> ^, <•" . > ,«^£>'^? »f rf „ CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

Last of the Sage College Femur Cornell is at War!

We wish you could have been in Ithaca at Commencement, to see and hear:

•Half the Senior Class ready to leave •.The impressive ceremony at the War immediately ίor military service, most Memorial in honor of Comedians who oί them as officers. served in World War I.

•The Class orator, out of uniform for new contingent of 72 ensigns ar- a single day, pledge allegiance to the rive for Diesel engine training—part ideals for which America stands and of a Navy program that will have 800 which Cornell so ably upholds. officers on the Campus by mid-summer. •.President Day proclaim that the •Students enrolling for wartime sum- chief purpose of Cornell in these times mer courses on Commencement Day. must be to help win the war.

Your Gift to Cornell This Year Is a

Contribution to the War Effort CORNELL ALUMNI FUND COUNCIL Executive Committee If you have not already made your Alumni Fund Gift through For 1941-42 your Class Committee, send it now to the Alumni Fund Office, 3 East Avenue, Ithaca. To be counted in the 1942 Class totals, it must reach the office by June 30. Edward E. Goodwillie '10, President Walter C. Heasley, Jr. '30, Executive Sec'y. Charles f. Mordock, '97 Harold T. Edwards, ΊO President Edward E. Goodwillie Matthew Carey, '15 Harold L. Bache, '16 Cornell Alumni Fund Council Alumni House, Ithaca, N. Y. Christopher W. Wilson, ΌO Miss Katherine Buckley, '01 Henry W. Roden, '18 Enclosed is my gift to $ in cash Miss Mary K. Hoyt, '20 Roger W. Hooker, '21 through our Alumni Fund for this year: Caesar A. Grasselli, '22 $. in war stamps Walter W. Buckley, '26 H. Victor Grohmann, '28 William M. Vanneman, '31 Name Class $.. in war bonds

Street.

Town. CAN ELL ALU I NEWS Subscription price $4 a year. Entered as second class matter, Ithaca, N. Y. Published weekly during the college year and monthly during the summer

VOL. XLIV, NO. 33 ITHACA, NEW YORK, JUNE 4, I942. PRICE, 15 CENTS REUNIONS—BY CLASS REPRESENTATIVES The VanCleef Dinner '87, GEORGE M. BRILL '91, CHARLES G. FRENCH The Reunion closed on Sunday evening In the porch dining-room of Sage College '91, and STANLEY W. HAYES '91. when the members who had not already left on Saturday evening, sixteen members and Because of illness, I was unable to attend for home participated in the Senior singing, eleven guests of the Classes of 'yi-'^i met for the dinner this year, and I am indebted to Lieutenant Commander NELSON MACY and the annual VanCleef Dinner for the early HENRY PHELPS GAGE '08 and CLARA STARRETT WILLIAM G. SMITH, former Glee Club singers, Classes. At tables decorated with bouquets GAGE Ί8 for the material in this report. alternating in singing the four verses of 92.'s of spring flowers they enjoyed a banquet pre- —SIMON HENRY GAGE '77 Freshman song composed by ARTHUR J. pared for them by Mrs. ANNA FIELDEN GRACE BALDWIN '92., the Class members and Seniors Ίo and her assistants at Sage. Class of '92 joining in the chorus.—L. N. N. That the decline in attendance this year was Cornell's half-century Class returned to Class of '97 due to the exigencies of war and weather and Prudence Risley Hall at Ithaca, arriving Fri- The Class of '97 abandoned its plan for a not to any falling-off in the Cornell spirit of day, May 2.2., and closing the Reunion activi- large Forty-five-year Reunion in Ithaca some the older Classes was shown by the reports on ties by joining with the Seniors in the Sunday time ago, for reasons known to all. Instead, themselves and other members given by those evening sing at Gold win Smith Hall. members of the Class gathered Saturday present. Cornell '92. is one of the "great" Classes in evening in New York at the Hotel Astor, in In the absence of the regularly appointed the sense of loyalty and devotion to demo- Chicago and other places where such get- toastmaster, JAMES F. TUTHILL '82., secretary cratic ideals in higher education. Trained by togethers were held, and a few rallied in of the Sixty-year Class who telegraphed greet- Andrew D. White, Charles Kendall Adams, Ithaca. ings from Pasadena, Cal., Mr. ARTHUR GIBB , Robert Thurston, The following dined together in Willard '90 introduced a very gracious and capable Hiram Corson, Moses Coit Tyler, and a host Straight Hall, listened to the Reunion broad- substitute in Miss Eugenia VanCleef. She was of others of the early leaders of constructive cast, and attended the Bailey Hall alumni ideals of the nineteenth century, '92. had an ably assisted in the extempore program by meeting: Professors WILLIAM N. BARNARD, unusual number oί members who entered into Professor ALBERT W. SMITH 'γ8> MRS. SMITH, FRED A. BARNES, and GEORGE N. LAUMAN the work of building the new America in and by the other Cornellians present. from the Hill, and CHARLES T. MORDOCK, defiance of the old forms of authoritarian dic- The Rev. CHARLES MCKNIGHT '91 paid a LEWELL T. GENUNG, FREDERICK D. HERBERT, tation. '92. would not tolerate any recanting of tribute to Miss VanCleef s father, MYNDERSE WALTER KELSEY, and JERVIS LANGDON. Also the principle of education of women, the train- VANCLEEP '74, who originated the group registered were Mrs. LENA HILL DUNCAN, ing of hands and brains together, the neces- dinner for the older Classes and was for many NANNIE BURT HERRICK, HELEN M. KNOX, H. sity of living in a civilization that was still years its generous host. The diners listened to HERBERT CRUM, and WALTER H. WHITLOCK. the Cornell broadcast, Professor Smith and crude in its ideals. That, and the effect of the Mr. STODDARD STEVENS '85 read original war on our present civilization, was the sub- -J. L. poems, and as many other members of the stance of the conversation of the fifty returned Class of '07 Men group spoke as time permitted before the Classmates of 2.19 now living, and their several The Thirty-five-year Reunion of the men of Alumni Association meeting at Bailey Hall. guests and friends, as they carried on at their the Class of 1907 ran off happily in spite of Besides those mentioned, Cornellians of dinners on Friday and Saturday evenings. rain, washouts of the railroads, and competi- the early Classes present were Mrs. Willard On Saturday afternoon, the Class attended tion from the big New York party at the Beahan (BESSIE DEWITT) '78, EDWARD N. the reception given by Dr. and Mrs. Day at Astor. Smallest Reunion of the Class ever TRUMP '78, FREDERIC WHITON '79, ISABEL their residence, and met again at Bailey Hall held, it fitted nicely along with the men of HOWLAND '81, Dr. ALFRED A WITHINGTON '81, to loyally support President Day in carrying 1912. in Wait Hall, the former dormitory of the CHARLES E. CURTIS '85, JAMES H. WHALEY '86, out the same ideals and policies that marked Cascadilla Preparatory School. FORREST M. TOWLE '86, HARRISON E. COLEY '92/s entrance into real lite fifty years ago. Friday dinner was at Willard Straight,

CLASS OF '92. AT FIFTY-YEAR REUNION Fenner Standing: Willis C. Ellis, F. Lewis Holbrook, Frank A. Bell, Henry A. Booth, Henry G. Hamann, Henry Hicks, Daniel A. Mason '94, Roscoe C. Beebe, James E. Gleason, Allison S. Capwell, Elliott F. Aldrich, Elmer G. Horton, Edgar H. Wood, William G. Starkweather, Burton N. Bump, John P. P. Lathrop, Henry C. Nelson, Arthur H. Timmerman, Charles H. Werner, George T. Hogg, Albert M. Fowler, Arthur H. Woodward, Edwin D. Shurter, Henry E. Merriam, Harry D. Howe, Furman L. Mulford, L. Nelson Nichols. Seated: George W. Bacon, Mrs. P. F. McAllister, Mrs. L. B. KeifTer, Mrs. R. C. Beebe, Mrs. E. F. Aldrich, Mrs. A. S. Capwell, Mrs. Bisgood, Caroline H. Swartout, Lenard B. KeifTer, Bacon's granddaughter Bridgit, Peter F. McAllister, Mrs. E. H. Wood, Mrs. H. C. Nelson, Amy vonS. Gerecke, Mrs. Mary Relihan Brown, Mrs. Laura Dickey Ho well, Edward Everett. 43° CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

