Svery Cornellian's Taper RNELL ALUMNI NEW

In the News this Week: Cornell Day Set for May 11 —Expect Five Hundred School Boys. Cornellian Council Reports Class Standings in Alumni Fund for Past Six Months. Alumni University Tentatively Planned for June 18-21 — Committee Invites Opinions. Announce New Trustees' Committee on Athletics Organization. Boxing Team Surprises Customers in First Intercollegi- ate Meet with Penn State—Wrestlers Defeat Springfield.

Volume 37 Number 15

January 24, 1935 PROFESSIONAL Lehigh'Valley Service DIRECTORY OF CORNELL ALUMNI

(llθU'L THROUGH CONVENIENT METROPOLITAN DISTRICT Q SERVICE TO AND FROM ITHACA FRANK-S BACHE INC.

DAILY BETTER BUILDING Eastern Standard Time Construction Work of Every Description The Black The Diamond Star in Westchester County and Lower Lv. (Pennsylvania Station) 11.05 A.M. 11.30 P.M. Connecticut Lv. New York (Hudson Terminal) 11.00 A.M. 11.20 P.M. Lv. Newark (Park Place-P.R.R.) 11.00 A.M. 11.30 P.M. F. S. BACHEΊ3 Lv. Newark (Eliz. & Meeker Aves.) 11.3 5 A.M. 12.00 Mid. 94 Lake Street White Plains, N. Y. Lv. Philadelphia (Reading Ter'l, Rdg. Co.) 11.20 A.M. 11.20 P.M. Lv. Philadelphia (N. Broad St., Rdg. Co.) 11.26 A.M. 11.26 P.M. Ar. Ithaca 6.27 P.M. 6.30 A.M. .Sleeping Car may be occupied until 8.00 A.M. RETURNING Eastern Standard Time THE BALLOU PRESS The Black Train Diamond No. 4 Lv. Ithaca 12.47 P.M. 10.52 P.M. Printers to Lawyers Ar. Philadelphia (N. Broad St., Rdg. Co.) 7.40 P.M. 7.32 A.M. Ar. Philadelphia (Reading Ter'l, Rdg. Co.).... 7.48 P.M. 7.42 A.M. Ar. Newark (Eliz. & Meeker Aves.) 7.51 P.M. 6.49 A.M. CHAS. A. BALLOU, JR., '21 Ar. Newark (Park Place-P.R.R.) 8.20 P.M. 7.21 A.M. Ar. New York (Hudson Terminal) 8.31 P.M. 7.22 A.M. 69 Beekman St. Tel. Beekmcn 8785 Ar. New York (Pennsylvania Station) 8.20 P.M. 7.20 A.M. New York Sleeping Car open at 9.00 P.M.

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VOL. XXXVII, NO. 15 ITHACA, NEW YORK, JANUARY 2./\y I 93 5 PRICE I 5 CENTS

COUNCIL REPORTS GIFTS through the Alumni Fund have been an COSMOPOLITAN CLUB indispensible part of the University's Alumni Fund Mounts income, and that without this assistance Thirtieth Anniversary As the Cornellian Council begins its the work of the University would be Thirty years ago, on Founder's Day, twenty-sixth year, Archie M. Palmer '18, severely handicapped. • January 11, 1905, the Cornell Cosmo- executive secretary, reports that during "The steady flow of annual contribu- politan Club formally opened its first the six months ending December 31, tions to the Alumni Fund," says Palmer, quarters, rooms leased at 313 Eddy 1934, 1,590 alumni have contributed attests the unswerving loyalty of alumni Street, near Buffalo Street. By that time $24,681.58 to the Alumni Fund. Since and their continuing interest. The Cor- the Club, organized the previous fall, had its first meeting, March 5, 1909, as a seventy-five members, citizens of more 4 nellian Council enters upon its second ' bureau for the collection of an alumni quarter-century of service with justifiable than twenty countries, including the fund for the support of the University," pride in the record of alumni giving at United States. the Council has served as the medium Cornell and with unqualified confidence Now, under an amendment to the through which alumni have made their in the continued support of the alumni.'' Club's constitution, women students for contributions to the financial support of the first time are admitted to active Cornell. membership and are given representa- NEW ATHLETICS COMMITTEE Experience shows that most alumni tion on the executive committee. The and friends of the University make their The appointment of a new committee first woman to become a member of the gifts during the late winter and spring "to consider the organization of the committee is Meda E. Young '35 oί months, so it is to be expected not only athletic interests of the University," as Palmyra; others will be elected in March. that the number and amount of contribu- authorized by the Board of Trustees, was On December 6 the Club elected to active tions will increase shortly over the past announced January 15. It will hold its membership thirteen women; on January six months' period, but also that the first meeting in the President's office in 8, eight more. It has a number of women relative standing of the classes may Morrill Hall on January z6. residents of Ithaca, members of the change with respect to amount given and The committee is composed of two Faculty, and wives of Faculty members to number and percentage of contributors. representatives of the Faculty, two as associate members. The Cornell Trustees, and four alumni representatives. For the period now reported, the Class Women's Cosmopolitan Club disbanded Chairman Frank H. Hiscock '75 has of Ίo leads in amount contributed, with last year. $1,488.00. The Class of 'zz is second with appointed Colonel John B. Tuck '93 of Soon after the University opened in $1,1x8.19; '^ *s ^ird with $1,084.79; Syracuse and Robert E. Treman '09 of 1904, a group of Latin-American stu- and the others of the ten highest are '2.3 Ithaca to represent the Trustees. President dents, with the enthusiastic support of with $1,069.34; 'z4 with $1,046.34; '85 Farrand, who is chairman of the com- Modesto Quiroga, M.S.A. '05, and Pro- with $1,040.00; 'zi with $1,0^7.58; '90 mittee, has appointed from the Faculty fessor Thomas F. Hunt, organized the with $990.00; 'z6 with $964.90; and '05 Dean George Young, Jr. '00, Architecture, Club. Its first officers were William A. with $905.75. and Professor Hugh C. Troy '95, Dairy Reece '04 of New Zealand, president; Industry; and for the alumni, C. Reeve The Class of 'zz ranks well toward the James N. Lorenz '05 of Ohio and Kuei top in all three classifications, being first Vanneman '03 of Albany, Dr. Floyd S. Ling Wu '05 of China, vice-presidents; in number of contributors and second Winslow '06 of Rochester, Andrew J. Christian R. A. Bues '06 of Germany, both in amount given and in percentage Whinery Ίo of Newark, N. J., and Wil- secretary; Fernando Aleman '07 of of its members who have given to the liam J. Thorne Ίi of Syracuse. Buenos Aires, assistant secretary; Fred- Fund. Because of their larger number, it Pending the recommendations of this erick D. Colson '97 of the College of Law, is to be expected that the classes of the new committee, athletics will continue treasurer; with Quiroga, Abraham A. twenties would lead in number of con- to be administered by the Trustees' Freedlander '05 of Buffalo, and Pro- tributors, but Ίz appears among the first committee on athletic control of which fessors Hunt, Everett W. Olmsted '91, ten with 73, tied with 'Z3 for fifth place. Professor Herman Diederichs '97 is chair- George P. Bristol, and Frank A. Fetter 'zz had 95 contributors; 'Z4 was second man and Comptroller Charles D. Bost- as trustees. with 90; 'zi had 8z; 'z6 was fourth with wick '9Z and Professor Donald English As pointed out in an article by Freed- 80. Seventh place went to 'zo with 67 are members. lander in the Cornell Era for June, 1904, contributors, followed by '2.5 with 57, the principles of the Club had included and *Z7 and 'z8 with 53 each. KATE GLEASON MEMORIAL from the first not only to welcome to In percentage of their total living Henry D. Sharpe, Rhode Island engi- membership students from foreign coun- membership who contributed to the Fund neer and manufacturer, has presented to tries, but Americans as well; and to make during the six months, the Class of '85 the Providence Engineering Society a this the first of an Association of Cosmo- ranks first with 6.45 percent, 'zz had 6.17 fund in memory of Kate Gleason '88, the politan Clubs, which would have chap- percent, followed by 'zi with 6.05 per- first woman who took engineering at the ters in many other universities. A New cent, and by Ίz as the fourth on the list University. Miss Gleason entered the York , mistakenly supposing with 6.03 percent of its members con- University in 1884 for a special course, the Club to be for foreign students only, tributing. The others of the first ten remained one year, and returned for had opposed it editorially on the ground classes in this tabulation are '24 with further work in 1888. She died in De- that foreign students should be en- 5.9Z percent, '80 with 5.68 percent, '78 cember, 193Z. couraged to mingle with the others. Such with 5.56 percent, 'z6 with 5.5 percent, The Kate Gleason Fund is a legacy of interchange of knowledge and ideas was Ίi with 4.94 percent, and '94 with 4.87 $1,000 which Sharpe had received from the fundamental idea of the Club; of its percent. Miss Gleason. The income is to be used hundred members at that time, about President Farrand has repeatedly de- for the purchase of engineering periodi- half were American citizens. The Club's clared that the annual gifts from alumni cals for the Providence society. international nights have been regularly CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS enjoyed since its founding as integral PHI KAPPA PHI ELECTS Voorhees of Brooklyn, and Daniel G. parts of Campus life. Ninety-three graduate students and Yorkey of Central Square. In 1907 the Association of Cosmo- seniors have been elected to the Cornell In Architecture, Robert S. Kitchen of politan Clubs was organized at the first Chapter of Phi Kappa Phi, national hon- Dayton, O., H. Roger Williams of Day- convention in Madison, Wis., by eight orary scholastic society. The list follows: ton, O., Oleg P. Petroff of Montclair, chapters, many of whom had adopted N. J., Robert R. Sheridan of Piqua, O., practically the constitution of the Cor- GRADUATE STUDENTS and Harry W. Tobey of Pittsfield, Mass. In Agriculture, Mary F. Crowell of nell club. Manuel B. de Almeida '09 and In Administrative Engineering, John Shortsville, Frank K. Beyer '19 of Frank D. Mitchell '04, then a graduate H. Mount, Jr. of Red Bank, N. J. and Buffalo, Fred F. Cowan: of Alice, Tex., student, were delegates from Cornell and George P. Torrence of Evans ton, 111. Roland B. Dearborn of North Weare, were active in launching the affairs of the In Electrical Engineering, John B. N. H., Vladimir N. Krukovsky of Ithaca, new Association. In December, 1909, at a Maggio of Brooklyn and Herbert L. Burtis C. Lawson of Springfield, O., convention in Ithaca, the Association Prescott of East Orange, N. J. Erich O. Mader of Ithaca, William G. was affiliated with the International In Mechanical Engineering, Justus P. Mather, MS '33, of Cuba Springs, James Federation of Students, known as " Corda Allen of Seneca Falls, Eugene F. Murphy, W. Neely of Siloam, Ark., Floyd R. Fratres." Jr. of Syracuse, and Eugene C. Schum of Nevin of Long Eddy, Charles E. Palm of By March, 1911, the present home of Erie, Pa. Rogers, Ark., George V. Parris of Bar- the Club at 301 Bryant Avenue was bados, B. W. L, John R. Raeburn of Fife, In Home Economics, Katherine M. partially occupied, contributions to the Scotland, Herbert T. Scofield of Locke, Mclntyre of Perry, Edith E. Gulbe of building fund having been made by Harry R. Varney of Ithaca, Donald Ithaca, Elizabeth Myers of Washington, President Andrew D. White and by many Wyman, MSA '31, of Ithaca, Roland S. D. C, Norma Nordstrom of East Aurora, alumni, both members and nonmembers. Young of Edmonton, Alberta, Can. Marjorie H. Shaver of Hi on, and Mar- The Club's dining room was open, and garet F. Sturm of Ithaca. In Arts and Sciences, Gertrude Blanch the old rooms on Eddy Street were In Hotel Administration, William L. of Brooklyn, Mary E. Burton of Louis- given up. Kahrl of Clairton, Pa. and Phillip A. ville, Ky., Sister Mary E. Gable of St. During the summer of 1933, through Waldron of Seymour, Conn. Joseph, Minn., Charles A. Annis, AM '33, the interest of some forty Ithacans and In Law, Robert L. Griffith of Ro- of Pickering, Ont., Can., Arthur W. members of the Faculty who were mem- chester and Norman MacDonald of Fall Brown '03 of Ithaca, Joseph R. Cheli- bers of the Cosmopolitan Club, the Inter- River, Mass. kowsky '31 of North Tonawanda, J. T. national Association of Ithaca, Inc., was In Veterinary Medicine, Herbert J. Emlin of Germantown, Pa., William F. formed with the purpose of increasing Buell of Constable, Michael J. Donahue Geigle '30 of Buffalo, W. S. Neff of the contribution of foreign students to of Newburgh, and Richard L. Fortune of , Andrew J. Ramsey of the social and cultural life of the com- Gouverneur. munity. The Association took over the Angola, Ind., Herbert Schauman of operation of the Club building, which Lusterburg, Germany, Ross E. Shrader of CORNELL GEOLOGISTS was redecorated and renovated, and Drexel Hill, Pa., William E. Utterback Cornell had a larger representation of brought to Ithaca, as executive director, of Oberlin, Ohio. Fellows and invited guests than any John L. Mott, a Princeton graduate and In Civil Engineering, William L. other institution, at the forty-seventh son of John R. Mott '88. Mr. Mott was Malcolm of Kingston, Ont. In Home annual meeting of the Geological Society also made assistant to the Dean of the Economics, Mabel A. Rollins '31 of of America at Rochester, December 27- University Faculty in charge of foreign Brooklyn and Delpha Diesendanger. In 19. The following Cornellians read papers students, and his residence at 5 Grove Medicine, Mrs. Margaret Gilbert of at the sessions: Dr. Herman L. Fairchild Place was made the headquarters of the Ithaca and Mrs. Ruth Hunter, PhD '33, '74, professor emeritus, University of Association. of Broadacre, Ohio. Rochester; Arthur L. Howland '2.9 of The directors of the International As- SENIORS Northwestern University; John L. Rich sociation were Dean Floyd K. Richt- In Agriculture, Helen L. Griffin of '06 of University of Cincinnati; Benjamin myer '04, chairman; William C. Andrea, Coxsackie, Virginia Yoder of Water- M. Shaub '2.5 of Smith College; William treasurer; D. Boardman Lee '2.6, secre- town, George E. Brandow of Roxbury, H. Shideler, PhD Ίo, of Miami Univers- tary; William A. Boyd, Professor Dwight Charles J. Blanford of Iola, Kan., Stanley ity; and Kenneth E. Caster '2.9, Evans B. Sanderson '98, L. Alva Tompkins, Jr. E. Wadsworth of Northboro, Mass., Mayo, PhD '31, Charles M. Nevin, PhD 'x4, and Professor Julian L. Wood- Irwin C. Gunsalus of Brookings, S. D., '2.5 and Oscar D. von Engeln '08 of the ward 'zz. James T. Tanner of Cortland, Bruce B. Department of Geology. Many members of the Cosmopolitan Miner of Sheridan, Donald G. Pasko of On December z8 a Cornell luncheon Club have achieved prominence, among Niagara Falls, and Έmil F. Meyer of was attended by all of these and the them Leonard K. Elmhirst 'zi, whose New York City. following 33 Cornellians: from the wife, the widow of Willard Straight '01, In Arts and Sciences, Violet J. Brown Cieology Department, James D. Burfoot, is the donor of . of Brooklyn, Dorothea M. Ferguson of Jr., PhD 'x9, Joseph R. Chelikowsky '31, Philadelphia, Pa., Marjorie R. Fleiss of Louis C. Conant, AM '19, Mrs. Louis C. ON FRIDAY, January Z5, Professor Brooklyn, Eleanor Middleton of Long Conant, AM '2.8, Wilbert C. Dennis, Harold D. Smith, University Organist, Island City, Sadie Samuel of Brooklyn, Grad., James L. Dyson, Grad., Raymond gives a recital in Bailey Hall, and on Gladys Wilensky of Passaic, N. J., S. Edmundson, Grad., Alexander D. Sunday afternoon Willard Straight Hall Thomas P. Almy of Redding, Conn., Falck, Jr. '35, James D. Forrester, MS presents Gudmundur Kristjansson, Ice- William C. Babcock of Hornell, Walter *X9, Gerrard R. Megathlin, MS 'x8, landic tenor. Balderston of Chicago, 111., Sanford H. Frances L. Parker '35, John M. Parker Bolz of Albany, Theodore R. Colborn of III '2.8, Professor Heinrich Ries, John PI TAU PI SIGMA, honorary society in Rochester, Samuel S. Horowitz of Lib- Rodgers '36, John W. Roehl, Grad., the signal corps of the ROTC, held its erty, Frederich J. Hughes of Plainfield, Harry N. Fridley, PhDΊ8, and James H.C. initiation banquet in Willard Straight N. J., William Massarsky of Rockaway Martens '2.1 of West Virginia University; Hall in full dress military uniform, and Beach, Channing Nelson of Erie, Pa., Charles K. Cabeen, 'x8 Grad., of Lafay- heard Professor Vladimir KarapetorT, Howard F. Ordman of Brooklyn, Harry ette; Monroe G. Cheney Ί6 of Coleman, Lieutenant Commander, USNRF, de- Pearlman of Mount Vernon, Ellison H. Tex.; W. Storrs Cole '2.5 of Ohio State; scribe current conditions in Russia. Taylor of Springfield, Mass., Phillip H. Chamberlain Ferry, AM '-$1, of Hamilton; JANUARY 2.4, 1935

