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VOLUME  XXIX 

Published  by  the  Junior  Class  of  the  University  of  Maryland 
College  Park,  Md. 


In  the  1930    Reveille 
the    editors    have    at- 
tempted   to    present 
graphically    campus 
leadership  in  the  stu- 
dent life  at  the   Uni- 
versity of  Maryland. 
They  have  presented 
university  life  in  all  o£ 
its  aspects,  and  espec- 
ially   the    service     of 
leadership  as  the  cen- 
ter of  academic  activ- 
ities. They  have  ^iven 
a  picturesque  resume, 


by    means    o£   which 
the  departing  student 
may    lonri    remember 
the    activities    of   the 
current  session.   ^    ^    ^ 
Of   course    the    most 
important    considera- 
tion has  been  the  stu- 
dent  interests    .    . 


A  year's  ^roup  is  only 
one  feneration,  mere- 
ly four  fenerations 
are  in  the  University 
at    one    chronological 
period,  but  the  alumni 
form   the   entire   past 
tradition  in  establish- 
ing the  present  stand- 
ards  of  campus  lead- 
ership. They  have  laid 
the    foundation    upon 
v/hich    the    present 
generation   are   build- 
ing a  framework  for 
the    future    academic 


successors.    ^     /     / 
It    is    to    the    alumni 
of  the   University    of 
Maryland,     and    to 
their  achievements  in 
campus     leadership, 
that  the  Junior  class 
dedicates    the    1930 
Reveille 


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CONTENTS 

Book 

I     .     . 

.    Campus 

Book 

II     . 

Administration 

.Book 

Ill     . 

Classes 

Book 

IV     . 

Activities 

Book 

V     . 

Athletics 

Book 

VI     . 

Women 

Book 

VII     . 

.    Organizations 

Book 

VIII     . 

Features 

CAMPUS 


Dining  Hall 


Byrd  Stadium 


ADMINISTRATION 


Administrative  Officers  of  the 
University  of  Maryland 


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President 
RAYMOND  A.  PEARSON,  M.S.,  D.Agr.,  LL.l). 

Assis/iiiif  til  the  Vreudent 
H.  C.  BYRD,  M.S. 

financial  Secretary 
MAUDE  F.  McKENNEY 

Assistant  Registrar 
ALMA  H.  PREINKERT,  M.A. 

SitperintenJeni  of  Biilitlings  and  Gruiiiids 
H.  L.  GRISP,  M.M.E. 

Purchasing  Agent 
T.  A.  HUTTON,  A.B. 


Librarian 
GRACE  BARNES,  B.S.,  B.L.S. 


Board  of  Regents 

Samuel  M.  Shoemaker,  Chainiuiii 

John  M.  Dennis 

Dr.  Frank  J.  Goodnow 

John  E.  Raine 

Charles  C.  Gelder 

Dr.  W.  W.  Skinner 

E.  Brooke  Lee 

George  M.  Shriver 

Henry  Holzapfel,  Jr. 


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Ur.  Raymond  A.  Pearson 

President 


Harry  C.  Byrd 
Assistant  to  the  President 


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College  of  Agriculture 


The  business  c^^  farming  requires  a 
varied  and  wide  range  of  knowledge. 
However,  some  branches  are  highly  spe- 
cialized. The  courses  offered  in  the  Col- 
lege of  Agriculture  aim  to  meet  these 
requirements  and  conditions.  The  gen- 
eral and  elective  courses  enable  the  stud- 
ent to  specialize  and  prepare  for  any 
sphere  of  activity  he  may  desire  to  fol- 
low. 

There  is  a  demand  for  men  and 
women  well  trained  in  the  science  and 
application  of  agriculture,  as  farmers, 
farm  managers,  teachers,  investigators, 
and  in  industrial  and  commercial  activities  related  to  farming.  The  graduates  of  the 
past  ten  years  are  occupying  over  fifty  different  kinds  of  positions  in  these  fields.  The 
College  of  Agriculture  gives  a  broad  and  liberal  training  and  enables  the  cjuntry  reared 
boy  or  girl  to  capitalize  on  their  sixteen  to  twentv  years  of  life  in  the  country.  The 
courses  in  the  College  of  Agriculture  are  well  suited  to  the  student  who  lias  not  found 
himself  or  decided  upon  his  life's  work. 


Harry  J.  Patterson,  D.Sc. 
Diau 


Schmidt.    Conrad,    Gardner,    Wentworth,    DeVault,    Bruce,    Smith,    Eppley,    Vierheller,    Tfuiplc,    White,    Waite 
Poelma,  Berry.   Inffham,  Grise,   Meade,   Rothpeh,  Thomas,  Carpenter.  Welsh,   Schrader,    .Metzper,  Ayers 
Cory,  McCrary,  Ivnight,  Reed,  Patterson.  Winant,  Norton,  Applenian,  Jehle,  Ballard,  Quigley 


■4  20  \fl- 


College  of  Arts 
and  Sciences 


The  College  of  Arts  and  Sciences 
embraces  so  great  a  variety  of  courses 
that  is  impossible,  in  a  few  words,  to  do 
other  than  sketch  in  a  hazy  outline  of  its 
function.  Between  Liberal  Arts,  so  called 
originally  because  open  only  to  Roman 
freemen,  and  Science,  defined  as  knowl- 
edge reduced  to  law  and  embodied  in 
system,  there  is  a  great  mass  of  learning 
of  which  the  component  parts  may  be 
classed  as  Science  or  as  Art  according  to 
one's  point  of  view.  This  defining  of  the 
proper  location  of  subject  may  well  be  left  to  others  for  it  will  not  in  any  way  affect 
the  function  of  this  College,  since  it  is  well  defined  and  clear  cut.  It  is  two-fold  in 
character.  On  the  one  hand  the  College  must  serve  the  needs  of  students  of  other 
Colleges  in  certain  basic  subjects.  On  the  other  hand  the  demand  for  basic  subjects  and 
for  more  advanced  training,  which  will  promote  their  vocational,  avocational  and 
cultural  welfare. 


Thomas  H.  Taliaferro,  C.E.,  Ph.D. 
Dean 


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Alrich,  Evans,  Gland,  Ritz,   Frye,  Westball,   Highberger,   Schweitzer,  Van  Wormer,  Wittes,  Spann,  Walls,  Foster 

Isiaelson.    Defferrai,    Lemon,    Reimenschneider,   Gilbert,   Wilcox,   Fitzhugh,    Burhoe,    Dantzeig, 

Bellman,   Clark,  White.  Zintz,   Baumgardner 

Roberts,    Stoner,    Daniels,    Hale,    Kuhnle,    McConald,    McDonald,    Harring,    Eichlin,    Jaeger,    Drake,    Donaldson 

Wheelen,    Murray,    Beall,    Broughton,    Crothers,    Richardson,    Johnson,    Pearson,    Taliaferro,    House, 

Gwinner,  Spence,  Zuker,  Kramer,  Harmon,  Rosasco 


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College  of  Engineering 


The  College  of  Engineering,  one  of 
the  earliest  to  be  established  in  the 
United  States,  has  had  a  most  satisfactory 
growth  since  its  reorganization  in  nine- 
teen hundred  and  twenty.  The  enroll- 
ment has  steadily  increased  from  one 
hundred  and  eight  students  in  nineteen 
hundred  and  nineteen  to  two  hunderd 
and  seventy  students  in  nineteen  hundred 
and  twenty-nine,  an  increase  of  one  hun- 
dred and  fifty  per  cent. 

In  view  of  the  fxjlicy  of  putting  as 
much  public  work  as  possible  under  contract,  there  is  an  increased  field  in  prospect  for 
employment  of  engineers,  and  as  has  been  hitherto  the  fact,  the  members  of  the  gradu- 
ating class  have  positions  assured  even  before  the  date  of  graduation. 

Recognition  of  the  standing  of  the  College  of  Engineering  has  been  accorded  during 
the  year  by  Tau  Beta  Pi,  the  national  honorary  engineering  fraternity,  in  granting  a 
charter  to  the  local  Phi  Mu  Fraternity.  Tau  Beta  Pi  has  fifty-eight  chapters  and  ranks 
as  the  highest  honorary  engineering  fraternity  in  the  country.  Installation  ceremonies 
were  held  last  November,  when  five  active,  twenty  alumni  and  three  faculty  members 
were  initiated. 


A.  N.  Johnson,  B.S.,  D.Eng. 
Dean 


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Skeltoii,   Hodgins,   Bailey,   Creese,   Nesbit 
Hennich,    Steinberg,   Johnson.    Hosball,    Pyle 


■4  22  \p- 


College  of  Education 


The  College  of  Educatoin  was  estab- 
lished in  nineteen  hundred  and  twenty. 
It  was  organized  to  meet  the  need  of  the 
following  classes  of  students;  under- 
graduate students  preparing  to  teach  the 
cultural  and  the  vocational  studies  in  the 
high  schools;  advanced  students  prepar- 
ing to  become  high  school  principals; 
those  preparing  for  educational  work  in 
the  trades  or  the  industries;  county 
agents,  home  demonstrators,  and  other 
extension  workers;  and  lastly  students 
majoring  in  other  lines  who  desire  courses  in  education 
cultural  values. 

The  instructional  work  of  the  College  of  Education  is  conducted  by  five  functional 
divisions  or  departments:  History  and  Principles  of  Education,  Methods  in  Academic 
and  Scientific  Subjects,  Agricultural  Education,  Home  Economics  Education,  and  In- 
dustrial Education. 

The  degrees  conferred  upon  students  who  have  met  the  conditions  prescribed  for  a 
degree  in  the  College  of  Education  are  Bachelor  of  Arts  and  Bachelor  of  Science. 


W.  S.  Small,  Ph.D. 
Dean 

for    their    informational    and 


Worthington,    Long,    Cotterman,    Sprowls.    Breckbell 
Buckcy,    Rosasco,    Small,    Smith,    McNaughton 


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M.  Marie  Mount,  M.A. 
Dean 


College  of 
Home  Economics 


The  College  of  Home  Economics  was 
cstjblislied  in  1919.  Up  ro  that  time, 
with  the  exception  of  summer  course, 
home  economics  had  not  been  a  part  of 
the  regular  University  curriculum.  It 
was  organized  for  those  women  students 
wishing  to  obtain  a  Bachelor  of  Science 
degree  in   Home  Economics   work. 

It  is  the  aim  of  this  college  to  pre- 
pare young  women  for  worth  while  liv- 
ing, either  as  home-makers,  or  as  wage- 
earners.     There    are    three    administrative 


departments  within  the  college,  namely:  Foods  and  Nutrition,  Textiles,  Clothing  and 
Art,  Home  and  Institutional  Management.  Each  of  these  departments  offers  a  well- 
planned  curriculum,  in  addition  to  a  general  home  economics  curriculum,  arranged  for 
those  who  do  not  care  to  specialize.  A  student  may  obtain  a  teacher's  diploma  when 
she  has  completed  the  required  subjects  in  the  College  of  Education. 

The  College  of  Home  Economics  has  recently  moved  into  a  separate  building, 
attractively  decorated  and  remodelled,  to  meet  the  needs  of  an  increasing  enrollment. 
The  college  maintains  a  home  management  house,  where  senior  home  economics  students 
live  for  a  number  of  weeks,  in  family  groups,  to  give  practical  experience  in  managing 
a  home. 


McNauKtitou 
McFarland 


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Mount 


Westney 
Murphy 


•4  24  Ii=- 


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Agricultural 
Experiment  Station 


The  Maryland  Agricultural  Experi- 
ment Station  is  the  research  branch  of 
the  University.  The  investigations  in 
progress  major  on  the  problems  which 
will  contribute  towards  the  economic 
production  and  betterment  of  food  for 
human  consumption. 

Maryland  is  excc'ptionally  well  suited 
by  soils  and  climate  and  by  location  with 
reference  to  markets  for  the  production 
of  human  foods.  Every  student  in  the 
University  of  Maryland  should  become 
familiar  with  the  general  character  and  scope  of  the  Experiment  Station  work  as  it  will 
surely  be  an  asset  in  his  life's  work,  no  matter  what  course  he  may  be  raking.  The 
Experiment  Station  has  about  one  hundred  and  fifty  different  investigations  in  progress. 
These  are  being  pursued  in  the  twelve  research  departments. 

The  results  will  contribute  towards  improved  and  more  profitable  farms;  better  farm 
products,  and  methods  of  marketmg  them. 


Harry  J.  Patterson,  D.Sc. 
Director  of  Agricidfiiral  Expcrinn-iit  Station 


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Schmidt,  Conrad,  Gardner,  Wentworth,   DeVauIt,   Bruce,   Smith,   Eppley,   Vierheller,  Temple.   White,   Waite 

Poelma,   Bernu,    Ingham,    Grise,    Meade,    Rothgeb,   Thomas,    Carpenter,   Welsh,    Schrader,    Metzger,    Ayers 

Cory,  McCrary,  Knight,  Reed.  Patterson,  Winant,   Norton,  Appleman,  Jehle,   Ballard,   Quigley 


•4  25  }>■ 


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Thomas  B.  Symons,  M.S.,  D.Agr. 
Director  of  Exteiisiun  Service 


Extension  Service 


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T.  B.  Symons,  M.S.,  D.Agr.,  Director 
F.  B.  BoMBERGER,  A.M.,  D.Agr., 
Assistant  Director 
W  R.  Ballard,  B.S. 
H.  C.  Barker,  B.S. 
R.  W.  Carpenter,  A.B.,  LL.B. 
K.  A.  Clark,  M.S. 
J.  A.  CONOVER,  B.S. 

E.  N.  Cory,  Ph.D. 

S.  H.  DeVault,  A.m. 

Dorothy  Emerson 

L.  M.  Goodwin,  B  S. 

H.  A.  Hunter,  B.S. 

R.  A.  Jehle,  B.S.A.,  Ph.D. 

E.  G.  Jenkins 

Venia  M.  Keller,  B.S. 
Margaret  McPheeters,  M.S. 
DeVoe  Meade,  Ph.D. 

F.  W.  Oldenberg,  B.S. 


W.  B.  Posey,  B.S. 

\V.  H.  Rice,  B.S. 

C.  S.  Richardson,  M.  A. 

P.  D.  Sanders,  M.S. 

S.  B.  Shaw,  B.S. 

Heley  Shelby,  M.A. 

W.  T.  L.  Taliaferro,  B.A.,  Sc.DD. 

C.  E.  Temple,  MA. 

A.  F  Vierheller,  M.S. 

A.  H.  Snyder,  B.S. 

H.  E.  Besley,  B.S 

O.  R.  Carrington,  B.S. 

Castillo  Graham,  B.S. 

W.  T.  Henerey,  B.S. 

G.  S.  Langford,  Ph.D. 

E.  I.  Oswald,  B.S. 
P.  A.  Raper,  B.S. 
Edythe  M.  Turner 

F.  B.  Trenk,  B.S. 


■4  26  >• 


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C.  O.  AppLEMAN,  Ph.D. 
Dean  of  the  Graduate  School 


The  Graduate  Council 


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C.  O.  Appleman,  Ph.D. 

Raymond  A.  Pearson,  M.S.,  D 

E.  S.  Johnston,  Ph.D. 

H.  J.  Patterson,  D.Sc. 

A.  N.  Johnson,  D.Eng. 

T.  H.  Taliaferro,  C.E.,  Ph.D. 

E.  N.  Cory,  Ph.D. 

H.  C.  House,  Ph.D. 

H.  F.  Cotterman,  M.A. 

DeVoe  Meade,  Ph.D. 

E.  C.  Auchter,  Ph.D. 

L.  B.  Broughton,  Ph.D. 

M.  Marie  Mount,  M.A. 

G.   L.   Jenkins,   Ph.D. 

Edward  Uhlenhuth,  Ph.D. 


Dean  of  the  Graduate  School,  Chairman  of  Council 
,Agr.,  LL.D.  .  .  President  of  the  University 

Secretary 

Director  of  the  Agricultural  Esperhnent  Station 

Professor  of  Highway  Engineering 

Professor  of  Mathematics 

Professor  of  Entomology 

Professor  of  English  and  English  Literature 

Professor  of  Agricultural  Education 

Professor  of  Animal  and  Dairy  Husbandry 

Professor  of  Horticulture 

Professor  of  Agricultural  and  Food  Chemistry 

Professor  of  Home  and  Institutional  Management 

Professor   of   Pharmaceutical   Chemistry    (Baltimore) 

Associate  Professor  of  Anatomy   (Baltimore) 


■4  27  >■ 


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CLASSES 


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ROBERT  ALLEN 
JAMES  ANORtWS 

BERT  8EALL 
WILLWn  BRADLEY 
WILLIAM  CHAFFINCH 
CHAHLE5  DOOSON 
WILLIAM  E:VAI\)5 
ALBERT  HEAGY 
ROBERT  HEAir 
FRED  HETZEL 
WILLIAM  HOPKINS 
PHILLIP  IN5LEY 
HARRY  JARVI5 

DONMO  KiEfrrR 

WILLIAM  r\ll\INAMON 
HAOISON  LLOYO 

JOHN  McDonald 

JOHN  O'NEILL 
JOHN  PITZER 
VERNOW  POWERS 
ROBERT  SETTLE 
JOHN  UMBARGER 
flRLEY  UNGLR 


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OMICRON  DELTA  KAPPA 


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CATHERINE  BflRMSLEY! 
ISABEL   DYNES 
RUTH  HAYE5 
MARGARET  KARR 
MARGARET  MtlGS 
&EWEV1EVE  WRI&ttT 


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WOMEN^S  SENIOR  HONOR  SOCIETY 


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"He  is  not  idle  who  does  noth- 
ing, but  he  is  idle  who  might  be 
better  employed." 

— Socrates. 


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SENIORS 


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Albert  Heagy 
President,  Senior  Class 


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Wisner  Hta^y  Tansil 

Jarvis 


Senior  Class  History 


Muddled  class  schedules,  lost  trunks,  formidable  faculty  memb.ns,  a  confusion  of 
Greek  letters,  cinder  walks,  a  reception  which  was  an  entanglement  of  queer,  unheard- 
of  names — these  are  some  of  our  first  impressions  of  our  Alma  Mat:r.  Then  classes, 
rushing,  during  which  the  perplexity  of  Greek  letters  became  less  meaningless,  and 
— the  absurdest  of  absurd  rat  rules. 

But  then  the  chaos  began  to  seem  less  chaotic,  and  out  of  it  emerged  all  sorts  of 
unexpected  things — a  Freshman  Frolic  (which,  we  felt,  did  not  warrant  so  many 
vegetables),  then  a  Prom,  unexpectedly  successful,  to  say  nothing  of  budding  campus 
leaders  and  important  athletes. 

Sophomore  year  brought  the  realization  of  our  great  sophistication,  of  our  import- 
ance, of  our  mistake  when  we  thought  rat  rules  silly.  Also,  came  a  further  display 
of  our  ability;  a  Prom  with  the  dignity  of  formality  was  a  precedent  which  we  were 
to  see  followed  in  other  Sophomore  Proms;  Sophomore  officers  were  scattered  through 
the  various  activities.  The  campus,  too,  was  changing;  new  roads,  shrubbery,  new 
buildings  were  altering  its  appearance. 

Junior  year  recalls  class  meetings,  arguments,  last-minute  catastrophes,  out  of 
which  emerged  a  lovely,  almost  faultless  Prom.  Then  the  same  sort  of  meetings,  an 
air  of  mystery  and  secrecy,  girls  in  queer  costumes  rushing  to  rehearsals — and  May 
Day  was  created. 

More  and  more  outstanding  had  we  become  in  athletics.  Pictures  in  the  newspaper 
of  Evans,  McDonald,  Wilson,  Warcholy;  headlines  mentioning  Heintz,  Heagy  and 
Madigan;  Dodson  and  Roberts  on  the  field;  Hetzel  and  Radice  running  up  basketball 
scores,  these  are  more  impressions  of  this  class  of  1930. 

Our  last  year  has  been  a  continuation  of  all  the  activities  which  we  started  before 
it.  The  Junior-Senior  German  stands  out  among  the  social  events  sponsored  by  it. 
Then  an  auditorium  watching  the  Senior  Play,  Baccalaureate  and — graduation!  Fare- 
wells— tearful  and  otherwise — then  that  shaky,  far-from-self-confident  feeling  that  at 
last  we  are  "out  in  the  world." 

■4  35  Ii=- 


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CHAUNCEY  A.  AHALT 

MiiliUifou  II,   Mary!  an  J 

College  oi   Engineering,  B.S. 

Engineering  Society  (1),  (2),  (3),  (4);  Mem- 
ber of  Student  Congress  (4);  Y.  M.  C.  A.  (1), 
(2),   (3),    (4);    Lutheran  Club    (3),    (4). 


GEORGE  WATSON  ALGIRE 

Haml^stcttil,  Maryland 

A   *  £2  K  *   K 

College  of  Education,  A.B. 


EVELYN  FULLER  BALLOU 

Wasbitigtoii,   D.  C. 

College  of  Education,  A.B. 

Student  Grange  (2),  (3)  (4);  Opera  Club 
(1),  (2),  (3),  (4);  Basketball  (1),  (2);  >X'.  A. 
A.    (i),    (2),    (3),    (4);    Bowling    (2),    (3).    (4). 


CATHERINE  DOUGLAS  BARNSLEY 

Kufkiillc,  Marylautl 

K  K  r       A  ^i*  n       <i>  K  * 
College  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  B.S. 

Women's  Senior  Honor  Society;  Basketball, 
Women's  Athletic  Association  ( 1 ) ;  Secretary 
(-);  Vice-President  (3);  President  (4);  Basket- 
ball (I),  (2),  (3)  (4);  Captain  of  team  (1), 
(2),  (3),  (4);  Girls'  "M"  Club  (I),  (2),  (3), 
(4);  President  (4);  Tennis  (1),  (2);  Hockey 
(4);  Rifle  (I);  Le  Ccrcle  Francais  (2),  (3);  Poe 
Literary  Society  (1),  (2);  Winner  of  National 
Chemistry  Pri?.e  Essay  Contest  (1);  Dittniontl- 
Ihich    (1);  Junior  League  of  Women  Voters    (3). 


4  36  >• 


JAMES  HARRISON  BENNER 

Wiishingfon,   D.  C. 

K  A 
College  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  A.B. 

Track    (1),    (2);    New   Mercer   Literary   Society 
(2);    Varsity   Debating   Team    (3),    (4). 


ISABEL  D.  BEWICK 

Cn'tihtrliinJ,    Maryltiiul 

K   A  A    *   Q  M    r 

College  of  Education,  B.S. 

May  Day  Chairman  (3);  Secretary  Student 
Assembly  (4);  Student  Congress  (4);  Junior  and 
Senior  Representative  to  Executive  Council; 
Footlight  Club  (1)  (2),  (3),  (4);  "M"  Club 
(2),  (3),  (4);  Basketball  (2);  Y.  W.  C.  A.  (2), 
(3),  (4);  New  Mercer  (1),  (2),  (3),  (4); 
Student  Grange  (3),  (4);  Panhellenic  Council 
(3),  (4);  Women's  Student  Government  Council 
(3),  (4);  Freshman  Frolic  Committee  {!); 
League  of  Young  Women  Voters  (4);  Lutheran 
Club  (3),  (4);  W.  A.  A.  (2),  (3),  (4);  Ri - 
VF.ILLE    (3),    (4);   Dianiotiilhack    (3). 


S.  MARGUERITE  BEWLEY 

Bi-rwytiy   Maryland 

College  of  Home  Economics,  B.S. 

League  of  Young  Women  Voters  (4);  Presby- 
terian Club  (4);  Tennis  (3),  (4);  Y.  W.  C.  A. 
(1),    (3);  W.  A.  A.    (I). 


CHARLES  B.  BISHOP 

Wd^hingfon,   D.  C. 

K  A 
College  of  Engineering,  B.S. 

Tennis    (I),    (2);    Freshman    Rifle,   Engineering 
Society   (1),   (2),   (3),   (4). 


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DAVID  CHRISTIAN  BLENARD 

Uiigfritowil,  Mitrylatnl 

A   *  12 

College  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  B.S. 

Glee  Club    (2);    Student   Orchestra    (1),    (2); 
Chorus   (1);  Track   (1),   (4);  Diamondback   (1). 


WILLIAM  A.  BOYLES 

Wfitcriiport,  Mcirylaiid 

College  of  Agriculture,  B.S. 


HARRY  D.  BOUBLITZ 

BaltniiorCy   Maryland 

*  :i  K 

College  of  Engineering,  B.S. 

Baseball    (1),    (2),    (3),    (4);   "M"    (3);   Engi- 
neering Society. 


WILLIAM  G.  BRADLEY 

Hyii/fsiillc,  Maryland 

*:-K       2An       OAK 

College  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  A.B. 

Glee   Club    (2),    (3),    (4);    Opera    Club    (2) 
(3),     (4);     Dkmondback     (3),     (4);     Rossbourg 
Club   (3),   (4);  Student  Congress   (4);  New  Mer- 
cer  (2),   (3),   (4);  Glee  Club  Award    (3). 


•4    38   >•• 


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MARGARET  EMMA  BROWER 

Washington,   D.  C. 

K  A       B  n  0       :s  A  ri 

College  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  A.B. 

Poe  Literary  Society,  Y.   \v\  C.   A. 


GRAEF  WILLIAM  BUEHM 

Washington,  D.  C. 

0  X 

College  of  Engineering,  E.E. 

Scabbard  and  Blade,  Debating  (3),  (4);  Foot- 
light  Club  (4);  First  Lieutenant,  R.  O.  T.  C; 
Engineering  Society    (3),    (4);   Track    (2). 


MARIAN  PAULINE  BULLARD 

Kivcrtldlc,   MarylauJ 

A  Y  X 

College  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  B.S. 

Student  Grange  (2);  Basketball  (1);  Tennis 
(4);  Panhellenic  Council  (2);  May  Day  Com- 
mittee. 


JOHN  MURRAY  BUSH 

Hanipstead,  Maryland 

2  T  n 

College  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  A.B. 

Y.  M.  C.  A.    (1),    (2). 


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J.  NELSON  CAMERON 

North  East,  Maryhind 

A   ^   12 

College  of  Engineering,  E.E. 

Engineering    Society;    Y.    M.    C.    A.;    Freshman 
Lacrosse;   Student   Band. 


ELIZABETH    LOUISE   CARMICHAEL 

Kiicrdale    Maryland 

K  A 
College  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  A.B. 

New    Mercer    Literary    Society     (I),    (2),  (3), 

(4);    Y.    W.   C.    A.    (2),    ()),    (4);    Tennis  (2), 

(3);   Women's  Varsity  Debating  Team    (5),  (4); 
League  of   Young   Women    Voters    (4). 


ANTHONY  FRANK  CERRITO 

BiiUimorc,    Miirylaiid 

A  '!>  2 

College  of  Engineering,  B.S. 


WILLIAM  P.  CHAFFINCH 

Eiiston,  Miiryliind 

K  A  OAK 

College  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  A.B. 

Class  President  (2);  B.iseball  Manager  (4); 
Interfratcrnlty  Council  (4)^  Student  Congress 
(4). 


■4  40  }z- 


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CAROLYN  SUE  CHESSER 

Putoiiwkf  Crfy,  Marylantl 

K  A 
College  of  Education,  B.S. 

Student  Grange  (2),  (3),  (4);  Bowling  (2); 
Y.  W.  C.  A.  (2),  (3),  (4);  Poe  Literary  So- 
ciety   (2),    (4);   Lutheran  Club    (4). 


DUNCAN  CLARK 

Chciy  Cha^c,  MavylanJ 

2  T  n 
College  or  Arts  and  Sciences,  B.S. 


MARGARET  PAULINE  CREEGER 

Tl>u>  irtonf     MiiryliiiiJ 

&  r 

College  of  Home  Economics,  B.S. 

Freshman  Rillc  Team  ( 1 ) ;  Poe  Literary  So- 
ciety (I),  (2),  (3);  Lutheran  Club  (3),  (4); 
Student  Grange  (3),  (4);  Student  Council  (3); 
Y.  W.  C.  A.   (I),  (2). 


MARGUERITE  ANNE  CLAFLIN 

College  Pavk,  Maryland 

X  A 

College  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  A.B. 

Dlamondback  (1),  (2),  (4);  Episcopal  Club 
(2),  (3),  (4);  Opera  Club  (2),  (3),  (4);  Bas- 
ketball (I),  (2),  (3);  "M"  (3);  Tennis,  Winner 
(2),  (3);  Rifle  (3),  Manager  (4);  Authorship 
Club  (3),  (4);  Women's  "M"  Club  (3),  (4); 
May  Day  Committee   (3). 


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WILLIAM  WILFRED  COBEY 

Qiiiticy,  Floritlu 

K  A 

College  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  A.B. 

Rossbourg  Club  (3),  (4);  Intcrfraterity  Coun- 
cil (2),  (3);  Freshman  Lacrosse  (1);  Y.  M.  C.  A. 
(1),    (2);   University  Chorus    (1),    (2). 


MILDRED  COKER 

BrcilfU'ootI,  Maryland 

College  of  Education,  A.B. 

Young  Voters  League    (4);  Opera  Club    (4). 


HAZEL  LENORE  DAWSON 

Cumberland,  Maryland 

College  of  Education,  A.B. 


CHARLES  T.  DEAN 

Ridgfly,  Maryland 

A  2   ^ 

College  of  Agriculture,  B.S. 

Freshman  Lacrosse   (1);  Manager  Lacrosse   (4). 


■4  42  > 


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HUGH  ALBERT  DEAN 

Frederick,   Maryland 

AS* 

College  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  A.B. 

Freshman  Cross  Country;  Freshman  Track;  En- 
gineering Society;   Manager  Track. 


JAMES  DONALD  DEMARR 

Beruyn,  Maryland 

2  A  n 

College  of  Engineering,  B.S. 

Captain    Co.    B,    R.    O.    T.    C;    Scabbard    and 
Blade. 


CHARLES  RUSSELL  DODSON 

Takoiiia  Park,  Maryhiiul 

2N         OAK         TBn         4>K<I> 

College  of  Engineering,  B.S. 

Football  (1),  (2),  (3),  (4);  "M"  (2),  (3), 
(4);  Basketball  (I);  Track  (1);  Lacrosse  (2), 
(3),  (4);  "M"  (2),  (4);  Interfratcrnity  Coun- 
cil (3),  (4);  Engineering  Society  (I),  (2),  (3), 
(4) ;  President  of  Tau  Beta  Pi. 


ARTHUR  PAUL  DUNNIGAN 

Pylesville,  Maryland 

2  T  n 

College  of  Agriculture,  B.S. 

Lacrosse    (I),     (2),     (3);    Freshman    Vigilance 
Committee;  Rossbourg  Club. 


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MARGARET  REGIS  DUNNIGAN 

Was/.unsifoii,  D.  C. 

K   A 

College  of  Education,  A.B. 

Student  Congress  (1);  May  Day  Committee 
(3);  Diiimiiinlhack  Staff  (2),  (3);  Sophomore 
Prom  Committee;  Freshman  Frolic  Committee; 
New  Mercer  Literary  Society  (2),  (3),  (4); 
Student  Grange  (3),  (4);  Y.  W.  C.  A.  (2),  (3), 
(4);  Junior  League  of  Women  Voters  (4);  Ten- 
nis  (2),   (5). 


ISABEL  DYNES 

Clniy  Chase,  MarylaiiJ 

A  Y  X       *  K  *      0  r      B  n  0 

College  of  Home  Economics,  B.S. 

Women's  Senior  Honor  Society;  Panhellenic 
Council,  President  (4);  Tennis  (1),  (2),  (3), 
(4).  Manager  (3);  W.A.  A.  (I),  (2),  (3),  (4); 
Lc  Cercle  Francais  (1),  (2);  League  of  Young 
Vf'omen  Voters,  President  (4);  May  Day  Com- 
mittee   (3). 


RICHARD  J.  EPPLE 

RiJsi-itootl,   Nt'w   jt'ncy 

0  X 
College  of  Engineering,  BS. 

Scabbard  and  Blade;  Baseball  (I),  (2);  Foot- 
ball (1),  (2),  (3),  (4);  DiiimonJhack  (1),  Cap- 
tain, R.  O.  T.  C.  (4);  Engineering  Society  (2), 
(3),    (4),    (S);   Episcopal   Club. 


WILLIAM  W.  EVANS 

Chi-l  y  Chau\  MaiyLnul 

K   A  O  A   K 

College  op  Arts  and  Sciences,  A.B. 

Football  (1),  (2),  (5),  (4);  "M"  (3),  (4); 
Basketball  (1),  (2),  (3),  (4);  "M"  (2),  (3), 
(4);  Alternate  All-American  Football  (4);  All- 
Kastcrn  (4);  All-Maryland  (4);  Lacrosse,  Sec- 
ond All-American  (2);  All-American  (3),  (4); 
Country's  Leading  Lacrosse  Scorer  (4);  All- 
Maryland   Lacrosse    (3),    (4). 


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CARL  N.  EVERSTINE 

CnmbcrLinJ ,  Mai  yliintl 

A  ^  n 

College  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  A.B. 

Council  of  Oratory  and  Debate  (4);  Poe  Lit- 
erary Society  (1),  (2),  (3).  (4),  President  (4); 
Diumomiback  Staff  (1);  Rossbourg  Club  (2), 
^3);   Intersociety  Debating  Team    (3),    (.4). 


WILLIAM  HARTGE  PIPER 

Gdli-srillv,   Marytamt 

T  B  n         *  K  $ 
College  of  Engineering,  B.S. 

Engineering    Society     (2),     (3),    (4);    Lutheran 
Club   (3),    (4);  Y.  M.  C.  A.    (4). 


SAMUEL  W.  PISHKIN 

Linden,    New    jersey 

Q    K 
College  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  B.S. 

Composer  "All  Hail  to  Our  Maryland";  Uni- 
versity Band  (2),  (3),  (4);  Sergeant,  Music 
Committee  (2);  Sergeant,  Managerial  Committee 
(3);  Glee  Club  (3),  (4);  University  Symphony 
Orchestra  (2),  (3),  (4);  University  Chorus  (4); 
German  Club    (4) . 


VIRGINIA  POORS 

Preston,  Maryland 

K  K  r 

College  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  A.B. 

Freshman  Frohc  Committee;  Tennis  (I),  (2), 
(3),  (4);  Rifle  Squad  (1),  (2);  Class  Historian 
(3). 


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DORATHEA  S.  FRESEMAN 

Baltimore,   Maryland 

K  K  r 

College  of  Home  Economics,  B.S. 

May  Day  (1),  (2);  Basketball  (3),  (4);  Vol- 
ley Ball;  Bowling  (2).  (5),  (4);  Freshman  and 
Junior  Prom  Committee;  Junior  Representative  to 
lixccutivc  Council;   Sponsor,   R.  O.   T.   C.  Co.  D 

(4). 


HYMAN  P.  FRIEDMAN 

New  York  City 

*  A 

College  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  B.S. 

German   Club;    Chess   and   Checker   Club;   D/d- 
inuiulhack  Staff    (I ), 


JAMES  B.  GAHAN 

Berwyiiy  MaryLiiiJ 

College  of  Agriculture,  B.S. 

Opera  Club    (1),    (2),    (3);   Glee  Club    (1). 


HELEN  VIRGINIA  GINGELL 

lifiuyii,  Marylaud 

K   A 

College  of  Education,  A.B. 

All-Maryland  Hockey  Team  (4);  Bowling  (4); 
Poe  Literary  Society  (4);  Y.  W.  C.  A.  (4); 
Woman's   Athletic   Association    (4). 


■4  46  >■ 


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JAMES  M.  GORDON 

Tiikoniij   Park,   Miirylanil 

«  X 
College  of  Engineering,  B.S. 

Engineer  Society  (1),  (2),  (3),  (4);  Rifle 
Team  (1),  (2);  University  Band  (1),  (2);  Uni- 
versity Chorus    (1);   Y.  M.  C.  A.    (I),   (2),   (3). 


CHARLES  G.  GREY 

Waihhigfoti,   D.   C. 

ATP  A   '/. 

College  of  Agriculture,  B.S. 

Student  Grange  (1),  (2),  Master  (4);  Student 
Band  (1),  (2),  Drum  Major  (3);  Livestock  Club 
(4);  Authorship  Club    (2). 


LLOYD  E.  GROSHON 

Graceham,  Marylutul 

ATP  K  <I>   K 

College  of  Education,  B.S. 

Student  Grange  (1),  (2),  (3),  (4),  Lecturer 
(3);  Hort  Club  (1),  (2),  (3),  (4);  Livestock 
Club  (1),  (2),  (3),  (4);  University  (2),  (3); 
Y.  M.  C.  A.  (1),  (2);  Diamomlback  (1).  (2); 
Interfraternity  Council  (3);  Junior  Prom  Com- 
mittee  (3). 


EVANGELINE  L.  GRUVER 

Hyathi'iUc,  Milrylainl 

AYX  Bn®  <1>K<I> 

College  of  Agriculture,  B.S. 

W.  A.  A.  (1),  (2),  (3),  (4);  W.  S.  G.  A. 
Council,  Vice-President  (4);  Y.  W.  C.  A.  (1), 
(3),  (4);  Basketball  (1),  (2),  (3),  (4);  Opera 
Club  (1),  (2),  (3),  (4);  Le  Cercle  Francais  (1), 
■(2);  Tennis  (I),  (2),  (3),  (4);  Student  Grange 
(2).    (3),    (4). 


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ERNEST  V.  HAINES 

Wushin^i^/on,   D.   C. 

X  :s  o       A  X  2 

College  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  B.S. 

Freshman  Track  (I);  Varsity  (2);  Orchestra 
(1).  (2),  (3);  Student  Band  (1),  (2),  (3), 
(4);    Chem  Show    (I),    (2). 


LORETTO  HANNON 

Froslhiny,,    Mji  yLniil 

College  of  Education,  A.B. 


LUTHER  HARPER 

Cuwhi-rlaiiJ^  MtirylatiJ 

N  5   O  T  B   n 

College  of  Engineering,  B.S. 

Engineering  Society  (1),  (2),  (3),  (4);  Pot 
Literary  Society  (2);  Lacrosse  (1);  First  Lieuten- 
ant R.  O.  T.  C;  Manager  Cross  Country  (4); 
"M"   (4). 


WALTER  G.  HARRIS 

Wus/jiiigfou,  D.  C. 

I  N  A 
College  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  a.B. 

Presbyterian  Club;  Y.  M.  C.  A.  (I);  Glee  Club 
(3),  (4);  Opera  Club  (4);  Rossbourg  (2);  Glee 
Club:  Orchestra   (3),    (4). 


■4  48  l!=- 


E.  EAMES  HARRISON 

Biilfiiiiorf,    Miirylaiul 

K  A 
College  of  Home  Economics 

Y.  W.  C.  A.  (I),  (2),  (3),  (4);  Episcopal 
Club  (1),  (2),  (3),  (4);  Opera  Club  (2),  (3), 
(4);  Student  Grange  (3),  (4);  Women's  Student 
Council    (3);   Home  Economics  Council    (4). 


ROBERTA  HARRISON 

W,ii/j/iix/oii.   D.  C. 

X  Q       H  n  «       2  A  n 

College  of  Education,  A.B. 

Footlight  Club    (3),    (4). 


HELENA  J.  HARTENSTEIN 

New   Freedom,   Painsylviinia 

College  of  Education,  A.B. 

New    Mercer    Literary    Society    (2),    (3),    (4) 
Women's  Student  Council    (3). 


RUTH  COWAN  HAYS 

Washington,  D.  C. 

K  A  *  K  ^ 

College  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  B.S. 

Orchestra  (1),  (2),  (3);  Varsity  Debate  (2), 
(3),  (4);  Y.  W.  C.  A.  (3),  (4);  Poe  Literary 
'Society  (1),  (2),  (3),  (4);  Episcopal  Club  (4); 
May  Day  Committee  (3);  Women's  Senior  Honor 
Society  (4);  Junior  League  of  Women  Voters 
(4);  Executive  Council    (3). 


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ALBERT  B.  HEAGY 

Wiiihiii!^li,n.    D.  C. 

2   N  OAK 

College  of  Arts  and  Sciences.  A.B. 

Class  President  (1),  (3),  (4);  Football  (1), 
(2).  (3),  (4);  "M"  (2),  (3),  (4);  Basketball 
(1),  (2),  (3),  (4);  "M"  (2),  (3),  (4);  L»- 
crosse  (1),  (2),  (3),  (4);  "M"  (2),  (3),  (4); 
Captain  (4);  Calvert  Forum  (2),  (3);  All- 
Maryland    End    (4). 


ROBERT  FAIRBANK  HEALY 

Glyiiiloit,    Marytaiitl 

N  2   O  OAK 

College  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  B.S. 

