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The 1934 INDEX
IINDE
Published
19 3 4
B y Th ^J^
Class Of
(955
Massachuseffs
SfateCollege
DANIEL J. FOLEY
Editor-in-chief
RALPH H. GRANGER
Business Manager
FRANK PRENTICE RAND
Literary Advisor
LAWRENCE S. DICKINSON
Financial Advisor
1934 INDEX BOARD
Editor-in-chief
Business Manager
Secretary
Statistics Department
George A. Hartwell, Editor
Bernard J. Doyle
William A. Scott
Elizabeth K. Harrington
Ruth A. Avery
James J. Valentine
Art Department
E. Lawrence Packard, Editor
Edward D. Masters
. Daniel J. Foley
Ralph H. Granger
. Bernice G. Schubert
Literary Department
Marion E. Smith, Editor
R. Harlow Hermanson
Frederick N. Andrews
Marie E. Currier
Mildred M. Hovey
Theodore M. Leary
Photographic Department
Emil J. Tramposch, Editor
Wendell R. Hovey
Elizabeth C. Perry
BUSINESS BOARD
Sales Manager
Assistant
Circulation Manager
Arthur S. Levine
. Silas Little, Jr.
Louis \. Winokur
EMIL J. TRAMPOSCH
Photographic Editor
MARION E. SMITH
Literary Editor
LAWRENCE PACKARD
Art Editor
ARTHUR S. LEVINE
Sales Manager
LOUIS I. WINOKUR
Circulation Manager
FOREWORD
Since the sixty-fourth issue of the Index was published, a new policy
has been introduced by our Academic Acitivities Board. This group has
decided that the INDEX should feature the Seniors rather than the Juniors,
as has been the custom in the past. As a result, the members of the class of
1934 are featured in two successive yearbooks. Therefore, in order to avoid
the repetition of the individual photographs used last year, group pictures
of the students in the various departments of the college have been used.
An effort has been made to record the events of the college year by
picture and pen, in order to depict clearly the activities of our college life,
and to present a faithful account of "another yesterday" at Massachusetts
State College.
We the Class of 1934
Dedicate our Index to
Hugh Pof-t-er Baker
eleventh president of
Massachusetts State College
Hugh Potter Baker
THOSE really familiar with the development of the Massachusetts State
College, up to the period of President Thatcher's resignation, were cogni-
zant of the fact that it had entered a new era. With the marked increase in
enrollment, new demands for expansion of curriculum and facilities would be
made. These would have to be met fearlessly, yet wisely. This could only be
done with a courageous and safe leader whom the students, the faculty, the
alumni, the trustees, and the interested public could follow with confidence.
Hugh Potter Baker was selected and began his administration in February
1933. His ability as an executive met the first tests acceptably. He studied
the college — its history, curriculum, faculty, and students, and then an-
nounced a sane policy from which neither radical nor conservative could
dissent. "Our real objective at Massachusetts State is to continue the growth
of a fine, clean, strong college where Massachusetts boys and girls can live
a wholesome life in preparation for full and effective living. In concentrating
on this objective we shall strive for a program in which culture shall be the
foundation and vocational instruction the super-structure. In other words,
we conceive it to be our opportunity and our obligation to graduate each year
a few well educated people who shall be prepared to go out into life to live
reasonably satisfactory and useful lives."
Though we are privileged to know Dr. Baker as an executive primarily,
it is as an authority in the field of Forestry that he first attained recognition.
Born in St. Croix Falls, Wisconsin, paternal descendant of Capt. Remember
Baker of the "Green Mountain Boys" of Vermont, he early developed a fond-
ness for the out-of-doors which quite naturally influenced him toward his
first career — forestry. After receiving his Bachelor's degree at Michigan
State College in 1901, and in 1904 his Master of Forestry from Yale Uni-
versity, he became Professor of Forestry at Iowa State College. From 1907-
1912 he held a similar professorship at Pennsylvania State College. To this
work he added ten years of practical experience as a member of the United
States Forestry Service. Upon receiving the degree of Doctor of Economics
at the University of Municb in 1910, he became Dean and Professor of
Silviculture of the New York State College of Forestry at Syracuse. He
resigned this position in 1920 to begin a career in business as Executive
Secretary of the American Paper and Pulp Association. Eight years later we
find him in the employ of the United States Chamber of Commerce. In 1929
he returned to the Deanship of the Forestry School at Syracuse University
where he remained until he assumed the Presidency of Massachusetts State
College.
Although President Baker has served the college only one year, his first
annual report to the trustees shows a splendid record of achievement. Funds
have been secured for much needed physical improvements on the campus
from the C. W. A. and the P. W. A. as well for the building of a new library
and men's dormitory. Firmly believing that the college and its aims should
be better understoodby the citizens of the state, he inaugurated a publicity
program which should achieve this end. Through frequent addresses, to
groups, radio talks, and personal correspondence, he has clarified the work
and opportunities of the college. Another acute need was met when he
organized a placement service for the graduates and needy students of the
college. These accomplishments were the products of his unselfish devotion
to and genuine faith in the growth of the college. -
In Dr. Baker we find intimately blended the attributes of administrator
and practical 'man of affairs. He knows, seemingly instinctively, what consti-
tutes well organized and effective service and makes a genuine effort to
recognize it. His many co-workers bear eloquent testimony to his marked
ability to analyze difficult situations and obtain a satisfactory solution.
Fortunately the man is not lost In the official. Both he and Mrs. Baker
are most cordial and friendly. He takes opportunity to associate with his
student body, his faculty, and his friends, and the numerous invitations to
his home are eagerly accepted by those who receive them. His hearty manner
of greeting, his sturdy common sense, his high standards of integrity are
apparent to all who know him. Moreover all these testify to his long hours
at his desk, to his conscientious devotion to his work, and to his success
as President.
WILLIAM L. MACHMER
TABLf OF CONTENTS
Board of Editors .......... 4
Foreword
6
Dedication
7
Calendar
11
Campus Views
12
Trustees
20
Administration
21
Tribute To Roscoe W. Thatcher
22
Tribute To Charles H. Patterson
24
The Honor Council .
28
Faculty . . .
29
Associate Alumni
41
Another Yesterday .
43
Poem of The Year 1932-33
44
Graduate School
45
Seniors
47
Tribute to Joseph Lojko .
58
Juniors
83
Snapshots
102
Sophomores
103
Poem — A Year Goes By .
120
Freshmen
121
Poem Of The Year 1933-34
128
Fraternities
129
Sororities
157
Campus Activities .
163
Social Activities
193
Snapshots
198
Athletics
199
Snapshots
220
Military
221
Snapshots
225
Inauguration Of Hugh P. Baker
227
Poem — Grates
228
Senior Index .
229
Calendar
1933
September 13-16, Wednesday-Saturday
September 1 8, Monday
September 20, Wednesday .
October 1 2, Thursday .
November 1 1 , Saturday
. Entrance Examinations
First semester begins for Freshmen
First semester begins for Upper Classmen
Holiday, Columbus Day
Holiday, Armistice Day
November 29-December 4, Wednesday 12,30M Monday 8.00 A. M. Thanksgiving Recess
December 20-January 2, Wednesday 12. BOM Tuesday 8.00 A. M. Christmas Recess
1934
February 3, Saturday . . . .
February 5, Monday 8.00 A. M. .
February 22, Thursday
March 31 -April 9, Saturday 1 2.30M-Monday
April 19, Thursday ....
May 30, Wednesday ....
June 1-4, Friday-Monday
June 14-16, Thursday-Saturday
July 2-31, 1934
September 12-15, Wednesday-Saturday
September 17, Monday
September 1 9, Wednesday .
October 12, Friday ....
November 1 2, Monday
8.00
First semester ends
Second semester begins
Holiday, Washington's Birthday
A. M. Easter Recess
. Holiday, Patriot's Day
Holiday, Memorial Day
Commencement
Entrance Examinations
Summer School
Entrance Examinations
First semester begins for Freshmen
First semester begins for Upper Classmen
Holiday, Columbus Day
Holiday, Observance of Armistice Day
November 28-December 3, Wednesday 1 2.00M-Monday, 8.00 A. M. Thanksgiving Recess
December 19-January 2, Wednesday 1 2.00M-Wednesday, 8.00 A. M. Christmas Recess
1935
February 2, Saturday, 12.00M ....
February 6, Wednesday, 8.00 A. M.
February 22, Friday ......
March 30-April 8, Saturday 1 2.00M-Monday, 8.00 A. M
April 19, Friday .......
May 30, Thursday ......
June 7-1 0, Friday-Monday .....
First semester ends
Second semester begins
Holiday, Washington's Birthday
Spring Recess
. Holiday, Patriot's Day
Holiday, Memorial Day
. Commencement
Trustees of Massachusetts State College
Members Ex-Officio
His Excellency Governor Joseph B. Ely of Boston
Hugh P. Baker
Payson Smith ......
Arthur W. Gilbert
. President of the Board of Trustees
President of the College
. State Commissioner of Education
State Commissioner of Agriculture
Officers of the Trustees
His Excellency Governor Joseph B. Ely of Boston
George H. Ellis of West Newton
Robert D. Hawley of Amherst
Fred C. Kenney of Amherst ....
Frank Gerrett of Greenfield ....
President
Vice-President
Secretary
Treasurer
Auditor
Members of the Trustees
To 1 934
Hon. George H. Ellis, 1245 Commonwealth Ave., West Newton, Mass.
Mr. Philip F. Whitmore, Sunderland, Mass.
To 1935
Mr. John Chandler, Sterling Junction, Mass.
Mr. Fred D. Griggs, 35 Eton Street, Springfield, Mass.
To 1936
Mr. Nathaniel I. Bowditch, Framingham, Mass.
Mr. Howard S. Russell, 657 Main Street, Waltham, Mass.
To 1937
Mr. James F. Bacon, 77 Franklin Street, Boston, Mass.
Mrs. Joseph S. Leach, 238 School Street, Walpole, Mass.
To 1938
Mr. Harold L. Frost, 20 Mill Street, Arlington, Mass.
Hon. Frank Gerrett, Greenfield, Mass.
To 1939
Mr, David J. Malcolm, Charlemont, Mass.
Mr. Charles H, Preston, Hathorne, Mass,
To 1940
Dr. Davis R. Dewey, Dept. of Economics, M. I. T., Cambridge, Mass.
Dr. John F. Gannon, 43 East Street, Pittsfield, Mass.
Officers of Adminisfration
Hugh Potter Baker, D. Oec, President
Born 1878; B. S. Mich. State College 1901; M. F. Yale University 1904; D. Oec.
University of Munich, 1910. For 10 years with the U. S. Forest Service examining public
lands for forest reserves in Central Ida., Wye, Neb.; field studies in New Mexico,
Washington, Oregon. Professor of forestry, Iowa State College, 1904-07; Pennsylvania
State College 1907-12; Dean and Professor of silviculture, N. Y. State College of Forestry,
1912-20; Executive Secretary Am. Paper and Pulp Assn. 1920-28; Manager, Trade Assn.
Dept., Chamber of Commerce of U. S. 1928-30; Dean, N. Y. State College of Forestry,
Syracuse, 1930-33. Fellow A. A. A. S., Royal Geog. Soc. (London), Member, Am. Geog.
Soc, Soc. Am. Foresters, Deutschen Dendrologischen Gesellschaft, Soc. Colonial Wars,
S. A. R., Loyal Legion, Mason. Member 2d R. O. T. C, Ft. Sheridan, III. Aug-Nov. 1917;
with 46th Inf. and member Gen. Staff 1917-19; Maj. O. R. C. Clubs; Yale (New York),
Cosmos (Washington), University (Syracuse). 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. Sievers, 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.' Instructor in Soils, University of Wisconsin, 1909-12. Agronomist, Milwaukee
County School of Agriculture and Domestic Science, 1912-13. Superintendent, 1912-17.
Professor of Soils, State College of Washington, 1917-28. Member of American Society
of Agronomy, American Association of University Professors, Irrigation Institute; Inter-
national Farm Congress, Fellow of American Association for the Advancement of Science.
Theta Chi, Sigma Xi, Alpha Zeta, Phi Kappa Phi.
Roland H. Verbeck, B. S., Director of Short Courses
Born 1886. B. S., M. S. C, 1908. Principal Petersham (Mass.) Agricultural High
School, 1908-10. Headmaster Parsonfield (Maine) Seminary, 1910-16. First Lieutenant,
Air Service, Commanding 281st Aero Squadron, American Expeditionary Forces, 1917-19.
Service in France, 1918-19. Director, New York State School of Agriculture at St. Lawrence
University, Canton, N. Y., 1919-24. Director of Short Courses, M. S. C, 1924-. National
Education Association, Harvard Teachers 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, 1905-07,
Farmer, 1908-15. County Agricultural Agent, 1915-20. Director, Division Markets, Mass-
achusetts Department of Agriculture, 1920-26. Director, Massachusetts Extension Service,
M. S. C, 1926-. President, Mass. Fruit Growers Association, 1919-21. President, National
Association of State Marketing Officials, 1926. President, New England Research Council
on Marketing and Food Supplies, 1923-28. Member, Association of Land Grant Colleges.
Phi Kappa Phi, Phi Sigma Kappa.
Robert D. Hawley, B. S., Secretary of the College
Born 1 895; B. S. ,M. S. C, 1 920 as of 1918; Supervisor of Extension Courses, M. S. C,
1920-21, 1922-24, Extension Editor 1925-26; Secretary of the College 1926-. U. S. Army
1917-19, Second Lieutenant Infantry, A. E. F., 1918-19. Adelphia, Phi Sigma Kappa.
Basil B. Wood, A. B., Librarian
Born 1881; A. B., Brown, 1905. Assistant in John Crerar Science Library, Chicago;
Reference librarian. Pittsfield and Springfield Libraries, Mass. Assistant in three camp
libraries during the war. Librarian, public library, Westerly, R. \. Delta Epsilon, 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.
INMEMORIAM
Roscoe Wilfred Thatcher
1872-1933
Roscoe Wilfred Thatcher
SCIENTIST, educator, public servant, friend; how best can we record the
loss of him whose life was so full of rich experiences and whose contribu-
tions to society encompassed such broad fields? It was only for six short
years, the last six of his life, that he was associatecTwith our College, and yet
he has left a lasting impression upon the institution and a cherished memory
in the hearts of those students, alumni and staff who knew him as 'Prexy'.
When Dr. Thatcher came to this College in 1927 as its tenth president,
he was nationally recognized as a scientist. His achievements in the field of
chemical and agronomic research had been outstanding and he was leaving
the Directorship of one of the country's leading research organizations.
Scientific research was always his beloved vocation to which he returned
with joy when ill health made necessary the termination of his administrative
duties.
Besides this scientific background, he brought to the presidency a thorough
knowledge of the problems of education gained through years of experience
as teacher, investigator, and administrator in three other Land-Grant Colleges.
But mqre important still of all the fine qualities of the man were his broad
vision, his kindliness, and his optimistic philosophy of life, which gave charac-
ter and grace to his administration.
He was firm believer in the American system of public education from
the primary school through college, and he frequently referred to the full
program as the sixteen grades of the public school system. His own words
were, "If there is any one thing that history teaches more clearly than any
other, it is that general education of all the people is the best safeguard for
the welfare of any country. Aristocracy in education is as dangerous to public
welfare as is any other kind of aristocracy."
He was deeply religious and found no difficulty in reconciling science
and religion. "Truths," he said, "cannot conflict. I believe it is more profit-
able to find harmony than discord between the truths of religion and the
truths of science." He had faith in the ultimate supremacy of good, and,
while he experienced much sorrow and discouragement in life, he attained
an enviable happiness through his optimistic viewpoint.
It was fitting that his passing should be from the midst of his work in
his laboratory. The evening before, he had attended a faculty party with the
usual delight which came to him in the association with his friends. The
transition was sudden and unheralded, yet it may well be suspected that he
himself would have had it so. His loved ones and his friends were prostrate.
From all over the nation came messages of condolence and grief. They
referred to his great contributions to science, to the important new research
project in which he was engaged, and they spoke unfailingly of his cherished
friendship.
He did his work well and in his record our College may well be proud.
Soon there will stand on the campus a beautiful new men's dormitory which
for generations to come will be a memorial of our beloved leader, for the
inscription which it will bear is "Thatcher Hall."
ROBERT D. HAWLEY
23
IN MEMORIAM
Charles Henry Patterson
1863-1933
IN MEMORIAM
Charles Henry Patterson
In that noble elegy, The Adonais, written in memory of the dead Keats,
the poet Shelley sings:
"Life, like a dome of many-coloured glass.
Stains the white radiance of Eternity,
Until Death tramples it to fragments. — . . ."
For most of us, it is only in such shattering moments that we glimpse at all
the mystery of existence, a glimpse, too, so fleeting, so evanescent that with
its passing we are but the more sorely puzzled and can only murmur:
"We are such stuff
As dreams are made on, and our little life
Is rounded with a sleep."
Shakespeare, The Tempest, Act IV Sc. 1 .
Now, we are confronting such a moment. A little less than a month and
a half ago we were all stunned by the passing of Charles Henry Patterson,
our colleague, our leader, our friend. But a few weeks ago and he was with
us — able, prudent, genial, human; now we can only bring "frail tokens of
love, and pay this inadequate tribute." Vergil, Book VI. This afternoon it is
my purpose merely to try to put into words as truly as I can, a few of the
things which I feel very deeply and very sincerely about my friend and your
friend.
No one who ever knew Charles Patterson at all, could help being im-
pressed with his immense love for literature, especially for our own English
literature in which he was such a master. It was this great love and respect
for the noble heritage of so many centuries of spiritual and literary fruitage
in our English race, that led him to expect and demand nothing less than the
best from every student, as so many of you can attest. The patience and the
skill which he brought to bear in conducting and building up to its present
state of abounding excellence the sophomore survey course in English litera-
ture — the largest and one of the most important fundamental courses given
in our curriculum — will ever be a monument to his scholarship, his teaching
skill, his fine absorption in those humane qualities that distinguish the field
of letters, and a noble criterion in teaching which his successor will find it
difficult, indeed, to emulate. How often in talking with me about this course
did his enthusiasm for the great Elizabethan and Caroline masters of song
show forth as he quoted some lyric from Drayton or Shakespeare or Ben
Jonson; from Wither, Herrick, Waller, Suckling, or Lovelace! And I have
wondered after hearing him read with such glow;
"I sent thee late a rosy wreath,
. Not so much honouring thee.
As giving it a hope that there
It could not withered be.
But thou thereon didst only breathe.
And sent'st it back to me;
Since when it grows, and smells, I swear.
Not of itself, but thee."
Johnson, Song to Celia.
or
"I could not love thee. Dear, so much,
Loved I not honour more."
Lovelace, To Lucasta on Going to the Wars.
25
or again with such whimsy:
"Whenas in silks my Julia goes
Then, then (methinks) how sweetly flows
The liquefaction of her clothes.
"Next, when I cast mine eyes and see
That brave vibration each way free;
O how that glittering taketh me!"
Herrick, Upon Julia's Clothes.
I have wondered, I say, upon such occasion how any of "our young
barbarians, all at play" (Arnold) could be so thoroughly impervious, as I
fear some have been, to the mood and the art of great lyric moments when
rendered so perfectly by our friend. Of course, it was this understanding of
and delight in such perfect lyric art that led to his appreciation for and love
of the great Romantic poets — Keats and Byron, Rossetti and Swinburne.
But truly his greatest love, as you know, was found in the drama, in every
period of which he was equally at home, from the tropes and interludes,
miracle plays and moralities of the Middle Ages, down through the drama of
Shakespeare and the great Elizabethans, through the heroic plays, so-called,
of Dryden, through the scintillating comedies of the Restoration masters of
wit and irony, down to the art of the late Dion Boucicault, whom he believed
to be greatly underrated when not actually neglected by the present age, and
of whose life and work Professor Patterson has left what is doubtless the most
comprehensive and thoroughgoing study that has yet been made. I trust,
Mr. President, if no other arrangement proves feasible, that somehow Mass-
achusetts State College may find a way to make possible the publication of
this critical biography of Dion Boucicault as a memorial to its author, who has
done so much for the cause of drama in our college and in our community
and some of whose earlier years were spent on the stage in support of such
dramatic stars as Edwin Booth, Margaret Mather, and Otis Skinner. For me
some of the happiest recollections of my friend will be found always in the
fact that I was privileged to be a member of the cast he last directed; that I
was also favored, as were some of you, in seeing him in his final and only
public appearance as an actor in Amherst; and that especially do I find a
serene comfort in remembering that I was with him and the intimate group
who, early in the summer at the Court Square Theatre in Springfield, shared
together the pleasure of witnessing what proved to be for him the last profes-
sional production he was destined to see.
But do not, my friends, conclude that all this fervent interest in and
preoccupation with the emotions as the basis of great art ever led Charles
Patterson to neglect or to underestimate reason as the rule of life. To such
a comprehension of the role of reason in life may be attributed his ready
understanding and mastery of the great thinkers of the Age of Reason — the
eighteenth century — of Swift, Shaftesbury, Mandeville, Johnson, Hume,
Gibbon, Burke, and Paine. There never has been, there is not now, nor is there
ever likely to be on this faculty a more fearless, a more valiant, a more forth-
right exemplar of reason as the law of life than Charles Henry Patterson. For
cults and the "cultish", for the esoteric, for the dark, for whatever savored
of mystification or hocus-pocus, he was ever on guard and strove mightily to
imbue his students likewise with a similar attitude of caution. As the Reverend
Henry Ives in his funeral address so admirably brought out, our friend trusted
reason implicitly as the law of life and never doubted that she would be
justified of her children.
It is, however, as a friend that those of us who knew him best love to
think of him. Never, never, shall I forget the fine consideration with which
he stood by me in my time of trial less than two years ago, nor shall I fail to
remember with what a solemn satisfaction I now recall our frequent conversa-
tions carried on in his flower garden, in which he so much delighted, this very
June before he left for that Maine vacation from which he was not to return.
His sterling sincerity, his genial humor, his consideration of others, his ability
to sense and to understand their case as different from his own, his scrupulous
fairness, his sportsmanship, his good fellowship — and what a good fellow
he was! — these, all these qualities, and many more endear him forever to
every one of us. With what poignancy they bring to us by their very absence
now, the whole problem of human existence and the meaning of the great
transition that every life, no matter how rich in joy and love, must sooner or
later make. One moment we behold it fertile in experience, replete with
meaning, great with the promise of much more still to be achieved; the
next — silence and "the dreamless dust". Man's life, indeed, falls between
the eternities; in verity, it is like unto the parable which the Venerable Bede
more than ten centuries ago told of the sparrow driven in at one door of the
great hall from the wild storm without and presently departing at another
into the dark and wintry night from which it had emerged.
What more fitting word, then, in conclusion, can I utter than that spoken
by the great humanist and interpreter of life, Shakespeare, whom our friend
so well understood and so truly loved? Doubtless you all remember in the
tragedy, Hamlet, how dear Hamlet was to Horatio; and at the end of the play
when the dying Hamlet has closed his own account in this world with the
words, "The rest is silence," you recall with what noble feeling and language
Horatio pronounces the final eulogy:
"Good night, sweet prince;
And flights of angels sing thee to thy rest!"
What more suitable utterance can I suggest at the final curtain of my friend
and your friend.
"Good night, sweet prince;
And flights of angels sing thee to thy rest!"
WALTER E. PRINCE
THE HONOR SYSTEM
Address given at the Weekly Convocation of January 24, 1934.
Where the vision fails, the people perish. Where the ethical core of a highly concentrated
society, such as is ours here at the State College, is threatened by disintegrative organisms, by
corruption and gangrene, the whole of that society is threatened. Conversely, any measure
calculated to protect and foster the soundness of this ethical core is to be eagerly welcomed.
The Honor System is one of the agencies which, at this College, is, for better or worse, a
force affecting the moral core to which I have made reference. It has been, in the past, a great
strengthening agency dignifying and elevating student life here on our campus, and fostering
especially favorable relationships between students and members of the faculty. But it has been
such largely by virtue of the fact that practically all of the students were unanimous in regard-
ing themselves as loyal to the spirit of the student-gentleman, because with them the gentle-
manly sentiments of self-respect and personal pride and fair play were not empty words to which
lip service might be rendered in public, but active realities as real as the food that they ate, or
the facts that they mastered in the classroom, the laboratory, or the library.
The result was that with students of this predominant view — for whom honesty, honor,
pride, self-respect, and integrity were eagerly desired as ends making for deep-seated and
glowing happiness — the Honor System was a profound Article of Faith, an objective expres-
sion of firm sentiments experienced right in their own hearts. It was one forthright affirmation
of their more or less explicit realization that there can be a gratifying and sustaining beauty in
a life of virtue, more to be sought after than beauty manifested in other ways.
Students dominated by this central, though often unconsciously formulated view of
experience, could not merely acquiesce passively to an institution like the Honor System. It
meant too much to them. It was vitally concerned with one of the deepest aspects of their
lives; hence it could not be a matter of indifference to them.
The very first question, then, that each one of you should ask yourself right now is whether
or not you wish to continue toward the realization of this ideal. Are you so deeply stirred by it
that it is a matter of vital importance to you? Are you stirred by it, not because loyalty to such
an ideal will necessarily make for external success measured in terms of dollars and cents, but,
on the contrary, because you share my conviction that only through a controlled and shaped
life of integrity can you achieve anything like a condition of being happily and permanently at
one with yourself, independent of changing circumstances? Your answer to this question is
central. The Honor System, by its very name, assumes, presupposes, a society of gentlemen
and gentlewomen. Honor is a virtue inextricably lashed to the code and the spirit of true gentility
(note that I do not use the term genteelness, which is but the second-hand caricature of the
spirit of gentility). It is absurd to talk of honor among those to whom that term has no virile
and living connotation.
To conclude. If you vote against the Honor System, you say, "Members of the Faculty, we
have looked within our hearts, and have found that for us the so-called ideal of the American
student-gentleman is a beautiful, but impossible, figment of the imagination. We either feel
that it is altogether empty and remote from us, and impossible of attainment even if we wanted
it, or that it is not worth striving for at all. Practical expediency, with an eye always to the
main chance, this is our ideal, and to this we dedicate ourselves.
"We feel, furthermore, that we are too weak-willed, too jelly-spined, to continue to
accept these responsibilities that must be ours if we maintain the Honor System. We have not
enough moral strength and maturity, and, though we realize that we are the victims of a fallacy
of sentiment, we feel that we could never get ourselves to the point of reporting the cheat, —
the self-designated common enemy of our corporate welfare. So we relinquish our privileges.
We prefer the proctor system, with its quick meting out of punishment to the cheater, with
its accompanying freedom of collective responsibility on our part, but with its atmosphere of
tension as exerted between the proctors, and those who are being examined."
DR. MAXWELL H. GOLDBERG
28
FACULTY
Faculty
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, Nogaku 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 Agri-
culture, M. S. C, 1889-1908. Lecturer on Agriculture, 1908-18. President, ad interim, M. S. C, 1903, and
1905-06. Agriculturist, M. S. C. Experiment Station 1889-1921. Director, M. S. C. Experiment Station,
1906-18. Consulting Agriculturist, M. S. C. Experiment Station, 1918-21. Decorated 4th Order of the
Rising Sun, Japan, 1888. Fellow, American Association for the Advancement of Science. Member, Associa-
tion of Agricultural Colleges and Experiment Stations. 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. Contributed to Massachusetts Horticultural Society and to Agricul-
tural Reports of U. S. and Massachusetts. Author, "Agriculture", "General Agriculture, Dairying, and Poultry
Farming."
Henry 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, John Hopkins University, 1887-90. Ph. D., John Hopkins
University 1890. Professor of Zoology, Penn. State College, 1890-99. State 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., Goessman 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., Pawtucket, R, I., 1 885-89. Student at University of Gdttingen, Germany, 1889-
92. M. A.,, Ph. D., University of Gottingen, 1891. Student at Polytechnic Institute, Zurich, Switzerland, 1892.
Associate Chemist, Mass. State Experiment Station, 1892-95. In charge of the Department of Feeds and
Feeding, Hatch Experiment Station, 1895-1907. Chemist, Mass. State Experiment Station, 1907. Vice Director
of Mass. State Experiment Station 1909-. Head of the Department of Chemistry, M. S. C, 191 1-28. Goessman
Professor of Agricultural, Chemistry, 191 1-. Member of the American Chemical Society. Fellow in American
Association for the Advancement of Science. Member of the American Society of Animal Production. Member
of the American Dairy Science Association. Alpha Sigma Phi, Phi Kappa Phi.
THE FACULTY
George W. Alderman, B. A., Assistant Professor of Physics
Born 1898. A. B., Williams College 1921. Instructor in Physics, 1921-26. Assistant
Professor of Physics, M. S. C, 1926-. American Physical Society.
Charles P. Alexander, Ph. D., Professor of Entomology
Born 1889. B.Sc, Cornell University, 1913. Ph.D., Cornell University, 1 908. Assistant
in Biology and Limnology, Cornell, 1911-13. Instructor in Natural History, Cornell,
1913-17. Curator, The Snow Entomological Collections, 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 Men of Science.
Sigma Xi, Alpha Gamma Rho, Phi Kappa Phi.
Carrolle E. Anderson, B. Sc, Instructor in Botany
Born 1908. B. Sc, M. S. C, 1932. Instructor m Botany, M. S. C, 1932-.
Lorin E. Ball, B. S., Instructor in Physical Education
Born 1898. B. Sc, M. S. C, 1921. Coach of Freshmen Basketball, 1921-25. Coach
of Freshmen 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, 1925-26. Coach
of Varsity Baseball, 1925-31. Coach of Varsity Hockey, 1925-. Attended University of
Wisconsin Summer School, 1926. Varsity Club. Q. T. V.
Luther Banta, B. S., Assistant Professor of Poultry Husbandry
B. S. C, Cornell University, 1915. Head of the Department of Poultry Husbandry,
New York School of Agriculture, 1915-18, at Alfred University. Instructor of Poultry
Husbandry, M. S. C, 1918-20. Assistant Professor of Poultry Husbandry, 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 State School of
Agriculture, 1919-20. Principal, 1920-25. M. S., Cornell University, 1926. Central
Officers' Training School, Camp Lee, Va., October 1918 to January 1919. Assistant
Professor of Farm Management, M. S. C, 1926-. Phi Mu Delta.
Evelyn A. Beaman, B. S., Instructor in English
Born 1910; B. S., M. S. C, 1931. Graduate Assistant in English, M. S. C, 1931-33.
Instructor in English, M. S. C, 1933-.
Arthur B. Beaumont, Ph. D., Professor of Agronomy. Head of the Department
B. Sc, University of Kentucky, 1908. Ph. D., Cornell University, 1918. Teacher of
Science, North Bend High School, North Bend, Oregon, 1909-1 1. Teacher of Science and
Agriculture, and Head of the Department, Oregon Normal School, 1911-13. Graduate
Student and Assistant in the Department of Soil Technology, Cornell, 1913-17. Associate
Professor of Agronomy and Acting Head of the Department, M. S. C, 1917-19. Professor
and Head of the Department of Agronomy, 1919-1933. Fellow in the American Asso-
ciation for the Advancement of Science and the American Society of Agronomy. Acacia,
Sigma Xi, Phi Kappa Phi.
Lyie L. Blundell, B. S., Professor of Horticulture
Born 1897. B. S., Iowa State College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts, 1924. With
Olmstead Brothers, Landscape Architects, 1924-31. Professor of Horticulture, M. S. C,
1931 -. Gamma Sigma Delta.
Harold D. Boutelle, B. S., Ch. E., Instructor in Mathematics
Born 1898. B. Sc, Worcester Polytechnic Institute, 1920. Ch. E., W. P. I., 1922.
Instructor in Mathematics, M. S. C, 1926-.
Leon A. Bradley, Ph. D., Professor of Bacteriology
B. Sc, Wesleyan University, 1922. Ph. D., Yale University, 1925. Assistant in General
Bacteriology, Yale University, 1 924-25. Assistant Professor of Bacteriology, M. S. C,
1925-. American Society of Bacteriologists; American Public Health Association; American
Association for the Advancement of Science. Beta Theta Pi, Sigma Xi.
Lawrence E. Briggs, B. S., Instructor in Physical Education
Born 1903. B. Sc, M. S. C, 1927. Instructor in Physical Education, M. 5. C, 1927-.
Springfield Summer School, 1927. Counsellor at Camp Enajerog, 1928-29. Secretary and
Treasurer Western Massachusetts Basketball Coaches Club, English Folk Dance School,
M. S. C, 1929. Varsity Club, Theta Chi.
31
Mildred Briggs, M. S., Assistant Professor of Home Economics
A. B., De Pauw 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 Pro-
fessor 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 Theta.
Alexander E. Cance, Ph. D., Professor of Agricultural 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, Avalon 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, 1912-1 5.' Professor of Agricultural Economics, M. S. C,
191 5-. U. S. Army Educational Corps. A. E. F., France. Decoration — Chevalier of Agri-
culture. Phi Kappa Phi.
Harold W. Cary, M. A., Instructor in History
Born 1903. B. A. Williams College, 1925. M. A. Harvard University, 1926. instructor
in History, Cushmg Academy, 1926-29. Graduate Student in History, Yale University,
1929-30, 1932-33. Instructor in History, Yale University, 1930-32. Instructor in History,
M. S. C, 1933-.
Joseph S. Chamberlain, Ph. D., Professor of Organic and Agricultural Chemis-
try and Head of Department
Born 1870. B. Sc, Iowa Agricultural College, 1890. M. Sc, Iowa Agricultural College,
1892. Instructor in Chemistry, Iowa Agricultural College, 1894-97. Johns Hopkins Uni-
versity, 1899. Instructor in Chemistry, Oberlin College, 1899-1901. Research Assistant
to Professor Ira Remsen, Johns Hopkins University, 1901. Assistant Chemist, Bureau of
Chemistry, 1901-07. Chief of Cattle Food and Grain investigation Laboratory, Bureau of
Chemistry, 1907-09. Student at University of Berlin, 1909. Associate Professor of Organic
and Agricultural Chemistry, M. S. C, 191 3-. American Chemical Society, Fellow American
Association for the Advancement of Science. Nelw England Association of Chemistry
Teachers, President, 1928-. Phi Beta Kappa, Phi Kappa Phi.
Walter W. Chenoweth, M. S., Professor of Horticultural Manufactures and
Head of Department
Born 1872. A. B., Valparaiso University, 1902. Assistant in Botany, Valparaiso Uni-
versity, 1902-03. Head of the Department of Science, Chillicothe Normal School, Missouri,
1903-10. Instructor in Pomology, M. S. C, 1915-18. Professor of Horticultural Manufac-
tures, M. S. C, 191 8-. Alpha Zeta, Sigma Xi, Phi Kappa Phi.
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 Uni-
versities of Rostock-MiJnchen and Strassburg, 191 1-13. Assistant in Botany at the Univer-
sity of Strassburg, 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.
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, 1910-1 1. 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.
Frank Cronk, Instructor in Military Science and Tactics
Born 1894. Enlisted July 5, 1914 at Vancouver, Washington. Assigned to Troop "G",
4th Cavalry, Honolulu, T. H., 1914. Appointed Corporal, 1915. Appointed Sergeant, 1916.
Transferred as Private First Class to 310th Cavalry, Fort Ethan Allen, Vt., 1918. Appointed
First Sergeant Machine Gun Troop, 310th Cavalry, 1918. Transferred as First Sergeant to
20th Trench Mortar Battery, Camp Jackson, S. C, Nov., 1918. Furloughed to Regular
Army Reserve, Feb. 1919. Discharged from Reserve, Character Excellent, July 1920.
Reenlisted as Private at Camp Devens, Mass., 1921. Assigned to Duty at M. S. C, Jan.,
1921. Appointed Sergeant, June 1921.
Frederick Morse Cutler, Ph. D., Assistant Professor of History and Sociology
Born 1874. 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 History, University of
Porto Rico. Professor of Social Science and History, Massachusetts State Teachers College,
32
Worcester, Mass. 1st Lieutenant, Headquarters, 55th Coast Artillery, U. S. Army, 1917-19
(Battles: Aisne-Marne, Champagne, Oise-Aisne, Meuse-Argonne) . Now Lieutenant Colonel,
Reserve, U. S. Army. Member, American Sociological Society. Assistant Professor of
Sociology, M. S. C, 1926-. Sigma Phi Epsilon, Pi Gamma Mu.
William H. Davis, Pd. B., Assistant Professor of Botany
Pd. B., New York State Teachers' College. A. B., Cornell University. M. A., and Pd. B.,
University of Wisconsin. Assistant in Science, New York State Teachers College and Cornell
University. Professor of Botany, and Agriculture, Iowa State Teachers College Assistant
Professor of Botany, M. S. C, 1922-. Sigma Xi.
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. Univer-
sity 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-. Member of Advisory Committee, New England Intercollegiate
Amateur Athletic Association, 1932-33. Member of Association of College Track Coaches
of America.
Harry Reginald De Silva, Ph. D., Phil. D., Professor of Psychology
Born 1898. A. B. University of Florida, 1920. A. M., Harvard University, 1920-22,
1924-26. Ph. D., Harvard University, 1927. Phil. D., Cambridge University, 1928.
Lecturer, McGill University, 1922-24. National Research Fellow, Harvard University,
1925-26. National Research Fellow, Cambridge University, 1927-28. Assistant Professor
of Psychology, University of Kansas, 1928-30. Assistant Professor of Psychology, University
of Kansas, 1930-32. Professor of Psychology, M.' S. C. 1932-. Member of American
Psychological Association. Member of Optical Society of America. Sigma Xi, Phi Kappa Phi.
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 Kappa.
Fred C. Ellert, B. S., Instructor in German
Born 1905. B. S., M. S. C, 1930. Instructor in German, M. S. C, 1930-.
Richard W. Fessenden, Ph. D., Assistant Professor of Inorganic Chemistry
Born 1902. B. Sc, M. S. C, 1926. M. Sc, M. S. C, 1928. Ph. D., Columbia Univer-
sity, 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 Kappa Phi,
Sigma Xi, Pi Lambda Upsilon. Member, American Chemical Society.
Mary J. Foley, Ph. D., Instructor in Agricultural Economics
B. Sc, M. S. C, 1924. Graduate Student in Agricultural Economics, 1924-25. M. S.,
M. S. C, 1926. Ph. D., M. S. C, 1933. Instructor in Agricultural Economics, 1925-.
Delta Phi Gamma, Phi Kappa Phi.
Richard C. Foley, M. S., Instructor in Animal Husbandry
B Sc, M. S. C, 1927. M. S., M. S. C, 1931; Instructor in Animal Husbandry,
M. S. C, 1929-. Sigma Phi Epsilon, Phi Kappa Phi.
Charles Frederic 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, Colorado
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 of Modern Language Association; American Associ-
ation of University Professors; Societe des Anciennes Textes Francais.
Julius H. Frandsen, M. S. A., Professor of Dairy Industry and Head of the
Department
Born 1877. B. S. A., Iowa State College, 1902. M. Sc, Iowa State College, 1904.
Assistant Station Chemist, Iowa State College, 1902-04. Dairy Chemist, Hazelwood Cream-
ery, Portland, Oregon, 1904-07. Professor of Dairying, University of Idaho, 1907-11.
Professor of Dairy Husbandry, University of Nebraska, 1911-21. Dairy Editor and Councillor,
Caper Farm Publications, 1 921 -26. Member of American Dairy Science Association. Member
of Society for Promotion of Agricultural Science. During War, Chairman of 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.
33
Arthur P. French, M. S., Assistant Professor of Pomology
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-. Alpha Zeta, Sigma Xi, Alpha Tau Omega, Phi
Kappa Phi.
George E. Gage, Ph. D., Professor of Bacteriology and Physiology and Head
of 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., Yale University, 1909.
Associate Biologist, Maryland Experiment Station, 1909-10. University of Michigan, 1910.
Special Student in Pathology, University of Michigan, Summer of 1910. Biologist, Maryland
Experiment Station, in charge of Pathological Investigation. Assistant Professor of Animal
Pathology, M. S. C, 1912-20. U. S. Army, December 1 91 7-October, 1919. Head of the
Department of Serology, Central Department Laboratory, A. E. F., France, 1918-19.
Professor of Animal Pathology and Head of the Department of Veterinary Science and
Animal Pathology, M. S. C, 1920-27. Professor of Bacteriology and Physiology and Head
of the Department, I 927-. Kappa Phi, Phi Kappa Phi.
Mary E. M. Garvey, B. Sc, Instructor in Bacteriology
B. Sc, M. S. C, 1919. Instructor in Bacteriology I921-. Delta Phi Gamma.
Constantine J. Gilgut, B. S., Instructor in Botany
Born 1909. B. Sc, M. S. C, 1931. Instructor in Botany, 1931-.
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, Iowa State College, 1919-20. Assistant in Animal Husbandry, Iowa
State College, 1920-21. Beef Cattle Specialist, U. S. D. A., Summer of 1922. Assistant
Professor of Animal Husbandry, M. S. C, 1921-. Personnel Officer, Placement Service,
I 933-. Kappa Sigma.
Harry N. Glick, Ph. D., Professor of Psychology
Born 1885. A. B., Bridgewater College, 1913. A. M., Northwestern University, 1914.
Instructor in Science, Waukesha, Wisconsin, 1914-15, and Freeport, Illinois, 1915-17.
Manager of Farm in Illinois, 1917-20. Graduate Student at University of Illinois, 1920-23.
Professor of Education, M. S. C, 1 923-. Ph. D., University of Illinois, 1924. Member of
International Congress of Psychology. Phi Delta Kappa, Kappa Delta Phi.
Stowell G. 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 1926. Instructor in French at the Rice
Institute at Houston, Texas, 1926-27. Graduate Student in Paris, summer 1927. Assistant
Professor of French and Music, M. S. C, 1927-. Phi Beta Kappa, Phi Kappa Phi, Alpha
Sigma Phi, Sigma Alpha, Kappa Phi Kappa, Adelphia, Alliance Francaise.
Maxwell H. Goldberg, Ph. D., Instructor in English
Born 1907. B. S., M. S. C, 1928. Instructor 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. Yale University Scholar, 1932-33. President, the Alumni Academics Activi-
ties Club, M. S. C, 1933-34. Alpha Epsilon Pi, Adelphia, Phi Kappa Phi.
Clarence R. 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 at Clark University, Summer
Sessions, 1901 and 1903. B. Sc, Boston University, 1903. Science Master, Gushing
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, 191 2-. 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.
Harold M. Gore, B. S., Professor of Physical Education
Born 1891. B. Sc, M. S. C, 1913. Assistant in Physical Education, M. S. C, 1913-16.
Instructor, 1916. Harvard Summer School of Physical Education, 1916. Assistant Professor
of Physical Education, M. S. C, 1917-27. Plattsburg Officer's Training Camp, 1917. 1st.
Lieutenant, 18th Infantry, American Expeditionary Forces, 1918. Varsity Head Coach of
Football, 1919. Varsity Coach of Baseball, 1919-22. Professor of Physical Education,
M. S. C., 1926. Member of American Football Coaches Association. Member of Camp
Directors' Association. Director, Basketball Officials' Board, 1925-. Counselor, Camp Becket
34
for Boys, 19]3. Director M. S. C. Boys' Camp, 1913-15, 1917 and 1921. Associate
Director Camp Sangamon for Boys, 1922-24. Director Camp Enajerog for Boys 1925-
Q. T. v., Adelphia, Maroon Key, Varsity Club.
John C. Graham, B. S. Agr., Professor of Poultry Husbandry and Head of
Department
Milwaukee State Normal School, 1894. Student at Chicago University, Summers of
1894-98, Teacher's Institute Work in Wisconsin, 1894-1907. B. Sc, Agricultural Uni-
versity of Wisconsin. Associate Professor of Poultry Husbandry, M. S. C, 1 91 1 - 1 4. Profes-
sor of Poultry Husbandry, M. S. C, 191 4-. Member of the American Association of Investi-
gators 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.
Emory E. Grayson, B. S., Supervisor of Placement Training and Personnel
Officer
Born 1894. B. Sc, M. S. C, 1917. Farm Bureau Work at Gardner, Mass., 1917-18.
Field Artillery, Camp Taylor, Louisville, Ky., O. T. C, 1918. Assistant Football Coach,
M. S. C, 1919. Coach of Two Year Athletics, M. S. C, 1919-24. Baseball Coach and
Assistant Coach in Football and Basketball, Amherst College, 1924. Associate Professor of
Physical Education, Amherst College and Coach of Baseball, Basketball, and Assistant
Coach of Football, 1925. Supervisor of Placement Training, M. S. C, 1927-. Alpha Sigma
Phi, Adelphia.
Christian I. Gunness, B. S., Professor of Agricultural Engineering and Head
of the Department
Born 1882. B. Sc, North Dakota Agricultural College, 1907. Instructor in Mechanical
Engineering, North Dakota Agricultural College, 1907-12. Superintendent of School of
Tractioneering, Laporte, Indiana, 1912-14. Professor of Agricultural Engineering, M. S. C,
191 4-. Phi Kappa Phi.
Jay L. Haddock, M. S., Instructor in Agronomy
Born 1903. B. S., Brigham Young University, 1930. M. S., M. S. C, 1932. Albion
State Normal School, Albion, Idaho, 1923-24. Principal, Public School, Bloomington, Idaho,
1927-28. Instructor in Agronomy, M. S. C, I930-.
Margaret Hamlin, B. A., Vocational Counselor for Women
A. B., Smith College, 1904. Vocational Counselor for Women, M. S. C, 1918-1933.
Placement Officer for Women, 1933.
Arthur K. Harrison, Professor of Landscape Architecture
Born 1872. With Warren H. 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, 1911-1 3. Assistant Professor of Land-
scape Gardening, M. S. C, 1913-33. Professor of Landscape Architecture, M. S. C, 1933-.
Vernon P. Helming, B. A., Instructor in English
Born 1904. B. A., Carleton College, 1925. Graduate Work at Yale University, 1928-
32. Instructor, American University of Beirut, Beirut, Syria. Knox College, 1932-33. Phi
Beta Kappa.
Curry S. Hicks, M. Ed., Professor of Physical Education and Hygiene and
Head of Department
Born 1885. Michigan Agricultural College, 1902-03. B. Pd., Michigan State Normal
College, 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 Professor, 1914-16. Professor, 1916-. M. Ed.,
Michigan State Normal College, 1924.
Mrs. Curry S. Hicks, B. A., Physical Director for Women
Michigan State Normal College, 1909. B. A., Michigan State Normal College, 1925.
Instructor in Physical Education for Women, M. S. C, 1918-27. Physical Director, 1927-.
National Member of the American Association of University Women.
Robert P. Holdsworth, M. F., Professor of Forestry
Born 1890. B. S., in Forestry, Michigan State College, 191 1. 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 Co., 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-.
S. Church Hubbard, Assistant Professor of Floriculture
1905-15 with A. N. Pierson, Inc., Cromwell, Conn., as Propagator, Section Foreman,
roses, and Superintendent and Salesman of Retail Department, Vice-President and Manager
35
of F. W. Fletcher, Inc., of Auburndale, Mass., 1915-16, Superintendent in charge of Test
Grounds of American Rose Society, American Peony Society, American Iris Society, American
Gladiolus Society and American Sweet Pea Society at Cornell University, 1916-21. Green-
house foreman and Instructor in Floriculture, M. S. C, 1921-29. Assistant Professor of
Floriculture, M. S. C, 1928-.
Dwight Hughes, Jr., Captain, Cavalry, U. S. A., Assistant Professor of Military
Science and Tactics
Born 1891. B. S., University of South Carolina, 1913. Graduate of the Cavalry School,
Troop Officers' Course, 1922. Assistant Professor of Military Science and Tactics, M. S. C,
1931-.
Lorain P. Jefferson, M. A., Assistant Research Professor of Agricultural
Economics
B. A., Lawrence College, Appleton, Wisconsin. M. A., University of Wisconsin, 1907.
Research Work in Economics for the Carnegie Institute. The American Bureau of Industrial
Research. Wisconsin State Board of Public Affairs, 1912-13. Assistant Professor of Rural
Social Science, 1917-20. Acting Head of the Department of Agricultural Economics,
1918-19. Assistant Research Professor of Agricultural Economics, 1920-. Member of
Agricultural History Society. The Foreign Policy Association, and National Woman's Farm
and Garden Association. Author of several Bulletins published by M. S. C. Agricultural
Experiment Station and Vermont State Department Of Agriculture. Phi Beta Kappa, Phi
Kappa Phi.
Arthur N. Julian, A. B., Professor of German
A. B., Northwestern University, 1907. Instructor in German, Elgin Academy, Elgin,
III., 1907-10. Student at Berlin University, 1910-11. Instructor in German, M. S. C,
191 1-19. Assistant Professor in German, 1919-23. Assistant Professor in Chemistry, 1923-
24. Assistant Professor in German, 1924-25. Professor in German, 1925-. Phi Beta Kappa,
Phi Kappa Phi, Phi Gamma Delta.
Claude R. Kellogg, A. M., Assistant Professor of Entomology and Beekeeping
Born 1886. B. A., University of Denver, 1909. M. A., University of Wisconsin, 1918.
Teacher of Biology, Anglo-Chinese College, Foochow, China, 191 1-16. Professor of Zoology,
Fukien Christian University, Foochow, China, 1916-31. Teaching Fellow, University of
Maryland, Sept. -Dec, 1931. Assistant Professor of Entomology and Beekeeping, M. S. C,
1931-. Honorary Life Member, American Museum of Natural History. Member, Phi Sigma
Honorary Biological Society. Associate Member, American Association of Economic Ento-
mologists. Fellow, Peking Society of Natural History. Member, North China Branch, Royal
Asiatic Society. Member, China Society of Science and Arts. Member, the Apis Club,
London.
Helen Knowlton, M. A., Assistant 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. Assistant Professor of
Home Economics, M. S. C, 1924-.
Marshall O. Lanphear, M. Sc, Assistant Dean and Assistant Professor of
Freshman Orientation
Born 1894. B. Sc, M. S. C, 1918. M. Sc, M. S. C, 1926. U. S. Army, 1918.
Instructor in Agriculture, Mt. Hermon, 1919. Salesman with American Agricultural
Chemical Co., 1919-21. Instructor in Agronomy, M. S. C, 1921-24. Member of Mass-
achusetts Soil Survey Party, 1922-25. Assistant Professor of Agronomy, M. S. C, 1925-26.
Assistant Dean and Assistant Professor in charge of Freshman Orientation, 1927-. Phi,
Kappa Phi, Kappa Sigma.
John B. Lentz, A. B., V. M. D., Professor of Veterinary Science and Head of
the Department
Born 1 887. A. B., Franklin and Marshall College, 1 908. 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 and College Veterinarian,
M. S. C, 1922-27. Head of the Department, 1927-. Phi Sigma Kappa. Phi Kappa Phi.
Harry Lindquist, M. S., Vocational Instructor in Dairying
Born 1895. B. Sc, M. S. C, 1922. Graduate Assistant, University of Maryland, 1922-
24. M. S., University of Maryland, 1924. Baltimore City Health Department, Summer,
1924. Instructor, University of Maryland, 1924-25. Graduate Assistant, Ohio State Univer-
sity, 1925-27. Instructor in Dairying, M. S. C, 1927-. 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 at Alabama Polytechnical Institute, 1923-25. Fellow, at Iowa State College,
1925-26. Northwestern University, Summer, 1926. University of Chicago, Summer, 1927.
Assistant Professor at Iowa State College, 1926-29. Ph. D,, Iowa State College, 1929.
Professor of Agricultural Economics, M. S. C, 1929-. Pi Gamma Mu.
36
Wayne J. Lowry, M. S., Instructor in Horticulture
Born 1906. B. Sc, Michigan State College, 1928. Graduate Assistant Landscape
Gardening, M. S. C, 1928-29. Instructor in Horticulture, M. S. C, 1929-.