Saturday at the Alhambra. President and Mrs. Carl Snavely explained the present all-in- KAY HARRIS, BLANCHE BROOKS MCLEAN, HELEN Day kindly included "07 in the tea to the older clusive physical training program of the stu- PALMER SILCOX, ELOISE SMITH, PEG WARD, classes on Saturday. What with the regular dents, and hesitantly predicted that he might were all there. features of Saturday and these special ones, a have a fair football team next fall. EDDIE The picnic supper at HELEN HOWELL consistently active schedule was followed be- ANDERSON reported on our efforts for the STEVENS '15 around the fireplace was swell; ginning with Thursday evening's little dinner Alumni Fund, and the benediction was given looking at recent snapshots of the families, and ending with the Memorial Service Sun- by the oldest member of the 1917 Class, Pro- perusing stunt books with souvenirs and day noon. fessor CHARLES L. (Bull) DURHAM. pictures of "the girls" minus their dignity, While there was some question of the prac- We have diplomas, but no memories of with talk and more talk, was the chief order ticability of holding a Reunion at a time when Commencement or graduation exercises. Two of the evening. What a wicked baseball bat the University's dormitories were filled with wars, twenty-five years apart, decided we those girls could swing for the glory of the undergraduates and when a full Reunion pro- should not be graduated like other Classes, team and what fun and what costumes for the gram was not possible, the consensus seemed but wars could not make us forget Cornell and famous "christening" and other stunt nights! to be that the plans worked out quite well and our Classmates. And they never will. For we With her incomparable zest, PICK NORTHUP that Wait Hall gave the '07 Reunion a sem- are fighting to make the world safe for Re- SNYDER'S triumphant but breathless entry blance of regularity not possible had the unions. dispelled any lingering restraint due to age or Classmates been scattered through casual We had a grand luncheon on Saturday with cares, and the supper and Cornell broadcast dormitory rooms and rooming houses. the other Classes; one of our own on Sunday were thoroughly enjoyed. RUTH ROYCE and —R. W. S. at Sage with many prominent Campus guests. Ev FINCHER did their usual good job manag- Class of'12 Women But the event that will always live in our ing reservations and the supper, and it was hearts was the memorial service in tribute to gratifying to have $x6 received from Class Since the women of 1912. postponed their Cornell's war dead held in front of the Cor- fees which enables us to pay current Reunion Ithaca Reunion, perhaps the largest group to nell War Memorial at noon, Sunday May 2.4, costs for circularizing, etc., and keep the small gather was that in New York, at the Cornell 1942.. Our Class president, JOHN L. COLLYER, reserve in the treasury against our Twenty- Reunion at the Hotel Astor. We hope that spoke for the Class; BOB KEEFE with BOB fifth, of which RUTH IRISH was unanimously others throughout the country were able to MACKENZIE, GLEN ACHESON, and HENRY elected chairman. Too bad not to have had hear the radio broadcast of the program from MARSH, members of The Tinkham unit, laid a Irish with us in Ithaca, but she was at the there and Ithaca. That group included VIOLET wreath for the Class and the American Field New York party. HARRISON EMERY who came from Philadelphia Service, and later Bob Keefe placed ,the wreath Seeing Cornell friends and the Campus was for the occasion, ANNA HUNN, EDITH MC- at the inner Memorial Shrine with the Class the best part of getting back, and the high CULLYJ JANET FRISCH KLEIN, MARIAN DAR- attending in a body. point of the program was President Day's VILLE, HELEN DIXON GILLESPIE, ROSE WIL- challenging talk to the alumni.—L. K. J. LIAMS COHN, and NINA SMITH. The party was a To BILL CRIM, Reunion committee chair- gay occasion, and all of us enjoyed seeing one man; EDDIE ANDERSON, New York chairman; SHEP SHEPARD, Washington chairman; JOHN Class of'32 Women another, some for the first time in years. Al- Reunion activities for the women of '32. though this was our "third Tenth Reunion," COLLYER, our president, and all others we owe thanks for the success of what was called an were very informal. Special costumes and the as someone put it, we are looking forward to usual Class picture were dispensed with, but a real one in Ithaca before too many years impossible Reunion. For making possible good fellowship and cheer from start to finish we the Ten-year women were an enthusiastic pass, and we hope to make that a really big and happy group in spite of their small affair.—N. S. thank our Classmate OTTO BADENHAUSEN, who so generously furnished round after numbers. Class of '17 Men round of Ballantine's. To WALT HEASLEY Most of Saturday afternoon, after the In spite of hell and high water, they came and the University we owe thanks for making alumni luncheon, was spent in such im- from North, South, East, and West, from all it possible to meet again as a Class, 114 strong, promptu activities as exploring the Campus directions through rain and flood-waters. and to have the opportunity to hold fast and and climbing the Libe Tower. Saturday night, "We can't come to your Reunion, but we're let our grips be tight when we greeted each the seven '32.ers met for a Class dinner in the here," announced the Washington gang. The other again. And we vowed that our Victory tearoom at Willard Straight. After dinner trip from New York on the Lehigh required Reunion when the war ends will be the great- they joined the Class of '40 in one of the pri- twenty-four hours, but Time and Tide were est in Cornell history!—H. R. J. vate dining rooms, where they listened to the finally conquered. special broadcast from Ithaca and New York, All day Saturday, eighty Classmates in Class of '22 Women and then went up to Bailey Hall for the meet- Ithaca exhorted the Lehigh to send busses to The anticipated handful of '2.2/s returning ing of the Alumni Association. Some of the the stranded train. All day, thirty more for our Twentieth Reunion increased until women attended the War Memorial services around the New Jersey-Pennsylvania border there were actually seventeen of us for the on Sunday. wired that they were on their way and would Class supper. All things considered, that was The seven '3xers who were registered for arrive soon. They landed at 7 p.m., just twelve a good number and cause for enthusiasm. the Ten-year Reunion were PAULINE CAR- hours late, and were rushed from the station DELLA DINGLE KEMP took the prize for being PENTER, HELEN MALY, BETTY NORTH, ARLENE to Willard Straight, where the 1917 Class the farthest distant Classmate to return, and NUTTALL, VELVA LAMB ROSE, BETTY SCHURR, dinner had been delayed pending their ar- she did some real negotiating with the authori- and EVELYN ROSENBLOOM SLAVIN.—P. C. rival. ties to get to Ithaca from Toronto, Canada. Shortly after, President Day and Dr. Hu Her loyalty and devotion did us all good. Classes of '22-'32 Men SHIH '14, Chinese Ambassador, were an- Your Reunion chairman was the only full- Four Classes joined in dinner at the Club nounced and the finest program ever presented time representative from the Metropolitan Claret Saturday night of Reunion week end. at a Reunion banquet was on. Dr. Day told us area, but ELSIE BLODGETT (Long Island) During the afternoon, members of '2.2., '2.7, of Cornell's all-out effort to win the war, and came over from Corning for lunch and that '2.9, and '32. partook of the hospitality of '17 in the peace. Dr. Hu told us how the United was a nice surprise. "Puss", Ev, PETE HUDSON, the Library Slope tent. Nations would win both, and why we must. MARION MCMILLAN NICHOLS, LOUISE DEAN, Before the steak dinner was served, those present heard the Cornell broadcast, put on less than a stone's throw from the dining room. After pinner several of the party went to Bailey Hall for the rally. Those present were: 192.x, J. B. TROUSDALE and C. F. GILBERT, both of Ithaca; 192.7, HARRY B. LOVE of Alliance, Ohio, H. KENNETH DRAKE of South Lansing, and Dr. A. B. BERRESFORD, RICHARD C. MURDOCK, H. STILWELL BROWN, STANLEY W. WARREN, and WILLIAM J. WATERS of Ithaca; 1919, Captain ROBERT I. DODGE, JR., Ithaca; 1931, Dr. j. M. MCCARTHY of Teaneck, N. J., Dr. HOWARD K. FULLER of Interlaken, HERB NAUMANN of Philadelphia, Pa., CLARENCE F. CHAFFEE of Binghamton, JOHN V. B. RICE of Trumans- burg, and ELMER S. PHILLIPS of Ithaca. —H. S. B. & W. J. W. Class of '37 Women "Come hell or high water," we said, "we'll have a '37 Five-year Reunion in Ithaca this year!" '17 TENT ON THE LIBRARY SLOPE WAS A POPULAR REUNION GATHERING PLACE Well, come high water and the Big Day, JUNE 4, I94Z 43