Junior  Representative  Executive  Council;  Vice- 
President  Sophomore  Class;  Secretary,  Omicron 
Delta  Kappa;  Interfraternity  Council  (3),  (4); 
junior  Prom  Committee;  Poe  Literary  Society 
(1);  Rossbourg  Club  (2),  (3);  Lacrosse  (1), 
(2),  (3),  (4);  Acting  Treasurer  Student  Assem- 
bly   (4). 


WILLIAM  W.  HEINTZ 

WdshniRton,   D.  C. 

A  X  2        A  *  n 

College  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  B.S. 

Scabbard  and  Blade,  Major,  R.  O.  T.  C;  Foot- 
light  Club  (3),  (4);  Football  (1),  (2),  (3), 
(4);  "M"  (3),  (4);  Track  (2),  (3),  (4);  Chess 
Club. 


E.  SAM  HEMMING 

Easton,  Maryland 

.\  r  P        A  z        *  K  <i> 
College  of  Agriculture,  B.S. 

Student  Grange  (1),  (2),  (3),  (4);  Alpha 
Zeta  Award  for  Scholarship  (I);  Student  Con- 
gress (4);  Rossbourg  Club  (3),  (4);  Art  Staff 
Reveille  (1),  (2),  (3);  Hort  Club  (1),  (2), 
(3),    (4);   Cross  Country    (1). 


■4  50  l> 


FRED  HETZEL 

Ciimhi-rliniil,  Min  yliiirti 

A  2  <J>         OAK 
College  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  A.B. 

Football,  (1),  (2);  Baseball  (1);  "M"  (2), 
(3),  Captain  (4);  Basketball  (1),  "M"  (2),  (3), 
(4);  Interfraternity  Council  (2),  (3);  Univer- 
sity Chorus  (2),  (4);  Poe  Literary  Society  (2), 
(3):  Senior  Representative  to  Executive  Council 
(4). 


ANN  ELIZABETH  HICKS 

Fairchiincc,  Pcniisyli  iiiiiii 

A  Y  X 

College  of  Home  Economics,  B.S. 

Y.  W.  C.  A.;   Young  Voters  League. 


HOWARD  H.  HINE 

Bill tiui ore,    Mtivyhiiid 

T  B  n 

College  of  Engineering,  B.S. 


ESTELLE  HOFFA 

Biir/oii,  Miirylttiul 

K  A       0  r 

College  of  Home  Economics,  B.S. 

Y.  W.  C.  A.  (2),  (3),  (4);  "M"  Club  (2), 
(3),  (4);  W.  A.  A.  (2),  (3),  (4);  Basketball 
(2);  University  Chorus  (2),  (3):  League  of 
Women  Voters    (4). 


•4  51  >• 


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HERBERT  RUSSELL  HOOPES 

hcl  Air.  MaryUiiiJ 

A   r  V         A  / 
College  of  Agriculture,  B.S. 

Student  Grange    (1),    (2),    (3),    (4);    Livestock 
Club    (1),    (2),    (3),    (4);  Y.  M.  C.  A. 


WILLIAM  L.  HOPKINS 

Bait  1 1)1  arc,    Maryhim! 

«   X  OAK 

College  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  A.B. 

Manager,  Baseball  (4);  Scabbard  and  Blade 
(3),  (4);  Rossbourg  Club  (1),  (2),  (3),  (4); 
Glee  Club;  Episcopal  Club  (1),  (2),  (3),  (4); 
Student   Congress;   Student   Band. 


ROBERTA  D.  HOWARD 

Hyiittiiitlc,  Maryliiiiil 

K  K  r 

College  of  Education,  A.B. 

Tennis  (1),  (2),  (3),  (4);  Swimming  (I); 
Rifle  (1),  (2);  \V.  A.  A.;  Sponsor,  Co.  E.  (3); 
Sponsor,  First   Battalion    (4). 


RICHARD  CHALMERS  HUGHES 

Wti^hin^foii,   D.  C. 

A  *  n 

College  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  B.S. 


-4  52  >• 


CARROLL  S.  JAMES 

Frederick,  Maryland 

T  B  n         *  K  * 

College  of  Engineering,  B.S. 

Engineering    Society    (1),    (2),    (3),    President 
(4);   Track    (1). 


NICHOLAS  A.  JANETZKE 

Baltimore,   Maryland 

E  N 
College  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  A.B. 

New  Mercer  Literary  Society  (I),  (2),  (3); 
Debating  Team  (2),  (3),  (4);  President,  Council 
of  Oratory  and  Debate  (3),  (4);  President,  Bap- 
tist Society   (3),   (4). 


HARRY  AYDELOTTE  JARVIS 

Berlin,  Maryland 

2*2  OAK 

College  of  Engineering,  B.S. 

Manager  Football  (4);  Executive  Council  (4); 
Vice  President  Senior  Class;  Treasurer,  Sopho- 
more Class;  Engineering  Society  (1),  (2),  (3), 
(4);   Episcopal  Club    (1),    (2). 


KENDALL  P.  JARVIS 

Bvrlhi,  Maryland 

A  ^  a 

College  of  Engineering,  B.S. 

Engineering  Society. 


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JOSEPH  JERARDI 

Baltiworc,    Marylitml 

College  oi  Arts  and  Sciences,  B.S. 


M.    ELIZABETH   SHERMAN   JONES 

OUuy,  Miiryluiiil 

5  A  n       B  n  0 

College  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  A.B. 

Student  Grange  (1),  (2),  (3,  (4);  Episcopal 
Club  (1),  (2),  (3),  (4);  Women's  Athletic  As- 
sociation (1),  (2),  (3);  Tennis  (1),  (2);  Class 
Basketball  Team  (I),  (2),  (3),  "M"  (2);  M 
Club  (2),  (3),  (4);  Opera  Club  (3),  (4);  Poe 
Literary  Society  (3),  (4);  Student  Congress 
(4);  May  Day  Committee  (3);  University 
Chorus   (1),   (2). 


VIRGINIA   MAY   KALMBACH 

Winhhi^ton,  D.  C. 

<I>  K  *  X   A 

College  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  A.B. 

Reveille  (3);  Dianioiulback  (3),  (4);  Y.  W. 
C.  A.  (3),  (4);  Cabinet  (4);  W.  A.  A.  (2), 
(4);  Basketball  (1),  (4);  Hockey  (4);  Bowling 
(4);    Mathematics    Society    (3),    (4). 


HENRY  J.  KAPLAN 

Spring  Vdllt-y,  Ncii    York 

College  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  B.S. 

German   Club. 


■4  54  > 


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MARGARET  KARR 

Bi'f/jcstia,  Muryliiiitl 

K   K   r  <I>   K  *  Ml' 

College  of  Education,  B.S. 

Women's  Senior  Honor  Society,  President;  Y. 
W".  C.  A.  (1),  (4);  Undergraduate  Representa- 
tive (2),  President  (3);  Episcopal  Club  (1), 
(3),  (4);  Women's  Student  Council;  Executive 
Council;  Religious  Work  Council  (3);  New  Mer- 
cer Literary  Society  (1),  (2),  (3);  Dianwiul- 
back  (2);  W.  A.  A.;  Tennis  (1),  (2),  (3),  (4); 
Basketball   (3);  Bowling  (3);  May  Day   (1),   (3). 


JAMES  KELLY 

Tousoii,  MiiiyliiiiJ 

2   N 

College  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  B.S. 


J.  DONALD  KIEFFER 

Baltimore,    MtiryiunJ 

N  2   O  OAK 

College  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  B.S. 

Lacrosse  (1);  Poe  Literary  Society  (1),  (2), 
(3);  Dill  III  oiul  back  (1);  Advertising  Manager 
(2);  Business  Manager  (3);  Council  of  Oratory 
and  Debate  (3);  Manager  of  Basketball  (4); 
Treasurer  of  Student  Government  Association 
(4). 


WILLIAM  J.  KINNAMON 

Eas/on,  AUiryhiml 

5*2  OAK  TAN 

College  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  B.S. 

Scabbard  and  Blade  (5),  (4);  Lieutenant-Col- 
onel, R.  O.  T.  C.  (4);  Track  (1),  (2),  (3J, 
(4);  "M"  (2),  (3),  (4);  Mile  Relay  Team  (3), 
(4);  Cross  Country  (1),  (2),  (3);  Reveille 
(2),  Editor  (3),  advertising  editor  (4);  Presi- 
dent, Gamma  Alpha  Nu  (4);  Interfraternity 
Council  (3),  (4);  Student  Congress  (4);  Glee 
Club    (2);   Sophomore  Prom  Committee    (2). 


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ADOLPH  KOLDEWEY 

Catonsi  lUc.  MarylanJ 

A  2  * 
College  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  B.A. 

University    Chorus     (3);     Football     (2),     (3); 
Boxing   (4);  Student  Congress   (4). 


MELVIN  ELWOOD  KOONS 

Washington,  D.  C. 

2   N 

College  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  B.S. 

President,  Scabbard  and  Blade;  Captain,  R.  O. 
T.  C;  Baptist  Society  (3),  (4);  Basketball  (1), 
(2);    Lacrosse    (1),    (2),    (3),    (4). 


WILHELMINA  DOROTHY  KROLL 

Wiishhjgtori,  D.  C. 

*  K  ^ 

College  of  Education,  B.S. 

Y.  W.  C.  A.  (3),  (4);  Lutheran  Club  (3), 
(4);  V;'.  A.  A.  (2),  (3),  (4);  Rifle  Team  (2), 
(3),    (4). 


MARIAN  EVELYN  LANE 

Washington,   D.  C. 

K  A       or 

College  of  Education,  B.S. 

Student  Grange  (3),  (4);  Poe  Literary  Society 
(3),  (4);  Y.  W.  C.  A.  (4);  Tennis  (2),  (3), 
(1). 


■4  56  >■ 


IRA  LEE  LANGELUTTIG 

Baltimore,   Maryland 
ATP  A  Z 

College  of  Agriculture,  B.S. 

Student    Grange     (1),     (2),     (5),     (4);    Live- 
stock Club    (1),    (2),    (3),    (4);    Football    (1). 


MARGARET  VERNON  LEIGHTON 

Mountain   Lake  Park,  MarylauJ 

A  o  n       or 

College  of  Home  Economics,  B.S. 

Student  Grange  (2),  (3),  (4);  New  Mercer 
Literary  Society  (1),  (2),  (3),  (4);  Episcopal 
Club  (3),  (4);  Y.  W.  C.  A.  (I),  (2),  (3),  (4); 
Tennis  (1).  (2),  (3);  League  of  Young  Women 
Voters  (3),  (4);  Women's  Student  Government 
Association    (1),    (2),    (3),    (4). 


SAMUEL  LETVIN 

Washington,  D.  C. 

T  B  n 

College  of  Engineering,  B.S. 


MAUDE  E.  LEWIS 

Washington,   D.   C. 

K  A 
College  of  Home  Economics,  B.S. 


Episcopal    Club     (2),     (3), 
(3);    French   Club    (2),    (3); 
Voters   (4);  Y.  W.  C.  A.   (2), 
ship  Club    (3),    (4). 


(4);  Chorus  (2), 
League  of  Women 
(3),   (4);  Author- 


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RUPERT  B.  LILLIE 

Washington,  D.  C. 

I   N  A 

College  of  Agriculture,  B.S. 

Glee  Club  (I),  (2),  (4);  Little  Symphony 
Orchestra  (3);  University  Chorus  (2);  Hort 
Club  (3),  (4);  Baptist  Student  Union  (3);  Re- 
viir  11     (2). 


FLOYD  RANDALL  LININGER 

W'ri/ri///>i)i7,   Al.irv/.'"./ 

A   vl/   12 
College  of  Engineering,  B.S. 

Engineering  Society  (I),  (3),  (4);  Glee  Club 
(1),  (2);  Student  Band  (1);  Junior  Prom  Com- 
mittee (3);  Executive  Council  (5);  Vice  Presi- 
dent Junior  Class  (3);  Interfraternity  Council 
(4);   Episcopal  Club    (1). 


URBAN  THOMAS  LINZEY,  JR. 

Tousoii,  Maryland 

K  A 

College  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  A.B. 

Track  (1),  (2),  (3),  (4);  "M"  (2),  (3), 
(4);  Cross  Country  (1),  (2),  (3),  (4),  "M" 
(2),    (4);    Captain    Cross    Country     (4). 


FOSTER  ELLIS  LIPPHARD 

Washington,  D.  C. 

T  B  n 

College  of  Engineering,  B.S. 

Major,  R.  O.  T.  C;  Rifle  (I),  (2),  (3), 
Opera  Club  (1),  (2);  Orchestra  (1),  (2), 
University  Chorus  (1),  (3);  Rossbourg 
(4);    Diainontlbaik.    (4). 


(4); 
(3); 
(2). 


■4   58   > 


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MADISON  E.  LLOYD 

Cocki-ysi  illf.   Miiryiiiml 

N50  OAK  PAN 

College  of  Engineering,  B.S. 

Track  (I),  (4);  Cross  Country  (4);  Reveille 
(2),  Business  Manager  (3),  Advising  Business 
Manager  (4);  Poe  Literary  Society  (1),  (2),  (3), 
(4);  Rossbourg  Club  (2),  (3),  (4);  Y.  M.  C.  A. 
(1),  (3);  Engineering  Society  (1),  (2).  (5). 
(4). 


ROBERT  W.  LOCKRIDGE 

Eilinonston,  Murylaiiil 

College  of  Engineering,  C.E. 

Freshman  Lacrosse;  Glee  Club  (2),  (3);  Engi- 
neering Society  (2);  Varsity  Debate  Team  (3): 
Assistant  Manager  Varsity  Debate;  Member  of 
Council  of  Oratory  and  Debate  (3),  (4);  R.  O. 
T.  C. 


HERMAN  LOMBARD 

Washington,  D.  C. 

T  E  * 

College  of  Engineering,  B.S. 

Football  (I),  (2),  (3),  (4);  "M"  (3),  (4); 
Baseball  (2),  (3),  (4);  Engineering  Society;  Re- 
ligious Work  Council  (5),  (4);  All-Maryland 
Football   Team    (3). 


ERMA  LOWE 

Pyli'Siillv,  Maryland 

College  of  Education,  A.B. 

Y.   W.   C.   A.;   Chorus;   Women's   Student   Gov- 
ernment Council. 


■•^I  59  > 


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ORA  BLANCHE  LOWE 

Pylviiille,  Marylatnl 

College  of  Education,  A.B. 

Y.  W.  C.  A.    (3),    (4);  Chorus    (4). 


WILLIAM  L.  LUCAS 

Baltimore,   Maryland 

2  T  n 

College  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  A.B. 

Tennis    (1),    (2),    (J),    (4);    First    Lieutenant, 
R.  O.  T.  C;  Y.  M.  C.  A.    (1),    (2),   (3). 


LILLIAN  LUNENBERG 

Washington,  D.  C. 

A  Y  X 

College  of  Home  Economics,  B.S. 


GEORGE  FRANCIS  MADIGAN 

Washington,  D.  C. 

:S   N  A  X  2  A  Z 

College  of  Agriculture,  B.S. 

Football  (1),  (2),  (3),  (4);  "M"  (3),  (4) 
Basketball  (1),  (2),  (3),  (4);  "M"  (2),  (3) 
Track  (1);  Baseball  (1),  (2);  Lacrosse  (3),  (4) 
Treasurer  of  Class  ( 1 ) ;  Vigilance  Committee 
Representative  to  Student  Congress. 


4  60  Il=" 


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PAUL  CHARLES  MARTH 

Ecisfon,  Marylitiul 

k  7.         $  K  <i> 

College  of  Agriculture,  B.S. 

Student     Grange     (1),     (2),     (3),     (4);     Hort 
Club    (2),    (3),    (4);    President    (4). 


GRACE  MAXWELL 

Lnkc,  MiiryliUid 

A  ()  n         &  T         *  K  $ 
College  of  Home  Economics,  B.S. 

Student  Grange  (1),  (2),  (3),  (4);  Y.  W. 
C.  A.  (2),  (3),  (4);  Cabinet  (3);  Poe  Literary 
Society  (1),  (2),  (3),  (4);  Episcopal  Club  (3), 
(4);  Bowling  (2);  League  of  Young  Women  Vot- 
ers (3),  (4);  Women's  Student  Government  As- 
sociation   (1),    (2),    (3),    (4). 


ROBERT  JOHN  McCANDLISH 

Hancock,    Maryland 

N  2  O 
College  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  A.B. 

Episcopal    Club     (  1 )  ;     Dianiondhack     (  1  )  ;     Pt>e 
Literary   Society    (I);    Rossbourg   Club    (2),    (4). 


JOHN  E.  McDonald 

Wiishrngfon,   D.  C. 

AS*  AX  2  OAK 

College  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  B.S. 

Football  (1),  (2),  (3),  (4);  "M"  (2),  (3), 
(4);  Track  (1),  (2),  (3),  (4);  "M"  (2),  (3), 
(4);  Freshman  Basketball;  Glee  Club  (1),  (2), 
(3),  Director  (3);  Opera  Club  (1),  (2),  (3), 
(4);  M  Club  (2),  (3),  (4);  Vigilance  Commit- 
tee: Chairman  Sophomore  Prom;  Chairman,  Jun- 
ior  Prom   Committee. 


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FLORENCE  McLEOD 

Ah'xciuilrid,   Virginia 

K  K  r       A  *  a 

College  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  A.B. 

Y.  W.  C.  A.  (1),  (2),  (3);  Music  Festival 
(ll;  Footlight  Club  (2),  (5),  (4);  Hockey  (4); 
limiiir    League  of   Women    Voters    (4);    W.    A.   A. 


MARGARET  MEIGS 

Belhi-ulii,    MiiryhiilJ 

K   K   r  X   A  *   K   * 

College  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  A.B. 

Rifle  (I),  (2),  (i)\  Basketball  (1),  (2),  (3), 
(4);  Bowling  (3),  (4);  Tennis,  (1),  (2),  (3), 
(4);  Captain  Hockey  (4);  Revkille  (1),  (2); 
New  Mercer  (I),  (2),  (3);  Episcopal  Club 
(I),  (2);  Y.  W.  C.  A.  (I),  (2),  (3);  League 
of  Young  Women  Voters  (3).  (4);  M  Club  (4); 
"M"  in  Basketball  (3);  Women's  Senior  Honor 
Society    (4). 


FULTON  TALMADGE  MISTER 

Bitltinioiw    Miuyltiiiil 

K  A 

College  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  A.B. 


CLAUDINE  MORGAN 

Loiiiicoiinl}^.  Muryliiiul 

K  K  r 

College  of  FIome  Economics,  B.S. 


•4  62  \a 


ALFRED  T.  MYERS 

Hyatfsiillf,   MurylaiiJ 

A  X  2        2*2 
College  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  B.S. 


WARREN  GRAHAM  MYERS 

Tbiirniont,   Maryliunl 
ex  K   4)   K  A   Z 

College  of  Education,  B.S. 

Captain,  Cross  Country;  "M"  in  Cross  Coun- 
try (2),  (3),  (4);  "M"  in  Track  (3),  (4); 
Treasurer,  Lutheran  Club;  Student  Grange  (2 ) , 
(3),    (4). 


WILBUR  GIBBS  MYERS 

Washlllx/oll.    D.   C. 

K  <!>   K 
College  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  A.B. 

Rifle  Team  (1),  (3),  (4);  Opera  Club  (3), 
(4);  Diamoiulhack  (4);  Glee  Club  (4);  Ross- 
bourg  Club    (4);    Authorship  Club    (4). 


ROSALIE  NATHANSON 

Leonard tou'u,   Maryland 

A   *  fi 
College  of  Education,  A.B. 

DiamoiiJhiH'k  (2);  Young  Women  Voters' 
League  (2),  (3),  (4);  Authorship  Club  (2), 
(3),  (4);  Footlight  Club  (2),  (3),  (4);  Chorus 
(2);  Opera  Club    (4);   Student  Congress    (4). 


■4  63  >■ 


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THORMAN  A.  NELSON 

Wiishiugton.   D.   C. 

2  T  n       B  n  w 

College  of  Education,  B.S. 

Y.   M.  C.  A.    (2),    (3).    (4). 


J.   DONALD  NEVIUS 

Colli\^f    Park,    MitryLtiiJ 

2  T  n 

College  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  A.B. 

Scabbard  and  Blade;  Poe  Literary  Society  (1), 
(2);  Glee  Club  (1),  (2);  Captain,  R.  O.  T.  C; 
Intertraternicy  Council  (3),  President  (4); 
Treasurer,  Student  Government  Association;  Ten- 
nis    (3),    (4). 


ALICE  CURRY  NOURSE 

Diiusoiii  rlU-,   Miiryliititl 

K  K  r       t)  r       <i>  K  * 

College  of  Education,  A.B. 

Y.  W.  C.  A.  (1),  (2);  Student  Grange  (1), 
(2),  (3);  W.  A.  A.  (1),  (2),  (3).  (4);  Rifle 
(1);  Tennis  (I),  (2),  (3),  (4);  Women's  Stud- 
ent Council  (1);  Panhellenic  Council  (3),  (4); 
Poe  Literary  Society  (I),  (2),  (3);  Bowling 
(3),  (4);  Dhmoiulback  Staff  (3),  (4);  May 
Day    Committee    (3). 


WILLIAM  PAUL  NOWELL 

Wiishiiif^toii.   D.   C. 

I   N   A 

College  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  B.S. 


■4  64  \r- 


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JOHN  THOMAS  O'NEILL 

Wiis/.yiif^/uiJ,   D.   C. 

<!>   i-    K  (.)   A    K 

College  of  Engineering,  B.S. 

Scabbard  and  Blade;  Interfraternicy  Council 
(2),  Vice  President  (3);  Representative  to  Na- 
tional Intcrfratcrnity  Conference  (  3  ) ;  Represen- 
tative to  Southern  Federation  of  Colleges  ( 3 )  ; 
Council  of  Oratory  an  J  Debate  (4) ,  President 
(4) ;  Captain,  R.  O.  T.  C;  Senior  Cheerleader 
(4);  "M"  in  checrleading  (4);  Secretary,  Stud- 
ent Executive  Council  (4);  President.  Student 
Government    Association. 


ALICE  LOUISE  ORTON 

\Vi:sbiiigtoii,  D.  C. 

K  K  r 

College  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  A.B. 

Girls'  Rifle  Team  (1),  (2),  (4);  Rifle  "M" 
(1),  (2);  New  Mercer  (2),  (4);  Spanish  Play 
(1);  Bowling  (2);  Class  Hockey  (4);  House 
President  (4);  Student  Congress  (4);  W.  A.  A. 
(1),  (2),  (4);  Y.  W.  C.  A.  (2);  Woman's 
National   Individual    Rifle  Champion. 


NORMAN  EDGAR  PENNINGTON 

Kvivicilyiiiie,  Muryltiiul 

ATP 

College  of  Agriculture,  B.S. 

Student   Grange    (1),    (2),    (3),    (4);   Livestock 
Club    (1),    (2),    (3),    (4). 


JOHN  EDWIN  PERHAM 

Hagcrstou'u,  MaryUimi 

I  N  A 

College  of  Engineering,  B.S. 

Freshman  Track;  Engineering  Society   (1),    (2), 
(3),    (4);  Glee  Club. 


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GEORGE  T.  PHIPPS 

Washinnl.in,   D.   C. 

^  <i>  -^         T  B  n 
College  oi   Engineering,  B.S. 

Engineering    Society     (3),     (4);    Baseball     (1), 
(2),    (3),    (4);   Math  Club    (3). 


JERROLD  VERNON  POWERS 

Hyattuillc,  Maryland 
<I>:=K     OAK     2An     TAN     A*fi 
College  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  A.B. 

New  Mercer  (1),  (2),  (3),  (4);  Rossbourg 
Club  (1),  (2),  (3),  (4);  Opera  Club  (2);  Dia- 
moiidback  (2),  News  Editor  (3),  Editor-in- 
Chief  (4);  Sophomore  Prom  Committee,  Inter- 
fraternity  Council  (2),  (3);  President,  Sigma 
Delta  Pi    (4);   Footlight  Club    (3),    (4). 


MARGARET  S.  PRESSLEY 

Elk    Rulgc,  Maryland 

College  of  Home  Economics,  B.S. 

Y.  ^'.  C.  A.;  Presbyterian  Club   (4);  May  Day 
Committee    (3), 


ROBERT  FREDERICK  QUINN 

Washiui^tou,   D.  C. 

2  N 
College  of  Engineering,  B.S. 

Track  (1),  (2),  (3),  (4);  "M"  in  Track  (2), 
(3),  (4),  Captain  (4);  Football  (1);  Engineer- 
ing Society   (1),   (2),   (3),   (4). 


•4  66  !;<:• 


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JULIUS  JOHN  RADICE 

Washhigtou,   D.   C. 

2  N 
College  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  A.B. 

Freshman  Football;  Basketball,  Captain;  Base- 
ball (1),  (2),  (3),  (4);  Football  (2),  (5),  (4); 
Basketball  (2),  "M"  (3),  (4);  Baseball  (1),  "M" 
(2),  (3),  (4);  Leading  Batter,  Tri-State  League 
of  Southern  Conference,  All-Maryland  Basketball 
Team;  All-Southern  Conference  Team;  All-Mary- 
land Baseball  Team    (4). 


M.  MARLIN  RAMSBURG 

I'rcJirU  k.    Mar  yl  a  till 

A  *  a  K  <J>   K 

College  of  Agriculture,  B.S. 

Freshman   Football    (1);    Varsity   Baseball    (2); 
President  of  Kappa  Phi  Kappa    (4). 


WILLIAM  A.  RANDALL 

Washiiigfoii,   D.  C. 

College  of  Agriculture,  B.S. 


ROBERT  KENNETH  REMSBURG 

MiddhfoiitJ,  Maryland 

A  *  n         K  $  K 
College  of  Agriculture,  B.S. 

Cross  Country  (1),  "M"  (2),  (3),  Captain 
(4);  Track  (1),  "M"  (2),  (3),  (4);  Mile  Relay 
Team  (1),  (2),  (3);  Student  Grange  (3),  (4); 
Lutheran  Club  (3),  (4);  Poe  Literary  Society 
(4). 


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FREDERICK  WM.  RIBNITZKI,  JR. 

VCis/'iiixliin.   D.  C. 

A   i   *  A    Z 

College  of  Agriculture,  B.S. 

Freshman  Football;  Varsicy  Football  (2),  ()), 
(4),  "M"  in  Football;  Basketball;  Lacrosse;  Scr- 
Kcant-at-Arms   of  Class    (1),    (2),    (3),    (4). 


EVALYN  S.  RIDOUT 

A II iiii linli\ ,    MtiiyLiiiii 

A   O   II  13   IT   (-)  X   A 

College  of  Arts  anu  Sciences,  A.B. 

Women's  Student  Government  Association 
Council  (3),  President  (4);  Council  of  Oratory 
r.nd  Debate  (4);  Secretary,  Executive  Council 
(4);  Religious  Council  (4);  Student  Grange  (2), 
(3),  (4);  Y.  W.  C.  A.  (2),  (3),  (4);  Cabinet 
(4);  Pee  Literary  Society  (I),  (2),  (5),  (4); 
D'liimoiiilhack  (3),  (4);  Le  Cercle  Francais  (2); 
Class  Historian  (4);  May  Day  Committee  (3); 
League  of  Young  Women  Voters. 


EUGENE  JOSEPH  ROBERTS 

Vi'iishiiigfon.   D.  C. 

2  T  n 

College  of  Engineering,  B.S. 

Band    (3),    (4);  Glee  Club    (2),    (3);   Captain, 
R.  O.   T.   C;   Engineering  Society    (1),    (2). 


KATHERINE  ELIZABETH  RODIER 

Wcishiilf^fon,   D.  C. 

College  of  Home  Economics,  B.S. 

Swimming  Club  (2);  New  Mercer  (2);  Bowl- 
ing (3);  Y.  \V.  C.  A.  (3);  Episcopal  Club  (3); 
League  of   Women   Voters    (4);    Rl  vtlLLE    (3). 


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■4  68  >• 


IRVING  H.  ROSENBAUM 

Ncu'hiirgh,  New  York 

T   E  4> 

College  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  A.B. 

Track  (1);  "M"  Tennis  (2),  (3),  (4);  Cap- 
tain (4);  Junior  Prom  Committee;  Student  Re- 
ligious Council. 


WILLIAM  T.  ROSENBAUM 

\'ttf   York  City 

*  A  TAN 

College  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  A.B. 

DiamaiullHuk  (I),  (2),  Sports  Editor  (3), 
(4);  Campus  Improvement  Committee  (3); 
Student  Congress    (4). 


ELSIE  ELIZABETH  RYON 

Watdoyf,  Maryland 

K  K  r 

College  of  Education,  A.B. 

Women's  Student  Council  (3);  D/aiiiunJhack 
(2),  (3);  Episcopal  Club  (1),  (2),  (3),  (4); 
League  of  Young  Women  Voters    (4). 


WILLIAM  LAWRENCE  SANDERS 

Hairc  dc  Grace,  Maryland 

ATP 

College  of  Agriculture,  B.S. 

Hort  Club    (1),    (2),    (3),    (4). 


■4.  69  >• 


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ARTHUR  HERMAN  SCHREIBER 

Cl.nny  Chase,  D.  C. 

ATP 

College  of  Agriculture,  B.S. 

Cross  Country  (1),  (2),  (3),  "M"  (2);  Stud- 
pnt  Grange  (1),  (2),  (3);  Track  (1),  (2); 
livestock   Club    (1),    (2),    (3),    (4). 


J.  RANDALL  SCHULTZ 

Upl]crco,  Marylatiti 

A  X  2 

College  of  Agriculture,  B.S. 

Y.  M.  C.  A.    (I). 


HALE  FRENCH  SEHORN 

Wiiihitiglou,  D.  C. 

College  of  Engineering,  B.S. 

Rifle     (2),     (3),     (4),    Manager     (3),    Captain 
(4);    "M"   in    Rifle    (2),    (3),    (4);    Engineering 

Society    (A  ) . 


ROBERT  T.  SETTLE 

Baltimore,   Maryland 

2  N  OAK 

College  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  A.B. 

Chairman,  Freshman  Prom  Committee;  New 
Mercer  Literary  Society  ( 2 ) ,  ( 3 ) ,  (4 ) ;  Ross- 
bourg  Club  (1).  (2),  (3),  (4);  Sophomore 
Prom  Committee;  Junior  Prom  Committee;  Vice 
President,  Student  Government  Association;  Presi- 
dent, Student  Executive  Council. 


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BARBARA  SCHILLING 

Cumbcrttind,  Maryland 

A  o  n        B  n  (-^        X  A        *  K  $ 
College  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  A.B. 

Student  Grange  (2),  (3),  (4);  Poe  Literary 
Society  (I),  (2),  (3),  (4);  Society  Debating 
Team  (1),  (2);  Critic  (3);  Secretary  (4);  Y. 
W.  C.  A.  (1),  (2),  (3),  (4);  Cabinet  (2),  (3), 
(4);  Diamondback  (1),  (2),  (3);  President, 
Beta  Pi  Theta  (4) ;  League  of  Young  Women 
Voters  (2),  (3);  Intercollegiate  Debating  Team 
(3),  (4);  Manager  (3),  (4);  May  Day  Commit- 
tee  (3). 


ANNIE  L.  SNODGRASS 

Norton,  Virginia 

College  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  A.B. 


NORVAL  HARRISON  SPICKNALL, 
JR- 

tlyattsi'illc,  Maryland 

College  of  Agriculture,  B.S. 

Rifle    Team     (1),     (2),     (3),     (4);    Livestock 
Club   (1),   (2);  Hort  Club    (3),   (4). 


EDWIN  GREENWOOD  STIMPSON 

Washington,  D.  C. 

0  X        A  X  2        A  *  n 

College  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  A.B. 

Freshman  Cross  Country  (1);  Glee  Club  (1), 
(2),  (3),  (4),  President  (3),  (4);  Opera  Club 
(1),  (2),  (3),  President  (4);  Episcopal  Club 
(1),  (2),  (3),  President  (4);  Footlight  Club 
(3),   (4);  Y.  M.  C.  A.    (2),   (3). 


■4  71  l!=- 


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ROY  B.  TANSILL 

Bait  nil  ore,    Marxian  J 

*  5  K 

College  or  Engineering,  E.E. 

Engineering  Society  (1),  (2),  (3),  (4);  Fresh- 
man Baseball  (1);  Interfraternity  Basketball  (2), 
(3),  (4);  Interfraternity  Council  (3);  Class 
Treasurer  (3),  (4);  Junior  Prom  Committee 
(3);  Varsity  Baseball    (2),    (3),    (4);   "M"  Club. 


ALICE  E.  TAYLOR 

VcrryiiUc,  Maryland 

B  n  0 

College  or  Education,  A.B. 

New  Mercer  Literary  Society;  Women's  Stud- 
ent Council  (4);  Y.  W.  C.  A.;  House  President 
(4);  League  of  Young  Women  Voters;  Basket- 
ball   (1). 


NORMAN  LAFAYETTE  TAYLOR 

Salisbury,  Maryland 

0   X 

College  of  Engineering,  B.S. 

Engineering  Society;   Y.  M.  C.  A. 


LOUISE  SCARBOROUGH 
TOWNSEND 

Gh'dli'irce,  Maryland 

K  K  r       A  *  n       X  A 

College  of  Education,  A.B. 

Y.  W.  C.  A.  (1),  (2),  (3),  (4);  S.  A.  A.; 
New  Mercer  Literary  Society  (2),  (3),  (4); 
Opera  Club  (1),  (2);  Footlight  Club  (I),  (2), 
(3),  (4);  Hockey  (4);  Bowling  (3),  (4);  Dia- 
moiidback  (1),  (2),  Women's  Editor  (3),  (4); 
May  Day  Committee  (3);  Committee  on  Fresh- 
man Regulations    (2);  Vice  President,  Chi  Alpha. 


■<  72  >• 


HARRY  S.  TROXELL 

Nort/jilmlfini?,  Pfillisylt  iltua 

College  of  Arts  and  Sciencfs,  A.B. 

New    Mercer    Literary   Society    (1),    (2);    Foot- 
ball   (1). 


JOHN  N.  UMBARGER 

Bi'l  A'n\  Maryhllil 

K   A  OAK 

College  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  A.B. 

Freshman  Lacrosse  ( 1 ) ;  Track  ( 1 ) ;  New  Mer- 
cer Literary  Society  (2),  (3);  Rossbourg  Club 
(2),  (3);  President  (4);  Scabbard  and  Blade 
(3),  (4);  Interfraternity  Council  (2),  (3); 
First   Lieutenant,  R.  O.   T.   C.    (4). 


LUCY  R.  VORIS 

Ltitncl,  Muyyluilit 

College  of  Arts  and  Sciences.  A.B. 


JAMES  N.  WALLACE 

Wiisbhigton,  D.  C. 

0  X         T  B  n 
College  of  Engineering,  B.S. 

Rifle    (2),    (3),    (4);   Engineering  Society    (2), 
(3),    (4). 


■4  73  I^- 


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NICHOLAS  P.  WARCHOLY 

Passilif,  New  ji'rst-y 

A    i    'I> 

College  or  Arts  and  Sciences,  B.S. 

Football  (1),  (2),  (3),  (■♦);  Freshman  Track; 
Lacrosse  (1),  (2),  (3);  Lutheran  Club;  German 
Club;  Poe  Literary  Society;  Interfraternity  Bas- 
hetball. 


DAVID  J.  WARD,  JR. 

Siilnhiny,  Mary  lit  ml 

&  X 

College  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  A.B. 

Baseball    (1);   Rossbourg    (I),    (2),    (3);  Y.  M. 
C.  A.    (1). 


LORIS  ELWOOD  WILLIAMS 

Wits/-iinj<(oti,  D.   C. 

*  X         A  X  2 

College  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  B.S. 

Baseball    (1);  Track    (1);   Rossbourg    (3),    (4). 


CHARLES  A.  WILLMUTH 

Ktiiiluorfb,  D.  C. 

College  of  Engineering,  A.B. 

Glee  Club    (1),    (2),    (3);   Student   Band    (I), 
(2);  Kngineering  Society   (3),   (4). 


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HARRY    NORMAN    WILSON 

liifiU-iiilr,    Miirylainl 

2  <!'  2 
College  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  B.S. 

Football  (1),  (2),  (3),  (4);  Lacrosse  (1), 
(2),  (3),  (4);  "M"  (2),  (3),  (4);  Freshman 
Basketball;   Rossbourg  Club. 


WILLIAM  SAMUEL  WILSON 

Siilis/viry,  Miiryhiinl 

^  ^  n 

College  of  Engineering,  B.S. 

Track    (I);   Baseball    (1),    (2);   Engineering  So- 
ciety   (I),    (2),    (3),    (4);    Glee  Club    (1). 


MARGARET  WISNER 

Takonid  Park,  Miiryliiml 

K  K  r 

College  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  A.B. 

Secretary  of  Class  (1),  (2),  (3),  (4);  Fresh- 
man Prom  and  Frolic  Committees;  Episcopal  Club 
(1);  Rifle  (I);  Y.  W.  C.  A.;  New  Mercer  Lit- 
erary Society  (1),  (2);  W.  A.  A.  (I),  (2),  (3), 
(4) ;  Sophomore  Prom  Committee;  Hockey  (4) ; 
Soccer    (4);   Tennis    (4);   Basketball    (4). 


GENEVIEVE  GRACE  WRIGHT 

Chevy  Chase,  MtiryUiul 

A  on       Bn®       XA 

College  of  Arts  and  Sciences.  A.B. 

Reveille  (2),  Women's  Editor  (3),  Advising 
Women's  Editor  (4);  Diamoiidback  (1),  (2); 
Rifle  (1);  New  Mercer  Literary  Society  (I),  (2), 
(3),  (4);  Panhellenic  Council,  Secretary  (3), 
Treasurer  (4);  Student  Grange  (2),  (3),  (4); 
Freshman  Frolic  Committee  ( 1 ) ;  May  Day  Com- 
mittee (3);  Le  Cercle  Francais  (1),  (2);  Alpha 
Nu  Gamma  (3);  President,  Women's  Journalism 
Fraternity,  Chi  Alpha;  Women's  Senior  Honor 
Society,  Secretary-Treasurer  (4);  Y.  W.  C.  A. 
(3),  (4);  League  of  Young  Women  Voters  (3), 
Treasurer    (4);    Senior   Play   Committee    (4). 


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Junior  Class  History 


Filled  with  enthusiasm  and  anticipation  yet  just  a  httle  fearfvil  we  arrived  at  Mary- 
land in  the  fall  of  1927.  Everything  and  everyone  seemed  to  be  in  a  topsy-turvy  state, 
for  very  strange  conditions  existed  on  the  campus,  since  it  was  going  through  the 
process  of  renovation.  The  new  Chemistry  building  and  the  state  roads  which  we 
now  enjoy  so  much  were  in  the  making.  The  roar  of  machinery  made  more  than  one 
professor  lose  his  temper  and  the  dirt,  dust  and  briers  called  forth  exclamations  of  woe 
from  many  a  fair  co-ed  at  the  wholesale  destruction  of  her  silken  hose.  Our  first  few 
weeks  were  spent  in  arranging  rooms,  wardrobes  and  in  getting  acquainted  with  the 
many  interesting  things  around  us.  But  we  knew  that  this  pleasantness  would  not 
last  indefinitely.  Before  we  realized  it  the  Sophomore  demons  were  on  our  trail  and 
they  really  gave  us  a  ride  for  a  while.  The  "rat  and  rabbit"  rules  were  hard  and  fast 
while  they  lasted,  but  we  all  took  them  good  naturedly  and  did  not  let  the  "sophs" 
discourage  us. 

Fraternity  and  Sorority  rushing  had  started  and  we  were  in  a  quandary  as  to  what 
it  was  all  about.  The  campus  was  literally  buzzing  with  rushing  gossip  which  was 
indeed  quite  amusing  to  the  Freshmen.  For  the  first  time  we  realized  that  probably 
we  were  worth  something  after  all.  Finally  pledge  day  cam.e  along  with  all  its  thrills 
and  put  an  end  to  the  rushing  season. 

As  pledges  we  were  treated  just  as  ordinary  hiiman  beings  once  agaiti.  The  "eds" 
cut  grass  and  were  general  utility  men  for  their  future  brothers,  while  the  co-eds  were 
given  various  opportunities  for  showing  their  domestic  ability  at  their  respective  sorority 
houses. 

Shortly  after  our  return  we  were  met  with  our  first  finals.  Contrary  to  Caesar, 
we  came,  we  saw,  but  many  of  us  did  not  conquer.  However,  the  heaviest  of  hearts 
could  not  remain  so  In  the  midst  of  the  gay  social  season  that  followed.  Spring  ushered 
in  the  formals  and  the  Freshman  frolic  which  gained  the  prestige  of  being  the  worst  in 
the  history  of  the  institution.    Anyhow  we  enjoyed  it  and  there  was  only  one  casualty 


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from  the  bombardment  of  fruits  and  vegetables.    The  reputation  was  saved  though  by 
a  successful  prom  which  completed  our  part  in  the  social  whirl  of  the  year. 