William L. Machmer, M. A., Professor of Mathematics, Dean
Born 1883. Graduate at Keystone State Normal School, 1901. Teacher in Public
Schools, 1901-04. A. B., Franklin and Marshall College, 1907. Head of the Department of
Mathematics, Franklin and Marshall Academy, 1907-11. A. M., Franklin and Marshall
College, 1911. Instructor in Mathematics, M. S. C, 1911-13. Assistant Professor in
Mathematics, M. S. C, 1913-19. Federal Demonstration Agent in Marketing, 1918-19.
Associate Professor of Mathematics, M. S. C, 1919-20. Professor of Mathematics, M. S. C,
1920. Assistant Dean, M. S. C, 1920. Acting Dean, M. S. C, 1922-23. Acting Registrar,
1924-25. Dean, 1926-. Phi Beta Kappa, Phi Kappa Phi, Pi Gamma Mu, Alpha Sigma Phi.
Merrill J. Mack, M. S., Assistant Professor of Dairying
Born 1902. B. Sc, Pennsylvania State College, 1923. Graduate Assistant 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 Profes-
sor of Dairying, 1927-. Alpha Zeta, Phi Kappa Phi,
A. Anderson Mackimmie, A. M., Professor of History, Economics and Sociol-
ogy; Head of Department; Head of Division of Social Sciences
Born 1878. A. B., Princeton University, 1907. Boudinot Fellow in Modern Languages,
1906-07. Instructor in French, Colchester, Academy, Truro, Nova Scotia, 1906-08. Instruc-
tor in French and Spanish, M. S. C, 1908-11. Assistant Professor of French, M. S. C,
1911-15. A. M., Columbia University, 1914. Associate Professor of French, M. S. C,
1915-J9, Professor of French, M. S. C, 1919-. Studied in Spain, Summer of 1922.
Received the Diploma de Conpetencia, Centro de Estudios Historicos, Madrid. Professor
of Economics, M. S. C, 1924-. Head of the Division of Social Sciences, M. S. C, 1928-.
Phi Beta Kappa, 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 of the U. S. Army, 1918-19, Assistant Professor of Agricultural
Engineering, M, S. C, 1925-.
George A. Marston, M. S., Instructor in Mathematics
Born 1908, B. Sc, Worcester Polytechnic Institute, 1930. M. S,, University of Iowa,
1 933. Research Assistant, University of Iowa, 1 932-33. Instructor in Mathematics, M, S. C,
1933-. Junior Member of American Society of Civil Engineers, Sigma Chi, Lambda Chi
Alpha.
Frank C. Moore, A. B., Associate Professor of Mathematics
A. B., Dartmouth College, 1902. Graduate Student at Dartmouth College, 1903.
Graduate Student at Columbia University, 1916. Instructor in Mathematics, Dartmouth
College, 1906-09. Assistant Professor, University of New Hampshire, 1909-17. Assistant
Professor of Mathematics, M. S. C, 1918-33. Associate Professor of Mathematics, M. S. C,
1933-. 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 Teacher, 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.
John B. Newlon, Instructor in Agricultural Engineering
Born 1884. Instructor in Forge Work, M, S, C, 1919, Special Student at Massa-
chusetts Institute of Technology, 1921, Instructor in Agricultural Engineering, 1921-.
A. Vincent Osmun, M. S., Professor of Botany and Head of Department
Born 1880. B. Agr., Connecticut State College, 1900, Assistant, Storrs Agricultural
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 in Botany, M. S, C, 1907-14. Associate Professor in Botany, M. S. C,
1914-16. Acting Head of the Department of Botany, M. S, C, and Experiment Station,
1914-16. Professor of Botany and Head of the Department, M, S, C, 1916-, Q, T. V., Phi
Kappa Phi.
John E, Ostrander, A, M,, C, E,, Professor of Mathematics and Head of
Department
Born 1865. A. B., and C, E,, Union College, 1886, Assistant in Sewer Construction,
West Troy, New York, 1 886, Assistant on Construction, Chicago, St, Paul, and Kansas
City Railway, 1887, A, M., Union College, 1889, Instructor in Civil Engineering, Lehigh
University 1891-92, Professor of Civil Engineering and Mechanic Arts, University of Idaho,
1 892-97. Professor of Mathematics, 1 897, and Meterologist at Experiment Station, M. S. C,
37
1897-1928. Member of Committee VI., International Commission on Teaching Mathe-
matics, 1900-11. Phi Kappa Phi.
Ranson 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, 1927-.
Ernest Milford Parrott, M. S., Instructor in Chemistry
Born 1903. 8. S., Union University, Jackson, Tenn., 1927. M. S., M. S. C, 1932.
Instructor in Chemistry, M. S. C, 1931 -. Associate Member of Division of Chemical Educa-
tion, American Chemical Society. Science Club. Gamma Sigma Epsilon, Phi Kappa Phi.
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 Super-
intendent of College Farm, 1931-. M. S., M. S. C, 1933. Member, American Society of
Animal Production. Q. T. V.
Charles A. Peters, Ph. D., Professor of Inorganic and Soil Chemistry
Born 1875. B. Sc, M. S. C, 1897. B. Sc, Boston University, 1897. Assistant in
Chemistry, M. S. C, 1897-98. Graduate Student in Chemistry, Yale University, 1899-1901.
Ph. D., Yale University, 1901. Professor of Chemistry and Head of the Department, Uni-
versity of Idaho, 1901-09. Student at University of Berlin, 1908-10. Exchange Teacher,
Friedrichs Werdersche Oberrealschule, 1909-1 1. Graduate Student, Yale University, 1910-
11. Assistant Professor of Inorganic and Soil Chemistty, M. S. C, 1911-12. Associate
Professor of Inorganic and Soil Chemistry, M. S. C, 1912-16. Professor of Inorganic and
Soil Chemistry, M. S. C, 191 6-. Alpha Sigma Phi. Sigma Xi, Phi Kappa Phi.
Ralph W. Phillips, M. A., Instructor in Animal Husbandry
Born 1909. B. S., Berea College, 1930. M. A., University of Missouri, 1931. Research
Assistant in Animal Husbandry, University of Missouri, 1930-33. Instructor in Animal
Husbandry, M. S. C, 1933-. Sigma Xi, Gamma Sigma Delta, Gamma Alpha Graduate
Scientific Fraternity.
Wallace F. Powers, Ph. D., Professor of Physics and Head of Department
A. B., Clark College, 1910. A. M., Clark University, 1911. Associate Professor of
Mathematics and Physics, University of Richmond, 1914-16. Instructor in Physics, Sim-
mons College, 1916-17. Instructor in Physics, New York University, 1917-20. Assistant
Professor in Physics, Wesleyan University, 1920-25. Professor of Physics and Head of
Department, M. S. C, 1925-.
Walter E. Prince, A. M., Professor of English
Born 1881. Ph. B., 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 Professor, English and Public Speaking, 1915-28. Associate Professor of English,
1928-33. Professor of English, 1933-. Sphinx, Phi Kappa Phi. Shakespearean Association
of America, Inc.
George F. Pushee, Instructor in Agricultural Engineering
I. C. S., 1906. Teacher's Training Class, Springfield, 1914-15. Assistant Foreman and
Millwright, Mt. Tom Sulfide Pulp Mill, 1915-16. Instructor in Agricultural Engineering,
M. S. C, 191 6-. Councillor Camp Medomak, Washington, Maine, Summers, 1927-33.
Ernest J. Radcliffe, M. D., Professor of Hygiene and Student Health Officer
Born 1898. M. B., University of Toronto, 1923. M. D., University of Toronto, 1929.
Private and Clinic Practice. Canadian Field Artillery, 1916-19. Professor of Hygiene and
Student Health Officer, M. S. C, 1930-. Massachusetts Medical Society, American Medical
Association.
Frank Prentice Rand, A. M., Professor of English and Acting 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 Kappa "Signet", 1914-29.
U S Army, 1918. Instructor in English, M. S. C, 1914-21. Grand Secretary of Phi Sigma
Kappa 1919-22. Faculty Member of Academics, 191 9-. Assistant Professor of English,
1921-27. Associate Professor of English, 1927-33. Professor of English, 1933-. Adelphia,
Delta Sigma Rho, Phi Sigma Kappa, Phi Kappa Phi.
Cecil C. Rice, M. S., Instructor in Horticultural Manufactures
Born 1907. B. S., M. S. C, 1928. Instructor in Horticultural Manufactures, M. S. C,
1930-. M. S., M. S. C, 1932. , . r^
Victor A. Rice, M. Agr., Professor of Animal Husbandry; Head of Depart-
ment; Head of 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 Ani-mal Husbandry, M. S. C, 191 9-. Phi Kappa Phi.
38
J. Harry Rich, B. S., Assistant Professor of Forestry
Born 1888. B. S. in Forestry, N. Y. State College of Forestry, 1913. Assistant Profes-
sor of Forestry, M. S. C, 1933-. Member of Society of American Foresters; Sigma Xi, Pi
Kappa Alpha.
Oliver C. Roberts, B. S., Instructor in Pomology
Born 1895. B. Sc, M. S. C, 1919. Teacher of Agriculture, West Lebanon Academy,
1920-22. Foreman of Pomology Department, M. S. C, 1922-26. Instructor in Pomology,
M. S. C, 1926-. 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-.
Joseph R. Rogers, Jr., Instructor in Physical Education
Born 1906. Worcester Polytechnical Institute, 1930. Instrument-man, Metropolitan
District Water Supply Commission, 1930-31. Instructor in Physical Education, M. S. C,
1931-. Member, American Society of Mechanical Engineers.
Charles A. Romeyn, Colonel. Cavalry, U. S. A., Professor of Military Science
and Tactics and Head of Department
Born 1874. Graduate, U.S. Military Academy, 1899. 2nd lieutenant of Cavalry,
1899-1901. 1st Lieutenant, 1901-05. Captain 1905-17. Distinguished Graduate, Army
School of the Line, 1913. Graduate, Army Staff College, 1914. Major, 1917-20. Lt. Colonel,
1920-21. Colonel, 1921-24. Chief of the Staff, 94th Division (Reserve), 1924-27.
Inspector General, 1927-31. Professor of Military Science and Tactics, M. S. C, 1931-.
Delta Tau Delta.
Donald E. Ross, B. S., Instructor in Floriculture and Greenhouse Foreman
Born 1896. B. Sc, M. S. C, 1925. Nurseryman at A. N. Pierson, Inc., Cromwell,
Conn., 1925-26. Nurseryman Superintendent at The Rose Farm, White Plains, N. Y.,
1926-28. Instructor in Floriculture and Greenhouse Foreman, M. S. C, 1928-. Served
in France with 101st Infantry, 26th Division, 1917-19. Alpha Gamma Rho.
William C. Sanctuary, M. S., Professor of Poultry Husbandry
Born 1888. B. Sc, M. S. C, 1912. New York State School of Agriculture, 1912-18.
U. S. Army, 1917-18. Professor of Poultry Husbandry, M. S. C, 1921. Acting Director of
New York State School of Agriculture, 1924-25. Professor of Poultry Husbandry, M. S. C,
1925-. Kappa Delta Phi, Theta Chi.
Fred C. Sears, M. S., Professor of Pomology and Head of Department
Born 1866. B. Sc, Kansas Agricultural College, 1892. Assistant Horticulturalist,
Kansas Experiment Station, 1892-97. M. Sc, Kansas Agricultural College, 1896. Professor
of Horticulture, Utah Agricultural College, 1897. Director of Nova Scotia School of Horti-
culture, Wolfville, N. S., 1897-1904. Professor of Horticulture, Nova Scotia Agricultural
College, Truro, N. S., 1905-07. Professor of Porrology, M. S. C, 1907-. Phi Kappa Phi.
Paul Serex, Ph. D., Assistant 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, Nejw Hampshire State Col-
lege, 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-. Member of American Chemical
Society. Phi Kappa Phi.
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 Milliken University, 1912-18.
Professor of Home Economics, Head of Department, M. S. C, 191 9-. M. Ed., Michigan
State Normal College, 1922. M. A., Columbia University, 1929.
Harold W. Smart, A. B., LL. B., Vocational Instructor in Farm Law, Business
English and Public Speaking
Born 1895. LL. B., Icum laude) Boston University, 1918. Boston University, 1919.
Practiced Law, 1919-24. Instructor in Business Law, M. S. C, 1921-. A. B., Amherst
College, 1924. Phi Delta Phi, Woolsack, Delta Sigma Rho.
Grant B. Snyder, M. S., Assistant Professor of Olericulture
B. S. A., Ontario Agricultural College, Toronto University, 1922. Assistant Plant
Hyludist at Ontario Agricultural College, 1919-21. Instructor in Vegetable Gardening,
M. S. C, 1921-26. Assistant Professor of Vegetable Gardening, M. S. C, 1926-. M. S.,
Michigan State College, 1931.
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, State of Colorado, 1922.
Bureau of Entomology, U. S. D. A., 1923. Instructor, Iowa State College, 1923-25.
Instructor, University of Minnesota, 1926. Wyoming Aaricultural Experiment Station
1927-29. Assistant Professor of Entomology, M. S. C, 1930-. Alpha Zeta, Gamma Sigma
Delta.
39
William H. Tague, B. S., Assistant Professor of Agricultural Engineering
Born 1882. B. S., Agricultural Engineering, Iowa State College. Assistant Professor
of Agricultural Engineering, M. S. C, 1929-.
Melvin H. Taube, M. S., Assistant Professor of Physical Education
Born 1904. B. S., Purdue University, 1926. M. S., Indiana University, 1932. Assistant
Professor of Physical Education, M. S. C, 1931-. Delta Tau Delta.
Charles H. Thayer, Vocational Instructor in 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, 191 8-. Member, American Society of Agronomy.
Clark L. Thayer, B. S., Professor of Floriculture and Head of the Department
Born 1890. B. S., M. S. C, 1913. Graduate 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 and Head of the Department,
M. S. C, 1920-. U. S. Army, 1918. Alpha Gamma Rho, Phi Kappa Phi, Pi Alpha 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, Wesleyan, 1918-19. Instructor in Botany, M. S. C, 1919-
21 Assistant Professor of Botany, M. S. C, 1921-33. Associate Professor of Botany,
M. S. C, 1933-. Phi Kappa Phi.
Frederick S. Troy, B. S., instructor in English
Born 1909. B. S., M. S. C, 1931. Instructor in English, M. S. C, 1931-. Alpha
Gamma Rho.
Alden P. Tuttle, M. S., Instructor in Vegetable Gardening
Born 1906. B. S., M. S. C, 1928. M. S., Penn. State College, 1930. Assistant in
Vegetable Gardening, Penn. State College, 1928-29. Graduate Assistant in Vegetable
Gardening, Penn. State College, 1929-30. Instructor in Vegetable Gardening, M. S. C,
1930-. Gamma Sigma Delta.
Ralph A. Van Meter, M. S., Professor of Pomology; Head of the Division of
Horticulture
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. Professor of Pomology, M. S. C,
1 923-. Graduate Work, Cornell University, 1930-31. Head of the Division of Horticulture,
I 932-. Delta Theta Sigma, Phi Kappa Phi.
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
Husbandry, M. S. C, 1929-.
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. Professor of Biology, Broad-
dus College, 1929, Mammalogist, Oklahoma Biological Survey, summers, 1930-31. Capitol
Hill Senior High School, Oklahoma City, 1929-31. Assistant Professor of Zoology, M. S. C,
1931-. Phi Sigma, Sigma Xi.
James A. Warren, Technical Sergeant, Major Cavalry Reserve, (D. E. M. L.-
R. O. T. C. ) Instructor in Military Science and Tactics
Born 1884. Pvt., Corporal, U. S. and Philippine Islands, 1901-04. Pvt., Corporal, and
Sergeant, Mexican Border and Philippine Islands, 1910-17. Temporary 2nd Lieutenant of
Cavalry, 1917. Promoted Captain Cavalry, and Instructor, First Officer's Training Camp,
Fort Roots, Ark., 1917. Transferred to Field Artillery, 1917. Promoted Major Field Artillery,
1918. Provost Marshal, 87th Division, Commanding 312th Military Police, 1918. Over-
seas, France and Belgium, 1918-19. Commanding 1st Batt. 17th F. A. Camp, Travis, Texas,
1919-20. Reenlisted as Sergeant of Cavalry, Duty at M. S. C, 1921. Promoted Staff
Sergeant Cav., (D. E. M. L. — R. O. T. C), 1921. Commissioned Major Cavalry Reserve,
1922. Promoted Technical Sergeant, Cav., (D. E. M. L. — R. O. T. C), 1922.
Herbert E. Watkins, Captain Cavalry (D. 0. L.). Assistant Professor of Mili-
tary Science and Tactics
Born 1894. A. B., Chemistry, University of Maine, 1917. Graduate of Cavalry School
Troop Officers, 1921. Graduate Field Artillery, Advanced Class, 1932. Assistant Professor
of Military Science and Tactics, M. S. C, 1932-. Delta Tau Delta.
40
Frank A. Waugh, M. S., D, Sc, L. H. D., Professor of Architecture and Head
of the Department
Born 1869. Kansas Agricultural College, 1891. Editor, Agricultural Department of the
Topeka Capital, 1891-92. Editor of "Montana Farm and Stock Journal", 1892. Editor,
"Denver Field and Farm", 1892-93. M. S., Kansas Agricultural College, 1903. Professor of
Horticulture, Oklahoma, A. and M. College, and Horticulturist of the Experiment Station,
1893-95. Graduate Student, Cornell University, 1 898-99. "Professor of Horticulture, Uni-
versity of Vermont, and State Agricultural College, and Horticulturist of the Experiment
Station, 1893-1902. Horticultural Editor of the "Country Gentleman", 1898-1911.
Hospitant in fhe Koenigliche Gaertner-Lehranstadit, Dahlem, Berlin, Ger., 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. Kappa Sigma, Phi Kappa Phi.
Winthrop S. Welles, M. Ed., Professor of Education and Head of the Depart-
ment
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. Teacher of Biology and Agriculture,
State Teachers College, River Falls, Wis., 1907-19. Founder and Director of Educational
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.,
Harvard, 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, Urbana, III.,
1925-26. Assistant in Student Work, Riverside Church, New York, 1927-28. Director of
Religious Education, M. S. C, 1928-. Kappa Sigma, Phi Kappa Delta, Fellow, The National
Council on Religion in Higher Education.
Who's Who In America 1933 — 1934
Hugh Potter Baker, D. Oec, L.
Alexander E. Cance, Ph. D.
Joseph S. Chamberlain, Ph. D.
Guy Chester Crampton, Ph. D.
Frederick Morse Cutler, Ph. D.
Henry T. Fernald, Ph. D. .
Julius H. Frandsen, M. S. A.
Joseph B. Lindsey
John E. Ostrander, A. M., C. E.
Frank Prentice Rand, A. M.
Fred C. Sears, M. S. .
Fred J. Sievers, M. S. .
Frank A. Waugh, M. S., D. Sc,
L- D. . . Forestry
Agricultural Economist
Professor of Chemistry
Professor of Entomology
. Educator
Entomologist
Dairy Husbandman
. Chemist
Mathematician
Author
Pomologist
Experiment Station Director, Agronomist
H. D., Horticulturist, Landscape Architect
Associate Alumni
of
Massachusetts State College
OFFICERS
President, Theorem L. Warner '08
Vice-President, Ralph F. Taber '16
Secretary, William L. Doran '15
Treasurer, Clark L. Thayer '13
Assistant Secretary, George E. Emery '24
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
To 1934
Sumner R. Parker '04
Harold M. Rogers '1 5
George A. Drew '97
Laurence A. Bevan '13
Louis M. Lyons '1 8
Dennis M. Crowley '29
David H. Buttrick '17
Stuart B. Foster '14
William L.
Allister F.
Goodwin '1 8
MacDougall '13
To 1935
To 1936
To 1937
Charles H, Gould '16
Ralph F. Taber '16
George E. Stone '86
Harry D. Brown '1 4
Louis V. Ross '17
Henry M. Walker '16
Massachusetts State College Alumni Clubs and Associations
Massachusetts State College Club of Central and Northern California
Massachusetts State College Club of Southern California
Fairfield County (Conn.) Alumni Association of Massachusetts State College
Massachusetts State College Club of Hartford, Conn.
Massachusetts State College Club of New Haven, Conn.
Massachusetts State College Alumni Association of Washington, D. C.
Massachusetts State College Club of Florida
Massachusetts State College Western Alumni Association, Chicago, Illinois
Massachusetts State College Club of Lafayette, Indiana
Massachusetts State College Alumni Club of Boston
Massachusetts State College Club of Middlesex County, Mass.
Massachusetts State College Club of Essex County, Mass.
Franklin County Massachusetts State College Alumni Association
Massachusetts State College Alumni Association of Southeastern, Mass.
Massachusetts State College Club of Berkshire County, Mass.
Massachusetts State College Club of Hampden County, Mass.
Massachusetts State College Club of Worcester County, Mass.
Massachusetts State College Club of Hampshire County, Mass.
Massachusetts State College Club of New Brunswick, N. J.
Massachusetts State College Club of Central New York
Massachusetts State College Club of New York City
Massachusetts State College Club of Cleveland, Ohio
Central Ohio Alumni Club of Massachusetts State College, Columbus, Ohio
Massachusetts State College Club of Philadelphia, Pa.
Massachusetts State College Club of Reading, Pa.
Massachusetts State College Club of State College, Pa.
Massachusetts State College Club of Providence, Rhode Island
Massachusetts State College Club of Northern Vermont
Southern Vermont Alumni Association
42
President, Alpha J. Flebut'15
President, Clarence H. Griffin '04
President, John A. Barri'75
Secretary, Peter J. Cascio '21
Secretary, Douglas W. Loring '28
Chairman, Everett L. Upson '17
Chairman, Myron G. Murray '22
President, Walter A. Mack '17
Chairman, J. T. Sullivan '22
President, Lewis J. Schlotterbeck '1 5
President, Harry D. Brown '14
President, Joseph Martin '87
President, Walter C. Grover '25
Chairman, Erford W. Poole '96
Chairman, Harry J. Talmage '22
President, Wilbur H. Marshman '23
President, Homer C. Darling '16
Chairman, Josiah W. Parsons, Jr., '27
Secretary, Lyman G. Schermerhorn '1
President, Roger C. Coombs '21
President, Clarence A. Smith '1 1
President, Henry F. Staples '93
President, Murray D. Lincoln '14
President, Thomas J. Gasser'lQ
Secretary, E. L. Murdough '27
Secretary, Harlan N. Worthley'18
President, Willis S. Fisher '98
Secretary, John F. Lambert '26
President, R. W. Howe '13
ANOTHER YESTERDAY
October 19, 1933. "Yesterdays at Massachusetts State College" by Pro-
fessor Rand is published. It is a history of Massachusetts, but it is not only
history, it is drama, romance — the more significant because it is true. It
offers us a glimpse of those staunch characters of yesterday who have made
possible whatwe have today. It is the timely presentation of a precious
heritage which we must somehow carry on, an incentive, and this ringing
command to us
" — take up the task eternal and the
burden, and the lesson,
"Pioneers, O Pioneers!"
June I, 1934. Another yesterday has slipped into the past. Another
chapter has been added to the history of our COLLEGE, another year to her
life. We who have helped make this yesterday would have it go down on. record
as it regally is — a continuation of the past, essentially the same, yet dotted
here and there with incidents, plans, and aspirations which give to it a charac-
ter of its own, progressive, yet true to old traditions; outstanding, yet typical
of the days which have gone before. We, therefore, present this book as an
Index of another yesterday at Massachusetts State College.
POEM OF YEAR
1932-33
First Prize, Twenty-five Dollars
Edythe M. Parsons
ON THE UNCERTAINTIES OF LIFE
To question, as a child with searching eyes
Exclaims in wonder of the lovely rose;
What mighty power lies hid in earth or skies.
From whence descends this lovely thing that grows?
To marvel, as a youth with cherished hopes
Exults triumphant in a well-earned name;
Who glories in the joy and grief of strife,
A guileless victim of the goddess Fame.
To ponder, as an old man bent with care
Seeks longingly for quietude and peace;
What happiness is left for him to share,
What fate ensues when life on earth shall cease?
Of Life we ask but these three things alone.
And find no answer save our humble own.
EDYTHE M. PARSONS '36
GRADUATE SCHOOL
1933-34
AGRICULTURE
Henry M. Emerson, M. A.
AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS
Elizabeth J. Donley, A.
Grace B. Gerard, B. S.
John R. Hanson, B. S.
Raymond F. Pelissier, B.
Gilbert Simpson, B. S.
AGRONOMY
Matthew C. Darnell, Jr.,
Howard R. DeRose, M. S.
Benjamin Isgur, B. S.
William J. Moore, Jr., M. S.
Major F. Spaulding, M. S.
John A. Ciague, M. S.
Clifford R. Foskett, M. S
Catherine G. Johnson, B.
BACTERIOLOGY
Morrison Rogosa, B. A.
Bernard E. Supowitz, B.
Adam V. Syrocki, B. S.
BACTERIOLOGY & PHYSIOLOGY
Kenneth W. Chapman, B. S.
BOTANY
Carrolle E. Anderson, B. S.
John C. Barter, B. S.
Paul R. Fitzgerald, B. S.
Julia E. Abbott, M. S.
Emmett Bennett, B. S.
John Calvi, M. S.
James J. Chap, M. S.
Maurice M. Cleveland, M.
Eunice M, Doerpholz, B. S.
Albert H. Gower, M. S.
Paul D, Isham, M. S.
Eugene J. Kane, B. S.
John W. Kuzmeski, B. S.
William A. Mac Coll, B. A.
Majel M. MacMasters, M.
George A. Andrews, B. S.
James H. Boynton, B. S.
Carlton O. Cartwright, B. V. Ag.
Ralph O. Channell, B. S.
George A. Cooley, B. S.
Catherine L. Decker, B. A.
Philip L. Ely, B. A.
Warren W. Fabyan, B. V. A.
Elizabeth F. Foley, B. S.
William J. Foley, A. B.
Claude B. Germany, A. B.
Marian G. Gleason, A. B.
Una D. Hilliker, B. S.
Henry Holz, B. S.
Gustaf A. Karlson, B. V. A.
Vernet S. Keller, B. S.
William J. Kirchner, B. S.
Clarence J. Larkin, B. A.
CHEMISTRY
Constantine J. Gilgut, B. S.
Irene A. Goodell, B. S.
Elfriede Klaucke, B. S.
Christine V. Markus, B. S.
Charles E. Minarik, B. S.
William S. Mueller, M. S.
Bryan C. Redman, B. S.
Albert F. Spelman, B. S.
Laurence W. Spooner, M. S
Peter G. Staszko, A. B.
Wallace W. Stuart, B. S.
Marion R. Taylor, B. 5.
James E. Tucker, B. S.
Charles B. Wendell, Jr
M. S.
EDUCATION
Francis M. Lohan, A. B.
Anthony T. Lyons, B. A.
Edward J. McKenna, A. B.
Willard T. Maloney, B. S.
James S. Missett, A. B.
Ernest W. Mitchell, Jr., M. S.
Gilbert Muir, B. S.
Charles E. Murphy, A. B.
John J. O'Connell, B. A.
Charles F. Oliver, Jr., B. S.
Ruth L. Parker, B. S.
Alton G. Perkins, A. B.
Joseph Politella, B. S.
John M. Quirk, B. S.
James P. Reynolds, A. B.
Paul E. Shumway, B. A.
Walter S. Utiey, B. S.
45
ENGLISH
Mildred S, Brown, B. S.
ENTOMOLOGY
Richard C. Baker, A. B.
Ashley B. Gurney, B. S.
Miriam Morse, M. S.
Inez W. Williams, M. S.
Edward H. Wilson, B. S.
HISTORY
E. Lois Young, A. B.
HORTICULTURE
Lawrence S. Dickinson, B. S.
HORTICULTURAL MANUFACTURES
Robert E, Buck, B. A. Abraham Naoum, A. B.
Walter A. Maclinn, B. S.
LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE
J. Lee Brown, B. S. Homer S. Fisher, B. S.
Neal A. Butterfield, B. S. Robert M. Howes, B. S.
Arnold M. Davis, B. S.
LANGUAGES AND LITERATURE
Anna L. Daley, A. B.
Damon Boynton, B. S.
Arthur P. French, M. S.
Fred P. Jeffrey, B. S.
Marguerite E. Bicknell, B. A
George E. Aldrich, B. S.
Laurence E. Briggs, B. S.
Wynne E. Caird, M. S.
Willis D. Ellis, Ph. D.
POMOLOGY
George G. Smith, B. S.
POULTRY HUSBANDRY
David J. Knight, B. S.
SOCIOLOGY
Robert B. Fletcher, B, S.
UNCLASSIFIED
Charles Rawlings, A. B.
Cecil C. Rice, M. S.
Ada W. Tague, B. S.
45
SENIORS
CLASS OF 1934
OFFICERS
President . . . Edmund J. Clow Treasurer .... Alvan S. Ryan
Vice-President . . . Page L. Hiland Class Captain . Alexander A, Lucey
Secretary . . Harriette M. Jackson Sergeant-at-arms . Russell E. Taft
TRIBAL LEGEND
Eight and forty moons have risen,
Waxed and waned in endless splendor,
Since a band of braves and maidens —
Young, untried, but still most valiant
Of the tribes they left behind them- —
Gathered for the hunting season,
Gathered near the shores of Hadley.
There the gently rising mountains, —
Norwottuck, Holyoke, Warner, Toby —
Lifting high their heads to heaven.
Gazed upon a goodly picture:
Verdant fields and wooded hillsides;
Flowing brooks and stately pine-trees;
Peaceful waters, ever bearing
Calm reflections of the tepees
Built around the waters' edges.
Shifting scenes of elms and willows.
Rippling stars and flowing moonlight:
Such was Massachusetts Aggie.
There they found a village ready.
Left intact by other peoples:
Wigwams, council-fires, and weapons.
Theirs to use and theirs to cherish.
Many older chiefs were waiting.
Ready, eager, to direct them.
Teach them ways of hunting, fishing.
Raising corn, and making wigwams.
Warfare, warwhoops, tribal dancing.
Legends of their people's people.
And the worship of their idols.
Nearby other tribes were scattered.
Older, wiser, skilled in hunting,
Friendly, ready to assist them —
All but one, which, not so friendly.
Hid in ambush, plotting warfare.
So in council-fire assembled
Chose they leaders to defend them:
Big chief Clow, and next, chief Goodhue,
Batstone, guardian of provisions,
Ashley, keeper of the records,
Jackson, teller of the legends.
Heap big war-chiefs, Blanchard, Blackburn.
Thirty-four became their symbol.
On their totem-poles depicted.
Warriors straightway were conducted
By the older settled Redskins
Through their own ancestral tepees;
(For the braves were all divided
Into bands, all tribes uniting,
Under bonds of pledged allegiance.
Under ties of close alliance.)
Thirty-four ere long decided
Where to smoke fraternal peace-pipes,
Where to pledge as loyal brothers.
Thirty-four had scarce assembled
When they heard the war-whoops sounding.
Thirty-three rushed in upon them,
Rushed into their council-chambers;
Made the warriors practice war-whoops
Loud and long each morn at sunrise;
Made the tribe, both braves and maidens,
Wear green feathers in their headbands
As the symbol of their weakness;
Made them carry tribal records,
Hop insignia in the foot-paths;
Made the maidens, pigtails hanging,
File together to a skirmish.
With the tribe from near-by Amherst,
With the Amherst red-skinned warriors.
All this for a moon and longer.
Long before that moon was over
Time and place were set for battle.
Braves prepared with chants and warpaints;
Maidens came to stand hard by them;
All the wood was thick with Redskins.
Warwhoops sounded. Cries of "Razoo"
Filled the blackness of the evening,
(For the inter-tribal language
Termed the first important battle
"Razoo" — famed in tribal legends.)
In a clearing of the forest.
Brave met brave in bloody combat;
One by one with steadfast courage
Warriors faced a threatening Redskin;
One by one the matches ended.
Bringing glory to the stronger.
Now as victors, now as vanquished,
Thirty-four renewed their war-whoops.
Fought and struggled, fiercely, bravely,
Vanquished one by one the warriors
Thirty-three sent forth to meet them.
So that when the peace-cry sounded
Thirty-four emerged victorious!
Thirty-three was not yet willing
Thus to smoke their rivals' peace-pipe.
So they lay in ambush, waiting
For the passing of the warriors;
Dealt each one a blow so mighty
That it shoved him down the pathway.
Stumbling blindly down the pathway.
Once again they met in conflict
Robed in tribal war-dance costume.
Ere the East was red with morning.
Thirty-four, in triumph meeting.
Found themselves enclosed by enemies.
At a signal from the chieftain,
Brave met brave in lonely combat.
Dragged him back and forth in struggle.
Scalped him, robbed him of his feathers,
Tried to drag him to the wigwam,
To the guard-house for the vanquished.
Thirty-four, when peace was granted,
Found their wigwam filled with prisoners.
Filled with scalps and draggled feathers.
So that Redskins, hostile, friendly,
Named the tribe again victorious.
Thirty-three was not yet vanquished!
Once again these tribes assembled,
Drew up forces near the waters.
Sixty men, the bravest, strongest
From each tribe, in hostile manner,
Facing foes across the river.
Across and through the muddy waters
Writhed a rope — a hempen serpent.
At the shooting of an arrow
Warriors all laid hands upon it.
Heaved and tugged with all their manhood
Till at last one tribe was weakened;
Thirty-four, then all defeated.
Slipped and slid into the waters.
Through the muddy swirling waters.
While the victors, warwhoops sounding,
Raised aloft the rope in triumph.
One more great encounter followed.
Braves eleven, strong and fearless,
From each tribe in warfare meeting,
Met to battle long and bravely
In a war-game known as football.
Met to struggle with their foemen
For the capture of a trophy —
Just a bit of polished leather
From a wild boar torn and beaten —
Tried to kick or pass or carry
That inflated bit of pigskin
Down the field to safety regions.
Thirty-four, with Bush among them.
Rushed with vengeance on their rivals,
Overwhelmed them, drove them homeward.
Pressed with vigor toward the goal-line;
And the air was thick with shouting,
With the shouting and the warwhoops
From the tribe, now thrice victorious.
Over thirty-three, their enemy.
Meanwhile, all four tribes of Redskins
Harkened to the words of wisdom
Which their elders spake unto them.
Assimilated much of learning,
Grew in mind as well as body.
Some there were who would not listen,
Disregarded love of learning,
Seeking only joy and pleasure.
But at last, some three moons later.
Came a day of final reckoning:
Trembling squaws and doubting warriors
Had to show their elder chieftains
Worthiness of their encampment,
Ruggedness against their hardships,
Fitness both in mind and body.
Many squaws and many warriors.
Failing to uphold the standards,
Left their tribe and their companions.
Nevermore to meet as equals.
Nevermore to call them brothers.
Half a moon at length was granted
Free of cares and obligations.
Half a moon, which all the Redskins
Spent in their ancestral tepees.
Spent in song, and dance, and worship
Of the great and noble sun-god.
Spent in carefree happy freedom
Far away from their encampment.
Once again the summons sounded;
Thirty-four rolled up their blankets.
Reluctantly returned to Amherst,
Called the roll, but soon discovered
That their ranks were quite depleted.
At a secret consultation.
Once again they chose their leaders:
Clow and Goodhue, Ashley, Jackson;
Ryan, now as tribal trader.
Smith and Adams as the war-chiefs.
Warriors now were strangely treated
By their brothers, fellow tribesmen;
Made to stalk through virgin forest
While the sky was dark above them.
Made to wear outrageous raiment.
Made to suffer, mind and body.
Ere they knew them as their brothers,
Ere they called them worthy brothers.
Moons passed slowly, yet too quickly;
Thirty-four was now accepted
As the youngest of the warriors.
Youngest of the tribes of warriors
Living, learning, on the campus.
Freshmen — this their tribal title —
Sought for honors, sought for duties.
Listened in at council-meetings.
Made themselves a part of Aggie.
Final choice of tribal leaders
Gave them Clow and C. McMackin,
Gave them Ashley, Smith, and Ryan,
Gave them Thompson as a war-chief.
Gave them Jackson, legend-teller.
Great rejoicing filled the campus.
When the word was brought by tom-toms.
When the Redskins, war-whoops sounding.
Learned that old familiar "Aggie"
Now was simply "Massachusetts".
Ere the tribe began to scatter.
Ere they left their loved encampment.
Braves and squaws, attired in feathers,
Robed in gowns of ceremony,
Sought a private place of meeting,
Chose the distant council-chamber
In the great Hotel Northampton,
There they met in secret splendor.
Feasted long, and drank and jested.
Smoked the peace-pipe of contentment.
There their elder chief and teacher.
Friend of all the braves and maidens.
Heap big fire chief. Father Serex,
Spoke to them in words of wisdom.
Ere they gathered in formation
For their final dance of triumph.
For their celebrated war-dance.
Shortly ere the tribes disbanded
Came the formal dedication
Of the newly-finished tepee.
Dedicated to the training
Of the braves, of the encampment.
Training in all types of warfare.
Training them in rugged fulness.
In their strength and their endurance.
Such a wigwam as was worthy
Of the braves of Massachusetts.
Thirty-four returned to Amherst;
(Three short moons had departed;)
Greeted fellow braves and maidens.
Chose once more their tribal leaders:
Edmund Clow again as chieftain;
Next in power — chief McMackin,
Tribal scribe — squaw Harriette Jackson;
Lucey, Smith, as tribal war-chiefs;
Teller of the legend — Campbell;
Ryan, re-elected trader.
Sophomores, they called each other.
Represented on the campus
By their braves — Maroon Kev holders;
Dunphy, Noble, Clark, the chieftains.
Clow and Ryan, Hiland, Alton,
Sturtevant, and C. McMackin.
Warwhoops sounded, war-cries echoed;
Thirty-four gave out the challenge:
Thirty-five young braves and maidens.
Latest comers to the campus.
Rallied to the call to battle.
Drew up forces, met the foeman,
Overwhelmed h'm with their numbers.
Scalped him, robbed him of his weapons.
Overcame him during "Razoo";
Dragged him, stumbling, through the campus.
Choking, eating dust and feathers.
At the hard-fought, six-brave rope-pull;
Dragged him, struggling, to the tepees.
Robbed him of his war-dance costume.
Meted out defeat inglorious
In the costumed war-dance conflict;
52
Only once their rivals rallied:
Thirty-four came through victorious
In a basketball encounter,
In a five-brave test of prowess.
Though the powerful freshmen warriors
Overcame their rival tribesmen.
Still the sophomores were stronger:
Older, longer on the campus.
Many braves held seats of honor.
Many squaws received high honors.
Bush, upon the field of battle,
Struggled bravely for his Redskins,
Helped to bring them fame and glory
In the contest with their rivals —
Nearby Amherst, deadly rivals —
Brought defeat upon those warriors.
Vanquished them on field of battle.
Other braves and other maidens
Vied in varied fields of valor.
Some in song, or dance, or story,
Some in campfire entertainments-
Many braves went out to warfare.
On the courts, in track, and baseball.
Leaders of these rising Redskins:
Clow, McMackin, Jackson, Ryan,
Campbell, teller of the legend,
Warchiefs, changing their positions,
Lucey, Smith, Taft, Burr, and Coburn.
Three persistent groups of maidens,
After waiting, waiting, waiting.
Finally received permission
From their elder chiefs and chieftains
To regard themselves as sisters:
Sigma Beta Chi, the first one.
Alpha Lambda Mu, and Lambda
Delta Mu. the two remaining.
Soon another joined the council.
Called itself by name. Phi Zeta.
These four bands of faithful sisters.
Maids from all three upper sections.
Pledged in sisterhood devoted.
Modeled after bands of warriors.
Faced a hard but glamorous future.
Thirty-four, their power growing.
Twice conducted tribal dances.
One by their official leaders.
By their braves — Maroon Key wearers;
One in honor of the seniors.
As a farewell to the seniors,
Thirty-two, their braves and maidens.
Ere the tribes in haste departed.
For their far ancestral tepees.
Thirty- four returned as juniors:
Took up seats of greatest honors-
Full-fledged leaders of the campus.
Clow again they chose as chieftain,
Clark as sub-chief, Taft a war-chief;
Jackson, Ryan, Lucey, Campbell;
Only once a change was voted;
Second chief they named McMackin.
Bush again, among the gridsters.
Piled up endless scores of honors.
Gained a title, well-deserving.
Leading scorer of the nation.
While the warriors, strong and mighty.
Overcame their ancient foemen.
Once defeated — Bowdoin, victor;
Once unsettled — Tufts, the enemy;
Seven times they were victorious.
Seven times the braves were victors.
Chief among the tribal dances.
Chief of all the ceremonies,
Came the Prom — a formal war-dance;
Red-skinned warriors, long expectant,
Maidens garbed in robes of splendor.
Gathered for a nightly vigil.
Celebrated long together.
Thirty-four, before departing,
Wrote a full and splendid record.
Wrote a comprehensive record,
In their log-book — called the "Index",
Wrote in there for every Red-skin —
Fellow tribesmen, younger warriors.
Wrote it there for all to witness.
Filled it full of picture-language.
Telling of their high achievements.
Telling of their tribal honors.
This they left behind in honor
As they left their loved encampment.
Left it for the summer season.
Thirty moons and six had ended
Since the tribe had first assembled.
Thirty-four, her braves and maidens.
On the Massachusetts campus.
Now for three moons all had scattered.
But when the fourth was high in heaven.
Then the tribe once more assembled,
Happy in their last reunion;
Gladly greeted fellow tribesmen.
Heard their tales, their wars, achievements;
Sadly, too, for each remembered
But a few moons were before them
Ere they leave this loved encampment;
Leave their tepees, trails, and trophies.
Leave them to the younger tribesmen.
Leave their fellow braves and maidens.
And return to distant valleys.
And our tribe of noble seniors.
Facing happily the future.
Joyous with their fellow Redskins,
Found their hearts quite over-shadowed
By the passing of their chieftain.
By his passing in the summer
To the happy hunting regions;
54
Patterson, their well-loved chieftain,
Lover, and the chief of teachers
Of the songs and of the legends
Handed down for generations;
So they joined in silent tribute
With the other tribes and Redskins
As chief Prince, his friend and brother.
Spoke with words of admiration
Of the man they knew and honored.
Thirty-four, now stately seniors.
Leaders now through all the campus.
Gathered once again together
For the naming of their chieftains;
Big chief Clow, their foremost leader,
First elected tribal chieftain
When these Redskins were but freshmen,
Chief of thirty-four since thirty.
Once again was highly honored.
Re-elected to his office;
Next in power came chief Hiland,
Tribal scribe again — squaw Jackson;
Ryan, guardian of the store-house
Since the days he was a freshman.
Chose they once more for that duty;
Smith as captain, heap big war chief,
Lucey also as a war chief,
Campbell still as legend teller.
Famed of tribal ceremonies
Came the great inauguration.
Came the public installation
Of the chief of the encampment,
Big chief Baker, mighty father.
Thirty-four, in tribal costume.
In the tribal robes of seniors.
Marched sedately through the campus;
All the tribes stood by to see them.
Came to see the big procession;
Watched the ranks of stately scholars.
Watched the seniors proudly passing.
Saw their friend and past chief, Thatcher,
Saw their newly-chosen chieftain.
Gazed upon the noble Ely,
Chief of Massachusetts Redskins,
Gazed upon those dignitaries.
Fourscore chiefs, in native costume.
Sent on terms of peace and friendship
From encampments near and distant.
Sent to bring them tribal greetings.
Long and brilliant the procession,
Long the ceremony following;
Noble speeches were presented
By his excellency Governor Ely,
By the chiefs Smith, Graves, and Machmer,
By the newly chosen chieftain.
By the tribes of younger Redskins
Through their spokesman, Alvan Ryan;
Ryan, speaking for his tribesmen.
Serious, earnest, in his manner.
In his ardent aspirations,
In his firm beliefs and tributes.
Well-deserved the words of honor
Spoken by his friends and elders.
Thirty-four, returned as seniors,
Found their tribe a great deal smaller
Than in freshman days of battle.
Many could not stand the hardships.
Could not stand the stress of training,
Left the tribe and its encampment.
Others, vastly more successful.
Found their way to other Redskins:
Four enrolled at Tufts encampment,
Still as seniors of State College,
Learning there the art of medicine.
Planning to become witch doctors;
Bourgeois, Wyman, were the warriors,
Duckering, Tiffany, the maidens.
Twelve from all the many seniors.
Leaders, winners of high honors.
Twelve, and only twelve, were honored
By election by their elders.
By their teachers and their chieftains
To a tribe of braves and maidens.
Honorary tribe for scholars:
Mary Taylor, Ruth D. Campbell,
Only maids to be thus honored;
Bates and Caird, among the warriors,
Randall Cole, and Coombs, and Frigard,
Hoffman, Denmark, Alvan Ryan,
Ted Cooke, Jr., and Kozlowski.
Some moons later French was chosen
As a member of the order.
Greatest honors were divided
For the two of highest standing:
Mary Taylor, Hyman Denmark;
And as all were named and honored
All the tribes stood by in tribute.
Great rejoicing filled the campus
When announcement reached the Redskins
That at last would be presented
Two new wigwams: one to shelter
Freshmen warriors, called in honor
Of the late chief, Roscoe Thatcher,
"Thatcher Hall", to be erected
Opposite the squaws' headquarters,
Opposite their house, the "Abbey",
On the hillside, facing westward.
Facing Warner and the Abbey.
For the use of tribal records.
Legends, papers, songs, and pictures.
Would be raised a second wigwam.
Named "Goodell" for that past chieftain.
Thus was their encampment growing.
Seniors — eldest of the whole encampment.
Leaders throughout all the campus:
56
Thirty-four now gave their noblest,
Gave their best and last endeavors
In the fields of their attainments.
Tribal records were depicted
For the eyes of all the Redskins,
By the hands of big chief Royal,
By squaw Campbell, brave Seperski,
By Burns Robbins, Snowdon Thomas,
In the widely-spread Collegian,
With braves Talbot, Schenck, and Batstone
Ably keeping it in motion.
In the tribal warfare contests.
Bush was chief of all the gridsters;
Smith and Frigard, Mountain, Lojko,
Sievers, Sibson, Bigelow, Coburn,
Ryan, Burke, and Norman Griswold;
These from thirty-four were chosen,
Fought against their old-time rivals.
Conquered Bowdoin, Conn., and Worcester,
Rensselaer, then Rhode Island,
Lost to Amherst, local rival.
Lost to Tufts, and to Saint Anselm's.
Captain Cowing, chief of soccer.
Captain Caird, cross-country runner.
Leading many sturdy warriors.
Winning honors for his tribesmen.
Captain Lojko, with his teammates.
Conquered each and every rival.
Overcame their twelve assailers.
Won an undefeated season.
On the courts, o'er all victorious.
Then in campfire entertainment
Maid McCarthy, warrior Southworth,
Chief of Roister Doisters tribesmen.
Gained a lasting reputation.
Achieved acclaim and endless praises.
Stephanson, an able warrior.
Manager of Harvest field-day.
Spread to all the neighboring Redskins,
Spread the fame of his encampment.
So through all the wide-spread campus
Thirty-four has placed her tribesmen.
Left upon the tribes below her
Never-ending signs of conquest.
Left upon the whole encampment
Something of her dauntless spirit.
Something of her great successes.
So that as her braves and maidens
Bid farewell to fellow tribesmen.
Teachers, friends, and able leaders.
Bid farewell to Massachusetts,
Seeking wider fields of battle.
Then her spirit shall yet linger
Living in the hearts of Redskins,
Scattered wide, but not forgotten:
Thirty-four, beloved Redskins,
Loyal Sons of Massachusetts.
IN MEMORIAM
JOSEPH LOJKO 1911-1934
JOSEPH LOJKO, late member of the Senior Class, died at the age of twenty-two as the result of an auto-
mobile accident on April 27, 1934 in South Deerfield. He was born in Poland in 191 1 and came to live in North-
hampton a few years later. He was graduated from the Northampton High School in 1929 ancJ spent the
following year there as a post-graduate. In 1930 he entered "State" and was to be graduated in June, 1934.
With his passing the Senior Class lost a most lovable and colorful member. In dress, walk, and speech,
"Joe" was attractively individualistic. One was quickly impressed with his healthy and clean-cut appearance,
which he was always mindful of maintaining.
As a friend, he was sincere, frank, and tactful, always ready to offer helpful criticism. His sense of humor
was of the type which makes men congenial. The courage and daring spirit which so characterized his play were
qualities which he was ever willing to offer for the support of a friend. "Joe's" spirit of fun and exuberance were
extremely contagious, and there was never lack of excitement when he was around.
As a student, his thoroughness and enthusiasm were well known. Always able to concentrate to an excep-
tional degree, he could study while others were wasting time. He could see the goal while others were merely
on the track. "Joe" was brave enough to ask questions until a topic was clear to him. Modesty marked his
behavior in the class room as well as on the athletic field. Cooperative and willing to share his knowledge, he
had an air of jaunty confidence.
As an athlete, "Joe" accepted the fact that he was handicapped in size, and compensated for this defi-
ciency by using strategy and having at his control unusually well-developed fundamentals. His philosophy, "It's
not what you do that counts, but rather, how you do it", found application in his athletic as well as his academic
life. "Joe" was seldom the high scorer, but he drew attention by his sterling sportsmanship, his strong leadership,
and his intelligent technique.
Indeed, we shall ever remember Joseph Lojko as a loyal friend, an exceptional scholar, a great athlete, but
most of all, as an outstanding member of the class of 1934.
HOWARD R. SIEVERS.
58
MacCleery Sturtevant Healey Stockbridge Cutler Pottei
ANIMAL HUSBANDRY
Richard Thompson Cutler South Sudbury
1912; Weston High School; Animal Husbandry; Football 1, 2, 3; Manager, Freshman
Hockeyl; Animal Husbandry Club; Dairy Judging Team — Alternate; Fat Stock Judg-
ing Team; Meats Judging Team; Q. T. V.
Elsie Elizabeth Healey Lee
1913; Lee High School; Animal Husbandry; W. A. A. 2, 3, 4; Soccer 1, 2, 3, 4;
Basketball 1 , 2, 4; Field Hockey 4; Newman Club 1 , 2, 3, 4; Fat Stock Judging Team
1933; Alpha Lambda Mu.
Russell Eldridge MacCleery Winthrop
1913; Winthrop High School; Animal Husbandry; Animal Husbandry Judging Team 4.
Harold Carpenter Potter Greenfield
1911; Greenfield High School; Animal Husbandry; Track 1, 2; Hockey 2; Animal
Husbandry Club, President 4; Outing Club 1; Poultry Judging Team; Dairy Cattle
Judging Team; General Livestock Judging Team; Meat Judging Team; Sigma Phi
Epsilon.
Robert Reed Stockbridge Worcester
1910; Northi High School; Animal Husbandry; Football 1 — squad; Varsity 3, 4;
Outing Club 4; Poultry Judging Team; Dairy Judging Team; Live Stock Judging Team.
Theta Chi.
Russell Sturtevant Halifax
1912; Bridgewater High School; Animal Husbandry; Maroon Key 2; Kappa Epsilon.
Harold Spencer Wood Central Village
1909; M. C. I.; Animal Husbandry; Varsity Football 2; Class Track 1; Class Football,
Captain 1 ; Lambda Chi Alpha.
Kingsbury
Pyenson
AGRICULTURE DAIRY POULTRY
Randall Knight Cole West Medway
1912; Medway High School; Poultry Husbandry; Class Football 2; Class Baseball —
Numeral Man and Manager 1 ; Band 3; K. O. Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Interfraternity Council
3, 4; Poultry Judging Team 2; Dairy Judging Team 3; Alpha Gamma Rho.