and Reunion Chairman EL RAΓNΌR got marooned on the Lehigh with the Honorable CLASS WORKERS BUILD ALUMNI FUND Hu SHIH and MARY DONLON and all the other big shots. El staggered into our Class dinner President Edward E. Goodwillie Ίo 15 per cent had the largest percentage of at the Straight at 7:30 p. m. Saturday evening, predicted at the annual meeting of the living members contributing. Class of just as Yours Truly was cutting the big Alumni Fund Council that by the end of '97, the committee headed by Fred F. "Happy Birthday '37" cake with the five candles on it. (Incidentally, we did better at the fiscal year, June 30, the Alumni Fund Bontecou, was second with 21 per cent. would equal or exceed last year's total blowing out the candles this time than we did ALUMNI RESTR. at our last Reunion!) of $nz,ooo for the unrestricted use of the CL. No. DONORS FUND GIFTS It takes a lot more than a mere flood to University. dampen the old '37 spirit, however, and with '72 5 1 $ 2.00 EΓs tardy appearance the party got even more Some 2,000 members of Class commit- '74 12 1 50.00 tees are busily at work soliciting their chummy. (Seventeen of us were at the dinner. '76 I £ 491.50 Twenty-one of us registered during the day at Classmates for gifts to the Fund. The fol- I 5 .00 the Straight Reunion desk.) We had already '77 lowing report shows the comparative elected El Raynor our new Class treasurer for >8 26 5 59-5° 4,900.13 standing by Classes from July 1, 1941 five years, succeeding LOUISE MCCLEAN who '79 2-9 3 30.00 resigned the job because she may go on foreign through May 15, 1942.. Total unre- '80 35 2 15 .00 service with the Army at any moment. So El stricted Alumni Fund of $59,750.94 for was deluged with dollar bills upon her ar- '81 2-5 2 50.00 this period is approximately the same rival (and you are hereby notified that you all '82 21 2 75.00 as last year. Intensive work by commit- owe another dollar Class tax right now, to keep '83 26 2 26.00 things going for the next five years). ED teemen from now to June 30, it is hoped, '84 28 2 35.00 WHITING '2.9 obligingly took snapshots of may increase the Fund at least $65,000. those assembled. JEAN BRADLEY ASHBERY, our '85 32- 4 285.00 banquet chairman, took over the meeting The Class of '92 had contributed the '86 46 6 117.00 590,000.00 momentarily to get your correspondent re- largest amount to May 15. Women of '87 43 3 30.00 5 444-45 elected Class secretary for another five years, ? the Class of '12., Mrs. Mariana Mc- 200.00 as good a railroading job as these old ears 73 5 95.00 Caulley VanDeventer, chairman, with 1 have heard, but we thank you one and all for 9 - 6 55.00 10.00 giving us another chance. The prize—a tiny silver cup—usually given to the girl coming the greatest distance to CLASS REPRESENTATIVES TOTAL DONORS ALUMNI RESTR. Reunion caused slight complications. Fearing LIVING NO. % FUND GIFTS that RAY MUNN BLAKESLEY of Alexandria, Va., and HAZEL OLDHAM HANSON, late of 9° 148 $ 450.00 f 1,115.68 Virginia and soon to move to Georgia, and Frank J. Tone 149 413.00 5,699.84 this Ohioan would battle for it, we agreed to 12 give it to the one present who had the most 2O2 10 5,187.50 10.00 children. But RUTH MCCURDY SHAW and '93 1IO 18 9 239.00 400.00 BARBY PRATT SMILEY each had three! So it '94 IO3 16 8 351.00 2,800.00 was unanimously decided to give it to the Harry J. Clark 1,109.00 person who'd spent months and months '95 2-35 36 ij 20.00 George S. Tompkins 1 443.00 planning this Reunion only to be slapped in 2.87 3 II 185.00 the face by gas and tire rationing; the gal '97 Fred F. Bontecou 1,683.66 187 60 21 874-77 who'd certainly had the hardest time getting '98 JohnJ. Kuhn 189 10 1,420.00 615.00 to Reunion, the Woman of*the Hour, El 28 '99 Emmett B. Carter X II 788.84 Raynor! 3 7 35 617.00 '00 Christopher W. Wilson 366 A letter of greeting to '37 from our adopted 37 10 976.50 2,037.50 '01 Harvey J. Couch Classmate Mrs. , and 3°5 33 II 730.50 20.00 others from Classmates who could not be Dr. Emily Hickman 46 13 58.50 25.00 present were read, and we listened to the Cor- 6 '02. John C. Trefts 1 1 6 nell Reunion radio broadcast. Then we all ad- 33 3 9 33 73 4,530.00 journed to Bailey Hall for the alumni meeting Mrs. R. H. Shreve 75 11 15 123.00 170.00 and Dr. Day's "report to the stockholders." '03 Stuart Hazlewood 381 41- II 1,690.00 175.00 Some of us returned to the Straight later in Lucy N. Tomkins 88 II 12 102.00 14.00 the evening to enjoy some more of our enor- '04 Charles P. Wood 458 1 1,110.00 mous cake and have a delightful bull-session. 4 9 868.00 If your ears didn't burn, they should have! We 87 9 10 80.75 23.00 talked about everyone!!! '05 Harry N. Morse 579 61 II 1,642.50 73,92-5 59 We forgot to mention the delicious lunch- 75 12 16 90.50 88.00 eon in the Memorial Room for all alumni at '06 Nicholas H. No yes 64 12 8 noon. After it, we paraded in a body to Dean 54*- 1,054.85 5>3 3 35 Blanding's house and drank her delicious Mrs. Chas. F. Landmesser 69 5 7 50.00 1.25 punch, making quite an impressive showing '07 Howard M. Rogers 616 76 12 1,711.50 285.00 with our "costumes"—big white buttons with Mrs. Oswald M. Milligan 73 8 II 4Γ.00 15.00 a large green '37 thereon. '08 Herbert E. Mitler 602 60 10 1,586.28 332.50 P. S. Professor Lauman's entire family has Mrs. Chas. E. Craven J 90.00 thanked '37 for the remains of the cake; and 74 3 '7 55.00 '37 wishes to thank the Laumans for their '09 Creed W. Fukon 644 87 14 1,853.14 500.0c offer of "at least five beds" and their usual Mrs. Harry S. Tarbert 97 12 12 70.50 20.00 "open house" hospitality.—C. H. C. Ίo Harold T. Edwards 675 74 II 3,611.76 13,680.00 Mrs. Merton A. Darville Class of '37 Men 87 *5 17 74-5° 46.00 Ίi Edward G. MacArthur 2 In the opinion of this reporter, the next 743 96 13 1,265 -^ Reunion of the Class of '37 should be sched- Christina Stivers 83 3 4 I I : CO uled ίor Berlin. With every male member of '12. Donald C. Kerr 861 96 II I»735-2-5 1,275 °° the Class who can meet the physical require- Mrs. Harry B. Van Deventer 97 M 25 250.50 33.00 ments in the armed forces and others in defense '13 Walter K. Shaw 901 112 12 I industry, only a handful were able to meet in ?959 °5 337.00 Ithaca. Those of us here carried on. Bessie G. Secrest 90 9 10 30.00 6.25 It is perhaps a fair indication of our Class's '14 Leonard C. Treman 801 79 10 1,148.50 1,350.00 participation in the war to mention that every Eva M. Haigh 78 18 86.00 81.25 man at the Class dinner was in uniform. The '15 Matthew Carey 964 122 broadcast was the highlight of the dinner. 13 2,148.55 340.00 Ruth Darville 112 The familiar voices of KENT, TRACY, and Miss 11 10 76.00 10.00 Ί6 Richard J. Foster, Jr. 970 SARNOFF and the singing of the Glee Club 16 1,829.5° 1,747.12 (Continued on page 434) Mrs. Lloyd E. Moore 130 15 45-5° 7-5° 43 ^ CORNELL ALtΓMNI NEWS