Alton Gabriel, PhD '30; Louis C. Graton CORNELL DAY MAY 11 by permission. This course should accom- Όo of Harvard; Charles S. Gwynne '07 of To Entertain Schoolboys pany Course 710." Iowa State; Caroline Heminway, AM '2.8, The second "Cornell Day" is set for Two subsequent courses of more of Smith; David E. Jensen '30 of Ward's May 11, 1935. About five hundred rep- limited scope will first be offered in 1935- Natural Science Establishment, Rochester; resentative students from leading per- 36. Both are of two hours credit each. The Harriet E. Lee \γ of Wellesley; Robert B. paratory and high schools will be enter- one to be offered in the first term of next Newcombe, '2.6 Grad.; Paul H. Price, tained for a week-end on the Campus. year is described as a Seminar in Park PhD '30, West Virginia State Geologist; Planning and the other, to be given in the The alumni committee on relations Leslie E. Spock '13 of New York Uni- second term, is a Seminar in Parkway, with secondary schools, of which Wil- versity; Marcellus H. Stow Ί6 of Wash- Freeway, and Highway Planning. Both liam J. Thorne Ίi of Syracuse is chair- are to be given by Professor Clarke. ington and Lee; Jasper L. Stuckey, PhD man, will be responsible for bringing the '14, of North Carolina State; and Her- students to the Campus. Their entertain- mann F. Vieweg '2.1 of Rutgers. ment here will be sponsored by the senior TORONTO HEARS DURHAM societies, and Sphinx Professor Charles L. Durham '99 was MOORE AT OMAHA Head, with the cooperation of Scarab and the speaker at a meeting of the Cornell The Cornell Club of Omaha, Nebr. other honorary societies, and Ray S. Club of Toronto on December 17. The entertained Professor Clyde B. Moore of Ashbery '15, alumni field secretary, will members of the Club, together with some the Department of Rural Education at a serve as general chairman coordinating representatives of schools in Toronto dinner on January 4. The group, consist- the activities of these two committees. and vicinity, met for luncheon at Simp- ing of alumni and eight or ten students Registration of the guests will begin on son's Arcadian Court. William Rae '89, from the secondary schools interested in Friday evening, May 10, and the boys president of the Club, presided. going to college, met at the Omaha Club. will be housed and entertained at the Judge John W. Battin '86, president of various fraternity houses. The final the Club, presided. COLLEGE NEWS APPEARS schedule for Saturday has not yet been A new publication on the Campus this arranged, but the visitors will be guests year is College News, an eight-page semi- CHICAGO CLUB SPEAKERS of the Athletic Association that after- monthly newspaper delivered free to At the regular luncheon of the Cornell noon at a league baseball game with students. The editor is Frank Albanese Club of Chicago on January 17, William Princeton on . '35 of Newfield; the publisher, the Rural W. Welsh, Michigan '12., described his Last year six hundred guests came to News of Dryden. College News carries experience opening and operating a the Campus on May 12.. A crowded news of the University, editorials, fea- branch in Russia of the National City schedule, which included lectures, tours tures, fiction, and a goodly amount of Bank, six months under the Czars, the of the Campus, smokers, a track meet, a advertising of the merchants of College- entire period under Kerensky, and for rally in Bailey Hall, and a dance in the town, which is the territory near the nearly a year under the Bolsheviks. Drill Hall, gave the visitors an experience Campus end of Eddy Street and College On January 10 the speaker was J. which elicited many enthusiastic letters. Avenue. Dillard Hall, manager of the United Of the six hundred who came, 2.10 were States Fidelity and Guaranty Company, seniors in preparatory and high schools CORNELLIANS SAVE BILOXI central division, who discussed auto- and were eligible to apply for admission The shrimp and oyster industry of mobile accidents and the regulation of to the University. Of these eligibles, 108, Biloxi, Miss, is saved, and harmony drivers' licenses. more than half, are now registered in the reigns again among the fisherman and freshman class. the canners of this river town whose STUDY ICE CONE leading industry was threatened when A peculiar ice-cone formation at the DESCRIBE NEW COURSES labor difficulties promised to result in the foot of Taughannock Falls this winter The first two courses in regional plan- withdrawal of government inspection and last has been found by Professor ning to be given by Professor Gilmore D. and so destroy the market for its principal LorenC. Petry, Botany, and his daughter, Clarke '13, as announced in the ALUMNI product. Ruth '37, to be caused by certain condi- NEWS of November ix and November 2.9, That peace has settled in Biloxi is due tions at the falls which are probably not are described in an announcement from largely to the efforts of Lester A. Blumner duplicated elsewhere. During last winter's the College of Architecture. Beginning '30, publisher of The Daily Biloxian, sub-zero temperatures, the cone reached with the second term, which opens and at least partially, so it is said, to the an estimated height of one hundred feet, February 11, the College announces: discovery by Blumner and Dr. Herbert and in a recent cold spell it grew upward "Course 710. Principles of Regional B. Switzer Ίi of the Federal Food and five feet in less than twenty-four hours. Planning. Throughout the year. Credit Drugs Administration that both were The cone has a crater or bowl in its two hours each term. Registration limited Cornellians. The final conference, at top sometimes five feet deep, with a solid to 50. Open to graduates and upperclass- which Dr. Switzer and John R. Steelman, bottom that builds up with the cone. It men in all colleges of the University. commissioner of conciliation of the has been observed that the small volume A general view of the history and prac- Federal Department of Labor, brought of water coming over the falls in its 1-15- tice of large scale planning. Lectures, harmony between the canners and the foot drop becomes practically a mist assigned reading and examinations. Oc- fishermen, was held in the Biloxian office. which freezing temperatures convert into casional lectures will be given by members "We'll never underestimate college slush ice before it reaches the bottom. of other faculties and by outside lecturers connections and friendships again," says This slush ice piles up and freezes harder selected because of their special experi- Norman L. Matson, columnist of the around the edges of the crater, and a ence and skill in certain phases of newspaper. Dr. Switzer and the pub- constantly shifting stream flows down planning." lisher of The Daily Biloxian learned by the outside. "Course 711. Seminar in Regional accident that they were both graduates These observers have come to the con- Planning. Throughout the year. Credit of . As small as it clusion that the conditions necessary to one hour each term. Investigation of seems, that little fact helped negotiations result in such a formation are: a straight assigned topics on particular aspects of in settling the shrimp inspection problem drop, not too much water in the stream, the subject with emphasis on regional tremendously. The two men spent al- a height of more than one"hundred feet, planning. Registration limited. Open to most as much time discussing the 'Big and temperature fifteen degrees or below. students in all colleges of the University Red Team,' the old Dutch Kitchen, and CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