Robert Taylor Coleman Somerville
Somerville High School; Dairy Industries; Football 1; Track 1; Dairy Club 4; Dairy
Judging Team 4;
Robert Crompton Jackson New Bedford
1910; New Bedford High School; Agriculture — English; Soccer 2, 3, 4; Basketball 1 ;
Track 1 , 2, 3, 4; Interfraternity Council 3, 4; Kappa Epsilon.
Harlan Wesley Kingsbury Braintree
1909; Braintree High School; Dairy Industry; Class Football 1, 2; Class Baseball 1, 2;
Class Basketball 1, 2; Dairy Club; Chess-Checker Club; Alpha Gamma Rho.
Harry Pyenson East Lee
1913; Lee High School; Dairy Manufactures; Baseball 1; Hockey 3; Dairy Club,
Vice President 4; Dairy Products Judging Team; Alpha Epsilon Pi.
Malcolm Chamberlain Stewart Needham
1912; Needham High School; Poultry Husbandry; Basketball 2, 3; Track 1, 2, 3;
Kappa Sigma.
Joseph Frank Zillman Dorchester
1910; Dorchester High School for Boys; Dairy Manufactures; Football 1, Varsity 2;
Band 4; Dairy Science Club; Christian Association 1, 2, 3, 4; Social Economics Club.
60
Casey
Cande
HOME ECONOMICS
Elinor Sherman Cande Sheffield
1912; Sheffield High School; Home Economics; Girl's Basketball 1, 2, 3; Index 3;
W. S. G. A. 3; Sigma Beta Chi, Pres. 4.
Charlotte Belcher Casey Easthampton
1913; Home Economics; Chorus 2, 3.
Dorothy Frances Doran Springfield
1912; Commerce High School; Home Economics; Phi Zeta.
Marjorie Louise French West Newton
1912; Medway High School; Home Economics; Collegian 1, 2; Home Economics Club;
Phi Zeta, Pres. 4.
Sarah Augusta Peaslee Woodville
1913; Worcester Classical High School; Home Economics; Home Economics Club;
Outing Club 1; Y. W. C. A. 1, 2, 3; Intersorority Council 3, 4; Alpha Lambda Mu.
Edith Janette Smith State Line
1913; Pittsfield High School; Home Economics; Home Economics Club; Y. W. C. A.
1, 2, 3; Intersorority Council 3, 4; Lambda Delta Mu.
Mary Arundale Tomlinson West Newton
1911; Newton High School; Home Economics; Glee Club 1, 2; Home Economics Club;
Outing Club 1; Y. W. C. A. 1, 2; Sigma Beta Chi.
Skipton
HOME ECONOMICS
Muriel Viola Brackett Marblehead
1910; Bishop Hopkins Hall; Home Economics; Bay State Revue 1, 2, 3; Phi Zeta.
Catherine Maclnnis Ellis East Brewster
1913; Dean Academy; Home Economics; Phi Zeta.
Barbara Kimball Gerrard Holyoke
1911; Holyoke High School: Home Economics; Orchestra 1, 4; Bay State Revue 3;
Home Economics Club; Phi Zeta.
Alberta Elizabeth Skipton Springfield
1912; Central High School; Home Economics; Home Economics Club 1, 2, 3, 4;
Outing Club 1; W. S. G. A. 1, 2, 3, 4; Y. W. C. A. 1; Horticultural Show 3; Phi Zeta.
Elizabeth Wheeler Worcester
1912; Classical High School; Home Economics; Dad's Day Committee 3; Home Econo-
mics Club; W. S. G. A. — Treasurer 4; Y. W. C. A. — Secretary 2; Lambda Delta Mu.
Joan Elizabeth Wilcox
1910; Jamaica Plain High School; Home Economics; Sigma Beta Chi
Jamaica Plain
Cutle
Bingham
Cook
FLORICULTURE
Stephen Wiggins Bennett Worcester
1909; North High School; Floriculture; Orchestra 1; Floriculture Club; Horticultural
Show 3, 4; Manager, Horticultural Show Store 4; Theta Chi.
Leonard Joseph Bingham North Andover
1912; St. John's Prep.; Floriculture; Class Football 1, 2; Track 2, 3, 4; Floriculture
Club; Alpha Sigma Phi.
Elizabeth Addie Cook Shrewsbury
1912; Shrewsbury High School; Floriculture; Orchestra 1; Y. W. C. A. 1, 2.
Roland Rogers Cutler, Jr. South Sudbury
1910; Weston High School; Floriculture; Horticultural Show 3, 4.
George Deming Moody North Andover
1910; Johnson High School; Floriculture; Alpha Gamma Rho.
Albert Sherman Stoneham
1912; Stoneham High School; Floriculture; Exhibited in Hort. Show 3, 4.
Edwin Francis Steffek Westfield
1912; Westfield High School; Floriculture; Floriculture Club; K. O. Club 1, 2, 3, 4;
Alpha Gamma Rho.
Bigelow
Taylor
Papp
LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE
George Harrison Bigelow Marlborough
1912; Marlborough High School; Landscape Architecture; Football 2 — squad, 3, 4 —
varsity; Informal Dance Committee 4 — Chairman; Senate 4; Sigma Phi Epsilon.
William Austin Bower North Andover
1912; Johnson High School; Landscape Architecture; Class Baseball 2; Class Football
2; Kappa Sigma.
Gerald Thomas Bowler Westfield
1910; Westfield High School; Landscape Architecture; Soccer 2, 3, 4; Baseball 2;
Q. T. V.
Charles Reitz Herbert Squantum
1912; Thayer Academy; Landscape Architecture; Index 3; Horticultural Show Com-
mittee 4; Landscape Club.
James Shepard Klar Springfield
1912; Central High School; Landscape Architecture; Roister Doisters 3; Index 3;
Chorus 1; Outmg Club 1 ; Band 1, 2; Bay State Entertainers 1, 3, 4; Theta Chi.
Walter Louis Papp North Falmouth
1910; Lawrence High School; Landscape Architecture; Bay State Revue 4; Glee Club
3, 4; Chorus 1, 2; Choir 1, 2.
Wolcott Lawrence Schenck Longmeadow
1912; Springfield Technical High School; Landscape Architecture; Cross Country 1 —
numerals; 2 — Junior Varsity; Collegian 3, 4; Roister Doisters 3, 4; Sohp. -Senior Hop
Committee 2; Junior Prom Committee 3; Dad's Day Committee 3, 4; Landscape Club
2, 3, 4; Interfraternity Council 3; Lambda Chi Alpha.
Elizabeth Taylor Holyoke
1913; Holyoke High School; Landscape Architecture; Landscape Club; Sigma Beta Chi.
64
Burke
Stephansen
MacMackin
LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE
Herbert Roger Alton Webster
1911; Bartiett High School; Landscape Architecture; Class Track 1; Cross Country,
Junior Varsity 2; Index, Art Editor 3; Bay State Revue 4; Junior Prom Committee 3;
Combined Chorus 1, 2; Glee Club 3, 4; Landscape Club 1 , 2, 3, 4 — President; Inter-
fraternity Council 3, 4; Maroon Key 2; Horticultural Show 4; Theta Chi.
Frank Arthur Batstone, Jr. West Newton
1911; Newton Classical High School; Landscape Architecture; Class Treasurer 1;
Collegian 2, 3, 4; Band 1; Orchestra 1, 2, 3, 4; Dad's Day Committee 3; Landscape
Club 3, 4; Orpheus Club 1, 2; Horticultural Show 3, 4; Theta Chi.
Raymond Francis Burke Woronoco
1910; Westfield High School; Landscape Architecture; Football 1 , 2, 3, 4; Basket-
ball 1; Track 1, 2; Newman Club; Q. T. V.
William Donald Durell Attleboro
1910; Williston Academy; Landscape Architecture; Roister Doisters 2; Mother's Day
Committee; Landscape Club; Horticultural Show 4; Theta Chi.
Carleton Archie MacMackin Lancaster
1910; Vermont Academy; Landscape Architecture; Winter and Spring Track 1, 2,
3, 4; Varsity Relay Squad 2; Class Vice-President 1, 2, 3; Band 1, 2; Informal Com-
mittee 3; Freshman Handbook Committee 1; Landscape Club 3, 4; Christian Associa-
tion 1 ; Maroon Key 2; Theta Chi.
Fred Jouett Nisbet
1912; Randolph-Macon Academy; Landscape Architecture; Class Track 1 ■
Track 2, 3; Swimming 4; Band 1, 2, 3; Orchestra 1, 2; Outing Club
Leader 1; Landscape Club 2, 3, 4; Theta Chi.
Boston
numerals;
2; Cheer
Amherst
Hans Paul Stephansen
1907; Northeast High School, Philadelphia, Pa.; Landscape Architecture; Hockey 1, 2;
Bay State Revue 4; Combined Chorus 1, 2; Glee Club 3, 4; Landscape Club; Outing
Club 1, 2; Horticultural Show 3, 4 — Chairman; Kappa Sigma.
65
Edney
Chase
Esselen
Wheelt
Clark
Henry
GENERAL HORTICULTURE
Gordon Ellery Ainsworth Littleton, N. H.
1909; Littleton High School; University of Maine; Forestry; Lambda Chi Alpha.
David Louis Bick Everett
1911; Everett High School; Horticultural Manufactures; Football 1; Manager, Track
1; Manager Varsity Track 2; Horticultural Show 4; Alpha Epsilon Pi.
Greenleaf Tucker Chase Newburyport
1912; Ridgewood High School; Landscape Architecture; Track; Bay State Revue 4;
Outing Club 1 , 2, 3, 4; Horticultural Show.
Frederick Griswold Clark West Deerfield
1912; Deerfield Academy; Pomology; Manager, Varsity Cross Country 2; Class Vice-
president 1; Manager, Roister Doisters 2, 3; Dad's Day Committee 1 ; Informal Dance
Committee 4; Maroon Key 2; Adelphia 3, 4, President 4; Horticultural Show 3, 4;
Pomology Judging Team 4; Q. T. V.
James Palmer Edney South Acton
1913; Acton High School; Horticultural Manufactures; Class Track 1; Jr. Varsity Cross
Country 2; Cheer Leader 1; Dairy Club 4; K. O. Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Horticultural Show
4; Dairy Judging Team 4; Theta Chi.
William Brigham Esselen, Jr. Millis
1912; Millis High School; Horticultural Manufactures; Football Manager 1, 4; Band
1, 2, 3, 4; Horticultural Show 4; Q. T. V.
John Biggs Farrar South Lincoln
1912; Concord High School; Pomology and Olericulture; Baseball 1 , 2, 3, 4; — Cap-
tain 4; Cross Country 1, 2; Interfraternity Council 4; Horticultural Show 3, 4; Lambda
Chi Alpha
Ralph Joseph Henry Methuen
1906; Maiden High School; Pomology; Football 1; Hockey 1, 2, 3, 4; Basketball 1;
Cross Country 2; Band 1, 2, 3, 4; Manager 4; Orchestra 1, 2, 3, 4; Bay State Revue
1, 2, 4; Horticultural Show Committee 4; Academics Board 3, 4; Alpha Sigma Phi.
Nelson Adrian Wheeler Belchertown
1913; Holyoke High School; Pomology; Football 1, 2; Horticultural Show — Chairman
of Pomology Division 4; Fruit Judging Team 3; Theta Chi.
66
Cowing
BACTERIOLOGY
Wilmer Dwight Barrett West Bridgewater
1913; Howard High School; Bacteriology, and Physiology; Football 1; Baseball 1;
Track 1, 3.
Richard Mills Brown Springfield
Springfield College; Bacteriology and Physiology; Varsity Swimming 4.
Raphael Fiorani Costello Franklin
1910; Dean Academy; Bacteriology; Band; Alpha Sigma Phi.
Roy Tapley Cowing West Springfield
1912; West Springfield High School; Bacteriology; Soccer 2, 3, (Capt.) 4; Track I,
2, 3; Interfraternity Council 3, 4; Scientific Conference at Wesleyan 3; Alpha Sigma
Phi
Windsor, Conn.
Springfield
Darreli Anderson Dance
1913; John Fitch High School; Bacteriology.
Charles Hurwitz
1913; Central High School; Bacteriology.
Herbert Jenkins Methuen
1912; Searles High School; Bacteriology and Physiology; Collegian 1, 2, 3; Inter-
national Relations Club 1 .
David Charles Mountain
Pittsfield
1911; Pittsfield High School; Bacteriology and Physiology; Varsity Football 2, 3, 4;
Class Football 1, 2; Class Basketball 3, 4; Varsity Swimming 4; Kappa Sigma.
PHYSICAL AND BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
Erma Marie Carl
1913; Hoiyoke High School; Botany; Roister Doisters
Kendrick McDowell Cole
Hoiyoke
Y. W. C. A; Lambda Delta Mu.
Needham
1913; Needham High School; Entomology and Zoology; Cross Country 1, 2; Fernald
Entomological Club.
Ralph Warren Dexter Gloucester
1912; Gloucester High School; Zoology; Editor-in-Chief 1934 Index 3; Christian
Association 1 ; Debating 2; Kappa Epsilon.
Eliot Landsman Dorchester
1912; Dorchester High School; Distributed Sciences; Football 1; Varsity Soccer 2, 3,
4; Track 1; Roister Doisters 3; Debating 1;
Laura Elizabeth Rowland Springfield
1912; Central High School; Entomology; Fernald Entomological Club; Y. W. C. A. 1, 2.
Henry Atchinson Walker Southbridge
1913; Mary E. Wells High School; Entomology; Class Track 1; Class Cross Country 1;
Index-Business Manager 3; Fernald Entomological Club 2, 3, 4, (President 4) ; Outing
Club 4; Academics Activities Board 3; Editor-Fernald Club Yearbook; Chorus 1, 2, 3;
Alpha Gamma Rho.
68
Tiffany
Wyman
Duckering
Bourgeois
PHYSICAL AND BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
George Albert Bourgeois, III
1911; Phillips Exeter Academy; Botany,
Williamsburg
Varsity Football 2; Class Track 2; Q. T. V.
Florence Duckering
1912; Dorchester High School; Bacteriology; Y. W. C. A.
Alpha Lambda Mu.
Dorchester
2; Intersorority Council 3;
Holyoke
; Index Secretary 3; Alpha Lambda Mu.
Turners Falls
Distributed Sciences; Sigma Phi Epsilon.
East Northfield
ices; Varsity Baseball 2; Manager
Grace Elizabeth Tiffany
Holyoke High School; Bacteriology
Edward Rochford Wyman
1909; Turners Falls High School;
Aaron Wayne Newton
1913; Northfield High School; Distributed
Cross Country 3; Alpha Sigma Phi.
One half of our year at Tufts Medical School was spent with Anatomy,
all day long from 9 A, M. to 5 P. M. We often thought longingly of the well
balanced variety of our classes at Massachusetts State. Of course, we had
Microscopic Anatomy in the morning with the Gross in the afternoon, but
after all Anatomy is Anatomy and we thought that we had plenty of it.
This semester there is Physiology instead — or, rather Physiology and
Physiological Chemistry (which are all the same to us) . We think of the warm
spring days on the campus with the scent of new mown hay in the air and
can hardly wait to be back.
However, despite all this, we have enjoyed our year at Tufts even more
than we expected. Our life has not been a grind, as a disinterested observer
might think, but has given us richer fields, a gay time, and pleasant memories.
O'Neil
CHEMISTRY
Alice G. Anderson Everett
1910; Everett High School; Chemistry; Outing Club 1, 2; Order of the Guides 3, 4.
Roger Gordon Bates Cummington
1912; Northampton High School; Chemistry; Index 3 — Literary Editor; Orchestra
2, 3, 4; Bay State Revue 2, 3; Freshman Handbook Committee' 1 ; Glee Club 4;
Combined Chorus 1, 2, 3; Kappa Epsilon; Phi Kappa Phi.
Raymond Dunham Coldwell Framingham
1910; Framingham High School; Chemistry; Football 1, 2; Baseball 1.
Theodore Frederic Cooke, Jr. Richmond
1913; Pittsfield High School; Chemistry; Alpha Sigma Phi; Phi Kappa Phi.
Karol Joseph Kucinski Amherst
1911; Amherst High School; Chemistry; Band 1, 2;
Stephen Albert Lincoln Oakham
1912; Hardwick High School; Chemistry; Phi Sigma Kappa.
James Willis Merrill South Hadley Falls
1910; South Hadley High School; Chemistry; Q. T. V.
Cornelius Francis O'Neil Northampton
1912; Saint Michael's High School; Chemistry.
Vernon Kenneth Watson Amherst
1912; Amherst High School; Chemistry; Class Football 1, 2; Index 3; Interfraternity
Council 3, 4; Phi Sigma Kappa.
70
CHEMISTRY
Franklin Gilmore Burr Worthington
1912; Springfield Technical High School; Chemistry; Lambda Chi Alpha.
David William Caird Dalton
1912; Dalton High School; Chemistry; Senate 3, 4; Honor Council 2, 3, 4; Varsity
Track — letterman 1, 2, 3; Cross Country — letterman 1, 2, 3 — Captain 4; Fresh-
man Handbook Committee 1; Adelphia; Phi Kappa Phi.
Charles Edwin Coombs Holyoke
1912; Holyoke High School; Chemistry; Track 1; Cross Country 2; Index 3; Band 1,
2, 3, 4; Orchestra 3; Bay State Revue 4; Physics Club; Phi Kappa Phi.
Hyman Samuel Denmark Holyoke
1912; Holyoke High School; Chemistry; Phi Kappa Phi.
James Henry Flynn Easthampton
1913; Easthampton High School; Chemistry.
Chester Leroy French Greenfield
1911; Greenfield High School; Chemistry; Track 1; Hockey 1, 2, 3; Christian Asso-
ciation 1, 2, 3; Sigma Phi Epsilon.
Arthur Carlton Merrill, Jr. Rockport
1913; Rockport High School; Chemistry; Class Track 1; Cross Country 2; Basketball
4 — Manager; Phi Sigma Kappa.
John Frank Pozzi North Adams
1911; Drury High School; Chemistry; Varsity Hockey 2, 3 — squad; Class Hockey 1;
K. O. Club 1, 2; Sigma Phi Epsilon.
Joseph Whitney Springfield
1912; Northampton High School; Chemistry; Track 1 — Manager; Cross Country 2 —
Manager; Lambda Chi Alpha.
Landsman Hoffman Kibbe
5bbins Soufhworth Freedman
Zielinski
Clow Sievers
PHYSBCAL AND BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
Edmund James Clow Orange
1911; Orange High School ;Distributed Sciences; Football 1, 2; Class President 1, 2,
3, 4; Senate 3, 4, President 4; Maroon Key 2; Adelphia 4; Lambda Chi Alpha.
Alexander Harvey Freedman Dorchester
1912; Dorchester High School for Boys; Physical and Biological Sciences; Class Foot-
ball 1; Track I; M. S. C. Chorus; Alpha Epsilon Pi.
Archie Arthur Hoffman Amherst
1913; Revere High School; Distributed Sciences; Soccer 2, 3, squad; Band 1, 3; Phi
Kappa Phi.
Milton Homer Kibbe West Springfield
191 1 ; West Springfield High School; Pre-medical; Alpha Sigma Phi.
Burns Robbins Brewton, Alabama
1900; Brewton Collegiate Institute; Pre-Medical; Collegian 4; Roister Doisters 2, 3, 4;
Bay State Revue; Dad's Day Committee 4; Newman Club 4; Interfraternity Council
3, 4; Sigma Phi Epsilon.
Howard Ralph Sievers Amherst
1912; Amherst High School; Physical and Biological Sciences; Varsity Football 2, 3, 4;
Basketball 1, 2, 3; Roister Doisters; Junior Prom Committee 3; Informal Committee 4;
Interfraternity Council 2, 3, 4; Senate 4; Kappa Sigma.
Warren Hilbourne Southworth Lynn
1912; Lynn English High School; Zoology; Roister Doisters 1, 2, 3, 4, — President 3,
Vice-president 4; Bay State Revue 3, Director 4; Dad's Day Committee 4.
Joseph Francis Zielinski Holyoke
1912; Holyoke High School; Distributed Sciences; Varsity baseball 2, 3, 4, squad;
Varsity basketball 2, 3, squad; class baseball 1 ; class basketball 1,2; Alpha Sigma Phi.
72
Griswold
srnstein Rogers
Thompson
Nichols Hilanc
PHYSICAL AND BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
Harry Bernstein Everett
1912; Everett High School; Distributed Sciences; Class baseball 1 — squad; Class
football 1 — squad; class soccer 2 — squad; Varsity soccer 2; Band 1 ; Alpha Epsilon
Pi.
Samuel Bresnick Revere
1913; Revere High School; Distributed Sciences; Band 3; Phi Lambda Tau.
Norman Bulkeley Griswold . Hartford, Connecticut
191 1 ; Hartford High School; Distributed Sciences; Football 1, 2, 3, 4; Collegian 1, 2;
Outing Club 1, 2; Sigma Phi Epsilon.
Fanny Abigail Hager South Deerfield
1912; Deerfield High School; Biological Sciences; Y. W. C. A. 1, 2, 3; W. A. A. 1;
Outing Club 2, 3.
Page Livingston Hiland Sheffield
1912; Sheffield High School; Berkshire Prep. School; Distributed Sciences; Class Vice-
President 4; Index 3; Maroon Key 2; Soph Senior Hop Committee 2; Junior Prom
Committee, Chairman 3; Military Ball Committee 3, 4; Dad's Day Committee 3, 4,
Chairman 4; Informal Committee 4; Christian Association 3, 4, Chairman 4; Lambda
Chi Alpha.
Nathan Paddock Nichols
Danvers
1912; Loomis Institute; Physics; Hockey 1; Cross Country 1; Physics Club 3, 4,
President 4; Outing Club 3, 4; Kappa Sigma.
Mark Henry Rogers West Newbury
1913; West Newbury High School; Dummer Academy; Mathematics; Track 2, 3; Phi
Sigma Kappa.
Donald Hartwell Smith
South Berlin
1912; Waltham High School; Class Football 1 ; Class Baseball 1; Varsity football 2, 3;
Honor Council 1, 2, 3, 4, President 4; Class Captain 1 ; Phi Sigma Kappa.
Walter Earle Thompson, Jr. South Hadley Center
1912; Holyoke High School; Chemistry and Bacteriology; Class Football 1, 2; Alpha
Sigma Phi.
73
Chesbro
rvey Adams
Hoagland
Fisher
Wordell
Simmons
PHYSICAL AND BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
Laura Elizabeth Adams
Athol
1911; Athol High School; Distributed Sciences; Index 3; Bay State Revue 1; Outing
Club 1, 4; Y. W. C. A. 1, 2, 3, 4; Alpha Lambda Mu.
Wallace Lea Chesbro Osterville
1913; Barnstable High School; Distributed Sciences; Orchestra, Manager 4; Bay State
Revue 4; Christian Association 1, 3, 4; Kappa Epsilon.
Douglas Gordon Daniels Reading
1910; Cushing Academy; Distributed Sciences; Hockey 1, 2; Military Ball Committee
4; Phi Sigma Kappa.
Josephine Frances Fisher Jamaica Plain
1912; Jamaica Plain High School; Biology; Index 3; Campus Chest Committee; Fernald
Club 3; History and Sociology Club 4; Outing Club 1 ; Y. W. C. A. 1, 2, 3, 4, Cabinet
3, 4; W. A. A; Alpha Lambda Mu.
Edward Winslow Harvey Amherst
1912; Amherst High School; Biological Sciences; Soph-Senior Hop Committee; Kappa
Sigma.
Descom DeForest Hoagland Waltham
1911; Springfield Central High School; Distributed Sciences; Alpha Gamma Rho.
James Paige MacKimmie North Amherst
1911; Amherst High School; Distributed Sciences; Soccer 2, 3, 4; Baseball 1, 2.
Gladys Josephine Simmons Pittsfield
1913; Pittsfield High School; Physiological and Biological Sciences.
Hillman Hathaway Wordell Somerset
1912; Somerset High School; Distributed Sciences; Band 3; Chorus 3; Alpha Gamma
74
Smiaroski
Dunphy
AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS
Norton Spencer Chapin Swampscott
1912; Swampscott High School; Agricultural Economics; Varsity Football 2; Freshman
Football 1; Debating 1.
Charles Henry Dunphy Palmer
1910; Palmer High School; Economics; Track 1, 2, 3; Index 3; Roister Doisters 3;
Dad's Day Committee 3, 4; Mardi Gras Committee 2; Debatmg I, 2, 3; Newman Club;
Maroon Key 2; Lambda Chi Alpha.
Lillian Hannah Hast Worcester
1912; South High School; Agricultural Economics; Soccer 4; Basketball 3, 4; Hockey
4; Index 3; Newman Club 2, 3, 4; Alpha Lambda Mu.
William Kozlowski Lynn
1912; Lynn English High School; Economics; Soccer 2, 3, 4; Roister Doisters 2; Band
1, 2; Burnham Declamation Contest 2; Phi Kappa Phi; Sigma Phi Epsilon.
Stoneham
Springfield
Varsity 2,
William Seaton Lister, Jr.
1912; Stoneham High School; Economics; Class Baseball 2; Band 1, 2, 3, 4; Orches-
tra 1, 2, 3, 4.
Edward James Talbot
1912; Central High School; Agricultural Economics; Football 1; Soccer
3, 4; Letter 3, 4; Hockey 1; Collegian — Advertising Manager 3, Business Manager
4; Index — Circulation Manager 3; Bay State Revue 4; Glee Club 3, 4; Newman Club
1, 2, 3, 4; Sigma Phi Epsilon.
Winthrop Snowden Thomas South Middleboro
1911; Middleboro High School; Agricultural Economics; Track 2; Cross Country 1;
Collegian 4; Christian Association.
75
Royal
Caswell
EDUCATION
Ethel Winfred Blatchford Attleboro
1910; Attleboro High School; Education; Graduate of Posse-Nissen School of Physical
Education, 1929; Assistant Instructor in Physical Education for Women, M. S. C;
Delta Psi Kappa.
Carolyn M. Caswell Shattuckville
1913; Arms Academy; Education; Y. W. C. A. 1, 2, 3.
Margaret Patricia Crean Turners Falls
1913; Turners Falls High School; Education.
Marjorie Ann Jensen Worcester
1912; Worcester South High School; Psychology; Women's Baseball 3; Basketball
1, 2, 3; Manager 2, 3; Tennis 1, 2; Roister Doisters 1,2, 3, 4; Dad's Day Committee
2; Outing Club 1 ; W. S. G. A. 1, 2; Y. W. C. A. 1, 2; Intersorority Council, Sec'y-
Treas. 3; Sigma Beta Chi.
Charles Alonzo LeClair Amherst
1911; Amherst High School; Economics; Varsity Baseball, assistant manager 1, 2;
Varsity Hockey, assistant manager 2; Kappa Sigma.
Joseph Lojko Northampton
1911; Northampton High School; Education; Football 1, 2, 3, 4; Basketball 1 , 2, 3, 4;
Lambda Chi Alpha.
Raymond Deward Royal Adams
1911; Adams High School; Education; Varsity Soccer 2; Class Baseball 1; Class Foot-
ball 1; M. S. C. Chorus 2; Collegian 2, 3, 4; Editor-in-chief 3.
76
Hodgen Snow
Frigar
EDUCATION
Louis Joseph Bush Turners Falls
1912; Vermont Academy; Education; Footbali 2, 3, Captain 4; Baseball 2, 3, 4;
Basketball 2, 3, 4; Senate 4; Adelphia 4; Sigma Phi Epsilon
Wilho Frigard Maynard
1912; Maynard High School; Education; Football 2, 3, 4; Baseball 2, 3, 4; Basketball
3, 4; Phi Kappa Phi; Lambda Chi Alpha.
Alden Reginald Hodgen Hubbardston
1911; Arms Academy; Education; Debating 3, 4; Kappa Sigma.
Ruth Pushee North Amherst
1913; Amherst High School; Education; Orchestra 1, 2, 3, 4; Chorus 1, 2, 3, 4;
Choir 2, 3.
Russell L. Snow Arlington
1911; Arlington High School; Education; Class Track 1; Varsity Track 2; Varsity
Hockey 1, 2, 3, Captain 4; Varsity Cross Country 2, 3; Assistant Manager, Band 3;
Phi Sigma Kappa.
Florence Pauline Stoeber Adams
1913; Adams High School; Education; Outing Club 1; Phi Zeta.
Gorey
Lucey
Einbinder
Cosgriff
Sibs
SOCIOLOGY
David Edward Cosgriff Springfield
1910; Central High School; Sociology and History; Hockey 1; Bay State Revue 3, 4;
Chorus I, 2, 3; Glee Club — Manager 3, 4; Sigma Phi Epsilon.
Gordon Bowman Dennis Framingham
1912; Alton High School; Economics, Sociology and History; Sigma Phi Epsilon.
Celia Harriet Einbinder Springfield
1913; Holyoke High School; Economics, Sociology and History; Women's Rifle Team —
captain, Manager 3; Chorus 2; W. A. A. 3 — Cabinet; Outing Club 1 ; Phi Zeta.
Robert Francis Gorey South Deerfield
1910; Deerfield Academy; Sociology and History; Football 1; Class football 1, 2;
Collegian 1, 2; Glee Club 3, 4; Bay State Revue 3; History Club 4; Sigma Phi Epsilon.
Alexander Ambrose Lucey Medford
1912; Medford High School; Economics, History and Sociology; Track — squad 2;
Cross Country — squad 2; Class Captam 2, 3; Class Sergeant at Arms 4; Roister
Doisters 3, 4 — Manager; Band 1, 2, 3, 4; Orchestra Manager 3; Bay State Revue
2, 3, 4; Dad's Day Committee 4; Chorus I, 2; History-Sociology Club — President 4;
Newman Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Academic Activities Board 3, 4; Alpha Sigma Phi.
James Albert Sibson Milford
1910; Milford High School; History, Economics and Sociology; Football 1, 2, 3, 4;
Baseball 1, 2, 3; Class Basketball 1, 2, 3; Military Major; Kappa Sigma.
Frances Woodbury Maiden
1911; Maiden High School; History, Economics, and Sociology; History Club (Secre-
tary; Y. W. C. A. 1, 2; Sigma Beta Chi.
78
Costa
Cook
McGuckian
SOCIAL SCIENCES
Thurl D. Brown Danvers
1908; Holten High School; Social Science; Roister Doisters 2, 3; Alpha Gamma Rho.
Frances Lora Cook Waltham
1910; Waltham High School; Sociology; Honor Council 4; W. A. A. President 4;
Sigma Beta Chi.
Flory Gloria Costa Agawam
1912; Agawam High School; Languages and Literature; Girls' Basketball.
Nathaniel Bartram Hill Amherst
1913; Helen E. James High School, Williamsburg; Social Sciences; Soccer 2 — Squad;
Roister Doisters 1, 2, 3; Bay State Revue 2; Debating 1, 2, 3, 4; Captain-Manager
3, 4; Burnham Declamation Contest I; Flint Oratorical Contest 3.
Harriette Morgan Jackson Orange
1912; Orange High School; English; Class Historian 1; Class Secretary 2, 3, 4; Dad's
Day Committee 3; Soph-Senior Hop Committee 2; W. S. G. A. Vice President 3;
President 4; Y. W. C. A. 1; Sigma Beta Chi.
Kathleen Jane MacDonald Greenfield
1912; Northfield Seminary; Social Sciences; Phi Zeta.
Ambrose Thomas McGuckian Roslindale
1910; Jamaica Plain High School; Social Sciences — Economics; Football 3, 4; Track
2, 3; Hockey 2, 3, 4; Index 3; Roister Doisters 2, 3; Interfraternity Council 3, 4;
President 4; Adelphia 4; Q. T. V.
Taylor
Hillberg
Ryan
LANGUAGES AND LITERATURE
Donald William Chase
Haverhill
1913; Haverhill High School; English; Roister Doisters 3, 4; Bay State Revue 4;
Combined Chorus 1, 2, 3; Outing Club 4.
Arthur Allerton Green Windsor, Conn,
1911; Loomis Institute; English; Class Track 1 ; Outing Club 3, 4; (Vice President 4)
(Order* of the Guides 4); Christian Association 1, 2, 3, 4; United Religious Council 4;
Chorus 1, 2, 3.
Alice Severance Gunn
Turners Falls
1912; Turners Falls High School; English; Transferred from University of Vermont;
Pi Beta Phi.
Pauline Louise Hillberg Pittsfield
1909; Pittsfield High School; Bershire Business College; English; Intersorority Council
3, 4; President 4; Phi Zeta.
J. W. Robertson
Dorchester
Alvan Sherman Ryan Needham Heights
1912; Needham High School; English; Football 2, 3, 4; Track 2, 3; Class Treasurer
1, 2, 3, 4; Senate 4; Maroon Key 2; Honor Council; Adelphia 4; Lambda Chi Alpha.
Mary Isabelle Taylor
1912; Groton High School; English; W. S. G. A. 4; Council 4.
Groton
80
Magay
Einbinder
LANGUAGES AND LITERATURE
Ruth Dexter Campbell Springfield
1912; Central High School; English; Class Historian 2, 3, 4; Collegian 2, 3, 4; Dad's
Day Committee 3; Y. W. C. A. 1, 2, 3, 4, President 3; Honor Council 3, 4; Sigma
Beta Chi; Phi Kappa Phi.
Margaret Clark Greenfield
1912; Greenfield High School; Languages; Girls' Basketball 1, 2, 3, 4; Manager 3;
Sigma Beta Chi.
Robert Andrew Magay
1910; Worcester North High School; French; Class Footbal
Senior Hop Committee 2; Theta Chi.
Shirley Elizabeth McCarthy
1912; Greenfield High School; French; Roister Doisters 1, 2
President 4; Dad's Day Committee 4; Mother's Day Committee 3; Intersorority Council
4; Sigma Beta Chi.
Nancy Russell Springfield
1913; Central High School; English; Index 3; Bay State Revue 4; Dad's Day Committee
4; United Religious Council 4; Newman Club 3, 4; Phi Zeta.
Russell Eugene Taft Greenfield
1913; Suffield School; Languages; Class Sergeant at Arms 2, 3; Soccer 3; Baseball
1 — Numerals 2, 3, Varsity; Basketball 1 — Numerals, 3 — Varsity; Lambda Chi
Alpha.
Worcester
2; Track 1, 2; Soph-
Greenfield
3, 4, Vice President 3,
Ex- 1934
Samuel Adams
Karl O. Anderson
Muriel E. Ashley
Sargent M. Baird
Thomas W. Barrus
Helen W. Bartlett
Stasia P. Basamania
Roland F. Becker
John M. Bellows, Jr.
Florence L. Benson
Roger T. Blackburn
Floyd O. Blanchard
Kenneth B. Cahoon
Calvin P. Call
James J. Carlin
Percival N. Churchill
Joseph L. Coburn
Ralph S. Cohen
Frederick L. Corcoran
Alfred E. Cox
David Crosby
Herbert V. Cummings
Richard H. Daniels
Rheal E. Daze
Frank DeAndrade
Hazel M. Dow
Alice K. Dressel
Wilmot G. Dunham
Ellen A. Dupuis
John W. Dwyer
Clyde N. Ennis
Everett H. Fletcher
Ida Forer
Russell T. Gagnon
Ruth A. Gardner
Max B. Gertz
Vincent C. Gilbert
Irene R. Ginsburgh
Sylvan J. Ginsburgh
Oscar R. Gooch
John R. Goodhue
William V. Goodstein
Irwin F. Gordon
Leslie J. Gore
Lionel C. Hartford, Jr.
Scott H. Harvey
Verne Harvey
Benton L. Hatch
Knut A. Haukelid
Alice B. Hess
Dorothy E. Heywood
Richard E. Hicks
Charles H. Hinckley
Edward H. Hobbie
Arthur F. Hoffman
Robert W. Hornbaker
Albert B. Hovey
Miner S. Howes
Robert P. Hunter
Louise Hutchins
John A. Kennedy, Jr.
Frank H. Krumpholz
Arnold J. Levy
Janet M. Lockhart
Robert C. Merritt
Helen B. Merritt
Adolfo R. Miranda
William P. Mulhall
llmar Natti
Robert G. Noble
Elizabeth E. O'Donnell
Bowyer B, Osgood
Edward L. Packard
John W, Pinneo
Leo H. Pollock
Helen L. Powers
Eleanor W. Ramsdell
Ruth S. Redman
James N. Reynolds, Jr.
Phyllis A. Rhinehart
Agnes C. Riley
Lloyd P. Rix
Milton J. Rogers
Harold C. Sabean
Paul W. Schaffner
William V. Schlaefer
Carl S. Schwartz
Marion C. Scott
John C. Sealey, Jr.
Stanley F. Seperski
Willard W. Shattuck
Bertram Shatz
John J. Shea
Otto L. Shemwick
Harold Shuman
Joseph N. Smiaroski
Elizabeth W. Snow
Barnett Solomon
Elwood Spencer
John J. Taylor
Chester W. Thomson
Wallace W. Thompson
Eleanor Townsend
Francis G. Trow
Benjamin Weinberger
Charles H. Wetmore, Jr.
Howard E. White
82
JUNIORS
President
Vice-President .
Secretary
Treasurer
Captain .
5ergeant-at-arms
CLASS OF 1935
CLASS OFFICERS
Raymond Knightly Evans
Marie Eleanor Currier
, Ruth Lydia Lindquist
. Roger Lewis Warner
Theodore Moreau Leary
Sheldon Pratt Bliss
1935 CLASS HISTORY
The largest freshman class in the history of the college; the first class
to enter Massachusetts State College; that was 1935. She entered upon her
four-year career with a name already charged with new responsibility and
purpose. Significant of the new era into which her alma mater had stepped
was her initiation — for she was the last of her line to be "oriented" to the
campus by the rigorous hazing of the "good old days". Her members have
vivid recollections of skull-caps and green berets; sunrise serenades and
freshman "Bibles"; brilliant paper dunce-caps on the men, clothes backwards
on the women, and the conscientious prompting of the vigilant sophomores
on "hopping the nines".
Razoo Night — held for the first time in the cage of the new physical
education building — gave her an opportunity to "get even". Though her
co-eds had no active part in the clash, all were on hand to cheer their fellow
classmates. Whether or not it was the cheering that did the trick we cannot
say, but her men actually won both the events in the cage and the annual
night-shirt parade. Still on a winning streak, they pulled the sophomores over
the line in the six-men rope-pull some few weeks later, but because of illness
on the campus, the sixty-man rope-pull title was left uncontested, and a tie
in foot-ball and a defeat in basketball ended the struggles with the sopho-
mores. An undefeated season in track helped her to earn a place for herself
among the other classes.
While she was thus creditably carrying on those activities annually
expected of freshmen, the class of 1935 gradually came to feel more at home
on the campus, acquiring for herself academic and social standing, and laying
foundations for future leadership and responsibility.
September, 1932, brought the class of '35 back to meet old friends and
to fill those places in athletics and academics which she had made for herself
the previous year. She found herself in close contact with her own freshman
days, for the annual challenges with the freshman class still sounded. Thirty-
five retained for herself the title of victor in the Razoo night clash, but later
in the fall the sophomores waded through the pond with what grace they
could on the end of a rope drawn by sixty victorious freshmen. Other games
were played as usual with the freshmen, but with less of the "do or die"
attitude, for the class had by this time acquired other interests.
The Maroon Key of the class of '35 will be remembered for Mardi Gras
in the true spirit of this festive occasion, when ladies and gentlemen of the
gay nineties exchanged dances with Hula Hulas in grass skirts, amid balloons
and paper streamers. The Soph-Senior Hop was strongly supported by her
sophomores.
Junior year for Thirty Five meant the beginning of major work, under
the new semester system. To become a junior meant for her the beginning
of the most vital part of college life, and she realized that the second half
of college had begun and that she must make the most of her opportunities.
She looked upon the "Frosh-Soph" scraps and wondered a bit how she had
once been so enthusiastic about them.
As far as sports were concerned, she had already divided herself into a
large group of spectators and a smaller group of varsity players. Many other
activities interested her members, and juniors were to be found in every phase
of campus life. The high light of social life — the Junior Prom — was held
in April. Making a decided innovation, she published the Index for the first
time for the seniors instead of for her own classmates.
All too soon she finds that she is forced to say, "Only one year left!"
85
CLASS OF 1935
Robert West Abbott Falmouth
1913; Lawrence High School; Pre-Medical; Christian Association 1, 2; Kappa Epsilon.
Mary Louise Allen Greenfield
1913; Greenfield High School; Chemistry; Women's Student Council 1, 2, ; Y, W. C. A.
1; Collegian 1, 2; Orchestra 1, 2; Dad's Day Committee 2; Phi Zeta.
Robert John Allen, Jr. Worcester
1912; Commerce High School; Floriculture; Track — Numerals 1, 2, Letter 3; Cross
Country 1, 2; Class Officer — Historian 1, 2; Floriculture Club; Outing Club 2, 3;
Phi Sigma Kappa.
Frederick Newcomb Andrews South Weymouth
1914; Weymouth High School; Animal Husbandry; Football — Freshman Manager,
Numerals; Track 1, 2, Squad; Index 3; Animal Husbandry Club; Burnham Declamation
Contest 2; Dairy Cattle Judging Team 3.
David Lewis Arenberg Rochester
1915; Wareham High School; Distributed Sciences; Soccer 2, 3; Collegian 1, 2, 3;
Mathematics Club 2, 3; Entomology Club 3; Non-Fraternity Athletics 1, 2, 3, Captain 3.
Stuart Aborn Arnold Rehoboth
1914; Providence Technical High School; Poultry Husbandry; Poultry Judging Team 2;
Alpha Sigma Phi.
Madelyn Gertrude Ashley Greenfield
1914; Greenfield High School; Home Economics; Y. W. C. A. 1; Lambda Delta Mu.
Ruth Anna Avery Pocasset
1915; Bourne High School; Boston University, C. L. A.; English; Index 3; Y. W. C. A.
2, 3, Vice-President, 3; United Religious Council 3; Red Cross Drive 2, 3, — Publicity;
K. O. Club 2, 3, — Secretary-Treasurer; Chorus 2; Freshman Reception 3; Delta
Delta Delta.
John Lewis Bailey Kingston
1912; Kingston High School; Horticultural Manufactures; Alpha Sigma Phi.
Jean Sutherland Baker Braintree
1912; Thayer Academy; Radcliffe; Home Economics; Home Economics Club 3; Outing
Club 3; Y. W. C. A. 3.
lona Elizabeth Barr Greenfield
1912; Greenfield High School; Home Economics; Girls' Rifle Team 1, 2, 3; Bay State
Revue 3; Home Economics Club; Y. W. C. A. 1 , 2, 3 ; Lambda Delta Mu.
Dorothy Eleanor Bartlett Chicopee Falls
1914; Chicopee Falls High School; Home Economics; Girls' Rifle Team 1, 2; Girls'
Tennis — Manager, 3; Home Economics Club 1, 2, 3; Outing Club 1, 2; Y. W. C. A.
1, 2, 3; Sigma Beta Chi.
Helen EInora Bartlett Framingham
1912; Framingham High School; Bacteriology; Alpha Lambda Mu.
Carleton Everett Bearse Sharon
1914; Sharon High School; Psychology; Lambda Chi Alpha.
Roland Frederick Becker Methuen
1912; Lawrence High School; Distributed Sciences; Soccer 2; Basketball 1; Track 1.
86
Helen Elizabeth Beebe Monson
1912; Monson High School; Home Economics; Women's Rifle Team 1, 2; Home
Economics Club.
Vernon Adam Veith Bell Amherst
1910; Pennsylvania State College; Entomology; Soccer 2, Squad; Band 2, 3; Bay State
Revue 3; Glee Club 3; Fernald Entomology Club; Interfraternity Council 3; Alpha
Gamma Rho.
Anne Judyth Bernstein Greenfield
1914; Greenfield High School; Languages; W. A. A, 1, 2, 3; Woman's Rifle Team
1, 2; Chorus 1, 2; Social Science Club 3; History and Sociology Club 3; French Club
1, 2; Y. W. C.A.I, 2,3.
OIlie L. Bertorelli Milford
1912; Milford High School; Chemistry and Physics; Mathematics Club 1, 2, 3; Physics
Club 3; Newman Club 1, 2, 3; Theta Kappa Gamma.
Laura Bingham . Athol
1912; Athol High School; Distributed Sciences; Outing Club 1, 2, 3.
James William Blackburn Springfield
1913; Central High School; Entomology; Soccer; Entomology Club.
Roger Tait Blackburn Stoneham
1912; Huntington School; Landscape Architecture; Hockey 2, 3; Maroon Key 2;
Lambda Chi Alpha.
Lamont Vincent Blake Springfield
1913; Central High School; Chemistry; Kappa Sigma.
Sheldon Pratt Bliss Greenfield
1913; Greenfield High School; Pre-Medical; Baseball — Manager Freshman Team, 1;
Basketball — Assistant-Manager, 2, 3; Class Officer — Sergeant at Arms 1, 3; Band
1, 2, 3; Orchestra 1, 2, 3; Dad's Day Committee 3; Christian Association 1; Senate 3;
Maroon Key 2.
Willard Harold Boynton Groveland
1914; Groveland High School; Distributed Sciences; Kappa Epsilon.
George Bozian Fall River
1913; B. M. C. Durfee High School; Poultry Husbandry; Track 2; Six Man Rope Pull 2.
Walter Edward Brayden Maynard
1912; Maynard High School; Education; Senate 3; Class Baseball 1 — Squad; Class
Football 1 — Numerals.
Mary Teresa Brennan Ipswich
1915; Manning High School; Economics, History and Sociology; Sigma Beta Chi.
William Clay Brown Winchester
1913; Winchester High School; Landscape Architecture; Track 2; Hockey 2, 3; Lambda
Chi Alpha.
Lawrence Mason Bullard Berlin
1910; Hudson High School; Harvard; Pomology; Pomology Judging Team 3; Sigma
Phi Epsilon.
Albert Franklin Burgess, Jr. Greenfield
1913; Melrose High School; Agricultural Economics; Military Ball 3; Senate 3; Phi
Sigma Kappa.
Kenneth Bangs Gaboon Centerville
1912; Barnstable High School; Chemistry; K. O. Club 1, 2, 3;
Francis L. Caron North Adams
1912; Drury High School; Chemistry; Football 1; Baseball 1; Sigma Phi Epsilon.
John Alden Caswell Milford
191 1; Milford High School; Antioch College; Distributed Sciences; Alpha Gamma Rho.
Curtis Mason Clark Millis
1912; Needham High School; Chemistry; Football 1; Soccer 1, 2, 3; Class President 1 ;
Roister Doisters 3; Freshman Dance Committee; Mardi Gras Committee 2; Soph-Senior
Hop Committee 2; Maroon Key 2; Interclass Athletic Board; Q. T. V.
Lester Wilbur Clark Montague
1913; Turners Falls High School; Chemistry; Outing Club 1;
Philip Hartshorn Clark Waltham
1912; Waltham High School; Entomology; Band 1, 2, 3; Orchestra 1, 2, 3; Kappa
Epsilon.
Alma Hough Colson North Agawam
1912; Agawam High School; Home Economics; Alpha Lambda Mu.
George Steadman Congdon Millis
1913; Millis High School; Chemistry; Class Football 1 — Squad; Soccer — Varsity 2;
Class 2; Class Treasurer 1; Roister Doisters — Assistant Manager 3; Q. T. V.
Ellen Rose Connery Easthampton
1914; Easthampton High School; Agricultural Economics; Women's Rifle' Team 2;
History and Sociology Club 3; Newman Club 1.
Helen Margaret Connelly Hadley
1913; Hopkins Academy; Education; History and Sociology Club 3.
John Joseph Consolati Lee
1912; Lee High School; Social Science; Football 1, Varsity 2, 3; Baseball 1, Varsity 2;
Kappa Epsilon.
Dorothy Flora Cook Hadley
1913; Hopkins Academy; Home Economics; Women's Rifle Team 2; Home Economics
Club 1, 2, 3; Y. W. C. A. 3; K. O. Club 1, Vice-President 3; Secretary 2; Lambda
Delta Mu.
Frederick Leo Corcoran Stoneham
1912; Huntington School; Economics; Football 1; Baseball 1; Track 2; Hockey 2, 3;
Roister Doisters 1,3; Band 1,2; Newman Club 1, 2, 3; Lambda Chi Alpha.
Hugh Joseph Corcoran Westfield
1914; Westfield High School; Economics; Bay State Revue 3; Newman Club 1, 2, 3;
Glee Club 3; Q. T. V.
Alfred Elmer Cox, III Bridgewater
1913; Bridgewater High School; Biological Sciences; Soccer — Manager of Class Team
1, Varsity Manager 2, 3; Basketball — Manager of Class Team 1 ; Track 1, 2, Squad;
Member of Joint Committee of Intercollegiate Athletics 2, 3.
Kenneth MacKenzie Cox West Springfield
1911 ; West Springfield High School; Bacteriology; Band 1, 2; Q. T. V.
Chester Ellsworth Cross Onset
1913; Wareham High School; Botany.
Roderick Wells Cumming Bristol, Conn.
1913; Bristol High School; Floriculture and Landscape Architecture; Football 1, 2, 3;
Track 1, 2; Class Captain 2; Landscape and Floriculture Clubs; Q. T. V.
Marie Eleanor Currier Amesbury
1914; Amesbury High School; Agricultural Economics; Class Vice-President 2, 3;
Index 3; Dad's Day Committee 3; Mathematics Club 3; W. S. G. A. 2, 3; Y. W. C. A.
1, 2, 3; Lambda Delta Mu.
Charles Howard Daniels Melrose
1914; Melrose High School; Entomology; Cross Country; Fernald Club; Outing Club;
Phi Sigma Kappa.
Myron Carl Davis Stafford Springs, Conn.
1912; Stafford High School; Horticultural Manufactures; Dairy Club 3; Christian Asso-
ciation 2; Alpha Gamma Rho.
William Milford Davis South Lee
1911; Lee High School; Economics; Varsity Basketball 3; Kappa Sigma.
Amy Dearden Palmer
1912; Palmer High School; English; Orchestra 1, 2, 3; Y. W. C. A. 1.
Raymond DiMarzio North Plymouth
1914; Kingston High School; Horticulture Manufactures; Football 1 , 2; Alpha Sigma Phi.
Catherine Elizabeth Dimock Springfield
1912; Springfield Central High School; Home Economics; Outing Club 1, 3; Y. W. C. A.
1, 2, 3; Lambda Delta Mu.
Howard Ralph Dobbie Haverhill
1915; Tilton School; Forestry; Soccer 1, 2, 3; Baseball 1, 2; Outing Club 1.
Bernice Jo-Ann Dolan Turners Falls
1914; Turners Falls High School; Home Economics; Bay State Revue 2, 3; Home
Economics Club; Newman Club 1 , 2, 3; Phi Zeta.
Bernard Joseph Doyle Northampton
1913; St. Michael's High School; Distributed Sciences; Freshman Soccer; Varsity
Soccer Squad 2, 3; Freshman Basketball Squad 1; Index 3; Combined Chorus 1 ; New-
man Club 1, 2, 3; Kappa Epsilon.
Ralph Peter Dubie Turners Falls
1911; Turners Falls High School; Pre-Medical.
Max Dubin Maiden
1914; Maiden High School; Pre-Medical; Orchestra 1; Christian Association 3; Secre-
tary, Social Science Club 3; Chorus 1, 2; Entomology Club 1.
Wilmot Grant Dunham Centerville
1912; Hyannis High School; English; Collegian 1, 2, 3; Sports Editor 2; Band Leader
2, 3; Orchestra 1, 2, 3; Bay State Revue 3; Author music score "Let's Go Nutty";
Leader Chorus 2; Leader Glee Club 2; Song Leader 3; Composer of six college songs;
Christian Association 1, 2; K. O. Club 1, 2, 3; Class football 1, 2; Alpha Gamma Rho.
