Park  Dole  Avenue 

Dorothy  Jean  Rourke 

84  Marion  Street 

Walter  Richards  Rubinwitch 

16  Sterling  Street 


Hadley 

Braintree 

Pittsfield 

Greenwood 

Springfield 

Pittsfield 

Boston 

Framingham 

Brighton 

Worcester 

Springfield 

Winthrop 

Northampton 

Worcester 

Lexington 

Dorchester 

Wiliiamstown 

Hadley 

Lynn 

West  Springfield 

Allston 

Springfield 

Springfield 


[164] 


i 


MEMBERS  OF  THE  CLASS  OF   1940 


Alfred   Howard   Rudge 

23  Adelle  Circuit 

Sylvia    Russell 

281  Chestnut  Street 

Walter  Fred  Russell 

Room  43,  State  House 

Winslow   Edwin   Ryan 

62  Pork  Street 

Theodore  Saltzman 

]67  Howard  Avenue 

James  Joseph  Sanderson 

Leo  Joseph  Santucci 

232  South  Main  Street 

Francis  Richard  Saunders 

32  Trosk  Street 

David  Sawyer 

50  Lucerne  Street 

Flourence  Peter  Scannell 

19  Linden  Avenue 

Evi  C.  Scholz 


Norman  James  Schoonmaker 

Henry  Marcus  Schreiber 

185  Grovers  Avenue 

David  Harold  Searle,  Jr. 

Beacon  Hill 

John  Paul  Serex 

69  Lincoln  Avenue 

Everett  Shapiro 

7  Dee  ring  Rood 

Donald  Houghton  Shaw 

215  Washington  Street 

Marjorie  Clarinda  Shaw 

North  Main  Street 

Samuel  Pettee  Shaw 

88  Pearl  Street 

Robert    Irving   Sheldon 

90  Hompden  Street 

Daniel  Edgar  Shepardson 

65  Simonds  Street 

Wilfred  Britton  Shepardson 

63  Simonds  Street 

Arthur   Sherman 

Main  Street 


Worcester 
Lynnfield  Centre 
Boston 
Hudson 
Roxbury 
Becket 
Palmer 
Gloucester 
Dorchester 
Greenfield 
State  Line 
Amherst 
Winthrop 
Housatonic 
Amherst 
Mattopan 
Belmont 
Belchertown 
Middleboro 
West  Springfield 
Athol 
Athol 
Lonesboro 


Myrtle  Rosalyn  Sherry 

63  Columbia   Park 

Myron  Henry  Sichol 


Sidney  Carl  Siegal 

38  Forrest  Street 

Bernard  Silberberg 

26  Esmond  Street 

Tracy  Bernard  Slock,  Jr. 

70  Lincoln  Avenue 

Edgar  Burton  Slater 

Dorothy  Florentino  Smolley 

78  Downing  Street 

Alan  Clark  Smith 

94  Eliot  Avenue 

Carlton  Vernon  Smith 

Maplewood  Form 

Frank  Browne  Smith 

10  Porker  Street 

John  Smith 

Vining  Hill  Road 

Marion  Marjorie  Smith 

194  Middlesex 

Everett  Royal  Spencer,  Jr. 

3   Francis  Avenue 

Frank  Henry  Spencer 

439  Elm  Street 

Elizabeth    Harriet   Spofford 

46  Housotonic  Street 

Benjamin  Spungin 

43  Maryl'jnd  Street 

Sidney  Spungin 

44  Main  Street 

Eric  Stahlberg,  Jr. 

44  State  Street 

Frank  Raymond  Stanisiewski 

Triangle  Street 

Robert  Staples 

33  Olive  Street 

Jacqueline  Louise  Stewart 

Shay  Street 

Mary  Allerton    Stewart 

Bay  Road 

Harold  Frederick  Storey 

Union  Street 


Hoverhill 

Holland 

Winthrop 

Dorchester 

Amherst 

Tyringhom 

Worcester 

West  Newton 

North  Brookfield 

Holyoke 

Southwick 

Springfield 

Holyoke 

Northampton 

Lee 

Springfield 

Greenfield 

Northampton 

Amherst 

Northampton 

Amherst 

South  Duxbury 

Millis 


[165] 


MEMBERS  OF  THE  CLASS  OF  1940 


Homer  Lincoln  Stronger 

Summer  Street 

Harold  Louis  Straube 

50  Haines  Drive 

Susan  Elizabeth  Stutsman 

123  College  Street 

Albert  William  Sullivan 

27  North  Main  Street 

John  William   Swenson 

9  Montvale  Rood 
Warren   Rowford  Tappin 

133  Grove  Street 

Priscillo  Winslow  Taylor 

38  Kenneth  Street 

Roy  Clifton  Taylor 

Bernordston  Road 

Dean  Thomas  Terry 

67  Park  Street 

Henry  Smith  Thornton 

23  East  Pleasant  Street 

Chester  Howard  Tiberii 

North   Main  Street 

George  Burton  Tobey,  Jr. 

250  Cochituate  Road 

Bernard  Tolnick 

101    Devon   Street 

Malcolm  Parker  Trees 

14  Randall   Road 

Matthew  Nathan  Tuttle 

32  Shirely  Avenue 

Carlton  William  Twible 

111  Mam  Street 

Margaret  Viola  Vonnah 

7  Hampden  Court 

George  David  Vigue 

217  Worcester  Road 

Arthur  Wendoll  Washburn, 

George  Street 

Frederick  Johnson  Watson 

21   Thomas  Street 

Helena  Joan  Webber 

1 59  West  Street 


Kingston 
Bloomfield,  N.  J. 
South  Hadley 
South  Hadley  Falls 
Worcester 
Winchendon 
West  Roxbury 
Greenfield 
Polmer 
Amherst 
Charlton 
Framingham 
Roxbury 
Maynard 
Revere 
Gilbertville 
Monson 
Framingham 
Plainville 
Jamaica   Plain 
Winchendon 


Dexter  Howard  Wetherell 

Oak   Bluffs 

Esther    Hammond   Wheeler 


Westfield 


Manchester,  N  H. 


Marciene  Ramsdell  Whitcomb 

6  Central  Avenue  South  Hadley  Falls 


Nathan   Leonard  Wilonsky 

54  Ridgevk'ood  Avenue 

Walter  Anthony  Wileikis 

Summer  Street 

Robert  James  Williams 

18A  Prospect  Street 

Harold  Willson,  Jr. 

Division  Street 

George  Albert  Winchester 

40  Clover  Street 

Nathan  Winer 

Bondsville  Road 

Francis  Wing 


Wilfrid  Murray  Winter 

South  Street 

John   Ferris  Wolfe 

19  Jefferson  Road 

Beatrice   Wood 

Williams  Street 

Edgar  Harvey  Woodbury 

Goldsmith  Street 

Richard  William  Woytisek 

Little  River  Street 

Fred  Loring  Wright,  Jr. 

105  Magoun  Avenue 

Wallace  Warren  Wyman 

74  Highland  Avenue 
Julian   Henry  Zabierek 
Perham  Street 
Myer  Samuel  Zelbovitz 

35  Vale  Street 

Sidney  Zuckerman 

320  Onota  Street 


Holyoke 

North  Amherst 

Milford 

West  Harwich 

Worcester 

Three  Rivers 

Sandwich 

Wrenthom 

Winchester 

West  Uptor 

Littleton 

Westfield 

Brockton 

Westfield 

Chelmsford 

Chelsea 

Pittsfield 


[166] 


BOOK  THREE 


.# 


^• 


THE 
INDEX 


INTERFRATERNITY  AWARDS 


The  Interfraternity  Council,  in  the  fall  of  last  year, 
decided  to  award  three  cups  to  those  three  fraternities 
which  would  rank  highest  as  a  result  of  definite,  prede- 
termined competition. 

The  scores  were  to  be  judged  on  the  basis  of  scholar- 
ship, athletics,  extra-curricular  activities,  and  several 
definite  activities  such  as  the  Dad's  Day  entertainment, 
Interfraternity  Sing,  Snow  Sculpturing,  and  House  In- 
spection. 

This  first  new  competition  was  keenly  contested  and 
the  beautiful  first  prize  cup  was  awarded  to  Kappa 
Sigma  Fraternity.  Close  behind  in  second  place  was 
Alpha  Epsilon  Pi  Fraternity.  The  third  prize  was  won  by 
Sigma  Phi  Epsilon  Fraternity.  These  three  cups  were 
permanently  retired  and  three  new  ones  will  be  awarded 
next  year. 

In  conjunction  with  the  Winter  Carnival  this  year,  the 
Interfraternity  Council  awarded  a  splendid  bronze  victory 
trophy  to  Alpha  Gamma  Rho  Fraternity  for  the  outstand- 
ing snow  sculpture. 


[170] 


THE  INTERFRATERNITY  COUNCIL 


OFFICERS 

President KENWOOD  ROSS,  '37 

Vice  President  RAYMOND  WYMAN,  37 

Secretary ROBERT  BUZZEE,  38 

Treasurer DONALD  L.  SILVERMAN,  38 


The  Interfraternity  Council  was  organized  for  the  purpose  of  tying  together  more 
closely  the  bonds  among  the  various  houses  on  campus.  Each  fraternity  sends  two 
delegates  to  the  monthly  meetings  where  there  are  discussed  such  matters  as  rush- 
ing. Hell  Week,  banquets,  Interfraternity  Competition,  and  other  matters  pertaining 
to  the  functions  of  the  fraternities  on  campus. 

In  an  attempt  to  display  clearly  the  various  aspects  of  fraternities,  the  Council 
sponsored  The  Interfraternity  Council  Convocation  where  Professor  W.  Elmer  Ekblaw 
addressed  the  student  body. 


The  fraternities  at  Massachusetts  State  College  were  represented  by  a  delegate 
from  the  Council  at  the  National  Interfraternity  Conference  which  was  held  in  New 
York  during  the  Thanksgiving  holidays. 

The  council  also  sponsors  the  Interfraternity  Ball,  which  has  grown  to  be  one  of 
the  most  important  social  events  of  the  year. 


Second  Row:     Binder,  Smith,  Lurnbord,   Puwerb,   Bioibdeli,   Turner,  Fefersun,  Ailen,  Guralnicl^ 
Front  Row;     Jordan,  Newcomb,  Buzzee,  Wyman,  Ross,  Silverrr.on,  Koch,  Loyton,  Symoncyk 


[171] 


KAPPA  SIGMA 

Gamma  Delta  Chapter 


Established  May  18,  1904 

National  Organization  Founded  at  the  University  of  Virginia, 

December  10,  1869 

One  Hundred  and  Seven  Chapters  Eighty-six  Alumni  Chapters 

Publication:     "The  Caduceus" 

Colors:     Scarlet,  Green  and  White 


Leroy  L.  Blackmer 
Horace  W.  Bolton 
James  F.  Cutter 
Ralph  B.  Gates 


Robert  D.  Buzzee 
Charles  E.  Elliott 
Eugene  P.  Gieringer 
Russell  J.  Hauck 
Ralph  Ingram 
Richard  R.  Irving 

Arthur  D.  Broadfoot 
Robert  E.  Cain 
Frederick  E.  Estobrook 
John  F.  Click 

Dean  A.  Beytes 
Robert  M.  Chapman 
Robert  M.  Creswell 
Gerald  M.  Dailey 
Charles  L.  Gleason 
William  F.  Goodwin 
Myron  D.  Hager 


FRATRES  IN  COLLEGIO 

Class  of  1937 

Norman  W.  Grant 
Erving  D.  Hardy 
Robert  P.  Holdsworth 
Allan  S.  Ingalls 
Willard  S.  Munson 

Class  of  1938 
William  A.  MacPhail 
Donald  S.  McGowan 
Robert  Morrison 
Edward  G.  Newman 
George  Niden 

Class  of  1939 

Clifford  Morey 
Edward  Morin 
Francis  Smith 

Class  of  1940 

Robert  E.  Hall 
Thomas  W.  Herrick 
Robert  L.  Jones 
Donald  J.  Mahoney 
James  Malcolm 
Charles  L.  McLaughlin 
John  E.  Merrill,  Jr. 


Norman  L.  Sheffield 
Clifford  E.  Symoncyk 
Edward  J.  Thacker 
Donald  E.  Weaver 


James  B,  Olivier 
Alfred  S.  Page 
Dean  L.  Rounds 
Frederick  J.  Sievers 
Philip  Smardon 
John  W.  Tindale 

Herbert  S.  Howes 
Lawrence  E.  Johnson 
Seaton  C.  Mendall 
Tracy  0.  Page 

Roy  E.  Morse 
Richard  K.  Muller 
John  V.  Osmun 
Charles  A.  Powers,  Jr. 
Samuel   P.  Shaw 
Everett  R.  Spencer,  Jr. 
Eric  Stahlberg,  Jr. 


[172] 


r      I 


*-y'-N 


INTERFRATERNITY  COUNCIL 

Senior — Clifford  E.  Symancyk 
Junior — Robert  D.  Buzzee 

OFFICERS  OF  THE  HOUSE 

President,  James  F.  Cutter 

Secretary,  Norman  L.  Sheffield 

Treasurer,  Ralph  B.  Gates 


FRATRES  IN  FACULTATE 

Oran  C.  Boyd  Edward  B.  Holland  Frederick  A.  McLaughlin 

Kenneth  L.  Bullis  Marshall  0.  Lanphear  Frank  A.  Waugh 

Guy  V.  Glatfelter  J.  Paul  Williams 


George  Cutler 
James  A.  Foord 
Edward  W.   Harvey 


FRATRES  IN  URBE 

Edward  Hazen 
Homer  F.  Robert 


Ezra  L.  Show 
George  P.  Smith 
E.  Joseph  Thompson 


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w     #     #     m,    ':                ^         ^ 

f  %S^f  1 1 1 

Fourth  Row;     Seorle,  Chapman,  Osmun,  Merrill,  Goodwin,  Morin,   Herrick,  Powers,  Cain 

Third  Row:     Shaw,  Rounds,  McLaughlin,  Gleason,  Johnson,  Morrison,  Howes,  T.  Page,  Spencer,  Buzzee,  Olivier,  Jones, 

McGowon,  Doiley,  Sievers,  Glick,  Newman,  Smardon 
Second  Row:     Elliott,  Ingram,  A.  Page,  Niden,  Tindale,  Gieringer,  Hauck,  Irving 
Front  Row:     Blackmer,  Ingalls,  Munson,  Thacker,  Symanczyk,  Cutter,  Grant,  Sheffield,  Holdsworth,  Handy,  Gates,  Weaver 


[173] 


THETA  CHI 

Theta  Chapter 

• 

Established  December  29,  1911 

National  Organization  Founded  at  Norwich  University,  April  10,  1856 

Fifty  Chapters  Twenty-five  Alumni  Chapters 

Publication:     "The  Rattle" 

Colors:     Red  and  White 


William  A.  Leighton,  Jr. 
Austin  W.  Fisher 
Byron  T.  Johnson 


Marshall  B.  Allen 
Rexford  Avery 
Richard  C.  King 
F.  Merton  Lyon 
Chester  C.  Conant 
Walter  K.  Mitchell 


William  H^  Cox 
Robert  W.  Packard 
Arthur  E.  Sullivan 
William  W.  Howe 


Willard  0.  Foster 
James  Poyson 
Francis  Wing 
Allen  Smith 
Frederick  J.  Watson 


FRATRES  IN  COLLEGIO 

Class  of  1937 

Cyrus  E.  French 
Kenneth  C.   Irvine 
Philip  D.  Lay  ton 
William  V.  Johnson 

Class  of  1938 

E.  Fairfield  Carr 
William  B.  Ferguson 
Philip  Haskins 
Walter  Green 
Clifford  N.  Luce 

Class  of  1939 

David  W.  Hornbaker 
John  A.  Parker 
W.  Thomas  Wakefield 
Courtney  Stetson 

Class  of  1940 

Roger  W-  Morgan 
Franklin  M.  Davis,  Jr. 
George  T.  Pitts,  Jr. 
Howard  A.  Rudge 


Walter  Simonsen 
John  A.  Tuttle 
Guy  M.  Gray 


Herbert  Johnson 
Edgar  S.  Beaumont 
Norman  E.  Linden 
Dickenson  R.  Goode 
Everett  W.  Eldridge 
Paul  S.  Putnam 


Edmund  G.  Wilcox 
David  S.  Tappan 
Howard  Steff 
Robert  Glass 


James  H.  King 
John  P.  Serex 
Harold  F.  Storey 
Harold  L.  Straube 
Arthur  A.  Noyes 


[174] 


OFFICERS 

President,  William  A.  Leighton,  Jr. 

Vice  President,  Austin  W.  Fisher 

Secretary,  Cyrus  E.  French 

Treasurer,   Byron  T.   Johnson 

INTERFRATERNITY  COUNCIL 

Marshall  B.  Allen 
Philip  D.  Layton 


FRATRES  IN  FACULTATE 

Lawrence  E.  Briggs  Oliver  C.  Roberts  William  G.  Sanctuary 

Fred  J.  Sievers 


Stuart  Edmond 


FRATRES  IN  URBE 

Hubert  Elder 
Enos  F.  Montague 


Robert  B.  Fletcher 


K^fcmWiM';^aiJi.l^.M  M'M  mM  Jl» 

f 

■  f 

v^ 

f 

>f  11*  <ft  %  #  ^  %  #  V  s#  "^  ^  -"k  ^'^S 

Fourth  Row:     Morgan,  Howe,  Stetson,  Glass,  Sullivan,  Luce 

Third  Row:     Davis,  Wing,  Toppan,  Good,  Foster,  Ferguson,   Haskins,  R.  King,  Beaumont,  Serex,  Noyes,  Carr,  Parker 

Second  Row:     Hornbaker,  Steff,  Payson,  Mitchell,  Green,  Cox,  Wilcox,  Storey,  J.   King,  Eldridge,  Linden,  Avery,  Straube, 

Rudge,  Smith,  Wakefield 
First  Row:     Layton,  Pockard,  W.  Johnson,  Lyon,  Conant,   Irvine,   Fisher,  Leighton,  Gray,  B.  Johnson,  Tuttle,   French,  Allen, 

H.  Johnson 

[175} 


PHI  SIGMA  KAPPA 
Alpha  Chapter 


National  Organization 

Founded  at  the  Massachusetts  Agricultural  College,  March  15,  1873 

Fifty  Chapters  Sixteen  Alumni  Chapter 

Publication;     "The  Signet" 

Colors;     Silver  and  Magenta  Red 


Ralph  Aiken,  Jr. 
Richard  Bohm 
Forrest  Hartin 


Harry  Bloisdell 
Vincent  Couper 
Albert  Farnsworth 


Alexander  Alexion 

Robert  Allen 

H.  Gardner  Anderson 

Charles  Branch 

Donald  Colo 

Roger  Cole 

Frank  Fanning 


George  Atwater 
Frederick  Cole 
Douglas  Cowling 
Frank  Dalton 
Godfrey  Davenport,  Jr. 


FRATRES  IN  COLLEGIO 
Class  of  1937 

Raymond  Jordan 
William  Kewer 
Lee  W.  Rice,  Jr. 
L.  Everett  Roberts 

Class  of  1938 

William  Harrison,  Jr. 
Thomas  Hennessy 
Edward  Higgins 
David  Mildram 

Class  of  1939 

Paul  Fanning 
C.  Allen  Gove 
C.  Nelson  Julian 
Donald  Lawson 
Clifford  Lippincot 
Emery  Moore,  Jr. 
John  Murphy 
Robert  Murphy 

Class  of  1940 

Eugene  Deneault,  Jr. 
Robert  Honley 
Malcolm  Harding,  Jr. 
Ralph  Hill 
Everett  Langworthy 
Roger  Lindsey 


Roger  Smith 
Robert  Spiller,  Jr. 
Robert  Thorndike 


Robert  Perkins 
Wentworth  Quast 
Theodore  Rice 


Gordon  E.  Najor 
George  Benjamin 

Lloyd  Copeland 
Joseph  Doherty 
Emerson  Grant 
Ervin  Welch 
Ralph  White 


Lewis  Norwood,  Jr. 
Francis  Saunders 
Albert  Sullivan 
Richard  Vincent 
H.  Dexter  Wetherel 


[176} 


OFFICERS 

President,  Robert  L.  Spiller,  Jr. 

Vice  President,  Robert  W.  Thorndike 

Secretary,  William  F.  Kewer 

Treasurer,  L.  Everett  Roberts 

Auditor,  Roger  Smith 

Inductor,  Lee  W.  Rice,  Jr. 

INTERFRATERNITY  COUNCIL 

Raymond  Jordan,  '37 
Harry  Bloisdell,  '38 


William  H.  Armstrong 
William  P.  Brooks 
Orton  L.  Clark 


FRATRES  IN  FACULTATE 

Lawrence  S.  Dickinson  Frank  B.  Stratton 

Robert  D.  Hawley  Frank  Prentice  Rand 

John  D.  Lentz  Roland  H.  Verbeck 

Willard  A.  Munson 


Frederick  Adams 
Warner  H.  Carter 
Carl  F.  Clancy 
Harold  A.  Haskins 
George  C.  Hubbard 


FRATRES  IN  URBE 

Charles  S.  Howe 
Raymond  H.  Jackson 
F.  Civille  Pray 
Philip  H.  Smith 
Ernest  G.  Smith 


Russell  L.  Snow 
George  E.  Stone 
Vernon  K.  Watson 
Charles  B.Wendell 
Howard  H.  Wood 


Fourth  Row:     Branch,  Julian,  Anderson,  Benjamin,  Grant,  F.  T,  Fanning,  White,  Johnson 

Third  Row:     Dalton,  Cole,  Lippincott,  Lawson,  Moore,  Gove,  Alexion,  R.  J.  Murphy,  J.  J.  Murphy,  P.  R.  Fanning,  Calo, 

Second  Row:     Nojor,  Couper,  Harrison,  Hennessy,  Fanrsworth,  Bloisdell,  Perkins,  T.  A.  Rice,  Higgins,  Quast,  Mildrom 

Jackson 
Front  Row:    Jordan,  Aiken,  Kewer,  Thorndike,  Spiller,  Roberts,  Smith,  L.  W.  Rice,  Hartin,  Bohm 


[177] 


LAMBDA  CHI  ALPHA 
Gamma  Zeta  Chapter 

• 

Established  at  Massachusetts  Agricultural  College,  Moy  18,  1912 

National  Organization  Founded  at  Boston  University,  November  2,  1902 

Eight-four  Chapters  Forty-two  Alumni  Chapters 

Publication:     "The  Cross  and  Crescent" 

Colors:     Purple,  Green  and  Gold 


Louis  A.  Breault,  Jr. 
Kenneth  R.  Higgins 

Norman  P.   Blake 
Herbert  E.  Brown 
Philip  B.  Chose 
Clifford  A.  Curtis 


Donald  H,  Cowles 
George  J.  Hoylon 
James  S.   King 

Vincent  J.  Barnard 
Earl  K.  Bowen 
Roger  W.  Brown 
William  Bullock 
Robert  F.  Dunn 
William  G.  Foley 
Arthur  F.  Howe 


FRATRES  IN  COLLEGIO 

Class  of  1937 

Wendell  E.  Lapham 
Walter  B.  Mosley 

Class  of  1938 

John  T.  Dunlop 
William  Eaton 
James  A.  Fleming 
Thomas  F.  Kelley 
Robert  S.  Lyons 

Class  of  1939 

Richard  E.  Lee 
Robert  H^  Muller 

Class  of  1940 

Kenneth  Hughes 
John  S.   Ingham 
B.  Francis  Keville 
Joseph  P.  Lorkin 
Vasilis  Lavrakas 
Ralph  F.  Palumbo 


Kenwood  Ross 
Donald  K.  Tucker 

Richard  W.  Towie 
Wayne  F.  Townsley 
Nicholas  Valvonius 
John  Lavarokos 


Charles  Rodda,  Jr. 
Franklin  W.  Southwick 

Francis  Warren 

L.  Fletcher  Prouty 
Winslow  E.  Ryan 
Robert  I.  Sheldon 
John  W.  Swenson 
Warren  R.  Tappin 
Malcolm  P.  Trees 
Stephen  Kosakoski 


[178] 


OFFICERS 

President,  Kenwood  Ross 

Vice  President,  Richard  Towie 

Secretary,  Robert  S.  Lyons 

Treasurer,  Donald  Tucker 

INTERFRATERNITY  COUNCIL 

Robert  Lyons 
Kenwood  Ross 


FRATRES  IN  FACULTATE 

Walter  S.  Eisenmenger  George  A.  Marston 


FRATRES  IN  URBE 

Allan  W.  Chadwick  John  R.  Hanson 


Third  Row:     Howe,  Roddo,  Blake,  Southwick,  Swenson,  Warren,  King,  Haylon,  R.  Brown 

Second  Row;     Muller,  Lyons,  H.  Brown,  Dunlop,  Townsley,  Kelly,  Eaton,  Chase,  Curtis,  Fleming,  Ingham 

Front  Row;     Houghton,  Higgins,  Laphom,  Ross,  Tucker,   Breault,  Mosely,  TowIe 


[179] 


Q.  T.  V. 

• 

Founded  at  the  Massachusetts  Agricultural  College,  May  12,  1867 
Colors:     White  and  Brown 


Alfred  W.  Basamonia 
John  P.  Brooks 
Leroy  F.  Clark 
Robert  E.  Couhig 
Clayton  C.  Cra.  r 
Leo  V.  Crowley 
Frederick  L.  Dickens 

Royal  Allaire 
Warren  S.  Baker,  Jr. 
Mederic  H.  Beloin 


Stanley  Bettoney 
Donald  W.  Cadigan 
Raymond  A.  Degraff 
Leo  D.  Fay 
George  Pereira 

Richard  Blake 
Frank  Daley,  Jr. 