CLASS REPRESENTATIVES TOTAL DONORS ALUMNI RESTR. Middleton '35, membership; Charlotte LIVING No. % FUND GIFTS Gristede '19, annual luncheon and house '17 Edward E. Anderson 1048 Ill II 1,560.49 1,150.00 and hospitality committee; Miss Taft, X33 IO 8 38.00 141.00 fields of work conference; Mrs. Roger Ί8 P. Paul Miller 1061 102. 10 1,196.10 115.00 Woolley (Virginia Van Vranken) '15, Mrs. James C. Huntington 182. J9 II J33 75 91.50 secondary schools; Alice G. Gordon '17, ?I9 John C. Hollis 860 56 7 618.18 884.17 publicity; Elizabeth Russell '40, activi- Margaret A. Kinzinger *95 11 II 89.50 90.00 ties; and Miss Irish, Federation Scholar- I ship Fund benefit. '10 Orville G. Daily 973 89 9 >2-94 -97 160.71 Mary K. Hoyt 191 2.O 10 113.15 461.00 A buffet supper before the business '11 Clyde Mayer 910 89 10 1,965.44 2-,469 77 meeting was in charge of Mrs. Serge Mrs. R. D. Heath 2.2.2. 17 8 46.63 133.87 Jarvis (Lucile Howard) '38. '2.2. Walker L. Cisler 1051 8θ 8 1,018.00 770.00

I Mrs. Louis A. Winkelman 2-5x 2-7 II 184.68 - 33 2-5 REUNION ENROUTE '2-3 Robert O. Brannan 1151 87 8 840.94 1,496.36 Sudden flood the night of May 11 342- 36 II 163.07 101.18 washed out railroad tracks in eastern 'M George Pfann 944 84 9 874.11 1,407.45 Pennsylvania to stop the Lehigh Valley Mary E. Yinger 3°5 2-7 9 100.75 58.00 train from New York City that was •j '2-5 Stuart Richardson 1015 70 481.36 386.89 bringing 100 or more alumni, University Mrs. Robert T. Smith 2-97 18 9 109.59 109.06 Trustees, and officials for Reunion and '16 Walter W. Buckley 980 84 9 630.90 7°5-74 Commencement. Among the passengers Mrs. Charles W. Stillwell 306 18 6 60.06 70.14 were Dr. Hu Shih '14 who was scheduled '2-7 1015 61 6 442--45 895.00 to take part in a nation-wide broadcast 389 17 4 *57 54 15.96 from Ithaca Saturday evening, Adrienne '2.8 H. Victor Grohmann 918 61 7 456 95 371.10 Ames, motion picture actress who was lone P. Barrett 311 16 5 70.75 80.00 to appear in an Ithaca War Bond parade '2-9 Karl F. Kellerman, Jr. 93° 58 6 587-2-5 981.00 Saturday morning, and Creed W. Fulton Dorothy A. English 353 16 7 105.90 111.00 '09, president of the Alumni Association. '30 George C. Castleman 910 90 10 554-75 65 .00 These three were picked up by a plane Mrs. Paul P. McClellan 383 τ9 5 74.00 13.50 from Ithaca Airport and arrived about 1 '3 William M. Vanneman 904 79 9 368.50 60.00 3 p.m. 3M 34 II !77 75 8.00 The others spent all day Saturday '32- Frederick I. Biggs 847 67 8 184.00 3 .00 getting to Ithaca by railroad by-passes. 1 Mrs. John L. Skinner 34 2-4 7 106.00 5.00 A number of them were '17 men on the '33 John P. Nell 953 60 6 185.50 17.00 way to their Twenty-five-year Reunion. Carleen Maley 374 39 10 133.00 1.00 One of these, Charles W. Ramsey, con- '34 William R. Robertson 1062. 61 6 318.50 11.00 tributes the following account of the Mrs. Robert B. Roe 354 XI 6 65 .00 8.00 forced "Reunion enroute" at the request '35 Frank A. Ready 1081 84 8 396 75 146.00 of the ALUMNI NEWS: Mrs. William D. Dugan 35° 11 6 76.00 10.00 "Despite 'hell and high water,' the '36 William M. Hoyt, Jr. 966 88 9 459.00 10.00 Class of '17 held its Reunion. It seems Mrs. Herbert T. Brunn 353 33 9 117.50 7.00 inevitable that the doings of this Class '37 894 52- 6 198.00 be accompanied by signs and portents. Mrs. Robert B. Child 341 2-3 7 148.50 1.00 This time, the major portent was a cloud- '38 George S. Smith 941 45 5 113.50 1.00 burst that delayed part of the New York Harriette E. Vane 318 IX 4 63.50 contingent's participation one full work- '39 Thomas I. S. Boak 981 38 4 187.05 50.00 ing day. T Mrs. Ernest Loewenstein 333 9 6 5° 75 "This group left New York Friday '40 1134 17 1 43.00 110.00 night. The city celebrated the event by Barbara Brown 374 7 2 30.00 having a complete blackout just before '41 Edward P. White 1169 5 0.5 11. 50 10.00 the departure of the Lehigh Valley Mrs. Robert L. Wiggans 42-1 4 I 13.50 sleeper. Nevertheless, as the train swung IX Graduate School & Others 11,530 3 1,109.56 11,331.89 across the Jersey flats, thirty-five or forty