Alice Isabel Dwight Griswoldville
1913; Arms Academy; Botany.
Joseph Aaron Dworman Worcester
1912; Worcester Classical High School; Dairy Manufactures; Alpha Epsilon Pi.
Henry Holton Elder Mount Hermon
1912; Mount Hermon Academy; Social Sciences; Track; Cross Country.
John Crosby Eldridge West Bridgewater
1913; Howard High School; Chemistry; Band 1, 2, 3; Orchestra 1, 2, 3; K. O. Club;
Theta Chi.
89
Charles Francis Elliot Waltham
1913; Waltham High School; Pre-Medical ; Kappa Sigma,
Henry David Epstein Brookline
1914; Boston Latin School; Distributed Sciences; Band 1, 2; Social Science Club;
Physics Club; Outing Club; Phi Lambda Tau.
Raymond Knightly Evans Easthampton
1907; Williston Academy; Landscape Architecture; Class President 3; Soph-Senior Hop
Committee 2; Interfraternity Council 3; Alpha Sigma Phi.
Florence Chesson Fay Chicopee Falls
1914; Chicopee High School; Home Economics; Home Economics Club 1 , 2, 3 ; Sorority
Athletic Captain 3; Co-ed Rifle Team 1, 2, 3; Sigma Beta Chi.
Abraham Feinberg Dorchester
1912; Dorchester High School; Chemistry; Varsity Track 3; Junior Varsity Cross
Country 2; Band 1; Math Club 2. 3.
Ernest Brayton Fisher, Jr. Walpole
1913; Walpole High School; Animal Husbandry; Animal Husbandry Club; Christian
Association; Social Science Club; Alpha Gamma Rho.
Cornelia Frances Foley Amherst
1913; Amherst High School; Home Economics; Home Economics Club; Junior Class
Representative; Newman Club; Intersorority Council 2, 3; Phi Zeta.
Daniel Joseph Foley Salem
1913; Salem Classical and High School; Landscape Architecture; Index; Editor-in-Chief
3; Dad's Day Committee; Landscape Club 2, 3; Floriculture Club 2, 3; Outmg Club 3;
United Religious Council, President 3; Newman Club; President 3, Treasurer 2; Horti-
cultural Show, Secretary 3; Q. T. V.
Charles Bostwick Fowler West Newton
1913; Newton High School; Languages and Economics; Kappa Sigma.
Christine Louise Frey South Hadley Falls
1914; South Hadley High School; Education.
Lois Florence Friedrich Florence
1912; Northampton High School; Economics; Sociology, and History; Sigma Beta Chi.
James Edward Gavagan Dorchester
1912; Jamaica Plain High School; Social Sciences.
Minnie Gendler Greenfield
1913; Greenfield High School; Social Sciences; Chorus 1.
Edward Harry Genest, Jr. Pittsfield
1912; Pittsfield High School; Education; Class Baseball 1, 2; Class Basketball 1, 2;
Kappa Sigma.
Clayton N. George Belchertown
1909; Belchertown High School; Entomology; Freshman Football; Class Soccer 1;
Varsity Soccer 2, 3; Class Baseball 1, 2; Band 1; Entomology Club; Kappa Sigma.
Vincent Cooper Gilbert Belmont
1912; Belmont High School; Agricultural Engineering; Christian Association; Theta Chi.
Arthur Gold Springfield
1914; Springfield Central High School; Chemistry; Physics Club 3; Secretary-Treasurer;
Phi Lambda Tau.
90
Barnett Louis Golub East Longmeadow
1912; Springfield Central High School; Pre-Medical; Football 1; Baseball 1 ; Hockey 2;
Orchestra 1 ; Phi Lambda Tau.
Grace Mae Goulart Fairhaven
1913: Dean Academy; Chemistry; Newman Club 1; Sigma Beta Chi.
Irene Edna Govoni North Agawam
1913; Agawam High School; Bacteriology and Zoology. Women's Athletic Association
Soccer Manager; Lambda Delta Mu.
Ralph Hawthorne Granger Westfield
1911; Westfield High School; Mt. Hermon; Animal Husbandry; Class Track 1; Index,
Business Manager 3; Animal Husbandry Club 1, 2, 3; Dairy Club 3; K. O. Club 1, 2,
3; Academics Activities Board 3; Alpha Gamma Rho.
Julian Philip Griffin Indian Orchard
1912; Springfield Central High School; Physical and Biological Sciences; Football 2,
Squad; Freshman Baseball; Varsity Squad 2; Hockey Squad 2; Band 1; Class Treasurer
1 ; Soph-Senior Hop Committee 2; Informal Committee 3; Christian Association 1, 2, 3;
Newman Club 1, 2, 3; Interfraternity Council 3; Kappa Sigma.
Edward Frederick Guenard Dracut
1911; Lowell High School; Social Sciences; Track.
Ellen Le Roy Guion Newton
1912; Newton High School; Brimmer; Landscape Architecture; Landscape Club; Sigma
Beta Chi.
Evelyn Alice Gunn Southampton
1913; Easthampton High School; Chemistry; Christian Association 1, 3.
Joseph John Gurka Ware
1913; Ware High School; Chemistry; Baseball 1 ; Track 2; Cross Country 1, 2; Newman
Club 2, 3.
Victor Stanley Guzowski Northampton
1912; Northampton High School; Physical Sciences; Football 1, 2, 3; Baseball 1;
Track 2.
Eben Theodore Hall Upton
1913; Upton High School; Landscape Architecture; Class Football 1, 2; Baseball 1;
Basketball 1; Landscape Club; Floriculture Club; Interfraternity Council; Secretary-
Treasurer 3; Phi Sigma Kappa.
Elizabeth Katherine Harrington Ludlow
1913; Ludlow High School; Languages and Literature; Collegian 2, 3; Index 3; Red
Cross Drive Committee; Y. W. C. A. 1,2 Cabinet; Women's Athletic Association, Vice-
President 2; Intersorority Council 3; Sigma Beta Chi.
Marion Threasa Harris Leominster
1912; Leominster High School; Chemistry; Intersorority Cup Committee; Y. W. C. A.
1, 2, 3, Treasurer 3; Intersorority Council 3; W. A. A. 1, 2, 3, Cabinet; Lambda
Delta Mu.
Robert Russell Harris Leominster
1912; Leominster High School; Economics; Q. T. V.
George Albert Hartwell Maiden
1913; Phillips Exeter Academy; Landscape Architecture; Index 3 — Statistics Editor;
Band 1, 2; Orchestra 1, 2, 3; Orpheus Club 1 ; Bay State Revue I, 2; Landscape Club
1, 2, 3; Outing Club 1 , 2, 3 ; Theta Chi.
91
Robert Harlow Hermanson Brookline
1912; Boston Latin High School; Distributed Sciences; Soccer — Assistant Manager
2, 3, Manager 4; Index 3; Interfraternity Council 3; Alpha Epsilon Pi.
Howard Lester Hinckley, Jr. Dorchester
1913; Dorchester High School for Boys; Chemistry; Alpha Sigma Phi.
Mildred Martina Hovey Springfield
1914; Central High School; Springfield Junior College; Bacteriology; Index 3; Bay
State Revue 3; Y. W. C. A. 3; French Play 2, 3; Co-ed Rifle Team 2; Lambda Delta Mu.
Albert Bancroft Hovey Stoneham
1912; Wakefield High School; Biological Sciences; Band 1 ; R. O. T. C. 1 ; Rifle Team 1 ;
Outing Club 2, 3; Swimming 3; Interclass Swimming 2; Varsity Swimming 3; Theta
Chi.
Wendell Roy Hovey Wakefield
1913; Wakefield High School; Agricultural Economics; Index 3; Band 1, 2, 3; Outing
Club 1, 2, Treasurer 3; Theta Chi.
Richard William Hubbard Sunderland
1913; Amherst High School; Chemistry; Soccer Squad 2; Track 3; Cross Country 3;
Roister Doisters 1, 2, 3; Debating 1, 2; Burnham Declamation Contest 1; Mathematics
Club; Physics Club.
Robert Packard Hunter Melrose
1910; Melrose High School; Entomology; Soccer 2, 3; Phi Sigma Kappa.
Charles Wooding Hutchinson Amherst
1911; Springfield Central High School; University of Vermont; Distributed Sciences;
Cross Country I; Track 2; Interfraternity Council 3; Theta Chi.
Zigmund John Jackimczyk Florence
1911; Northampton High School; Distributed Sciences; Football 2, 3; Q. T. V.
Ernest Anthony Jaworski Adams
1914; Adams High School; Education; Baseball 1, 2; Basketball 1, 2, 3; Kappa Epsilon.
Stuart Farnham Jiilson Readsboro, Vt.
1913; Mt. Hermon Academy; Physical and Biological Sciences; Track 1, 2; Cross
Country 1, 2; Band 1, 2, 3; Orchestra 1; Mathematics Club; Physics Club; Q. T. V.
Walter Oscar Johnson Haverhill
1912; Haverhill High School; Physical and Biological Sciences; Band 1, 2; Soph-Senior
Hop Committee 2; Maroon Key 2; Kappa Sigma.
William Joseph Jordan, Jr. Revere
1913; Revere High School; Chemistry; Track 1, 2; Cross Country 2, 3; Phi Sigma
Kappa.
Joseph Francis Keil Attleboro
1914; Attleboro High School; Floriculture; Horticultural Show Committee; Phi Sigma
Kappa.
Eloise Beers Kellogg Arlington
1913; Arlington High School; Distributed Sciences; W. A. A. 1, 2, 3; Co-ed Rifle
Team 1, 2, 3; Outing Club 1, 2; Y. W. C. A. 1, 2; Alpha Lambda Mu.
James Maurice Kiely Northampton
1914; Northampton High School; Chemistry.
Leslie Collis Kimball Pelham
1913; Amherst High School; Landscape Architecture; Landscape Club 2, 3; Sigma Phi
Epsilon.
92
Mary Emma Kingston Springfield
1913; Central High School; Home Economics; Bay State Revue 3; Y. W. C. A; Home
Economics Club; Lambda Delta Mu.
Robert Magoon Koch Greenfield
1914; Greenfield High School; Animal Husbandry; Poultry Judging Team 2; Dairy
Judging Team 3; Animal Husbandry Club 2, 3; Dairy Club 3; K. O. Club 1, 2, 3;
Sigma Phi Epsilon.
Violet Sylvia Koskela Maynard
1912; Maynard High School; Home Economics; Index 3; W. A. A. Cabinet; Home
Economics Club; Sigma Beta Chi.
Albert Broudy Landis . Amherst
1913; Amherst High School; Zoology; Football 1, 2, 3; Class Basketball 2; Outing
Club 3; Alpha Epsilon Pi.
Marjorie Louise Lannon Holyoke
1913; Holyoke High School; Pre-Medical; Alpha Lambda Mu.
Theodore Moreau Leary Turners Falls
1914; Turners Falls High School; Pre-Medical; Class Football 1; Class Baseball 1;
Class Hockey 1; Class Sergeant-at-Arms I; Class Basketball 1; Class Captain 2, 3;
Collegian Editor-in-Chief 3; Index 3; Freshman Dance Committee 1; Secretary, Senate
3; President, Inter-class Athletic Board; Christian Association; Newman Club; Sigma
Phi Epsilon.
Roger Kenison Leavitt Framingham
1911; Framingham High School; Floriculture; Football 1, 2, 3; Alpha Sigma Phi.
Louis Herbert Lebeshevsky Thompsonville, Conn.
1913; Enfield High School; Chemistry; Roister Doisters 2, 3; Band 1, 2; Orchestra 1;
Track 1 ; Phi Lambda Tau.
Arthur Sidney Levine Brookline
1913; Brookline High School; Distributed Sciences; Soccer Squad 2, 3; Index, Business
Board 3; Alpha Epsilon Pi.
Robert Franklin Libbey Westboro
1913; Westboro High School; Chemistry; Basketball 1; Track I; Orchestra 1; Swim-
ming 3; Phi Sigma Kappa.
Lucien Bingham Lillie, III New Bedford
1913; Central High School, Springfield; Economics; French Club; Lambda Chi Alpha.
Ruth Lydia Lindquist East Longmeadow
1912; Technical High School, Springfield; Biology; Class Secretary 1, 2, 3; Roister
Doisters 2; Dad's Day Committee 3; Outing Club 1; Lambda Delta Mu.
Silas Little, Jr. Newburyport
1914; Newburyport High School; Forestry; Freshman Track 1; Varsity Track 2; Fresh-
man Cross Country 1; Varsity Cross Country 2; Collegian 1, 2, 3; Index 3; Dad's Day
Committee 3; Chairman, Campus Chest 3; Christian Association 1, 2, 3; Sec.-Treas.,
Maroon Key 2; K. O. Club 1, 2 — Pres. 3; Business Mgr., Freshman Handbook 1;
Alpha Gamma Rho.
Elizabeth Loring Melrose
1913; Melrose High School; Psychology and Sociology; Outing Club 1; W. S. G. A. 1,
2, 3; Y. W. C. A. 1, 2; Sigma Beta Chi.
Bertram Lubin . Boston
1914; Boston Latin School; Distributed Sciences; Freshman Football 1; Soccer 2; Rois-
ter Doisters 2.
Everett Spencer MacQuestion Winchendon
1913; Murdock High School; Landscape Architecture.
93
Ronald C. Malloch Greenfield
1913; Greenfield High School; Chemistry; Soccer 2, 3; Alpha Gamma Rho.
Ruth Annette Markley Greenfield
1914; Boston University; Economics, History and Sociology; Delta Delta Delta.
Edward Danville Masters Athol
1913; Athol High School; Landscape Architecture; Index 3; Lambda Chi Alpha.
John Henry McKelligott Palmer
1913; Palmer High School; Physical and Biological Sciences; Football 1, 2, 3; Base-
ball 1; Basketball 1; Interfraternity Council; Newman Club; Q. T. V.
Alma Standish Merry Duxbury
1913; Duxbury High School; Distributed Sciences; Bay State Revue 3; Outing Club;
Y. W. C. A.; Intersorority Council; Alpha Lambda Mu.
Howard Bryne Michelson Boston
1914; Boston Latin School; Horticultural Manufactures; Bay State Revue 2; Cheer
Leader 2, 3.
Joseph Miller Roxbury
1914; Boston Latin School; Horticultural Manufactures; Football 1; Soccer 1, 2, 3;
Baseball 1 ; Track 1 ; Alpha Epsilon Pi.
James Frederick Moran Millis
1914; Millis High School ;Agricultural Economics; Football 1, 2, 3; Newman Club; Q.
T. V.
Harold Laurud Morland Westwood
1906; Huntington School; Entomology; Class Hockey 1.
John Jesse Moulton Weymouth
1913; Weymouth High School; Physics and Mathematics; Band 1, 2, 3; Physics Club.
Walter Stanley Mozden Three Rivers
1913; Palmer High School; Pre-Medical; Soccer 1; Track 2; Q. T. V.
William Paul Mulhall Ashland
1912; Ashland High School; Animal Husbandry; Football 1, 2, 3; Newman Club;
Q. T. V.
William Richard Muller Darien, Conn.
1915; Darien High School; Economics; Basketball 1; Freshman Dance Committee 1;
Lambda Chi Alpha.
Marguerite Anne Murphy West Springfield
1915; Springfield Junior College; Economics, History and Sociology; Sociology Club.
Robert Vincent Murray Holyoke
1914; Holyoke High School; Horticultural Manufactures; Track 1, 2; Cross Country
1 , 2; Alpha Sigma Phi.
Edward Bedre Nassif North Adams
1913; Drury High School; Pre-Medical; Basketball 1, 2, 3; Baseball 1, 2; Bay State
Revue 3; Interfraternity Council 2, 3; Sigma Phi Epsilon.
Stanley Stowell Newcomb Orange
1912; Orange High School; Distributed Sciences; Kappa Epsilon.
William Joseph MacKenzie Newman Florida
1913; Arms Academy; Mathematics and Chemistry; Alpha Gamma Rho.
Alfred Eastman Newton Sharon
1913; Sharon High School; Chemistry; Lambda Chi Alpha.
Peter Andrew Nietupski Palmer
1913; Palmer High School; Chemistry; Football — Numerals 1, Varsity Football 2, 3;
Class Baseball 1, 2; Class Basketball 1, 2; Varsity "M" Club; Newman Club; Wrestling
Instructor 3.
Ralph Eaton Norris Sharon
1912; Sharon High School; Chemistry; Class Football 1; Varsity Soccer 2, 3, Letter-
man; Class Baseball 1, 2 — Numerals; Interfraternity Council 3; Kappa Epsilon.
Julius Novick Amherst
1914; Amherst High School; Bacteriology; Varsity Track 1 — Squad; Burnham Decla-
mation Contest 1 — Second Prize; Cheer Leader 2, — Head Cheer Leader 3.
Allen John O'Brien Northampton
1913; Northampton High School; Chemistry; Class Football 1, 2; Class Basketball 1,
2 — Numerals; Lambda Chi Alpha.
Edward Lawrence Packard Amherst
1912; Amherst High School; Landscape Architecture; Index 3 — Art Editor; Class
Soccer 2; Kappa Epsilon.
Leonard Ward Parker Amherst
1912; Phillips Academy, Andover; Mathematics and Civil Engineering; Orchestra 2;
Glee Club 2, 3; Sigma Phi Epsilon.
Hermann George Patt, Jr. Granville
1915; Westfield High School; Physical and Biological Sciences; Social Science Club 3.
George Raymond Pease Amherst
1914; Amherst High School; Chemistry; Collegian 2, 3; Roister Doisters 1, 2, 3;
Theta Chi.
Howard Edson Pease Ashfield
1913; Sanderson Academy; Mathematics and Physics; Varsity Soccer 2; Class Base-
ball 1; Q. T. V.
Ruth Elizabeth Pelissier Hadley
1915; Hopkins Academy ;Education; History and Sociology Club 3; Lambda Delta Mu.
Elizabeth Cushman Perry Watertown
1914; Watertown High School; Home Economics; Dad's Day Committee 3; Home
Economics Club 1, 2, 3; W. S. G. A. 3 — Secretary; Y. W. C. A. 1 , 2, 3 — Cabinet 2;
Index 3; Phi Zeta.
Leo Pollin Springfield
1913; Central High School; Chemistry and Mathematics.
Helen Louise Powers Hadley
1913; Hopkins Academy; Home Economics; Home Economics Club; Burnham Decla-
mation 2.
Edward Leroy Prentiss Upton
1915; Upton High School; Education; Class Baseball 1 — squad; Class Cross Country
1 ; Phi Sigma Kappa.
Shirley Dorothy Putnam Springfield
1914; Technical High School; Home Economics; Home Economics Club; Outing Club;
Y. W. C. A. 1, 2, 3; Lambda Delta Mu.
Walter Dalton Raleigh West Springfield
1914; West Springfield High School; Pre-Medical; Class Soccer 1, 2; Newman Club
1, 2, 3.
Albert Bradbury Ramsdell Palmer
Alpha Sigma Phi.
95
Kenneth Lloyd Riley, Jr. Ludlow
1912; Ludlow High School; Harvard Engineering School; Chemistry; Alpha Sigma Phi.
Henry Frank Riseman Winthrop
1913; Revere High School; Physiology and Bacteriology; Class Football 1; Class Soccer
2, 3; Band 1, 2; Poultry Judging Team; Chess Team; Alpha Epsilon Pi.
Phillip Robinson Revere
1914; Revere High School; Physical and Biological Sciences; Cross-Country 3 — Man-
ager; Joint Committee on Intercollegiate Athletics.
Sylvia Louise Rod Becket
1914; Lee High School; Bacteriology and Chemistry; Chorus 1; Outing Club 1.
Harriet Ann Roper Westminster
1914; Gardner High School; Wellesley College; Mathematics; Bay State Revue 3;
Lambda Delta Mu.
Sydney Arthur Salamoff Roxbury
1913; Roxbury Memorial High School; Pre-Medical; Class Baseball 2; Band 1, 2, 3;
Orchestra 1 ; Outing Club 1 ; Phi Lambda Tau,
Janet Christie Sargent Auburndale
1914; Newton High School; Distributed Sciences; Y. W. C. A. 1 , 2, 3 ; W. A. A. 3 —
President; Sigma Beta Chi.
Ruth Wentworth Sargent Wollaston
1912; Northfield Seminary; Distributed Sciences.
Thomas Joseph Savaria Ware
1912; Ware High School; Chemistry; Newman Club; Class Football 1, 2; Class Track
1, 2. Q. T. V.
Paul Webster Schaffner Dover
1912; Dover High School; Varsity Football 2, 3; Phi Sigma Kappa.
William Valentine Schlaefer Englewood, N. J.
1912; Englewood High School; Landscape Architecture; Class Track 1, 2; Cross Coun-
try 3, 4 — Manager.
Ralph William Francis Schreiter Walpole
1913; Walpole High School; Distributed Sciences; Orchestra 1, 2, 3; Interfraternity
Council 3; Lambda Chi Alpha,
Bernice Giduz Schubert Boston
1913; Girls' Latin School; Botany; Index 3 — Secretary.
William Arthur Scott Bloomfield Conn.
1913; Bloomfield High School; Landscape Architecture; Index 3; Band 1, 2, 3; Phi
Sigma Kappa.
Willard Henry Senecal Williamsburg
1912; Northampton High School; English; Bay State Revue 3; Kappa Sigma.
Maurice Shapiro North Adams
1912; Drury High School; Pre-Medical; Band 1, 2, 3; Phi Lambda Tau.
Hyman Sharff Chelsea
1913; Chelsea High School; Physical and Biological Sciences; Track 1, 2; Phi Lambda
Tau.
Rosamond Shattuck Pepperell
1913; Bates College; Psychology; Y. W. C. A. 3; Bay State Revue 3; Lambda Delta Mu.
Glenn Frederick Shaw Palmer
1911; Hitchcock Academy; Agricultural Economics; Varsity Cross Country 2; Class
Track 1; Collegian 2, 3 — Managing Editor; Social Science Club — President; Alpha
Gamma Rho.
John Raymond Siira Centerville
1913; Barnstable High School; Landscape Architecture; Class Football 1, 2; Q. T. V.
George Walker Simmons, Jr. Amherst
1913; Amherst High School; Landscape Architecture; Class Hockey 1; Cross Country
1 ; K. O. Club 1, 2, 3; Outmg Club 1.
Charlotte Fogwell Sleep Fitchburg
1914; Fitchburg High School; Home Economics; Chorus 2; Y. W. C. A. 1, 2; Home
Economics Club 3.
Joseph Nieckoski Smiaroski Deerfield
1912; Deerfield Academy; History; Football 1; Vice-president, History Club; Sigma
Phi Epsilon.
Marion Estelle Smith Greenfield
1913; Greenfield High School; Entomology; Y. W. C. A. 1, 2 — cabinet, 3 — presi-
dent; W. A. A. 1,2 — council, 3; Index 3 — Literary Editor; Fernald Club 3 — secre-
tary; Outing Club 3; United Religious Council 3; Intersorority Council 3; Alpha Lamb-
da Mu
Samuel Peaslee Snow West Roxbury
1912; Jamaica Plain High School; Landscape Architecture; Baseball 1, 2 — Assistant
Manager, 3 — Manager; Band 1, 2, and 3 — Assistant Manager; Landscape Club.
Kenneth A, Steadman Needham
1913; Milton and Needham High Schools; Floriculture; Track 2 — Assistant Man-
ager, 3 — Manager; Kappa Sigma.
Walter Stephat Braintree
1914; Braintree High School; Chemistry; Class Track 2; Cross Country 3; Alpha Gam-
ma Rho.
Nelson Pierce Stevens Haverhill
1912; Haverhill High School; Chemistry; Collegian Business Board 2, 3; Christian
Association 2, 3; United Religious Council Cabinet 3 — Treasurer ;Business Board of
Freshman Handbook 2; Kappa Epsilon.
Donald Mitchell Stewart Arlington
1913; Arlington High School; Bacteriology; Kappa Sigma.
Philip Carieton Stone Athol
1912; Worcester Academy; Entomology; Phi Sigma Kappa.
Helen Guild Streeter Springfield
1913; Central High School; Springfield Junior College; Home Economics; Y. W. C. A.
1, 2; Women's A. A. 1, 2; Home Economics Club; Choir 1, 2; Outing Club 1.
James Ellsworth Sumner Squantum
1909; Quincy High School; Landscape Architecture; Track 1; Chorus 1; Glee Club 2,
3; Bay State Revue 3.
97
Sulo John Tani Worcester
191 1; Worcester North High School; Landscape Architecture and Forestry; Class Track
1, 2; Class Treasurer 1; Maroon Key 2; Lambda Chi Alpha.
Harold Samuel Tannenbaum Roxbury
1913; Roxbury High School; Physical and Biological Sciences; Band 2; Phi Lambda
Tau.
Eleanor Charlotte Thatcher Athol
1910; Athol High School; Entomology; Fernald Club; Y. W. C. A. 1, 2, 3.
Carrol Edwin Thayer Williamsburg
1913; Helen E. James High School; Mathematics; Class Baseball 1; Class Football 2-
Class Basketball 1, 2.
Wallace Wetherell Thompson Worcester
1911; South High School; Pomology; Band 1, 2, 3; Horticultural Show 2, 3; Fruit
Judging Team 3; Theta Chi.
Edna Thornton Amherst
1913; Boston University; English; Lambda Delta Mu.
Adolph Edward Tikofski Walpole
1913; Walpole High School; Mathematics and Physics; Football 1, 2, 3 — letterman.
Baseball 1, 2 — letterman; Lambda Chi Alpha.
Corada Sarah Tinti North Agawam
1912; Agawam High School; Languages; Lambda Delta Mu,
Wilbur Greene Tirrell South Weymouth
1913; Weymouth High School; Distributed Sciences.
Joseph John Tosches Milford
1913; Milford High School; Chemistry; Class Baseball; Outing Club; Newman Club;
Theta Kappa Gamma.
Emil John Tramposch Huntington Station, L. I.
1913; Huntington High School; Landscape Architecture; Landscape Club 1, 2, 3; New-
man Club 1, 2, 3; Track 2 — Manager — letterman; Football 3 — Assistant Manager;
Index 3 — Photographic Editor; Horticultural Show 3; Q. T. V.
Owen Smith Trask Lexington
1913; Lexington High School; Poultry; Track I, 2; Cross Country 1 ; Soccer squad 2;
Band 1, 2, 3; K. O. Club 1, 2; Theta Chi.
James Jackson Valentine Framingham Centre
1912; Framingham High School; Northeastern University; Floriculture; Band 1, 2;
Floriculture Club 2; Hockey 3 — Manager; Index 3; Horticultural Show 3; Theta Chi.
John Peter Veerling Weymouth
1 91 4;Weymouth High School; Landscape Architecture; Football 1; Soccer Squad;
Band 1, 2 — Drum Major 3; Orchestra 1, 2, 3; Honor Council 3.
Roger Lewis Warner Williamsburg
1914; Helen E. James High School; Distributed Sciences; Burnham Declamation Con-
test 1 ; Class Treasurer 2, 3; Maroon Key 2; Class Track 1 ; Baseball 2; Freshman Hand-
book Committee 1; Honor Council 3; Phi Sigma Kappa.
Myer Louis Weiner Maiden
1913; Maiden High School; Economics; Orchestra 1, 2, 3; French Club Plays 1; Inter-
fraternity Speaking Contest 2.
Merrill Louis Welcker Holyoke
1914; Norwich University; Physical and Biological Sciences.
Gaie Dorothy Whitton North Adams
1913; Drury High School; Psychology and Sociology; Y. W, C. A. 1 ; Debating 1, 2, 3;
Captain of Co-ed Debating Team 3; W. A. A. 3; Co-ed Rifle Team 2, 3; Sigma Beta
Chi.
Benjamin Joseph Wihry Haverhill
1913; Haverhill High School; Landscape Architecture; Football 1, 2; Baseball 1, 2;
Hockey 1, 2; Newman Club; Q. T. V.
Luther Lincoln Willard Worcester
1912; Worcester South High School; Forestry; Cross Country 1; Q. T. V.
Louis Isaac Winokur Dorchester
1914; Dorchester High School for Boys; Distributed Sciences; Class football 1; Class
baseball 1; Basketball 2 — manager — numerals; Index 3; Mathematics Club; Chess
Club. 2, 3 — president; Alpha Epsilon Pi.
John Langille Wood Greenfield
1913; Moses Brown School; Sciences; Varsity Football 2 — squad; K. O. Club 1, 2;
Collegian 2; Sigma Phi Epsilon.
Paul Owen Wood White Plains, N. Y.
1913; Melrose High School; Dairy Manufactures; Phi Sigma Kappa.
Robert Holman Wood West Upton
1914; Upton High School; Floriculture; Soccer — class numerals — letter; Floriculture
Club; Phi Sigma Kappa.
Dante Zucker Holyoke
1914; Holyoke High School; Languages and Mathematics; Glee Club.
99
SOMETIME MEMBERS OF THE CLASS OF 1935
William H. Alderman
Marion K. Alger
Isaac M. Arenberg
Harold S. Bacon
Ernest Baker
Pearl E. Bean
Rachel P. Beeman
John W. Bennett
William W. Bodman
Columbus C. Bonzogni
Alice F. Bradford
Robert S. Bray
Frank G. Brenna
Marion E. Brooks
Gunnar M. Brune
Francis C. Burke
Edmond L. Cance
Lawrence B. Carr
Joseph J. Casey
Lorraine M. Caverly
Joseph L. Coburn
Ralph S. Cohen
John P. Colman
Warren P. Conary
William H. Cone
Anita Crabtree
George E. Curtis
Lois M. Daland
Rheal E. Daze
Mary N. Dec
Albert W. Dempsey
Marilyn A. Donaldson
Dorothy F. Doran
Gladys A. Durham
Frank W. Eaton
John R. Evans
Winifred D. Each
Marion L. Farrand
Dorothy E. Fitzgerald
Erna M. Flack
Everett H, Fletcher
William B. Foxhall
Miles F. Galbraith
Myrtle S. Gary
Willard R. Gillette
Patricia A. Gledhill
Francis D. Goddard
Helen E. Goldberg
John D. Hannifin
Henry J. Harlow
Ethel G. Hast
Benjamin W. Hatch, Jr.
Ovide G. Hogaboom
Darius W. Horton
Edward C. Horton
Robert F. Hutt
Ralph E. Jerauld
Margaret Jones
Victor J. Judson
Bernard J. Kelleher
Walter E. Kieda
Florence M. King
Albert H. Knowles
Charles L. Krtil
Robert D. Lamson
W. Robert Leach
June M. Leary
Marian B. MacLaughlin
William P. Madden
Ruby N. Mason
100
Samuel R. McCleery
Dorothy E. McKeon
Milton J. Miller
Anton M. Mushovic
Kenneth B. Nash
Marshall W. Nay
A. Elizabeth Oberg
C. Clifford O'Brien
Elizabeth C. Oliver
Katherine D. Parsons
William F. Pelton, Jr.
Mary A. Pillsbury
Daniel C. Plastridge
John A. Ploticzyk
Helen D. Proulx
Richard E. Putnam
Margaret E. Reardon
Ruth V. Reed
Eunice R. Reich
Harold E. Robbins, Jr.
Virginia J. Robbins
David J. Rogers
Haskell Rothberg
Arthur J. Ruffo
Addison L. Sandford
Roger V. Seacord
Willard W, Shattuck
Sanford Shongood
George T, Siddall
Harold A. Sleeper
Richard G. Smith
Marjorie L. Sprague
Dorothy E. Stanford
John K. Strickland
Eunice M. Taft
Emanuel I. Toder
Donald A. Wallace
Willard M. Wallace
Thomas L. Warren
John C. Whitcomb
Robert P. Willard
Lester A. Williams
Walter B. Zewski
101
SOPHOMORES
i,^*y^ «j
El
CLASS OF 1936
CLASS OFFICERS
President
Vice-President
Secretary
Treasurer
Captain .
Sergeant-at-arms
John William Stewart
Constance Hathaway Hall
Margaret Lois Hutchinson
. Fred Joseph Murphy
Arthur Frederick Bixby
. Albert Dodge
104
1936 CLASS HISTORY
The members of the class of '36 returning to Massachusetts State Col-
lege as sophomores, realized that several changes had taken place since their
entrance into college life as mere "frosh" the year before.
In the first place, our numbers had been increased by many transfers
from colleges and junior colleges. The college year had been changed from a
three-term to a two-semester year, and we found our courses re-arranged to
meet the requirements of the new program. Under the inspiration of our new
president. Dr. Baker, the Horticultural Show, during our sophomore year, has
become a permanent annual event, and the singing of carols on campus around
the Christmas tree promises to become a tradition. Plans have been completed
for the erection of a new college library and a men's dormitory, and we realize
that during our four years great progress will have been made toward the
completion of the plans for the future Massachusetts State College campus.
'36 is not at all proud of its record in the freshmen-sophomore sports
this year. The freshmen won Razoo Night with a big margin, pulled the
sophomores through the college pond, won the football game, — but they
will tell all about that and we do not need to do so. However, the sophomore
class is well represented in college athletics, having letter-men on every one
of the varsity teams. In co-ed activities, the class has been more success-
ful, having obtained the inter-class runner-up position in both soccer and
basketball.
In academic activities, '36 is well represented in every line. We won
second place in the Burnham Declamation Contest, and one of our members
took the annual Poetry Contest prize. Two of the cast of the Roister Doisters
annual play, "There's Always Juliet" were sophomores. Several of our musical
members took part in the Bay State Revue, which this year was given in the
form of an original musical comedy, "Let's Go Nutty". In the radio broadcast
of the production, three of the soloists were from our class. We have held our
own scholastically throughout the year and socially we have been most active
taking in the Mardi Gras and every "Vic" party on campus.
As we continue our college life at State, we become more devoted to
our "Dear Old Massachusetts", and are most happy that we still have two
years in which to uphold her ideals and take part in her victories.
MARGARET L. HUTCHINSON
105
CLASS OF 1936
Charlotte Louise Abbott Quincy
1915; Goddard School, Barre, Vermont; Landscape Architecture.
Ralph Terry Adams Athof
1913; Athol High School; Chemistry; Football 1, 2; Hockey 1.
Elmer Howes Alien South Hadley
1913; South Hadley High School; Floriculture; Football 1 — Numerals, 2 — Varsity
Letter; Basketball 2 — Varsity; Glee Club 2; Sigma Phi Epsilon.
George Howard Allen Westboro
1914; Westboro High School; Social Science; Baseball 1 — Numerals; Hockey 1;
Collegian 1 ; Freshman Handbook; Lambda Chi Alpha.
Roger Everett Allen Shrewsbury
1914; Shrewsbury High School; Physical and Biological Sciences; Cross Country 1,
2 — Varsity; Theta Chi.
Gertrude Helen All is Conway
1913; Deerfield High School; Social Sciences; Outing Club 2.
Michael Anacki West Springfield
1913; Suffield School; Social Sciences; Football 1; Baseball 1, 2.
Edward Popp Anderson Dalton
1913; Dalton High School; Chemistry; Alpha Sigma Phi.
Philip Brigham Anderson Framingham
1914; Framingham High School; Economics.
Harriett Katherine Andrus Springfield
1914; Technical High School; Education; Y. W. C. A. 1, 2; Lambda Delta Mu.
Ralph Alexander Arnold Franklin
1915; Weston High School; Forestry; Baseball 1; Cross Country 1.
Herbert Bernard Atlas Brookline
1915; Boston Latin School; Social Science; Baseball 1 — Manager; Phi Lambda Tau.
Chester Ira Babcock, Jr. Newtonville
1912; Physiological and Biological Sciences; Kappa Sigma.
Barbara Edwards Baggs Belchertown
1915; Belchertown High School; Social Science.
Louis Gerald Baizman Chelsea
1913; Chelsea High School; Lincoln Preparatory School; Physical and Biological
Sciences; Football 1, 2 — Varsity; Inter-class Boxing.
Maurice Herman Baizman Chelsea
1909; Chelsea Senior High School; Lincoln Preparatory School; Class Boxing.
Elizabeth Weston Baker Braintree
Daniel Algerd Balavich North Andover
1914; Johnson High School; Social Science; Baseball 1 — Numerals; Hockey 1, 2
— Varsity; Newman Club; Q. T. V.
Edward Estle Baldwin Boonton, N. J.
1913; Boonton High School; Landscape Architecture; Football 1, 2 — Varsity; 6-Man
Rope Pull; Lambda Chi Alpha.
Donald Murch Ballou Holyoke
1913; Holyoke High School; Bacteriology; Football 1; Baseball 1; 6-Man Rope Pull;
Alpha Sigma Phi.
Randolph Corbin Barrows Stafford Springs, Conn.
1915; Suffield School; Physical Education; Football 1, 2; Baseball 1 ; Track 1 ; Q. T. V.
106
Jackson Arthur Barton Dorchester
1914; Boston Latin School; Physical and Biological Science; Track 1 — Manager.
All in Cloud Battles Sherborn
1914; Roxbury Latin School; Farm Management; Track; Glee Club; Kappa Sigma.
Philip Becker Easthampton
1915; Easthampton High School; Chemistry; Soccer.
Florence Selma Bilsky Springfield
1915; Central High School; Bacteriology; Deborah Club 1, 2; Y. W. C. A. 1.
Gordon Harold Bishop Athol
1914; Athol High School; Economics; Track 1; Cross Country 1, 2; Phi Sigma Kappa.
Arthur Frederick Bixby Sunderland
1914; Amherst High School; Chemistry; Football 1, 2; Hockey 1; Class Officer
Treasurer — 1, Captain 1, 2; Maroon Key; Kappa Sigma.
Alice Joanne Blanchfield Easthampton
1914; Easthampton High School; Social Sciences; Alpha Lambda Mu.
Paul Frederick Bobula West Roxbury
1915; Jamaica Plain High School; Floriculture.
Clare Elizabeth Bosworth Holyoke
1914; Holyoke High School; Social Science; Newman Club 1, 2.
Myles Gerald Boylan Watertown
1913; Watertown Senior High School; Landscape Architecture; Football 1, 2 — Varsity;
Basketball 1; Bay State Revue; Mardi Gras Committee 2; Freshman Informal Com-
mittee; Newman Club; Maroon Key; Lambda Chi Alpha.
Barbara Barker Bradley Southfield
1915; Marlborough High School; Social Sciences; Y. W. C. A. 1, 2.
Robert Story Bray Gloucester
1913; Gloucester High School; English; Band 1, 2; Alpha Sigma Phi.
Owen Joseph Brennan Wheelwright
1915; Hardwick High School; Economics; Track; Newman Club.
Elia Mabel Bridges South Deerfield
1913; South Deerfield High School; Home Economics.
Arnold Charles Briere Holyoke
1913; Holyoke High School; Biological Sciences; Football; Track.
Elva Louise Britton Gardner
1915; Gardner High School; Home Economics; Home Economics Club; Y. W. C. A.;
Sigma Beta Chi.
Chester Zell Brown Belmont
1913; Belmont High School; Economics; Theta Chi.
Ernestine Charlotte Browning Springfield
1914; Technical High School; Languages; Y. W. C. A.; Phi Zeta.
Alfred Herold Brueckner Springfield
1914; Central High School; Bacteriology; Baseball 1; Track 1; Cross Country 1 ; Kappa
Sigma.
Helen Norris Bruns Somerville
1914; Somerville High School; Home Economics; Y. W. C. A. 2; Debating 2; Sigma
Beta Chi.
Frederick Kemerer Bull Springfield
1914; Commerce High School; Physical and Biological Sciences; Football; Baseball-
Hockey 1 ; Bay State Revue 1, 2; Kappa Sigma.
Marian Elizabeth Bullard New Salem
1914; New Salem Academy; Social Science; Y. W. C. A.; Alpha Lambda Mu.
107
Francis Campbell Burke Clinton
1913; Clinton High School; Landscape Architecture; Maroon Key President — 2;
Football 1 — Class; Track 1, 2 — Class; Hockey 1 — Class; Phi Sigma Kappa.
Edmond Leiand Cance Amherst
1911; Stanley High School, Wisconsin; Social Science.
Reginald Sidney Carey, Jr. South Hadley
1914; South Hadley High School; Floriculture; Soccer 2; Alpha Gamma Rho,
Mary Alice Cawley Winthrop
1915; Winthrop High School; Physical and Biological Sciences; Newman Club,
Madeline Chase Winthrop
1914; Winthrop High School; Distributed Sciences; Alpha Lambda Mu.
Milton Earle Chase Monument Beach
1914; Bourne High School; Physical and Biological Sciences; Basketball 1; Band 1;
Bay State Revue 2; Alpha Gamma Rho.
William Wallace Chilson Northampton
1913; Northampton High School; Social Science; Track 1; Band 1; Orchestra 1; Fresh-
man Dance; Kappa Epsilon.
James Wellington Clapp Springfield
1915; Central High School; Chemistry; Baseball 1; Basketball 1; Track 2; Cross
Country 1; Bay State Revue 2; Glee Club 1, 2; Kappa Sigma.
James Roe Clarke Milton, N. Y.
1914; Westtown Preparatory School; Pomology; Track 1; Swimming 1, 2; Bay State
Revue; Kappa Sigma.
Robert Brown Clark Sharon
1914; Sharon High School; Landscape Architecture; Football 2; Baseball 1; Cross
Country 2.
Joseph George Cleary New London, Conn.
1912; Distributed Sciences; Sergeant-at-arms 2; Varsity Football 2; Class Football;
Men's Glee Club 2, 3; Q. T. V.
William Howard Cone Fairfield, Conn.
1911 ; Dean Academy; Landscape Architecture; Class Track 1 — squad; Q. T. V.
Frederick Richard Congdon Great Barrington
1914; Searles High School; Pre-medical; Track 1; Band 1, 2; United Religious Council
2; Treasurer, Newman Club 2; Theta Kappa Gamma.
Philip Richard Cook Haydenville
1914; Williamsburg High School; Social Sciences; Phi Sigma Kappa.
Mary Abbie Cooney Interlaken
1916; Williams High School; Distributed Sciences; Alpha Lambda Mu.
Dorothy Mary Corcoran Stoneham
1915; Stoneham High School; Home Economics; Co-ed Rifle Team; Class Soccer;
Basketball; Hockey; Class Vice-President 1; Y. W. C. A.; Christian Association; New-
man Club; Sigma Beta Chi.
Lois Crabtree Gardner
1914; Gardner High School; Home Economics; Y. W. C. A. 1, 2; Debatmg 2; Lambda
Delta Mu.
Joseph Vincent Cronin Haverhill
Kenneth Earl Cuthbertson Millers Falls
191 1 ; Turners Falls High School; Poultry Husbandry; Football 1; Sigma Phi Epsilon.
Janina Mary Czajkowski Amherst
1915; Hopkins Academy; Physical and Biological Sciences; Newman Club.
108
John Danaczko South Hadley
1914; South Hadley High School; Chemistry.
James Davidson Norwood
191 1; Norwood High School; English; Varsity Soccer 2; Theta Chi.
Barbara Jewell Davis Lexington
1914; Lexington High School; William and Mary College; Distributed Sciences;
Orchestra 2; Outing Club 2; Y. W. C. A.; Sigma Beta Chi.
Frederick Leroy Davis Portland, Me.
1913; Deering High School; Landscape Architecture; Kappa Epsilon.
Domenic DeFelice Belmont
1914; Belmont High School; Chemistry; Outing Club 1.
Richard Clancy Desmond Lynn
1916; Leesburg (Fla.) High School; Social Sciences; Social Science Club; Newman Club.
Louis deWilde Shiloh, N. J.
1913; Bridgeton High School; Landscape Architecture; Kappa Epsilon.
Ralph Warren Dimock Oxford
1915; Oxford High School; Dairy Industry; Theta Chi.
Albert Winslow Dodge, Jr. Wenham
1914; Wilbraham Academy; Landscape Architecture; Manager, Freshman Baseball 1;
Hockey 1; Class Sergeant-at-Arms 1, 2; Bay State Revue 1 ; Interclass Athletic Board
1, 2; Maroon Key 2; Honor Council 1 ; Horticultural Show 2; Sigma Phi Epsilon.
Donald Tracy Donnelly Chester
1915; Chester High School; English-Education; Chorus 1; Varsity Debating 1, 2;
Newman Club 1, 2; Kappa Epsilon.
Hazel Marie Dow Haverhill
1912; Central High School, Springfield; Social Sciences; Phi Zeta.
Frances Mary Driscoll Holyoke
1915; Holyoke High School; Home Economics; Bay State Revue 2; Newman Club;
Phi Zeta.
Paul John Driscoll Northampton
1912; Northampton High School.
Malcolm Ramsey Dunbar Barre
1914; Barre High School; Chemistry; Phi Sigma Kappa.
Carl Frederick Dunker Holyoke
1914; Holyoke High School; Chemistry; Track 1, 2; Cross Country 1,2; Alpha Gamma
Rho.
Alden Robinson Eaton North Reading
1914; North Reading High School; Landscape Architecture; Football 1; Six Man Rope
Pull 2; Sigma Phi Epsilon.
Kenneth Thomas Farrell Brookline
1914; Brookline High School; Pre-Medical; Class Football 1, 2; Class Soccer 2; Class
Baseball 1; Band 1, 2; Freshman Handbook Committee; Alpha Gamma Rho.
Joseph Arnold Feldman Northampton
Herbert William Ferguson Pittsfield
1913; Pittsfield High School; Social Sciences; Band 1, 2; Orchestra 1, 2; Alpha
Sigma Phi.
Eleanor Clarke Fillmore Melrose
1914; Melrose High School; Landscape Architecture; W. S. G. A. Council 1, 2; Sigma
Beta Chi.
109
Carlton Jesse Finkelstein Revere
1915; Revere High School; Distributed Sciences; Assistant Manager, Football 2;
Manager, Hockey 1 ; Phi Lambda Tau.
Allyn Hubbard Fisher Norwood
1914; Norwood High School; Floriculture; Orchestra 1, 2; Horticultural Show 2; Theta
Chi.
Robert Bernard Fisher Northampton
1915; Saint Michael's High School; Landscape Architecture; Kappa Epsilon.
Franklin Howe Fiske Greenfield
1911; Deerfield Academy; Physical and Biological Sciences.
Patrick James Fitzgerald Haverhill
1913; Haverhill High School; Distributed Sciences; Class Football; Class Hockey; Class
Baseball; Collegian 2; Interfraternity Council 2; Newman Club 1, 2; Theta Kappa
Gamma.
Erna Martha Flack Northampton
1908; Northampton High School; Distributed Sciences; Sigma Beta Chi.
Anna Agnes Flynn Millers Falls
1914; Turners Falls High School; English; Orchestra 1, 2; Bay State Revue 2; Secre-
tary, Newman Club; United Religious Council; Phi Zeta.
Marguerite Maralyn Ford Brockton
1915; Brockton High School; English; Class Secretary 1; Roister Doisters 1; Bay State
Revue 1, 2; Y. W. C. A. 1, 2; Newman Club 1, 2; Sigma Beta Chi.
Bertram Rabin Forer Springfield
1914; Technical High School; Pre-Medical; Class Soccer 2; Outing Club 2; Phi Lambda
Tau.
Jack Walter Foster Winthrop
1914; Winthrop High School; Bacteriology; Collegian 2.
John Franco East Falmouth
1915; Lawrence High School; Physical and Biological Sciences.
Melvin Herbert Frank Roxbury
1914; Boston Latin School; Physical and Biological Sciences; Football 1; Track 1, 2;
Alpha Epsilon Pi.
Bradley Luther Frye Orange
1913; Orange High School; Poultry Husbandry.
Louis Edward Fuller Belchertown
1913; Wilbraham Academy; Economics; Lambda Chi Alpha.
Louise Fannie Galbraith Greenfield
1916; Greenfield High School; English; Outing Club 1, 2; Y. W. C. A. 1; Chorus 1.
Samuel Garbar Holyoke
1913; Holyoke High School; History, Economics, and Sociology; Baseball 1; Cross
Country 1 ; Band 1 .
Dorothy Garbose Gardner
1914; Gardner High School; Social Sciences; History-Sociology Club; Y. W. C. A. 1.
Alfred Hamilton Gardner, Jr. Belmont
1914; Belmont High School; Chemistry; Secretary, Dad's Day Committee; President,
Maroon Key 2; Honor Council 1, 2; Phi Sigma Kappa.
Chester Mason Gates Southbridge
1915; Mary E. Wells High School; Bacteriology; Theta Chi.
Lewis Chapman Gillett Littleton
1914; Littleton High School; Education; History-Sociology Club; Outing Club 1, 2.
Irene Virginia Gingras Blackinton
1913; Drury High School; Botany.
Lynn Rodney Glazier Leverett
1914; Amherst High School; Dairy Industry; Baseball 1 ; Dairy Club.
Dean Newton Glick Amherst
19)4; Amherst High School; Landscape Architecture; Band 2; Orchestra 1; Mardi
Gras Committee 2; Maroon Key 2; Kappa Sigma.
Myer Glickstein Chelsea
1913; Chelsea High School; Dairy Industry; Dairy Club; Animal Husbandry Club.
Charles Nelson Glynn Northampton
1913; Central High School, Springfield; Social Sciences; Cross Country 1; Christian
Association 1 .
William Leonard Goddard, Jr. Littleton
1913; Littleton High School; Chemistry; Soccer 1, 2; Baseball 1; Basketball I.
Arthur Jacob Gold Dorchester
1913; Boston Latin School; Physical and Biological Sciences; Track 1; Roister Doisters
1; Band 1; Varsity Debating 1,2; Burnham Declamation Contest 1 ; Alpha Epsilon Pi.
Louise Charlotte Govone Sandwich
1915; Sandwich High School; Home Economics; Orchestra 1; Home Economics Club
1, 2; Y. W. C. A. 1, 2; Alpha Lambda Mu.
Russell Thompson Graves Northampton
1914; Northampton High School; Physical and Biological Sciences; Glee Club 2.
Frank Greenwood Methuen
1915; Searles High School; English; Track 1, 2; Debating 2; Kappa Sigma.
Louis Paul Haffer Revere
1914; Revere High School; Economics; Baseball 1 ; Debating 1.
Elizabeth Warner Hager South Deerfield
1914; Deerfield High School; Home Economics.
Christine Evelyn Hakanson Worcester
1914; Classical High School; Home Economics; Class Vice-President 1; Bay State
Revue 1, 2; Y. W. C. A. 1; Phi Zeta.
Harold Homer Hale Tolland
1915; Gilbert High School; Chemistry; Sigma Phi Epsilon.
Louise Mary Haley Chester
1914; Chester High School; Home Economics; Soccer; Basketball; Newmani Club;
Lambda Delta Mu.
Constance Hathaway Hall Sharon
1915; Sharon High School; Bacteriology; Class Vice-President 2; Debating 1; Sigma
Beta Chi.
Calvin Siddell Hannum Pittsfield
1914; Pittsfield High School; Language and Literature; Kappa Sigma.
Forrest Dana Hartin Maynard
1914; Maynard High School; Distributed Sciences; Football 1, 2; Baseball 1; K. O.
Club; Phi Sigma Kappa.
Priscilla Frances Hartwell Dover
1913; Newton High School; Education; Phi Zeta.
Donald Henry Haselhuhn Springfield
1913; Central High School; Pre-Medical; Varsity Soccer 2; Track 1 ; Hockey 1 ; Cross
Country 1 ; Sigma Phi Epsilon.
Adin Allyne Hixon Worcester
1913; South High School; Landscape Architecture; Cross Country 1 ; Bay State Revue
2; Chorus 1; Glee Club 2; Theta Chi.
Merrill Spinney Hobart Needham
1913; Needham High School; Chemistry and Physics; Track 1; Swimming 2; Kappa
Epsilon.
1 1 1
Alice Lillian Hopkins Orleans
1912; Orleans High School; Home Economics; Y. W, C. A. 1; Home Economics Club
1, 2; Alpha Lambda Mu.