FRATRES  IN  COLLEGIO 

Class  of  1937 

Howard  B.  Driscoll 
Albert  J.  Gricius 
Lawrence  K.  Harris 
Henry  N.  lacovelli 
Joseph  G.  Kennedy 
John  E,  Landers 


Class  of  1938 

Earl  A.  Blomberg 
John  Cazazza 
William  J.  Collins 
Nicholas  D    Elicpoulas 

Class  of  1939 

Irvin  D.  Reade 
Everett  Roberts 
Henry  Salmela 
Lee  L.  Sanborn 


Class  of  1940 

Edmond  Dereg 
Robert  McCartney 
Richard  Plichta 


Thomas  J.  Maguire 
Robert  C.  Perriello 
Charles  L.  San  Clemente 
Stanley  F.  Seperski 
Harvey  G.  Turner,  Jr. 
Frederick  W.  Whittemore 
Karol  S.  Wisnieski 

William  B.  Graham 
Fritz  A.  Winblad 
Douglas  J.  Wood 


George  J.  Spelman 
Edmond  Stawiecki 
Frank  Stone 
Gordon  F.  Thomas 
Leonard  C.  Wirtanen 

Donald  Shaw 
Julian  Zabierek 


SSiWU*>i^' 


OFFICERS 

President,  Harvey  G.  Turner 
Vice  President,  Leroy  F.  Clark 
Secretary,  Karol  S.  Wisnieski 

Treasurer,  Warren  S.  Baker 


INTERFRATERNITY  COUNCIL 

Harvey  G.  Turner  William  B.  Graham 


Lorin  E.  Ball 
William  R.  Cole 


FRATRES  IN  FACULTATE 

Harold  M.  Gore  A.  Vincent  Osmun 

Henry  D.  Haskins  Clarence  H.  Parsons 

Paul  D.   Isham 


John  E.  Bement 
Francis  C.  Crowley 
William  B.  Esselen 


FRATRES  IN  URBE 

Elliot  K.  Greenwood 
Ralph  Haskins 
Gerald  D.  Jones 


Daniel  J.  Foley 
Albert  Parsons 
Albert  F.  Spelmon 


Third  Row:     Whittemore,  Baker,  Thcmas,  DeGraff,  Stone,  Spelmon,  Blake,  Daley,  Beftoney,  Reode,  Craft,  Moguire 

Second  Row:     Shaw,  Beloin,  Blomberg,  Wood,  Collins,  Grohom,  Dickens 

Front  Row:     Couhig,  Seperski,  Gricius,  Landers,  Wisnieski,  Tuiner,  Driscoll,  Kennedy,  Crowley,  San  Clemente,  Harris 


[181] 


ALPHA  EPSILON  PI 

Phi  Chapter 

• 

Established  at  Massachusetts  Agricultural  College,  1916 

National  Organization  Founded  at  New  York  University,  1913 

Publication:     "Alpha  Epsilon  Pi  Quarterly" 

Colors:     Blue  and  Gold 


FRATRES  IN  COLLEGIO 

Class  of  1937 

Walter  Charles  Guralnick      Isadore  Barr 


Robert  Sidney  Feinburg 
Julian  Herman  Kotzeff 


Sidney  Harold  Beck 
Abraham  Carp 
Maurice  Featherman 


Harvey  From 
Sidney  Samuel  Lipshires 
Dana  Harold  Malins 
Robert  Rodman 
David  Sawyer 
Arthur  Adelson 


Class  of  1938 

Bernard  Lester  Kohn 
H.  Maxwell  Pyenson 

Class  of  1939 

Bertram  Fogel 
Louis  Kertzman 
Alvan  John  Myerson 
Jacob  Steinberg 

Class  of  1940 

Morris  Hyman  Burakoff 
Paul   From 

Sumner  Charles  Levy 
Herbert  Irving  Morris 
Morton  Joseph  Pearlman 


James  Dobby 


Stephen  Israel  Silverman 
Donald  Lawrence  Silverman 


Norman  Edward  Stone 
Arthur  Milton  Kaplan 
J.  Henry  Winn 


Sidney  Walter  Rosen 
Edwin  Malcolm  Rossman 
Henry  Marcus  Schreiber 
Bernard  Siiberberg 
Benjamin  Spungin 
Myer  Samuel  Zelbovitz 


[182] 


OFFICERS 

Master,  Walter  Charles  Guralnick 

Lieutenant  Master,  James  Dobby 

Scribe,  Alvah  John  Myerson 

Exchequer, 

Donald  Lawrence  Silverman 

Sentinel,  Stephen  Silverman 

Historian,  Abraham  Corp 

House  Manager,  H.  Maxwell  Pyenson 

Member-at-Large,  I.  Barr 
Quarterly  Reporter,  Louis  Kertzman 


INTERFRATERNITY  COUNCIL 


Donald  Silverman 


Walter  Guralnick 


FRATER  IN  FACULTATE 

Maxwell  H.  Goldberg 


Third  Row:     Adelson,  Zelbovitz,  Spungin,  Rodman,  H.  From,   P.  From,  Lipshires,  Sowyer,  Peorlmon,  Gloshow,  Rossman,  Rice, 

Moiins,  Schreiber,  Bural<off 

Second   Row:     Levey,   Kaplan,   Steinberg,   Myerson,  Kertzman,  Beck,  Carp,  Stone,  Morris 

Front  Row:     Fogel,   Kotzeff,  Feotlnerman,   Pyenson,  D.  Silverman,  Barr,  Guralnick,  Dobby,  Kohn,  Kruger,  S.  Silverman,  Elkind 


[183] 


KAPPA  EPSILON 


Founded  at  Massachusetts  Agricultural  College,  February  1,  1931 
Colors:    Garnet,  Gray  and  Gold 


Ernest  K.  Davis 
Frederick  Davis 
Richard  Knowlton 
Lawrence  Kyle 

Vernon  Coutu 
Norman  Emery 
Edward  Glass 


John  Balcolm 
Richard  Giles 
Douglas  Milne 
Ellsworth  Phelps 
Stanley  Podolak 
Vincent  Schmidt 


Henry  Barney 
Robert  Benemelis 
James  Buckley 


FRATRES  IN  COLLEGIO 

Class  of  1937 

Walter  Lewis 
George  Milne 
Gordon  Moody 
Henry  Moss 

Class  of  1938 

Roy  Moult 
William  Riley 


Class  of  1939 

Martti  Suomi 
Charles  Slater 
Morrill  Vittum 
Horace  Wildes 
Edward  Willard 


Class  of  1940 

Daniel  Shepardson 
Wilfred  Shepardson 
Edgar  Slater 
Fred  Wright 


Elliot  Newcomb 
Paul  Rosberry 
John  Ruffley 
Philip  Spear 


Herbert  Tetreault 
Edward  Keyes 
Norman  Clark 


Donald  Brown 
Richard  Elliot 
Alexander  Miller 
Elliot  Wilson 
Merton  Wilson 
Stanley  Zelazo 


Daniel  O'Connell 
Ed  Woodbury 
John  Powers 


[184] 


OFFICERS 

President,  Edward  Glass 

Vice  President,  William  Riley 

Secretary,  Herbert  Tetreault 

Treasurer,  Douglas  Milne 

Sergeant-at-Arms,  Vernon  Coutu 


William  Riley 


INTERFRATERNITY  COUNCIL 


Douglas  Milne 


FRATRES  IN  FACULTATE 

Guy  Chester  Crampton  Gunnar  E.  Erickson  Walter  E.  Prince 

John  C.  Graham  Fred  C.  Kenney  Harold  W.  Smart 

Arthur  K.  Harrison  Harry  G.  Lindquist  Grant  B.  Snyder 


William  L.  Dowd 
Bertram  C.  Goodell 


FRATRES  IN  URBE 

Kenneth  G.   Ives 


Gilbert  Simpson 
Nelson  P.  Stevens 


Fourth  Row:     Keyes,  W.  Shepardson,  D.  Shepardson,  Miller,  Wright,  D.  Milne,  E.  Slater,  Robbins 
Third  Row:    Benemelis,  Coutu,  Moult,  Barney,  Tetreault,  O'Connell,  Brown,  Willord,  Schmidt,  Balcom,  Suomi 
Second  Row:     Buckley,  M.  Wilson,  Phelps,  Vittum,  Elliott,  Riley,  Giles,  Wildes,  E.  Wilson,  Clark,  Slater 
Front  Row:     Emery,   Ruffley,  Davis,  Moody,  Moss,   Newcomb,   G.  Milne,  Gloss,  Lewis,  Knowlton 


[185] 


ALPHA  SIGMA  PHI 
Gamma   Chapter 

• 

Established  at  Massachusetts  Agricultural  College,  1913 

Notional  Organization  Founded  at  Yale  University,  1845 

Thirty-two  Chapters  Ten  Alumni  Associations 

Publication:     "The  Tomahawk" 

Colors:     Cardinal  and  Stone 


Charles  Benea 
Francis  Cushman 
David  Peterson 

Russell  Smith 
Donald  Osley 


William  McGowon 
Edward  Stoddard 
Phillips  Luce 
James  Meehan 


Harold  Willson 
Robert  Mosher 
Evi  Sholz 
Kenneth  Pike 


FRATRES  IN  COLLEGIO 

Class  of  1937 

Alfred  Bruneau 
Franklyn  Berry 
John  Kabat 

Class  of  1938 

David  Lamb 
Carl  Bokina 
Phillip  Anderson 

Class  of  1939 

Charles  Lehr 
Samuel  Alferi 
Ray  Parmenter 
Donald  Mayo 
John  Townsend 

Class  of  1940 

John  Miller 
Lawrence  Reagan 
David  Novel  I  i 
Rino  Roffinoli 


Henry  Sampson 
Lawrence  Johnson 
Edward  Flavin 

Walter  Mayko 
Kenneth  Nolan 


Lee  Shipmon 
Rodney  Turner 
Frank  Hawthorne 
Fred  Purnell 


George  To  bey 
Homer  Stranger 
Currie  Downs 
John  Mango 


[186} 


OFFICERS 

President,  Alfred  W.  Bruneau 
Vice  President,  John  H.  Kabat 

Secretary,  Russell  E.  Smith 
Treasurer,   Franklyn  D,   Berry 


INTERFRATERNITY  COUNCIL 

David  A.  Peterson,  37  Russell  E.  Smith,  '38 

FRATRES  IN  FACULTATE 

Alexander  E.  Cance  Stowell  C.  Goding  Sumner  R.  Parker 

Earle  C.  Carpenter  Emory  E,  Grayson  Charles  A.  Peters 

Edwin  F.  Gaskill  Joseph  B.  Lindsey  George  W.  Wescott 

William  L  Machmer 


Edward  B.  Eastman 


FRATRES  IN  URBE 

Walter  B.  Hatch 
Stephen  P.  Puffer 


Alexander  A.  Lucey 


Third  Row:     Novelll,  Miller,  Tobey,  Osley,  Stranger,  Luce  Smith,  Roffinoli,  Meehan 
Second  Row:     Shipman,  Mosher,  McGowan,  Wilson,  Pormenter,  Pike,  Bokina 
Front  Row:     Kobot,  Peterson,  Benea,  Bruneau,  Berry,  Cushman,  Flavin 


[187} 


ALPHA  GAMMA  RHO 

Mu   Chapter 

• 

Established  at  Massachusetts  Agricultural  College,  April  28,  1917 

National  Organization  Founded  at  University  of  Ohio,  April  4,  1908 

Thirty-two  Chapters  Twenty-six  Alumni  Chapters 

Publications:     "The  Sickle  and  Sheaf" 

Colors;     Green  and  Gold 


Charles  E.  Eshbach 

Robert  E,  Alcorn 
Kenneth  E.  Benson 
Leon  W.  Cone 
Stanley  A.  Flower 
Frank  W.  Kingsbury 

Roger  H.  Decker 


Clement  E.  Brault 
Arthur  A.  Hagelstein 
Raino  K.  Lanson 


FRATRES  IN  COLLEGIO 

Class  of  1937 

Murray  W.  George 

Class  of  1938 

Roland  Klaucke 
James  D.  Lee 
Elmer  R.  Lombard 
Edward  Mish 
Osgood  L.  Villaume 

Class  of  1939 

James  0.  Graves 
Robert  S.  Cole 

Class  of  1940 

C.  Vernon  Smith 
Wallace  W.  Wyman 
Vern  W.  Gillmore 
John  Smith 


Raymond  Wyman 

James  F.  Wheeler 
Stanley  H.  Wiggin 
Richard  J.  Fitzpatrick 
Conrad  J.  Hemond 
Harold  C.  Hemond 

Thomas  E.  Handforth 


A.  Wendell  Washburn 
Wilfred  M.  Winter 
John  F.  Wolfe 


[188] 


OFFICERS 

Noble  Ruler,  Chas.  E.  Eshbach,  '37 

Vice  Noble  Ruler,  Leon  W.  Cone,  '38 

Secretary,  Stanley  A.  Flower,  '38 

Treasurer,  Raymond  Wymon,  '37 


INTERFRATERNITY  COUNCIL 


Raymond  Wyman,  '37 


Elmer  R.  Lombard,  '38 


Charles  P.  Alexander 
Ellsworth  W.  Bell 
Arnold  M.  Davis 


FRATRES  IN  FACULTATE 

William  Doran  Harvey  L.  Sweetman 

Richard  W.  Fessenden  Frederick  S.  Troy 

Donald  E.  Ross  Clark  L.  Thayer 


J.  Lee  Brown 


FRATRES  IN  URBE 

Donald  LaCroix  George  G.  Smith 

Eorle  H.  Nodine 


Third  Row:     Waslnburn,  Wiggin,  Graves,  C.  Smith,  Handforth,  Klaucke,  \N.  Wyman,  Gillmore,  Fitzpatrick 
Second  Row:     Decker,  Benson,  Wheeler,  Mish,  Kingsbury,  Alcorn,  J.  Smith,  Winter,  Wolfe 
Front  Row:     Cole,  George,  Lee,  R.  Wyman,  Eshbach,  Flower,  Lombard,  Villaume 

[189] 


SIGMA  PHI  EPSILON 

Massachusetts  Alpha    Chapter 

• 

Established  April  27,  1912 

National  Organization  Founded  at  Richmond  College,  November  1,   1901 

Sixty-seven  Chapters  Twenty-five  Alumni  Chapters 

Publication:     "The  Journal" 

Colors:     Purple  and  Red 


Louis  Bongiolatti,  Jr. 
Harry  F.  Koch 

William  F.  Lonergan,  Jr. 
William  E.  Roberge 


Richard  L.  Powers 
David  H.  Johnson 


Philip  C.  Geoffrion 
Robert  Beattie 


FRATRES  IN  COLLEGIO 

Class  of  1937 

Malcolm  S.  Butler 


Class  of  1938 

William  F.  Barrett 
Frank  C.  Healy 
William  B.  Avery 

Class  of  1939 

Philip  E.  Burgun 

Class  of  1940 

George  Flanagan 


Elmer  W.Hallowell 
Trento  J.  Domenici 


William  G.  McKinney 
Berthier  L.  Gibbs 


John  Galvin 
Kenneth  Dorman 

Robert  Cash  man 
Charles  Bennett 


[190] 


OFFICERS 

President,  Louis  Bongiolatti,  Jr. 

Vice  President,  Harry  F.  Koch 

Secretary,  Malcolm  S.  Butler 

Historian,  William  F.  Lonergan,  Jr. 

Treasurer  and  Guard, 

William  E.  Roberge 

Marshal,  William  F.  Barrett 

Marshall,  Frank  C.  Healy 


INTERFRATERNITY  COUNCIL 

Horry  F.  Koch  William  F.  Lonergan 

FRATRES  IN  FACULTATE 

Philip  Connell  George  E.  Emery  Richard  C.  Foley 

Frederick  M.  Cutler  Ralph  L.  France  Winthrop  S.  Welles 

FRATRES  IN  URBE 

B.  Davenport  Betts  Harold  Elder  John  Schoonmaker 


Second  Row;     Healy,  Barrett,  McKinney,  Burgun,  Powers,  Johnson,  Geoffrion,  Avery,  Gibbs 
Front  Row:     Roberge,   Domenici,   Butler,   Bongiolatti,   Koch,   Hallowell,  Lonergan 


[191] 


PHI  LAMBDA  TAU 


Founded  at  Massachusetts  State  College,   February  1' 
Publication:     "The  Pilot" 
Colors:     Green  and  White 


1934 


Edwin  G.  Bernstein 
Moses  J.  Entin 


Charles  Rosenbloom 
Irving  Binder 
Herbert  M.  Halpern 


Myron  W.  Fisher 
Ira  L.  Jackson 


Melvin  Reisman 
Melvin  Chalfen 
Theodore  Soltzmon 
Herbert  Kraus 


FRATRES  IN  COLLEGIO 

Class  of  1937 

Samuel  Klibanoff 


Class  of  1938 

Benjamin  G.  Hurwitch 
Seymour  T.  Jacobson 
Mitchell  I.  Jackson 
William  E.  Bergman 

Class  of  1939 

Milton  Reiser 
Ernest  Schwartz 

Class  of  1940 

Everett  Shapiro 
Sidney  Siegal 
David  Marcus 


Leo  D.  Lipmon 
Myron  A.  Widlansky 


Abraham  B.  Goldman 
Samuel  J.  Golub 
Edward  Handverger 


Coleman  Katz 
Irving  Blassberg 


Robert  Bernstein 
Isadore  Cohen 
Nathan  Wilansky 
Bernard  Tolnick 


[192} 


OFFICERS 

Chancellor,  Samuel   Klibanoff 

Vice  Chancellor,  Myron  A.  Widlonsky 

Scribe,  Irving  Binder 

Bursar,  Mitchell   I.  Jackson 

Historian,  Benjamin  G.  Hurwitch 

Sergeant-at-Arms,  Coleman  Katz 


INTERFRATERNITY  COUNCIL 

Edwin  Bernstein,  '37  Irving  Binder,  '38 


■  ko 

;;                                 ■   ■                     ..     '     ,         i' 

^^^^AS^^EIi^  ^"^^^B  i 

¥^m 

9         Mt         '        tt^ 

mm  7 ' 

Third  Row:    Colnen,  Shapiro,  Spungin,  Fisher,  Marcus,  Reisman,  Tolnicic,  Siegal,  Saltzman,  Krauss,  Chalfen,  Bergman 

Second  Row:     I.  Jackson,  Kelfer,  Schwartz,  Jocobson,  Auerboch,  Blassberg,  Goldman,  Bernstein 

Front  Row:     Katz,  M.  Jacl<son,  Widlonsky,  Lipman,  E.   Bernstein,   Klibanoff,  Waldman,  Hurwitch,  Binder,  Halpern 

[193} 


PHI  BETA  KAPPA  ASSOCIATION 


President,  George  L.  Farley 

Vice  President, 
A.  Anderson  Mackimmie 

Secretary-Treasurer,  William  H.  Ross 


Mrs.  L  K.  Bullis 
Joseph  S.  Chamberlain 
Guy  Chester  Crampton 
Mrs.  Gunnar  E.  Erickson 
George  L.  Farley 
Henry  T.  Fernald 


MEMBERS 

Stowell  C.  Coding 
Vernon  P.  Helming 
Arthur  N.  Julian 
William  L.  Machmer 
A.  Anderson  Mackimmie 
Walter  M.  Miller 


Helen  S.  Mitchell 
Frank  C.  Moore 
Miriam  Morse 
William  H.  Ross 
Mrs.  J.  Paul  Williams 
Basil  B.Wood 


SIGMA  XI 


President,  William  H.  Davis 

Vice  President,  Frederick  J.  Sievers 

Secretary,  Carl  R.  Fellers 


Dr.  Charles  P.  Alexander,  Entomology 
Dr.  Hugh  P.  Baker,  Forestry 
Dr.  Oran  C.  Boyd,  Plant  Pathology 
Dr.  Leon  A.  Bradley,  Bacteriology 
Prof.  Walter  W.  Chenoweth, 

Horticultural  Manufactures 
Dr.  W.  G.  Colby,  Agronomy 
Mrs.  Sarah  M.  Coolidge,  Nutrition 
Dr.  Carl  R.  Fellers,  Nutrition 
Dr.  Richard  W.  Fessenden,  Chemistry 
Dr.  Monroe  E.  Freeman,  Chemistry 
Prof.  Arthur  P.  French,  Pomology 
Dr.  James  E.  Fuller,  Pomology 
Dr.  Clarence  E.  Gordon, 

Geology  and  Zoology 
Dr.  Emil  F.  Cuba,  Plant  Pathology 
Dr.  Florence  S.  Jenney, 

Resident  Physician 


MEMBERS 

Dr.  Linus  H.  Jones,  Plant  Physiology 
Dr.  Malcolm  A.  Mackenzie,  Botany 
Mr.  George  A.  Marston,  Mathematics 
Dr.  Walter  M.  Miller,  Mathematics 
Dr.  Helen  Mitchell,  Home  Economics 
Dr.  Charles  A.  Peters,  Chemistry 
Dr.  Nothian  Rokietan,  Physiology 
Prof.  Harry  J.  Rich,  Forestry 
Prof.  Walter  S.  Ritchie,  Chemistry 
Dr.  William  H.  Ross,  Physics 
Dr.  Frank  R.  Shaw,  Entomology 
Director  F.  J.  Sievers,  Agronomy 
Mr.  Reuben  E.  Trippensee,  Wild  Life 
Mr.  Henry  Van  Roekel,  Veterinary 
Prof.  Herbert  E.  Worfel,  Zoology 
Dr.  George  L.  Woodside,  Biology 


[194] 


PHI   KAPPA  PHI 


President,  William  L.  Machmer 
Vice  President,  Maxwell  H.  Goldberg 

Secretary,  Arthur  N.  Julian 

Treasurer,  Marshall   0.    Lanpheor 

Corresponding  Secretary, 

Elizabeth  Donley 

HONORARY  MEMBER 

Walter  Dyer 


Charles  P.  Alexander 
John  G.  Archibald 
Hugh  P.  Baker 
William  P.  Brooks 
Alexander  E.  Cance 
Joseph  S.  Chamberlain 
Walter  W.  Chenoweth 
G.  Chester  Crampton 
William  L.  Doran 
George  L.  Farley 
Carl  R,  Fellers 
Richard  W.  Fessenden 
Richard  C.  Foley 
Julius  H.  Frandsen 
Arthur  P.  French 
George  E.  Gage 
Harry  N.  Click 


FACULTY  MEMBERS 

Stowell  C.  Coding 
Maxwell  H.  Goldberg 
Clarence  E.  Gordon 
Christian  I.  Gunness 
Frank  A.  Hays 
Robert  P.  Holdsworth 
Edward  B.  Holland 
Leonta  G.  Horrigan 
Arthur  N.  Julian 
Marshall  0.  Lanpheor 
Joseph  B.  Lentz 
William  L.  Machmer 
Merrill  J.  Mack 
A.  Anderson  Mackimmie 
Frank  C.  Moore 
Fred  W.  Morse 
Willard  A.  Munson 
A.  Vincent  Osmun 


Ernest  M.  Parrott 
Clarence  H.  Parsons 
Charles  A.  Peters 
Walter  E.  Prince 
Frank  P.  Rand 
Victor  A.  Rice 
David  Rozman 
Fred  C.  Sears 
Paul  Serex 
Jacob  K.  Show 
Frederick  J.  Sievers 
Harvey  L.  Sweetman 
Clark  L.  Thayer 
Ray  E.  Torrey 
Frederick  S.  Troy 
Ralph  Van  Meter 
Frank  A.  Waugh 


MEMBERS   RESIDENT   IN   AMHERST 


Roland  Becker 
Marguerite  E.  Bicknell 
James  A.  Foord 
Mrs.  Christian  I.  Gunness 
Elizabeth  Hager 


Melvin  Irving  Cohen 
Richard  Clancy  Desmond 
Shirley  Gale 
Barbara  Knox  Keck 


Ralph  W.  Hoskins 
Charles  S.  Howe 
Joseph  B.  Lindsey 
Samuel  Newman 
John  E.  Ostrander 
Harry  D.  Pratt 


Ralph  W.  Redman 
Fred  C.  Sears 
George  E.  Stone 
Olive  Turner 
Mildred  A.  Weeks 


Class  of  1937 

Samuel  Raymond  Klibanoff  William  Henry  Moss 

Morris  Lerner  Roger  Kingman  Pratt,  Jr. 

Leo  David  Lipman  Carl  Pontius  Swanson 

George  MacLean  Milne  Albert  Stetson  Thomas 
Lucille  Amelia  Monroe 


[195] 


BOOK   FOUR 


THE 
NDEX 


THE  INTERSORORITY  COUNCIL 

• 

OFFICERS 

President  EDITH  WHITMORE,  '37 

Vice  President DOROTHY  DONNELLY,  37 

Secretary-Treasurer ELEANOR  BROWN,  '38 


The  Intersorority  Council  is  a  group  of  representatives  from  each  sorority  on 
the  campus;  it  was  founded  in  1931  with  the  purpose  of  establishing  and  maintain- 
ing good  will  among  the  houses  which  comprised  it. 

The  council  seeks  to  secure  this  aim  by  a  cooperative  regulation  of  social, 
academic  and  athletic  functions  among  the  sorority  chapters.  The  climax  of  its 
yearly  program  is  the  Intersorority  Formal  which  is  held  in  the  Spring  and  is  recog- 
nized as  one  of  the  outstanding  social  events  of  the  year. 


