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1.  Mijin  Entrji|.._u 

2.  Gymnasium-Armory 

3.  Silvester  Hjll 
4.-  Calvert  Hall 

^1  Student  Con+pr 

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15. 

Home  tconomics  Buitding. 

%     Morrill  Holl 

16. 

Engineering  Group    . 

10.    Girls'  Field  House 

17. 

Agricultural  Building 

1 1 .    Girls'  Tennis  Courts 

18. 

Chemistry  Building 

12.     Girls'  Athletic  Fields 

19. 

Green  Houses 

13.     Student  »i  -.-:  t/-  -  -     i  ci,,, 

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29.  Men  i  Practice  Fi&lds 

30.  St.  Andrew'^  Episcopal  Church 

31.  Dairy  B,uildifig 

32.  Horticulture  Building 

33.  Shoemaker  Hail — ; 

Arts  and  jr.ience  Buildinq 


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34.  Home  Economics  Practice  House  ^     ^^       \ 

35.  Morg'iret  Brent  Hall  ■ 

36.  New  Gill'.'  .Dormitory 

37.  Lake 

38.  Poultry- Buil'Jin.;) 

39.  Site  of  Propoo^d  Eureou  of 

Min^i;  Building 


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HE  Editors  of  your  1936 
Terrapin  are  privileged  to  ex- 
press a  heartfelt  wish  of  suc- 
cess and  happiness  from  the 
Junior  Class  to  the  members  of 
the  Senior  Class. 
It  is  our  hope  that  the  1936 
Terrapin  wiU  add  something  to 
your  future  enjoyment  when 
its  portrayal  of  campus  life 
recalls  to  mind  your  happy 
undergraduate  days. 
May  it  add  something  to  your 
success  as  well  as  in  cement- 
ing and  renewing  friendships 
which  will  prove  of  mutual  ben- 
efit. Cooperation  and  friend- 
ships are  just  as  important  in 
the  business  world  as  you  have 
discovered  them  to  be  in  the 
activities  presented  herein. 


THE      UNIVERSITY 

VIEWS 
ADMINISTRATION 


E 


CTIVITIES 

STUDENT  GOVERNMENT 

PUBLICATIONS 

MILITARY 

SOCIAL   LIFE 

DRAMATICS  AND  MUSIC 

ORGANIZATIONS 


W 


THLETICS 

MAJOR   SPORTS 
FRESHMAN  SPORTS 
INTRAMURAL    SPORTS 

• 


O 


E 


N 


I   T   I   E   S 


F  R  A  T   E   R   IV 

HONORARY 

SOCIAL 

SORORITIES 


UNIVERSITY      LIFE 


COPYRIGHT,  1936 

John  S.  Hbbb,  III 

Editor-in-Chief 

Ruth  Kbeiter 

Woman's  Editor 

Walter  Lohb 
Business  Manager 


VIEWS 


WELCOME  TO  OUK  UNIVERSITY— DRIVE  IN 


HANDSOllE  NEW  HOME  OF  ARTS  AND  SCIENCE  COLLEGE 


WITHIN  HANDSOME  PILLABS  OF  ENTRANCE  TO  LIBRARY 


GLIMPSE  OF  MEN'S  DORMS— CALVERT  HALL  AND  SILVESTER  HALL 


SPACIOUS  AND  ATTRACTIVE  LOUNGE  IN  CALVERT  HALL 


AS  THE  SUN  'TLAYS"  ON  PILLAKS  OF  ENGINEERING  BUILDING 


WOMEN'S  PKACTICE  HOUSE.  WEffiRE  DOMESTIC  NEEDS  ARE  TAUGHT 


HOME  EC  COLLEGE  BUILDING  IS  A  HOMEY  PLACE 


MARGARET  BRENT  HALL  DORM,  ON  CREST  OF  "COED  HnX" 


PAID  THREE  VISITS  EACH  DAY— UNIVERSITY  DINING  HALL 


HOME  OP  R.O.T.C.  AND  MENS  PHYSICAL  EDUCATION 


AG  BUILDING  PRESENTS  BOLD  AND  ENTICING  FRONTAGE 


HORT  BUILDING,  A  STRUCTURE  A  CAMERA  NEVER  DOES  JUSTICE 


REVAMPED.  DAIRY  BUILDING  REALLY  IS  EYE-PLEASING 


CHEMISTRY  BUILDING,  WHICH  ADOENS  THE  CLUSTER  ON  "THE  HILL" 


ENTRANCE  TO  BYRD  STADIUM  ATHLETIC  FIELD  AND  TRACK 


INSIDE  OF  BYRD  STADIUM,  SHOWING  WEST  SIDE  STANDS 


PEEKING  FROM  LIBRARY  WINDOW  DOWN  HILL  TO  BYRD  STADIUM 


RITCHIE  COLISEUM,  CLASSIC  AND  UTILITARIAN  SPORTS  EMPORIUM 


WOMEN'S  FIELD  HOUSE.  CENTER  OP  COEDS'  ACTIVrnES 


HISTOBIC  BOSSBOUBG  INN,  OLDEST  BUILDING  ON  CAMPUS 


\ 


WHEN  SNOW  BLANKETS  MARYLAND'S  CAMPUS 


LOOKING  UP  THE  ROAD  TO  THE  NEW  WOMEN'S  DORMITORY 


mbtvt  Cabell  mtt\)it 


(ioing  to  State  IIouso  for  last  inaugural  .  .  .  Making  inaugural  address  .  .  .  Leaving  f()r('lueago  icm- 
vention  .  .  .  Throng  greets  him  there  .  .  .  Making  response  ,  .  (iood-hye  on  leaving  for  Europe  .  .  .  On 

lioat  .  .  .  Fhologra])hed  in  London 


As  a  healthy  infant  .  .  .  When  first  elected  Governor  .  .  .  While  attorney-general  .  .  .  With  his  mother 
.  .  .  W'ith  General  Pershing  .  .  .  Being  "tapped"  for  Red  Cross  ...  At  a  football  game 

ALBERT  CABELL  RITCHIE 

BORN  in  Richmond,  Va.,  August  26, 1876;  died  in  Baltimore,  February  24,  1936. 
Four  times  Governor  of  the  State  of  Maryland,  one  of  America's  greatest  states- 
men, lawyers  and  economists,  and  probably  kept  from  the  presidency  of  his  country 
by  his  geographical  location. 

Served  in  several  minor  positions  and  then  was  chosen  attorney -general  of  his 
State  before  l)eing  elected  governor  for  the  first  time  in  1920.  Remained  as  chief 
executive  continuously  until  1935,  an  honor  never  achieved  by  any  other  Marylander. 

Received  his  LL.B.  from  the  University  of  ^Maryland  in  1898  and  his  LL.D.  in 
1920.  Was  professor  of  law  at  the  University  from  1907  to  1920. 

A  great  friend  of  education,  he  played  a  telling  part  in  the  building  of  the  Uni- 
versity of  Maryland  and  bettering  the  general  educational  system  of  the  State. 

His  death  was  ^Maryland's  greatest  loss  in  modern  times. 

[31] 


iUjiiriitt 


ALBERT  CAB 

"^  ,:     GQVERNQR    OF  MARYlAM' 

UNIVERSnY  OF  MARYLANTD  DEOICATES  THt^' 
ASA  FITTINd  TRIBUm  HEREIM  WILfc  BE'  FOSTEREl 
COOO  SPORTSIVIANSHIP,  AMD  Alt  THAT  iS^'ASSOdfATEC 
WITH  IT^  FAIR  PLAY,  COMPETITIVE  SPlPlt,  CLEAh 
THIMKINQ.  QUICK  AOTIOM,  COURAGE  AND  CQURTESV 
THE  IDEALS  OF  A  GENTLE  MAM',  MOMS'  COUL0  BETTER 
EXEMPLIFY  THES^  THAlSi  ALBERT  (5*  RlTCHl^'^WHO 
FOR' FOUR  TERMSr  AS  GOVERNOR;  HAS  WOff  FOR 
HIMSELF  IM  THE  HEARTS  OF  HK^  PEOPLE  StlCH  a 
PLACE  A9  NEVER  BEFORE  IM  TH^  HISTORf  OF  tHE 

STATE'  HA3   BESM   AtTAlNEn'  BY   AMY  OTttER 

OE'tllGATIOM   dF  THE  RITGHlH    COtlSr 
UNIVERSITY   Of  MARYLAMflT^ 
>  JANUARY  2m  19$  — 


Tablet  erected  in  Ritchie  Coliseum  Lounge 


1 


In  upper  right  picture,  Ritchie  is  delivering  response  at  Coliseum  dedication.  Other  three  pictures  were 
taken  on  his  appearances  at  as  many  commencement  exercises  at  College  Park 


ADMINISTRATION 
AXD     FACULTY 


HK.MtY  HULZAPFEL,  Jr.,  JOHN  E.  RAINE.  WILLIAM  P.  COLE,  Jr.,  J.  MILTON  I'ATTEUSUN.  MRS.  JOHN  L.  WHITEHIHST,  Secretary: 
W.  \V.  SKINNER,  Chairman:  CLINTON  L.  RIGGS,  HARRY  H.  NUTTLE,  W.  CALVIN  CHESNUT 


BOARD  OF  REGEXTS 


W.  W.  Skinner 
Chairman 


W.  Calvin  Chestnnt 


J.  Milton  Patterson 


William  P.  Cole,  Jr. 


John  E.  Raine 


Henry  Holzapfel,  Jr. 
Hanv  \nttle 


Clinton  L.  Riggs 


Mrs.  John  1>.  AVliitehurst 


|34| 


HARRY  CLIFTOX  RYRD 


BYRD  AS  A  FRESHMAN 


Born  Crisfield,  Md.,  on  February  li.  1889. 

Entered  Maryland  Agricultural  College  in  September,  1905. 

Was  graduated  from  Maryland  Agricultural  College  in  June,  1908, 
with  a  degree  of  B.S.  in  Engineering,  having  finished  a  four-year 
course  in  three  years. 

Returned  to  Maryland  Agricultural  College  as  an  instructor  in 
English  and  coach  of  athletics  in  the  Fall  of  1912.  Soon  afterward  was 
made  Director  of  Athletics. 

Became  Assistant  to  the  President  in  1918.  (Then  Maryland 
State  College,  which  it  became  in  1916.) 

Made  Vice-President  in  1932.  (Became  University  of  Maryland 
in  1920.) 

Made  Acting  President  on  July  1,  1935. 

Elevated  to  the  Presidency  on  February  21, 1936. 

Prime  mover  in  every  big  step  taken  by  the  institution,  including 
the  consolidation  of  the  Baltimore  and  College  Park  schools  to  create 
the  present  University. 

There  were  only  about  120  students  at  College  Park  when  he  came 
back  to  hisAlma  Mater  in  1912  and  only  a  few  buildings  onthecampus. 
Now  there  are  more  than  2,000  students  and  the  property  is  valued  at 
close  to  $5,000,000. 

Due  largely  to  his  influence,  a  hospital  costing  more  than 
$1,500,000  and  other  needed  buildings  also  have  been  added  in  Balti- 
more, where  there  are  over  1,400  students.  Property  assets  there  also 
approximate  $5,000,000. 


[35] 


CASBARIAN,  HUTTON,  CRISP,  BARNES,  PREINKERT 


OFFICERS  OF  ADMIXISTRATIOX 

Harry  C.  Byrd,  B.S.,  President 

H.  J.  Patterson,  D.Sc,  Dean  of  the  College  of  Agrieulture 

A.  N.  Johnson,  S.B.,  D.Eng.,  Dean  of  the  College  of  Engineering 

T.  H.  Taliaferro,  C.E.,  Ph.D.,  Dean  of  the  College  of  Arts  and  Sciences 

W.  S.  Small.  Ph.D.,  Dean  of  the  College  of  Edncation 

M.  Marie  Mount,  M.A.,  Dean  of  the  College  of  Home  Economics 

C.  ().  Ai)pleman,  Ph.D.,  Dean  of  the  Graduate  School 

H.  T.  Casbarian,  Comptroller 

Alma  H.  Preinkert,  M.A.,  Registrar 

H.  L.  Crisp,  M.M.E.,  Superintendent  of  Buildings 

T.  A.  Hutton,  A.B.,  Purchasing  Agent 

Grace  Barnes,  B.S.,  B.L.S.,  Librarian 


[30] 


STUDEXT  LIFE  COMMITTEE 


Geary  Eppley,  Chairman 

Ralph  I.  Williams,  Executive  Secretary 

Dean  Adele  Stamp 

Prof.  Ray  W.  Carpenter 

Prof.  H.  B.  Hoshall 


Dr.  Susan  E.  Harman 


Dr.  Leonard  Harp 
Dr.  C.  Leory  Mackert 
Dr.  Norman  E.  Phillips 


Dr.  Charles  E.  White 


Prof.  S.  S.  Steinberg 


Dr.  Roy  Yates 


Col.  Joseph  B.  Patch 


Mr.  William  Hottel 


Dr.  Harold  F.  Cotterman 


Mrs.  Claribel  Welsh 


Dr.  Charles  B.  Hale 


Miss  Helen  Wilcox 


iN 

1 

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HAYS,  STEINBERG,  WHITE,  HARMAN,  WILCOX,  HALE,  MACKERT, 
EPPLEY,  WILLIAMS,  PATCH,  MOUNT,  STAMP,  FALLS,  HOSHALL 


[37] 


RANDALL,  BROUGHTON.  CROTHERS.  EKHLIX.  MANNY 
SPROVVLS,  DANTZIG,  HOUSE,  TALL\FERRO,  FALLS,  PIERSON,  MAGRIDER 


COLLEGE  OF  ARTS  AXD  SCIENCES 


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


Profe.isors 


L.  B.  Broughton,  Pli.D. 

N.  L.  Drake,  Ph.D. 

Malcolm  Haring,  Ph.D. 

H.  B.  McDonnell,  M.S.,  M.D. 

W.  H.  Brown,  Ph.D. 

T.  H.  Spence,  A.M. 

H.  C.  House,  Ph.D. 

C.  B.  Hale,  Ph.D. 

Harry  Warfel,  Ph.D. 

F.  A.  Magruder,  Ph.D. 

Associate  Professors 

C.  E.  White,  Ph.D. 
R.  C.  Wiley,  Ph.D. 
S.  M.  Wedeberg,  B.A.,  C.P.A. 


H.  B.  Crothers.  Ph.D. 
H.  Gwinner,  M.E. 
Tobias  Dantzig,  Ph.D. 
W.  F.  Falls,  Ph.D. 
C.  G.  Eichlin,  A.B.,  M.S. 
J.  W.  Sprowls,  Ph.D. 
C.  S.  Richardson,  A.M. 
T.  B.  Manny,  Ph.D. 
C.  .J.  Pierson,  M.A. 
R.  V.  Tniitt,  Ph.D. 


Susan  Hannaii,  Ph.D. 
.J.  T.  Si)ann,  B.S. 
C.  F.  Kramer,  M.A. 


(381 


Assistant  Professors 

G.  M.  Machwart,  Ph.D. 
V.  Webster  Johnson,  Ph.M. 

E.  B.  Daniels,  Ph.D.,  M.F.S. 

F.  M.  Lemon,  M.A. 
R.  T.  Fitzhugh,  M.A. 
Reuben  Steinmeyer,  B.A. 
Ransom  Mackie,  Ph.D. 
R.  C.  Yates,  Ph.D. 
Meno  H.  Spann,  Ph.D. 
George  O.  S.  Darby,  Ph.D. 
R.  M.  Watkins,  M.A. 

N.  E.  Phillips.  Ph.D. 


DEAN  THOMAS  H.  TALIAFERRO,  C.E.,  Ph.D. 


Instructors 


G.  S.  Weiland,  Ph.D. 
Jos.  C.  White,  Ph.D. 
C.  D.  Murphy,  M.A. 
Wm.  F.  Vollbrecht,  Ph.D. 
Harold  W.  Thatcher,  Ph.D. 
Arthur  Silver,  M.A. 
C.  L.  Newcombe,  Ph.D. 


G.  F.  Alrich,  M.S.,  E.E. 
C.  B.  Tompkins,  Ph.D. 
Helen  Wilcox,  M.A. 
M.  Schweizer,  M.A. 
Harlan  Randall 
Boone  D.  Tillett,  D.C.L. 
S.  0.  Burhoe,  M.A. 


Assistants 


Leona  Morris 
Frances  Ide 
Geo.  L.  Sixbey 


F.  D.  Cooley,  A.M. 
Olga  C.  Lofgren 


Graduate  Assistant.^ 

Frank  L.  Howard 
E.  G.  Stimpson 
W.  T.  Haskins 
W.  P.  Campbell 
P.  P.  Zapponi 
Lila  Blitch 

Visiting  Professors 
Fritz  Marti 


C.  W.  Williams 
W.  R.  Volckhausen 
Henrietta  Goodner 
Genevieve  Blew 
Alaric  Evangelist 


[39] 


COLLEGE  OF  EXGIXEERIXG 


DEAN  ARTHUR  N.  JOHNSON,  S.B.,  D.Eng. 

Instructors 

J.  B.  Blandford 

Chas.  W.  England,  Ph.D. 

J.  E.  Faher,  Jr.,  M.S. 


Dean 
A.  N.  Johnson,  S.B. 

Professors 

Myron  Greese,  B.S. 
J.  N.  Nesbit,  B.S.,  M.E. 
S.  S.  Steinberg,  B.E.,  C.E. 
L.  J.  Hodgins,  B.S. 

Assistant  Professors 

Russell  B.  Allen,  B.S. 
Wayland  S.  Bailey,  M.S. 
H.  B.  Hoshall,  B.S. 
M.  A.  Pyle,  B.S. 
H.  B.  Cordner,  M.S. 
G.  A.  Greathouse,  Ph.D. 
Paul  Knight,  M.S. 
M.  W.  Parker,  Ph.D. 
Geo.  D.  Quigley,  B.S. 
Ralph  Russell,  M.S. 

Assistants 

G.  J.  Abrams,  M.S. 
A.  B.  Hamilton,  B.S. 
Donald  Hennick 


STEINBERG,  NESBIT,  JOHNSON,  CREESE 
[40] 


COLLEGE  OF  EDUCATION 


Dean 
W.  S.  Small,  Ph.D. 

Professors 

H.  F.  Cotterman,  Ph.D. 

B.  T.  Leland,  B.S.,  M.A. 
E.  F.  Long,  Ph.D. 

C.  L.  Mackert,  M.A. 
Edna  McNaughton,  M.A. 

Assistant  Professor 

H.  H.  BrechbiU,  M.A. 

histructors 

Mary  Barton,  CD.,  E.F.,  E.E. 
Elizabeth  R.  James,  M.A.    . 


DEAN  WILLARD  S.  SMALL,  Ph.D. 

Kathleen  Smith,  A.B.,  Ed.M. 
L.  G.  Worthington,  B.S. 


LONG,  WORTHINGTON 
SMITH,  SMALL,  JAMES,  McNAUGHTON,  COTTERMAN,  BRECHBILL 


[41] 


COLLEGE  OF  AGRICULTURE 


DEAN  HAKRY  J.  PATTERSON,  D.Sc. 

Lecturers 


E.  C.  Auchter,  Ph.D. 
V.  R.  Boswell,  Ph.D. 

F.  E.  Gardner,  Ph.D. 
R.  E.  Snodgrass.  A.B. 
Charles  Thorn,  Ph.D. 


Dean 
H.  J.  Patter-soii,  D.Sc. 

Professors 

C.  O.  Applenian.  Ph.D. 
John  H.  Beaumont,  Ph.D. 
F.  W.  Beslev,  Ph.D. 
O.  C.  Bruce,  M.S. 

B.  E.  Carmichael.  M.S. 

R.  W.  Carpenter,  A.B.,  LL.B. 

E.  N.  Corv,  Ph.D. 

S.  H.  DeVault,  Ph.D. 

W.  B.  Kemp.  Ph.D. 

DeVoe  Meade,  Ph.D. 

J.  E.  Metzger,  B.S.,  M.A. 

H.  J.  Patterson,  D.Sc. 

A.  L.  Schrader,  Ph.D. 

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

C.  E.  Temple,  M.A. 
A.  S.  Thurston,  M.S. 
R.  H.  Waite,  B.S. 

Associate  Professors 

Ronald  Bamford,  Ph.D. 
L.  A.  Black,  Ph.D. 
Geary  Eppley,  M.S. 
L.  W.  Ingham,  M.S. 
R.  P.  Thomas,  Ph.D. 
S.  W.  Wentworth,  B.S. 


KEMP,  HEAIIMON  r.  TAI.lAI'KltUO 
COTTERMAN,  CORY,  PATTERSON.  Al'lM.KMAN,  METZER 


[iil 


COLLEGE  OF  HOME  ECONOMICS 


Dean 
Marie  Mount,  M.A. 

Claribel  Welsh,  M.A. 
Edna  McNaughton,  M.A. 
Eleanor  Murphy,  M.A. 
Freda  McFarland,  M.A. 
Franc  Westney,  M.A. 
Amy  J.  England 


DEAN  M.  MARIE  MOUNT,  M.A. 


WELSH,  MlUrHV,  WESTNEY,  MOUNT,  McFARLANU,  McNAUliHTON 

(431 


GRADUATE  !$€HOOL  COUNCIL 


Dear 


DEAN  C.  O.  APPLEMAN,  Ph.D. 


C.  O.  Appleman,  Ph.D. 

A.  N.  Johnson,  D.Eng. 

M.  Marie  Mount,  M.A. 

H.  J.  Patterson,  D.Sc. 

W.  S.  Small,  Ph.D. 

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


Professors 


E.  C.  Auchter,  Ph.D. 
J.  H.  Beaumont,  Ph.D. 
L.  B.  Broughton,  Ph.D. 
E.  N.  Cory,  Ph.D. 
H.  F.  Cotterman,  Ph.D. 
H.  C.  House,  Ph.D. 
DeVoe  Meade,  Ph.D. 
W.  F.  Falls,  Ph.D. 
G.  L.  Jenkins,  Ph.D. 
Edward  Uhlenhuth,  Ph.D. 


COrrERMAN.  SMAI.I,.  HKAIMONT,  TA[,IAI' EKIiO,  I  III.KMIUTH 
CORY,  JOHNSON,  MOIjN T,  APPI.EMAN,  PATTERSON.  I'Al.US,  HOUSE 


[44] 


EXECUTIVE  COUNCIL 


STUDEXT  GOVERNMENT 
ASSOCIATION 

THE  Student  Government  Association  is  the  student 
governing  body  of  the  University.  Its  purpose  is 
the  enactment  and  administration  of  such  laws  and  reg- 
ulations as  it  shall  deem  necessary  and  proper  for  the 
welfare  of  the  student  body  and  for  the  promotion  of  co- 
operation and  harmony  between  students  and  adminis- 
tration. 

The  three  component  parts  of  the  Association  are 
the  Women's  League  and  the  Men's  League,  each  to 
consider  its  respective  problems,  and  the  Executive 
Council  which  has  final  jurisdiction  as  far  as  the  govern- 
ment of  students  is  concerned. 

This  is  the  second  year  of  the  existence  of  the  Wo- 
men's League  and  INIen's  League.  The  Women's  League 
is  only  a  continuance,  under  a  new  name,  of  the  old  Wo- 
men's Student  Government  Association,  whereas  the 
Men's  League  is  a  comparatively  new  organization 
which  has  justified  its  creation  by  functioning  this  year 
in  its  true  capacity — handling  completely  the  affairs  of 
all  men  students. 

LOUIS  A.  ENNIS,  Pmidcnt 
ROBERT  BEALL.  Vice-President 
JUNE  BARNSLEY,  Secrclary-Treasurer 


[45] 


MEX'S    LEACr  E 

'  i^M^^^^^MMI  Albert  W.  Webb President 

•a?-;  '^  ^  Jh         Henry  G.  Knofhe Vice-Prexident 

J^ ^^Bs^^""^!         Thomas  E.  Russell Secretary 

ft  ^^H         Parker  Lindsay Silvester  Hall 

J- 
H^iSiMt  ^^M         George  B.  Watson Silvester  Hcdl 

Richard  E.  Zimmerman Calvert  Hall 

^■^  |f  Michael  A.  Lombardo Calvert  Hall 

W.  Brooks  Bradley Interfrateniify  Council 

I    A       '"*''  ^^^^B        Paul  Yeager Interfraternity  Council 

IIm^  - ■•— 

I^^^^HIHl        \      \ Sidney  P.  McFerrin Senior  Representative 

John  E.  Stonebraker Junior  Representative 

«    ^  •>  -  -        B  J         Frank  H.  Oonin Sophomore  Representative 

^•s"         Mid^Et  ^^R->i>'     ^H         William  F.  Howard Freshman  Representative 

Vi       ^^B    J^B         Selbv  M.  Frank Vice-Pres.,  Senior  Class 

M  Vl  

'*' "       ^^   ■     ^^^^^^^^         Thomas  J.  Birmingham..  [  (Ve-Prc.v. ,./(//»(»/•  r7(;s.v 
■  ''  ^^^K^m.       ^^^^^^m         Robert  L.  Walton.  .  .  Vice-Pres.,  Sophomore  Class 

•  IKy      '^rr»s>,  J         Henry  Wyatt Vicc-Prcs..  Freshman  Class 

Richaril  J.  O'Neil Reprcscututivc  at  Large 

IJicliani  Johnson Re  presented  ire  at  Large 

Schuyler  G.  Kohn Representative  at  Large 

[id] 


WOMEN'S   LEAGUE 

President Routh  Hickey 

Vice-President Anna  Marie  Quirk 

Secretary-Treasurer Mary  B.  Crisp  K*"*        '^■^■^        ^ililH^' 

Recorder  of  Points Mildred  Hearn  ^^W  jmtHKkW I!    ■:i:i:l'  I       WM  T  , 

SeJiior  Representative Anne  Padgett  ^^^'^"'^  ■ ;        ^^^jiL"  il 

Junior  Representative Jean  Barnsley  ^By^  flUI'         -^     W^Ml^ 

Sophomore  Representative Eleanor  Quirk  |P  ,.*' "■"'*  '  ^^■^Rii     / /// 

Freshman  Representative Eleanor  Sherman  ^I^BRHiiP^'^^n^ 

Alpha  Omicron  Pi Marjorie  Higgins  ^^f**     -  t          "    '~     ,M       ' 

Kappa  Kappa  Gamma Jean  Paterson  ^^■4       ''         wKbtSf'' 

Kappa  Delta Jean  Cowie  BW ^.  :^^^t^ R^^SfSB  - , .-^v , ■ 

Alpha  Xi  Delta Helen  Stolzenbach  lUjf         ^^ 

Delta  Delta  Delta Kathryn  Pultz 

Margaret  Brent  Hall.  .Wrginvd  Thomas,  President 

Virginia  Merritt 

RuthReviUe  Bti '^S^    ^■H'^  ^ 

New  Girls'  Dorm Maude  Cutting,  President  K 

Alice  Ayers        ^^B  i^^^mm 

Mary  Fisher  ii^^^«l     'J^^^^k     ^ 

Representatives  at  Large Dorothy  Trout  ^s        j_  ^^     "       _^    f    -I 

Dorothy  Hohbs  ..^      ^^^B  ,.4^      \        i^^ 

Eloise  Dahn 

Constance  Nash  ^V<3|  *^ 

Fannye  Snyder  ^B^^'     ~    IB5*^ 

Mary  Lynn  Mclntire  Ikftw            .    ^  ^^^/^^^^^§^' 

■      [471 


ADVISORY    BOARD 


Mary 


IVERSITY  of  Maryland  student  pnl)lications  are  extremely  fortunate  in 
aving  fine  faculty  cooperation  antl  expert  supervision.  In  fact  the  system  at 
land  has  gained  wide  recognition  and  frequent  inquiries  come  to  the  Uni- 
versity in  regard  to  it. 

William  H.  (Bill)  Hottel,  Washington  newspaper- 
man of  many  y^ears'  experience,  who  is  director  of  pub- 
h'c  relations  at  the  University,  is  faculty  adviser  of  all 
publications  and  very  active  in  their  affairs;  Geary 
(Swede)  Eppley,  associate  prcjfessor  of  agronomy, 
coach  of  the  track  teams,  chairman  of  the  Student  Life 
Committee,  member  of  the  Athletic  Board,  and  all- 
round  busy  man  in  campus  activities,  keeps  an  eagle 
eye  on  the  various  excheciuers,  including  publications 
and  other  organizations,  while  Miss  Edith  Frothingham, 
amanuensis  and  general  efficiency  expert,  does  the  book- 
keeping and  auditing,  and  keeps  everyone  happy  and 
working  smoothly. 

Bill  Hottel  started  his  career  with  the  Washington 
Post  but  has  been  with  the  Washington  Star  for  nearly 
eighteen  years.  He  has  been  associated  with  the  Uni- 
versity for  fourteen  years  and  in  that  time  has  become  a 
very  integral  part  of  student  publications. 

Professor  Eppley  is  a  graduate  of  the  Maryland 
State  College  and,  while  an  undergraduate,  distinguished, 
himself  in  athletics,  military  and  publications.  He  was 
awarded  the  H.  C.  Byrd  citizenship  medal  upon  grad- 
uation in  19'-20  as  a  B.vS.  in  Agriculture.  Swede's  college 
days  were  broken  up  by  service  in  the  world  war,  in 
which  he  gained  a  lieutenancy.  He  is  now  a  major  in 
the  cavalry  reserves, 
in  1920. 


He  got  his  M.S.  From  Maryland 


I  i((iihin(;ham 

KI'IM.KY 
llliriKI. 


Miss  Frothingham,  whose  home  is  in  Laurel,  has 
been  with  the  University  for  nearly  seventeen  years, 
having  gained  some  excellent  banking  experience  before 
becoming  such  a  valued  member  of  the  staff  at  College 
Park. 

All  three  work  harmoniously  with  the  studenl 
leaders  and  the  University.  The  faculty  and  student 
bodv  are  highlv  grateful  for  their  eH'orls. 


[48] 


!^ENIOR  CLASS  HISTORY 


^0f!^-    |^^||f~~[^^B^t?.  TT'S  liard  to  realize  that  it's  our  turn 

SSH^  ^i^HB  ^HP^^^^'^  to  (Ion  caps  and  gowns  and  march 

up  the  aisle  to  receive  that  little  piece 
of  paper  that  represents  the  work  of 
four  years. 

It's  even  harder  to  realize  that  it 
was  four  years  ago  that  we  first  be- 
came a  part  of  this  University.  ^Ye 
can  recall  so  easily  our  first  class  meet- 
ing when  we  elected  (lardner  Brooks 
as  head  of  our  class,  the  little  yellow 
hats  and  name  plates  we  wore,  the 
razzing  we  got  for  our  greenness,  the 
cold  bath  the  Sophs  gave  us  in  Paint 
Branch,  and  the  fun  we  had  with  our 
Freshman  Frolic  and  Prom,  so  ably 
conducted  by  Jerry  Sachs. 

if,:  .^MHL"^       ^^  '^^M  The  second  year  was  fun,  too.    Un- 

■^■HMK-     ^j^H^pH^^-i^ir  '     .M^M       (ler  Brooks,  Funis,  Quirk,  and  Hart, 
^^^H^^      ^^BMf^^\  ^^M       ^^^  sailed  through  the  year.     It  was 

^^^m  / ,        ^^BkSl0MSt  .^^^^^       ^^^^^  ^^  ""  longer  be  the  underdogs. 

and  we  got  great  satisfaction  out  of 
venting  our  superiority  on  the  Fresh- 
men. Said  Freshmen  were  decidedly 
unruly  and  openly  balked  at  Sopho- 
more razzing.  Already  we  had  quite  a 
few  people  participating  in  teams,  publications,  dramatics,  and  other  clubs. 

Our  Junior  year  was  quite  triumphant  under  Funis,  McFerrin,  Quirk,  and  Brill. 
At  last  we  came  into  our  own  and  were  duly  recognized  as  important  people.  Our 
Prom  was  recognized  as  a  huge  success,  with  Red  Nicholls  officiating  musically. 
Further  asserting  our  independence,  we  took  matters  into  our  own  hands,  under 
Editor  Duke  Lohr,  and  rechristened  the  Reveille  as  the  Terrapin. 

Even  while  we  were  still  contemplating  our  Junior  achievements,  we  suddenly 
awoke  to  the  fact  that  we  were  Seniors!  We  proudly  surveyed  our  contributions  to 
Maryland's  Hall  of  Fame — Minion  and  ^Yillis,  All-American  mention;  Haskin.  ama- 
teur in  name  only  so  far  as  dramatics  is  concerned;  Webb,  boxer  par  excellence; 
June  Barnsley  and  Betty  Quirk,  two  grand  girls  who  almost  managed  a  corner  on 
Women's  offices;  Routh  Hickey,  beloved  little  First  Lady  of  the  Maryland  Campus; 
and  Lou  Funis,  football  player,  3.5  student  and  Student  (Government  Head.  As 
Seniors  we  saw  go  up  a  new  (iirls'  Dorm,  Arts  and  Science  Building  and  a  new  face 
for  the  Dairy  Building,  to  say  nothing  of  the  long-sought  improvements  to  the  park- 
ing lots.  We  saw  Harry  C.  Byrd  receive  the  highest  honor  this  rniversity  can  grant 
— the  appointment  to  the  Presidency.  We're  proud,  but  we  survey  all  this  with  a 
lump  on  our  throats  as  we  realize  it's  almost  over.  It's  been  a  glorious  four  years 
and  we  shall  always  look  back  on  them  with  pride. 


I.HEKBERT  BRILL 

SKLBV  M.  FRANK 

Prrsideni 

V  ice-Prcsideni 

BKTTY  QUIRK 

SAMUEL  LEISHEAR 

Sf'crdarij 

Treasurer 

rsi 


Learning  Physics  is  a  serious  task 


COLLEGE  OF  ARTS  A^D  SCIENCES 


THE  Dean  and  faculty  of  the  College  of  Arts  and  Sciences  take  this  op- 
portunity to  l)i(l  you.  who  will  soon  leave  us  as  graduates,  Godspeed  in 
your  journey  through  life.  Our  feelings  at  the  thought  of  parting  are  mixed, 
for  there  is  sorrow  when  we  consider  that  the  close  relationship  which  has  ex- 
isted throughout  four  years  is  about  to  terminate,  and  joy  when  we  renieni- 
her  that  there  are  going  forth  from  the  halls  of  the  University  a  hand  of 
young  men  and  women  well  equipped,  un<ler  our  direction,  for  the  "battle  of 
life." 

Our  best  wishes  for  uiilarnisiiod  success,  tiierefore  true  happiness,  will 
follow  you  thr(»ugh  life. 


[5i] 


COLLEGE       OF       ARTS       AND       SCIENCES 


B.A. 


Dorothy  V.  Allen 

WASHINGTON,  D.C. 


AAA 


Samuel  E.  Bogley 

FRIENDSHIP  HEIGHTS,  MD. 

B.s.  ex 

Fresliman  Commission,  1;  Latch  Key,  3; 
Vice-President  Theta  Chi;  Riding  Club; 
Manager  Freshman  Lacrosse;  M.C.A. 
Cabinet,  "2,  3. 


B.A. 


^.  lunall  Ambrnap 

BALTIMORE,  MD. 


0X 


Freshman  Commission,  1;  Editor  of  "M" 
Book,  2;  Tennis,  1;  M.C.A.  Cabinet,  2; 
Student  Congress,  2;  Student  Alumni 
Dance  Committee,  2;  Junior  Manager 
Tennis,  3 ;  Latch  Key  Society,  Vice-Presi- 
dent, 3;  Manager  Tennis,  4. 


B.A 


William  B.  Bowie 
LARGO,  MD. 


ex 


Rossbourg  Club;  Latch  Key  Society;  Vig- 
ilance Committee;  Manager  Basketball. 


B.S. 


David  Henry  Baldwin 

WASHINGTON,  D.C. 


AXS 


B.A. 


W.  Brooks  Bradley 
BALTIMORE,  MD. 


KA 


Interfraternit.v  Council,  4;  Lieutenant- 
Colonel,  i;  Student  Government,  1;  Var- 
sity Football,  i,  3,  4;  Varsity  Lacrosse,  3; 
Freshman  Football,  1;  Freshman  La- 
crosse, I;  Men's  League. 


B.A. 


June  Barnsley 

ROCKVILLE,  MD. 


KKr 


Student  Congress,  2;  Executive  Council, 
3;  Secretary-Treasurer  S.G.A.,  4;  Man- 
ager Girls'  Debate,  3;  W.A.A.  Secretary,  2, 
President,  4;  Cheerleader,  2.  3,  4-  Wo- 
men's Editor  "M"  Book,  2;  Hockev,  1,  2, 
3,  4;  Basketball.  1,  2,  3,  4;  Baseball,  I,  2, 
3,  4;  Volley  Ball,  1,  2,  3,  4;  Numerals,  1; 
"M",  2;  Blazer,  3. 


J.  Herbert  Brill 

BALTIMORE,  MD. 


B.A 


<i>A0,  OAK 


President  Senior  Class;  Treasurer  Junior 
Class;  R.O.T.C.  Captain;  Lacrosse,  1,  2, 
3,  4. 


Edmund  G.  Beacham 

BALTIMORE,  MD. 

B.S. 

Tennis;  Intramural  Soccer. 


Lester  Brooks 

BROOKLYN.  N.Y. 

B.S. 

Swimming  Club;   Democratic  Club;  In- 
tramural Soccer;  Intramural  Wrestling. 


[53] 


COLLEGE       OF       ARTS       AND       SCIENCES 


B.S. 


Charles  L.  Cogswell 
WASHINGTON,  D.C. 


AS* 


B.A. 


William  O.  Buckingham  ^„  ,     ,,     ,    ^ 

Kreshnian    Chemistry    Club;    Maryland 
WASHINGTUN,  D.C.  Democratic    Club;    International    Rela- 

<1>SK   riAE       tions  Club;  Varsity  Rifle  Team,  -3;  Epis- 
copal Club. 
Old  Line,  2,  3,  4;  Glee  Club,  3,  4;  Secre- 
tary Phi  Sigma  Kappa,  3,  4;  Freshman 
Frolic;  International  Relations  Club,  4, 
Treasurer,  4;  Track,  1. 


Corbin  C.  Cogswell,  Jr. 

PIKESVILLE,  MD. 


B.A. 


KA 


Reginald  Burroughs 

UPPER  MARLBORO,  MD. 

B.A. 

Glee  Club,  3,  4;  Opera.  1,  2;  Track  Squad, 
2. 


Scabbard  and  Blade;  President  Kappa 
Alpha,  4;  R.O.T.C.  Lieutenant,  4;  Ross- 
bourg  Club,  2,  3,  4;  Lacrosse. 