Mary Frances Morgan Beverly
1915; Beverly High School; Simmons; Home Economics; Newman Club; Sigma Beta Chi.
Leonta Gertrude Horrigan West Springfield
1914; West Springfield High School; Social Sciences; Y. W. C. A.; Chairman World
Fellowship Group; Alpha Lambda Mu.
John Benjannin Howes Middleboro
1913; Middleboro High School; Pomology; Q. T. V.
Priscilla Ruth Howland Conway
1913; Wallen High School; Chicago, 111.; Social Science.
Margaret Lois Hutchinson Amherst
1915; Central High School, Springfield; Mathematics; Class Secretary 1, 2; Orchestra
1 ; Outing Club 1 ; Phi Zeta.
Robert F. Hutt Glastonbury, Conn.
1 914;Glastonbury High School; Landscape Architecture; Landscape Club; Sigma Phi
Epsilon.
Carroll Reed Johnson Foxboro
1914; Foxboro High School; Social Science; Theta Chi.
David Lewis Johnson Holden
1914; Holden High School; Chemistry.
Harry Agnew Johnson Northborough
1914; Northborough High School; Chemistry.
Williann Francis Johnston Worcester
1914; St. John's High School; Forestry.
Marion EInora Jones Springfield
1915; West Springfield High School; Home Economics; Bay State Revue 2; Phi Zeta.
Maxwell Kaplovitz Winthrop
1914; Winthrop High School; Bacteriology and Physiology; Alpha Epsilon Pi.
Allan Max Kaufman Dorchester
1914; Boston Latin School; Physical and Biological Sciences; Soccer 2; Basketball 2,
Assistant Manager; Track 1; Cross Country 1; Band 1, 2; Alpha Epsilon Pi.
Robert Alexander Keefe Franklin
1911; Worcester Academy; Chemistry; Alpha Sigma Phi.
Bernard John Kelleher Turners Falls
1913; Turners Fa, is High School; Landscape Architecture; Class Track; Class Basket-
ball; Sigma Phi Epsilon.
Richard Tomfohrde Kennett West Medford
1914; Mount Hermon School; Chemistry; Freshman Track 1; Varsity Track 2; Theta
Chi.
Theodore William Kerr, Jr. Medford
1910; Medford High School; Botany; Freshman Cross Country; Freshman Track;
Varsity Track — Relay Team; Theta Chi.
Priscilla King Melrose
1914; Melrose High School; Bacteriology; Orchestra 1, 2; Y. W. C. A. 1, 2; Sigma
Beta Chi.
Lucy Kingston Springfield
1915; Springfield Junior College; English; Bay State Revue 2; Y. W. C. A. 2; Phi Zeta.
Mildred Elizabeth Kleyla South Deerfield
1915; Deerfield Academy; Home Economics.
David Klickstein Maiden
1914; Maiden High School; Pre-Medical; Soccer 1. 2 — Assistant Manager; Alpha
Epsilon Pi.
Emil John Koenig Jefferson
1915; Holden High School; Pre-Medical; Football 1, 2; Alpha Gamma Rho.
Joseph Harold Krasnoff Roslindale
1914; Roxbury Memorial High School; Distributed Sciences; Football 1, 2; Alpha
Epsilon Pi.
Charles Lewis Krtil Westfield
1913; Westfield High School; Landscape Architecture; Football 1; Baseball 1; Basket-
ball 2; Phi Sigma Kappa.
Herbert Paul Kugler Easthampton
1915; Easthampton High School; Social Sciences; Debating 2.
Richard Alvah Kulya Greenfield
1914; Greenfield High School; Chemistry; Basketball 1; Track 1; Band 1, 2; Newman
Club 1, 2; Kappa Epsilon.
Richard Hudson Lake Westfield
1914; Westfield High School; Chemistry; Bay State Revue 2; Varsity Swimming 2;
Glee Club 2; Theta Chi.
Norvin Clement Laubenstein Maynard
1913; Maynard High School; Economics; Football 1; Band 1; Bay State Revue 1;
Lambda Chi Alpha.
Edward Lavin Springfield
Central High School; Distributed Sciences.
Edward Victor Law Belmont
1913; Belmont High School; Economics; Roister Doisters 1, 2; Bay State Revue 1, 2;
Glee Club 1, 2; Theta Chi.
Ivan Narcisse LeClair Southbridge
Marguerite Rita LeDuc Ware
1916; Ware High School; Social Sciences; Y. W. C. A.; Debating 1, 2; Newman
Club 1, 2.
Fred A. Lehr Springfield
1913; Cathedral High School, Springfield; St. Anselm's College; Education; Alpha
Sigma Phi.
Dolores Lesquier Springfield
1914; Central High School, Springfield; Home Economics; Bay State Revue 2; Dad's
Day Committee 2; Y. W. C. A. 2; Phi Zeta.
Lester Henry Levine Dorchester
1913; Boston Latin School; Distributed Sciences; Roister Doisters 1, 2; Bay State
Revue 2; Phi Lambda Tau.
Walter Frederic Lewis Andover
1913; Essex County Agricultural School; Poultry; Cross Country 1, 2; Kappa Epsilon.
Sidney Liberfarb Roxbury
1915; Roxbury Memorial High School; Boston Latin School; General Sciences; Soccer
2; Basketball 1, 2.
Madeline Hazel Lincoln Belchertown
1916; Belchertown High School; Mathematics; Outing Club 1; Alpha Lambda Mu.
Robert Bradley Lincoln Taunton
1914; Taunton High School; Horticulture; Kappa Sigma.
113
Irving Lipovsky Springfield
1914; Central High School, Springfield; Bacteriology; Phi Lambda Tau.
Robert Mel lor Logan Lawrence
1914; Lawrence High School; Chemistry; Kappa Epsilon.
Francis Alfred Lord Northampton
1911; Northampton High School; History; Football 1, 2; Baseball 1; Hockey 1; Six
Man Rope Pull 2; History Club; Rifle Team; Q. T. V.
Thomas Henry Lord Arlington
1914; Arlington High School; Bacteriology; Kappa Epsilon.
Cummings Lincoln Lothrop Hingham
1915; Hingham High School; Floriculture; Class Soccer; Class Treasurer 1; Lambda
Chi Alpha.
Elizabeth Low Arlington
1914; Arlington High School; Home Economics; Orchestra 1, 2; Home Economics
Club 1, 2; W. S. G. A. Council 2.
Helen Lubach Mattapan
1915; Girl's Latin School; Home Economics; Home Economics Club 1, 2; Y. W. C. A. 1.
Phyllis Gary Macintosh North Dana
1914; New Salem Academy; Home Economics; Home Economics Club; Alpha Lambda
Mu.
Evelyn Marie Mallory Amherst
1914; Amherst High School; Chemistry; Outing Club 1, 2; Chorus 1; Lambda Delta Mu.
Charles William Marsh Feeding Hills
1915; Agawam High School; Chemistry; Baseball 1; Alpha Sigma Phi.
Gertrude Evelyn Martin Shrewsbury
1914; Holyoke High School; Biological Sciences; Outing Club 1.
Dorothy Louise Masters Stockbridge
1916; Williams High School; Home Economics; Sigma Beta Chi.
John Lewis McConchie Monson
1909; Monson High School; Entomology; Football 1; Baseball 1; Basketball 1, 2; Phi
Sigma Kappa.
Abraham Irving Michaelson Revere
1915; Revere High School; Distributed Sciences; Track squad; Band; Six man rope
pull 2; Alpha Epsilon Pi.
Harold Austin Midgley Worcester
1915; Worcester North High School; Entomology; Baseball 1; Phi Sigma Kappa.
Philip Barton Miner Holyoke
1914; Holyoke High School; Physical and Biological Sciences; Track — Numerals;
Cross Country — Numerals.
George Edward Monroe Weymouth
1915; Weymouth High School; Animal Husbandry; Football; Hockey; Lambda Chi
Alpha.
Charles Henry Moran Boston
1914; East Boston High School; Bacteriology; Newman Club.
Fred Joseph Murphy Belmont
1915; Belmont High School; Physical Education and History; Football 1, 2; Hockey 1,
2; Maroon Key 2; Class Captain and Class Treasurer 2; Sigma Phi Epsilon.
Samuel Neuman Dorchester
1913; Boston Latin School; Modern Languages; Manager Freshman Football and Base-
ball; Dance Committee 1; Discussion Club 1 — Secretary.
Kenneth Raycraft Newman Hoosac Tunnel
1915; Arms Academy; Physical and Biological Sciences; Alpha Gamma Rho.
Terrence Shanahan Norwood Greenfield
1913; Greenfield High School; Horticulture.
114
Lorraine Fisherdick Noyes Hartsdale, N. Y.
1915; Greenwich High School; William and Mary; Pre-'Medical; Outing Club 2; Girl's
Debating Team 2; Y. W. C. A. 2; Roister Doisters 2.
Dorothy Nurmi Westminster
1915; Fitchburg High School; Sociology; Orchestra 1, 2; Outing Club 1, 2; Y. W. C. A.
2; Lambda Delta Mu.
Katherine Louise O'Brien Amherst
1915; Amherst High School; Home Economics; Sigma Beta Chi.
Oscar Evald Olson Amherst
1914; Amherst High School; Agriculture.
Ruth Mildred Ordway Hudson
1913; Hudson High School; Languages and Literature; Outing Club 1, 2; Lambda
Delta Mu.
Clarence Adalbert Packard Amherst
1914; Amherst High School; Chemistry and Physics.
Howard Clarence Parker Bondsville
1913; Palmer High School; English; Track 1, 2; Orchestra 1, 2; Bay State Revue 1, 2;
Alpha Gamma Rho.
Edith Mildred Parsons Turners Fails
1914; Turners Falls High School; Social Science; English.
Marion Louise Paulding South Hanson
1914; Whitman High School; Biological Sciences; Outing Club 1; Y. W. C. A. 2.
David Berstien Pearlmutter Revere
1913; Revere High School; Pre-Medical; Soccer 2; Outing Club 1, 2; Alpha Epsilon Pi.
Robert Bishop Peckham West Medford
1914; Medford High School; Social Sciences; Football 1; Basketball 1; Hockey 1; Sigma
Phi Epsilon.
Richard Tufts Peckham West Medford
1914; Medford High School; Social Sciences; Football 1; Baseball 1; Hockey 1; Sigma
Phi Epsilon.
Lester Peterson Quincy
1914; Quincy High School; Horticulture.
Clare Linwood Pineo Mt. Tom
191 I; Hopkins Academy; Dairy; Wrestling 1, 2; Dairy Club; Kappa Epsilon.
Daniel Clayton Plastridge Bedford
1913; Lexington High School; Farm Management; Alpha Sigma Phi.
Wendell Judson Potter Melrose
1914; Melrose High School; Chemistry; Class Football 1; Track 1; Phi Sigma Kappa.
Harry Davis Pratt North Adams
1915; Drury High School; Entomology; Swimming 2; Band 1, 2; Orchestra 1, 2; Outing
Club 1, 2; Alpha Gamma Rho.
Bessie Louise Proctor Lunenburg
1915; Lunenberg High School; Economics, History, and Sociology; History and Sociology
Club 2; Y. W. C. A. 1, 2.
Raymond Norris Proctor Lunenburg
1914; Lunenberg High School; Animal Husbandry; Track 1; Cross Country 1, 2;
Animal Husbandry Club; Dairy Club; Mathematics Club.
Arthur Allan Putnam Wilbraham
1914; Springfield Junior College; Dairy; Football 1; Dairy Club; Theta Chi.
Oliver Ripley Putnam Danvers
Beatrice Norma Rafter Sharon
1915; Sharon High School; Class Vice-President 1; Sigma Beta Chi.
Helen Marie Reardon Amesbury
1914; Amesbury High School; English; Sigma Beta Chi.
Ruth Vassall Reed Waltham
1912; Waltham School for Girls; Home Economics; Y. W. C. A.
Thomas John Reilly Schenectady, N. Y.
1914; Schenectady High School; Chemistry; Debating Team 2; Newman Club 1, 2;
Mathematics Club.
Albert Peter Richards Amherst
1914; Monson Academy; Distributed Sciences; Collegian 2; Sigma Phi Epsilon.
Maida Leonard Riggs Grafton
1915; Grafton High School; Distributed Sciences, Co-ed Rifle Team; Class Secretary;
Freshman Girls Class Captain; Debating; Y. W. C. A.; Phi Zeta.
Betty Mavis Riley Ludlow
1914; Ludlow High School; Poultry.
Richard Grimshaw Riley Barre Plains
1914; Barre High School; Chemistry; Track 1 — Numerals; Maroon Key 2; Phi Sigma
Kappa.
Arthur E. Robinson Arlington
1913; Arlington High School; Biology; Outing Club; Kappa Epsilon.
William Arthur Rose Winthrop
Charles Trescott Roys Sheffield
1913; Berkshire High School; Agriculture.
Jack Joseph Rutstein Everett
1913; Everett High School; Pre-Medical; Football 2; Basketball 1; Cross Country 1;
Wrestling 1; Alpha Epsilon Pi.
Robert Joseph Ryan Hatfield
1914; Smith Academy, Hatfield; Social Sciences; Soccer 2 — squad; Alpha Sigma Phi.
Esther May Sanborn Pittsfield, N. H.
1912; Pittsfield, N. H. High School; University of New Hampshire; Animal Husbandry;
Alpha Lambda Mu.
Addison Lawton Sandford Ware
1912; Ware High School; Manlius; Economics, History and Sociology; Band 1, 2;
Orchestra 1, 2; Track 1; Bay State Revue 1, 3; Glee Club 3; Soccer 3; Sigma Phi
Epsilon.
Florence Mae Saulnier Worcester
1915; Classical High School; English; Collegian 2; Newman Club 1, 2; Y. W. C. A. 1;
History and Sociology Club.
Helen Louise Sawyer Littleton
1915; Littleton High School; Home Economics; Y. W. C. A.; Lambda Delta Mu.
Edward John Seredynsky Holyoke
1913; Holyoke High School; Chemistry; Soccer 2; Basketball 1; Track 1; Cross Country
1 ; Orchestra 2.
Arnold Samuel Shulkin Revere
1912; Revere High School; Pre-Medical; Track 1; Football 2; Wrestling 1; Six man
rope pull; Rope Pull 2; Alpha Epsilon Pi.
Charles Norman Sjogren Easthampton
1914; Easthampton High School; Chemistry; Baseball 1.
116
Francene Smith Walpole
1914; Walpole High School; Chemistry; Y. W. C. A. 1; M. S. C. Chorus ] ; Phi Zeta.
Gladys Virginia Smith Westfield
1914; Westfield High School; English or Pre-Law; Rifle Team 1, 2- Bay State Revue
2; Y. W. C. A. 1 ; K. O. Club 1 , 2; Chorus 1 ; Cher 1 ; Phi Zeta.
John Arthur Smith Cambridge
Raymond Milton Snow Lawrence
1912; Essex County Agricultural School; Dairy Manufactures; Swimming 2; Dairy
Club; Kappa Epsilon,
Edward Joseph Soulliere Worcester
Worcester Academy; Pre-Medical; Football 1, 2; Baseball 1; Track 1; Class Sergeant-
at-arms 1 ; Phi Sigma Kappa.
Velda Stefanelli South Hadley
1914; South Hadley High School; French.
John William Stewart Needham
1914; Needham High School; Social Sciences; Football 1, 2; Basketball 1, 2; Track 1;
Class President 1, 2; Maroon Key 2; Kappa Sigma.
Virginia Stratton Lee
1915; Lee High School; Social Sciences; Y. W. C. A. 1, 2; Alpha Lambda Mu.
Jack Sturtevant Lynnfield Centre
1912; Swampscott High School; Teacher Training; Football 1, 2; Basketball 1, 2.
Edmund Joseph Sullivan Milford
1914; Milford High School; Distributed Sciences; Class Baseball; Cross Country —
Junior Varsity; Orchestra 1, 2; Newman Club 1, 2; Phi Sigma Kappa.
Ralph Frederick Sweinberger Holyoke
Royal Kendrick Tanner Greenfield
1914; Greenfield High School; Physical and Biological Sciences; Alpha Sigma Phi.
David Henry Taylor Methuen
1913; Edward F. Searles High School; Landscape Architecture; Baseball 1; Collegian 2;
Kappa Sigma.
Charles Vallentine Thayer Amherst
1914; Amherst High School; Physics.
Richard Hugh Thompson Colrain
1914; Arms Academy; Physiological and Biological Sciences; Track 1, 2 — Assistant
Manager Varsity; Collegian 2; Band 1, 2; Christian Association 1, 2; Theta Chi.
Ray Kinsman Thompson East Northfield
1910; Mount Hermon; Physical and Biological Sciences; Alpha Sigma Phi.
Haskell Solomon Tubiash Dorchester
1913; Roxbury High School; Bio-Chemistry; Track 1; Cross Country 2 — Assistant
Manager; Social Science Club 2.
Annie Louise Urban Springfield
1913; Technical High School; Landscape Architecture.
James Alden Valentine, Jr. Walpole
1913; Deerfield Academy; Agriculture; Football 1 — Squad 2; Baseball 1; Varsity
Hockey 2; Phi Sigma Kappa.
George Arthur Vassos, Jr. Springfield
1915; Central High School; Pre-Medical; Soccer 1, 2; Track 1; Band 1; Maroon Key
2 — Vice-President; Interclass Athletic Board — Secretary-Treasurer; Lambda Chi
Alpha.
Gertrude Mabel Vickery Greenfield
1914; Greenfield High School; Social Sciences; Collegian 2; History and Sociology
Club; Y. W. C. A. 2.
1 17
Morris Vidiborsky Dorchester
Phi Lambda Tau.
Walter Wainio Maynard
1914; Maynard High School; Chemistry; Football 1; Lambda Chi Alpha.
John Olin Walker Merrimac
Thomas Larkin Warren Lawrence
Frances Wentworth Pittsfield
1912; Pittsfield High School; Russell Sage College; Physics; Soccer; Basketball;
Hockey; Outing Club; Y. W. C. A.; Alpha Lambda Mu.
William Gordon Whaley East Moriches, N. Y.
1914; Patchogue, N. Y. High School; Floriculture and Horticulture; Soccer 2; Kappa
Epsilon.
Spofford Whitaker West Medford
1914; Medford High School; Economics; Football 1, 2; Phi Sigma Kappa.
Marjorie Eleanor Whitney Westminster
1914; Gardner High School; Home Economics; Home Economics Club; Y. W. C. A.
1, 2; Lambda Delta Mu.
Sylvia Bancroft Winsor New Bedford
1914; House in the Pines; Floriculture; Alpha Lambda Mu.
Thomas Bernerd Wolcott Westfield
1913; Westfield High School; Deerfield Academy; Economics; Baseball 1; Basketball
1, 2; Kappa Sigma.
Charles Samuel Woodbury Springfield
1914; Central High School; English; Track 1; Outing Club 2; Alpha Sigma Phi.
Betsy Worden West Springfield
1915; West Springfield High School; Home Economics; Phi Zeta.
John Michael Zak, Jr. Sunderland
1914; Amherst High School; Economics.
Walter Bernard Zewski Northampton
1911; Northampton High School; Chemistry.
Apolonia Julia Ziomek Amherst
118
SOMETIME MEMBERS OF THE CLASS OF 1936
Vinton R. Adams
George Balcanoff
Marjorie E. Ball
Kenneth A. Barton
Columbus C. Bonzogni
Mary E. Boucher
Leo W. Carbonneau
M. Adele Clancy
Louis F. Clark
Marguerite C. Clark
Leo W. Collins
Francis E. Conolly
Anita Crabtree
Clayton C. Craft
Philip A. Craig
William D. Crocker
John Croft
David W. Cunningham
George E. Curtis
Allan B. Elliot
John T. Fallon
Murray W. George
Kenneth E. Gillett
Hyman Gold
John L. Goodrow
Irwin S. Gottesman
Edmund A. Greene
Russell L. Griswold
William H, Hager, Jr.
J. William Hall
Eugene V. Higgins
Edith L. Jackson
Frederick Jenney
Sylvia Kaplan
Virginia K. Kellogg
Joseph V. T. Kempton
Sheldon C. Kuran
George N. Laite
Ruth A. Leahy
Eloise Leonard
Karl S. Macek
Duncan Macmaster
Robert H. MacPherson
Hilda A. Malmquist
Paul Mandella
Alfred J. Markowitz
Francis J. McCarthy
Kathleen E. McDermott
Angus J. McLeod
John E. McNally
Timothy J. Moriarty
John R. Morrison
Edith E. Priest
Emil A. Przystas
Stephen C. Puffer
Clement R. Purcell
Isadore Rabinowitz
George Rajonsky
Warren W. Rivers
Louis E. Roberts
Willard C. Roberts
Frank E. Rose
James A. Ryan
Robert Ryer, 1 1 1
Charles L. SanClemente
Lewis J. Sandler
Muriel H. Schiff
Sanford Shongood
Philip J. Spear
Arthur J. Stuart
Gildo J. Uliana
Asa Waterman
Carl R. Wiidner
Leslie W. Williamson
Olivia E. Willis
Mae Winer
Henry Wisneski
\\- r'*.
A YEAR GOES BY
The chapel tower is silver grey
When springtime opens leafy buds.
Mid lacy green it stands by day
But reaches toward the stars by night.
The chapel tower is pale as smoke
Beneath a scorching summer sun,
Not shaded by the neighboring oak
Nor airy shifting cloud above.
The chape! tower is warm and brown
Midst golden autumn's flaming leaves.
It's then the bell chimes above the town
To celebrate a winning game.
The chapel tower is steely grey
When winter snow comes sifting down.
Aloof, it seems, above the way
Of snowy, windblown passers-by.
MARIE E. CURRIER
FRESHMEN
■U}
President
Vice-President
Secretary
Treasurer
Captain .
Sergeant-at-arms
CLASS OF 1937
CLASS OFFICERS
Robert Anthony Bieber
. Marian Kay Wingate
Elinor Viola Trask
Priscilla Hutson
James Frederick Cutter
. Walter Holden Perry
FRESHMAN CLASS HISTORY
From all over Massachusetts, with a few from other states, came students
to make up the class of '37. Each face was as unfamiliar as the next, but with
the cooperation of the different organizations on campus, this situation was
soon remedied.
Immediately upon our arrival, antagonism between the class of '36 and
the class of '37 commenced. As customary, the first battle between the two
lower classes was the sixty-man rope pull. The Freshmen, with the normal
support of their loyal Junior friends, pulled the sixty sophomores through the
refreshing waters of the campus pond. Next came Razoo Night. Even though
the Freshmen did not win every match in wrestling and boxing, the night was
one of victory for '37. Following these matches came the Night-Shirt Parade.
Here the Freshmen, cheered on by their co-ed classmates, came out of the
battle with the greatest number of shirts. Later in the season, between the
halves of the Connecticut State football game, the Freshmen managed to pull,
with little difficulty, the six sophomores over the half-way mark.
The Freshmen won the annual football game with the sophomores 19-8,
but lost the soccer game 1-0. In basketball, they were victorious over the
seniors, but lost again to the sophomore class.
All in all, this first year of college has been successful for the Freshman
class.
ELINOR V. TRASK
123
CLASS OF 1937
Ralph Emerson Aiken, Jr
Charles Appel
John F. Appel
Rose Jane Ash
Arthur Chester Avery
Carol Joy Avery
Dorothy Veronica Ballard
Georgetown
Holyoke
Holyoke
Holyoke
Amherst
Winthrop
Gilbertville
Harold Edward Ballway Schenectady, N. Y,
Lois Anna Barnard .
Lois Brewster Barnes
Isadore Barr .
Alfred Walter Basamania
Charles Benea
Warren Newton Bentley
Nathan Milton Berman
Edwin George Berstein
Franklyn Doane Berry
Nelson Benjamin Betts, Jr
Alice Barlow Bevington
Robert Anthony Bieber
Ernest Leslie Birdsall
Catherine Martha Birnie
Leroy Lewis Blackmer
Harry Linwood Blaisdell
Shirley Alberta Bliss
Walter Drahorad Bliss
Richard Oscar Bohm
Horace Winfield Bolton
Louis Bongiolatti, Jr.
Mary Elizabeth Boucher
Sam Boxer
Alma Ruth Boyden .
Priscilla Marie Bradford
Louis Adelard Breault, Jr
Mary Rebecca Breinig
Gilbert Dearborn Bristol, J
John Poor Brooks .
Dorothy Imogene Brown
Frank Arthur Brox .
Alfred Washburn Bruneau
Hatfield
Florence
. Springfield
Holyoke
No. Plymouth
. Leominster
Mattapan
.. Springfield
West Dennis
ValleyFalls, N. Y.
Lawrence
Hatfield
Lawrence
Ludlow
No. Brookfield
Greenfield
Springfield
Attleboro
.East Milton
East Northfield
Adams
Easthampton
Pittsfield
Boylston
No.. Raynham
Auburn
. Northfield
■.'' E. Longmeadow
Holliston
Agawam
Dracut
No. Plymouth
Candidate for degree of Bachelor of
Warren Estey Bryant
Dorothy Lois Burnham
Norman Wesley Butterfield
John Joseph Byrnes
Marjorie Grant Cain
Muriel Elizabeth Cain
Margaret Calkins .
Leo William Carbonneau
Frank Fairfield Carr
Fred Nelson Carter .
Webster Allen Chandler
Jessie Josephine Chase
Carl Peter Ciosek
Barbara May Clark
Barbara Ruth Clark
Leroy French Clark
Marie Janet Cobb
Howard Stanley Cohen
Melvin Irving Cohen
Chester Cook Conant
Virginia Justine Conner
Raymond Francis Conway
Louis Elios Cosmos .
Robert Emmet Couhig
Clayton Chester Craft
William Daniel Crocker
Leo Vincent Crowley
Lois Curry
Francis Elliott Cushman
James Frederick Cutter
Edward William Czelusniak
Frederick Russell Dame .
Phoebe Daniels
Ernest Kirk Davis .
Frederick Leiand Dickens
Henry George Dihimann
James Jack Dobby .
Elizabeth Louise Dodge
Leah Ruth Domas
Trento Joseph Domenici
Vocational Agriculture.
24
Billerica Center
Maynard
Pittsfield
Pittsfield
Conway
Conway
Harvard
. Ware
Newtonville
Hanson
Melrose
West Springfield
Chicopee
Charlton
Ashfield
Walpole
Greenfield
Dorchester
Roxbury
Greenfield
Westfield
Holyoke
Springfield
Beverly
Ashfield
Ashfield
Amherst
Ithaca, N. Y.
Kingston
West Hatfield
Easthampton
. Athol
Melrose
Lee
Ashland
Shutesbury
Winthrop
Ashland
Dorchester
Holyoke
Jr,
Dorothea Margaret Donnelly
Nellie Marie Donnis
Helen Anna Downing
Howard Bernard Driscoll
Esther Mae Dunphy
Ellsworth Bryant Easton
Chester Bruno Eisold
Moses Jacob Entin .
Charles Edgar Eshbach
Alburn Lasell Fargo
William Bragdon Ferguson
Edson John Ferrell .
Angela Mary Filios .
Frances Pola Filipkowski
Sabin Peter Filipkowski
Austin Wellington Fisher
James Fleming
Frederick Henry Foerster
Joseph Freedman
Hillel Henry Friedman
Lois Isabella Fun
Shirley Gale ,
Ralph Bailey Gates .
Phyllis Ann Gleason
Sylvia Shirley Goldsmith
Frederick Wells Goodhue
Barbara Ramona Gordon
Edwina Louise Goss .
Estella Caroline Flora Go
Norman Wallace Grant
Guy Manning Gray .
Myrtle Lizzie Greene
Albert Joseph Gricius
Elvire Alexandre Gulben
Walter Charles Guralnick
Elmer Winston Hallowell
Herbert Milton Halpern
Virginia Lee Halvorson
John Francis Hanson
Erving Hardy .
Lawrence Keith Harris
Raymond Lewis Hart
Chester
Hatfield
Holyoke
Holyoke
So. Hadley Falls
Somerville
Ludlow
Boston
Winchester
Monterey
Ludlow
North Agawam
Westfield
Whately
Whately
Auburndale
Holyoke
Holyoke
Holyoke
Roxbury
Holyoke
Marblehead
Barre, Vt.
Springfield
Springfield
Haydenville
West Springfield
Orange
ulding Leicester
Lynn
Greenfield
Belchertown
Dorchester
Worcester
Roxbury
Greenfield
Holyoke
Lynn
Medford
Worcester
. Salem
. Lynn
Herbert Tilden Hatch, Jr.
Clarence William Haviland
Emily Madeline Healey
Burton Yaeger Hess
Thomas Anton Hiersche
Walter James Hodder
Julian Albert Hodesh
Robert Powell Holdsworth
Sarah Huntington Hopkins
Priscilla Horton
Leroy Kingsbury Houghton, Jr
Harlan Arnold Howard
Priscilla Hutson
Henry Nicholas lacovelli
Allan Southworth Ingalls
Kenneth Colwell Irvine
Edith Lillian Jackson
Porter Geer Jenks .
Howard Theodore Jensen
Byron Taylor Johnson
Lawrence Sterling Johnson
William Vialle Johnson
Victor Arthur Jones
Dorothy Mary Joyce
John Kabat
Simon Michael Katopes
Barbara Knox Keck .
Joseph George Kennedy
William Frank Kewer
Edmund Mac Keyes
Ruth Kinsman
William Herbert Kirby
Richard Berry Knowlton
Harry Frederick Koch
Max Frank Kramer .
Rudolph William Kuc
Frank Peter Kuklewicz
John Alexander Kulesa
Henry Shoub Kushlan
Laurence Harwood Kyle
John Edward Landers
Dorothy Elizabeth Lannon
South Hanover
Amesbury
Easthampton
. Springfield
Ludlow
Belmont
Northampton
Amherst
Orleans
Canton
Boston
Amherst
Brighton
Milford
Methuen
Worcester
North Middleboro
. West Acton
. Shrewsbury
Danbury, Conn.
Springfield
Kendal Green
Amherst
Amesbury
Hatfield
Northampton
Boylston
Quincy
Dorchester
Amherst
Roxbury
Adams
Maiden
Greenfield
Winthrop
Holyoke
Turners Falls
Whately
Boston
Huntington
Holyoke
Holyoke
125
Wendell Edward Lapham . . Carlisle
Whitney Edward Lawrence . Beverly
Philip Dumaresq Layton . . W. Newton
William Ames Leighton, Jr. . Auburndale
Morris Lerner . . . Springfield
Daniel Abraham Levin Northampton
Max Lilly .... Maiden
Leo David Lipman . . . Springfield
Walter Francis Lizak . Holyoke
Gardner Cromwell Lombard Danvers
Isadore Ludwin Maiden
Frank Merton Lyon . Hampden, Conn.
Robert Douglas MacCurdy . Watertown
Thomas Joseph Maguire . Haverhill
Henry Ward Marble . . . Athol
Emil Marciniak . . Easthampton
Charles Martin . . . Pittsfield
Justine Gordon Martin West Roxbury
Helena Clare McMahon . Brighton
Thomas Francis McMahon, Jr. . Brighton
Edmund James McNally . Palmer
John Edmund McNally Palmer
Charles Harold Meyers Greenfield
George McLean Milne . Lexington
Ivan Charles Minott, Jr. . Greenfield
Raymond Arthur Minzner . Lawrence
Lucille Amelia Monroe Southbridge
Gordon Moody . Amherst
Edwin Lewis Moore . . Pelham
Joy Emma Moore .... Leeds
Timothy Joseph Moriarty So. Hadley Falls
Walter Benjamin Mosely . Agawam
William Henry Moss Fairhaven
Edward Malcolm Munson, Jr. S. Dartmouth
Willard Squier Munson Amherst
Marion Frances Nagle Sheffield
Elliott Houghton Newcomb Orange
Anthony Joseph Nogelo . Framingham
Alfred Louis Novick Roxbury
Joseph Conrad Nowakowski Easthampton
George Edward O'Brien Northampton
Barbara Elmina Oertel . No. Hanson
Sirkka Miriam Oikemus . . Watertown
Nellie Mary Okolo . . Amherst
Robert Thomas O'Neill Northampton
Lemuel Osborne, Jr. Tenafly, N. J.
Otis Gunnar Ovaska . Hingham
Lawrence Pearl man . Roxbury
Charles Whitney Pedersen Chicopee Falls
Robert Charles Perriello . Medford
Walter Holden Perry . No. Andover
David Allen Peterson . . Methuen
James Aaron Pickering . . Boston
Carl Wynne Pilat . Ossining, N. Y.
Alfred Herbert Planting Amherst
Tabor Wells Polhemus East Northfield
Alger Wheeler Powell Brookfield
Roger Kingman Pratt, Jr. Brockton
Rita Agnes Provost . North Agawam
Milton Radio .... Roxbury
Warren Charles Rand West Boylston
William Augustus Raynes, Jr. Hyde Park
Lester Reynolds, Jr. . Newtown, Conn.
Lee Wilson Rice, Jr. . Wilbraham
Prescott Langdon Richards Florence
George Robert Richason . Turners Falls
Robert Whitman Richmond South Hanover
Beatrice Elynor Ritterman Holyoke
Warren Whelden Rivers , . Charlemont
Louis Everett Roberts Lexington
Caroline Rita Rogers Medway
Francis Joseph Rogers . . . Lynn
Paul Hubbard Roseberry . . Erving
Charles Rosenbloom . Holyoke
Robert Floyd Rosenburg , Williamstown
Kenwood Ross . Springfield
David Patrick Rossiter Maiden
John Ruffley, Jr. . New Bedford
James Marcus Ryan Needham Heights
Robert Ryer, III . South Hadley
Henry James Sampson North Westport
George Warren Sanborn . Norwood
Gizela Caroline Sawinski . Taunton
Douglas Francis Schirch . . Holyoke
126
Philip Treen Schneider
Warren Hugo Scholz
Bernard Timothy Shea
Norman Louis Sheffield
Philip Burrell Shiff
Walter Simonsen
John Merrill Sinclair
Saul Small
Esther Elizabeth Smith
Rodger Chapman Smith
Francis Edward Sovie
Philip James Spear
Robert Leroy Spiller, Jr.
Bernard Samuel Stepner
Elinor Leola Stone .
Abraham Suher
Edward Parsons Swan, Jr
Car! Pontius Swanson
Clifford Ernest Symancyk
John Joseph Talinski
Mary Veronica Tatro
Kenyon Yale Taylor, Jr. .
Edward Jesse Thacker
Frederic Russell Theriault
Albert Stetson Thomas
Francis Joseph Thomas
Robert William Thorndike
Donald Frederick Thurlow
Ruth Elizabeth Todt
Elinor Viola Trask .
Donald Kent Tucker
Palmer
Lawrence
Turners Falls
Enfield
South Duxbury
Everett
Northampton
. Springfield
Easthampton
Amherst
Adams
Charlemont
Beverly
Roxbury
Orange
Hoi yoke
Amherst
Rockport
Westfield
Boston
Agawam
Greenfield
Greenfield
East Weymouth
Brattleboro, Vt,
Turners Falls
Methuen
Greenfield
West Springfield
Lexington
Foxboro
Harvey Gay Turner, Jr.
John Albert Tuttle .
Jacob Saul Waldman
Helen May Warner .
Louise Isabel Warner
Alida Elizabeth Wattles
Harold Irving Watts
Beatrice Rivoli Waxier
John Herbert Weatherby
Donald Edward Weaver
Leonard Albert Webb
Lucille Frances Webber
Eleanor Alice West
Edith Lillian Whitmore
Ira Bertram Whitney
Frederick Winsor Whittemore
Myron Albert Widlansky
Sarah Clark Wilcox
Carl Richard Wildner
Sidney Williams
Ruth Irma Wilmes .
Mirian Kay Wingate
Philip Alexander Winsor
Frederick Joseph Wishart
Karol Stanley Wisnieski .
Judith Gail Wood .
Ruth Elizabeth Wood
Raymond Wyman .
Andover
Torrington, Conn.
Springfield
Sunderland
Sunderland
Montague
Amherst
Hoiyoke
Natick
Springfield
Amherst
Montague
Sheffield
Forestdale
Springfield
Roslindale
Springfield
Hudson
Amherst
Peabody
West Springfield
Fairhaven
New Bedford
Turners Falls
South Deerfield
Weymouth Heights
Hoiyoke
. Westfield
Arthur Jacob Zuckerman
John William Zukel
Pittsfield
Northampton
In Memoriam
ALLAN DONALD HARDY
Member of the Freshman Class
who passed away
January 14, 1933
POEM OF THE YEAR 1933-34
First Prize Fifteen Dollars, Shirley A. Bliss '37
Second Prize Ten Dollars, Dorothy Nurmi '36
Judge, David Morton
NOEL
Tumult of anticipation;
Hush of snow,
Falling . . . falling
On a waiting world.
A child stirs gently
In the straw.
Sad-eyed oxen breathe warm mist
In the cool night air.
And in the strange half-light
Joseph stands humble.
Hands clenched in aching reverence;
The world is taut with wonder.
Then a young lamb's bell
Shivers the glowing night
With soft Noel.
SHIRLEY A. BLISS '37
David Morton, famous American poet, in selecting the above poem for
first honors, wrote: "Noel seems to be completely successful in creating an
imaginative reality. Also it has the quality of drama — suspense and event."
SONNET
(To My Mother)
I shall not be afraid of growing old;
The end of day is always calm and still.
While God blows out the lamp of day, to hold
The dimmer twilight lanterns o'er the hill.
I shall drink tea by mellow candle-light
From delicate cups, and talk to those old friends
Who still remain; the rest I shall hold bright
Within my heart with love that never ends.
I shall have fires of birch wood burning low;
The subdued embers will no longer leap.
But in the dusky shadows gently glow.
And I shall be content with thoughts of sleep.
But while I wait, and watch the dying light.
The stars will shine, and then it will be night.
DOROTHY NURMI
In awarding the above sonnet second honors for 1933-34, David Morton
wrote: "This seems firmly felt, and to move steadily and surely through the
feeling. It has the right quietness and richness of tone for the reverie, which
it is".
FRATERNITIES
Hutchinson
McKelligott Hermanson
Robbins Alton
Nassif
Bernstein Hall
Sievers McGuckian
Schreiter Bell
Cole Evans Griffin Norri;
Cowing Jackson Farrar
THE fNTERFRATERNITY COUNCIL
THE fine spirit of cooperation and the good feeling among fraternities which
is a notable factor of our campus life is due largely to the work of the
Interfraternity Council. The Council is composed of two men from each
fraternity. This group elects its president and secretary who call the frequent
meetings of the Council at which matters of fraternity interests are acted
upon.
The Council has as its purpose the promoting of desirable interfraternity
relations through forwarding the athletic, social, and academic phases of
campus activity in respect to the several houses. In carrying out its purpose
this group acts virtually as a medium between the fraternities it represents
and the Physical Education department, the Academic Activities board, and
the Dean's office with all of which it cooperates. In this respect the Council
conducts an interfraternity competition consisting of a varied program which
is continued throughout the college year. To promote unification of interests
and cooperation on the part of each fraternity, these three departments of the
college have given a cup which is awarded annually to the house totalling the
greatest number of points throughout the college year in athletics, academics,
and scholarship. It is stipulated that the group winning the cup for three years
In succession shall have it as permanent possession.
Universal fraternity grievances find audience in the meetings of the
Interfraternity Council, as do many other matters of mutual concern, such as
rushing rules, banquet dates, and pledging matters. The Council because of
its having two members from each house, one junior and one senior, elected
by and representing the interests of their respective houses, is able to main-
tain a high degree of cooperation and efficiency in the administration of such
matters.
The activities of the Council include an annual banquet in the spring,
at which new members from each house are introduced, and the staging of an
Interfraternity Ball, a most promising innovation this year. Each year a dele-
gate is sent to the convention of the National Interfraternity Council.
130
INTERFRATERNITY COUNCrt
President
Vice-President .
Secretary-Treasurer .
Ambrose T. McGuckian
Vernon K. Watson
Howard R. Sievers
H, Roger Alton
Burns Robbins
John B. Farrar
Roy T. Cowing
Randall K. Cole
Robert C. Jackson
Harry B. Bernstein
Patrick J. Fitzgerald
Samuel Bresnick
Q. T. V.
Phi Sigma Kappa
Kappa Sigma
Theta Chi
Sigma Phi Epsilon
Lambda Chi Alpha
Alpha Sigma Phi
Alpha Gamma Rho
Kappa Epsilon
Alpha Epsilon Pi
Theta Kappa Gamma
Phi Lambda Tau
Ambrose T. McGuckian
Howard R. Sievers
E. Theodore Hall
John H. McKelligott
E. Theodore Hall
Julian P. Griffin
Charles W.Hutchinson
Edward B. Nassif
Ralph W. F. Schreiter
Raymond K. Evans
Vernon A. V. Bell
Ralph E. Norris
Robert H. Hermanson
Joseph J. Tosches
Sidney A. Salamoff
W V
Q. T. V.
Founded at Massachusetts Agricultural College, May 12, 1869
Colors: White and Brown
8T WAS on the twelfth day of May in 1869 not quite two years after the
first students had entered the college that Q. T. V. society was founded.
Frederick W. Sommers, George Mackie, William R. Peabody, Lemuel L.
Holmes, Russell W. Livermore, and Edward A. Fisher were the six young men
who gathered in a room in South College to formulate plans for the first
fraternity that was established on this campus. The meetings of the society
were of great importance. Behind closed doors the significance of the frater-
nity symbols was made known each year to the incoming pledges. As was
the custom with so many college secret societies, the members carried on
intensive literary studies. The old records contain accounts of many scholarly
talks that were presented.
In 1874 a chapter of Q. T. V. was established at University of Maine.
Later other chapters were organized at University of New Hampshire, Penn-
sylvania State College, Worcester Polytechnic Institute, and Cornell Univer-
sity. However, because of the conservative standards of the Amherst Chapter
regarding expansion, the Fraternity became a local in 1889 and has remained
so ever since.
For many years the organization had quarters in North and South
Colleges and on more than one occasion was there excitement when someone
was dropped through a trap door or when there was a battle on between the
inhabitants of the two buildings.
In 1915 with the aid of the alumni, who formed a corporation, the frater-
nity purchased its present property which was for many years the residence
of the late Colonel Fearing. The house was erected under the direction of
McKim, Mead and White, of New York.
As the sixty-fifth anniversary of the fraternity draws near there are
scattered in all parts of the United States more than four hundred alumni.
The active membership of Q. T. V. is forty-four students.
OFFICERS
President
Vice-President
Secretary
Corresponding Secretary
Treasurer
Frederick Griswold Clark
Ambrose Thomas McGuckian
James Frederick Moran
Daniel Joseph Foley
John Henry McKelligott
Lorin E. Ball
William R. Cole
Harold M. Gore
Fratres in Facultate
Henri D. Haskins
Paul D. Isham
Eugene Kane
Charles Minarik
A. Vincent Osmun
Clarence H. Parsons
Albert F. Spelman
John E. Bement
Francis J. Crowley
Fratres in Urbe
Warren W. Fabyan
Elliot K. Greenwood
Ralph Haskins
Gerald D. Jones
Albert Parsons
George Albert Bourgeois, III
Gerald Thomas Bowler
Raymond Francis Burke
Active Members and Pledges
1934
Frederick Griswold Clark Ambrose Thomas McGuckian
Richard Thompson Cutler James Willis Merrill
William Brigham Esselen
Curtis Mason Clark
George Steadman Congdon
Hugh Joseph Corcoran
Kenneth Mackenzie Cox
Roderick Wells Gumming
Daniel Joseph Foley
1935
Robert Harris
Zigmund John Jackimczyk
Stuart Farnham Jillson
John Henry McKelligott
James Frederick Moran
Walter Stanley Mozden
William P. Mulhall
Howard Edson Pease
Thomas Joseph Savaria
Raymond John Siira
Emil John Tramposch
Luther Lincoln Willard
Benjamin Joseph Wihry
Michael Anacki
Daniel Algerd Balavich
1936
Randolph Barrows
Francis Alfred Lord
John B. Howes
William Howard Cone, Jr
Warren Bentley
John P. Brooks
Leroy S. Clark
Clayton Craft
1937
William D. Crocker
Leo V. Crowley
Frederick L. Dickens
Albert J. Gricius
Henry lacovelli
Harvey G. Turner
Frederick V. Whittemore
133
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PHI SIGMA KAPPA
ALPHA CHAPTER
National Organization
Founded at the Massachusetts Agricultural College, March 15, 1873
Fifty Chapters — Sixteen Alumni Chapters
Publication: "The Signet"
Colors: Silver and Magenta Red
The Alpha Chapter of Phi Sigma Kappa was founded at Massachusetts
Agricultural College on March 15, 1873, in old North College. The six
founders were Jabez William Clay, Joseph Franklin Barrett, Henry Hague,
Xenos Young Clark, Frederick George Campbell, and William Penn Brooks.
Brooks, the only one of the six now living, makes his summer home in
Amherst.
For five years the fraternity had no outside name, and was known to its
members as the "Three T's," "Hell's Huddle," or "The Huddlers." In 1878
the name Phi Sigma Kappa was adopted, in the same year the Grand Chapter
was organized with Clay as president. The undergraduate chapter was then
known as Phi chapter of Phi Sigma Kappa.
In 1888 a chapter was formed at Albany Medical College, and in 1899,
Gamma chapter at Cornell. The Amherst and Albany chapters were then
called Alpha and Beta respectively. With this start. Phi Sigma Kappa was
well on its way towards becoming a great national fraternity. By slow, careful
growth. Phi Sigma Kappa has increased to forty-nine chapters spreading over
the entire country.
In 1914, Alpha built its present chapter house located at the entrance
of the Mass. State college campus, and in the summer of 1933 added a new
dining-hall for the use of its members, now numbering thirty-two.
OFFICERS
President
Vice-President
Secretary
Treasurer
Auditor .
Inductor
William H. Armstrong
William P. Brooks
Alfred A. Brown
Frederick Adams
Warner H. Carter
Raymond E. Goodrich
Harold A. Haskins
George C. Hubbard
Greenleaf Tucker Chase
Douglas Gordon Daniels
Robert Packard Hunter
Robert John Allen, Jr.
Albert Franklin Burgess, Jr.
Charles Howard Daniels
Eben Theodore Hall
Ralph Terry Adams
Gordon Harold Bishop
Philip Richard Cook
Malcolm Ramsey Dunbar
Alfred Hamilton Gardner, Jr.
Robert E. Aiken, Jr.
Harry L. Blaisdell
Richard O. Bohn
Harlan A. Howard
William Frank Kewer
Fratres in Facultate
Orton J. Clark
Lawrence S. Dickinson
Robert D. Hawley
John B. Lentz
Fratres in Urbe
Charles Sumner Howe
Raymond H. Jackson
F. Civille Pray
Francis C. Pray
Philip H. Smith
Albert F, Burgess, Jr.
. Paul O. Wood
A. Carlton Merrill
William A. Scott
Stephen A. Lincoln
. Russell L. Snow
Willard A. Munson
Frank Prentice Rand
Roland H. Verbeck
Ernest G. Smith
George E. Stone
Charles B. Wendell, Jr.
Howard H. Wood
Active Members and Pledges
1934
Stephen Albert Lincoln
Arthur Carlton Merrill, Jr
Mark Rogers
Paul Webster Shaffner
1935
William Joseph Jordon, Jr
Joseph Francis Keil
Robert Franklin Libbey
Edward LeRoy Prentice
William Arthur Scott
1936
Forrest Dana Hartin
Charles Lewis Krtil
John Lewis McConchie
Harold Austin Midgely, Jr.
Wendell Judson Potter
1937
Thomas F. McMahon, Jr.
Ivan C. Minott
Lee W. Rice
Louis E. Roberts
David P. Rossiter
Rodger C. Smith
Donald Hartwell Smith
Russell Linnell Snow
Vernon Kenneth Watson
Philip Carlton Stone
Paul Owen Wood
Robert Holman Wood
Roger Lewis Warner
Richard Grimshaw Riley
Edmund Joseph Sullivan
Edward Joseph Souliere
James Alden Valentine, Jr
Spofford Whitaker
Robert LeRoy Spiller, Jr.
Robert William Thorndike
John Albert Tuttle
Harold I. Watts
John Herbert Weatherby
135
KAPPA SIGMA
GAMMA DELTA CHAPTER, Established May 18, 1904
National Organization
Founded at the University of Virginia, December 10, 1869
One Hundred and Eight Chapters — Eighty-six Alumni Chapters
Publication: "The Caduceus"
Colors: Scarlet, Green and White
The founding of the Gamma Delta Chapter of Kappa Sigma Fraternity
at the Massachusetts Agricultural College was in every way a notable event.
Delta Gamma Kappa, a local fraternity established at the Massachusetts
Agricultural College in 1868, enjoying as much fame and strength as a
local organization could hope or wish for, voted to seek a charter as a chapter
of Kappa Sigma. It was a forward, not a backward look, that made such action
possible. Forty-four active and alumni members became Kappa Sigmas at the
installation, the largest number that had ever been initiated into the Fra-
ternity at one time and place. Among the chapter's older members are Pro-
fessors Frank A. Waugh, professor of landscape architecture at the Massa-
chusetts State College, and Professor J. L. Hills, dean of the College of Agri-
culture at the University of Vermont.
Four years ago it became the custom to award annually to that fraternity
having the best record in athletics, academic activities, and scholarship a cup.
It has been the aim of Kappa Sigma to encourage a balanced education, and
its members have been awarded this cup twice in the three times it has been
presented.
During the last year, the brothers have transformed a practically useless
section of the basement into a modernly equipped and heated dining hall.
It has been the purpose in the past and at present to develop an atmosphere
of fellowship; the program of Kappa Sigma has been planned to this end.
OFFICERS
President
Secretary
Treasurer
Edward Winslow Harvey
. Edward Harry Genest
. Julian Philip Griffin
Oran C. Boyd
Kenneth L. Bullis
James A. Foord
George Cutler
Edward Hazen
Fratres in Facultate
Guy V. Glatfelter
Edward B. Holland
Marshall O. Lanphear
Frederick A. McLaughlin
Fratres in Urbe
Homer F. Rebert
Ezra L. Shaw
Ernest W. Mitchell
J. Paul Williams
Frank A. Waugh
George P. Smith
E. Joseph Thompson
William A. Bower
Charles A. LeClair
David C. Mountain
Active Members and Pledges
1934
Nathan P. Nichols
James A. Sibson
Howard R. Sievers
H. Paul Stevenson
Malcolm C. Stewart
Lamont V. Blake
William M. Davis
Charles S. Elliot
1935
Charles B. Fowler
Clayton George
Kenneth A. Steadman
Willard H. Senecal
Donald M. Stewart
Chester I. Babcock
Allin C. Battles
Arthur F. Bixby
Alfred H. Brueckner
Frederick K. Bull
1936
Leo W. CarbonneaL
James W. Clapp
James R. Clark
Dean N. Click
Calvin S. Hannum
Robert B. Lincoln
Warren W. Rivers
Arthur E. Robinson
John W. Stewart
David H. Taylor
Thomas B. Wolcott
James S. Cutter
Ralph Gates
Norman Grant
Robert Holdsworth
1937
Allen Ingalls
Victor A. Jones
W. Squire Munson
Norman Sheffield
Clifford Symancyk
Edward Thacker
Donald Weaver
137
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: Military Red and White
Theta Phi, the fraternity which afterward became Theta Chapter of
Theta Chi, was founded at Massachusetts Agricultural College at Amherst
in February, 1908, and was recognized as one of the fraternities, by the
college, on October 5 of the same year. Theta Phi was organized as the fifth
fraternity on the campus, when fraternities were just beginning to find a
fertile field for development at Massachusetts Agricultural College. The
Fraternity was established by a group of sixteen men who were moved by
ideals of closer fellowship and mutual benefits to band together into a new
brotherhood.