Zinck's, as they did the problems facing CLEVELAND CLUB Constitution of the Society of the the sea foods industry." I. T. Frary, membership and publicity Sigma Xi, Revised 1891. E. D. Norton, Blumner was one of those who per- secretary of the Cleveland Museum of Printer, i89x, 16 pp. petrated the "Hugo N. Frye" hoax in Art, gave an illustrated talk on'' Thomas Constitution of the Society oί the 1930; the other was Edward T. Horn '31, Jefferson—Architect and Builder," at the Sigma Xi, Revised and Adopted at the now pastor of the Lutheran Church in regular meeting of the Cornell Club of Convention 1893. Andrus and Church, Ithaca. It will be recalled that Blumner, Cleveland January 17. 1893, 18 pp. then retiring editor of the Sun's Berry List of Members of the Society of the Patch, and Horn, the incoming editor, FORM YACHT CLUB Sigma Xi. 1893, 68 pp. sent out invitations to a dinner to honor A new organization, the Cornell Constitution of the Society of the this sturdy patriot who, they said, was a Sigma Xi, as amended in Convention Yacht Club is projected by undergraduates founder of the Republican party in New 1895. Andrus and Church, 1895, 2-° PP of the University. It hopes to have sailing York State and the originator of the Proceedings of the Third, Fourth, dinghy races on Cayuga Lake, to hold slogans, "Protection for our prosperity" Fifth and Sixth Conventions at Toronto competitions each June for places on the and "Freedom in the land of the free." in 1897, Columbus 1899, Denver 1901, crew to represent the University in the They received many letters of congratu- and Washington 1902.. lation from those in high places, includ- intercollegiate yacht races, and possibly ing the Vice-President of the United to arrange for representation in the intercollegiate outboard motor boat races. COLLEGE LETTER WINNERS States, which were read at the annual The percentage of Varsity letter win- The Cornell crew which sailed in the Berry Patch dinner. The hoax received ners last year among the students of the intercollegiate yacht races last June at wide notice in the and was various Colleges has been recently com- Marblehead, Mass, comprised A. James discussed on the floor of the Senate. The piled by . Its survey Moxham '37, son of Commodore Egbert idea was born, according to Horn, when showed that in the Department of Hotel Moxham '04 of the Manhasset Bay Yacht Professor Martin Sampson mentioned a Administration, 5.88 percent of the 153 Club, Briton H. Richardson '37 of North- similar hoax perpetrated by a French students had won Varsity C's; in Agri- port, Britton L. Gordon '36 of North newspaper on the Chamber of Deputies. culture, 4.76 percent; in Engineering, Muskegon, Mich., and Paul Makepiece. 4.2.7 percent; in Arts and Sciences, 4.ox None of these is now in the University, percent. Fifty-one awards were given to STATE BOARD REPORTS but William A. Drisler, Jr. '37 of Bronx- Arts students, ΔfL to those in Agriculture, The first formal report of the State ville and Jesse A. B. Smith, Jr. '37 of 36 to engineers, and 9 to those in Hotel Planning Board, submitted at Albany Stamford, Conn, are promoting the Administration, according to the Sun. January 14 and signed by Provost Albert new organization. R. Mann '04, chairman, recommends the Awards considered were for football, cross-country, baseball, track, wrestling, gradual purchase by the State of six SIGMA XI PAPERS million acres of unproductive farm land hockey, soccer, basketball, lacrosse, Professor Henry B. Ward, formerly and its addition to the State-owned tennis, and crew. Agriculture had five of national secretary of Sigma Xi, is com- domain, be used for public recreation, the seven letter-winners in cross-country piling the early publications of the and the most letter men on the soccer lumbering, watershed protection, and society, with the promise that if six other "economic and social uses." team with five of the eleven awards. complete sets can be obtained, one will Engineering had four who won soccer The report is based on the first compre- be placed in the University Library. hensive survey of the land areas of the letters. Agriculture and Arts each had Sigma Xi was founded at Cornell in the five of the thirteen baseball awards; and State ever to be made. According to fall of 1887, through the efforts of Frank Provost Mann, that survey revealed that in crew Arts and Engineering shared Van Vleck, then assistant to the director honors with five each. something like one-sixth of the land area of Sibley College and instructor in charge in its present condition is a liability of the mechanical laboratory, and Wil- rather than an asset. Yet potentially it is liam A. Day '86. The other founders were ECONOMISTS LEAD a great resource, the value of which will William H. Riley '86, Charles B. Wing Four of the twelve men selected as the be shared by all the people when the land '86, Harry E. Smith '87, John Knicker- outstanding economists during 1934 by is put to the economic and social uses for backer '87, John J. Berger '87, Edwin N. Jules Backman and A. L. Jackson, vice- which it is naturally suited and which the Sanderson '87, William A. Moscrip '88, presidents of Economics Statistics, Inc. people can enjoy. The abandonment of Professor Henry Shaler Williams oί the are Cornellians. Heading the published farms in certain sections, too largely at- Department of Geology, who in the list is Professor George F. Warren '03 of tributed to the lure of the city for the spring of '86 had organized a society of the Department of Agricultural Eco- younger men, became significant at least fourteen geology students with much the nomics, "because he was the author of fifty years ago, and it has been progress- same purposes. the famous and now defunct gold-buying ing at the average rate of 100,000 acres a policy." Next comes Edwin W. Kem- Professor Guy E. Grantham of the year ever since for the excellent reason mbrer, PhD '01, who was assistant pro- Physics Department, secretary of the that the land, after the timber had been fessor and professor in the Department of Cornell Chapter, will forward to Profes- removed, would not support a farm popu- Economics from 1906 to 1912., "because sor Ward any of the eleven wanted pub- lation and was not adapted to modern he is the most prominent, articulate, and lications which may be sent to him. agricultural methods. learned of the anti-inflation school of Those desired are: monetary thought." Third is James EUGENE EN-JUNG FAN of Tungsien, Sigma Xi. The Preamble and Constitu- Harvey Rogers, who was assistant pro- Hopei, China, now a graduate student at tion. Signed by nine original student fessor of economics here from 1910 to the University, is the originator of the members. Ithaca, N. Y., 1887, 13 pp. 1913, "because he was Dr. Warren's as- only privately owned radio broadcasting The Organization of the Scientific sociate as monetary adviser to the ad- station in China. While teaching school Society of the Sigma Xi, by Frank Van ministration and because he was sent on a near his home he conceived the idea of Vleck, J. Henry Comstock, and C. D. trip to the Orient to study the silver broadcasting agricultural information to Marx. Andrus and Church, 1888, iS pp. problem." Professor Harold L. Reed, Chinese farmers, and from his home-made The Organization of the Scientific PhD '14, of the Department of Eco- transmitting set has grown the present Society of the Sigma Xi, by Frank Van nomics is selected "because his analysis station, which broadcasts regularly three Vleck, J. Henry Comstock, and C. D. of the defects of the commodity dollar times a week. Marx. Andrus and Church, 1888, 40 pp. was an important contribution to the JANUARY I935 5 clarification of loose thinking on the ALUMNI UNIVERSITY ing woman with a little boy tugging at subject." Committee Invites Opinions her skirt and pointing at the man inside. The other eight named are Rexford G. The Faculty committee on the pro- Two co-eds, says Cecil R. Rosenberry '2.5 Tugwell and H. Parker Willis of Co- posed alumni university has tentatively in , stopped in front lumbia, Jacob Viner of University of suggested a program for next June, and of the mural one day recently, to try to Chicago, Lewis H. Haney and Walter E. now invites communications from alumni decide why the lady weeps. "I know," Spahr of New York University, O. M. W. said one, "it's because they won't let before making final decision and recom- Sprague of Harvard, Irving Fisher of her in." "No," said the other, "she is mendation. Yale, and J. Maynard Keynes of Great crying because they won't let the little The October convention of the Cornell Britain. boy in." Alumni Corporation unanimously recom- TO REPEAT PINAFORE mended that the establishment of an alumni university next June be given ON PHYSICS COMMITTEE In response to popular demand, the consideration. The committee has been Four Cornellians have been named to combined musical forces of the Univer- studying the successful alumni colleges the committee on physics of the Society sity will again present H.M.S. PinafoVe. and alumni universities of other institu- for the Promotion of Engineering Educa- An afternoon performance oί the Gilbert tions, and believes that Cornellians also tion. Professor Guy E. Grantham, PhD and Sullivan opera will be given in may wish to re-establish connection with '2.0, of the Physics Department is chair- Bailey Hall February 7, and an evening the intellectual life of the University and man of the committee. The other Cor- performance February 8 as one of the nellian members are Professors Charles C. events of Junior Week. to live on the Campus again as students for a few days. Bid well, PhD '14, of Lehigh; Percy As for the first performances, December Hodge, PhD '08, of Stevens Institute; and 14 and 15, the production will be directed As tentatively arranged, the program Louis B. Spinney of Iowa State College, by Professor Paul J. Weaver, head of the for Cornell's first alumni university would who was a student in the Graduate Department of Music, assisted by Pro- call for probably four days of classes in School in '93-4, '97-8, and '99-Ό0. fessor Alexander M. Drummond, George the week following reunions and Com- L. Coleman '95, and Mr. and Mrs. Eric mencement. Reunions are scheduled for Dudley. The same cast will take part. Friday to Sunday, June 14 to 16. Com- MY NIGHT IN NEW YORK mencement is on Monday, June 17. It is Of last week I spent Thursday, Friday FOUNDERS DAY MEETINGS proposed to open the alumni university and Saturday in New York. I had ex- Founder's Day celebrations, in honor on Tuesday, June 18, continuing through pected to be fully engaged all the time of the birthday of Ezra Cornell, were held Friday, June 2.1. and had made no arrangements for spare by several of the clubs. Reports have been Cornell men and women, with their time or frivolity. Consequently I was received from the Cornell Clubs of New families, would be invited to enroll as taken aback when a Saturday afternoon England, Washington, and the Women's students for those four days, living in the session on Fifty-ninth Street which was Clubs of Philadelphia, New York and University dormitories, dining together, expected to continue until train time Washington. probably in Willard Straight Hall, at- broke up at 7 o'clock in the evening. The Cornell Clubs of New England, of tending lectures and discussions led by Saturday night at New York in Christ- the men and of the women, met at the members of the Faculty. The general mas week and nothing to do between 7 Hotel Bellevue in Boston for luncheon on subject of the week would be the con- and 11:30! Everybody one knew would January 10. Dean Dexter S. Kimball was sideration of current social, political, be dated up or away and there isn't the speaker. Walter P. Phillips '15, presi- and governmental questions. Afternoons much percentage in crashing a party only dent, introduced William G. Stark- and evenings would give opportunity for to leave before 11. Ordinarily I would weather '92. as toastmaster. sport and recreation, including musical have walked, I think, along the back The Cornell Club of Washington, also programs and exhibits in some of the streets observing life and waiting for with the men and women combining, had University buildings. The fee for the four mild adventure. But only the night be- the annual Founder's Day dinner at the days, including tuition, board, and room, fore a large, powerful and ominous foot- Hotel Lafayette on January 11. The would not exceed twenty-five dollars. ball coach of my acquaintance had speakers included Dr. Willis R. Gregg Before making definite recommenda- stepped out oί the hotel to walk around '03, Chief of the U. S. Weather Bureau; tions, the committee invites alumni to the block for a breath of fresh air and Dr. Leland O. Howard '77, distinguished write their opinions, indicating whether before he reached the corner he had the entomologist; Henry M. Eaton '90; and they would be inclined to enroll in such muzzle of an automatic stuck in his ribs and was relieved of his money ($2.9.60), Dr. William A. White, director of St. a course and whether they favor its his watch and his Elks' pin. Elizabeth's Hospital. Alonzo B. Cornell establishment even though attendance great-grandson of the Founder, responded this year may be uncertain. So I stuck to Broadway and the bright briefly. August H. Moran '17 was toast- If an alumni university is to be in- lights. At Madison Square Garden I master, introduced by Edward Holmes augurated on the Campus this June, plans thought for a moment of attending the '05, president of the club. must be made within the next few weeks. Notre Dame-New York University The Cornell Women's Club of Phila- The committee asks, therefore, that basketball game but a||:er looking at the delphia met for dinner on January 11 alumni write their expressions as promptly sportsmen who thronged the entrance I at the College Club. Professor John G. as possible to Foster M. Coffin Ίx, became afraid I would catch leprosy, or Jenkins '2.3 of the Department of Psy- secretary of the Cornell Alumni Corpora- barber's itch or something if any one of chology was the speaker. tion, Willard Straight Hall. them so much as touched me. So I kept Dean Floyd K. Richtmyer '04 of the walking rapidly while withdrawing the Graduate School spoke at the annual PREACHER January 2.7 hem of my garments the while in defer- meeting of the Cornell Women's Club of is Rev. Justin W. Nixon, D.D., pastor of ence to the germ theory. New York, at the Hotel Barbizon on the the Brick Presbyterian Church, Rochester. This or that first attracted and then, on evening of January ix. sober second thought, repelled. And so The meeting of the Cornell Women's ONE OF THE MASTERPIECES of Hugh finally—not to waste entirely my one Club of Rochester was a luncheon at the Troy, Jr. 'x6 in the Dutch depicts an old- free night in New York—I stepped into University Club on January 12. with fashioned swinging door, inside of which one of the lesser cinemas and saw Babes Foster M. Coffin '12., Alumni Represent a is a man succumbing to the wiles of a in Toyland. It's an awfully nice movie tive, as the speaker. siren in red, while outside stands a weep- and I've always loved that Victor Her- CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

BEEBE LAKE IS A BUSY PLACE THESE CRISP WINTER DAYS

THE CHAMPIONSHIP SPRINT RELAY TEAM of which two are back this year: Left to right—Captain Richard F. Hardy '34 and Robert J. Kane '34 are gone, but Robert A. Scallan '36 and Robert E. Linders '36 are leading the sprinters for the indoor season which opens February 2.T, with Yale in the Drill Hall(see p. 10). JANUARY I93 5 7