Second  Row:     Misses  Rondall,   Kapllnsl<y,  Thompson,   Boyden,  Crowell 
Front  Row:    Misses  Goldsmith,  Donnelly,  Whitmore,  Brown,  Todt 


[198} 


SIGMA  IOTA 

Alpha    Chapter 


Organized  at  Massachusetts  State  College,  May,  1934 
Colors:    Blue  and  White 

OFFICERS 

President,  Beatrice  Waxier 

Vice  President,  Sylvia  Goldsmith 

Recording  Secretary,  Ruth  Blassberg 

Corresponding  Secretary, 

Esther  Bloom 

Treasurer,  Martha  Kaplinsky 

Historian,  Bernice  Sedoff 


Sylvia  Goldsmith 


Ruth  Blassberg 
Esther  Bloom 


Florence  Goldberg 
Sylvia  Goldman 


Ida  Davis 


INTERSORORITY  COUNCIL 


SORORES  IN  COLLEGIO 

Class  of  1937 

Sylvia  Goldsmith 

Class  of  1938 


Martha  Kaplinsky 


Beatrice  Waxier 
Martha  Kaplinsky 


Class  of  1939 

Jeanette  Herman 

Fern  Kaplinsky 

Class  of  1940 

Roma  Levy 


Mary  Rogosa 
Bernice  Sedoff 


Myrtle  Sherry 


\   f  JL  f    L 


Second  Row:    Misses  Sherry,  Rogosa,  Davis,  Goldberg,  Levy,  Herman 

Front  Row:     Misses  Sedoff,  Goldman,  Blassberg,  Waxier,  Goldsmith,  M.  Kaplinsky,   Bloom,  F.  Kaplinsky 


[199] 


PHI  ZETA 

Alpha  Chapter 

• 

Founded  at  the  Massachusetts  State  College,  1932 

Colors:     Block  and  White 


Alma  Boyden 
Mary  Breinig 
Marjorie  Cain 


Elizabeth  S.  Barton 
Eleanor  Fahey 
Ann  Gilbert 
Doris  W.  Jenkins 


Constance  Fortin 


Elizabeth  Abrams 
Erma  Alvord 
Priscilla  Archibald 
Louise  Bowman 
Jean  Carpenter 
Millicent  Carpenter 
Lorraine  Creesy 


SORORES   IN   COLLEGIO 

Class  of  1937 

Muriel  Cain 
Virginia  Conner 
Helen  Downing 
Helena  McMahon 

Class  of  1938 

Frances  Morley 
Phyllis  Snow 

Mary  Elizabeth  Streeter 
Barbara  Strode 
Edith  G.  Thayer 

Class  of  1939 


Class  of  1940 

Katherine  Doran 
Barbara  Farnsworth 
Evelyn  Gould 
Frieda  Hall 
Elizabeth  Howe 
Marjorie  Irwin 


Caroline  Rogers 
M.  Kay  Wingate 
Ruth  E.  Wood 


Elthea  Thompson 
Roberta  Walkey 
Louisa  E.  Towne 
Shirley  Bliss 


Rosamund  Burke 


Eleanor  Jewell 
Catherine  Leete 
Barbara  Little 
Irma  Malm 
Dorothy  Morley 
Patricia  Robbins 
Beatrice  Wood 


[200] 


OFFICERS 

President,  M.  Kay  Wingote 

Vice  President,  Phyllis  Nelson 

Secretary,  Betty  Streeter 

Treasurer,  Mary  O'Connell 

House  Chairman,  Patsy  McMohon 

Social  Chairman,  Elthea  Thompson 

Academic  Chairman,  Muriel  Cain 

Historian,   Roberta  Walkey 

Portal  Guard,  Marjorie  Cain 


INTERSORORITY  COUNCIL 

Senior — Alma  Boyden  Junior — Elthea  Thompson 

SOROR  IN  FACULTATE 

Ethel  Blotchford 


Dorothy  Doron 


SORORES  IN  URBE 

Pauline  Hillberg  Kathleen  MacDonald 


Fourth  Row:     Misses  Fomsworth,  M.  Carpenter,  Malm,  Bowman,  Gould,  Leete,  Alvord,  B.  Wood,  Creesy 

Third   Row:     Misses  D.  Morley,   Hall,   Little,   Jewell,   Erwin,  J.  Carpenter,  Abrams,  Robbins,  Howe,  Doran 

Second  Row:     Misses  Snow,   Barton,  F.  Morley,  Strode,  Fahey,  Thayer,  Jenkins,  Fortin,  Walkey,  Thompson,  Archibald 

Front  Row:  Misses  Conner,  Downing,  M,  G.  Cain,  Streeter,  Wingate,  Nelson,  O'Connell,  M.  E.  Cain,  McMohon,  Breinig,  Rogers 


[201} 


LAMBDA  DELTA  MU 

Alpha  Chapter 

Founded  at  Massachusetts  State  College,  October,  1931 
Colors;     Green  and  Gold 


Dorothea  Donnelly 
Lois  Fun 
Phyllis  Gleason 


Marion  Becher 
Elinor  Brown 
Julia  Graves 
Gertrude  Hadro 
Carol   Julian 


Mabel  le  Booth 
Beryl  Briggs 
Shelagh  Crowley 
Elizabeth   Eaton 
Bettino  Hall 
Margery  Harris 
Elizabeth  Jasper 


Myra  Graves 
Dorothy  Merrill 
Virginia  Pease 


SORORES  IN  COLLEGIO 
Class  of  1937 

Lillian  Jackson 
Dorothy  Joyce 

Class  of  1938 

Eleanor  Julian 
Barbara  Miller 
Laura  Morse 
Louise  Rutter 

Class  of  1939 

Rose  Jensen 
Mary  Keefe 
Elizabeth  Kenyon 
Katherine  Kerivan 
Julia  Lynch 
Phyllis  MacDonald 

Class  of  1940 

Katherine  Rice 
Sylvia  Russell 
Marjorie  Smith 
Marjorie  Johnson 


Esther  Smith 
Sarah  Wilcox 
Judith  Wood 


Jane  Schopfer 
Kothryn  Spaight 
Christine  Stewart 
Ruth  Wood 
Clare  Young  ran 


Justine  Martin 
Ethel  Meurer 
Dorothy  Nichols 
Joan  Sanella 
Mary  Lee  West 
Marjorie  Wilcox 
Julia  Whitney 


Loretta  Kenney 
Molly  Maddocks 
Helene  Pelissier 


[202} 


OFFICERS 

President,  Dorothea  Donnelly 

Vice  President,  Marion  Becher 

Secretary,  Dorothy  Joyce 

Treasurer,  Carol  Julian 

Social  Chairman,  Louise  Rutter 


INTERSORORITY  COUNCIL 

Senior — Dorothea  Donnelly  Junior — Elinor  Brown 


Fourth   Row:     Misses  Pelissier,  Smith,   Russell,   Rice,  Miller,   Pease,  Merrill,  O'Donnell,  Kenney 

Third  Row:     Misses  Johnson,  Martin,  West,  Kenyon,  Harris,   Briggs,  Jasper,  Booth,  Morse,  Hall,  Keefe,  Nichols 

Second  Row:    Misses  Moddocks,  M.  Graves,  Eaton,  Wilcox,  Youngren,  Schopfer,  Meurer,  R.  Wood,  Spaight,  J.  Graves,  Rutter, 

Lynch,  MacDonald,  Crowley 
Front  Row:     Misses  E.  Smith,  E.  Julian,  Hadro,  J.  Wood,  Fun,  Gleason,  Joyce,  Donnelly,  Becher,  C.  Julian,  S.  Wilcox,  Jackson, 

Stewart,  Brown 

[203] 


SIGMA  BETA  CHI 

Alpha  Chapter 

• 

Founded  at  Massachusetts  State  College,  October,  1931 
Colors:     Blue,  Black  and  White 


Lois  Barnes 
Catherine  Birnie 
W.  Elizabeth  Boucher 
Priscilla  Bradford 


Ruth  Bixby 
Stella  Crowell 
Virginia  Fagan 


Rite  Anderson 
Rita  Buckley 
Elizabeth  Clapp 
Justina  Crosby 
Marjorie  Damon 


Mary  Elizabeth  Bates 
Janet  Campbell 
Anne  Corcoran 


SORORES    IN    COLLEGIO 

Class  of  1937 

Dorothy  Brown 
Ruth  Kinsman 
Katharine  Machmer 
Lucille  Monroe 
Joy  Moore 

Class  of  1938 

Elizabeth  Gaskell 
Jessie  Kinsman 
Lois  Macomber 

Class  of  1939 

Doris  Dyer 
Eva  Eldridge 
Helen  Hollas 
Marjorie  Litchfield 

Class  of  1940 

Virginia  Gale 
Ruth  Kuusela 
Elizabeth  Reynolds 
Dorothy  Rourke 


Edith  Priest 
Gladys  Sawinski 
Elinor  Stone 
Ruth  Todt 


Elaine  Milkey 
Evelyn  Parker 
Frances  Rathbone 


Frances  Merrill 
Olive  Norwood 
Nancy  Parks 
Belva  Sinclair 
RuthWaddell 


Dorothea  Smalley 
Elizabeth  Spofford 
Jacqueline  Stewart 


[204] 


OFFICERS 

President,  Lucille  Monroe 

Vice  President,  Dorothy  Brown 

Secretary,  Priscilla  Bradford 

Treasurer,  Elinor  Stone 


INTERSORORITY  COUNCIL 

Ruth  Todt,  37  Stella  Crowell,  38 

SOROR   IN    FACULTATE 

Leonto  G.  Horrigan 


SORORES    IN    URBE 


Mary  T.  Brown 


Ruth  Campbell 


Fourth  Row;     Misses  Reynolds,  Corcoran,  Botes,  Gale,  Stewart,   Kuuselo,  Rourke,  Spofford 

Third  Row:     Misses  Norwood,  Dyer,  Damon,  Crosby,  Ciopp,  Merrill,  Buckley,  Eldridge 

Second  Row:     Misses  Sinclair,  Smalley,  Litchfield,   Rathbone,  Gaskell,  J.  Kinsman,  Milkey,  Mocomber,  Parker,  Crowell, 

Campbell,  Waddell,  Hollas 
Front  Row:     Misses  Barnes,  Birnie,  Machmer,  Sawinski,  Stone,   Brown,  Monroe,  Bradford,  Todt,  Boucher,  Moore,  Priest, 

R.  Kinsman 

[205] 


ALPHA  LAMBDA  MU 

Alpha  Chapter 


Founded  at  Massachusetts  State  College,  October,  1931 
Colors:     Blue  and  Silver 


Dorothy  Lannon 
Barbara  Clark 
Eleanor  West 
Estelle  Goulding 


SORORES  IN  COLLEGIO 

Class  of  1937 

Angela  Filios 
Esther  Dunphy 
Rita  Provost 
Frances  Stepoth 


Frances  Filipkowski 
Edith  Whitmore 
Sandra  Gulben 
Barbara  Gordon 


Winnifred  Taylor 
Sylvia  Randall 
Lois  Wood 


Class  of  1938 

Jessie  Chase 
Edna  Sp rogue 
Helen  O'Hearn 


Elizabeth  Scoce 
Beatrice  Davenport 
Helen  Carew 


Eleanor  Ward 


Class  of  1939 


Marion  Stomberg 


Elizabeth  Firth 
Beryl  Barton 
Rosa  Kohls 


Class  of  1940 

Priscilla  Oertel 
Anna  Banuzkewic 
Carolyn  Monk 
Esther  Pratt 


Dorethy  Kelly 
Dorothy  Phipps 

Evelyn  Ellery 


[206] 


OFFICERS 

President,  Edith  Whitmore 

Vice  President,  Winnifred  Taylor 

Secretary,  Dorothy  Lonnon 

Treasurer,  Eleanor  West 

Social  Chairman,  Beatrice  Davenport 

Alumnae  Secretary,  Estelle  Goulding 

Athletic  Chairman,  Lois  Wood 

House  Chairman,  Barbara  Clark 


INTERSORORITY  COUNCIL 


Edith  Whitmore,  '37 


Sylvia  Randall,  38 


Third  Row:     Misses  Barton,   Kohls,   Banuzkewic,   Monk,   Firth,  Ellery,  Phipps,  Pratt 

Second  Row:     Misses  Oertel,  O'Hearn,  Ward,  Scace,  Toft,  Carpenter,  Chose,  Sprague,  Randall,  Carew,  Truron,  Wood,   Kelly 
Front  Row:    Misses  Hopkins,  Stepath,  Clark,  Gulben,  West,  Taylor,  Whitmore,  Lannon,  Goulding,  Davenport,  Gordon,  Dunphy, 
Filios 


[207] 


BOOK    F IVE 


THE 
I  NDEX 


ACADEMIC  ACTIVITIES  BOARD 


The  Academic  Activities  Board  is  that  Board  composed  of  those  faculty  members 
in  charge  of  activities  as  well  as  those  students  who  each  represent  as  a  manager 
some  specific  academic  activity. 

The  school  paper,  the  Collegian;  the  year  book,  The  Index;  the  dramatic  society, 
the  Roister  Doisters;  the  musical  organizations.  Band,  Orchestra  and  Glee  Clubs; 
and  the  Debating  Society,  are  all  represented  on  this  Board. 

It  is  this  Board  which  determines  the  academic  activity  awards  for  the  year. 

Academic  Act-ivities   Board 

President  Baker,  Ex  Officio. 
Dean  Machmer,  Chairman. 

Dr.  Click. 
Prof.  Rand. 
Prof.  Dickinson. 
Mr.   Parsons. 

Student-  Members 

Kenwood  Ross,  '37,  Collegian. 
Richard   Irving,  '38,  Orchestra. 
Barbara  Keck,  '37,  Girls'  Glee  Club. 
Bernard  Kohn,  '38,  Men's  Glee  Club. 
Albert  Thomas,  '37,  Debating. 
James  Dobby,  '37,  Roister  Doisters. 
Mitchell  NeJome,  '38,  Index. 
Robert  Spiller,  '37,  Band. 


Second    Row;      Kohn,    Dobby,    Spiller,    Ross,    NeJame,   Thomas 

Front  Row:     Mr.  Emory,  Prof.  Dickinson,  Miss  Keck,  Dean  Mochmer,  Prof.  Glick,  Prof.  Rand,  Mr.  Parsons 


[210] 


THE  SENATE 

• 

OFFICERS 

President  CARL  SWANSON,  '37 

Vice  President  WENDELL  LAPHAM,  37 

Treasurer LOUIS  BONGIOLLATI,  '37 

Secretary  FREDERICK  SIEVERS,  '38 


The  Senate  is  a  student  governing  body  composed  of  members  of  the  junior  and 
senior  classes,  elected  each  year  by  their  respective  classes.  It  is  the  ruling  body 
which  perpetuates  the  traditions  of  the  college  and  determines  the  standards  of 
student  conduct  on  the  campus.  This  group  is  also  in  control  of  the  undergraduate 
classes  and  its  influence  is  manifested  in  the  undergraduate  class  meetings  and 
elections. 

It  is  this  body  that  undertakes  to  instruct  the  new  students  in  the  customs  and 
traditions  of  campus  life  at  Massachusetts  State  College. 

Another  service  that  it  performs  is  the  representation  of  student  interests  before 
the  faculty  and  in  this  capacity  is  able  to  present  a  cross  section  of  student  opinion 
on  matters  of  common  interest  to  the  students  and  faculty. 


Second  Row:     Towie,  Riley,  Sievers,  Rossiter,  Brown 
Front  Row;     Bongioloti,  Lopham,  Swonson,  Cutter,  Couhig 


[211] 


THE  1937  INDEX 


GEORGE    S.    ROZWENC 
Editor-in-Chief 


In  presenting  this  issue  of  the  Index  the  present 
board  is  fully  aware  that  it  has  produced  a  year  book 
that  differs  from  past  issues  in  a  great  many  points. 
The  board  first  broke  with  tradition  when  it  decided  to 
discard  the  ancient  and  outmoded  idea  of  a  classical 
"theme"  and  substituted  a  modern  and  completely 
original  photographic  treatment  of  the  division  pages. 
Credit  for  the  novel  subject  matter  of  the  photographs 
in  the  division  of  pages  is  due  entirely  to  the  art  editor. 
Miss  Ann  Gilbert,  who  originated  the  idea  and  to  the 
fine  work  of  her  assistant,  Miss  Ruth  Bixby.  The  board 
feels  confident  that  the  caricature  of  the  clay  models 
is  particularly  appreciated  by  the  various  groups  they 
represent. 

While  the  book  retains  the  general  subject  matter  of  past  Indexes,  the  arrange- 
ment owes  little  to  its  predecessors.  The  outstanding  innovation  in  the  1937  Index 
is  a  spectacular  opening  section  of  sixteen  pages  done  in  three  color  print.  Several 
beautiful  campus  views  are  arranged  in  striking  designs  offset  by  type  and  color  to 
produce  an  immediate  and  sensational  effect. 

Prominent  among  the  many  new  features  is  the  cover,  designed  in  a  modern 
motif.  The  color  base  is  black  and  the  effect  of  the  debossed  lettering  on  a  sil- 
ver background  is  enhanced  by  a  maroon  rub.  All  members  of  the  senior  class  were 
presented  complimentary  copies  with  the  name  of  each  individual  stamped  on  the 
cover. 

Another  striking  feature  of  the  book  is  the  novel  layout  of  the  end  leaves  in 
which  a  map  of  the  campus  with  the  buildings  drawn  in  perspective  appears  in 
a  phantom  effect. 

The  novel  treatment  of  the  book  was  also  extended  to  the  arrangement  of  photo- 
graphs throughout  the  book.  The  men  and  women  of  ^_^_ 
the  senior  class  appear  in  separate  groups,  the  en- 
gravings of  the  latter  being  vignetted  to  accentuate  the 
effect  of  the  drapes  used  in  the  photographing  of  the 
individuals.  The  placing  of  groups  at  the  bottom  of 
the  page,  the  arrangement  of  engravings  in  the  frater- 
nity and  sorority  sections,  the  set-up  of  the  class  groups 
were  all  planned  to  secure  a  maximum  of  interest  to  the 
reader.  Less  apparent  to  the  average  person  but  never- 
theless the  result  of  careful  consideration  is  the  type 
itself;  it  is  of  modern  design  in  keeping  with  the  motif 
of  the  rest  of  the  book. 

L 

WILLIAM  F.  WELCKER 
Associate  Editor 


[212} 


THE  1937   INDEX  STAFF 


Editor-in-Chief,  GEORGE  S,  ROZWENC 
Business  Manager,  MITCHELL  F.  NEJAME 
Associate  Editor,  WILLIAM  F.  WELCKER 


MITCHELL  F.  NEJAME 

Business  Manager 

Business  Assistants 

Literary  Editor 

OSGOOD  VILLAUME 

JULIAN  H.  KATZEFF 

ELMER  LOMBARD 

Assistants 

Statistics  Editor 

HERBERT  TETREAULT 

ALFRED  SWIREN 
DONALD  SILVERMAN 

Art  Editor 

Assistants 

ANN  GILBERT 

THEODORA  EDSON 

Assistant  Art  Editor 

WILLIAM  EATON 

RUTH  L  BIXBY 

E.  FAIRFIELD  CARR 

Assistant 

HELEN  CAREW 

LANE  GIDDINGS 

Second  Row:     Silverman,  Lombard,  Corr,  Katzeff,  Eaton,  Giddings,  Villoume 

Front  Row:     Miss  Carew,  Miss  Edson,  NeJame,  Rozwenc,  Welclcer,  Miss  Bixby,  Miss  Gilbert 


[213] 


KENWOOD  ROSS 
Business  Manager 


THE  MASSACHUSETTS  COLLEGIAN 


Prominent  and  popular  on  the  campus  this  year  has  been  the  MASSACHUSETTS 
COLLEGIAN,  the  student  newspaper  and  organ  of  expression.  As  usual  the  Col- 
legian has  held  the  interest  of  the  students  and  faculty  as  well  as  of  many  alumni 
because  of  its  vigorous  manner  of  news  reporting,  as  well  as  its  editorial  comment 
concerning  vital  campus  problems. 

Among  the  problems  taken  up  by  the  COLLEGIAN  have  been  the  necessity  of 
lowering  the  number  of  units  necessary  for  graduation,  thereby  reducing  the  number 
of  courses  taken  by  the  students,  the  necessity  of  a  reading  period  before  examina- 
tions, the  necessity  of  an  A,  B.  Degree,  the  necessity  of  offering  a  four  credit  elemen- 
tary physics  course.  In  short  the  COLLEGIAN  has  endeavored  to  designate  ways 
by  which  Massachusetts  State  College  can  be  improved. 

The  Collegian  published  a  memorial  edition  upon  the  death  of  former  President 
Edward  M.  Lewis,  The  student  paper  is  a  member  of  the  Associated  Collegiate  Press 
and  as  such  distributes  the  Collegiate  Digest  rotogravure  section.  During  the  last 
presidential  campaign  the  Collegian  conducted  a  presidential  poll  on  campus  re- 
gistering student  opinion.  This  poll  was  held  in  conjunction  with  the  inter-collegiate 
poll  of  the  Daily  Princetonian. 

This  past  year  a  literary  section  was  added  to  the  Collegian.  This  section 
appeared  during  the  past  semester  and  is  to  appear  quarterly  in  the  future.  As  usual 
the  Collegian  conducted  c  poem  of  the  month  contest. 


LOUIS  BREAULT 
EdItor-in-Cliief 


[214] 


MASSACHUSETTS  COLLEGIAN 

LOUIS  A.  BREAULT,  '37,  Editor-in-Chief 

FREDERICK  LINDSTROM,  '38,  Managing  Editor 

WALTER  GURALNICK  '37,  Associate  Editor 

EDITORIAL  BOARD 


Campus 

PHILIP  B.  SCHIFF,  '37,  Editor 
RICHARD  C.  DESMOND,  37 
JAMES  S.  WALDMAN,  37 
STANLEY  A,  FLOWER,  38 
MAURICE  TONKIN,  38 
THOMAS  J,  ENRIGHT,  39 
MARY  T.  MEEHAN,  '39 
EMERY  MOORE,  39 

SUSAN  E.  STUTSMAN, 

Athletics 

JULIAN  H.  KATZEFF,  38,  Editor 

MAXWELL  I.  KLAYMAN,  '38 

ALFRED  M.  SWIREN,  '38 

JOHN  E.  FILIOS,  '40 
ARTHUR  A.  NOYES,  '40 

Make-up 

RAYMOND  B.  JORDAN,  '37,  Editor 
DOROTHY  MERRILL,  '40 


ELEANOR  WARD,  '39 
MABELLE  BOOTH,  '39 
BETTINA  HALL,  '39 
JOSEPH  BARTOSIEWICZ,  '40 
FRANKLIN   M,    DAVIS,   '40 
NANCY  E.  LUCE,  '40 
CAROLYN  E.  MONK,  '40 
JACQUELINE  L^  STEWART,  '40 
40,  Secretary 

Stockbridge  Correspondents 

GEORGE  TROWBRIDGE,  '37 
WESLEY  NUTTER,  '38  , 
Financial  Adviser 

PROF.  LAWRENCE  S  DICKINSON 

Faculty  Adviser 

DR,  MAXWELL  H.  GOLDBERG 


BUSINESS  BOARD 

KENWOOD  ROSS  '37,  Busmess  Manager 


Business  Assistants 

CLIFFORD  E.  SYMANCYK,  '37 
Advertising   Manager 


HARRY  F.  KOCH,  '37 
Circulation  Manager 


WILLIAM  B.  GRAHAM, 
MITCHELL  F.  NEJAME, 
ABRAHAM  CARP,  '39 
ALLEN  GOVE,  '39 


WILLIAM  B.  FERGUSON  '38 
Subscription  Manager 

WILLIAM  H.  HARRISON,  '38 
DONALD  L.  SILVERMAN,  '38 
CHARLES  RODDA,  '39 
HENRY  WINN,  '39 


I    9-X 


t    t 


V  '^•»  V 


Third  Row:     Misses  D.  Merrill,  Stutsman,  Booth,  Monk,  Hill,  Word,  F.  Merrill,  Stewart,  Meehan,  Luce 
Second  Row:    Waldmon,  Enright,  Schiff,  Desmond,  Noyes,  Davis,  Moore,  Tonkin,  Swiren,  Rosen,  Filios 
Front  Row:     Prof.  Dickinson,  Kotzeff,  Flower,  Lindstrom,  Guralnick,  Breoult,  Ross,  Harrison,  Silverman,  Grohom,  NeJame 


[215} 


THE  BAND 


OFFICERS 


Director  and  Coach  CHARLES  B.  FARNUM 

of  Holyoke 

Student  Leader RALPH  B,  GATES,  '37 

Manager ..:..... ROBERT  L.  SPILLER,  '37 

Drum  Major  STANLEY  BOZEK,  '38 

Much  in  demand  because  of  its  increasing  excellence,  the  Band  made  a  number 
of  appearances  this  year.  It  played  regularly  at  home  football  games  and  also 
at  the  Tufts  gome  at  Medford.  It  presented  snappy  drills  and  letter  formations 
learned  under  Lt.  Col.  Applington's  tutelage. 

In  January  the  band  began  its  concert  season  playing  at  the  Alumni  Broadcast 
over  WBZ  and  WBZA,  at  the  Neuro-Psychiatric  Institute.  It  appeared  as  port  of 
the  Bay  State  Revue  in  February  and  gave  a  concert  program  at  convocation  on 
February  25.  The  rest  of  the  season  included  another  radio  program,  a  concert  at 
Holyoke  High  School,  and  concerts  at  the  annual  spring  concert  as  well  as  at 
commencement. 

The  band  acquired  some  new  uniforms  and  new  instruments  also. 


Back  Row:     Spiller,  Gates,  Howard,  Paul,  Powers,  Wilansky,  C.  Hemond 
Center  Section:     Smart,  Fulton,  Gleasan,  Shaw,   Lepine,  Cowling 
Clarinets:    H.  Hemond,  Mabie,  Kelfer,  Julian,  Giddings 
Trumpets:    Smith,  Coutu,  L.  Johnson,  Blouer,  Mortice 


[216] 


THE  COMBINED  MUSIC   CLUBS 


The  three  Music  Clubs,  the  Women's  Glee  Club,  The  Men's  Glee  Club,  and 
the  Orchestra,  were  combined  last  Fall  under  the  management  of  one  board.  This 
board  is  made  up  of  the  manager  and  assistant  manager  of  each  club.  Richard 
Irving,  manager  of  Orchestra  is  the  present  chairman  of  the  board;  Barbara  Keck, 
manager  of  the  Women's  Glee  Club,  is  secretary;  Barbara  Strode,  the  assistant 
manager  of  the  Women's  Glee  Club,  is  publicity  chairman,  and  Bernice  Kohn  is  stage 
manager.    The  board  meets  every  Tuesday  night. 

The  purpose  of  the  amalgamation  of  these  clubs  is  to  ensure  greater  efficiency 
in  the  managment  of  each  club.  Many  programs  are  planned  each  year,  necessitat- 
ing the  cooperation  of  these  clubs.  It  is  hoped  that  by  the  creation  of  a  single  board 
these  programs  may  be  carried  out  with  greater  ease. 

Among  the  efforts  of  this  board  are  the  Spring  Concert,  the  operetta,  UTOPIA 
LIMITED,  and  two  concerts  to  defray  expenses  of  the  operetta. 


College  Orchestra 

The  College  Orchestra,  concentrating  its  work  in  the  String  Ensemble  has,  in 
the  past  year,  presented  some  very  creditable  work.  The  ensemble  made  its  initial 
appearance  in  the  Spring  Concert  of  1937  introducing  a  type  of  music  seldom  heard 
on  this  campus  before. 