Came  graduation — the  time  when  the  best  of  friends  must  part.  Seniors  we  would 
no  more  see  as  undergraduates.  It  was  a  sad,  yet  very  happ\'  dav,  since  it  meant  home 
and  three  months  of  leisure  for  us. 

A  wonderful  summer  had  passed  and  we  were  mighty  Sophomores  by  this  time  and 
as  each  one  of  us  approached  a  Freshman  the  little  ones  trembled  in  fear  of  his  superior. 
We  commanded,  ruled  and  gave  them  our  full  attention.  Wc  saw  to  it  thit  they  never 
got  lonely.  The  Freshmen  were  good  sports  and  after  a  period  of  time  we  decided  that 
they  were  fairly  decent  people  and  we  lifted  the  traditional  regulations  so  that  they 
could  become  normal  folks  again. 

Even  though  we  did  lose  most  of  our  games  our  Freshman  year  it  was  apparent  that 
there  was  some  good  material  in  the  class.  Varsity  basketball  gained  three  men  from 
the  Sophomores  and  Lacrosse  six.  Co-eds  were  also  interested  in  sports  and  a  promising 
Sophomore  team  played  six  games  during  the  basketball  season.  Maryland's  skill  in  rifle 
work  is  well  known.  Several  of  the  Sophomore  girls  were  prominent  members  of  the 
squad. 

Our  big  social  event  of  the  year  was  the  Sophomore  Prom.  Warren  Rabbit,  as 
chairman,  and  his  committee  arranged  everything  perfectly.  The  gym  was  decorated 
in  green  and  gold,  the  class  colors.  It  was  a  formal  affair  without  programs,  which 
allowed  the  usual  stag  line.    This,  no  doubt,  was  most  appreciated  by  the  fair  sex. 

For  us  the  Sophomore  year  was  a  very  successful  one. 

With  an  air  of  dignity  we  returned  to  college  as  Juniors  and  prepared  to  fall  in  line 
as  future  campus  leaders.  The  campus  is  indeed  beautiful — quite  a  contrast  to  its 
appearance  in  1927.  The  winding  state  roads  and  artistic  lights  which  attractively 
illummated  the  grounds  at  night  have  lent  an  aristocratic  atmosphere  ro  the  place. 
We  as  women  of  the  University  have  gained  great  prestige  for  we  are  now  affiliated  with 
the  American  Association  of  University  Women.  Many  other  changes  have  taken 
place.  Two  sororities  and  two  fraternities  have  gone  National.  New  houses  have  been 
built  and  as  a  matter  of  fact  the  campus  and  surroundings  have  been  abolished  and  we 
now  have  a  student  congress  which  takes  charge  and  manages  our  problems.  A  blanket 
tax  which  will  be  counted  in  our  fixed  charges  has  been  passed. 

After  finals  in  February  which  are  the  bane  of  the  existence  of  every  student  came 
the  biggest  event  in  the  life  of  a  Junior — the  Junior  Prom.  Of  course  this  was  pre- 
ceded by  several  formals  such  as  the  Calvert  Cotillion,  and  the  Military  Ball  but  none 
could  surpass  the  Prom.  It  was  indeed  a  fashion  show.  The  girls  in  their  flowing  gowns 
of  which  green  and  white  were  the  predominating  colors;  their  long  white  kid  gloves, 
the  fad  of  the  season;  the  gorgeous  corsages,  combined  in  making  the  promenade  a 
brilliantly  colorful  pageantry.  The  escorts  in  their  conventional  tuxedos  made  a  most 
effective  background. 

We  Juniors  feel  as  though  we  have  set  a  prestige  which  rests  with  future  classes 
to  maintain.  The  Tea  Dance  and  Rossburg  on  the  following  day  were  equally  successful. 

The  latter  part  of  the  year  was  devoted  to  extensive  work  on  the  May  Day  pro- 
gram, politics,  athletics  and  numerous  social  events  in  which  we  as  upperclassmen  took 
prominent  part. 


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Sophomore  Class  History 


We  members  of  the  Sophomore  Class,  having  successfully  completed  the  first  stretch 
of  the  glorious  adventure  of  college,  find  ourselves  freed  from  the  first  two  years  of 
orientation  and  feel  within  our  reach  the  success  and  prominence  of  the  coming  two 
years.  We  are  much  too  busy  "carrying  on"  the  many  activities  of  our  alma  mater,  to 
pause  long  in  reviewing  our  present  accomplishments,  yet  we  rightfully  can  be  proud 
of  our  record. 

We  remember  that  when  we  entered  the  University  in  the  fall  of  '2  8,  we  were  the 
largest  and  one  of  the  finest  classes  which  had  ever  been  enrolled.  Although  we  have 
since  been  reduced  in  numbers,  we  still  maintain  our  position  as  one  of  the  best!  (Apolo- 
gies to  the  Seniors) . 

During  our  Freshman  year  we  quickly  accustomed  ourselves  to  our  new  surround- 
ings— in  spite  of  the  kind  administrations  of  the  present  junior  class.  Our  girls  dreaded 
shiny  ncs;s,  exposed  ears,  serenades  before  fraternity  houses,  and  the  like;  while  our 
boys  lacked  enthusiasm  for  rat  caps,  proposals,  and  Paint  Branch. 

We  enjoyed  the  athletic  events  and  social  activities,  yet  did  not  shirk  our  scholastic 
obligations,  for  we  soon  learned  our  duties  as  loyal  Marylanders.  We  begm  the  process 
of  character  building — one  of  the  fundamental  aims  of  our  University. 

The  Freshman  Frolic  was  an  outstanding  event — from  a  freshman  point  of  view. 
The  entertainment  took  the  form  of  a  series  of  short  sketches,  the  star  act  being  a  chorus 
girl  dancing  number,  featuring  Vera  Kline,  Rosalie  Goodheart,  Kitty  Williams,  Eleanor 
Margerum,  Mae  Dezendorf,  Virginia  Cooke,  Laura  Nevius  and  Minna  Cannon.  The 
Freshman  Prom  was  the  usual  successful,  hilarious  affair. 

■4  83  li^- 


Our  Frcshm.in  otHccrs  were  Charles  May,  president;  John  Roth,  vice-president;  Ted 
Myer,  treasurer,  and  Eloyse  Sargent,  secretary.  The  representatives  to  the  Executive 
Council   were   Irma   DudL'v  and  Clifford   Davids. 

Our  class  has  a  wealth  of  athletic  ability.  Our  Freshman  basketball  team  did  not 
lose  a  single  game  and  it  scored  thirty-five  points  or  more  in  every  encounter.  "Bozy" 
Berger,  "Pat"  Rooney,  "Ed"  Ronkin,  "Shorty"  Chalmers  and  "Jack"  Norris  are  now 
on  the  varsity  squad. 

We  have  also  augmented  the  varsity  football  team.  This  year  four  University  of 
Maryland  men  were  recognized  on  the  all-state  football  eleven.  Jesse  Krajcovic  of  our 
class  gained  one  of  these  positions.    Several  men  won  letters  and  others  are  on  the  squad. 

The  Sophomore  girls  boasted  the  winning  combinations  in  hockey  and  basketball. 
The  court  victory  over  the  Seniors  marked  the  upperclassmen's  first  defeat  in  four  years. 

We  revived  the  Sophomore-Freshman  tug-of-war  and  won  without  difficulty.  We 
also  introduced  a  flag-pole  rush  for  these  two  classes,  but  its  score  has  been  mislaid  and 
forgotten! 

We  fully  repaid  the  Freshmen  for  the  embarrassment  we  suffered  last  year.  The  boys' 
vigilance  committee  was  composed  of  Charles  May,  Carl  Meek,  Joe  Sanford  and  Bozy 
Berger.  The  girls  were  brought  to  account  for  by  Evelyn  Harrison,  Alma  Hickox,  Har- 
riet Fulkenstein,  and  Gethine  Williams. 

Our  formal  Sophomore  Promenade  reflected  our  increased  feeling  of  maturity  and 
restraint,  although  absence  of  programs  betrayed  our  lingering  delight  in  informality. 
Ritchie  Gymnasium  was  artistically  decorated  in  the  class  colors  of  blue  and  gold,  and 
the  dance  was  considered  one  of  the  most  brilliant  of  the  year.  The  arrangements  for  the 
affair  were  in  charge  of  chairman  John  Steir,  Bob  Wilson,  Bert  Eby  and  Eloyse  Sargent. 

Our  class  officers  are:  President,  Charles  May;  vice-president,  John  Roth;  secretary, 
Evelyn  Harrison;  treasurer,  Ted  Myer,  and  sergeant-at-arms,  Pat  Rooney.  The  repre- 
sentatives to  the  Executive  Council  are  Minna  Cannon  and  William  Lines. 

Perhaps  our  history  seems  tinged  with  unnecessary  vanity  concerning  material 
achievements,  yet  we  realize  that  our  opportunity  to  form  friendships  with  our  associates 
and  to  become  acquainted  with  the  knowledge  of  the  world  has  prepared  us  for  better 
lives,  and  is,  after  all,  the  greatest  experience  of  college. 


Berber.    Sanford 
Koelle,   May,  Wilson 

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Freshman  Class  History 


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In  the  fall  of  '2  9  wc  arrived  at  Maryland.  Until  September  we  harbored  an  illusion 
that  we  were  quite  a  desirable  lot.  Our  good  opinion  of  ourselves  suffered  during  the 
elapse   of    the    next    few    months,    however,    only    now    is    beginning    to    reassert    itself. 

But  the  Sophomores,  wishing  to  display  their  newly  gained  power,  waved  a  magic 
wand  and  we  became  the  victims  of  their  ridicule.  Rats  and  rabbits  ran  about  the 
campus  sporting  shiny  noses  and  dancing  to  the  tune  of  the  merry  mischief  maker. 
Thanksgiving  brought  relief,  the  tune  died  away  and  we  regained  our  rightful  selves. 

Added  to  this  our  minds  were  in  a  whirl  as  we  attended  one  rush  function  after 
another.  Finally  pledge  day,  December  3,  the  traditional  crowd  on  the  Ag  steps  and 
the  hearty  greetings  at  noon.  "Silence  period"  over  and  many  newly  gained  brothers 
and  sisters! 

Athletics  received  their  share  of  the  Freshmen  and  in  the  fall  Billie  Woods,  Al 
Woods,  Poppleman,  and  Kiernan  did  their  best  in  football.  Gravett  and  Hauver  were 
good  cross-country  men.  Later  came  a  fair  basketball  season  with  Galotte,  Melvin  and 
Wood.  With  the  approach  of  spring  Himic  Gorman  and  Jeff  Small  entered  a  successful 
baseball  season.  A  number  of  men  give  promise  of  developing  into  outstanding  ath- 
letes as  we  enter  our  Sophomore  year. 

The  traditional  Freshman  Frolic  and  Prom  were  our  contributions  to  the  social  whirl, 
our  first  attempt  at  producing  the  "song  and  dance."  The  frolic  received  little  favorable 
comment,  but  the  informal  dance  afterward  seemed  to  satisfy  the  indignant  upper- 
classmen.  With  the  aid  of  balloons  and  crepe-paper  the  gym  assumed  the  atmosphere 
of  a  "nite  club." 

The  officers  of  the  class  are  Jack  Riley,  president;  Jack  Roberts,  vice-president; 
Lawrence  Plumley,  treasurer;  Betty  Smaltz,  secretary;  Wilma  Coleman  and  Charles 
Spicknall,  representatives  to  the  Student  Executive  Council. 


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President  of  Oiiihron  Delta  Kdlijhi 


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J.  Vernon  Powers 
Editor,  The  Diamondlnnk 


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Board  in  Control  of  Student  Publications 


Student  Publications 

Student  publications  are  made  up  of  the  Reveille,  the  annual,  the  Diamondback,  the 
newspaper,  and  a  new  literary  magazine  which  has  recently  b«cn  provided  for,  but 
not  yet  published.  There  is  also  a  Student  Handbook  which  is  put  out  independently 
by  the  Y.  M.  C.  A. 

Supervifion  of  the  publications  is  provided  for  by  a  faculty  committee  which  works 
harmoniously  with  the  students  who  do  practically  all  of  the  planning  and  work.  This 
committee  is  composed  of  William  H.  Hottel,  Chairman,  and  Miss  Maude  McKenny, 
Addison  H.  Snyder  and  Raymond  Carrington  were  recently  appointed  as  members  of 
the  Committee  because  of  the  death  of  Melvin  Bowers. 

One  man  who  is  outstanding  in  the  advisement  of  Student  Publications  is  Mr. 
William  Hottel.  Too  much  credit  cannot  be  given  him  for  work  he  has  done.  Since 
he  has  been  guiding  the  way,  the  publications  have  advanced  to  first  class  condition. 

The  progressiveness  of  the  publication  is  illustrated  in  the  fact  that  Maryland  is 
a  charter  member  of  the  District  of  Columbia  Press  Association  of  the  National 
Scholastic  Press  Association.  Because  of  the  excellent  publications  put  out  by  the  Uni- 
versity and  the  hard  work  of  the  Staff  members  an  honorary  fraternity  composed  of 
staff  members  alone  was  granted  a  charter  in  the  National  Organization,  Pi  Delta 
Epsilon. 

At  the  close  of  each  year  there  is  an  Annual  Publications  Banquet  and  Dance, 
which  all  staff  members  attend.  The  affair  is  quite  elaborate  and  is  one  of  the  leading 
social  events  on  the  campus. 

If  any  surplus  is  created  over  a  certain  year  it  is  used  in  some  fixed  investment  for 
the  organization.  At  one  time  office  furniture  was  bought  at  another  a  new  press  stand 
was  built  in  the  stadium. 


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The  Reveille 

The  Reveille,  the  forerunner  of  the  present  annual,  first  m.ide  its  appearance  on 
the  campus  in  1897.  Since  then,  after  many  temporary  checks  it  has  climbed  to  a  very 
high  ratmg.  It  is  a  Junior  Publication,  complete  and  edited  by  the  Juniors  and  pre- 
sented to  the  Seniors  as  a  record  of  their  last  year  at  Maryland. 

In  the  year  twenty-five  and  twenty-six,  the  book  was  given  a  first  class  honor 
rating  by  the  Central  Interscholastic  Press  Association.  When  this  Association  became 
the  National  Scholastic  Press  Association  in  twenty-eight,  the  book  for  the  year  re- 
ceived a  second  class  rating.  The  1929  Reveille  was  graded  as  first  class.  These  awards 
alone  are  evidence  of  the  steady  Improvement  of  the  Maryland  annual. 

The  Reveille  is  financed  absolutely  by  what  can  be  collected  in  Publication  fees  by 
the  Business  Manager  and  his  assistants.  No  advertisements  are  permitted  in  the  book 
at  all.  However,  a  recent  change  in  Student  Legislation  provides  a  large  fund  to  be  .it 
the  disposal  of  Student  Publications  and  this  will  provide  approximately  the  same  amount 
of  money  each  year. 

There  are  three  major  publication  officers  on  the  Reveille  staff.  They  are  Editor-in- 
Chief,  Women's  Editor  and  Business  Manager.  These  officers  are  elected  bv  the  Student 
Body  in  the  Spring  of  the  year  in  which  they  are  to  serve. 

We  are  greatly  indebted — 

To  H.  G.  Roebuck  &  Son  for  their  expert  advice  and  stimulating  cooperation  and 
interest  which  they  displayed  at  all  times. 

To  White  Studio  for  their  excellent  photography  and  prompt  delivery  on  all  orders. 

To  Maurice  Joyce  Engraving  Company  for  their  immediate  and  expert  service  on  all 
engraving. 

To  John  A.  Curtin  for  his  excellent  art  work  and  mountmgs. 

To  David  J.  Molloy  &  Co.  for  the  cooperation  in  designing  and  bringing  out  the 
ideas  expressed  on  the  cover. 

To  the  Faculty  and  Administration  Officials  who  so  pacifically  accepted  all  inter- 
ruptions and  returned  good  for  evil  by  cooperating  to  the  greatest  extent. 

■4.  94  > 


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Decker,    Powers,    Cieary,    Wulfc,    Lines,    Caldara,    Hasslinger 
Cannon,    Kent,   Sargent,    Beall,    Miles,   Andrews,   Wright,    Bewick 


Reveille  Board 


James  E.  Andrews,  Jr. 
Robert  W.  Beall 
Ruth  L.  Miles 
William  Kinnamon 
Madison  E.  Lloyd 
Genevieve  G.  Wright 
William  H.  Hottel 


Edilor-iii-Chicf 

Biisiiifss  Manager 

Woincii's  Editor 

Ailfis/ng  Editor 

Adii:>/ir^  BiiiiiH'ss  Manager 

Adi'isiiig  Women's  Editor 

Siiperi'ising  Manager 


Minna   Csnnon 
May  Dezendorf 
James  Decker 
Herbert  O.  Eby 

Edmond  Brower 

Joseph   Caldara 

Isabel   Bewick 
George  Brouillet 
May  Dezendorf 

James 

Vincent  Calosimo 


REVEILLE  STAFF 

Editorial  Staff 
Ruby  Jeiili 
Mable  Mudd 
Marjorie  Rogge 
Kenneth  Stahl 

Business  Staff 
Howard  Geary  Harry   Hasshnger       WiHiam  Lines 

Athletics 
James  Decker  Irvin  O.  Wolf  Herbert  O.  Eby 


Eloyse  Sargent 
Edith  Stinnette 
Martha  Ross  Temple 
Irvin  O.  Wolf 


Photography 
Herbert  O.  Eby 
William    Lines 


Edith   Stinnette 
Katherine  Williams 


Decker 
Gibbs  Myers 


Art  Staff 

Helen   Mead 
Humor 

Stanley  B.  Simmons      Gordon  Zimmerman 


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The  Diamondback 


What  is  now  the  Diamointback  has  its  origin  in  the  Triangle,  a  bi-weekly  news 
pubhcation  begun  at  Maryland  Agricultural  College  in  1910.  After  numerous  improve- 
ments, the  weekly  in  its  present  form  has  been  evolved. 

The  Diamondback  is  headed  by  an  Editor-in-Chief,  under  whom  are  the  department 
heads:  Business  Manager,  News  Editor,  Sports  Editor  and  Women's  Editor.  The  Busi- 
ness Manager's  Department  is  the  most  isolated  and  is  composed  of  advertising  and 
circulation  functions.  The  other  three  divisions  are  more  closely  associated  together, 
and  are  directly  supervised  by  the  Editor-in-Chief. 

Theoretically,  control  of  the  Diamondback,  including  all  the  material  printed  and 
all  its  policies,  in  addition  to  supervision  of  the  selecton  of  officers  of  the  staff,  rests 
with  the  Faculty  Committee  on  Student  Publications.  As  a  practical  matter,  however, 
no  supervision  is  exercised  over  the  management  of  the  paper,  but  occasional  advice  is 
given  by  one  of  the  members  of  the  committee.  Suggestions  of  the  officers  are  usually 
taken  in  the  selection  of  Editor-in-Chief,  Wom- 
en's Editor,  and  Sports  Editor,  appointive  offices; 
and  for  recommendations  to  the  Executive  Coun- 
cil of  candidates  for  the  offices  of  News  Editor 
and  Business  Manager,  elected  by  the  student  body 
from  approved  candidates. 

Several  improvements  made  in  the  Diamond- 
hack  this  year  are  the  introduction  of  several 
larger  headlines  and  a  new  arrangement  of  the 
editorial  page.  A  better  appearance  is  one  of  the 
big  advantages  of  the  larger  headlines,  while  the 
change  in  the  editorial  page  presents  the  material 
there  in  a  more  interesting  and  attractive  manner. 
The  first  three  columns  have  been  replaced  by  two 
of  one  and  a  half  times  the  width  of  the  others, 
and  the  editorials,  which  appear  in  these  two  col- 
umns are  now  set  in  larger  type  than  is  the  rest  of 
the  paper.  Advertisements  are  no  longer  printed 
on  this  page  and  several  features  now  fill  the  other 
three  columns. 


CEKEMONIES  MARK 
ASNUAl  MABYUND 
DAY  OBSERVANCE 


-  EVANS  AND  LOANE 
WIN  ALL  AME*ICA.N 
lACBOME  POSITIONS 


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■4  96  l!=- 


McFatlden,    Grecly,    Krickt-r,    Sn.ith,    Zimmerman,    B reman 

Kaplan,    Paine,    Kalmback.    Spicknall,    Iteeman.    Cooper,    Connell,    ilargerum,    Jenkins,    Myers 

Spicknall,    Ridout,    Ward,    Norwood,    Powers.    Townsend,    Unjier,    Rosenbaum,    Smith 


Jerrold   v.   Powers 
Arley  R.  Unger 
Louise  Townsend 
Hayden  E.  Norwood 
William  T.  Rosenbaum 
Raymond  Carrington 
William  H.  Hottel 


Diamondback  Staff 

Editorial  Staff 

•    ■       Q 


John  Bremen 
Donald  Beeman 
William  Bradley 


News  Staff 
Hayden  E.  Norwood,  Neivs  Editor 
Gibbs  Myers,  Assis/aiif  News  Editor 

Philip  Cooper 

Elihu  McFadden 


Abner  Kaplan 


Marguerite  Claflin 
Rosalie  Goodhart 
Elena  Hannigan 
Felisa  Jenkins 


James  Creely 


Editor-iii-Cbicf 

Business  Manager 

Women's  Editor 

News   Editor 

Sports   Editor 

Alumni  E.ditor 

Adiisory  Editor 


Charles  Spicknall 
Gordon  Zimmerman 


Sports  Staff 
William  T.  Rosenbaum,  Sports  Edito 
Foster  Lipphard 
Women's  Staff 
Louise  Townsend,  Women's  Editor 
Virginia  Kalmbach 
Eleanor  Margerum 
Elizabeth  Mims 
Curry  Nourse 
Business  Staff 
Arley  R.  Unger,  Business  Manager 
William  Kricker  James  Mason 

Circulation  Staff 
Chester  Ward,  Circulation  Manager 
Allan  Campbell  Howard  Matthews 

•<  97  li^- 


William  Wray 


Stella  Payne 
Evalyn  Ridout 
Virginia  Smith 
Florence    Spicknall 


Thomas  Stone 


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STUDENT  GOVERNMENT 


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John  O'Neil 

President  of  Studeitt  Goicrnmcnt 

Association 


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Robert  Settle 
President  of 

E\ct  utile  Council 


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Settle 


Student  Government  Association 


OFFICERS 


John  T.  O'Neil 
Robert  T.  Settle 
Isabel  Bewick 
Donald  Nevius 


President 

Vice-President 

Secretary 

Treasurer 


Student  government  at  the  University  of  Maryland  this  year  underwent  the  greatest 
change  since  its  beginning  over  ten  years  ago.  Last  spring,  because  of  the  lack  of  inter- 
est shown  by  the  students  as  a  whole  in  attending  the  meetings  of  the  Student  Assembly, 
those  in  charge  at  that  time  proposed  a  new  system. 

Modeled  somewhat  after  the  legislatures  of  the  states  and  the  Congress  of  the  United 
States,  the  new  system  was  embodied  in  a  constitution  submitted  for  student  ratification 
at  the  May  meeting  of  the  Assembly  last  year. 

Two  governing  bodies  were  provided.  The  Executive  Council,  made  up  of  the  class 
presidents  and  vice-presidents,  in  addition  to  one  man  and  one  woman  representative 
at  l.irge  from  each  class,  was  continued  in  operation  as  before,  but  displacing  the  Student 
Assembly  meetings  a  Student  Congress  was  created.  Membership  of  the  Congress  is 
composed  of  delegates  from  each  dormitory  group,  each  fraternity  and  sorority  house, 
and  the  day  students  taken  as  a  group.  Any  body  composed  of  more  than  thirty  students 
is  allowed  one  delegate  for  each  thirty  or  major  fraction  thereof.  Meetings  of  the  Con- 
gress are  held  once  a  month,  on  the  evening  of  the  second  Thursday. 

From  th  standpoint  of  interest  and  benefit,  the  most  important  piece  of  legislation 
during  the  year  was  the  creation  and  passage  of  a  student  activities  fee  of  ten  dollars, 
which  is  to  be  divided  according  to  a  percentage  basis  among  the  Student  Government 
Association,  the  Student  Publications,  and  the  class  organizations. 

A  program  was  worked  out  by  the  Student  Congress  Committee  on  Campus  Im- 
provements for  a  golf  course,  a  swimming  pool,  and  several  additions  and  improvements 
to  the  athletic  plant  of  the  school.  Their  report  provided  for  financing  by  an  issue  of 
bonds,  which  are  to  be  redeemed  by  an  annual  tax  of  ten  dollars  on  each  student  for  the 
next  ten  years. 

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Bewick,    Jarvis,    Helzel.    O'Neil,    Heagy,    Ridout 

Allen,    Pitzer.    Settle,    Baumel,   Whiting 

May,    Lines.    Roth,   Cannon 

Spicknall,    Roberts,    Coleman,    Riley 


Student  Executive  Council 

Robert  Settle,  Pmidciit       ....  Vice-President,  Student  Government 

Isabel  Bewick     .........  Senior  Represent.uive 

Frederick  Hetzel       ........         Senior  Representative 

Robert  Allen  ........  Junior  Representative 

Eleanor  Baumel        ........         Junior  Representative 

William  Lines     ........         Sophomore  Representative 

Minna  Cannon  .......  Sophomore  Representative 

Charles  Spicknall        .......  Freshman  Representative 

Wilma  Coleman  .......         Freshman  Representative 

Albert  Heagy     ...  .....  President  Senior  Class 

Harry  Jarvis       ........         Vice-President  Senior  Class 

John  Pitzer       .........         President  Junior  Class 

Henry  Whiting         .......         Vice-President  Junior  Class 

Charles  May       ........  President  Sophomore  Class 

John  Roth  .......         Vice-President  Sophomore  Class 

Jack  Riley    .........         President  Freshman  Class 

Jack  Roberts         .......         Vice-President  Freshman  Class 

EvALYN  Ridout       .....  President  Woman's  Student  Government 

John  O'Neil         .......  President  Student  Government 

•:;I  102  \>- 


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Chaffinch,   RosenI)aum,   Nathanson,   Kinnamon,   Orton,   Hopkins 

Hemming,    Madigan,    Hickox,    Bradley,    Koldewey,    Dunnigan 

Temple,    Ladson,    Andrews,    Ahalt,    Beall,    Kettler,    Dixon 

Parry,    Dent,    La  Motte,    CVHare,    Gifford,    Hanimack,    Rowe 

Bates,   Schmidt,    Loughran,   Pyles 


ES 


As? 


Chancey  Aholt 
James  Andrews 
Marion  Bates 
Robert  Beall 
William  Bradley 
Ernest  Carliss 
William  Chaffinch 
Walter  Dent 
McClelland  Dixon 
Regis  Dunnigan 
Willis  Frazier 
William  Gifford 
Squire  Hamer 
Jane  Hammack 


Student  Congress 

Samuel  Hemming 
Alma  Hickox 
William  Hopkins 
Elizabeth  Jones 
Mildred  Kettler 
William  Kinnamon 
Adolph  Koldewey 
Mary  Koons 
Jack  Ladson 
Jane  La  Motte 
Granville  Leaman 
James  Loughran 
George  Madigan 
Eleanor  Margerum 


Delray  McPhatter 
Charles  Miller 
Rosalie  Nathanson 
George  O'Hare 
Alice  Orton 
Geraldine  Parry 
Elizabeth  Pyles 
Warren  Rabbitt 
William  Rosenbaum 
Norma  Rowe 
Raymond  Schmidt 
Joseph  Settino 
Sidney  Shapiro 
Samuel  Sugar 
Martha  Ross  Temple 


•4  103  \?- 


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"The  men  who  try  to  do  something 
and  fail  are  infinitely  better  than  those 
who  try  to  do  nothing  and  succeed." 
— Lloyd  Jones. 


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MILITARY 


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William  Kinnamon 
Cadcf  Colonel,  R.  O.  T.  C. 


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Upson 


Lytle 
Bowes 


Young 


Staff  of  Military  Department 

Robert  S.  Lytle - Major  Infantry,  D.  O.  L. 

Professor  of  Milifary  Science  and  Tactics 
Everett  L.  Upson .Captain  Infantry,  D.  O.  L. 

Assistant  to  Professor  Military  Science  and  Tactics 
Edward  H.  Bowes First  Lieutenant  Infantry,  D.  O.  L. 

Assistant  to  Professor  Military  Science  and  Tactics 
Robert  N.  Young First  Liciitanant  Infantry,  D.  O.  L. 

Assistant  to  Professor  Military  Science  and  Tactics 

William  H.  McManus Warrant  Officer,  U.  S.  Army 

Earl  Hendricks - Staff  Sergeant,  D.  E.  M.  L. 

Otto  Siebeneichen - Master  Sergeant,  U.  S.  Army  Band 

Edward  V.  Flautt — Storekeeper 

Reserve  Officers'  Training  Corp 

For  the  seventh  consecutive  year  the  R.  O.  T.  C.  Regiment  of  the  University  of 
Maryland  received  the  highest  distinction  which  the  War  Department  awards  to  insti- 
tutions maintaining  Senior  Units  of  the  R.  O.  T.  C. 

The  noticeable  improvement  which  must  be  expected  from  an  excellent  unit  has 
been  officially  commented  on  annually  by  inspectors.  The  continuation  of  sincere 
cooperation  by  faculty,  students  and  the  Military  Department  will  insure  this  improve- 
ment which  becomes  more  difficult  to  achieve  each  year  as  the  standard,  already  high, 
becomes  higher. 

The  Professor  of  Military  Science  and  Tactics  takes  this  opportunity  to  express  an 
appreciation  of  the  fairness,  good  will  and  spirit  of  helpfulness  shown  by  faculty  and 
student  body  in  their  relations  with  the  work  of  the  Military  Department.  Only  because 
of  such  an  attitude  on  the  part  of  everyone  interested  in  the  welfare  of  the  institution 
as  a  whole  has  the  R.  O.  T.  C.  here  maintained  such  an  enviable  standard. 


(Signed) 


R.  S.  Lytle, 
Major,  Infantry,  D.  O.  L. 


■4  107  >• 


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Lt.  Col.  Wm.  J.  Kinnamon 
Comiuaiiding  Eegiment 


REGIMENTAL 


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Christine  Simmonds 
Kcgiiuciital  Sponsor 


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Capt.  John  T    O'Neal 

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Jane   Hammock 
Staff  Sponsor 


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Major  Foster  Lipphard 
Commanding,  First  Battalion 


FIRST  BATALLION 


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Roberta   Howard 
Sj'onsor  First  Battalion 


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Company  A,  Infantry 


CAPTAIN 

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Eugene  J.  Roberts 

LIEUTENANT 
First  Lieut.  Richard  A.  Burr 

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FIRST  SERGEANT 
George  R.  Hargis 

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SERGEANTS 

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Gerald  L.  Munson 

John  L.  Bischoff 

Walter 

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Eugene  J.  Roberts 

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Ruth  Miles 
Sponsor 


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Company  B,  Infantry 


CAPTAIN 
James  D.  DeMarr 

LIEUTENANT 
John  N.  Umbarger 

FIRST  SERGEANT 

David  S.  Miller 

SERGEANTS 
Conrad  £.  Grohs 
George  Chertkof 


Melvin  H.  Derr 
Colonel  C.  Willis 


James  DeMarr 

Captain 


Virginia  Blount 
Sponsor 


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Company  C,  Infantry 

CAPTAIN 
W.  Edward  Siddall 

LIEUTENANT 
Graei-  W.  Buehm 

FIRST  SERGEANT 
Law  RENCE  R.  Chiswell 


SERGEANTS 


J.  Robert  Troth 
Frederick  H.  Marshall 


Candler  H.  Hoffman 
Perry  W.  Carman 


Edward  Siddall 
Captain 


Margaret  Cook 
Sponsor 


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Major  William   Heintz 
Coiininiihliitg  Second  Battalion 


SECOND  BATALLION 


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Roberta  Howard 
Sponsor  Second  Battalion 


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Company  D,  Infantry 


Willis  T.  Frazier 


Melvin  Koons 
Captain 


CAPTAIN 
Melvin  E.  Koons 

LIEUTENANT 

RoBFRT   W.   LOCKRIDGE 

FIRST  SERGEANT 
W.  Edward  Roberts 

SERGEANTS 
David  A.  Rosenfeld 


John  H.  Mitton 


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Dorothea  Freseman 
Sponsor 


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Robert  Horne 


Company  E,  Infantry 

CAPTAIN 
Phillip  Insley 

LIEUTENANT 
First  Lieut.  William  L.  Lucas 

FIRST  SERGEANT 
Joseph  Caldara 

SERGEANTS 

Clarke  Skaton 


Theodore  Mowatt 


Phillip  Insley 
Captain 


Isabelle  Toulson 
Sponsor 


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Company  F,  Infantry 

CAPTAIN 
J.  Donald  Nevius 

LIEUTENANT 
First  Lieut.  Luther  Harper 

FIRST  SERGEANT 
Richard  B.  Gossom 


SERGEANTS 


Frank  B.  Cox 
Harold  S.  Rhind 


Arley  R.  Unger 
Henry  J.  Whiting 


Donald  Nevius 
Captain 


Mildred  Kettler 
Sponsor 


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R.  O.  T.  C.  Band 


Otto  Siebeneichen,  Director 


Alto  Horn 

Base 

John  Dye 

Edward  Holland 

Clarinet 

Lewis  Phillips 

Ron  AID  Brown 

Base  Drum 

Lloyd  Eyler 
William  Fisher 
Charles  Fouts 

William  Schultheis 
Cymbol 

George   Keseling 

Edmund  Yocum 

Thomas   Newcomer 

Snare  Drinn 

Cornet 

Martin  Hanna 

Clifford  Adams 
Herbert  Cooper 

Saxophone 

Lawrence  Dodd 
Kermit  FIunt 

Harvey  Connick 
Edward  Kelbaugh 

William  Lang 

Harry  Scheuerman 

Theodore  McGann 

Robert  Scott 

LeRoy  Remsburg 

Trombone 

Baritone 

Howard  Bixby 

Joseph  Clark 

Frederick  Stelzer 

4ll8l!=- 


Final  inspection. 


Waiting  for  orders. 


\X\ 


Passing  in  review. 


Forward    march. 


At  ease. 


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R.  O.  T.  C.  Drill 


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Leisure  time  and  a 
group  of  Maryland  boys 
looking  for  extra  work? 


All    dressed    up   and   no 
place  to  go. 


In    strict    obedience    to 
the  command  At  Ease. 


Men    of    muscle,    brain 
and  power. 


Thank    God!    The    na- 
tion is  safe. 


A   camp   natator    (page 
a  bucket  of  water) . 


R.  O.  T.  C.  Camp 


■4  120  >■ 


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SOCIAL    LIFE 


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ROSSBOURG 


Aklev  Unglr 

Vice-President 


Harold  Robinson 

Secretary 


ROSSBOURG  CLUB  OFFICERS 


■4  122  p 


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CLUB 


Top — Informal  Dance 
Bottom — Dance  After  Junior  Prom 

ROSSBOURG  CLUB  DANCES 


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Calvert  Cotillion 

Sponsarfii  by  Oniicruii  Delta  Kapjia 

Sigma  Circle 

February  28,  1930 

Led  by  Mr.  Robert  Settle  and  Miss  Margaret  Van  Fossen 


PATRONS  AND  PATRONESSES 


Dr.  and  Mrs.  R.  A.  Pearson 
Mr.  and  Mrs.  H.  C.  Byrd 
Dean  and  Mrs.  W.  S.  Small 
Dean  and  Mrs.  W.  B.  Kemp 
Dr.  R.  V.  Truitt  and 

Miss  Mary  Harrington 

Robert  Alien 
Charles  Dodson 
Robert  Healy 
William  Hopkins 


Dr.  and  Mrs.  E.  N.  Cory 
Mr.  and  Mrs.  C.  S.  Richardson 
Mr.  and  Mrs.  R.  W.  Carpenter 
Mr.  and  Mrs.  R.  M  Watkms 
Lt.  and  Mrs.  R.  W.  Young 


COMMITTEE 


Philip  Insley 

Arley  linger 

Robert  Settle,  Chairman 


Calvert  Cotillion 
■•=il  124  Ii=- 


Military  Ball 

Given  by  the  Rcscrir  Officers  Training  Corps  of  the  Uii/iersity  of  Maryland 

March  7,  l'>^0 
Led  by  Cadet  Colonel  William  ].  Kiiinamon  with  Miss  Christine  Srnnnonds 

PATRONS  AND  PATRONESSES 
Dr.  and  Mrs.  R.  A.  Pearson  Dr.  and  Mrs.  C.  O.  Appleman 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  H.  C.  Byrd  Dr.  and  Mrs.  W.  B.  Kemp 

Dr.  and  Mrs.  A.  N.  Johnson  Lt.  Colonel  and  Mrs.  R.  H.  Leavitt 

Dr.  and  Mrs.  T.  H.  Taliaferro  Major  and  Mrs.  A.  C.  Gillem,  Jr. 

Dr.  and  Mrs.  W.  S.  Small  Dean  Marie  Mount 

CHAPERONES 
Major  and  Mrs.  R.  S.  Lytle  Mr.  and  Mrs.  H.  B.  Shipley 

Captain  and  Mrs.  Everett  Upson  Mr.  and  Mrs.  G.  Eppley 

Lieutenant  and  Mrs.  E.  H.  Bowes  Miss  Adele  Stamp 

Lieutenant  and  Mrs.  Robert  Young  Dr.  R.  V.  Truitt 

COMMITTEE 
William  Hientz  John  Umbarger 

Philip  Insley  William   Kinnamon,  Chairman 

Melvin  Koons 


Military  Ball 
••=!l  125  >• 


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Junior  Promenade 

March  2S,   I'^O 
Led  by  Mr.  John  Pitzcr  and  Mhi  Elizabeth  Mc\'ey 

PATRONS  AND  PATRONESSES 

Governor  Albert  C.  Ritchie  Dean  and  Mrs.  W.  S.  Small 

Dr.  and  Mrs.  R.  A.  Pearson  Dr.  and  Mrs.  L.  B.  Broughton 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  H.  C.  Byrd  Dean  Adele  Stamp  and  Escort 

Dean  and  Mrs.  C.  O.  Appleman  Dean  Marie  Mount  and  Escort 

Dean  and  Mrs.  A.  N.  Johnson  Major  and  Mrs.  R.  S.  Lytle 

Dean  and  Mrs.  T.  H.  Taliaferro  Captain  and  Mrs.  E.  L.  Upson 
Dean  and  Mrs.  W.  B.  Kemp 


Lois  C.  Sinimonds 
Robert  H.  Allen 
Joseph  D.  Caldara 
M.  Rankin  Hatfield 


COMMITTEE 

Elihu  C.  McFadden 
John  R.  Parks 
Henry  J.  Whiting 
James  R.  Troth,  Chairman 


Junior  Promenade  Held  at  Wardman   Park   Hotel 
4  126  Js- 


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JOSEPH  CALDARA 


INTERFRATERNITY  TEA  DANCE 
Junior  Prom  Weekend 

■4  111  Xp- 


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DELTA  PSl  0ME(;A  HcmSF.  PARTY 

Junior  Prom  Weekend 

•4  128  Ii=- 


Top — Interfraternitv  Banquet 

Bottom — Interfraternitv  Ball 


•4129^ 


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Top — Sophomore  Prom 
Bottom — "M"  Club  Dance 


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■4  130  > 


MUSIC    AND    DRAMA 


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L  amiiuta,   .Myers 
Fislikin,   Hatfield,   Burhans,   Bradley,   Clagett.   Flook,   Mech 
Silverberg,    Sadowsky,    Hendrick.    Stull.    Sangston.    Benjamin,    Spire,    Gienger,    Davids,    Perhani 
Ycung,    Lillie,    Harris,    Schindler,    Caldara,    McPhatter,    Stinipson,    Shure,    Brouillet.    Decker 


The  Glee  Club 


PERSONNEL 
Edwin  Stimpson  .......       Presidenf 

D.  Bennet  MacPhatter    ......        Director 

Joseph  C.  Caldara     .......        Manager 

The  University  of  Maryland  Glee  Club  is  the  one  singing  organization  on  the 
Campus  that  has  a  system  of  elimination  of  applicants  by  trial.  It  has  been  existant  for 
about  nine  years  and  holds  a  unique  place  as  an  advertising  factor  for  the  school. 

Members  are  selected  by  a  series  of  eliminations  through  voice  tests.  Tiiese  selections 
are  made  by  the  active  members  of  the  club  and  its  director.    The  new   members  are 

offered  the  possibility  of  voice  training  as  well  as 
the  opportunity  to  learn  some  of  the  technique 
of  choral  harmony. 