bert music and there were a great many children in the audience who responded INTEREST IN MUSIC INCREASES to the thing with spontaneous delight. Department Has Wide Influence on Campus And the next day I felt fine—which is the world's record in feeling after a big That the University has built up dur- and historical work and has a regis- Saturday night in New York.—R. B. in ing the past five years one of the most tration of approximately 185 students. The Ithaca Journal. complete libraries of phonograph and Five years ago the staff of the Depart- piano recordings in the country and that ment consisted of one assistant professor. FIRST UNIVERSITY PRIZE last year students made use of this At that time Paul J. Weaver, who had John A. Rea of Tacoma, Wash., now library almost ten thousand times is re- for ten years been head of the depart- the only surviving member of the Class vealed in the annual report of Professor ment of music at the University of North of '69, writes to supplement our state- Paul J. Weaver, head of the Department Carolina, was called to the professorship ment of December 6 that the Woodford of Music. The Department has ten sound- of music and the headship of the Depart- Prize was the first prize to be offered at proof listening and practicing rooms in ment. Now the staff contains two full the University. « its building at 30a Wake Avenue, form- professors, three assistant professors, one "The first," he says, "was Andrew D. erly occupied by Scorpion and remodelled instructor, and several graduate as- White's, in June, 1869, of two prizes, by the University for the temporary use sistants. A major in music for the Arts forty dollars and twenty dollars, for the of the Department of Music. That these degree was established two years ago; best answers to fifty-two questions (we rooms are constantly used, not only by graduate students are accepted for the called them questions) given out by Mr. students registered in the Department but Master of Arts, the Master of Fine Arts, White, [based on?] Guizot's History of by many others for their enjoyment, is and the Doctor of Philosophy degrees. Civilization, [for?] junior and senior only one indication of the widespread Graduate work is guided largely by classes, '69 and '70. interest in music which now prevails on Professor Otto Kinkeldey, University "Behringer and Rhodes '69 tied, each the Campus. librarian and eminent musicologist, getting twenty dollars. John A. Rea, the Others are the successful performances whose chair of musicology was estab- 'kid,' second prize, a twenty-dollar gold of the two Gilbert and Sullivan operas, lished in 1930, the first in the United piece. Forgot to keep it." The Mikado and Pinafore, directed by States. Gilbert Ross, violinist, Harold D. Our reference to the Woodford Prize Professor Weaver with the cooperation Smith, organist, and Andrew C. Haigh, meant, of course, although not so stated, of the Glee Clubs, the University Or- pianist, are assistant professors; and that it was the first endowed, and so con- chestra, and the University Theatre; and George L. Coleman '95 is instructor. tinuing, prize to be given at the Univer- the festival performance last May under sity. Professor Weaver's direction of Mendel- GARGOYLE, the architects' honor Mr. Rea who was a co-founder of Phi ssohn's Elijah with a chorus of four society, has elected seven members of the Kappa Psi, was recently the medium for hundred voices, the New York Symphony fourth-year class: Arnliot R. Brauner of a compliment to the University from Orchestra, Richard Bonelli, Doris Doe, Ithaca, Malt by S. Fowler, Jr. of New President Ernest O. Holland of Wash- Dan Gridley, and Emily Roosevelt. The Haven, Conn., Donald W. McNulty of ington State College. President Holland Department sponsors also the series of Rutherford, N. J., Elmer J. Manson of wrote: Faculty recitals which fill the largest Massena, Charles J. Meyer of Bayshore, "John A. Rea, a graduate of Cornell concert hall on the Campus, the weekly Serge P. Petroff of Montclair, N. J., and University, is able to appreciate the work organ recitals of Professor Harold D. John Sullivan, Jr. of Ithaca. of this institution because he saw the Smith, University beginnings (1868-69) of one of the great organist, and two series land grant institutions of America, and I of University concerts might add, one of the great institutions by world-famous artists, of the civilized world.'' all of which are largely Charles F. Hendryx, who was Rae's attended. This is to say last living classmate, died on January 15. nothing of the student We shall print next week a brief sketch choir of 105 voices of his life. sponsored by the Uni- versity, the student sym- PRESIDENT FARRAND and Dr. Wil- phony orchestra of 75 liam C. Senning, PhD '31, of the Geology pieces, student bands with Department have been initiated as hon- a registration of 1x5 orary members into Skulls, pre-medicine players, and the present society. Other new members are Everett popularity of the Men's C. Bragg '36 of White Plains, William O. and Women's Glee Clubs Henderson '36 of Louisville, Ky., Wil- and the Instrumental liam W. Manson ' 3 6 of East Orange, N. J., Clubs. Herbert E. Sandresky '35 of Buffalo, This increase of interest Addison B. Scoville, Jr. '36 of Mt. Ver- in music parallels a signi- non, Paul R. Wood '36 of Jenkintown, ficant expansion in the Pa., and Harold S. Wright '36 of Nor- curriculum of the Music wood. Department during the past five years. Starting THE '94 MEMORIAL PRIZE debate is with a small registration scheduled for March 12.. The best junior in 192.9, with only two or senior speaker on either side of the theoretical offerings in proposition: "The manufacture and sale harmony and counter- or arms and munitions should be made a point, the Department Government monopoly,'' will receive the now offers seventeen award of ninety-four dollars established courses covering the by the Class of '94. entire field of theoretical PROFESSOR PAUL J. WEAVER CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

nellians with the alumni of other in- CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS stitutions. FOUNDED 1899 Although not a panacea, Cornell Day, Concerning announced this week for its second an- Published for the Cornell Alumni Corpora- tion by the Cornell Alumni News Publishing nual appearance, is potentially a cure for THE FACULTY Corporation. Weekly during the college year many of the evils that seem to threaten. and monthly in July, August and September: The thoroughness with which it will pro- PRESIDENT FARRAND will be one of thirty-five issues annually. duce results depends largely upon the those seated at the head table at the Supscriptions: $4.00 a year in U. S. and posses- enthusiasm with which alumni, both as thirty-sixth annual dinner of the Society sions; Canada, $4.3;; Foreign, $4.50. Single copies individuals and as members of organiza- fifteen cents. Subscriptions are payable in advance of the Genesee at the Hotel Commodore tions, enter into the project. and are renewed annually until cancelled. in New York City February 4. The din- Editor and Publisher R. W. SAILOR '07 Undergraduate organizations are pre- ner will honor the fiftieth year of the Managing Editor H. A. STEVENSON '19 paring to stage a rushing party that newspaper career of Louis Wiley, business Associates: should cause each guest to understand manager of and L. C. BOOCHEVER 'ΓL F. M. COFFIN ΊX better and to think more highly of Cor- a founder of the Society. Printed by The Cayuga Press nell. Many of the guests will eventually matriculate. The quality of future Cor- DR. VLADIMIR KARAPETOFF, versatile ITHACA, NEW YORK nellians will be modified by the influx of professor of Electrical Engineering, has these selected persons to the extent to been awarded the honorary degree of which the alumni do their part. Doctor of Music by the New York Col- BETTER TIMES AHEAD The part in the program for the alumni lege of Music, fifty-five-year-old institu- The report of the Cornellian Council on is that of arranging that the subfrosh are tion of which Mischa Elman is head of the class funds should be cheering to the brought to Cornell on that day. Curi- the board of trustees. Professor Karapet- friends of the University who realize the ously, the less satisfied an alumnus is, the off's diploma reads, "for distinguished value of these annual gifts. better opportunity this event offers him, professional services and outstanding Under the late Harold Flack Ίz the if he has any real fight in him. achievements in music education." Alumni Fund showed remarkable growth. While alumni of all colleges are'' view- DR. ROLLINS A. EMERSON and Mrs. Before his illness and subsequent death, ing with alarm" it is Cornell's good for- Cornell's Alumni Fund was the most Emerson have left Ithaca for a trip which tune to have something to offer a visitor will take Dr. Emerson for two months to productive fund, in number of subscribers which should make a greater appeal than and in total subscriptions for unrestricted Yucatan. At the request of the Carnegie can almost any other campus in the Institution, he and a specialist of the uses, of the eighty or ninety similar country. enterprises in all the colleges and uni- United States Department of Agriculture The undergraduates are ready to do will study the wild maizes of Yucatan. versities of the country. their part. They have, in fact, started Then came depression, disaster, and Mrs. Emerson plans to remain in Miami, already. Quaintly, they wonder if the Fla., and upon Dr. Emerson's return they death. A period of several years ensued alumni can do theirs. They believe they can when the excellent work of the office and will motor to California, visiting gene- entertain as many guests as the alumni tics and plant breeding laboratories of the part-time and volunteer workers enabled can send. The next move is alumnal. the Fund to continue with exceptionally south and midwest, and later their son, good results, under the momentum it had Dr. Sterling H. Emerson 'zz of the Cal- acquired in happier times. ifornia Institute of Technology in Pasa- dena. Comes now a reorganization, a new SPRING DAY MAY 18 secretary of the Council, Archie M. Saturday, May 18, has been designated LINCOLN D. KELSEY, assistant state Palmer Ί8, and a ray of hope for general as Spring Day and declared a University leader of country agricultural agents at emergence from the depression. The first holiday by the Faculty committee on the College of Agriculture since 19x8, has report of the new regime gives reason for student activities. On that day the been appointed regional agricultural ad- belief that the alumni of Cornell will soon Carnegie Cup regatta will be held on visor to the FERA in six Eastern states. be providing again an adequate back log Cayuga Lake with Princeton and Yale, He has been granted a six months leave that will enable the University to ad- and the baseball team will play Yale on of absence from the University. Kelsey vance rather than simply mark time. Hoy Field. was one of the first agriculturists sent to Because of their news interest to our Turkey by the Near East Relief, and spent readers and their real importance to the JOB OUTLOOK BRIGHTER more than a year at Marsovan. Last year University, the ALUMNI NEWS will pub- Herbert H. Williams '2.5, director of he had charge of organizing the AAA lish in succeeding issues from time to the University Placement Bureau, is program in the State and was secretary time, reports on the contributions by quoted as predicting a definite upturn in of the State farm debt conciliation com- members of the various classes through employment prospects for next June's mittee. the Cornellian Council. k graduates. COACH JAMES WRAY is a member of the "Present indications are that there will constitution committee of the new Row- CORNELL DAY—YOUR MOVE be more jobs available for 1935 graduates ing Coaches' Organization of America, It matters little what phase of the of Cornell than for any class graduating formed last June at Poughkeepsie. qualifications of the entering class causes since 1930. Ever since the middle of concern to a given alumnus of any college November we have had an increasing PROFESSOR FREDERICK BEDELL, PhD '92., in the country; he will find many others number of requests for well qualified Physics, has been granted a patent on an have similar worries. Whether it be lack applicants for jobs from a wide variety of apparatus for bone audition as an aid to of material for athletics, for fraternities, business and technical organizations. All the hard of hearing, according to the for music, dramatics, publications, and graduates of our hotel course are now press. what-not, or the danger that scholarly employed and there is actually a shortage PROFESSOR HENRY N. OGDEN '89, Civil standards must be lowered for the benefit of men available for jobs. All our recent Engineering, has been reappointed to the of the less competent, there is general law school graduates have jobs. Over New York State Public Health Council, alarm manifest that colleges and univer- eighty percent of our engineers graduat- of which he has been a member since sities are slipping. These alarms, both ing last year are employed or are working its organization in 1913. President Far- general and specific, are shared by Cor- for advanced degrees." rand is also a member of the Council. JANUARY I935 BRIEF NEWS OF CAMPUS AND TOWN

BLOCK WEEK started Monday. For "The Prehistoric Civilizations of the CORNELLIANS have always, of course, those who do not know, this is the seven Andes," illustrated, January 2.x; an illus- had a prominent part in the Ithaca city days just preceding term examinations trated talk before the Deutscher Verein administration. New Year appointments when regular classes of the College of by Dr. Ernest A. Kubler January Z3; an for 1935 include Conant Van Blarcom '08, Arts and Sciences are suspended, pre- illustrated lecture by L. M. Church, re- University superintendent of grounds and sumably to give its students time to pre- frigeration specialist with the Carrier buildings, to the board of public works pare. So far as we can learn, the Arts Engineering Corporation, on "New Re- and Dr. Phillip C. Sainburg '12., is the only one thus to accommo- frigeration Technique for Gold Mining," dentist, to the board of public welfare, date its students; the Sun comes editor- January Z4; and Frank W. Hankins, vice- both for six years. Reappointed were ially to the conclusion that the arrange- president of Rolland G. E. Ullman, Inc. Lewis E. Doίflemyer '91, assessor and ment should be extended to engineers, on' * Marketing Methods and Technique, building commissioner; Harold E. Simp- architects, and all others of the under- illustrated, January 2.5. son '19, acting city judge; Dr. Esther E. graduate body. "The existing seven-day Parker '05 and Henry A. Carey '12. to be respite," says the Sun, "does no one any SKI CLUB members held a four-mile health commissioners; and Charles D. harm, and in nine cases out of ten is a cross country race with a team of Dart- Bostwick '92. to the sinking fund com- welcome period whether it be used in mouth graduates in the University on the mission. George F. Rogalsky '07, Uni- making up work not done, in last-min- hills near Cortland as a try-out to select versity Treasurer, is an alderman. ute cramming, or whether it is enjoyed those who will represent the University with an attitude of calm preparedness." at Dartmouth's winter carnival in Feb- A FOUR-WEEKS' COURSE for mission- ruary. First three places were taken by aries opened at the College of Agriculture CONFIRMING the general opinion, the sponsors. January 2.2.. About twenty on furlough comes now John C. Fisher, Government from the Orient, Africa, and South ITHACA BANK elections for the new meteorologist in charge of the Weather America were expected to attend. year brought the names of many Cornel- Bureau station in Ithaca, to say that from lians into the news. James R. Robinson '09 PI LAMBDA THETA, women's honor- official records of thirty-five years the was elected to a new office, that of chair- ary educational society, has elected five sun shines in Ithaca less than half the man of the board of directors of the First students in the Graduate School, twelve daylight hours, and that rain falls, on National Bank. Two of three new direc- seniors and Elizabeth M. Waters of the the average, 157 days of the 365. tors elected are Charles H. Newman '13 Faculty of Rural Education. Graduates and Professor Harold L. Reed, PhD '14, elected are Ruth V. Daniels of Smith ELISABETH SCHUMANN, Viennese of the Department of Economics. Officers Center, Kan., Anna E. Lewis of West lyric soprano and Lieder singer, appeared and directors re-elected include Ebenezer Chester, Pa., Anne M. M. Sauerlander of in Bailey Hall January 15 in the series of T. Turner '83, vice-president, Provost Buffalo, Sarah A. Solovay of Brooklyn, University concerts. She was warmly Albert R. Mann '04, Howard Cobb '96, and Theresa West of Ithaca. Seniors are applauded by the audience. The next Jared T. Newman '75, and Laurence C. Mildred E. Evans of Utica, Dorothea M. musical event on the Campus is the sec- Rumsey Ίi. Re-elected officers and direc- Ferguson of Philadelphia, Pa., Muriel ond of the chamber music series in the tors of the Tompkins County National A. Garlock of Ithaca, Ruth L. Gates of University Theatre in Willard Straight Bank include Robert H. Treman '78, Buffalo, Virginia M. Lauder of Bing- Hall January 2.4. The Kroll Sextet is the chairman of the board, Charles D. Bost- hampton, Ruth Marcus of Scranton, Pa., first such group to appear in Ithaca. wick '9Z, vice-president, Mynderse Van Anne L. Roehrig of Staten Island, Mar- Cleef '74, Charles H. Blood '88, Robert garet L. Schramm of Flushing, Anne L. FOUR SPEAKERS discussed war in a E. Treman '09, Leon D. Rothschild '09, Shulman of Binghamton, Gladys Wilen- program arranged jointly by the Cornell George F. Rogalsky '07, and Harry G. sky of Passaic, N. J., Mary Willmott of Council Against War, the Liberal Club, Stutz '07. Huntington, and Meda E. Young of the National Students' League, and the Palmyra. Student League for Industrial Democracy ALL OFFICERS of the Ithaca Trust in Willard Straight Hall January ,2.2.. They Company have been re-elected. Cornel- GEORGIA'S DOG on College Avenue were Rev. Alfred P. Coman of the First lians among them are Robert H. Treman was a familiar place to many generations Methodist Episcopal Church in Ithaca, '78, president; Sherman Peer '06, vice- of Cornellians. Now it is transformed to who spoke on "War and Religion," president and secretary; Paul Bradford the very modern and shining Gillette's Alvin R. Mintz '35 of Morris town, N.J., Ί8, cashier. Directors who are Cornel- Cafeteria, run by Carl Gillette, Hotel Leonard J. Lurie '36 of Brooklyn, and lians include also George S. Tarbell '90, Management '2.8. The name, however, Jacob Shulman '35 of Rochester. Leon D. Rothschild '09, Allan H. Tre- survived until recently in Georgia's man '2.1, Mynderse Van Cleef '74, Charles Restaurant at 409 Eddy Street. The pres- NURSERYMEN of the Eastern States D. Bostwick '92., Charles H. Blood '88, ent restaurateur, John J. Sullivan 'z6, are meeting at the College of Agriculture Frederick J. Whiton '79, and Charles E. held a contest for a new name, which January 2.3 and Z4 to consider the business Treman, Jr. '30. turned out to be Eddy gate. Bertram L. and professional problems of their in- Hughes, Grad. was awarded the prize of dustry. This is the fifth annual conference LEFT HANDED one-arm chairs for Uni- two meal tickets or ten dollars by a com- to be held here on the growing and mar- versity classrooms are suggested by the mittee of members of the University keting of ornamental plants. Cornellian father of a southpaw student staff. The place years ago was run as the note-taker. Ray Ashbery '2.5 says feel- Campus Gate Restaurant by Charlie the LECTURES for the week include Carl ingly that the complaint is well founded, Greek, later was Osborn's, and more re- Snyder, statistician of the Federal Re- but that the difficulty has sometimes been cently has been owned by George B. serve Bank of New York, on "The solved by arranging with the professor Dunnack '30. Strange Career and Fantasy-Life of Sir for a seat to be kept vacant on the left. Isaac Newton," January 2.1; Dr. Wendell A better suggestion, he thinks, would be PI ALPHA PSI, honorary floriculture C. Bennett, assistant curator of the Am- to set aside one row of chairs in each fraternity, is holding weekly dinners and erican Museum of Natural History, on classroom with their arms transposed. discussions in Willard Straight Hall. iό CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