Its  next  appearance  was  made  at  the  commencement  play  of  the  Stockbridge 
School.  Immediately  afterwards,  it  finished  its  season  by  playing  at  the  65th  annual 
Baccalaureate  and  Commencement  exercises. 

In  the  fall  of  1936,  the  String  Ensemble  was  very  much  in  evidence  at  both  of 
the  informal  concerts  sponsored  by  the  Combined  Musical  Clubs. 

The  orchestra  participated  in  the  1937  Spring  Concert  and  in  the  operetta 
"Utopia  Limited". 

The  orchestra  belongs  to  the  Combined  Musical  Clubs  Organization  and  as  a 
member,  it  has  representation  on  the  Board  of  Managers. 

The  orchestra  is  conducted  by  Frank  Stratton  and  is  managed  by  Richard  A. 
Irving,  assisted  by  Robert  Cain. 


Second  Row;     Coin,  Miss  Taylor,  Miss  Dolliver,  Miss  Boyden,  Miss  Kodis,  Powers 
Front  Row:     Miss  Lynch,  Miss  Ellery,  Stratton,   Irving,  Miss  Keck,  Miss  Kuusela 


[217] 


Men's  Glee  Club 

The  past  few  years  has  seen  the  meteoric  rise  of  Massachusetts  State  College 
Glee  Club.  Much  of  the  success  is  due  to  the  efforts  of  Mr.  Frank  B.  Stratton, 
the  Musical  Director. 

This  past  year  the  club  has  made  several  trips  and  given  several  concerts.  In 
conjunction  with  the  College  Radio  program  the  Glee  Club  presented  two  songs  over 

station  WBZ  in  Springfield. 

The  concerts  were  presented  at  Cummington,  Adams,  North  Brookfield,  and 
Schenectady. 

The  Glee  Club  also  is  planning  to  take  on  important  part  in  the  spring  concert 
which  is  to  be  presented  by  the  combined  Musical  Clubs. 


Second  Row:    Hager,  Osmun,  Bauks,  Deneault,  Sheidon,  kiddle,  Stratton,  Smith,  Stiles,  Lindsey,  Dimock,  Nojor,  Tobey 
Front  Row;     Washburn,  Decker,  Cousins,  Kohn,  Kerr,  Tucker,  Moult,  Tappan,  Dolton 

■     [218] 


Women's  Glee  Club 

Manager BARBARA  K,  KECK 

Assistant  Manager BARBARA  STRODE 

Director MR.  FRANK  B,  STRATTON 

Mixed  Quartet 

Director  and  Accompanist,   MR.  FRANK  B.  STRATTON 

Barbara  Keck,  soprano 
Rosa  Kohls,  alto 
John  Osmun,  tenor 
Bernard  Kohn,  bass 

In  comparison  to  the  other  musical  organizations,  the  Women's  Glee  Club  is 
relatively  new  on  the  campus.  Founded  in  September,  1934,  at  the  request  of 
the  women  students,  the  club  soon  made  a  place  for  itself  in  the  musical  activities 
of  the  college,  and  in  the  succeeding  years  has  gradually  increased  in  importance. 
The  club  concluded  a  very  successful  year  with  the  following  concerts; 

Musical  Clubs,  March  19 

"Utopia  Limited",  April  .23,  24 

Sunderland  Concert,  May  12 

Language  and  Literature  Association  Concert 

The  mixed  quartet  participated  in  these  concerts: 
Musical  Clubs,  March  19 

Concert  sponsored  by  the  Board  of  Managers,  May  15 
Language  and  Literature  Association  Concert 


Second  Row:    Misses  Oertel,  Curtis,  Borton,  Fitts,  Kohls,  Davis,  Banuzkewic,   Mr.    Strotton,    Mi.sses   Pratt, 
Maschin,    Pushee,  Stepath,  West,  Goulding,  Kelly 
Front  Row:    Misses  Seol,  Goldberg,  Herman,  A.  Boyden,  Keck,  Strode,  G.  Boyden,  Colkins,  Carpenter 


[219] 


THE  ROISTER  DOISTERS 


The  ROISTER  DOISTERS  is  the  student  dramatic 
association  of  Massachusetts  State  College.  Its 
chief  purpose  is  to  present  each  year  an  outstand- 
ing classical  or  modern  ploy.  More  recently  it  has 
also  been  the  custom  to  present  a  dramatic  enter- 
tainment OS  part  of  the  annual  commencement 
exercises. 

This  year  the  main  production  of  the  ROISTER 
DOISTERS  was  a  modern  melodramatic  work  by  Ayn 
Rand,  called  "The  Night  of  January  16th",  one  of 
the  hits  of  the  1935-36  New  York  stage  season.  The 
play  was  under  the  direction  of  Prof.  Frank  Prentice 
Rand  and  presented  a  novel  treatment  of  a  sup- 
posedly exhausted  plot. 

The  scene  of  the  story  is  that  of  a  court  room  in 
which  Karen  Andre,  portrayed  alternately  by  Lucille 
Monroe  and  Constance  Fortin,  is  on  trial  for  the 
murder  of  the  wealthy  Bjorn  Faulkner,  a  business 
man  of  questionable  principles.  The  jury  wos  selected 
from  the  audience  each  night  and  the  treatment  of 
the  presentation  was  to  give  the  effect  to  the  au- 
dience of  actual  presence  at  a  murder  trial. 

The  leading  members  of  the  cast  alternated  in 
their  roles  and  the  dramatic  effect  of  the  leads  was 
different  at  each  presentation  in  an  attempt  to  ex- 
periment with  audience  reaction.  Though  the  ef- 
fectiveness and  worth  of  the  experiment  may  be 
questioned  the  play  was,  in  general,  favorobly  ac- 
cepted by  the  audiences. 

Many  of  the  minor  characters  were  very  weak  ond  the  performance  of  John  Hoar,  as  Attorney  Flint, 
at  the  second  performance,  though  carefully  calculated  to  bring  a  desired  reaction,  was  unimpressive. 
It  is  doubtful  that  the  presentation  secured  the  proper  rapport  in  the  audience  in  regard  to  courtroom 
atmosphere  as  a  result  of  the  failure  of  many  of  the  actors  in  their  roles.  However,  the  attempt  was 
creditable  and  the  ploy  as  a  whole  was  a  success. 

Three  one-act  ploys  were  presented  at  the  1937  Commencement  exercises. 


PROFESSOR 

FRANK  PRENTICE  RAND 

Director 


Second  Row;     Thomos,  Moult,  MacCurdy,  Watts,  Moody,  Cadigon,  Goodhue,  Graham,  Collins,  Brox 
Front  Row:     Dobby,  Miss  Fortin,  Miss  Strode,  Hoar,  Miss  Monroe,  Miss  Norwood,  Levinson 


[220] 


THE  ROISTER  DOISTERS 


JOHN  HOAR 
President 


OFFICERS 

President  JOHN  HOAR,  '38 

Vice  President LUCILLE  MONROE,  '37 

Electrician GORDON  MOODY,  '37 

Stage  Manager ROY  MOULT,  '38 

General  Manager JAMES  DOBBY,  '37 

Director PROF.  FRANK  PRENTICE  RAND 

Cast   of 
"THE   NIGHT  OF   JANUARY    16TH" 

KAREN  ANDRE  ^    LUCILLE  MONROE 


CONSTANCE  FORT  IN 

NANCY  LEE  FAULKNER .._ I  CONSTANCE  FORTIN 

1    LUCILLE  MONROE 

JOHN  GRAHAM  WHITFIELD .{    DONALD  CADIGAN 

1    LAWRENCE    LEVINSON 

ATTORNEY  STEVENS  I    LAWRENCE    LEVINSON 

[    DONALD  CADIGAN 

ATTORNEY  FLI NT JOHN  HOAR 

JERRY  REGAN ROBERT  MacCURDY 

HANDWRITING  EXPERT  BERYL  BRIGGS 

BENITO FRANK  BROX 

BAILIFF WILLIAM  COLLINS 

COURT  CLERK IVAN  COUSINS 

SIGURD  JUNQUIST FRED  GOODHUE 

CLERK  OF  COURT ....JOSEPH  JAVORSKI 

DR.  KIRKLAND  WILLIAM  LEIGHTON 

ROBERTA  VAN  RENSSALAER OLIVE  NORWOOD 

PRISON  MATRON  BARBARA  PHILLIPS 

MAGDA  SVENSEN  JOAN  SANNELLA 

COURT  SECRETARY  BARBARA  STRODE 

POLICEMAN FRANCIS  THOMAS 

J  UDGE HAROLD  WATTS 

HOMER  VAN  FLEET THOMAS  LYMAN 

COURT  ATTENDANTS {    ^^^^   FOSTER 

DONALD   FOWELL 


[221] 


MEN'S  DEBATING  TEAM 


The  1937  Men's  Debating  Team  created  college  history  when  they  took  the 
longest  trip  ever  taken  by  a  State  academic  activities  organization.  Immediately 
after  spring  vacation  the  varsity  squad,  composed  of  Captain  Max  Lilly,  '37,  Manager 
Alvin  Thomas,  '37,  John  Hoar,  '38  and  Alfred  Swiren,  '38,  left  on  a  ten  day  southern 
trip,  the  end  point  of  which  was  Charleston,  S.  C. 

Opening  the  practice  session  early  in  the  fall,  the  squad  began  a  study  of  the 
resolution  which  they  debated  for  the  season,  "Resolved  that  Congress  shall  be  em- 
powered to  pass  legislation  to  regulate  maximum  hours  and  minimum  wages  for  in- 
dustry." At  the  start  of  the  second  semester  Professor  Prince  of  the  English  depart- 
ment took  up  his  reins  as  coach  of  the  team,  and  until  vacation  weekly  practice 
debates  were  held. 

The  only  home  debate  of  the  season  was  in  early  February  against  the  University 
of  Pennsylvania.  The  teams  encountered  on  the  trip  included  Pennsylvania,  Wake 
Forest  College,  University  of  Charleston,  Atlantic  Christian  College,  Johns  Hopkins 
University  and  Franklin-Marshall  College. 

In  addition  to  those  making  the  trip,  members  of  the  squad  included  Francis 
Thomas,  '37,  Walter  Lewis,  '37  and  George  Flanagan,  '40. 


Second  Row;     Hoar,  F.  Thomas,  Lewis,  Swiren 
Front  Row:     Lil!y,  Prof.  Prince,  A.  Thomas 


[222} 


MASSACHUSETTS  STATE  COLLEGE 


FORTY-FIRST 

Flint  Oratorical  Contest 

MEMORIAL  HALL 

Friday  Evening,- June  5,    1936 

At  Seven-Thirty  O'Clock 


First  Prize  of  $30.00  to  Arthur  J.  Gold 
Second  Prize  of  $15.00  to  Leo  W.  Carbonneau 


Presiding  Officer 
PROFESSOR  WALTER  E.  PRINCE 


1.  Patriotism  and  the  American  College. 

GEORGE  M.  MILNE,   1937 

2.  Government  and  the  College  Man 

MAX  LILLY,  1937 

3.  The  Criminal  Must  Go 

ARTHUR  J.  GOLD,  1936 

4.  Shall  We  Stay  at  Home? 

RUTH  BLASSBERG,  1937 

5.  Present  Day  Abuses  of  Liberty 

LEO  W.  CARBONNEAU,  1937 


JUDGES 

PROFESSOR  HARRY  N.  CLICK 

MR.  NORMAN  MYRICK 

MR.  CLYDE  W.  DOW 


[223] 


FIFTY-NINTH  ANNUAL 
BURNHAM  DECLAMATION  CONTEST 


BOWKER  AUDITORIUM 
Thursday,  May  7,  1935 

First  Prize  of  $15.00  Awarded  to  John  Hoar 

Second  Prize  of  $10.00  Awarded  to  Frank  Brox 

CLYDE  W.  DOW,  Chairman 

The  Burnham  Declamation  Contest  was  established  by  Mr.  T.  0.  H.  P.  Burnham 
in  1875,  and  has  increased  in  popularity  every  year.  The  students  who  compete  -for 
the  contest  show  much  interest  and  ability.  The  declamations  were  presented  during 
one  of  the  convocation  periods,  and  were  thoroughly  enjoyed  by  the  student  body. 

PROGRAM 

1       "The  Mountain  Whipoorwill" Stephen  Vincent  Benet 

JOHN  F.  CLICK,  '39 

2.     "Selection  from  Sainte  Joan" George  Bernard  Shaw 

LOIS  MACOMBER,  38 

3     "Selection  from  Henry  Vl" William  Shakespeare 

FRANK  BROX,  '38 

4.  "Prisoner  of  Chi  I  Ion" Lord  Byron 

WALTER  EPSTEIN,  '38 

5.  "Innocents  Abroad" Mark  Twain 

JOHN  HOAR,  '38 

6.  "Guinevere" Alfred,  Lord  Tennyson 

(Selection  from  "Idylls  of  the  King") 
BARBARA  STRODE,  '38 

7.  "False  Banners" James  Reed 

HERBERT  TETREAULT 

JUDGES 

PROFESSOR  FRANK  P.  RAND 

PROFESSOR  WALTER  E.  PRINCE 

DR.  MAXWELL  H.  GOLDBERG 


[224] 


ADELPHIA 


OFFICERS 

President  DAVID  ROSSITER,  '37 

Vice  President KENWOOD  ROSS,  '37 

Secretary-Treasurer  WALTER  GURALNICK,  '37 

Adelphia  is  the  senior  honorary  society  which  is  composed  of  seven  senior  men  who 
are  elected  by  their  predecessors.  Its  members  are  those  who  are  outstanding  as 
leaders  in  various  campus  activities.  The  society  directs  those  student  activities 
which  are  backed  by  no  specific  group  but  which  are  essential  to  a  well-rounded 
campus  life.  It  has  for  its  purpose  the  promotion  cf  student  interest  in  the  many 
worthwhile  functions  and  activities  of  the  college. 

In  the  post  it  has  sponsored  many  student  forums  and  in  the  past  year  has 
directed  several  football  rallies. 


MEMBERS 


Carl  P.  Swonson 
Walter  C.  Guralnick 
James  F.  Cutter 


David  P.  Rossiter 
Kenwood  Ross 
Robert  L.  Spiller 


Wendell  E.  Lapham 


Second  Row;     Svvanson,  Spiller,  Lophom,  Cutter 
Front  Row;    Ross,  Rossiter,  Gurolnick 


C225] 


THE  HONOR  COUNCIL 


OFFICERS 

President  JAMES  RYAN 

Secretary PHILIP  CHASE 


The  Honor  Council  originated  as  the  result  of  a  series  of  talks  on  college  life 
which  Dean  Lewis  gave  to  the  class  of  1921 .  For  its  first  -few  years  of  existence  it 
went  through  troublous  times;  some  students  supported  it;  others  did  not.  Finally 
the  entire  college  adopted  the  idea  and  voted  to  support  the  constitution  that  the 
council  drew  up.  In  order  that  the  constitution  be  the  best  of  its  kind,  questionaires 
were  sent  to  all  other  colleges  using  the  honor  system;  from  their  answers  came  the 
knowledge  necessary  for  drawing  up  an  outstanding  constitution. 

The  purpose  of  the  Honor  Council  is  to  uphold  and  to  interpret  the  Honor  Con- 
stitution and  to  try,  and  convict  or  acquit  any  case  of  alleged  dishonor,  and  to  file 
0  report  of  such  action  with  the  President  of  the  College.  The  purpose  o-f  the  con- 
stitution is  to  place  all  students  af  the  regular  four-year  course  on  their  honor  during 
examinations  of  all  kinds.  In  1934  a  clarification  of  this  purpose  was  made  by  the 
student  body  which  voted  several  amendments  to  the  constitution. 

Members  of  the  council  are:  James  Ryan,  president;  Philip  Chase,  secretary; 
Harvey  Turner,  Bob  Holdsworth,  Samuel  Townsley,  Nelson  Julian,  Myron  Hager, 
Dorothea  Donnelly  and  Catherine  Birnie. 


Second  Row:     Holdsworth,  Julian,  Townsley 

Front  Row:     Miss  Donnelly,  Ryan,  Chose,  Miss  Birnie 


[226] 


THE  WOMEN'S  STUDENT  GOVERNMENT   ASSOCIATION 


The  Women's  Student  Government  Association  is  mode  up  of  all  the  women 
students  on  campus.  Each  year  an  executive  council  is  elected  whose  function  it 
is  to  supervise  the  discipline  and  to  represent  the  interests  of  the  group  at  large. 

Every  year  a  series  of  teas  is  sponsored  early  in  the  fall  which  offers  an  oppor- 
tunity for  the  freshmen  women  to  become  acquainted  with  the  upperclass  girls  as 
well  as  with  each  other.  Among  this  year's  accomplishments  are  a  party  for  co-eds, 
the  continuation  af  the  scholarship  that  was  begun  in  1936,  and  the  purchase  of 
a  new  victrola  for  the  Abbey. 


Second  Row;    Misses  Stone,  Clopp,  Nichols,  Gale 
Front  Row;    Misses  Julion,  Todt,  Becher 


[227] 


THE  PRESS  CLUB 

• 

OFFICERS 

President  CHARLES  E.  ESHBACH,  37 

Secretary  STANLEY  A.  FLOWER,  38 

Adviser FRANCIS  C.  PRAY 

Tine  Massacliusetts  State  College  Press  Club  was  founded  in  1935  by  o  group 
of  student  newspaper  correspondents  to  secure  closer  cooperation  and  united  ad- 
vancement in  their  journalistic  work.  In  the  absence  of  any  course  in  journalism  at 
the  college,  projects  and  studies  have  been  conducted  by  the  group  to  provide  in- 
struction and  opportunity  for  practical  application  of  journalistic  principles. 

The  members  of  the  Press  Club  occupy  an  important  place  in  the  set-up  of  the 
college  news  service  in  offering  individual  contacts  with  the  larger  Western  Mass- 
achusetts papers.  Members  o-f  the  Press  Club  also  assist  college  publicity  officials 
in  the  coverage  of  conferences  and  similar  special  events. 

The  Press  Club  has  been  recognized  by  the  Student  Life  Committee  as  a  pro- 
fessional journalistic  organization. 


Left  to  Right:     Eshbach,   Pray,  Miss  O'Connell,   Breault,   Flower,  Hemond,  Lindstrorm,  Jordan,  Warner 


[228] 


MAROON  KEY 


OFFICERS 

President  ROBERT   PACKARD,  '39 

Vice  President _ HOWARD  STEFF,  '39 

Secretary  HERBERT  CLICK,  '39 

The  Maroon  Key  is  o  chapter  of  a  national  honorary  society  which  has  chapters 
at  many  of  the  leading  colleges  of  the  United  States.  In  each  case  the  chapter  name 
is  determined  by  the  college  color. 

"^he  main  duty  of  the  Maroon  Key  members  is  that  of  meeting  visiting  teams  and 
other  visiting  organizations  and  acting  as  host  to  them  during  their  stay  on  the 
campus. 

Maroon  Key  members  receive  the  society  insignia,  a  gold  key  with  a  maroon  "M" 
on  a  white  background,  as  well  as  a  white  felt  hat  with  maroon  key  and  maroon  band, 
■for  recognition. 


Second  Row:    Swanson,  R.  S.  Cole,  Codigon,  Najar 
Front  Row:     R.  M.  Cole,  Steff,  Packard,  Click,  Southwick 


[229] 


STUDENT  RELIGIOUS  COUNCIL 


The  Student  Religious  Council  is  the  student  organization  which  conducts  alj 
religious  activity  of  a  general  campus  nature.  It  is  composed  of  representatives  of 
the  religious  clubs,  which  through  the  medium  of  the  Council,  achieve  a  unity  bene- 
ficial to  the  campus. 

Each  year  the  Student  Religious  Council  conducts  a  Religious  Conference  at 
which  a  prominent  clergyman  presents  a  series  of  talks.  The  choice  of  clergyman  is 
rotated  among  the  three  major  religions  represented  on  compus.  Father  Robert  J. 
Hewitt,  S.J.,  led  the  conference  this  year  on  February  14,  15,  16. 

Also  this  year,  the  Council  conducted  a  symposium  on  the  subject  "Is  Life  Worth 
Living?"    This  was  participated  in  by  students  and  -faculty  as  well  as  by  townspeople. 


Second  Row;     Mr.  Williams,  Levinson,  Miss  Blassberg,  Rossiter 
Front  Row;    Brown,  Miss  Fortin,  Wyman,  Miss  Nichols,  Goge 


[230] 


HORTICULTURAL  SHOW  1937 


The  Horticultural  Show,  under  the  direction  of  Chairman  Walter  J.  Hodder, 
presented  a  novel  contrast  in  theme  at  the  1936  exhibition  in  November.  In  anti- 
thesis to  the  usual  naturalistic  presentation,  a  low,  formal  design  was  developed 
around  the  central  feature,  a  Parterre  Garden,  with  formal  hedges  and  terminal 
features  of  statuary.  The  plan  was  so  designed  that  the  whole  show  appeared  as 
a  single  unit,  not  as  several  incongruous  end  separate  features;  the  exhibits,  of  which 
there  were  fewer  commercial  features  than  usual,  were  arranged  so  that  they  not 
only  set  off  each  other,  but  gave  unity  and  balance  to  the  show.  The  center  piece 
of  the  Parterre  Garden  was  a  statue  of  Mercury,  the  symbol  of  the  American  Florists; 
it  stood  in  a  small  pool  which  was  planted  with  water  lilies  and  banked  with  fragrant 
chrysanthemums. 

As  in  the  past,  the  Holyoke  and  Northampton  Florist  Club  exhibited,  and  there 
were  more  student  exhibitions  than  usual.  The  general  design  was  worked  out  by 
James  Robertson  of  the  department  of  Landscape  Architecture.  The  exhibits  in- 
cluded displays  of  fruits,  forestry,  horticultural  manufactures,  landscaping  and 
student  contests;  these  occupied  the  entire  -floor  of  the  physical  education  cage. 
The  total  attendance  during  the  three  days  of  the  twenty-eighth  annual  Show  was 
somewhat  lower  than  that  of  last  year,  but  only  because  of  inclement  weather  on  the 
final  day  of  the  exhibition.  Winners  in  the  vanous  student  competitions  were:  Flori- 
culture; vase  arrangements  of  large  flowered  chrysanthemums,  Albert  J.  Gricius; 
formal  displays  of  100  square  feet,  Albert  Forbush;  vase  arrangement  of  native  or 
other  hardy  materials,  Fred  Davis;  winter  bouquet,  Walter  F.  Golosh;  arrangement 
of -fruit  in  metal  container,  Fred  Davis.  Judges  of  the  student  competition  were  Mrs. 
Mrs.  Robert  B.  Parmenter  of  Amherst,  Mrs.  Nelson  C,  Holland  of  Belchertown,  and 
Miss  Kate  Ries  Kock,  Smtih  College. 

The  Hortcultural  Show  was  under  the  general  direction  of  Professor  Clark  L 
Thayer,  head  of  the  department  of  Floriculture.  The  student  committee  arranging 
the  show  was  headed  by  Walter  J.  Hodder  and  included  John  A.  Tuttle,  Norman  W. 
Butterfield,  Lee  Rice,  Jr.,  Robert  Thorndike,  Ralph  Gates,  Philip  Layton,  Walter 
Simonsen,  Clarence  Benson,  and  Edwin  S.  Holmes. 


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Second  Row:    Thorndike,  Benson,  Holmes,  Rice,  Simonsen 
Front  Row:     Layton,  Tuttle,  Hodder,  Butterfield,  Gates 


[231} 


DAD'S  DAY  1937 


The  tenth  Annual  Dads'  Day  gathering  was  held  on  October  twenty-fourth. 
The  Dads  were  welcomed  at  the  Memorial  Building  and  were  given  programs  and 
tickets  for  the  diverse  and  multifold  activities  of  the  day.  The  feature  of  the  morn- 
ing program  was  a  demonstration  of  fancy  riding  and  jumping  by  the  R.  0.  T.  C. 
seniors  and  juniors.  Anthony  Nogelo  took  first  place  in  the  competitive  jumping, 
while  John  Landers,  Leroy  Clark,  and  Kenwood  Ross  took  second,  third  and  fourth 
places  respectively.  The  committee  for  the  Horse  Show  was:  Leroy  Clark,  chairman; 
Robert  Bieber,  Kenwood  Ross,  Robert  Couhig  and  Frederick  Whittemore. 

In  the  afternoon  the  Massachusetts  State  football  players  met  the  Worcester 
Tech  players  in  a  close  struggle;  the  weather  was  excellent  and  compensated  for  the 
disappointment  O'f  the  defeat  in  the  game.  During  halves  the  spectators  were  en- 
tertained by  a  rope  pull  between  the  freshmen  and  the  sophomores  in  which  the  fresh- 
men were  victorious  after  a  valiant  struggle. 

The  evening  program  offered  the  paternal  visitors  the  combined  entertainment 
of  the' fraternities  and  sororities.  An  interfraternity  sing  opened  the  program;  each 
fraternity  was  limited  to  two  songs  and  a  group  of  sixteen  men.  Judges  of  the 
competitive  singing  were:  Mr.  Helming,  Dr.  Fraker,  and  Professor  Prince.  The 
sororities  presented  singing,  and  a  comic  skit,  which  was  the  high  spot  of  the  evening's 
entertainment.  Theta  Chi,  under  the  direction  of  Ben  Lyon,  won  first  place  in  the 
interfraternity  singing;  other  winners  were:  Phi  Lambda  Tau,  under  the  direction  of 
Irving  Binder,  second  place;  Phi  Sigma  Kappa,  under  the  direction  of  Gordon  Major, 
third  place;  Lambda  Chi  Alpha,  under  the  direction  of  Don  Tucker,  -fourth  place. 


Second  Row:     Buzzee,  Conant,  Moody,  Brown,  Ross,  Haylon 

Front  Row:    Miss  Rutter,  Miss  Hall,  Clark,  Miss  Bradford,  Miss  Stone 


[232} 


SOPHOMORE-SENIOR  HOP  1936 


Held  on  the  eighth  of  June,  the  Sophomore — Senior  Hop  mari<ed  the  auspicious 
close  of  the  social  season  of  1936.  The  chaperons  for  the  occasion  were  Major  and 
Mrs.  Herbert  E.  Wati<ins  and  Dr.  and  Mrs.  E.  J.  Radcliffe;  for  the  Major  and  Mrs. 
Herbert  E.  Watkins  it  was  the  last  social  participation  before  leaving  college.  As 
guests  of  honor,  President  and  Mrs.  Francis  D.  Farrell  of  Kansas  State  College  were 
invited  to  attend  with  President  and  Mrs.  Hugh  P.  Baker. 