Until  the  past  year  the  Glee  Club  has  been 
directed  by  a  faculty  member.  However  an  inaugu- 
ration of  a  student  director  was  made  and  it  met 
with  some  success.  The  policy  of  the  organization 
to  make  a  tour  of  the  state,  and  to  establish  con- 
tact with  many  residents  in  the  state,  is  an  aid 
to  the  general  advertising  of  the  school.  The  pro- 
gram as  mapped  out  by  the  music  committee  and 
the  officers  of  the  club  will  consist  of  some  de- 
scriptive music  with  the  dash  of  the  popular  here 
and  there  to  make  them  pleasing  to  all  the  dif- 
ferent tvpes  of  audiences  met  on  the  tour. 

Due  to  a  slight  difference  of  opinion  between 
the  committee  on   music   and   the  club  itself  the 
club   has   been   more   or   less   Inactive   throughout 
the  present  season,  and  did  not  make  the  annual 
Delray  McPhatter,  Directur  tour.   However  plans  have  been  made  by  the  same 

committee  and  those  officers  for  the  ensuing  year  which  promises  an  excellent  enter- 
tainment and  a  highly  successful  year  for  the  Glee  Club  and  further  aid  to  the 
University. 

•4  132  \p- 


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The  University  of  Maryland  Little 
Symphony  Orchestra 

The  University  of  Maryland  Little  Symphony  Orchestra  was  organizeJ  in  1924  by 
Professor  B.  L.  Goodyear.  At  first  this  organization  worked  in  conjunction  with  the 
Maryland  Opera  Club.  However  the  need  for  an  orchestra  on  the  campus  was  very 
much  felt,  and  soon  the  Little  Symphony  was  an  independent  body,  recognized  by  the 
University  Senate. 

The  most  outstanding  achievement  this  year  was  an  evening  concert,  given  in 
Washington  during  December.  This  program  received  excellent  comment  and  shows 
that  Mr.  Goodyear's  untiring  efforts  have  been  rewarded  in  bringing  recognition  to 
the  orchestra  and  University  of  Maryland. 

The  Symphony  also  had  an  important  part  in 
the  annual  May  Day  Festival,   and   furnished   the 
accompaniment  for  the  Opera  Club's  spring  pro- 
duction "Yeomen  of  the  Guard." 

The  Little  Symphony  has  done  much  toward 
instilling  a  proper  veneration  and  respect  for  the 
works  of  the  masters.  Some  of  the  compositions 
that  have  been  studied  this  vear  are:  Ballet  music 
from  Faust,  Tannehauser,  Rubenstein's  Kammen- 
noi-Ostrow,  and  ballet  music  from  French  Classics 
by  Rambear. 

Professor  Goodyear  deserves  a  great  deal  of 
credit  for  his  work  and  his  efforts  in  the  interest 
of  the  University  of  Maryland.  He  has  been  the 
conductor  since  the  Symphony  was  first  organ- 
ized. Membership  is  open  to  students  of  all 
classes.    If  they  are  qualified  to  participate  in  the 

work  of  the  orchestra  they  can  receive  a  year's  credit.  We  find  many  students  playing 
purely  for  the  love  of  good  music.  From  the  excellence  rendered  in  the  past  it  is  rea- 
sonable to  believe  that  as  a  thoroughly  artistic  organization  the  Little  Symphony  will 
go  far. 


Prof.  B.  F    Goodyear,  Director 


■■^n'if-- 


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Sangston,    Duval  I,    Dye,    Bixby,    Clark,    Phillips,    Jlullaiul,    ("owgill,    Silverherg 

Cooper,   Hainer,  Hunt,  Jones,   Remsberg,   Dodd,   Roberts,  Adams,  Yocnm,   Sclniltheis,   Hauna 

Davids,    lUivgtorff,    Eyler,    Fonts,    Hatfield    Brown,    Fisher,    Kesling,    Linger,    Schenerman,    Scott,    Cnnnick 

Director — Siebeneichen,     Grohs 


The   Student   Band 


"A  university  is  lost  without  a  football  team,  it  is  fairly  disabled  without  equipment, 
and  it  is  sadly  lacking  without  an  organized  student  band."  Therefore  fhe  band  was 
organized  in  1927,  and  at  the  same  time  secured  the  competent  leadership  of  a  man 
whose  popularity  is  well  known  about  the  campus — Mr.  Otto  Siebeneichen.  Its  member- 
ship has  steadily  increased  and  has  always  attracted  to  its  organization  the  best  musicians 
of  the  campus. 

Much  pep  and  pomp  are  added  the  football,  basketball,  lacrosse  and  baseball  games 
by  the  presence  of  such  a  body.  Having  accompanied  the  teams  on  their  trips,  the  band 
has  performed  the  double  duty  of  cheering  section  and  rendering  music,  to  keep  high 
the  old  Maryland  spirit,  helping  our  boys  to  bring  home  the  victory.  Aside  from  these 
trips,  they  have  offered  three  annual  concerts  and  have  fulfilled  corresponding  number 
of  radio  engagements. 

The  annual  concerts  which  have  been  given  in  the  Ritchie  Gymnasium  have  re- 
sulted in  the  Old  Line  student  body  turning  out  en  masse  to  be  present  at  the  func- 
tioning of  their  musical  organization.  Many  letters  of  commendation  and  praise  have 
been  received  from  prominent  musicians  throughout  the  country,  congratulating  the 
quality  and  character  of  the  Maryland  Band. 

As  fate  has  put  into  our  midst  this  year  a  talented  man,  it  should  not  go  amiss  at 
this  time  to  offer  a  few  humble  words  in  recognition  of  his  successful  efforts  in  the 
composition  of  a  spirited  school  song,  which  from  the  applause  it  received  at  its  intro- 
duction to  the  student  body,  for  their  approbation  bids  fair  to  rival  the  popularity  of 
Maryland's  Victory  Song.  The  composer  is  Samuel  Fishkin  and  his  masterpiece  has 
taken  the  title  "Hail  to  Our  Maryland." 


•=ill34l!=- 


m 


Hale,   Wilson,   Watkins,   Clark,    Simmons 

Cotton   Pickers'   Minstrels 

(SpoinorcJ  hy  the  Kappa  Alpha  t'ratcnii/y ) 

END  MEN 
"Johnny"  Baldwin  'Cracker"  Hale  Simp"  Simmons  'Dutch"  Stieber 

INTERLOCUTOR 
Mr.  R.  M.    (Bunt)    Watkins 

COTTON-PICKERS  TRIO 
"Milly"  Price  "Dick"  Clark  Norman   Wilson 

CHORUS 
Baldwin       Benner  Chaifinch     Imirie  Kiernan        Milburn       Mitchell       Small 

Batson  Bonnet         Harlan         Kcenan         Llnzey  Miller  Reuling        Spire 

ACCOMPANIST 

Mr.  Wilson  Satterfield 

FIRST    ACT 

Opening  Chorus  ........  Entire   Company 

Collegiate   Love  .........         "Simp"  Simmons 

Nobody's  Sweetheart  ..........  "Milly"  Price 

Hottest  Man  in  Town  ........     "Cracker"  Halde 

Harlem  Hot  Feet         ..........  Bert  Dippold 

A  true  interpretation  of  Barber  Shop  Harmony     .  .  .        Cotton  Pickers  Trio 

I'm  Following  You      .........      "Dutch"  Stieber 

If  I'm  Dreaming "Dick"  Clark 

My  Wife  is  on  a  Diet Johnny  Baldwin 

Closing   Chorus Entire  Company 

SECOND    ACT 
The  Harmony  Twins  (Washington's  Fairest  Crooners)  Misses  Shomo  and  Welch 

Norman  Wilson 

Maryland's  Own  John  McCormack  in  a  group  of  songs 

Si  and  Sio 

The  campus  hot  men  singing  their  own  arrangements  of  popular  songs 

■-->l  135  }a- 


'^ 


h 


:a 


•a 


i 


m 


m 


^d^ 


<a 


Xoruuocl.    Thome,    Herrcll.    StaMtr.    McDonald,    Burlians,    Beemaii.    Gardner,    Rlaisdell 

Myers.    Beauchanip,    Seipt.    Clartin,    Paine,    Steffey,    Xathansun,    Petty.   Jenkins.    Row* 

Oaflin,    Truitt,   Jones,    Steinwedel,    Stinipson,    Ballon,    Strassliurger,    Epicknall,    Walton,    Grnver,    Goodyear 


'# 


Opera   Club 


§ 


The  University  of  Maryland  Opera  Club  which  was  established  in  1924  has  for  the 
past  few  years  presented  to  the  students  of  the  University,  their  friends  and  parents,  a 
series  of  light  operas  of  the  Gilbert  and  Sullivan  type.  These  have  always  been  well 
received  and  the  annual  production  by  the  club  has  come  to  be  one  of  the  outstanding 
dramatic  and  musical  events  of  the  college  year. 

The  presentation  in  1924  was  "Camanita,"  a  play  written  by  Mr.  Louis  Goodyear. 
In  1926  that  well  known  and  much  beloved  work  of  Jakobowski,  "Ermine,"  was  pre- 
sented with  Cecil  Propst  as  Rabie.  Following  these  "The  Mikado"  in  1929,  all  these 
last  by  Gilbert  and  Sullivan. 

This  year  the  club  presented  "Yeomen  of  the  Guard"  or  "The  Merryman  and  His 
Maid,"  also  by  the  inevitable  writers,  Gilbert  and  Sullivan.  This  was  well  received  by 
large  audiences  on  both  of  the  nights  it  was  presented  (April  30th  and  May  1st).  The 
costumes  and  scenery  were  very  well  selected  and  did  much  to  aid  the  fine  acting  of 
the  characters.  The  parts  were  taken  as  follows:  Coloniel  Fairfax,  Jack  Ladson;  Elsie 
Maynard,  Lenore  Blount;  Jack  Point,  James  Decker;  Phoebe  Meryll,  Margaret  Van 
Possen;  Dame  Carruthers,  Anna  Deal;  Wilfred  Shadbelt,  Edwin  Stimpson;  Sergeant 
Meryll,  John  McDonald;  Lieutenant  Cholmondeley,  Dr.  Charles  Hale. 

The  object  of  the  club  is  to  provide  its  members  with  a  possibility  for  expressing 
their  musical  and  dramatic  talent  and  at  the  same  time  presenting  to  the  campus  as  a 
whole  a  finished  production  of  high  artistic  value  and  thereby  helping  lo  uphold  the 
high  standard  of  culture  for  which  the  school  stands. 

The  officers  for  this  year  were: 
Edwin  G.  Stimpson 
GiBBS  Myers     .... 
Elizabeth  Jones 
Norma  Rowe 
Professor  Louis  Goodyear 


Prcsideiif 

Vice-President 

Secretary-Treasurer 

Assistant  Secretary-Treasurer 

Director 


I'fa' 


•4. 136  >■■ 


'  1  1  .  (,.     .  s^-.^-».  »      -t  r~  Ai     -j^/^^  ^rr^.^^^^A^  r^r'\  ^'-C^^'*  "Trf 


no  ^-Ti 


..<L/r''.V^V 


"Yeomen   of  the   Guard" 

(PnsciitcJ  by  flic  Maryland  Opera  Cliil>) 

THE  CAST 

Sir  Richard   Cholmondeley          .......  Dr.    C.    B.    Hale 

Colonel  Fairfax           ........  .        Tack  Ladson 

Sergeant  Meryll           .........  John  McDonald 

Leonard  Meryll           .........  Kenneth   Spessard 

Jack    Point         ..........  James  Decker 

Wilfred    Shadbolt       .........  Edward  Stimpson 

First    Yeoman              .........  Wheeler  Ensor 

Second  Yeoman           .........  Norman  Wilson 

Elsie  Maynard   .........  Lenore  Blount 

Phoebe  Meryll     .........      Margaret  Van   Fossen 

Dame  Carruthers        ..........         Anna  Deal 

Kate           ...........  Evelyn  Ballou 

A  Priest             W.  W.  Covington 

Chorus  of  Yeom;:n  and  Citizens. 

Accompaniments  by  the  Little  Symphony  Orchestra. 

Scene:    Courtyard  of  London  Tower.  Time:    Sixteenth  Century. 

Act     I — Morning  of  the  Day  of  Execution. 
Act   II — Night — Two  days  have  elapsed. 


-4  137  > 


.<^ 


ZimnuMniaii,   Stimpson,    Eliy,    Hit-ntz,   Williams 

Huehni,   Harrison,   StefTey,   Goodhart,   Richetts,   Diggs,   Margerum,   Powers 

Whiting,    Cook,    Mims,    Gifford,    McLeod,    Townsend,    Ruhl 


^^^^ 


m 


^ 

?&^. 


Footlight  Club 

In  the  spring  of  1926  a  few  students  interested  in  dramatics  organized  a  dramatic 
club  known  as  the  Mask  and  Bauble  Club.  This  group  presented  one  play,  "The  Mummy 
and  the  Mumps."  Due  to  the  graduation  of  all  the  officers  that  June,  and  the  failure  to 
elect  others.  The  Mask  and  Bauble  Club  was  reorganized  under  the  name  of  The  Foot- 
light  Club.  Professor  C.  S.  Richardson,  Dr.  C.  B.  Hale,  and  Professor  R.  M.  Watkins 
composed  a  faculty  committee  whose  support  was  secured  from  the  start. 

During  this  first  year,  1927,  five  plays  were  successfully  presented:  "The  Pot  Boiler," 
"The  Monkey's  Paw,"  "The  Man  in  the  Bowler  Hat,"  "Monsieur  Beaucaire,"  and  "The 
Old  Soak." 

A  more  ambitious  program  was  undertaken  in  1928-29.  The  membership  was  in- 
creased from  twelve  to  twenty-nine  members  and  the  following  productions  were  pre- 
sented: "The  Three  Live  Ghosts,"  "Suppressed  Desires,"  "Polly  with  a  Past,"  "Doses 
of  Life,"  and  three  scenes  from  "Midsummer  Night's  Dream."  "The  Three  Live  Ghosts" 
and  "Polly  with  a  Past"  were  presented  in  the  auditorium  and  the  proceeds  were  used 
by  the  club  to  further  its  work  on  the  campus.  "Suppressed  Desires"  was  given  for 
the  benefit  of  the  Progress  Club  of  College  Park.  "Doses  of  Life"  was  the  winning  play 
in  a  play-writing  contest  conducted  by  the  club.  The  author,  Thomas  Loy,  not  a 
member  of  the  Club,  was  allowed  to  select  his  own  cast  from  the  membership  of  the 
Club  and  also  served  as  director.  The  play  was  presented  before  the  Student  Assembly. 
"Midsummer  Night's  Dream"  was  given  by  invitation  before  the  Shakespearean  Society 
of  Washington. 

The  plays  produced  in  this  past  year  were  "Outward  Bound,"  "Wurzle  Flummery," 
"Eight  Hundred  Rubles,"  "Midsummer  Night's  Dream,"  and  "This  Thing  Called 
Love." 

Perhaps  some  indication  of  the  success  of  the  Club  is  the  fact  that  in  the  spring  of 
1929  Alpha  Psi  Omega,  National  Honorary  dramatic  fraternity,  granted  the  University 
of  Maryland  a  charter.  The  officers  for  1929-30  are: 

William   Renton  Gifford,     President  Elizabeth  B.  Mims  .         Secretary 

Isabel  Bewick  .         Vice-President  Henry  Whiting      .         .         Treasurer 


4  138  li*- 


(^^^MM'^, 


"Outward  Bound" 

(Pvcscii/cJ  hy  titc  Footliy^ht  Club  of  iIjc  Uiiitrrsi/y  (if  Miirrliiinl) 

A  comedy-dr.im.i  in  three  acts  by  Sutton  V.ine. 

Act      I — The  smoking  room  of  a  ship — in  dock.    Morning. 
Act     II — The  same — at  sea.    The  same  evening. 
Act  III — Scene   1:   The  same — in   port.    Several   days   later. 
Scene  2:  That  evening. 

CHARACTERS 

(//;  onli'r  iif  their  iil)j>carancc) 

Scrubby Henry   Whiting 

Anne         ..........  Elizabeth  Mims 

Henry Ralph  Williams 

Tom  Prior Edwin  Stimpson 

Mrs.  Cliveden-Banks Rosalie  Goodhart 

The  Reverend  William  Duke      ........    Graef  Buehm 

Mrs.  Midget Roberta  Harrison 

Mr.  Lingley Gordon  Zimmerman 

The  Examiner William  Heintz 


I 


>.<^v 


Kappa  Delta  Revue 

(Sponsored  Ay  Kappa  Delta  Sorority) 

^^From  Trotter's  Technique'* 

Musical  Comedy  in  three  acts. 

CAST  OF  CHARACTERS 
(/;;  orilcr  of  their  appearance) 

Beverly  ,___  HELEN   MEAD 

Jane _ EAMES    HARRISON 

Coeds Alice  Brennan,  Carolyn  Chesser,  Anna  Deal,  Ruth  Hays 

Carlton , SAMUEL    DETWILER 

Jackie HELEN    GiNGELL 

Polly Harriet   Bishopp 

Clare ....VIRGINIA    COOKE 

Anna    -  _  .ANNA    DEAL 

Amos Stanley  "Simp"  Simmons 

Mo Maurice   Glynn 

Rege  Regis  Dunnigan 

Izzy  Isabel  Bewick 

The  Two  Goats KATHERINE  AND  VIRGINIA  LUERS 

Kay Ruth   Hays 

Mart ....Martha    Boujids 

Cliff-. -•- Richard   Clark 

Marge _ ELIZABETH    NORTON 

MUSICAL  NUMBERS 
Act  I 

"Crying  for  that  Man  of  Mine" Chorus 

"Love  Ain't   Nothin'   But   the  Bluecs". Alice   Brannan 

"Why  Am   I   So  Black  and  Blue".... Anna  Deal 

ACT    II 

"1  Don't  Need  Atmosphere"  Duet) Beverly  and  Carlton 

"Side  "Walks  of  New  York"   (Tap  Dance) _ Mo 

"St.  James  Infirmary  Blues  "   (Skit) Rege  and  Izzy 

"I'm  Following  You"    (Due') Two  Goats 

Dance _. _ _ Martha    Boujids 

"St.  Louis  Blues" ..Anna 

"Absence    Makes    the    Heart    Grow    Fonder" Beverly 

"Ship  'Without  a  Sail" Cliff 

ACT   III 

"Feeling   the   Way   I   Do" Alice 

"A  Year  from  Today" Entire  Company 

All  three  acts  take  place  outside  a  sorority  house  at  a  southern  college. 


140  >■ 


ATHLETICS 


M 

m 


m 

mi 


Athletic  Board 

Facility  Members 
H.  C.  BvRD,  C/.niiriniin 

r.    B.    BOMBERGER  J.   E.   A'IeTZGER 

C.  S.  Richardson 


L.  B.  Broughton 


Al nil! Ill  Members 

\Vm.  p.  Cole,  Jr. 
Millard  E.  Tydings 
J.  W.  P.  Somerville 

Student  Members 


Harry  Hess 


Wm.  Kinnamon 


"*v 


->1  1421s- 


Gerrv  "Sw'kdk"   Epri.EV 

Varsity  Track 

Freshman   Track 


Edward  Smith 
Fieshm.iii  L.icrasse 


H.     C.     •■CURI.EY 

Varsity   Foot 

'    Byrd 
ball 

c 

o 

A 

c 

H 

1 

/ 

V 

T 

G 

A 

F 

F 

H.    UuRTON   "Ship"    Shipley 

Varsity  Basketball 

Varsity  Baseball 


John   E.   "Jack"   Facer 

Varsity  Lacrosse 

Frfshman  Football 

Freshman  Basketball 


Robert  M.  "Bunt"  Watkins 
Freshman   Baseball 


Charles  Fenwick 
Assistant  Varsity  Football 


Ivan    Marty 
Varsity  Lacrosse 


■4  143  l!=- 


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Tippctt.    O'Xeil.    Whiting 

Cheer  Leaders 

Three  cheerleaders,  one  from  each  of  the  three  upper  classes,  compose  the  group  in 
charge  of  the  Maryland  student  body's  concentrated  cheering  contingent.  The  post  of 
chief  noisemaker  and  clown  for  the  undergraduates  is,  from  the  end  of  the  first  year, 
a  hereditary  one.  All  aspiring  Freshmen  are  allowed  to  cut  their  capers  during  Basket- 
ball season,  and  after  another  demonstration  before  the  entire  student  body  in  May, 
the  most  likely  candidate  is  chosen  by  that  group.  As  Sophomore  Cheerleader  for  the 
following  school  year,  he  automatically  becomes  Junior  and  Senior  Cheerleader  in  the 
two  succeeding  years. 

White  pullover  sweaters  with  large  gold  "M's,"  and  white  flannel  trousers  are  fur- 
nished as  the  costume  of  the  antic-masters.  Each  year  one  of  the  prominent  Alumni  of 
the  University  awards  a  white  sweater  to  the  Senior  Cheerleader. 

Several  antics  were  introduced  into  the  repertoire  of  the  Kings  of  Clowndom  this 
year  when  Eddie  Tippett,  Sophomore  Cheerleader,  and  George  Ruhl,  who  assisted  during 
Football   season,   created   numerous   acts   of  acrobatic   excellence   for   the   entertainment 

and  diversion  of   the   fans. 

In  order  to  acquaint  the  incommg  with  the 
school  yells  and  songs,  and  to  instill  the  proper 
spirit  of  Maryland  in  them,  practices  were  held 
daily  during  the  Football  season.  All  Freshmen 
were  required  to  attend,  and  a  fifteen  minute 
practice  under  the  supervision  of  the  Cheerleaders 
was  gone  through.  Freshmen  are  asked  also  to  sit 
in  a  group  at  all  contests,  and  form  the  nucleus 
of  the  cheering  section  for  the  student  body.  Co- 
operation in  noisemaking  is  given  by  the  student 
band  which  sits  in  the  cheering  section  and  con- 
tributes its  share. 

At  the  beginning  of  the  year  just  past,  it  was 
found  that  neither  the  Senior  nor  the  Junior 
Cheerleader  had  returned  to  school.  After  try- 
outs,  John  O'Neill  was  selected  to  fill  the  Senior 
post,  while  Henrv  Whiting  was  picked  as  the 
Junior  member  of  the  trio. 


John  O'Neil,  Senior  Cheerleader 


4  144  f- 


Sehoii.   Miil)inn    Taiisil.   Wilson,   Roberts.   McDonald.   Wilson.    Marshall 

Allen.    Lncas,    Gaylor.    McDonalrl,    Phipps.    Dodson.    Hemp,    Hientz,    Kinnamon.    Boublitz 

Derr,    Beck.   Kelly,    MadiKJin,    Lombard,   Quinn.    Radice,    Evans,   Kemsburg 


Wearers  of  the  "M'' 


Football 

Carliss 

Chalmers 

Dodson 

Evans 
Heagy 
Heintz 

Ribnitzk 

Jarvis                         May 
Lombard                  McDonald 
Madigan                    Miller 
i                                      Roberts 

Basketball 

Krajovic 

Pease 

Radice 

Berger 
Chalmers 

Evans 
Gaylor 

Heagy                      May 
Hetzel                      Radice 

Lacrosse 

Ronkin 

Allen 
Beck 

Dean 

Evans 

Heagy 
Kelly 

Baseball 

Roberts 
Wilson 

Chaflinch 

Boublitz 

Derr 

Gaylor 
Hetzel 
Higgins 

Hess                         Phipps 
Hopkins                    Radice 
Milbourn 

Cross  Country 

Tansil 
Wilson 

Cooper 
Hammerlund 

Harper 
Linzey 

Mays 
Savage 

Tennis 

Shure 

Kurkland 

Lucas 

Rosenbaum              Schofield 
Rifle 

Valliant 

Frazier 

Hemp                 Li 

pphard             Marshall              Sehorn 
■4  145  Ii=- 

Spicknall 

^^J^^ 


ii 


L--^:     t-    ^ Z^ 


All  American 


An  AU-American  close  attack  choice.  A  phrase  which  is  often  repeated  but 
sometimes  does  not  carry  with  it  the  full  significance  of  its  meaning.  To  be  an  AU- 
American  close  attack  choice  means  that,  of  all  the  hundreds  of  attack  men  playing 
Lacrosse  in  American  colleges  today,  two  have  been  selected  by  the  one  publication 
recognized  as  official  and  supreme  in  the  field,  Spalding's  Lacrosse  Guide,  to  be  the 
spearheads  of  the  offense  which  is  considered  to  be  the  very  strongest  which  could  be 
assembled  from  all  of  the  stick  team-;  in  the  country. 

Captain  of  the  Maryland  attack.  An  honor  which  usually  finds  the  recipient 
one  of  the  finest  Lacrosse  players  in  the  country  mechanically  and  far  above  the  average 
in  Lacrosse  brains  and  leadership  of  men  because  of  the  high  grade  of  the  Lacrosse  skill 
and  men  who  perennially  produce  at  Maryland  a  twelve  which  !>;  ever  a  contender- — • 
more  than  a  contenter — a  powerful  threat  for  the  National  Lacrosse  championship. 

Bill  Evans.  A  name  that  is  written 
deep  in  the  bronze  which  is  the  record  of 
Lacrosse  at  the  University  of  Maryland.  A 
name  that  stands  for  all  that  is  finest  in 
the  Maryland  tradition  of  athletic  suprem- 
acy. A  name  which  causes  a  thrill  to  run 
down  one's  mind  even  at  this  late  date  as 
it  brings  vividly  to  mind  how  this  Old 
Liner  led  the  National  scorers  in  1929 
with  thirty-seven  goals;  how  his  bullet- 
like passing  was  like  the  heart  of  the 
team  which  pumped  blood  to  each  of  its 
members;  how  his  deadly  shooting  was 
the  machine  gun  of  the  twelve  because 
of  its  accuracy  and  frequency;  how  his 
open  field  running  was  a  knife  which 
pierced  and  found  an  opening  in  the  most 
granite  like  defense;  and  how,  in  tight 
moments  on  the  field  of  battle  and  in 
the  hours  of  the  glow  of  victory  it  was 
Bill  Evans — truly  All-Amcican  and  ace 
of  the  Maryland  attack. 


William  "Bill"  Evans 


4  146  > 


FOOTBALL 


1929  Varsity  Football  Season 


Maryland's  football  team  inaugurated  its  sea- 
son with  a  decisive  victory  over  Washington 
College  by  a  34  to  7  score.  The  one-sided  results 
of  this  initial  game  would  seem  to  indicate  a  cer- 
tain amount  of  efficiency  but,  to  a  spectator,  it 
was  quite  evident  that  the  squad  was  not  in  the 
form  compatible  with  its  showing  in  the  defeat 
administered  to  Washington  College.  The  pre- 
season line-up  included  a  veteran  forward  line 
that  unaccountably  failed  to  measure  up  to  the 
expected  standard. 

In  the  second  game  disaster  overtook  the  team; 
fortune  failed  to  smile  upon  Maryland  and  her 
hard-fighting  team,  bitterly  contesting  each  yard, 
went  down  before  the  steady,  irresistible  march 
of  North  Carolina.  The  score  was  43  to  0,  per- 
haps the  worst  defeat  suffered  during  the  season, 
and  though  North  Carolina's  victory  was  conclu- 
sive, as  the  score  indicates,  it  was  no  disgrace  for  a  practically  untried  team  to  bow 
before  the  smoothest  and  fastest  eleven  ever  to  visit  College  Park. 

The  following  Saturday  witnessed  another  defeat,  this  time  at  the  hands  of  South 
Carolina.  The  "breaks";  that  weather-vane  of  fortune  which  may  turn  the  tide  of 
victory  with  the  indication  of  some  sudden  advantage;  that  intangible  ally  or  opponent, 
undeniably  a  factor;  aided  indiscriminately  both  teams  but  Maryland  failed  to  take 
advantage  of  her  breaks.  Radice  was  the  star  with  his  inspired  and  effective  defensive 
play,  which  was  prophetic  of  his  game  throughout  the  remainder  of  the  season. 

Gallaudet  was  the  next  opponent,  and  Maryland  barely  managed  to  emerge  with 
the  victory.  Heintz,  Ribnitzki  and  Heagy  were  missing  from  the  line,  and  the  absence 
of  these  veterans  greatly   impaired   the  efficiency  of   the   team. 

Maryland  began  to  give  evidence  of  its  normal  stride  in  the  Virginia  Military  Institute 
game  which,  since  the  successful  engagement  of  Washington  College,  was  the  stage 
when    the   Terrapin   eleven    first    displayed    that    capability    which    was    a    guaranty    of 


William  Evans 


m 


S 


\ 


i 


Albert  Heagy 


Harry  Jarvis,  Manager 


■4  149  h- 


I 


3 


S 


,^^-'' 


Charles  Dodson 


MILLER,  -\ii;dj.\.\ld,  lombakd 

accomplishment.  The  final  score  was  7  to  6,  and  although 
Maryland  lost,  there  was  ample  cause  for  satisfaction. 
Madigan  gave  an  excellent  account  of  himself  at  center. 
On  the  whole,  the  team  showed  a  smoother  and  more 
organized  efficiency. 

On  Homecoming  Day  Maryland  met  its  ancient  rival, 
Virginia,  in  a  13-13  tie.  The  game  was  replete  with  thrills. 
In  spite  of  several  unfortunate  breaks  Maryland  failed  to 
retreat  before  the  attack  of  a  much  heavier  team  and 
achieved  a  moral  victory,  actually  outclassing  the  Cava- 
liers. 

The  next  game  was  the  pinnacle  of  the  season.  Mary- 
land journeyed  to  New  Haven  to  test  the  mettle  of  the 
strong  Yale  team.  An  expectant  study  body  waited  in 
College  Park,  hopeful  but  skeptical.    The  Old  Liners,  play- 


Rad:ce  Recovering  Fumble  Against  South  Carolina 


■<150> 


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^^.>i^ 


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)1II;NTZ,    KIlSNITZKl,    ROBERTS 

ing  wonderful,  inspired  football,  won  glory  in  that  game. 
The  first  half  was  disheartening,  ominous.  Maryland  was 
unable  to  score  while  Yale  battled  to  a  single  touchdown. 
Yale  added  to  its  lead  with  another  touchdown  in  the  first 
of  the  second  half  and  Maryland  looked  a  hopelessly  beaten 
team  until  Krajcovic  recovered  a  fumble  on  the  forty-yard 
line.  The  Terrapin  started  a  steady  march  down  the  field. 
Evans  broke  away  and  after  a  grounded  pass  Chalmers 
sailed  the  ball  into  the  waiting  arms  of  Berger,  who  made 
the  score.  Evans  made  frequent  and  substantial  gains,  but 
the  aerial  attack  was  Maryland's  most  effective  weapon. 
Berger  caught  a  pass  for  thirty  yards,  and  a  triple  lateral 
to  him  brought  the  last  touchdown  of  the  game.  Mac- 
Donald  kicked  the  tying  point  and  a  great  contest  became 


Altred  Pease 


Maryland  Line  Stops  Plunge  Through  Center  in  Gallaudet  Game 


■4  151  >■ 


George  Madigan 


CHALMERS,  CARLISS,   MAY 

Maryland  football  history. 

On  the  sixteenth  of  November  Maryland  went  to  Nor- 
folk to  wrest  a  24-to-O  victory  from  the  tenacious  grip  of 
V.  P.  I.  Evans  and  Chalmers  bore  the  brunt  of  the  attack; 
Evans  with  his  ball-carrying  and  Chalmers,  with  his  kick- 
ing contributed  three  extra  points  and  one  field  goal,  a 
really  creditable  performance. 

Thanksgiving  Day  and  the  defeat  of  Hopkins  came  as 
was  anticipated.  Maryland  decisively  proved  its  superiority 
over  the  Baltimore  eleven  and  consigned  the  age-old  "Hop- 
^  kins'  Jinx"  to  the  Limbo  of  forgotten  things.  Hopkins' 
lone  score  was  the  result  of  a  trick  play  executed  on  the 
kick-off.  Berger  made  three  touchdowns,  catching  passes 
and  plunging  across  for  a  score. 


Evans  Scoring  Touchdown  Against  Hopkins 
••<  152  l!=- 


North  Carolina  Stopped  Ai-TtR  a  Short  Gain 
Maryland  had  waited  long  and  hopefully  for  its  final 
clash  with  Western  Maryland,  the  highly-touted  unde- 
feated eleven.  The  field  was  a  sea  of  mud,  saturated  by 
frequent  rains  of  the  preceding  days.  The  game  ended  12-0 
and  this  score  conveys  no  idea  of  the  real  closeness  of  th; 
game.  Maryland  threatened  twice  but  each  time  lacked  th; 
punch  to  force  a  touchdown. 

And  so  Maryland  played  its  season  through,  slow,  at 
first  to  attain  its  real  stride,  but  from  the  middle  of  the 
season,  a  spirited,  hard-fighting  unit  that  played  hard  for 
victory  and  harder  against  inevitable  defeat.  The  prospect 
is  assuring  for  a  team  next  year  that  will  duplicate  the  suc- 
cess of  this  past  one  and  offer  a  tangible  proof  of  the  spirit 
of  Maryland.  Krajcovic,  Evans,  Radice  and  Lombard  were 
picked  for  the  All-Maryland  team. 


Jesse  Krajcovic 


Maryland  Completes  Pass  in  Western  Maryland  Game 
■4  153  }a- 


e    o 


i» 


Haydeii,  Chalmers,  Sterling.  Dodson,   McDonald.   Norres,   Pease,   Dyott,   Norris,  Koelle.   Heagy 
Rooney.    Butz,    Krajcovic,    Loughran,    Wilson,    Berger,    Wilson,    Faber,    Miller 

Crouin,   Stiber,   Radice,   Roberts,   May,   Serrlno,  Warcholy,   Miller 
McDonald,   Lombard,   Ribnitzki.   Madigan.   Hientz,   Carliss,   Sanford,   Nicholson 


Varsity  Football 


OFFICIALS 

H.   C.   Byrd Coac/j 

Burton  Shipley — - Assistant  Coach 

Charles  Fenwick Line  Coach 

Jack  Faber - ..Assistant  Coach 

FiARRY    Jarvis — -  Manager 

Walter  Dent   — Assistant  Manager 


Berger 

Butz 

Carliss 

Chalmers 

Cronin 

Dodson 

Dyott 


Evans 

Faber 

Fisher 

Hayden 

Heagy 

Heintz 


Koelle 

Krajcovic 

Lombard 

Loughran 

May 

Madigan 


SQUAD 

McDonald 

Miller 

Miller 

Nicholson 

Norris 

Norris,  J. 


Pease 

Pitzer 

Radice 

Ribnitzki 

Roberts 

Rooney 


Sanford 

Settino 

Sterling 

Stieber 

Warcholy 

Wilson 

Wilson,  H. 


SCHEDULE 


U. 


September  28  Washington    College    

October      5.    North    Carolina - 

October    12      South  Carolina  _ 

October    19 Gallaudet    

October   26      Virginia   Military   Academy 

November     2 Virginia    

November     9   -—Yale        

November  16 Virginia   Polytechnic   Institute. 

November  28  ....Hopkins  

December  7 Western  Maryland 


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William  "Bill"  Evans 
Captain 


-4  156  >• 


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Julius  Radice 


1930  Varsity  Basketball  Season 

Maryland  started  the  Basketball  season  with  a  win 
over  William  and  Mary  that  showed  the  promise  of  a  Bas- 
ketball team  in  the  making  that  would  indeed  be  good. 
There  were  only  four  members  of  the  squad  who  had  had 
more  than  a  week's  practice  before  the  first  game.  The 
rest  of  the  team  were  still  a  bit  stiff  from  the  Football 
season.  However,  the  team  displayed  moments  of  a  fast 
passing  combination  that  would  mean  much  before  the 
season  ended. 

The  second  game  of  the  season  was  a  thriller  that  kept 
the  fans  on  their  toes  from  start  to  finish.  The  game  was 
with  the  Duke  Blue  Devils  and  they  were  as  fast  as  blue 
lightning.  However  the  Maryland  team  had  found  itself 
and  was  equal  to  the  terrific  pace  set  by  the  opposition. 
When  the  final  whistle  blew  the  Duke  team  was  leading 
by  one  point  and  the  game  went  to  the  opposing  team. 
Berger  and  Ronkin  scintillated  brightest  for  the  home  team.  The  teams  as  a  unit 
worked  together  so  smoothly  it  was  hard  to  see  any  individual   starring. 

The  following  Saturday  Maryland  met  and  conquered  Catholic  University  in  a  mild 
game  that  suffered  greatly  from  comparison  to  the  one  a  few  days  before.  Gaylor,  who 
had  been  high  scorer  in  both  the  preceding  games,  continued  his  work  in  this  encounter 
and  led  his  team  mates  in  the  scoring  with  Radice  and  Ronkin  very  close  seconds.  In 
this  game,  as  in  the  first  game  of  the  season,  the  majority  of  the  members  of  the  squad 
were  given  a  chance  to  try  hooping  the  ball. 

Gaylor  continued  leading  the  team  when  the  Terps  made  the  trip  to  Charlottesville 
and  turned  in  a  real  triumph  over  Virginia.  Coach  Shipley's  newly  developed  style  of 
fast  and  deceptive  passing  seemed  to  bewilder  the  Cavaliers  to  such  an  extent  that  the 
large  score  seemed  to  appear  as  a  matter  of  course. 

The  Friday  of  the  same  week  the  local  club  added  another  to  their  string  of  victories 
by  defeating  the  Blue  Jay  quint  from  Johns  Hopkins.  This  game  was  a  bit  slow  and  at 
no  time  whatsoever  were  the  Terps  in  any  danger  of  being  headed  by  the  Jays. 

Navy's  basketball  team  and  the  Virginia  Polytechnic  Institute  quint  fell  before 
Maryland's  attack,  which  presented  excellent  floor  work  and  a  good  deal  of  snap  and 
precision.  The  former  team  lived  up  to  their  tradition  of  always  giving  a  Maryland 
team  a  good  battle.  It  was 
only  after  a  hard  fight  that 
Maryland  came  out  on  the 
long  end  of  the  score.  Mary- 
land continued  to  display  the 
excellent  form  which  was  the 
,  team's  greatest  asset.  The 
Virginia  Polytechnic  Inst- 
itute game  was  an  easy  one 
for  the  Terp  quintet  and  pre- 
sentend  another  opportunity 
for  wholesale  substituting. 

The  next  two  games  were 
heartbreakers,  which  Mary- 
land lost,  one  to  the  Wolf 
pack  from  North  Carolina 
State  and  the  other  to  the 
Generals  from  Washington 
and  Lee.  The  former  defeat 
was  only  by  two  points  while  J.  Donald  Kieffer,  Mcinai^cr 


Louis  Berger 


■4  157  li-- 


s 


y 

^^^^^^^^^^B  ^^^^ 

ROONEY,    M.\^,    C.HALMIRS 

the  Generals  won  by  a  margin  of  tour  points.  However,  these  two  losses  in  a  row  were 
not  signs  of  a  weaker  team  to  any  extent. A  week's  layoff  due  to  semester  exams  before 
the  North  Caroline  game  may  have  helped  in  the  win  of  the  opposing  team.  However, 
neither  of  the  wmners  had  enough  of  a  margin  to  assume  any  great  superiority  over  the 
Maryland   team. 

Western  Maryland  was  completely  outclassed  when  it  played  the  local  team  in  the 
Ritchie  Gymnasium.  The  game  was  slow  and  a  substitution  parade  again  filed  on  and 
off  the  court. 

The  quint  now  took  a  Southern  trip  that  netted  three  wins  out  of  four  games  played. 
The  Generals  again  took  Maryland's  measure  by  some  fast  work  against  a  disorganized 
and  patched  up  team.  The  game  was  the  night  following  the  win  over  Virginia  Military 
Institute.  Previous  to  both  of  these  games  the  Virginia  Polytechnic  Institute  team  had 
been  defeated  for  the  second  time.  The  second  game  with  Virginia  again  resulted  in  a 
win  for  Maryland  that  helpjed  soothe  the  injury  of  a  defeat  at  the  hands  of  the  Generals. 

When  Maryland  undertook  to  play  two  teams  in  one  day  there  was  some  head  shaking 


BtRGER    ScORLS    I.N    HoPKLNS    G.\.\1L 

•4l58li=- 


()£rj\ 


HLTZEL,   KONKIN,  GAVLOR,   HEAGY 

among  the  fans  who  know  their  basketball.  However,  these  two  games  simply  meant 
two  more  victories  for  the  Maryland  team.  Hopkins  went  down  on  a  Saturday  afternoon 
to  the  tune  of  thirty-nine  to  twenty-four  while  the  evening  of  the  same  day  saw  the 
Terps  trounce  Virginia  Military  Institute  for  the  second  time  in  the  season.  This  score 
was  thirty-nine  to  twenty-one  and  shows  the  power  that  the  Maryland  team  had  to  be 
able  to  play  two  teams  and  win  from  both  by  such  a  top  heavy  score.  Substitutions 
galore  were  made  in  the  Hopkins  game  and  in  the  fray  with  Virginia  Military  Institute 
thirteen  of  the  Black  and  Gold  players  were  used.  Berger,  Ronkin  and  Chalmers  started 
in  the  afternoon  while  Evans  and  Radice  made  their  bid  for  glory  in  the  night  game. 