B.A. 


Charles  L.  Callahan 

BALTIMORE,  MD. 


Dorothy  M.  Cutler 

SILVER  SPRING,  MD. 

B.S. 

Freshman  Commission;  Diamoiiilback;  1, 
2;  .\uthorship  Club,  1,  2;  Spanish  Club,  4. 


KA 


Sergeant-at-Arms  Senior  Class;  Advanced 
R.O.T.C,  .3,  4;  Freshman  Football;  Var- 
sity Foottjall,  2,  3,  4. 


George  Bernard  Dantzig 

HYATTSVILLE,  MD. 
B.A. 
President  of  Mathematics  Club. 


Edward  F.  Cave 

WASHINtiTON,  DC. 


B.A. 


KA 


B.S. 


Mildred  Davidson 

(  II F.VY  CHASE,  MD. 


KA 


Mildred  F.  Chapin 

CHEVY  CHASE.  Ml). 


B.A. 


KKP 


iMiolJiglit   Chil>;    Women's   .\tlilrtic   As- 
sociation. 


[54] 


COLLEGE       OF       ARTS       AND       SCIENCES 


Dorothy  C.  Donovan 

WASHINGTON,  D.C. 

B.A. 

I^niversity  Orchestra,  1,  2,  3,  4;  Newman 
Club,  2,  3,  i;  Y  Cabinet,  2,  3;  Interna- 
tional Relations  Club,  4;  W.A.A.,  1. 


Ralph  I.  Evans 

WASHINGTON,  D.C. 

B.A. 


B.A. 


Ernest  R.  Eaton,  Jr. 

WASHINGTON',  D.C. 


KA 


R.O.T.C.  Captain;  Scabbard  and  Blade; 
Latch  Key  Society,  3;  Manager  Freshman 
Lacrosse,  i;  "M"  Club,  4. 


John  H.  Farson 

SHOWELL,  MD. 
B.A. 

M.C.A.,  2;  Secretary  Theta  Chi, 
Manager  Varsity  Rifle  Team,  4; 
national  Relations  Club,  4. 


ex 

3,  4; 

Inter- 


Wayne  P.  Ellis 

WASHINGTON,  D.C. 
B.S.  2*S,  .\XS 


Ethel  A.  Fisher 

UPPER  MARLBORO,  MD. 

B.A. 


Louis  A.  Ennis 

LONG  BRANCH,  N.J. 


B.A. 


UN,  OAK 


Vice-President  Sophomore  Class;  Presi- 
dent Junior  Class;  President  Student 
Government  ."Vssociation;  R.O.T.C.  Col- 
onel, 4;  Football,  1,  2,  3,  4;  Lacrosse,  1,  2, 
3,  4;  Scabbard  and  Blade. 


Sylvan  E.  Forman 

BALTIMORE,  MD. 
B.S. 


Intranmral  Touch  Football; 
Playground  Ball. 


Intramural 


B.A. 


Theodore  H.  Erbe 

BALTIMORE,  MD. 

<I>A0,  ATQ,  OAK 


Footlight  Clul),  1,  2,  3,  4;  Scabbard  and 
Blade,  3,  4;  Diamondhack,  1,  2;  Terrapin, 
1,  2;  Old  Line,  1,  2,  3;  Business  Manager 
Old  Line,  4;  Calvert  Debate  Club,  2;  Pres- 
ident Calvert  Debate  Club,  3,  4;  Ad- 
vanced R.O.T.C.  Lieutenant,  4;  Der 
Deutsche  Verein,  1,  2;  Interfratemity 
Council,  3;  Junior  Prom  Committee,  3. 


Charles  Raymond  Fowler 

WASHINGTON.  D.C. 

B.A. 

Calvert  Debate  Club,  2;  Lutheran  Clul), 
3. 


[55] 


COLLEGE       OF       ARTS       AND       SCIENCES 


B.A. 


Isidor  Handler 
NEW  YORK,  N.Y. 


r.vM 


Harold  B.  Friedman 

SILVER  SPRING,  MD. 
B.A. 

French  Club;  Swimming  Club. 


B.A. 


George  C.  Hart 
BALTIMORE,  MD. 


KA 


B.S. 


Nathan  Gammon,  Jr. 
WASHINGTON,  D.C. 


Treasurer  Sophomore  Class,  2;  R.O.T.C. 
Captain. 


AXS 


Rossbourg  Club,  1,  2;  Alpha  Chi  Sigma 
Recorder,  4;  Freshman  Chemistry  Club, 
1. 


B.A. 


James  F.  Hart,  Jr. 

BALTIMORE,  MD. 


KA 


George  David  Garber 

FREDERICK,  MD. 

I$.A.  <I>SK,  HAE 

Business  Manager  Terrapin,  3;  Freshman 
Manager  Tennis,  4;  Secretary-Treasurer 
Latch  Key;  Terrapin,  i,  3,  4. 


Lacrosse,  1,  2,  3,  4;  Vice-President  Scab- 
bard and  Blade;  Interfraternity  Council, 
2,  3,  4;  Men's  League,  4. 


Frederic  J.  Haskin,  Jr. 

CHEVY  CHASE,  MD. 

B.A.  <1>A0,  AI'Q 

Footlight   Club;   DIamondhack  Editorial 
Staff;  .\uthorship  Club. 


Ray  H.  Greenfield 

TAKOMA  PARK,  MD. 

B.A. 


Marjorie  R.  Grinstead 

WASHINGTON,  D.C. 

HA.  AAA,  Mortar  Board 

I'rcsid.'iit  Delta  Delta  Delta;  Secretary 
I'aii-Ilclleiiic  ( 'ouniil,  4;  French  Chib.  4; 
(  lionis,  1,  2,  .'i,  4;  Orchestra,  1;  Freshman 
Conirnission;  V.W.C..\.  Cabinet,  2,  3; 
\V..\..\.,  1,  2,  .3,  4;  Women's  League,  3; 
May  Day,  1,2,  3. 


B.A. 


Caleb  R.  Hathaway 

CHEW  CHASE,  MD. 


ex 


.Xutliorsliip  Club,  2,  3;  President  .\uthor- 
.sliip  dull,  4;  Glee  Club,  3,  4;  Secretary, 
4. 


[56] 


COLLEGE       OF       ARTS       AND       SCIENCES 


J.  Leon  Helfgott 

MITCHELLVILLE,  MD. 


B.A. 
Lacrosse,  1,  3. 


TE* 


B.A. 


R.O.T.C. 

Lacrosse. 


Melvin  C.  Lankford 
BALTIMORE,  MD. 

*A0,  OAK 
Captain;     Manager    Varsity 


Herbert  S.  Hyatt 

DAMASCUS,  MD. 
B.A. 


Harvey  T.  Leet 

FRIENDSHIP  HEIGHTS.  MD. 

B.A.  ex 

Freshman  Commission. 


Marguerite  E.  Jones 

OWINGS  MILLS,  MD. 


Samuel  A.  Leishear 


WASHINGTON, 


B.A. 


AAA 


B.S. 


D.C. 
A>rQ,  HAE 


Episcopal  Club,  1,  i,  3;  Vice-President 
Episcopal  Club,  i;  W.A.A.,  i,  3,  4;  Rid- 
ing Club,  4;  Hockey,  2. 


Circulation  Manager  Old  Line,  2,  3,  4; 
Footlight  Club,  2,  3,  4;  Student  Band,  1. 
2,  3,  4,  Business  Manager,  4;  Captain 
R.O.T.C.  Band,  4;  President  Freshman 
Commission,  1 ;  Junior  Prom  Committee, 
3;Rossbourg  Club,  1,  2,  3,  4;  University 
of  Maryland  Collegians,  2,  3;  Treasurer 
Senior  Class,  4. 


Katherine  E.  Kesler 

SILVER  SPRING,  MD. 
B.A. 


Robert  G.  Litschert 

UNIVERSITY  PARK,  MD. 

B.A.  <I)A0,  HAE,  ATD 

Old  Line,  1,  2;  Feature  Editor  Old  Line,  3, 
Managing  Editor,  4:  Diamondback,  1,  2. 
4;  F'ootlight  Club,  2,  3,  4;  Vigilance  Com- 
mittee, 2;  Junior  Prom  Committee. 


Theodorie  C.  Langley 

WASHINGTON,  D.C. 
B.A. 


Solomon  Love 

WASHINGTON,  D.C. 

B.S. 


[57] 


L-Cl". 


COLLEGE       OF       ARTS       AND       SCIENCES 


Joseph  H.  McCarthy 
WASHINGTON,  D.C. 


Harry  J.  Lynn 

WASHINGTON,  D.C. 

B.A. 

Student  Band;  R.O.T.C.   First  Lieuten- 
ant; R.O.T.C.  Hand. 


B.A. 

Interfraternit.N 
Council. 


2<I>S 

Cuuneil;        Executive 


H.  Louise  Maddox 

HVATTSVILLE,  MD. 

B.S. 

Hockey;  Volley  Ball. 


Sidney  P.  McFerrin 

BALTIMORE,  MD. 

B.A.  <I>A0,  OAK 

President  Phi  Delta  Tlicta;  R.O.T.C; 
Scabbard  and  Blade;  M.C..\.  President, 
3;    Vice-President   .Junior   Class;    Men's 

Representative  Senior  Class;  Manager 
Boxing,  4;  Freshman  Baseball. 


Mary  Lynn  Mclntire 

OAKLAND,  MD. 

B.A.                                          AAA.  AAA 

Numerals,  1. 

i 

Louise  C.  Marche 

HVATTSVILLE,  MD. 

B.S. 

Samuel  W.  Meloy 

WASHINGTON.  D.C. 
B.A.                                                     0X 

Lutheran  Club;  Rossbourg  Club;  M.C..V.; 
R.O.T.C;  Tennis,  1,  4.  3,  4;  Intramural 

Kenneth  R.  Mason 

Sports. 

NEWARK,  N.J. 
U.A. 

■1)A0 

Scabliard  and  Hlade. 

Dorothy  H.  Miles 

w\siiin(;ton,  d.c 
B.A.  .\on 

Opera   Cluli;    Ko..lli«lil    Cub;    Daydo.l- 
gersClub. 


Richard  H.  Maurer 

WASHINGTON,  D.C. 
M..\. 


[58 


COLLEGE       OF       ARTS       AND       SCIENCES 


David  Miller 

WASHINGTON',  DC. 
B.A. 


Miriam  L.  Moreland 

WASHINGTON,  D.C. 
B.A. 

Rifle;  Diamondhack;  Daydodgers  Club 


Jean  V.  Miller 

BELTSVILLE,  MD. 
B.A.  Aon 

International  Relations  Club;  Daydod- 
gers Club;  Diamoiidhack;  Volley  Ball,  1; 
Basketball,  1. 


B.S. 

R.O.T.C. 

Club. 


J.  Hope  Morgan 

WELCOME,  MD. 


First     Lieutenant;     Newman 


Rebecca  Charlotte  Miller 

BELTSVILLE,  MD. 


B.A. 


.\on 


Opera  Club,  1;  Old  Line,  1;  Daydodgers 
Club,  Vice-President,  4;  French  Club; 
Hockey,  1. 


G.  Edward  Murray 

WASHINGTON.  DC. 


BS. 


AXS 


Edward  M.  Minion 

NEWARK,  X.J. 
B.A.  KA 

"M"  Club,  Treasurer;  Football;  Lacrosse. 


Wilford  Eltinge  Nevius 

COLLEGE  PARK,  MD. 

B.A. 


B.A. 


Paul  F.  Mobus 
ELLERSLIE,  MD. 


SN 


Latch  Key;  Freshman  Basketball  Man- 
ager; Secretary  Sigma  Nu,  4;  Baseball, 
1,  2,  a. 


Nancy  L.  Norment 

HAGERSTOWN,  MD. 

B.A.  KKr,  AAA,  Mortar  Board 

May  Day,  1;  Terrapin,  Assistant  Wo- 
man's Editor,  3;  Riding  Club,  1,  2,  Secre- 
tary-Treasurer, 2;  Pan-Hellenic  Council, 
3,  4;  President,  4;  Standards  Committee, 
3,  4;  Historian  Senior  Class;  Mortar 
Board,  4,  Secretary,  4;  Executive  Coun- 
cil, 4;  President  Kappa  Kappa  Gamma,  4. 


[59] 


COLLEGE       OF       ARTS       AND       SCIENCES 


Morris  H.  Reich 

ASTORIA,  L.I.,  N.Y. 
B.S. 
Swimming  Club. 


Charles  D.  Oland 

OLNEY,  MD. 
B.A. 


Robert  T.  Reid 

BALTIMORE,  MD. 
B.A. 


MA. 


E.  Anne  Padgett 

BALTIMORE,  MD. 


KKr 


Riding  Club,  2;  Swimming  Club,  4;  Wo- 
men's League,  3;  Senior  Woman's  Rep- 
resentative. 


B.A. 


Marion  E.  Parker 

WASHINGTON,  D.C. 


KKr 


Diamondback,  1,  2,  3;  Managing  Editor 
Diamnndhack,  3;  Secretar.v  International 
Relations  Club,  4;  Secretary  Freshman 
Class,  1. 


Christian  F.  Richter,  Jr. 
OVERLEA,  MD. 


B.A. 


AXA 


B.A. 


Anna  Marie  Quirk 

WASHINGTON,  D.C. 


AOn 


Riding  Club,  2;  May  Day,  L  2.  3;  I'ni- 
versity  Orehestra,  1;  Demoeratic  Club, 
2.  3.  4;  Secretary  Board  of  Governors.  4; 
House  President,  3;  Women's  League,  3, 
4,  Vice-President,  4;  Newman  Club.  2; 
Y.W.C.A.,  2,  3,  4:  President  Alpha  Onii- 
cron  Pi;  Bacteriological  Society;  I'an- 
Hellenic  Council. 


James  L.  Rintoul,  Jr. 

BALTIMORE,  MD. 
B.A. 

Tennis,  1,2,3,  4. 


0X 


Betty  Quirk 

WASIIIN(iTON,  D.C. 


B.A. 


Aon 


Secri-liiry  of  Class,  2,  3,  4;  T(rr<ifiin.  1.  2. 
:i.  4.  Women's  Editor.  3;  Dcinoinitie 
CInl).  3.  4.  Sccretar\'.  4;  Newman  ("luli. 
\'i<i-l'resiilinl.  2;  I'aii-Ilcllcnii'  Council, 
:!;  Miiv  l)av,  2;  Executive  Council,  4: 
Riding  Club'.  1,2. 


Thomas  E.  Robertson 

\VASHIN(iTON.  D.C. 

HA.  1'<I'1',  OAK,  IIAE 

Dmmtmdhacky  1,  2,  3,  4,  .\dvisory  Man- 
ager. 3.  Business  Manager,  4;  Vice-Presi- 
ilcnl  Oinicrou  Di'lta  Kappa.  4;  Sec  re  I  ary- 
Trcasurcr  I'i  Delia  Epsilon.  4;  Lutheran 
<  lul).  4;  Cliairinaii  Publications  Banquet, 
.3;  Intcruatioiial  ltclatioi;s  Club,  4;  Baser 
ball,  1.2;  Hask.lball.  1. 


I  f.n  I 


COLLEGE       OF       ARTS       AND       SCIENCES 


B.S. 


Carl  Rothschild 

COLLEGE  PARK,  MD. 


TE* 


Debate  Club,  2,  3,  4;  Old  Line,  4;  Tennis. 
1. 


Thomas  F.  Scheele 

WASHINGTON,  D.C. 
B.S. 
Basketball,  1,  3;  Lacrosse,  1. 


Mortimer  Ruben 

BROOKLYN,  X.Y. 
B.S. 

M.C.A.  Representative,  3; 


<i>A 


George  H.  Schaffer,  Jr. 

BALTIMORE,  MD. 
B.A.  KA 

Student  Band,  1,2;  Lacrosse,  1,  2,  3,  4. 


Jerome  G.  Sacks 

BALTIMORE,  MD. 


B.S. 


TE<I>,  A»rQ,  OAK 


Footlight  Club,  2,  3,  4,  Treasurer,  4; 
M.C..\.,  1,  2,  3,  4,  President,  4:  President 
-Alpha  Psi  Omega,  4;  Chairman  Maryland 
Mixer,  2,  3;  Chairman  Sophomore  Prom; 
Junior  Prom  Committee;  President  Tau 
Epsilon  Phi.  4;  Opera  Club;  Old  Line,  4; 
Rossbourg  Club,  3,  4. 


William  Randolf  Schneider 

ELLICOTT  CITY,  MD. 


B.A. 

Scabbard  and  Blade. 


2<I)i; 


Hugh  H.  Saum 

LANHAM,  MD. 


B.A. 


0X 


Rifle  Team.  1,  2,  3,  4;  Rossbourg  Club,  1 
2,  3,  4;  Interfraternity  Council,  3,  4 
Latch  Key  Society,  3,  4,  President,  3 
Manager  Freshman  Track  Team,  4 
R.O.T.C,  First  Lieutenant,  4;  Scabbard 
and  Blade,  3,  4. 


B.A. 


David  S.  Scrivener 

WASHINGTON,  D.C. 


<I>A0 


Alton  L.  Sanford 
CHEVY  CHASE,  MD. 


B.A. 


ATQ 


R.O.T.C.  Captain;  Business  Manager 
Glee  Club;  Rifle,  1,  2,  3,  4;  Track,  1,  2,  3, 
4. 


Frederick  W.  Sieling,  Jr. 

ANNAPOLIS  JUNCTION,  MD. 

B.S.  AXA 

Episcopal  Club;  Rossbourg  Club;  Fresh- 
man Rifle. 


SJ^-■ 


[61] 


COLLEGE       OF       ARTS       AND       SCIENCES 


B.S. 


Harman  L.  Spencer 

WASHINGTON,  D.C. 


AXS 


K.O.T.C.  Captain;  Social  Chairman 
Alpha  Chi  Sigma;  Rossbourg  Cluh,  1,  i, 
3,4. 


Ruth  Simon 

WASHINGTON,  D.C. 

B.A. 


William  A.  Stanton 

HYATTSVILLE,  MD. 
B.S. 

Milton  Small 

HEMPSTEAD,  N.Y. 

B.S. 

International    Relations    Club;    German 
Cluh;  M.C.A.;  Swimming  Club;  Journal 
Clul>. 

Elwood  V.  Stark 

ABERDEEN,  MD. 

J.  Brady  Smith 
BALTIMORE,  MD. 

B.A. 

Latch  Key,  3;  Rossbourg  Club,  4. 

B.S. 

Scabbard    and    Blade;   R.O.T.C.   Lieu- 
tenant; Freshman  Lacrosse;  Football,  2; 
Intramural     Wrestling,     2;     Intramural 
Track,  2,  3. 

Thomas  R.  Sweeney 

Leonard  Smith 

WASHINGTON,  D.C. 
B  S.                                         OAK,  AXS 

W.VSHINGTON,  U.C. 
B.A. 

Rossbourg  Club. 

I'lrsliiiig    Rifles:    Scabbard    and    Blade; 
Mathematics  ('hil>,  1;  Rossbourg  Club,  1, 
2.   3,   +;  Track,    1;  President   Alpha   Chi 
Sigma,  4. 

AXS 


0X 


AXA 


Walter  Soltanoff 
MONTCLAIR,  N.J. 


Lester  W.  Tucker 
ABINGDON,  MD. 

B.A. 

Baseball,  1,2. 


U.S. 


<1>K<I> 


Zoology  Jcinriiai  Chili;  Iiilcriialiiinal  Re- 
hiliniisClub;  (iiTiiiaii  Club;  French  Club; 
Spiiiiisli  Club;  {■Viiciug. 


I  02  I 


COLLEGE       OF       ARTS       AND       SCIENCES 


Joseph  J.  Velenovski 

BALTIMORE,  MD. 
B.A. 


James  T.  Whalin 

HYATTSVILLE,  MD. 
B.A. 


B.A. 


James  Calvin  Voris 

LAUREL,  MD. 


AAT 


Footlight   Club.    3,    i:    Assistant   Stage 
Manager,  4:  Intramural  AVrestling. 


Charles  G.  Whiteford 
BALTIMORE,  MD. 


B.A. 


i:x 


Manager  Freshman  Football;  "M"  Club; 
Lateh  Kev;  Rossbourg  Club;  Democratii- 
Club. 


Merton  T.  Waite 

ODENTOX,  MD. 


B.A. 


<I>A0 


Semour  Wiederlight 

BROOKLAXD,  X.Y. 

B.S. 


William  F.  Waller 

SILVER  SPRIXG,  MD. 
B.A. 

Boxing,  2,  3,  4;  Tennis. 


ATQ 


Daniel  D.  Willard 

CUMBERL.WD,  MD. 

B.A. 


Albert  W.  Webb 
VIENNA,  MD. 


B.S. 


IX,  OAK 


Scabbard  and  Blade;  President  Men's 
League;  R.O.T.C.  Captain;  Debate  Club, 
3,  4;  Executive  Council,  4;  Lacrosse,  2,  3, 
4;  Track,  1. 


B.A. 


Edward  J.  Willey 

WASHIX(iT()X,  D.C. 

AAT,  Ax:i: 


[63] 


COLLEGE       OF       ARTS       AND       SCIENCES 


William  W.  Williams 
WASHINGTON,  D.C. 

B.S.  ex,  <i>K<I> 


John  Henderson  Woodell 

BALTIMORE,  MD. 


B.A. 


<I)A0 


Meredith  Wilson 

JARRETTSVILLP;,  MD. 


B.A. 


.KA 


President  Uomocratic  Club,  i;  Men's 
League,  3 ;  Vice-President  Rossbourg  Club, 
i\  Student  Congress,  3. 


Paul  J.  Yeager 
CATONSVILLE,  MD. 


B.A. 


AAl 


Interfraternitv  Cuuneil,  '•2,  .'?,  4;  Foot- 
light  Club,  3.  4:  Student  Band,  1.  2,  3,  4; 
International  Relations  Club,  4;  Intra- 
nuiral  Sports. 


B.S. 


John  K.  Wolfe 

WASHINGTON,  D.C. 


AXS 


Harold  K.  Young 

DETOUR,  MD. 
B.S. 


|(;4] 


All  engineers  must  know  their  surveying 


COLLEGE  OE  ENGIXEERINO 

THOSE  of  you  who  graduate  in  engineering  give  evidence  of  a  definite  pur- 
pose which  has  been  carried  out  through  your  study  of  engineering  sub- 
jects. Some  of  you  made  your  decision  to  he  an  engineer  while  still  in  high 
school;  others  did  not  come  to  the  conclusion  until  their  freshman  year,  but 
the  important  fact  is  that  you  did  choose  engineering,  and  that  you  expect  by 
it  to  develop  your  careers  wherever  your  activities  may  lie. 

The  advance  made  by  applied  science  calls  for  an  ever-increasing  demand 
for  those  who  are  trained  to  apply  the  great  discoveries  in  the  physical  field. 
And  so  long  as  these  discoveries  in  the  abstract  sciences  are  made,  so  long  will 
there  be  an  increasing  need  and  opportunity  for  those  who  are  trained  to  ap- 
ply them,  the  engineer. 


[651 


COLLEGE       OF       ENGINEERING 


Carroll  S.  Anderson 

BALTIMORE,  MD. 

B.S. 


John  B.  Armen trout 

BETHKSDA,  Ml). 


U.S. 

Engineering  Society,  3,  i. 


TBn 


Raymond   F.   Bartelmes 


WASHINGTON,  D.C. 


B.S. 


TBFI 


Seahl>iird     and     Blaiie;     Engineering 
Societv;  Track,  1,  -i. 


Andrew  B.  Beveridge 

BERVVYN,  Ml). 


li.S 


i;<I>l',TBII,()AK,<l>K*. 


Didmonilharl.-.  1;  Hmillc,  'i;  Engineer- 
ing Society,  1,  'i,  4;  Per.siiing  Rifles,  3; 
Scitl)l)aril  and  Blade.  .'!,  4;  President 
Tan  Beta  Pi;  Major,  R.O.T.C,  4; 
Junior  Prom  Committee;  Student 
MeMiKer  .X.l.E.E..  4;  Inlramnral  Box- 
ing, '2;  Inlrainural  Track.  1. 


Roger  T.  Bollman 

HAl/riMOliK   .Ml), 
B.S. 


J.  Gardner  Brooks 

WASHINGTON,  D.C. 

B.S.  SN,  HAE,  OAK 

President  Freshman  Class;  Presiilent 
Sophomore  Class;  Manager  Debating 
Team,  -i:  Old  Line  StaH',  1,  i;  Art  Edi- 
tor of  Old  Line,  3;  Editor-in-Chief  of 
Old  Luie.  4;  Executive  (.'ouncil,  1,  '■I; 
Engineering  Society;  .Vmeriean  So- 
ciety of  Civil  Engineers. 


B.S. 


Bennard  F.  Bruns 

BALTIMORE,  MD. 


ex 


Riding  Club,  2,  3,  4;  Swimming  Club, 
3,  4;  Engineering  Society,  1,  2,  3,  4; 
Maryland  Christian  .\ssociation,  1; 
Lutheran  Club,  1,  '2,  3,  4;  Rossbourg 
Club,  1,  2,  3,  4;  R.O.T.C.  First  Lieu- 
tenant; Manager  Freshman  Rifle 
Team:  Lacrosse,  1. 


B.S. 


Harry  V.  Bryan 

W.VSHINGTOX,  D.C. 


ATQ 


Engineering  Society;  Baseball,  1,  2.  3; 
Ba.skctball,  1,2. 


Noel  O.  Castle 
BROOKMONT,  MD. 

B.S. 

Scalibard  and  Blade;  Kngineering 
Societv,  3,  4;  Rossbourg  Club,  4; 
R.O.T.C.  Major;  Rifle  Team,  1,  2,  3. 


B.S. 


John  F.  Christhilf 

B.M.TIMOKE,  Ml). 


K  A 


Scabbard  and  Mlade;  Swimming  (  lub; 
Engineering  Society,  I.  2.  3.  4; 
R.O.T.C.  Lieutenant;  Lacrosse.  I.  •>. 
3,  4;  Football.  I.  2;  Intrannu-al  Touch 
Ball,  2.  3,  4;  Basketball.  2.  3,  4. 


«<! 


COLLEGE       OF       ENGINEERING 


Leon  B.  Davis 

CHEVY  CHASE,  MD. 

B.S. 

Glee  Club,  3,  President,  4;  Band,  2,  3, 
4;  Orchestra,  3.  4;  Engineering  So- 
ciety, 2,  3,  4. 


B.  James  Dayton 

BIVALVE,  MD. 


B.S. 


nAE 


Scabbard  and  Blade;  Pershing  Rifles, 
3,  4,  Second  Lieutenant,  3,  First  Lieu- 
tenant, 4;  Diamoiulhacl:,  1,  2,  3,  4; 
Circulation  Manager,  4;  Rossbourg 
Club,  3,  4;  Engineering  Society.  1,  2, 
3,4;Captain,R.O.T.C.,4. 


Louis  F.  Flagg 
TAKOMA  PARK,  MD. 


B.S. 


TBI! 


Engineering  Society,  3,  4;  R.O.T.C. 
Lieutenant:  Rifle  Team;  Secretary 
Tau  Beta  Pi;  Freshman  Tennis. 


B.S. 


John  M.  Firmin 

WASHINGTON,  D.C. 


24>S 


Scabbard  and  Blade;  R.O  T.C.  Major; 
Engineering  Society,  1,  2,  3,  Treasurer 
4;  Glee  Club,  3,  4:  Rossbourg  Club,  3, 
4;  Cross  Country,  1;  Intramural  Class 
Relay,  3;  Treasurer  Class,  1:  Opera 
Club,  4. 


Robert  B.  Foley 

WASHINGTON,  DC. 


B.S. 


AS* 


Selby  M.  Frank 

SAN  ANTONIO,  TEXAS 

B.S.  <I>A0 

Engineering  Society ;  Vice-President 
Senior  Class:  Interfraternity  Council; 
Rossbourg  Club;  Track,  1,  2,  3,  4. 


Joseph  H.  Galliher,  Jr. 

WASHINGTON,  DC. 
B.S. 


Al'h 


Lewis  T.  Gibbs 

WASHINGTON,  D.C. 

B  S.  SN,  TBI  1 

Scabbard  and  Blade:  Chairman  Ju- 
nior Prom ;  Chairman  Freshman  Prom : 
Executive  Council,  1;  Interfraternity 
Council,  2;  Track,  1,  2,  3.  4. 


George  E.  Gilbert 

COLLEGE  PARK,  MD. 

B.S. 

Espiscopal  Club;  Scabbard  and  Blade; 
A.S.C.E. 


Austin  T.  Hall 

WASHINGTON,  D.C. 


B.S. 


I;<^i; 


Engineering  Society,  1,  2,  3,  4;  \  ice- 
President,  3;  Rossbourg  Club,  3,  4; 
Men's  Representative  Junior  Class; 
Executive  Council;  R.O.T.C.  Lieu- 
tenant; Glee  Club,  3;  Intramund 
Relay,  2,  3. 


:»- 


[67] 


COLLEGE       OF       ENGINEERING 


Richard  E.  Hardie 

AVASHINGTON,  D.C. 
B.S. 

Engineering  Society;  FreslimanTrack. 


Joseph  M.  Harris 

WASHINGTON,  D.(  . 
M.S. 

Boxing,  ^,  3;  Lacrosse,  1. 


KA 


William  A.  Hart 

WASHINCTOX,  D.C. 
U.S.  Ai;* 

K.O.T.C.     Lieutenant,    i;    President 
Xueman  (hil),  3,  4 


Robert  L.  Hensell 

HACERSTOWX,  MI). 
U.S.  0X 

Engineering  Societv,   ^2,   3,   4;   Radio 
I'lnb,  a, ;! 


Peter  F.  Hilder 

WASHINCi'lON.  D.C. 


U.S. 

K.O.T.C.  First 

K.O.T.C  .  Hand 

l''n'sliiiian  Kille 
Kill.-.  J.;!. 


Al'* 

l.leiilcnant.       2; 

CoMiMian<ler,      2; 

r<ani,    2;    Varsity 


William  T.  Johnson 

B.\LTIMUKE,  MD, 

B.S.  ^<l>i;,  AI'U 

Footlight  Club;  Riding  Club;  Opera 
Club;  Ros.sbourg  Club;  Student  Con- 
gress; Cheer  Leader;  Glee  Club;  Soph- 
omore and  Junior  Prora  Committees; 
Freshman  Lacrosse. 


Paul  L.  King 

WASHINGTON,  D.C. 


B.S. 


TBn 


Engineering  Society,  2, .'!,  4;  K.O.T.C. 
First  Lieutenant,  4. 


Henry  G.  Knoche 

CATONSVILLE,  .MI). 

B.S. 

Men's  League,  3,  4;  Vice-President 
Men's  League,  4;  Intramural  at  Gov- 
ernors, 3;  Swimming  Club,  2.  3,  4; 
Regimental  .\djutant,  R.O  T.C.,  4; 
Lacrosse,  1,  2,  3,  4;  Football,  i:  Intra- 
mural Football  and  Soccer,  3,  4. 


William  C.  Leasure 

SILVER  SPRING.  MI). 
B.S.  <I'1'K 


Richard  L.  Lutz 

KIVEKD.M.E.  MD. 


15.S; 


il-iJK 


[68] 


COLLEGE       OF       ENGINEERING 


John  F.  Maynard 

BALTIMORE,  MD. 

B.s.  <i>A0,  Ten 

Engineering  Society;  Rossbourg  Club; 
Lacrosse,  1;  Rifle,  I. 


Andrew  G.  McConnell 

HAVRE  DE  GRACE,  MD. 

B.S  AFP 

Rossbourg  Club ;  Livestock  Club ;  En- 
gineering Society. 


Fred  H.  Menke 

WASHINGTON,  D.C. 
B.S. 


Emerson  Ogle 

CATONSVILLE,  MD. 

B.S. 

Engineering  Society;  Opera  Club,  1; 
Men's  Glee  Club;  Rossbourg  Club; 
Swimming  Club;  Freshman  Lacrosse. 


B.S. 


Bernard  A.  O'Neill 

ANNAPOLIS,  MD. 


AS* 


Engineering  Society;  Newman  Clul); 
M.S.C.E.;  Boxing,  3,  4;  Intramural 
Boxing  Champion,  2,  3. 


James  L.  Owens 

FEDERALSBl  RG,  MD. 
B.S. 

Engineering  Society,  1,  2,  3,  4. 


Louis  Park 

WASHINGTON,  D  C. 

B.S. 

R.O.T.C.  Lieutenant,  4;  Engineering 
Society,  3,  4;  A.S.C.E.,  4. 


B.S. 


Lyle  F.  Parratt 

WASHINGTON,  D.C. 


<I>SK 


Rossbourg  Club,  1,  2,  3,  4;  Engineering 
Society,  I,  2,  3,  4;  Baptist  Club,  1,  2, 
3.  4. 


William  Appleton  Pates 

CHEVY  CHASE,  MD. 

B.S. 

Scabbard  ami  Blade;  Engineering  So- 
ciety; Lacrosse,  1;  Rifle  Team,  1,  2,  3, 
4;  First  Lieutenant,  R.O.T.C. 


Jack  Wendell  Phillips 


WASHINGTON,  D.C 


B.S. 


TBII 


Scabbard  and  Blade,  3,  4;  R.O.T.C. 
First  Lieutenant,  4;  Engineering  So- 
ciety, 1,2, 3, 4;  Rossbourg  Club,  2,  3,4; 
Vice-President  Tau  Beta  Pi,  3,  4. 


[69] 


COLLEGE       OF       ENGINEERING 


miA 


B.S. 


Charles  W.  Poole 

FREDERICK,  MD. 


ATQ 


Matli  Clul),  1,  2;  Engineering  Society, 
1,  i,  3,  i;  Democratic  <'liilj.  1,  '2;  De- 
Molay  Cliil>,  1;  American  Institute  of 
Electrical  Engineers,  4:  Freshman 
Track. 


William  M.  Reading,  Jr. 

KENSINGTON,  MD. 
U.S.  4>SK 


James  S.  Rimmer 

I'NIVERSITY  PARK,  MD. 
B.S.  Tsn 


Gordon  W.  Robertson 

WASHINGTON,  D.C. 

B.S. 

Opera    Chili;   Glee  Clul>,    1,   i,   3,   4; 
I' nslinian  Track,  1,  2. 


Howard  O.  Robinson 

UALTIMOKE,  MD. 


M.S. 


AS* 


Ellis  P.  Root 

ANNAPOLIS,  MD. 

B.S. 

Engineering  Society,  3,  4;  Rossbourg 
Club.  3,  4;  R.O.T.C.  First  Lieutenant. 


Edwin  L.  Ruppert 

SILVER  SPRING,  MD. 

B.S 

Engineering  Society;  Newman  Cliili 


James  W.  Shipley 
HARMAN,  MD. 
B.S. 
Engineering  Society,  3,  4. 


Francis  D.  Shoemaker 

BETHESDA.  MI). 


B.S. 


Al'I' 


R.O.T.C.  Captain.  4;  RiHe  Team,  1; 
Scabbard  and  Blade;  Engineering 
Society,  3,  4. 


Melvin  H.  Steen 

\V.\SlllN(iTON,  D.C. 


B.S. 


<I>1K 


[70] 


COLLEGE       OF       ENGINEERING 


Henry  C.  Strobel 

WASHINGTON,  D.C. 

BS. 

Engineering  Society,  1,  i,  3,  4; 
R.O.TC.  First  Lieutenant,  4; 
Lutheran  flub. 


Richard  E.  Volland 

WASHINGTON,  D.C. 

B.S. 

Men's  Glee  Club,  3,  4;  Opera  Club,  1, 
i:  Engineering  Society,  1,  2,  3,  4; 
Rossbourg  Club,  1,  '2,  3,  4;  Lutheran 
Club,  I,  i,  3,  4;  Freshman  Football; 
Freshman  Track. 


Walter  J.  Zuk 
NEW  BRITAIN,  CONN. 


B.S. 
Glee  Club. 


AS* 


71 


As  you  enter  spacious  Library  reading  roonv 

COLLEGE  OF  EDIJCATIOX 

"^7"^^^  ^^li*'  ^i'6  about  to  graduate  and  to  try  to  find  opportunities  in  teach- 
-*-  ing  will  find  that  teaching  continuously  becomes  less  a  job  and  more  a 
profession.  You  will  find  two  things  bulking  large  in  the  minds  of  tliose  who 
employ  teachers:  first,  your  preparation  in  knowledge  and  skill;  and  second, 
what  kind  of  a  person  you  are.  Some  will  emphasize  the  former;  some,  the 
latter.  Neither  will  be  neglected  entirely.  Your  success  in  teaching  will  de- 
pend upon  many  things.  Of  first  importance,  among  them,  are  knowledge  of 
subjects  taught,  understanding  of  l)()ys  and  girls,  ability  to  work  hard  with- 
out loss  of  buoyancy,  and  capacity  for  growth. 


[721 


COLLEGE       OF       EDUCATION 


William  Andorka 


B.S. 


LORAIN,  OHIO 


i;<i>s 


Intramural  Association;  Secretary 
Spring  Sports;  "M"  Club;  Foot- 
ball, 2,  3;  Basketball,  2,  3. 


William  Robert  Beall 

HYATTSTOAYN,  MD. 

B.S.  <I>A0,  OAK 

Freshman  Commission;  Latch  Key 
Society;  Student  Congress,  3; 
Vice-President  Student  Govern- 
ment Association,  4;  .\dvanced 
R.O.T.C,  3,  4;  "M"  Club,  2,  3,  4; 
Track,  1,  2,  4;  Manager  Football, 
4,  Scabbard  and  Blade;  Intra- 
mural Association  Intramural 
Track    Manager. 


Edith  Brechbill 

COLLEGE  PARK,  MD. 


B.S. 


Aon 


Mortar    Board 


Diamondback  Staff,  1,  2,  3;  Fresh- 
man Commission;  V.W.C.A.  Cab- 
inet; Women's  Athletic  Associa- 
tion, 1;  Episcopal  Club,  1,  2,  3,  4; 
Secretary,  Episcopal  Club,  2,  3; 
Mortar  Board  President,  4;  Day- 
dodgers  Club,  3,  4;  Executive 
Council,  4;  Student  Activities 
Committee,  4;  Coed  Rifle  Team,  1. 


Virginia  Conner 
HAGERSTOWN,  MD. 


B.S. 