Until the final two minutes the lead least to repeat the 1934 record of no de- swung from one to other, but a foul shot feats in triangular or dual meets. No less About by Kollinites put the Crimson ahead by than twenty-two of last year's team are one point and brought on a frenzied back, of whom seven took the trip to ATHLETICS Varsity effort to regain the lead. In the England last July. confusion, the Crimson captain, Boys, Captain Walter S. Merwin '35 of made two goals to put the game away. Buffalo, intercollegiate indoor hurdles LOSE TWICE AT BASKETBALL Only seven fouls were called, six by champion, leads the Varsity's strongest The basketball team continued to show Cornell. Wilson at forward starred, mak- department, with Frank J. Irving '35, improvement in Syracuse on January 16, ing 7 tallies for the Red; Freed was so football end, as his perennial partner. but lost to the Orange 35-50. This was closely guarded that he made but one One of the two has placed first or second the fifteenth straight victory for Syracuse. basket; and Captain Foote made three. in every meet since 1933, and they were For the first fifteen minutes the Varsity The lineup: members of the shuttle-hurdle relay team fought the Syracusans on even terms, but CORNELL (17) which set a new record at the Pennsyl- an Orange rally in the closing minutes of G F T vania Relay Carnival last April. These the first half broke a 13-13 tie and Wilson, f 3 1 7 two will be ably backed in the low r Freed, f 1 o 1 brought the score to 11-14 f° Syracuse at hurdles by James H. Hucker '37 of half time. Improved defensive work by Jacobs o o o Downer, c o o o Buffalo, who last summer in England as the Redmen accounted for holding the Dykes o o o a freshman placed second only to the Orange at the start, but the larger Eisenberg, g o o o great Stan wood, double winner for Cam- Syracuse team soon drew ahead and held Stofer 1 o 2. Foote, g 3 o 6 bridge; and by John L. Messersmith '36 its lead to the end. of Westfield, N. J. Rounding out the Play was fast and hard, with three Totals 8 1 17 group of hurdlers is the diminutive Syracusans, AlkofF, Sanford, and De HARVARD fo) Charles Y. NefT '37 of Buffalo. Young leading the scoring with 18, ii, G F T Leading the sprinters is Robert E. and 11 points, respectively. Wilson led Kollinites f 2. 1 5 Linders '36, another veteran of the the Red team with 10 points, all from the Stephenson o o o English trip and understudy to Captain Field, and Freed made 9. The last few White, f 2. o 4 Lavietes 1 o 2. Hardy of the 1934 team; with Norman minutes were faster than ever, but the Gray, c 1 o 2. M. Rosenberg '37 of Canisteo in the efforts of the Varsity were of small avail Spring o o o shorter events. Hucker and Robert A. against the stronger Orange team. Boys, g 3 2. 8 Scallan '36 of Terrace Park, O. are leading The lineup: Fletcher, g 1 o 2. in the longer sprints and the quarter-mile, CORNELL (35) Totals 10 3 13 together with Addison M. White '35 of G F T Wilson, If 5 o 10 New Hartford and Robert B. Schnur '35 Dykes, If o o o FRESHMEN WIN TWO of Evanston, 111. Downer, rf 2. 1 5 The freshman basketball team, coached Bruce D. Kerr '35 of Ithaca, cross- Jacobs, rf 1 o 2. by Donald F. Layton 'Z9, won the first country captain, will run the mile this Moran, c o 1 1 Eisenberg, lg 1 2. 4 two games on its current schedule. In a year, and Ellison H. Taylor '35 of Doering, lg o o o preliminary to the Varsity-Syracuse Springfield, Mass, the two-mile. Kerr Foote, rg 1 2. 4 battle in Syracuse January 16, the year- won in all the dual events last year lings beat the Orange cubs 2.5-2.4, leading and Taylor led the varsity harriers in the Totals 14 7 35 from the first. On Saturday in the Drill cross-country intercollegiates last No- SYRACUSE (50) Hall they beat Dickenson Seminary 34-2.4 vember. William S. Hutchings '35 of G F T in a ragged game in which Coach Layton Pickard, If 1 o 2. Ithaca and White will handle the half- Simonitis, If o o o used two complete teams. mile; and John Meaden '37 of LaGrange, Gulef, If o o o Few of the freshman squad this year 111., freshman team captain last year, is De Young, rf 5 1 11 have had much experience in basketball, a consistent performer in the 880 and Nitinger, rf o o o Sonderman, c 2. 2. 6 but they appear nevertheless to show mile. Edmund V. Mezzitt '37, of Weston, Scott, c o 1 1 considerable promise. The remainder of Mass., William V. Bassett '37 of West Alkoff, lg 6 6 18 their schedule includes Cook Academy Newton, Mass., John H. Chapin '35 of Minsavage, lg o o o at Mont our Falls February 13, Manlius Montreal, and John H. Peck '36 of Sanford, rg 6 o 12. Morris town, N. J., 1935 cross country Balinski, rg o o o at Manlius February 16, Cook Academy at Ithaca February 2.0, Colgate Freshmen captain, are all capable runners in the Totals 2.0 10 50 at Ithaca February 2.3, and Cortland longer distances. Score at half: Syracuse 2.2., Cornell 14. Referee, Normal at Cortland March 2.. Charles R. Scott, Jr. '36 of Montclair, Risley, Colgate; umpire, Kearney, Syracuse. N. J., winner in England last July and The second league contest of the season TRACK TEAM PROMISING champion of Scotland with a mark of 6 was lost to Harvard at Cambridge on The winter track season opens Febru- feet 2. inches, seems certain to lead the January 19, the Crimson winning 2.3-17. ary Z3 with Yale in the Drill Hall. This high jumpers, but will be closely pressed This was the first league game Harvard will be the eleventh annual meet between by Grandin A. Godley '36 of Tenafly, had won, losing all twelve last season the two since the inception of the series N. J. These two will be reinforced by and one to Princeton and two to Penn- in 192.4; that in 1933 was cancelled be- Llewellyn W. Collings, Jr. '36 of South sylvania this year. cause of the bank moratorium. Last Orange, N. J., Edward G. Ratkoski '35 Saturday's contest was close and hard year's meet was won for the Varsity by of Dunkirk, and Herbert E. Sandresky fought but did not show either team as the unexpected winning of the first two '35 of Buffalo. particularly fast. The,Varsity dominated places in the shot put. Cornell has won The broad jump will be in the hands of throughout the first half, although not seven of the ten, but the scores have veterans Henry S. Godshall, Jr. '36 of leading the scoring until near the end of never been more than ix points apart; the Lansdowne, Pa., another international- the period, when it was 11-9. Harvard totals for all ten only 43}^ points ist, and of Henry S. Berkowitz '35 of regained the lead in the second for a time, different. Brooklyn, and Ratkoski. until Captain Foote brought the score to The thirty-fifth track team to be In the weight throws, Robert A. Reed a tie with a difficult shot from the side. coached by John F. Moakley bids fair at '35 of Dunkirk is closely pressed by John JANUARY 193$ ίί