I2 members of the Class were duly accounted TOTALS (ALL CLASSES) 60,657 4, -3 7 $59>75° 94 $773,111.67 for, to the accompaniment of barber shop harmony, greetings, and conviviality. NEW JERSEY OFFICERS NEW YORKERS ELECT Those who went to bed before the train Annual dinner meeting of the Cornell At the annual meeting of the Cornell reached Easton, Pa., enjoyed the most Women's Club of Northern New Jersey Women's Club of New York May 10 in comfortable night on a sleeper that many was attended by eighteen members. Offi- the Club rooms at the Hotel Barbizon, of them had ever experienced. This was cers were elected for two years: Mrs. A. Marjorie A. Rice '19 was elected presi- because at 10 the next morning the train Mortimer Erskine (Mabel Baldwin) '17 dent, succeeding Ruth F. Irish '11. Elea- was still at Easton, Pa., some sixty miles of Chatham, president; Mrs. George J. nor C. Raynor '37 is first vice-president; from New York. Beside the tracks the Kilgen (Gertrude Hohrath) '31 of Mont- Barbara Brown '40, recording secretary. river was surging under the Main Street clair, treasurer; Mrs. Edward Meincke New directors are Mildred Taft '11, stone bridge almost filling the arches. (Frances Meisse) '31 of Scotch Plains, re- Emma E. Weinstein '13 and Betty E. Trees, gasoline drums, and heavy timbers cording secretary. It was reported that Niles '41. floated by. Ahead, all railroad traffic had the Club has contributed $88 to the Miss Irish summarized the Club's ac- been halted by washouts. After the rain Federation Scholarship Fund this year. tivities this year, and Katherine Doring of the day before, every river in eastern Motion pictures of University activities '35 presented her treasurer's report. Com- Pennsylvania was at flood level. and the Campus were shown and enjoyed. mittee reports were made by Eleanor By 11, railroad authorities had worked JUNE 4, I94X 433 out a new route through the Delaware Water Gap, Stroudsburg, Scranton, and CORNELLIANS SERVE WAR BOARDS Pittston. With much delay, backing and Alumni and Faculty at Work in Washington filling at junction points, and slow prog- ress to avoid undue strain on tracks Almost daily, more Cornellians join of the Food Rationing Division. Dexter possibly weakened by the storm, the the increasing number in Washington in M. Keezer, AM '23, former president of trip was made. In some places, the second responsible jobs with the various Gov- Reed College, is assistant administrator track on the right of way was completely ernment boards and offices that are guid- of the Consumer Division. Robert S. Bet- undercut and dangling over streams as ing the country's war effort. Their num- ten '18 is in the Transportation Division. the train cautiously edged along. A ber and duties change overnight, but Dean Robert S. Stevens of the Law hastily-acquired diner served minute with the helpful assistance of Professor School, on leave from the University, steaks until they ran out, and then Dexter S. Kimball, Engineering, Emeri- took up legal duties June 1 with the standardized on ham and eggs. tus, now of the War Production Board, Office of Emergency Management. Ear- At 7 in the evening, Ithaca was sighted the ALUMNI NEWS has compiled a partial lier, Professor George T. Washington, and a rescue squad of Brother 'iyers list of alumni and members of the Faculty Law, and D. Boardman Lee '2.6 joined whisked us up to Willard Straight Hall who are of this number. the legal staff of OEM. to the Class dinner which had been held In the War Production Board, James S. Walter C. Teagle '99, Trustee of the for our arrival." Knowlson '05, who was president of University and chairman of Standard Oil Stewart-Warner Corp., Chicago, 111., is Co. of New Jersey, is a member of the LAW ALUMNI DO WELL director of the Division of Industry Oper- National War Labor Board, and its as- Of forty-seven graduates of the Law ations. In his Division, George S. Frank sistant secretary is Theodore W. Khecl School who took New York State Bar Ίi, former University Manager of Pur- '35- examinations in March, forty-one passed chases, is chief of the School Section, In the Lend Lease Administration, the examinations. This figure of 87 per Bureau of Governmental Requirements. Byron Spence '2.5 is principal food liaison cent successful Cornellian candidates Elmer J. Baxter '2.3 is chief of the Opera- officer. compares with the total of 60.3 per cent tions Section, Priorities Bureau. Charles Deputy director of the Office of Facts of all who took the examinations. H. Me Arthur '08 is assistant chief of the and Figures is John R. Fleming '2.1, and Industrial Salvage Section. Lucius C. also in that Office are Henry F. Pringle ALUMNI MAKE NAVY PLANES Fuller '97 is in the Bureau of Inventory '19, formerly of the Columbia University Time for May 18 devotes three columns Requisitioning. faculty; Professor Frank A. Southard, and a picture to Grumman Aircraft En- Chief of the Bureau of Industrial Con- Jr., Economics; and Professor Leonard S. gineering Corp., Bethpage, L. I., and its servation, Division of Production, WPB, Cottrell, Jr., Sociology, as consulting expanding production of Wildcat and is Lessing J. Rosenwald '13, former social scientists. Avenger planes for the Navy. President chairman of Sears, Roebuck & Co. National Resources Planning Board has of Grumman Aircraft is LeRoy R. Grum- George C. Brainard Ίi, former presi- as its executive director Harold A. Mer- man Ί6, and the vice-president and gen- dent of the General Fireproofing Co., rill '2.1. eral manager is Leon A. Swirbul Ίo. Youngstown, Ohio, is deputy director of A large number of Cornellians are in Details of the new Avenger torpedo the Division of Production, WPB, and Washington, of course, in the Army, plane are a Navy secret; Grumman Wild- chief of its Tools Branch. In the Tools Navy, and Marine Corps. But in the War cats are the only fighters used by US Branch as chief of the Priorities Section Department as director of the Division aircraft carriers. "Last February," says is Dean Kimball, and Professor Frederick of Procurement and Distribution is Colo- Time, "carrier-based Wildcats engaged F. Stephan, Sociology, is adviser to the nel Charles D. Young '02., former vice- Japanese land-based aircraft over the Planning Section. In the Tools Branch president of the Pennsylvania Railroad. Marshall Islands, shot down ten fighters also, Robert B. Rhoads Ίi is chief of the In the Office of the Quartermaster Gen- and three bombers without loss of a Available Used Tools Section, in which eral as chief of the Engineering and De- single US plane. At Wake Island, two Carl M. Jackson '12. is supervisor and sign Structural Unit is Professor Leonard Marines in Wildcats sank a Jap cruiser Walter D. Baer '2.0 is a field supervisor. C. Urquhart '09, Civil Engineering; and with bombs. Lieut. Commander Edward Division of Materials, Power Section, Professor William E. Stanley, Sanitary ('Butch') OΉare was at a Wildcat's WPB, has Walker L. Cisler '2.2. as chief Engineering, is chief of the Sewage and controls when he bagged five Jap bombers of priorities, Charles F. Kells 'ZT, as a Incineration Unit. Lewis E. Durland '30, and crippled another in a single engage- consultant, and Ivan A. Kazine-Zateye- Assistant Treasurer of the University, is ment." vitch '2.9 as a priorities analyst. Thomas in the Navy Department Office of Pro- The Navy " E" pennant which flies E. Milliman '14, on leave as president of curement and Materials as assistant to over the Grumman buildings is the first GLF Soil Building Service, Ithaca, is con- the director, Scheduling and Reporting awarded to an airplane company. Grum- sultant to the Nitrogen Unit of the Division. man's construction of the first military Chemicals Branch in the Division of Ma- This listing is undoubtedly far from plane with retractable landing gear terials, and also to the Agricultural complete. Additions to it will be pub- brought their first substantial Navy con- Chemicals Unit of the Office of Price Ad- lished as received, and turned over to tract when a test model delivered in De- ministration where he was chief for a permanent records of the University. cember, 1931, flew thirty miles an hour time. faster than any other Navy fighter at Deputy director of the Division of ALUMNI IN CANAL ZONE that time. Time quotes Rear Admiral Purchases, WPB, is Houlder Hudgins '2.2., Lieutenant George F. Mueden, Jr. '40, John H. Towers, chief of the Bureau of former president of Sloane-Blabon Corp., on duty with the 87th Field Artillery Aeronautics, when he awarded Grum- New York City. Battalion, Fort William D. Davis, Canal man the Navy E: "Practically every air- William K. Frank Ίi is chairman of Zone, writes of the marriage of Warner plane you turn out goes to an active the Resources Protection Board of WPB. Howe '41 to Geraldine Presley of Mem- combat area immediately. . . . We are In the office of Price Administration, phis, Tenn., November 5, in Balboa teaching the Japanese what the expres- Professor Paul M. O'Leary, PhD '19, Heights, C.Z. Best man was Henry J. sion 'to fight like a Wildcat' means. May Economics, is acting assistant adminis- Rechen '41. we shortly teach the" Japanese and other trator of rationing. Archie M. Palmer Ί8, Mueden, Howe, Rechen, Jack C. An- enemies the meaning of the word resigned as president of the University of trim '41, Charles F. Odenbach '41, 4 Avenger'." Chattanooga, Tenn., is associate director Robert I. Bronkie '41, and Harry B. Dah- 434 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS men '40 went to the Canal Zone last The Varsity lost to Harvard and the July, and on the boat were "royally en- US Naval Academy by close margins and tertained" he writes, by Joseph F. Troy an About to Princeton and finished ahead of Syra- '19 who is in the Municipal Engineering cuse three times and MIT, Boston, and Division at Gatun, C.Z., Box 498. ATHLETICS Yale. Until he joined the Army last Febru- ary, Mueden worked in the same office TRACK TEAM NINTH BASEBALL TEAM TAKES TWO with Howe, on structural steel for the The track team scored nj^ points to The baseball team finished its Eastern new locks. All the men named and Otto finish ninth in the annual champion- Intercollegiate League season with two Marquart '41, Bartlett C. Tully '41, and ships of the ICAAAA at Triborough victories and one defeat last week. Play- James F. Goodwin '35, Mueden says, are Stadium, New York City, last Friday and ing under a new coach, Carl Snavely, the now working in the Special Engineering Saturday. Penn State won the title for team took a doubleheader from Dart- Division on the Third Locks Project, of the first time. mouth, 5-4 and 3-0, Commencement Day which Major Charles H. Barth, Jr. '17 is The point scores: Penn State 2.53^2, and lost to Columbia, 6-z, Saturday. All assistant to the supervising engineer. Pittsburgh 19H, New Hampshire 19, the games were played on Hoy Field. William C. Baird '46 and Robert I. Yale 18, New York University 17, Col- The first Dartmouth game, scheduled Ballinger, Jr. '40 he says are also working gate 15, Georgetown 15, Rhode Island for seven innings, went to ten, with Leo for the Canal. State 13M, Cornell n H, Michigan State Hamalian '41, after a shaky start, set- Last fall, Mueden "went from the 11, Fordham 10K, Boston College 8, tling down to pitch eight-hit ball. He Pacific to the Atlantic to have dinner Dartmouth 7, Princeton Tufts 7, Man- struck out eleven batters. Cornell scored with Lieutenant Colonel Robert R. Ray- hattan 6, Syracuse 5H, US Naval Aca- four runs in the first inning, as Hughes, mond, Jr.," who as Captain Raymond demy 5, Holy Cross 4, Virginia 4, Alfred the Dartmouth pitcher, walked the first was detailed to the ROTC at the Univer- 3, Pennsylvania 3, MIT 2., Connecticut 2., three men. Dartmouth picked up a run versity from 1935-40. He was on the way Columbia H, and Northeastern H here and there and tied the score in the to duty in the Virgin Islands. Charles E. Shaw, Jr. '43 contributed 7 sixth. In the tenth, with none out, Cor- of Cornell's points with second place in nell filled the bases on a single by Louis CHICAGO WOMEN ELECT the 2.2.0-yard dash and third in the 100- C. Bufalino '42., a fielder's choice, and an Cornell Women's Club of Chicago, yard dash. In both events the winner was intentiontional base on balls. Edward S. 111., at its April meeting elected Mrs. Ewell of Penn State, who also won the Steitz delivered the decisive blow, scor- Alvin H. Eichholz (Rhoda Linville) '31, broad jump for his third successive triple ing Bufalino with a single to right. secretary-treasurer. crown. In the second game, Raymond Jenkins Arthur C. Smith '43 placed third in the '41 gave Dartmouth only four hits in CLASS REUNIONS 440-yard dash, and Clark R. Sanford '44 hanging up a seven-inning shutout. Cor- placed fifth in the hammer throw with a (Continued from page 431) nell scored all its runs in the sixth inning. brought back old memories, and the thought toss of 143 feet 4 inches. John L. Haugh- Partner, the Dartmouth pitcher, gave up that Cornellians of our Class and of all Classes wout '44 shared in a six-way tie for scattered all over the world were listening also three hits, including a double by Jenkins, fourth and fifth places in the pole vault at was charged with a wild pitch, and and were united in thoughts of Cornell for a iz feet 6 inches. moment, gave us the Reunion spirit of other threw wild to a base. years.—W. E. H. Jr. Lyman W. Warfield '43 just missed a place in the 12.0-yard high hurdles by Hamalian started the Columbia game Class of '40 Women finishing sixth. but was batted out in the sixth inning Undaunted by the war, tire shortage, and when the visitors collected six hits and many other problems of the day, twenty-seven CREWS FINISH SEASON scored five runs. Columbia scored another women appeared in Ithaca for Reunion, with The crews closed their season with in the seventh. twenty-five attending the banquet. It was a small but enthusiastic crowd and gave promise another series of victories over Syracuse, Blazek, the Columbia pitcher, was for our Fifth. on Lake Onondaga last Saturday. All stingy with hits. For eight innings he CAROL CLARK arrived Friday night with her races were at two miles. allowed only four scattered singles. In the usual cheer and exuberance. PRISCILLA COFFIN The Varsity boat, rowing a steady 32. ninth he lost a shutout when Captain BAXTER also arrived for the festivities Friday, most of the way, finished a little better accompanied by little Dick. Saturday morning, Robert C. Ochs '31 opened with a single. everyone milled around the Straight, getting than a length ahead, after the Junior Bufalino flied out, but Harry L. Turner together for lunch in the Memorial Room. For Varsity had won by a length and three- '41 was safe when Allison, the visiting the first time for a J40 Class get-together, it quarters and the Freshman eight by ten shortstop, misplayed his grounder. Ochs did not rain. lengths. In all three races, Syracuse reached third on the play, and Turner That night we had a banquet in Willard Straight. BETTY OLESON (52.3 East State) and started fast and gained an early lead, moved to second as Columbia tried for RUTH HOWELL (IIO North Titus) took pic- only to succumb to Cornell's greater Ochs at third. Samuel W. Hunter '43 tures inside and on the terrace, which may be power at a lower beat. pineh-singled to right field to score both obtained by writing to them. Before the ban- The times: runners. quet, many crowded around Carol's file for the ALUMNI NEWS column. Additions and correc- Varsity, Cornell 10:51.6, Syracuse The result left Cornell and Columbia tions were made. MYRTA MUNN took a bow 10:55.4. tied with Pennsylvania for fourth place, for having come the greatest distance, from Junior Varsity, Cornell 11:14.6, Syra- each with five victories and seven de- Montgomery, Ala. JEAN RAYNOR, our Senior cuse 11:31. Class president, and MARJE BAKER arrived in feats. The League standings: time for dessert and coffee; they were among Freshman, Cornell 11:13.x, Syracuse the stranded passengers on the Lehigh from 11:55. w L PC New York. The Junior Varsity crew finished the Princeton 9 1 .900 After the banquet a large poster was con- season undefeated, with three victories Harvard 5 4 .556 concocted, and everyone trooped gayly up to *Yale Bailey to the rally. We were greeted by ap- over Syracuse and others over Harvard, 3 4 •42-9 plause as we entered the auditorium in a body MIT, US Naval Academy, Princeton, and Cornell 5 7 4!7 singing "Give My Regards to Davy," pro- Yale. Columbia 5 7 •4*7 ducing the first cheer of the evening. The Freshman crew lost only to Har- Pennsylvania 5 7 4J7 People were still getting together on Sun- vard and defeated Syracuse thrice and *Dartmouth day, meeting for early and late breakfasts. 3 5 •375 The Class had one of the largest groups of MIT, Boston University, US Naval Acad- *played tie game. women back on Campus.—H. H. emy, Princeton, and Yale. Box scores: JUNE 4, 1941 435