The  last  game  of  the  scheduled  season  was  with  St.  John's  College  from  Annapolis 
with  the  highly  touted  McCartee  in  the  opposing  line-up.  Maryland  had  ^o  great  diffi- 
culty in  taking  this  last  game  and  while  so  doing  gave  the  fans  a  last  glimpse  of  the 
team  that  would  enter  the  Southern  Conference  Tournament. 

The  first  opponent  the  Black  and  Gold  quintet  met  in  the  Conference  tourney  was 
Kentucky,  and  the  opposition  won  after  a  stiff  battle.  Berger  was  the  star  for  the 
Terrapins  in  this  game,  running  up  eleven  points  of  the  team's  twenty-one.  This  game 
concluded  a  colorful  and  successful  season  for  the  Maryland  basketball  team. 


Maryland  Defeats  Navy 
■4  159  p- 


Plioto  by  A.  Auhify  Bodine 


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Kieffei",    iladigan,    Hctzcl,    Xuri  is,    Rooney,    May,    Shipley 
Ronkin,  Gaylor,  Burger,  Evans,  Haegy,  Radice,  Chalmers 


Varsity   Basketball 


OFFICIALS 


Burton  Shipley 
Jack  Faber    . 
Donald  Kieffer 
Harry  Hess  . 


Coach 

.    Freshmen  Coach 

Manager 

Assistant  Manager 


SQUAD— Lc/tcr  Men 


Bcrger 

Chalmers 

Evans 


Madigan 


December   12 William 

January      9 Duke 

January   11 Catholic 

January   14 Virginia 

January   1  7 Hopkins 

January  22 Navy    __, 

January   25 Virginia 


Gaylor 
Heagy 
M  =  y 


and    Mary  .. 
University 


Norris 
Radice 
Ronkin 


RESERVES 

Pease 

SCHEDULE 


Rooney 


Steiber 


U. 


Polytechnic    Institute.. 

1 North  Carolina   State 

3 Washington    and    Lee 

6 Western    Maryland    

8 North   Carolina   University  

11 Virginia    Polytechnic    Institute.. 

12 Virginia   Military   Institute 

13- Washington  and  Lee  

15— -Virginia   

18 North  Carolina   State 

19 North  Carolina   University 

20 Duke   

22 Hopkins 


February 
February 
February 
February 
February 
February 
February 
February 
February 
February 
February 
February 

February    22 Virginia  Military  Institute. 

February    25 St.   John's  - 


ofM. 

Opp. 

27 

23 

27 

28 

37 

30 

54 

20 

41 

24 

43 

39 

44 

27 

26 

28 

25 

29 

37 

18 

34 

26 

34 

23 

44 

25 

21 

36 

51 

29 

21 

19 

29 

22 

24 

39 

39 

24 

39 

21 

42 

25 

•4 160 : 


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ALBtRT    HeAGY 

Captain 


■■'4  162  I:-- 


Kri^ 


William  Evans 


1930  Varsity  Lacrosse  Season 

Continuing  the  superior  brand  of  play  which  has 
marked  the  twelves  of  the  past  and  which  promises  to  make 
excellent  teams  in  this  sport  a  tradition  at  Maryland,  the 
1930  edition  of  the  Old  Line  lacrosse  team  as  usual  was 
an  exceptional  and  a  successful  one. 

In  the  State  of  Maryland,  where  lacrosse  is  second  only 
to  football  as  the  most  popular  collegiate  sport  and  where 
annually  the  best  teams  in  the  country  are  developed,  it  is 
only  natural  that  the  University  of  Maryland  should  be 
among  the  leaders  in  the  sport.  Johns  Hopkins,  St.  Johns, 
Navy,  and  Maryland,  all  from  the  Old  Line  State,  can 
always  be  counted  on  to  develop  contenders  for  the  na- 
tional lacrosse  championship.  Small  wonder,  then,  that 
keen  rivalry  should  appear  among  the  four  schools  and  that 
the  winner  of  the  state  championship  might  almost  auto- 
matically take  on  national  honors. 

It  is  also  almost  irrelevant  to  state  that  the  University  of  Maryland,  with  one  of 
the  finest  lacrosse  coaches  in  the  country  in  the  personage  of  Jack  Faber,  is  always  at  its 
best  and  fighting  hard  when  these  state  rivals  are  met,  and  that  it  usually  emerges  with 
its  share  of  the  victories. 

Individual  exploits  in  super  playing  were  necessarily  prevalent  with  such  a  fine 
twelve.  "Bill"  Evans,  who  last  year  won  Ail-American  lacrosse  honors  and  was  the  high 
point  scorer  of  the  country,  again  made  himself  the  outstanding  player  on  the  team 
by  a  continuance  of  his  sterling  attack  work.  At  the  time  of  this  writing  he  is  leading 
the  heavy  scorers  of  the  country  by  a  safe  margin.  At  center,  "Ossie"  Back  kept  up  his 
excellent  work  of  last  year  when  he  was  conceded  to  be  one  of  the  best  defense  men 
ever  to  hold  a  racquet  for  the  University,  was  an  outstanding  player.  No  less  efficient 
in  quelling  the  enemy  attack  was  Charlie  Dodson,  a  sterling  performer  if  there  ever  was 
one.  "Slu"  Kelly  as  a  goalie  was  without  an  equal  in  the  country.  Joe  Deckman  con- 
ceded nothing  to  any  defense  man  in  collegiate  ranks.  Fred  Stieber,  a  husky  sophomore, 
turned  out  to  be  almost  as  dangerous  as  the  vaunted  Evans  on  attack. 

At   the  present   writing,  but   seven  of  the  nine  scheduled  games   have   been   played, 

resulting  in  six  vic- 
tories and  one  defeat. 
The  two  remaining 
contests,  however, 
promise  to  be  real 
tests  of  Terrapin  la- 
crosse ability.  Johns 
Hopkins  and  Navy 
will  go  a  long  way 
toward  determining 
the  final  national 
rating  of  the  Uni- 
versity of  Maryland 
in  lacrosse. 

The  opening  game 
turned  out  to  be  lit- 
tle more  than  a  prac- 
tice skirmish  for  the 
Old  Liners  for  Ran- 
dolph-Macon   bowed         Charles  Dean,  Manager 


Harry   Wilson 


■4  163  }=■■ 


\,v^<>>-.  • 


I'^Jtcfi 


g 


COLOSIMO,    MADIGAN,    NORRIS 

easily  by  the  shut-out  score  of  11-0.  Evans  got  off  to  a  good  start  in  his  race  for  scoring 
honors  by  flicking  seven  into  the  net  before  retiring  from  the  game.  The  defense  had 
very  httle  opportunity  to  show  its  wares.  Starting  with  a  crashing  attack,  the  Mary- 
landers  dented  the  net  for  four  goals  in  quick  succession,  averaging  one  every  three 
minutes. 

Against  Western  Maryland  in  the  second  game,  the  Terrapins  again  succeeded  in 
keeping  their  own  net  undented  by  an  alien  bail,  while  Evans  continued  his  scoring  ram- 
page by  leading  his  mates  to  a  9-0  victory.  The  effect  of  Coach  Faber's  teachings  made 
Itself  apparent  in  this  fray,  for  the  passing  and  general  stickwork  of  the  twelve  was 
greatly  improved. 

14  to  1  plainly  tells  the  story  of  the  Maryland  victory  over  the  University  of 
Georgia.  The  stickmen  from  the  south  were  simply  too  inexperienced  to  compete  with 
the  heavy  scoring  Terrapin  attack.  However,  the  Georgians'  lone  score  marked  the 
first  time  that  the  Maryland  defense  had  ever  been  successfully  penetrated. 


S 

i 


ACTION    AGAINST    RANDOLPH    MACON 


•=il  164  Ii=- 


k^ 


FABER,   STIEBER,    LEE 

The  Army  of  West  Point  came  to  College  Park  to  take  a  8-to-l  drubbing  on  the 
following  week.  The  College  Parkers  hopped  into  the  lead  in  the  first  minute  of  play 
when  Evans  sneaked  around  from  behind  the  net  to  score  after  a  huddle  of  the  attack 
men.  It  was  one  of  the  smoothest  plays  ever  witnessed  in  lacrosse  at  College  Park.  The 
Army  defense  men  were  completely  bewildered  and  were  at  a  total  loss  for  a  method  of 
staving  off  the  attack,  but  before  then,  the  goal  was  scored.  After  the  Cadets  had 
knotted  the  count  a  few  minutes  later  on  Lehrfcld's  goal,  Maryland  again  went  into  the 
front  when  Evans  received  a  perfect  pass  from  Stieber  to  score  another  marker  from 
the  right  side  of  the  field.  Army  never  threatened  seriously  after  this  point,  while  the 
Terrapins  went  on  to  gain  a  5-to-l  edge  at  half  time.  At  the  outset  of  the  second  half, 
Stieber  counted  Maryland's  goal  by  scooping  the  ball  into  the  webbing  from  a  scuffle 
in  front  of  the  net.  Then  Evans  scored  again  on  a  double  pass  from  Stieber  to  Colosimo 
to  Evans.    The  last  score  was  made  by  Stieber  in  the  w.ming  minutes  of  the  game.  Al 


m 


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m 


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STIEBER  SCORES  IN   ARMY  GAME 

■<  165  Ii=- 


(I\ 


INVERNIZZI,   SNELL,   BECK 

Heagy  played  a  prominent  part  in  the  Maryland  defense,  as  did  Dodson.  On  the  whole 
the  passing  game  was  polished  and  the  attack  was  erratic,  while  the  defense  proved  to  be 
a  sturdy  and  effective  bunch  of  stick  wielders  who  performed  well  in  their  first  real 
test  of  the  year. 

St.  John's  of  Annapolis  registered  the  first  triumph  of  the  season  over  Jack  Faber's 
proteges  to  the  tune  of  7-3.  It  was  just  a  case  of  a  smoother  working  team  winning 
the  game.  The  Johnnies  were  all  fast  and  all  ball  hawks,  and  the  Old  Liners  lost  accord- 
ingly. Kelly  and  Heagy  put  up  splendid  exhibitions  at  goal  and  first  defense  Evan's 
play  was  of  his  usual  high  excellence.  The  two  defense  men  did  much  to  stem  the  tide 
of  St.  John's  goals  in  the  first  half  when  the  visitors  came  through  with  four  tallies 
while  holding  the  home  team  scoreless.  When  Evans  scored  a  goal  within  ten  seconds 
after  the  opening  of  the  second  half,  and  then  followed  it  up  shortly  with  another 
Maryland  rooters  hoped  to  see  a  more  even  battle.  The  play  was  even  in  the  second 
half  as  far  as  scoring  went,  but  the  ball  was  more  frequently  in  Maryland  territory 
than  in  St.  John's.  Loose  passing  and  the  inability  of  the  Sophomores  to  play  up  to  the 
p)owerful  game  of  the  visitors,  spelled  the  difference  between  the  two  teams.  Evans 
scored  all  of  Maryland's  points,  while  Pool,  Hoff,  Wiegler,  MacCartee  and  Hines  counted 
for  St.  Johns.  In  this  fray,  Kelly  turned  in  one  of  the  finest  exhibitions  of  goal  tending 
ever  seen  in  Byrd  Stadium. 


t*i%^ 


MARYLAND  STOPS   ST.   JOHN  S   LONG    SHOT 


■4l66> 


4 


I^O 


UODSON,    KtXLY,    NICHOLSON 


Journeying  to  Philadelphia,  Fabcr's  stickmen  had  a  field  day  at  the  expense  of  the 
University  of  Pennsylvania  lacrosse  team.  Striking  a  soft  spot  after  two  hard  games  in 
a  row,  the  local  twelve  ran  up  fifteen  points,  while  the  Quakers  got  a  total  of  two. 
There  had  been  a  little  bit  of  doubt  as  to  the  ability  of  the  Pennsylvania  twelve  because 
it  was  this  team  which  administered  the  second  final  defeat  to  the  Oxford  Cambridge 
lacrosse  team;  it  was  a  matter  of  conjecture  as  to  whether  the  Red  and  Blue  earned  that 
triumph  or  caught  the  Cantabs  on  an  off-day.  The  result  of  the  game  seems  to  indicate 
that  the  latter  guess  was  correct.  Pennsylvania  never  was  in  the  game.  At  the  end  of 
the  first  half  the  score  was  Maryland  9,  Pennsylvania  1.  While  the  opposition  was 
busy  earning  another  goal  in  the  second  half,  Maryland  lunged  along  and  rang  up  six 
more  tallies  before  the  final  whistle  blew.  There  was  little  or  no  trouble  attached  to 
the  contest  for  the  Terps.  Evans  led  the  scoring  as  usual.  He  had  five  goals.  The  other 
close  attack  man,  Stieber,  followed  with  three  goals.  Colosimo  and  Lee  had  two  each, 
and  Wilson,  Heagy  and  Faber  also  scored. 

Washington  College  went  down  in  defeat  before  a  crushing  Old  Line  attack  led  by 
"Bill"  Evans  to  the  score  of  20- L  The  attack  men  of  the  local  aggregation  handled 
the  ball  with  unusual  dexterity  and  won  handily.  The  Eastern  Shoremen,  coached  by 
"Chief"  Beatty,  former  Old  Line  star,  displayed  poor  stick  work,  and  in  no  way  could 
compete  with  the  more  experienced  Maryland  twelve. 


KELLY   MAKES  A  GREAT  STOP  AGAINST  ST.   JOHN  S 

■4  167  >■ 


Miller,   Faber.   Healy,  Tinner,   Snell,    Lt-e,   Pin;l!,    Decknian,   Xorris,    Loughraii.   Evans 
Ebaiigh,   Stieber.   Madigan,   Dodsoii,   Wilson,   Heagy.   Kelly,    Nicholson 
Ronkin,    Harlan,    Chew,    Beck,    Koons,    Reeves,    Invernizzi,    Colosimc 


Varsity  Lacrosse 


OFFICIALS 


Jack  Faber 

Ivan  Mary     . 

RivERDALE  Smith 

Charles  Dean 

Darius  Dixon     . 

Beck 

Ebaugh 

Chew 

Evans 

Colosimo            Faber 

Deckman           Harlan 

Dodson 

Hayden 

SQUAD 

Heagy  Loughran 

Healy  Lee 

Invernizzi  Madigan 

Kelly  May 

Koons  Miller 


Coach 

Assistant  Coach 

Freshman  Coach 

Manager 

Assistant  Manai^er 


Nicholson 

Norris 

Pugh 

Reeves 

Ronkin 


Stieber 

Snell 

Silber 

Turner 

Wilson 


SCHEDULE 


April 
April 
April 
April 
May 


5    Randolph  Macon 

12  -...Western  Maryland 


U  of  M. 
.     11 
.       9 


19    - University  of  Georgia 14 

26 U.  S.  Military  Academy 8 

3 St.  John's  College 3 

May    10 University  of   Pennsylvania... 15 

May    16 Washington   College   _ 20 

May   24.. Johns  Hopkins  6 

May    31 ..U.  S.  Naval  Academy _ — 


■<  168  >• 


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Robert  Quinn 

Captain 


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•<  170  >• 


1930  Varsity  Track  Season 


Robert  Remsburg 


A  resume  of  the  University  of  Maryland  track  team's 
accomplishments  reveals  only  a  minimum  amount  of  suc- 
cess in  the  way  of  victories,  but  from  the  point  of  progress 
much  has  been  effected. 

Maryland's  indoor  season  started  off  with  the  Millrose 
games  held  in  Madison  Square  Garden  annually.  Here  the 
Old  Line  mile  relay  team  showed  up  well  enough  to  finish 
fourth  against  the  fastest  on  the  Atlantic  seaboard.  Quinn 
finished  second  in  the  handicap  50-yard  dash.  White, 
Havell,  Linzey  and  Kinnamon  made  up  the  Black  and  Gold 
quartet. 

The  Terrapins   next    showed    up   at    the   Meadowbrook 
Indoor  Games  and  acquitted  themselves  very  honorable  by 
taking  the  mile  relay  very  handily.    Outstanding  was  the 
performance  of  Bob  Quinn  in  the  4 5 -yard  dash,  who  fin- 
ished only  slightly  behind  Jack  Elder  and  Chet  Bowman, 
two  of  the  fastest  in  the  country. 
Again  at  the  Virginia  indoor  meet  Maryland  men  came  through.    Linzey,  Remsburg 
and  McDonald  took  seconds  in  the  half,  quarter  and  shot  put  respectively,  while  Quinn 
placed  third  in  4 5 -yard  sprint. 

More  laurels  came  to  Black  and  Gold  thin  clads  at  the  first  Southern  Conference 
Indoor  Championships.  Linzey  ran  a  beautiful  race  to  cop  the  half  mile,  Johnny  Mc- 
Donald heaved  the  shot  farther  than  any  of  his  competitors,  and  Remsburg  copped 
second  in  the  double  furlong  to  give  Maryland  third  place  in  the  final  standing.  Mary- 
land's win  of  the  Catholic  U.  indoor  meet  brought  the  season  to  a  close  and  Black  and 
Gold  tracksters  began  to  turn  their  attention  to  outdoor  competition.  Fonts  established 
a  new  pole  vault  record  at  eleven  feet  seven  inches  in  the  C.  U.  meet. 

Opening  the  Spring  program  for  varsity  sports  at  the  renovated  Byrd  Stadium, 
University  of  Maryland's  track  team  found  the  going  a  little  rough  and  consequently 
were  overwhelmed  by  the  strong  Washington  and  Lee  aggregation,  winners  of  the  in- 
door Southern  Conference  tourney,  who  scored  y&'/z  points  while  the  Terrapins  were 
accumulating  only  47' j.  Bill  Kinnamon  turned  in  a  neat  victory  over  Finkelstein,  one 
of  the  best  hurdlers  in   the  South. 

Maryland  lost  a   close  meet   to  V.  M.  I.   the  following   week.    Kinnamon   turned  in 


P 


William  Kinnamon 


Albert  Dean,  Manager 


■4  171  }a- 


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SUTER,    SMITH,    MCDONALD,    SHURE 

wins  in  the  high  and  low  hurdles  as  did  Quinn  In  the  century  and  220.  Linzey  ran  a 
nice  race  to  take  the  furlong. 

Hitting  the  tape  ten  yards  ahead  of  the  second  man  in  a  representative  field  of  col- 
lege hurdlers,  "Bill"  Kinnamon,  Maryland's  mainstay  in  the  timber  topping  events  for 
the  past  two  years,  scored  the  most  impressive  athletic  triumph  of  his  career  by  win- 
ning the  four  hundred  meter  hurdle  event  at  the  Penn  relays.  The  mile  relay  made  up  of 
Smith,  White,  Linzey  and  Kinnamon  turned  in  a  clinking  performance  by  reeling  off  the 
mile  in  3:2  5  but,  because  of  the  speed  of  the  field,  was  unable  to  place  better  than 
fifth  in  an  event  won  by  De  Pauw  of  Indiana. 

Virginia  humbled  the  Terrapins  in  the  next  dual  meet,  75-51.  Urban  Linzey  came 
through  nicely  in  the  quarter  and  half  mile  runs  to  take  two  firsts  and  Kinnamon  did 
the  same  in   the  high  and  low   hurdles. 

William  and  Mary's  track  team  defeated  Maryland  thin  clads  at  Byrd  Stadium  by 


KliNNAMON    WINS    HIGH    HURDLES    IN    WASHINGTON    AND    LEE    MEET 


4  172  Ii=- 


LINZEY,     FOUTS,    MCDONALD,   COOPER 

the  score  of  75  to  50.  Kinnamon  was  the  individual  star  for  Maryland  as  he  won  first 
place  in  both  the  high  and  low  hurdle  events.  Fouts  also  made  a  good  showing  by 
winning  the  high  jump  at  the  mark  of  five  feet  eight  inches.  This  is  one  of  the  best 
marks  made  by  a  Maryland  jumper  in  the  past  few  years.  Linzey,  who  was  a  double 
winner  against  Virginia,  found  the  going  tough  in  his  last  race.  In  the  quarter  mile, 
he  was  off  to  a  bad  start  and  had  to  sprint  his  way  through  the  entire  field  before  he 
could  make  his  bid  for  first.  It  came  too  late,  however,  and  he  finished  second.  The 
winning  time  was  51:3.  Krajcovic  won  in  the  shot  put  event,  the  distance  being  41 
feet,  6  "z  inches. 

The  only  victory  of  the  season  came  in  the  foum  of  69-5  7  win  over  Johns  Hopkins 
University.  Practically  every  one  of  the  Terrapins  scored  with  Jesse  Krajcovic  leading 
the  ensemble  by  accumulating  12  points.  Urban  Linzey  and  Bill  Kinnamon  registered 
10  apiece  in  their  favorite  events.  "Bob"  Quinn,  "Pete"  Cooper,  John  McDonald  and 
Charlie  Fouts  also  came  through  with  premier  honors. 


100- YARD  DASH,   VIRGINIA   MEET 

■4 173  !:=■• 


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Linzey.    Sliure,    McDonald.    McDonald.    Krojcovic,    Smith,    Fonts,    Whiteley  Reichel,   Flook.   Eppley 
Fellows,   Cooper.   Duncan.   Ward.  Quinn.   Gregory,  Cosimono,   White.   Havell.   Ruhl 


Varsity  Track 


OFFICIALS 

Geary  Eppley 

, 

Coach 

Albert  Dean 

Manager 

George  O'Hare 

SQUAD 

Assisfant 

Miiiniger 

Brown 

Pouts 

Havell 

McDonald 

Reichel 

Sugar 

Cooper 

Garrett 

Heintz 

McGlathery 

Remsburg 

Suter 

Cosimono          Gregory 

Kinnamon         Myers 

Ruhl 

Ward 

Duncan 

Hammerlund 

Linzey 

Pease 

Sanford 

White 

Fellows 

Knobloch 

Mays 

Price 

Shure 

Whiteley 

Flook 

Krojcovic 

McDonald         Quinn 

Smith 

SCHEDULE 

U  of  M. 

April     5  Washington  and  Lee 47]' 2 

April     9   - Catholic  University  

April  19 Virginia  Military  Institute- —  

April  26. Penn  Relays   

May      3 University  of  Virginia  51 

May    10 .William  and  Mary  College — -  50 

May   14 Johns  Hopkins  University  69 

May    17— .Southern    Conference    Meet..- — 

May   24  -- ..U.  S.  Naval  Academy _ 


■4 174 1> 


opp. 

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75 
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Fred  Hftzel 


■4  176  > 


^^rr; 


1930  Varsity  Baseball  Season 


Louis  Berger 


April  5,  193  0,  saw  baseball  come  into  its  own 
on  the  University  of  Maryland  campus  when  the 
team  representing  that  institution  downed  that  of 
Cornell  6-0,  mainly  because  of  stellar  pitching  of 
one.  Jack  Batson,  who  set  the  visiting  Ithacans 
down  with  two  small  hits.  Tansill  and  Radice 
provided  the  big  punch  at  the  plate  while  the 
Maryland  infield  displayed  real  defensive  skill. 

The  opening  game  found  Julia  Radice,  last 
year's  second  baseman  and  leading  hitter  of  the 
Tri  State  league,  at  the  initial  bag  with  Bozy  Ber 
ger  and  Shorty  Chalmers,  two  of  the  best  all- 
around  Sophomore  athletes,  cavorting  around  the 
keystone.  Bob  Gaylor  was  back  at  his  old  post, 
third  base,  while  Hammy  Derr  and  Jimmy  Wilson 
were  listed  as  two  capable  utility  men.  Captain 
Fred  Hetzel,  Roy  Tansill  and  Paul  Cronin  made 
up  the  outer  garden. 

After  such  an  auspicious  inauguration  of  the  season,  the  Terrapin  invasion  of  the 
Southland  was  not  so  productive  of  victories.  One  win,  two  losses,  and  one  tie  game 
resulted  from  the  activities  of  the  Black  and  Gold  south  of  the  Potomac. 

Outstanding  was  the  performance  of  Batson,  who  turned  in  his  second  win  in  as 
many  starts  by  holding  Virginia  to  two  runs  while  his  mates  were  pounding  the  Old 
Dominion  twirlers  for  11.  Berger,  Radice  and  Hetzel  each  contributed  three  hits  to  the 
cause  during  the  course  of  the  afternoon,  Berger  accounting  for  a  single  and  two  doubles 
while  Radice  collected  one  triple  and  two  singles. 

After  starting  out  well  against  North  Carolina  State,  and  running  up  a  good  mar- 
gin in  the  first  four  innings,  the  Old  Line  pitching  staff  weakened  and  allowed  the 
State  batsmen  to  tie  the  score  in  regulation  time  and  lengthen  the  game  to  ten  innings 
when  the  affair  was  called  on  account  of  darkness 

The  Old  Liners  next  bowed  to  the  Blue  Devils  of  Duke  University,  who  had  one  of 
the  best  college  teams  in  the  East.  The  score  was  5-2.  Phipps,  starting  his  first  game  of 
the  season,  was  ineffective  and  the  Devils  were  able  to  collect  twelve  hits  off  of  his 
delivery. 

North  Carolina  University  next  lowered  Black  and  Gold  colors  7-2.  In  the  Carolina 
game  Berger  connected  for  a 
double  and  a  home  run  to 
lead  his  team  at  bat.  Errors 
were  instrumental  in  the  Ter- 
rapin downfall,  however,  and 
more  perfect  fielding  might 
have  delivered  a  different 
story.  Hauver,  starting  his 
first  game  as  a  regular  twirl- 
er,  allowed  the  Tarheel  bats- 
men ten  safe  wallops  and  is- 
sued six  tickets  to  first  base. 
Coming  back  to  the  local 
field,  the  Old  Liners  flashed 
their  best  ball  of  the  season 
before  the  clientele  by  win- 
jljSSr^^  ning    six    of    the    next    seven 

«^F  contests. 


Julius  Radice 


William  Chaffinch,  Manager 


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PHIPPS,   DERR,   BATSON,   TANSILL,   HF.SS 

Harry  Milburn  got  revenge  for  the  defeat  he  suffered  on  the  southern  tour  at  the 
hands  of  North  Carohna  U.  by  Hmiting  the  Tarheels  to  four  hits  and  one  run  when 
they  showed  up  in  this  neighborhood.  Meanwhile  his  mates  fattened  up  their  batting 
averages  on  19  hits  and  14  runs.  "Black"  Jack  Batson  downed  the  V.  P.  I.  boys  2-1 
in  a  pretty  exhibition  of  hurling  while  Hess  and  Milburn  conquered  Washington  and 
Lee  9-1.  "Black"  came  in  for  more  glory  when  he,  with  the  aid  of  his  pals,  sent  the 
Army  mule  back  to  West  Point  with  an  8-2  licking  plastered  on  its  hide.  Maryland  got 
away  to  an  early  start  and  scored  all  eight  of  its  runs  in  the  first  three  innings.  Approxi- 
mately 3,000  spectators  were  on  hand  to  aid  in  the  dedication  of  the  new  baseball 
stadium.  Senator  Millard  E.  Tydings  lent  the  appropriate  dignity  to  the  occasion  and 
climaxed  the  matter  by  successfully  tossing  out  the  first  ball  to  open  the  game. 


GAYLOR  SAFE   AT  HOME  IN   CORNELL  GAME 


4  178  \r- 


WK 


ORONIN,    MILBURN,    GAVLOR,    CHALME-RS 

North  Carolina  State  broke  Maryland's  winning  streak  in  a  somewhat  surprise  vic- 
tory, but  the  Old  Liners  came  back  strong  to  register  wins  over  Virginia,  8-5,  and 
Catholic  University,  24-7.  In  the  first  game  Batson  extended  his  winning  streak  to 
five  while  Hauver  and  Hess  did  the  twirling  in  the  second.  The  all-around  playing  of 
Radice  and  Chalmers  was  commendable. 

A  three-day  trip  through  Virginia  was  not  so  successful  as  the  Terrapins  could  win 
hut  one  game.  They  were  downed  by  V.  P.  I.,  12-2.  and  V.  M.  I.,  10-9,  but  took  the 
measure  of  W.  and  L.  4-3. 

Maryland  lost  its  last  Tri-State  League  game  to  V.  M.  L  10-3.  Although  the  pitching 
held  up  well,  the  fielding  was  poor,  errors  paving  the  way  for  the  cadet  victory.  Out- 
standing was  the  work  of  Chalmers.  The  Terrapins  won  six  and  lost  five  in  the  Tri- 
State  contests. 

The  Terrapins  swamped  Washington  College  in  the  next  encounter,  16-10.  Berger 
and  Radice  featured  at  the  plate.  The  former  got  two  homers,  a  triple  and  a  single,  while 
the  latter  got  five  hits  in  which  were  scattered  three  doubles. 


CRDNl.N     SIIAIS     I  I  IIKII    A(,AI\S  I     AR.\n 


■•<  179  l!=- 


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Radi'-e.  Gaylor,  Batson.  Sterling,  Mech.  Chaffinch 

Hess,   Phipps,    Berger,    Wilson,   Jones,    Hauver,    Hetzel 

Derr,    May.    Cronin.    Rosen,    Milljnrn,    Chalmers 

Varsity  Baseball 


OFFICIALS 


Batson 
Berger 
Chalmers 
Cronin 


Burton   Shipley 
Bunt  Watkins 
William    Chaffinch 
Ralph  Garreth 

Derr 
Gaylor 
Hauver 
Hess 


Coach 

Freshman  Coach 

Maua;^cr 

Assistant  Manai^cr 


SQUAD 

Hetzel 
Higgins 
Mech 
Milburne 


Phipps 
Radice 
Rosen 
Sterling 


SCHEDULE 


Apr! 
Apr 
Apr: 
Apr: 
Apr: 
Apr 
Apr; 
Apri 
Apr 
Apr 
May 
May 
May 
May 
May 
May 
May 
May 
May 


5  .Cornell       

7 North   Carolina   State 


Tansil 
Wilson 


UofM. 
6 


8  University  of  North  Carolina   2 

9 Duke    2 

10  Virginia     1 1 

11  ..University  of  North  Carolina. 14 

18... Virginia   Polytechnic   Institute 2 

2  5    Washington  and  Lee  9 

26 -- U.  S.  Military  Academy 8 

2  8   ..North   Carolina   State — 

1  ...Virginia   _ 8 

3 Catholic  University  24 

5 -Virginia  Polytechnic  Institute 2 

6 Washington  and  Lee 3 

7 Virginia   Military   Institute   9 

14  .   Virginia  Military  Institute 3 

17 Catholic  University 13 

1 J Washington    College 16 

21 U.  S.  Naval  Academy..... 3 

May    28 University    of    Pennsylvania    — 

•4  180  l!=- 


opp. 


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7 
12 

4 
10 
10 

5 
10 

6 


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\'alliant,    HischofY,    Robertson,    Lucas,    Nevins 
Freeman,    Rosenbaum,    Roberts 


4 


Varsity  Tennis 

OFFICIALS 


Edwin   Valliant 
John  Bischoff 


Manager 
Assistant  Manager 


SQUAD 


Duckman 
Freeman 


Lucus 
Robertson 


Roberts 
Rosenbaum 


Spencer 


SCHEDULE 

U.  uf  M.  Ot>l>. 

April     14  George  Washington  2  7 

April    2  5  Western  Maryland  4  5 

April    26 .-Washington  and  Lee  1  8 

April    29 Duke 0  9 

May      1 William  and  Mary  _ .„. 1  8 

May      J    - University  of  Richmond  7  2 

May      6 ..William  and  Mary  3  6 

May      8 Washington  and  Lee 3  6 

May   13 University  of  Baltimore  _ 8  1 

May    16  University  of  Richmond  5  2 

May    17 Carnegie  Tech       1  6 

May    19 University  of   Virginia   —  — 

May    21 U.  S.  Naval  Academy  -- —  — 

May    22  Washington    College   —  — 

May   24 Johns  Hopkins  _ —  — 

■4  182  \c^- 


1930  Varsity  Tennis  Season 


Irving  Rosenbaum 

Captain 


The  Philadelphia  Athletics  won  World's  Championships 
almost  two  decades  ago  and  then  finished  last  in  many  con- 
secutive pennant  races  before  climbing  to  the  top  rung  in 
the  ladder  of  professional  ball  clubs  last  year.  Cornell  a 
decade  ago  possessed  eight-oared  crews  which  were  supreme 
in  collegiate  racing  ranks,  but  today  is  far  from  the  glory 
she  once  knew  when  the  time  for  the  historic  Poughkeepsie 
regattas  neared.  And  today,  Maryland,  only  a  few  years 
ago  possessor  of  first  rate  tennis  teams,  is  in  a  slough  as 
far  as  putting  out  winning  teams  in  the  sport  which  made 
Wimbledon,  Forest  Hills  and  St.  Cloud  famous  wherever 
amateur  sport  is  known  or  spoken  of. 

It  seems  that  amateur  sport  is  almost  comparable  to 
great  nations  in  that  the  sway  of  power  is  never  stationary 
but  rests  first  here  and  then  there.  Greece,  Rome,  Spain, 
and  England  have  all  had  undisputed  day,  only  to  fall  from 
unquestioned  power.  So  it  goes,  in  a  much  more  unimportant  sphere  of  this  world's 
interests  among  which  are  tennis.  England  and  Australia  once  commanded  the  tennis 
horizon,  America  held  long  sway  over  courts  and  for  the  past  few  years  French  netmen 
have  conquered  as  they  pleased.  To  bring  the  metaphor  closer  home,  Maryland  only  a 
few  years  ago,  in  1926,  held  the  virtual  championship  of  three  states,  Maryland,  Dela- 
ware and  Virginia,  by  winning  from  the  leading  teams  of  these  states. 

For  an  Old  Line  tennis  team  to  climb  to  any  sort  of  a  championship  is  indeed  an 
achievement,  considering  the  limited  facilities  which  exist  in  College  Park  for  tennis. 
Only  last  year  were  the  old  four  tennis  courts  completely  discarded  for  the  ten  new 
ones  built  just  north  of  Byrd  Stadium.  And  the  consequent  adjustments  which  must 
be  made  before  new  courts  are  in  the  best  of  shape  undoubtedly  hampered  the  Maryland 
team  from  getting  into  the  best  of  possible  shape.  Then  there  is  no  coach  at  Maryland 
and  the  team  is  forced  to  condition  itself  as  best 
it  can  under  its  own  direction.  The  handicap  of 
playing  against  teams,  the  large  proportion  of 
which  have  regular  coaches  and  completed  courts 
may  readily  be  seen. 

It  must  be  admitted,  however,  that  the 
tennis  material  at  Maryland  was  not  strong  this 
year.  There  was  one  man,  Kurland,  a  medical 
student  in  the  Baltimore  school,  who  is  capable  of 
holding  his  own  in  any  collegiate  competition  on 
the  courts.  Municipal  champion  of  Baltimore,  he 
had  been  counted  on  heavily  for  this  year,  but 
found  his  studies  too  arduous  to  leave  for  tennis. 

Therefore  Captain  Rosenbaum  was  obliged  to 
move  up  to  number  one  position  and  the  remain- 
der of  the  team  also  played  one  peg  higher  than 
was  expected  of  them  the  beginning  of  the  season.  Edwin  Valliant,  Manager 


■4  183  Il=- 


The  first  five  matches  of  the  season  were  played  before  a  victory  was  turned  in 
over  Richmond.  Rosenbaum,  Freeman,  Lucas,  Roberts  and  Robertson  all  winning  their 
matches.  Also  Freeman  and  Rosenbaum,  and  Lucas  and  Roberts  won  double  matches. 
The  team  score  was  Maryland  7,  Richmond  2.  The  work  of  Freeman,  number  two  singles 
player,  who  won  every  match  he  participated  in,  singles  and  doubles,  was  especially  note- 
worthy. Going  on  to  Lexington  from  Richmond,  Washington  and  Lee  was  met.  Mary- 
land lost  by  the  score  of  6-3.  Freeman  and  Roberts  won  their  singles  matches  and  Free- 
man and  Rosenbaum  took  the  first  doubles  match. 

Kurland  was  the  only  Old  Line  winner  of  the  day  when  the  Generals  came  to  College 
Park.  The  Maryland  number  one  singles  man  took  his  match  at  7-5,  6-1.  Although 
close  competition  marked  the  rest  of  the  matches,  several  of  the  encounters  going  to 
extra  games  and  sets,  the  Generals  were  finally  victorious  in  the  five  remaining  singles  and 
three  doubles  matches. 

In  the  next  few  days,  the  Old  Liners  defeated  Richmond  again  and  took  a  match 
from  the  University  of  Baltimore.  However,  the  return  engagement  with  William  and 
Mary  was  dropped  7-2.  Then  the  strong  Carnegie  Tech  squad  took  a  decisive  victory 
home  to  Pittsburgh  by  winning  every  match  at  College  Park  except  the  number  one 
singles. 

Roberts,  number  four,  had  done  the  best  work  over  the  season,  surveyed  up  to  the 
Carnegie  Tech  match,  as  he  was  victorious  in  six  out  of  ten  matches  played.  Freeman, 
with  an  even  standing  of  five  out  of  ten  matches  played,  was  next  in  effectiveness,  and 
Rosenbaum,  winning  five  out  of  eleven  singles  was  third. 

With  the  improvements  made  in  the  new  courts  this  year  and  those  still  to  come, 
it  is  hoped  that  the  pendulum  will  shortly  swing  the  powers  that  is  Maryland's  on 
other  fields  to  the  tennis  team  also.  With  better  material  coming  to  college  each  year, 
this  prospect  may  not  be  very  far  off;  undoubtedly  it  will  be  hastened  with  the  acqui- 
sition of  a  new  coach. 


Tennis  Courts 
■4  184  l!=" 


'jTf'O'TTr?^.  .\'^^<*"  ., 


RIFLE 


4 


"^ 


m 


m 


i*OI 


Buwcs,    Spicknall,    Hemp,    Tower,    Marshall,    Silverljcig 
Myers,    Wallace,    Shoemaker,    Walker,    Lipphard,    Lines 


^l 


M 


Varsity  Rifle 


Alljaugh 

Dobbs 

Frazier 


Lieutenant   Edward   Bowes 
Foster    Lipphard 


Hemp 

Hoffman 

Lines 


OFFICIALS 
S.    A.     , 


Coach 
Manager 


SQUAD 

Marshall 

Myers 

Schmidt 


SCHEDULE 
(Telegraphic    Matches) 

January    11 Amherst   College   _ 

January   11 Columbia    University    ._ ! 

January    11 Gettysburg   College    _ 

January   11 Mass.    Inst,   of   Tech 

January    18 . .University    of    Iowa 

January    18 New   York    Stock    Exchange 

January    18 Presbyterian    College     - 

January   25 Mississippi    A.    and    M 

January   25 Montana    State     

February     8 University   of   Alabama   

February     8 Washington     Liniversity 


February  15 

February  15 

February  15 

February  15 _ 

February  15 

February  22 

February  22 

February  22 

February  22.. 


..Kansas    State   Aggies 

..Georgia    Tech 

„Rose    Poly.    Inst. 


..L^niversity    of    Porto    Rico . 
..Oklahoma   A.    and    M 


. Mass.    Inst,   of  Tech, 

University   of    South    Dakota 

University  of  West  Virginia 

Oregon     State    

February    22 University     of     Illinois 


March 

March 

March 

March 

March 

March 

March 

March 

March 

March 

March 

March 

March     1 5 

March     15 

March    1 5 

March    1 5 

March    22 

March    22 

March    22 


1 

1 

1.. 


United    States    Military   Academy.. 

University    of    Wyoming 

University   of    Washington 


1 North    Dakota    Agricultural    College  . 

1 University    of     Georgia 

1 L^niversity    of    Wichita _ 

1 University   of    North    Dakota 

8 University    of     California 

University    of    Nebraska . 


15. 
15  . 


_South  Dakota  State  College . 

..Carnegie    Tech    

..Stanford     University    

_University    of    Kentucky 

_Texas    A.    and    M. 


^University   of   Pennsylvania 
_Penn    Military    College. 


University    of    Pittsburgh 

University     of     Southern     California.. 

Davidson    College    


Shoemaker 
Silverberg 
Spicknall 


0pp. 