The  decorations  were  arranged  to  follow  the  same  pattern  as  the  Mardi  Gras 
scheme.  The  walls  and  ceilings  of  the  drill  hall  were  decked  with  all  the  colors  of 
the  rainbow  to  give  a  gay  and  fantastic  setting  to  the  hall.  Hudson-Delange  or- 
chestra provided  the  music  for  the  Hop  and  contributed  much  to  making  it  the  social 
success  of  the  season. 

The  members  of  the  Hop  commttee  were:  Norman  Blake,  chairmen;  Herbert  E. 
Brown,  Eltheo  Thompson,  Eleanor  Fahey,  Jessie  Kinsman,  William  Riley,  Cyrus  French 
and  Frederick  Sievers. 


BAY  STATE  REVUE 


On  Saturday  evening,  December  9,  the  annual  Bay  State  Revue  was  presented 
at  Stockbridge  Hall.  The  Roister  Doister  production  of  the  famous  scene  erf  Pyramus 
and  Thisbe  from  "A  Midsummer  Night's  Dream"  was  the  highlight  of  the  evening's 
performance.  The  combined  efforts  of  Laurence  Levinson,  '38,  John  Hoar,  '38, 
William  Graham,  '38,  Francis  Thomas,  '37  and  Ivan  Cousins,  '39,  did  much  to  make 
this  hilarious  entertainment  one  of  the  most  enjoyable  ever  seen  at  a  Revue. 

The  Revue  was  opened  with  a  selection  by  the  college  orchestra,  which  was 
followed  by  vocal  selections  by  James  Kerr,  '36. 

Other  presentations  of  the  evening  included  a  dramatic  skit  "Rosa"  in  which 
Frank  Brox,  '38,  excellently  portrayed  the  character  of  a  tragic-stricken  Italian; 
a  "trick"  violinist,  Robert  Cain,  '39;  a  humorous  skit  by  the  members  of  Phi  Lambda 
Tau  Fraternity;  impersonations  by  Kingsbury  "Bob  Burns"  Houghton,  '39;  and  a 
riotous  skit  ingeniously  delivered  by  Eugene  Gieringer,  '38,  who  was  dressed  effectively 
in  a  short  skirt  and  rompers;  an  interpretative  dance  by  Chester  Sherman,  '38;  guitar 
selections  by  James  Lee,  '38;  and  eccentric  dancing  by  Lone  Giddings,  '38. 

The  Revue  was  presented  under  the  direction  of  the  Roister  Doisters. 


[233} 


INFORMAL  COMMITTEE 


The  Informal  Committee  opened  the  fall  social  season  with  a  bang  by  sponsoring 
a  successful  dance  on  September  26,  the  first  Saturday  of  the  school  year.  Old  loves 
were  renewed  and  new  ones  started,  aided  and  abetted  by  the  rapturous  rhythm  o-f 
Helen  Downing  and  her  orchestra. 

On  the  17th  of  October,  the  day  of  our  first  home  football  game,  the  committee 
entertained  the  victors  of  the  afternoon's  battle  midst  the  strains  of  Ed  Cerruti's 
orchestra. 

Adding  a  slight  modification  to  the  Amherst  Week-end,  the  committee  held  a 
tea  dance  immediately  after  the  Amherst  game.  Ed  Petrucelli  of  Westfield  led  the 
music  manufacturers. 

On  the  24th  of  November  Ed  Cerutti  again  favored  with  orchestral  selections  and 
the  boys  and  girls  reveled  in  the  holiday  spirit. 

The  first  old  clothes  party  was  held  on  December  1 1  th  with  music  by  the  "States- 
men". Suitable  prizes  were  awarded  in  the  collegiate  contest  and  to  the  couple  with 
the  most  original  costume. 

During  the  Winter  Carnival  a  Ski  Boot  Informal,  something  new  on  the  campus, 
was  sponsored  by  this  enterprising  committee  of  dance  men  and  pleased  the  large 
number  that  attended. 

Other  informals  were  held  on  March  5,  March  20,  April  10,  and  May  22. 

The  Committee: 

David  P.  Rossiter,  Chairman 
Louis  Bongiolatti 
Kenwood  Ross 
Philip  Layton 
Russell  Hauck 


Second  Row:     Hauck,  Bongiolatti 
Front  Row:     Ross,  Rossiter,  Loyton 


[234] 


THE  R.  0.  T.  C. 


With  the  cyclical  change  in  personnel  completed  by  the  departure  of  Major 
Herbert  Watkins  lost  spring,  on  entirely  new  staff  is  now  carrying  on  R.  0.  T.  C. 
work  at  Massachusetts.  The  Department  is  now  headed  by  Lt.  Col.  Horace  T. 
Aplington,  Major  Leo  B.  Conner  and  Captain  Harold  P.  Stewart.  Technical  Sergeant 
James  A.  Warren  and  Sergeant  Frank  Cronk  are  also  members  of  the  Department. 
Aside  from  the  usual  program,  the  Department  conducted  an  Army  Day  exhibition, 
a  Night  Ride,  a  spring  review,  and  a  horse  show  last  year. 

THE  CADET  OFFICERS  FOR  1937 
Cadet  Colonel 

Cadet  2nd  Lieutenant  David  A.  Peterson 

Cadet  Majors 

Cadet  2nd  Lieutenant  Leroy  F.  Clark 

Cadet  2nd  Lieutenant  Anthony  J.  Nogelo 

Cadet  Captains 

Cadet  2nd  Lieutenant  James  F.  Cutter 

Cadet  2nd  Lieutenant  Ernest  K.  Davis 

Cadet  2nd  Lieutenant  Albert  J,  Gricius 

Cadet  2nd  Lieutenant  Wendell  E.  Lapham 

Cadet  2nd  Lieutenant  Frederick  W.  Whittemore,  Jr. 

Cadet  Master  Sergeant 

(Regimental  Sergeant  Mo|or) 

Cadet  Sergeant  Robert  S.  Lyons 

Cadet  First  Sergeants 

Cadet  Sergeant  Warren  S.  Baker,  Jr. 

Cadet  Sergeant  Cyrus  E.  French 

Cadet  Sergeant  Richard  W.  Towie 

Cadet  Sergeant  Robert  D.  Buzzee 

Cadet  Staff  Sergeant 
Cadet  Sergeant  Robert  K.  Morrison 
Cadet  Sergeant  Herbert  E.  Brown 
Cadet  Sergeant  Richard  R.  Irving 
Cadet  Sergeant  Norman  P    Bloke 


MILITARY  BALL  COMMITTEE 


Breault,  Lyons,  Lapham,  Ross,  Couhig,  Clark 


[235] 


MILITARY  BALL 


Each  year,  under  the  guidance  of  the  Mili- 
tary Majors,  there  is  a  Military  Ball.  It  has 
been  the  custom  for  those  Seniors  and  Juniors 
who  major  in  Military  to  appear  at  the  Ball 
attired  in  their  uniforms;  others  in  attendance 
come  in  -formal  dress. 

This  past  year,  the  Ball  was  held  on  Friday 
evening,  December  2,  1936.  As  a  special  in- 
novation an  Honorary  Colonel  was  chosen  by 
the  Military  Majors  and  Miss  Priscilla  Brad- 
ford of  the  class  of  '37  was  chosen.  After 
an  impressive  and  ceremonious  Grand  March, 
the  ballots  were  cast,  the  winner  chosen  and 
the  announcement  and  award  presented  by 
Colonel  Aplington  of  the  Military  Dept. 

There  was  dancing  from  9  to  2  A.  M.,  to 
the  rriusic  of  Felix  Ferdinando  and  his  Park 
Central  Hotel  Orchestra.  Colonel  and  Mrs. 
Aplington,  Major  and  Mrs.  Conner,  and 
Captain  and  Mrs.  Stewart  were  the  invited 
guests.  Chaperones  were  Dean  and  Mrs. 
Machmer  and  Dr.  and  Mrs,  Radcliffe. 


SENIOR  MILITARY  MAJORS 


Second  Row:     Whittemore,  Holdsworth,  Bruneau,  talinski,  Tjmer,   Ross  Lophom,   Bieber,   Peterson,   Nogelo,  Gricius 
Front  Row;     Borr,  Clark,   Ingalls,  Landers,   Breault,  Wildner,   Couhig,  Avery,  Moseley 


[236] 


MILITARY  NIGHT  RIDE 


On  Friday  evening,  May  8,  1936,  the  nmtin  annual  nigint  ride  of  the  R.  0.  T.  C. 
was  held.  It  was  the  first  controlled  night  ride  since  1931  when  the  custom  was  dis- 
carded for  a  modified  night  ride.  In  1934-35  the  pentathlon  took  the  place  of  the 
night  ride,  but  the  reversion  to  the  old  night  ride  has  proved  to  be  decidedly  popular 
among  the  cadets. 

Cadets  1st  Lieutenants,  Norvin  C.  Laubenstein  of  Moynard,  riding  Al  Mann, 
and  Horry  A.  Johnson  of  Northboro,  riding  Molly,  tied  for  first  place,  each  receiving 
-five  penalties.  Second  place  was  taken  by  Cadet  1st  Lieutenant  Harold  A.  Midgely 
of  Worcester,  riding  Heland,  who  had  seven  penalties,  Cadet  Major  Calvin  S.  Hannum 
of  Pittsfield  was  third  and  Cadet  1st  Lieutenant  Adolph  E.  Tikofski  of  Walpole  was 
fourth.  Fifth  and  sixth  places  went  to  Cadet  2nd  Lieutenant  Tanner  and  Cadet 
Captain  Soulliere  respectively. 

Starting  at  7:30  p.  m.,  the  course  of  18.2  miles  was  covered  at  the  average  rate 
of  5.2  miles  per  hour,  taking  about  three  and  one  half  hours  to  complete  the  ride. 
Penalties  were  given  'for  arriving  too  late  or  too  early  at  various  posts. 

The  awards  were  presented  on  Tuesday,  May  12,  at  the  regimental  review  of 
the  R.  0.  T  C.  by  Colonel  Aplington. 


JUNIOR  MILITARY  MAJORS 


Second  Row:     Buzzee,  Townsley,   Irving,  Lyons,  Blake,  Brown,  Hooker,  Elliott,  McGowon,  Carr,  Morrison, 

Eaton,  Brox,  Linden,  Clark 
Front  Row:     MacCurdy,  Baker,  Towie,  Curtis,  Riley,  King,  Beoumont,  Allen,  French,  Czelusniak,  Avery 


[237] 


HORSE  SHOW 


The  fifteenth  annual  horse  show  was  held  last  spring  on  the  equitation  field  south 
of  the  Physical  Education  Building.  As  usual  a  large  crowd  of  interested  spectators 
was  present  as  the  equestrians  went  through  their  paces  in  competition. 

Awards  in  the  show  were  as  follows: 

Nine  classes  were  shown. 


Class     1.     To  be  shown  at  walk,  trot,  and  canter  with  both  hands. 
First — Louis  A.  Breault,  Jr. 

Class     2.     R.  0.  T.  C.  pair  jumping. 

First — Royal  K.  Tanner  and  Alden  Eaton 

Class     3.     Saddle  horse  pairs  for  the  Gage  Cup. 

First — Miss  Elizabeth  T.  Scace  and  James  Clarke 

Class     4.     Junior  Cadet  Balloon  bursting. 
First — ^Arthur  Avery. 

Class     5.     Sophomore  Cadet  R,  0.  T.  C.  horsemanship. 
First — Frank  Sherman 

Class     6.     Officers'  Reserve  Corps  jumping. 
First — Lieutenant  Robert  Allen 

Class    7.     Local  saddle  horse  ■for  the  Mrs.  N.  D.  Skillings  trophy. 
First — Mrs.  Marion  Thompson 

Class     8.     Coeds'  horsemanship  for  the  Thompson  trophy. 
First — Miss  Lillian  Jackson 

Class     9.     Children's  novice  saddle  class. 
First — Joan  Birnie 

Class  10.     Senior  cadet  R.  0.  T.  C.  jumping  for  trophy  presented  by 
President  Hugh  P.  Baker. 
First — Harold  Midgely. 


[238] 


OUTING  CLUB 


OFFICERS 

President  GORDON  MOODY,  '37 

Vice  President  LELAND  HOOKER,  '38 

Secretary  CHARLES  ELLIOT,  '38 

Treasurer LEMUEL  OSBORNE,  JR.,  '37 


The  Outing  Club  was  established  at  Massachusetts  State  College  in  1926  by  o 
group  of  students  who  were  anxious  to  benefit  from  the  numerous  opportunities  for 
outdoor  exercise  afforded  by  the  hills  and  woods  that  surround  Amherst;  from  this 
early  beginning  has  grown  the  present  organization  which  conducts  on  organized 
program  of  hiking  activities;  holds  regular  monthly  meetings  ,at  which  -foresters, 
naturalists  and  travelers  speak;  and  closes  its  yearly  activities  with  a  banquet. 

This  past  year  the  Outing  Club  sponsored  one  of  the  most  successful  Mountain 
Days  ever  held.    The  Club  also  assisted  in  the  second  annual  Winter  Carnival. 

The  enjoyable  Sunday  hikes  to  Mount  Toby,  Mount  Warner  and  Mount  Sugarloaf 
have  done  much  to  please  the  old  members  as  well  as  to  attract  new  ones. 


Second   Row:     Willard,   Cole,   Bixby,   Bloisdell,   Phelps,   Vittum 
Front  Row:     Miss  Clough,  Elliot,  Moody,  Miss  Pierce 


{239] 


MATHEMATICS  CLUB 


As  usual  the  meetings  of  the  Math  club  afforded  real  pleasure  and  enjoyment  to  those  interested 
in  Mathematics  this  past  year.  Students  interested  in  the  subject  have  found  the  meetings  of  the  Club 
well  worth  attending,  and  informal  discussion  periods  which  close  them  "exciting".  The  members  of 
the  club  hold  forth  every  other  Wednesday  evening  when  reports  are  given  by  students.  The  subjects 
of  these  reports  varied  last  year  from  discussion  about  war  problems  related  to  properties  of  the  hyper- 
bola, to  comments  about  relativity.  The  Club  was  founded  six  years  ago  through  the  efforts  of 
Professor  Moore  who  has  token  an  active  part  in  the  club  ond  who  has  been  instrumental  in  its  success. 
In  the  post  six  years,  over  seventy  reports  have  been  presented  by  students.  Meetings  are  open  to 
everyone. 


THE  FERNALD  ENTOMOLOGICAL  CLUB 


OFFICERS 

President  ROBERT  HOLDSWORTH 

Secretary  THOMAS  KELLEY 

The  Fernald  Entomological  Club  was  founded  at  the  Massachusetts  Agricultural  College,  January 
14,  1925.  It  was  named  in  honor  of  Dr.  Henry  T.  Fernald,  at  that  time  head  of  the  Department  of 
Entomology  and  internationally  known  as  an  entomologist. 

The  prime  purpose  of  the  club  is  to  keep  the  students  in  touch  with  the  most  recent  advances  in 
Entomology,  which  is  accomplished  in  3  different  ways — by  speakers  giving  reviews  of  recent  literature, 
by  discussion  of  field  problems  and  experiences  among  the  students,  and  by  talks  delivered  by  prominent 
Entomologists  who  visit  the  College.  The  materials  so  presented  ore  supplementary  to  the  required 
courses  in  Entomology. 

Under  the  auspices  of  the  Club,  prominent  visiting  entomologists  often  give  informal  talks.  Some 
of  these  ore:     N.  Banks,  J.  Bequaert,  E.  P.  Felt,  J.  P.  Johnson,  F.  Silvestri,  R.  J,  Tillyard,  and  Chenfu  Wu. 


LANDSCAPE  CLUB 


The  Landscape  Club  is  composed  of  those  students  who  are  majoring  in  the  Department  of  Land- 
scape Architecture.  Speakers  prominent  in  the  field  of  landscape  architecture  are  the  features  of  the 
monthly  meetings  of  the  club.  Another  prominent  feature  of  the  club's  program  is  a  dance  which  is 
held  every  spring.  This  affair  is  usually  very  well  attended  and  is  the  outstanding  social  affair  for 
Landscape  Architecture  majors. 


PRE-MED.  CLUB 


Among  the  new  clubs  on  campus  last  year  was  the  Pre-Med.  Club,  which  was  formed  by  students 
contemplating  a  career  in  medicine.  The  purpose  of  the  club  is  to  acquaint  students  with  the  field  of 
medicine,  and  to  bring  speakers  to  the  compus.  Mr.  Warfel  of  the  Zoology  department  is  faculty 
advisor  to  the  club.  Officers  of  the  club  ore:  Philip  Chase,  38,  president;  John  Talinski,  37,  vice  presi- 
dent; Julian  H.  Katzeff,  38,  secretary  and  Robert  Gage,  38,  treasurer. 


[240} 


BACTERIOLOGY  CLUB 


OFFICERS 

President  HAROLD  A.  SLEEPER,  '37 

Vice  President  JAMES  J.  DOBBY,  37 

Secretary-Treasurer  ALICE   BEVINGTON,  37 

The  Bacteriology  Club  was  organized  in  October,  1935,  with  a  three-fold  purpose;  to  bring  the 
students  in  closer  contact  with  the  department,  to  acquoint  them  with  present  day  activities  in  the  field 
of  Bacteriology  by  means  of  a  series  of  speakers,  and  to  give  them  a  sense  of  their  importance  as  o 
professional  group.  The  wholehearted  response  of  the  students  and  the  generous  support  of  the  foculty 
ore  evidence  that  the  club  has  come  to  take  a  permanent  place  in  the  department. 

Meetings  are  held  every  three  weeks  with  speakers  alternating  between  the  campus  and  outside. 
Refreshments  and  a  discussion  group  are  enjoyed  after  the  talk. 

Membership  is  open  to  seniors  taking  advanced  bacteriology  courses  and  also  graduate  students. 
Juniors  are  token  in  as  associate  members,  becoming  regular  members  in  February  if  they  continue  in 
Bacteriology. 

HOME  ECONOMICS  CLUB 


OFFICERS 

President  RUTH  E.  WOOD,  37 

Vice  President MARION  BECHER,  38 

Secretary ELIZABETH  CLAPP,  39 

Treasurer  LOUISA  TOWNE,  38 

Social  Chairman  EDITH  WHITMORE,  37 

Publicity  PHYLLIS  GLEASON,  39 

The  purpose  of  the  Home  Economics  Club  is  to  develop  a  professional  spirit  omong  the  members, 
to  keep  up  with  current  topics  of  the  home  economics  world,  to  bring  members  in  contact  with  larger 
home  economics  orgonizations,  and  to  cultivate  a  friendship  among  the  girls  in  this  field.  Meetings 
are  held  at  the  Homestead,  and  all  home  economics  majors  are  active  members. 

RADIO  CLUB 


The  purpose  of  the  Radio  Club  ot  Massachusetts  State  College  is  to  acquaint  its  members  with 
radio  and  communication  work  and  to  enable  its  members  to  become  licensed  amateur  rodio  operators. 
Meetings  ore  held  on  alternate  Wednesday  evenings  in  the  Physics  Building.  During  the  past  year 
several  papers  hove  been  presented  by  the  members  and  demonstrations  have  also  been  prepared. 
Officers  of  the  club  for  the  post  year  have  been  Nelson  Julian,  president  and  Douglas  Milne,  secretary- 
treasurer. 

DAIRY  CLUB 


The  Doiry  Club,  founded  in  1933,  was  established  for  the  purpose  of  creating  a  stronger  depart- 
ment of  dairy  science  through  closer  student  cooperation.  The  club  holds  meetings  at  regular  intervals 
throughout  the  college  year.  Once  each  month  a  speaker  addresses  the  club  on  chemistry,  bacteriology, 
economics  or  other  subjects  related  to  dairy  science.  The  organization  has  been  instrumental  in  bringing 
students  in  contact  with  octive  workers  in  the  field  of  dairying.  Meetings  of  tlie  organization  ore  open 
to  all  students  interested  in  the  production  of  milk  ond  milk  products. 


[241] 


CHEMISTRY  CLUB 


President ANTHONY  P.  FERRUCCI,  '37 

Vice  President  WALTER  C.  MAYKO,  38 

Secretary AUSTIN  W.  FISHER,  '37 

Treasurer  MORRIS  LERNER,  '37 

Reporter GERTRUDE  J.  HADRO,  '38 

The  Chem  Club  of  Massachusetts  State  College  is  composed  of  those  students  majoring  in  the 
department  of  chemistry  and  those  who  intend  to  make  some  branch  of  chemistry  a  closely  related  sub- 
ject to  their  life  work.  The  aim  of  the  club  is  to  stimulate  interest  in  chemistry  as  a  profession  and  as 
a  science,  and  to  aid  its  members  by  every  honorable  means  in  the  attainment  of  their  ambitions  as 
chemists.  Further  than  that  the  club  serves  as  on  important  bridge  between  the  academic  work  and 
the  use  of  chemistry  in  industry;  the  students  obtain  an  insight  into  the  ramifications  of  seemingly  in- 
significant reactions  in  industrial  processes. 

One  of  the  outstanding  activities  of  the  club  this  year  was  the  dedication  of  two  trees  in  front 
of  Goessmann  Laboratory  to  Dr.  Joseph  S.  Chamberlain  and  Dr.  Joseph  B.  Lindsey,  retired,  in  recognition 
of  their  services  and  devotion  to  the  college  and  to  the  science  of  chemistry. 

Meetings  ore  held  bi-monthly  throughout  the  college  year  and  include  demonstrations,  lectures, 
and  reviews  by  the  staff,  students,  and  distinguished  visitors.  The  roster  of  speakers  for  the  year 
included  Charles  Wendell,  Dr.  Linus  Jones,  Ira  Whitney,  Leo  Lipmon,  Longdon  Richards,  Dr.  Paul  Serex, 
and  Edward  Doyle. 

MENORAH  CLUB 


The  Menorah  Club  is  the  organization  of  the  Jewish  students,  on  campus.  It  has  for  its  purpose 
to  "put  its  members  in  contact  with  all  the  romance  and  poignancy  of  Jewish  traditions,  with  all  the 
inquiring  activity  of  modern  Jewish  effort,  with  all  the  science  and  art  that  is  building  the  Jewish  future," 

The  club  accomplishes  its  purpose  by  holding  informal  services  at  which  sermons  are  given  by 
invited  speakers.  At  the  regular  meetings  of  the  club,  speakers  are  invited  to  talk  on  subjects  of 
interest  to  Jewish  students.  The  Menorah  Club  is  a  member  of  the  Intercollegiate  Jewish  Conference 
of  the  Connecticut  Valley,  which  held  its  annual  meeting  at  Wesleyan  last  year.  Officers  of  the  club 
are  Moses  Entin  '37,  president;  Ruth  Blassberg,  '37,  vice  president;  and  James  S.  Waldmon  and  Martha 
Kaplinsky,  secretaries. 

AVIATION  CLUB 


Among  the  newly  formed  clubs  at  Massachusetts  State  College  last  year  was  the  Flying  Club. 
The  Club  was  organized  in  November  by  Thomas  Hennessy  with  the  purpose  of  furthering  the  interest 
in  aviation  on  the  campus,  and  to  do  some  flying.  The  flying  is  made  possible  through  the  use  of  the 
plane  owned  by  the  Amherst  College  Flying  Club.  Members  of  the  club  are  privileged  to  attend  the 
ground  school  at  La  Fleur  Airport  once  a  month  and  here  receive  practical  and  theoretical  training  in 
flying. 

Officers  of  the  club  are  Thomas  Hennessy,  president  ond  Robert  Murphy,  secretary. 

PSYCHOLOGY  CLUB 


President  DAVID  A.  PETERSON,  '37 

Vice  President  DONALD  K.  TUCKER,  '37 

Secretary PHYLLIS  NELSON,  '38 

Treasurer  FRANKLYN  D.  BERRY,  '37 

The  purpose  of  the  Psychology  Club  is  to  serve  as  an  agency  through  which  the  students  at  Mass- 
achusetts State  College  may  gather  to  discuss  topics  of  psychological  interest  and  to  hear  authoritative 
speakers  on  such  topics.  Membership  is  open  to  any  student  at  the  Massachusetts  State  College  without 
obligation.  The  program  for  the  year  included  Dr.  Harry  N.  Click,  who  presented  an  hypnosis  demon- 
stration; Dr.  George  McPherson  of  the  Belchertown  State  School,  who  spoke  on  "Some  Types  and  Causes 
of  Mental  Deficiency";  Dr.  Margaret  Curti,  who  spoke  on  "Child  Psychology";  Clarence  Hudgins,  on 
the  "Problems  in  Training  the  Deaf  and  Dumb";  and  Dr.  S.  Rosenbliett,  on  "Veterans'  Administration 
Facility". 


[242} 


WESLEY  FOUNDATION 


The  Wesley  Foundation  at  Massachusetts  State  College  is  affiliated  with  a  National  organization 
of  that  name  which  was  founded  at  the  University  of  Illinois  about  twenty  years  ago  and  is  sponsored 
by  the  Methodist  Board  of  Educotion.  The  club  was  formed  here  two  years  ago.  Its  purpose  is  to  further 
religious  instruction  of  Methodist  students  through  fireside  discussions  of  religious,  social  and  economic 
problems.  Meetings  are  held  at  the  home  of  Dr.  Adrian  Lindsey.  Reverend  Arthur  Hopkinson,  Jr.,  of  the 
Wesley  Methodist  Church  of  Amherst,  is  odvisor  to  the  club. 

Officers  of  the  club  are:  James  D.  Lee,  president;  Matti  Suomi,  vice  president;  and  Ethel  Seal, 
secretary- treasurer. 


MUSIC  RECORD  CLUB 


Morking  what  is  perhaps  the  beginning  of  a  new  era  at  Mossochusetts  Stote  College,  was  the 
organization  of  the  Music  Record  Club  last  fall.  The  purpose  of  the  club  is  to  creote  a  lending  library 
of  records  available   to  members.     Any  member  of  the  college  community   is  eligible   to  membership. 