DARTMOUTH (4) COLUMBIA (6) He is the fourth member of the coach- ABR H PO A E AB R H PO A E ing staff to volunteer for the physical Burns, If 5 1 1 3 o o Dillon, c 1 1 I 0 Zarod, 3b 4 o 1 o 5 1 5 3 training of Army and Navy pilots. Lieu- Klingon, ib 5 1 1 9 0 0 Callan, ss 4 1 1 3 1 o tenant Mose P. Quinn, baseball, and Governali, cf 5 I 3 5 0 0 Koslowski, ib 502.1101 Allison, ss 4 0 I 1 4 I Lieutenant (jg) Alfred B. Wolff, boxing, Daniels, rf 5 2. 2. 1 o o Yuknavich, ib 4 I I 4 4 0 are at the US Naval Academy for an in- Jones, cf 401100 Arden, rf 3 I I 0 0 0 Kreter, c 300401 doctrination course as Naval Reserve Ferrarini, If 4 0 I 4 0 0 Barrett, 2.b 100330 officers, and Lieutenant (jg) Gregory G. Farinon, 3 b 4 0 1 1 1 0 b Mara 000000 Blazek, p 4 0 0 0 I I Zitrides, USNR, football, is detailed to C. Brown, ih o o o o 1 o the US Naval Aviation Pre-Flight School Hughes, p 3 o o o 2. o Totals 38 6 13 17 11 1 at University of North Carolina, Chapel Totals 35 4 8 2.7c 12. 3 CORNELL (V) Hill. AB R H PO A E CORNELL (5) ABR H PO A E Stillman, ss 3 o o 1 1 o Stillman, ss 4 1 1 o 6 o Ochs, cf 4 1 1 3 o o Bufalino, If 300010 FIRM GETS NAVY E Ochs, cf 410700 Nordberg Manufacturing Co. in Mil- Bufalino, If 4 2. 2. 2. o 1 Turner, c 4 1 1 8 1 1 Turner, c 5 o 1 Ίi 1 o Parker, ib 300110 waukee, Wis., which is producing Diesel Daukas, ib 4 1 1 8 1 o Batt, ib 000100 engines for the Navy, was awarded the a—Hunter 1 o 1 o o o Hunter, 3b 300111 Navy E for excellent performance, May a Billings 1 o o o o o Steitz, 3b 4 o 1 1 3 1 Steitz, 3b 1 o 1 1 o o Jenkins, rf-p 400010 15. President of Nordberg is Robert E. Jenkins, rf 400000 Daukas, ib 3011110 Friend '08, and the secretary-treasurer is Kesten, rf 000000 Hamalian, p 100030 James A. Friend Ί6. Parker, ib 401010 Albright, p 1 o o o 1 o Kesten, rf 1 o 1 o o o Hamalian, p 3 o 1 o 1 1 MARYLAND ELECTS Totals 37 5 9 30 7 4 Totals 31 1 17 16 a—Batted for Batt in 9th. Cornell Club of Maryland at its annual a—Batted for Hunter in 8th. meeting April 19 elected Edward H. b—Batted for Barrett in 9th. Columbia 000 005 100—6 c—None out when winning run scored. Cornell 000 000 001—1 Carman, Jr. Ί6, president. Vice-president Score by innings: Runs batted in: Governali 2., Allison, is H. Mayhew White '2.3; secretary, Dartmouth 011 001 000 o—4 Yuknavich, Ferrarini, Hunter 1. Two-base James E. Kane, Jr. '31; treasurer, John hits: Allison, Arden, Farinon, Dillon. Stolen Cornell 400 000 000 1—4 deB. Shepard '19. The Club voted to Runs batted in: Turner, Daukas 1, Hunter, bases: Klingon, Governali. Double plays: Zarod, Koslowski, Steitz. Two-base hit: Yuknavich and Kίingon; Farinon, Yuknavich invest $500 of its funds in US War Bonds. Daniels. Three-base hit: Koslowski. Stolen and Klington. Left on bases: Columbia 6, bases: Bufalino 1, Burns. Sacrifices: Hamalian, Cornell 5. Bases on balls: Off Blazek 1, off OFFER INDUSTRIAL COURSES Hughes, Callan. Double plays: Hunter to Hamalian 1. Struck out: By Blazak 1, by Daukas; Hamalian to Daukas to Steitz. Left Hamalian 4, by Jenkins 1. Hits: Off Hamalian College of Engineering has announced on bases: Cornell 10, Dartmouth 7. Bases on 9 in 5^ innings, off Albright 3 in 1% innings, a free-tuition summer course for both men balls: Off Hughes 4, Hamalian 4. Struck out: off Jenkins 1 in 1% innings. Losing pitcher, and women to qualify them for employ- Hamalian. Umpires, Higgins and Baker. By Hughes 1, Hamalian 11. Umpires, Higgins ment in drafting and design departments and Frey. Time of game, 1:13. Time, 1:59. CORNELL (3) for the Army, Navy, and in war indus- tries . Sponsored by the US Office of Edu- AB R H PO A E ARRANGE SUMMER SPORTS cation in the University's engineering, Stillman, ss 311140 Members of the Department of Physi- Ochs, cf 100000 science, and management defense training cal Education and Athletics are conduct- Bufalino, If 300100 program, the course will begin July[6 and ing intramural contests in baseball, ten- Turner, c 1 o 1 1 1 o continue for fifteen weeks, six hours a Daukas, ib 3 o o 13 o o nis, and golf throughout the summer for day, five days a week. Steitz, 3b 300041 all men students who are here, including Kesten, rf 300100 Naval Reserve officers. Tentative ar- Classes will be given in mathematics, Parker, ib 1 1 1 1 3 o mechanical drawing, properties of ma- Jenkins, p 3 1 1 o 3 o rangements have been made by Acting Director Robert J. Kane '34 for simultan- terials, use of graphs, shop work,phy- Totals 14 3 5 11 15 1 eous contests in the three sports between sics, statics, design, and use of the slide DARTMOUTH (O) teams from Cornell and those from Col- rule. "This intensive training in work AB R H PO A E gate, Syracuse, Penn State, Fort Niagara, where there is a serious shortage," says Burns, If 300100 Dr. Arthur S. Adams, Director of the Zarod, 3b 300140 and perhaps also Brown University, Callan, ss 300100 Hamilton College, and Bucknell Uni- ESMDT courses, "will giγe young Koslowski, c 300311 versity. men and women opportunity to take ac- 301000 Daniels, rf Subject to University approval, plans so tive and important part in the nation's Jones, cf 1 O O I O O war effort in a relatively short time." Mara, ib 101900 far call for Colgate teams to play in Ithaca Barrett, ib 101410 July 8, with return matches in Hamilton Application may be made at the ESMDT Parmer, p 00003 i July ΊSL\ for Syracuse teams to come here office in Olin Hall, Ithaca. a—C. Brown I O O O O O July 11 and Cornell teams to go to Syra- For women graduates, the State De- P. Brown, p o o o o i o cuse July 2.9; games in State College, Pa., partment of Education is organizing sum- Totals 11 o 4 11 11 1 July 18 with Penn State visiting Ithaca mer courses in various colleges and uni- a—Batted for Parmer in 6th. August 1; and Fort Niagara teams here versities to train for work in war indus- Score by innings: July 2.5. tries. These courses will cover tracing Cornell 000 003 o—3 Dartmouth 000 000 o—o and drafting, ordnance and aircraft Runs batted in: Stillman, Turner. Two-base GULLION JOINS ARMY inspection, industrial chemistry and hit: Jenkins. Sacrifices: Ochs, Turner, Parmer. Blair Gullion, head coach of basket- physics, clerical work, machine opera- Double plays: Jenkins to Parker to Daukas; tion, and electrical and mechanical Stillman to Daukas. Left on bases: Cornell 3, ball, left Ithaca with his family June 1 Dartmouth 1. Bases on balls: Off P. Brown 1. for Denver, Col. As a captain in the Army assembly. Information may be obtained Struck out: By Jenkins 1, Parmer 1, P. Brown Air Force, he will organize and staff Air from Blanche Nechanicky, Supervisor 1. Hits: Off Parmer, 5 in 6 innings; off P. Force bases west of the Mississippi for Trade and Industrial Education for Wo- Brown, o in 1 inning. Losing pitcher, Parmer. men, State Education Department, Al- Wild pitch, Parmer. Umpires, Higgins and the physical training of some 400,000 Frey. Time of game, 1 :i4 prospective pilo ts of Army planes. bany. 43 6 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