Aon 


Swimming  Club,  3,  4;  Women's 
Athletic  Association,  1,  2,  3,  4; 
"M"  Club;  Lutheran  Club,  3,  4; 
Freshman  Commission,  1 ;  V.W.C. 
A.  Cabinet,  2;  May  Day,  1,  2,  3; 
Reveille,  2;  Hockev,  1,  2,  3,  4;  Bas- 
ketball, 1,  2,  3,  4;  Soccer,  1,  2,  3,  4; 
Volley  Ball,  1,  2,  3,  4;  Archery,  2,  3 
4;  Baseball,  1,2,3,4. 


John  J.  Asero 

Mary  Elizabeth  Beitler 

John  G.  Byers 

WASHINGTON,  D.C. 

RELAY,  MD. 

LONACONING,  MD. 

B.A. 

B.S. 

B.S. 

Track,  1,  2,  3;  Boxing,  3. 

President,  Riding  Club,  2;  Secre- 

Student Congress,  2,  3;  Diammid- 

tary-Treasurer,  Riding  Club,  1,  4; 

iacA:Business!5taff,  1,  2. 

Episcopal     Club,     3;     Swimming 

Club,  3;  Y.W.C.A.,   1;  Women's 

Athletic    Association,    1;    Demo- 

cratic Club,  3;  .Student  Activities 

Committee,  3,  4. 

Glendora  M.  Downs 

WILLIAMSPORT,  MD. 

B.A. 

Lutheran  Club,  I,  2,  3;  Women's 
.\thletic  Association,  1,  2;  Hockey, 
1,  2,  3;  Basketball,  1,  2,  3;  Vollev 
Ball;  Baseball,  1,  2,  3. 


[73] 


COLLEGE       OF       EDUCATION 


Wilbur  Irving  Duvall 

GAITHERSIU  HG,  ML). 
BS. 

Track,  1,  i.  3.  i;  SocetT.  1,  2.  .'!,  4. 


Velma  Barr  Edwards 

RIVERUALE,  MU. 


B.A. 


AAA 


Albert  Bernard  Farrell 

WASHINGTON,  D.C. 
B.S.  2N 

Football,  3;  Boxing,  3;  Baseball,  3. 


M.  Mell  Ford 

ABINGDON,  MI). 
B.A.  AHA 

Opera  Club,  1,  '2,  3,  +;  W.A.A.,  1, 
2;  Y.\V.C..\.  Cabinet:  I'Vesbman 
Commi,s.sion;  International  Rela- 
tions Club,  4:  May  Day,  2;  All- 
University  Night,  i. 


Lois  T.  Edmunds 

WAS!nX(;T()N,  D.C. 

B.A. 

Freshman  Commission;  Y.W.C 
Cabinet,  Vice-President,  4. 


Warren  Rhys  Evans 

BEADENSBURC;,  MD. 

B.S.  '^SK 

.\.  Scabbaril  and   Blade;  Lieutenant, 

R.O.T.C.;  I're.sident,  Intramural 
.\tlilelic  .\ssoriation;  "M"  Club; 
Manager,  Intramural  Basketball, 
3. 


Mary  C.  Fisher 

ROCKVIl.I.E.  MD. 
B.A. 


David  Friedman 

SILVER  SIMUNG,  Ml). 


[741 


COLLEGE       OF       EDUCATION 


Conrad  Gebelein 

BALTIMORE,  Ml). 


B.A. 


AS* 


Glee  Club;  Orchestra;  Interna- 
tional Relations  Club;  Freshman 
Track. 


Jack  Masters  Herbsleb 

WASHINGTON,  DC. 
B.S.  <1>SK 

Vice-President;  Intramural  Ath- 
letics, 3:  Track,  1,  2,  3,  4;  Boxing, 
2,  3. 


Mary  Cornelia  Keller 

WASHINGTON,  D.C. 

B.A.  KKr 

Diamondback,  1,  3;  Old  Line,  i: 
Riding  Club,  2,  3;  Junior  Prom 
Committee. 


Walter  G.  Lohr 

BALTIMORE,  MD. 
B.S.  ATQ,  HAE,  OAK 

Editor  Terrapin,  3. 


B.S. 


Dorothy  F.  Hande 

BALTIMORE,  MD. 


ASA 


Women's  Athletic  Association; 
Swimming  Club;  Episcopal  Club; 
Hockey;  Basketball;  Volley  Ball. 


Routh  Virginia  Hickey 

POPES  CREEK,  MD. 
B.A.  AAA 

President  Women's  League,  4; 
Freshman  Commission  President; 
V.W.C.A.  Cabinet,  1,  2.  3;  Debate 
Club,  2,  3,  4;  Junior  Prom  Com- 
mittee; House  President,  Marga- 
ret Brent  Hall.  3;  W'omen's  Editor, 
Old  Line,  4;  Episcopal  Club,  1,  2, 
3:  Secretary,  Women's  League,  3; 
Vice-President.  V.W.C.A.,  3;  Pul)- 
lications  Board,  4. 


Catherine  P.  Kenny 

QUOGUE,  LONG  ISLAND,  N.Y. 

B.A.  AOn 

Women's   League;   Riding   Club; 
SwimmingClub;  Democratic  Club. 


I.  William  Lustbader 
BALTIMORE,  MD. 


B.S. 


TE* 


[75] 


COLLEGE       OF       EDUCATION 


Blanche  Lee  Lyddane 

Polly  Hillman  Mayhew 

\VASIIIN<iTON,  D.C. 

HVATTSVILLE,  MD. 

B.S. 

B.S. 

Newman    Club,    1,    2;    Women's 
Athletic  Association,  i,  3,  i;  Rid- 
ing Club,  i:  Hockev,  2,  3,  4;  May 
Dav,  i,  3;  Basketball,  3. 

Women's     Athletic     .Association, 
Hockey;  Volley  Ball;  Baseball. 

C.  Elizabeth  McFarland 

CUMBERL.WD,  MU. 
B.S. 

Glee  Club,  3;  Swimming  Club. 


Everett  H.  Northrop 

HAGERSTOWX,  MD. 
B.A.  AXA 

Student  Band,  1,  2,  3,  4;  Business 
Manager,  3;  Captain,  4;  I  niver- 
sity  Orchestra,  1 ;  Freshman^Com- 
mission. 


Robert  H.  Matthews,  Jr. 

cambrii)(;k.  MI). 


B.S. 


0X 


Laura  A.  McCotnas 
ABI.NGDOX,  MD. 


B.S. 


A3  A 


Student    Orange,    Women's    Ath- 
letic .\ssociation;  Epi.scopal  Club. 


William  Edward  Merrill 

roCOMOKE  CITY,  MD. 

B.S. 

Student   Band,   I,  i.  3.  4;   Intra- 
mural Track. 


B.S. 


Ira  Earl  Over 

lAtiERSTOWX,  MD. 


AXA 


Latch  Kev  Society;  Inlerfraternity 
Council,  -2.  3;  hiding  Club,  3; 
Miinagcr,  Freshman  Baseball; 
Lutheran  Club;  Orchestra,  1,  i. 


COLLEGE       OF       EDUCATION 


B.A. 


Ruth  E.  Parker 

BALTIMORE,  MD. 


ASA 


B.S. 


Fay  Reuling 

BALTIMORE,  MD. 


KKr 


Women's  Athletic  Association,  1, 
2,  3,  4;  International  Relations 
Club.  4;  Y.W.C.A.,  4;  Chemistrv 
Club,  1;  Riding  Club,  1,  2,  3,  4'; 
Student  Grange,  4. 


Riding  Club;  Swimming  Club; 
W.A.A.;  Hockev,  1,  i.  4;  Basket- 
ball, 1,  3,  4;  Voile V  Ball,  1;  Tennis, 
1,  2. 


Marion  Jean  Rowland 

WASIIIXGTOX,  DC. 
B.A. 
Y.W.C.A.  Cabinet,  4. 


Leora  L.  Sanford 

CHEVY  CHASE,  MD. 
B.S.  AAA 

Women's  Athletic  Association,  2, 
3,  4;  Iniversity  Chorus,  2,  4; 
Manager,  Women's  Rifle  Team,  4; 
"M"  Club;  Hockev,  2,  3,  4;  Bas- 
ketball, 2,  3,  4;  Volley  Ball. 


Margaret  Adele  Posey 

Aileen  Moore  Rohr 

George  Henry  Sachs 

R.  Karl  Shank 

LA  PLATA,  MD. 

HARPERS  FERRY,  W.VA. 

WASHINGTON',  D.C. 

HAGERSTOWN,  MD. 

B.S. 

B.A. 

B.S. 

B.S.                                        AXA 

Women's     -Athletic     .Association; 
Newman  Club.' 

Football,    2,    3,    4;   Track,    1,    2; 
Men's  League,  4;  "M"  Club,  2,  3, 
4;  Intramural  Association,  3,  4. 

Varsity     Manager,     Baseball,     4; 
Student  Band,  2,  3,  4;  Latch  Key 
Society;  Lutheran  Club. 

[77] 


COLLEGE       OF       EDUCATION 


Robert  W.  Slye 

WASHINCiTON,  DC. 

B.S.  <I>SK 

Intramural  Athletic  Association; 
Rosslionrg  (lul),  1,  i,  4;  Captain, 
R.O.T.C;  Track.  1,  «,  .'i.  4:  Box- 
ing, 4;  Scabbard  and  Blade. 


Dorothy  Smith 

HVATTSVILLE,  MD 
B.A. 


Edith  Louise  Stiles 

HOCKVILLE,  MD. 

B.A. 


Elizabeth  Blakistone 

Thompson 
DAYTONA  BEACH,  FLA. 
B.A.  AAA 

Riding  Club;  Diamoiidback  Staff. 


Florence  Frances  Small 

HYATTSVILLE,  Ml). 
B.A.  KA 

Diamondback,  2,  3,  4;  I'niversit.v 
Orchestra,  1,  2;  Opera  Club,  1,  2; 
Coed  Trio,  i,  X  4;  I'ootlight  Club, 
3, 4;  Spanish  Club,  4. 


Mile  Wilcox  Sonen 

WASHINGTON.  D.C. 
B.S.  <1>SK 

Fn'shman  Commission;  Kossbourg 
Club.  2,  3.  4;  Advan.cd  K.O.T.C.; 
Manager,  En'shuiaii  Ifoxiug,  3;  In- 
terfraternity  (  ouncil,  3;  \'ice- 
I'resident,  Interfraternitv  Couniil. 
4;  Track.  1.  2,  3,  4;  Scai)bard  and 
Blade. 


Kathryn  M.  Terhune 

WASHINGTON,  D.C. 

B.S.  .\OIl,  C-)P 

Mortar  Boanl 

Freshman  Commission;  .May  Day. 
1,  2.  3;  Student  .\dvisory  Coni- 
mitlee;  Women's  .\thletic  Club, 
1.  2.  .3.  4;  Uaskelball,  Ilockev, 
Ba.seball,  \ollev-l!all,  1.  2.  3,  4; 
"M"  Club,  2,  .3.  4. 


Evelyn  Chatham  Turner 

SALISBURY,  MD. 

B.S.  er,  A.\A 

Women's  .\thletic  .Association; 
Hi<ling  Club;  Home  Economics 
(lull;  Sludeiit  Congress;  Women's 
League:  "M  "  Club;  Hockey;  Bas- 
ketball; Itaseball;  Soccer, "  Volley 
Ball. 


78 


COLLEGE       OF       EDUCATION 


Virginia  P.  Turner 

SALISBURY,  MD. 

B.S.  ©r,  AAA,  *K* 

Women's  Athletic  Association; 
Riding  Club;  "M  "  Club;  Home 
Economics  Club;  Student  Con- 
gress; Hockey;  Basketball;  Soccer; 
Volley  Ball. 


John  R.  Weld 

SANDY  SPRING,  MD. 

B.S. 

Varsity  Track,  2,  3,  4;  Manager, 
Intramural  Football,  3;  Intra- 
mural Track,  1;  Rossbourg  Club. 
1,  2,  3,  i. 


Claire  E.  Zerman 


B.S. 


TRENTON,  N.J. 


BHS 


Spanish  Club,  4;  Riding  Club,  4; 
Women's  .\thletic  .\ssociation,  1, 
i.  3,  4;  Beta  Pi  Sigma,  Treasurer, 

2.  President,  3;  Hockey,  1,  '2,  3,  4; 
Basketball,  1,  2,  3,  4;  Tennis,  1,  2, 

3,  4;  Soccer,  1,  2,  3,  4;  Baseb.all,  1, 
2,  3,  4;  Volley  Ball,  3,  4:  Archery 
Championship;  Fencing;  Rifle. 


Christine  L.  Wall 

CATONSVILLE,  MD. 
B.S.  AZA 

Bacteriology  Club;  Episcopal  Club. 


Charles  F.  Yaeger,  Jr. 

BALTIMORE,  MD. 
B.S.  KA 

Football,  1,  2,  3.  4;  Man.ager  Intra- 
mural C.olf;  "M"  Club;  Manager 
Intramural  Swimming;  Lacrosse, 
1,  2,  4. 


Franklin  J.  Zimmerman 

FREDERICK,  MD. 


B.S. 


OAK 


Secretary-Treasurer,  O.D.K;  Sec- 
retary-Treasurer, Intramural  .\th- 
letic .Association;  Manager,  Varsity 
Basketball;  Manager,  Intramural 
Tennis;  Engineering  Society; 
R.O.T.C.  Captain;  Latch  Key 
Society;  Scabbard  and  Blade. 


|79] 


Botany  is  an  important  subject  for  Ag  students 


COLLEGE  OF  AGRICULTURE 


r  I  "lIIE  fine  associations  which  have  existed  for  four  years  will  soon  change. 
■'-  ]\Iass  and  more  or  less  regimented  activities  will  give  way  in  most  cases  to 
individual,  separate  and  special  interests.  You  may  not  find  immediately  the 
connection  you  have  hoped  for  and  deserve,  i)ut  there  never  was  a  time  when 
agriculture  and  its  allied  interests  had  so  great  need  for  highly  trained,  clear, 
logical,  luminously  thinking  men  and  women.  There  is  always  a  place  for  the 
educated  person  with  a  purpose  who  has  vision,  initiative,  pluck,  i)unch  and 
diplonuK-y  coupled  with  a  real  spirit  of  cooperation.  These  ((iialities  you 
should  have  ac(|uired  through  the  classroom,  laboratory,  societies,  clubs, 
athletic  contacts  and  general  as.sociatious. 

May  your  careers  he  full  of  success  and  crowned  with  rich  satisfaction 
that  conu's  with  coiitrihuting  of  a  worlli-whilc  servic(>  to  yoiu"  fellow  man  and 
your  country.  May  yoiu-  greatest  and  most  lasting  pleasures  he  foiuid  in 
vour  dailv   lahors. 


[801 


COLLEGE       OF       AGRICULTURE 


Howard  F.  Allard 

CLARENDON.  VA. 
B.S. 

Scabbard  and  Hhule:  R.O.T.C.  Captain. 


William  F.  Boarman 

HYATTSVILLE,  MD. 
B.S.  AFP,  AZ 

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


Fitz  James  Bartlett 
MT.  RAINIER,  MD. 


B.S. 


AIT,  AZ 


Entomology  Club,  1,  2,  3,  i;  Newman 
Club,  1,  •e,'3,  4;  Men's  League.  3;  Latch 
Key,  3;  Treasurer  Newman  Club,  3,  4 
Secretary-Treasurer.  Entomology  Club,  4 
Secretary  .\lplia  Zeta,  4;  Rossljourg,  3,  4 
Manager  Varsity  Boxing.  4. 


Arthur  R.  Buddington 
COLLEGE  PARK,  MD. 


B.S. 


AZ 


Entomology  Club,  2,  3,  4;  Episcopal 
Club,  1,  2,  3,  4;  Advanced  R.O.T.C: 
Scabbard  and  Blade,  3,  4;  Football,  1,  2. 


B.S. 


H.  Clifton  Byrd,  Jr. 

COLLEGE  PARK,  MD. 


i;x 


Interfraternity  Council,  3,  4;  R.O.T.C. 
Captain;  Baseball,  1;  Basketball,  1; 
Football,  1. 


Charles  Clayton  Croft 

WASHINGTON,  D.C. 

B.S. 

Freshman  Commission,  1;  Opera  Clul),  1, 
2;  Bacteriology  Club,  2,  4;  Hcirilli:  1. 


Harry  Webster  Clark 
FOREST  HILL,  MD. 


B.S. 


AFP 


Chester  Cissel 

ELLICOTT  CITY.  MD. 
B.S.  APP 

Livestock  Club;  Student  (irange. 


[8i: 


COLLEGE       OF       AGRICULTURE 


Walter  Moulden  Eiker 

WASHINCTOX,  D.C. 
U.S.  AZ 

Livestock  Chili. 


Grace-Louise   Greenwood 

COTTAGE  CITY,  MD. 

B.S. 

Secretary     .\lphii     Lambda     Delta,     i; 
Hockey,"l,  2,  3;  Baseball,  I. 


William  N.  Garrott 

KXOXVILLE,  MU. 

B.S. 

••M"Cliib:F.M)tball,  1.'2,.'!.  4. 


Wayne  B.  Hamilton 

OAKLAXD.  MI). 
B.S.  AFP 

Glee  Chil),  4;  Livestoek  Club,  .'5,  4:  Presi- 
dent Opera  Club,  4 


George  Elliot  Harrington 

\vasiiin(;tox.  d.c. 


B.S. 


AFP 


RcssbourK  Club,  4:  R.O.T.C.  1,  2,  .3,  4: 
First  Lieutenant  Co.  E,  4;  Horticultural 
Club,  1 


B.S. 


Thomas  Jacob  Hoshall 
PAHKTOX,  MD. 


A  IT 


William  Howard  Henderson 

WOOD  MINK.  Ml). 


B.S. 


AFP 


GranRe,  2,  :!,  4;  LivestcK-k  Club.  1.  i>,  .•).  4; 
Ba.seball,  ].  2;  Soccer,  1,  2,  :i.  4 


Elizabeth  L.  Huntington 

liHOOKLIXE,  PA. 


B.S. 


AOII 


(Jranpe.  2.  S,  4;  (Jranfie  Lecturer,  4;  Hor- 

tiiulturc  Club,  2;  Lutlieniu  Club,  4. 


|H2| 


COLLEGE       OF       AGRICULTURE 


B.S. 


Paul  H.  Imphong 

HANCOCK,  MD. 


B.S. 


William  S.  James 

HANCOCK,  MD. 


ArP 


B.S. 


Addison  Wilson  King 
BALTIMORE,  MD. 


KA 


Grange,  2,  3,  4;  Livestock  Club,  1,  2,  3,  4; 
Riding  Club  President,  3;  Men's  League, 
3,  4;  Business  Manager  "M"  Book,  3; 
DiamondbacI; ,  2;  Lacrosse,  1. 


AFP 


B.S. 


John  C.  Lovell 

NEW  WINDSOR,  MD. 


AFP 


Livestock  Club;  Grange;  Track  Manager; 
Latch  Key. 


H.  Pearce  Maccubbin 

BALTIMORE,  MD. 


B.S. 

Lacrosse,  1,  2,  3,  4. 


Elmer  L.  Mayer 

WASHINGTON,  D.C. 


B.S. 

Entomological  Club. 


KA 


Arnon  Lewis  Mehring,  Jr. 

HYATTSVILLE,  MD. 

B.S. 

Livestock  Club,  1,  2,  3,  4;  Intercollegiate 
Livestock  Judging  Team,  3;  Rifle  Team, 
1,  2,  3,  4;  "M"  Club,  4;  Intramural  Box- 
ing, 3;  Intramural  Wrestling,  4. 


Oscar  J.  Miller 

WASHINGTON,  D.C. 


B.S. 

Livestock  Club. 


AZ 


AZ 


83 


COLLEGE       OF       AGRICULTURE 


B.S. 


Paul  Elsworth  Mullinix 
WOODBINE,  MD. 


AFP.  AZ 


Joseph  F.  Puncochar 

CURTIS  BAY,  Ml). 
BS. 

Bacteriological  Society. 


Student  Band,  1,  2,  3,  4;  Maryland  Little 
Symphony,  1,  i,  3,  4;  Student  Grange,  1, 
2,  Steward,  3,  Overseer,  4;  Livestock 
Clul),  1,  2,  3,  Secretary,  4;  Student  Ad- 
visory Committee,  1,  2,  3,  4;  Intramural 
.Soccer,  1,  2. 


Michael  J.  Pelczar,  Jr. 

STEMMERS,  RUN,  MD. 

U.S.  AFP,  AZ 

ISacteriological  Society,  2,  3,  4;  President, 
:!;  Student  (Jrange,  2,  3;  Livestock  Clul), 
1 ,  2,  3,  4. 


B.S. 


Alton  E.  Rabbitt 

WASHINGTON,  D.C. 

SN.  OAK 


Rossliourg  Clul>,  1,  2,  .3,  4;  President,  4; 
Interfraternitv  Council,  2,  3;  .\dvanced 
R.O.T.C.  3,  i:  "M"  Clul),  4;  Lacrosse,  1, 
2,  3,  4;  Basketball,  1,2,  3. 


Garnett  D.  Radebaugh 

FOREST  HILL,  MD. 
B.S.  AFP,  AZ 

Horticulture  Clul);  Livestock  Clul). 


Elsie  May  Sockrider 

WASHINGTON,  D.C. 

B.S. 

Bacteriology  Clul). 


Joseph  W.  Sisson,  Jr. 

wasiiin(;t()n.  d.<  . 

B.S. 

Rossbourg  Cluli,  1.  2,  .3.  4;  Bacteriology 
Clul),  4;  Advanced  R.O.T.C;  Lacrosse,  1. 


B.S. 


C.  Grayson  Stevens 

NEW  .MARKET,  Ml). 


AFf 


Opera  Club.  1;  Democratic  Clul>,  1.  2; 
Cheerleader.  2.  .3,  I;  Track.  1;  .Soccer,  1, 
2,  3,  4;  Intramural  Tra<k.  2.  3.  ^. 


|H4| 


COLLEGE       OF       AGRICULTURE 


Clayton  T.  Thorne 

SILVER  SPRING,  MD. 
B.S. 


James  H.  Vawter 

LAUREL,  MD. 
B.S.  *SK 


William  C.  Warfield 

COLLEGE  PARK,  MD. 

B.S. 


James  L.  Weber 

OAKLAND.  MD. 
B.S.  2*2,  AZ 


Jack  Wolk 

WASHINGTON,  D.C. 

B.S. 

Bacteriological  Society:  Fre-sliman  Rifle 
Team,  2:  Varsity  Rifle  Squad,  .'5,  i;  Intra- 
mural Tenni.s,  1,  2,  3,  4;  Intramural 
Touch  Football,  2,  3;  Intramural  Dia- 
mondltall,  3,  i. 


85 


Students  at  present  but  future  homemakers 


COLLEGE  OF  HOME  ECONOMICS 


r  I  lIIIS  closes  your  four  years  in  College.  Wherever  you  are  next  year  your 
-^  education  will  continue.  Your  success  and  happiness  will  depend  greatly 
upon  your  attitude  toward  the  obstacles  you  are  sure  to  encounter.  If  you 
keep  yourself  fit  and  face  each  day  with  cheerfulness,  determination  and 
honesty  of  purpose;  and  if  you  admit  your  mistakes  and  profit  by  them,  you 
will  develop  in  character  and  usefulness. 

If  you  do  not  have  an  attitude  of  humility  toward  learning,  cultivate  it. 
Share  your  knowledge  with  others  gladly  but  modestly.  As  you  develop 
your  personality  and  character  through  giving  your  best  each  day,  a  share  o 
happiness  and  material  success  will  be  yours. 


[8(iJ 


COLLEGE       OF       HOME       ECONOMICS 


Catherine  E.  Aitcheson 

LAUREL,  MD. 

B.S. 

Home  Economics  Club;  May  Day, 
1.  2,  3. 


Lucile  Bowker 

WASHINGTON,  D.C. 

B.S.  ASA,  or 

Mortar  Board 

Pan-Hellenic  Council,  Treasurer, 
4;  Home  Economics  Club;  Presi- 
dent Alpha  Xi  Delta,  4;  Treasurer 
Theta  Gamma,  4;  Mortar  Board, 
Treasurer,  4. 


Barbara  Elinor  Cornell 

SILVER  SPRING,  MD. 
B.S. 


N.  Rebekah  Pouts 

^YASHINGTON,  D.C. 
B.S.  Aon 

Y.W.C.A.,  1,  i,  3,  4;  Footlight 
Club,  3,  4;  Terrapin,  1,  2,  3;  Stu- 
dent Grange,  1,  "2;  Riding  Club,  1, 
2,  3,  4;  May  Day,  3;  Home  Eco- 
nomics Club,  1,  2,  3,  Vice-Presi- 
dent, 4;  Y.W.C.A.  Cabinet,  2,  3,  4; 
Freshman  Commission,  1;  AV.S.G. 
A.,  2. 


Frances  Benedict 

SILVER  SPRING,  MD. 
B.S.  AOn 


Mildred  E,  Carlton 

BETHESDA,  MD. 
B.S. 


Mary  Ruth  Cross 
QUEENSTOWN.  MD. 

B.S.  AAA,  er 

Home  Economics  Club,  2,  3,  4; 
Episcopal  Club,  3,  4;  Tenniquoits, 


Betty  J.  Goss 

CHEVY,  CHASE,  MD. 

B.S.  ASA 

Student  Grange,  3;  Secretary,  4; 
Home  Economics  Club. 


87 


COLLEGE       OF       HOME       ECONOMICS 


Jeanette  R.  Merritt 

CHEVY  CHASE,  MD. 
B.S.  ASA 

Home  Economics  Club,  1,  2,  3,  4; 
May  Day,  2,  3. 


Dorothy  H.  Patterson 

WEAVERVILLE,  \.C. 

B.S. 

Daydodgers     Clul);    Home    Eco- 
nomics Club. 


Florence  R.  Rea 

WASHINGTON,  D.C. 

B.S.  AAA,  AAA,  ©r 

Mortar  Board 

Mortar  Board,  Historian,  4;  Presi- 
dent Alpha  Laml)da  Delta,  2; 
Y.W.C.A.,  1,  2,  3:  Treasurer,  4; 
Home  Economics  Club,  1,  i,  Vice- 
President,  3,  Secretary,  4;  Dia- 
tuondhiicU,  2. 


Joan  W.  Rymer 

HV.\TTSV1LLE,  MD. 
B.S. 


Mary  Virginia  Taylor 
PERRYMAN,  MD. 


B.S. 


ASA 


Freshman  Commission,  1;  Home 
Economics  Club,  1,  i,  3,  4;  Y.W. 
C.A.,  1,  i,  .3,  4;  Women's  Athletic 
Association,  1,  i,  3,  4;  Episcopal 
Club,  3,  4;  May  Day,  3;  All-Uni- 
versity Night,  3;  Pan-Hellenic 
Council,  3;  Secretary  of  Alplia  Xi 
Delta,  3;  Basketball,  2. 


Carolyn  L.  Vogt 

WASHINGTON,  D.C. 

B.S.  AOn,  ATQ 

Home  Economics  Club,   1,  2,  3; 
President,  4;  Riding  Club; 
eran  Club;  Footlight  Club 


Luth- 


Ruth  E.  Wellington 

TAKOMA  PARK,  MD. 

B.S.  Mortar  Board 

Din-mondback,  1,  '2,  3,  Women's 
Editor,  4;  Rcii'ilU\  2,  3;  .Sophomore 
Prom  Committee;  Junior  Prom 
Committee. 


Virginia  L.  White 

WASHINGTON,  D.C. 
B.S.  KA 

Secretary  Kappa  Delta;  Rifle.  1,  2, 
3,  4;  Y.W.C.A.,  1,  2,  3,  4;  Foot- 
light  Club,  3,  4;  Women's  Athletic 
Association,  I,  2. 


Elizabeth  Spitler 
LURAY,  VA. 

B.S. 


88 


JUNIOR  CLASS  HISTORY 


ARRIVING  one  Se))temher  three  years  ago,  which  of 
-^»-  inexiierienced  men  and  women  would  become  the 
class  of  1937  have  watched  with  interest  the 
progress  we  have  made  in  the  past,  and  are 
eagerly  looking  forward  to  the  time  when  we 
will  be  "high  and  mighty"  seniors. 

We  were  organized  under  the  able  leader- 
ship of  John  Jimmyer  and  all  of  us  looked  for- 
ward to  the  day  when  we  would  be  "rats"  no 
longer.  Although  we  started  out  pretty  badly 
by  losing  the  tug-of-war  over  Paint  Branch  we 
redeemed  ourselves  with  the  Freshman  Frolic. 

Then  continuing  under  the  same  president 
assisted  by  Ireland,  Waldman,  and  Brock- 
man,  we  became  Sophomores.  Our  dignity 
was  profound,  we  were  Freshmen  no  longer. 
We  had  our  fun,  but  again  we  were  destined 
to  be  the  losers  of  the  Fre.shman-Sophomore 
struggle.  By  this  defeat,  we  won  the  distinc- 
tion of  being  beaten  by  the  Freshman  Class 
and  were  further  distinguished  when  we  gave 
the  Sophomore  Prom,  for  not  every  orchestra 
shows  u])  a  couple  of  hours  late  for  a  dance. 

Our  school  term  more  than  half  over,  we 
find  that  the  members  of  our  class  have  dis- 
tinguished them.selves  in  all  fields  of  extra- 
curricular activities.  In  sports  we  have  such 
stars  as  EUinger,  Guckeyson,  Headley,  and 
Stonebraker;  in  dramatics,  debate  and  ])ub- 
lications  we  find  Hunt,  Kreiter,  Schuh,  Bir- 
mingham and  Hebb. 

Climaxing  the  activities  of  the  Junior  Class, 
we  have  our  Junior  Prom,  tlie  highlight  of  the 
social  season,  made  i)ossible  by  the  efforts  of 
Bud  Hammerlund  and  the  Prom  Committee. 


us  would  have  thought  that  those  young  and 
leaders  of  today.   Those  of  us  who  are  in  the 


OLEMAN  HEADLEY 

Pregidcitt 

FLORA  WALDMAN 

Secretary 


THO>L\S  BIRJIINT.HAM 

I'ice-l'risirlciit 

CARL  BROCKMAN 

Treasurer 


89 


SOPHOMORE  €LA!$S  HISTORY 


^HIS  year's  history  of  the  dass  of  '38  is  a  joyous  realization  of  last  year's  expectations.  The  class  is 
sho\vin<i  continually  the  spirit  and  unity  which  is  responsible  for  the  success  it  has  acheived  in  its 

two  years  on  the  campus. 

As  Freshmen  we  bore  up  under  the  usual 
tortures  inflicted  upon  "rats."  One  day  a  horde 
of  excited  Freshmen  pulled  a  somewhat  smaller 
and  less  excited  ^roup  of  supercilious  Soi)ho- 
mores  into  Paint  IJranch.  We  were  no  longer 
forced  to  obey  the  lowly  "rat"  rules. 

But  then  came  September  and  a  new  Fresh- 
man class,  to  be  the  "rats"  for  our  fiendish  ex- 
])erimentation.  Ignored  or  perha])s  only  too 
well  remembered  were  all  our  sutt'erings  as 
Freshmen.  We  carried  on  the  tradition  of 
hard-hearted  Sophomores  and  painstakingly 
educated  the  "rats."  There  were  two  jjartic- 
ularly  memorable  e\cnings.  One.  when  the 
Frosh  displayed  their  teamwork  l)y  touring' 
their  taskmasters  over  the  camjMis  in  two 
large  farm  wagons;  the  other,  when  blind- 
foldetl,  the  "rats"  were  led  first  through  the 
slimy  waters  of  the  Zoology  ])Ool,  and  then 
o\er  a  coal  ])ile.  We  carefully  organized  for 
the  tug-of-war,  and,  as  we  expected,  won  it. 

Defying  all  laws  of  superstition,  we  held 
our  So|)liomore  i'rom  on  Friday,  the  thir- 
teenth of  March. 

In  class  histories  it  is  often  the  tendency  for 
each  class  to  claini  most  of  the  credit  for  the 
success  of  the  athletic  teams  or  other  cain])us 
activities.  In  reality,  however,  it  is  the  com- 
bined work  of  students  from  e\-ery  class. 


OSCAR  UULEY 

President 

DOROTHY  HOBIiS 

Secretary 


UOHKUT  WALl'ON 

I' ice- Preside  III 

JOHN  MUNCKS 

Treuaurer 


90 


FRESHMAX  CLASS  HISTORY 

THAT  long-hoped-for,  never-to-be-forgotten  day  September  sixteenth!   Collegiates  at  last!   Only 
Freshmen,  but  with  hopes  of  bigger  and  better  things  to  come. 
Class  elections.  Campaign  speeches,  politicians,  preliminaries,  and  that  fatal  day  of  final  ballots. 

The  results:  President,  Thomas  Smith;  Vice- 
President,  Henry  Wyatt;  Secretary,  Gwen- 
dolyn Glynn;  Treasurer,  Dick  Shaffer;  Men's 
Rejjresentative,  William  Howard;  Women's 
Representative,  Eleanor  Sherman;  Sergeant- 
at-Arms,  John  DeArmey ;  Historian,  Margaret 
Maslin. 

Sophomores!  Sophomores  who  tried  to 
make  us  suffer  untold  embarrassment  and 
degradation,  who  enforce  "rat  rules,"  who 
dragged  us  through  coal  piles  and  paddled  us 
severely.  Then,  finally,  the  tug-of-war  over 
Paint  Branch — and  the  icy  waters  that  closed 
over  our  heads  finished  a  long,  hard  struggle. 
But  the  day  will  come. 

Rushing.  Luncheons,  teas,  dinners,  and 
dances.  Fraternity  and  sorority  houses.  Si- 
lence period  —  and  then  pledge  buttons, 
(ireeks  everywhere ! 

Our  society  debut — The  Prom.  An  event 
to  be  proud  of  and  a  night  to  be  remembered. 

Athletics.  The  football  .season  with  its 
many  stars.  The  liasketball  .season  with  more 
than  its  share  of  high  scorers,  and  boxing 
team  that  bids  fair  to  be  one  of  the  best.  Then 
spring  with  a  great  array  of  lacrosse  players  and 
track  men  to  add  to  next  year's  varsity  teams. 

And  so  our  introduction  to  college  is  over. 
A  grand  year  for  us — and  next  fall  we'll  be 
Sophomores  with  another  share  of  studies, 
good  times,  extra-curricular  activities,  and 
athletics.  We  leave  this,  our  first  year,  with 
regret  and  look  forward  to  next  with  great 
expectations. 


THOMAS  S^^TH 

President 

GWENDOLYN  GLYNN 

Secretary 


HENRY  WY'ATT 

y  ice-President 

RICHARD  SHAFFER 

Treasurer 


91 


Student  Center 


PUBLICATIONS 


THE  1936  TERRAPIN 


'HE  Terrapin  is  compiled  and  edited  by  the  Junior 
Class  to  be  presented  to  the  Senior  Class  as  a  lasting 
record  of  their  many  experiences  while  undergraduates  at 
Maryland.  In  order  to  make  this  a  worthwhile  memo  of 
their  four  years  of  University  life,  the  editors  have  at- 
tempted to  cover  every  phase  of  campus  activity,  and  to 
illustrate  the  many  important  functions  that  take  place  in 
order  that  these  memories  will  not  die  with  the  presenta- 
tion of  diplomas. 

The  annual  is  financed  entirely  by  funds  received  from 
the  Student  Government  Association  through  the  student 
activities  fee  and  the  fees  paid  by  the  various  organiza- 
tions having  representation  in  the  book.  There  are  no  ad- 
vertisements in  the  book,  which  makes  it  distinct  in  the 
field  of  college  journalism. 

The  three  major  positions,  namely,  the  Editor-in-Chief, 
Women's  Editor,  and  Business  Manager,  are  chosen  from 
tlie  incoming  Junior  Class  by  the  retiring  officers  with  the 
approval  of  the  Faculty  Adviser  on  publications  and  the 
Executive  Council.  This  system  bases  promotion  upon 
merit  rather  than  upon  popularity,  and  has  proved  to  be 
free  from  criticism  either  from  the  faculty  or  the  students 
of  the  school. 

This  year  The  Terrapin  has  endeavored  to  present  a 
HKiui  book  that  will  be  both  interesting  and  worthwhile,  and  to 

KREiTER  accomplish  this  end  the  entire  make-up  of  the  book  has 

been  rearranged.  An  example  of  this  is  to  be 
found  in  the  Senior  Section  which  has  been  divided  into  groups  accord- 
ing to  colleges  instead  of  into  a  university  group  as  formerly.  In 
addition,  a  more  extensive  sports  section  has  been  inaugurated  which 
covers  the  activities  of  the  men's  and  women's  intramural  competi- 
tion as  well  as  the  various  Varsity  matches.  Increased  emphasis  has 
been  placed  upon  the  photographic  work  of  this  year's  annual  as 
compared  to  former  issues. 


[96] 


John  Brinckerhoft" 
Elizabeth  D.  Brown 
Jean  Duhn 
Florence  Hill 


TERRAPIN  BOARD 

John  S.  Hebb,  III Editor-in-Chief 

Ruth  Kreiter Women's  Editor 

Walter  G.  Lohr Business  Manager 

William  H.  Hottel Advisory  Editor 

EDITORIAL  STAFF 

Bernice  Ellis,  Assistant  Women's  Editor 

Dorothy  Hobbs  Eleanor  Quirk 

Fay  Reuling 


Lois  Kuhn 
Russell  Langmaid 
Betty  Law 
Richard  Maurer 


Jeanne  Solliday 
Ruth  Wellington 
Paul  S.  Wise 


Brian  Benson 


PHOTOGTAPHY  STAFF 

Pyke  Johnson  Ruth  Lowry 

BUSINESS  STAFF 

Bernice  Ellis  Jameson  McWilliams  William  Mitchell 


Harry  Swanson 
Ralph  Meng 


McWILLIAMS.  MITCHELL,  DULIN,  MENG,  WISE 
B.  QUIRK,  HOBBS,  KREITER,  HEBB,  ELLIS,  E.  QUIRK,  KUHN 


[97] 


THE  1935-30  DIAMOXDBACK 


HINT 

ROHKKTSON 

HUMKLSINE 

WELLINGTON 


^  ■''HE  policy  of  the  Diamondback  during  the  past  year 
-*-  has  been  one  of  consideration  for  student  interests.  At 
times,  the  publication  has  taken  sides  with  the  Adminis- 
tration of  the  University  and  on  other  occasions  it  has 
taken  an  opposite  stand. 

The  facilities  of  the  Diamondback  were  devoted  to- 
ward the  appointment  of  Mr.  H.  C.  Byrd  as  president  of 
the  institution.  Sympathetic  cooperation  was  given  to 
leaders  of  the  student  committee  which  circulated  peti- 
tions favoring  Mr.  Byrd. 