._ _ Forfeit 

-._ 1259 

1932 

...- 2599 

_ 2744 

2688 

2420 

_..  2593 

2525 

2569 

2470 

2677 

2657 

2488 

2364 

Forfeit 

2585 

2543 

1376 

2754 

Forfeit 

„_  2552 

2562 

3725 

2725 

- 2519 

2408 

—  2706 

2708 

2613 

2780 

. 1366 

1397 

2790 

2776 

3415 

Forfeit 

1305 

1409 

2792 


Tower 
Troth 
Wallace 


U.  of  M. 

1543 
2123 
2628 
2624 
2624 
2624 
2628 
2628 
2610 
2610 
2633 
2633 
2633 
2633 

2658 
2658 
1352 
2633 

2665 
2665 
2665 
2665 
2665 
2665 
266S 
2668 
2668 
2668 
1339 
1339 
2631 
2631 
2631 

1356 
1356 
2625 


■4. 186  Il=- 


1930  Varsity  Rifle  Season 


Hale  Sehorn,  Calitti 


The  Varsity  Rifle  Team  was  called  out  in 
November  and  a  squad  of  about  twenty-five  men 
answered.  After  some  preliminary  firing  and  try- 
outs  the  squad  dropped  to  eighteen  men.  The  pre- 
liminary firing  showed  promise  of  much  better 
team  than  the  nineteen  twenty-nine  aggregation. 
The  loss  of  Norvall  Spicknall  through  the  three- 
year  rule  was  made  up  by  the  firing  of  three 
Sophomores,  Morton  Silverberg,  William  Spick- 
nall and  later  in  the  season  Thurl  Tower. 

The  season  began  immediately  after  Christmas 
vacation  and  telegraphic  matches  were  fired  every 
week,  except  for  Examination  Week,  up  to  the 
week  ending  March  twenty-second.  Out  of  the 
total  number  of  telegraphic  matches  of  forty  the 
rifle  team  won  twentv-two  and  lost  eighteen. 

The  Rifle  Team  during  the  season  tried  to 
schedule  as  many  shoulder  to  shoulder  matches  as  possible.  This  was  done  in  an  effort 
to  give  the  team  experience  and  steadiness  in  the  final  match  of  the  year.  The  National 
Intercollegiate  Match.  Following  this  idea  the  team  fired  the  United  States  Naval  Acad- 
emy on  January  1 1  at  Annapolis.  The  team  in  this  match  faced  a  more  experienced 
team  and  went  down  to  defeat,  1340  to  1256.  Two  triangular  matches  were  arranged 
one  with  George  Washington,  and  Virginia  Polytechnic  Institute  on  February  15;  and 
the  other  with  George  Washington  and  Virginia  Military  Institute  on  March  8.  On 
February  1 5  the  match  was  lired  on  the  Maryland  Range  and  George  Washington  won 
with  a  score  of  13  59  to  Maryland's  1331  and  Virginia  Polytechnic  Institute's  12  51.  The 
second  match  was  shot  at  the  George  Washington  Range  and  Virginia  Military  Institute 
fired  a  good  score  of  13  5  8  to  place  first,  while  George  Washington  and  Maryland  fought 
it  out  for  second.    George  Washington  took  second  with  133  8  to  Maryland's  133  5. 

Maryland  this  year  entered  the  Middle  Atlantic  States  National  Rifle  Association 
League  and  ended  the  season  in  third  place  with  five  won  and  two  lost.  The  league 
matches  climaxed  on  April  5,  with  the  National  Match  which  in  this  section  was  fired 
at  Annapolis.  In  the  sectional  match  Maryland  placed  third  behind  Navy  and  West 
Virginia.  In  the  National  match.  Maryland's 
score  of  133  3  gave  them  fourth  place  behind 
Navy  with  an  excellent  score  of  1375,  University 
of  Iowa  with  13  50  and  West  Virginia  with  1341. 
The  result  of  the  experience  gathered  during  the 
season  was  evident  in  the  steadiness  of  the  team 
in  this  match.  One  very  gratifying  result  was 
that  we  beat  both  Virginia  Military  Institute  and 
George  Washington  in  this  match.  This  gave  us 
a  standing  of  two  won  and  one  lost  with  Virginia 
Military  Institute  and  one  won  and  two  lost  with 
George  Washington. 

Several  new  teams  were  fired  this  season, 
among  which  was  the  United  States  Military 
Academy.  Maryland  beat  the  Cadets  in  a  ten- 
man  match  by  2665  to  25  52.  It  is  hoped  that 
next  year  West  Point  can  be  met  in  a  shoulder  to 
shoulder  match.  University  of  Porto  Rico  was 
also  met  for  the  first  time  and  was  beaten  by 
2633  to  2364.  Foster  Lipphard,  Manager 


■4  187  >■ 


The  Military  Rifle  Team  did  much  better  this  year  firing  over  a  hundred  points 
better  in  the  Third  Corps  Area  match  which  entered  them  in  the  National  Reserve 
Officers'  Training  Corp  match.  The  results  of  these  matches  are  not  known  yet,  but 
as  the  team  fired  even  better  in  the  National  match  we  hope  for  a  high  standing.  Two 
teams  were  entered  in  the  annual  Herald  Trophy  competition  and  the  first  team  fired  an 
excellent  score  in  this  match.  The  results  are  not  ready  for  publication  as  yet  and 
the  standing  is  unknown. 

Maryland  is  a  member  of  the  Middle  Atlantic  States  Intercollegiate  League  and  the 
firing  of  the  league  is  as  follows: 

February      8 Virginia   Military   Institute 1343  Maryland    1345 

February    15 George   Washington — .      1359  Maryland   1330 

February    22 Johns   Hopkins   - 1267  Maryland   1352 

March      1  Western   Maryland   1295  Maryland   1360 

March      5  United  States  Naval  Academy _ 1409  Maryland   1364 

March   15  Georgetown    1336  Maryland    1336 

March   22 Princeton    1322  Maryland    1357 

The  shoulder  to  shoulder  matches  fired  were: 

January    11 United  States  Naval  Academy '     13  51  Maryland   13  50 

February     6 Western   Maryland   1256  Maryland   1340 

February   1 5 Triangular  Match — 

George   Washington  13  59  Maryland    1331 

Virginia  Polytechnic  1251  Maryland    1331 

March    8 Triangular  Match — 

George  Washington   13  38  Maryland   133  5 

Virginia   Military   Institute 1358  Maryland   1335 

The  results  of  the  University  of  Maryland  Varsity  Rifle  Team  for  the  season  nine- 
teen hundred  and  thirty  are: 

Matches — Number  fired  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .53 

Telegraphic  matches — Number  fired        .......     40 

Won 18 

Won  by  forfeit      ...........       4 

Total  23 

Lost       .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .      li 

Shoulder  to  shoulder  matches — Number  fired  ..... 

Dual  matches — Number  fired  ........ 

Won 

Lost      ............. 

Triangular  matches — 

League  match   with  George  Washington        .  .  .  .2   Place 

3  Place 
Middle  Atlantic  States  Intercollegiate  League — 
Telegraphic  matches — Number  fired        ....... 

Won 

Losr      ............. 

Final  standing — Third  place. 

National  Intercollegiate  Match  at  Annapolis — Fourth  place  out  of  thirty  teams 
firing. 


■4  188  \> 


CROSS    COUNTRY 


/*^^.J^ 


^ 

\ 


Duncan,   Mays,   Turner,    Shure,    Whitely,   Harper 
Coo])er,   Krout,   Reichel,   Linzey,   McGlathery,    Brown,   Hammerland 


Varsity   Cross   Country 


Geary  Eppley 
Luther  Harper 
Douglas  Parks 


Cooper 

Hammerland 


OFFICIALS 


SQUAD— /.(//(■)•  Men 
Linzey 
Mays 


Couch 

Manager 

Assistant  Manager 


Savage 
Shure 


SCHEDULE 

U.  of  M. 

October    26 Virginia   Polyteclinic    Institute  29 

November    16 Catholic  University _. .-_  H 

November    23 Navy  40 

November    27 Hopkins    

November    29 Episcopal   Seminary   15 


26 

40 
15 


40 


■4_  190  \p- 


5-r^^f  i=.c^,' 


Urban  Linzev,  Cttpf. 


1929  Varsity  Cross  Country  Season 

Practice  for  the  Varsity  Cross  Country  season  began 
with  but  a  small  nucleus  of  last  year's  successful  squad 
left  to  Coach  Eppley. 

Of  the  veterans  who  were  eligible  for  hill  and  dale 
work,  two,  Remsberg  and  Kinnanion,  were  forced  by  cir- 
cumstances to  remain  idle.  Thus  two  of  the  best  men  who 
could  have  put  on  togs  for  Maryland  were  forced  to  remain 
inactive. 

Urban  Linzey,  Track  and  Cross  Crountry  star  of  last 
year,  was  the  leading  candidate  for  honors  this  season,  and 
was  captain  of  the  team,  due  to  the  inability  of  Bob  Rems- 
berg to  participate.  Linzey 's  efforts  were  supported  by 
Savage,  Connell,  Whitely,  Shurs,  Duncan,  Reichel,  Brown, 
McGlathery,  Urban  Linzey,  Smith,  Lloyd,  Kibler,  Ward 
Bilker,  Hammerlund,  Mays,  Krout,  Captain  and  Turner. 
These   men   were   under   the  tutelage  of  "Swede"  Eppley, 


who  can  mold  a  winning  team  out  of  the  material   avail- 
able if  anyone  can. 

The  team  opened  its  season  at  College  Park  on  October  the  twentv-sixth,  when  it 
encountered  the  harriers  of  Virginia  Polytechnic  Institute.  In  this  contest  Maryland 
was  nosed  out  by  three  points,  the  final  score  being  twenty-nine  to  twenty-six.  This 
meet  showed  that  many  who  were  on  last  year's  squad  had  improved,  and  that  several 
good  men  had  come  up  from  the  previous  year's  Freshman  team. 

The  next  event  proved  a  victory  for  the  Old  Liners,  Episcopal  Seminary  being  de- 
feated by  the  score  of  fifteen  to  forty.  Leading  the  team  to  victory  in  this  contest  was 
Urban  Linzey,  second  and  third  places  going  to  Jack  Savage  and  Ralph  Shure, 
respectively. 

Catholic  University  was  the  next  school  to  bow  to  Maryland  by  a  perfect  score. 
Although  the  first  six  men  to  cross  the  line  wore  the  Black  and  Gold  colors,  only  five 
were  allowed  to  count,  and  so  Catholic  University  was  credited  with  the  last  five  places. 

At   Annapolis,    the   Navy   harriers   triumphed   over   the   Terrapins,    the   meet   ending 
forty  to  fifteen.    In  this  meet  Linzey  was  out  with 
a  bad  ankle. 

Running  in  its  last  meet  of  the  year  and  han- 
dicapped severely  by  the  inability  of  the  stars  of 
the  team.  Savage  and  Linzey,  to  compete,  the 
Maryland  Cross  Country  team  bowed  to  the  Johns 
Hopkins  harriers  by  the  score  of  twenty-five  to 
forty  over  the  Black  and  Blue  course.  Shure  of 
Maryland  continued  his  consistent  work  by  fin- 
ishing third.  He  followed  Scheible  and  Emerson 
to  the  top  after  losing  some  time  because  of  his 
unfamiliarity  with  the  course.  Hopkins  and  Mary- 
land men  alternated  in  coming  home,  McGlathery 
trailing  Waters  of  Hopkins,  Cooper  following 
Reeder  and  Hammerlund  and  Brown  chasing 
Pachard  to  the  finish.  Reichel,  Hancock  and  Mays 
were  other  Terrapins  to  finish. 

The  Sophomores  contributed  not  a  small  part 
to  the  teams'  success  during  the  past  season.  Out- 
standing was  Ralph  Shure,  who  promises  to  be  a 
double  threat  for  the  Old  Liners. 


Luther  Harper,  Manager 


■4  191  Ii=- 


m 


m 


m 


J^ 


'h 


"The  longer  I  live  the  more  deeply 
I  am  convinced  that  that  which  makes 
the  difference  between  one  man  and 
the  other — between  the  weak  and  the 
powerful,  the  great  and  the  insignifi- 
cant is  energy,  invincible  determina- 
tion, a  purpose  once  formed  and  then 
death  or  victory." 

— Vowell  Blexton. 


r^^^r-< 


^>   ^-iii.^^.''3  •  c"  '  . 


FRESHMAN    SPORTS 


TAiC9r< 


m'^mms; 


i'^'f:^^^^^ 


ki^»^-. 


ij-^ 


m 

"IP 

i 

m 


i^^ 

:^®^ 


Kiernan.   Sugrue,    Dent,   Thorne,   Galotta,    Scott.    Henckensiiiith,    Wood,    Norwood,    Hines.    Popplemaii, 
Hunt,  Nordenholz,  Crothers,   Hanna 

Mitchell    Masuii,   (n'ad,   Feldniaii.   Woods,    McMillian.   Cole,    Fountain,    Stelzer,    Kelly   WiiiKate,    Keenan 


Freshman  Football 

SCHEDULE 

U.  of  M. 

October    19 Washington  and  Lee 12 

October   26- .^Virginia        19 

November     2  Virginia  Military   Institute..- —        0 

November     9 Western   Maryland 18 

November  16 North    Carolina 18 


opi>. 

7 

13 

0 

0 

12 


Cole 
Feldman 
Fountain 
Galotta 


SQUAD— Niimcnih 
Hines  Kierman 

Hockcnsmith  McMillin 

Hunt  Mitchell 

Keenan  Norwood 

RESUME 


Poppleman 
Scott 
Wood 
Woods 


The  University  of  Maryland  yearlings  completely  outclassed  all  opposition  this  sea- 
son. They  played  exceptionally  well  and  achieved  a  schedule  of  five  games  unblemished 
by  a  single  defeat,  accumulating  a  total  of  sixty-seven  points  against  thirty-two  allowed 
their  opponents. 

The  freshman  teams  of  Washington  and  Lee,  Virginia,  North  Carolina  and  Western 
Maryland  bowed  before  the  Young  Terrapines  with  comparative  ease.  Virginia  Military 
Institute  offered  the  only  anxiety,  this  contest  resulting  in  a  scoreless  tie. 

Jack  Faber  and  Gus  Crothers,  former  Old  Line  stars,  ably  coached  the  team.  They 
evolved  from  practically  raw  material  a  most  capable  and  efficient  football  machine. 
A  sturdy  forward  line  and  speedy  backfield  was  developed.  The  efficiency  of  the 
coaching  that  the  Freshmen   received  is  well  evidenced  by  their  splendid   '.howing. 

Woods  and  Poppleman  performed  with  consistent  effectiveness  through  the  season. 
To  these  men  is  due  a  great  measure  of  the  success  of  the  team. 


■4  194  \> 


VV'eiiigardner,    Gouljcau,    \  t-iinaniaii,    Ncwcuiiicr,    Hess 
Thorne,  Wood,  Galotta,  Popjielman,  Melviii 

Freshman  Basketball 

SQVAD—Ninin-ntls 
Galotta  Goubeau  Melvin  Poppclman         Thorne  Wood 

Reserves 
Henrick  Kakle  Newcomer         Scott  Venemari  Weingardner 

SCHEDULE 

U.  of  M.  Opp. 

January      9 Central  High  _  __ -.-  23  17 

January    16 Catholic  University  Freshman -  20  30 

January    22 ...Business    High    23  20 

January    24 Western   High  ....  27  24 

February     8 Poolesville    34  13 

February  11            Emerson    39  44 

February  14           Eastern  High  37  32 

February  18 George  Washington  Freshman 18  31 

February  21 Tech  High  28  19 

February  24 George  Washington  Freshman 12  25 

RESUME 

Despite  the  fact  that  only  inexperienced  material  was  available  to  supply  a  Frosh 
team,  a  creditable  aggregation  was  whipped  into  shape  through  the  consistent  efforts 
of  Coach  Jack  Foster. 

The  season  was  successfully  and  officially  ushered  in  at  College  Park  when  the  Terra- 
pin Cubs  defeated  Central  High  School  of  Washington.  The  team  then  suffered  defeat 
at  the  hands  of  Catholic  University's  strong  Freshman  team.  Business  High  School, 
and  Tech  High  School  yielded  their  contests  to  the  Maryland  Frosh,  who  in  turn  gave 
way  to  the  powerful  Freshman  team  from  George  Washington.  The  schedule  played 
was  stiff,  and  any  team  that  won  from  them  was  extended  to  its  utmost  to  win. 

The  aggressive  playing  of  Galotta,  Poppelman  and  Wood  deserve  commendation. 

4  195  \P- 


?i®^ 


^^. 


iiaker.    Fountain,    Gordy,    Iglehart.    Brandau.    Zirckle,    Stahl.    FuUurd,    Roberts 

Wingate.  Feldman,  Tinsley,  Anderson,   Dodd.  Burton,  Williams,  Welsch 

Kessling,  Grad.  Kelly,  Dean,  Venniman,  Pfau,  Thorne,  Ensor,  West 


Freshman  Lacrosse 


SQUAD 


Anderson 

Feldman 

Hockinsmith 

Thorn 

Win^ate 

Baker 

Fountain 

Kelly 

Tingslev 

Wood 

Brandau 

Grad 

Pfau 

Venemon 

Cole 

Hinese 

Popleman 

Williams 

Opp. 

10 

2 

7 
4 


SCHEDULE 

U.  of  M. 

May      2  _  _ ...Friends  School   _ 8 

May      6 ....Severn  School  3 

May    10 Plebes    .... 1 

May    23 ....Baltimore  Polytechnic   Institute 2 

May   29 ..Baltimore  City  College —  — 

RESUME 

The  frosh  lacrosse  team  under  Coach  Smith  was  fairly  successful.  The  initial  contest 
was  dropped  to  Friends  School  by  the  close  margin  of  10-8.  This  was  the  hrst  encounter 
for  the  majority  of  the  yearlings  and  the  opponents  were  the  Maryland  Scholastic 
champions. 

The  Cubs  avenged  the  defeat,  by  defeating  Severn  3-2.  Ray  "Gaspipe"  Grad  led  the 
attack  and  accounted  for  all  three  goals. 

The  strong  plebe  team  beat  the  frosh  7-1.  Pfau  scored  the  lone  marker  for  the 
freshmen. 

Two  games  remain  on  schedule,  one  with  Baltimore  City  College  and  the  other  with 
Baltimore  Poly. 


■4  196  \> 


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Kitchen,   Riley,   McTlvee.   Bowie,    Keenan.   Yedinak.    Baldwin,   McCann 
Connelly,   Hendricks.   Gorman,    Devlin,    Mt-lvln.   Maxwell.   Kochman,   Galotta 


Freshman  Baseball 


SQUAD 


Galotta 

Kochman 

Mclvin 

Gorman 

Maxwell 

Riley 

Hendrick 

Mcllvee 

Small 

Baire 

Connally 
Devlin 


SCHEDULE 

U  of  M.  Opl>. 

April    29 Catholic  University  4  11 

May      1 Western   High   School _  7  7 

May      6 —Central  High  School  12  14 

May    12 Tech  High^School S  4 

May    16 Eastern  High  School 12  17 

May    19 Charlotte  Hall  7  6 

May   21 Navy  Plebes  J  6 

May    23 Baltimore  Polytechnic  Institute 11  11 

RESUME 

The  freshman  baseball  team  were  off  on  a  slow  start  and  did  not  enter  the  win 
column  until  the  fourth  contest.  The  Catholic  University  frosh  easily  defeated  the 
yearlings    11-4.      Erratic   fielding  and  a  lack  of  punch  caused   this  loss. 

The  frosh  threw  away  a  four  run  lead  in  the  game  with  Western  High  School  and 
the  game  was  called  in  the  tenth,  score  tied  7-7. 

The  next  encounter  was  with  Central  High  School  and  again  poor  playing  cost  us 
a  win.     The  score  was  12-14. 

The  cubs  exhibited  a  sudden  reversal  of  form  in  the  game  with  Tech  High  School 
and  won  3-4. 

With  this  victory  the  freshman  have  gained  a  much  needed  self  assurance  and 
should  hold  their  own  with  Eastern  High,  Charlotte  Hall,  Plebes,  City  College,  and 
Baltimore  Poly.     These  are  the   remaining  scheduled   games. 

■4 197  Ii=- 


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hOl 


Eppley,   DeMoIle,   Roltliins,   Shaffer,   Baker,   Hockcnsniith.    Hints,    Priiict-,    Hauver 

Bogdaiiow,    i\Iurdock,    Feldman,    Walters.    Wertheimer,    Sutton,    Busick,    Mothershead 

Kindleberger,   Hasslinger,   Stratnian,   Greenfield,    Biggs,   Loppen 


Freshman  Track 


Baker 

Biggs 
Bogdanow 
Busick 
DeMoll 


April    12.. 
April    26. 
April    30 
May    10__-. 
May    17- 
May   24-.- 


Eppley 

Fountain 

Greenfield 

Hasslinger 

Hauver 


Hines 

Hockensmith 

Keenan 

Kiernan 

Lappen 


SQUAD 

Madison 
Moniyer 


Mothershead 

Murdock 

Poppleman 


Prince 
Robbins 

Shaffer 
Sutton 
Thomas 


Walters 
Wertheimer 
Wilson 
Woods 


SCHEDULE 

U  of  M. 

.-Baltimore    Poly 68 

..Eastern  High  School - 2  5 

-Catholic    University __  5  5 

..Tech  High  and  Navy  Plebes 22!,/2 

-Gallaudet    —  — 

-Hyattsville  High  School.     — 


opp. 

49 
92 
62 


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RESUME 

Maryland's  Freshman  Track  Team  has  experienced  to  date  an  unsuccessful  season. 
The  team  started  the  season  in  a  flashy  manner  by  defeating  the  Baltimore  Poly  team 
but  since  then  have  dropped  meets  to  Eastern  High,  Catholic  University  Frosh,  Tech 
High,  and  Navy  Plebes  at  Annapolis. 

This  leaves  two  meets  unrun  as  yet,  one  with  Gallaudet  and  the  other  with  Hyatts- 
ville High  School. 

The  star  performers  for  the  Cubs  were  Busick,  Poppleman,  and  Walter,  each  having 
scored  heavily  in  every  meet. 


■4  198  Ifl- 


^ 


Freshman  Tennis 


Briddell 
Busick 


SQUAD 


Dement 
Goubeau 


Hoffman 
Kirby 


Randolph 
Sharer 


SCHEDULE 

U  of  M.        Opp. 

April    25 Central    High 5  2 

May     2 Tech  High _ 7  0 

May      8 Episcopal    High 3  4 

May    10 Plebes    ...-. 0  9 

May    13 Western    High 1  6 

RESUME 

The  Freshman  Tennis  Team  this  year  proved  to  be  a  rather  formidable  one.  The 
Cubs  got  off  to  a  flying  start  and  defeated  Central  High  and  Tech  High  of  Washing- 
ton. The  Frosh  were  nosed  out  in  the  match  with  Episcopal  High  by  a  count  of  4  to  3 
but  were  decisively  beaten  by  the  Navy  Plebes  and  the  strong  Western  High  aggre- 
gation, the  results  being  9-0  and  6-1,  respectively. 

The  team  demonstrated  their  calibre  to  advantage  when  they  met  the  strong  Central 
High  team  early  in  the  season  and  out  of  seven  individual  matches  registerd  five  vic- 
tories. 

Busick  and  Goubeau  proved  to  be  the  stellar  performers  for  the  Cubs.  Busick,  play- 
ing number  one  position,  lost  only  one  match  during  the  season,  that  being  in  the 
encounter  with  the  Navy  team. 


•4  199  \a- 


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K<s:>:) 


W3W^^^^ 


Davis,    Ramsay,    Lappen 
Thomas,   Sutton,   Hauver 


Freshman  Cross  Country 


Gravetto 
Hauver 


SQUAD 


Waters 


Thomas 
Lappen 


SCHEDULE 

U.  of  M.  Opp. 

November    9 Tome -.     26  29 

November  16 Catholic   University  Freshmen 15  40 

November  2}  .....Navy  Plebes  39  16 


(^M-'' 


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RESUME 

The  Freshmen  Harriers,  despite  a  brief  schedule  from  which  no  conclusive  estimate 
of  ability  could  be  drawn,  performed  creditably  during  the  past  season. 

The  yearlings  won  two  of  their  three  meets  with  comparatively  little  difficulty.  The 
first  opponent  was  Tome  which  was  defeated  by  three  points.  A  combination  of  bad 
weather,  inexperience  and  superior  skill  was  responsible  for  the  single  defeat  at  the  hands 
of  Navy.  Catholic  University  Freshman  was  the  last  team  met  and  Maryland  won 
easily  from  them  by  a  perfect  score. 

The  squad  offered  little  encouragement  at  the  beginning  of  the  season;  there  was  no 
experienced  material  among  them.  In  spite  of  the  gruelling  demands  of  cross-country 
running,  the  team  was  willing  and  gradually  assumed  some  measure  of  efficiency. 

Only  four  of  the  Freshmen  received  numerals  from  a  squad  of  nine.  These  four 
men  ran  consistently  well  and  alternated  among  the  first  positions.  Leroy  Gravett  gave 
promise  of  the  greatest  ability,  while  William  Thomas,  Arthur  Hauver  and  Walter 
Lappen  were  not  far  behind  him  in  performance. 

■4  200  >■ 


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INTERFRATERNITY  SPORTS 


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Top — Kappa  Alpha,  Winnik^  oi    the  Basketball  Cup 
Bottom — Delta  Psi  Omega,  Winners  of  the  Baseball  Cup 

■4  202  l!=- 


r:r.ai^ii^«feti^& 


Top — Kappa  Alpha,  Winners  of  Tennis  Cup 
Bottom — Alpha  Gamma  Rho,  Winners  of  the  Scholarship  Cup 

■4  203  }a- 


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Bush,   Gitiurd 
Spoerlein,    Straw,    Gifford 

Sigma  Tau  Omega — Winners  of  Bowling  Cup 


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WOMEN 


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EVALYN     RiDOUT 

President  of  Woman's.  Stinlent  Govern- 
ment Aisociation 


sfeil^ 


Isabel  Bewick 

Secretary  of  Student  Goiernmcul 
Association 


Practice  House 


Gerneaux  Hall 
Homestead 
Women's  Dormitory  Groups 

■4  207  > 


"Y"  Hut 


Vv^''. 


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Miss  Adele  H.  Stamp 
Dean  of  Women 


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^VOMEN'S     ACTIVITIES 


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Hull,    (ialian.    Parry,    Howes 

Reed,    Minis.    Kohn.    Koons.    Lane,    Magruder 
(Iviiver,    Jcines.    Rjdout.    Taylor,    Cannon 


Women's  Student  Government  Association 

The  Women's  Student  Government  Association  is  the  organ  for  the  enforcement 
of  all  college  rules  for  women  on  the  campus.  The  standards  of  this  body  are  high,  for 
besides  cooperating  with  the  Administration  in  carrying  out  their  regulations,  it  pro- 
motes the  development  of  leadership,  good  scholarship,  self  responsibility,  and  higher 
ideals  of  collegiate  activities  among  the  co-eds. 

The  Executive  Council,  composed  of  the  officers  of  the  Association  and  the  house 
presidents  of  each  house  in  which  University  women  live,  acts  as  a  governing  body  of 
the  organization.  Its  members  carry  out  an  honor  system  in  reporting  offenders  of  rules 
to  the  rest  of  the  Executive  Council,  and  by  so  doing  become  responsible  for  the  activi- 
ties of  those  in  their  respective  houses.  When  a  rule  has  been  broken,  the  offender  is 
tried  by  the  Council,  and  the  penalty  is  determined. 

These  rules  are  made  by  the  women  themselves,  since  every  woman  who  enrolls  in 
the  University  as  a  student  becomes  a  member  of  the  organization.  By  allowing  every 
co-ed  a  part  in  the  making  of  the  rules  under  which  she  must  live,  better  feeling  is  pro- 
moted on  the  campus.  Each  rule  is  approved  by  Miss  Adele  Stamp,  the  dean  of  women, 
before  becoming  final.  There  can  he  no  complaints  about  the  penalties,  because  the 
penalty  for  each  offense  is  decided  on  and  made  known  to  the  co-eds. 

Within  the  last  few  years  a  new  ofticcr  has  been  added — the  recorder  of  points. 
Her  duty  is  to  keep  a  record  of  the  major  offices  held  by  various  women.  This  helps  to 
divide  more  evenly  the  honor  and  work  of  extra-curriculum  activities  among  more 
girls.  Each  office  counts  for  a  certain  number  of  points,  the  sum  of  which  has  a  certain 
limit. 

Through  this  association,  the  co-eds  and  the  dean  of  women  have  been  drawn  closer 
together  in  working  for  a  similar  goal. 

The  officers  for  the  year  were:  Evalyn  Ridout,  President;  Evangeline  Gruver,  Vice- 
President;   Eleanor  Baumel,  Secretary-Treasurer;   Gladys  Bull,  Recorder  of  Points. 

■4210li=- 


U¥^:iW:K 


^  -^ ,. 


Ridotit.    Hnwes.    Jones,    Clray 
Schilling,     Ilvill,    Kirk  wood 


The  Younp;  Women's  Christian  Association 


The  Young  Women's  Christian  Association  at  Maryland  is  an  outgrowth  of  a  re- 
ligious organization  known  as  the  College  Women's  Church  Club.  In  1924  a  charter 
was  granted  by  the  national  Y.  W.  C.  A.,  since  it  recognized  the  local  organization  as 
one  laving  the  purpose:  To  unite  in  a  desire  to  realize  a  rich  and  creative  life.  This 
aim  has  been  carried  out  in  planning  a  varied  program,  including  discussion  groups, 
service,  world  fellowship  meetings,  conferences,  social  programs  and  speakers  on  many 
subjects. 

This  year  the  Big  Sister  Movement  was  again  sponsored  by  the  Y.  W.  C.  A.  as  a  part 
of  orientation  week,  during  which  the  members  assisted  the  faculty  in  acquainting  the 
freshmen  with  their  new  surroundings.  Soon  after  the  arrival  of  the  freshmen  girls, 
they  were  entertained  at  a  tea  and  a  reception  given  by  the  Y.  W.  C.  A.  As  a  part  of 
the  social  service  work  of  the  Y.  W.  C.  A.  a  Christmas  basket  was  sent  to  a  poor  family 
in  Washington. 

The  national  affiliation  of  the  association  has  enabled  its  members  to  enjoy  several 
speakers  sent  by  the  national  board  from  New  York.  Mrs.  Induk  Kisn  visited  the 
campus  again  this  year  and  was  received  enthusiastically  by  her  many  admirers.  Her 
address  was  a  real  inspiration  and  conducive  to  much  needed  world-mindedness. 

Membership  is  open  to  all  women  students  who  are  willing  to  uphold  the  purpose 
of  the  association. 

The  officers  for  the  closing  year  were  Gladys  Bull,  President;  Elizabeth  Kirkwood, 
Vice-President;  Estelle  Hoflfa,  Secretary;  Barbara  Schilling,  Treasurer.  Other  cabinet 
members  who  served  as  chairmen  of  standing  committees  were  Hilda  Jones,  Marinda 
Robertson,  Florence  Spicknall,  Evalyn  Ridout,  Virginia  Kalmback,  Adelaide  Gray, 
Marion  Lane,  Isabel  Howes,  Doris  Bishop,  Margaret  Stone  and  Lucy  Voris. 


•4211> 


■w     "V  ^— ^ 


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WOMEN'S   ATHLETICS 


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5) 


Catherine  Barnslev 

I'lcsiih'ii/  of  Women's  Athletic  Association 


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K.-ri^ji 


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Virginia  Peasley,  Coach 


Women's  Athletics 


The  year  1929  has  marked  the  turning  point 
in  the  career  of  Women's  Athletics  on  the  Univer- 
sity campus.  For  the  first  time  in  history,  the 
Maryland  co-eds  can  boast  of  an  athletic  director. 
Last  year  Miss  Virginia  Peasley  came  to  us  from 
the  Marjorie  Webster  School  of  Physical  Educa- 
tion as  a  student  director;  after  receiving  her  de- 
gree she  decided  to  remain  with  us  to  devote  full 
time  to  coaching  and  directing  athletics. 

Hockey,  the  first  sport  of  the  year,  was  re- 
ceived enthusiastically  by  all.  The  interclass  series 
was  climaxed  by  the  game  between  the  Sopho- 
mores and  the  Freshmen,  neither  of  whom  had 
been  previously  defeated.  The  game  aroused  in- 
terest on  the  part  of  both  the  spectators  and  the 
participants;  thereby,  assuring  its  position  among 
the  major  sports  of  the  athletic  curriculum. 

The  tennis  schedule  of  the  year  was  modified  with  a  doubles  tournament  in  the  Fall 
and  a  singles  tournament  in  the  Spring.  This  digression  from  the  former  plan  of  doubles 
in  both  Spring  and  Fall,  and  the  use  of  the  eight  new  tennis  courts  just  completed  by 
the  University  helped  to  keep  tennis  on  the  list  of  popular  Spring  and  Fall  sports. 

Rifle,  Maryland's  only  intercollegiate  sjKjrt,  retained  its  position  in  the  athletic  cur- 
riculum in  spite  of  all  of  the  other  sports.  The  team  this  year  had  the  distinction  of 
shooting  better  scores  than  ever  before.  This  accomplishment  must  be  credited  to  Ser- 
geant Hendricks,  who  has  labored  with  the  team  for  several  years  and  is  responsible  for 
the  development  of  all  of  the  members  of  the  Rifle  Squad  into  excellent  shots. 

Another  innovation  in  the  athletic  schedule  was  two  division  basketball.  This  proved 
a  snappy  game  and  attracted  the  usual  number  of  contestants  losing  none  of  its  prestige 
to  the  newer  sports.  The  interclass  series  was  replete  with  the  thrills  that  marked  last 
year's  tournament.  The  laurels  of  the  season,  in  spite  of  the  vigorous  attempts  of  the 
Juniors  and  Seniors,  were  given  to  the  Sophomores. 

Spring  with  its  bright  sunny  days  brought  baseball,  volley  ball,  tennis  and  soccer 
with  their  universal  appeal.  Baseball,  however,  attracted  the  largest  number  of  partici- 
pants. 

Clogging,  folk  and  aesthetic  dancing  classes  were  made  compulsory  for  the  Freshman 
and  Sophomore  women;  and  these  quickly  gained  popularity  among  the  upperclassmen. 

The  entire  curriculum  of  the  year  was  based  on  a  point  system,  the  purpose  of  which 
was  to  organize  all  of  the  sports  sponsored  by  the  Athletic  Association.  The  awards  were 
given  on  this  basis  and  letters  were  no  longer  given  for  excellency  in  one  sport  but  in  all 
sports.  This  system  was  successful  in  that  it  caused  a  larger  number  of  participants  to 
come  out  for  each  sport,  and  served  as  an  incentive  for  many  who  were  previously  un- 
interested. 

The  year  was  closed  with  the  annual  banquet  held  at  the  University  Dining  Hall, 
at  which  time  the  awards  of  the  year  were  presented  to  deserving  women  athletes  of 
the  University. 


m 


v^^s'Of 


Koons,  LaMonte,  Arrel,  Hlaisdell,  Jenkins 

Klein,  Miller,  Spicknall,  Rowe,  Kirkwood,  Chesser.   Bundick,  Bishopp,  Claflin 

Ricketts,   Gingell,    Iiigersoll,    Sargent,    Bixler,    Harrison,    Leighton.    Hoffman.    KroU 

Gruver,  Jones,  McCubbin,  Peasley,  Barnsley,  Hatton,  Kent,  Gingell,  Bewick,  Gray,  Wade 


Women's  Athletic  Association 

This  year  marks  the  beginning  of  a  new  era  for  the  Women's  Athletic  Association, 
which  was  organized  in  the  fall  of  1924  by  a  small  group  of  girls  who  realized  the  need 
of  an  association  to  sponsor  and  supervise  the  women's  athletics  of  the  University.  The 
purpose  of  the  organization  when  founded  was  to  supervise  girls'  athletics,  to  promote 
more  and  better  sports,  to  encourage  good  sportsmanship;  and  to  provide  an  incentive 
by  presenting  letters  to  individuals  and  trophies  to  winning  teams. 

Rifle  and  basketball  were  the  first  sports  which  received  the  attention  of  the  Associa- 
tion. Maryland  is  esj>eciallv  proud  of  its  rifle  team  and  of  the  fact  that  for  the  last 
four  consecutive  years  it  has  turned  out  the  women's  national  champion.  Besides  the 
sports  already  popular,  hockey,  volley  ball,  baseball,  and  soccer  were  introduced  this 
year. 

With  these  new  attractions  and  a  stronger  organization  of  the  older  sports,  a  point 
system  has  been  developed  to  act  as  a  basis  for  marking  the  achievement  of  each  partici- 
pant in  the  sports.  Miss  Virginia  Peasley,  Maryland's  first  women's  athletic  director, 
has  done  a  great  deal  toward  further  women's  athletics. 

The  year  was  closed  with  the  annual  banquet,  at  which  the  awards  of  the  year  were 
given  to  the  Rifle  Team,  and  the  outstanding  girl  athletes  in  all  sports. 

The  officers  of  the  association  were:  Catherine  Barnsley,  President;  Eleanor  Baumel, 
Vice-President;  Rhoda  Hatton,  Secretary;  and  Isabel  Dynes,  Treasurer. 


Webster,   Jones,    IJoyd,   Jenkins 
Jones,    Orton,    Harnslcy.    Claflin,    Bewick 


The  Girls'  "M"  Club 

The  Girls'  M  Club  was  organized  at  the  University  of  Maryland  on  May  26,  1926. 
Formerly,  any  girl  who  had  been  awarded  a  letter  for  excellence  in  either  basketball  or 
rifle  was  eligible  for  membership.  Last  spring  a  point  system  was  worked  out  by  the 
Women's  Athletic  Association  whereby  a  girl  received  a  certain  number  of  points  for 
going  out  for  a  team,  for  making  a  team,  for  playing  on  a  winning  team,  and  for  being 
named  on  the  All-Maryland  Team.  More  sports  were  added  to  the  athletic  calendar, 
which  now  includes  hockey,  basketball,  soccer,  volley  ball,  baseball,  bowling  and  tennis. 
At  the  end  of  each  year  those  women  who  have  earned  the  required  number  of  points 
are  awarded  a  letter  for  being  all-around  athletes.  This  system  is  in  its  infancy,  but  the 
women  of  the  University  are  watching  with  interest  its  development.  It  is  hoped  that 
the  Girls'  M  Club  will  become  truly  representative  of  the  women  athletes  of  the  Uni- 
versity through  this  new  scheme. 

The  purpose  of  this  club  is  to  further  athletics  and  good  sportsmanship  among  the 
girls  at  the  institution.  Membership  in  the  club  is  a  goal  for  the  girls  to  strive  for.  The 
membership  is  open  to  only  the  Wearers  of  the  M,  so  the  members  are  naturally  limited. 

The  officers  for  the  past  year  were:  Catherine  Barnsley,  President;  Margaret  Caro- 
thers,  Vice-President;  Isabel  Bewick,  Secretary;  and  Marguerite  Clafin,  Treasurer. 


-4  217  >• 


<^ 


Felisa  Jenkins,  Captain 


Marguerite  Claelin,  Manager 


Women's  Rifle  Team 

The  Women's  Rifle  Team  has  again  completed  a  successful  year  under  the  careful 
guidance  of  Sergeant  Earl  Hendricks  who  has  coached  the  squad  for  six  years.  The 
schedule  this  year  included  twenty-nine  competitive  matches,  of  which  twenty  were 
won,  six  were  lost,  and  three  were  tied.  Altogether  there  were  thirty-two  matches,  each 
National  Rifle  Association  Teaim  Match  stage  of  two  targets  counting  as  one  match. 

Alice  Orton,  a  member  of  the  University  of  Maryland  team  won  the  Women's  In- 
dividual Intercollegiate  Rifle  Championship,  by  the  remarkable  score  of  594  out  of  a 
possible  600.  This  is  the  third  consecutive  year  that  the  University  of  Maryland  has 
won  this  match. 

Honors  for  individual  hgh  scoring  go  to  Alice  Orton  with  a  total  of  3,43  5  out  of 
a  possible  3,500  for  the  season.  Minna  Cannon  made  the  second  highest  total  score  for 
the  year. 