FACULTY APPOINTMENTS are Jessie L. Ruhlman, RuthJ. Scott, and NEW ALUMNI COMMITTEE Three Trustees Continue Lillian Shaben, Extension. Dr. Arthur To Aid on Special Gifts G. Danks '33 was appointed associate Formation of a new alumni committee University Board of Trustees re-elected professor of Veterinary Surgery, Dr. on bequests, trusts, and special gifts has as Trustees for five-year terms ending in Stephen J. Roberts '37 was appointed been announced by Maxwell M. Upson 1947 Roger H. Williams '95, Neal D. assistant professor of Veterinary Medi- '99, chairman of the Trustee committee Becker '05, and William D. P. Carey '2.3. cine for next year. Williams served two terms as Alumni on University development. Charter Announcement has been made that members of the committee are forty- Trustee, 1919-2.9, and was coδpted by Professor Carl E. F. Guterman, PhD '30, the Board in 1933. Becker has been a seven alumni in seventeen States and the becomes July 1 Director of Research in District of Columbia, under the chair- member of the Board since June, 1935, the College of Agriculture and Director when he was elected for the two-year ship of Thomas B. Gilchrist '06 of New of the Agricultural Experiment Station. York City. unexpired term of the late Mynderse Van Graduate of Massachusetts State College Composed in large part of Cornellians Cleef '74. Carey was elected by the Board in 192.5, he became a graduate assistant who are lawyers and trust officers, the last October to fill the term of the late in Plant Pathology that year; has been committee has the general functions of Bancroft Gherardi '93. Assistant Director of the Experiment developing revenue for the University The Trustees appointed Dr. Joseph C. Station since 1936. through testamentary and other forms Hinsey to be Dean of the Medical College Appointed chairmen of departments in New York. He succeeds Dean William of gifts, offering its services to Cornell in the College of Arts and Sciences for lawyers and other alumni throughout the S. Ladd, who resigned because of ill five years from July 1, 1942., were Pro- health. Dr. Hinsey has been acting Dean country to accomplish this result, con- fessors Robert W. Shaw, PhD '34, As- sulting and advising with the University since January, following the death of tronomy; Frederick O. Waage, Fine Acting Dean Walter L. Niles Όo. He on matters affecting gifts, and devising Arts; and Ernest J. Simmons, Slavic appropriate legal forms and procedures. joined the Medical College from Stanford Languages and Literatures. Dr. Jennette The scope of the new committee's ac- in 1936 as professor and head of the De- Evans '14 was appointed acting chair- tivity is broader than that of the former partment of Physiology, and in 1939 man of the Department of Hygiene and committee on bequests, which it super- became professor of Anatomy and head Preventive Medicine for τ<$φ--/\τ , Dr. ) sedes. It will operate as a subcommittee of the Department. He is a Faculty repre- Dean F. Smiley Ί6, chairman, taking of the Trustee committee on University sentative on the Medical College Council sabbatic leave next year. Dr. Henry B. development, working through the office and to the University Board of Trustees. Wightman '2.7 was appointed to the staff of Provost H. W. Peters '14 and coop- Member of many professional societies of the University Infirmary and Clinic erating closely with the Cornell Alumni and of Phi Delta Theta, Nu Sigma Nu, for next year, as assistant professor of Fund Council. It is announced that care- Phi Beta Kappa, Alpha Omega Alpha, Clinical Medicine. and Sigma Xi, Dr. Hinsey received the ful and detailed consideration will be BS at Northwestern University in 192.2., TO DIRECT GENEVA STATION given to such problems as methods of making gifts through annuities and in- the PhD at Washington University Professor Arthur J. Heinicke, PhD '17, surance, the effects of new tax laws on School of Medicine in 1917; was assistant head of the Department of Pomology in special gifts and bequests, and other mat- professor of neuro-anatomy at North- the College of Agriculture, will become ters related to the financial welfare of the western until he went to Stanford in Director of the University. 1930 as professor of anatomy. State Agricul- President Edmund E. Day, empha- Dean Ladd has been on leave since he tural Experi- sized last week the special importance of suffered a heart attack last fall. He joined ment Station this committee in wartime. "The Uni- the Medical College Faculty in 1931 as at Geneva upon versity is making every effort," he said, assistant professor of Medicine and Asso- retirement of "to maximize its contributions to the ciate Dean; was appointed Dean in 1936. the present Di- war program through instruction, re- Four associate professors of the Agri- rector, Profes- search, and extension. Continuance of culture Faculty were appointed profes- sor Percival J. adequate financial support from alumni sors, and eleven assistant professors in Parrott, Sep- and other friends of Cornell is essential the State Colleges were advanced to tember 1. if this effort is to be completely suc- associate professorships of indefinite Professor cessful. It is gratifying to know that Cor- tenure. Heinicke will nellians recognize this fact and are will- Lowell C. Cunningham, PhD '34, be- continue to ing to volunteer their time and energy in comes extension professor of Farm Man- supervise work these times to make certain that Cornell agement; Richard F. Fricke '17, professor of the Depart- can do its full share to win the war." in Extension Service and Assistant ment at the College, carrying on a co- County Agent Leader; Frederick E. operative program of research in fruit Cβmmittee members thus far appoint- Heinzelman '2.2., professor in Extension growing with which he has long been ed are: Service and Assistant State Leader in active. He came to the Graduate School Alabama, William B. White '09, Birming- Junior Extension; Stanley W. Warren ham; Arizona, H. H. d'Autremont Ίi Tucson; in 1914 from the University of Missouri, California, Paul Overton Όo, Los Angeles; Ί.J, son of the late Professor George F. was appointed instructor in Pomology, Connecticut, George Munsick '2.1, Hartford; Warren '03 and Mrs. Warren (Mary became assistant professor in 1917, pro- District of Columbia, Thomas J. McFadden Whitson) '05, professor of Farm Man- fessor in 1910, and the next year was ap- '2.2. and Percy W. Phillips Ί5, Washington; agement. Florida, George B. Howell '17, Tampa; Il- pointed head of the Department. He is a linois, James P. Harrold '93, David F. Taber New associate professors in the Col- member of Sigma Xi, Phi Kappa Phi, Ί6, and Waldo F. Tobey '95, all of Chicago; lege of Agriculture areJDamon Boynton and Gamma Alpha, and is mayor of the Kansas, William D. P. Carey '2.3, Hutchinson; '31 and Raymond M. Smock, Pomology; Village of Cayuga Heights. The Geneva Massachusetts, Oley D. Roats '06, Springfield; Missouri, James V. Frank '2.2., St. Louis, and John I. Miller, PhD '34, Animal Hus- Station is administered by the Univer- George J. Mersereau '99, Kansas City; Ne- bandry; Roy A. Olney '15, Rural Educa- sity, and he will remain a member of the braska, Laurens Williams, 3d '31, Omaha; tion; Arthur J. Pratt 'z6 and Clinton B. Faculty here. New Jersey, Ernest L. Quackenbush Όo, Raymond '13, Vegetable Crops, Exten- Dr. Parrott has been at the Station for Newark; New Mexico, A. Warren Marshall sion; Herbert H. Schwardt, Entomology. '2.1, Deming. forty years, as Director since 1937. He Members in New York are Frank L. Casey In Home Economics, associate professors will continue to live in Geneva. '2.1, John J. Kuhn '98, Randall J. Le Boeuf, JUNE 4, 1941 437