In  addition,  such  improvements  as  advocating  a  swim- 
ming pool  for  the  school,  elimination  of  final  exams  for 
seniors,  paving  of  the  road  leading  to  the  Men's  Parking 
Lot,  beautification  of  the  campus,  etc.,  were  fostered. 

The  Diamondback  has  also  worked  to  obtain  a  feeling 
of  student-faculty  cooperation.  Suggestions  have  been 
advanced  for  the  creation  of  a  board,  to  be  composed  of 
members  of  the  student  body  and  teaching  staff,  which 
will  serve  to  iron  out  difficulties. 

Various  structural  improvements  have  been  made  in 
the  pul)lication  itself.  The  appearance  of  the  sports  sec- 
tion of  the  paper  has  been  modernized  and  cartoons  have 
been  installed  as  a  regular  weekly  feature.  In  adilition, 
editorials  have  been  reduced  in  quantity,  and  an  effort  has 
been  made  to  substitute  ciuality. 

A  sympathetic  hand  has  been  extended  to  all  campus 
groups,  and  it  has  been  the  purpose  of  the  editors  to  give 
as  wide  a  coverage  as  possible  to  all  phases  of  campus  life. 

Special  attention  has  been  given  to  women's  news  and 
an  effort  has  been  made  to  assist  coeds  of  the  institution 
in  the  various  projects  which  have  interested  them.  Un- 
der proposed  changes  in  the  staff,  the  position  of  women's 
editor  will  bo  given  increased  importance.  In 
the  future  the  women's  editor  will  be  second 
in  inii)()rtance  to  the  editor-in-chief. 

In  conclusion,  the  purpose  of  the  19.'5;3  '5(i 
Diamondback  has  been  to  condjine  progress 
with  care  in  all  editorial,  reportorial.  and 
structural  policies. 

[981 


RMms 


.:—:izj 


DIAMONDBACK  STAFF 

Richard  M.  Hunt Editor-in-Chief 

Thomas  E.  Robertson Business  Manager 

James  Dayton Circulation  Manager 

Ruth  E.  WeHington Women  s  Editor 

CarHsle  H.  Humelsine Managing  Editor 

Christine  Kempton Feature  Editor 

Stanley  Kennon Sports  Editor 

John  Bell Art  Editor 

William  H.  Hottel Advisory  Editor 


EDITORIAL  STAFF 


Lawrence  Hoover 
Janet  Weidemann 
Eileen  Kellerman 
Jerry  Hardy 
Marty  Heaps 
Ann  Carver 
Marcia  Ladson 


Barbara  Judd 
Ruth  Kreiter 
Betty  Benton 
Eunice  Miller 
Helen  Reindollar 
Ida  Fisher 
Robert  Neiman 


Victor  Reeser 
Esther  Wellington 
Walter  Hurley 
Ezra  Gratz 
Genevive  Long 
Nancy  Price 
Ernestine  Bovvver 


Nancy  Anders 
Dolores  Piozet 
Donn  Strausbaugh 
Nora  Huber 
Barbara  Cornell 
Donnie  Godwin 
Mary  E.  Holt 


SPORTS  STAFF 

Stanley  Kennon,  Sports  Editor 
Herbert  Smith 
Robert  Baker 
Gus  Warfield 
Max  Zankel 
Danny  Shumner 

BUSINESS  STAFF 

Thomas  Robertson,  Business  Manager 

Thomas  Birmingham.^rfrerf/sfn^iV/^r. 

James  Lewald  John  Wolf 

CIRCULATION  STAFF 

B.James  Dayton,  Circulation  Manager 
J.  Dale  Patterson 
M.  Luther  Brotemarkle 
H.  Malcolm  Owens 
Harold  W.  Smith 
Ralph  E.  Clark 
William  R.  Funk 
Fred  W.  Perkins 
Solomon  Resnick 
Irving  P.  Mendelsohn 

FEATURE  STAFF 

Christine  Kempton,  Feature  Editor 
Frederic  Haskin 
Kay  Thompson 
Jerry  Tax 
Pyke  Johnson 
Robert  Litschert 
Maurice  Atkin 
Elizabeth  Thompson 


DIAMONDBACK  EDITORIAL  STAIF 

Atkin.  Hoover,  Litschert,  Strjiiishailgh,  Hurley,  Mobley,  Freudenberg 

.Judd,  Reeser,  Neimiin,  .Johnson,  Ladson.  Tax 

Weidemann.  Godwin.  Heaps.  Kellerman.  Thompson.  Waldman.  Carver 

Thompson.  Smith.  WellinRton,  Hunt.  Humelsine,  Kempton,  Baker 

DIAMONDBACK  BUSINESS  STAFF 

Smith.  Clark,  Perkins 

Resnick,  Manown.  Da.vton.  Robertson,  Birminf;;ham,  Maslin,  Brotemarkle 


199 


1932C7 


THE  1935-36  OLD  LIXE 


i^ONCOMITANT  with  the  growth  of  the  University  in 
^^  the  past  few  years  has  been  the  growth  of  The  Old 
Line,  Maryland's  youngest  pubhcation.  Started  only  six 
years  ago  as  a  quarterly,  it  has  increased  its  number  of 
issues  from  six  last  year  to  eight  this  year.  With  this  en- 
largement in  number  of  issues  has  come  a  corresponding 
development  in  national  prestige. 

This  increase  in  quantity  has  gone  hand  in  hand  with 
an  increase  in  the  literary  and  artistic  content  of  the  mag- 
azine. For  the  first  time  in  its  history  an  Old  Line  editor 
has  been  appointed  to  the  advisory  board  of  College  Hu- 
mor, national  anthology  of  college  humor  magazines.  A 
remarkably  efficient  business  staff  has  brought  about  an 
unprecedented  increase  in  volume  of  advertising,  both 
national  and  local. 

The  magazine  this  year  has  made  more  distinct  and  in- 
dividual style  that  has  slowly  been  developing  during  its 
growth.  Its  rotogravure  features — pictures  accompanied 
by  editorial  comment — have  been  widely  imitated  and 
borrowed.  Its  cartoons  and  features  have  been  reprinted 
in  all  of  its  leading  contemporaries. 

The  Old  Line  is  unique  among  campus  publications  in 
that  it  is  the  only  one  to  recognize  and  promote  original 
creative  writing.  The  yearbook  and  newspaper  serve 
merely  to  record  campus  life.  To  The  Old  Line  is  reserved 
1'"'""^^  the  task  of  satirizing  this  life.     For  the  person  who  has 

literarv  or  artistic  ambitions  the  magazine  is  the  sole  me- 

ERBE  '  ° 

diuin  of  expression. 

In  the  past  i)rimarily  a  humor  magazine,  The  Old  Line  has  this  year 
laid  particular  emphasis  on  literary  production.  The  success  of  the  va- 
rious short  story  contests  sponsored  by  the  magazine  has  attested  to 
this  increase  in  ils  literary  quantity. 

During  the  school  year  an  experienced  staff  has  put  out  eight  novel 
and  rib-tickling  numbers,  the  success  of  which  has  been  evidenced  by 
the  student  body  and  contemporary  publications. 


10(1 1 


OLD  LINE  STAFF 

J.  Gardner  Brooks Editor-in-Chief 

Routh  Hickey Womens  EdUor 

Theodore  Erbe Business  Manager 

William  H.  Hottel Advisory  Editor 

EDITORL\L  STAFF 
Pyke  Johnson,  Feature  Editor 


Evelyn  Bradford 
George  Eirman 
Virginia  Faul 
Mary  Garner 
Virginia  Garrott 


ART  STAFF 
John  Bell,  Art  Editor 

Lucille  Bennett 
Phyllis  Bitzing 
Bill  Buckinghan 
Lester  Symons 

BUSINESS  STAFF 

Sam  Leishear,  Circulation  Manager 
Elinor  Hopping,  Office  Manager 

John  Bowman 

Morman  Broadwater 

Harry  Dosch 

Francis  Henry 

Jean  Hester 

Mitchel  Sokal 

Donald  Strauss 


Margaret  Jack 
Christine  Kempton 
Ruth  Lowry 
Jerry  Sacks 
Ruth  Snyder 
Jeanne  SoUiday 


Helen  Somers 
Martin  Stein 
Jerry  Tax 

Virginia  Thomas 
Kay  Thompson 
Robert  White 


OLD  LINK  KDITdlUAL  STAFF 

Bennett,  Thomas,  BuckinKhani.  Uhhear.  Slein.  Patterson.  Jack.  Tax 

Hopping.  Lnnry.  BilzinK.  Sn.viler.  Garner,  Kempton.  Henr.v 

Solliday,  Bell.  Litsehert.  Brooks,  Hieke.v,  Johnson.  Thompson 

OLD  LINE  BUSINESS  STAFF 
Patterson,  Erhe,  Sokal 


101 


SMITH,  BOEKHOFF.  HUMELSINE,  JOHNSON,  BELT 


THE  1935  ^^M"  BOOK 


Editor Carlisle  Humelsine 

MamujiiKj  Editor Pyke  Johnson 

Munuginy  Editor F.  Walter  Goldstein 

Sports  Editor Herbert  Smith 

Womc)i\s-  Editor Claire  Boekhoff 

Associate  Editor Kenneth  Belt 

Business  Manager Harry  Swanson 

''  I  ^HE  objective  of  the  "M"  Book  this  year  was  to  furnish  the  Freshmen  Class  with 
-'-  a  collection  of  diversified  facts,  which  were  to  be  found  in  a  number  of  different 
places,  in  order  to  help  them  become  better  acquainted  with  the  history,  traditions, 
and  general  life  of  the  University. 

The  editors  endeavored  to  place  emphasis  on  matters  about  which  the  incom- 
ing' students  would  know  little  as  well  as  upon  the  things  with  which  they  were  most 
concerned.  With  this  in  mind,  the  main  stress  was  placed  on  the  section  for  frater- 
nities and  sororities. 

Feeling  that  this  was  the  most  important  issue  from  the  viewpoint  of  the  fresh- 
men, an  entirely  difl'erent  section,  containing  information  relative  to  the  various 
fraternities  and  sororities,  was  placed  in  the  book. 

Another  improvement  started  by  the  present  staff  was  the  increased  use  of 
"cuts"  and  art  work  which  went  a  long  ways  toward  improving  this  year's  publica- 
tion over  those  of  former  years. 

The  make-u])  of  the  book  was  changed  a  great  deal  with  the  end  in  mind  of 
making  material  easier  to  find  and  to  accomplish  this  the  editorial  board  resectioned 
the  book  so  as  to  do  away  with  a  great  deal  of  the  ambiguity  of  previous  years. 


MILITARY 


RESERVE  OFFICERS'  TRAIXIXG  CORPS 


A' 


^LTHOUGH  my  tour  at  the  University  of 
Maryland  has  been  brief,  I  have  discov- 
ered a  very  fine  state  of  mind  in  the  Reserve 
Officers'  Training  Corps.  This  has  unques- 
tionably been  brought  about  by  a  coopera- 
tive faculty  and  student  body.  Training  has 
been  decentralized,  and  student  leaders  ac- 
tually command  and  conduct  the  training  of 
their  units.  This  practice  of  decentralization 
is  bound  to  develop  leadership  in  our  student 
officers.  It  is  our  purpose  to  maintain  the  high 
standards  established  by  our  able  predeces- 
sors. 

I  wish  to  take  this  opportunity  to  express 
our  regret  over  the  departure  of  Captain  Har- 
mony at  the  end  of  the  present  school  year.  An 
officer  and  gentleman,  in  fact,  he  has  estab- 
lished a  standard  here  for  all  of  us  who  follow  him. 

The  War  Department  rating  of  "Excellent"  which  has  been  won  for  so  many 
years  by  this  school  will  be  our  Spring  objective.  The  ability  of  our  Army  personnel, 
the  cooperation  of  our  student  officers,  and  the  effort  which  is  being  made  by  the 
man  in  the  ranks  augurs  well  for  the  future. 

I  wish  to  express  appreciation  for  the  helpful  cooperation  on  the  part  of  the 
President  and  Faculty. 

I  also  wish  to  thank  my  Army  staff  for  their  loyalty  and  efficient  service. 


PATCH 


(Signed)         J.  D.  Patch, 

Lieut.  Col.,  Infantry,  PMS  &  T. 


WARD 


HARMONY 

[105] 


CLARK 


Colonel  Louis  Ennis 
Commanding  Regiment 


\ 

Lieut. -Col.  Brooks  Bradley 
iSecond  in  Command,  Regiment 


Miss  Marjorie  Higgins 
Sponsor 


Miss  Doris  Mitchell 
Sponsor 


REGIMENTAL        STAFF 


Captain  Henry  Knoche 
Regimental  Adjutant 


Captain  Francis  Shoemaker 
Regimental  P.  <£-  T.  Officer 


■    .»?fiWS 


Miss  Hetty  Rutt 
Sponsor 


Miss  Suzanne  Shejiherd 
Sponsor 


|l()(i| 


Major  Noel  Castle 

( 'om manding  First  Battalion 

Major  Andrew  Beveridge 
Commanding  Second  Battalimi 

Major  John  Firmin 
Commanding  Third  Battalion 


Flora  Waldman 
Sponsor,  First  Battalion 

Betty  Griffith 

Sponsor,  Second  Battalion 

Jean  Leach 

Sponsor,  Third  Battalion 


ATTALION      COMMA^DER!^ 


t 


Captain  Harry  C.  Byrd 

Second  in  Command 
First  Battalion 

Captain  Harman  Spencer 
Second  iyi  Command 
Second  Battalion 

Captain  Melvin  Lankford 

Second  in  Command 
Third  Battalion 

Frederica  Waldman 

Sponsor 

Valerie  Vaught 
Sponsor 

Polly  Ensor 
Sponsor 


107 


COMPANY      A,     INFANTRY 


Edward  M.  Minion 
Captain 

Lois  M.  Kuhn 

Sponsor 

Heunard  F.  Bruns 
Lieutenant 

J.  Hope  Morgan 
Lieutenant 

Jack  W.  Phillips 

Lieiileuuuf 

J.  Brady  Smith 

Lieutenant 


MINION 


ALLARD 


BABCOt'K 


Howard  F.  Allard 
Captain 

Audrey  H.  Babcock 
Sponsor 

Raymond  F.  Bartelmes 
Lieutenant 

Arthur  R.  Buddinjiton 
Lieutenant 

Austin  .1.  Hall 
LieuteuunI 

William  A.  Hart 
Lieutenant 


COMPANY 


,     INFANTRY 


[108] 


COMPANY     C,     IXFAXTRY 


U 


Edward  H.  Gibbs 
Captain 

Constance  Nash 

Spo7isor 

Wright  G.  Calder 
Lieutenant 

Corbin  C.  Cogswell 
Lieutenant 

Sidney  P.  McFerrin 
Lieutenant 

Joseph  W.  Sisson 
Lieutenant 


GIBBS 


NASH 


HART 


STAUB 


James  F.  Hart 

Captain  ; 

Lillian  Ann  Staub 

Sponsor 

Charles  L.  Callahan 
Lieutenant 


John  F.  Christhilf 
Lieutenant 

George  E.  Gilbert 
Lieutenant 

Milo  W.  Sonen 
Lieutenant 


\ 


COMPANY     D 


IXFAXTRY 


[109] 


COMPANY      E,      INFANTRY 


George  C  Hart 
Captain 

Nancy  V,  Clark 
Sponsor 

George  E.  Harrington 

Lieutenant 

William  A.  Pates       \ 
Lieutenant 

Hugh  H.  Saum 
Lieidenant 


HART 


CLARK 


SLYE 


(Jl  IKK 


Robert  W.  Slye 
Captain 

Eleanor  K.  Quirk 
Sponsor 

William  N.  Garroti 
Lieutenant 

Paul  L.  King 
Lieutenant 

William  R.  Schneider 
Lieutenant 

Ellis  P.  Root 
Lieutenant 


CO^IPANY      F.     INFANTRY 


[110] 


COMPANY     G,     IXFAXTRY 


Alton  L.  Sanford 
Captain 

Marjorie  Grinstead 

Sponsor 

William  R.  Beall 
Lieutenant 

Lewis  T.  Gibbs 
Lieutenant 


SANFORD 


GRINSTEAD 


WEBB 


Walter  Webb 
Captain 

Dorothy  V.  Allen 

Sponsor 

Theodore  H.  Erbe    ) 
Lieutenant 

Warren  R.  Evans 
Lieutenant 

Louis  F.  Flagg     , 
Lieutenant 

Kenneth  R.  Mason  | 
Lieutenant 


COMPANY 


INFANTRY 


;iii] 


COMPANY      I,      IXFAXTRY 


Ernest  R.  Eaton 
Captain 

Alife  J.  Solliday 
Sponsor 

Louis  Park 
Lieutenant 

Harold  Sachs 
Lieutenant 

Henry  C.  Strobe) 
Lieutenant 


EATON 


SOLMDAV 


LEISHEAR 


Samuel  G.  Leishear 

■^  Captain 

Vivian  Reed 
Sponsor 

Harry  J.  Lyiui 
Lieutenant 


R  .      O   .      T   .      C 


X      D 


|1H| 


SOCIAL    LIFE 


Junior  I'riiin  k-cl  li\  <  oK-inaii  llradlry  and  Kriulcrifii  Waldimm 


JUNIOR  PROM 

COMMITTEE 

Robert  O.  Hammerluiid,  Chairman 
Kenneth  Belt 
Thomas  Birmingham 
Claire  Boeckhoff 
Warren  Bonnett 
Luther  Brotemarkle 
Harvey  Cooke 
Alfred  Ireland 
John  Jimmyer 
Ruth  Kreiter 
Robert  Leighty 
William  Mitchell 
Dale  Patterson 
Peter  Remson 
Geraldine  Schuh 
Elmer  Stevenson 
Harry  Swanson 
Flora  Waldman 
Aaron  Welch 
Max  Zankel 


HKADLEY 
HAMMERLUND 


1151 


Kosshourg's  Cuntriliiiliciii  tii  I'rcsiili-iil's  llirtlulay  ISall 


ROSSBOVRG  €LVB 

THE  Rossbourg  Club,  the  sole  pur- 
pose of  which  is  the  sponsoring  of 
(lances  for  ^Maryland  students,  con- 
tinued its  progress  of  bringing  na- 
tionally known  orchestras  to  the  Uni- 
versity campus. 

Membership  is  restricted  to  Mary- 
land students,  although  popularity 
and  attendance  at  the  dances  is  by  no 
means  confined  to  students.  The  so- 
cial functions  attract  numerous  alum- 
ni, and  also  members  of  the  younger 
sets  of  Baltimore  and  Washington. 

The  climax  of  the  current  social 
season  was  reached  when  Tommy 
Dorsey  and  his  orchestra,  playing  for 
the  mid-year  dance,  broadcast  over  a 
nation  hook-up  in  connection  with  the 
President's  Birthday  Ball. 

The  operation  of  the  Rossbourg  is 
left  in  charge  of  the  student  officers. 


1117] 


CALVERT 
COTILLIOIV 

Spun.sorrd  bi/ 

Omieron  Delta  Kappa 
Sigma  Circle 

Led  hi/ 

Mr.  Frank  P.  Duggan 

and 
Miss  Beatrice  Phillips 

COMMITTEE 

The   entire    Circle   func- 
tioned as  a  committee. 


us 


i      MILITARY 
BALL 


Sponsored  by  the 

Regiment    of    Cadets,    Re- 
serve     Officers      Training 
Corps  of  the  University  of 
Maryland 

Led  by 

Cadet  Col.  Louis  A.  Ennis 

and 

Miss  Marjorie  Higgins 

Assisted  by 

Cadet  Captain  Beveridge 

and 

Miss   Betty   Griffith 


MILITARY  BALL  COMMITTEE 


Andrew  Beveridge 
Brooks  Bradley 
Wright  Calder 


Noel  Castle 
Louis  Ennis 
John  Firmin 
George  Gilbert 


Henry  Knoche 
Alton  Rabbitt 
Leonard  Smith 


119 


INTERFRATERNITY  BALL 


Sponsored  by  the 
Intel-fraternity  Council  of  the  University  of  Maryland 


April  3,  1936 


Led  by 


Mr.  J.  Harry  McCarthy 


and 


Miss  Mildred  Berrv 


[HO] 


MUSIC      AND 
DRAMATICS 


Above:  *'Joi]riU'y's  Kn<l.'*    lirloir:  "Olivrr,  Oliver" 


FOOTLIGHT 
CLUB 

Frederic  J.  Haskin,  Jr. 

President 

Raymond  Leighty 
Stage  Manager 

Mildred  Hearn 
Secretary 

Jerome  Sacks 
Treasurer 

Geraldine  Schuh 
Puhlicitji  Director 

Dr.  Charles  B.  Hale 

Faculty  Advisor,  Director 


HITTIIN,  WISE,  LITSCHERT,  POSNEK,  PIERCE 

HAMMOND,  SM.^LL,  ERBE,  LEISHEAR,  TAX,  SCHUH 

WHITE,  KEMPTON,  HEARN,  HASKIN,  SACKS,  CARVER,  TARBETT 


^HE  fall  production  was  "Journey's  End,"  the 
world-famous  war  tragedy  by  R.  C.  Sherriff.  The 
tragic  parts  of  Captain  Stanhope,  Lieutenant  Raleigh 
and  Lieutenant  Hibbert  were  played  sincerely  and 
with  moving  effect  by  Fred  Haskin,  Jr.,  Bill  Johnson, 
and  Jerome  Sacks.  The  comedy  was  capably  handled 
by  Samuel  Leishear,  Theodore  Erbe,  and  David 
Seidel.  Two  newcomers,  Paul  Wise  and  Tom  Whar- 
ton, filled  small  parts. 

The  late  winter  production  was  Paul  Osborn's 
"Oliver  Oliver,"  a  light  and  swiftly  paced  comedy, 
with  Theodore  Erbe,  Florence  Small,  and  Deborah 
Billig  shining  in  expert  comic  portrayals  in  the  piv- 
otal roles;  with  Geraldine  Schuh  an  attractive  in- 
genue; and  John  Edwards,  Samuel  Leishear,  and 
Clara  Tarbett  rounding  out  the  cast. 

As  a  curtain-raiser,  the  Club  presented  Alice  Ger- 
stenberg's  biting  satire  "The  Pot  Boiler."  Jerry  Tax 
directed,  and  the  broadly  burlesque  characters  were 
cleverly  portrayed  by  Jerry  Tax,  Mildred  Hearn, 
Ann  May  Baines,  Dick  Hunt,  Gordon  Hammond,  Ed 
Stimpson,  and  Joel  Hutton. 

No  Footlight  Club  story  is  complete  without  a 
word  of  tribute  to  its  guiding  genius.  Dr.  Charles  B. 
Hale,  whose  brilliant  and  sympathetic  direction  has 


been  responsiblef  or  the  club's  successes  for  ten  seasons. 

A  note  of  sadness  entered  the  history  of  the  j'ear  when  the  Footlight  Club  was 

deeply  saddened  by  the  tragic  death  of  one  of  its  most  brilliant  stars.    The  Club 

wishes  this  paragraph  to  be  a  small  but  sincere  tribute  to  the  memory  of  Betti 

Buschman. 


1231 


Sci-nrs  frdin  Op.ra  (lull's  "Swcctliparts" 


HATHAWAY,  HIPER,  ZUK.  HAIMOVRZ,  NOLTE,  FRIEDMAN.  WOHLSTADTER 

LYONS,  LOVELL.  JEHLE.  WHARTON,  T.  WHARTON 

RABAI,  ST.  CLAIR.  NEVY.  CROCKER.  SCHUH.  MAYES 

WEBSTER.  TARBETT.  VENNEMAN.  SMITH.  L.VGER,  JONES.  HOOTEN 

STODDARD.  MILETO,  BROCKM.\N,  RANDALL  ENDERLE,  SCHAFFER,  STUART 


OPERA  CLUB 


"SWEETHEARTS" 

Music  by  Victor  Herbert;  Book  by  Harry'  B.  Smith 

Sylvia Ruth  Lowry 

Liane Geraldine  Schuh 

Dame  Paula Florence  Small 

Lisette Dorothy  Allen 

Clairette Leora  Sanf  ord 

Babette Betty  Shaffer 

Jeannette Nora  Huber 

Toinette Elnora  Lyon 

Nanette Bernice  Aring 

Mikel John  Edwards 

Franz Roswell  Bryant 

Karl Wayne  Hamilton 

Slingsby Edwin  Stimpson 

Van  Trornp Louis  Hueper 

Caniche Leonard  Wohlstadter 

Captain  Loiirent William  Nolte 

First  Footman Joseph  Haimovicz 

Second  Footman James  Young 

Men's  Chorus 

William  Buckingham,  F.  Deen  Evans,  Harold  Franke,  Joe  Franzoni,  Caleb  Hathaway,  Frank 
McFarland,  J.  W.  Miller,  Dan  Prettyman,  Alton  Sanford,  Edward  Wharton,  Thomas  Wharton. 

Women's  Chorus 

Sara  Stoddard,  Mildred  Chapin,  Mary  Beggs,  Kittie  Hooton,  Ruth  Jehle,  Laura  Gunby,  Jeanne 
Homewood,  Maurine  Stuarts,  Mildred  Smith,  Carolyn  Mobsten,  Inez  Nevy,  Ermine  Rabai, 
Marian  Mayes,  Audrey  Jones,  Eleanor  Crocker,  Evelyn  lager,  Edna  LIpdike,  Lois  Ernest,  Grace 
Lovell,  Ethel  Underle,  Louise  Brockman,  Eileen  Neumann,  (^atherine  Mileto,  Clara  Tarbett, 
Catherine  Samson,  Virginia  Venemann,  Elizabeth  Mayhew,  Janet  Weidemann. 


[125] 


JONES.  STODDARD,  DAVIS,  SHAKFKU,  CALLADINE,  HlI'Kli.  AlilM,,  l.dWliY 

BEGGS,  DOMINIC,  MATTOON,  JEHLE.  LOVELL,  ERNEST,  MAYHEW,  MATTOON.  TOWNSEND 

ALLEN,  SANFORD,  CHAPIN,  BLAISDELL.  RANDALL,  LYONS,  ENDERLY.  BROCKMAN 


WOMEN'S  CHORUS 


Mr.  Harlan  Randall 
Director 

Mrs.  Jessie  Blaisdell 
Accompanist 


WWriTH  a  larger  number  of  applicants  this  year,  Mr. 
Randall,  director  of  the  club,  was  able  to  exercise 
greater  choice  in  selecting  the  personnel  of  the  club  than 
in  former  years,  and  thus  a  finer  group  of  voices  was 
possible. 

The  season  was  opened  with  a  joint  concert  with  the 
Men's  Glee  Club  at  the  Petworth  Baptist  Church, 
Washingt(m,  D.C.  This  Chorus  also  appeared  on  the 
All  University  Night  Program  where  they,  as  on  many 
other  occasions,  joined  with  the  Men's  (ilee  Chib  to 
form  a  mixed  chorus  which  has  been  very  popular 
throughout  the  .school  year.  In  ]March  the  coml)ined 
groups  broadcastover  station  WMAL,  Washington,  D.C. 
The  annual  campus  concert  of  the  two  singing  organi- 
zations was  held  in  ]\Iay  in  the  auditorium  of  the  Agri- 
cultural  Building. 


liGl 


f  1 1  t 

^  W       4?      ^ 


1 1-  t 


PRETTYMAN,  LISKEV,  FRANKE,  FIRMIN,  i\K)RGAN,  HUEPER,  WHITON,  NEWMAN 
MILLER,  FURTNEY.  HAIMOVICZ,  THOMPSON,  YOUNG,  VOLLAND,  FRANZONI,  BEBB 
WOHLSTADTER,  SANFORD,  DAVIS,  RANDALL,  HATHAWAY,  ZUK,  HAMILTON,  EVANS 


MEN'S  GLEE  CLUB 


Mr.  Harlan  Randall 
Director 

Leon  Davis 
President 

Caleb  Hathaway 
Secretary 

Alton  Sanford 
Manager 


'T^HE  Men's  Glee  Club,  in  its  second  year  under  the  di- 
rection  of  Mr.  Randall,  has  become  more  firmly 
established,  increasing  their  influence  and  bettering 
their  reputation.  A  large  nvunber  of  formal  concerts  and 
shorter  programs  were  given  which  usually  consisted  of 
songs  by  the  entire  group,  solos  by  Wayne  Hamilton, 
baritone,  and  solos  and  accompaniments  by  Walter 
Zuk  at  the  piano. 

Concerts  were  j^resented  in  a  number  of  churches 
and  other  places  in  and  around  this  vicinity  before  va- 
rious types  of  audiences,  either  jointly  with  the  Wo- 
men's Chorus  or  alone.  A  quartet  from  this  group  ap- 
peared before  many  clubs  and  other  groups  during  the 
year.  The  Glee  Club  this  year  enjoyed  a  trip  to  Han- 
cock, Maryland,  where  they  presented  a  formal  concert 
in  the  high  school  which  was  enthusiastically  received. 
The  club  made  an  important  contribution  to  the  very 
successful  All  University  Night  program. 


[1-27] 


PHILLIPS,  WKDDINC  I!f:NT()N,  MKNG 

TREACY.  MILLER,  ANSl'ON,  HAKKIi,  MIUTHRIP 

YOCHELSON,  ATKIN,  LAWLESS.  PAKISEAl,  MORRIS,  WILSON 

SAVAGE,  MULLINIX,  HIRSCH.  (JRODJESK,  EIRMAN,  LEISHEAR.  NEWELL,  HEISS,  PERKINS 

McFARLAND.  HORTMAN,  F.\TKIN,  SIEBENEICHEN,  MILLER,  MERRILL,  SYTES 


STIJDEXT  BAND 


Everett  Northrop 
Captain 

Gibson  Wilson 

First  Sergeant 

Samuel  Leishear 
liuniness  Manager 

Albert  Savage 
Drum-Major 

Price  Piquett 

Quarterinaxter  Sergeant 


THIS  year's  sixty-piece  student  band  lias  eclipsed  all 
former  bands  at  Maryland.  Not  only  has  the  pres- 
ent organization  doubled  its  membership  but  it  has  been 
dressed  up  in  new  black  and  gold  capes  and  caps. 

The  band  has  displayed  enthusiasm  never  before 
shown  by  any  other  band.  This  is  probably  due  to  the 
in.spiration  given  to  the  men  in  the  organization  by  the 
new  faculty  advisor,  Major  Howard  Clark.  Not  a  little 
of  the  credit  for  the  band's  work  this  year  goes  to  Ser- 
geant Otto  Siebeneichen,  conductor  of  the  group. 

Maryland's  football  and  basketball  games  were 
livened  up  many  times  by  the  playing  of  the  Old  Line 
Band.  Not  only  did  the  musicians  play  at  football  and 
basketl)all  events,  but  they  contributed  to  the  baseball 
season. 

Besides  playing  three  radio  concerts,  one  of  them  the 
nation-wide  National  Farm  and  Home  Hour,  the  mem- 
bers gave  two  public  concerts  at  the  University. 

The  members  of  the  band  and  the  faculty  advisors 
look  forward  to  the  coming  year  as  the  greatest  in  the 
history  of  band  music  at  the  University  of  Maryland. 


Ii8\ 


ORGANIZATIONS 


SACKS,  WILLIAMS.  ATKIN.  FCKiG,  BROWN.  ELVOVE 
GOLDBERG.  BROWN.  HEARN.  EIERMAN,  JAKBOE 
ZIMMERMAN,  SCHUH.  ERBE,  KKEITER.  JOHNSON 


CALVERT  DEBATE  CLUB 


Theodore  Erbe 
President 

Geraldiiie  Schuh 
Secretary-Treasurer 

Polly  Lewis 

Women's  Manager 

Pyke  Johnson 
Mens  Manager 


^  I  "'HE  Calvert  Debate  Club  completed  one  of  the  most 
-»-  .successful  seasons  in  its  history.  Teams  representing 
better  and  larger  schools  were  scheduled,  and  the  scope  of 
club  activity  was  extended  so  as  to  include  a  northern  and 
a  southern  trip  for  the  men's  team,  and  a  southern  trip  for 
the  women's  team. 

The  climax  of  the  season  culminated  in  the  formal 
match  between  the  University  of  IMaryland  and  the  Uni- 
versity of  Hawaii,  in  which  Maryland  emerged  victorious 
over  one  of  the  best  forensic  teams  ever  to  face  the  rostrum 
on  this  campus.  Judges  for  the  occasion  were  George  L. 
Radclitfe,  U.S.  Senator  from  Maryland.  AYarren  F.  Ster- 
ling. Maryland  Bank  Commissioner,  and  Thomas  Nixon 
Carver,  professor  emeritus  of  Harvard  University.  At  a 
banquet  preceding  the  debate,  President  H.  C.  Byrd  was 
inducted  into  honorary  membership  in  the  club. 

The  liighlight  of  the  year  was  the  presentation  of  the 
second  l}urlcs<|uc  Debate.  Amid  laughs  and  the  numch- 
ing  of  dougliiiuts,  students  and  faculty  listened  to  ora- 
tions extolling  the  virtue  of  doughnut  holes  and  the  fra- 
grance of  limburger  chee.se  as  rudiments  of  health. 

Keys  denoting  succes.sful  partici])ation  in  five  engage- 
ments were  presented  to  Richard  Zimmerman  and  Paul 
Wise. 


[130  J 


GALL,  GOLL.  ^LVRTINEZ,  GUNBY,  McCOJL\S.  HAYMAN,  TAYLOR,  DRECKBILL 
FAWBLE,  LIGHTFOOT,  JONES,  TAYLOR  GILBERT,  WHITE  ,CRUIKSHANK 


EPISCOPAL  CLUB 


George  E.  Gilbert 
President 

Marfi'iierite  E.  Jones 
Vice-President 

Georgianna  Lightfoot 
Corresponding  Secretary 

Maxine  White 

Recording  Secretary 

James  Hammet 
Treasurer 

Rev.  Ronalds  Taylor 
Chaplain 


THE  Episcopal  Club  of  the  University  of  Maryland  is 
a  group  of  students  and  faculty  united  for  the  pur- 
pose of  creating  fellowship  among  the  Espiscopalians  on 
the  campus.  The  club  is  affiliated  with  the  National 
Student  Council  of  the  Episcopal  Church  and  follows 
a  five-point  program:  worship,  religious  education, 
church  extension,  and  campus  and  community  service. 

The  annual  reception  for  new  students,  given  in  the 
Parish  Hall  of  St.  Andrew's  Church.  College  Park, 
opened  the  activities  for  the  year.  Opportunity  for  wor- 
ship and  service  for  the  members  was  found  through  co- 
operation in  the  activities  of  St.  Andrew's  Church  by 
serving  in  the  choir,  teaching  in  the  Sunday  School,  and 
affiliating  with  such  organizations  as  the  Brotherhood 
of  St.  Andrew. 

The  club  held  regular  meetings  of  the  first  and  third 
Mondays  of  each  month  throughout  the  school  year. 
During  Lent  regular  meetings  were  discontinued,  in- 
stead, the  club  attended  the  Wednesday  evening  ser- 
vice at  St.  Andrew's.  Delegates  were  sent  to  the  Tri- 
Diocesan  Conference  in  Washington.  The  club's  activi- 
ties terminated  with  the  election  of  officers,  and  a  picnic. 

The  club  cordially  welcomes  to  its  meetings  all  stu- 
dents and  members  of  the  faculty  interested  in  its  work. 


131 


COWIK,  MAWVKI.L.  UANFOKIIl.  WILSON,  SCHINDKL,  KEPHART,  HAZAHD 
KAYLOR,  FISHER.  GANZERT,  PLAIT.  CROTLISCH.  MILETO,  PARKER.  STEVENSON 

WALinLW.  c;ram.  harlan.  (jiirk.  lon(;,  heffernl\n.  tavlor.  smith 

HILL,  WILLIAMS,  LAWS,  BOOSE.  HOBBS,  REA,  WHITE.  STRATMANN 


MARYLAND  CHRISTIAN  ASSOCIATIOX 


WOMEN 


Flora  Waldnian 
President 

Lois  Edmunds 
Vice-President 

Lucille  Laws 
Secretary 

Florence  Rea 
Treasurer 


o 


MEN 

Jerome  Sacks 
President 

Clay  Webb 

V  Ice-President 

Edward  Blumencrans; 

Serrrtarij 

Thomas  Birmingham 

Treasurer 


RGANIZED  in  1930,  the  Maryland  Christian 
A.s.sociation  .strive.s  to  achieve  close  relationship 
and  cooperation  among  the  students  and  to  aid  in 
furthering  programs  which  will  benefit  the  students 
and  faculty.  The  as.sociation  is  comprised  of 
two  units,  the  mens  and  women's  cahinets.  These 
cabinets  work  both  separately  and  in  unison  to  ac- 
complish their  objectives.  Each  year  they  work 
out  their  individual  purpo.ses  and  goals  and  at  all 
times  have  the  advice  and  help  of  the  faculty  and 
Advisory  lioard. 

A  few  of  the  features  of  the  jjrogram  are  the 
Freshman  Week  Program,  Speakers.  Philanthropic 
\York,  the  Maryland  Mixer,  and  the  Student-Fac- 
ulty Tea. 

This  year's  program  began  with  Freshman 
Week  followed  by  the  ^Maryland  Mixer,  which  was 
(|uite  clever  and  attracted  a  large  crowil.  For  the 
("iiristmas  Relief  Drive,  the  M.C.A.,  in  coopera- 
tion with  the  S.Cl.A.,  held  a  cam])us-wide  drive  for 
food,  money  and  clothes.  The  drive  was  climaxed 
with  a  Novel  Depression  Dance.  Then  for  the  first 
time  on  cami)us  a  Student-Faculty  Tea  was  given 
by  the  V.W.("..\.  to  create  a  clo.ser  feeling  between 
the  students  and  facultv. 


\M\ 


TERRAPIN  SWIMMING  CLIJR 


George  A.  Johnson 
President 

John  Woodell 

Vice-President 


Mary  Townsend 
Secretary-  Treasurer 

Lester  Brooks 

Actiinties   Committee 
Chairman 

John  Woodell 

Membership  Committee 


THE  purpose  of  the  organization  is  to  promote  in- 
terest in  swimming  as  a  campus  activity  and  pro- 
vide a  basis  for  future  varsity  organization,  as  well  as 
to  teach  swimming  and  give  instructions  in  life  sav- 


The  Terrapin  Swimming  Club  has  enjoyed  one  of 
the  most  successful  years  in  the  history  of  the  club, 
under  the  efficient  and  expert  guidance  of  the  presi- 
dent, George  A.  Johnson.  The  club  started  the  year 
with  a  mere  handful  of  members  and  before  two 
Chairman  weeks  of  the  year  had  passed  boasted  a  membership 

of  over  one  hundred  students. 