The  members  of  the 
team  for  1929-30  are: 
Felisa  Jenkins,  Captain; 
Marguerite  Claflin, 
Manager;  Gladys  Ober- 
lin.  Assistant  Manager; 
Dorothy  Blaisdell,  As- 
sistant Manager,  Ridge- 
ly  Arrel,  Minna  Can- 
non, Ruth  Diggs,  Vir- 
ginia Hoffman,  Mary 
K  o  o  n  s,  Wilhelmina 
Kroll,  Frances  McCub- 
bin,  Mary  Murray, 
Alice  Orton,  Betty 
Owen,  Claire  Schley 
and  Florence  Sugar. 
Alice  Orton,  Marguer- 
ite Claflin,  Claire 
Schley   and   Wilhelmina 

AiAcn  Orton  ^^^^^^^^^B     ^•'"H    '''»    ^    '"'^    ^X 

Na/ioinil  hidiiidual  Champion  ^^^^^^^^^*     graduation. 


i)} 


<\  218  >• 


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Morcell,   Schley,   Hoffman,   McCubbin.   Claflm.   Kioll 

Cannon.   Koones,    Murray,   Owen.   Ariel 
Cingcll,    Oberlin,    Jenkins,    Claflin.     Ulaisdell.     Sugar 


Women's  Rifle  Team 


Felisa   Jenkins 
Marguerite  Claflin 
Sergeant  Earle  Hendricks 


Captain 

Manager 

Coach 


SCHEDULE 


Date  Opposing  Team  Opp.  Score 

January  18 Drexel    Institute    — — - - — -  -t^O 

January]  8 University    of    Michigan — -  ■t71 

Januaryl8 University    of   Wichita -^6^ 

January    25  _. -  University  of  Maryland  Men's  Team 499 

February      8 Keene    Normal    School 430 

February      8 University  of  South  Dakota.— - 487 

February    15 Northwestern    University   - Default 

February    15 Washington   University  — 444 

February    22 Oklahoma  College  for  Women 403 

February    22 Massachusetts   Agricultural   College 440 

March       1 Michigan   State   College ---  483 

March       1 University    of    Missouri—. 498 

March      8 Cornell    University   492 

March      8 University   of   Washington 499 

March      8 Carnegie   Tech     494 

March      8 South  Dakota  State  College 496 

March    15 University   of  Vermont... 495 

March    15 .University  of   Maine 479 

March    15. University   of   Kansas Default 

March    15 University  of  Wyoming .. 485 

March    15 University  of  Southern  California- 489 

March    22      University   of   California 493 

March   29 Baltimore    Poly    465 

March    29 George    Washington    University 49/ 

April      5 University  of  Idaho   

April      5 Depauw    University    

April      5 Louisiana  State  University — 

April    12 Stout    Rifle   Club 

April    12 Pennsylvania  State  College.. 

■4  219  >■ 


»IM) 


488 
486 
497 
446 
478 


Md.  Score 
492 
492 
492 
491 
496 
496 
497 
497 
489 
489 
491 
491 
491 
491 
491 
491 
489 
489 
489 
489 
489 
493 
497 
497 
494 
494 
494 
492 
492 


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Snyder,    Lloyd.    Miller 
Williams,   Gingell,    Harrison,    Nevius 

Women's  Hockey 

For  the  first  time  at  the  University  of  Maryland,  Hockey  has  been  placed  among  the 
girls'  athletics.  There  was  a  great  deal  of  enthusiasm  over  this  sport,  and  a  large  group 
of  girls  came  out.     Margaret  McGarvey  was  elected  manager. 

After  new  hockey  equipment  was  obtained  in  the  fall,  the  various  classes  began 
vigorous  practice.  Under  the  coaching  of  Miss  Virginia  Peasley,  the  fine  pxiints  of  the 
game  were  learned.  Games  began  on  cold  wintery  days.  When  everybody  else  was  bun- 
dled in  furs  energetic  little  co-eds  were  seen  scrapping  over  a  little  cork  ball  with  sticks 
resembling  golf  clubs. 

When  the  teams  were  finally  picked  and  their  captains  chosen,  six  exciting  games 
followed,  with  the  sophomores  as  champions.  The  members  of  the  champion  team  were 
as  follows:  Katherine  Williams,  Captain;  Laura  Nevius,  Alma  Hickox,  Margaret  Her- 
ring, Eloyse  Sargent,  Evalyn  Harrison,  Buckey 
Clemson,  Ridgely  Arrel,  Betty  Kent,  May  Dezen- 
dorf,  Beckey  Howes,  Mary  Martha  Miller  and 
Dorothy  Lederer. 

After  the  games  were  played  off.  Miss  Pcaslcy 
picked  the  All-Maryland  team,  the  members  of 
which  represented  the  most  outstanding  players  of 
each  class.  They  were: 

Lou  Snyder,  Center  Forward, 
Eloyse  Sargent,  Right  Inside, 
Evalyn  Harrison,  Right  Wing, 
Katherine  Williams,  Left  Inside, 
Laura  Nevius,  Left  Wing, 
Margaret  Meigs,  Right  Halfback, 
Meriam  Lloyd,  Left  Halfback 
Mary  Martha  Miller,  Right  Fullback, 
Helen   Gingell, 
Becky  Howes,  Goal  Keeper. 

•4  220  Ii=- 


Margaret  McGarvlv,  Miiini;^cr 


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Barnsley,    Snyfier.    Need,    Hiindick,    Sar^'ent,    Jones 


Women's  Basketball 


Basketball  started  ofF  at  a  lively  pace  and  never  slackened  in  speed  or  pep  until  the 
end  of  the  season. 

The  practices  were  snappy  and  promised  exciting  games.  Much  of  the  enthusiasm 
displayed  was  due  to  our  lively  coach  and  the  innovation  of  two  division  basketball  as 
against  the  formerly  played  three  division  game. 

The  first  victory  was  won  over  the  seniors  by  the  Sophs  in  a  hard-fought  battle — 
both  teams  displaying  considerable  skill. 

In  the  second  game  the  Freshies  and  Juniors  clashed;  with  the  laurels  going  to  the 
upperclassmen. 

The  final  tussle  was  between  the  Juniors 
and  Sophs.  After  a  neck  to  neck  fight  the 
Sophs  defeated  the  Juniors  by  the  grace  of  one 
point.  The  game  was  exciting  and  at  the  end  of 
the  first  half  the  Sophs  were  leading  by  three 
points.  The  Juniors  were  in  a  fighting  mood  and 
in  the  second  half  both  teams  displayed  fine  team 
work.  The  Juniors  had  the  advantage  with  Mer- 
iam  Lloyd  jumping  center  against  Ruth  Reed  for 
the  Sophs. 

The  close  of  the  season  resulted  the  election 
of  the  All-Maryland  Team,  the  members  of  which 
are: 

Elgar  Jones,  Forward, 

Catherine  Barnsley,  Forward, 

Ruth  Reed,  Center  Forward, 

Eloyse  Sargent,  Guard, 

Victoria  Bundick,  Guard, 

Lou  Snyder,  Guard.  Margaret  Meigs,  Manager 


4221  >■ 


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Karr,    Hickox,    Sargent.    Lloyd,    Kuwe,    Uuens 
Nevius,  Siehler,  Jones,   Bullard,   Harrison,  Claflin 


Women's  Tennis 

The  Spring  Tournament  of  last  year  reached  a  finale  with  Helen  Mead  and  Rita 
Claflin.  A  champion  in  her  Sophomore  year  Claflin  came  out  again  as  the  winner  of  the 
Tournament  in  her  Junior  year. 

This  fall  a  doubles  tournament,  which  had  never  been  introduced  before,  was  begun. 
Because  of  the  bad  condition  of  the  courts,  the  team  was  unable  to  begin  playing  until 
so  late  that  it  was  decided  to  omit  the  fall  matches,  which  have  never  been  completed 
in  other  years,  and  to  concentrate  on  a  larger  and  a  better  Spring  Tournament. 

The  Spring  Tournament  in  singles  was  begun  before  Easter  with  a  turnout  of  about 
fifty.  This  year  there  was  a  better  spirit  of  co- 
operation among  the  girls  to  play  ofi^  their 
matches  by  schedule  than  ever  before.  There  were 
few  defaults  and  a  successful  tournament  re- 
sulted. Florence  Sugar  and  Margaret  Karr,  Helen 
Mead  and  Laura  Nevius  closed  out  the  semi-finals 
with  Nevius  as  a  predicted  champion. 

The  courts  were  an  added  attraction  this 
spring.  Beginning  the  new  improvements  on  the 
athletic  field  the  tennis  courts  were  the  first  to  be 
constructed.  Sixteen  new  courts,  ten  more  than 
the  University  previously  had  were  laid  off.  The 
girls  had  a  much  better  chance  to  work  up  a  real 
tennis  team  than  before  as  previously  the  girls 
were  required  to  leave  the  courts  any  time  the 
men's  team  wished  to  practice. 

Elgar   Jones    was   elected   Manager   of   Tennis 
this  year,  succeeding  Isabel  Dynes,  who  was  Man- 
ager of  the  team  for  two  preceding  vears. 


En.AR  Jones,  Mana^^cr 


■4  222  Ii=- 


ORGANIZATIONS 


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SOCIETIES 


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Schilling 


Lockridj^e,    O'Neill,    Richardson 
Evcrstine.   Janet zke,   Riduut 


Council  of  Oratory  and  Debate 


The  Council  of  Oratory  and  Debate  was  organized  in  1922  for  the  purpose  of 
picking  the  debaters  who  are  to  represent  the  University  of  Maryland  in  intercollegiate 
matches.  Another  duty  of  this  organization  is  to  supervise  over  the  annual  intercity 
debate  between  the  New  Mercer  Literary  Society  and  Poe  Literary  Society. 

It  is  composed  of  four  students:  the  Presidents  of  the  Literary  Societies,  the  Presi- 
dent of  the  Student  Assembly,  the  President  of  the  Woman's  Student  Government 
Association;  and  of  two  faculty  members  chosen  by  the  student  members.  These 
faculty  members  who  were  originally  elected  were  Professor  Charles  Richardson  and 
Professor  Frank  Lemon.     The  students  to  hold  membership  are: 

John  O'Neill,  President  of  Student  Government  Association, 
Evalyn  Ridout,  President  of  Women's  Student  Government  Association. 
Carl  Everstine,  President  of  Poe  Literary  Society, 
Herbert  Eby,  President  of  New  Mercer  Literary  Society. 
Nicholas  Janetzke,  who  was  President  of  New  Mercer,  resigned  in  December  because 
he  was  unable  to  give  to  the  organization  the  time  necessary  for  its  success,  and  Herbert 
Eby,   who   was  elected   president,   automatically   became   a   member  of   the   Council  of 
Oratorv  and  Debate. 

The  debaters  who  were  picked  to  represent  the  University  of  Maryland  in  the  inter- 
collegiate matches  are:  Nicholas  Janetzke,  James  Benner,  Henry  Whiting,  Herbert  Eby 
and  Robert  Lockridge. 

With  more  funds  .ivailable  for  debating  than  ever  before,  Robert  Lockridge,  man- 
ager of  the  Men's  debating  team,  has  arranged  a  very  interesting  program  with  some 
of  the  leading  universities  in  the  East. 


■4  226  \r- 


Williams,    Khy,   Jaiu-tzke,    b>tettey 
Minis.    Hays,    C;irmichae],    Blaisdell,    Schilling 


Debating  Team 

The  University  of  Maryland  is  represented  by  two  debating  teams,  a  Men's  team 
and  a  Women's  team,  each  working  independent  of  the  other.  Anyone  who  is  interested 
in  debating  can  try  out  for  the  squad.  These  tryouts  are  held  every  fall  and  the  last 
six  surviving  being  the  ones  who  constitute  the  squads.  The  active  members  of  the 
teams  are  selected  by  the  Council  of  Oratory  and  Debate.  It  is  the  aim  and  hope  of 
these  squads  to  develop  intercollegiate  debating  to  a  high  degree  and  to  place  Maryland 
among  the  universities  whose  debating  teams  are  outstanding  in  the  East. 

The  debating  teams  are  financed  by  the  University,  which  enables  them  to  take  at 
least  one  trip  every  year.  Mr.  Charles  Richardson,  of  the  Public  Speaking  Department, 
a  very  capable  coach,  is  ever  ready  to  help  the  members  in  any  way  and  the  success  of 
the  teams  is  undoubtedly  due  in  a  large  part  to  his  untiring  efforts  directed  in  this  line 
of  work. 

After  the  usual  preliminary  fall  debates  the  men  that  were  picked  by  the  Council 
of  Oratory  and  Debate  are  as  follows:  Nicholas  Janetzke,  Graf  Buehme,  James  Benner, 
Henry  Whiting  and  Herbert  Eby.  The  Council  also  elected  Ralph  Lockridge  who 
arranges  the  debates  and  manages  the  team.  He  has  arranged  a  most  attractive  schedule 
for  this  year. 

Maryland  has  a  debate  with  Hopkins  on  March  20,  relative  to  Disarmament  ques- 
tion. On  March  31 — the  men's  team  will  take  a  trip  South  in  which  North  Carolina 
State  will  first  be  met.  North  Carolina  University  and  Duke  will  also  be  engaged.  Most 
of  these  schools  will  probably  later  come  to  Maryland. 

The  Women's  team  is  composed  of  Ruth  Hayes,  Elizabeth  Carmichacl,  Dorothy 
Blaisdell,  Elizabeth  Mims  and  Katherine  Williams.  Barbara  Schilling,  who  is  manager 
of  the  girls'  team,  has  arranged  a  very  interesting  schedule.  The  first  debate  is  with 
George  Washington  University.  Other  schools  which  will  be  met  are  Buckncll  Univer- 
sity, West  Virginia  and  the  University  of  Buffalo. 


■4  227  l!=- 


Hughes,  Sininions,  Voctnii.   Deckman,  (iiie,   I'trrif,   l)f   La  Torre,   Hollnway 

Creese,   Xesbit,    lUirton,   Allen,    McClung 

Kil)ler,    Jones,    Willse,    Undson,    Berger,    Cosper 

Mowatt,    Wildensteincr.    Perham,    Hodgins,    Johnson 

Schoefiekl,    Jarvis 

Mitton,    Horn,    Roberts.    Quinn,    Letvin,    Frolick 

Alhaugh,    Gossoni,    Rhind,    Bailey,    Aholt.    Jarvis,    Cameron 

Gross,    Hennick,    Steinberg,    Ward,    Bishop,    Orwig,    Hargis,    Horton 

Briddell,  Vignan,  Pyle,   Skelton,   Fifer,  Hoshall,  James,   Lininger,   Harper,  Tansil,   tlifford,   Taylor,   Epple 


Engineering  Society 


The  Engineering  Society  at  the  University  of  Maryland  is  the  medium  through 
which  the  three  branches  of  Engineering — Ci\  il.  Mechanical  and  Elcctrica!  represented 
at  Maryland,  can  meet  together  and  discuss  modern  engineering  practice.  A  close  rela- 
tionship exists  among  all  the  members  of  the  various  departments  of  engineering  because 
of  the  contacts  made  during  its  meetings,   which  occur  monthly. 

The  society  has  enjoyed  a  very  successful  year.  It  has  had  the  honor  and  privilege 
of  hearing  several  prominent  speakers  on  engineering  subjects.  Among  those  who  ad- 
dressed the  society  were  Dr.  A.  B.  McDaniel,  who  spoke  on  engineering  work  in  Porto 
Rico;  and  Dr.  C.  F.  Jenkins,  nationally  known  inventor.  Dr.  Jenkins'  illustrated  lecture 
on  slow  motion  movies  and  radio  vision  was  given  before  the  entire  student  body  of  the 
University.  This  program,  arranged  by  the  society,  was  especially  attractive  and  fol- 
lowed the  suggestion  of  President  Raymond  Pearson  that  such  features  be  provided  for 
the  entire  University  from  time  to  time. 

Other  features  enjoyed  during  the  year  included  programs  of  motion  pictures.  The 
films  illustrated  such  subjects  as  riveting  of  steel,  electric  arc  welding,  applications  of 
compressed  air,  and  operations  on  rubber  plantations. 

Officers  of  the  society  during  the  past  year  were: 
C.  S.  James 
R.  F.  Lininger 


H.  A.  Jarvis 
W.  H.  Fifer 
L.  M.  Harper 


President 

Vicc-Prciident 

Secretary 

Treasurer 

Sergeant-at-Arms 


•4  228  >■ 


Rill,    Vieweg.    Stowell,    Myers.    Howes,    Sutton,    Etienne 

Taylor,  Jones,   Norwood,  Hartge,  Lusby,  Claflin 
Stone.    Crey,    Jones,    Stimpson,    Carr,    Brouillet,    Bowie 


Episcopal  Club 

For  the  past  eight  years  the  Episcopal  Club  has  been  an  active  organization  on  the 
campus.  Some  of  the  ideals  that  are  directly  responsible  for  the  success  of  this  organiza- 
tion are:  the  hope  of  bringing  Episcopal  students  at  the  University  of  Maryland  into 
closer  fellowship,  the  possibility  of  uniting  this  club  with  similar  groups  of  Episcopal 
students  in  other  colleges  and  universities,  and  finally  the  carrying  out  of  a  program  of 
religious  education,   worship,   and  service,   through   regular  meetings   of   the  club. 

During  the  past  year  the  club  has  sponsored  at  its  meetings  a  series  of  lectures  on 
the  church,  studying  in  detail  its  objects  and  accomplishments.  The  Episcopal  Club 
made  a  special  Lenten  offering  in  conjunction  with  religious  clubs  at  other  universities, 
to  further  the  work  of  training  Chinese  students  to  become  Christian  doctors  at  St. 
John's  Medical  College.  They  have  also  arranged  to  attend  in  a  body  the  weekly  Thurs- 
day evening  Lenten  service. 

It  is  a  practice  of  the  club  to  attend  the  University  Chapel  once  a  month  to  partake 
of  Corporate  Communion.  At  the  same  time  many  members  of  the  Episcopal  Club  help 
in  the  work  of  the  Chapel  by  teaching  Sunday  School,  playing  the  organ,  reading  the 
lessons  and  singing  in  the  choir. 

The  Episcopal  Club  extends  a  welcome  invitation  to  students  who  are  interested  in 
this  work  and  who  do  not  yet  belong  to  this  club.  Meetings  are  held  twice  a  month,  at 
which  time  both  social  and  business  matters  are  attended  to.  The  new  officers  are  in- 
stalled at  a  banquet  held  annually  toward  the  end  of  the  school  year. 

The  officers  during  the  past  year  were:  Edwin  Stimpson,  President;  Elsie  Ryon,  Vice- 
President;  Maude  Lewis,  Recording  Secretary;  Adelaide  Gray,  Corresponding  Secretary, 
and  Betty  Jones,  Treasurer. 


■4  229  !:=•■ 


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CXvX 


renniiigtun,    Hulter.    Gt-ary 

Martin,    Groshon,    Went  worth,    Gardner,    Geise,    Holter,    Schroder 

Hoopes,    Baker,   Sanders.   HeniminK,    Marth,    McFadden,    Pryor,   Parks 

The  Hort  Club 

In  the  fall  of  1919  seven  students  with  Dr.  W.  C.  Auchter  made  a  tour  of  the 
principle  fruit-growing  sections  of  Virginia,  West  Virginia,  Maryland  and  Pennsylvania. 
It  is  not  surprising  that  from  ths  group,  exposed  as  they  are  to  the  rich  rewards  of  a 
pomological  harvest,  should  come  the  idea  of  the  present  Hort  Club. 

During  the  early  days  of  its  existence  the  club  met  at  the  home  of  Dr.  Auchter. 
Later,  meetings  were  held  in  the  Administration  Building  and  finally  the  present  room 
in  the  horticulture  building  was  provided. 

The  monthly  meetings  provide  much  interest  and  entertainment  to  all  horticultural 
students.   Appropriate  topics  are  discussed  by  members  of  the  club,  student  and  faculty. 

On  several  occasions  during  the  year  distinguished  members  of  the  U.  S.  Department 
of  Agriculture  are  secured  to  address  the  club.  During  this  year  the  club  has  been 
very  fortunate  in  having  Dr.  E.  C.  Auchter,  head  of  the  Federal  Department  of  Horti- 
cultural Investigation,  Dr.  Thomas  and  Dr.  Whitehouse  of  the  Office  of  Foreign  Plant 
Introduction. 

The  outstanding  event  of  the  year  was  the  Eastern  States  Intercollegiate  Fruit 
Judging  Contest,  held  on  the  Maryland  Campus  in  December.  The  team  representing 
Maryland  was  composed  entirely  of  Hort  Club  members. 

Paul  Marth,  president  of  the  Hort  Club,  was  second  high  mar.  in  the  contest,  with 
almost  a  perfect  score,  being  surpassed  only  by  Robinson  of  West  Virginia,  who  had  a 
perfect  score.  The  Maryland  team  won  third  pl.icc  in  the  contest,  being  beaten  by 
West  Virginia  and  Massachusetts. 

The  members  of  the  Hort  Club  were  very  active  in  providing  entertainment  for 
visiting  teams.  Arrangements  were  made  for  them  to  reside  at  the  various  fraternity 
houses,  a  banquet  was  held  at  the  Dining  Hall  after  the  contest,  and  every  attempt  was 
made  to  extend  to  them  a  full  measure  of  Maryland  hospitality.  The  team  participating 
this  year  were:  West  Virginia,  Massachusetts,  Maryland,  Purdue,  Ohio  State  and  Penn 
State. 

The  officers  for  the  past  year  were:  Paul  March,  President;  E.  S.  Hemming,  Vice- 
President;  E.  C.  McFadden,  Secretary  and  Treasurer. 

■4  230  }=■■ 


Hanna,  Gilbert,  Baker,  Geary,  Stier,  Downey,  Gilbert,  Eppley,  Ward,  Bewley 

Glass,   Naill,   Claggett,    Miller,   Gahan,   Kline,   Miles,   Kirkwood,   Woods,   Chesser,   Lane,   Roye, 

Lawler,   Bewick,  Jones,   IngersoU,   McGarvey,   Schilling,   Lay  ton,   Maxwell,   Wade,   Taylor,   Goodhart,   Norton 

Ahalt,  Hoopes,  Griiver,  Wright,  Jones,  Holtcr,  Kent,  McCubbin,  Ballon 


Student  Grange 

The  Student  Grange  is  among  the  largest  and  most  active  organizations  on  the  Uni- 
versity of  Maryhind  campus.  This  is  a  student  argricultural  fraternity,  organized  for 
the  promotion  of  farm  hfe,  and  is  a  part  of  the  National  Grange  of  the  Patrons  of 
Husbandry.  The  members  are  chosen  from  the  college  of  Agriculture  and  co-eds  in 
farm  work. 

The  Student  Grange  was  organized  at  the  University  of  Maryland  in  1915,  and  is 
said  to  be  the  best,  most  progressive,  and  most  typical  Student  Grange  in  the  country. 
It  is  the  only  one  which  is  managed  entirely  by  Students  with  a  member  of  the  faculty 
to  advise  them  if  necessary. 

The  major  purpose  of  this  organization  is  to  train  young  men  and  women  for  lead- 
ership in  rural  communities,  and  it  gives  the  student  a  direct  touch  with  local  and 
national  farm  problems. 

The  meetings,  which  are  held  twice  a  month,  are  enlivened  with  business  interests 
and  very  interesting  programs,  and  are  concluded  with  refreshments.  The  Grange  sends 
degree  teams  and  educational  and  entertaining  programs  out  to  the  various  chapters  in 
the  state. 

In  December  the  Student  Grange  was  represented  at  the  Statu  Grange  Convention 
which  was  held  at  Westminster.  It  was  also  host  to  the  Pomona  Grange  in  February, 
and  contributed  several  members  to  the  program  of  the  Lecturer's  Hour. 

The  Grange  sponsored  a  special  lecture  by  Dr.  Harry  J.  Patterson,  Director  of  Agri- 
cultural Experiment  Station,  on  "The  Agricultural  Situation  in  Europe,"  at  which  selec- 
tions were  presented  by  the  Little  Symphony  Orchestra  and  The  Grange  Quartette,  and 
a  new  Maryland  song  was  presented. 

The  officers  for  this  year  are:  Charles  Gray,  Master;  Herbert  Hoopes,  Overseer; 
Harley  Holter,  Steward;  Elizabeth  Jones,  Secretary;  Vernon  Holter,  Treasurer  and 
Gladys  Bull,  Lecturer. 


■4  231  >■ 


Matthews,    McPhatter,    Fouts,    Sanford,    Downey,    Myers,    Warcholy 

Gingell,  Dezendorf,  Taylor.  Kline,  Hays,  Lane.  Stier,  Wade,  Bundick,  Kent 

Lewis,    Jones,    Jones,    Schilling,    Everstine,    Carrico,    Maxwell,    Ridout,    Bixler 


Poe  Literary  Society 

The  Poe  Literary  Society  is  an  outgrowth  of  the  old  Morrill  Society,  which  was 
established  in  1900.  As  its  name  indicates,  it  is  named  after  Edgar  Allen  Poe,  and  an 
annual  study  is  made  of  his  life  and  works.  This  old  organization  has  a  fine  past  to  look 
back  upon,  and  has  developed  many  worthy  traditions. 

As  it  is  now  organized,  the  society  aims  to  develop  the  literary  side  of  college  life. 
Debates,  book  reports,  recitations,  and  discussions  form  the  bulk  of  th;  work.  In  short, 
any  topic  of  general  interest  is  acceptable. 

Through  the  years  of  its  history,  Poe  has  developed  many  outstanding  debating 
teams.  All  along  the  line  of  its  progress  are  prominent  men  and  women  who  have  done 
much  to  elevate  the  standards  of  debating  at  the  University  of  Maryland.  As  evidence 
of  the  literary  ability  of  Poe  there  are  several  cups  owned  by  the  club  which  it  has 
won  in  various  competitions.  For  permanent  ownership  of  one  of  these  cups  offered  by 
Dr.  Patterson,  it  is  necessary  to  win  the  annual  Inter-Society  Debate  three  times  in 
succession.  Poe  has  won  two  of  these  cups,  lost  the  third  to  New  Mercer,  and  now  has 
one  leg  on  the  fourth  cup. 

Membership  is  not  limited  strictly  to  students,  and  several  prominent  professors 
enjoy  honorary  membership.  Among  these  are:  Professors  Charles  S.  Richardson,  George 
Schultz,  Harold  F.  Cotterman  and  Frank  N.  Lemon. 

During  the  year  Poe  Literary  Society  has  continued  to  play  an  important  part  in 
campus  activities.  Meetings  are  held  bi-weekly,  and  consist  chiefly  of  the  programs  pre- 
pared under  student  direction.  From  time  to  time  prominent  speakers  have  addressed 
the  society,  and  have  drawn  audiences  from  the  entire  student  body.  Poe  has  contributed 
two  of  its  members  to  the  Varsity  Debating  Team,  Elizabeth  Minis  and  Barbara  Schil- 
ling. Strong  competition  has  been  engendered  for  positions  on  the  Inter-Society  Debat- 
ing Team.   The  oflScers  for  the  year  are: 

Carl  Everstine        .         .         President  Elgar  Jones    .         .         .        Treasurer 

Rudolph  Carrico     .  Vice-President  Hilda  Jones      .         .         .         Reporter 

Barbara  Schilling  .         Secretary  Elizabeth  Jones       .         .         .    Critic 

■4232lis- 


Beall,    Kricker.    Wolf,  Janetzke.    Bacchus,    Lines.    Bishoff.    Greeley 

Bradley,   Finzel,   Carmicheal,   Hoffman,   Kelleter,   Tippet,   Leighton,   McGarvey,    Pearson 

Lea,    Temple,   Jarrell,    Cannon,    Gilbert,    Hershberger,    Miles 

Bewick,  Rowe,  Snyder,  Olenberg,  Eby,  Kettler,  Clemson,   Siehler,   Hardiman 


New  Mercer  Society 


The  New  Mercer  Literary  Society  was  founded  by  Dr.  William  Mercer  in  January 
1860.  'This  literary  club  is  justly  proud  of  being  the  oldest  organization  on  the  Uni- 
versity of  Maryland  Campus.  During  the  seventy  years  of  successful  existence  it  has 
been  the  purpose  of  this  society  to  cultivate  the  intellectual  faculties  of  the  students 
and  at  the  same  time  provide  a  means  of  entertainment  and  diversion.  The  society 
meets  every  first  and  third  Wednesday  in  each  month,  but  due  to  the  increased  interest 
shown  in  literary  work  meetings  this  year  have  been  held  more  frequently. 

Programs  this  year  include  various  fields  of  learning  and  arc  enjoyed  by  both  the 
members  and  other  interested  students.  A  sense  of  freedom  is  fostered  that  is  conducive 
to  original  expression.  These  expressions  and  compositions  will  be  found  recorded  in  the 
paper  published  quarterly  by  the  New  Mercer.  This  is  serving  as  a  medium  for  the 
expression  of  the  society  and  campus  talent.  Lectures  by  both  the  faculty  members 
and  students,  and  debating  occupy  another  portion  of  the  program. 

The  outstanding  event  on  the  New  Mercer  calendar  is  the  annual  inter-society 
debate  held  the  last  week  in  April.  All  members  who  wish  to  participate  appear  in 
try-out  debates  before  the  society.  These  debates  are  short  and  informal,  but  neverthe- 
less show  whether  the  member  is  capable  of  representing  the  society. 

Last  year  New  Mercer  lost  the  debate  to  Poe,  however  Herbert  Eby  did  win  the 
Alumna:  medal  for  the  best  speaker  in  the  dtbate.  Dr.  Patterson  offers  a  cup  to  the 
society  winning  its  debate  three  consecutive  years.  New  Mercer  won  this  cup  in  1928 
and  will  try  to  start  another  winning  streak  this  spring.    The  officers  for  this  year  are: 


Herbert  C.  Eby 
Ruth  Miles 
Mildred  Kettler 
Robert  Beall 
Dorothy  Shipley 


President 

Vice-President 

Secretary 

Treasurer 

.    Critic 


■4  233  l!=- 


"The  world  is  blessed  most  by  men 
who  do  things,  and  not  by  those  who 
merely  talk  about  them." 

— James  Oliver. 


HONORARY  FRATERNITIES 


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OMICRON  DELTA  KAPPA 

Society   for   the   Recoanition   of   College   Leadership 
Founded  at   Washington  and  Lee  University  in    1914 

SIGMA  CIRCLE 

Established  University  of  Maryland  in   1927 
Publication — The   Circle 


Harry  Byrd 
Ray  Carpenter 
John  Faber 
William  Kemp 


William  Bradley 
William  Chaffinch 
Charles  Dodson 
William  Evans 
Albert  Heagy 
Robert  Healy 


Robert  Allen 
James  Andrews 


FRATRES  IN  FACULTATE 

Raymond  Pearson 
Charles  Richardson 
Willard  Small 


FRATRES  IN  URBE 
Omar  Crothers 

FRATRES  IN  UNIVERSITATE 

Graduate  Students 
John  Schueler 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty 

Frederick  Hetzel 
William  Hopkins 
Philip  Insley 
Donald  Keiffer 
William  Kinnamon 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-One 
Robert  Beall 


Reginald  Truitt 
Robert  Watkins 
Robert  Young 


Madison  Lloyd 
John   MacDonald 
John  O'Neill 
Vernon  Power 
Robert  Settle 
John  Umbarger 


John  Pitzer 
Arley  Unger 


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■4  238  >• 


C.  O.  Appleman 
E.  C.  Auchter 
B.  E.  Carmichael 
R.  W.  Carpenter 
K.  A.  Clark 


Daniel  Fahey 
Joseph  Long 


Charles  Grey 
Samuel  Hemming 
Herbert  Hoopes 


Kenneth  Baker 
James  Coddington 
Willis  Frazer 


ALPHA  ZETA 

Honorary  Agriculture  Fralerniiy 
hounded  at  Ohio  Stale  College  in   189-' 

MARYLAND  CHAPTER 

Established    19  ZO 


FRATRES  IN  FACULTATE 

W.  J.  Hart 
W.  E.  Hunt 
L.   W.   Ingham 
De  Voe  Meade 


FRATRES  IN  URBE 
Englebert  Schmidt 

FRATRES  IN  UNIVERSITATE 

Clau  of  Nineteen  Thirty 

I.  L.  Langeluttig 
Paul  C.  Marth 
George  F.  Madigan 

Clais  of  Nineteen  Thirty-One 

Sydney  T.  Lawler 
Henry  F.  Long 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-Two 
Howard  F.  Geary 


■4  239  \fl- 


R.  A.  Pearson 
H.  J.  Patterson 
G.  D.  Quigley 
A.  L.  Schrader 
F.  B.  Trenk 


Paul  Walker 
John  Faber 


Warren  Myers 
Robert  Teeter 
Fred  Ribnitzki 


Elihue  McFadden 
Mark  Woods 


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A.  N.  Johnson 


Charles  Dodson 
Wilham  Fifer 
Luther  Harper 
Howard  Hine 


John  Burger,  Jr. 


TAU  BETA  PI 

Honorary  Engineering  Fraternity 

Founded  at  Lehigh  University  m  1885 

Publications — The   Bent.    The   Council   Bulletin 

BETA  CHAPTER 

Founded  at   University  of  Maryland  in    1929 


FRATRES  IN  FACULTATE 
M.  Creese 

FRATRES  IN  UNIVERSITATE 
Graduate  Students 
H.  H.  Kaveler 

Class  of  Nine /ecu  Thirty 

Carroll  James 
Samuel  Letvin 
Floyd  Lininger 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-One 
Edwin  Gue 


S.  S.  Steinberg 


Foster  Lipphard 
George  Phipps 
James  Wallace 


George  McClurg 


■4  241  h 


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SIGMA  DELTA  PI 

Honorary    Spanish    Fraternity 
Foundtd  at    University  of  California  in    1919 

DELTA  CHAPTER 

Established   1910 


Harry  A.   Deferrari 
Charles  F.  Kramer 


William  Bradley 
Margaret  Browei 


Eleanor  Baumel 
Robbiu  Hunt 


William  Ackerman 
Ruth  Greenwood 
Rhoda  Hatton 


FRATRES  IN   FACULTATE 
Arthui   C.  Parsons 

FRATRES  IN   UNIVERSITATE 

Clain  of  Nineteen  Thirty 

Donald  DeMarr 
Elizabeth  Jones 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-One 
Elizabeth  Mims 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-Tivo 

Alma  Hickox 
Laura  Nevius 


4  243  Ii=- 


Helen  B.  Wilcox 


Roberta  Harrison 
Jerrold  Powers 


Arley  Unger 
Edwin  Willse 


Maria  Santinie 
Eloyse  Sargent 


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SCABBARD  AND  BIADE 

Honorary   Military   Fraternity 
Founded  at  the  University  of  Wisconsin  in   1904 

COMPANY  I,  THIRD  REGIMENT 

Established  at    University   of   Maryland    1922 


Major  R.  S.  Lyttle 


Graef  Buehm 
Donald  DeMarr 
William  Heintz 
Philip  Insley 


Walter  Bonnett 
Lawrence  Chiswell 
Frank  Cox 
Melvin  Derr 


FRATRES  IN  FACULTATE 

Lieut  Robert  N.  Young  Lieut.  Edward  H.  Bowes 


FRATRES  IN  UNIVERSITATE 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty 

William   Kinnamon 
Melvin  Koons 
Robert  Lockridge 


Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-One 

Willis  Frazier 
George  Hargis 
Robert  Home 


■4.  245  Ii=- 


Donald   Nevius 
John  O'Neill 
Edward  Siddall 
John  Umbarger 


William  Roberts 
Robert  Troth 
Henry  Whiting 
Colonel  Willis 


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GAMMA  ALPHA  NU 

Honorary  Journalistic   FraWrnity 
Founded  at  the  University  of  Maryland  in  1928 


Harry  Byrd 


FRATRES  IN  FACULTATE 
Dr.  Charles  Hak 


William  Hottel 


FRATRES  IN  URBE 
Raymond  Carrington  Reese  Sewell 


Ross  Black 


William  Hammcrsley 
Philip  Insley 
Donald  Kieffer 


FRATRES  IN  UNIVERSITATE 
Graduate  Students 
John  Schueler 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty 

William  Kinnamon 
Madiso:.  Lloyd 


Kenneth  Stoner 


Jerrold  Powers 
William  Rosenbaum 


Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-One 


James  Andrews 
Robert  Beall 


Arley  Unger 
Hayden  Norwood 


■4247>- 


BETA  PI  THETA 

Honorary    French    Fraternity 
Founded  at  City  of  Birmingham 


KA 


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PI  BETA  CHAPTER 

Established  at  University  of  Maryland  IVZ') 


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Harry  A-.  Defarri 
Charles  Kramer 


Margaret  Brower 
Isabel  Dynes 
Evangeline  Gruver 
Roberta  Harrison 


Robert  Allen 
Madeline  Bernard 
George  Brouillet 


Louise   Babcock 
Virginia  Daiker 
Myra  Ferrier 
Don  Hammerlund 


FRATRES  IN  FACULTATE 
Adelia  E.  Rosasco 

FRATRES  IN  UNIVERSITATE 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty 

Elizabeth   Jones 
Ruth  Lawless 
Maude  Lewis 
T.  A.  Nelson 

Class  of  'Nineteen  Thirty-One 

Felisa  Jenkins 
Elgar  Jones 


Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-Two 

Wayne  Hisle 
Elizabeth  Norton 
Marjorie  Rugge 


■4  249  lis- 


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>Helen  Wilcox 
A.  E.  Zucker 


Evalyn  Ridout 
Barbara  Schilling 
Alice  Taylor 
Genevieve  Wright 


Mary  Koons 
Virginia  Smith 
Fletcher  Veitch 


Claude  Smith 
Gethine  Williams 
Katherine  Williams 


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WOMEN'S  SENIOR  HONOR  SOCIETY 

Founded  at   the  University  of  Maryland  in    1925 

SORORES  IN  FACULTATE 
Dean  Adele  Stamp 

SORORES  IN  URBE 
Mary  Jane  McCurdy  .■  |I'5I  '  Eleanor  Seal 

SORORES  IN  UNIVERSITATE 
Clas,s.  of  Nineteen  Thirty 


Catherine  Barnsley 
Isabel  Dynes 


Ruth  H=ys 
Margaret  Karr 


Margaret  Meigs 
Genevieve  Wright 


•4  250  Ic- 


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C.  O    Appleman 
E.  C.    Auchter 
L.  E.  Bopst 
L.  B.  Broughton 
H.  E.  Bi-sley 
O.  C.  Bruce 
C.  Church 
C.  M.  Conrad 
H.  F.  Cotterman 
M.  Creese 


PHI  KAPPA  PHI 

Founded  at  University  ot  Maine  m   1897 

Established  University  of  Maryland   1920 

Publication — Phi   Kappa   Phi    Journal 


FRATRES  IN  FACULTATE 

C.  G.  Eichhn 

F.  H.  Evans 

C.  B.  Hale 

A.    N.    Johnson 

C.  F.  Kramer 

H.  B.  McDonnell 

H.  B   Mctzger 

M.  Mount 

J.  B.  S    Norton 


FRATRES  IN  UNIVERSITATE 


H.  J.   Patterson 

B.  B.  Powell 
R.  G.  Rothgeb 
A.  L.  Schrader 
E.  H    Schmidt 
T.  H.  Taliaferro 
W.  T.  L.  Taliaferro 
M.  F.  Welsh 

C.  E.  White 

L.  G.  Worthingion 


■4  251  Ii=- 


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Graduate  Students 

■  -  -  J 

W.   W.   Aldrich 

Paul  R.  Henson 

Adelia  Rosasco 

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J.  C.  Bauer 

Mary  Murray 

H.  W    Rudel 

Z?"?^^ 

Paul  W.  Frey 

John  H.  Weinberger 

69] 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty 

-Mr. 