B. Harlow '35 of Montclair, N. J., with 1935 FOOTBALL SCHEDULE Captain Zeleznock, intercollegiate 1x5- Joseph L. Leone '36 of Ithaca, Wilson P. The 1935 football schedule, recently pound champion, by decision. Burns '35 of Colorado Springs, Col. and ratified by the Faculty committee on Robert A. Saunders '35 of Cossayuna John W. Shoemaker '37 of Scranton, Pa. student affairs, calls for the first five won a draw and the first Varsity score in for backing. Walter D. Wood, Jr. '36 of games to be played in Ithaca, the team the 135-pound event against Madison. Summit, N. J., William C. McLaughlin meeting only Dartmouth and Penn- In the 145-pound class, the decision '36 of Poughkeepsie, and Donald T. sylvania away from home. against Victor R. deGrasse '35 of New Houpt '36 of Ambler, Pa. are contenders The season opens September 2.8 against York City in favor of Goodman of Penn in the shot-put. St. Lawrence. On October 5, Western State was decidedly unpopular, but Cap- Robert B. McNab '36 of Missoula, Reserve plays at Ithaca; on October 12., tain David Cramer '35 of Utica in the 155- Mont, and Fred C. Sorenson '35 of Platts- Syracuse at Ithaca; October 2.6, Princeton pound event was the first of three Red- burgh have a pole vault mark of 12. ίeet at Ithaca; November x, Columbia at men in a row to retaliate, winning the 6 inches; they are paced by Robert D. Ithaca; November 16, Dartmouth at decision over Flenniken. Jira P. Thayer Price '36 of Willoughby, O. and Philip F. Hanover; November 2.8, Pennsylvania at '37 of Panama won the second clear de- Stevens '37 of Larchmont. * Philadelphia. Two open Saturdays, Oc- cision in the 165-pound class over Ritzie, Following the meet with Yale Febru- tober 19 and November 9, follow re- and Bo I. B. Adler '35 of Ithaca out boxed ary i3, the winter track schedule includes spectively the Syracuse and Columbia Sawchak in the 175-pound event, bring- ing the score to a 3 y tie, with the heavy- the indoor intercollegiates in New York games. 2 City March 2., a triangular meet with weight bout to decide the meet. Harvard and Dartmouth at Boston, BOXERS SURPRISE ALL Mass., March 9, and one with Syracuse With Professor Charles L. Durham '99 ARMY WINS AT POLO and Colgate at Ithaca March 13. as announcer, Ithaca's mayor, Louis P. Putting up a game fight but outclassed On May 11 at Palmer Stadium at Smith, as timekeeper, and Professor Fred- by a crack Army trio, the polo team lost Princeton, N. J. the team will participate erick G. Marcham and Dave Saperstone its second indoor game, 15-5, in the West in a new Eastern intercollegiate meet, as judges, intercollegiate boxing for a Point riding hall on Saturday. with those of Columbia, Dartmouth, Cornell team was inaugurated auspic- Both teams scored in every period but Harvard, Pennsylvania, Princeton, and iously under a single powerful floodlight the final one, when Army made 5 points Yale. Each university will be limited to in the darkened Old Armory Saturday to none for the Varsity. Two scores in two contestants in each event, so that night before four hundred interested the first chukker, by Palmer and Estes, there will be but one trial and no semi- spectators. put the Army into the lead, but Tom finals. All preliminaries except heats in The proteges of Coach Jake Goldbas Lawrence scored one for the Red team. the 400-meter relay will be run off in the '34 were tied with the powerful Penn Thirty seconds after the second period morning, and the finals within a two- State sluggers, runners-up last year in the opened, Estes again put the ball between hour period. Five places will be scored, Eastern intercollegiate league, when the the markers and his teammate, Wilson, 6-4-3-2.-1, putting a premium on first last bout began. Then their burly heavy- counted on a foul shot before Jack Law- place. Running events will be 100-meter, weight entry, scored a clean knockout rence made another for the Varsity. 800-meter, 1500-meter, and 3000-meter in the second round over Irving A. Jen- Palmer brought in another as the second races, 400-meter and 1600-meter relays, kins '37 of New York City to end the period ended with the score 8-3, Army and 100-meter high hurdles and 2.00- meet 4K-3K in the visitors' favor. The leading. meter low hurdles. Field events are to be referee was Scales of Ithaca. From that point on the game was all the broad and high jumps, pole vault, Army's, but the Red riders gave battle to shot put, discus, hammer, and javelin. The Red team lost the first two bouts: Luis Torregrosa '36 of Porto Rico to the last second. John Leslie rode with the Plans have been made only for 1935, Me Andrews in the 115-pound class, by a Lawrence brothers to make up the Var- but it is predicted that this meet may be- technical knockout in the second round; sity trio. come an annual event, rotating among and John Canzoneri, Sp. of Walden to The game scheduled with Newburgh Princeton, Yale, Harvard, and Penn- Polo Club that afternoon was cancelled. sylvania. The next on the schedule is with the ii2.th Field Artillery. New Jersey Na- COLGATE WINS AT HOCKEY tional Guard, on January 2.6 in the Riding With but fragmentary chances to prac- Hall. tice, the hockey team showed good form Saturday night in the Syracuse Coliseum WRESTLERS WIN 23-11 against Colgate, but lost, 4-2.. Wattles Scoring falls in the first four bouts and began the scoring before the first period a decision in the fifth, the Varsity was half over, but before it ended a Col- wrestling team opened its season in the gate goal by Van Benschoten erased the Drill Hall Saturday afternoon by defeat- lead and it was never regained. Coach ing Springfield, 2.3—11. The visitors got Bawlf used two complete teams, and in but one fall and two decisions. the final period his men came close to With the exception of Henry C. Weis- catching the Colgate lead in a fast, clean heit '35 of Glenmont and Captain Charles game that gave the spectators plenty of C. Shoemaker '35 of Philadelphia, Pa., thrills. The summaries: all those on the Varsity team had won Cornell CO Colgate (4) University championships in their re- Petroff G Billings spective classes in the elimination Drisler LD Van Benschoten matches held on January 18. Weisheit had Wattles RD Relyea been defeated for 135-pound University Hoyt C McDonough Johnson LW Wood Referee Scales introduces Captain Zel- champion by John P. Floros '36 of Ithaca, Simpson RW Speckel eznock, Penn State's intercollegiate 12.5- but substituted for him in the Springfield Cornell scoring: Wattles, Scott. pound champion, to his opponent, John meet because of an injury. Captain Shoe- Colgate: Van Benschoten 2., Speckel t. Canzoneri, during Cornell's first inter- maker lost the University 155-pound Cornell spares: W. Dugan, S. Dugan, Scott, Fauver, Groat, Steiner, Wolff. collegiate boxing meet in the Old Armory match to George R. Brownell '36 of Referee, Lalonde. Saturday night. Westfield, N. J. CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

The other University championship Robert G. Bellamy of Caldwell, N. J.,, gains of the child-labor provisions of the winners, were: n8-pound, Gregory T. William C. Kruse of St. Davids, Pa., industrial codes before the codes expire. Shallenberger '37 of Cleveland, O.; 1x5- Edwin A. Williams of Glen Ridge, N. J. '90; '03—J. Dolph Ross and Roscoe C. pound, Julius Nathan '35 of Monticello; Charles A. L. Stephens, Jr. of New York Tarbell have been re-elected directors of 145-pound, William L. Coggshall '35 of City, Robert J. McDonald of Waterbury, the First National Bank of Dryden. Ithaca; 165-pound, Robert A. Wilson '35 Conn., David M. Misner of Elma, and '93 CE—Mrs. Amelia M. Knoch, wife of Cleveland, O.; 175-pound, Dean Wid- Jack J. Siegel of New York City. Besides of the late Professor Julius J. Knoch '95 ner, Jr. '36 of Brooklyn; unlimited class, selecting and coaching the teams, Coach died at Little Rock, Ark., January 5. H. Boarke Weigel '36 of New Rochelle. TerentiefF gives instruction to any student '93 AB—Edward C. Townsend is still The summaries of the Springfield meet: who desires it. in the Stoli Land Office, Olympia, Wash. 118-Pound Class—Shallenberger (C) threw He writes that he is enjoying good health Kent (S) in 5:07 with a Nelson and body NEW GOLF CAGE and happiness. scissors, and in 2.9 seconds of the second period Indoor golf practice is made possible with a crotch and half-Nelson. '94 DSc—Dr. Ephraim P. Felt of Stam- at the University this winter for the ii5-Pound Class—Nathan (C) threw Hawke ford, Conn., predicted at the meeting of second season. Under the supervision of (S) in 7:19 with double armlock and front the American Association for the Ad- scissors. Professor Charles V. P. Young '99, head vancement of Science in Pittsburgh, Pa., 135-Pound Class—Weisheit (C) threw Dar- of the Department of Physical Education, byshire (S) in 8:13 with a leg grasp. December 19, that next year tent cater- the former heating plant next to the Old 145-Pound Class—Coggshall (C) threw pillars and canker worms will be very Armory now houses a golf cage with Kuscher ( S) in 7:55 with a half-Nelson and prevalent in eastern United States. far wrist hold. room for five players and putting greens. 155-Pound Class—Brownell (C) defeated These enlarged facilities replace three '95 CE—Norman B. Livermore is a Gould (S). Time advantage, 7:56. cages and several small putting greens governor of the Commonwealth Club of 165-Pound Class—Kodis (S) defeated Shoe- California, in San Francisco. maker (C). Time advantage, 3:55. constructed last winter in the Drill Hall. 175-Pound Class—Rosengren (S) defeated George Hall, Corning Golf Club pro- '98 LLB—Rush F. Lewis is mayor of Widner (C). Time advantage, 4:03. Extra fessional, is available to give lessons if St. Johnsville, which village recently periods. purchased and will operate a plant form- Unlimited Class—LΉommedieu (S) threw desired. Weigel (C) in 7:35 with a headlock. erly owned by the Union Mills, Inc. An ananymous benefactor donated $zoo,- SWIMMERS LOSE TWO Concerning 000 for the purchase. '98 AB; '98 LLB; Ίi ME; '2.7, '2.8 AB— The swimming team on Friday night Floyd W. Mundy, John J. Bryant, Jr., lost to Franklin and Marshall, 46-zx, in THE ALUMNI Winton G. Rossiter, and Floyd W. Lancaster, Pa., and to Manhattan in New Mundy, Jr. are partners of James H. York City Saturday, 33-38. In Saturday's '84 BCE—Daniel W. Mead is a consult- Oliphant & Co., brokers, with offices at meet Avery won the 2.00-yard breast ing engineer at Madison, Wis. 61 Broadway, New York City, and 109 stroke in 1:54; Tarlow won the 50-yard '86, '87 BS—Dr. Robert T. Hill, South La Salle Street, Chicago, 111. free style; and the fancy dive was won Columbus professor of Texas geology at '98 AB—Frank E. was re- by Miller. the University of Texas, was guest of The previous day Avery had tied for elected president of the American Business honor at a banquet in Austin December Men's Research Foundation in Chicago, first place in the zoo-yard breast stroke; 15 which closed the quarter-centennial Tarlow had come in second in the 50- January 8. The foundation is working celebration of the State Division of Na- against liquor in the United States. yard and 100-yard free style; and Miller tural Resources. Dean T. U. Taylor of had taken second place in the diving. Gannett has also been appointed to the the University of Texas College of en- advisory committee of the Motion gineering said of Dr. Hill: "He sits Picture Foundation. TENNIS RANKINGS among us not rich in this world's goods '98 ME—David Clark is managing In preparation for the selection of and chattels, but a millionaire in deeds editor of the Textile Bulletin in Char- Varsity and Freshman tennis teams for well done, in discoveries for the richness lotte, N. C. the spring meets, Coach Vladimir G. of Texas, and an Edison in contribution Terentieff has announced the rankings to to Texas geologic lore." A series of '99 AB—Nelson W. Cheney, Jr., son of date of the ladder tournaments which are articles by Dr. Hill are being published Nelson W. Cheney '99, of Eden, married being run off in the Drill Hall. in the Dallas News. An interview in that Marion Brady of Buffalo, January 5, Leader of the Varsity ranking is newspaper with Elmer H. Johnson, '99 ME(EE)—John W. O'Leary of Stephen E. Hamilton, Jr. '35 of Wilming- regional economist of the University of Chicago, president of the Machinery and ton, Del., for two years winner of the Texas bureau of business research, char- Allied Products Institute, advocated University singles championship and for acterizes Dr. Hill as "that grand old open price filing, with a provision for an the same period never having lost a man of Texas geology and geography," interim between the time prices are filed match as a member of the tennis team. and outstanding among the writers on and the time they become effective at a Next is Samuel J. Tilden '35 of Scituate, the American Southwest. hearing on price fixing, sponsored by the Mass., then in order, Bernard Marcus '36 National Industrial Recovery Board, in of Mount Vernon, Lloyd A. Doughty '36 '86—A "Landscape, Binghamton, N. Washington, January 8. of Bay side, William J. Simpson '37 of Y." by Louis Eilshemius has been '99 BSA—Fourteen year old Edwin R. Larchmont, Bernard E. Diamond '37 of bought from the Valentine Gallery for Sweetland, Jr., the son of E. R. Sweet- Brooklyn, Ellis L. Tarshis '36 of West- the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New land '99, of Dryden, was the first New mount, Que., Alfred A. Reiss '36 of York City. York State boy ever to show in the open New York City, Victor G. Anderson '35 '88 PhB; Όz—John R. Mott and Henry class at the Chicago International Live- of New Rochelle, and-Earl W. Ohlinger Bruere were appointed January 6 members stock Show. His Berkshire barrow, raised '35 of Chicago, 111. Besides Hamilton, of a national nonpartisan committee for and shown by him, won first in the Tilden, Marcus, Doughty, and Anderson ratification of the Child Labor Amend- heavyweight barrow class, champion of were members of last year's varsity team. ment in 1935. The announced purpose of the Berkshire breed, and reserve cham- Herbert Sobel of New York City heads the committee, made up of lawyers, pion of all breeds at the Show this year. the Freshman list, followed in order by industrialists, educators, clergymen, and '99 BS—Walter Teagle, president of Lawrence Tobias of Richmond Hill, civic leaders, is to make permanent the the Standard Oil Company of New JANUARY X4, 193 5