Since  the  University  has  no  pool  the  club  has  been 
swimming  in  the  Shoreham  Hotel  in  Washington, 
where  they  have  secured  a  reduced  rate.  The  swims 
have  been  very  popular  and  the  attendance  at  them  vary  from  one-half  to  three- 
fourths  of  the  membership.  The  club  has  brought  swimming  before  the  eyes  of  the 
school  and  at  present  is  one  of  the  largest  and  strongest  bodies  backing  the  "build 
a  pool"  movement. 

One  of  the  highlights  of  the  year  was  the  first  annual  dance  on  February  28, 1936. 
The  club  gained  much  from  this  dance  as  a  result  of  the  invaluable  work  of  the 
committee  headed  by  Lester  Brooks. 

The  club  finished  oft'  the  year  with  a  beach  party  which  was  held  the  latter  part 
of  May. 


[133] 


MILLER,  WALDMAN.  SPARLING,  WOLF,  MAR  1  IN,  HKVEILLE,  GANZERT,  HUNT 

ZERMAN,  BELL,  RIGG,  DAVIS,  CRISP,  SPIK(iELGLASS,  BOYLE 
KREITER,  WEIDEMANN,  BARNSLEY,  HUGHES,  BEITLER,  GROTLISCH,  LANG 

Hlllll^i;:     4^1  ITlt  William  R.  Johnson Piesident 

»^»^»9m^l^  \9     ^M^U  MB  pj.gj  Hughes Vice-President 

Mary  Beitler Secretary-  Treasurer 

THE  Riding  Club  of  the  University  of  Maryland  came  into  existence  in  1931  and  has  since  that 
time  grown  to  a  very  active  pleasure  organization.  It  now  has  a  membership  of  (iO  persons,  which 
include  experienced  and  beginning  horsemen. 

One  of  the  features  of  the  club  has  been  to  hold  moonlight  rides,  which  the  members  have  re- 
ceived very  enthusiastically. 

The  climax  of  the  year  was  the  Spring  Hor.se  Show,  which  is  an  annual  event.  The  show  this  year 
attracted  wide  interest  in  Maryland,  the  District  of  Columbia,  and  Virginia. 

COED  DAYDODGERS  CLUB  r.rM™'  .  .r..K"! 

Eleanor  Broughton  .  .  Sec.-Treas. 

A  YEAR  ago  in  May,  in  an  effort  to  form  closer  union  between  Daydodgers  and  University  activity, 
the  Coed  Daydodgers  Club  was  formed  under  the  guidance  of  Dean  Adele  Stamp. 
In  a  very  short  time,  the  organization  had  procured  two  rooms  on  the  first  floor  of  the  Old  Li- 
brary for  the  Daydodgers'  use  for  eating  and  recreation.  Later,  the  club  expects  to  have  some  sort  of 
cafeteria  .service  for  the  use  of  those  coeds  who  have  inade(|uate  lunching  facilities  at  ])re.sent. 


WII.SON.  KKHI!ER>L\N,  W.  HAINES.  A.  HAINES,  WILLIAMS 

.lEPPEKSON.  NHLES,  SCHMIDT.  ROBINSON 

HAZARD.  SHIPLEY.  MrKKKVKH.  CEHKING.  VNC.EH 

POWELL.  sn.LIVAN.  IIIIINS.  lACKU,  MOdSl  ,  I.U\M.  DkALBA 

HOltBS.  STEARNS.  FEEI.E,  NORDKI  N.  I.ADSUN.  Sl'KAKI  ,  lll.N  EDK   I'.  HAMILTON 

HAKI.AN,  HKRSIIItERGER.  STODDARD.  STEVENSON,  HILL.  S(  HINDEL,  HUOIEN,  KEPHART.  SNYDER 


[I'M] 


MEH1U.NG.  SKINNER,  WHITE,  W  KUiHT,  KUHN,  .lARRELL 
MILLER,  GALBREATII,  SHAW,  .SHEPARD,  BEHM,  YOUNG,  CLARK,  HENDERSON 
BOVVERS  WAGAMAN,  ECK,  LOVELL.  MULLINIX,  MacFARLAND,  JORDON,  ASTLE 


LIVESTOCK  CLUB 


JohnC.  Lovell,  President 

William  H.  Henderson, 

Vice-President 

Paul  E.  MuUinix,  Secretary 

Kenneth  R.  Wagaman, 

Treasurer 


THE  purpose  of  this  club  is  to  give  agricultural  students  a  more 
practical  insight  into  the  care,  breeding  and  feeding  of  livestock, 
and  to  give  non-farm  students  experience  in  working  wath  animals. 
Prominent  livestock  breeders  of  the  state  are  invited  to  speak  be- 
fore their  meeting.  The  club's  greatest  achievement  is  the  sponsor- 
ing of  the  annual  Livestock  Exposition,  a  fitting  and  showing  con- 
test that  is  becoming  an  occasion  of  great  interest  to  every  breeder 
of  livestock  in  Maryland. 


STUDENT  GRANGE 


Clay  Webb,  Master 
Albin  Kuhn,  Overseer 
Carolyn  Young,  Secretary 
Thomas  Gordon,  Treasurer 


THE  Grange  is  a  national  organization  for  those  interested  in  agri- 
culture. The  order  strives  to  secure  harmony,  good  will,  and 
vital  brotherhood  among  the  members.  The  Student  Grange  was 
organized  in  1914  by  Reuben  Brigham  who  is  now  the  head  of  the 
Department  of  Visial  Education  in  the  U.S.D.A.  The  Order  gives 
the  students  experience  in  handling  a  typical  rural  organization  and 
brings  them  in  contact  with  the  agricultural  leaders  of  the  state. 


BROWN,  CRUMP,  BOWERS,  GALBREATH.  SHEPARU.  WAGAMAN,  HENDERSON,  JARUEI.L,  SKINNER,  JORDON,  WRIGHT 

DOWNEY,  MULLINIX,  ECK,  WEBB,  KUHN,  BEHM,  ASTAL,  MacFARLAND 

WALL,  DOUB,  HEFFERMAN,  STOLZENBACK,  YOUNG,  THOMAS,  WHITE,  PARKER,  MacFARLAND. 


[135] 


HERRINGMAN,  GEBELEIN,  HART,  ELLIS,  COGSWELL 

ROBERTSON,  R.  MILLER,  SOLTONOFF,  BELL.  SOMMERVILLE,  SMALL,  ROHR 

E.  MILLER,  FORD,  PARKER.  HANDE,  McCOMAS,  BRADFORD.  LEWIS,  DONOVAN 

THOMPSON,  FOSBROKE,  HUNT,  STEINMEYER,  HEBB,  BLICKINGHAM,  WILSON 


Richard  M,  Hunt 
Vice-P  resident 

Marion  E.  Parker 
Secretary 

William  O.  Buckingham 
Treasurer 


II^TERNATIOI^AL  RELATIONS  CLUB 

John  S.  Hebb,  III  TIVING  as  we  do  in  an   age  when   great  political, 

tremdent  J_i  social,  and  economic  changes  are  sweeping  over  the 

world,  one  cannot  hope  to  live  intelligently  without 
being  informed  as  to  the  undenying  forces. 

Modern  means  of  communications  have  succeeded 
in  drawing  the  nations  of  the  world  more  closely  to- 
gether than  ever  before.  The  student,  therefore,  cannot 
limit  himself  to  a  knowledge  of  his  own  country  and 
the  forces  operative  there,  if  he  desires  to  gain  a  true 
perspective  of  the  world  in  which  he  lives.     Changes 
taking  place  in  one  nation  will  of  necessity  affect  the 
others.   Problems  today  may  be  national  in  their  origin 
but  they  are  international  in  their  significance  and  im- 
plications. 
The  International  Relations  Club  of  the  University  of  ]Maryland  was  organized 
for  the  i^urpose  of  offering  the  student  an  opportunity  of  becoming  better  ac- 
quainted with  the  problems  underlying  international  intercour.se.  Speakers  of  rec- 
ognized standing  are  invited  to  address  the  club  from  time  to  time.  The  members 
of  the  club  are  thus  offered  the  opportunity  of  discussing  these  problems  with  the 
speaker. 

College  and  T  diversity  students  hoping  to  become  leaders  of  thought  in  their 
respective  communities  are  here  given  an  opportunity  in  not  merely  to  gain  infor- 
mation, but  are  assisted  in  developing  the  ability  to  evaluate  the  problems  con- 
fronting the  various  nations  of  the  world. 


[136] 


PROF.  L.  W.  INGHAM 


PROF.  C.  S.  RICHARDSON 


DR    L.  B.  BROUGHTON 

ATHLETIC 
BOARD 


M 


COL.  J.  D.  PATCH 


DR.  C.  O.  APPLEMAN 


[ARYLAND'S  Athletic 
Board  is  made  up  of 
two  veteran  members.  Dr. 
L.  B.  Broughton,  who  is 
chairman;  Prof.  Charles  S. 
Richardson,    pioneer    in 
sports  leadership  at  the  Old  Line  institution;  in  addition  to  Dr.  C.  O.  Appleman, 
Dean  of  the  Graduate  School;  Col.  J.  D.  Patch,  head  of  the  Military  Department, 
and  Prof.  Leroy  W.  Ingham. 

Dr.  Broughton  is  head  of  the  Chemistry  Department  and  Professor  Richardson 
is  director  of  Public  Speaking. 

Professor  Richardson,  former  board  chairman  and  a  member  of  the  body  for 
nearly  40  years,  was  mainly  responsible  for  bringing  Curley  Byrd  back  to  his  alma 
mater.  Dr.  Broughton,  a  classmate  of  Byrd's  in  graduating  in  1908,  has  been  on 
the  campus  ever  since.  He  is  now  acting  athletic  director  also,  and,  along  with 
Professor  Richardson  and  others,  was  given  the  task  by  President  Byrd  of  carrying 
on  where  the  new  chief  executive  left  off.  They  have  done  a  pleasing  job. 


[139] 


COACHING  STAFF 


BURTON  SHIPLEY  , 


JOHN  FABER 


GEARY  EPPLEY 


JOHN  HARMONY 


FRANK  DOBSON 


LESLIE  BOPST 


(HARLKS  MACKERT 


ALBERT  HEAOY 
[140] 


c;e()K(;k  pollock 


MAJOR   SPORTS 


K.NNIS 
CALLAHAN 
SACHS 
GRETZ 


iMIMON 

BUSCHER 

YAKCIER 


STALl'URT 
HIRKLANl) 
GARROTT 
McLAUCiHLLN 


[1421 


GUCKEYSON 

WILLIS 

ELLINGER 

HEADLEY 

De  ARMEY 

STONEBRAKER 

WHEELER 

WOLFE 

DALY 

GORMLEY 
SMITH 
FLETCHER 
SURGENT 


[143] 


I»   §  f  .  ^  ^    t 


Frank  DeArmey,  John  Birklaiid,  Charlie  Zulick.  Million  Daneker,  Charlie  Callahan,  Rlair  Smith,  Mike  Svirgent,  Bill  Garrott 

Tom  McLaughlin,  Bob  Walton,  Carl  Stalfort,  Charlie  Yaegcr,  Coleman  Headley,  Bill  Guckeyson,  Harry  Grelz,  Haney  Cooke,  Assistant  Manager 

Ed  Daly,  John  Gormley,  Waverly  Wheeler,  Louis  Ennis,  Charlie  Ellioger,  Ed  Minion,  George  Sachs,  Bill  Wolfe,  Bill  Bryant,  Bernie  Buscher 

Vic  Willis,  Jack  Stonebraker,  John  McCarthy,  Robert  Beall,  Manager;  Paul  Pfeiffer,  Ed  Fletcher,  Bill  Aitcheson 


VARSITY  FOOTBALL  SQL! AD 


FROM  19M  VARSITY  SQUAD 


Name 

Position 

Height 

Weight 

Age 

Years  on 
Squad 

From 

•LOUIS  ENNIS 

end 

5-11 

186 

21 

3 

Long  Branch,  N.J.,  High, 

•VIC  WILLIS 

end 

6-5 

197 

21 

2 

Newark.  Delaware,  High. 

•BEHMK  lUSCHER 

end 

6 

182 

21 

3 

Western  High.  D.C. 

•JdllN  lilHKLAND 

tackle 

S-i 

192 

24 

2 

Clifton.  N.J.,  High. 

•CAHI.srAI.l'ORT 

tackle 

6 

192 

21 

3 

Baltimore  Citv  College. 

•CII  Mil, F,S  CALLAHAN 

tackle 

6-4 

201 

21 

3 

Loyola  IliKh.  .M,l. 

•T(IM  M.  LACtiHLIN 

tackle 

6-10 

208 

22 

3 

St.  John  >  .\ca<lemy.  Wis. 
(Home,  Woodbridge,  N.J.) 

•ED  MINION 

guard 

5-11 

194 

22 

3 

Barringer  High,  Newark,  N.J. 

•WILLIAM  GARROTT 

guard 

6-7 

175 

21 

S 

Central  High,  D.C. 

(Home,  Knoxville,  Md.) 

CHARLES  ZULICK 

guard 

6 

196 

20 

2 

Houtzdale,  Pa.,  High. 

•EDWARD  FLETCHER 

guard 

6 

181 

21 

2 

Tech  High,  D.C. 

•HAUUV  GRETZ 

back 

5-10 

1S6 

21 

3 

Tech  High,  D.C. 

•GKdliCH  SACHS 

back 

5-9 

186 

22 

8 

Tech  High,  D.C. 

•ClIAULFS  VAEGER 

back 

6 

188 

22 

3 

Baltimore  City  College. 

•WILLIAM  GUCKEYSON 

back 

6 

185 

20 

2 

Bethesda,  Md.,  High. 

•JACK  STONEBRAKER 

back 

6 

161 

21 

2 

Hagerstown.  Md.,  H  igh  and  Choate, 
Conn.,  School. 

•COLEMAN  HEADLEY 

back 

5-n 

167 

21 

2 

Hargrave  Military  .\cademy 
(Home.  College  Park). 

•JOHN  GORMLEY 

t)ack 

« 

183 

20 

2 

Tech  High,  D.C. 

•EDMOND  DALY 

back 

5-9 

183 

23 

2 

Peddie  Institute.  N.J. 
(Home,  Brighton.  N.Y".) 

•CHARLIE  ELLINGER 

back 

5-11 

168 

21 

« 

Baltimore  City  College. 

FROM  1934  FRESHMAN  SQUAD 

Hgh.  Sch. 
Exp. 

Name 

Position 

Height 

Weight 

Age 

From 

•WILLIAM  WOLFE 

line 

5-10 

186 

19 

S 

Alloona,  Pa.,  High. 

•BLAIR  SMITH 

line 

8-1 

170 

19 

3 

Tech  High,  D.C. 

(Home,  Mount  Rainier,  Md.) 

WILLIAM  AITCHESON 

line 

6-9 

165 

19 

1 

Hargrave  Slilitary  .\cademy,  Va. 
(Home.  Berwyn,  Md.) 

JOHN  MrCARTHY 

line 

6-VA 

187 

20 

4 

Eastern  High.  D.C. 

MI  1,1  JON  DANEKER 

line 

6-3 

186 

20 

0 

Bel  Air.  Md.,  High. 

•.MIKF.  SntCiKNT 

line 

6-1 IH 

184 

19 

1 

Freeland.  Pa.,  High. 

Kdii  \V\I,I()N 

center 

5-8 

164 

19 

0 

Tech  High.  D.C. 

•Fil  \\K  |)T  ARMEY 

center 

5-11 

195 

23 

2 

Windber.  Pa.,  High. 

111  1,1,  illCi  ANT 

back 

6 

170 

20 

2 

Central  High,  D.C. 

W A\  l,Hl,'i  WHEELER 

back 

5-9 

163 

21 

0 

Tech  High,  D.C. 

KUKU  IHO.MAS 

t>ack 

B 

167 

20 

0 

Tech  High,  D.C. 

JOHN  EGAN 

back 

6 

170 

21 

3 

Valley  Forge,  Pa.,  M.A. 
(Home,  Waterbury,  Conn.) 

JOHN  HURLEY 

back 

5-8 

148 

19 

0 

Tech  High,  D.C. 

(Home,  I^jindover.  Md.) 

PAUL  PFEIFFER 

back 

(i 

177 

21 

0 

.\nnapoli;*,  Md. 

•  L*-tter  men 

H4] 


Guckeyson  taking  pass  from  EUinger  for  long  gain  against  Georgetown 

VARSITY  FOOTBALL 

RESULTS  OF  1935  SEASON 

U.  of  M.  0pp. 

September  28 — St.  John's  of  Annapolis  at  College  Park 39  6 

October         5 — Virginia  Tech  at  Baltimore  Stadium 7  0 

October       12 — North  Carolina  at  Baltimore  Stadium 0  33 

October       19 — Virginia  Military  Institute  at  Lexington,  Va..  .  .  6  0 

October       26 — LTniversity  of  Florida  at  Gainesville,  Fla 20  6 

November    2 — University  of  Virginia  at  Charlottesville,  Va. .  .14  7 

November    9 — University  of  Indiana  at  Baltimore  Stadium. ...  7  13 

November  16 — Washington  and  Lee  at  College  Park 0  0 

November  23 — Georgetown  University  at  Washington 12  6 

November  28 — Sj'racuse  University  at  Baltimore  Stadium 0  0 

December     5 — Western  Maryland  at  Baltimore  Stadium 22  7 


PLAYING  a  flashy,  well  coordinated  game  from  start  to  the  final  whistle,  Mary- 
land's football  team  had  one  of  its  most  gratifying  seasons. 

The  Terps,  always  a  tough  and  tricky  foe,  won  seven  games,  tied  a  pair  and  lost 
two,  one  of  which  it  apparently  had  well  within  their  grasp.  It  was  a  couple  of  bad 
"breaks"  with  victory  all  but  gained  that  cost  a  triumph  in  a  big  intersectional  game 
with  Indiana. 

However,  John  E.  (Jack)  Faber,  who  served  as  head  coach;  Frank  Dobson,  who 
presided  as  field  coach  in  his  debut  season  with  the  Old  Liners  after  20  years  in  the 
saddle  at  Richmond  LT.,  and  Leroy  Mackert,  line  coach,  had  no  wails  over  the  sea- 
son. Neither  did  the  faculty,  students  and  followers  of  the  team  in  general,  all  of 
whom  had  high  praise  for  the  Terps. 

Probably  the  most  prized  trumphs  of  the  campaign  were  scored  over  George- 

[145] 


>A  1 1 


McPH£:liSON  i_A 


Headluy  takes  Ij uckej .sou  s  luiwanl  for  louclidowu  in  Western  Maryland  tilt 


town,  a  game  in  which  MaryUmd  was  the  underdog  to  a  fine  Blue  and  Gray  eleven, 
and  over  Western  Maryland,  another  neighboring  rival. 

The  game  with  the  Green  Terrors  really  was  a  post-season  affair,  arranged  to 
help  raise  funds  for  the  field  house  at  Westminster,  but  as  the  contest  eventually 
shaped  up  the  State  title  and  the  Mayor's  trophy  were  at  stake  at  one  and  the  same 
time.  Now  the  Terps  have  both  in  their  possession  after  registering  a  22  to  7  win 
that  was  more  decisive  than  anyone  had  expected.  However,  it  was  more  of  a  bat- 
tle than  the  figures  would  tend  to  indicate. 

It  was  fine  team  play,  engendered  by  a  remarkably  fine  spirit  within  the 
squad,  that  brought  such  great  success  to  the  Old  Line  gridders,  but  there  were  some 
notable  individual  feats  that  stood  out,  especially  some  by  Bill  Guckeyson,  rated 
among  the  greatest  backs  of  the  country  in  a  year  that  filled  with  scintillating  talent. 

Bill's  most  outstanding  achievements  were  in  the  Georgetown  and  Florida 
games.  He  stepped  50  yards  from  scrimmage  for  one  touchdown  against  the  Blue 
and  Gray  and  ran  the 
second  half  kick-off 
back  for  90  yards  for 
another  counter  in  a 
grueling  game  Mary- 
land won  by  only  12 
to  6. 


Ennia   breaks    up    jiass    in    homo- 
coming  guuie  with  Wasliington 
and  Lee 


IKil 


Guckeyson  running  behind  great  interference  in  Indiana  contest 


However,  it  was  team  play  in  the  nature  of  great  blocking  that  enabled  Guckey- 
son to  turn  in  two  such  remarkable  feats  in  one  tilt,  and  the  way  the  path  was 
cleared  for  him  in  the  longer  touchdown  run  was  amazingly  near-perfect. 

Guckeyson's  kicking  contribution  in  the  Florida  game  was  one  of  the  great 
masterpieces  of  the  football  campaign.  He  made  three  boots  which  totalled  fully  210 
yards  from  the  line  of  scrimmage,  and  set  the  stage  for  each  of  the  three  Terp  touch- 
downs that  brought  victory  by  20  to  6  score. 

His  kicking  and  running  stood  out  in  other  games,  too,  and  his  booting  in  the 
Syracuse  tilt,  played  in  rain  and  mud  in  Baltimore  stadium,  was  classical.  His  punts 
were  so  well  placed  that  not  a  one  was  caught. 

But  while  Guckeyson  led  the  parade,  Ed  Minion,  guard;  Carl  Stalfort  and 
Charlie  Callahan,  tackles;  Vic  Willis,  Lou  Ennis  and  Bernie  Buscher,  ends,  and 
Charlie  Ellinger,  Coleman  Headley  and  John  Gormley,  backs,  were  right  behind 
beating  the  tom-toms  of  high  class  football. 

Guckeyson  will  be 
back,  along  with  Vic 
Willis,  and  that  adds 
sunshine,  but  darkness 
comes  from  the  fact 
that  Minion,  Stalfort, 
Callahan,   Ennis    and 


Terps  effectively  check  Albanese, 
Syracuse's  great  fullback 


[147] 


*.  -^^-^--^S^  ^ 


Willis  l,iu  Ijlack  suit  on  extremo  left)  awaits  pass  in  North  Carolina  game 


Buscher  will  be  missing  when  the  roll  is  called  next  September  1 ,  for  the  start  of 
another  campaign,  leaving  shoes  that  any  coach  would  find  difficult  to  fill.  As  men 
and  athletes  they  will  leave  a  great  void. 

Guckeyson,  who  was  all-Southern  selection,  and  ^YilIis  and  Minion  got  All- 
America  mention,  while  they  and  Stalfort,  Callahan,  Ennis  and  Buscher  came  in 
for  honors  on  All-State  and  sectional  teams. 

Guckeyson  was  picked  by  such  teams  as  Syracuse,  Florida  and  Indiana  as  the 
best  back  they  played  against  all  year  and  it  must  be  remembered  that  the  Hoosiers 
faced  such  stars  as  Jay  Berwanger  of  Chicago,  All-America  choice,  and  the  aces  of 
the  great  Minnesota  and  Iowa  teams. 

Maryland  figured  in  some  highly  attractive  games  during  the  season  and  in  only 
the  North  Carolina  tilt,  in  which  it  got  off  on  the  wrong  foot,  did  it  look  bad.  Then 
all  the  ill  luck  that  goes  with  the  loser  was  in  evidence. 

There  was  an  unusual  angle  to  the  clash  with  Virginia  Tech  in  which  the  Terps 
gained  more  than  300 
yards  to  a  paltry  few  for 
the  Gobblers  to  gain  a 
one  touchdown  victory. 

However,  the 
toughest  breaks  of  them 
all  came  in  the  game 


Cavalier  liack  abruptly  halted  in 
\  irjjinia  game 


[14H] 


Stonebraker  on  way  to  touchdown  in  game  with  Florida 


with  Indiana,  which  was  lost  in  the  last  minute  of  play  when  a  long  forward  pass, 
apparently  broken  up,  was  deflected  into  the  hands  of  a  Hoosier  back  of  the  goal 
line.  Just  before  that  penalty  was  called  on  the  Terps,  when  they  had  intercepted 
a  pass  that  seemingly  assured  victory,  that  gave  the  ball  back  to  Indiana  and  set 
the  stage  for  the  fatal  aerial. 

There  was  great  interest  in  the  Syracuse  game  in  the  Baltimore  Stadium  on 
Thanksgiving  Day  and  the  contest,  that  ended  scoreless,  doubtless  would  have 
drawn  a  fine  crowd  had  it  not  turned  out  to  be  a  rainy  and  chilling  day.  It  was  a  fine 
battle  in  the  mud,  with  Guckeyson's  kicking  being  marvelous  under  the  circum- 
stances and  the  Terps  stopping  the  great  Vannie  Albanese,  Orange  fullback,  with 
great  effectiveness. 

These  two  potential  All-Americas,  Guckej'son  and  Albanese,  held  the  lime- 
light and  the  Old  Liner  was  the  better  man  of  the  two — that  day  at  least. 

One  player  who  hardly  got  the  recognition  he  deserved  from  the  fans  and  writ- 
ers is  John  Gormley,  Maryland  fullback,  whose  blocking  on  attack  and  defensive 
play  was  a  joy  to  the  coaches. 


1936  VARSITY  FOOTBALL  SCHEDULE 

-St.  John's  of  Annapolis  at  College  Park  - 
-Virginia  Tech  at  Roanoke.  ' 
-North  Carolina  at  Chapel  Hill. 
-University  of  Virginia  at  Charlottesville,  Va.  - 
-Syracuse  University  at  Syracuse.- 
-University  of  Florida  at  Gainesville,  Fla.' 
University  of  Richmond  at  Richmond. 
-Virginia  Military  Institute  at  College  Park. 
-Georgetown  University  at  College  Park. 
-Washington  and  Lee  University  at  Baltimore. 


September 

26 

October 

3 

October 

10 

October 

17 

October 

24 

October 

31 

November 

7 

November 

14 

November  21 

November 

26 

U9 


BERNIE  BUSCHER 


"JO"  SHIPLEY,  MASCOT 


VIC  WILLIS 


VARSITY  BASKETBALL  SQUAB 


Name 
*Vic  Willis 
*Bernie  Buscher 
*A1  Waters 
*Waverly  Wheeler 
*Fre(i  Thomas 
*Charlie  Keller 
*Ben  Allen 
*John  McCarthy 
Bill  Bryant 

Totals 

Opponents'  Points 
*Letter  men 


Position  Games 

Center  19 

Forward-Guard  20 

Forward  18 

Forward  19 

Guard  20 

Guard  20 

Center-Forward  16 

Center-Forward  17 

Guard  12 


Goals 

84 

80 

41 

35 

24 

28 

14 

16 

1 

.  323 

.  278 


Fouls 

38 

32 

30 

18 

24 

10 

10 

1 

2 

165 

153 


RESULTS  FOR  SEASON 


U.  of  M. 


WM.  BOWIE,  MANAGER 


Virginia  Military  Institute  at  College  Park 44 

Washington  and  Lee  at  Lexington,  Va 27 

Virginia  Military  Listitute  at  Lexington,  Va 53 

U.S.  Naval  Academy  at  Annapolis,  Md 32 

University  of  Richmond  at  College  Park 28 

University  of  Baltimore  at  College  Park 55 

Washington  College  at  College  Park 46 

North  Carolina  at  College  Park 32 

WilHam  and  ALiry  at  College  Park 41 

Duke  University  at  College  Park 38 

University  of  X'irginia  at  College  Park 40 

West  \irgiiiia  University  at  Cumherhmd,  Md 26 

Washington  and  Lee  at  College  Park 54 

St.  John's  of  Annapoli.s  at  College  Park 40 

Catholic  University  at  College  Park 29 

Washington  College  at  Chestertown,  Md 56 

Johns  Hoi)kins  University  at  College  Park 45 

Georgetown  University  at  Tech  High  gym,  D.C..    .  47 

[150] 


Points 

206 

192 

112 

88 

72 

66 

38 

33 

4 

811 

709 


0pp. 
29 
30 
32 
20 
24 
33 
34 
44 
39 
34 
34 
51 
55 
28 
40 
.SO 
40 
39 


WWBlS'SBIIPWiPWHIS 


THOMAS 
WATERS 
ALLEN 


KELLER 


WHEELER 
BRYANT 

McCarthy 


;i5i] 


Wheeler  leaps  high  to  score  against  North  Carolina 


Willis  stops  prospeetive  Washington  and  Lee  basket 


VARSITY  BASKETBALL 

THF>RE  was  plenty  of  the  exliilarating  in  the  basketball  season  that  was  provided 
l)y  a  small  but  high  class  squad,  capably  coached  l)y  H.  Burton  Shipley,  serving 
his  thirteenth  season.  Jack  Faber,  who  acted  as  Ship's  aide-de-camp,  also  shared 
in  the  laurels. 

('ai)turing  13  of  18  contests  during  the  regular  .season  and  breaking  even  in  two 
hot  tilts  in  the  Southern  Conference  championship  tourney,  played  at  Raleigh, 
N.C..  the  Terrapins  compiled  an  enviable  record  and  in  addition  paraded  some  tal- 
ent that  gained  wide  recognition. 

Maryland,  like  every  other  team,  had  its  off  nights,  but  played  as  nearly  up  to  a 
consistent  standard  as  most  basketball  teams,  and  on  occasions  was  unbeatal)le.  The 
Terps,  the  experts  agreed,  played  the  finest  game  of  the  entire  Southern  Conference 
tourney  when  they  rompecl  away  from  Duke  in  the  opening  round  to  the  tune  of  47 
to  35.   Their  l)lay  was  near-perfection  and  gained  the  plaudits  of  the  fans. 

The  Terps,  though,  after  their  extremely  "hot"  night  against  Duke,  fell  off  a 
little  the  next  evening  and  lost  out  to  Washington  and  Lee  in  the  semi-final.  3'"2  to 
38,  in  a  game  in  which  just  a  bit  more  accuracy  in  their  shooting  would  have  won.  In 
fact,  it  was  the  general  ()i)ini()n  that  Maryland  had  the  best  team  in  the  toiu-ney. 

Bernie  Buscher,  who  had  his  greatest  year  in  the  .sport,  gained  the  highest 
recognition,  being  placed  on  the  All-Southern  Conference  first  (|uint  and  on  all  the 
picked  teams  in  his  home  section.  ^  ic  Willis  was  on  the  .second  All-Conference  five  at 
center  as  well  as  on  many  other  all-star  outfits.  In  fact,  Paul  Menton,  sports  editor 
of  the  Evening  Sun  of  lialtimore.and  a  well-known  basketl)all  official  and  authority, 
and  others  thought  Willis  should  have  been  first  Conference  choice. 


152 


Terps  and  Duke  in  merry  battle  for  ball 


Willis  puts  in  two-pointer  against  Richmond  U. 


Willis  and  Buscher  staged  a  great  battle  all  through  the  season  for  scoring  hon- 
ors with  the  former  finishing  with  205  points  for  19  games  and  the  latter  with  192 
for  20  engagements.  Both  of  these  great  players  have  had  their  three  years  of  bas- 
ketball and  will  be  sorely  missed  when  another  campaign  rolls  around.  Willis, 
though,  does  not  graduate  until  next  February  and  has  another  season  of  football. 

Charlie  Keller  and  Al  Waters,  the  only  other  veterans  on  the  team;  Ben  Allen,  a 
junior  in  the  Pharmacy  School  in  Baltimore  but  out  for  the  cjuint  for  the  first  time; 
Fred  Thomas,  Waverly  Wheeler,  John  McCarthy  and  Bill  Bryant,  sophomores, 
completed  the  squad  and  all  saw  plenty  of  action. 

Notable  triumphs  for  the  season  were  scored  over  Georgetown,  which  was  a 
rather  heavj'  favorite;  Navy  in  a  game  at  Annapolis,  Richmond  University  to  atone 
for  a  bad  licking  the  year  before,  Virginia,  Duke  in  the  regular  season  as  well  as  in 
the  tourney,  and  all  State  foes  that  were  met,  Washington  College  twice,  St.  John's, 
Johns  Hopkins  and  Baltimore  University,  In  fact,  the  Terps  firmly  established 
themselves  as  the  undoubted  rulers  of  the  State  realm. 

Outside  of  Buscher  and  Willis,  Waters  was  the  only  player  to  score  more  than 
100  points,  his  total  being  112  for  18  games.  Waverly  Wheeler,  chief  pinch-hitter, 
totalled  88  and  gave  a  lot  of  thrills  with  his  flashy  floor  play.  Keller  and  Thomas 
also  were  streaks  on  the  court. 

Maryland  will  make  a  rule  to  play  only  18  games  starting  next  season  and  the 
schedule  for  1936-37  already  has  been  filled  with  attractive  teams,  the  majority  of 
which  were  on  the  card  during  the  last  campaign. 

Al  Heagy,  who  tutored  the  freshman  basketeers,  is  sending  up  several  good 
prospects  to  the  Varsity  and  a  larger  squad  than  Shipley  carried  this  year  is  likely 
to  wear  suits  during  the  next  campaign. 

[153] 


HARMUNV,  HKNDKUSdN,  U  AH  ILETT,  .IA(  MLK^.  .MK.M)K1X)11N.  MclKKKIN 

UKRBSI.EH,  HONNKTT.  CORMLEY,  SMITH,  PEARSON,  SCHWARTZ 

WALTON,  SLYE,  KELLY,  EGAN,  BOWMAN 

SHEGOGUE,  BIRMINGHAM,  WEBB,  LOMBARDO,  GEBHART 


VARSITY  BOXING  SQUAD 


Years 

Name 

Weight 

Class 

on  Squad 

From 

'Edward  Shegogue 

115 

Junior 

1 

Landover,  Md. 

*Charles  Gebhardt 

115 

Sophomore 

1 

Silver  Spring,  Md. 

*Tom  Birmingham 

U5 

Junior 

2 

Sparrows  Point,  Md. 

Warren  Bonnctt 

125 

Junior 

2 

Aberdeen,  Md. 

Robert  Slye 

125 

Senior 

1 

Washington,  D.C. 

Uaymond  Putnam 

135 

Sophomore 

1 

AVashington,  D.C. 

(Iccirge  Bowman 

l.'!5 

Sophomore 

1 

Annapolis  Junction,  Md 

•Walter  Wel>l) 

135- 

145 

Senior 

3 

Vienna,  Md. 

*Mortimer  Schwartz 

135 

Junior 

2 

New  York  City 

*Ivan  Xedomatsky 

145- 

155 

Junior 

2 

Catonsville,  Md. 

Harold  Kelly 

155 

Junior 

2 

Forest  Glen,  Md. 

John  Egan 

155 

Sophomore 

1 

Waterbury,  Conn. 

Boliert  \Yalton 

155 

Sophomore 

1 

Washington,  D.C. 

II.  R.  Pearson 

165 

Sophomore 

1 

St.  George's  Island,  Md 

*Mike  Lomhardo 

155- 

105 

Junior 

2 

Newark,  N.J. 

Blair  Smith 

105- 

175 

So])h()m(ire 

1 

Mount  Ranier,  Md. 

Mohn  <iormle.v 

175- 

Heavy 

Jimior 

2 

Washington,  D.C. 

John  Birkland 

Ileavy 

Junior 

2 

Clifton,  N.J. 

Ed  I'l.'tcher 

Heavy 

Junior 

1 

Washington,  D.C. 

*  Lcller  nii'n 

RESULTS  OF  SEASON 

U.  of  M.  0pp. 

January     18 — Catholic  Iniversity  at  Washington 3K  ^K 

January    25 — Iniversity  of  Miami  at  College  Park 3>2  4K 

February    1 — University  of  Virginia  at  ( dllege  Park '-i'A  ^K 

February    7 — North  Carolina  at  (  hajjel  Hill 5K  ^/^ 

February  15— V.M.I,  at  College  Park 7  1 

February  22— U.S.  Military  Academy  at  West  Point ^  5 

March        13 — University  of  Wisconsin  at  Ma<lison 'i^i  5'/i 


154 


SMITH 

NEDOMATSKY 

GORMLEY 

WEBB 

BIRMINGHAM 

SCHWARTZ 

SHEGOGUE 

GEBHARDT 

LOMBARDO 

BIRKLAND 

[155] 


Nedomatsky  kayoes  Shcppard  of  V.P.I,  for  Southern  Conference  title 


VARSITY  BOXING 


THE  1936  boxing  team,  with  Captain  John  W.  (Jack)  Harmony  coaching  for  his 
fourth  and  farewell  .season,  did  not  do  as  well  as  in  some  previous  campaigns 
when  the  won  and  lost  column  is  taken  strictly  into  consideration,  but  the  squad  and 
the  tutor  pleased  every  one  in  the  know. 

Taking  two  out  of  seven  meets  does  not  appear  as  a  great  record  on  the  surface, 
but  "officiating  breaks,"  that  will  not  be  discussed  here,  may  truthfully  be  charged 
with  costing  a  Maryland  triumph  in  at  least  three  of  the  meets,  two  of  which  were 

dropped  by  counts  of  4}/2  to  Sj/^  and  another  that 

went  the  wrong  way,  5  to  3. 

One  champion  was  crowned  in  the  Southern 
Conference  tournament,  held  as  usual  at  the 
University  of  Virginia,  and  another  reached  the 
final  only  to  lose  out  on  a  close  decision. 

Ivan  Nedomatsky  brought  home  the  title, 
winning  in  the  145-pound  class,  registering  kay- 
oes in  l)oth  the  semi-final  and  final  rounds  to 
leave  no  doubt  as  to  his  superiority.  Nedomat- 
sky the  previous  year  had  won  in  the  135-pound 
.  -  division   and  repeating  in  a  higher  weight  was 

1  JBS  unusual. 

1^        JH9P  John  Gormley,  battling  in  the  light-heavy- 

g^^\  weight  section,  was  the  Marylander  to  reach  the 

J     y  .        ultimate  round,  and  he  came  near  garnering  the 

^^01     9  J        laurels   by   a   kayo,   although   finally   being  de- 

'^^  J       clared  loser  on  points. 

Two  things  hurt  the  team  greatly  all  through 
the  season.      Nedomatsky \s  advance  in   weight 


SALLY  II.\KM()NV  (^L\SCOTl  mid 
CAl'T.  Sl'lKK   WKHB 


150 


threw  the  whole  squad 
out  of  kelter  at  the  start, 
forcing  Captain  Har- 
mony to  juggle  his  team 
about  more  than  he  liked 
to  in  order  to  make  the 
best  of  the  situation. 
Then,  too,  Maryland 
never  had  a  dependable 
heavyweight  who  really 
was  in  that  class  as  to 
poundage.  Gormley,  al- 
though easily  able  to 
make  175  and  never  go- 
ing more  than  two  or 
three  pounds  above  180, 
fought  in  that  class  a 
couple  times  and  showed 
to  advantage.  However, 
he  naturally  was  forced 
to  concede  too  much 
weight  not  to  reduce  his 
winning  chances. 