The  library  of  the  club  is  being  continually  increased  so  that  at  present  the  club  possesses  a  varied 
collection  of  classic,  romantic  and  contemporary  composers  represented  by  instrumental  as  well  as 
vocal  works. 

The  officers  of  the  club  are:  Alexandre  Gulben,  president;  Joseph  Nowakowski,  secretary-treasurer, 
v/ho  comprise  the  executive  committee  together  with  Professor  Coding. 


ANIMAL  HUSBANDRY  CLUB 


OFFICER 

President  LEMUEL  OSBORNE,  '37 

The  Animal  Husbandry  Club  was  established  at  Massachusetts  State  College  as  a  professional 
organization  for  the  purpose  of  bringing  together  students  taking  courses  in  Animal  Husbandry. 
Economists,  scientists  and  writers,  os  well  as  men  in  the  practical  field,  oddress  the  organization  from 
time  to  time,  and  an  effort  is  made  to  strengthen  the  relationships  between  the  college  student  and 
the  research  and  practical  worker  in  the  fields  of  Animal  Husbandry.  Speakers  for  this  year  include 
P.  D.  Young,  DeWitt  C.  Wing,  Shaun  Kelley,  Clifford  Cleavenger,  R.  H.  Merritt,  J.  C.  Cort  and  Quentin 
Reynolds. 


4-H  CLUB 


OFFICERS 

President CHARLES  E.  ESHBACH,  '37 

Vice  President FORREST  D.  HARTIN,  '37 

Secretary DOROTHY  M.  DECATUR,  '39 

Treasurer  NELSON    NEWELL,  '37 

Program  Chairman  PHYLLIS  MacDONALD,  '39 

The  Massachusetts  State  College  4-H  Club  is  made  up  of  present  and  former  4-H  club  members 
and  those  interested  in  4-H  club  work  who  are  attending  Massachusetts  State  College  or  the  Stockbridge 
School  of  Agriculture,  The  organization  has  as  its  purpose  the  furthering  of  the  spirit  of  4-H  club 
work  and  the  provision  of  a  means  of  organized  activity  for  its  members. 

Meetings  ore  held  each  month  in  the  Farley  4-H  Club  House.  In  addition  to  the  regular  meetings 
during  the  post  year  the  organization  has  hod  several  hikes,  sponsored  a  Christmas  sale,  sent  delegates 
to  meetings  of  other  college  4-H  clubs  at  other  New  England  colleges,  sent  a  delegate  to  the  annual 
conference  of  the  Junior  section  of  the  American  Country  Life  Conference  held  in  Kalomozoo,  Michigan. 
Members  of  the  organization  have  appeared  in  several  radio  programs. 

The  organization  has  affiliated  with  the  Country  Life  Association. 

In  April,  the  College  4-H  Club  sponsored  the  annual  conference  of  the  New  England  section  of  the 
American  Country  Life  Association,  at  M.  S.  C.  The  conference  is  held  each  yeor  at  o  different  New 
England  college. 


[243] 


INTERNATIONAL  RELATIONS  CLUB 


OFFICERS 

President-  WARREN  C.  BRAY,  38 

Vice  President  BARBARA  MILLER,  38 

Secretary  KIRTLEY  JUDD,  38 

Coming  back  into  its  own  again  tinis  year  was  the  International  Relations  Club  re-formed  last  fall. 
The  Club  held  regular  meetings  until  several  years  ago  when  it  was  transformed  into  the  History- 
Sociology  Club.    This  year  the  change  was  again  made  back  to  Internationol  Relations  Club. 

The  Club  holds  meetings  once  a  month  at  which  speakers  discuss  current  events  and  international 
relations.     Mr.  Cary  of  the  History-Sociology  department  is  faculty  advisor. 

NEWMAN  CLUB 


OFFICERS 

President DAVID  P.  ROSSITER 

Vice  President  HELENA  C.  McMAHON 

Secretory-Treasurer  ..; MARY  P.  O'CONNELL 

Publicity  Secretary  CHARLES  E.  ESHBACH,  JR. 

The  Newman  Club  of  Massachusetts  State  College  was  founded  in  1929  for  the  purpose  of  uniting 
all  Catholic  students  of  the  college  and  of  Stockbridge  School  of  Agriculture  in  a  common  purpose — 
that  of  promoting  their  spiritual,   intellectual,  and  social  development. 

The  Club  is  affiliated  with  the  National  Federation  of  College  Catholic  Clubs,  and  with  the  Student 
Religious  Council  on  campus.  In  connection  with  these  organizations,  the  Newman  Club  conducts  its 
program;  each  year  prominent  Catholic  clergymen  and  laymen  are  invited  to  address  the  club;  annually 
a  Newman  lecture  is  given  by  some  authority  on  the  life  and  work  of  Cardinal  Newman  from  whom 
the  Club  takes  its  name;  twice  each  semester  the  members  ossemble  at  a  community  breakfast  at  the 
parish  hall. 

Delegates  to  the  Student  Religious  Council: 
David  P.  Rossi  ter 
Herbert  Brown 
Constance  C.  Fortin 

CHRISTIAN  FEDERATION 


The  Christian  Federation  at  Massachusetts  State  College  is  the  organization  uniting  Protestant 
men  and  women  students.     It  is  on  active  branch  of  the  New  England  Student  Christian  Movement. 

The  purpose  of  the  Christian  Federation  is  to  furnish  students  with  the  means  of  finding  the  sig- 
nificance of  religion  in  the  world,  and  of  strengthening  their  lives  through  the  spirit  of  God. 

The  activities  of  the  past  year  hove  consisted  of  study  groups  under  faculty  direction,  sending 
deputations  to  neighboring  churches,  and  attendance  at  conferences.  Officers  of  the  federation  are; 
Roy  Wymon,  president;  Dorothy  Koehler,  secretory;  and  Philip  Chose,  treasurer. 


[244] 


THE  WINTER  CARNIVAL 

• 

The  Winter  Carnival  was  heralded  on  Wednesday,  January  sixth,  by  a  Carnival 
Rally  held  at  Bowker  Auditorium.  On  the  following  Friday,  the  Carnival  'Pormally 
opened  with  c  program  of  skating  races,  and  figure  and  comic  skating  exhibitions. 
The  tobogganing,  ski-joring,  and  cross-country  snowshoe  race  were  not  held  because 
of  a  premature  visitation  of  Spring  which  left  the  campus  without  snow.  As  a  com- 
pensation for  the  morning's  disappointment,  the  State  swimmers  triumphed  over  the 
United  States  Coast  Guard  Academy  swimmers  in  a  meet  in  which  the  Statesmen 
established  many  new  records.  This  success  was  embellished  in  the  evening  by  the 
victory  of  the  basketball  team  against  Norwich  University. 

The  same  afternoon,  a  fashion  show  was  held  under  the  direction  of  Lois 
Macomber.  Fall  clothes,  ski  togs,  evening  wear  and  sports  wear  were  shown  by  the 
models  selected  -for  the  occasion.  In  the  evening,  after  the  basketball  game,  the 
Carnival  Ball,  offering  the  music  of  Henry  Bicgini  and  the  novelty  of  a  crystal  shower, 
opened  the  social  events  of  the  week-end.  During  the  intermission  the  Carnival 
Queen,  Miss  Marjorie  Damon,  '39,  was  chosen  by  a  committee  composed  of  off- 
campus  judges. 

For  Saturday  morning  many  events  had  been  scheduled:  an  Intercollegiate 
Skiing  Meet  at  Bull  Hill,  New  Hampshire,  a  hockey  game  between  Amherst  and 
State,  figure  skating  and  a  snow  shoe  race;  un-fortunately  they  were  more  than 
hampered  by  lack  of  snow.  Boxing  and  wrestling  matches  held  in  the  cage  during 
the  early  afternoon,  were  followed  directly  by  the  "Ski  Boot"  informal  dance.  This 
unique  addition  to  the  Carnival  provided  that  couples  might  remain  in  their  outdoor 
attire,  but  added  the  admonition  "thou  shalt  not  wear  hobnailed  boots". 

In  the  evening  Mulholland,  the  Magician, 
astounded  a  crowded  audience  of  colle- 
giates  with  his  feats  of  magic.  After  the 
entertainment  the  snowless  Carnival  of 
'37  was  ushered  out  at  the  various  frater- 
nity house  parties  and  dances. 

The  general  chairman  of  the  Head  Com- 
mittee for  the  Carnival  was  Philip  Layton, 
'37;  officers  of  the  committee  were:  Craw- 
ford Adams,  vice  chairman;  Jessie  Kins- 
man, secretary;  Mitchell  Jackson,  treas- 
urer. There  were  four  main  committees: 
the  general  committee  headed  by  Eleanor 
Stone;  the  Winter  Sports  committee  head- 
ed by  Sidney  Kaufman;  the  Social  commit- 
tee headed  by  David  Rossiter;  the  Publicity 
committee  under  Louis  Breault. 

WINTER  CARNIVAL 
BALL  COMMITTEE 

Second  Row:     Steff,  Sievers,  Pockard 
Front  Row:    Glick,  Miss  Wood,  Blake 


[245} 


THE  COLLEGE  RING 


For  the  first  time  in  the  history  of  Massachusetts  State  College  a  standard 
college  ring  has  been  established.  The  initiative  was  assumed  by  the  class  of  1937 
and  a  committee  composed  of  six  seniors  was  appointed.  They  were  Anthony  Fer- 
rucci,  Jr.,  chairman,  Wendell  Lapham,  Lucille  Munroe,  Edward  Thacker,  Austin 
Fisher,  Jr.,  Harold  Rogers.  Other  committee  members  were  Eugene  Gieringer,  38, 
Olive  Norwood,  '39  and  Fletcher  Prouty,  '40,  who  represented  the  other  classes.  They 
undertook  to  establish  an  official  ring  in  the  fall  of  1936. 

Several  concerns  submitted  designs  and  bids.  After  careful  examination  and 
deliberation  the  design  of  the  Robbins  Company,  of  Attleboro,  Massachusetts,  was 
accepted.  The  design  underwent  several  modifications  before  it  was  acceptable  to 
the  committee.    The  final  form  will  be  official  for  several  years  to  come. 

The  design  is  carried  out  in  heavy  bas-relief.  It  incorporates  the  chapel  tower, 
the  symbolic  and  familiar  landmark  of  the  campus,  on  one  side  and  an  adaptation 
of  the  college  seal  on  the  other.  The  ring  is  set  with  a  synthetic  ruby  which  best 
approximates  the  maroon  of  the  college  color.  The  class  numerals  are  superimposed 
on  open  books  on  either  side. 

In  its  entirety  the  ring  is  at  once  appropriate  and  symbolic.  It  expresses  the 
durability  and  solidarity  of  Massachusetts  State  College. 


Second   Row:     Gieringer,   Prouty,   Miss  Kinsman,   Lapham,   French 
Front  Row;    Thacker,  Miss  Rogers,  Ferrucci,  Miss  Norwood,  Fisher 


[246] 


FINE  ARTS  COUNCIL 

• 

As  an  outgrowth  of  the  informal  concerts  held  last  year,  there  was  organized  this 
year  a  Fine  Arts  Council  whose  purpose  is  to  promote  interest  in  all  the  fine  arts,  to 
correlate  the  work  of  the  various  departments,  and  to  present  a  weekly  program 
based  on  some  form  erf  the  fine  arts. 

The  members  of  the  council  ore;  Professor  F.  A.  Wough,  chairman,  Professors 
0.  Clark,  F.  P.  Rand,  S.  Coding,  Mr.  Carey,  Librarian  B.  Wood,  and  Miss  Skinner. 
This  year's  program  has  included  lectures,  demonstrations  and  concerts  by  the  various 
members  of  the  faculty  as  well  as  visiting  professors  and  artists.  This  list  includes; 
Harold  Bauer,  Ernst  Wolff,  Robert  Francis,  Professors  Scott  and  Theobald  erf  Amherst 
College,  Professor  Stites  of  Antioch  College,  the  Smith  College  String  Trio,  and  the 
combined  State  and  Amherst  musical  organizations. 

CHAPEL  RENOVATIONS 

• 

The  "old  library",  perhaps  the  most  outstanding  building  on  campus  received 
much  needed  repairs  this  past  year.  For  many  years  a  landmark  on  the  State  College 
campus,  the  former  chapel  was  converted  into  a  class-room  building.  Repairs  for 
the  exterior  as  well  as  renovations  for  the  interior  were  effected.  A  set  erf  chimes 
for  the  building  have  been  donated  to  the  college  by  Bernard  H.  Smith,  '99,  in  memory 
of  Dr.  Warren  Elmer  Hinds,  also  of  the  class  of  '99.  The  gift  consists  of  ten  bells 
ranging  in  weight  from  225  pounds  to  1500  pounds. 

The  building  is  to  be  used  -for  offices  and  class-rooms  of  the  departments  of 
Languages  and  Literature,  and  History. 

COMMUNITY  CONCERT  SERIES 

• 

Especially  noteworthy  this  year  in  the  realm  of  musical  entertainment  was  the 
annuel  Community  Concert  series  in  which  four  concerts  were  held  at  Massachusetts 
State  College.  The  series  opened  with  on  appearance  by  Arthur  Spalding,  eminent 
American  violinist,  who  held  his  aduience  spellbound  by  his  performance.  Follow- 
ing Spalding  came  Jesus  Maria  Sanroma  on  January  19.  Mr.  Sanroma  is  the  pianist 
with  the  Boston  Symphony  Orchestra  and  he  too,  delighted  his  appreciative  audience. 

WOMEN'S  ATHLETIC  FIELD 

October  of  last  fall  saw  the  completion  and  dedication  of  the  long-awaited 
women's  athletic  field  situated  in  back  of  the  physical  education  building.  Long 
awaited,  and  for  some  time  in  the  process  of  being  constructed,  the  -field  was  finally 
completed  at  a  cost  of  $35,000. 

Celebrating  the  completion  of  the  field,  was  a  dedication  ceremony  and  program 
conducted  by  Mrs.  Adeline  E.  Hicks,  head  of  the  Department  of  Physical  Education 
for  Women.  The  ceremony  included  several  addresses  and  a  pageant  depicting  in 
symbolic  form  the  various  stages  in  the  construction  of  the  rfield. 


[247] 


Informals 


[248] 


[249} 


Waiting  for  Doc 


1250] 


[251} 


Campus  Sweethearts 


[252] 


£253} 


i^ 


THE 
INDEX 


[255] 


THE 
I  NDEX 


^M 

'^^UTUALlii^fSg 

COMPANY ' 

w     HARDWARE      ^. 

J8i 

■il 

1 

t 

i. 

^^^'^P^l 

mmmmm 

A  Fraternity  house  or  a  college- room,  would 
be  a  bit  dreary  without  a  good  Radio,  eh?  You 
said  it!  No  need  to  be  without  one  —  for  the 
MUTUAL  PLUMBING  AND  HEATING  COM- 
PANY can  equip  you  with  R.  C.  A.  or  Phiico 
Radios  —  and  there's  none  that  excel  them! 

They  also  have  Fraternity  House  Equipment 
and  are  expert  in  plumbing  and  heating,  either 
new  work  or  repairs.     Oil  Burners,  too! 

Of  course  you'll  visit  their  store  —  soon! 


£256} 


THE 
I  NDEX 


Whether  you  purchase  a  three-cent  stamp  or 
five  dollars  worth  of  merchandise,  you'll  find 
the  same  pleasing  courtesy  at  the  Wellworth 
Pharmacy  at  all  times.  Eight  well-trained  clerks, 
including  two  registered  men,  waiting  for  your 
commands. 

Known  as  "the  store  with  thousands  of 
friends"  —  we  know  you'll  remember  WELL- 
WORTH  PHARMACY. 


[257} 


THE 
INDEX 


To  browse  around  —  among  the  books  and 
things  —  that's  a  fine  way  to  spend  a  half  hour 
or  more!    And  here's  your  chance! 

At  Lowell's  Bookshop  you'll  find  a  lending 
library,  fountain  pens,  books  new  and  standard, 
dictionaries,  artists'  materials,  prints,  playing 
cards,  crepe  paper,  pottery,  gifts,  sheet  music, 
note  books  of  all  kinds,  student  outlines  and 
many  other  things  desirable. 

You  will  visit  LOWELL'S  BOOKSHOP  often, 
we  are  sure! 


[258] 


THE 
I  NDEX 


After  the  theater  —  or  dance  —  that  famous 
"college  candy  kitchen"  .  .  .  snappy  restaurant 
.  .  .  fountain  service  ...  the  finest  candies  .  .  . 
"atmosphere"!  .  .  .  reasonable  prices. 

Let  us  remember  the  SARRIS  BROTHERS! 


[259] 


THE 
INDEX 


There's  ONE  complete  home  furnishing  store 
in  Amherst  —  where  Lower  Prices  prevail  —  and 
courtesy  abounds.  It's  on  Amity  Street  —  yes, 
you  guessed  right,  it  is  GRIGGS  FURNITURE 
WAREHOUSE.  Popular,  pleasing,  and  open  for 
your  convenience  until  nine  in  the  evening. 

You  will  need  a  chair,  a  couch,  and  possibly 
many  other  articles.  Just  remember  GRIGGS 
— and  save  money! 


[260} 


THE 
I  MDEX 


"The  LORD  JEFFERY" 

The  friendliness  of  your  reception  here  will 
prove  only  the  beginning  of  a  pleasurable  visit, 
for  there  is  genuine  interest  in  your  welfare  and 
a  distinct  charm  in  service  and  surroundings  that 
will  compel  you  to  return  at  some  future  time. 

It's  a  "Treadwaylnn"—a  fact  that  means 
much  to  those  who  "get  about"  —  so  you're 
assured  that  your  stay  is  more  than  pleasant — 
whether  you  wish  a  lunch,  dinner  or  are  to 
remain  in  one  of  their  delightful  rooms. 

Geo.  R.  Jones,  Resident  Manager. 


[261] 


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INDEX 


"In  the  center  of  things".  Now,  is  that  not 
just  what  college  folks  want!  Well,  that's  the 
location  of  the  Hotel  Perry  —  a  college  inn  in  a 
college  town. 

Features  that  you'll  appreciate  are  the  reas- 
onable rates  which  prevail  here  and  the  large, 
airy  rooms.  Remember  HOTEL  PERRY  —  boys 
and  girls! 


[262] 


THE 
I  NDEX 


"At  the  end  of  the  Village  Green"— that's  romantic,  is  it 
not?  It's  the  slogan  of  a  fine  store  that  sells  Furniture  of  all 
kinds— and  they  will  gladly  arrange  terms  for  payment,  if  you 
wish. 

We  speak  of  Douglass-Marsh — who  sell  for  less — and  who 
present  such  nationally  famous  lines  as  Maple  Furniture  by 
Whitney  —  Cushman  —  Heywood.  Beds  and  bedding  by  Sim- 
mons —  and  Red  Cross.  Living  room  suites  by  Gardner  Uphol- 
stering Co.  Rugs  by  Bigelow  —  Sanford  —  Whittall.  In  fact, 
everything  up-to-date  and  worthwhile. 

Be  sure  to  visit  DOUGLASS-MARSH! 


[263] 


THE 
INDEX 


Quality,  Service. 

Two  words  thof  describe  the  clothing  and 
haberdashery  one  obtains  at  Eddie  Switzer's. 
Complete  stocks  —  excellent  variety. 

Remember  EDDIE  SWITZER! 


[264} 


THE 
I  NDEX 


•  For  books  you  don't  wont,  but  have  to  have 

•  For  books  you  do  want  but  don't  have  to  have 

•  For  books  you  have  to  hove  and  want 

•  For  pens  and  periodicals,  gifts  and  gadgets 

•  For  stationery  and  an  up-to-date  circulating 

library 

JEPPERY  AMHERST  BOOKSHOP.  Inc. 
4  Amity  Street 


[265] 


THE 
INDEX 


Own  a  car?  If  not,  you  had  better  buy  one! 
And  we  suggest  with  all  sincerity  that  you'll  find 
Harold  B.  Ketchen  at  11  East  Pleasant  Street, 
just  the  fellow  for  whom  you  are  looking.  He 
sells  Ford  automobiles — and  services  them.  And 
he  is  "pledged  to  better  service  at  lower  cost." 
You  can't  beat  that! 

He  will  service  or  repair  any  make  of  car — 
with  understanding — with  a  charge  that  will 
please  you. 

KETCHEN'S  will  be  a  popular  place  with 
you  —  give  him  a  trial  —  that's  all  he  asks! 


[266} 


THE 
I  NDEX 


You  have  to  go  to  Convocation,  but  you  visit 
the  House  of  Walsh  from  choice.  One  visit  and 
it  will  become  a  habit — because  you'll  find  there, 
Hickey-Freeman  suits.  Burberry  coats,  Knox 
hats — and  all  the  things  so  necessary  in  the 
life  of  a  college  man. 

Do  not  forget  "THE   HOUSE  OF  WALSH"! 


[267] 


THE 
INDEX 


Smart  photo,  eh! 

That's  the  kind  of  work  you  get  at  the 
Garber  Studios  in  Springfield!  Just  note  the 
detail  and  clarity  of  the  photo  above  —  and 
remember  that  this  careful,  skillful  sort  of  work 
is  what  you  obtain  in  portrait  or  any  other 
photography,  when  you  hove  it  done  by  Garber, 
who  produced  most  of  the  photographs  for  the 
1937  Index. 

For  photographs  of  any  sort — remember  the 
GARBER  STUDIOS! 


[268] 


THE 
INDEX 


In  these  pleasant  dining  rooms  you'll  find 
home-cooked  food  —  carefully  served.  Special 
Sunday  dinners  and  suppers  —  Parties  large  or 
small  —  delightfully  arranged. 

There  are  attractive  rooms  for  parents  and 
week-end  guests  —  rates  reasonable. 

Just  remember  MOUNT  PLEASANT  INN  and 
Florence  Munson  Smith  —  Route  116  —  tele- 
phone 440. 


[269] 


The  publication  of  o  year-book  involves  more  work  than  most  of  you  will  ever 
realize,  but  no  amount  of  work  on  the  part  of  those  concerned  with  editing  an  annual 
can  successfully  produce  a  good  publication  without  assistance  and  helpful  sugges- 
tions from  persons  who  have  had  the  long  and  necessary  experience  lacking  in  the 
ordinary  student  editor. 

The  editor  of  the  1937  Index  is  especially  indebted  to  MR.  RUSSELL  C.  KNIGHT, 
formerly  of  Howard-Wesson  Co.,  and  to  MR.  C.  ARTHUR  NICHOLS  and  his  son, 
PHILIP  G.  NICHOLS,  of  the  Burbank  Printing  Co.,  for  their  wholehearted  cooperation 
in  the  production  of  the  book. 

The  editor  also  wishes  to  acknowledge  the  assistance  of  the  following: 

Mr.  Saul  E.  Baidack  of  Garber  Studios,  Springfield. 

Howard-Wesson  Co.,  of  Worcester,  Engravers 

Prof.  Lawrence  S.  Dickinson  of  the  Faculty. 

Prof.  Maxwell  H.  Goldberg  of  the  Faculty. 

And  those  students  who  so  generously  submitted  candid  camera  shots  to  be 
used  in  the  book. 

GEORGE  S.  ROZWENC,  '38 
Editor-in-Chief 


PROF.  L.  S   DICKINSON 
Financial  Advisor 


PROF.  MAXWELL  H.  GOLDBERG 
Literary  Advisor 


[270] 


THE 
I  NDEX 


and   then   came  the   dawn. 


Both  Pictures,  Left  to  Right: 
Philip  G.   Nichols,  C.  A.   Nichols,    (Printers);   George  Rozwenc, 
Mitchell  NeJame,  38;  Russell  C.   Knight,   (Engraver) 


This    may    appear    to    you,    dear    reader,    as 
comedy.     In  truth,  it  was  almost  stark  tragedy! 

Note  that  the  clock  says  five  minutes  after 
ten  in  the  first  picture  —  while  the  bottom  shot 
shows  it  was  2:35  A.  M. 

That  is  what  it  means  to  "get  out  an  annual"! 
And  this  was  but  ONE  night,  out  of  weeks  of 
them! 

P.  S.    The  bottles  contained  ginger  ale. 


[271] 


BOOK  SEVEN 


THE 
INDEX 


JOINT  COMMITTEE  ON  INTERCOLLEGIATE  ATHLETICS 


Regulating  intercollegiate  athletics  at  M.  S.  C,  and  setting  policies  for  the 
athletic  program,  is  the  duty  of  the  Joint  Committee  on  Intercollegiate  Athletics. 
This  body  governs  all  matters  of  finance,  fields,  construction,  and  athletic  policy. 

Among  its  several  duties  the  Committee  must  approve  of  all  intercollegiate 
athletic  schedules,  of  all  managerships,  and  of  awards  made  for  excellence  in  athletic 
competition.  These  are  but  a  fev*^  of  the  matters  considered  each  year  by  the 
Committee. 

The  joint  committee  is  composed  of  the  following  members:  the  student  mana- 
gers of  each  of  the  recognized  Varsity  sports;  two  members  of  the  faculty  appointed 
by  the  President  of  the  College;  three  alumni  of  the  college;  the  Director  of  Athletics; 
the  Dean  of  the  College,  and  the  President  of  the  College  ex-officio. 