Jersey, was one of the nine members of more orders than a year previous, with the President's Advisory Council who employment increased 1,000 over the low voted for the Federal-State unemploy- point of 1933, wages increased 40 per- ment insurance plan approved by the cent, and working hours increased 30 Council. The plan recommended provides percent. for a Federal subsidy to states adopting Ό7—Arthur Roeder is trustee of the plans which comply with certain na- Colorado Fuel and Iron Company, Den- tional standards. The vote of the Council ver, Col. was nine to seven. '07 AB—Oswald D. In gall and family '01 LLB—Joseph L. Zoetzl was elected have returned from an extended trip to the Board of directors of the Bronx throughout the United States to their County Bar Association, January 9. winter home at 1997 Lunas Street, Pasa- '02. AB—Mrs. R. H. Shreve (Ruth dena, Cal. Bentley) of Hastings-on-Hudson, is one '09 AM—Dr. Alfred J. Lotka of New of those who will assist the chairman of a York City married Romola Beattie of school of politics, sponsored by the West- Red Bank, N. J. on January 5. Lotka is chester County Women's Republican assistant statistician of the Metropolitan Club. Life Insurance Company. They will live '03 AB; '19, '2.0 LLB—Floyd L. in Red Bank. Carlisle, head of the Consolidated Gas '09 AB—As Assistant Attorney Gen- system, is quoted by John E. Mack, eral of the United States and head of the counsel to the utilities investigating antitrust division of the Department of committee of the New York Senate, as Justice, Harold M. Stephens has charge saying that the system would be willing of all litigation arising under the Na- to adopt the Washington plan of rate tional Recovery Act and the Agricul- reduction, which guarantees the com- tural Adjustment Act, of civil matters panies a limited return and calls for shar- arising under the Securities Exchange ing with consumers the excess profits. Act, and of the support in the courts of Randall J. Le Boeuf, Jr. '19, counsel to many of the orders and statutes which the Consolidated and the Niagara Hud- have been promulgated by the present son Power Company, attended a con- administration and its predecessors. ference in New York City January 8, Stephens received his LLB degree from held to discuss this development. Car- Harvard Law School in 1913 and that of OUTH AFRICA'S scenery lisls doesn't think much of a college edu- S.J.D. in 1932.. Before going to Washing- S will provoke your pet super- cation as a preparation for business, ton he practiced law in Salt Lake City, latives, whether you gaze spell- according to Lemuel F. Part on in the Utah, and Los Angeles, Cal., was judge bound at majestic Victoria Falls, New York Sun. He is quoted as saying of the Third Judicial Court of Utah, and that the boy with the earlier start and a member of the commission appointed the subterranean fairyland of the the tighter discipline of business experi- by the State Supreme Court to revise the Cango Caves, the rugged ence has an advantage over the college laws of Utah. He is a member of Phi Beta grandeur of the Drakensberg boy. Kappa, Phi Delta Phi, and Delta Chi. Mountains, the varied panorama '04 LLB—Justice William F. Bleakley, Ίo AB—Jansen Noyes and Mrs. Noyes president of the Yonkers National and sailed January 5 for a trip to Egypt and of the beautiful "Garden Route," Trust Company, Yonkers, is a member the Riviera. or the entrancing views unfolded of the central committee of a new real Ίo AB—Stanton Griffis is living on the 100-mile "Marine Drive" estate conference of Westchester County, aboard his yacht, North Star, at the organized by sixty large holders to pro- at the Cape. The wonders of the Flamingo docks, Miami Beach, Fla. tect their equities in Westchester real "Sunny Sub-Continent" will im- ' 11 ME—Delmar G. Roos is president of estate. He was recently appointed by press pictures of lasting beauty Cardinal Hayes a lay member of the New the Society of Automotive Engineers. York Diocesan Council of the League of Ίi—Paul V. Shields, of Shields & Co., on your memory. Decency. has been appointed by the governing committee of the New York Stock Ex- '06 MD—Albert N. Benedict of Yonkers change a member of a special committee is one of the executors of the estate of Come on commissions. John E. Andrus, "millionaire strap- hanger" who died recently. Ίi BS—Edward L. Bernays at a meet- ing of the Hat Institute January 11 in '06 AB—Edwin G. Nourse, director of New York City, advised hatters not to Brookings Institution, Washington, D. rely too much on traditions in their C, was one of the speakers at the Rutgers manufacturing and selling methods, but Institute of Rural Economics which to conform to the new demands of a opened January 6 in New Brunswick, N.J. changing public. Four out of five national '06 AB—Paul Schoellkopf resigned as advertisers will increase 'advertising, director of the Marine-Midland Trust sales promotion budgets, and sales forces Company at the annual meeting of the in 1935, while only 2. percent will spend stockholders, January 9, in New York less, according to a survey of 95 corpora- For full information address City. tions reported by him and Percival White, Thos. Cook & Son—Wagons-Lits, Inc., '07 ME—Nelson J. Darling, General president of the Market Research Corpor- 587 Fifth Avenue, New York, N. Y., Electric Company manager in Lynn, ation of America. or any of their branch offices; or any Mass., is reported as stating that the '13 AB—J. Waldo Myers, of the Stand- of the other leading tourist and travel River Works began 1935 with 2.5 percent ard Oil Company of New Jersey, at agencies throughont the world. M CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

the speakers table at a luncheon forum brewers, of New York City. He is quoted A Glorious in New York City, January 7, on the as saying that the company's sales in 1934 Retreat... problem of unemployment insurance. equalled those of the peak years before '13—S. Richard Davidge and Mrs. prohibition. Davidge of Scarsdale are spending the '17 LLB; '87—Recommendations for winter at Belleair, Fla. legislation to extend the right of examin- '14—Austin G. Parker is a writer at ation before trial in New York State the Warner Brothers Studio in Los were addressed to the Judicial Council of Angeles, Cal., and is considered one of New York, January 6, by the New York the old timers in Hollywood. Law Society. Kenneth Dayton '17 was '14 PhD—Dr. W. Howard Rankin of one of those who signed the report, pre- INVERURIE/'/z the State Department of Agriculture an- pared at the suggestion of Judge Cuth- nounced January z that the Federal and bertW. Pound '87. BERMUDA State authorities have set up an office of Ί8—Louis Bromfield has recently the Dutch Elm Disease Control at Flush- arrived in the United States from Senlis, BERMUDA this winter! What ing, which will seek to clean out every France. He expects to have three plays a glorious decision that is to make. dead or diseased elm tree on Long Island running simultaneously on Broadway by Gay days instead of gray days . . . before April. the middle of February. He is finishing one long round of sports—tennis, '14 BS—James E. McGolrick, president a new novel and writing a travel book on sailing, bathing, dancing, riding, of the Fair view Realty Corporation, is India. driving, cycling. Golf privileges undertaking a large housing operation at Ί8, 'zo BS; '15, Ί6 CE—Manly M. at famous Belmont Manor. Aurora Hills, Va., a suburb of Wash- Gale was re-elected cashier of the First THE ACCOMMODATIONS ington, D. C. National Bank of Groton January 9, and ACCOMMODATE '14 BS, '2.5 MS—John L. Buck, head Jay Conger, Jr. was re-elected a director. YOUR POCKETBOOK of the department of agricultural eco- Ί8 AB—Dr. MaxJ. Wasserman of the nomics and farm management at Nanking AAA is quoted as saying that the codes Come to Inverurie, the friendly, University, is a member of the Chinese hotel . . . and see how good Ber- have cleared away obstacles in the way Ministry of Industry's silver commission. of recovery by getting rid of sweat shops, muda can be to you! See your He is in Washington, D. C. at the Travel Agent. unfair competition, long hours, low pay, invitation of the United States Treasury manufacture of inferior products, cutting BERMUDA HOTELS Department to discuss the silver question prices below profitable levels, and the INCORPORATED as it is related to China. break-down of the credit system. The 500 Fifth Avenue New York City '14 AB—Frank (Francis J.) Sullivan, in codes have made it possible for American Telephone—Pennsylvania 6-0665 the New York American, discusses industry to increase production without Meher Baba, Indian mystic who was to fear of bankruptcy. break a seven years' silence in New York 'zo AB—Edwin F. Cadiz is vice-presi- City. dent of G. A. Saxton, Inc., 60 Wall Ί6—Dr. David M. Cohen of New York Tower, New York City, traders in in- City is engaged to marry Thelma Tarr of vestment securities. Cornell Newark, N.J. 'zi CE—Waldemar Polack is in charge Ί6 BS; fz4 EE—Meyer Willett of of several remodeling and reconstruction Bristol & Willett, and Francis Rizzo of projects in and around New York City Law Quarterly Clinton, Gilbert & Company have been for Samuel I. Adelson, Inc., 39Z East 195 elected governors of the New York City Street. He lives at 431 Wads worth Avenue. Security Dealers' Association. 'zi WA—John D. H. Hoyt of Buffalo Ί6 AB, 'zi MD; '2.3 AB, 'z6 MD; has been appointed a regional vice- A National Ί8 AB, 'zz MD; '05 AB, '07 MD; Ίo MD president of the Real Estate Association —Dr. Henry B. Sutton was elected presi- of the State of New York. Legal Publication dent of the Tompkins County Medical 'zi EE—F. Earle Fairchild, for 13 Society December zo in Ithaca. Dr. years a development engineer with the Norman A. Moore 'Z3 was chosen dele- American Telephone and Telegraph Com- Published by Students gate to the State Medical Society. pany, has resigned to become vice-presi- and Faculty Doctors Leo P. Larkin Ί8, Esther E. dent of Fairchild Sons, Inc., morticians, Parker '05, and Francis J. McCormick of*Brooklyn, Flushing, and Jamaica. His Ίo were elected censors. Keep Step With address is 163 Woodland Ave., Ridge- '17 LLB—Kenneth Dayton of New wood, N.J. The Legal Currents York City is assistant to Aldermanic President Deutsch, and one of the or- 'zi MD—Dr. Charles J. Kaufman is medical director of the National Jewish An Invaluable ganizers of the Fusion Party. As law partner of Julius H. Cohen, Alfred H. Hospital at Denver, Col. Dr. Kaufman is Reference Book Smith's expert on power matters, he was a specialist in tuberculosis, and has been made head of the legal staff of the St. a member of the Faculty of the Medical College in New York. Ithaca, N. Y. Lawrence Power Development Commis- sion. He has been chairman of the com- 'zz—George M. Gillies is secretary of a mittee on law reform, and now is chair- committee formed to protect the holders • man of the committee on courts of in- of bonds on the Fuller Building, New ferior jurisdiction of the City Bar As- York City. Price $2.50 per year sociation. 'Z3 AB, 'z6 MD; 'zz BS—Warren D. '17 ME—Carl W. Badenhausen is Robbins has been re-elected president of vice-president of P. Ballantine and Sons, the Cape May County Medical Society. JANUARY Z4, 1935

He writes that Lee I. Towsley '2.2. of 'Z7 AB—John G. Krieger has opened The Punchbowl: "THANKS TO YOU, Patchogue was his guest after the Penn- law offices at 911 Hotel Jamestown OLD FELLOW—EVERYBODY'S sylvania-Cornell game, Thanksgiving Building, Jamestown. CROWDING AROUND Day. Robbins' address is Ocean and 'z8 Sp—Mrs. Gervas Huxley (Eίspeth ME TONIGHT." Hughes Street, Cape May, N. J. Grant) and her husband were holiday '2.4 BChem—The engagement of John guests in Ithaca of Professor and Mrs. The Rum in D. Macdonald 'Z4 of New York City and Bristow Adams. Huxley is a cousin of the Bottle: Mary Anne Day of South Orange, N. J., Aldous and Julian Huxley, British writers "I'M GLAD TO was recently announced. as representative of an international tea KNOW I DIDN'T 'z4, 'Z5 BS—Bertha L. Zoeller is an syndicate, he and Mrs. Huxley travel SPEND OVER 8 indexer in the Division of Publications, throughout the world. From Ithaca they YEARS IN THE U. S. Department of Agriculture, Wash- were to go to Montreal, then to their WOOD FOR ington, D. C. home in London, then shortly to NOTHING." '15—John K. Ottley, who is wifch Australia and New Zealand. Mrs. Huxley Eastern Air Lines, has recently leased an is the author of a book on the develop- apartment at 60 East Ninety-sixth Street, ment and occupation of East Africa, soon New York City. to be published by Macmillan, London. *%6 Grad—Flora B. Whitacre is now '2.8 BS—A. Van Vranken Desforges of Mrs. D. L. Tabern, 300 Sheridan Place, New York City is engaged to marry Lake Bluff, 111. Dorothea M. Townsend of Buffalo. 'z6 AB—Lauds ton S. Taylor and an 'z8 CE—Daniel Shamroy was married associate have developed an apparatus November 4, 1933, to &utn A. White of which enables scientists to measure the Lockhaven, Pa. His address is 400 South effect of X-rays and radium rays after High Street, Lockhaven. penetrating human tissues as accurately 'z8 BS—Paul D. Harwood, junior as though the measuring device actually parasitologist of the zoological division were put inside the body, according to X HE gay camaraderie of of the Bureau of Animal Industry, the New York Herald-Tribune of the punchbowl is glowingly United States Department of Agriculture, January 6. enhanced when the chief was married July z, 1934, to Jessie T. 'z6; '2.1 AB; '91 BSA—Edward R. ingredient is Myers's Fine Cutler in Stuart, Iowa. His address is Old Jamaica Rum "Planters' Eastman, editor of the American Agri- Box 93, College Park, Md. culturist, and George W. Sisson 3d, of Punch" Brand. Matured over 'Z9—Frederick Max Dean is manager Potsdam will preside at sessions of the 103d 8 years in oaken puncheons, of the Camlin Hotel, Seattle, Wash. He annual meeting of the New York State this fine old Rum has both was formerly with the Hotel Monte Agricultural Society held in the Assembly age and pedigree. Cristo, Everett, Wash.; Hotel Clifton, parlor at Albany, January Z3. Eastman is Niagara Falls; Hotel William Penn, To make your parties a former president of the Society; Jared Philadelphia, Pa.; and the Hotel Daven- successful . serve a Rum Van Wagenan, Jr. '91 is the present port, Spokane, Wash. Punch. To make them perfect president and ex-officio University •.. use Trustee. 'Z9 ME—Lester B. Knight, Jr., of Larchmont is engaged to marry Eliza- 'z6, *iη AB—Eugene M. Kaufmann, Jr. beth A. Field of Rye. is living at the Cornell Club of New MYERS'S 'Z9 BArch—Clyde A. Reynolds is a York City, 245 Madison Avenue. He Fine Old started January 1 with the statistical de- landscape draftsman for the New York partment of Wertheim & Company. City Department of Parks. He lives at 5 West 63 Street, New York City. JAMAICA RUM '2.6, 'zy AB, '2.9 EE—Robert S. Thurs- "Planters' Punch " Brand '30 BS—Robert A. Rose is manager of ton, air conditioning sales manager of You'll find 60 delightful recipes in the General Electric Company, was one the Essex House, in Newark, N. J., booklet sent free upon request to of a party of outstanding salesmen who formerly the Elk's Club and recently R. ϋ. DELAPENHA & CO., INC. were guests of General Electric for a six- operated as the Elton Hotel. Dept. R-l '30 BS—Merle C. Bartley, formerly 57 Laight Street New York. N. Y. day trip to Bermuda. AUSTIN-NICHOLS & CO., INC. '2.7 AB—Eugene W. Goodwillie of assistant manager of Hotel Vendig, 184 Kent Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. New York City is engaged to marry Janet Philadelphia, Pa., has been appointed HENRY KELLY & SONS, INC. F. Williams of Montclair, N. J. manager of the Black River Valley Club 413-419 West 14th Street New York of Watertown. HOFFMAN BEVERAGE CO. •2.7 AB—The New York World-Tele- 42-1213th St., Long Island Ciίγ,N.Y. gram of January 5 carried a full page of '30 LLB—James F. O'Connor has opened law offices at 311 Savings Bank HOFFMAN BEVERAGE CO. photographs of Roosevelt and his col- 400 Grove St., Newark, N. J. Building, Ithaca. leagues, taken by Margaret Bourke- THE HOUSE OF STOVER White. '30 AB—William C. Banta, Jr. is 806-8 Earle Bldg., Wash., D. C. 'Z7—Edward S. Lori '2.7 of Greenwich, associated with the Connecticut General MAYNARD & CHILD 149 State St., Boston, Mass. Conn, is engaged to marry Geraldine Life Insurance Company, ZZ5 Broadway, MAYNARD & CHILD Bourne of Port Chester. New York City. 2 & 4 E. Hamilton St., Baltimore, Md. '2.7, 'z8 CE—Claude E. Hinds '2.7 of '30 EE—Walter M. Bacon is engaged to HANCOCK NELSON MERCANTILE Brockton, Mass, is engaged to marry marry Mary L. Taylor of New York City. CO., St. Paul, Minn. Wynne A. Shaw of East Orange, N. J. Bacon is with the Bell Telephone Labor- B. A. RAILTON CO., Chicago, 111. Z7 CE—Forbes D. Shaw '27 of Brook- atories in New York City. CORYDON & OHLRICH lyn, a senior in the Law School, is en- '30 EE—Alton G. Foote is the father of 372 W. Ontario St., Chicago, 111. TONKIN DISTRIBUTING CO. gaged to marry Katherine I. Neavling of a son, born December 10, 1934 in Cleve- 440 Ninth St.. San Francisco Brooklyn. land, O. and Los Angeles, Calif. i6 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