Maryland  is  extremely 
fortunate  that  it  will 
turn  a  fine  nucleus  over 
to  the  new  coach,  who- 
ever he  may  be.  Walter 
Webb,  who  acted  as 
captain  in  most  of  the 
fights  during  the  1936 
season,  will  be  the  only 
scrapper  to  be  gradu- 
ated and  some  good  talent  will  come  up  from  the  freshman  squad,  which  was 
stronger  in  quality  than  in  quantity.  Lyman  McAboy,  who  fought  under  Harmony 
for  three  years,  handled  the  yearlings  in  gratifying  fashion. 

With  few  exceptions,  Maryland's  boxers  come  from  within  the  State  and 
the  District  of  Columbia  and  only  rarely  does  one  make  his  appearance  who 
has  had  any  experience  worthwhile  and  nearly  all  of  them  have  had  absolutely 
none. 

Captain  Harmony  will  go  from  Maryland  to  the  Army  Staff  School  at  Leaven- 
worth and  this  means  that  his  chances  of  going  high  up  in  the  service  are  bright. 
Maryland  will  miss  him  greatly  and  if  it  can  come  close  to  filling  his  shoes  it  will  be 
well  satisfied. 

Tom  Birmingham,  for  two  years  the  regular  in  the  1 '■25-pound  class,  has  been 
elected  president  of  the  Student  Government  Association,  but  this  is  not  expected 
to  take  him  away  from  the  boxing  squad. 

Another  boxer,  Mike  Lombardo,  who  fights  in  either  the  155  or  165-pound 
class,  also  was  honored  in  the  elections,  being  named  president  of  the  Men's  League 
oftheS.G.A. 


Webb  and  Tobias  of  Miami  battle  it  out  at  close  range 
Gormley  defeating  Dulaney  of  V.M.I. 


[157] 


I^ATIOXAL      IXTEKCOLLECIATE      CHAMPIONS 


HART.  GULP,  HAMMERLUND,  WEBB,  BOWIK,  JIMMYER,  IJOWNIN,  ELLINGER,  TUWSON 

SCHAFFER,  MITCHELL,  LODGE,  RABBITT,  KELLY.  WOLFE,  WATSON,  GROFF,  FLETCHER,  MANAGER  LANKFORD 

MUNCKS,  MINION,  MACCUBBIN.  ENNIS,  LINDSAY,  CHRISTHILF,  YAEGER,  BRILL 


VARSITY  LACROSSE  SQUAD 


Years 

Name 

Position 

on  Squdd 

Height 

Weight 

From 

John  Kelly 

Goal 

2 

6 

159 

Baltimore,  Md. 

John  Muncks 

Goal 

1 

5-9 

145 

Baltimore,  Md. 

Louis  Ennis 

Point 

3 

5-11 

183 

Long  Branch,  N.J 

Jiia  Hart 

Cover  Point 

2 

6-'-2 

174 

Baltimore,  Md. 

Oden  Bowie 

Defense 

2 

5-11 

153 

Mitchellville.  :Md 

Ike  Rabbitt 

Defense 

3 

5-ioy^ 

145 

Washington,  D.C 

Charlie  Yaeger 

Defense 

2 

6 

188 

Baltimore,  Md. 

Ed  Minion 

Defense 

3 

5-11 

194 

Newark,  N.J. 

Bill  Towson 

Defense 

1 

6 

160 

Baltimore,  Md. 

Jack  Downin 

Defense 

2 

(i~l 

168 

Baltimore,  Md. 

Bill  Wolfe 

Defense 

1 

5-10 

186 

Altoona,  Pa. 

Harvey  Cooke 

Defense 

1 

5-10 

182 

Washington,  D.C 

Robert  Walton 

Defense 

1 

5-8 

162 

Chevy  Chase,  Md 

Herbert  Brill 

Attack 

3 

6 

148 

Baltimore,  ^Id. 

Pearce  Maccubbin 

Attack 

3 

5-8 

153 

Baltimore,  Md. 

George  Watson 

Attack 

1 

6-1 

163 

Towson,  Md. 

Bill  Grift' 

Attack 

1 

6 

176 

Reisterstown,  Md 

Walter  Webb 

Attack 

3 

5-7 

150 

^'ienna,  Md. 

George  Schatt'er 

Attack 

3 

5-8 

164 

Towson,  Md. 

Bol)  Haimnerhmd 

Attack 

2 

5-11 

152 

Washington,  D.C. 

Bill  Mitchell 

Attack 

1 

6-1 

243 

Baltimore,  Md. 

Parker  Lindsay 

Center 

1 

5-10 

160 

Baltimore,  Md. 

John  Christhilf 

Out  Home 

3 

5-11 

176 

Baltimore,  Md. 

Charlie  EUinger 

In  Home 

2 

.5-11 

168 

Baltimore,  Md. 

[158] 


XATIOXAL      INTERCOLLEGIATE      CHAMPIONS 


BABBITT 
HART 
KELLY 

ENNIS 


BOWIE 

BRILL 

LINDSAY 

YAJEGER 

[ACCUBBIN 

CHRISTHILF 

ELLINGER 

159] 


Christhilf  fires  ball  into  net  against  Harvard 


VARSITY  LACROSSE 


MARYLAND'S  1936  lacrosse  team,  from  the  standpoint  of  balance  and  all- 
around  excellence,  generally  was  conceded  to  be  one  of  the  very  best  stick  com- 
binations ever  produced  in  the  colleges  and  one  of  the  outstanding  squads  ever  to 
show  its  wares  in  the  famous  old  Indian  pastime. 

It  was  a  team  that  had  power  and  polish  from  stem  to  stern,  with  every  man 
who  was  permitted  by  the  rules  to  go  down  the  field  on  attack  being  capable  of  dex- 
terously firing  the  ball  into  the  netting.  This  is  testified  to  by  the  division  of  the 
scoring  among  so  many  of  the  Old  Liners.  All  of  the  lacrosse  writers  referred  to 
Maryland's  offense  as  a  "six-man  attack." 

From  Jack  Kelly,  the  alert  and  agile  goalie,  down  to  Charlie  Ellinger,  the  in 
home  and  axis  of  the  team,  there  was  not  a  single  weak  spot  in  the  outfit.  Ellinger,  a 
clever  general  and  feeder,  also  could  toss  the  rubber  pellet  into  the  goal  along  with 
such  adept  throwers  as  Herb  Brill,  John  Christhilf,  Parker  Lindsay,  Pierce  Mac- 
cubbin  and  others. 

It  was  mainly  a  combination — as  far  as  the  first  team  was  concerned — of  se- 
niors and  juniors,  Lindsay,  an  umisually  capable  center,  being  the  only  sophomore 
to  gain  a  regular  berth. 


ICO 


Maccubbin  almost  slays  goalkeeper  in  B.A.C.  game 

This  means,  of  course,  that  Head  Coach  Jack  Faber  and  Al  Heagy,  defense 
coach,  will  have  quite  a  few  shoes  to  fill  when  another  Spring  rolls  around.  Among 
those  who  will  be  missing  will  be  Lou  Ennis,  Jim  Hart  and  Ike  Rabbitt,  three  ex- 
cellent defense  men,  and  Herb  Brill,  John  Christhilf  and  Pierce  Maccubbin,  attackers, 
all  regulars. 

Ed  Minion,  defense,  and  Walter  Webb  and  George  Schaffer,  attack,  of  the  1936 
reserves  also  have  played  their  final  lacrosse  for  the  Terps.  Every  man  to  go  will  be 
missed  and  it  will  take  a  lot  of  searching  to  fill  their  places,  especially  men  like  Ennis, 
Christhilf,  Brill,  Hart  and  Rabbitt. 

However,  Joe  Deckman,  who  has  worked  like  a  Trojan  with  a  good  band  of 
freshmen,  will  send  more  than  the  average  amount  of  talent  up  to  the  Varsity. 

Doubtless  the  three  strongest  teams  that  Maryland  played  all  season  were 
Baltimore  Athletic  Club,  Mount  Washington  Club  and  the  Naval  Academy.  Both 
of  the  club  teams  are  made  up  mainly  of  former  college  lacrosse  stars,  many  of  them 
All-Americas  in  their  student  days  and  offer  a  tremendous  problem  for  any  collegi- 
ate outfit. 

The  Terps  carried  off  the  honors  in  the  tilts  with  B.A.C.  and  the  Navy,  but  lost 
out  by  a  single  goal  margin  to  the  Mount  Washington  aggregation  in  a  game  in 
which  Maryland,  after  a  jittery  start,  appeared  to  be  the  superior  combination.  In 
fact,  after  trailing  4  to  7  at  intermission,  the  Terps  came  back  to  outplay  their  more 


161 


A  race  for  llie  ball  in  hoi  .Mount  Waslimglou  battle 


experienced  rivals  in  the  second  half  four  goals  to  two,  only  to  lose  out  by  8  to  9.  It 
was  a  great  game  of  lacrosse  and  to  hold  the  clubmen  to  such  a  close  count  was  a 
noteworthy  feat. 

Another  greatly  prized  victory  was  the  9  to  0  triumph  scored  over  St.  John's, 
Maryland's  old  rival  which  has  proved  a  thorn  in  the  side  of  the  Terps  on  the  la- 
crosse field  in  recent  years.  It  is  exceptional  in  modern  lacrosse  for  a  team  to  be 
blanked,  especially  an  outfit  of  the  caliber  of  the  Johnnies,  who  later  took  the  meas- 
ure of  a  strong  West  Point  ten. 

However,  the  big  thrill  of  the  campaign  came  in  the  game  with  the  Navy  at- 
tackmen  at  Annapolis  on  May  9  when  the  outfit,  now  coached  by  Dinty  Moore, 
former  St.  John's  mentor,  was  conquered  by  a  7  to  2  count.  It  was  a  torrid  battle, 
fought  out  under  a  glaring  sun  and  the  Old  Liners  had  to  show  real  class  to  gain  the 
upper-hand  by  such  a  margin. 

The  game  was  the  high  spot  of  the  season  from  the  standpoint  of  attendance,  as 
fully  (5,000  persons  withstood  the  heat  to  witness  the  annual  struggle,  and  few  of 
them  left  until  the  final  whistle  blew.  The  play  throughout  was  just  about  as  hot  as 
the  day  and  every  point  that  came  Maryland's  way  was  fully  earned. 

Few,  if  any  contests,  in  any  sport  are  as  spiritedly  played  as  those  between  the 
Middies  and  Terps  on  the  lacrosse  field  and  the  1936  tilt,  if  anything,  carried  more 
dash  than  usual,  although  the  play  was  sportsmanlike  at  all  times. 

[102] 


One  ball  that  was  shot  past  Navy's  goal,  but  plenty  went  in 

It  might,  incidentally,  be  mentioned  that  Maryland's  schedule  was  the  tough- 
est tackled  by  any  outfit  in  the  country.  In  fact,  it  was  the  only  list  that  contained 
all  the  big  teams  of  the  State,  the  hot-bed  of  the  stick-wielding  sport. 

It  might  also  be  pointed  out  that  two  of  the  big  guns  of  the  Mount  Washington 
Club  are  former  Old  Line  stars,  Fred  Stieber,  high  scoring  in  home,  and  Norwood 
Sothoron,  who  is  equally  as  good  at  center  or  in  a  defense  position. 


April 

2 

April  11 

April  18 

April 

25 

INIay 

2- 

]\Iay 

9 

May 

16 

:May 

23 

lylav 

30 

RESULTS  OF  THE  SEASON 

U.  of  M.  0pp. 

-Harvard  L'niversity  at  College  Park 15  2 

-Alumni  at  College  Park 15  0 

-Baltimore  A.C.  at  College  Park 9  6 

-St.  John's  College  at  College  Park 9  0 

-Mount  Washington  Club  at  College  Park 8  9 

-U.S.  Naval  Academy  at  Annapolis 7  2 

-Rutgers  LTniversity  at  New  Brunswick 8  7 

-Johns  Hopkins  University  at  Baltimore 9  4 

-Penn  State  College  at  State  College 

[163] 


SOIJTHERX     COIVFEREXCE     CHAMPIONS 


MANAGER  SHANK,  GUCKEYSON,  PATTERSON.  RUBLE,  WILLIS,  McCARTHY,  C.  KELLER,  COACH  SHIPLEY 

BRYANT,  WOOD,  FREAS,  WHEELER,  THOMAS,  SURGENT,  STONEBRAKER 

EGAN,  DALY,  DULEY,  BEEBE,  .1.  KELLER 


VARSITY  BASEBALL  SQUAB 


C 


Years 

Name 

Position 

on  Hquad 

Height 

Weight 

From 

Vic  Willis 

Pitcher 

3 

6-5 

193 

Newark,  Del. 

-vFord  Loker 

Pitcher 

2 

6 

165 

Leonardtown,   Md 

<  Dale  Patterson 

Pitcher 

1 

6 

176 

Indian  Head,  Md. 

■^Charles  Beebe 

Pitcher 

2 

5-10 

170 

Chevy  Chase,  Md 

vGeorfje  Wood 

Pitcher 

1 

5-6 

130 

Laurel,  Md. 

V  Kyle  Ruble 

Pitcher 

1 

6-2 

170 

Poolesville,  Md. 

'Fred  Thomas 

Catcher 

1 

6 

157 

Washington,  C.C. 

vJohii  (iorinley 

Catcher 

2 

6 

183 

Washington,  D.C. 

•/Ralph  Keller 

Catcher 

1 

5-11 

160 

Frederick,  Md. 

-  Gordon  Freas 

First  Base 

1 

5-10^2 

165 

Wheat  on.  :Md. 

'/John  McCarthy 

First-O.F. 

1 

6-1 

180 

Washington,  D.C. 

'/jack  Stonebraker 

Second  Base 

2 

6 

151 

Ilagerstown,  Md. 

-/Charlie  Keller 

Short-O.F. 

2 

5-10>^ 

186 

Middletown,  Md. 

Waverly  Wheeler 

'i'hird  Base 

1 

5-9K 

163 

Washington.  D.C. 

vMike  Surgent 

Short-O.F. 

1 

5-11 

190 

Freeland,  Pa. 

/Rill  Bryant 

Outfield 

1 

6 

170 

Takoina  Park.  Md 

'  Bill  Guckeysoii 

Outfield 

1 

6 

185 

Hethesda.  Md. 

-td  Daly 

Outfield 

2 

5-11 

183 

New  Brighton.  T-.I 

John  Egan 

Outfield 

1 

5-11 

163 

Waterbnry,  Conn. 

Oscar  Duley 

Outfield 

1 

5-7 

140 

Marlboro,  Md. 

104 


SOUTHERN      CONFEHEIVCE     CHAMPIONS 


WOOD                                                                 STONEBRAKER  KELLER 

WHEELER  WILLIS 

VARSITY  BASEBALL                           „„,,,  opp 

March  26— Ohio  State  at  College  Park 5  2 

March  27 — Ohio  State  at  College  Park (Rain) 

March  31— Cornell  University  at  College  Park 8  6 

April       1 — Cornell  University  at  College  Park 6  7 

April       2 — University  of  Vermont  at  College  Park (Rain) 

April       \ — Rutgers  University  at  College  Park (Failed  to  arrive) 

.  April       8 — University  of  Richmond  at  Richmond 0  2 

April       9 — University  of  Virginia  at  Charlottesville (Rain) 

April     10 — Washington  and  Lee  at  Lexington (Rain) 

April     11 — Virginia  Military  Institute  at  Lexington 11  3 

April     18 — University  of  Michigan  at  (College  Park 14  13 

April     20 — LTniversity  of  Richmond  at  College  Park 6  16 

April     23 — University  of  Virginia  at  College  Park 3  4 

April     25 — Georgetown  University  at  Washington 2  5 

April     28— West  Virginia  University  at  College  Park 21  9 

April     29 — LT.S.  Naval  Academy  at  Annapolis 9  1 

May       2 — Georgetown  Liniversity  at  College  Park 12  9 

May       4 — Duke  LTniversity  at  College  Park 13  8 

May       7— William  and  Mary  at  College  Park 10  7 

May       9 — Washington  College  at  Chestertown 15  13 

May      14 — Virginia  Military  Institute  at  College  Park 19  6 

May      15 — Washington  and  Lee  at  College  Park 8  7 

May      16— North  Carolina  at  College  Park 8  2 

May      19 — Washington  College  at  College  Park (Rain) 

May      21 — Rutgers  University  at  New  Brunswick 7  10 

May      23— U.S.  Military  Academy  at  West  Point 19  5 


[165] 


:    ..y'-.*^-f;;,;v^'j*f3ii3^j]-<*p! 


Stonebraker  safe  at  third  in  Michigan  game 


Keller  scores  on  Cornell 


THERE  was  plenty  of  glory  in  the  baseball  season  witli  the  Southern  Con- 
ference title  flag  tacked  to  the  mast  and  a  great  majority  of  the  games  on  the 
right  side  of  the  ledger.  This  was  accomplished  despite  unfavorable  weather  early  in 
the  season  that  retarded  Vic  Willis  and  other  pitchers. 

However,  the  crafty  George  Wood,  the  sojiliomore  southpaw  mite,  led  the  slab- 
bers to  a  gratifying  season,  in  which  some  of  the  high  spots  were  triumphs  over  Ohio 
State,  Cornell,  ^Michigan,  Duke  and  Navy,  to  mention  a  few. 

An  even  break  also  was  gained  with  Georgetown,  one  of  the  best  nines  playing 
in  the  South  Atlantic  sector  and  it  came  as  one  of  the  feature  triumphs  of  Field  Day. 

Charlie  Keller,  who  continued  to  show  big  league  caliber  in  the  outfield;  Jack 
Stonebraker,  who  first  played  second  and  then  was  shifted  to  short  to  fill  a  gap  there; 
Waverly  Wheeler,  third  sacker;  Fred  (Young  Knocky)  Thomas,  catcher,  and  Bill 
Bryant,  outfielder,  were  the  ))ig  guns  of  the  team,  ^like  Surgent,  infielder,  also  de- 
veloped as  the  sea.son  progressed  and  aided  with  his  hitting. 

liill  Guckeyson  coming  to  tlie  team  late 
when  he  was  kept  from  track  by  a  nerve  ail- 
ment in  his  shoulder,  also  shone  as  the  sea- 
son waned,  sliowing  that  he  has  the  talent 
to  make  good  on  the  diamond  as  well  as  on 
the  gridiron  and  as  an  all-aromul  field  man. 

Willis  and  Ford  Lokcr,  a  pitcher  who  will 
enter  the  Medical  School  next  Fall,  will  be 

Maryland's  new  electric  scorcbDunl  Coacll  BurtOU  Shipley's  only  loSSCS. 


[HiOj 


Athletic  Board  at  opening  game  with  Ohio  State 

Walter  Johnson  tossing  out  first  ball 

Thomas  scoring  first  run  of  season 


[167] 


LOVELL,  WELD,  HERBERT.  MAURER.  GIBBS,  BELT,  EDWARDS,  PUTMAN,  BAKER,  GEBELEIN,  DANEKER,  DeARMEY.  EPPLEY 

GRAHAM,  ZULICK,  PFEIKKER,  HERBSLEB,  BALDWIN,  WOLK,  YOUNG,  GERBER,  THIES,  KILBY,  WAHL 

DRAKE,  GALLIHER,  RYAN,  BEALL,  ORCl  TT,  DUVALL,  SANFORD,  CRONIN,  W.  EVANS,  HEADLEY,  FINK,  SCHUTZ 


VARSITY  TRACK  SQUAD 


Name 

Events 

Years  on  Squad 

From 

Joe  Ryan 

100,  220 

2 

Washington,  D.C. 

Kenneth  Fink 

100,  220 

1 

Baltimore,  Md. 

Alton  Sanford 

220,  440,  Hurdles,  broad  jump 

3 

Chev.v  Chase,  Md. 

Selbv  Frank 

220,  440 

3 

Washington,  D.C. 

Conrad  (lebelein 

220,  440 

1 

Baltimore,  Md. 

Frank  C'ronin 

220,  440,  Pole  vault 

1 

Joppa,  Md. 

Warren  Hughes 

100,  200,  Hurdles 

1 

Washington,  D.C. 

Wilson  Kilb.v 

100,  Broad  jump 

1 

Rising  Sun,  Md. 

Philip  Miller 

100.  200 

1 

Mount  Rainier,  Md, 

Reuben  Wolk 

100 

1 

Washington,  D.C. 

Warren  Evans* 

440 

3 

Hyattsville,  Md. 

Robert  Archer* 

440 

3 

Bel  Air,  Md. 

Coleman  Headley 

440,  880,  mile 

2 

College  Park,  Md. 

William  Thies 

440,  Broad  jump 

1 

Washington,  D.C. 

Halbert  Evans 

440,  Hurdles 

1 

Hyattsville,  Md. 

Robert  Slye 

Hurdles,  broad  jump 

S 

Washington.  D.C. 

John  Schutz 

Hurdles,  broad  jump 

1 

Washington,  D.C. 

Robert  Bcall 

440,  880,  Mile 

3 

Rockville,  Md. 

Lewis  (iibbs 

880 

3 

Washii.gton,  D.C. 

Joe  (ialliher 

880,  Broad  jump 

3 

Washington,  D.C. 

Million  Daneker 

880,  Shot,  discus 

1 

Bel  Air.  Md. 

Sigmund  (Jerber 

Mile 

1 

Baltimore.  Md. 

Richard  Lee 

Mile,  broad  jump 

1 

Hyattsville,  Md. 

Charlie  Orcutt 

Two  miles 

2 

Washington,  D.C. 

Kenneth  Belt 

Two  miles 

2 

Washington,  D.C. 

Willis  Baldwin 

Two  miles 

1 

Have  dc  (Irace,  M<l 

Wilbur  D.ivall 

High  j\imp,  pole  vault 

3 

Damascus.  Md. 

John  W.ld 

High  jump 

2 

Sandy  Spring,  Md. 

Paul  Pf.-iffcr 

.lavelin,  discus,  broad  jump 

2 

.\nnapolis,  Md. 

Rill  (tr;ihai>i 

.Javelin,  discus 

;i 

W'asliington.  D.C. 

Jack  llcrbsleb 

Jaxelin 

3 

Washington,  D.C. 

Bill  CiK-kcvsonf 

Ja\"elin,  shot,  discus 

2 

Bi-thcsda.  Md. 

Dan  Drake 

Pole  vault,  liroad  jump 

2 

Washington,  D.C. 

VcriKiii  (iray 

Itrond  .lump 

1 

Chevy  Cha.se.  Md. 

Ciiarlic  Ziilick 

.Shot 

2 

Houlzdale,  Pa. 

William  Eihvards 

Shot 

1 

Washington,  D.C. 

Thomas  McLaiif;lilin 

Shot 

2 

Woodridg.'.  N.J. 

*  Kligiblo  for  indoor  season 

only. 

t  Developed  nerve 

ailment 

in  arm  and  did  not  ciiui|icle  all  sea.sou. 

l''iiiall.\'  went  o\'er  to  baseball. 

[168  J 


sasi- 


BEALL 
GALLIHER 


DUVALL 


HERBSLEB 


GRAHAM 


SANFORD 

FRANK 


VARSITY  TRACK 


DESPITE  enough  bad  breaks  to  have  taken  the  starch  out  of  the  squad  and 
Coach  Swede  Eppley,  the  Maryland  track  and  field  combination  carried  on  in 
brilliant  fashion  in  a  long,  hard  schedule  and  but  for  the  unexpected  loss  of  star  tal- 
ent might  possibly  have  gone  through  the  outdoor  campaign  with  a  clean  slate. 

Coleman  Headley,  ace  middle  distance  runner,  and  Frank  Cronin,  sophomore 
runner  and  pole-vaulter,  turned  in  the  outstanding  achievements.  Headley  smashed 
the  half  mile  and  mile  marks,  the  former  which  he  held,  and  the  latter  which  had 
stood  on  the  books  since  19'26. 

Headley's  finest  feat  was  in  the  mile  in  the  Southern  Conference  outdoor 
championship  meet  at  Durham,  N.C.,  on  May  16,  when  he  ran  the  distance  in  4  :'20.9 
to  conquer  one  of  the  best  fields  ever  to  race  in  Dixie.  It  smashed  to  smither- 
eens the  old  mark  of  4:31.2  made  by  Carlton  Neunam.  Earlier  in  the  season 
Headley  did  4:23.3  and  4:22.4. 

Headley  also  smashed  his  880-yard  mark  of  1 :58.8  against  Virginia,  his  new 
.  time  being  1:58.2. 

Cronin  turned  in  his  record  pole-vault  in  the  first  meet  of  his  varsity  career 
against  Virginia  Tech  at  Blacksburg  on  April  9,  going  over  the  bar  at  12  feet  4^4 
inches.    He  also  won  the  Conference  440  title  in  49.6. 

Other  notable  achievements  during  the  year  were  Warren  Evans'  52.4  for  the 

[169] 


Heaflley  winning  mile  in  4:2'2.4  and  Slye  capturing  liigli  hurdles  against  Richmond  U. 

440  and  the  feat  of  the  relay  team  of  Boh  Archer.  Bill  Thies.  Cronin  and  Evans  run- 
ning the  mile  in  Southern  Conference  indoor  meet  at  Chapel  Hill  in  3:31.8.  Both 
times,  matle  on  an  unbanked  track,  were  records. 

Earlier  in  the  year  the  same  relay  team,  with  the  exception  that  Thies  was  out 
and  Headley  ran  anchor,  defeated  Amherst.  Yale  and  Princeton  in  a  mile  race  in  the 
Millrose  games  in  New  York  in  3:'-27.'-2. 

Bob  Slye,  hurdler  and  broad  jumper,  followed  closely  on  the  heels  of  Headley 
and  Cronin  in  stardom,  while  Charlie  Orcutt  and  Bob  Beall  in  the  distance  runs, 
Wilbur  Duvall  in  the  jumps.  Selby  Frank  and  Alton  Sanford  in  the  dashes,  Charlie 
Zulick  and  Bill  Edwards  in  the  shot-put,  and  Jack  Herbsleb,  Paul  Pfeiffer  and  Bill 
Craham  in  the  javelin  and  discus  contributed  heavily. 

Slye,  Duvall,  Frank,  Sanford,  Herbsleb  and  Graham  are  among  those  in  the 
graduating  class  and  will  be  greatly  missed.  It  may  be  a  long  time  before  Maryland 
can  fill  the  shoes  of  Slye,  big  point  getter  for  a  little  fellow. 

Maryland's  greatest  blow  came  in  the  loss  of  Bill  (nickeyson,  javelin,  discus 
and  shot  tosser,  who  averaged  14  points  a  meet  in  193.5.  through  a  nerve  ailment  in 
his  shoulder.  Cuckeyson  had  hopes  of  making  the  ()lym])ic  team  as  a  javelin  tosser, 
and  had  a  great  chance. 

Another  jolt  was  the  failure  of  Bill  IV'crs,  hin-dler  and  broad  jumper,  to  return 
to  school.   He  is  the  holder  of  the  Iniversity  broad  jumj)  mark  of  '■23  feet  '■^^^  inches. 

An  appendicitis  operation  also  robbed  the  team  of  Bill  Thies,  fine  quarter  miler 
and  broad  jumper,  and  there  were  other  setbacks  that  would  have  caused  most  any 
other  coach,  except  Swede  Eppley,  to  moan.  One  was  the  injury  that  kept  Slye  out 
of  the  Virginia  meet  and  doubtless  cost  the  Terj)s  a  victory. 

But  there  was  enough  on  the  bright  side  spread  across  the  .season  to  look  back 
upon  with  sati.sfaction. 


[170] 


Cronin,  who  set  new  University  record  in  pole  vaulting 


RESULTS  OF  THE  SEASON 


OUTDOOR 

U.  of  M. 

April    9— Virginia  Tech  at  Blacksburg.  Va 74>2 

April  11 — Washington  and  Lee  at  Lexington,  Va 87 

April  18— Virginia  Military  Institute  at  College  Park  S"! 

A.pril  25— Penn  Relays  at  Philadelphia:  Third  in  mile  race  (Sanford,  Beall,  Frank 

and  Headley). 

April  27 — University  of  Virginia  at  College  Park 5G}4 

May     2 — University  of  Richmond  at  College  Park 73^ 

May     9 — Johns  Hopkins  University  at  College  Park 105 

May  16 — Southern  Conference  meet  at  Durham,  N.C. 

Headley  won  mile,  Cronin  took  440,  in  which  Frank  was  fifth,  Beall  fifth  in 

the  half,  Orcutt  fourth  in  the  2-mile,  the  mile  relay  team  third  and  Cronin 

tied  for  fourth  in  the  pole  vault. 

May  19— Catholic  University  at  College  Park 90)4 

Mav  23 — U.S.  Naval  Academy  at  Annapolis 


0pp. 

5l}4 

39 

54 


69^ 

52>^ 
21 


ssyi 


INDOOR 


February  ^— (Millrose  games  in  New  York):  Mile  relay  (Evans,  Cronin,  Archer  and  Headley)  de- 
feated Amherst,  Yale  and  Princeton  in  3:27.2,  and  Headley  also  was  third  in  1,000-yard  special. 

February  12— (In  Philadelphia):  Second  in  National  Junior  A.A.U.  relay  and  scored  points  in  other 
events. 

February  i5— (New  York  A.  C.  Games) :  Headley  second  to  Chuck  Horubostle  in  the  Halpin  Mile. 

February  ^;2— Headley  and  Evans  failed  to  tpialify  in  National  A.A.U.  meet  in  New  York. 

March  7— Team  finished  third  in  Southern  Conference  indoor  meet  at  Chapel  Hill,  N.C.  Mile  relay 
team  (Archer,  Bill  Thies,  Cronin  and  Evans)  set  indoor  record  of  3:31.8  on  unbanked  track; 
Evans  also  broke  440-yard  mark  with  52.4.  Maryland  got  points  in  four  other  varsity  events. 


m 


SMITH,  MANAGER  GARBER,  WATERS.  COACH  liUPST,  POSNER,  LEHMAN 
MELOY,  COHEN.  KRULEVITZ,  LAND,  BEACHAM,  RINTOUL 


VARSITY  TEXXIS  SQUAD 


Name 
James  L.  Rintoul 
Keaciel  Krulevitz 
William  S.  Meloy 
Robert  Land 
Edmund  Beaeham 
Ted  Lehman  n 
Rohert  Waters 
Carl  Rothschild 


Years 
on  Squad 

3 
2 
3 
2 
1 
1 


Height 
5-9 
5-9 

6-H 

5-7 

5-8 

5-11 

5-7 

5-11 


Weight 
145 
160 
176 
135 
142 
172 
155 
180 


From 
Baltimore,  Md. 
Baltimore,  Md. 
Washington,  D.C. 
Baltimore,  Md. 
Baltimore,  Md. 
Baltimore,  Md. 
Princess  Anne,  Md. 
Chefoo,  China. 


April  14 

April 

17 

April  18 

April  'ti 

April  29 

May 

2- 

May 

4 

May 

7- 

May 

8 

May 

9 

RESULTS  OF  THE  SEASON 

U.  of  M.        Opp. 

-William  and  ■VLiry  at  College  Park 9  0 

-University  of  Richmond  at  College  Park 5  3 

-U.S.  Naval  Academy  at  Annapolis 1  8 

-Georgetown  University  at  College  Park 8  1 

Western  Maryland  at  College  Park 7  2 

-Catholic  University  at  College  Park 8  1 

-Washington  and  Lee  at  College  Park 5  4 

-L'niversity  of  Virginia  at  Charlottesville 1  8 

-University  of  Richmond  at  Richmond 6  2 

-William  and  Mary  at  Williamsburg 8  1 

1172] 


Bird's-eye  view  of  men's  attractive  tennis  layout 


VARSITY  TENNIS 

THE  Old  Line  tennis  team  had  a  much  more  successful  season  than  was  antici- 
pated at  the  outset  of  the  campaign.  Coach  Les  Bopts  had  lost  the  mainstays  of 
the  1935  squad  through  graduation  and  withdrawals  and  hardly  anyone  expected 
the  netmen  to  win  eight  of  their  ten  matches. 

Keaciel  Krulevitz,  in  the  singles,  and  with  Bob  Land  in  the  doubles,  was  a  lead- 
ing factor  in  the  success  gained  by  the  Terps.  This  pair  showed  their  best  tennis  in  a 
pinch. 

While  the  team  lacked  an  outstanding  racketer,  it  was  well  balanced  all  down 
the  line  in  both  singles  and  doubles  and  this  kept  the  opposition  from  shifting  their 
line-ups  to  take  advantage  of  weak  spots  that  usually  exist. 

One  of  the  prized  victories  was  the  8  to  1  defeat  handed  Georgetown,  a  combi- 
nation the  Terps  had  expected  to  find  one  of  the  toughest  on  the  schedule. 

Bill  Meloy,  Edmund  Beacham  and  Jim  Rintoul  will  be  lost  by  graduation 
from  the  1936  outfit. 


[173] 


WELCH,  PATES,  DAVIS,  FARSON,  CASTLE,  MEHRING 

VARSITY  RIFLE 

THE  Terj)  riflemen  really  hit  the  mark  during  the  1935-36  season.  The  team  car- 
ried ott"  the  Third  Corps  Area  honors  with  a  score  of  3,737;  was  sixth  in  the  Na- 
tional Intercollegiate  championships  title  meet  with  a  five-man  score  of  1,355,  while 
Arnon  Mehring's  281  was  the  third  best  individual  count  in  the  collegiate  .shooting. 

Besides  Mehring,  Hugh  Saum,  Aaron  Welch,  Noel  Castle  and  Raymond  Davis 
shot  in  the  collegiate  tourney. 

Maryland  marksmen  also  were  seventh  nationally  and  third  in  the  Third  Corps 
Area  in  the  Hearst  cup  match. 

Maj.  Frank  Ward's  fine  coaching  was  responsible  for  the  great  advance  in  rifle 
work. 


SIlKWIlKIDdK,  NEWMAN,  SAI:M.  MII,I,|;II,  lloltlis.  H()l)li;|{.  MAI"IIN(.1,\,  WOI.K 

117+1 


FRESHMAN 
SPORTS 


tllANOLY,  WITZKE.  WEIUINCJER,  MEADE.  FORRESTER,  PAGE,  WOOD,  SWEENEY.  BUUKOFF 
NEILSON,  MACHEN,  MALES,  PEURACH.  DeARMEY.  COOKE,  FULKS.  BURK 
EGNELL.  TYLER,  STARLINGS.  KNEPLEY,  PLUxM,  BENBOVV,  HEWITT,  DEELEY 


FRESHMAN  FOOTBALL  SQUAD 


U.S. 

Name. 

Position 

Height 

Weight 

Age 

Exp. 

Joe  Burk 

End 

6-4 

184 

19 

3 

Nicholas  Budkoff 

End 

5-11 

181 

18 

3 

Wade  Wood 

End 

6-1 

170 

18 

3 

E.  K.  Sweeney 

End 

6 

170 

20 

1 

George  Kncpley 

End 

5-11 

160 

20 

0 

John  Page 

Tackle 

6 

180 

18 

2 

Edward  Egnell 

Tackle 

6-4 

212 

19 

4 

Cable  Starling.s 

Tackle 

6-1 

200 

19 

4 

John  DeArmey 

Guard 

5-8 

183 

20 

4 

Leroy  Witzke 

Guard 

.5-10 

176 

18 

3 

Haskin  Deeley 

Guard 

5-9>^ 

17.S 

17 

2 

Alex  Male.s 

(iuard 

5-11 

185 

20 

3 

John  Plum 

Guard 

5-10 

165 

20 

4 

Alfred  Cooke 

Line 

6-1 

191 

19 

0 

James  Forrester 

Line 

5-10 

170 

17 

1 

James  Peurach 

Center 

6-1 

1!)7 

18 

4 

Jahies  Pitzer 

Center 

5-10 

168 

18 

3 

Charlie  Weidinger 

Back 

5-10 

177 

18 

3 

James  Mea<le 

Back 

6-1 

185 

21 

3 

Robert  Neilson 

Back 

5-11 

140 

20 

2 

Homer  Tyler 

Back 

5-8 

163 

20 

3 

Griffith  Jones 

Back 

5-9 

173 

19 

3 

Robert  Henbow 

Back 

5-10 

103 

19 

0 

Moir  Kulks 

Back 

5-6 

140 

18 

0 

Lon  (Hanoly 

Back 

5-11 

159 

19 

0 

V.  M.  Hewitt 

Back 

5-11 

101 

19 

1 

From 
St.  Thomas  School,  St.  Paul,  Minn. 

(Home.  Lintliicum  Heights,  Md.) 
Classical  High,  Lynn,  Mass. 
Eastern  High.  D.C. 
Tech  High,  D.C. 
Altoona,  Pa.,  High. 
Baltimore  City  College. 
Curtis  School,  Staten  Island,  N.Y. 
Roxburv  School,  Cheshire,  Conn. 
Windber,  Pa.,  High. 
McDonogh  School,  Baltimore,  Md. 
Baltimore  Poly. 
East  Pittsburgh,  Pa.,  High. 
LaSallc  Institute,  Cumberland,  Md. 
Tech  High.  D.C. 

(Home,  Hyattsville,  Md.) 
Warrcnton.  Va.,  High. 

(Home,  I5crw.\n.  Md.) 
Johnstown,  Pa.,  High. 
Alleghany  High,  Cinuberland,  Md. 
McDonogh  Scliiuil,  Baltimore,  Md. 
Tome  School.  Md. 

Baltimore  City  College  and  McDonogh. 
Greenbrier,  W.Va.,  M..\. 

(Home,  Iliigcrstown,  Md.) 
McDonogh  School.  Baltimore,  Md. 
Sparrows  Point,  Md..  High. 
Belhcsda,  Md.,  High. 
Tech  High.  D.C, 
Baltimore  Poly. 


RESULTS  OF  THE  SEASON 

U.  of  M. 

October       11 — Virginia  Freshmen  at  ('oUege  Patk * 

October       18 — V.M.I.  Freshmen  at  I>exingt<m,  Va .....' 7 

November    8— Catholic  University  Freshmen  at  College  Park 0 

November  16 — Washington  and  Ia-c  Freshmen  at  Collcgi'  Park 0 

November  23 — Georgetown  Freshmen  at  Washington " 


0pp. 