Not until January, 1909, did the Fraternity have a home. The members
associated together and met in the "Dorms", as did the other fraternities on
campus. However, the need for a Chapter House was keenly felt, since this
is so necessary for fraternity strength. Theta Phi secured a well located house
near the campus and determined to make it a success. The Fraternity and
the house were developed and improved to such an extent that soon there
was a felt need of a stronger fellowship with a well established national
organization. Thus in the Fall of 1 91 1 Theta Phi was changed to Theta Chap-
ter of Theta Chi, when the charter was granted by the National Grand
Chapter of Theta Chi.
In the summer of 1918, the Fraternity left its original Chapter House
for one of larger and better quarters. This house continued to be the home
of Theta Chi until it moved into its present home after the World War.
The men of Theta Chapter of Theta Chi Fraternity have always repre-
sented a high degree of scholastic achievement and student activities, up-
holding the f'ne ideals which first promptecj its birth back in 1908. At
present the Chapter is in excellent condition with a strong active group.
Again history repeats itself and the need for a larger and better house is
keenly felt. The Fraternity is at present making specific plans and arrange-
ments for the construction of a new house in the near future.
President
Vice-President
Secretary
Treasurer
OFFICERS
Carleton Archie MacMackin
Wallace Wetherell Thompson
. Frank Arthur Batstone, Jr.
Robert Andrew Magay
Lawrence E. Briggs
Fred J. Sievers
Fratres in Facultate
Olive
Willi
G. Roberts
m G. Sanctuary
Robert B. Fletcher
Hubert Elder
Fratres in Urbe
Stuart Edmond
Charles Gould
Enos T. Montague
Herbert Roger Alton
Frank Arthur Batstone, Jr.
Stephen Wiggens Bennett
William Donald Durell
Acfive Members and Pledges
1934
James Palmer Edney
Vincent Cooper Gilbert
James Shepard Klar
Robert Andrew Magay
Fred Jouette Nisbet
Carleton Archie MacMackin
Nelson Adrian Wheeler
John Crosby Eldridge
George Albert Hartwell
Albert Bancroft Hovey
1935
Wendell Roy Hovey
Charles Wooding Hutchinson
George Raymond Pease
Wallace Wetherell Thompson
Owen Smith Trask
James Jackson Valentine
Roger Everett Allen
Chester Zell Brown
James Davidson
Ralph Warren Dimock
Allyn Hubbard Fisher
1936
Chester Mason Gates
Adin Allyne Hixon
Carroll Reed Johnson
Richard Tomfohrde Kennett
Theodore William Kerr, Jr.
Richard Hudson Lake
Edward Victor Law
Arthur Allan Putnam
Richard Hugh Thompson
Harold Edward Ball way
Frank Fairfield Carr, Jr.
Chester Cook Conant
Ellsworth Bryant Easton
William Bragdon Ferguson
Austin Wellington Fisher, Jr.
Guy Manning Grey, Jr.
Leroy Kingsbury Houghton, Jr
1937
Kennetth Colwell Irvine
Howard Theodore Jensen
Byron Taylor Johnson
William Johnson
Phillip Dumaresq Layton
William Ames Leighton, Jr.
Gardner Cromwell Lombard
Frank Merton Lyon
James Aaron Pickermg
Carl Wynne Pilat
Alger Vi/heeler Powell, Jr
Robert Floyd Rosenburg
Walter Simonsen
Kenyon Yale Taylor, II
139
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
The history of Sigma Phi Epsilon Is very similar to the history of any
other fraternity on campus. Sigma Phi Epsilon started as a local fraternity
and gradually grew large enough so that It became national.
Albert "Cherry" Dodge, of the class of 1912, was the man responsible
for the foundation of the local Sigma Tau Delta fraternity. In the two years
after its foundation, it grew quite rapidly for a new fraternity. In the year
1912, the brothers petitioned for admittance into the national fraternity of
Sigma Phi Epsilon. A charter was soon granted the local fraternity and thus
Sigma Phi Epsilon was added to the list of fraternities on this campus. That
first year the members elected "Cherry" as president and ever since that
day he has been closely connected with the fraternity.
During the first few years after its foundation, Sigma Phi Epsilon grew
rapidly and became quite a strong influence on the campus. The twenty
charter members certainly did a splendid job at starting a fraternity.
Shortly after its foundation the Great War came and Sigma Phi Epsilon
did its part in sending several young men to serve their country. Several of
these men never came back and several who did come back were maimed
for life, but a few were honored by the country for which they served.
After the Great War the fraternity went forward much the same as it
had before, until about 1925. At this time and just shortly after, the frater-
nity membership was on the wane. It looked as if something would happen
to the fraternity. However, with the help and sacrifice of some of the men
who were in the house, the fraternity gradually regained its position and
pulled itself out of the slump into which it had fallen.
At present the fraternity is one of the strong fraternities on this campus
and the active members hope that the part they have played in the history of
the fraternity will be remembered for years to come.
President
Vice-President
Secretary
Treasurer
OFFICERS
Harold C, Potter
Robert F. Gorey
. John F, Pozzi
Chester L. French
Frederick M. Cutler
George E. Emery
Fratres in Facultate
Richard C. Foley
Ralph L. France
Winthrop S. Welles
Harold Elder
Fratres in (Jrbe
John Schoonmaker
George Harrison Bigelow
Louis Joseph Bush
David Edward Cosgriff
Chester Leroy French
Active Members and Pledges
1934
Robert Francis Gorey
Norman Bulkeley Griswold
William Kozlowski
Harold Carpenter Potter
John Frank Pozzi
Burns Robbins
Joseph Smiaroski
Edward James Talbot
Lawrence M. Bullard
Francis Leo Caron
Lester Wilbur Clark
Robert Frederick Hutt
1935
Leslie Collis Kimball
Robert Magoon Koch
Theodore Moreau Leary
Edward Bedre Nassif
Leonard Parker
Walter Dalton Raleigh
Addison Lawton Sandford
Robert Brown Clark
Albert Winslov/ Dodge
Alden R. Eaton
Harold Homer Hale
1936
Donald Henry Hazelhuhn
Ivan Narcisse LeClair
Fred Joseph Murphy
Albert Peter Richards
Jack Sturtevant
Richard Tufts Peckham
Robert Bishop Peckham
Robert Bieber
Lewis Bongiolotti
Frank Brox
Edward Czelusniak
Trent Domenici
1937
Sabin Filipkowski
William Kirby
Harry Koch
John Kulesa
Emil Marceniak
Anthony Nogelo
Warren Rand
Francis Sovie
Carl Swanson
Philip Winsor
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LAMBDA CHI ALPHA
GAMMA ZETA CHAPTER, Established May 18, 1912
National Organization Founded at Boston University November 2, 1902
Eighty-two Chapters — Thirty-seven Alumni Chapters
Publication: "The Cross and Crescent"
Colors: Purple, Green and Gold
Gamma Delta Sigma was the local fraternity from which Gamma Zeta
chapter of Lambda Chi Alpha was formed. It was installed on May 18, 1912.
The history of Lambda Chi Alpha is an interesting one. The mother chapter
was founded at Boston University in 1909 and the local chapter was the first
to be added to the original group. Since then it has grown rapidly and
steadily until there are now eighty-four chapters in leading colleges all over
the United States. In addition to these undergraduate groups there are forty-
three alumni associations in cities throughout the country. Lambda Chi Alpha
is one of the sixty senior members of the National Interfraternity Council.
Gamma Zeta Chapter has remained active since its founding in 1912
except during the World War when ninety-eight per cent of its members
were enrolled in the service. Shortly after the fraternity's installation into
the national organization, increased enrollment and a prominent position
among the other fraternities on campus made the need for a house evident.
In 1913 it obtained as its home the house which it now occupies. Gamma
Zeta has always been active both as a member of Lambda Chi Alpha and
among the other fraternities on the campus. During 1933 it had next to
the highest scholastic average of all the chapters of Lambda Chi Alpha. Its
members have always been prominent socially, scholastically, and athletically
at Massachusetts State College.
President
Vice-President
Treasurer
Secretary
OFFICERS
. Edmund James Clow
Wolcott Lawrence Schenck
Franklin Gilmore Burr
Charles Henry Dunphy
George Marston
Fratres in Facultate
Walter S. Eisenmenger
Allan W. Chadwick
Kenneth W. Chapman
Fratres in Urbe
J. Robert Hanson
Norman Myrick
Harold C. McCleary
Herbert V. Cummings
John B. Farrar
Active Members and Pledges
1934
Wilho Frigard
Page L. Hiland
Joseph Lojko
Alvan S. Ryan
Russell E. Taft
Carleton E. Bearse
Roger T. Blackburn
William C. Brown
1935
Frederick L. Corcoran
Lucien B. Lillie, III
William R. Muller
Alfred E. Newton
Allan J. O'Brien
Ralph W. F. Schreiter
Sulo J. Tan!
George H. Allen
Edward E. Baldwin
Myles G. Boylan
1936
Lewis E. Fuller
Cummings L. Lothrop, III
George E. Monroe
George A. Vassos, Jr.
Walter Wainio
Ernest L. Birdsall
Frederick R. Dame
James A. Fleming
Clarence W. Haviland
1937
Burton Hess
Wendell E. Lapham
Robert D. MacCurdie
H. Ward Marble
Otis Ovaska
Roger K. Pratt, Jr.
William A. Raynes, Jr.
Kenwood Ross
George W. Sanborn
ALPHA SBGMA PHI
GAMMA CHAPTER Established 1913
Nafionsi Organizat-ion Founded at- Yale University, 1845
Thirty-two Chapters — Ten Alumni Associations
Publication: "The Tomahawk"
Colors: Cardinal and Stone
Alpha Sigma Phi Fraternity was founded as a sophomore society at Yale
College in 1845. Since each of the three upper classes had its own society,
duality of membership existed. This situation ultimately contributed to a
dormant condition of the fraternity, but in 1907 the Yale chapter was
revived, not as a sophomore but as a university fraternity. At the present
time there are thirty-two chapters of this national organization well estab-
lished in many of the foremost colleges and universities in the United States.
The Gamma Chapter of Alpha Sigma Phi was established on this campus
in 1913 and was chartered at that time by what was formerly known as the
College Shakespearean Club, a literary society whose purpose and activities
are well known to the alumni of this college. The original Gamma Chapter
was first established at our neighboring institution, Amherst College, in
1854; however, that chapter was dissolved in 1860. The petition of the
College Shakespearean Club to join Alpha Sigma Phi was accepted in 1913.
The purpose of this chapter has been to promote scholarship, fellowship,
and fraternalism. This chapter has claimed a goodly number of the present
and past faculty members in this college as well as in other universities in
the country. It does not enroll honorary members, and its faculty members
have been regularly initiated as active members. They cannot belong to any
other national fraternity and they act as chapter advisers. It also boasts a
widely scattered but co-operative body of alumni which has in its loyalty
carried on the traditions and high ideals of Alpha Sigma Phi. The present
active membership comprises about fifty young men who are daily asserting
themselves in the various phases of college work and in extra curricular
activities.
144
President
Vice-President
Secretary
Treasurer
OFFICERS
Milton Homer Kibbe
. Roy Tapley Cowing
Charles William Marsh
Roger Kenison Leavitt
Alexander E. Cance
Earle S. Carpenter
Edwin F. Gaskill
Fratres in Facultate
Stowell C. Coding
Emory E. Grayson
Joseph B. Lindsey
William L. Machmer
Sumner R. Parker
Charles A. Peters
Harold B. Rowe
Walter B. Hatch
Frafres in Urbe
Edward B. Eastman Stephen P. Puffer
Active Members and Pledges
1934
Leonard Joseph Bingham
Theodore Frederick Cooke, Jr
Raphael Fiorani Costello
Roy Tapley Cowing
Milton Homer Kibbe
Ralph Joseph Henry
Alexander Ambrose Lucey
Walter Earl Thompson
Joseph Francis Zislinski
Stuart Aborn Arnold
John Lewis Bailey
Sheldon Pratt Bliss
Robert Story Bray
1935
Raymond DiMarzio
Howard Lester Hinckley, Jr.
Roger Kenison Leavitt
Daniel C. Plastridge
Albert Bradbury Ramsdell, Jr
Raymond Knightly Evans
Robert Vincent Murray
Kenneth Riley
Donald Murch Ballou
Herbert William Ferguson
Robert Alexander Keefe
1936
Fred Anthony Lehr
Charles William Marsh
Timothy Joseph Moriarty
Royal Kendrick Tanner
Ray Kinsman Thompson
Charles Samuel Woodbury
Charles Benea
Franklyn Doane Berry
Walter Drahorad Bliss
Alfred Washburn Brun.
1937
Francis Elliot Cushman
John Kabat
Rudolf Kuc
John Landers
Walter Lizak
David Allen Peterson
Tabor Wells Polhemus
Francis Joseph Rogers
Philip Treen Schneider
145
ALPHA GAMMA RHO
Mu Chapter
Established April 28, 1917
National Organization Founded at University of Ohio, April 4, 1908
Thirty-two Chapters — Twenty-six Alumni Associations
Publication: "The Sickle and Sheaf"
Colors: Green and Gold
Mu Chapter of Alpha Gamma Rho was originally Beta Kappa Phi, a local
fraternity. It was started late in the fall of 1909 and was organized formally
on February 10, 1910. Character, scholarship, and college loyalty were the
basic tenets. Incorporation according to state laws was effected, although
the group lived in a rented house until the purchase of an attractive home in
1913. During the winter of 1917, it was decided that the fraternity should
enjoy the benefits of national prestige. Accordingly, A. H. Nehrling, Alpha,
assisted the group in getting in touch with the national headquarters of Alpha
Gamma Rho, and at the Ames convention of the year, Lincoln D. Kelsey
presented a petition to nationalize Beta Kappa Phi. The request was honored
and Mu Chapter came into existence.
Glenn Campbell, then editor of the "Sickle and Sheaf", installed the new
chapter with the aid of Ford S. Prince, Alpha '13, J. B. Spaulding, Gamma ' I 5,
and W. L. Slate, Beta '09. On April 29th, 1917, twenty-two men had been
initiated, and Frank S. Binks had been elected as first noble ruler. Outstanding
among these charter members was Clarke L. Thayer, now Professor of Flori-
culture at the Massachusetts State College. In the next year, the strength
of the chapter was depleted, due to the general exodus of men to the battle-
fronts of France, but the beginnings of the new chapter were auspicious as the
founding of a house which has since been equal in every respect to, and on a
social par with, the other fraternities on campus.
Since that time the chapter has grown and flourished and now has a
roster of two hundred and fifty alumni behind it. The affairs of the fraternity
are run by the students themselves with the advice of a faculty member.
Alpha Gamma Rho'si success has been brought about mainly by the
maintenance of high standards of scholarship and morality among its members,
which has ever made for better character and spirit.
President
Vice-President
Secretary
Treasurer
OFFICERS
Henry Atchinson Walker
Glenn Frederick Shaw
William J. M. Newman
Descom DeForest Hoagland
Charles P. Alexander
Ellsworth W. Bell
Arnold M. Davis
William Doran
Fraires in Facultate
T. Rix Home
Earle H. Nodine
Donald E. Ross
Frederick S. Troy
Clark L. Thayer
Harvey Sweetman
Richard W. Fessenden
J. Lee Brown
Fratres in Urbe
George G. Smith Donald LaCroix
Thurl Dryden Brown
Randall Knight Cole
Wilmot Grant Dunham
Active Members and Pledges
1934
Descom DeForest Hoagland
Harlan W. Kingsbury
George Deming Moody
Edwin Francis Steffck
Henry Atchinson Walker
Hillman Hathaway Wordell
Vernon Adam Veith Bell
John Alden Caswell
Myron Carl Davis
Ernest Brayton Fisher, Jr
1935
Ralph Hawthorne Granger Glenn Frederick Shaw
Silas Little, Jr. Samuel Peaslee Snow
Ronald Carnegie Malloch Walter Stepat
William J. MacKenzie Newman
Edward Popp .Anderson
Reginald Sidney Carey, Jr.
Milton Earle Chase
Carl Dunker
1936
Kenneth Thomas Farrell
Emil John Koenig, Jr.
Kenneth Raycraft Newman
Howard Clarence Parker
Harry Davis Pratt
Oliver Ripley Putman
Edward Seredynsky
Gilbert D. Bristol
Robert C. Perriellc
1937
Warren H. Scholz
Leonard A. Webb
Raymond Wyman
KAPPA EPSILON
Founded at Massachuset-ts Agricultural College, February 1, 1913
Colors: Garnet, Gray and Gold
In October, 1912, a small group of non-fraternity man met in French
Hall to organize a society which might admit to membership those men who
should conform to the simple ideals of manhood, service, and democracy in
which the seventeen charter members expressed faith. The initial letters of
the words of the motto chosen by this group were Kappa Epsilon. Early the
following spring the constitution of the new fraternity, presumably because
of its unorthodox liberality, was accepted by the Student Life Committee on
the condition that no competition be offered the other fraternities during
rushing season and that men be pledged not before the second semester.
The National Federation of Commons Clubs, with which Kappa Epsilon
became affiliated early in 1 91 4, played an important part in the history of the
fraternity until 1 921 , at which time the fraternity was reorganized to conform
more closely than before to the other campus groups. The local chapter of the
Commons Clubs, during the period of 1914-1917, achieved a position of
prominence, locally by material growth accompanied by further administrative
prohibitions, and nationally by the election of one of its members to the
position of president of the National Federation, which at that time included
chapters at eight well-known eastern colleges. The chapter had about fifty
members until the war period, when it, like other college organizations,
struggled along under great difficulties, with most of the juniors and seniors
in the service. At about this time the group moved from its house on Mount
Pleasant into rooms on the top floor of North College.
After the period of reorganization in 1921 there ensued a year of strife
and ostracism until the fall of 1922, when an invitation to membership in the
Interfraternity Council was accepted. In the four years previous to 1925 the
fraternity occupied three houses, the present location being preceded by the
house next to Sigma Phi Epsilon and a house on East Pleasant Street.
It has been almost a decade that the fraternity has occupied its present
quarters. During this time expansion has been gradual but continuous, with
the exception of a short period centering at 1929, until the present day
conditions of capacity membership. Throughout Kappa Epsilon history the
outstanding endeavor of loyal individuals is memorable.
President
Vice-President
Secretary
Treasurer
OFFICERS
Russell Sturtevant
. Roger Gordon Bates
Nelson Pierce Stevens
Stanley Stowell Newcomb
G. Chester Crampton
John C. Graham
Fratres in Facultate
Arthur K. Harrison
Fred C. Kenney
Harry G. Lindquist
Harold W. Smart
Grant B. Snyder
William L. Dowd
Fratres in Urbe
Albert H. Gower
Robert M. Howes
Gilbert Simpson
Roger Gordon Bates
Wallace Lea Chesbro
Active Members and Pledges
1934
Ralph Warren Dexter Russell Sturtevant
Robert Crompton Jackson
Robert West Abbott
Willard Harold Boynton
Phillip Hartshorn Clark
1935
John Joseph Consolati
Bernard Joseph Doyle
Ernest Anthony Ja\worski
Stanley Stowell Newcomb
Ralph Eaton Norris
Nelson Pierce Stevens
William Wallace Chilson
Frederick Leroy Davis
Louis deWilde
Donald Tracy Donnelly
1936
Robert Bernard Fisher
Merril Spinney Hobart
Richard Alvah Kulya
Walter Frederick Lewis
Robert Mellor Logan
Thomas Henry Lord
Clair Linwood Pineo
Raymond Milton Snow
William Gordon Whaley
Fred N. Carter
Ernest K. Davis
Richard B. Knowlton
Laurence H. Kyle
1937
George L. M. Milne
Gordon Moody
William H. Moss
Edward M. Munson, Jr
Elliott H. Newcomb
Paul H. Rosberry
John Ruffley, Jr.
John M. Sinclair
n
f ttff
>f V
ALPHA EPSILON PI
Phi Chapter
Founded at Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1916
National Organization
Founded at New York University, 1913
Colors: Blue and Gold
The history of the Phi Chapter of Alpha Eosilon Pi dates back to the
fall of 1916 when four men, yearning for social friendship, bonded them-
selves together in a club, which they called U. E. C. (Unus et Omnibus) . For
the next few years the club met secretly. Its enrollment increased but slightly,
and it looked as if the hopes of a Jewish fraternity would not materialize.
In 1920, the club came openly on campus. The members filed a petition
to be recognized by the Student's Life Committee. The petition was rejected,
but on March 1 of that year, the members changed the name of the club to
Delta Phi Alpha. A chapter paper was founded, and a fraternity banner was
made. Official recognition was granted on April 6, 1921.
By 1929, the existence of the fraternity was secure. On November 16,
negotiations were begun with the national fraternity Alpha Epsilon Pi. These
negotiations were climaxed in June 1930 when Delta Phi Alpha pledged
Alpha Epsilon Pi.
The year 1 930 marked another transgression in the history of the frater-
nity. Up to June of that year, the members had occupied Rooms 13 and 14,
South College. However, the college authorities had ordered the remodelling
of South into a freshmen's dormitory, and the members of Delta Phi Alpha
were requested to vacate the rooms by the next year.
The house at 45 Pleasant Street was rented, but the sojourn there was
brief, for in June 1931 the group was asked to move again. The house was to
be torn down to make room for a proposed town park. Plans were made for
the purchase of a house. The alumni, in a body, backed the undergraduates in
their plan, and, during the summer of 1931, a house was bought at 1 Cosby
Avenue.
Meanwhile, the college's name had been changed, and there followed a
greater influx of Jewish students. Again the matter of nationalization was
taken up, and in 1933, after four years of careful investigation by all con-
cerned, the Student's Life Committee gave the fraternity permission to join
Alpha 'Epsilon Pi. On December 24, 1933, Delta Phi Alpha was officially
inducted as Phi Chapter of Alpha Epsilon Pi fraternity.
150
President
Vice-President
Secretary
Treasurer
OFFICERS
Alexander Harvey Freedman
Harry Bernstein
Henry Frank Riseman
. Harry Pyenson
Maxwell H. Goldberg
Edward Landis
Fratres in Facultate
Fratres in Urbe
Harry Bernstein
Active Members and Pledges
1934
David Louis Bick Harry Pyenson
Alexander Harvey Freedman
Joseph Aaron Dworman
Robert Harlow Hermanson
1935
Joseph Miller
Henry Frank Riseman
Louis Isaac Winokur
Albert Landis
Arthur Sidney Levine
Melvin Herbert Frank
Arthur Jacob Gold
Allan Max Kaufman
1936
David Klickstein
Jack Rutstein
Arnold S. Shulkin
David Bernstein Pearlmutter
Abraham Irving Michaelson
Maxwell Kaplovitz
J. Harold Krasnoff
Walter C. Guralnick
Milton Radio
James Dobby
1937
Max F. Kramer
Henry S. Kushlan
Max Lilly
Alfred L. Novick
Lawrence Pearlman
151
THETA KAPPA GAMMA
Founded at Massachusefts State College, September 25, 1933.
OFFICERS
President
Vice-President
Secretary
Treasurer
Theta Kappa Gamma
Patrick James Fitzgerald
Frederick Ricinard Congdon
Joseph John Tosches
. Owen Joseph Brennan, Jr.
a new local fraternity, the first to appear on the
campus since 1916, was formally recognized by President Baker and the
administration on January 18, 1934.
Originally the idea of a young naturalization officer of a prominent
national fraternity, the organization with its ideals rapidly gathered sup-
porters, and after a summer of correspondence, a local home approved by the
college was selected as the site of the fraternity's headquarters.
In September the group of interested students and faculty advisers met
in their chapter home, 83 Pleasant Street, and proceeded to draw up a consti-
tution, elect officers, and plan a program for the year.
The purpose of the group as outlined in its constitution is "To promote
a spirit of good fellowship; to encourage the attainment of a high scholastic
standing; to offer to each and every member the training and environment
which characterize the college man; to cultivate a spirit of loyalty to the
college; and to promote in every way social and intellectual intercourse among
its members.'"
Soon after the first meeting of the group, a petition was drawn up and
presented to the administration, which subsequently recognized the group
as Theta Kappa Gamma Club.
The inauguration banquet was held at the Lord Jeffrey Inn on September
21, and was attended by over fifty guests, including members of the faculty,
clergy, and students from Ohio State College.
The club has been active socially and is looking forward to its future
fraternity life with great expectations.
152
Henry David Epstein
Arthur Gold
Barnett Louis Golub
Herbert Bernard Atlas
Louis Gerald Baizman
Marice Herman Baizman
Edwin George Bernstein
Howard Stanley Cohen
Morris Lerner
PHI LAMBDA TAU
Members
1934
Samuel Bresnick
1935
Louis Herbert Lebeshevsky
Sydney Arthur Salamoff
Maurice Shapiro
1936
Jackson Arthur Barton
Carlton Jesse Finklestein
Bertram Robin Forer
Hyman Sharff
Harold Samuel Tannenbaum
Lester Henry Levine
Irving Lipovsky
Morris Vidiborsky
1937
Leo David Lipman
Charles Rosenbloom
Bernard Samuel Stepner
Abraham Suher
Myron Albert Widlansky
On February 14, 1934, Phi Lambda Tau was officially recognized as the
twelfth fraternity on the college campus.
Dr. Joseph Chamberlain, head of the Chemistry Department, was the
guest speaker at the first annual banquet of Phi Lambda Tau at the Lord
Jeffrey Inn on March 10,1934. A few days later Dr. Chamberlain consented
to become the faculty advisor for the fraternity.
The ideals of the fraternity, as expressed in its petition are to perpetuate
friendship among the college students, and to encourage scholastic attain-
ment. At the first official meeting a new constitution was presented, officers
were elected, and committees were appointed. The fraternity later joined the
Interfraternity Council. Temporary headquarters were selected. After a short
but selective rushing season, ten pledges were chosen for the fraternity.
The series of events that occured simultaneously with the formation
and organization of the fraternity have been of interest and pleasure to its
members. Its ideals may not be realized immediately but with its charac-
teristic spirit of faith and diligence, great hopes may take definite shape in
the near future.
153
PHI KAPPA PHI
OFFICERS 1933-1934
President
Vice-President
Secretary
Treasurer
Corresponding secretary
Charles P. Alexander
John G. Archibald
Arthur B. Beaumont
William P. Brooks
Alexander E. Cance
Joseph F. Chamberlain
Walter W. Chenoweth
G. Chester Crampton
William L. Doran
George Farley
Carl R. Fellers
Henry T. Fernald
Richard W. Fessenden
Richard C. Foley
Julius H. Frandsen
Arthur P. French
George E. Gage
Harry N. Glick
Stowell C. Coding
Clarence E. Gordon
Christian I. Gunness
Frank A. Hays
Edward B. Holland
Lorian P. Jefferson
John B. Lentz
. Frank Prentice Rand
. William L. Machmer
Arthur N. Julian
Marshall O. Lanphear
Mary J. Foley
Honorary Member
Walter Dyer
Members
Joseph B. Lindcey
Merrill J. Mack
A. Anderson Mackimmie
Frank C. Moore
Fred W. Morse
Miriam Morse
Willard A. Munson
A. Vincent Osmun
John E. Ostrander
Clarence H. Parsons
Ernest M. Parrott
Charles A. Peters
Walter E. Prince
Victor A. Rice
David Rozman
Fred C. Sears
Paul Serex
Jacob K. Shaw
Fred J. Sievers
Clark L. Thayer
Ray E. Torrev
Olive M. Turner
Ralph A. VanMeter
Frank A. Waugh
154
Mrs. Christian I. Gunness
Charles S. Howe
Herman Broudy
Alfred A. Brown
Wynne E. Caird
John Calvi
Maurice M. Cleveland
Matthew C. Darnell, Jr.
J. Elizabeth Donley
Resident Members
Ralph W. Redman
Mildred A. Weeks
Graduate Students
Fred P. Jeffrey
Albert H. Gower
Ashley B. Gurney
Robert M. Howes
Bryan C. Redmon
Wallace W. Stuart
John B. Barr
Arthur E. Bearse
Howard W. Chenoweth
Benjamin Isgur
Class of 1933
Lawrence Southwick
George T. bteffanides
John C. Swartzwelder
Class of 1934
Roger G. Bates
David W. Caird
Ruth D. Campbell
Randall K. Cole
Theodore F. Cooke, Jr.
Charles E. Coombs
Hyman S. Denmark
Chester L. French
Wilho Frigard
Archie A. Hoffman
William Kozlowski
Alvan S. Ryan
Mary I. Taylor
155
PHI BETA KAPPA
President
Secretary-Treasurer
A. Anderson Mackimmie
Stowell C. Coding
Phi Beta Kappa Association at Massachusetts State College was founded
May 1 6, 1 932. "The objects of this association are to encourage acquaintance
among members of Phi Beta Kappa, a larger knowledge of the history and
standing of the Society, and an enthusiasm for and cooperation in its larger
purposes, as they shall develop during and following the 150th anniversary
of its founding."
Members of Phi Beta Kappa at Massachusetts State College are:
Arthur B. Beaumont Lorian P. Jefferson
Joseph S. Chamberlain Arthur N. Julian
G Chester Crampton William L. Machmer
George L Farley A. Anderson Mackimmie
Henry T. Fernald Frank C. Moore
Charles S. Gibbs Miriam Morse
Stowell C. Coding William Ross
Vernon P. Helming Mrs. J. Paul Williams
Basil B. Wood
SIGMA XI
President
Vice-President
Secretary
Dr. James E. Fuller
William H. Davis
Dr. Carl R. Fellers
Members
Dr. Charles P. Alexander, Entomology Dr. Clarence E. Gordon
Dr. Hugh P. Baker, Forestry
Dr. Arthur B. Beaumont, Agronomy
Dr. H. F. Bergman, Chemistry
Dr. Oran C. Boyd, Plant Pathology
Dr. Leon A. Bradley, Bacteriology
Prof. Walter W. Chenoweth
Horticultural Manufactures
Dr. William H. Davis, Botany
Geology and Zoology
Dr. Linus H. Jones, Plant Physiology
Dr. C. V. Kightlinger, Plant Pathology
Mr. George A. Marston, Mathematics
Dr. Charles A. Peters, Chemistry
Mr. R. W. Phillips, Animal Husbandry
Prof. H. J. Rich, Forestry
Mr. W. H. Ross, Physics
Dr. Harry Reginald DeSilva, Psychology Director Fred J. Sievers, Agronomy
Dr. Carl R. Fellers, Nutrition Mr. C. R. Tillotson, Forestry
Dr. Richard W. Fessenden, Chemistry Dr. Bernice C. Wait, Nutrition
Prof. Arthur P. French, Genetics Prof. Herbert E. Warfel, Zoology
Dr. James E. Fuller, Bacteriology
Sigma XI is a national organization for the promotion of scientific
research, particularly by advanced and graduate students in colleges. The
accomplishment of outstanding original research is a prerequisite for election
to this society.
156
SORORITIES
Smith M.
Smith E.
McCarthy
Foley
Hillberg
Harrington
Harris
Peaslee
INTER SORORITY COUNCIL
Pauline L. Hillberg
. Shirley E. McCarthy
Elizabeth K. Harrington
Cornelia F. Foley
Alpha Lambda Mu
Marion E. Smith
Lambda Delta Mu
Marion T. Harris
President
Vice-President
Secretary
Treasurer
Sarah A. Peaslee
Edith J. Smith
Pauline L. Hillberg
Shirley E. McCarthy
Since the organization of the Intersorority Council in October, 1931,
this group has done much each year towards establishing sororities on a firm
basis at Massachusetts State College. The Council is composed of two women
from each sorority, from which a president and secretary-treasurer are elected
who call meetings once a month to act upon affairs of common interest to
all the sororities.
Through the regulation of athletic, social, and academic phases of
college life where it concerns sororities, the Council fulfills one of its main
purposes. This year for the first time, an Intersorority Cup will be awarded to
the sorority attaining the greatest number of points gained through a series
of competitions, academic, athletic and scholastic, held during the year.
Intersorority Council holds, annually in April, a Formal dance, one of the
outstanding social events of the college year.
Phi Zeta
Sigma Beta Chi
Cornelia F. Foley
i
Elizabeth K. Harrington
158
ALPHA LAMBDA MU
Alpha Chapter
Founded at Massachusetts State College, October, 1931
Colors: Blue and Silver
OFFICERS
President
Vice-President
Secretary
Treasurer
Social Chairman
Laura Elizabeth Adams
Florence Augusta Duckermg
Charlotte Belcher Casey
Members
1934
Flory Gloria Costa
Josephine Frances Fisher
Lillian Hannah Hast
1935
Laura Elizabeth Adams
. Alma Standish Merry
. Lillian Hannah Hast
Josephine Frances Fisher
Sarah Augusta Peaslee
Elsie Elizabeth Healey
Sarah Augusta Peaslee
Grace Elizabeth Tiffany
Alice Joanne Blanchfield
Marion Elizabeth Bullard
Madelin Chase
Mary Abbie Cooney
Louise Charlotte Govoni
Rose Ash
Lois Barnard
Alma Standish Merry
Marion Estelle Smith
Esther Sanborn
Velda Stefanelli
Virginia Stratton
Frances Wentworth
Sylvia Bancroft Winsor
Dorothy Lannon
Rita Provost
Helen EInora Bartlett Eloise Beers Kellogg
Alma Hough Colson Marjorie Louise Lannon
1936
Leonta Gertrude Horrigan
Alice Lillian Hopkins
Madeline Hazel Lincoln
Phyllis Garry Macintosh
Bessie Louise Proctor
Betty Mavis Riley
1937
Esther Dunphy
Sarah Hopkins
Angela Filios
Alpha Lambda Mu was originally one of the three open clubs formed
by the division of the old open sorority Delta Phi Gamma. Elizabeth Reed '32,
considered- as the real organizer of the present sorority, was president of that
club of five girls, which first met on October 26, 1 930. On November 6, 1 93 1 ,
with the recognition of the faculty, it became one of the three closed sorori-
ties. The first pledging and initiation services of the new organization were
held during January, 1932. The members of the original club and of the
present sorority have been brought together by a desire to promote friendship
and loyalty, to encourage high standards of scholarship, and to aid the mem-
bers in showing good sportsmanship at all times.
159
LAMBDA DELTA MU
Alpha Chapter
Founded at Massachusetts State College, October, 1931
Colors: Green and Gold
OFFICERS
President
Secretary
Treasurer
Social Chairman
Erma Marie Carl
Madelyn Gertrude Ashley
lona Elizabeth Barr
Dorothy Flora Cook
Marie Eleanor Currier
Catherine Elizabeth Dimock
Harriet Kathsrine Andrus
Lois Crabtree
Louise Mary Haley
Dorothy Donnelly
Phyllis Gleason
Lillian Jackson
Soror in Facultate
Evelyn Beeman
Members
1934
Edith Janette Smith
1935
Irene Edna Govoni
Marian Threasa Harris
Mildred Martina Hovey
Mary Emma Kingston
Ruth Lydia Lindquist
Ruth Elizabeth Pelissier
1936
Evelyn Marie Mallory
Dorothy Nurmi
Ruth Mild.-ed Ordway
1937
Dorothy Joyce
Justine Martin
Esther Smith
Elizabeth Wheeler
Marie Eleanor Currier
Mary Emma Kingston
Mildred Martina Hovey
Elizabeth Wheeler
Shirley Dorothy Putnam
Harriet Roper
Rosamond Shattuck
Corada Tinti
Edna Thornton
Helen Louise Sawyer
Marjorie Eleanor Whitney
Sarah Wilcox
Judyth Wood
When the old open sorority, Delta Phi Gamma, was broken up, the girls
who later became the founders of Lambda Delta Mu formed one of the three
new, more intimate clubs. It existed as a club from November 1 3, 1 930, until
November 16, 1931, when, with the recognition of the faculty, it became a
closed sorority. It held its first initiation service to add new girls to the
charter members on January 25, 1932. At this time there were twenty mem-
bers. Since then it has grown until now forty-eight have been initiated. From
its founding. Lambda Delta Mu has been active both socially and academically.
SIGMA BETA CHI
Alpha Chapter
Founded at Massachusetts State College, October, 1931
OFFICERS
President Elinor Cande Treasurer Elizabeth Loring
Vice-President Frances Cook Social Chairman Marjorie Jensen
Secretary . Margaret Clark
Active Members and Pledges
1934
Ruth Campbell
Elinor Cande
Margaret Clark
Frances Cook
Dorothy Bartlett
Mary Brennan
Florence Fay
Erna Flack
Elva Britton
Helen Bruns
Dorothy Corcoran
Elinor Fillmore
Marguerite Ford
Lois Barnes
Catherine Birnie
Elizabeth Boucher
Priscilla Bradford
Harriette Jackson
Marjorie Jensen
Shirley McCarthy
Honorary Pledge
Mary Tomlinson
1935
Lois Friedrich
Grace Goulart
Ellen Guion
Elizabeth Harrington
1936
Constance Hall
Priscilla King
Dorothy Masters
Barbara Davis
1937
Dorothy Brown
Phoebe Daniels
Myrtle Greene
Ruth Kinsman
Elizabeth Taylor
Joan Wilcox
Frances Woodbury
Violet Koskela
Elizabeth Loring
Janet Sargent
Gaie Whitton
Catherine O'Brien
Beatrice Rafter
Frances Horgan
Helen Reardon
Lucille Monroe
Gladys Sawinski
Eleanor Stone
Ruth Todt
Sigma Beta Chi was one of the three original sororities founded by the
various groups of the Delta Phi Gamma sorority. Although it was formed by
the social group of the latter, its ideals embraced those of athletics, scholar-
ship, and friendship as it became an independent group. Its purpose as a so-
rority is to foster friendship among women of like ideals and interests.
In the spring of 1933 the sorority secured the house, which was then in
the process of construction, at 64 Lincoln Avenue. In September of that year
nineteen girls entered the house and proceeded to make it a home. The year
of 1933-34 has been an entirely successful one for Sigma Beta Chi, since the
sorority house has fulfilled its purpose admirably in establishing the sorority
as an important part of undergraduate life.
PHI ZETA
Founded af Massachusetts State College, February, 1932
Alpha Chapter
Established 1932
Colors: Black and White
OFFICERS
President
Secretary
Treasurer
Social Chairman
Academic Chairman
Portal Guard
Historian
Muriel V. Bracken
Dorothy F. Doran
Celia H. Einbinder
Catherine M. Ellis
Bernice J. Dolan
Marjorie L. French
Catherine M. Ellis
Alberta E. Skipton
Muriel V. Brackett
Pauline L. Hiilberg
Nancy E. Russell
Barbara K. Gerrard
Members
1934
Marjorie L. French
Barbara K. Gerrard
Pauline L. Hiilberg
Kathleen J. MacDonald
1935
Cornelia F. Foley
1936
Nancy E. Russell
Alberta E. Skipton
Florence P. Stoeber
Elizabeth C. Perry
Ernestine C. Browning Margaret L. Hutchinson Lucy Kingston
Frances M. Driscoll Marion Jones G. Virginia Smith
H. Marie Dow Francine Smith Betsy Worden
Anna A. Flynn Christine E. Hakanson Dolores Lesquier
Priscilla F. Hartwell Maida L. Riggs
1937
Muriel Cain Marion K. Wingate Patsy McMahon
Marjorie Cain Alma Boyden Caroline Rogers
Mary Breinig Helen Downing Carol Avery
Eleanor Trask Ruth Wood
Virginia Halvorson Peg Wattles
Phi Zeta, founded on February 1 1, 1932, seeks to draw together girls
of mutual interests in an organization of comradeship. Even in the two short
years of its existence, this sorority has become dear to the hearts of those
bound together under the name. Phi Zeta, to those who are sincerely striving
to uphold her noble ideals and to maintain her fine standards.
In the fall of 1933, Phi Zeta sorority established a house and dining
hall at 70 Lincoln Avenue, which accomodates a good proportion of her
members.
162
ORGANIZATIONS
iurgess
Bush
Leary
Smith
Ryan
Bigelow Brayden
Clow Sievers
SENATE
OFFICERS
President
Vice-President
Secretary
Treasurer
Marshal .
. Edmund J. Clow '34
Donald H. Smith '34
Theodore M. Leary '35
Howard R. Sievers '34
Louis J. Bush '34
Senior Members Junior Members
Alvan S. Ryan George H. Bigelow Walter E. Brayden Sheldon P. Bliss
David W. Caird Albert F. Burgess
The SENATE is the student governing council. It is composed of repre-
sentatives elected from the Junior and Senior classes. Besides acting as general
director of undergraduates conduct, it represents the interests of the students
and the student body before the Faculty.
r) r^^ f% f*^ f^. ^
Clow
Bush
Ryan
McGuckian
President
Vice-President
Secretary- treasurer
Louis J. Bush
David W. Caird
Hugh P. Baker
William L. Doran
Stowell C. Goding
Harold M. Gore
Emory E. Grayson
ADELPHIA
OFFICERS
Active Members
Frederick G. Clark
Edmund J. Clow
Members In Faculty
Robert D. Hawley
Curry S. Hicks
Marshall O. Lanphear
William L. Machmer
Alexander A. MacKimmie
Frederick G. Clark
. Alvan S. Ryan
. David W. Caird
Ambrose T. McGuckian
Alvan S. Ryan
Frank Prentice Rand
Fred C. Sears
Harold W. Smart
Melvin H. Taube
Frank A. Waugh
Adelphia is a Senior honor society whose members are chosen for their
leadership and their interest in student affairs. Although their duties are not
numerous, the members of Adelphia have charge of fall football rallies, the
promotion of student forums, and special college activities which need the
backing of a responsible group. Adelphia seeks to promote leadership and
good fellowship on the campus. Its ideal is to make students interested in
working for worthwhile student functions.
This year only one football rally was held on the drill field. It preceded
the opening game and consisted of a large bonfire, much singing and cheering,
and speeches.
Adelphia has always been ready to render assistance whenever necessary.
Ryan
Campbell
Veerling
THE HONOR COUNCIL
President
Secretary
David W. Caird '34
Ruth D. Campbell '34
Francis L. Cook '34
. Donald H. Smith '34
. Roger L. Warner '35
A. Hamilton Gardner Jr. '36
Alvan S. Ryan '34
John P. Veerling '35
For several years many students of this college have been proud of the
fact that the Honor System existed on campus. It seemed to give the college
prestige that its students were allowed to take examinations without proctors,
that they could definitely be placed on their own to do the right thing.
The Honor Council itself has one of the most difficult positions to see
that this system is carried out. The 1933-34 council felt that of late student
opinion was becoming lax and it is due, in a great measure, to the Honor
Council members that this year has witnessed a reawakening of active interest
in the system and of a more complete understanding, on the part of everyone
of the purpose.
"We, the students of the Massachusetts State College, believe that the
goal of education is character. The man of character deals fairly with himself
and with others and would rather suffer failure than stoop to fraud. The
Honor System stands for this attitude in all relations of the students with the
faculty. In expression of our belief we pledge ourselves to the support of the
the Constitution of the Honor System."
166
Perry
Currier
WOMEN'S STUDENT GOVERNMENT ASSOCIATION
Executive Council
President
Vice-President
Secretary
Treasurer
Abigail Adams House Chairman
Sophomore Members
Harriette M. Jackson
Marie E, Currier
Elizabeth C. Perry
Elizabeth Wheeler
. Mary I. Taylor
Eleanor C. Fillmore
Elizabeth Low
The Women's Student Government Association is the one organization
to which all the women belong. Each year the association elects an executive
council which has a two-fold purpose, disciplinary and social. In its former
capacity it enforces rules and endeavors to maintain a high standard of conduct
among Massachusetts State College women. In its second capacity it sponsors
teas and entertainments; in the fall it assists the Freshmen to make their
adjustments to college environment.
167
Bixby
Carbonneau
Stewart
Boylan
R;ley
Gardner
Click
Vassos
Dodge
Murphy
MAROON KEY
OFFICERS
President
Vice-President
Secretary-Treasurer
Arthur F. Bixby
Leo W. Carbonneau
Albert W. Dodge
Dean N. Click
Hamilton Gardner, Jr.
. George A. Vassos, Jr.
Myles G. Boylan
Members
Fred J. Murphy
John W. Stewart,
Richard G. Riley
Jr.
The Maroon Key is one chapter of a national honorary society which has
chapters at many of the leading colleges in the United States. The chapter
name is determined in each case by the college color.
The main purpose of this society is to act as host to all visiting athletic
teams, and all other groups of visitors that may come to our campus. The
duties of the members of the Maroon Key are threefold: They are to meet
the visiting groups and make them feel at home; to help the visitors in any
way possible; and to show them the main points of interest about our campus.
The social activities of the society are limited to the "Mardi Gras", a
formal dance which is held in the spring, and is one of the high lights of the
college social season. For recognition. Maroon Key members wear the society
insignia, the gold key with a maroon "M" on a white background.
The Maroon Key on our campus acquires membership by having the
sophomore class elect ten men to be active members for their sophomore year.
Each year a new group of men is elected to the chapter by the sophomore
class.
THE UNITED RELIGIOUS COUNCIL
OFFICERS
. Daniel J. Foley
Nancy E. Russell
Nelson P. Stevens
President
Secretary
Treasurer
Arthur A. Green
Page L. Hyland
Frederick R. Congdon
Patrick J. Fitzgerald
Anna A. Flynn
Bernice J. Dolan
Elizabeth K. Harrington
The United Religious Council at Mass. State College is composed of
representatives of the Y. W. C. A., The Christian Association, The Newman
Club, and The Stockbridge Christian Association. The duties of this group
are numerous, for besides sponsoring the three day conference program in
December which was conducted by Rev. M. J. Ahern, S. J. of Weston College,
the Council carried on the Red Cross Drive, managed the Freshmen Handbook,
sent representatives to Northfield and also to Yale. By combining the dif-
ferent religious interests on the campus, this organization has endeavored to
bring about religious harmony.
Members
Marion E. Bullard
Ruth A. Avery
Silas Little, Jr.
Joseph F. Zillman
Louise C. Govone
Marion E. Smith
Dorothy Nurmi
169
Proctor
Fisher
Smith
Avery
Whitney
Bullard
President
Vice-President
Secretary
Treasurer
Program chairman
Membership chairman
World friendship chairman
Social service chairman
Social chairman
House-party chairman
"Y" Room chairman .
Y. W. C. A.
OFFICERS
CABINET
Marion E. Smith
. Ruth A. Avery
Marion E. Bullard
Marion T. Harris
Betty L. Proctor
Josephine F. Fisher
Leonta G. Horrigan
Dorothy Nurmi
. Lois Crabtree
Marjorie E. Whitney
Louise C. Govone
The Young Woman's Christian Association has attempted to provide an
opportunity for its members "to realize full and creative lives through a
growing knowledge of God". Its program has included an active participation,
through the United Religious Council, in the sponsoring of the major religious
events of the year, but particular emphasis has been placed upon the organi-
zation of small groups meeting regularly for discussion and original work in
poetry, dramatics, music, world education, and for Sunday afternoon retreats.
Through the sending of delegates to the Northf ield Conference and to Maqua
the summer camp, and special programs held during the year, the organization
has sought to supplement the regular campus activities.
Collins Woodbury
Eldred Richardson Hartwell Puffer
Davis P. Daniels Bingham
Putnam Dimock Hovey C. Daniels
Henry
Hodder
Grant
Jenks Landis
Nurmi
Filios Allis
Baker
Pratt Nichols
THE OUTING CLUB
OFFICERS
President Charles H. Daniels Treasurer
Vice-President Arthur A. Green Trails
Secretary Jean Baker Cabins
Wendell R. Hovey
Harry Pratt
R. T. Allen
With the increasing interest in all phases of recreation and especially in
the Outing Club idea, an association of college outing clubs has come into
prominence. This association, known as the Intercollegiate Outing Club Asso-
ciation was begun by the Dartmouth Outing Club and one of its first mem-
bers was the Massachusetts State College club. Sey Dunn of Dartmouth,
attending the M. S. C. 0. C. banquet in 1932 as one of the speakers, told of
the proposed association whose object would be to stimulate outdoor activity
in colleges, to form new college outing clubs, and to allow existing clubs to
exchange ideas. The State club saw the value in such an organization and the
result was that Sey Dunn returned to Dartmouth with another club enrolled
in the infant I. 0. C. A.
The past year has been an active one for the Outing Club. In the spring
a long trip to the lofty heights of Mt. Greylock was enjoyed. The annual ban-
quet, at which President Baker, himself an enthusiastic outdoorsman, told
his adventures in travelling with a pack train through the Northwest on a
government survey, climaxed the season's activities.
With the coming of fall and the opening of college, activities were re-
sumed. Starting the season, Mr. Basil Wood gave his inimitable lecture on
camping to a large and enthusiastic audience. The following Sunday, a
rollicking, jovial crew consisting mostly of freshmen and new comers to the
college, rumbled off in a large open truck to make the acquaintance of Mt.
Massamet at Shelburne Falls. Supper was eaten at the summit and a musical
get-together was held around the campfire. On Columbus Day an unusually
large band of hikers left the campus in the open truck and the South
Amherst school bus, to enjoy the magnificent view and colorful autumn foli-
age from the height of Mt. Monadnock. The fall rapidly passed with Moun-
tain Day, a trip to Mt. Killington and other shorter trips to adjacent points.
171
Edney
Valentine
Bennett
Wheeler
HORTICULTURAL SHOW COMMITTEE
Chairman
Secretary
Floriculture
Landscape Architecture
Horticultural Manufactures
Olericulture
Forestry
General Horticulture
Pomology
H. Paul Stephansen '34
Daniel J. Foley '35
Roland R. Cutler '34
Robert J. Allen '35
Joseph F. Kiel '35
Stephen Bennett '34
James J. Valentine '35
H. Roger Alton '34
W. Donald Durell '34
William B. Esselen '34
James P. Edney '34
John B. Farrar '34
Greenleaf T. Chase '34
F. D. Chapin, S. S. A.
H. W. George, S. S. A.
Frederick G. Clark '34
Nelson A. Wheeler '34
172
1933 HORTICULTURAL SHOW
An arrow-straight black and white spire about whose base were placed
choice apples and slender evergreens and which was crowned with a cluster
of pure white chrysanthemums struck a keynote of simplicity and beauty
which characterized the entire Horticultural Show of nineteen-thirty-three.
The floor plan was laid out with this modernistic pylon as a center. The exhi-
bits were arranged along both sides of aisles which radiated to the corner and
sides and also around the walls of the cage.
Along several aisles florists had placed their displays of carefully chosen
flowers. There were baskets and vases of chrysanthemums ranging all the way
from the tiny button variety to huge richly colored blooms. Many lovely
colors were blended on the carnation tables. Roses, beautiful and rare, were
much admired. Other aisles were set with exhibits of dish gardens, examples
of floral arrangements, and table decorations. Many of these were prepared
by students of floriculture.
Yet another aisle was devoted to a display from the Horticultural Manu-
factures department. A pyramid of preserved fruits, vegetables, and meat,
topped by rows of red quince and green mint jelly, a tempting array of
candies, displays of cider and maple products, constituted a rich store.
In part, around the outside were fruit exhibits — both competitive and
instructive. A guessing contest, an artificial apple tree, and an apple pie
making competition were even included in this section.
Along another wall were examples of formal gardens. On the Edge of
the Clearing, Terminus of a Formal Garden, and Mossy Dell were some of
the outstanding ones which lent an air of dignity to the show. Near these
was an interesting display of furniture made from native woods and arranged
by the forestry department. A fine touch was the memorial to Charles H.
Patterson. At the end of a path, surrounded by evergreens, a picture of our
late professor was framed in a simple white altar beside which was placed a
single rosebud. One of the most interesting presentations in this section was
Pyrrha's Dream. Beyond a narrow lawn was a close clipped hemlock hedge in
which there was a narrow opening. Through this could be seen a replica of
the famous statue of Pyrrha reflected in a mirror pool. The very simplicity
of it gave it its loveliness.