President -.-  WILLIAM  MACHMER  (Dean) 

Vice  President  THEOREN  L.  WARNER,  '08 

Secretary  EARLE  S.  CARPENTER,  '24 

BOARD 

Willard  A.  Munson  ,'05  Frederick  McLaughlin,  '11 

Robert  D.  Hawiey,  '18  Curry  S.   Hicks 

Pres.  Hugh  P.  Baker  (Ex-officio) 

STUDENT  MEMBERS 

Ira  B.  Whitney,  '37 — Manager  of  Cross  Country 

William  F.  Kewer,  '37 — Manager  of  Football 

Richard  B.  Knowlton,  '37 — Manager  of  Soccer 

Merrill  S.  Hobart,  '37 — Manager  of  Swimming 

John  Kabat,  '37 — Manager  of  Basketball 

Phillip  H.  Shift,  '37— Manager  of  Track 

Paul  H.  Rosberry,  '37 — Manager  of  Hockey 

Norman  Clark,  '38 — Manager  of  Baseball 


Second   Row:     Kobat,   Rosberry,   Knowlton,   Kewer,   Koch,  Shift 

Front  Row:     Sec'y  Hawiey,  Mr.  Warner,  Dean  Mochmer,  Prof.   Hicks,  Mr.  Carpenter 


[274] 


THE  INTERCLASS  ATHLETIC  BOARD 


OFFICERS 

Faculty  member  SIDNEY  KAUFFMAN 

President  AUSTIN  W.  FISHER,  '37 

Vice  President  CARL  SWANSON,  '37 

Secretary VINCENT  SCHMIDT,  '39 


William  Roberge,  '38 
Carl  Bokina,  '38 


MEMBERS 


James  H.  King,  '40 
James  Payson,  40 


The  Interclass  Athletic  Board  is  composed  of  eight  members,  two  elected  from 
each  class.  Its  purpose  is  the  promotion  of  interclass  athletics  and  the  awarding  of 
class  numerals  and  certificates  to  members  of  winning  class  teams  in  the  various 
sports  carried  on.  The  officers  of  this  year's  board  are:  Austin  Fisher,  '37,  president; 
Carl  Swanson,  '37,  vice  president;  Vincent  Schmidt,  '39,  secretary.  Numerals  and 
certificates  have  been  awarded  this  year  to  sophomores  in  soccer,  and  to  -freshmen  in 
football,  swimming,  and  cross-country.  Hockey  competition  was  impossible  due  to 
lack  of  ice.  Other  sports  such  as  interclass  tennis  have  been  suggested  and  worked 
on,  but  interest  seems  to  favor  interfraternity  sports  and  upperclassmen  are  difficult 
to  organize  for  competition  in  interclass  sports. 


Second  Row:     Payson,  King 

Front  Row:     Swanson,  Fisher,  Schmidt 


[275] 


VARSITY  FOOTBALL 


SUMMARY   OF   THE   SEASON 

Score 

M.  S.  C.  Opponents 

Oct.     3     Bowdoin  at  Brunswick,  Maine....     12  14 

"       10     Conn.  State  at  Storrs,  Conn 0  13 

"       17     R.  I.  State  at  M.  S.  C 13  8 

24     Worcester  Tech  at  M,  S.  C 0  7 

"       31     Amherst  Qt  M.  S.  C 7  13 

Nov.     7     Coost  Guard  at  New  London 20  26 

"       14     R.P.I,  at  Troy 40  0 

"       21     Tufts  at  Medford 0  13 


COACH  CARAWAY 


PERSONNEL 


Captain  .. 
Manager 


DAVID  P.  ROSS  ITER 
WILLIAM  F.  KEWER 


David  P.  Rossiter,  '37  (M) 
Arthur  C.  Avery,  37   (M) 
Edwin  G.  Bernstein,  '37  (M) 
Ernest  K.  Davis,  '37  (M) 
Sabin  P.  Filipkowski,  '37  (M) 
Austin  W.  Fisher,  '37  (M) 
Hillel  H.  Freedman,  '37  (M) 
Guy  M.  Grey,  '37  (M) 
Albert  J.  Gricius,  '37  (M) 
Forrest  K,  Hartin,  '37  (M) 
Wendell  E.  Laphom,  '37  (M) 
Walter  B.  Mosely,  '37  (M) 
George  E.  O'Brien,  '37   (M) 


THE  TEAM 

Herbert  E.  Brown,  '38  (M) 
William  A.  Bullock,  '38  (M) 
Charles  W.  Collins,  '38  (M) 
Edward  W.  Czelusnick,  '38  (M) 
Russell  J.  Houck,  '38  (M) 
Norman  E.   Linden,  '38    (M) 
George  Niden,  '38  (M) 
Robert  C.   Perkins,  '38   (M) 
Paul  S.  Putnam,  '38  (M) 
William  E.  Roberge,  '38  (M) 
Frederick  J.  Sievers,  '38   (M) 
Richard  W.  Towie,  '38  (M) 
Clifton  W,  Morey,  '39  (M) 
Howard  Steff,  '39 


William  Howe,  '39 
James  Savage,  '38 
Frank  Brox,  '38 
Chester  Conont,  '37 
Leon  Cone,  '38 
Richard  Lee,  '39 
Franklin  Southwick,  '39 
Stanley  Zelozo,  '39 
Stanley  Bettoney,  '39 
Walter  Zoichowski,  '39 
Earl  Blomberg,  '38 
Stephen  Silverman,  '38 
Frank  Slesinski,  '38 


Fifth   Row:     Fay,   Hartin,   Bixby,    Bettoney,   Wo|tasiewicz,   Zojchowski 

Fourth  Row:     Murphy,  Fanning,  Silverman,  Slesinski,  Conont,  Steff,  Katz,  Zelozo 

Third   Row:     Morey,    Putnam,   Czelusniak,    Brox,    Howe,    Hauck,  Blomberg,  Cowles,  Wood,  Packard 

Second   Row:     Brown,   Bullock,   Sievers,   Collins,   Linden,   Roberge,  Cone,  Perkins,  Niden,  TowIe,  Monoger  Kewer 

Front  Row:     Friedman,  Moseley,  Lcphom,  Filipkowski,  Gricius,   Rossiter,  Gray,  Davis,  Fisher,  O'Brien,  Bernstein 


[276] 


THE  SEASON 


Although  the  State  football  ledger  showed  a  record  of  six  defeats  against  only 
two  victories  for  1936,  the  Statesmen  showed  a  fine  spirit  of  fight  and  sportsmanship 
throughout  the  season.  Coach  Caraway,  in  his  first  season  at  State,  had  to  rely 
entirely  on  junior  backfield  men  and  line  reserves. 

Opening  the  season  away  from  home,  the  Statesmen  were  edged  out  14 — 12  by 
Bowdoin.  The  result  was  not  discouraging,  however,  because  State,  trying  out  23 
men,  outplayed  the  Polar-bears  the  whole  game,  completing  eight  out  of  thirteen 
passes  and  constantly  gaining  through  the  line. 

On  the  following  Saturday  the  Statesmen  lost  a  tough  game  to  Connecticut 
State  13 — 0.  The  line  was  greatly  weakened  due  to  the  loss  of  Captain  Rossiter  at 
center  and  Fred  Sievers,  outstanding  junior  guard.  During  the  second  half  we  out- 
played the  Nutmeggers  but  pass  interceptions  cost  us  the  game. 

In  the  first  home  game  of  the  season,  the  State  team  drove  Rhode  Island  State 
all  over  the  mud-soaked  field  to  win  13 — 8.  The  team  showed  great  power,  with 
George  Niden  doing  most  of  the  ground  gaining  on  simple  off-tackle  plays. 

On  October  24,  the  Statesmen  lost  their  first  contest  to  W,  P.  I.  since  1930  by 
a  score  of  7 — 0.  Worcester  presented  one  of  their  strongest  teams  in  years  which 
put  across  a  touchdown  early  in  the  fourth  period.  State  could  not  capitalize  on 
the  several  scoring  opportunities  which  it  had. 

In  the  last  home  game  of  the  season  State  lost  the  town  championship  to 
Amherst  13 — 7.  State  led  7 — 0  at  the  half  but  could  not  maintain  its  lead.  Amherst 
had  a  wealth  of  experienced  backs,  and  a  beautiful  pass  combination  on  which  they 
scored  both  their  touchdowns.  The  State  line  was  weakened  by  the  loss  of  Fred 
Sievers  at  his  guard  position.  Towie,  Niden,  and  Brown  were  outstanding  in  the 
State  backfield. 

In  their  first  contest  against  the  Coast  Guard  Academy,  on  November  7,  the 
Middies  ran  up  a  19 — 0  lead  in  the  first  half.  In  the  second  half,  however.  State 
made  a  strong  comeback  and  ran  up  three  touchdowns  marked  by  strong  running  by 
Niden  and  Brown  and  a  fine  pass  combine  of  TowIe  and  Lapham.  The  Statesmen 
were  on  their  way  to  the  winning  tally  when  the  gun  brought  the  contest  to  a  close. 

On  the  following  Saturday  the  Carawaymen  came  back  with  a  vengeance  to  sink 
the  engineers  from  R.  P.  I.  40 — 0.  The  game  was  marked  by  the  clicking  of  the 
State  passing  attack.  "Brick"  Savage,  substitute  bock,  was  high  scorer  with  two 
touchdowns. 

The  last  game  of  the  season  saw  the  Statesmen  lose  13 — 0  to  the  Tufts'  Jumboes 
before  a  crowd  of  5,000.  State  played  a  hard,  fine  game,  but  Tufts  capitalized  on  a 
fumble  and  a  76-yard  touchdown  run. 


[277] 


VARSITY  SOCCER 
SUMMARY  OF  THE  SEASON 

Score 


M.  S.  C. 

Opponents 

W   P    1    at  Worcester 

.      7 
.      2 

4 

Connecticut  State  at 

Storrs.. 

1 

Williams  at  Williomst 

own 

.      0 

3 

Yale  at  M.  S^  C 

.      0 

2 

Tufts  at  Medford 

.      2 

1 

Amherst  at  M.  S,  C... 

.      2 

0 

Trinity   ot    Hartford... 

.      2 

0 

Wesleyan  at  M.  S.  C. 

.      0 

1 

COACH  BRIGGS 

Captain  . 
Manager 


PERSONNEL 

JOSEPH  G.  KENNEDY 

RICHARD  B.  KNOWLTON 


Joseph  G.  Kennedy,  37  (M) 
Raymond  F.  Conway,  37  (M) 
Laurence  H.  Kyle,  37  (M) 
Harvey  G.  Turner,  Jr.,  37   (M) 
Crawford  W.  Adams,  38  (M) 
Robert  D,  Buzzee,  38  (M) 
Henry  V.  Couper,  38  (M) 
Robert  S.  Feinberg,  38  (M) 


THE  TEAM 

Samuel  J.  Golub,  38  (M) 
Donald  Osley,  38  (M) 
Donald  Silverman,  38  (M) 
George  C.  Benjamin,  39  (M) 
Robert  S.  Cain,  39  (M) 
Thomas  G.  Lyman,  39  (M) 
Stanley  Podolak,  39   (M) 


Charles  Rodda,  39   (M) 
Lawrence  Johnson,  37 
Raymond  Conway,  37 
William  Avery,  38 
Richard  Barton,  38 
Everett  Roberts,  39 
John  Parker,  39 
Milton  Auerbach,  39 


Fifth  Row:     Barton,  Johnson,  Roberts,  Giddings 

Fourth  Row;     Goldman,  Gruner,  Cole,  Silverman,  Wilson,  Anderson 

Third  Row:     Auerbach,  Avery,  Osley,  Couper,  Roddo,  Golub,  Parker 

Second  Row:     Podolok,  Lyman,  Buzzee,  Cain,  Adams,  Feinberg 

Front   Row:     Coach   Briggs,   Benjamin,   Conway,   Kennedy,   Kyle,  Turner,  Manager 


[278} 


THE  SEASON 


October  3  marked  the  opening  of  another  successful  Soccer  Season.  Under  the 
tutelage  of  Coach  Larry  Briggs  and  the  able  leadership  of  Captain  Joseph  Kennedy 
the  team  emerged  victorious  in  five  of  its  eight  games. 

On  October  3  the  team  journeyed  to  Worcester  where  it  conquered  W.  P.  I. 
7 — 4.  In  this  his  first  varsity  contest,  Bud  Rodda  an  outstanding  sophomore  sensa- 
tion, scored  three  goals. 

The  follovi/ing  Saturday  the  team  made  it  two  straight  by  defeating  Connnecticut 
State  at  Storrs  2 — 1 . 

At  Williamstown  the  State  team  suffered  its  first  defeat  at  the  hands  of  the 
Ephmen  3 — 0  on  a  slippery,  mud-soaked  -field. 

The  second  defeat  came  at  the  hands  of  the  highly  touted,  well  coordinated, 
fast-passing  Yale  team  from  New  Haven. 

Journeying  to  Medford  on  October  24  the  team  again  broke  into  the  win  column 
with  a  hard  earned  victory  over  a  fighting  Tufts  team.     State  2;  Tufts  1 . 

A  week  later  the  team  continued  its  splendid  play  and  decisively  beat  the  town 
rivals.  The  Statesmen  dominated  the  play  all  afternoon  with  Don  Osley  as  the 
important  scoring  factor,  and. never  relinquished  the  lead  to  Amherst. 

At  Trinity,  Bud  Rodda  and  Don  Osley  gave  State  more  than  enough  goals  as  their 
opponents  failed  to  score  and  the  score  of  this  fifth  victory  was  State  2;  Trinity  0. 

The  final  gome  on  Alumni  Field  on  November  13,  was  a  heart-breaker  as 
Wesleyan  scored  in  the  first  minute;  from  that  moment  on  the  State  team  carried 
the  attack  to  Wesleyan  and  completely  dominated  the  play,  but  repeated  thrusts 
were  repulsed  by  a  hard  fighting  Wesleyan  team.  At  the  end  of  eighty-eight 
minutes  the  score  still  remained  1 — 0. 


[279} 


Dec, 

17 

18 

Jan. 

9 

" 

1^ 

" 

16 

" 

20 

2i 

Feb. 

10 

" 

12 

13 

17 

" 

19 

" 

24 

Mar 

.  3 

VARSITY  BASKETBALL 


SUMMARY  OF  THE  SEASON 

Score 
M.  S.  C.     Opponents 

Middlebury  at  M    S.  C 36  31 

M.  I.  T.  at  Boston 37  36 

Williams  at  Williomstown 50  41 

Connecticut  State  at  M.  S.  C 37  41 

Amherst  at  M.  S.  C 24  42 

Wesleyan  at  M.  S.  C 36  55 

Boston  University  at  M.  S.  C 47  31 

Rhode  Island  at  Kingston 37  60 

Norwich  at  M.  S.  C 38  19 

Springfield  at  Springfield 35  40 

Amherst  at  Amherst 31  32 

Coost  Guard  at  M  S.  C 41  32 

W.  P.  I.  at  M.  S.  C 45  43 

Tufts  at  Medford 42  31 


COACH  FRIGARD 


PERSONNEL 

Manager JOHN   KABAT 

Captain  ISADORE  BARR 


Isodore  Barr,  '37  (M) 
John  E.  McNally,  37  (M) 
John  G.  Bush,  '38   (M) 
Cor!  J.  Bokina,  '38 
Edward  W.  Czelusniak,  '3E 


THE  TEAM 

Paul  S.  Putnam,  '38 
Frederick  C.  Riel,  '38 
Robert  Rustigian,  '38 
Frederick  J.  Sievers,  '3 
Frank  A,  Slesinski,  '38 


John  Bemben,  '39 
Everett  W.  Eldridge,  '39 
Francis  J.   Riel,  '39 
Franklin  W.  Southwick,  '39 
Stanley  S.  Zelozo,  '39   (M) 


Second  Row:     Monoger  Kobot,  Eldridge,  Putnam,  Southwick,  Bokina,  Slesinski,  Francis  Reil, 

Rustigian,  Coach  Frigard 
Front  Row:     Zelazo,  Sievers,  Czelusniak,  Barr,  Frederick  Reil,   Bush,  McNally 


[280] 


THE  SEASON 


Bill  Frigard's  first  M.  S.  C.  outfit  turned  out  to  be  a  team  that  never  gave  up, 
and  as  a  result  had  a  fairly  successful  season,  winning  8  and  losing  6.  It  was,  with 
the  exception  of  the  1935-36  captain,  Johnny  Stewart,  and  the  addition  of  a  few 
sophomores,  practically  the  same  team  which  last  year  won  but  two  games. 

Playing  an  unusually  weak  Middlebury  team  in  the  opening  game  of  the  season, 
M.  S.  C.  started  off  on  the  right  foot  by  winning  36 — 31,  led  by  Captain  "Lefty"  Barr 
who  tallied  16  points. 

In  the  second  gome,  played  on  M.  I.  T.'s  home  court,  "Lefty"  Barr  again  sank 
the  winning  margin,  a  foul  shot  with  thirty  seconds  to  go,  making  the  score  37 — 36. 

Again  on  the  road.  State  overwhelmed  Williams  by  employing  the  "fast-break" 
to  perfection.  This  time  it  was  Fred  Riel  and  Eddie  Czelusniak,  scoring  28  points 
between  them,  who  gave  us  the  third  consecutive  win,  50 — 41 . 

On  January  14,  in  a  hair-raising  game  played  in  the  Physical  Educational  Build- 
ing, Conn.  State,  paced  by  6- foot,  6-inch  John  Pringle  who  scored  21  points,  eked  out 
a  41 — 37  victory  in  the  last  few  minutes  despite  the  spectacular  shooting  of  Czelus- 
niak and  Fred  Riel. 

Although  the  Statesmen  led  13 — 9  for  the  first  ten  minutes  of  the  first  Amherst 
game,  the  latter,  paced  by  Benny  Meyers,  proceeded  to  dominate  the  remainder  of 
the  game,  winning  42 — 24. 

Wesleyan  coming  to  Amherst  undefeated,  left  with  the  same  rating  after  pinning 
bock  the  collective  ears  of  Frigard's  men  to  the  tune  of  a  53  to  36  victory. 

On  the  following  Saturday,  a  supposedly  star-studded  Boston  University  aggrega- 
tion met  a  stunning  defeat  at  the  hands  of  Mass.  State's  fighting  ou^fit,  47 — 31 . 

An  exceedingly  fast-breaking,  well-conditioned,  Rhode  Island  team  overpowered 
our  quintet,  although  at  half-time  the  score  was  but  27 — ^25  in  their  favor.  Coach 
Keaney's  men,  scoring  in  spurts  of  five  baskets  at  a  time,  won  60 — 37. 

The  Norwich  game  was  a  "walkaway"  with  Eddie  Czelusniak  alone  getting  17 
tallies  to  19  for  the  little  army  team.  All  the  State  substitutes  had  their  chance  as 
the  gome  ended  38 — 19. 

Playing  Springfield  at  the  Tech  High  School  gym,  in  the  city  of  homes.  State 
fought  hard,  but  a  smoothly  coordinating  Springfield  team  managed  to  score  a  40 — 35 
victory. 

Resuming  the  inter-town  series,  the  Frigardmen  led  Amherst  up  to  the  last  two 
minutes.  The  score  at  half-time,  due  to  the  shooting  of  the  two  Riels,  Barr,  and 
Czelusniak,  was  State  25  and  Amherst  13.  But  with  13  minutes  to  play.  Coach 
Jordan's  outfit  hit  the  comeback  trail,  and  due  to  Schweizer's  basket  emerged 
victorious  32 — 31 . 

Coast  Guard  presented  a  surprisingly  strong  quintet,  but  succumbed  to  the 
Maroon  and  White,  41 — 32. 

The  Worcester  Tech  gome  was  also  close  but  Stan  Zelazo,  star  sophomore  guard, 
and  high-scoring  Freddie  Riel,  scoring  28  points  between  them  played  a  huge  part  in 

our  winning  45 — 43. 

The  Tufts  game,  played  in  Medford,  resulted  in  a  victory  for  Mass.  State,  42 — 31 . 

The  season  was  featured  throughout  by  the  stellar  shooting  of  Fred  Riel  and  Ed 
Czelusniak,  the  passing  of  Captain  Barr,  the  second  half  playing  of  Fran  Riel  and 
Zelazo,  and  above  all,  the  steady  playing  throughout  by  Fred  Sievers,  defensive  back- 
bone of  the  team.  Coach  Bill  Frigard  can  look  forward  to  a  very  good  season  as 
Captain  Barr  will  be  the  only  man  graduating,  while  there  are  several  good  prospects 
coming  up  from  this  year's  frosh  team. 


[281] 


JOSEPH  R,  ROGERS 
Coach 


VARSITY  SWIMMING 
SUMMARY  OF  THE  SEASON 

Score 
M.  S.  C.     Opponents 

Jan.     9     Wesleyan  at  M.  S.  C 53  24 

"      16     W,  P.  I.  at  Worcester 62  15 

Feb.   12     Coast  Guard  at  M.  S.  C 52  25 

"      16    Trinity  at  M.  S.  C 44  33 

"      20  Williams  at  Williamstown 32  45 

"     25     Connecticut  State  at  Storrs 55  22 

March   12-13,   New  England   Intercollegiate.     Third   place. 
Twenty-five  points. 


PERSONNEL 

Co-Captains    WALTER  J.  HODDER,  JAMES  F.  CUTTER 
Manager  MERRILL  S.  HOBART 


James  F.  Cutter,  '37  (M) 
Walter  J.  Hodder, '37  (M) 
Austin  W.  Fisher,  Jr.,  '37  (M) 
Robert  W.  Thorndike,  '37   (M) 
Donald  F.  Thurlow,  '37 
Edwin  A.  Bieniek,  '38 
Walter  A.  Green,  '38 


THE  TEAM 

William  H.  Morrison,  Jr.,  '38 
Richard  R.   Irving,  '38   (M) 
Seymour  T.  Jocobson,  '38   (M) 
Dean  L.  Rounds,  '38   (M) 
George  S.  Rozwenc,  '38  (M) 
Wiliiom  F.  Welcker,  '38 
Henry  G.  Andersen,  '39 


Donald  Calo,  '39  (M) 
Herbert  S.  Howes,  '39  (M) 
Tracy  O.  Page,  '39 
George  J.  Spelman,  '39  (M) 
Courtney  Stetson,  Jr.,  '39 
Morrill  T.  Vittum,  '39 
Walter  T.  Wakefield,  '39 


Third  Row;     Manager  Hobart,  Rozwenc,  Page,  Harrison,  Green,  Coach  Rogers 

Second   Row:     Welcker,   Howes,  Spelman,    Irving,  Calo,  Andersen 

Front  Row:     Jacobson,  Fisher,  Co-Captain  Cutter,  Co-Captain   Hodder,  Thorndike,  Rounds 


[282} 


THE  SEASON 


Under  the  capable  leadership  of  Coach  Joseph  Rogers,  the  1937  swimming  team 
rounded  out  the  most  successful  season  in  the  natatorial  history  of  the  college.  Not 
only  did  the  team  succeed  in  winning  five  out  of  the  six  meets  on  its  schedule,  but 
it  set  a  series  of  records  that  made  it  famous  throughout  New  England.  The  co- 
captains,  Walter  J.  Hodder  and  James  F.  Cutter,  guided  the  team,  which  bowed  only 
to  Williams,  and  accumulated  an  array  of  honors  both  during  the  season  and  later 
in  the  New  England  Intercollegiate  competition. 

For  the  first  time  in  its  intercollegiate  existence,  the  team  defeated  the  power- 
ful Wesleyan  swimmers  and  in  its  opening  meet  with  them  it  not  only  succeeded  in 
piling  up  the  decisive  score  of  53  to  24,  but  it  struck  its  record-breaking  stride.  The 
medley  relay  team,  consisting  of  Rounds,  Hodder,  and  Howes,  established  a  new 
college  record  of  3:  15.  6;  Co-captain  Cutter  established  a  pool  and  college  record 
in  the  440  yard  free  style;  Rounds  set  up  a  new  pool  and  college  record  in  the  1 50  yard 
back  stroke;  Co-captain  Hodder  established  a  new  college  record  in  the  200  yard 
breast  stroke.    The  swimming  team  was  on  its  way. 

In  their  next  meet  the  Statesmen  utterly  defeated  the  alma  mater  of  Coach 
Rogers,  Worcester  Tech,  by  a  score  of  62  to  15.  The  outstanding  features  of  the 
meet  were  the  two  pool  records  created  by  Co-captain  Cutter  in  the  220  and  440  yard 
free  style.  The  following  meet  with  the  United  States  Coast  Guard  Academy  was 
as  easily  won,  the  score  being  52  to  25;  the  relay  team,  composed  of  Rounds,  Hodder, 
and  Fisher,  created  a  new  college  record;  Co-captain  Cutter  established  new  pool 
and  college  records  in  the  220  and  440  yard  free  style  events;  Rounds  wrote  up  a 
new  pool  and  college  record  in  the  back  stroke;  Co-captain  Hodder  set  up  still  another 
pool  and  college  record  in  the  breast  stroke. 

Against  Trinity,  the  State  natators  expected  a  hard  battle,  but  the  watery  hand 
of  fate  was  with  them;  although  both  teams  were  somewhat  deleted  by  the  sickness 
of  members,  the  champs  were  the  least  effected;  they  tallied  up  a  score  of  44  to  33. 
Only  two  records  were  broken  at  the  meet;  the  medley  relay  team  of  Rounds,  Hodder, 
and  Howes  set  up  a  college  record;  Co-captain  Hodder  established  a  new  pool  and 
college  record  in  the  200  yard  breast  stroke. 

The  one  break  in  an  otherwise  undefeated  season  came  when  the  Statesmen 
were  defeated  by  the  Williams  swimmers  after  a  hardy  battle  which  carried  the 
meet  to  the  final  relay.  The  opponents  showed  their  superiority  in  the  50  and  100 
yard  free  style  events,  and  the  Statesmen  could  not  overcome  them  in  the  final  400 
yard  relay;  the  final  score  was  45  to  32  in  favor  of  the  Williams  team.  Only  one 
record  was  written;  Co-captain  Hodder  established  a  new  pool  and  college  record 
in  the  Williams  pool. 

In  its  final  meet  with  Connecticut  State,  the  team  displayed  its  usual  auspicious 
success;  the  State  swimmers  triumphed  over  their  opponents  49  to  19.  The  medley 
relay  team  of  Rounds,  Hodder,  and  Howes,  established  a  pool  record;  Co-captain 
Cutter  established  a  pool  record  in  the  220  and  a  new  college  and  pool  record  in 
the  440  yard  free  style.  Co-captain  Walter  Hodder  established  a  New  England  Inter- 
collegiate record  in  the  200  yard  breast  stroke. 

In  the  New  England  Intercollegiate  swimming  competition  held  at  Bowdoin  this 
year,  the  Mass.  State  team  placed  third.  Co-captain,  James  F.  Cutter  was  awarded 
a  plaque  as  the  Outstanding  Competitor  of  the  Season.  Cutter  placed  first  in  the 
220  and  440  yard  free  style  events;  Co-captain  Hodder  placed  first  in  the  200  yard 
breast  stroke  and  in  the  300  yard  individual  medley;  the  medley  relay,  swimming 
Rounds,  Hodder  and  Fisher  took  a  second  place. 