'31 ME—Paul N. Hunt is with the refining department of the Texas Oil PROFESSIONAL Company, Port Arthur, Texas. '31 AB, '33 LLB—James P. Donovan DIRECTORY Ithaca, N. Y. has been appointed Assistant City Judge of Canandaigua. He is one of the young- OF CORNELL ALUMNI Classes in all preparatory sub- est members of the Canandaigua Bar Association. He is in partnership with jects begin with the second his sister, Mary C. Donovan, in what is semester, January 2.9. An unusual METROPOLITAN DISTRICT believed to be the first brother-and-sister program permits a considerable law firm in the State. Apartments Business Properties saving in time and expense, '31 AB, '34 LLB; '98 LLB—Richard C. Country Homes Chain Store Locations together with thorough train- Llop is with the law firm of Sylvanus B. ing for college and an oppor- ostenberg Nye '98 in Buffalo. ,ealty Co. Inc. tunity to develop self-reliance '31—Robert P. Tobin, Jr. of Maple- and good habits of work. L. O. ROSTENBERG, A.B. '26, PRES. wood, N. J. is engaged to marry Catherine 23 Orαwαupυm St. White Plains, N. Y. Catalogue on request B. Scott of Elizabeth, N. J. Tel. White Plains 8020-8021 '31 AB—Mrs. George C. Davis (Fred- Member Westchester County Realty Board C. M. DOYLE, '02., Headmaster erica Dorner) and Mr. Davis announce And Real Estate Board of New York the birth of a daughter, Vesta Eva, on December 8, 1934. Their address is n Highland Street, Springfield, Mass. WALTER S. WING '07, GenΊ Sales Mgr. '32. BS—Gilbert S. Powell of Glen Ridge, N. J. was married December n to Helen Smith of La Luz, New Mexico. UNIVERSITY PLACEMENT BUREAU '33 BArch—The engagement of June WILLARD STRAIGHT HALL A. Mason of Irvington, N. J. and Fred- 60 East 42nd Street, New York City ITHACA, N.Y. erick P. Clark '33 of Kingston, N. J. has been announced. '33 BS—Eileen S. Kane '33 is engaged A Service for Employers to William Dickison of Ithaca. She is BALTIMORE, MD. teaching home economics in the Ludlow- Address ville High School. Dickison is research WHITMAN, REQU ARDT & SMITH assistant in the Department of* En- HERBERT K WILLIAMS '25 Director Water Supply, Sewerage, Structural tomology. Valuations of Public Utilities, Reports, '33, '34 BS—James Q. Foster is assis- Plans, and General Consulting Practice. tant county agent in Columbia County. EZRA B. WHITMAN, C.E. '01 His address is Columbia County Farm G. J. REQUARDT, C.E. Ό9 B.L SMITH, C.E. '14 Bureau, Hudson. Baltimore Trust Building '34—William J. Newton '34 and Bessie L. West, of Montour Falls were married ESTABROOK & CO. December 2.9, 1934. KENOSHA,WIS. Members of fhe New York and '34—Hubert E. Westfall, formerly with Boston Stock Exchanges the Westbrook and Stuyvesant Hotels, Buffalo, is now assistant manager of the MACWHYTE COMPANY Sound Investments Jung Hotel in New Orleans, La. Manufacturers Wire and Wire Rope Streamline and Round Tie Rods Investment Counsel and '34 EE—John H. Stresen-Reuter of for Airplanes Supervision Hinsdale, 111. is engaged to marry Aurelia JESSEL S. WHYTE, M.E. Ί3, VICE-PRESIDENT Geer daughter of Dr. and Mrs. William R. B. WHYTE, M.E. '13, GEN. SUPT. Roger H. Williams '95 C. Geer '02., of Ithaca. Resident Partner New York Office '34 BArch—Yozo Fujii sailed January 40 Wall Street 10 for his home in Tokyo, Japan. He WASHINGTON, D. C. spent a weekend in Ithaca shortly before he left, and was given a dinner in the Dutch Kitchen by a group of undergradu- THEODORE K. BRYANT ates and Faculty members of the College LL.B. '97— LL.M. '98 of Architecture. Master Patent Law, G.W.U. Ό8 Your Card . . . . '34—George S. Thomson married Lois Patents and Trade Marks Exclusively appearing regularly in the A. Thompson, of Somerville, N. J., PROFESSIONAL December Z9. 309-314 Victor Building DIRECTORY OF '34 BArch—George A. Hutchinson, Jr. CORNELL ALUMNI is designing a group of small houses which will be published in an archi- Keeps Your Name tectural plan book. His address is 606 before 5,000 Gornellians who South Linden Avenue, Highland Park, 111. may need your services 1715 G Street, N. W. Write for Special Yearly Rate '34 AB—Harold H. Noling is with the Travelers Insurance Company in the YL block west State War and Navy Bldg. Cornell Almuni News Newark, N. J. branch office. His address BREAKFAST, LUNCHEON & DINNER Box 105 Ithaca, N. Y. is 302. Melrose Place, South Orange, N. J. RUTH CLEVES JUSTUS Ίό CORNELL CLUB LUNCHEONS

Many of the Cornell Clubs hold luncheons at regular intervals. A list is given below for the benefit of travelers who may be in some of these cities on dates of meetings. Unless otherwise listed, the meetings are of men: Name of Club Meeting Place Time AKRON (Women) 1st Saturday Homes of Members 1:00 p.m. Secretary: Mrs. Ralph B. Day 16, 245 Pioneer Street, Akron. ALBANY Monthly University Club 12:30 p.m. Secretary: Robert I. Dodge, Jr. '29, 5 South Pine Avenue, Albany. BALTIMORE Monday Engineers' Club 12:30 p.m. Secretary: N. Herbert Long '18, 3329 Winterbourne Road, Baltimore, Md. BOSTON Monday American House, 56 Hanover St. 12:30 p.m. Secretary: Anthony O. Shallna '16, 366 W. Broadway, Boston, Mass. BOSTON (Women) 3rd Wed. and 3rd Fridays CollegeClub, 40Commonwealth Av. 3:30 p.m. Secretary: Mrs. R. T. Jackson '97, 85 River St., Boston. BUFFALO Friday Buffalo Athletic Club 12:30 p.m. Secretary: Herbert R. Johnston '17, Pratt & Lambert, Inc., Buffalo. BUFFALO (Women) Monthly College Club 12:00 noon Secretary: Miss Alice C. Buerger '25, 3900 Main Street, Eggertsville. CINCINNATI Last Friday Sinton Hotel, Cincinnati 12:00 noon Secretary: Fred J. Wrampelmeier '29, 1155 Halpin St., Hyde Park, Cincinnati CHICAGO Thursday Mandels 12:15 p.m. Secretary: Buel McNeil '27, 1019-140 South Dearborn Street, Chicago. CLEVELAND Thursday Mid-Day Club 12:15 p.m. Secretary: Irwin L. Freiberger '25, 813 Public Square Bldg., Cleveland. CLEVELAND (Women) Homes of Members Evenings Secretary: Miss Alice S. Goedecke '35, 2116 Lenox Road, Cleveland Heights, Ohio. COLUMBUS Last Thursday University Club 12:00 noon Secretary: George R. Schoedinger, Jr. '31, 78 Auburn Street, Columbus, Ohio DENVER Friday Daniel Fisher's Tea Room 12:15 p.m. Secretary: James B. Kelly '05, 1660 Stout Street, Denver. DETROIT Thursday Intercollegiate Club, Penobscot Bldg. 12:15 p.m. Secretary: Thomas J. Litle III '34, 733 Seyburn Avenue, Detroit, Michigan FLORIDA, SOUTHEASTERN 2d Tuesday University Club, Miami 12:15 p.m. Secretary: Archibald R. Morrison '32, Congress Bldg., Miami, Fla. HARRISBURG, PENNA. 3rd Wednesday Hotel Harrisburger 12:00 noon Secretary: John M. Crandall '25, Hotel Harrisburger Los ANGELES Thursday Richfield Oil Bldg. 12:15 p.m. Secretary: W. Hubert Tappan '12, 322 Pacific Mutual Bldg., Los Angeles. Los ANGELES (Women) Last Saturday Tea Rooms Luncheons Secretary: Miss Bertha Griffin '09, 1711 W. 66th Street, Los Angeles. MILWAUKEE Friday University Club 12:15 p.m. Secretary: Arthur C. Kletzsch, Jr. '25, 2511 Farwell Ave., Milwaukee. NEWARK 2nd Friday Down Town Club 12:00 p.m. Secretary: Lowry T. Mead, Jr. '23, 29 Division Street, Newark. NEW YORK Daily Cornell Club, 245 Madison Avenue Secretary: Andrew E. Tuck '98, 245 Madison Avenue, New York. PHILADELPHIA Daily Cornell Club, 1219 Spruce Street Secretary: Charles B. Howland '26, 9 Guernsey Road, Swarthmore, Penna. PHILADELPHIA (Women) 1st Saturday Homes of Members Luncheon Secretary: Miss Mildred H. Hiller '25, 812 W. Birch Street, Philadelphia. PITTSBURGH Friday Harvard-Yale-Princeton Club 12:15 p.m. Secretary: John L. Slack '26, University Club, University Place, Pittsburgh, Pa. PITTSBURGH (Women) Monthly Homes of Members Afternoon Secretary: Miss Jane H. Gibbs '33, 1127 De Victor Place, Pittsburgh. QUEENS COUNTY (Women) 3rd Monday Secretary: Mrs. Gustave Noback, Grad., 17 Groton St., Forest Hills, N. Y. ROCHESTER Wednesday University Club 12:15 p.m. Secretary: J. Webb L. Sheehy '29, 603 Terminal Building, Rochester, New York ROCHESTER (Women) Monthly (usually Wednesday) Homes of Members Evening Secretary: Miss Ernestine Elmendorf '33, 56 Elmdorf Avenue, Rochester. ST. LOUIS Last Friday American Hotel 12:00 noon Secretary: Theodore A. Eggmann '28, 233A Collinsville Avenue, East St. Louis, 111. SAN FRANCISCO NO regular date S. F. Commercial Club 12:15 p.m. Secretary: Brandon Watson '26, Women's City Club, 2315 Durand Avenue, Berkeley, Cal._ SAN FRANCISCO (Women) 2nd Saturday Homes of Members Luncheon or Tea Secretary: Mrs. Nairne F. Ward '26, 2330 Rose Street, Berkeley, Cal. SYRACUSE Wednesday University Club 12:30 p.m. Secretary: Robert C. Hosmer '02, 316 South Warren Street, Syracuse. SYRACUSE (Women) 2nd Monday Homes of Members 6:30 p.m. Secretary: Miss Leah M. Bladen '24, 139 Wood Avenue, Syracuse. TRENTON Monday Chas. HertzeΓs Restaurant, Bridge & S. Broad Sts. Secretary: George R. Shanklin '22, 932 Parkside Avenue, Trenton. UTICA Tuesday University Club 12:00>oon Secretary: Harold J. Shackelton '28, 255 Genesee Street, Utica. UTICA (Women) 3rd Monday Homes of Members Dinner Secretary: Mrs. Charles C. Beakes '18, 159 Pleasant Street, Utica. WASHINGTON, D. C. Thursday University Club 12:30 p.m. Secretary: Harold W. Walker 11, 318 Southern Bldg., Washington. (e) 1935, LIGGETT & MYERS TOBACCO CO.