Another side was entirely taken up by two huge cornucopias made from
interwoven cornstalks. "No richer gift has Autumn poured from out her
lavish horn" than the variety of pumpkins, corn, carrots, and other vege-
tables that literally poured from these great "horns".
The show was permeated by an air of harvest, of beauty in its height, a
feeling of work well done. This was the twenty-fifth Horticultural Show to be
given at the college. In the last few years it has made tremendous strides
from the annual Autumn display in French Hall to the truly magnificent
exhibition of nineteen-thirty-three. It attracted eleven thousand people to
our campus during the three days in which it was presented. Among the
visitors were Governor and Mrs. Ely, officers of the Massachusetts Horticul-
tural Society as well as officials from such organizations in neighboring
states. Much credit is due to H. Paul Stephensen, general chairman of the
committee, for it was through his efforts and those who worked with him
that there was produced what one newspaper has called "The outstanding
exhibit of the year in Horticultural Shows."'
173
CLUBS
THE ANIMAL HUSBANDRY CLUB
President Harold C. Potter '34
Secretary-Treasurer ..... Sherwin L. Williams '34
The Animal Husbandry Club was established as a professional organiza-
tion for the purpose of bringing together during the winter months the
students in animal husbandry. Visiting economists, scientists, journalists, and
men in the practical field address the group 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 past, the organization has well served its purpose, and has
enabled the students to make contacts that have been of value after gradu-
ation. The Animal Husbandry Club attempts to bring about a balance be-
tween social, practical, and theoretical problems, and is a valuable part of
the curriculum of every student in this field.
CHESS CLUB
President .....'... Louis Winokur
Managing Secretary ...... Henry Riseman
Two years ago a group of ten men gathered together in the Memorial
Building one Saturday afternoon with the intention of founding a chess team
which would participate in intercollegiate contests. A club was formed which
was called the Chess and Checker Club. A program of intramural activity,
consisting of a round robin among the members, was inaugurated in the
Spring. By this method, a team of three men was selected to represent the
group. Attention was then turned to the M. S.C. Faculty, and all willing
chessmen were met in a tournament. The results proved the students to be
the better chessmen, for all contests played turned out to be undergraduate
victories.
The second year of the club's existence was marked by a broader and
more extensive program of activity and development. Among the notable
accomplishments of the year are: (1) the development of the club into a
group of twenty two men; (2) the submission of an application for recog-
nition as an accredited student activity; (3) the acquisition of the Conn.
Valley College Chess Championship (by virtue of our unique position as the
only college chess team in the valley) .
DAIRY CLUB
President ........ Robert T. Coleman
Vice-President Harry Pyenson
Secretary-Treasurer ...... Paul O. Wood
The Dairy Club was founded in 1933 and is the youngest of the depart-
mental clubs. This organization was established for the purpose of creating
a stronger department of dairy science by bringing the students together
at regular intervals. The club meets regularly throughout the college year
and is addressed by at least one speaker each month on matters pertaining
to chemistry, bacteriology, economics, or some other phase of dairy science.
It is hoped that this organization will bring the students in contact with the
active workers in the field of dairying, and that all who are interested in the
production and distribution of milk and milk products will attend the
meetings.
174
THE FERNALD ENTOMOLOGY CLUB
The Fernald Entomology Club, so named in tribute to Dr. H. T. Fernald
in particular and to the Fernald family in general, including Maria and
Charles H. Fernald, all entomologists of world reknown, was founded on
January 4, 1925.
The prime purpose of the Club is to keep the students in touch with
the most recent advances in entomology, which is accomplished in three
different ways: — by speakers giving reviews of recent literature, by discus-
sion of field problems and experiences among the students, and by talks
delivered by prominent entomologists who visit the college. The materials
so presented are supplementary to the required courses in entomology.
Membership in the Club is voluntary for all junior and senior and gradu-
ate students majoring in Entomology, while guests and other students are
cordially invited to attend. Meetings are held once a month, with interpo-
lated meetings at various times when it is possible to obtain a speaker of
note. Under the auspices of the Club, prominent visiting entomologists often
give informal talks to our students.
Its annual publication, the Fernald Club Yearbook contains much of
interest to graduates of this college now doing work in Entomology, and to
other interested entomologists. The Yearbook and the Club are conducted
entirely by students who show great interest in the advancement of these
activities.
HISTORY-SOCIOLOGY CLUB
OFFICERS
President . . . . ... Alexander A. Lucey '34
Vice-President ...... Joseph Smiaroski '35
Secretary . . . . . ... Frances Woodbury '34
Faculty Advisor Harold Carey
The club was organized this year to permit students majoring in His-
tory and Sociology to supplement the courses now offered in these subjects.
Informal meetings have been held every three weeks. Guest speakers
have discussed interesting topics and experiences. The club has received the
publications and books distributed by the Carnegie Foundation which spon-
sors the International Relations Club.
HOME ECONOMICS CLUB
President ........ Alberta E. Skipton
Vice-President
Secretary . . . . .
Treasurer ......
Shirley D. Putnam
, Elizabeth Low
Marjorie E. Whitney
is to develop a professional
The purpose of the Home Economics Club
interest among the girls, to bring them in touch with women in the field
and with the national organizations, and to cultivate friendships among stu-
dents and members of this department.
Meetings are held usually once a month in the Homestead and pro-
grams of interest are presented. Any girl majoring in home economics is
eligible for membership.
K. 0. CLUB
The "Karry On Club" is made up of former 4-H Club members who still
have an interest in club work. Its object is "to promote interesting Junior
Extension work from the leader's standpoint and to keep the 4-H Club
spirit alive among College students."
175
This club was organized in 1927 by a group of coeds and enlarged in
1929 to allow men students to join. The present enrollment is about one
hundred students. The advisor is George L. Farley, State Club Leader.
Meetings are held monthly in the new Farley 4-H Club House. This
building was constructed during the past summer, under the supervision of
Mr. Dirks and Lawrence Peck, by 4-H Club boys from this State. The money
was raised by 4-H Club workers and their friends.
LANDSCAPE CLUB
The Landscape Club is made up of all the landscape students who are
interested in getting a little more in their field than just what the different
courses offer. Professors in the department and outside speakers are heard,
from time to time. A studio dance and a trip to visit estates and parks are
planned for each year. In the spring of 1933 a very pleasant and worthwhile
day was spent in visiting the large estates about Lenox and Stockbridge.
Through the club, the members come in contact with men in the profession
and with some of the work that has been done.
Roger Alton is president of the club for 1934.
THE MATHEMATICS CLUB
Every other Wednesday evening during the winter months is reserved
by students interested in mathematics for the "Math Club". Here are ex-
plained the interesting highways and byways which lie away from the beaten
paths of geometry, algebra, and calculus. Presentations are made of the
classical problems, such as the tri-sectioning of an angle, of puzzles and re-
creations, geometric designs in nature, the history of our number systems,
and great names in the history of mathematics. Then, after the formal
speeches of the evening are over, there are always informal discussions which
keep the members there long after the allotted time is up.
The club is unique in the fact that it has no officers, and that the mem-
bership is not restricted. The speakers are students, usually those majoring
in mathematics, who have done extra work along some line in which they
are especially interested. It is largely through the efforts of Professor Frank
C. Moore that the club exists. He was its founder, and is largely responsible
for securing the speakers and arranging the bi-monthly programs.
MENORAH SOCIETY
Following a meeting Sunday evening, March 1 1, 1934, the Jewish stu-
dents revived the Menorah Club, the Hebrew cultural and religious organiza-
tion. The plan for its formation was projected under the guidance of Dr.
Maxwell H. Goldberg. The following officers were elected: President Max
Dubin '35, Vice Pres. Henry D. Epstein '35, Secretary Florence Bilsky '36.
What the organization can mean to the student as well as to the college
is expressed by the Intercollegiate Menorah Society which aims 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 group hopes to appreciate the best of Jewish culture and tradition,
and to become really conscious of the rich heritage which is theirs.
THE NEWMAN CLUB
The Newman Club was founded at Mass. State College in November
1929 in an effort to organize the Roman Catholic students on the Campus.
This organization is a part of the United Religious Council and cooperates
with it in all its activities. Then too the Newman Club is in the process of
176
becoming affiliated with the National Federation of College Catholic Clubs.
During the year, the Club has sponsored a series of lectures by prominent
laymen and clergy. Among the speakers were the Reverend Dr. Cummings
of Northampton, Rev. M. J. Ahern, S. J. of the Weston College, Honorable
Daniel D. O'Brian of Northampton and the Reverend Dr. Carol Bernhardt,
S. J. who gave a very scholarly talk on "Newman as A Man of Letters." Rev.
Fr. John J. Foley of St. Brigida's Church is spiritual advisor to the Club.
The Officers
President ........ Daniel J. Foley
Vice-President ....... Raymond E. Royal
Secretary ........ Anna A. Flynn
Treasurer ....... Frederick R. Congdon
PHYSICS CLUB
The Physics Club, with the generous cooperation of the Physics Depart-
ment has been, during the winter and spring months, running a series of
meetings at which various topics in Physics were discussed. In order that
the subjects be understood by the audience, membership in the club is re-
stricted to those who have taken advanced courses in the department.
Special papers on various topics, illustrated by experiments, and two moving
pictures entitled, "The Hydrogen Ion in Electrolysis" and "The Three Elec-
tron Radio Tube" have been presented at the bi-monthlv meetings. Among
the topics of special papers were "Crystal Structure", "The History of the
Atomic Theory", and "Various Topics in Sound". After each meeting the
club partakes of an informal buffet lunch in the newly decorated banquet
hall of the physics building (which is pressed into service during the day
as a laboratory for the elementary physics classes) . The arts are not entirely
absent, for during the serving of refreshments the members are entertained
by the music of the best jazz bands in America as well as that of the greatest
opera singers in the world. All thanks to the Department's victrola, amplifier
and supply of records!
SOCIAL SCIENCE CLUB
In the late fall of 1933, attempts to organize a group interested in
social conditions and current affairs, crystallized in the formation of the
Social Science Club. It was organized under the direction and guidance of
J. Paul Williams. The club was launched in encouraging fashion with an
initial membership enrollment of forty. The officers elected were as follows:
Pres. Glenn Shaw '35, Vice Pres. Miriam Oikemus '37, Secretary Max
Dubin '35.
The purpose of the group was threefold: (1 ) to attempt to learn the
truth about social conditions by listening to speakers who were well ac-
quainted with the facts, (2) to conduct club discussion groups for further
individual enlightenment, (3) to make observation trips to places of interest
to the organization.
Early in its career, the group conducted a week-end trip to Brookwood
Labor College where class discussions were attended. Later, on Feb. 24,
1934, it was represented at the Connecticut Valley Student Convention
Against War, where a part was taken in the drawing up of the anti-
war resolutions.
The club hopes to continue active participation, insofar as students are
able, in affairs involving social well-being.
AGRICULTURAL JUDGING TEAMS
Dairy Cattle Judging Team
Frederick N. Andrews '35 Harold C. Potter '34
Robert M. Koch '35 Russell Sturtevant '34
The team placed fourth out of eleven teams competing at the Eastern
Intercollegiate Dairy Cattle Judging Contest. Andrews, Koch, and Potter
took part in the collegiate contest at Waterloo, Iowa, and finished twelfth out
of eighteen teams.
Dairy Products Judging Team
Robert T. Coleman '34 James P. Edney '34
Harry Pyenson '34
This team was entered in the Intercollegiate Contest held in connection
with the Eastern States Exposition, and in the National Intercollegiate Dairy
Products Judging Contest at Chicago. The team placed second at Springfield
and eleventh at Chicago. A cup was won in Chicago for first place in the Ice
Cream Judging Contest, and individual medals were presented to the mem-
bers of the team for winning the Butter Judging Contest at Springfield.
Fat Stock Judging Team
Richard T. Cutler '34 Russell E. MaCleery '34
Elsie E. Healey '34 Harold C. Potter '34
Robert Stockbridge '34
The Fat Judging Team won second place in the Eastern Intercollegiate
Stock Judging Contest held at the Eastern States Exposition, and finished
nineteenth at the Stock Judging Contest held in connection with the Inter-
national Live Stock Show at Chicago.
Fruit Judging Team
Frederick G. Clark '34 Lawrence Bullard '35
Wallace W. Thompson '35
The fruit judging team represented the college in the New England
Intercollegiate Fruit Judging Contest at Orono, Maine, and in the Eastern
Intercollegiate Fruit Judging Contest held in Amherst, and placed second in
each contest.
Meats Judging Team
Richard C. Cutler '34 Harold C. Potter '34
Robert R. Stockbridge '34
The Meats Judging Team placed fifth out of the nine teams competing
at the Intercollegiate Meat Judging Contest at Chicago. Potter won first
place in the Pork Judging Contest, and received ninth individual honors
in the contest.
AGRICULTURAL JUDGING TEAMS
Poultry Judging Team
Stuart A. Arnold '35 Robert M. Koch '35
Henry F. Riseman '35 Robert R. Stockbridge '34
This team competed in the Eastern Intercollegiate Poultry Judging
Contest held in Trenton, New Jersey, and placed third of the nine teams
present.
GRINNELL PRIZES
1933
William T. Smith $25
Gordan A. Houran $15
Edwin J. Thompson $10
Click
Henry
ACADEMIC ACTIVITIES BOARD
Faculty Members
Chairman
Dean William L. Machmer
Vice-Chairman
. Prof. Harry N. Click
Secretary
Mr. George E. Emery
General Manager
' Pro
f. Frank Prentice Rand
Business Manager
Prof.
Lawrence S. Dickinson
Director .
Student
Members
Willard A. Munson
Collegian
. George R. Pease '34
Roister Doisters
Alexander A. Lucey
Debating
. Nathaniel B. Hill '34
Glee Club
David E. Cosgriff '34
Orchestra
Wallace L. Chesbro '34
Index
Ralph H. Granger '35
Band
. Ralph J. Henry '34
i
^^edals Heic
by Students
H. Roger Alton
34
Silver
Harriette Jackson
'34 Silver
Roger G. Bates
34
Gold
Edward V. Law
'36 Silver
Frank A. Batstone
34
Gold
William S. Lister
'34 Silver
Sheldon P. Bliss
35
Silver
Alexander A. Lucey '34 Gold
Wallace L. Chesbro
34
Silver
Shirley McCarthy
'34 Gold
Frederick G. Clark
34
Gold
Ruth Pushee
'34 Silver
Philip H. Clark
35
Silver
Raymond Royal
'34 Silver and Gold
David E. Cosgriff
34
Gold
Lawrence W. Schen
ck '34 Silver
Ralph W. Dexter
34
Silver
Warren H. Southwo
th '34 Gold
Donald Donnelly
36
Silver
Hans P. Stephensen
'34 Silver
Grant Dunham
35
Gold
Edward J. Talbot
'34 Gold
Arthur J. Gold
36
Silver
John P. Veerling
'^5 Silver
Ralph Henry
34
Gold
Henry A. Walker
'34 Silver
Nathaniel B. Hill
34
Gold
Gaie Whitten
'35 Silver
Alden R. Hodgen
34
Silver
ACADEMIC CONSPICUOUS SERVICE TROPHY
Won By Shirley E. McCarthy
ACADEMIC MANAGERS PRIZE
Won By Alexander A. Lucey and Edward J. Talbot
Scott
Doyle
Hovey
Leary Valentine Harrington Currier Koskela Avery Hermanson Andrews
Hartwell Shubert Tramposch Smith Foley Hovey Packard Perry Winoki
INDEX BOARD
Editor-in-chief
Business Manager
Secretary
. Daniel J. Foley
Ralph H. Granger
Bernice G. Schubert
Statistics Department
George A. Hartwell, Editor William A. Scott
Bernard J. Doyle James J. Valentine
Ruth A. Avery Elizabeth K. Harrington
Literary Department
Marion E. Smith, Editor Marie E. Currier
R. Harlow Hermanson
Frederick N. Andrews
Theodore M. Leary
Mildred M. Hovey
Art Department
E. Lawrence Packard, Editor Edward D. Masters
Photographic Department
Emil J. Tramposch, Editor Elizabeth C. Perry
Wendell R. Hovey
Business Department
Sales Manager, Arthur S. Levine Assistant, Silas Little, Jr.
Circulation Manager, Louis I. Winokur
181
Allen Leary Fitzgerald Eschback Foster
jnow Thompson Taylor Bliss Vickery Saulnier Stevens Little Johnson
Arenberg Batstone Campbell Talbot Royal Harrington Thomas Pease
MASSACHUSETTS COLLEGIAN
1933-'34
Board of Editors
Raymond E. Royal, Editor-in-chief
Glenn F. Shaw, Managing Editor Ruth D. Campbell, Associate Editor
Departmental Editors
News Department
David L. Arenberg '35, Editor
Burns Robbins '34
W. Snowden Thomas '34
Elizabeth K. Harrington '35
Mary Louise Allen '35
Patrick J. Fitzgerald '36
Edythe M. Parsons '36
Florence M. Saulnier '36
Athletics
Theodore M. Leary '35, Editor
Silas Little '35
Jack W. Potter '35
Albert P. Richards '36
Intercollegiates
Ruth D. Campbell '34, Editor
Features
Theodore M. Leary '36
David L. Arenberg '35
Board of Managers
Edward J. Talbot '34, Business Manager
W. Lawrence Schenck '34, Advertising Manager
Frank A. Batstone '34, Circulation Manager
George R. Pease '35
Business Assistants
John L, Wood '35
Nelson P. Stevens '35
182
THE MASSACHUSETTS COLLEGIAN
Important in the permanent recording of college events is a weekly
publication, known on the State College campus as the Massachusetts Col-
legian. Not only does this newspaper serve as an index of events, past and
present, but it also endeavors to reflect student and faculty opinion by pub-
lishing interviews communications and questionnaires.
During the past year, the staff has instituted the six page issue as a more
frequent feature than formerly. While the policy did not tend toward a daily
or bi-weekly publication as some campi advocate, it was felt that more justice
might be done campus affairs by a larger issue. In addition to putting out a
larger issue there have also been included more photographs than in the past,
the opinion being that they add interest to the page and also serve as an
appropriate recognition of service.
In skimming the paper one notices a variety of material. On the first
page one is generally attracted by at least one, and often more, photograph.
On closer inspection one sees the "current event in the Collegian" and the
"outstanding event of the week". In addition to the feature articles of the
week, are found usually an interview with some prominent character, and the
campus calendar.
Perhaps the greatest variety of material is disclosed on the second page.
Constructive criticism of campus situations and activities has been the recent
policy in the editorials. One generally finds in them matter for discussions in
regard to proposed improvement of college affairs, in contrast to the rest of
the paper is the column entitled "The Campus Crier", the purpose of this
being to recount humorous campus happenings as well as other pertinent
remarks, jokes, and anecdotes. In the "Agora" the student who has a worth-
while opinion to present has ample opportunity. Weekly there appears at
least one communication inviting campus discussion. In addition to the regular
column containing announcements there has recently been added one known
as the "Gadfly", a satirical article attacking current situations.
Sports are given the entire third page in a combination of articles,
photographs, and a column, "State-Sportlight". In addition to varsity news
the page contains outstanding news regarding opponents, individual stars
on campus, fraternity competition and any items of interest concerning the
physical education department.
In addition to the above mentioned articles, the staff annually conducts
a senior questionnaire and a poem of the month contest. Fifteen hundred
copies of the paper are printed weekly, of which approximately four hundred
are mailed to alumni and friends of the college. About one hundred and
seventy-five copies are sent to high school libraries throughout the state.
183
Eldridge
Dobby
Hovey
Pratt
Congdon
Bliss
Veerling
Lucey Gates Bell
Clark
Click
Trask
Henry
Davis Esselen
Lister
Leader
Manager
Assistant Manager
Librarian
Drum Major
Greenleaf T. Chase
Charles E. Coombs
William B. Esselen
Vernon A. V. Bell
Sheldon P. Bliss
Robert Bray
Philip H. Clark
John C. Eldridge
Wendell R. Hovey
Stuart F. Jillson
Dean N. Click
Allen M. Kaufman
Richard A. Kulya
Louis A. Breault, Jr.
James J. Dobby
Ralph B. Gates
Harlan A. Howard
Ivan C. Minott, Jr.
BAND
MEMBERS
Class of 1934
Professor William H. Davis
Ralph Henry '34
. Samuel P. Snow '35
Greenleaf T. Chase '34
. John P. Veerling '35
William S. Lister
Russell L. Snow
Joseph F. Zillman
Class of 1935
John J. Moulton
William A. Scott
Samuel P. Snow
Willace W. Thompson
Owen S. Trask
John P. Veerling
Class of 1936
Harry D. Pratt
Richard H. Thompson
Class of 1937
James A. Pickering
Paul H. Rosberry
Philip T. Schneider
Robert W. Thorndike
Conductor
Manager
Frank Batstone '34
Barbara Gerrard '34
Amy Deardon '35
Ralph Schreiter '35
Allyn H. Fisher '36
Carl R. Wildner '36^
Edward Seredensky '36
Ralph Henry '34
Philip H. Clark '35
Sheldon Bliss '35
William Lister '34
John P. Veerling '35
Roger Bates '34
Ruth Pushee '34
ORCHESTRA 1933-34
First Violin
Edgar Sorton '33
Wallace L. Chesbro
Howard Parker '36
Priscilla King '36
Edmund J. Sullivan '36
Second Violin
Myron A. Widlansky '37
Moses Entin '37
Viola
Myer Weiner '35
'Cello
Anna A. Flynn '36
Bass
Bernard S. Stepner '37
Flute
Elizabeth Low '36
Clarinet
Harry Pratt '36
Horn in F.
Herbert W. Ferguson '36
Trumpet
Barbara Davis '36
Phillip T. Schneider '37
Trombone
Robert W. Thorndike '37
Tympani
George A, Hartwell '35
Drums
Ralph Gates '37
Piano
Dorothy Nurmi '36
Louise M. Haley '36
185
ROISTER DOISTERS
President
Vice-President .
Manager .
Assistant Manager
Electrician
Director .
Shirley E. McCarthy '34
Warren Southworth '34
Alexander A. Lucey '34
George S. Congdon '35
W. Lawrence Schenck '34
Prof. Frank Prentice Rand
LET'S GO NUTTY
An original musical comedy in two acts, written by the students, was
presented at Bowker Auditorium, Friday evening, December 15, 1933. The
music of the eleven songs was written by W. Grant Dunham, David Cosgriff,
and Edward Law; the words were the combined efforts of Thurl D. Brown,
Bernice Dolan, Donald Chase, Fred Nisbet, and W. Grant Dunham. Warren
Southworth was general director of the show; Edgar Sorton composed the
orchestrations and W. Grant Dunham was mainly responsible for the plot of
the comedy.
Edward Nassif '35
Curtis Clark '35
Theodore Law '36
Bernice Doland '35
Walter Papp '34
Wallace Chesbro '34
Roy Cowing '34
Ralph Henry '34
Warren Scholz '37
Marguerite Ford '36
Chancellor of Victor University .
Dean .....
Jimmy, a student
Sally, his friend, a co-ed .
Chairman of Golden Dollar Council
Member of Golden Dollar Council
Pres. D. Mentia Precox of Nuttytown
Professor ....
Just a Freshman
Tillie, a stenographer to Prexy .
A large chorus assisted
186
AS YOU LIKE IT
Presented in the Ravir
June 9-10, 1933
Cast
Orlando ....
Adam, His servant
Oliver, his brother .
Dennis ....
Charles, a wrestler
Celia, Duke Frederick's daughte
Rosalind, her cousin .
Touchstone
Le Beau ....
Duke Frederick
The banished duke, his brother
Amiens ....
Another lord
A page ....
Corin, a shepherd
Silvius, another
Jaques, a lord .
Audrey, a country girl
Martext, a curate
Phebe, another country girl
William, another shepherd
Edward V. Law
Bertram Lubin
Louis H. Lebeshevsky
Alexander A. Lucey
Howard R, Sievers
Harriette M. Jackson
Shirley E, McCarthy
Charles H, Dunphy
Thurl D. Brown
Arthur J. Gold
Eliot Landsman
Joseph G. Cieary
Nathaniel B. Hill
George R. Pease
Burns Robbins
Richard B. Hubbard
Warren H. Southworth
. Ruth S. Redman
Donald W. Chase
Ruth L, Lindquist
Ambrose T. McGuckian
'36
'35
'35
'34
'34
'34
'34
'34
'34
'36
'34
'35
'34
'35
'34
'35
'34
'34
'34
'35
'34
Leonora Perrycoste
Florence .
Dwight Houston
Peter Walmsley
THERE'S ALWAYS JULIET
By John Van Druten
Presented at Bowker Auditorium
March 24, 1934
Cast
. Shirley McCarthy '34
Lorraine Noyes '36
Warren Southworth '34
Nathaniel Hill '34
Romeo
Juliet
Music
Prologue
. Edward Law '36
Helen Bruns '36
. Frank Batstone '34
Presentations
North Adams Teachers' College
Bowker Auditorium
Greenfield
Mt. Herman .
Westboro
Sudbury
Bowker Auditorium
March 22
March 24
April 13
April 21
April 27
April 28
. May 5
4
Greenwood Kugler Lilly
Thomas Zuckerman Bruns Avery Wyman Nowakowski
LeDuc Donnelly Whitton Prince Hill Hodgen Gold Noyes
DEBATING TEAM
Nathaniel B. Hill, Manager and Captain Men's Team
Gaie D. Whitton, Manager of Women's Team
Professor Walter E. Prince, Coach
Arthur J. Gold '36
Donald T. Donnelly '36
John C. Nowakowski '37
Albert S. Thomas '37
Men's Varsify Team
Herbert P. Kugler '36
Max Lilly '37
Women's Varsity Team
Carol Avery '37 Marguerite LeDuc '36
Dorothea Donnelly '37 Lorraine F. Noyes '36
DEBATING SCHEDULE
Men's Varsity Team
March 6 — Springfield College, Springfield, Mass. Affirmative: Lilly '37, Gold '36
Resolved: That the principle ot governmenr control of production and distribution as exemplified in the National Indus-
trial Recovery Act should be continued after the two year period provided in that Act.
Result: Lost Judges' Decision 2 to 1 .
March 6 — American International College Springfield. Mass. Negative: Donnelly '36, Thomas '37, Hill '34
Resolved: That the principle of government control of production and distribution as exemplified in the National Indus-
trial Recovery Act should be continued for at least fifteen years.
Result: Lost Judges' Decision.
March 15 — University of Pennsylvania, at Mass. State College. Negative: Gold '36, Hill '34
Resolved: That the United States should adopt the British system of Radio Control.
Result: Won Judges' Decision.
April 4 — Susquehanna University, Selinsgrove, Penn. Affirmative: Hodgen '34, Donnelly '36, Hill '34
Resolved: That the Federal government should own and operate all banking institutions in the United States.
Result: Lost Judges' Decision 2 to 1 .
April 5 — Muhlenberg College, Allentown, Penn. Negative: Donnelly '36. Hodgen '34
Resolved: That the Federal government should own and operate all banking institutions in the United States.
Result: Lost Judges' Decision.
April 6 — Lehigh University Bethlehem, Penn. Negative: Hodgen '34, Hill '34
Resolved: That the Federal government should own and operate all banking institutions in the United States.
Result: Won Judges' Decision.
April 7 — Gettysburg College, Gettysburg, Penn. Affirmative. Lilly '37, Hill '34
Resolved: That the essential features of the National Industrial Recovery Act should be continued as a settled policy in
the United States government.
of the National Industr
Result: No De
Negative: Noyes '36, Whitton '35
ed as a settled policy in United States
Women's Varsity Debating Team
March 1 — Boston University at Mass. State Colleoe.
Resolved: That the present increase in presidental power should be conti
government.
Result: Won Judges' Decision.
April 6 — Middlebury College, Middlebury, Vt. Negativ
Resolved: That the present increase in government control of industry should be continued as
States government.
Result: Won Judges' Decision.
April 25 — Columbia University, Men's Varsity Team at Mass State College. Negative: Noyes '36, Whitton '35
Resolved: That the government control of industry under the National Industrial Recovery Act should be continued as a
settled policy.
Result: Lost Judges' Decision.
188
Sorton Dunham Law
Cosgriff Cleary Bates Hixon
Clark Perry Grant Alton
Corcoran Lyon Talbot Gorey Ruffley
Bell
Wilder
GLEE CLUB
Manager .
. David E. Cosgri
ff '34
Director .
Edgar Sorton
Accompanist .
Leonard Parker '35
Violinist .
. Frank Batstone '34
Tenor Soloist .
MEMBERS
First Tenor
Joseph Clea
y '36
Elmer Allen '36
James Clapp '36
Joseph Cleary '36
David Cosgriff '34
Second Tenor
Alden Hodgen '34
Myles Boylan '36
Norman Grant '37
Adin Hlxon '36
Walter Moseley '37
First Bass
Paul Stephansen '34
James Sumner '35
Clifford Battles '36
Fred Bull '36
Curtis Clark '35
Hugh Corcoran '35
F. Merton Lyon '37
Second Bass
Walter Perry '37
Edward Talbot '34
Roger Alton '34
Vernon Bell '35
Robert Gorey '34
Walter Papp '34
John Ruffley '37 _
Addison Sandford '35
Quartet
Carl Wildner '36
Dante Zucker '35
Roger Alton '34
Curtis Clark '35
Joseph Cleary '36
David Cosgriff '34
Edward Law '36
Walter Papp '34
James Sumner '35
Christmas Music at
First Congregational
Hartford Psychiatric
M. S. C. Musical Clu
South Hadley .
Cummington
High School Day, M
Concerts
M. S. C. .
Church, Amherst
Hospital
bs Concert .
s. c. ;
. Dec. 17,
. Feb. 13,
. March 2,
March 16,
April 17,
. April 24,
. May 5,
1933
1934
1934
1934
1934
1934
1934
THE FIFTY-SEVENTH ANNUAL
BURNHAM DECLAMATION CONTEST
BOWKER AUDITORIUM
Wednesday Afternoon, May 24, 1933
First prize of fifteen dollars awarded to Bernice J. Dolan, 1935
Second Prize of ten dollars awarded to Leo W. Carbonneau, 1936
Professor Walter E. Prince, Chairman
A. D. Mason
. Tennyson
Fosdick
Shakespeare
Landor
Edna St. Vincent Millay
Program
1 . "Builders of Empire" .....
Leo W. Carbonneau, 1936
2. "Enoch Arden" ......
Sylvia Kaplin, 1936
3. "Roosevelt's Rough Riders"
Dean Click, 1936
4. "Now is the Summer of our Discontent".
Max Dubin, 1935
5. "Iphigenia and Agamemnon"
Helen L. Powers, 1935
6. "Renascence" ......
Bernice Dolan, 1935
7. "The War with America" .... Pitt, Earl of Chatham
Arthur Gold, 1935
8. "The Isles of Greece" . ....... Byron
Frederick N. Andrews, 1935
Judges
Professor Charles H. Patterson
Professor Charles F. Fraker
Reverend C. F. Luther
The Burnham Declamation Contest has become increasingly popular
since it was established by Mr. T. O. H. P. Burnham in 1875. in the 1933
Contest, the number of students competing was sufficiently large to neces-
sitate the holding of a preliminary contest, and those who appeared on the
program on May 24 were the finalists chosen from a group of thirteen
candidates.
The declamations had been carefully selected and prepared, and were
admirably presented.
THE THIRTY-EIGHTH
FLINT ORATORICAL CONTEST
MEMORIAL HALL
Friday Evening, June 9, 1933
First Prize of thirty dollars awarded to Ashley B. Gurney, 1933
Second Prize of fifteen dollars awarded to Joseph Politella, 1933
Professor Walter E. Prince, Chairman
Program
1. America and Our Hellenic Heritage George F. Steffanides, 1933
2. Whither Democracy? Nathaniel B. Hill, 1934
3. He Was in the World — and the World Knew Joseph Politella, 1933
4. The Farmer Once More .... Costas L. Caragianis, 1933
5. What Price Democracy? .... Ashley B. Gurney, 1933
Judges
Rev. T. Barton Akeley
Prof. Fred C. Sears
Dr. Maxwell H. Goldberg
STUDENT CURRICULUM COMMITTEE
Early in January of this year, President Baker appointed a Student Com-
mittee to investigate the curriculum at the Massachusetts State College.
This group, consisting of the following seniors: Miss Harriette Jackson, Miss
Betty Wheeler, Donald Smith, Edmund Clow (chairman). Nelson Wheeler,
Harold Potter, and Alvan Ryan (secretary), has been making a careful and
exhaustive investigation of the curriculum, in an endeavor to discover its
weakness and find means of strengthening it. Early in June the committee
will submit its findings to President Baker.
The committee has already, through the medium of The Collegian,
presented certain questions to the student body for consideration. The opinion
of the students in regard to having the A. B. degree here has been solicited,
and numerous changes in requirements, specific courses, and in the honors
course system have been considered from their various aspects. The curricula
of other colleges, and the particular needs of this institution have both been
considered by the student committee. At all times its members have solicited
student opinion and have attempted to encourage the student body to consider
the problem of the curriculum and its administration as a fundamental and
vital one, a question certainly worthy of earnest thought.
The findings of the committee should be most valuable in giving to Dr.
Baker the point of view of the student body as formulated by a group of seniors
who, having themselves "gone through the mill", have offered their construc-
tive criticism while the entire experience of four college years remained still
vivid in their minds.
DAD'S DAY COMMITTEE
Page L. Hiland, Chairman
Alfred H. Gardner, Jr., Secretary
Charles H. Dunphy
Daniel J. Foley
Ruth L. Lindquist
Silas Little, Jr.
Alexander A. Lucey
Shirley E. McCarthy
Edith M. Parsons
Elizabeth C. Perry
Nancy E. Russell
Wolcott L. Schenck
Warren H. Southworth
With over three hundred and fifty dads attending, the annual Dad's Day
was successfully held on October 14, 1933. The whole day was devoted to the
entertainment of the fathers of the Massachusetts State students.
In the military review which was held in the morning the military majors
gave an exhibition of skilled horsemanship. In the afternoon the dads received
complimentary tickets to the football game with Connecticut State College
which resulted in a 40-7 victory for Massachusetts State.
The special feature of the day's events was presented in the evening, a
program of fraternity and sorority skits.
The complete program was as follows
Chips off the Old Block
Finkelstein's German Band
God Bless our Home
Four College Years
War
Life on the Steppes
Dad's Hour
Good Old Daze .
Satire on Midsummer Night's Drea
1909 Class Reunion
Zemskoye Sobraniyi
Night in a Turkish Harem
Sophisticated Lady
Arizona Rythm
Alpha Lambda Mu
. Alpha Sigma Phi
. Phi Sigma Kappa
Q. T. V.
. Alpha Epsilon Pi.
Lambda Delta Mu
Alpha Gamma Rho
Sigma Beta Chi
Sigma Phi Epsilon
Kappa Epsilon
Lambda Chi Alpha
Kappa Sigma
. Phi Zeta
. Theta Chi
MOUNTAIN DAY
At eleven o'clock on October 19th, over three hundred enthusiastic
students, freed from the gloom and the grime of the classroom and the
laboratory, left the campus to become mountaineers for a day in celebration
of that annual event. Mountain Day.
The multi-colored, variously equipped hikers approached Mount Toby
from all points of the compass; some walked, some hitch-hiked, and some
even went on bicycles; and by noon, the usually silent trails were overflowing
with students. It is rumored that there are several prominent trails on Toby,
but on October 19th, even the seasoned Outing club members seemed to
doubt it. Most of the climbers found their way to the top of the mountain;
some were fortunate enough to locate the cabins and the caves; but all of
them found the grub wagon. It is said that many of the hikers found their way
through the maze of apples, doughnuts, hot-dogs, and cider kegs, at least
a half a dozen times.
The wood-sawing contest did not materialize, but Dean Burns, substi-
tuting for any and all contests, addressed the eager group in his own inimi-
table manner.
President Baker, Dean Machmer, and several other members of the
executive and administrative staffs, took advantage of the opportunity to
enjoy the crisp, clean air of Mount Toby. The outing club members have good
reason to believe that next year the chapel bell shall, of its own accord,
choose one of those rare fall days as Mountain Day.
192
SOCIAL ACTIVITIES
n
fi
f^^ JpEKBlk
i^i^M.
Clark
Brayden
JUNIOR PROMENADE COMMITTEE
Sheldon P. Bliss
Walter E. Brayden
Albert F. Burgess, Jr.
Curtis M. Clark
Julian P. Griffin
Chaperones
Mr. and Mrs. Guy V. Glatfelter
Mr. and Mrs. Emory Grayson
Guests
Mr. and Mrs. Hugh P. Baker
Mr. and Mrs. William L. Machmer
JUNIOR PROM
Junior Prom! the highlight of the social season and certainly the most
memorable of this year's dances, was held on April twenty-seventh. For this
occasion the drill hall went sophisticated with black and white modernistic
effects. The musical scores of the evening were supplied by Phil Emerton and
his Diamonds. To add interest and a lasting memory of Prom, favors with the
state seal were given. Amidst all this magnificence a Prom queen and her
attendants were chosen. This was an innovation for which the 1 935 committee
was responsible and who knows but it may become a tradition!
The chaperones for this occasion, who also acted as judges of the reigning
beauty, were President and Mrs. Hugh P. Baker, Dean and Mrs. William L.
Machmer, Professor and Mrs. Guy V. Glatfelter, and Mr. and Mrs. Emory
Grayson.
Griffin
Harvey
Clark
SOPHOMORE-SENIOR HOP COMMITTEE
Curtis M. Clark
Raymond K. Evans
Julian P. Griffin
Edward W. Harvey
Walter O. Johnson
Chaperones
Mr. and Mrs. Guy V. Glatfelter
Mr. and Mrs. Emory Grayson
Guests
Mr. and Mrs. Hugh P. Baker
Mr. and Mrs. William L. Machmer
Sophomore-Senior Hop of June 1 1, 1933, was another successful dance
in the setting of a formal garden. The walls were covered with night blue,
with tall juniper trees placed at ten foot intervals. The main axis was termi-
nated by a statue of a Grecian goddess raised on a pedestal on the southern
wall. This statue and pedestal in turn were on a terrace about two feet high
running across the whole south end of the hall, on which the orchestra sat.
The minor axis was terminated by a bird-bath and sun dial. Entrance to the
Drill Hall was gained through the north door which led one out onto a veranda
covered with vines of English ivy and wistaria.
Two large box-wood trees stood at the edge of the veranda at the
entrance to the garden. The veranda and the terrace were closed in with small
white railings. These decorations in their simplicity were not too heavy and
consequently not depressing, but rather colorful and cool on that warm June
night.
The committee was fortunate in being able to obtain the music of Mai
Hallett. Mai was just coming out of retirement, so to speak. He had not been
heard around here for some time so he was really quite a drawing card. The
eccentric playing of the incomparable drummer and the peg-legged bull fid-
dler, along with the well rendered fast numbers, were the features of the dance.
Bigelow
Sievers
INFORMAL COMMITTEE
George H. Bigelow
Frederick G. Clark
Howard R. Sievers
Julian P. Griffin
Page L. Hiland
Informal Dances
September 29, 1933
November 10, 1933
November 25, 1933
December 9, 1933
December 19, 1933
January 6, 1934
February 9, 1934
April 14, 1934
196
MILITARY BALL
The annual Military Ball opened the formal dance season on January thirteenth. Those
present, including guests from other college Reserve Officers' Training Corps, danced in a
brilliant military setting. Overhead was a low ceiling which was a representation of an early
American flag. It was done in strips of red and white crepe paper; in one corner was the blue
background with the thirteen white stars placed upon it. The walls were covered with a deep
blue upon which were placed sets of crossed sabers. The decorations became particularly effec-
tive when, after the stirring grand march, the overhead lights were turned on and shone down
through the flag.
That very important feature of the evening — the music — was supplied by Bert Green
and his band of sixteen musicians. The chaperones included the members of the college staff
of the Reserve Officers' Training Corps. Those on the committees deserved much credit for a
splendid dance; they were;
Page Hiland, chairman, Douglas Daniels, Ambrose McGuckian, Russell Sturtevant, and
Albert Burgess.
MARDI GRAS
MardI Gras, which is the annual dance sponsored by the sophomore honor society, the
Maroon Key, was held this year on March ninth. It was decided that the dance should be
formal. The committee secured as an orchestra one which always finds favor on this campus,
that of Eddie Murphy of Worcester. In the true spirit of the original dance, the Drill Hall was
decorated in balloons and streamers of every imaginable color. A touch of individuality was
introduced by a huge maroon key and class numerals placed on a white background behind
the orchestra.
It was truly a gala affair and there are many couples who will remember the night "when
we danced at the Mardi Gras". The special committees who were largely responsible for the
success of the affair are as follows: General Chairman, Hamilton Gardner; Decorations, Dean
Glick and Leo Carbonneau; Orchestra, Al Dodge and Myles Boylan; Refreshments, Fred Murphy
and John Stewart; Tickets, Myles Boylan and Arthur Bixby.
INTERSORORITY FORMAL
The Intersorority Formal Dance which was held in Drill Hall on the thirteenth of April
was the first of the spring dances to be held on campus.
Among the interesting features of the dance was the novel scheme carried out in the
decorations. The entire hall was transformed into a' garden. Bright colored lanterns which
swung gaily above the dancers lent a festive air to the occasion; flowers entwining in white
trellises decorated the walls; and what appeared to be a stone wall with flowers at its base
proved to be chairs facing onto a pathway around the sides of the hall. The orchestra and the
patrons and patronesses sat in sections of the hall enclosed in white fences and having garden
furniture. Music was furnished by Ed Murphy and his orchestra. Nothing seemed to have been
forgotten; even the old stone well was there!
The patrons and patronesses, representing the four sororities which gave the dance, were
Mr. and Mrs. John Baker, Captain and Mrs. Hughes, Mr. and Mrs. Taube, and Dr. and Mrs.
Fraker.
The Committee which arranged the dance were! Sarah Peaslee, general chairman, Muriel
Brackett, decorations, Mildred Hovey, music, Marjorie Jensen, chaperones, Edith Smith,
refreshments.
INTERFRATERNITY BALL
Not just another formal dance, but a most successful example of cooperation was the
first Interfraternity Ball which took place on May 18, 1934. This affair was an experiment on
the part of the Interfraternity Council, and it is hoped that it will become an annual affair.
By cooperating, it was possible to obtain much better music for this spring dance than the
individual houses could obtain. Paul Tremaine's orchestra furnished the rhythm. This most
successful affair was the result of the efforts of Ambrose T. McGuckian, Roy T. Cowing, and
Julian P. Griffin.
■(^4
^ i( ■^
ATHLETICS
VARSITY COACHES
Lorin E. Ball, Hockey
Lawrence E. Briggs, Soccer
Llewellyn L. Derby, Cross Country, Winter Track, Spring Track
Melvin H. Taube, Football, Basketball, Baseball
Joseph R. Rogers, Jr., Swimming
JOINT COMMITTEE
ON INTERCOLLEGIATE ATHLETICS
OFFICERS
President ....... Dean William Machmer
Vice-President Mr. Cecil C. Rice
Secretary Mr. Earle S. Carpenter
Auditor . . . Mr. Frederick A, McLaughlin
Faculty Members
President Hugh P. Baker Prof. Curry S. Hicks
Mr. Earle S. Carpenter Dean William L. Machmer
Prof. Harold Gore Mr. Frederick A. McLaughlin
Mr. Cecil C. Rice
Student Members
Samuel P. Snow '35 Baseball William V. Schlaefer '35 Cross Country
Arthur C. Merrill, Jr. '34 Basketball William B. Esselen '34 Football
James J. Valentine '35 Hockey Alfred E. Cox, III '35 Soccer
Kenneth Steadman '35 Track
ATHLETIC AWARDS
Southern Alumni Baseball Cup
Won in 1933 by Louis J. Bush
Allan Leon Pond Memorial Medal
Won in 1934 by Louis J. Bush
George Henry Richards Memorial Cup
Won in 1934 by Malcolm C. Stewart
Cup for the Highest Foul-Shooting Percentage
Won in 1934 by William M. Davis
Varsity Club Hockey Plaque
Won in 1933 by Arthur E. Brown
Varsity Club Track Plaque
Won in 1933 by Forrest Crawford
200
CLASS OF 1934 LETTER MEN
Harry Bernstein
Nov.
932
Soccer
George H. Bigelow
Nov.
932-33
Football
David L. Bick
May 1
932
Track Manager
George A. Bourgeois
Nov.
931
Football
May
932
Track
Gerald T. Bowler
Nov.
933
Soccer
Chester C. Brown
June
931
Track
June
933
Track
Raymond F. Burke
Nov.
932-33
Football
Louis J. Bush
Nov.
931-32-33
Football
Mar. 1
932-33-34
Basketball
May
1932-33
Baseball
David W. Caird
Nov.
931-32-33
Cross Country
Greenleaf T. Chase
June
1933
Track
Frederick G. Clark
Nov.
931
Cross Country Manager
Joseph L. Coburn
Nov.
932
Football
Roy T. Cowing
Nov.
931-32-33
Soccer
William B. Esselen
Nov.
933
Football Manager
John B. Farrar
Nov.
931
Cross Country
May 1
932-33
Baseball
Everett B. Fletcher
Mar.
932
Basketball
Wilho Frigard
Nov.
931-32-33
Football
Mar.
933-34
Basketball
May 1
932-33
Baseball
Norman B. Griswold
Nov.
932
Football
Ralph J. Henry
Mar.
932-33-34
Hockey
Robert C. Jackson
Nov.
931-32-33
Soccer
William Kozlowski
Nov.
931-32-33
Soccer
Elliot Landsman
Nov.
932-33
Soccer
Charles A. LeClair
Mar.
933
Hockey Manager
Joseph Lojko
Nov.
931-32-33
Football
Mar.
932-33-34
Basketball
June
933
Baseball
James P. MacKimmie
Nov.
931-32-33
Soccer
Ambrose T. McGuckian
Nov.
933
Football
Mar.
933-34
Hockey
Carlton A. MacMackin
May 1
932
Track
David C. Mountain
Nov.
931-32-33
Football
Aaron W. Newton
Nov.
932
Cross Country Manager
James N. Reynolds
Mar.
932
Basketball
Alvan S. Ryan
Nov.
931-32-33
Football
Mar.
932
Track
June
933
Track
James A. Sibson
Nov.
931-32-33
Football
June
932
Baseball
Howard R. Sievers
Nov.
931-32-33
Football
Mar.
933
Basketball
Donald H. Smith
Nov.
931-32-33
Football
Russell Snow
Mar.
932-33-34
Hockey
Nov.
931
Cross Country
Malcolm C. Stewart
May
932
Track
Mar.
934
Basketball
Edward J. Talbot
Nov.
1932-33
Soccer
Russell E. Taft
Nov.
1932
Soccer
Joseph F. Zielinski
June
1933
Baseball
CLASS OF 1935 LETTER MEN
Robert J. Allen
James W. Blackburn
Roger T. Blackburn
William C. Brown
Curtis M. Clark
John J. Consolatti
Frederick L. Corcoran
Alfred E. Cox
Howard R. Dobbie
Clayton H. George
Victor S. Guzowski
Richard W. Hubbard
Robert P. Hunter
Roger K. Leavitt
Silas Little, Jr.
William P. Mulhall
Robert V. Murray
Edward B. Nassif
Peter A. Nietupski
Ralph Norris
Phillip Robinson
Paul W. Schaffner
Glenn F. Shaw
Walter Stepat
Adolph E. Tikofski
Emil J. Tramposch
Robert H. Wood
Mar.
1933
Track
Nov.
933
Soccer
Mar.
933
Hockey
Mar.
933
Hockey
Nov.
933
Soccer
Nov.
933
Football
June
933
Baseball
Mar.
933
Hockey
Nov.
933
Soccer
Nov.
932
Soccer
Nov.
933
Soccer
June
933
Track
Nov.
932-33
Football
Nov.
933
Cross Country
Nov.
933
Soccer
Nov.
932-33
Football
Nov.
932
Cross Country
Nov.
932-33
Football
Nov.
932
Cross Country
June
933
Track
Mar.
933
Basketball
Nov.
932-33
Football
Nov.
933
Soccer
Nov.
933
Cross Country
Nov.
933
Football
Mar.
933
Track
June
933
Track
Nov.
933
Cross Country
June
933
Baseball
Nov.
933
Football
Nov.
933
Track
Nov.
933
Soccer
CLASS OF 1936 LETTER MEN
Ralph T. Adams
Elmer H. Allen
Philip Becker
Gordon H. Bishop
James Davidson
Carl F. Dunker
Donald H. Hazelhuhn
Emil J. Koenig
Raymond U. Proctor
Edward J. Souillere
John W. Stewart
John Sturtevant
Ralph F. Sweinberger
Nov. 1933
Nov. 1933
Nov. 1933
Nov. 1933
Nov. 1933
Nov. 1933
Nov. 1933
Nov. 1933
Nov. 1933
Nov. 1933
Nov. 1933
Nov. 1933
Nov. 1933
Football
Football
Soccer
Cross Country
Soccer
Cross Country
Soccer
Football
Cross Country
Football
Football
Football
Soccer
202
INTERCLASS ATHLETIC BOARD
OFFICERS
President
Vice-President .
Secretary
Faculty Adviser
Donald H. Smith '34
Albert W. Dodge '36
Members
Carl P. Swanson '37
Theodore M. Leary '35
Louis J. Bush '34
George A. Vassos '36
. Lawrence E. Briggs
Curtis M. Clark '35
Austin W. Fisher '37
The purpose of the INTERCLASS BOARD is to promote the athletic
interests of the undergraduate classes. The governing board consists of two
representatives of each class of the student body, and a member of the
Physical Education Department as an advisor. The board has supervision over
all interclass contests and the awarding of class numerals.
1933-34 SWIMMING TEAM
Joseph R. Rogers, Jr.
Members
Arthur C. Merrill, Jr. '34
David C. Mountain '34
Fred J. Nisbet '34
Frank A. Batstone '34
Richard M. Brown '34
Wilbur G. Tirrell '35
Albert B. Hovey '35
Robert F. Libbey '35
The high scorer of the year was Web
Mountain was second with 15 points and Me
Tirrell holds the college records in the "50'
style; the "100", and "150" yard backstroke
medley.
Coach
John C. Eldridge '35
Sulo J. Tani '35
Merrill S. Hobart '36
Harry D. Pratt '36
Milton E. Chase '36
James R. Clarke '36
Richard H. Lake '36
Milton R. Snow '36
Tirrell with 31 points. Dave
rrill third with 13 points. Web
"100", and "220" yard free
and the "300" yard individual
LI ^9 40 |e ,^ J^ .. 3^ 34 1^
J 24 49 25 22 4S 41 19 30 j^
Grayson Mulhall Murphy Eaton Gumming Shulkin Guzowski Hartin Barrows Ryan Taube
Boylan Koenig Bigelow Sievers Allen Baldwin Mountain Sturtevant Krasnoff Smith Esselen
Soulliere Tikofski McGuckian Leavitt Rose Lojko Stewart Moran Jackimczyk Shaffner
^lietupski Frigard Consolati Adams Burke Bush Baizman Whittaker Rutstein McKelligott
Griswold
1933 FOOTBALL TEAM
Captain .
Manager
Coach
Assistant Coaches
David C. Mountain
Howard R. Sievers
Roger K, Leavitt
Emil J. Koenig
Paul W. Shaffner
William P. Mulhall
Donald H. Smith
George H. Bigelow
John W. Stewart
Louis J. Bush
Wilho Frigard
Joseph Lojko
Edward J. Soulliere
End '34
Tackle '34
Guard '35
Center '36
Guard '35
Tackle '35
End '34
Quarterback '34
Halfback '35
Halfback '34
Fullback '34
Quarterback '34
Halfback '36
. Louis J. Bush
William B. Esselen, Jr.