[283] 


VARSITY  CROSS  COUNTRY 


SUMMARY  OF  THE  SEASON 

Score 
M.  S.  C.     Opponents 

Oct,     3     Springfield  at  M,  S,  C 15  40 

10     Northeastern   at    Boston 32  23 

"      17     M.  I,  T,  at  M.S.  C 25  29 

"     24    W.  P.  I.  at  M,  S,  C 15  49 

"      31     Amherst  at  M.  S.  C 30  25 

Nov.    9     New  England  Intercollegiate  at 
Boston.  Tenth  place. 

"      14     R.  P.  I.  at  Troy 32  25 

Low  score  wins. 

PERSONNEL 

Coach  LLEWELLYN  L.  DERBY 

Manager IRA  WHITNEY 


THE  TEAM 


Lawrence  K.  Harris,  '37    (M) 
Davis  W,  Beaumont,  '38   (M) 
Ralph  Ingram,  '38  (M) 
Melvin  T,  Little,  '38  (M) 


Mitchell  F.  NeJame,  '38  (M) 
Henry  J.  Sampson,  '37   (M) 
John  M.  Balcom,  '39 
Donald  S.  Mayo,  '39 


Laurence  K.  Pickard,  '39  (M) 
Irvin  D.  Reade,  Jr.,  '39  (M) 
Everett  Roberts,  '39 
Edward  F.  Stoddard,  '39 


Second  Row;     Coach  Derby,  Rubcrls,  Harris,  Mayo,  Stoddard,  Balcom,  Manager  Whitney 
Front  Row:     Beaumont,  Slater,  Reade,  Little,  NeJame,  Pickard 


[284] 


THE  SEASON 


III"  VMi'.ily  iro'.'i  country  leairi  bmh;  I'vcn  in  m/  'Iij<jI  tni:r\\  wiili   llii''i>  wiir. 
nii'l  iliM'i'  losses,     In  i'he  fourlh  arirl  final  home  slanH,  however,  wli'n  t\f  M'lii'', 
men  Icr.l  Id  /^iiiIh'I',!,  Ihey  broke  a  six-yeor  fiiml  of  no  lobijes  on  iIk'  lioin''  roiirse, 
Milchcll  I  l'-)'iiiii',  I  owcnce  Pickard  and  \^n\\h  liKjrrirn  were  oulsloii'linrj  Ihrough- 
otjf  the  season 

Opening  (jgrjinsl  jiniii'jlM'M  on  (>  tolni  ',  lln'  lintncrs  won  lli'ir  iwlMli  'on- 
^ccutive  homo  hfarl  IG  -JJ.  Pickurd,  NeJarne,  Ingram  oml  IVohim'/hI  Ii'-I  Ioi  lirsi 
|ilarc,  and  Slale  jiisl  missed  a  iinrferl  srore  of  fiflr.'en  wlmi  I  ilik  wos  iiom-I  out  (oi 

llllll    |.l0'<' 

(Jn    llii'    lollowiii'i    ','iliiidoy,    llie   '^kili.'SiiK.'n    fell    J]      V    Ij-'Ioh'  I  Ioi  lli^'osU'in, 

led  by   "I  Inwl- "    /nm|Kii''lli,   |iinior   national    lOOO-rneU't    r  Ii'iim|>ioii  Pi'hiid   ond 

NeJame  lool-    llni'l  oiul   (outlli  (ilnres  for  Stolr'^  rinrj   liir|ioiri,  hill''  ond  ';ri[n|(Son 
placed  sevcnili,  '-I'lhili  ond  imili,  n'sper  livly. 

Returning  home,  State  nosed  out  M  I  I  ,'(i-2'J.  Pickard  and  I  [••Uimr  |ilo"'d 
first  and  second,  Ingram  and  Little  tud  loi  si/lh,  and  r<eade  and  lic(iiiiii(;iii  liod  f(ji 
t'lilh  Against  W,  P.  I,,  State  had  a  perfect  score  of  15  -49  when  NeJame,  Pick- 
oid,  liKjram,  Little  and  Sampson  lied  for  first  and  Beoiimont  and  l^oadc  took  sixth 
and  seventh  places, 

l-ighfing  all  the  way,  Stnli'  losi  ilr  lir.i  liumu  mcul  in  lilteen  to  Amlicrsl 
2'j  30.  Pickard  of  State  won  iln-  \n' c  Imi  ihe  other  State  entries  finished  as 
follows:     NeJarne,  fifth;  Inrjrnm,  m.'IIi,  IiIHi',  eighth,  nrirl  Sampson,  tenth. 

At  the  New  liic|loiid  liileic.(j||egiales  '.;lal(j  plo(  ed  lenlli  onl  (j|  loiiil(jeii  leonr,, 
(ind  Pickard  plo<  ed  M-leenili  out  of  about  one  hundred  runners,  Ingram  placed 
Iwenty-sevenlli  In  ilie  IiihiI  meet  of  the  year  State  lost  to  R,  P,  I.  ?3-  -32.  Pickard 
and  Ingram  lied  loi  serond,  ond  I  lelome  ond  I  itde  hcd  for  ninlh 


|78'3] 


VARSITY  HOCKEY 


SUMMARY  OF  THE  SEASON 

Score 

M.  S.  C.  Opponents 

Jon.     6     Union  ot  M.  S,  C 3  2 

9     Army  at  West  Point 1  4 

"      11     M.  1.  T.  at  M,  S,  C 2  1 

14     Northeostern  at  Boston 2  4 

"      20     Springfield  at  Springfield 14  5 

"      23     Middlebury  at  Middlebury 5  7 

LORIN  BALL 
Coach 

PERSONNEL 

Coach  LORIN  BALL 

Captain ALLAN  INGALLS 

Manager  PAUL  H.  ROSBERRY 


Allan  S.  Ingalls,  '37  (M) 
David  P.  Rossiter,  '37  (M) 
William  V.  Johnson,  '37  (M) 
William  A.   Bullock,  '38    (M) 


THE  TEAM 

John  Lavrakas,  '38  (M) 
Norman  E.  Linden,  '38  (M) 
David  E.  Mildrom,  '38  (M) 


George  Niden,  '38   (M) 
Richard  W.  Towie,  '38    (M) 
Clifton  W.  Morey,  '39  (M) 
Donald  S.  Mayo,  '39  (M) 


Third  Row:     Coach  Ball,  Rosberry,  Prof.  Hicks 

Second   Row;     H.   Johnson,   Gove,   Moorehead,   Lavrakas,    Feinburg,  Bullock,  Morey 

Front  Row:     Moyo,  Niden,  TowIe,   Ingalls,  Rossiter,  W.  Johnson,  Linden 


[286] 


THE  SEASON 


The  varsity  hockey  team  broke  even  this  season  with  three  wins  and  three 
losses  in  a  schedule  on  which  three  contests  were  cancelled  due  to  lock  of  ice. 

Opening  immediately  after  recess  on  the  college  pond  against  Union,  the  States- 
men won  3 — 2  on  two  goals  by  Bill  Johnson  and  one  by  Towle.  Due  to  lack  of  practice. 
State  team  ploy  was  weak  but  the  nets  were  capably  guarded  by  Captain  Al  Ingolls 
and  sophomore  Cliff  Morey. 

Stacking  up  against  a  fast  team  at  West  Point  on  the  following  Saturday,  Don 
Mayo,  spare  wing,  made  the  only  State  tally  as  we  went  down  4 — 1.  On  Monday, 
however.  State  edged  out  a  strong  M.  I.  T.  team  2 — I.  Once  again  Bill  Johnson 
scored  both  tallies,  but  the  fine  defensive  work  of  Ingalls,  Rossiter  and  Towle  kept 
the  oft-shooting  Engineers  from  again  scoring. 

Traveling  to  Boston,  the  Statesmen  went  down  before  a  well  practiced  North- 
eastern sextet  4 — 2.  Niden  scored  unassisted  for  State  in  the  second  minute  of  play, 
but  the  Terriers  came  back  with  four  before  Towle  made  the  final  tally  of  the  contest. 

Playing  an  unscheduled  contest  against  Springfield  College's  newly  formed 
hockey  team,  the  Statesmen  had  a  scoring  day  winning  easily  14 — 5.  In  the  last 
game  of  the  season  the  Statesmen  ran  into  hard  luck,  losing  a  close  decision  to 
Middlebury  7 — 5.  The  Maroon  was  without  the  services  of  Dave  Ro.ssiter.  Johnson 
was  high  scorer  with  two  goals  and  two  assists. 


PHYSICAL  EDUCATION  BUILDING 


[287} 


LLEWELLYN  L.  DERBY 
Coach 


Co-Captains 
Manager 


VARSITY  SPRING  TRACK  OF  1936 
SUMMARY  OF  THE  SEASON 

M.S.C.  Opponents 

221/3 

48 
51  1/2 

83  1/2 

Eastern  Intercollegiate  Meet.  Fifth  place;  14  1/3  points. 
New  England  Intercollegiate  Meet.  Tied  14th  place;  3/11 
points. 

PERSONNEL 

WILLARD  R.  GILLETTE 

RICHARD  T.  KENNETT 
IRA  WHITNEY 


Union 

103  2/3 

Trinity 

78 

Tufts 

61  1/2 

W.  P.  1. 

52 

Connecti 

cut  State 

51  1/2 

Roger  E.  Allen,  '36 
Philip  B.  Miner,  '36 
Howard  C.  Porker,  '36 
John  Sturtevant,  '36 
Arthur  C.  Avery,  '37 
Alfred  W.  Basamania,  '37 
Robert  E.  Couhig,  '37 
James  Dobby,  '37 
Norman  W.  Grant,  '37 
Guy  M.  Gray,  Jr.,  '37 


THE  TEAM 

Wendell  E.  Lapham,  '37 
William  A.  Leighton,  Jr.,  '37 
Edward  J.  Thacker,  '37 
Donald  F.  Thurlow,  '37 
Frederick  W.  Whittemore,  '37 
Philip  D.  Layton,  '37 
Crawford  W.  Adams,  '38 
Robert  S.  Feinburg,  '38 
George  H.  Guenard,  '38 
Philip  H.  Haskins,  '38 


Ralph  Ingram,  '38 
Melvin  T.  Little,  '38 
Donald  S.  McGowan,  ' 
Mitchell  F.  NeJame,  ' 
William  C.  Riley,  '38 
William  E.  Roberge,  ' 
Frederick  J.  Sievers,  ' 
Frank  A.  Slesinski,  '3. 
George  E.  O'Brien,  '3E 
Donald  L.  Silverman, 


>t.   ^r  '^f^\ 


Fourth  Row:     NeJome,  Little,  Coach  Derby,  Sievers,  McGowan 

Third  Row:     Feinburg,  Silverman,  Haskins,  Alcorn,  Guenard 

Second    Row;     Dobby,    Thacker,    Whittemore,    Couhig,    Lapham,  Leighton 

Front  Row;     Murphy,  Greenwood,  Co-Copt.  Kennett,  Co-Copt.  Gillette,  Parker,  Allen 


{288} 


VARSITY  WINTER  TRACK 


SUMMARY  OF  THE   SEASON 

Score 
M.  S.  C.     Opponents 

Jan.  30     K.  of  C.  Meet  at  Boston Third  Place 

Feb.  13     B.  A.  A.  Meet  at  Boston Third  Place 

"     18    Connecticut  State  at  M.  S.  C 36  45 

"     27    Tufts  and  W.  P.  I.  at  M.  S.  C 47  1/2    40   22  1/2 

Mar.  13    Wesleyan  at  Middletown 42  5/12      70  7/12 


PERSONNEL 

Captain EDWARD  J.  THACKER 

Manager  PHILIP  SCHIFF 


Edward  J.  Thacker,  '37  (M) 
Robert  E.  Couhig,  '37 
James  Dobby,  '37  (M) 
Guy  M.  Gray,  Jr.,  '37 
Elmer  W.  Hollowell,  '37 
Wendell  E.  Lapham,  '37  (M) 
William  A.  Leighton,  Jr.,  '37 
George  E.  O'Brien,  '37 
Frederick  W.  Whittemore,  '37 
Arthur  C.  Avery,  '38 


THE  TEAM 

Walter  A.  Green,  '38  (M) 
Robert  S.  Feinburg,  '38  (M) 
George  H.  Guenord,  '38   (M) 
Ralph  Ingram,  '38 
Melvin  T.  Little,  '38 
Donald  S.  McGowan,  '38 
Mitchell  F.  NeJame,  '38 
William  C.  Riley,  '38 
William  E.   Roberge,  '38 
Frederick  J.  Sievers,  '38 


Richard  W.  Towie,  '38 
Floyd  W.  Townsley,  '38 
Alexander  Alexion,   '39 
Robert  E,  Coin,  '39 
Charles  W.  Griffin,  '39 
Frank  C.  Healy,  '39 
Stephen  M.  Jablonski,  '39 
Clifton  W.  Morey,  '39 
John  J.  Murphy,  '39 
Laurence  K.  Pickard,  '39 


Fourth  Row:     Manager  Shiff,  Coach  Derby 

Third  Row;     Healy,  Jablonski,  Feinburg,  Sievers,   Ingram,   Roberge,  TowIe,  Townsley 
Second  Row:     Little,  Griffin,  Riley,  Green,  Pickard,  NeJame,  Guenard,  Leighton,  Coin 
Front  Row:     Hollowell,  Couhig,  Lapham,  Captain  Thacker,  O'Brien,  Avery,  Dobby 


[289] 


VARSITY  BASEBALL 


SUMMARY  OF  THE  SEASON 

Score 
M.  S.  C.     Opponents 

April   18     Williams  at  Williamstown Cancelled 

"      20     Connecticut  State  at  Storrs 5  13 

"      23     Norwich  at  M,  S.  C 3  6 

"      25     Connecticut  State  at  M.  S.  C 5  12 

"      29     Holy  Cross  at  Worcester 0  16 

May    2     Worcester  Tech  at  M.  S.  C 13  1 

"       6    Trinity  ot  Hartford 2  4 

"       9     Wesleyan  at  Middletown 1  1 

13     Amherst  at  Amherst 8  9 

"      16     Tufts  at  Medford 3  14 

"      23     University  of  N.  H,  at  M.  S.  C.       7  10 

"      27     Springfield  at  M.  S.  C 4  7 

"      30     Union  at  Schenectady 6  5 

June     6     Amherst  at  M.  S.  C 3  8 


PERSONNEL 

Captain  EDWARD  J.  SOULLIERE,  36 

Manager HENRY  F.  KOCH,  '36 

Coach  ELBERT  F.  CARAWAY 

THE  TEAM 

Edward  J.  Soulliere,  '36  (M)             Robert  B.  Peckom,  '37   (M)  William  Johnson,  '37 

Daniel  A,  Bolovich,  '36  (M)             Norman  L,  Sheffield.  '37   (M)  Norman  Linden,  '38 

Randolph  C.  Barrows,  '36  (M)         Richard  W.  Towie,  38  (M)  Herbert  Brown,  '38 

Harold  A.  Midgley,  '36  (M)             Norman  P.  Bloke,  '38   (M)  Samuel  Townsley,  '38 

Richard  T.  Peckhom,  '36  (M)           Carl  J.  Bokino,  '38  (M)  Charles  Collins,  '38 

Adolph  E.  Tikofski,   '36   (M)            John  G,  Bush,  '38  (M)  Henry  Couper,  '38 

Isadore  Barr,  '37   (M)                       John  Lovrokas,  '38   (M)  Russell   Hauck,  '38 

Allan  S.  Ingalls,  '37  (M)                   Robert  S.  Lyons,  '38   (M)  Ralph   Ingram,  '38 
Frederick  C.  Riel,  '38  (M) 


Fourth  Row      Fred  Riel,  TowIe 

Third  Row:     Bush,  Hauck,  Silverman,  Bloke,  Lyons,  Townsley,   Brown 

Second  Row:     Manager  Koch,  Barr,  Davis,  Mildram,  Bokino,  Lovrokas,  Sheffield,  Coach  Corowoy 

Front  Row:     Tikofski,  Richard  Peckhom,  Balavich,  Soulliere,  Midgley,  Robert  Peckhom,  Ingalls 


[290] 


THE  SEASON 


The  1936  baseball  team  entered  its  fourteen-game  schedule  under  a  new  coach, 
Eb  Caraway,  who  had  but  recently  arrived  to  take  the  place  of  Mel  Taube,  the  for- 
mer coach.  The  team  spent  a  rather  troublous  season,  but  though  its  prowess  was 
vacillating,  and  its  success  but  intermittent,  it  showed  an  outstanding  spirit,  a  per- 
sistance  that  atoned  -for  its  failures. 

The  Statesmen  were  to  open  their  schedule  with  an  off-campus  game  at  Wil- 
liamstown,  but  their  game  with  the  Williams'  players  was  "rained  out"  as  Coach 
Caraway  put  it.  So  with  a  plentiful  battery  and  c  group  of  veteran  infielders,  they 
opened  their  first  actual  game  against  Connecticut  State.  It  was  an  inauspicious 
beginning;  their  opponents  defeated  them,  after  a  hard  battle,  by  the  score  of  13  to 
4.  The  feature  of  the  gome  for  the  team  was  Ed  Soulliere's  home  run  in  the  first 
few  innings  of  the  game. 

Next  on  their  list  of  games  came  three  within  a  week;  it  was  a  heavy  order  for 
the  team  to  stand  against.  In  the  first  game  against  Norwich,  held  at  Alumni 
Field,  the  team  scored  their  first  victory  and  showed  for  the  first  time  its  possibilities, 
winning  the  game  by  a  score  of  6  to  3.  But  in  the  games  which  followed,  it  was  to 
relapse  again  to  defeat;  in  its  return  game  with  Connecticut  State  it  suffered  de- 
feat to  the  tune  of  12  to  5  because  of  errors  and  poor  field  work.  In  the  third  game 
of  the  week  the  Statesmen  went  to  Worcester  to  meet  Holy  Cross.  Unexpectedly,  the 
team  agreed  to  elect  a  captain  before  making  the  trip;  at  a  meeting  of  the 
executive  committee  of  the  athletic  board,  Ed  Soulliere,  left  fielder,  was  elected  by  a 
special  ballot  to  fill  the  captaincy  which  had  purposely  been  left  vacant  on  the 
preceding  spnng.  In  the  game  with  Holy  Cross  the  team  played  good  ball,  but  when 
they  clamped  down  on  their  opponents  in  the  fifth  inning  it  was  too  late  to  save  the 
game  and  they  were  defeated  by  a  score  of  16  to  0. 

In  a  burst  of  recovery,  the  team  triumphed  over  the  Worcester  Tech  players 
with  a  score  of  13  to  I;  the  Statesmen  tightened  up  on  their  fielding  and  showed 
exceptional  batting  power  in  this  game.  Against  Trinity  the  players  battled  stal- 
wortly,  but  were  set  back  with  a  score  of  4  to  2.  Again  at  Wesleyan  the  team 
showed  its  fight;  only  rain,  which  came  on  in  the  ninth  inning,  prevented  the  States- 
men from  breaking  the  tie  score  of  1   to  1 . 

In  its  first  contest  with  Amherst,  the  team  experienced  its  most  severe  disap- 
pointment of  the  season;  it  lead  the  neighbonng  team  with  a  score  of  8  to  7,  until 
the  Amherst  boys  put  on  a  late  revival  and  batted  up  the  score  two  more  points  in 
their  favor  to  bring  the  final  tally  9  to  8  in  favor  of  Amherst.  With  their  morale 
broken,  the  players  went  to  meet  Tufts  and  be  defeated  by  the  score  of  14  to  3. 
The  team  went  on  to  fight  futilely  against  the  University  of  New  Hampshire  and  be 
defeated  10  to  7;  again  it  met  defeat  at  Springfield  with  a  score  of  7  to  4.  Before 
going  to  its  last  game,  it  revived  and  won  a  game  against  Union  College,  turning 
up  a  score  of  6  to  5.  In  the  final  game  of  the  season  the  Statesmen  fought  valiantly 
but  unsuccessfully  against  the  superior  pitching  and  playing  of  the  Amherst  team; 
the  score  was  8  to  3. 


[291] 


THE  WOMEN'S  RIFLE  TEAM 


Manager  -. 

Alma  Boyden,  '37 
Justine  Marten,  '37 
Emily   Healey,  '37 
Frances  Merrill,  '39 


Elizabeth  Howe, 


...  MARY  BREINIG 
Joan  Sanella,  '39 
Dorothy  Rourke,  '40 
Pnscilla  Archibald,  '40 
Roma  Levy,  '40 


Matches  were  fired  with  the  following  colleges: 
Indiana  University 
Carnegie  Institute  of  Technology 
Kansas  State  College 
Pennsylvania  State  College 
University  of  Washington 
University  of  Kansas 
University  of  California 
University  of  Nevada 
University  of  Wichita 
Drexel   Institute 
Rhode  Island  State  College 

THE  WOMEN'S  ATHLETIC  ASSOCIATION 


The  Women's  Athletic  Association  was  founded  on  the  campus  early  in  the 
spring  of  1925,  for  the  purpose  of  providing  athletic.recreation  -for  the  women  students. 
Its  function  is  to  regulate  the  women's  athletic  activities;  and  it  provides  oppor- 
tunities for  all,  as  all  the  women  students  automatically  become  members.  The 
Association  is  divided  into  clubs,  one  for  each  sport;  with  the  clubs  the  contests 
are  regulated  and  awards  made.  The  Women's  Athletic  Association  awards  keys 
to  the  girls  outstanding  in  the  separate  sports.  The  Executive  Committee  of  the 
Association  is  made  up  of  the  managers  of  the  different  clubs,  who  cooperate  in  pre- 
senting an  attractive  recreation  program  to  the  students. 


Third  Row:     Misses  Faliey,   Breinig,  Connor,  Whitmore,   Rothbone,  Julian 
Second   Row:     Misses  Nelson,  McMohon,  Gleoson,   Parks,   Jenkins 


[292] 


INTRAMURAL  ATHLETIC  ACTIVITIES 


Intramural  activities  were  recently  introduced  on  the  campus  under  the  leader- 
ship of  Mr.  Sidney  Kouffmon,  of  the  Physical  Education  department.  The  purpose 
of  the  activities  is  to  help  all  students  acquire  favorable  attitudes  toward  recrea- 
tional sports,  to  educate  the  students  concerning  the  outcomes  of  participation  in 
the  different  types  erf  sports  so  that  they  may  select  wisely  and  according  to  their 
needs,  and  to  encourage  all  students  to  acquire  regular  habits  of  athletic  recreation. 
As  only  c  small  percentage  of  the  students  constitutes  the  varsity  squad  in  any  one 
sport,  the  opportunity  for  the  less  skilled  student  to  get  into  competitive  athletics  can 
only  be  mode  possible  through  intramural  athletics.  The  intramural  athletics  ore 
also  of  social  importance;  they  bring  together,  in  a  friendly  spirit  of  rivalry,  students 
■from  all  branches  of  the  college.  Participation  in  intramurals  gives  a  better  appre- 
ciation of  varsity  contests  and  awakens  interest  in  them.  The  program  of  intra- 
murals is  presented  for  the  purpose  of  supplying  every  pupil  with  enjoyable  physical 
recreation.  No  man  is  fully  educated  who  has  not  learned  to  play,  to  compete,  to 
keep  himself  physically  healthy.  It  is  the  purpose  of  intramural  athletics  to  help 
teach  this  important  division  of  education. 

In  interfraternity  sports  all  teams  are  placed  in  divisions  which  play  round 
robin  schedules.  All  active  members  and  pledges  with  proper  standings  ore  eligible 
for  competition  with  the  exception  of  varsity  players.  Leadership  in  the  different 
sports  brings  cumulative  points  to  a  fraternity;  to  the  fraternity  which  accumu- 
lates the  greatest  number  of  points,  certain  points  are  given  towards  the  interfra- 
ternity cup.  But  the  number  of  men  which  a  fraternity  has  placed  on  the  various 
athletic  teams  also  enters  into  this  scoring. 

For  the  year  1935-1936,  Kappa  Sigma  won  the  interfraternity  athletic  compe- 
tition by  acquiring  430  points,  and  winning  two  first  places.  Alpha  Epsilon  Pi 
scored  a  close  second  by  accumulating  414  points;  the  next  five  •fraternities  were 
separated  by  a  mere  thirty  points.  Competition  included  meets  in  touch  football, 
soccer,  basketball,  volley  ball  and  baseball.  The  champion  in  touch  football  was 
Alpha  Epsilon  Pi  which  scored  a  total  of  108  points,  30  points  more  than  any  other 
fraternity.  Kappa  Sigma  took  the  honors  in  soccer,  leading  the  field  by  more  than 
30  points,  and  it  also  won  the  volley  ball  contest  by  a  large  margin.  Lambda  Chi 
Alpha  won  the  basketball  tourney  by  a  large  lead.  Theta  Chi  won  the  baseball 
championship  by  a  margin  of  50  points,  and  Sigma  Phi  Epsilon  contributed  the 
largest  number  of  varsity  men. 

Towards  the  winning  of  1936-1937  athletic  supremacy,  Sigma  Phi  Epsilon  has 
already  won  the  basketball  tourney  with  a  majority  of  95  points,  while  Kappa  Sigma 
has  triumphed  in  the  soccer -finals,  and  Theta  Chi  is  victorious  in  the  touch  football 
finals,  both  winning  by  an  accumulation  of  120  points. 


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LABORER— POST-MORTEM 


Not  the  black  earth  that  pressed, 

but  the  silence  pressing  in 

through  the  white  pine  sides; 

a  coffin 

is  such  a  narrow  world.   .    . 

death 

is  such  a  short  word.   .    . 

he  braced 
and  went  through 
from  the  black  earth, 
from  the  silence 
to  a  field  of  flowers, 
ebony,  red,  and  the  purple 
of  sunrise,  and  there  were  angels; 


this,  said  the  angel, 
is  a  flower,  observe  it, 
the  stamens  open  to  life, 
the  thin  orongelust  of  the  petals, 
the  black  earth  feeding 

the  hungry  stalk; 

beauty  that  was  never 

in  my  world,  he  said,  I  remember 

only  the  machines 

grinding  their  metalsong 

into  me  ....  he  sighed; 

tomorrow,  said  the  angel, 
we  shall  study 
grass. 

By:   SIDNEY  ROSEN,  1939. 


HORTICULTURE  SHOW 


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