6 
33 
26 

6 
31 


176 


FREI^HMAX  BASKETBALL  SQUAD 


REMSBERG,  JAMES.  MUl.l  I'/,  HAUVER,  WEIDINGER,  MANAGER  MdBl : 
NEILSON,  MEADE,  JOHNSON,  KNEPLEY 


FRESHMAX  BOXIXG  SQUAD 


DORR  ,McMALGHT,  ALPERSTEIN,  MAUSE,  PLUM,  EGNELL,  McABOYf  COACH) 

[177] 


FRESHMAN  BAI^EBALL  <^Qr AD 


Coach  POLLOCK,  AUU,  WALSH,  HAl'VEU.  LEAR.  MAGUIRK.  SHEGDGUE,  SMITH.  OVER 

JAMES.  GOLDBERG.  KABINOWITZ.  .lONES,  MISKI.MON.  HOWARD.  ARMSTRONG 

SCHARE.  S.  CHUMBRIS.  JOHNSON.  KNEPLEY,  L.  CHUMBRIS,  MULITZ,  MILLER.  CRIS.\FULL 


FRESHMAN  LACROSSE  SQUAD 


GULDBRANDSEN.  BAKKH.  MRAINERI),  ALDKIDGE.  COOK,  JONES.  SCHWEITZER,  1(11)111. PH.  SEELEY,  Vmcl,  DECKMAN 

1)IG(;S,  MELLKN,  (;AI(  H,  (IIIIOUI).  PITZER,  SM  1  TH.  MALES 

ROL'SE,  DEELEY,  COLE,  llADENHOOP.  O'NEILL.  VER.NAV.  liKOOKS 


1178] 


FRESHMAN  TRACK  SQMAD 


Loach  EV  \i\S   LE\SfRK,  CI.AHK.  ESSEX,  SAUM,  MATTINCLY,  WATKINS.  SMIIII,  lUWlN,  YOUNG,  SONEN 
'     SCn.LY    BROWN,  SLOTE,  McNAUClHT,  HOl^CK.  EIUMAN.  BKKItS.  IHUI.EY 
EDMONDS,  EULKS,  PEASLEY,  KLUGE,  ISSIS,  WOOD,  DllKDO.NNK,  HKADLEY 


FRESHMAN  RIFLE  SQUAD 


EVANS.  LANIGAN,  D.WIS.  HORTMAN,  liRUNS 
WAITE,  BOYD,  BONANNO,  POTTER,  L.,  SOULE,  F. 


179 


CHEERLKAllKK.-^ 
JACOB,  HOENES,  STEVENS,  BARNSLEY,  STEVENSON,  BOEKHOFF,  JOHNSON 


IMPORTS  LETTER  MEX  IN  !$EXIOR  €LA!$S 

FOOTBALL 

Louis  Ennis,  Bernie  Buscher,  Edward  Minion,  Carl  Stalfort,  Charlie 
Callahan,  George  Sachs,  Charlie  Yaeger,  Bill  Garrott,  Harry  Gretz, 
Tom  McLaughlin,  Bill  Andorka. 

BASKETBALL 

Vic  Willis,  Bernie  Buscher. 

LACROSSE 

Louis  Ennis,  James  Hart,  John  Christhilf,  Ike  Itabbitt,  Herbert  Brill, 
Pearce  Maccubbin,  Walter  Webb. 

BOXING 

Walter  Webb. 

BASEBALL 

Vic  Willis,  Ford  Loker. 

TENNIS 

John  Rintoul,  William  Meloy,  Edmund  Beacham. 


TRACK 

Alton    Sanford,   Selby   Frank,    Robert   Slye,    Rol)ert   Beall,   Wilbur 
Duvall,  Jack  Ilerljsleb,  Bill  Ciraham. 


180 


IXTRAM  URAL 
SPORTS 


Some  of  men's^many  indoor  intranuinil  spiirls 


Sample  of  outdoor  activities  in  men's  intramurals.    In  all,  more  than  20  pastimes  are  fostered  by  Charles  L.  Mackert, 

Director  of  Physical  Education 


MEX'S  INTRAMURALS 


DURING  1935-36  intramural  athletics  for  men  at  the  University  entered  a  period 
of  refinement  in  organization  and  administration.  With  an  internal  program  of 
sports  including  twenty  activities,  in  fifteen  of  which  external  competition  is  pro- 
moted, it  may  be  said  that  the  program  has  passed  through  its  development  stage. 

The  student  group,  which  has  so  successfully  managed  the  activities  for  the 
past  five  years,  organized  an  Intramural  Athletic  Association  during  1935-36  with  a 
President,  Warren  Evans,  a  Vice-President,  Jack  Herbsleb,  and  a  Secretary -Treas- 
urer, James  Zimmerman. 

The  members  adopted  a  "spot  pin,"  a  miniature  of  the  terrapin  medals  given  as 
awards,  as  a  badge  of  recognition.  One  of  the  stated  purposes  of  the  organization  is 
to  encourage  the  participation  of  more  students  in  the  management,  supervision  and 
conduct  of  intramurals. 

One  of  the  features  of  the  year  was  the  first  annual  joint  banquet  given  by  the 


183] 


Spring  spurts 

Men's  and  Women's  Athletic  Association  of  tlie  University,  at  whicli  time  the 
awards  earned  throughout  the  year  were  presented  to  incHviduals  and  groups.  After 
the  presentation  of  awards  and  speeches,  the  group  remained  to  rhance  and  other- 
wise enjoy  a  social  evening.  The  event  will  he  a  yearly  affair. 

The  promotion  of  extramural  contests  by  the  Intramural  Department  has  been 
received  with  enthusiasm.  In  this  manner  it  has  been  possible  to  organize  and  main- 
tain teams  in  individual  sports,  which  are  so  valuable  to  the  student  in  continuing 
his  athletic  participation  after  leaving  school. 

Teams  in  swimming,  wrestling,  fencing,  bowling,  golf  and  horseshoe  pitching, 
as  well  as  other  non-varsity  sports,  have  been  supported  in  extranuual  competition. 

It  is  the  plan  of  the  Intramural  Association  to  promote  a  sports  program  in  in- 
terschool  athletics  as  extensive  as  student  interest  dictates. 

The  University  of  Maryland  may  confidently  look  forward  to  being  second  to 
no  school  in  the  development  of  its  student  l)()dy  physically. 


11811 


?1Tt 


f<. 


In  si)riiig  the  girls"  Ihouglits  turn  to  iillililics 

WOMEN'S  IXTRAMURALS 

HISTORY  indeed  was  made  this  year  as  far  as  women's  atiiletifs  are  concerned  when  the  first  in- 
tramural basketball  tournament  was  held.  Prior  to  this  year  the  intramural  program  had  con- 
sisted of  games  between  the  four  class  teams,  freshman,  sophomore,  junior,  and  senior,  in  hockey, 
basketball,  and  baseball.  This  winter  the  W.A.A.  planned  to  increase  the  scope  of  the  intramural 
games.  Basketball  was  chosen  as  the  pioneer  s])ort  in  which  to  try  out  this  experiment.  Teams  were 
chosen  from  each  dormitory,  from  each  sorority,  and  from  among  the  day  students.  Games  were 
played  within  the  various  groups  and  then  the  winning  teams  from  each  group  played  each  other. 
Since  a  number  of  games  had  to  be  played  to  determine  the  winning  team,  a  large  number  of  students 
participated.  There  was  sufficient  friendly  rivalry  to  make  the  games  interesting  for  spectators  as 
well  as  participants  and  the  tournament  was  voted  a  great  success.  Next  year  we  hope  to  have  a  simi- 
lar intramural  program  in  hockey  and  baseball,  and  as  the  enrollment  of  women  students  increases 
at  the  University  in  like  manner  we  hope  to  see  a  broader  and  more  comprehensive  program  of  sports 
among  women. 


185 


**5r  -an-iiSil 


Coeds  keep  pace  witli  nun  in  reirrntiim.il  activities 


DEAN  ADELE  STAMP 


MARYLAl^D  COEDS 

THE  year  1 935-36  saw  the  completion  of  the  sec- 
ond dormitory  for  women.  This  building  with 
its  panelled  living  room  of  knotted  pine,  colorful 
draperies,  and  sunny,  comfortable  rooms  is  just 
as  attractive  as  INIargaret  Brent  Hall.  The  Stick- 
ler' maple  furniture  and  Simmons  beds  add  much 
to  the  comfort  of  the  girls  and  to  the  appearance 
of  the  rooms.  This  second  dormitory  is  the  cen- 
tral one  of  a  proposed  group  of  five.  We  hope 
that  not  many  more  years  will  pass  before  a 
third  building  will  be  added,  since  we  now  have 
over  six  hundred  women  students.  At  the  present 
time  we  cannot  house  all  of  our  women  students 
in  the  dormitories  and  sorority  houses;  the  need 
for  additional  housing  facilities  is  apparent. 

The  Women's  League,  under  the  capable  and 
intelligent  leadership  of  Routh  Hickey,  has  had  a 

very  successful  year.  The  problems  of  the  women  students  have  been  handled  very 
effectively  by  this  body  and  the  members  deserve  to  be  congratulated  for  their 
splendid  work  for  this  year.  In  November,  the  Women's  Intercollegiate  Association 
of  Student  Governments  will  meet  on  our  campus.  Maryland  will  be  the  hostess 
group.  Delegates  from  numerous  colleges  and  universities  will  attend,  and  it  is 
hoped  that  the  convention  will  be  so  worth  while  that  those  attending  will  feel  well 
repaid  for  coming. 

The  Coed  Daydodgers  Club  celebrated  its  first  birthday  in  March.  This  club 
fills  a  real  need  on  the  campus  for  women  day  students.  Under  the  wise  guidance  of 
Florence  Hill  the  Coed  Daydodgers  Club  has  worked  in  cooperation  with  the  Wo- 
men's League  for  two  things:  first,  club  and  study  rooms  for  day  students;  and  sec- 
ond, a  place  where  hot  soup,  sandwiches,  and  cocoa  can  be  bought  at  a  minimum 
price  by  the  day  students. 

The  Y.W.C.A.,  with  Flora  Waldman  at  its  helm,  has  met  with  much  success 
in  the  carrying  out  of  its  program.  This  organization  has  a  very  real  place  on  the 
campus  and  is  demonstrating  its  ability  to  meet  definite  needs  among  women  stu- 
dents. This  year  for  the  first  time,  a  student-faculty  tea  was  given  by  the  Y.W.C.A. 
This  tea  was  held  in  the  new  dormitory  and  its  purpose  was  to  bring  about  a  closer 
relationship  between  students  and  faculty  members.  A  large  number  by  their  at- 
tendance showed  that  they  were  interested  in  furthering  this  worthy  cause.  The 
officers  and  cabinet  of  the  Y.W.C.A.  deserve  to  be  congratulated  on  their  attain- 
ments for  this  year. 

Mention  must  be  made  of  Mortar  Board  and  Alpha  Lambda  Delta,  the  two 
national  honor  societies  for  women,  and  the  high  scholastic  standards  which  they 
uphold  and  the  furtherance  of  these  standards  among  the  women  students  by  these 
organizations. 


;i89] 


MRS.  EUZABETH  PHILLIPS  JAMES 


WOMEN'S  ATHLETIC 
ASSOCIATION 


■pkURING  the  past  year  the  Women's  Ath- 
letic Association  has  sponsored  the  most 
successful  intramural  program  in  its  history. 
Basketball,  hockey,  soccer,  baseball,  tenni- 
quoits,  volley  ball,  ping-pong  were  the  sports 
played. 

On  Homecoming  Day  we  sponsored  a 
hockey  meet.  Defeating  American  University, 
Marjorie  Webster,  Wilson's  Teachers  College, 
but  lost  to  Western  Maryland. 


For  the  first  time  in  three  years  has  any  jeweled  "M"  been  earned.  Kathryn 
Terhune,  Evelyn  Turner,  Virginia  Commer  and  June  Barnsley  were  presented  with 
their  "M"  at  the  annual  banquet  by  Dean  Adele  Stamp,  the  advisor. 

The  officers  for  the  past  year  were:  June  Barnsley,  President,  Florence  Hill, 
Vice-President,  and  Dorothy  Hobbs,  Secretary. 


ADKINS,  rEN(l-^WEBSTKR,STl^\in\  AVKltS/riUNni.K.  llAZAItl),  AIJj:N.SIN(I,AIli,SNiriII,,r()XKS,  BAKNSI.KV.JAMES, 

I'UINDI.K,  llAUNSI.K.-i  .  MdlUJAN,  llll.l,,  SllKRUILI.,  l.ADSON.  MCKIKK. 

KKPHAH  T,  SCIIINDI'.I,.  DOMINCK,  SANKUUl).  V.  TURNKU.  K.  TIHM'R 

GARRETT,  WKRNKU,  ZKUMAN.  KRUNPACII,  UKAPS.  CRISP,  HOBBS,  WELLKR,  TIIAPIN 


ll!)0] 


Lydane,  Trundle,  Trundle,  Weller.  Hobbs,  Balderson,  Barnsley,  Spehnkouch,  Kemper,  Pense,  Zerman,  Barnsley,  Connor 


HOCKEY 

THE  hockey  season  started  off  this  year  at  a  good  pace.  An  examination  was 
given  for  managers.  Kathryn  Terhune  was  manager;  Virginia  Conner  assist- 
ant. Practice  was  held  every  afternoon  at  4 :10  on  the  Hockey  fiehl.  For  the  first 
time  in  a  good  many  years  there  were  two  Freshmen  teams  and  a  complete  Senior 
team,  besides  the  regular  Sophomore  and  Junior  teams.  In  the  interclass  games  the 
Sophomore  team  was  victorious  over  Team  B  of  the  Freshmen. 

The  annual  Hockey  Play  Day  was  held  on  the  morning  of  Homecoming  with 
teams  from  Marjorie  Webster,  American  University,  and  Western  Maryland  Col- 
lege participating.  The  Maryland  team  came  out  at  the  head  of  the  list.  Later  in  the 
Fall  a  Washington  Hockey  Play  Day  was  held.  This  was  sponsored  by  the  Washing- 
ton Field  Hockey  Association.  Teams  from  the  colleges  in  and  nearby  Washington 
were  invited.  These  included  American  University,  Marjorie  Webster,  Western 
Maryland  College,  George  Washington  University,  Wilson  Teachers  College,  and 
Trinity  College.  Maryland  was  very  proud  to  come  out  tying  for  first  place  in  this 
Play  Day. 

This  year  may  be  looked  upon  as  the  most  successful  hockey  year  that  the  Uni- 
versity of  Maryland  has  ever  had. 


[  191 ; 


^fi 


^fu 


w  '^^  /^  (^^a 


CONNER,  JEAN  BARNSLEY,  TERHUNE,  JUNE  BARNSLEY,  WELLER,  LYDDANE 
LYDDANE,  ZERMAN,  BOOTH,  JUNE  BARNSLEY,  CHAPIN,  CONNER 


BASKETBALL  ANB  ABCHEBY 


BASKETBALL  is  perhaps  the  most  popular  sport  of  the  year.  This  season  we  had  three  different 
tournaments — intrasorority,  the  intramural  and  the  class  teams.  The  intranuiral  winners  were 
the  Terrapin  Fla.shes  captained  by  Sally  Haines  and  receive  gold  awards.  The  runners-u[),  captained 
by  Carolyn  Webster,  were  awarded  silver  pins. 

The  class  games  were  the  most  spirited  and  the  most  interesting.  The  Sophomore  Cla.ss  won  the 
championship  with  the  .seniors  a  clo.se  .second. 

The  managers  were  Claire  Zernian  and  June  Harnsley. 

Archery,  an  individual  s])orl,  during  the  j)ast  year  has  become  one  of  the  most  popular  activities 
for  coeds  on  the  Maryland  campus. 

At  the  third  ainuial  .\ll-l'niversity  Night  an  impressive  display  was  presented  by  the  women 
wand-splitters. 


\l9i] 


TEALE,  YEAGER.  BENNETT.  BOOSE,  SANFORU 
WALDMAN,  SNYDER  GARNER,  NORDEEN,  BOHLIN,  WALL 


WOMEN'S  RIFLE  TEAM 


'T^HE  coed  rifle  team  this  year  had  the  good  fortune  of  winning  22  out  of  27 
matches,  tying  1,  and  losing  only  4.  The  girls  did  some  noteworthy  shooting  and 
by  telegraphic  matches  worked  their  w  ay  up,  to  rank  with  the  best  women's  teams 
of  the  country.  Some  of  the  colleges  with  which  the  team  had  matches  are  George 
Washington  University,  University  of  Pennsylvania,  Carnegie  Institute,  Cornell, 
University  of  South  Dakota,  North  Western,  University  of  California  and  Univer- 
sity of  Washington. 

The  girls'  averages  ranged  from  99.2  to  95.1.  Mary  Frances  Garner  of  Wash- 
ington, D.C.,  received  the  Knox-Hendricks  Trophy  for  the  year  1935-36  for  the 
highest  average  of  99.2.  Two  of  the  coeds,  Georgia  Nordeen  and  Flora  Waldman, 
placed  in  the  National  Women's  Individual  Collegiate  Championship  with  97% 
averages. 

Corporal  George  J.  Uhrinak,  who  came  to  Maryland  just  this  year,  coached  the 
team  and  its  successful  season  was  made  possible  through  his  efforts.  That  he  was 
able  to  accomplish  as  much  as  he  did,  being  new  at  the  University,  is  highly  com- 
mendable. 

Flora  Waldman  of  Washington,  D.C.,  was  captain  of  the  team  and  Leora  San- 
ford  of  Chevy  Chase,  Md.,  was  the  manager. 

[193] 


'/  2boq  COYLE  AVEMUE 

March  25,  1936, 


CAGO 


Mr.  John  S.  Hebb, 
1936  Terrapin, 
Univereity  of  Maryland, 
College  Park,  Maryland. 

Dear  Mr.  Hebb: 

There  must  be  a  lot  of  beautiful  girls  in 
the  heart  of  Maryland  because  picking  the 
pulchritude  plus  was  no  easy  task. 

However,  in  one  man's  opinion,  the  select- 
ion, is  as  follows  in  numerical  order; 

First  -  your  number  22, 


Second- 

n 

II 

25, 

Third  - 

n 

11 

20, 

Fourth  - 

n 

11 

26. 

Fifth  - 

M 

It 

24, 

Sixth  - 

M 

« 

27, 

Seventh 

n 

K 

23, 

Eighth  - 

M 

N 

21, 

Ninth  - 

N 

tt 

28, 

With  a  sincere  hope  that  this  is  not  at  too 
great  odds  with  local  opinion,  I  beg  to  remain 


Yours  sincerely, 


GBP 
J 


ANN    CARVER 
Miss  Maryland 


Betty  Barker 


Ruth  Wellington 


Betty  Benton 


Dolores  Piozet 


-^^ 


■MitK^ 


w^ 


Christine  Cook 
Rosella  Gengnagle 


Fredericka  Waldman 
Lucia  Spehnkouch 


HONORARY 
FRATERNITIES 


Beull 

Heveridge 

Brooks 

Brill 


Duggan 
Erbf 
Ennis 

Goodhart 


Hunt 
Lankford 
Lohr 
Rabbitt 


Robertson 
Sacks 
Webb 
Zimmerman 


[202] 


OMICROX  DELTA  KAPPA 


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

SIGMA  CIRCLE 

Established  at  University  of  Maryland  in  1927 

Publication— TKE  CIRCLE 


JL 


(•W3 


^^r 


FRATRES  IN  FACULTATE- 


Ernest  Cory 


Reginald  Van  Trnmp  Truit 


FRATRES  IN  UNI\  ERSITATE- 


Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-six — 

William  R.  Beall 
Andrew  Beveridge 
John  H.  Brill 
Gardner  Brooks 
Frank  Duggan 


Louis  A.  Ennis 
Theodore  Erbe 
Raymond  Goodhart 
Melvin  Lankford 
Walter  Lohr 


Sidney  McFerrin 
Alton  Rabbitt 
Thomas  Robertson 
Albert  W.Webb 
James  Zimmerman 


Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-seren- 


William  Guckeyson 


Coleman  Headley 


Richard  Hunt 


[203] 


Bowker 
Norment 


Brechbill 
Rea 


(Jarllon 
Wellington 


Grinstead 


MORTAR  ROARD 


Kslablished  at  University  of  Maryland  //(  19-i^ 


SORORE  L\  FACl'LTATE- 
Dean  Adele  Stamp 


SORORES  IN  UNIVERftlTATE- 


I'Uiss  of  Nineteen  Thlrtn-nix- 

Lncille  Bowker 
Edith  Brecld)ill 
Mildred  ("arlton 


Marjorie  Grinstead 
Nancy  L.  Norment 
Florence  Rea 


Kathryn  Terhune 
Rntli  Wcllin>;ton 


[«04l 


Bowker 
Terhune 


Carlton 
Turner,  E. 


Cross 
Turner,  V. 


Rea 


THETA  GAMMA 


Honorary  Home  Economics  Fraternity 


Founded  at  the  University  of  Maryland  in  192^       im. 


SORORES  IN  FACULTATE- 


Frieda  McFarland 
Edna  McNaughton 


M.  Marie  Mount 
Eleanor  Murphy 


Clarihel  AVelsh 


SORORES  IN  UNIVERSITATE- 


Erna  Riedal 


Agnes  Soper 


Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-six — 

Lucille  Bowker 
Mildred  Carlton 


Mary  Ruth  Cross 
Florence  Rea 
Kathryn  Terhune 

[205] 


Evelyn  Turner 
Virginia  Turner 


Bell 

Birmingham 
Brcioks 
Breuckner 


Brotemarkle 
Buckingham 
Calder 
Dayton 


Garber 
Goodhart 
Hebb 
Litschert 


Patterson 
Robertson 


[206] 


PI  DELTA  EPSILOX 


Honorary  Journalistic  Fraternity 
Founded  at  Syracuse  University  in  J'.IOiJ 

MARYLAND  CHAPTER 

Est(d)Ushed  at  University  of  Maryland  //(  1930 

Puhlication— the' EFi^lLOG 


FRATRES  IN  FACULTATE— 


Harry  C.  Byrd 
Charles  Hale 


William  H.  Hottel 
George  Fogg 


Rueben  Steinmeyer 


FRATRES  IN  UNIVERSITATE- 


fVfl.s-.v  of  Xineteen  Thirty-six — 

Gardner  Brooks 
William  O.  Buckingham 
B.  James  Dayton 


George  D.  Garher 
Raymond  Goodhart 
Robert  G.  Litschert 


Waiter  Lohr 
Thomas  E.  Robertson 


Cla.su  uf  Xinetecn  Tliirti/seren — 

John  Bell 

Thomas  Birmingham 

Fred  Breuckner 


Luther  Broteniarkle 
Wright  Calder 
John  S.  Hebb,  III 


Richard  M.  Hunt 
J.  Dale  Patterson 


[207] 


Bartlett 
Boarman 
Buddington 


Butler 
Eiker 
ilayer 


Miller 
Mullinix 
Stevenson 


Webb 
Weber 
Welch 


[208] 


ALPHA  ZETA 


Founded  at  Ohio  State  University  in  1897 

MARYLAND  CHAPTER 

Established  at  University  of  Maryland  in  1930 

Publication— ALFRX  ZETA  QUARTERLY 


FRATRES  IN  UNIVERSITATE— 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-si.r — 

Fitz  J.  Bartlett  Walter  Eiker  Paul  E.  Mullinix 

Wm.  F.  Boarman  Elmer  Mayer  Logan  Weber 

Arthur  Buddington  Oscar  Miller 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirti/seien — 

Henry  Butler  Clay  Webb  Aaron  Welch 

Elmer  Stevenson 


[209 


AriiK'ntruiit 
Heveridge 
Bartelmes 


(aider 
Klagg 
Gibbs 


King 

Ma^^la^ll 
Phillips 


■2101 


TAIJ  BETA  PI 


Founded  at  Lehigh  University  in  18S5 

BETA  CHAPTER 

Established  at  University  of  Maryland  in  1939 

Publications— THE  BENT,  THE  COUNCIL  BULLETIN 


FRATRES  IN  FACULTATE- 


Myron  Cresse 


A. N.  Johnson 


Sidney  S.  Steinberg 


FRATRES  IN  UNIVERSITATE— 


Class  of  Nineteen  Thirtij-six- 


John  B.  Armentrout 
Raymond  F.  Bartelmes 
Andrew  B.  Beveridge 


Louis  Flagg 
Lewis  T.  Gibbs 
Paul  L.  King 


John  B.  Maynard 
Jack  W.  Phillips 

James  S.  Rinimer 


Class  of  Nineteen  Thirti/seven- 


Wright  G.  Calder 


Robert  A.  Jackson 


William  A.  McCool 


[211) 


Baldwin 
Bower 

Bredekemp 
Davis 


p:iii< 


Gammon 
Kelly 
Leighty 


Morgan 
Paddletord 
Pierce 
Smith 


Spencer 
Stanton 
WiUey 
Wolfe 


[212] 


ALPHA  CHI  SIGMA 


Professional  Chemical  Fraternity 

Founded  at  the  University  of  Wisconsin  in  1902 

ALPHA  RHO  CHAPTER 

Established  at  University  of  Maryland  in  1927 

Publication— THE  HEXAGON 


FRATRES  IN  FACULTATE— 


Leslie  E.  Bopst 
Levin  B.  Broughton 
Nathan  L.  Drake 
Macolm  M.  Haring 


George  M.  Machwart 
Henry  B.  McDonnell 
Harry  J.  Patterson 
Joseph  R.  Spies 


Glenn  S.  Weiland 
Charles  E.  White 
J.  Clarke  White 


FRATRES  IN  UNIVERSITATE— 


Graduate  Students- 


John  R.  Adams 
Willis  H.  Baldwin 
William  P.  Campbell 
Harry  M.  Duvall 
Einar  P.  Flint 


Hugh  A.  Heller 
William  A.  Home 
Frank  L.  Howard 
Joseph  R.  Kanagy 
William  B.  Lanham 
Charles  S.  Lowe 


Paul  E.  Parent 
William  W.  Pigman 
Edward  G.  Stimpson 
Lewellyn  H.  Welsh 
Pashet  P.  Zapponi 


Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-six — 

David  H.  Baldwin 
Nathan  Gammon 
Joseph  H.  Morgan 


Guy  E.  Murray 
Leonard  Smith 
Harman  L.  Spencer 


William  A.  Stanton 
Edward  J.  Willey 
John  D.  Wolfe 


Class  of  Nineteen  Thiriy-seven- 

Francis  M.  Bower 
Raymond  Davis,  Jr. 


Marion  W.  Bredekamp 
W^ayne  P.  Ellis,  Jr. 
George  B.  Kelly 


Raymond  V.  Leighty 
Karlton  W.  Pierce 


[213] 


Allard 
Bartelmes 
Beveridge 
Huddington 
f'astle 


Clirislliilf 

Cogswell 

Dayton 

Eaton 

Ennis 


Kibe 
Evans 
MeKerrin 
Kirmin 

(;ii)bs,  E. 


(Jibbs,  L. 
Hart, 
Mason 
Minion 
Pates 


I'liillips 
Saclis 
Saiim 
Shoemaker 
Slye 

Siiiitli,  J. 
Siiiilli,  L. 
Sonen 
Thomas 
Webb 
/immeriiian 


ilt) 


SCABBARD  AIVD  BLADE 

Honorary  Military  Fraternity 

Founded  «/  the  University  of  Wisconsin  /;;  1904 

COMPANY  I,  THIRD  REGIMENT 

Established  at  the  University  of  Maryland  in  1922 

PiMication— THE  SCABBARD  AND  BLADE  JOURNAL 


FRATRES  IN  FACULTATE— 

Major  Howard  Clark  Captain  John  Harmony 

FRATRES  IN  UNIVERSITATE— 


Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-six— 

Howard  F.  Allard 
Raymond  F.  Bartelmes 
Andrew  B.  Beveridge 
Arthur  R.  Buddington 
Noel  A.  Castle 
John  F.  Christhilf 
Corbin  C.  Cogswell 
B.  James  Dayton 
Ernest  R.  Eaton 
Louis  A.  Ennis 
Theodore  H.  Erbe 


Warren  R.  Evans 
John  M.  Firmin 
Edward  H.  Gibbs 
Lewis  T.  Gibbs 
George  E.  Gilbert 
James  F.  Hart 
Kenneth  R.  Mason 
Sidney  P.  McFerrin 
Edward  M.  Minion 
William  A.  Pates 
Jack  W.  Phillips 


George  H.  Sachs 
Hugh  H.  Saum 
William  R.  Schneider 
Francis  D.  Shoemaker 
Robert  W.  Slye 
James  B.  Smith 
Leonard  Smith 
Milo  W.  Sonen 
Robert  W.  Thomas 
Albert  W.  Webb 
James  F.  Zimmerman 


Class  of  Nineteen  Thirtt/seven- 

Charles  H.  Beebe 
Herman  W.  Berger 
Warren  L.  Bonnett 
John  E.  Boot  he 
Francis  M.  Bower 
Willson  C.  Clark 
Charles  H.  Culp 
Raymond  Davis 
Philip  Firmin 
Edward  J.  Fletcher 
John  J.  Gormley 


Robert  O.  Hammerlund 
Thomas  D.  Harryman 
John  G.  Hart 
Norman  L.  Hobbs 
Louis  Hueper 
Carlisle  Humelsine 
Alfred  Ireland 
George  B.  Kelly 
Harold  Kelly 
Robert  J.  McLeod 
Eugene  F.  Mueller 


Norman  P.  Patterson 
Jesse  D.  Patterson 
Paul  E.  PfeiflFer 
Walter  K.  Scott 
Alfred  E.  Savage 
John  S.  Shinn 
Clarence  T.  Thomason 
Clay  M.  Webb 
Aaron  W.  Welch 
George  Wood 


[215] 


Dolan 

Erbe 

Haskin 

Huttoii 

.Jdtuisuii 

.eighty 

Lcishear 

Litschert 

Sacks 

Vogt 

ALPHA  PSI  OMEGA 


Honorary  Dramatic  Fraternity 

Founded  at  Fairmont  State  College  in  1925 

IOTA  CAST 

Established  at  University  of  Maryland  in  1929 

Publication—TRE  PLAYBILL 


FRATRES  IN  FACULTATE- 

Charlcs  1$.  Hale 


Ral])h  I.  Williams 


FRATRES  IN  UNIVERSITATE- 


Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-six — 

Theodore  H.  Erbe 

William  T.  Johnson 

Jerome  G.  Sacks 

Frederic  .1.  Ilaskiii,  Jr. 

Samuel  A.  Lcishear 
Hohcrt  (i.  i.itschert 

Carolyn  Vogt 

(7«.s-.v  oj  Situivrn  Thirtij-seven — 

Loretta  Dolan 

Joel  Hull  on 

(216] 

Raymond  V.  Leighty 

Calladine 

Danforth 

Grodjesk 

Greenwood 

Grinstead 

Hamilton 

Mclntire 

Miller 

Norment 

Rea 

Rosen 

Schuh 

Sherrill 

Snyder 

Turner,  B. 

Turner,  V. 

Waldman 

ALPHA  LAMBDA  DELTA 


Founded  at  University  of  Illinois  in  192^. 
Establiished  at  University  of  Maryland  in  1932 


SORORES  IN  FACULTATE- 

Adele  Stamp 


Freida  McFarland 


Susan  B.  Harmon 


SORORES  IN  UNIVERSITATE- 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-six — 

Velma  Barr 
Grace  Greenwood 
Marjorie  Grinstead 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirtij-seren — 
Voncile  Davis 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-eight — 

Virginia  Calladine 
Shirley  Danforth 
Isabel  Hamilton 


Mary  Mclntire 
Nancy  Norment 
Claribel  Peirson 


Bernice  Grodjesk 
Geraldine  Schuh 


Arlene  McLaughlin 
Mary  E.  Miller 
Janet  Rosen 


Florence  Rea 
Evelyn  Turner 
Virginia  Turner 


Flora  Waldman 


Elizabeth  Sherrill 
Faye  Snyder 


[2171 


PERiliHIXG  RIFLE!^ 


Honorary  Military  Society  for  liasic  R.O.T.C.  Stiulents 

Founded  at  University  of  Nebraska  in  1S94 

Coni])any  C,  5th  Regiment  establi.shed  at  University  of  Maryland  in  I'JSo 


FRATRES  L\  UXIVERSUIATE- 

Class  of  Nineteen  Tliirt)/-iii.i — 
Howard  F.  Allard' 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-seven — 

Charles  W.  IJastian 

Charles  H.  Heehe 

Herman  W.  Berj^er,  Jr. 

Charles  Bittenjier,  Jr. 

Marriott  W.  Bredekani|) 

Martin  !>.  Brotemarkle 
Class  of  Nineteen  Thirtij-eight — 

Joseph  J.  Bowen,  Jr. 

George  A.  Bowman 

Richard  C.  Breaden 

Alfred  Brotman 

Elton  H.  Brown 

John  R.  Browning 

Raphael  Ca])lan 

Rn.s.sell  H.  Cnllen 

John  V.  Connellv 

John  H.  Ford 
Class  of  Nineteen  Thirtji-nine — 

Francis  E.  Bat<-li 

Antonio  C.  Boiianno 

Rohcrl  H.  Boy.l 

Richard  S.  IJrashears 

Charles  B.  Balmer 

H.  John  Ba(lenho()|) 

John  H.  Beers 

Howary  W.  Clark.  Ill 

Robert  P.  Cook 

Byron  L.  Car|)eider 

Jniian  C.  Crane 

(icorge  P.  Charimas 

Robert  M.  Dobrcs 


Andrew  B.  Beveridge 
B.  James  Dayton 

Charles  H.  Culp 
Raymond  Davis,  Jr. 
John  E.  Downin 
Philip  Firmin 
Rol)ert  (1.  Fnerst 
Robert  ().  Hammerlund 

William  E.  Gibbs 
Charles  C.  Heaton 
Charles  C.  Holbrook 
Ralph  S.  Jordan 
James  M.  Lannigan 
John  C.  Lnttrell 
Robert  L.  Mattingiy 
Dnncan  B.  McFadden 
William  F.  Moore 
John  E.  Moore 

Warren  P.  Davis 
Erasnuis  L.  Dieudonne,  Jr. 
John  (i.  Freudenberger 
John  A.  Farrall 
Walter  O.  Hawley 
David  R.  Joseph 
Harvey  W.  Kreuzberg 
Luther  E.  Mellen,  Jr. 
Walter  L.  Miller 
Barnett  M.  Needle 
Ned  H.  Oaklev 
(irillitli  B.  Oursler 
Fred  W.  Perkins.  Jr. 


Leonard  Smith 


Houlder  Hndgins 
Louis  A.  Kunzig 
Roliert  McLeod 
Norman  P.  Patterson 
Aaron  W.  Welch 


Benjamin  C.  McCleskey 
James  W.  McCurley,  Jr. 
H.  Malcolm  Owens 
A.  Gordon  Perry 
Edward  H.  Schmidt.  Jr. 
Benjamin  B.  Shewbridge 
Harold  W.  Smith 
Herman  R.  Strobel 
Theodore  T.  Weiser 


\ictor  K.  Reeser 
Charles  L.  Sherzer.  Jr. 
E,  W.  Scott.  Jr. 
Domi  P.  Strausbaugh 
E.  P.  Schweitz 
Floyd  A.  Sould 
Daniel  P.  Shnumer 
John  W.  Stevens 
Emniit  C.  Witt.  Jr. 
:Ma](icii  D.  Waitc 
X'ernon  K.  West .  Jr. 
Charles  L.  Wood 
Fred  B.  Winkter 


\'i\M 


SOCIAL 


Balicock 
Behm 
Bradley 
Brotemarkle 


Dolan 
Frank 
Gallilier 
Hammerlund 


Liindell  ■ 
McFadden 

Mclntire 
MuUett 


Patterson 
Piatt 
Saum 

Schutz 


Sonen 
Welch 
Yeager 


[iiO\ 


IIVTERFRATER^ITY  COUNCIL 


Joseph  McCarthy President 

Milo  Sonen Vice-President 

Patrick  Dolan Secretary-Treasurer 


ALPHA  TAU  OMEGA 

Ernest  Lundell 
Patrick  Dolan 


PHI  SIGMA  K\PPA 

Milo  Sonen 
Dale  Patterson 


K.\PPA  ALPHA 

Brooks  Bradley 
William  MuUett 


SIGMA  PHI  SIGMA 

Aaron  Welch 
John  Mclntvre 


LAMBDA  CHI  ALPHA 

Doran  Piatt 
Luther  Brotemarkle 


SIGMA  NU 

Oden  Bowie 
Logan  Schutz 


PHI  DELTA  THETA 

Selby  Frank 
William  Johnson 


THETA  CHI 

Robert  Hammerlund 
Hugh  Saum 


ALPHA  GAMMA  RHO 

Burton  McFadden 
Carl  Behni 


ALPHA  LAMBDA  TAU 

Paul  Yeager 
George  Foss 


DELTA  SIGMA  PHI 

Joseph  Galliher 
William  Babcock 


[iil] 


Hfall 

Kirmingham 
Brill 
Daue 


!5<rivencr 
Smith 
Wiiite 
Woodell 


'2'i'2  1 


PHI  DELTA  THETA 


Founded  at  Miami  University  in  18^8 

MARYLAND  ALPHA  CHAPTER 

E-slablished  at  University  of  Maryland  in  1930 

Publication— THE  SCROLL 


FRATRES  IN  FACULTATE— 

C.  O.  Appleman 
Oscar  C.  Brnce 

FRATRES  IN  UNIVERSITATE- 

Graduate  Studerits — 

John  E.  Schueler,  Jr. 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-six — 

Robert  Beall 
Herbert  Brill 
Frank  P.  Duggan 
Theodore  H.  Erbe 
Selby  Frank 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-seven — 

Thomas  J.  Birmingham 
Richard  Culp 
Edwin  Dane 
Harry  A.  Dosch 
John  Edwards 
Eric  Gibbs 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-eight — 

Joseph  Bowen 
Oscar  Diiley 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-nine — 

Charles  Berg 
Harold  Brannock 
Richard  Case 
Francis  daCruz 


Lawrence  Hodgins 
Earl  M.  Pickens 


Reese  L.  Sewell 


Frederic  J.  Haskin,  Jr. 
Courtney  Lankford 
Robert  Litschert 
Kenneth  Mason 
John  Maynard 


Joel  Hutton 
Norman  Jacobs 
John  Jimmyer 
Arthur  Johnson 
Pyke  Johnson 
William  R.  Johnson 


James  Lewald 
Edwin  Long 
Joseph  Mattingly 

Moir  Fulks 
Charles  Grant 
Edwin  Johnson 
Stephen  Jones 


Norman  E.  Phillips 


Sidney  McFerrin 
David  Scrivner 
Merton  Waite 
John  Woodell 
James  Zimmerman 


F.  Hilton  Ladson 
Ford  Loker 
Norman  Patterson 
Charles  Robinson 
Herbert  Smith 
Donald  Strauss 


Tyler  McNutt 
John  Muncks 


Robert  Mertie 
George  Seeley 
Maldon  Waite 


Housemother 
Mrs.  Marie  F.  Moore 


[223] 


Ambrose 
Bishop 
Bogley 
Bowie 


Bnins 
Ditmar 
Farson 
Hammerlund 


Hathaway 
lU-nsell 
Hughes 
Ireland 


Leet 

Matthews 
Meloy 
Ravenburg 


TJiiitouI 
Saum 
Smith 
Stark 


Williams 
/immerman 


in] 


THETA  CHI 


Founded  at  Norwich  University  in  1865 

ALPHA  PSI  CHAPTER 

Established  at  University  of  Maryland  in  1929 

Publication— TUE  RATTLE  OF  THETA  CHI 


FRATRES  IN  FACULTATE 

Arthur  Herseberger 
WilHam  Home 


FRATRES  IN  UNIVERSITATE- 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-six — 

H.  Duvall  Ambrose 
WilHam  B.  Bowie 
Samuel  E.  Bogley 
Bennard  F.  Bruns 
Warren  Browning 
Charles  E.  Edmondson 


William  B.  Kemp 
Frank  jVI.  Lemon 
Marion  W.  Parker 


John  H.  Farson 
Caleb  Hathaway 
Robert  L.  Hensell 
Harvey  Leet 
Samuel  Meloy 
Robert  H.  Matthews 


Edwin  Stimson 
Ralph  I.  Williams 


James  L.  Rintoul,  Jr. 
Hugh  H.  Saimi 
El  wood  Stark 
Lester  Tucker 
William  W.  Williams 


Class  of  Nijieteen  Thirty-seven — 

William  Bishop 
Gordon  F.  Dittmar 
Robert  O.  Hammerlund 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-eight — 

Robert  E.  Baker 
Pierre  J.  (larneau 
Oskar  Gulbrandsen 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-nine — 

William  Aldridge 
Van  Ashmim 
Richard  Bamnion 
Charles  Balmer 
Gordon  Bennett 
Frank  Browning 


John  F.  Home 
Matthew  Haspert 
Alfred  W.  Ireland,  Jr. 
Benjamin  Jewell 


Kenneth  Fink 
Fred  J.  Hughes,  Jr. 
Glen  Lewis 
Ralph  Ravenburg 


William  Ellis 
Gardner  Franklin 
Rod  Harrison 
Julius  Ireland 
Robert  Irwin 
Robert  Kraft't 


Harry  Parker 
Frank  Smith 
Richard  Zimmerman 


William  O.  Towsen 
Howard  \'ernay 
Leon  Yourtee 


E.  Leister  Mobley 
Carl  Molesworth 
Lester  Simon 
Thomas  Smith 
Ady  Ward 
Henry  Wyatt 


IIoHsemotlwr 
Mrs.  Walter  Phoebus 


n-i 


Benson 
Bryan 
Corbin 
Dolan 


Downey 
Goodhart 
Hughes 
Jones 


Lohr 
Lundell 
Mitchell 
Oliver 


Peffer 
Poole 
Ramsburg 
Sanford 


Smith,  J. 
Smith,  W. 
Swanson 
Waddill 


Waller 
Wise 


[226] 


ALPHA  TAU  OMEGA 


Founded  at  Virginia  Military  Institute  in  1865 
M.\RYLAND  EPSILON  GAM]VL\  CHAPTER 
Established  at  University  of  Maryland  in  1930 
Publications—TRE  PALM,  FLAGSHIP 


FRATRES  IN  FACULTATE- 

Harry  Gwinner 
DeVoe  Meade 


Lee  Schrader 
R.  M.  Watkins 
Sidney  W.  Wentworth 


Charles  White 
Mark  W.  Woods 


FRATRES  IN  UNIVERSITATE- 

C'lass  of  Nineteen  Thirty-six — 

Harry  V.  Bryan 
Patrick  L.  Dolan 
William  J.  Graham,  Jr. 