Catherine  Barnsley 

Ruth  Flays 

Ruth   Lawless 

Margaret   Butler 

Samuel  Hemming 

Paul  C.  Marth 

Charles  R.  Dodson 

Howard  H.  Hine 

Grace  Maxwell 

^;5cr^ 

Isabel  Dynes 

Carroll  S.  James 

Margaret  Meigs 

Wyi 

William  H.  Fifer 

Virginia  Kalmbach 

Curry  Nourse 

Charles  G.  Grey 

Margaret  Karr 

Claire  P.  Schley 

}£^niy 

Evangeline  Gruver 

Wilhelmina   KroU 

Barbara-Schilling 

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Miss  Mount 

Miss  McNaughton 


Isabel   Bewick 
Margaret  Creeger 
Margaret  Dodder 
Isabel  Dynes 


Harriet  Bishop 
Gladys  Bull 
Marjorie  Cullen 
Winifred  Gahn 
Adelaid  Grey 


THETA  GAMMA 

Honorary   Home   Economic   Society 
Founded  at   University  of  Maryland  in   1922 


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SORORES  IN  FACULTATE 
Mrs.  Welsh 

SORORES  IN  URBE 
Mary  Jane  McCurdy 

SORORES  IN  UNIVERSITATE 

Graduate  Students 

Mrs.  Mena  Edmonds  Baflford 

Class  of  'Nineteen  Thirty 

Estelle  Hoffa 
Margaret  Karr 
Marion  Lane 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-One 

Felissa  Jenkins 
Mildred  Kettier 
Miriam  Lloyd 
Helen  Mead 


■4  252  >• 


Mrs.  Murphy 
Mrs.  McFarland 


Lillian  Lunnenberg 
Grace  Maxwell 
Curry  Nourse 
Margaret  Lcighton 


Ruth  Miles 
Gladys  Obcrlin 
Martha  Ross  Temple 
Marie  Webster 


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K    r  K:^u- 


CHI  ALPHA 

Honorary  Woman's  Juurnalistic  Society 
Founded  at  University  of  Maryland  in   1929 


Margarita  Clatlin 
Virginia  Kalmback 
Margaret  Meigs 


Felisa  Jenkins 
Helen  Meade 


Rosalie  Goodhan; 


SORORES  IN  UNIVERSITATE 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty 

Curry  Nourse 
Evelyn  Ridout 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty -One 
Ruth  Miles 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-Two 
Eloyse  Sargent 


Barbara  Schilling 
Louise  Townsend 
Genevieve  Wright 


Elizabeth  Mims 
Martha  Ross  Temple 


Eleanor  Margerum 


•=;I  253  l!=- 


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LATCH  KEY  SOCIETY 

Society  for    Welcoming    Visiting   Athletic   Teams 
Founded  at  University  of  Maryland  in  1930 


r^ 


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Robert  Allen 
James  Andrews 
Donald  Beeman 
Philip  Cooper 
Lawrence  Chiswell 


MEMBERS 

Joseph  Deckman 
Walter   Kent 
McClelland  Dixon 
Simon  Duckman 
Ralph  Garreth 


Harry  Hess 
John  Pitzer 
Warren  Rabbitt 
John  Savage 
Arley  Unger 


■4  254  f- 


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PROFESSIONAL  FRATERNITIES 


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■•=;1 256  l!=- 


ALPHA  CHI  SIGMA 

Honorary  Chemical  Fraternity 
Founded  at  the  University  of  Wisconsin  in  190i 

ALPHA  RHO  CHAPTER 

Established  at   U n-.vernty  of  Maryland  in   1927 
Publication — The   Hexagon 


'1 


L.  E.  Bopst 
L.  B.  Broughton 
C.  M.  Conrad 
E.  C.  Donaldson 


FRATRES  IN  FACULTATE 

N.  L.  Drake 
M.  M.  Haring 
H.  B.  McDonnel 


H.  J.  Patterson 
W.  W.  Skinner 
C.  E.  White 


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p.  W.  Fray 
H.  W   Gilbert 
D.  P.  Highberger 
H.  H.  Kaveler 


FRATRES  IN  UNIVERSITATE 

Graduate  Students 

G.  C.  Oland 

R.  W.  Riemensclineider 

T.  B.  Smith 


J.  R.  Spies 
D.  H.  Wheeler 
G.  S.  Wciland 
B.  B.  Westfall 


Ernest  W.  Haines 
William  W.  Heintr 
George  Madigan 


Paul  Ambrose 
Arthur  Bowers 
Williams   L.   Crentz 


Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty 

John  E.  McDonald 
Joseph  R.  Schultz 


Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-One 

M.  Rankin  Hatfield 
William  H.  Leyking 


Edgar  G.  Stimpsoii 
Loris  E.  Williams 


Fletcher  P.  Veitch 
Richard  R.  Roberts 


Class  of  Nineteen  Tbirfy-Two 


Ronald  F.  Brown 
Thomas  G.  Davis 


James  T.  Kingsbury 
Oscar  L.  Spencer 


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KAPPA  PHI  KAPPA 

Honorary  Educational  Fraternity 
Founded  at   Dartmouth  College  in    1922 

ALPHA  KAPPA  CHAPTER 

Established  m    IV 29 
Publication — The  Open   Book   Magazine 


mm 


Henry  Brechbill 
Harold  Cocterman 


FRATRES  IN   FACULTATE 
Edgar  Long 


Leland  Worthington 
Dr.  WiUard  Small 


FRATRES  IN   UNIVERSITATE 
Graduate  Students 
Paul  Fi«her  Kenneth  Stoner 


George  Algire 
Lloyd  Groshon 


Class  of  Nineteen  Thirf 

Gibbs  Myers 
Warren  Myers 


Morris  Ramsberg 
Robert  Remsberg 


Class  of  Nine  fee  II  Thirty-One 
William  Burhans  Sydney  Lawler 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-Two 
Robert  Stull 


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SOCIAL  FRATERNITIES 


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ALPHA   GAMMA   RHO 
Herbert  Davis 
John  Parks 


PHI  SIGMA  KAPPA 
Darius  Dixon 
Arley  Unger 


DELTA  PSI  OMEGA 
Randall  Lininger 
Delray  McPhatter 


SIGMA  NU 
Albert  Heagy 
Warren  Rabbitt 


DELTA  SIGMA  PHI 
Fred  Hetzel 
John  Pitzer 


SIGMA  TAU  OMEGA 
William  Gifford 
Donald  Nevius 


KAPPA  ALPHA 
Gordon  Zimmerman 
Edwin  Harlan 


SIGMA  PHI  SIGMA 
Charles  Pouts 
William  Kinnamon 


NU  SIGMA  OMICRON 
Robert  Healy 
Harry  Hess 


THETA  CHI 
Warren  Myers 
Henry  Whiting 


-4  263  >• 


■4  264  h 


KAPPA  ALPHA 

Founded  at  Washington  and  Lvf  in   1865 

BETA  KAPPA  CHAPTER 

Established  in    1914 
Publication — Kappa  Alpha  Journal 


Dr.  L.  B.  Broughton 
Dr.  E.  N.  Cory 
H.  F.  Coctermaii 
W.  M   Hillegeist 


James  Benner 
Charles  Bishop 
William  Chaffinch 
Winefred  Cobey 


John   Batson 
Walter  Bonnet 
Joseph  Deckman 
Paul  Fellows 

Frank  Baldwin 
John  Beall 
Ernest  Carliss 
Paul  Cronin 
Raymond  Koelle 

Joseph  Clark 
Loring  Gingell 
Donald  Imirie 
Charles  Keenan 


FRATRES  IN  FACULTATE 
C.  S.   Richardson 
J.  H.  Schad 
S.  B.  Shaw 

FRATRES  IN  URBE 
James  Earle  Zulick 

FRATRES  IN  UNIVERSITATE 
Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty 
William  Evans 
Walker  Hale 
Milton  Price 
Fulton    Mister 

Class  of  Nine  teen  Thirty-One 
Robert  Gaylor 
Edwin  Harlin 
Robert  Havell 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-Two 
Jesse  Krajcovic 
Charles  Miller 
Thomas  Miller 
George  Norris 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-Three 
Paul  Kiernan 
John  Mitchell 
Lawrence  Plumley 
Jack  Roberts 


Dr.  Jesse  Sprowls 
Dr.  T.  B.  Symons 
Dr.  T.  H.  Taliaferro 
Dr.  R.  V.  Truitt 


Benjamin  Simmons 
Francis  Stevens 
John  Umbarger 
Richard  White 


Ercell  Maloney 
Harry  Milburn 
Charles  Ross 
Edward  Siddall 

Alfred  Pease 
Joseph  Settino 
Frederick  Stieber 
Irvin  Wolfe 
Gordon  Zimmerman 

Robert  Ruling 
Jeff  Small 
Richard  Spire 
Norm.in  Wilson 


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SIGMA  PHI  SIGMA 

Founded  at   the   Umcersily   of   Pennsylvania  in    190i 

DELTA  CHAPTER 

Established  at  University  of  Maryland   1916 
Publication — The   Monad 


Geary  Eppley 
Harry  B.  Hoshall 
Jacob  E.  Metzger 


Philip  A.  Insley 
Harry  A.  Jarvis 
William  J.  Kinnamon 


William  F.  Chew 
Lawrence  R.  Chiswel 
Ralph  Garreth 
Maurice'  J.  Glynn 

Charles  W.  Fouts 
Hatcher  R.  Gibson 
Arthur  L.  Hauver 
Lloyd  J.  Jones 

Irving  Ady 
Adam  Brandau 
John  Brewer 
Joseph  Darby 
Frank  Hines 


FRATRES  IN  FACULTATE 

H.  B.  McDonnell 
Milton  A.  Pyle 

FRATRES  IN  UNIVERSITATE 

Class  of  Nittctccti  Tljiity 
Alfred  T.  Myers 
George  T.  Phipps 
William  C.  Schofield 

Class  of  Niitcfcni  Thirty-One 
James  Lee 
Carl  Mclntire 
Kenneth  Morris 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-Two 
Charles  P.  Merrick 
George  F.  Openshaw 
Kenneth  Stahl 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-Three 
E.  Dorrance  Kelley 
Ralph  Lovell 
Carl  Pfau 
Lawrence  Powers 


Burton  Shipley 
James  T.  Spann 
Samuel  S.  Steinberg 


Norman  Shoemaker 
Edward  Valliant 
Harry  Wilson 


Harry  Schramm 
Mark  Shank 
James  Welch 


Ralph  T.  Sterling 
Thurl  Tower 
John  Velten 


Donald  Shaffer 
Arthur  K.  Thorn 
George  Weber 
Robert  Welch 


•4  267  >• 


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SIGMA  NU 

Founded  at  Virginia  Military  Institute  in   1869 

DELTA  PHI  CHAPTER 

Established  in   1917 
Publication — The   Delta 


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Lawrence  Bomberger 


George  Abrams 
Arthur  Beavens 


Charles  Dodson 
Nils  Falkenstine 
Albert  Heagy 
Nicholas  Janctzke 


Franklin  Cox 
Willis  Fr'azier 
Warren  Mitchell 

Louis  Berger 
George  Chalmers 
John  Doerr 
Frank  Ebaugh 
Parker  Faber 


George  Cole 
Towner  French 
Howard  Florence 
Trice  Gravatte 
Blaine  Havell 


FRATRES  IN  FACULTATE 
Leslie  Bopst 

FRATRES  IN  URBE 
Omar  D.  Crothers 

FRATRES  IN  UNIVERSITATE 
Class  of  Ninefeen  Thirty 
James  Kelly 
Melvin  Koons 
George  Madigan 
Robert  Quinn 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-One 
Alfred  Owens 
Warren   Rabbi  tt 

Class  of  Ninefeen  Thirty-Two 
Courtney  Hayden 
Wayne  Hisle 
Roger  Kelly 
William  Luney 
Thomas  Neff 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-Three 
George  Hockensmith 
David  Lynch 
Harold  Norwood 
Raymond  Poppelman 
James  Pruitt 


Thomas  Spence 

William  Tyler  Page 
William  Supplee 


Julius  Radice 
George  Roberts 
Robert  Settle 
Edward  Stevens 


John  Savage 
Courtney  Suter 


John  Noms 
Judson  Reeves 
Dale  Sncll 
Edward  Tippett 
Robert  Wilson 


Ray  Schmidt 
Robert  Scott 
Victor  Wingate 
William  Wood 
John  Zirchell 


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PHI  SIGMA  KAPPA 

Founded  at   Mussucbuseds   Atiruuhural  College  in    1873 

ETA  CHAPTER 

Established  at    UnioersUy  ot    Maryland    I  Baltimore)    in    18^)7 

Established  at  College  Park  m   1923 

Publication — Signet 


FRATRES  IN  FACULTATE 
Dr.  Raymond  Reed  Eugene  B.  Daniels 


Elmer  R.  Crami.'r 


FRATRES  IN  URBE 
William   Press 


Edward  Snouflfer,  Jr. 


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FRATRES  IN  UNIVERSITATE 
Graduate  Students 
Samuel  Crosthwaite  William   White 


Harry  D.  Boublitz 
William  Bradley 
Robert  Conk 

John  Bisc'hoff 
Davies  Dixon 


John  Albrittian 
Donal  Beeman 
Russell  Carter 
Herbert  Eby 
Milton  Fall 


Joseph  Baker 
John  Doyle 
John  Fissel 
John  Huebsch 


Class  of  Nineteen  Tl'irty 
John  O'Neill 
Jerrold  Powers 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-One 
William  Fisher 
William  Leyking 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-Two 
Mitchell  Franklin 
Howard  Geary 
Thomas  Gough 
James  Greeley 
George  Matthew\ 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-Three 
James  Mason 
Howard  Knoblock 
Richard    Murdock 


John   Robertson 
Roy  Tansill 
Bennington  Weiss 

Arley  linger 
Sh:rwuod  Wilson 


Charles  Rinehart 
John  Roth 
Louis  Schneider 
Arthur  Turner 
Fritz  Wenger 


William  Needham 
Webster  Ramsay 
Charles  SpicknaU 
Joseph  Walter 


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DELTA  SIGMA  PHI 

Founded  at  City  College  of  New  York  in   1899 

ALPHA  SIGMA  CHAPTER 

E&tablished  in    I" 24 
Publications — Sphinx.   Carnation 


Earl  S.  Bellman 
John  E.  Faber 


Osmond  Reck 
Vincent  Colosimo 
Winifred  Covington 
Albert  Dean 
Charles  T.  Dean 

Paul  Butz 
Rudolph  Carrico 
^X^alter  Dent 

Harry  Clayton 
Hazard  Eskridge 
John  Kirby 
MitchtU   Kinuhkowski 


Charles  Berry 
Robert  Clopper 
.  John  P.  Dean 
Daniel  Galotta 


FRATRES  IN  FACULTATE 
Charles  B.  Hale 

FRATRES  IN  URBE 

Ivan  Wheaton 

FRATRES  IN  UNIVERSITATE 

Graduate  Student 
Paul  Smith 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty 
Franklin  Haller 
Frederick  Hetzel 
Adolph  Koldcway 
Donald  Kline 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-One 
Grorgc  Hendrickson 
Henry  McDonald 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-Tuo 
Jack  Kraus 
James  Loughran 
Charles  May 
Thomas  Perrie 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-Three 
Theodore  McGann 
Edgnr  Newcomer 
William  Robbin- 


Walter  E.  Jeager 
George  T.  Schultz 


John  McDonald 
Frederick  Ribnitzski 
Chester  Towney 

NichoLi-  Warcholy 


George  O'Harc 
John  Pitzer 
George  Vieweg 

Thomas  Rooney 
George  Ruhl 
Joseph  Sanford 
Ralph  Shure 


Frederick  Stelzer 
Alfred  Toombs 
William  Winchester 


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ALPHA  GAMMA  RHO 

Founded  at  the  University  of  Illinois  in   1908 

ALPHA  THETA  CHAPTER 

Established  in    1928 
Publications — Sickle  and  Sheaf.   Crescent 


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Dr.  S.  H.  De Vault 
Dr.  F.  E.  Gardner 


FRATRES  IN  FACULTATE 
S.  G.  Hart 
W.  E.  Hunt 


L.   W.   Ingliam 
A.  S.  Thurston 


F.  N.  Dodge 
J.  C.  Long 


A.  B.  Hamilton 


Charles  G.  Grey 
Lloyd  Groshon 
E.  Sam  Hemming 


Arthur   Ahalt 
Kenneth  Baker 
James  Coddington 
Russell  Henry 
Harley  Holter 
Vernon  Holter 

Henry  Boyd 

Manville  Coblentz 
Herbert  Daris 
Millard  Eiler 


Roger  Burdette 
John  Burton 
George  Connley 
Wheeler  Ensor 


FRATRES  IN  URBE 

B.  B.  Powell 

E.  H.  Schmidt 
FRATRES  IN   UNIVERSITATE 
Graduate  Students 

P.  L.  Fisher 
Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty 

Herbert  Hoopes  Lawrence  Sanders 

Ira  Langeluttig  Arthur  Schreibei 

Norman  Pennington  Robert  Teeter 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-One 

Henry  Long  Ridgely  Parks 

Fred  Marshall  Robert  Pryor 

Arthur  Martin  Robert  Reedy 

Eliha  McFaddcn  John  Savage 

Austin  Miller  Roland  Ward 


Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-Two 
Ralph  England 
Willard  Evans 
Miles  Hanna 
Charles  Reichel 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-Three 
Lloyd  Eyler 
James  House 
Lee  Ifert 
Wilbur  McCann 


Max  Smith 
William  Spicknall 
Howard  Stier 
Russell  Umstead 


Kenneth  Spessard 
Marion  Satton 
Gardner  Warner 
Fred  Wintermoyer 


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THETA  CHI 

Founded  at  Norwich  University  in    1856 

ALPHA  PSI  CHAPTER 

Established  at  the  University  of  Maryland  in    1929 
Publication — The  Rattle  of  Theta  Chi 


FRATRES  IN  FACULTATE 


Earl  S.  Johnston 
William  B.  Kemp 


Frank  M.  Lemon 
Marion  W.  Parker 


FRATRES  IN  URBE 
Paul  D.  Sanders 


Graef  W.  Buehm 
Richard  J.  Epple 
James  M.  Gordon 
William  L.  Hopkins 
Kenneth  S.  Kesecker 


Arthur  D.  Bowers 
William  H.  Burhans,  Jr. 
Charles  F.  Cashell 
Robert  C.  Home 


Charles  R.  Albaugh 
Charles  D.  Briddell,  Jr. 
C.  Wilbur  Cisse! 
J.  Walter  Eby 
Merdith  A.  Flook 
Donald  J.  Gardner 

Albert   J.   Benjamin 
Howard  M.  Biggs 
James  G.  Busick 
John  C.  Chaney 
Lowell  E.  Hendrick 


FRATRES  IN  UNIVERSITATE 

Clans  of  Nitictccn  Thirty 
Leonard  J.  Vogel 
Warren  G.  Myers 
Edward  F.  Moser 
H.  Earl  Sangston 
Edwin  G.  Stimpson 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirly-One 
Thomas  Jones,  Jr. 
George  A.   Kibler 
Robert  C.  Oberlin 
Samuel  T.  Royer,  Jr. 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-Two 
Don  F.  Hammeriund 
John  Horton 
Arthur  B.  Hersberger 
Frederick   E.  Knowles,  Jr. 
Archibald  Lake,  Jr. 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-Three 
Everett   H.   Herrell 
Wilson  A.  Lansford 
Walter  H.  Lappen 
C.  Maurice  Lewis 
Edward  L.  Melvin 


Norman  L.  Taylor 
James  S.  Wilson 
Loris  E    Williams 
James  N.   Wallace 
David  J.  Ward,  Jr. 


George  E.  Taylor,  Jr. 
James  R.  Troth 
Robert  W.  Warfel 
Henry  J.  Whiting 


Karl  F    Mech 
Theodore  F.  Meyer 
Maurice  J.   Murphy 
Carl  Pergler 
Edwin  G.  Whitehead 


Frederick  Nordenholtz 
John  N.  Randolph 
A.  Jack  Riley 
Robert  G.  Somers 
Ralph  I    Williams 


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DELTA  PSI  OMEGA 

Founded  at  the  University  of  Maryland  in   1920 


Publication — Flagship 

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FRATRES  IN  FACULTATE 

Dr.  De  Voe  Meade 
Dr.  Lee  Schrader 

Robert  Watkins 

FRATRES  IN  UNIVERSITATE 
Graduate  Students 
Theret  T.  Taylor 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty 

Dr.  Mark  Welsh 
Dr.  Charles  White 

George  Algire 
David  Blennard 
James  Cameron 
Carl  Everstine 

Richard  Hughes 
Kendall  Jarvis 
Floyd  Lininger 

Marlin  Ramsburg 
Robert  Ramsburg 
William  Scott 
William  Wilson 

Robert  Allen 
James  Andrews 
George  Brouillet 
Joseph  Caldara 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-One 
Melvin  Derr 
Lawrence  Downey 
Wolcott  Etienne 

Robert  Haas 
Squire  Hamer 
Delray  McPhatter 
Mark  Woods 

William  Aldridge 
John  Allen 
Thomas  Davis 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-Two 
Edward  Ewald 
Frederick  Lawrence 
Robert  Reeder 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-Three 

George  Schindler 
Claude  Smith 
Robert  Stull 

William  Dunbar 
David  Harry 
Norman  Haywood 

William  Lang 
Arnold  Maxwell 

Carrol  Warner 
Thomas  Williamsor 
Ned  Zyler 

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NU  SIGMA  OMICRON 

Founded  at   University  of  Maryland 
Established  in  1916 


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FRATRES  IN  FACULTATE 


Oscar  Bruce 
Lawrence    Hodgins 


Earl  M    Pickens 
Kenneth  G.  Stoner 


Hugh  House 


August  L.  Ewald,  Jr. 
Ernest  V.  Haines 
Luther  M.  Harper 

John  P.  Allan 
Robert  W;  Beall 
Harry  Gray 
Harry  C.  Hess,  Jr. 


Edmund  D.  Brower 
Clifford   Davids 
James  S.  Decker 
Harry  Dobbs 

Richard  W.  Baldwin 
Charles  Faith 
Arthur  P.  Gambrill 
Carroll  Kakel,  Jr. 
Thomas  Kelbaugh 


FRATRES  IN  URBE 

Hugh  Shank 

FRATRES  IN  inVIVERSITATE 
Graduate  Students 
John  E.  Schueler,  Jr. 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty 
Robert  F.  Healy 
J.  Donald  Kieffer 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-One 
Wilbur  A.   Jones 
Gerald  L.  Munson 
John  W,  Neidhardt 
Douglas  M.  Parks 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-Tu'u 
Robert  A.  Garrett 
Fred  W    Invernizzi 
Willi.im  Kricker 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-Three 
George  Keseling 
Ralph  MuUendore 
Harry  Penn 
Norman  E.  Prince 


James  Shank 


Madison  E.  Lloyd 
Robert  J.  McCandlish 


Harold  B.  Robinson 
Harry  G.  Street 
Vance  R.   Sullivan 
Edmund  Willse 


Russell  I.  Krout 
Howard  B.  Mayi 
Sidney  D  Miller 
Robert  B.  Wooden 

Melvin   Roberts 
Thomas  H.  Stone 
John   W.   Street 
Arthur  L.   Sullivan 
S.  Hammond  Welsh 


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SIGMA  TAU  OMEGA 

Founded  at  University  of  Maryland  in  I'll  I 
Publication — The  Candle  of  Sigma  Tau 


FRATRES  IN  FACULTATE 
Kenneth  Asbury  Clark 


John  Bush 
Robert  Clark 
Arthur  Dunnigan 
Howard  Fetty 


Marcus  Rankin  Hatfield 
Josiah  Hunt 
Clarence  Lung 


Frederick  Burton 
Richard  Cochran 
Charles  Gifford 
Howard  Hunt 


FRATRES  IN  UNIVERSITATE 

Graduate  Students 
Samuel  Henry  Winterburg 

Class  of  N/iietceii  Thirty 

William  Giflford 
William  Hammcrsley 
William  Lucas 
Thorman  Nelson 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-One 

Theodore  Mowatt 
William  Roberts 


Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-Two 

James  Kingsbury 
William  Lines 
William  Linkins 


Joseph   Nevius 
Eugene  Roberts 
Harley  Spoerlein 
Lawrence  Winncmore 


Vernon  Spitznagle 
John  Wilhelm 
Robert  Wllhclm 


Thomas  Marshall 
Joseph  Straw 
Thomas  Young 


Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-Three 


Nicholas  Gordy 
Paul  Lung 


Howard  Mathews 
William  Rice 


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PHI  ALPHA 

Founded  at  George  Washington  University  in   I '^14 

EPSILON  CHAPTER 

Established  at  University  of  Maryland  in  1919 
Publication — Phi  Alpha  Quarterly 

FRATRES  IN  UNIVERSITATE 


Hyman  Friedman 


George  Chertkof 
Sidney  Friedman 


Sol  Rosen 


Raymond  Grad 
Julius  Levin 


Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty 
Max  Hcrstcin 


Class  of  Nineteen  Tlnrty-One 
Samuel   Lemcr 
Harry  Needle 


Class  of  Nineteen  Tbirty-Tiio 
Bernard  Rosen 


Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-Three 
Manuel  Landesman 


•4  285  Ii=- 


William  Rosenbaum 


Victor  Rosenthal 
Louis  Teitel 


Jerome  Schloss 


Nathan  Wasserm.iu 
Narcisse  Rochlin 


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TAU  EPSILON  PHI 

Founded  at  Columbia  University  in   l'>10 

TAU  BETA  CHAPTER 

Estabhsed    in    I '1 15 
Publication — Plume 


FRATRES  IN  URBE 
Julian  Venezky  Daniel  Weitzman 


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FRATRES  IN  UNIVERSITATE 

Chm  of  Nineteen  Tbir/y 
Herman   Lombard  Irving  Rosenbaum 


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Stanley  H.  Berenstein 
Morton  Chideckel 
Morris  Cohen 


Irving  Applefeld 
Albert  Cohen 
Jules  Cooper 
Nathan  Frankel 


Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-One 
Simon  Duckman 
Julius  Eisenstark 


Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-Two 
Maurice  Kaplan 
Abe  Karasik 
Sol  Karpel 
Joseph  Miller 


Sidney  Oilman 
Henry  Schwartz 
Sidney  Silverman 


Edward  Ronkin 
Irving  Sadowsky 
Morton  Silverberg 
Bernard   Venezky 


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Morris  Bogdenow 
David  Cohen 
Jerome  Feldman 


Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-Three 
Philip  Feldman 
Louis  Koladner 


Emanuel  Margareten 
Milton  Scheer 
Morris  Stern 


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ALPHA  PHI  SIGMA 

Founded  a!  UnivtrsUy  uf  Marylund  in   1927 


FRATRES  IN  FACULTATE 
Dr.   Harry  A.   Deferrari 


FRATRES  IN  URBE 


Frank  Di  Stasio 
Frank  Franklin 


Charles  Gentile 
Peter  S.  Scoles 


FRATRES  IN  UNIVERSITATE 

Class  of  Nineteen  Tl.nrty 
Anthony  Cerrito  Joseph   Jerardi 

Class  (if  Nineteen  Thirty-One 
Louis  Coroso  Joseph   Cosimano 


James  C.  Allen 
Miguel  Alonzo 


Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-Two 
George  Kent 


Ralph  Urciolo 
Charles  Whalin,  Jr. 


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PHI  KAPPA  DELTA 

Founded  at  Columbia  University 

THETA  CHAPTER 

Established  in  1918 
Publiialion — Phihadion 


FRATRES  IN  UNIVERSITATE 

Graduate  Students 
Reubiii  H.  Israelson 


Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-One 


Albert  Goldstein 
Ben  Sei?el 


Jack  Sugar 
Jule  Waghclstein 


Irving  Bachman 
Eli  Castleman 


Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-Two 
Abner   Kaplan 


Sidney  Shapiro 
Bernard  Cohen 


Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-Three 


Louis  Hoffman 
Sol  Millison 


Edward  Seidner 
Milton  Semoff 


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IOTA  NU  DELTA 

Founded  at   University  of  Maryland 
Established  in  1929 


FRATRES  IN  FACULTATE 
Charles  J.  Pierson 


FRATRES  IN  UNIVERSITATE 

Graduate  Students 


Paul  A.  Raper 


Cecil  A.  Renege: 


John  L.  Gardiner 
Rupert  B.  Lillie 


Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty 

Walter  G.  Harris 
Paul  Nowell 


John  E.  Perham 
Walter  A.  Then: 


Frank  P.  Beauchamp 
John  J.  Bremen 
Perry  W.  Carman 


Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty -One 

Rosser  L.  Gwynn 
Preston  Hartge 


Samuel  C.  Oglesby 
William  B.  Smith 
Landis  A.  Wilk 


William  A.  Burslem 
Hofmann  C.  Clift 


Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-Tivo 

John  M.  Duncan 
William  R.   McCallister 


Arthur  A.  Pittaway 
Maynard  P.  Shoemakei 


John  Devlin 


Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-Three 
Esdres  Gruver 


John  Thomas 


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WOMEN  S  FRATERNITIES 


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Pan  Hellenic  Counci; 


ALPHA  OMICRON  PI 

Jane  Hammack 
Genevieve  Wright 


KAPPA  DELTA 

Isabel  Bewick 
Elizabeth  Mims 


ALPHA  UPSILON  CHI 

Isabel  Dynes 
Felisha  Jenkins 


KAPPA  KAPPA  GAMMA 

Eleanor  Baumel 
Curry  Nourse 


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ALPHA  OMICRON  PI 

Founded  at  Barnard  College  in  1897 

PI  DELTA  CHAPTER 

Established  at  University  of  Maryland  in   1924 
Publication — To  Dragma 


Mrs.  Frank  Bomberger  Mrs. 

Mrs.  L.  B.  Broughton  Mrs, 

Mrs.  Leslie  Bopst  Mrs. 
Mrs.  Burton  A.  Ford 


PATRONESSES 

Robert  S.  Lytle 

Enos  Ray 

Charles  Rich:irdson 


Mrs.  Samuel  M.  Shoemaker 
Mrs.  Warren  Taliaferro 
Mrs.  Charles  E.  Temple 
Mrs.  E.  L.  Upson 


SORORES  IN  FACULTATE 
Mrs.  Freida  McFarland  Evelyn  Kuhnle 

SORORES  IN  UNIVERSITATE 


Margaret  Leighton 
Grace  Maxwell 


Madeline  Bernard 
Lenore  Blount 
Virginia  Blount 
Margaret  Cook 
Ruth  Finzei 
Jane  Hammock 


Julia  Arnold 
Minna  Cannon 
Charlotte  Clemson 
Hope  Col  burn 
May  Dezendorf 


Class  of  Nincfeeu-Thirfy 
Evalyn  Ridout 

Class  of  'Nineteen  Thirty-One 

Elgar  Jones 
Mildred  Kettler 
Margaret  McGarvey 
Ruth  Miles 
Margaret  Nowell 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-Two 

Irma  Dudley 
Rosalie  Goodhart 
Alma  Hickox 
Elizabeth  Kent 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-Three 
Marian  Bates  Dorothy  Simpson 


Barbara  Schilling 
Genevieve  Wright 


Gwendolyn  Sargent 
Audrea  Scholl 
Virginia  Smith 
Martha  Ross  Temple 
Marie  Webster 


Eloyse  Sargent 
Kathryn  Siehler 
Gethine  Williams 
Katherine  Williams 


Mrs.  E.  B.  Sheldon 
House  Mother 


Bertha  Cannon 
Dorothy  Claflin 
Virginia  Cronin 
Ada  Conklin 
Ruth  Gilbert 
Audrey  Jacobs 
Adeline  Jarrell 
Myra  Lewis 
Lucille  Lusby 
Mary  Medinger 
Eleanor  Morsell 
Norma   Person 


Jane  Smith 
Kinkead  Young 


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KAPPA  KAPPA  GAMMA 

Founded    at    Monmouth    College    in    1S70 

GAMMA  PSI  CHAPTER 

Established  at   the  University  of  Maryland  in    1929 
Publication — The  Key 


Mrs.  Charles  Appleman 
Mrs,  Edwin  Connor 


PATRONESSES 
Mrs.  Harry  Patterson 
Mrs.  Thomas  Symons 


Mrs.  Albert  Woods 
Mrs.  Stewart  Shaw 


SORORES  IN  FACULTATE 
Marie  Mount  Virginia  Peaseley 

SORORES  IN  URBE 
Katherine   Appleman  Eleanor  Seal 

Louise  Marlowe  Mary  Jane  McCurdy 

SORORES  IN  UNIVERSITATE 

Graduate  Students 
Anne  Cahill  Mena  Edmonds 


Catherine  Barnsley 
Virginia  Fooks 
Dorothea'  Freseman 
Roberta  Howard 
Margaret  Karr 

Eleanor  Baumel 
Agnes  McNutt 

Mary  Brossman 
Myra  Ferrier 
Evelvn  Harrison 
Margaret  Herring 

Alice  Bowie 
Winifred  Clark 
Wilma  Colman 
Marv  Drake 


Mrs.  Brown 
House  Mother 


Class  of  Ninetecii-Thirty 
Florence  McLeod 
Margaret  Meigs 
Claudine  Morgan 
Curry  Nourse 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-One 
Geraldine  Parry 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-Two 
Mary  Ingersoll 
Hilda  Jones 
Mabel  Mudd 
Kathleen   Nestor 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-Three 
Elena   Hannigan 
Sannve  Hardiman 
Louise  Herspberger 
Elizabeth  Howard 
Esther  Hughes 
Florence  Peters 


Alice  Orton 
Elsie  Rvon 
Louise  Townsend 

Margaret  Wisner 


Christine  Simmonds 
Ethel  Trask 


Marjorie  Rugge 
Phoebe  Steflfey 
Margaret  Stone 
Margaret  Van  Fossen 

Rosa  Lee  Reid 
Mary   Ricketts 
Dorothy  Shipley 
Ann  E.  Smaltz 
Lelia  Smith 
Lou  Snyder 


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KAPPA  DELTA 

Founded  at   Virginia  State  Normal  School  in   IS97 

ALPHA  RHO  CHAPTER 

Established  at  University  of  Maryland  in  1929 


AliiKi   Prinkert 


SORORES  IN  FACULTATE 
Dr.  Susan  Harmon 


Pi 


Marv  Graybille 


Isabel  Bewick 
Margaret  Brower 
Elizabeth  Carm-chael 
Carolyn  Chesser 


SORORES  IN  UNIVERSITATE 

Class  of  Nine  fecit  Tl.iirty 

Regis  Dunnigan 
Helen  Gingell 
Eames  Harrison 


Ruth  Hays 
Estellc  Hoflfa 
Marian  Lane 
Maude  Lewis 


Harriet  Bishopp 
Victoria  Bundick 
Marjorie  Cullen 
Adelaide  Gray 


Class  of  Nincfccu  Tliirfy-Oiic 

Elizabeth   Kirkwood 
Helen   Mead 
Elizabeth   Mims 


Marinda  Robertson 
Margaret  Wade 
Elizabeth  Wittig 
Anne  Wolfe 


Virginia  Cook 
Virginia  Hoffman 
Vera  Klein 
Catherine  Luers 
Virginia  Luers 


Class  of  Niiiefci'ti  T/jirfy-Tiio 

Francis  McCubbin 
Laura  Nevius 
Elizab>.'th  Norton 
Ruth   Reed 


Edith  Stinnette 
Charlotte  Taylor 
Isabelle  Toulson 
Margaret  Walton 


Alice  Brennan 
Anna   Deal 
Agnes  Gingell 


Class  of  Niiicffni  Tfiirf^-Tljree 

Marian  Kerr 
Doris  Lanahan 
Dorothy  Lane 


Clara  Beth  Miller 
Ruth  Reed 
Doruthy  Rombach 


Mrs.  Wilson 
House  Moflier 


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ALPHA  UPSILON  CHI 

Founded  a!   the  University  of  MurytanJ  in    1 '> 2 6 


PATRONESSES 


Mrs.  B    I.  Jaeger 
Mrs.  J   E.  Metzger 


Mrs.  A    L.  Schradtr 
Mrs.  T.  H.  Tali.iferro 


Mrs.  M.  F.  Welsh 
Mrs.  F.  H.  Westney 


Marian  Bullard 
Isabel  Dynes 
Evangeline  Gruver 


SORORES  IN  UNIVERSITATE 

Graduate  Student 
Mary  Murray 

dim  of  Niiictccii-Thirty 

Ann  Hicks 
Jane  La  Motte 


Ruth  L.'>wless 
Lillian    Lunenburg 


Lillian  Bunker 
Winifred  Gahan 
Maryvee  Glass 


Class,  of  Nineteen  Thirty-One 

Felisa  Jenkins  Marv  Koons 

Marion  Kohn  Norma  Rowe 


Louise  Babcock 
Doris  Bishop 
Virginia  Daiker 


C/«.ss  of  Nineteen  Thirty-Two 

Ruth  Greenwood 
Rhoda  Hatton 


Mary  Martha  Miller 
Elsie  Stanforth 


Catherine  Bixler 
Catherine  Crawford 
Mildred  Lutes 
Ailene  Lynham 


Mrs.  Koons 
House  Mother 


Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-Three 

Evelyn  Miller 
Mary  Elizabeth  Owen 
Florence  Rowe 
Lois  Steinwedel 


Claire  Shepherd 
Frances  Welsh 
Doris  Zabel 


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FEATURES 


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This  review  of  the  year's  outstanding 
events  is  more  than  a  mere  review — the 
camera  has  caught  moments  of  Uni- 
versity Hfe  and  presented  them  for  the 
time  when  the  memory  of  them  might 
become  dimmed.  Present  events  will 
soon  fade  into  the  obscurity  of  the 
past  and  new  ones  will  come  to  take 
their  place,  yet  the  spirit,  the  essence 
of  campus  life  is  ever  changing — it  will 
carry  on  into  the  future  all  that  is 
good  today. 


EVENTS  OF  THE  YEAR 


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HoME-CoMiNG  Day 


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Pledge  Day 
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Field  Day 


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Maryland  Defeats  Army  in  Double  Header 


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May  Day 


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Competitive  Drill 


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Maivland   Band  at  the   Marylaiid- 
Il.ilikins     Fiiutliall     Ganif. 


Installation  of  the  Kappa  Xi  Sorority  Into  Kappa  Delta 


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Initiative    is    doing    the    right    thing 
without   being   told. 

—Elbert  Hubbard. 


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UNIVERSITY    LIFE 


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MOST  POPULAR  SENIOR  MAN 


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Albert   Heagy 


Second,  John  O'Neil 
Third,  Julius  Radice 


MOST  POPULAR  SENIOR 
WOMAN 


Isabel  Bewick 

Sccoiiil,  Margaret  Wisner 
Third,  EvALYN  Ridout 


•4  320  lis- 


REVEILLES 
POPULARITY 


SENIOR    WOMAN    WHO    HAS 

DONE  THE  MOST  FOR  THE 

UNIVERSITY 


Genevieve  Wright 

Second,  Isabel  Bew  ick. 
Third,  Evalyn  Riuout 


SEMIOP 
COMTEST 


5ENIOR  MAN  WHO  HAS  DONE 

THE  MOST  FOR  THE 

UNIVERSITY 


John  O'Nhil 

Second,  Albert  Hfagy 

Third,  Win.iAM  Evans 


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BEST  SENIOR  ATHLETE 


PRETTIEST    SENIOR    WOMAN 


William  Evans 

Second,  Julius  Radice 
Third,  Albert  Heagv 


•4  321  >• 


Dorothea  Freseman 

Second,  Grace  Maxwell 
Third,  Margaret  Wisner 


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Two  of  the  social  hiKhliKhts.     One  winter  afternoon.      Two  of   Maryland's  fair  coeds. 
A   would  he   Mogul.    Jane,  just  hcfon-  her   recent   trip  to  Annapolis.     Track   manager   hard  at   work.     Kappas 

give   us   a   break. 
Powers   I)rowsinB  the    Kappas,   we   wonder   why?     Mac,   the   politician. 
Andrews    and    Settle.      This   and    that.      One    spring   afternoon. 

•4  324  lis- 


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Just   an    earnest   engineer.      One   of    those    ten    minute    relief    periods. 

Something    is    wrong.     It's   all    over    now. 

Joe    in    his    glory.     Powers    can't   be    far    away. 

Haller   an.l    Refte   getting    playful.     Handsome    Rili   and    Captain    Pete.     Myra's    prayer    has   been    answered. 

Rats   attend    football    game    in    pajamas. 

Winter    view    of    the    Administration    building. 

•4  325  \<=- 


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llclzci    ready    fur   a    "sleigh    rule."     Ilicntz   tells    Ilarrisiin    all    alnnit    il. 
Where    (litl     l.inzey    tiiid    this    one?      The     Phi     Sijis    need     his    RiiidinR    care.      Maryland    cheerin;.;    section    al 

Western    Marylanci  game. 

I  he   Jcihn    W.    Pitzer.      Kdith    doing   a    little    political    work    for    the    Kappa    Delta's.       Harrv    and    Kathleen. 

A  hi.ir  woman  on  the  campns.      Three   fellows  who  took  a   heatinK.     "I'rof."' 

Another  session.    The  A.  (1.  Pi's  huild  their  own  men. 


■'<  326  Is:- 


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Christmas  time  and  no  Santa  Claus.      Mogul   O'Neil   and  charges. 
Our   Rox.      Maryland   Day.      Good  advertisement   for   Maryland    Summer    School. 
Just  another  affair.      Industry   personified.      All   set  and   ready   to  go.      The   girls   stejj  out   of   the  harn. 
The   hard   working   Maryland   athletes.      Warcholy   getting  a   big   deal. 
Maryland    students   attend    football    game    at    Richmond,      Session    on    Ag    building    steps. 


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APPRECIATION 

jj' Roebuck.  Si- Son,. Baltimore,  Md.,  primers 

■     1         ■■■■,■  ;-\ 

WHitE  STtrbio,  New  Yorlt  Ciu 

Maurice "JoVci-E^fGRAViNc;  Co.,  Washington,  D.  C. 

[ciMX   A.  Ci'RiiN'    Wasliington.  D.  (~.,   utist 

Daviu  J.  Moi  1  in  Co.,  Chicago,  coyer  manutacuucis 

And 

Tin   Students  o;   Tiir:  LTNfinERSitY  of  Maryi-and 
AND  Faculty,  whose  hearty  co-operation  has 

counted  for  '.o  much  in  the  prep.irjtion  of  this 
volume. 


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