Melvin H. Taube
Emory Grayson, Clifford R. Foskett
John J. Consolati
Halfback
'35
Adolph E. Tikofski
Halfback
'35
Elmer H. Allen
Fullback
'36
Alvan S. Ryan
End
'34
Victor S. Guzowski
Tackle
'35
Raymond F. Burke
Guard
'34
James A. Sibson
Guard
'34
Jack Sturtevant
Center
'36
Norman B. Griswold
Center
'34
Peter A. Nietupski
Guard
'35
Roderick W. Gumming
Tackle
'35
Ralph T. Adams
End
'36
Ambrose T. McGuckian
End
'34
1933 FOOTBALL SEASON
M. S. C. 0pp.
M. S. C. Opp.
Bowdoin at Alumni Field
Connecticut State at Alumni Field
Rhode Island at Kingston
Worcester Tech at Worcester
14
Amherst at Pratt Field
14
40
7
St. Anselm's at Manchester
7
14
12
Rensselaer Tech at Troy
20
6
20
6
Tufts at Alumni Field
14
204
1933 FOOTBALL SEASON
Although the Massachusetts State College varsity football eleven was handicapped con-
siderably by injuries to its great back and captain, Lou Bush, the Statesmen completed a season
of five victories and three losses. Playing a variation of the Notre Dame style of football. Head
Coach Taube's team won seven, lost one and tied one in 1931, while last year's eleven con-
quered their opponents in seven of the nine contests.
After the opening game with Cooper Union had been cancelled, the Statesmen commenced
the gridiron season with a smashing victory over the highly-touted Polar Bears of Bowdoin Col-
lege on Alumni Field, 14-0. In the middle of the second period, Johnny Stewart, sophomore
halfback and later to be a regular on the undefeated Maroon and White basketball five, hurled
a beautiful 20-yard pass to Captain Lou Bush, who raced thirty yards for the score. In the
third session, Captain Bush led a 76-yard drive down the field, the Statesmen completing a
score when Stewart plunged over for the second touchdown. Bill Frigard, husky full back, con-
verted both points after touchdowns. The brilliant victory over Bowdoin was saddened by an
injury to Captain Bush, which handicapped the clever Maroon and White leader the remainder
of the season.
With Bush and most of the first-string regulars sitting on the bench, the Statesmen
romped to an easy win over a weak Connecticut State eleven on Alumni Field as the feature
of Dad's Day program, 40-7. Two touchdowns were scored in the first quarter. Bill Frigard
plunging over for the first, and Adams receiving a pass over the goal line from Soulliere for the
second six-pointer. In the middle of the second period, Elmer Allen, lanky sophomore fullback,
scored on a line play for the Taubemen, and a few minutes later Al Ryan chalked up the fourth
touchdown on a pass. During the final half. State scored but twice, Consolatti and Rutstein
carrying the ball over the last white line.
After a bitter struggle, the Statesmen finally outfought a stubborn Rhode Island State
eleven to conquer, 14-12. Rhode Island scored first in the game, Fisher carrying the ball over
the goal line, but his team mate, Keany failed to convert the extra point. Just before the
whistle for the end the first half. Bush hurled a 40-yard pass to Binka Smith for a touchdown
and Frigard kicked the extra point. After Bush had hurled a lateral pass to Frigard for the
second touchdown, and Frigard had again converted the extra point, Rhode Island began a
determined drive down the field which resulted in a second touchdown. Fisher, however, failed
to convert the point.
Led by Captain Lou Bush, the Statesmen chalked up the fourth straight win of the season,
with a decisive victory over an ancient rival, Worcester Tech. 20-6. After the Engineers had
held the Taubemen in check in the first period, Lou Bush entered the fray and immediately
scored a touchdown. After several exchanges of punts, Bush carried the ball over from the
three-yard line for the second Maroon and White touchdown. Bill Frigard kicked both extra
points. After Swenson had scored for Worcester Tech in the third quarter. Bush raced around
end for the final State touchdown.
Seeking its third straight victory over Amherst College, the Statesmen were outplayed and
overpowered by a superior Sabrina eleven in a desperate contest at Pratt Field, 13-0. The
Maroon and White warriors threatened to score but once when Lou Bush advanced the ball to
the Amherst 16-yard line. The Statesmen's offense was handicapped considerably by injury to
Lou Bush and Johnny Stewart earlier in the game, the Taubemen scoring but four first downs
to I 3 for Amherst.
The Maroon and White eleven suffered its second straight loss of the season, when St.
Anselm's conquered the Taubemen in a closely fought game, 7-0. Play during the entire con-
test was hard and even, but in the final minute of the game, a substitute halfback for St.
Anselm's raced 90 yards for the lone touchdown.
With Captain Lou Bush leading a brilliant offensive attack, the Statesmen conquered a
strong Rensselaer eleven 20-6. A few minutes after the opening, of the game. State carried the
ball to the three-yard line and Bush plunged over for his first touchdown, and Stewart kicked
the extra point. Bush, scored again in the second quarter on a 40-yard run and Stewart tallied
the third touchdown for State just before the half ended. Rensselaer fought desperately and
managed to score a lone touchdown in the final period.
State closed the season with a defeat at the hands of its rival. Tufts, on Alumni Field,
13-0. The Statesmen got into difficulty immediately when Frigard fumbled in the first quarter
and Tufts recovered and scored a touchdown. Just before the half closed. Tufts scored again
on a line plunge. The play during the second half was furious and hard, but the Maroon and
White backs could not penetrate the Jumbo defense.
The work of Captain Lou Bush at halfback, Donald Smith at end, and Paul Shaffner fea-
tured the Statesmen's contests during the season. Paul Shaffner, brilliant 165-lb. guard, was
elected captain of the 1 934 Maroon and White grid forces. Captain Bush was chosen on the
all-opponent teams of Tufts, Rhode Island, and St. Anselm's. Donald Smith was honored by
Tufts as the best end the Jumbos faced all season, while Paul Shaffner was selected at guard
on the all-opponent eleven of St. Anselm's. Bush, Smith, Ryan, Mountain, Sievers, McGuckian,
Lojko, Frigard, Burke, Sibson, Griswold, Bigelow are lost by graduation.
205
.ear Row; Left to Right.
Briggs, Sanford, Goddard, Boynton, Carey, Malloch, Levine, Hurwitz, Kaufman, Liberfarb,
othrop, Conners, Cox, Klickstein, Hermanson.
econd Row:
Blackburn, Landsman, MacKimmIe, Jackson, Kozlowski, Talbot, Davidson, Wood, Bowler,
ront Row;
Hunter, Haselhuhn, Sweinberger, Norris, Clark, George, Riseman.
1933 SOCCER TEAM
Captain .
Manager
. Roy T. Cowing
. Alfred E. Cox, III
Assistant Manager .
Harlow Hermanson
Coach
Lawrence E. Briggs
Position
Varsity
Junior Varsity
Goal
Dobbie
Norris
Sanford
Fullback
Cowing
Wood
Sweinberger
Malloch
Center Halfback
Blackburn
Goddard
Right Halfback
Talbot
Seredensky
Lothrop
Left Halfback
Landsman
Doyle
Ryan
Outside Right
MacKimmie
Carey
Riseman
Inside Right
Davidson
Levine
Miller
Center Forward
Jackson
Haselhuhn
Arenberg
Outside Left
Kozlowski
Pearlmutter
Inside Left
Hunter
Liberfarb
206
1933
SOCCER SEASON
RECORD
Massachusetts State
3
Worcester Tech
1
Home
Won
Massachusetts State
1
Trinity
3
Home
Lost
Massachusetts State
4
Tufts
1
Away
Won
Massachusetts State
Amherst
1
Away
Lost
Massachusetts State
Dartmouth
1
Away
Lost
Massachusetts State
3
Connecticut State
2
Away
Won
Massachusetts State
4
15
Wesleyan
1
10
Away
Won
Won 4 Lost 3
VARSITY SOCCER
Despite the fact that they faced the stiffest opposition ever to be
encountered by a State College Soccer Team, the State booters came through
with flying colors. A record of four wins and three losses against such opposi-
tion as Worcester Tech, Trinity, Tufts, Amherst, Dartmouth,, Connecticut
State, and Wesleyan is creditable. The Worcester game, as the season's
opener, was just another game to the State boys who had little trouble winning
by a score 3 to 1 . The following week. Trinity set the cocky State booters back
on their heels, winning handily by a 3 to 1 score. This defeat by a club they
had underrated was the best thing that could have happened to the Briggsmen,
for the next week they proceeded to plaster a 4 to 1 defeat upon Tufts and
thereafter displayed a determined brand of soccer. The varsity booters lost
two heartbreakers to Amherst and Dartmouth by 1 to scores, but not through
lack of fight. Then came the Connecticut State Game. In the face of a cold
wind, the Briggsmen fought through to a 3 to 2 win against the best club
that Connecticut State has yet produced. The Wesleyan game, which closed
the season, was a true test of State's ability. On a field covered with three
inches of snow, the Maroon and White booters swamped a Wesleyan team
which had held Yale to a to tie, by a 4 to 1 score.
The prosaic recording of the team's accomplishments, however, does not
give a true picture of the team. Their outstanding characteristic was the fact
that they played their best, win or lose. They showed ability to come from
behind and win and they capitalized their opportunities to good advantage.
Always aggressive, they were quick to anticipate opponents' plays and they
played more aggressive soccer than any of their predecessors who bore State's
banners.
The team loses seven seniors by graduation. Captain Cowing, Kozlowski,
Jackson, MacKimmie, Talbot, Landsman, and Bowler, and the playing of each
one deserves special mention. Cowing stood out as one of the best fullbacks
in State's history, a sure kicker, a good organizer and a leader who stood up
under pressure. His absence next year will be felt greatly. Kozlowski was a
clever player who played without grumbling, any position he was asked to, if
he thought that by so doing he would help the team. Always seeming to score
when we needed it most, he proved a very valuable asset to the team. Bob
Jackson rates as the best center forward to date at State and the leading
scorer over a period of three years. Jimmy MacKimmie was the lightest man
on the team but always the best dribbler on the field. His accurate passes
were responsible for many a score. Ed Talbot was prominent as the spark
plug of the team. When the going was hard, it was Ed's inspiring yelling that
aroused his team-mates to action, and his long boots that enabled the defense
to recover. Eli Landsman was an excellent passer. A very fast man, he sized
plays up well and worked hard every minute he was in the game. Jerry Bowler
was a hard worker who improved each year.
Under the leadership of Captain-Elect Jimmy Blackburn, the team is
looking forward to a successful season for 1934.
Lewis
Proctor
Hubbard
Caird
Allen
Stepat
1933 CROSS COUNTRY SEASON
Captain .
Manager .
Coach
Varsity Lettermen
Richard Hubbard '35
Walter Stepat '35
Gordon Bishop '36
Carl Dunker '34
Raymond Proctor '36
Scores of the Races:
. David W. Caird '34
. Phillip Robinson '35
Llewellyn L. Derby
Junior Varsity
Charles Daniels '35
William Jordan '35
Roger Allen '36
Robert Clark '36
Louis deWilde '36
William Johnston '36
Walter Lewis '36
M. S. C. 22, Tufts 33
M. S. C. 17, St. Stephen's 38
M. S. C. 26, Northeastern 30
W. P. I. 27, M. S, C. 28
M. S. C. 191/2, Williams 351/2
New England Intercollegiates, 8th
208
The 1933 varsity harriers go down on the records as a team that missed
a clean slate due to a one-point defeat in one of their five races; but any team
that wins four out of five races as did this one, must be ranked as a highly
successful outfit.
Dave Caird, the club's leader, was the only letter man to report as the
season got underway; but it was apparent to Coach Derby in the opening meet
with Tufts, won 22-33, that the Statesmen possessed possibilities. Caird,
Stepat and Proctor tied for first honors against the Jumbos, and Dunker and
Bishop followed to make the winning margin greater.
St. Stephen's fell next before the Derbymen by a 1 7-38 score as the team
captured five of the first six places. Northeastern was expected to furnish
stiff opposition and did not disappoint; but Stepat finally won a duel with
Stimpson of the Huskies for first honors, and his teammates finished close
enough behind him to eke out a 26-30 victory. Stepat continued to win first
place as State met Worcester Tech the following week, but the Engineers ran
away with the team score, 27-28. An unfortunate mixup as to finish of the
race probably cost M. S. C. a victory.
Gregory of Williams and Stepat ran practically the entire race at Wil-
liamstown side by side and finished in a dead heat, although the Statesmen
as a team easily walked off with a 19^2-35^2 win. Dick Hubbard steadily
improved as the season progressed and finished in fourth place in this meet.
Captain Caird is the only runner to be lost by graduation. State should
have an excellent prospect for next season in Polhemus, captain of the
yearling harriers, who finished in third place in the New England Inter-
collegiate freshman race.
209
L
fs
Wlhry
I Valentine J A.
Bull
Corcoran
Murphy
Snow Henry
b^own
Blackburn
Keil
Valentine J. J.
Captain
Manager
Coach
VARSITY HOCKEY— 1934
. Russell L. Snow
James J. Valentine
Lorin E. Ball
Team
I. w. Ralph J. Henry, William C. Brown — c. Russell L. Snow, Roger T.
Blackburn — r. w. Frederick L. Corcoran, Benjamin J. Wihry, Joseph F. Keil
— I. d. Fred J. Murphy — r. d. Frederick K. Bull — g. Ambrose T. McGuckian,
James A. Valentine.
Schedule
Date
M. S. C.
Opponents
Jan. 5
Brown at Providence
5
Jan. 12
M. 1. T. at Boston
2
4
Jan. 19
Williams at Williamstown
1
10
Jan. 20
Hamilton at Clinton
2
Jan. 24
New Hampshire at Durham
1
6
Jan. 27
Army at West Point
2
3
Feb. 3
Middlebury at Middlebury
2
3
Feb. 7
Northeastern at M. S. C.
4
8
1934 HOCKEY SEASON
Lack of practice, a scarcity of experienced replacements, the loss of
Cain, Hammond and Brown by graduation, and the unfortunate injury of
McGuckian, veteran goalie, in the Tech game, which ended his playing career,
were the outstanding causes for an unsuccessful ice season, the Maroon and
White hockey sextet losing every game on the schedule, for a record of eight
consecutive losses.
Although the team did not win a single game, the progress of the
Massachusetts State skaters through the season showed a remarkable im-
provement in every game, and a splendid display of fighting spirit and a
refusal to bow without a struggle before stronger opponents.
After a month of winter in which the varsity puckmen were able to find
only one day suitable for practice conditions, the Ballmen journeyed to
Providence and lost its first game to a powerful Brown sextet, 5-0. Captain
Russ Snow continually threatened the Brown goal but could never penetrate
far enough into the Bruins defense to score. Mac McGuckian, veteran goalie,
played brilliantly and turned in over thirty saves.
Following the defeat in Providence, the hockey team was not able to
practice before it journeyed to Boston to lose a hard-fought game to Massa-
chusetts Institute of Technology, 4-2. The Tech game was a costly one for the
Maroon and White skaters, for McGuckian received severe injuries and was
lost to the varsity for the remainder of the season. In the third period,
McGuckian, who had previously made sensational saves, was struck in the face
by a puck after a melee in front of the Massachusetts State goal. McGuckian
was rushed to a hospital where an examination showed that the Maroon and
White goalie had sustained several fractured bones in his face. Valentine, a
sophomore, without previous varsity experience, replaced McGuckian, and
turned in a creditable performance for the remainder of the game.
In the third contest, the Statesmen were completely swamped by a strong
Williams six, 10-1. However, the spirit of the team was not dampened, for
the following night in Clinton, N. Y., the Ballmen lost a hard fought game to
Hamilton, a team with a better record than Williams. Captain Snow at center,
and Henry and Wihry at wings, played brilliantly for the Statesmen.
The Massachusetts State skaters lost the fifth straight of the season
when New Hampshire turned back the Statesmen, 6-1. After this stunning
defeat the Ballmen journeyed to West Point and played brilliant hockey to
lose to the Army sextet, 3-2. After Middlebury had administered another
setback to the Ballmen, 4-2, Massachusetts State closed the season by losing
to Northeastern, 8-4.
The team will lose by graduation, Captain Snow at center, Ralph Henry
at wing, and McGuckian, veteran goalie. Captain Snow led the Maroon and
White offense this year in the number of goals scored and played a prominent
part in the State attack. Snow and Henry received commendation for their
play during the season by the Boston Transcript. The prospects for a success-
ful season next winter are excellent, with many freshmen stars as potential
varsity material. Roger Blackburn, husky junior who played a good game at
center, will lead the Maroon and White skaters next winter.
211
Aerrill Stewart M. Nassif Al
Frigard Stewart J. Bush
McConchie Muller
Lojko Jaworski Dav
Thayer Taube
Consolati
BASKETBALL
Coach ......
Melvin H. Taube
Captain ......
Manager ......
Joseph Lojko
Arthur C. Merrill
Te
am
Forward ......
Louis J. Bush '34
Forward ......
John Stewart '36
Center ......
William Davis '35
Guard ......
Guard ......
Joseph Lojko '34
Ernest Jaworski '35
Substitutes
Center ......
McConchie
Guard ......
Allen
Guard ......
Frigard
Forward ......
Nassif
Forward ......
M. Stewart
Forward ......
Muller
Forward ......
Forward . . .
Thayer
Consolati
Scores
Date M. S. C. Opp.
Jan. 11 Middlebury atM. S. C. 35 31
Date
Feb. 16
NewH
Scores
M. S. C. Opp.
smpshire at M. S. C. 34 30
15 Connecticut State at Storrs 37 31
17
Brown
3t Providence 42 33
19 Amherst at Amherst 43 38
23
Pratt Inst, at M. S. C. 40 35
22 Williams at Williamstown 45 35
Feb. 10 R. 1. State at M. S. C. 48 46
24
28
Wesley
Tufts a
an at Middletown 39 31
t Medford 29 27
14 Amherst atM. S. C. 28 27
Mar. 3
W. P. 1
at Worce
ter 43 33
212
BASKETBALL
With four veterans, Bush, Lojko, Frigard, and Nassif as a nucleus, and
with Davis a transfer from Purdue, the Stewart brothers — John a sophomore,
and Malcolm a senior, Jaworski a sub on last year's team, and McConchie a
sophomore, there seemed to be ample material to carry on the season.
The 1934 basketball season started off with a bang as the team under
the direction of coach "Mel" Taube defeated Middlebury on the home floor
with a score of 35-31 .
The Connecticut game was comparatively easy and unimportant except
that it was then that the best clicking combination was first discovered —
Bush, Stewart, Davis, Lojko, and Jaworski. The score at Connecticut was 37-31 .
Then came the first of the two games with Amherst. It was a pleasure to
watch the smoothly working, yet fast and accurate State team as it turned
in a 43-38 score.
After winning from Williams at Williamstown 43-35 in a high scoring
game in which Lou Bush made 23 points for the Statesmen, the team had a
three weeks lay-off due to a re-arrangement of schedule and exam week.
The first game after the rest was with Rhode Island State in the cage.
This was the first of a series of thrillers which followed. After threatening
several times during the game, the visitors finally tied our score and sent the
game into an overtime period. R. I. scored a field goal. Then Davis got into
action with a trio of baskets and with one by Stewart, State won by the score
48-46.
In the second game with Amherst, the visitors were anxious to avenge
the previous defeat. It was anybody's game up to the last minute of play
when a basket by Lojko gave the Taubemen a 28-27 decision.
Two nights later, we met the University of New Hampshire in the cage
and defeated their team by a narrow margin, 34-30.
To complete a busy week the Maroon and White met Brown at Provi-
dence on the following night. It was an easy victory giving the Maroon and
White a 42-33 victory. In this game, however, Ernie Jaworski received the
shoulder injury which affected his shooting the rest of the season.
With eight straight victories and four games to go, we were next hosts
to a strong New York team, Pratt Institute. In the first half Pratt outscored
the Statesmen 24-16, but as they were determined to continue their un-
defeated record, the Statesmen came back with a high second scoring half
and won 40-35.
The Wesleyan game the following day was won easily by a score of
39-31 with Bush again as high scorer.
The Tufts game was easily the most exciting game of the season. Those
who were fortunate enough to go to Medford, to see that game, saw the
Statesmen come from the short end of a 27-17 score in the last 7 minutes
of play, up to a final victory of 29-24.
One game to go for a perfect season. Worcester Tech at Worcester was
the final contest. The team worked smoothly and accurately. Beautiful feed
passes — Lojko to Bush and brilliant plays by Davis were features of the Tech
game, the final score being 43-33.
Twelve straight victories! What a satisfaction for any team! We're glad
it could be that way in the last college basketball game for Bush, Lojko,
Frigard and Malcolm Stewart. What a satisfaction for the coach of the team!
What a remarkable exhibition of sportsmanship, teamwork, and spirit in that
championship basketball team.
Entwistle Tikofski Leary
Consolati Wallace Jaworski
Frigard Farrar Sheff White
Zielinski
Taube
Pease Sibson
Wihry
Kovaleski Lojko
Bush
BASEBALL SQUAD 1933
Captain
Manager
Coach
Louis J. Bush
John J. Consolati
John B. Farrar
Wilho Frigard
John Kovaleski
Ernest A. Jaworski
Joseph Lojko
MEMBERS
Joseph F. Zielinski
Maurice F. White
Charles C. Entwistle
Melvin H. Taube
Theodore M. Leary
Howard E. Pease
Joseph J. Sheff
James A. Sibson
Adolph E. Tikofski
Donald A. Wallace
Benjamin J. Wihry
SUMMARY OF 1933 SCORES
April
May
of the 1933 season Mass
. State
0pp.
Scores
i of the 1 933 season
Mass
. State.
Opi
22 Williams here
2
7
May
17
Amherst there
3
4
27 Providence there
1
7
20
Tufts here
1
7
29 Worcester Tech here
17
1
23
Trinity here
4
3
6 Conn. State here
5
3
25
Northeastern there
15
5
1 2 Springfield there
14
4
27
Union there
1
5
1 3 Wesleyan there
8
3
June
10
Amherst here
12
VARSITY BASEBALL 1933
With a smashing victory over Amherst College before a large Commencement crowd on
Alumni Field, 12-0 the Massachusetts State baseball nine completed a season of seven vic-
tories and five losses. Other highlights of a successful season were the defeat by the Statesmen
of Worcester Tech, 17-1, a 14-4 victory over Springfield, and a decisive win over North-
eastern in Boston, 15-5.
At the start of the 1933 diamond season. Coach Mel Taube was faced with the difficult
task of finding regular hurlers to take over the duties of John Tikofski and George Cain,
two right banders who turned in brilliant mound duty for the Statesmen in the previous season,
but who had graduated. Coach Taube finally selected John Kovaleski a senior and a right
hander, to assume the role of starting pitcher. Kovaleski was aided during the season by two
juniors, Ben Wihry and A. Tikofski, and the three moundsmen turned in some very creditable
mound performances for the Maroon and White nine.
After the opening game with Clark had been canceled because of rain, Massachusetts
State opened the season with Williams, on Alumni Field. Williams scored four runs in the
third inning to assure a victory over the Taubemen, 7-4. The Statesmen pounded out five
hits off the delivery of Heermance and Filley while the Williams batters connected for a total
of seven hits off three State pitchers. The Maroon and White infield played excellent defens-
ive baseball, committing but two errors against three for Williams.
The Taubemen met a smarting defeat at the hands of a strong Providence College nine
in its second game of the season, the Friars making eight hits for seven runs, while the
Statesmen garnered but one run and no hits. Massachusetts State scored its only run in the
third inning when Farrar walked, was saved at second on an error, and scored when Marion,
Providence outfielder, let a wild throw get by him. Lou Bush played a brilliant game at short-
stop for the Taubemen, handling eleven chances without an error.
The Maroon and White nine won its first game of the season when the Taubemen
pounded out sixteen hits to defeat a weak Worcester Tech team, 17-1. Joe Sheff, center-
fielder, and Johnny Consolati, rightfielder, drove out three hits apiece to divide the batting
honors for the Statesmen.
Although Connecticut State rallied in the eighth inning to score three runs, the Massa-
chusetts State nine defeated the Nutmeggers on Alumni Field, 5-3. The game was played in
a drizzling rain but was witnessed by a large crowd of High School Day guests. Lou Bush,
featured for the Taubemen, having three hits in three trips to the plate for a perfect day, and
handling six chances without an error at shortstop. Kovaleski, hurled an excellent game for the
Taubemen, allowing but six hits.
The Statesmen continued their winning streak to four straight with decisive wins over
Springfield and Wesleyan. In the Springfield contest, the Taubemen pounded the opposing
hurlers at will, and scored 14 runs to but four for the Maroon nine. Next, the Massachusetts
State nine journeyed to Middletown and handed a strong Wesleyan team, an 8-3 setback.
With a record of four wins and two losses, the Taubemen played Amherst at Pratt
Field, but were unsuccessful, the Sabrina nine winning, a hard-fought contest, 4-3. Kovaleski,
allowed but nine hits to the Amherst batters, while the Statesmen connected for six, two by
Farrar, veteran catcher, and two by Zielinski, Maroon and White first sacker. The feature
of the game was a homerun by Kovaleski.
In the Tufts contest, the Jumbo athletes pounded Tikofski for ten solid blows, while
the Taubemen connected for seven hits off the offerings of Brown, the Jumbos winning, 7-1.
Joe Sheff, slugging Maroon and White centerfielder, led the Taubemen with two hits, while
Lou Bush, played brilliantly at shortstop.
The Taubemen swung back into the winning streak with victories over Trinity, 4-3,
and Northeastern, 15-5. John Kovaleski pitched brilliantly against Trinity and the Statesmen
won easily. In the Northeastern contest. Coach Taube used three pitchers and made the
game safe by scoring six runs in the second inning. Bush and Farrar led the State attack, the
flashy shortstop smashing out three of the team's sixteen hits, while Farrar made two hits
and scored three runs. After the Northeastern game, the Taubemen journeyed to New York
State and lost a hard-fought game to Union, 5-1.
With the thrilling 18-0 rout of the ancient rival, Amherst, in the final game of the
season, played on Alumni Field before a large commencement crowd, the Statesmen closed a
successful season, having won seven games and lost five.
215
Tramposch Guenard Little Brown Allen Guzowski Derby
Gumming Murray Caird Chase Ryan Shaw MacMackin Trask
McGuckian Brown Stephan Pruyne Grawford Crosby Gillette
1933 VARSITY SPRING TRACK TEAM
Captain
Manager
Coach
Chester Brown
Forrest Crawford
David Caird
Greenleaf Chase
Robert Allen
Willard Boynton
George Bozian
William Brown
Roderick Cumming
Willard Gillette
MEMBERS
Class of 1933
Class of 1934
Granville S. Pruyne
Emil J. Tramposch
Llewellyn L. Derby
David Crosby
Philip Stephan
Ambrose McGuckian
Carleton MacMackin
Alvan Ryan
Class of 1935
Edward Guenard
Victor Guzowski
Silas Little
Robert Murray
Glen Shaw
Owen Trask
SPRING TRACK RESULTS— 1933
Tufts 71 Vi, M. S. C. 631/2
Worcester Tech 94, M. S. C. 41
M. S. C. 71, Conn. State 64
Trinity 87, M. S. C. 38
Eastern Intercollegiates, 12 points, 7th place
New England Intercollegiates, no points scored
SPRING TRACK— 1933
The team won one out of four dual meets. The State team's style was cramped in the first
meet with Tufts as Crawford was unable to compete, and events in which he might easily have
placed were taken over by Tufts runners, to give the Jumbo a victory by eight points.
M. S. C. lost the services of its captain, Gran Pruyne, the following week in the meet
with Worcester Tech when he hit a hurdle and wrenched an ankle that put him out of com-
petition the remainder of the season. As he had started off with a 1 1 -point contribution in
the Tufts meet, his absence was keenly felt.
However, there were some bright spots in the season. Although unable to practice regularly,
Crawford ran the quarter mile against Connecticut and together with two teammates, swept
the event to help his team top the Nutmeggers, 71-64. Another noteworthy performance was
that of Greenleaf Chase in the high jump against Tufts when he set a new record of 5 ft. 8%
in. He also tied for first place at the Eastern Intercollegiate in this event with Kellam of Trinity.
Still another outstanding bit was contributed by Stephan who raced through the low hurdles in
the meet with Worcester Tech in 27 sec. to tie the record held by Woodworth '23. Murray
enjoyed a good season in the half mile, winning this event in three dual meets as well as at
the Eastern Intercollegiates. Others who carried on well were Caird in the two mile, Gillette in
the mile. Bill Brown in the low hurdles. Gumming in the discus and shot put. Ryan in the pole
vault, Guzowski in the hammer, Shaw in the broad jump and Art Brown in the javelin.
1934 WINTER TRACK
Captain .......... Alvan Ryan '34
MEMBERS
Class of 1934
Greenleaf Chase Robert Jackson
Edwin Steffek
Class of 1935
Roderick Cumming Walter Mozden
Abraham Feinberg Raymond Siira
Edward Guenard Glen Shaw
Walter Stepat
Class of 1936
Allin Battles Theodore Kerr
Melvin Frank Robert Lincoln
Frank Greenwood Howard Parker
Richard Kennett Raymond Proctor
Despite the fact that the relay team did not come out ahead in any one of its three races
and the indoor track team won but one of its three dual meets, the season was one distinguished
by hard work and but for one or two "breaks" that upset calculations, the record might have
been somewhat better.
Shaw, Lincoln, Battles and Kerr ran in that order on the relay team and after finishing
behind Rhode Island State and Worcester Tech at the K. of C. meet came back to Boston
two weeks later and although leading most of the race, lost out to Boston University but
defeated Tufts at the B. A. A. meet. State was matched with B. U. and Tufts at the University
Club meet the next week and defeated them handily but could not match strides with a fourth
opponent, Colby, who was slipped into the race at the last moment. Shaw and Kerr were the
outstanding runners of the quartet.
Although the team as a whole showed splendid spirit, the work of Stepat, Kerr and Shaw
featured the dual meet schedule. In the first two meets with Boston University and Worcester
Tech, Shaw won the 300 and 600 yard runs on each occasion and his time in the "600" against
Worcester Tech, 1 min. 21.3 sec, displaced the old record of 1 min. 21.4 sec, held jointly
by MacCreedy '23 and Mostrom '16.
Stepat won the mile and 1000 yard run against B. U. and repeated a win in the
mile and a second in the "1000" against W. P. 1. but his finest performance of the season
was reserved for the Connecticut State meet. He lost the mile by the margin of a few inches
but the race was the most exciting one of the season. Due to the closeness of the race a fifth
of a second was added to the time of the Connecticut winner, Borden, and Stepat were given
credit for a new indoor mile record of 4 min. 46.6 sec.
An attack of bronchitis kept Shaw out of the Connecticut meet and his absence without
question had much to do with the loss of it, as the visitors swept all places in the "300" and
won the "600" as well as taking all places in the broad jump, which is Shaw's best event.
Mention should also be made of the performances of Guenard in the 35 yard dash. He
won this event in both the Boston University and Connecticut meets and his time in the latter,
4.2 sec, is a new indoor record at this distance.
217
n
Kellogg Govoni
Har
ris
Koskela
Fillmore
Healy
Merry
Hicks Whitton
Cook
Sargent
Rafter
Jensen
Einbinder
WOMEN'S ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION
President
Vice-President .
Basketball Manager
Baseball Manager
Rifle Manager .
Bowling Manager
Tennis Manager
Hockey Manager
Soccer Manager
Cabin Manager
Riding Manager
Track Manager
Swimming Manager
Senior Advisor .
Janet Sargent '35
Beatrice Rafter '36
Marjorie Jensen '34
Elinor Fillmore '36
Celia Einbinder '34
Gladys Whitton '35
Florence Fay '35
Violet Koskela '35
Irene Govoni '35
Marion Harris '35
Elsie Healey'34
Alma Merry '35
Eloise Kellogg '35
Francis Cook '34
SORORITY SPORTS
Bowling — Sorority Winner — Lambda Delta Mu
Highest string rolled by Alma Merry '35 — 91
Second highest string rolled by Marion Harris '35 — 90
Third highest string rolled by Lois Crabtree '36 — 89
Fourth highest string rolled by Florence Stoeber '34 — I
Fifth highest string rolled by Gaie Whitton '35 — 81
Basketball — Winter 1934 — Drill Hall
Won
Alpha Lambda Mu 3
Lambda Delta Mu
Sigma Beta Chi
Lost
1
2
3
2
1
Phi Zeta
Those who won their numerals in spring of 1933 for playing in a major
sport and also earning 200 athletic points were Celia Einbinder '34, Elsie
Healey '34, Laura Bingham '35, and Lois Crabtree ex-'36.
218
Smith Riggs ■ Boyden Martin Healey
King Whitton Einbinder Corcoran Fay
Celia Einbinder '34
Helen Beebe '35
Florence Fay '35
Gaie Whitton '35
Dorothy Corcoran '36
RIFLE TEAM
Justine Martin '37
Priscilla King '36
Maida Riggs '36
Virginia Smith '36
Alma Boyden '37
Emily Healey '37
Matches with the following: — University of Washington, Pennsylvania
State College, Drexel Institute, University of Vermont, University of South
Dakota, University of California, University of Wichita, Carnegie Institute
of Technology, University of Indiana, — No winning scores by the W. A. A.
of M. S. C.
SORORITY SPORTS
Field Hockey — Fall 1 933 — Cage
First Place — Lambda Delta Mu
Second Place — Sigma Beta Chi
Third Place — Alpha Lambda Mu
Fourth Place — Phi Zeta
Soccer — Fall 1933 — Cage
Interclass championship won by '34
Sorority Series won by Lambda Delta Mu
Sorority — Non-Sorority Game won by Lambda Delta Mu
Baseball — Spring 1933 — Cage and Abbey Field
First Place — Lambda Delta Mu
Second Place — Sigma Beta Chi
Third Place — Tie between Alpha Lambda Mu and Phi Zeta
Sorority versus Non-Sorority won by Lambda Delta Mu
Tennis
The Tennis Tournament was won by Mary A. Cawley '36, to whom a
tennis pin was given. The runner-up was Marjorie A. Jensen '34.
MILITARY
MILITARY STAFF
Colonel Charles A, Romeyn, Cavalry D. O. L., Professor of Military Science
and Tactics.
Captain Dwight Hughes Jr., Cavalry D. O. L., Assistant Professor of Military
Science and Tactics.
Captain Herbert E. Watkins, Cavalry D, O. L., Assistant Professor of Military
Science and Tactics.
Technical Sergeant James A. Warren, Cavalry D. E. M. L., Instructor.
Sergeant Frank Cronk, D. E. M. L., Instructor.
R. O. T. C. Cadet Officers
1934
William A. Bower
Louis J. Bush
Donald W. Chase
Randall K. Cole
Theodore F. Cooke, Jr.
Roy T. Cowing
Charles H. Dunphy
Alexander H. Freedman
Vincent C. Gilbert
Page L. Hiland
Robert J. Allen
Walter E. Brayden
William C. Brown
Albert F. Burgess, Jr.
Curtis M. Clark
George S. Congdon
Frederick L. Corcoran
Wilmot C. Dunham
Victor S. Guzowski
Wendell R. Hovey
Stuart F. Jillson
Albert B. Landis
Lucien B. Lillie
Descom De Hoagland
Milton H. Kibbe
Ambrose T. McGuckian
Cornelius F. O'Neil
Wolcott L. Schenck
Albert Sherman
James A. Sibson
Russell Sturtevant
Henry A. Walker
Joseph A. Whitney
Joseph F. Zillman
R. 0. T. C
Cadet Sergeants
1935
Everett S. MacQuestion
Ronald C. Malloch
James F. Moran
John J. Moulton
William R. Muller
Walter D. Raleigh
Henry F. Riseman
Ralph W. F. Schreiter
William A. Scott
Glenn F. Shaw
John P. Veerling
Benjamin J. Wihry
Luther L. Willard
CADET OFFICERS OF THE R. O. T. C.
CAVALRY REGIMENT
MASSACHUSETTS STATE COLLEGE
College Year 1933-34
Squadron Headquarters
Cadet Major Randall K. Cole . . . ,
Cadet Captain Cornelius F. O'Neil
Cadet Staff Sergeant Curtis M. Clark .
. Commanding
Adjutant
Sergeant Major
Troop
Cadet Captain Charles H. Dunphy
Cadet Captain Donald W. Chase .
Cadet 1st Lieut. Joseph F. Zillman
Cadet 1st Lieut. Descom De Hoagland
Cadet 2nd Lieut. Vincent C. Gilbert
. Commanding
Junior Captain
Commanding Platoon
Commanding Platoon
Commanding Platoon
Troop "B'
Cadet Captain Page L. Hiiand
Cadet Captain Theodore F. Cooke, Jr.
Cadet 1st Lieut. Russell Sturtevant
Cadet 1st Lieut. Albert Sherman .
Cadet 2nd Lieut. Wolcott L. Schenck
. Commanding
Junior Captain
Commanding Platoon
Commanding Platoon
Commanding Platoon
Troop "
Cadet Captain Henry A. Walker .
Cadet Captain Roy T. Cowing
Cadet 1 St Lieut. Joseph A. Whitney
Cadet 1st Lieut. Ambrose T. McGuckian
. Commanding
Junior Captain
Commanding Platoon
Commanding Platoon
Troop "D'
Cadet Captain James A. Sibson
Cadet Captain Milton H. Kibbe
Cadet 1st Lieut. Louis J. Bush
Cadet 1st Lieut. William A. Bower
. Commanding
Junior Captain
Commanding Platoon
Commanding Platoon
1933 R. O. T. C. NIGHT RIDE
Cadet Mount Cadet Mount
James C. Bulman 1 33 Dick Allan E. Hovey 48 Molly
Seymour B. Scott 2 55 Lucella Harold H. Nelson 47 Cini
George E. Hodsdon 3 58 Ted Grant Richard A. Eldridge 44 Herman Kobbe
Charles A. LeClair 4 9 Stewart Cloyes T. Gleason 8 Bob
K. C. Miner 51 Johnny Johnson Paul M. Runge 38 Al Mann
Walter A. Maclinn 45 Dan Harold Shuman 43 Opal
H.E.Miner 59 Rags Charles E. Minarik 41 Colonel
Gordon A. Houran 57 Bill Hart Benton P. Cummings 1 Grant
Benjamin D. Betts 53 Fritz Shnyder Carl G. Jahnle 20 Dewey
Daniel J. Leary 56 Tom Mix Stanley W. Tyler 46 Goofey
Francis G. Trow 30 Nora Joseph L. Marchelewicz
Costas L. Caragianis 1 1 Powder 22 Johnny Hyde
John M. Fowler 4 Sheridan Ralph H. Bickford 37 Frank
John A. Kovaleski 54 Cy
The annual R. O. T. C. night ride was held on the evening of May 10,
1 933 with twenty-six cadets of the senior class participating. James C. Bulman
won the trophy, a cigarette case and a cash award of three dollars by com-
pleting the fourteen mile course in the time of one hour, sixteen minutes
and forty-five seconds. Seymour B. Scott, riding Lucella, finished in second
place ten minutes after Bulman, and was followed by cadets Hodson and
LeClair in third and fourth places respectively.
Beginning at nine o'clock, the cadets left in pairs, each cadet going in
the opposite direction until all of the twenty-six had left the starting point.
Maps and sealed orders were given each rider, and each was permitted to use
a flash light and a compass. The officers were on their honor not to move
at a faster rate than a trot, and the horses were examined the next morning
before the winners were announced.
M. S. C. HORSE SHOW
The twelfth annual Massachusetts State College Horse Show was held
at the riding park on Saturday, May 27, 1 933, at 2 p. m. The 1 933 horse show
was one of the largest and most successful that has been staged on the campus.
One hundred and twenty-five horses were entered in the eleven classes, and
nearly fifteen hundred spectators were present.
At the beginning of the show, the Stowell Cup was awarded to Cadet
Sergeant Douglas C. Daniels, who was selected as the junior who had shown
the greatest improvement in horsemanship during the year. The Hughes Cup,
awarded by Captain Dwight Hughes, Jr. to the cadet who has shown the most
interest in riding during the year, was awarded to Cadet Lieutenant Charles
A. LeClair for the second consecutive year.
In the student classes, the R. O. T. C. Trophy, awarded by Colonel C. A.
Romeyn for skill in horsemanship, was won by Cadet Henry Walker. The
Thompson Trophy for coed riding was won by Janice Munson of the class of
1933. The Watkins Trophy for saddle horse pairs was won by Marian Mc
Laughlin and Cadet James Bulman. The President's Trophy, presented by
President Hugh P. Baker for senior cadet jumping, was awarded to Francis
Trow.
The 1933 Horse Show was given under the auspices of the military
department, and Captain Dwight Hughes, Jr. was in charge. The jumping
classes were judged by Colonel W. J. Collins of Northampton, the saddle
classes by Roger Rouque of Greenfield, and the student classes by Colonel
Romeyn.
THE INAUGURATION OF HUGH POTTER BAKER
On the beautiful autumn afternoon of October ninth a colorful parade made its way from
the Memorial Building to Stockbridge Hall. It was the inaugural procession for Hugh Potter Baker
who was about to be installed as eleventh president of Massachusetts State College. The pro-
cession was led by the Marshal, Colonel Romeyn, and the Committee Chairman, Dean Machmer.
Behind them came the military aides with the colors of the United States and of the state of
Massachusetts. Next came Dr. Baker with Governor Ely, Commissioner Graves of the New York
Department of Education with Commissioner Smith of the Massachusetts Department of
Education, Alvan S. Ryan of the class of 1934 with Reverend J. Paul Williams, and Dr. Thatcher,
retiring president, with Dr. Ellis. The next groups were the trustees of the college, the faculty,
the delegates from other colleges, the senior class, and finally the representatives from academic
bodies, fraternities, and sororities. The members of the entire procession took their places with
other invited guests in Bowker Auditorium where the formal ceremony was held.
The inauguration program opened with an invocation by Reverend J. Paul Williams.
Governor Ely then presented to Dr. Baker the charter of the college with his pledge, as governor
of the state of Massachusetts, of the support of the Commonwealth to the new administration.
Addresses of greeting were delivered by Commissioner Graves on behalf of the delegates, by
Commissioner Smith for the State Department of Education, and by Alvan S. Ryan in behalf of
the undergraduate body of the college. Following the singing of a hymn by the entire gather-
ing. President Baker delivered his inaugural address. He spoke with appreciation of the history
of the college and of hopes for the future. The benediction and organ recessional concluded
the ceremony.
Directly after the exercises in Bowker Auditorium a reception was held at the President's
House. President and Mrs. Baker welcomed the distinguished visitors, representatives, and
delegates who were present from other colleges and those who represented various groups on
our own campus and had come to do honor to the new president of Massachusetts State College.
That evening a formal banquet was held in Draper Hall. Although it was not as serious,
nevertheless it was a memorable part of the day's ceremonies. The toastmaster, Philip Whit-
more of the class of 1915, cleverly presented the banquet as a wedding feast in honor of
President Baker, whom he referred to as the bride, and the college — the groom. Along this
pattern he presented the speakers and events of the evening. Among the speakers was
President Lewis of the University of New Hampshire, formerly president of Massachusetts State.
Other speakers were President Stanley King of Amherst who spoke on the long association of
the two colleges of the town of Amherst, Mrs. Lottie A. Leach, President John Albert Cousens
of Tufts, and Frank Prentice Rand, Professor of English at our own college. The guests were
also delighted with two beautiful piano selections rendered by Mrs. Grete von Bayer, Many
were the congratulations which the "bride" and "groom" received during the course of the
evening.
The list of delegates to these inaugural ceremonies was truly an impressive one; the
college was indeed honored by many distinguished guests. There were representatives from
seventy-eight colleges of all parts of the country, of these, twenty-five were presidents and
twenty-one more were members of the faculty. Thus it was, that, surrounded by all these
prominent guests and in the midst of the autumn splendor of a beautiful campus, the eleventh
president of Massachusetts State College was inaugurated.
GRATES
Alma Mater — -for this 1 give thee thanks:
You gave to me the vision of a star,
A glowing star by which to guide my life,
To keep me ever striving up and up,
A shining goal that I may never reach.
So far it gleams above my earthly path.
It is a vision which will hold me true
Though I am crushed and broken,
A vision that will make more splendid still
The truth and beauty of the life-to-come.
And will, I hope, create within my soul
Emotion, deep and pure, for those I love.
MARIE E. CURRIER
SENIOR INDEX
Adams, L. E. 74, 1 59
Ainsworth, G. E. 66, 143
Alton, H. R. 65, 130, 139, 189
Anderson, A, G 70
Barrett, W. D. 67
Bates, R. G. 70, 149, 155, 185, 189
Batstone, F. A., Jr. 65, 139, 182, 185, 189
Bennett, S. W. 63, 139, 172
Bernstein, H. B. 73, 130, 151
Sick, D. L. 66, 151
Bigelow, G. H. 64, 141, 164, 204
Bingham, L. J. 63, 145
Blatchford, E. W. 76
Bourgeois, G. A. 69, 1 33
Bowler, G. T. 64, 133, 206
Bower, W. A. 64, 137
Brackett, M. V., Miss 62, 1 62
Bresnick, S. 73 153
Brown, R. M. 67
Brown, T. D. 79, 147, 186
Burke, R. F. 65, 133, 204
Burr, F. G. 71, 143
Bush, L. J. 77, 141, 164, 165, 204, 212, 214
Caird, D. W. 7 1 , 137, 1 55, 1 64, 1 65, 1 66,
208, 216
Campbell, R. D. 81, 155, 161, 166, 182
Cande, E. S. 61, 161
Carl, E. M. 68, 160
Casey, C. B. 61, 159
Caswell, C. M. 76
Chapin, N. S. 75
Chase, D. W. 80
Chase, G. T. 66, 135, 216
Chesbro, W. L. 74, 149, 185
Clark, F. G. 66, 133, 165, 196
Clark, M. L. 81, 161
Clow, E. J. 72, 143, 164, 165, 191
Coldwell, R. D. 70
Cole, K. M. 68
Cole, R. K. 60, 130, 147, 155
Coleman, R. T. 60, 147
Cook, E. A. 63, 166
Cook, F. L. 79, 161, 218
Cooke, T. F., Jr. 70, 145, 155
Coombs, C. E. 71, 155
Cosgrlff, D. E. 78, 141, 180, 189
Costa, F. G. 79, 159
Costello, R. F. 67, 145
Cowing, R. T. 67, 130, 145
Crean, M. P. 76
Cutler, R. T. 59, 133
Cutler, R. R., Jr. 63, 172
Dance, D. A. 67
Daniels, D. 74
Denmark. H. S. 71, 155
Dennis, G. B. 78, 141
Dexter, R. W. 68, 149
Doran, D. F. 61, 162
Duckering, F. A. 69, 159
Dunphy, C. H. 75, 143, 192
Durell, W. D. 65, 139, 172
Edney, J. P. 66, 139, 172
Einbinder, C. H. 78, 162, 218, 219
Ellis, C. M. 62, 162
Esselen, W. B. 66, 133, 184, 204
Farrar, J. B. 66, 130, 143, 172, 214
Fisher, J. F. 74, 159, 170
Flynn, J. H. 71, 149
Freedman, A. H. 72, 151
French, C. L. 71, 155
French, M. L. 61, 141, 162
Frigard, W. 77, 143, 155, 204, 212, 214
Gerrard, B. K. 62, 1 62, 1 85
Gorey, R. F. 78, 141, 189
Green, A. A. 80, 169, 171
Griswold, N. B. 73, 141, 204
Gunn, A. S. 80
Hager, F. A. 73
Harvey, E. W. 74, 137, 195
Hast, L. H. 75, 159
Healey, E. E. 59, 159, 218
Henry, R. J. 66, 145, 180, 184, 185, 210
Herbert, C. R. 64
Hiland, P. L. 73, 141, 169, 192, 196
Hill, N. B. 79, 180, 186, 188
Hillberg, P. L. 80, 158, 162
Hoagland, D. D. 74, 147
Hodgen, A. R. 77, 137, 188, 189
Hoffman, A. A. 72, 151, 155
Hurwitz, C. 67, 151, 206
Jackson, H. M. 79, 161, 191
Jackson, R. C. 60, 130, 149, 206
Jenkins, H. 67
Jensen, M. A. 76, 161, 218
Kibbe, M. H. 72, 145
Kingsbury, H. W. 60, 147
Klar, J. S. 64, 139
Koslowski, W. 75, 141, 155, 206
Kusinski, K. J. 70
Landsman, E. 68, 151, 206
LeClair, C. A. 76, 137
Lincoln, S. A. 70, 135
Lister, W. S., Jr. 75, 143, 185
Lojko, J. 58, 76, 141, 204, 212, 214
Lucey, A. A., Jr. 78, 145, 180, 185, 186
MacCleery, R. E. 59
MacDonald, K. J. 79, 162
Mackimmie, J. P. 74, 206
MacMackin, C. A. 65, 139, 217
Magay, R. A. 81, 139
McCarthy, S. E. 8 1 , 1 58, 1 61 , 186, 192
McGuckian, A. T. 79, 130, 133, 165, 1 8(
204, 216
Merrill, A. C, Jr. 71, 135, 212
Merrill, J. W. 70, 133
Moody, G. D. 63
Mountain, D. C. 67, 137, 204
Newton, A. W. 69, 145
Nichols, N. P. 73, 137
Nisbet, F. J. 65, 139
O'Neil, C. F. 70, 149
Papp, W. L. 64, 1 89
Peaslee S. A. 61, 158, 159
Potter, H. C. 59, 141, 191
Pozzi, J. F. 71, 141,
Pushee R. 77, 185
Pyenson, H. 60, 151
Robbins, B. 72, 130, 141, 182
Robertson, J. W., Jr. 80
Rogers, M. H. 73, 135
Rowland, L. E. 68
Royal, R. E. 76, 182
Russell, N. E. 81, 162, 169, 192
Ryan, A. S. 80, 141, 155, 164, 165, 166,
191, 204, 216
Schenck, W. L. 64, 141, 182, 192
Sherman, A. 63
Sibson, J. A. 78, 137, 214
Sievers, H. R. 72, 130, 137, 164, 196, 204
Simmons, G. J. 74
Skipton, A. E. 62, 162
Smith, D. H. 73, 135, 164, 166, 191, 204
Smith, E. J. 61, 158, 160
Snow, R. L. 77, 135, 210
Southworth, W. H. 72, 186, 192
Steffek, E. F. 63, 147
Stephansen, H. P. 65, 137, 172, 189
Stewart, M. C. 60, 136, 212
Stockbridge, R. R. 59, 139
Stoeber, F. P. 77, 162
Sturtevant R. 59, 149
Taft, R. E. 81, 141
Talbot, E. J. 75, 141,
Taylor, E. A, 64, 161
Taylor, M. I, 80, 155, 167
Thomas, W. S. 75, 182
Thompson, W. E., Jr. 73, 145
Tiffany, G. E. 69, 1 59
Tomlinson, M. A. 61, 161
Walker, H. A. 68, 147
Watson, V. K. 70, 135
Wheeler, E. 62, 160, 167, 191
Wheeler, N. A. 66, 139, 172, 191
Whitney, J. A. 71, 143
Wilcox, J. E. 62, 161
Wood, H. S. 59
Woodbury, F. 79, 161
Wordell, H. H. 74, 147
Wyman, E. R. 69
Zielinski, J. F. 72, 145, 214
Zillman, J. F. 60, 151, 169
182, 189, 206
PHOTOGRAPHER
H, E. KINSMAN
Amherst, Massachusetts
ENGRAVER
JOHN AND OLLIER ENGRAVING COMPANY
Chicago, Illinois
PRINTER
CHARLES W. BURBANK COMPANY
C. A. NICHOLS, PRES. AND TREAS.
Worcester, Massachusetts
231
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