Raymond  J.  Goodhart 
Walter  G.  Lohr 
Charles  W.  Poole 


Herman  Ramsburg 
Alton  Sanford 
William  Waller 


Class  of  Nineteen  Thirt/j-seren- 

Charles  Beebe 
Brian  Benson 
Robert  Hnghes 


Joseph  Jones 
Ernest  Lundell 
William  A.  Mitchell 


Elmer  Oliver 
Harry  Swanson 


Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-eight — 

Maurice  Corbin 
Charles  Downey 
William  F.  Moore 


Paul  Pefter 

William  T.  Sherwood 

John  Smith 


Welsh  Smith 
Paul  S.  Wise 
Roland  A.  WadMl 


Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-nine — 

Robert  Benbow 
Henry  Bellows 
William  Brainerd 
John  Brinckerhoff 
Howard  Clark 


W^illiam  Edmonds 
Mervin  Eyler 
James  Gough 
Griffith  Jones 
Richard  Kern 


Paul  Kestler 
Harvey  Kreuzburg 
Daniel  Prettyman 
Floyd  Soule 


Housemother 
Mrs.  Eleanor  L.  Brehme 


[227] 


Bonnett 
Bradley 
Cave 

Christhilf 


( 'ogswcU 
Culp 
Dipple 
Drake 


Kalon 
Harris 
Hart,  G. 
Hart,  .1. 


King 

Maccubbin 
Minion' 
Miskimon 


Mullett 
Scliaffer 
Shatter 
Wilson 
Yaeger 


['228  J 


KAPPA  ALPHA 


i::-'^r3k 


Founded  at  Washinf^ton  and  Lee  University  //(  7W.'5 

bp:ta  kappa  chapter 

E-stabliahed  at  University  of  Maryland  //(  l'.)14 
PuhUcatum—KAVFA  ALPHA  JOURNAL 


fratres  in  facultate— 

Levin  B.  Broughton 
Ernest  Cory 
Harold  F.  Cotterman 
Charles  L.  ]\Lickert 

FRATRES  IN  UNIVERSITATE- 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-six — 

Brooks  Bradley 
Charles  Callahan 
Francis  C\ive 
John  (liristhilf 
Corbin  Cogswell 

Class  of  Xineteen  Thirti/seven — 

Herman  Berger 
AVarren  Bonnett 
Carl  Brocknian 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-eight — 

William  Bryant 
Harford  Cronin 
Million  Daneker 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-nine — 

Jack  Badenhoop 
William  Bergman 
Joseph  Biirk 
Thomas  Capossela 
William  Cole 
Frank  Dipple 
Robert  Held 
William  Howard 
Jack  Hovle 


Leo  J.  Poelnia 
Charles  S.  Richardson 
Stewart  Shaw 
Jesse  Sprowls 


Ernest  Eaton 
Joseph  Harris 
George  Hart 
James  Hart 
Edward  Minion 


Charles  Culp 
Daniel  Drake 
Charles  Ellinger 


Charles  Heaton 
Parker  Lindsay 
Charles  Shaffer 


Albert  Leaf 
Frank  Lee 
Louis  Lilge 
Harry  McCiinnis 
Joseph  Mehl 
Luther  Mellon 
Edwin  Miller 
Ravmond  Miskimon 
Richard  O'Neill 


Thomas  B.  Symons 
Reginald  Van  Trump  Truitt 
Thomas  Taliaferro 
Robert  C.  Yates 


Pearce  Maccubbin 
George  Schaffer 
Meredith  Wilson 
Charles  Yaeger 


Earl  Farr 
William  JNIatthews 
Charles  Zulick 


Thomas  Shaffer 
George  Watson 


Joseph  Peaslee 
Nelson  Phelps 
Samuel  Reeves 
Joseph  Robinson 
Edgar  Rouse 
Charles  Seitz 
Arthur  Shaffer 
Charles  Weidinger 
LeRoy  Witzke 


Housemother 
Mrs.  Marv  K.  Cassard 


[229] 


[230 


SIGMA  ^U 


Founded  at  Virginia  Military  Institute  in  1869 

DELTA  PHI  CHAPTER 

Established  at  University  of  Maryland  in  19 IS 

Publicatioti—TUE  DELTA 


FRATRES  IN  FACULTATE 

G.  J.  Abrams 
F.  P.  Bomberger 
L.  E.  Bopst 


E.  A.  Christmas 
A.  B.  Heagy 
G.  F.  Pollock 


T.  H.  Spence 
W.  C.  Supplee 
H.  R.  Walls 


FRATRES  IN  UNIVERSITATE 


Graduate  Students — 
Spencer  B.  Chase 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-six — 

J.  Gardner  Brooks 
Harry  C.  Byrd 
Louis  A.  Ennis 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-seven — 

Oden  Bowie 
William  G.  Crampton 
John  E.  Downin 
William  W.  Edwards 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-eight — - 

Joseph  Allen 
Perry  I.  Hay 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-nine — 

George  DeVore 
Robert  Diggs 
Haskin  Deeley,  Jr. 
William  Havden 


George  F.  Madigan 


Lewis  Gibbs 
Paul  F.  Mobus 
Alton  E.  Rabbitt 
Albert  W.  Webb 


Edward  J.  Fletcher 
John  F.  Kelly 
Philip  C.  McCurdy 
Charles  A.  Park,  Jr. 


Fred  R.  Lodge 
Logan  Schutz 


Robert  Jones 
William  Maynard 
Russell  Langmeade 
John  T.  Smith 


Charles  G.  Whiteford 
Victor  Willis 
Roy  H.  Yowell 


William  M.  Purnell,  III 
Philip  R.  Turner 
Carleton  Wahl 
Clay  M.  Webb,  Jr. 


Fred  M.  Thomas 
Robert  L.  Walton 


Thomas  Sweeney 
Tobv  Tyler 
Wade  Wood 


[231] 


^^ 

fc  -^^z 

w^ 

- 

li^ 

Boyd 

Buckingham 
Coster 
Evans 


Garber 
Herbsleb 
Heuper 
Keyes 


Kline 
Leas  lire 
Ludlow 
Xutz 


McCaffery 
McWilliams 
Miller 

Mossburg 


Mueller 
Parratt 
Patterson 
Reading 
Slye 


[i-.Hl 


PHI  SIGMA  KAPPA 


Founded  at  Massachusetts  State  College  mi  1S73 

ETA  CHAPTER 

Established  at  University  of  Maryland  in  1921 

Publications— THE  SIGNET,  ETA  TERRAPIN 


FRATRES  IN  FACULTATE— 

Eugene  B.  Daniels 

FRATRES  IN  UNIVERSITATE- 


C'lass  of  Nineteen  Thirty-six — 

William  Buckingham 
Warren  Evans 
George  Garber 


Jack  Herbsleb 
Richard  Lutz 
Phillip  Mossburg 


Lyle  Parratt 
William  Reading 
Robert  Slve 


Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-seven- 

David  Collier 
William  Coster 
Louis  Hueper 


William  Leasure 
Francis  Ludlow 
Richard  McCaflPrey 
J.  Dale  Patterson 


F.  Edward  Smith 
Raymond  Thompson 
James  Treacy 


Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-eight — 

Halbert  Evans 
Karl  Keys 


W.  Jameson  McWilliams 
Harrv  Miller 


T.  Tracy  Preston 
William  Thies 


Class  of  Nineteen  Thirfy-niue- 

Robert  Boyd 
Robert  Bradley 
Robert  Cook 
Ralph  Eaton 
John  Freudenberger 


Roland  Houck 
Robert  Leasure 
John  McNaught 
Ralph  Meng 
William  Nolte 


Robert  Stokes 
George  Tillotson 
\'ernon  West 
Tom  Wilson 


L,r^  -^^:^-i'i'-^^'i 

.  ^M  -^  :,t  ^ 

■W^KK^^    ^.^^                        "iffi        -^  ■ 

[233] 


Babcock 
Baldwin 
Bredekerap 
Brooks 


Campiglio 
Cogswell 
Foley 
Galliher 


Gebelein 
Hart 
Hilder 
Kelly 


Krieg 
O'Neill   . 
Quigley 
Reed 


Robinson 
Shoemaker 
Zuk 


[«34] 


DELTA  SIGMA  PHI 


Founded  at  College  of  the  City  of  New  York  in  1894 

ALPHA  SIGMA  CHAPTER 

Established  at  University  of  Maryland  in  1924 

Publication— SFUINX.  CARNATION 


FRATRES  IN  FACULTATE— 

John  Faber 


Charles  B.  Hale 


FRATRES  IN  UNIYERSITATE— 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-six — 

Robert  Campiglio 
Charles  Cogswell 
Robert  Foley 
Joseph  Galliher 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-seven — 

Hunter  Baldwin 
Thomas  Brooks 
Marriot  Bredekamp 
William  Findley 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-eight — 

William  Babcock 
Ralph  Chilcoat 
Ralph  Collins 
Frank  DeArmey 
Ralph  Keller 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-nine — 

Lloyd  Byers 
John  DeArmey 
George  Eierman 
Harry  Lucencamp 
Harvey  Machen 
Charles  McDonald 


William  Hart 
Peter  Hilder 
Henry  Kozloski 
Thomas  McLoughlin 
Bernard  O'Neill 


Conrad  Gebelein 
Max  Goodlit 
Thomas  Hall 
George  Kelly 


William  Lowe 
Benjamin  McCIesky 
Bernard  McFadden 
James  Owens 
Gordon  Perry 


James  Meade 
Robert  Newell 
Robert  Niemans 
Edward  Oakley 
John  Page 
John  Parks 


Howard  Robinson 
Francis  Shoemaker 
Eugene  Thurston 
Walter  Zuk 


Edward  Krieg 
John  Quigley 
Marion  Richmond 


Adon  Phillips 
Gilbert  Raymond 
Jack  Reid 
Marshall  Teabo 


James  Pitzer 
Jack  Plum 
Roger  Sherriff 
Cable  Starlings 
Jack  Stiegmier 
Edward  Tollone 


Housemother 
Mrs.  Nancy  Smith 


[235 


Heveridge 
Cooke 
Ellis 
Firman 


Hendrix 
Johnson 
Jolmston 
Jordan 


MfCiirtliy 
Mclntire 
I'ailthorpe 
Kemsen 


Itolit-rtson 
Sclinrider 
Slrincr 
Wrlx-r 
WV-kli 


I  -'■■!'!  I 


!^IGMA  PHI  SIGMA 


Founded  at  University  of  Pennsylvania  //(  190S 

DELTA  CHAPTER 

Established  at  University  of  Maryland  in  1910 

Publication— TUE  MONAD 


FRATRES IN  FACULTATE- 

Geary  Eppley 
Harry  Hoshail 
Henry  McDonnell 


Jacob  Metzger 
Milton  Pyle 
Bnrton  Shipley 


James  Spann 
Samuel  Steinberg 


FRATRES  IN  UN  I  VERS  IT  ATE- 


Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-six- 

William  Andorka 
Andrew  Beveridge 
John  Firmin 


Harry  Gretz 
Austin  Hall 
Williani  T.  Johnson 


Thomas  E.  Robertson 
Carl  Stalfort 
Logan  Weber 


Class  of  Nineteen  Thirti/scrcn- 

John  Boothe 
Harvey  Cooke 
Wayne  Ellis 
Phillip  Firmin 


Nevin  Hendrix 
Francis  Jordan 
J.  Harry  iVIcCarthy 
Peter  Remsen 


William  Ryan 
Jack  Shinn 
William  Snyder 
Aaron  Welch 


Class  of  Nineteen  Thirtij-eiijht — 

Warren  Hughes 
Frederick  Johnston 


George  McCann 
John  Mclntire 


Robert  Palethorpe 
Wilmer  Steiner 


Class  of  Nineteen  Thirtti-nine- 

George  Allen 
John  Bowman 
Robert  Burton 


Garner  Collins 
Peter  Costello 
Thomas  Kelly 


Peter  Lear 
Warren  Steiner 


[iSI] 


Bartlett 
Behm 
Boarman 
Bowers 
Butler 

Cissel 
Clark 
DeCecco 
Gordon 
Gottwals 

Hamilton 
Harrington 
Henderson 
Kite 
Hoshall 

Imphong 
James 
Kuhn 
Lovell,  J. 
Lovell,  M. 

McConnell 
McFadden 

Mullinix 
Pelczar 
Radebaugh 

Schmidt 
Seabold 
Shaw 

Shepherd 
Stevens 


Stevenson 
Wagaman 
Wheeler 


[238] 


ALPHA  GAMMA  RHO 


Founded  at  Ohio  State  University  of  Illinois  in  1909 

ALPHA  THETA  CHAPTER 

Established  at  University  of  Maryland  in  1928 

Publication— SICKLE  AND  SHEAF,  CRESCENT 


FRATRES  IN  FACULTATE— 

Myron  Berry 

Samuel  De Vault 
Walter  England 

FRATRES  IN  UNIVERSITATE- 

Graduate  Students — 
Paul  Poffenberger 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-six — 

James  Bartlett 
William  Boarman 
Chester  Cissel 
Harry  Clark 
Wayne  Hamilton 
George  Harrington 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-seven — 

Lloyd  Bowers 
Abram  Gottwals 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirtij-eight — 

Carl  Behm,  Jr. 
James  DeCecco 
Thomas  Gordon 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-nine — 

Louis  Alexander 
Charles  Astle 
Robert  Barthel 
Clarence  Eck 
Paul  Galbreath 


Arthur  Hamilton 
Leroy  W.  Ingham 


Edgar  Long 
Arthur  Thurston 


Hutton  D.  Slade 


William  Henderson 
Thomas  Hoshall 
Paul  Imphong 
Scott  James 
John  Lovell 
Andrew  McConnell 


Marker  Lovell 
William  Marche 
Burton  McFadden 


Norborne  Hite 
Albin  Kuhn 
William  Seabold 


Elmer  Huebeck 
William  Jarrell 
Frank  McFarland 
Charles  Schmier 
Alvin  Stoup 


Paul  Mullinix 
Michael  Pelczar 
Garnett  Radebaugh 
Grayson  Stevens 
Kenneth  Wagaman 


Herman  Schmidt 
Elmer  Stevenson 


Clay  Shaw 
Edward  Shepherd 
Elwood  Wheeler 


Richard  Sutton 
Guy  Taylor 
Stanley  Watson 
James  Young 


[239] 


Broteinarkle 
Corridon 
Kales 
Graves 


Hjnson 
Liskey 


Northrop 
Over 


Piatt 
Ricliter 


Shank 
Sieling 


Sweeney 
Zihlman 


[iW] 


"»iH»a     ■    ■.;^S>!X-;.^-;','riM^ 


ir^tfi^ 


Daniel  Davidson 

Jacobs  Meyers 


Dobres  Grodjesk  Handler 

Michlovitz  Schreter 


SIGMA  ALPHA  MU 


Founded  at  City  College  of  New  York  in  1908 

SIG]VL\  CHI  CHAPTER 

Established  at  University  of  Maryland  (;;  1933 

Publications— OCT AGONI AN  AND  MONTHLY  BULLETIN 


FRATRES  IN  UNIVERSITATE- 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-six — 
Isidor  Handler 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-seven — ■ 
Daniel  Daniel 


Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-eight — 
Herman  Harris 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-nine — ■ 

Oscar  Davidson 
Robert  Dobres 
Gabriel  Goldman 


Nathaniel  J.  Jacobs 


Joseph  Grodjesk 
Millard  Kaufman 
Melvin  Mevers 


A.  Harvey  Schreter 


Louis  Michlovitz 
Herbert  Rudolph 


[245] 


•MIKE"  JOHNSON 


Bell 
Bowker 
Dolan 


Garner 
Grinstead 
Laws 


Millar 
N'orment 
SoUiday 
Quirk 


PAN-HELLENIC  COUNCIL 


ALPHA  OMICRON  PI 

Anna  Marie  Quirk 
Lucile  Laws 


ALPHA  XI  DELTA 

Lucile  Bowker 
Edith  Bell 


DELTA  DELTA  DELTA 

Marjorie  Grinstead 
Mary  Frances  Garner 


KAPPA  DELTA 

Loretta  Dolan 
Jeanne  Solliday 


IsL\PPA  KAPPA  GAMMA 

Nancy  Norment 
Dorothy  Millar 


[247] 


Baines 
Benedict 
Boekhoff 
Brechliill 


Conner 
Fonts 
Harlan 
Higgins 


Ilobbs 
tloenes 

Huntington 
Kenny 


Laws 

iMiller,  B. 
Miller,  E. 
Miller,  J. 


Miles 

(iuirk,  A. 
Quirk,  B. 
Quirk,  E. 
Rcville 


Siunorville 
'IV'rhune 
Waldman 
Weaver 
\'ogt 


[■2-JS 


ALPHA  OMICRON  PI 


Founded  at  Barnard  College  in  1897 

PI  DELTA  CHAPTER 

Established  at  University  of  Maryland  in  192^ 

Publication— TO  DRAGMA 


SORORES  IN  FACULTATE— 

Frieda  McFarland 

SORORES  IN  UNIYERSITATE- 


Class  of  Nineteen  Thirtij-.six — 

Frances  Benedict 
Edith  BrechbiU 
Virginia  Conner 
Rebekah  Fonts 
Betty  Huntington 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirtij-seren — 

Claire  Boekhoff 
Eloise  Dahn 
Marjorie  Higgins 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-eight — 

Anna  Mae  Baines 
Doris  Harlan 
Dorothy  Hobbs 
Muriel  James 


Catherine  Kenny 
Dorothy  Miles 
Betty  Miller 
Jean  Miller 
Frances  Powell 


Sophia  Hoenes 
Lucile  Laws 
Virginia  Merritt 


Barbara  Judd 
Doris  Mitchell 
Constance  Nash 
Elizabeth  J.  Oswald 


Anna  Marie  Quirk 
Betty  Quirk 
Ruth  Somerville 
Kathryn  Terhune 
Carolyn  ^'ogt 


Eunice  Miller 
Flora  Waldman 
Betty  Weaver 


Dolores  Piozet 
Eleanore  Quirk 
Ruth  Reville 


Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-nine — 

Mathilda  Boose 
Audrey  Bosley 
Evelyn  Byrd 
Leslie  English 
Edith  Gram 
Carol  Hardy 
Jean  Hester 


Betty  Law 
Harriet  McCall 
Elaine  McClayton 
Gladys  Persons 
Helen  Piatt 
Kitty  Pollard 
Edith  R.  Sparling 


Dorothy  Stark 
Louise  Tucker 
Ella  M.  Tuttle 
Fay  Unger 
Frederica  Waldman 
Martha  S.  Williamson 


Housemother 
Mrs.  Luella  Martin 


[249] 


Sclmh 
Weitlemann 


[250] 


KAPPA  KAPPA  GAMMA 


Founded  at  Monmouth  College  in  1870 

GAMMA  PSI  CHAPTER 

Established  at  University  of  Maryland  in  1929 

Publication— THE  KEY 


SORORES  IN  FACULTATE— 

Marie  Mount  Ann  Shaw 

SORORES  IN  UNIVERSITATE— 


Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-six — 

June  Barnsley 
Mildred  Chapin 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-seven — 

Lucille  Bennett 
Betty  Benton 
Eleanor  Bishop 
Elizabeth  Brown 


Mary  Keller 
Nancy  Norment 
Anne  Padgett 


Janet  Cartee 
Rosella  Gengnagel 
Donnie  Godwin 
Ruth  Kreiter 


Marion  Parker 
Fay  Reuling 


Dorothy  Millar 
Elizabeth  Norris 
Geraldine  Schuh 
Janet  Weidemann 


Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-eight — 

Mary  Beggs  Jean  Dulin 

Elinor  Broughton  Mary  Krauss 

Ann  Carver  Lois  Kuhn 


Ruth  Lowry 
Jean  Paterson 


Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-nine — 

Bernice  Aring 

Marion  Barker 

Betty  Bishop 

Mary  Louise  Brinckerhoff 

Rosemarv  Burtner 


Roberta  Collins 
Katherine  Davis 
Jacklyn  Dotterer 
Nora  Louise  Huber 
Adrienne  M.  Henderson 


Eleanor  Kuhn 
Margaret  MacDonald 
Virginia  Smith 
Dorothy  Stewart 
Jane  Wilson 


Housemother 
Mrs.  Ehzabeth  F.  Driver 


25  r 


M^£:g 


Allen 
Brite 
Chatham 
Cowie 


t'ruig 
Crisp 

Danforth 
Davidson 


Dolan 
Dow 
Fisher 
Hazard 


Taylor 
Kempton 
Long 


Mills 
Minker 
Shotman 
Small 


SoUiday 
White 

Wilson,  \\. 
Wilson,  M. 
Walker 


ViM\ 


KAPPA  DELTA 


Founded  at  Virginia  State  Normal  in  1897 

ALPHA  RHO  CHAPTER 

Established  at  University  of  Maryland  in  1929 

Publication— ANGELOS 


SORORES  IN  FACULTATE— 

Lila  Blitch 


Susan  E.  Harman 
Olga  Lofgren 


Alma  H.  Preinkert 


SORORES  IN  UNIVERSITATE— 


Class  of  Ni?ieteen  Thirty-six — • 

Anne  Bourke 
Mildred  Davidson 


Loretta  Dolan 
Florence  Small 


Virginia  White 


Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-seven — 

Jeanette  Chatham  Mary  Crisp 

Jean  Cowie  Florence  Hill 

Catherine  Craig  Mary  Miller 


Dorothy  Minker 
Jeanne  SoUiday 


Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-eiyht- 

Josephine  Allen 
Nancy  Brice 
Dorothy  Danforth 
Mary  Dow 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-nine- 

Doris  Dunnington 
Virginia  Faul 
Anna  Hershberger 
Jean  Homewood 
Evelvn  lager 


Ida  Fisher 
Isabel  Hamilton 
Helen  Kaylor 
Christine  Kempton 
Genevieve  Long 


Virginia  Johnson 
Jane  Kephart 
Marie  McNicholas 
June  Prescott 
Doris  Reeser 


Josephine  Mills 
Vera  Walker 
Margaret  Wilson 
Ruth  Wilson 


Jeanette  Schindel 
Mary  Speake 
Sarah  Stoddard 
Frances  Wulf 


Housemother 
Mrs.  M.  M.  Rood 


[253] 


Snyder,  R.  . 
Somers 
Sanford 
TliDiiipson,  E. 
Tlioinpson,  K. 


12541 


DELTA  DELTA  DELTA 


Founded  at  Boston  University  in  1888 

ALPHA  PI  CHAPTER 

Established  at  University  of  Maryland  in  193Jt 

Publication— THE  TRIDENT 


ck^' 


SORORES  IN  FACULTATE— 

Claribel  Welsh  Franc  Westney 

SORORES  IN  UNIVERSITATE— 


Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-six — 

Dorothy  V.  Allen 
Mary  R.  Cross 
Marjorie  Grinstead 


Routh  Hickey 
Marguerite  Jones 
Mary  L.  Mclntire 


Florence  R.  Rea 
Leora  Sanford 
Elizabeth  Thompson 


Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-seren- 

Alice  Ayers 

Mary  Frances  Garner 


Ruth  Snydei' 
Helen  Somers 


Kathryn  Thompson 


Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-eight- 
Anne  Beal 
Virginia  CaUadine 
Maude  Cutting 
Lois  Ernest 


Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-nine — 

Nancy  Anders 
Betty  Bain 
Mary  H.  Bohlin 
Mary  K.  Bowman 
Ernestine  Bowyer 
Harriet  Cain 
Sarah  V.  Case 
Doris  Eichlin 


Mildred  Hearn 
Ruth  Knight 
Lois  Linn 
Grace  Lovell 
Bernice  O'Keefe 


Mona  Garmon 
Gwendolyn  Glynn 
Jean  Hartig 
Mary  Hennies 
Dorothy  Huff 
Helen  lager 
Vivian  Johnson 
Margaret  Maslin 


Paula  Snyder 
Eloise  Thawley 
Dorothy  Trout 
Valerie  Vaught 


Margaret  Odebrecht 
Betty  Rawley 
Jean  St.  Clair 
Patricia  Schutz 
Marguerite  Stevenson 
Jeannette  Vaught 
June  Weber 


%  Housemother 

I     Mrs.  Olive  W.  Hendricks 


[255] 


Smith 

Stolzenbach 
Swanson 
Talcott 
Taylor 


Wall,  C. 
Wall,  D. 
Weiner 
Young 


I  'isa  I 


ALPHA  XI  DELTA 


Founded  at  Lombard  College  in  1893 

BETA  ETA  CHAPTER 

Established  at  University  of  Maryland  in  1934 

Publication— THE  ALPHA  XI  DELTA 


SORORES  IN  UNIVERSITATE— 


Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-six- 

Lucile  Bowker 
Mell  Ford 
Betty  Goss 


Dorothy  Hande 
Jeannette  Merritt 
Laura  McComas 


Ruth  Parker 
Mary  Taylor 
Christine  Wall 


Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-seven- 
Edith  Bell 
Dorothy  Evans 
Doris  Johnston 
Eleanor  Nordeen 


Georgia  Nordeen 

Margaret  Smith 
Helen  Stolzenbaeh 
Lois  Talcott 


Dorcas  Teal 
Iris  Wilson 
Carolyn  Young 


Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-eight — 

Maryelene  Heffernan 
Betty  Jeffers 
Marguerite  Jefferson 


Audrey  Jones 
Ruth  Shamburger 
Evelyn  Stevens 
Margaret  Swanson 


Janet  Werner 
Dorothy  Wall 
Maxine  White 


Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-nine- 

Esther  Berryman 
Doris  E.  De  Alba 


Dorothy  Linder 
Elizabeth  Mayhew 
Anne  McLean 


Mary  Pence 
Ellen  E.  Talcott 


Housemother 
Mrs.  Thomas  J.  Randolph,  IV. 


[257] 


Cohen 

(irodjesk 

Jacobs 

Katz 

Levin 

Molofsky 

Olinger 

Potts 

Resnitsky 

Rosen 

Shmuner 

Snyder 

Sugar 

Wahlmuth 

Zerman 

BETA  PI  SIGMA 

SORORES  IN  UNIVERSITATE— 

Class  of  Nineteen  Thirty-sir — 
E.  Claire  Zerman 


Founded  at  the  University  of  Maryland  in  1930 


Class  of  \ineteen  Thirty-seren- 

Bernice  (Irodjesk 
Bernice  Molofsky 


Isabel  Resnitsky 
Anne  Schmuner 


Beatrice  Sugar 


Class  of  Xlni'teeii  Thirtii-eKjht — 

Gertrude  Cohen  Lillian  Katz 

Bernit-e  Jacobs  Sheba  Potts 


Jeanette  Rosen 
Faye  Snyder 


Class  of  yiueteen  Thirtii-tiinc 
Etlicl  !,evine 


Carolyn  Olinger 
Muriel  Solomon 

[258] 


Doris  Wohlmuth 


JUNE  WEEK 

FROINI  undergraduate  to  a  de- 
gree in  an  hour  and  a  half.  No 
naore  cramming,  no  more  cajoUng, 
no[more  cutting  class.  AVhat,  then? 
You'll  find  out  .  .  .  it's  a  cruel 
world.  Well,  it's  your  own  fault. 
You  didn't  have  to  pass  all  your 
hours,  did  you?  Rare  though  they 
may  be,  there  is  such  a  thing  as  a 
five-year  man.  It's  too  late  now 
.  .  .  you  have  your  diploma  .  .  . 
treasure  it  always  .  .  .  come  around 
and  see  us. 


ARMY  CAMP 

SIX  weeks  of  nothing  but  mili- 
tary science  and  tactics.  The 
boys  always  bring  back  glowing 
reports.  You  don't  really  do  those 
things,  do  you,  fellers?  Six-thirty 
breakfasts  are  enjoyable  functions, 
and  it  must  be  fun  to  drill  from 
seven  to  twelve.  Theory  courses 
until  three  .  .  .  athletics  pursued 
until  dinner  .  .  .  what  to  do  with 
spare  time  .  .  .  pretty  hard  grind 
.  .  .  school  starts  September  seven- 
teenth .  .  .  then  sleep  through 
nine-twenties  .  .  .  some  fun. 


OPENING  OF 
{SCHOOL 

ONE  look  at  the  poor  bewild- 
ered freshman  and  we  can 
only  ask  "Nineteen  thirty-nine, 
whyfore  art  thou?"  All  over  the 
campus  we  hear,  "What  say, Butch, 
howza  summer?"  or  perhaps  from 
the  fraternity  houses  come  words 
like  this:  "For  heaven's  sake,  I 
dropped  that  trunk  on  my  finger." 
The  sororities  are  always  good  for 
this  one:  "I  met  him  on  the  boat 
.  .  .  the  most  handsome  thing!"  A 
new  year  .  .  .  turn  over  a  new  leaf 
.  .  . yeah ! 


PRESIDENT'S 
RECEPTION 

April  21,  1936 
Gym-Armory 

THE  President  in  the  receiving 
line  with  the  members  of  the 
Board  of  Regents.  A  part  of  Presi- 
dent Byrd's  many  friends  attended 
to  extend  him  congratulations  on 
his  appointment.  None  was  more 
sincere  than  the  student  represent- 
atives who  were  present.  A  gala 
affair  .  .  .  lavish  decorations  .  .  . 
tasty  refreshments  .  .  .  R.O.T.C. 
officers  directing  traffic. 


HOMECOMING 

November  16,  1935 
Byrd  Stadium 

SEVEN  hundred  alumni  return 
for  festivities.  Amidst  general 
handshaking  and  back-slapping, 
the  old  grads  came  back  for  their 
annual  get-to-gether  at  the  scene 
of  their  college  days.  They  watched 
the  game  frosh  get  doused  by  the 
cocky  sophs  .  .  .  scoreless  tie  in 
football  ...  a  colorful  show  by  the 
shriners  .  .  .  fine  dance  in  Ritchie 
gym  .  .  .  waiting  for  next  year  .  .  . 
meanwhile  practice  in  hand-grip- 
ping and  lung  development. 


ALL-UNIVERSITY  XIGHT 


O  WELL  picture  of  extra-curricular  activities  with  350  undergraduates  taking  part.  A  crowd  of 
*^  five  thousand  saw  the  big  show.  The  extravaganza  which  took  place  between  two  Varsity  matches 
gave  our  visitors  lots  of  impressions  to  take  home.  Basketball  .  .  .  Pershing  Rifles  in  silent  manual 
. . .  Annie  Oakley,  Jr.  .  .  .  Tumbling  .  .  .  Hockey  .  .  .  Archery  .  .  .  Symphony  .  .  .  Glee  Club  .  . .  Boxing 
.  .  .  and  goodnight. 


MAY  DAY 


TT  REALLY 

-'-  spring    day, 
gently 


was  a  beautiful 
with  the  breeze 
rustling  the  leaves,  and 
nimble  barefoot  girls  dancing 
gracefully  to  a  minuet.  One  can't 
always  be  sure  of  the  weather  but 
we  of  Maryland  can  promise  the 
rest.  It  was  good  this  year  .  .  .  the 
stately  procession  .  .  .  the  queen 
takes  her  throne  of  authority  .  .  . 


the 
honor 


singing    and    dancing 


in  her 
the  crowning  of  the 
queen  .  .  .  the  winding  of  the  May- 
pole. We  look  back  and  sigh  .  .  . 
the  ancient  custom  of  ]May  Day 
has  been  observed  once  more. 


FIELD  DAY 

"IT'IGHT  hours  of  super  sports. 
-'-^  Five  Varsity  teams  parading 
in  all  their  glory.  The  high  school 
teams  enjoyed  this  occasion  as 
much  as  the  spectators.  It  was  a 
real  pleasure  to  see  the  cars  lined 
up  on  the  boulevard  throughout 
the  length  of  College  Park.  Head- 
ley  sets  new  school  record  for  the 
mile  run  .  .  .  Dr.  Broughton  pre- 
sents lots  of  medals  .  .  .  frat  men 
sell  programs  .  .  .  hot  dogs,  pop 
and  peanuts  consumed  in  huge 
quantities. 


AMBITIOUS  members  of  Riding 
-^*-  Club  at  White  House  asking- 
President  to  come  to  annual  horse 
show  . .  .  Incidents  at  three  football 
games,  where  flowers  are  received 
by  President  Byrd,  a  cup  comes 
from  Mayor  Jackson,  and  some 
goal  posts  are  torn  down . . .  Gay  90's 
football  at  Florida . . .  Also  some  of 
the  Old  Grads  at  the  Junior  Prom 
.  .  .  Pick  'em  out  for  yourself. 


A  HIGHLY  important  event, 
that  first  shovel  of  dirt  comes 
out  for  the  $350,000  Bureau  of 
Mines  building  being  built  on  the 
campus  .  .  .  And  some  less  serious 
matters . . .  Dance  chaperones ...  A 
little  something  for  the  coeds  to 
wear . . .  And  that  Grange  Play  that 
was  well  received  at  all  of  its  per- 
formances at  many  places  in  the 
State. 


Publications    HaiMiuct,  National  I'ress  C'Uib,  May  22,  1930 

ACKNOWLEDGMENT 

F(  )K  their  inestimalile  assistance  in  the  preparation  of  this  issue  of  the  Terrapin, 
tlie  editors  wish  to  thank  Thomsen-Ellis  Company,  and  especially  Mr.  Harry  P. 
Lavelle,  for  their  creative  printini"'  and  enthusiastic  cooperation;  Jalin  &  Oilier  En- 
li'ravinfi'  (\)inpany  and  ^Nlr.  C  (iordon  Brightman,  for  their  fine  engraving;  Merin- 
BaHhan  Studios  and  Mr.  Raymond  Bailey,  for  their  photography;  Mr.  James  T. 
Berryman,  for  his  unusual  art  work;  and  Mr.  John  Mueller,  for  his  exceptional  ac- 
tion pictures. 

We  are  especially  indebted  to  Mr.  William  H.  (Bill)  Hottel,  for  the  many  hours 
he  has  spent  with  the  staff,  supervising,  offering  innumerable  helpful  suggestions, 
and  working  hand  in  hand  with  us. 

To  those  members  of  the  faculty  and  student  body  who  have  kindly  rendered 
their  services,  we  also  are  greatly  appreciative. 

The  Editors. 


JOHN  MUELI.KK 


■^w 


2.  ,Cymnasium-Armory 

3.  Silvester  HjII 
4,-  Calvert  Hall 

5.  Student  Confer 

6.  Dining  Holl 
7  Infirmarv 


s. 


Building 
9.     Morrill  Hall 
10.     Girls'  Field  House 
I  I .     Girls'  Tennis  Courts 
12.     Girls"  Athletic  Fields 

n.       Studeni-Alijmn;  Mr.rrod'.l  Flag 


15.  Home  Economics  Bu'ldin9 

16.  Engineering  Group 

17.  Agricultural  Building 

18.  Chemistry  Building 
I*?.  Green  Houses 
20.  Small  Horticulture  Buildino 


30  i"?-'-