Jr. '19, Dennis B. Maduro '2.3, Jacob Mertens, Since May 1, President Schurman has ment, and will be the better for it—for Jr. '19, William O. Morgan '00, and Win- resided at the University Club in New a while. Momentarily, at least, it saw throp Taylor '07 of New York City, C. W. Wilson Όo of Brooklyn, Elmer E. Finck Ί4 York City. He is in excellent health; "the glory of the coming of the Lord," and Harry L. Taylor '88 of Buffalo, Charles spent the winter in Winter Haven, Fla., and those who jvere here sensed a little E. Treman '30 of Ithaca, Edward Harris Όo with his daughter, Mrs. John Magruder, feeling of consecration. We've been and W. Clyde O'Brien '12. of Rochester, whose husband, Brigadier General John stressing the wrong things. What we've William J. Thorne Ίx of Syracuse, Ralph S. Kent '02. of White Plains, Warnick J. Kernan Magruder, is head of the United States been striving for hardest isn't worth '05 of Utica, and William F. Bleakley '04 of military mission in China. striving for at all. The importance of his Yonkers. university in a man's life is what it does Ohio, Alfred R. Horr '95 and John W. to him; not what he can do with his Reavis '2.1 of Cleveland and Henry W. Seney '2.2. of Toledo; Pennsylvania, Charles B. How- NOW IN MY TIME! education. land '2.6, G. R. Rebmann, Jr. Ί8, and Francis H. Scheetz '15 of Philadelphia, Frank B. By Romeyn Berry ALBANY CLUB ELECTS Ingersoll '17 and John H. Scott '09 of Pitts- burgh, and E. J. Kelly '09 in Scran ton; Wash- Thirty members attended the annual ington, James B. Kinne 'cα of Seattle; Wis- luncheon meeting of the Cornell Club of consin, Bruno V. Bitker '2.1 and Robert A. A Commencement held in wartime on Albany, May 2.1 at the Wellington Hotel. Uihlein '05 of Milwaukee. the twenty-fifth of May is a vastly differ- Raymond A. Dewey '±5 was elected pres- ent thing from a peacetime Commence- ident, succeeding Howard E. Sals bury FLORIDA HEARS BROADCAST ment on the fifteenth of June, or there- '19, who presided. Vice-president is Dr. Duncan T. McEwan '2.5 and Mrs. abouts. Better, and more impressive in Hugh W. Prytherch '15; secretary, Terry McEwan (Marion Friess), Grad '31, en- many ways! S. Hinkle '2.5; treasurer, Wesley S. tertained thirty-four members and guests There were no straw hats, but many Knighton '2.5; assistant treasurer, David of the Cornell Club of Southern Florida uniforms. Not once did the band play B. Andrews '33; directors for three years, for supper and to hear the national Re- "Hail, Hail! The Gang's All Here." I Daniel H. O'Brien '99 and Harry J. Fee- union broadcast May 13. William G. don't believe it would have played that. han '14. At wood, president of the Club and It wasn't the thing to play. There wasn't Speaker at the luncheon was Edward secretary of '92. whose Classmates were much lolling around on the grass; too L. Olsen, special agent of the FBI in celebrating their Fifty-year Reunion in chilly still. The double-header with Albany, who told of the war work of his Ithaca, acted as master of ceremonies. Dartmouth in the afternoon was gor- Bureau. All enjoyed the broadcast, and a pleasant geously played and sparsely attended. evening was spent renewing and making In the academic procession not a single NEW SOCIAL DIRECTOR acquaintances and singing Cornell songs. Trustee strutted this time. Your reporter watched like a hawk. They've got a job MESSAGE FROM SCHURMAN on their hands, those Trustees, and they On Commencement Day, May 2.5, the seemed to realize it. Time enough to University Board of Trustees sent a tele- strut when they've done it. gram of felicitation to Jacob Gould As a matter of fact, nobody strutted Schurman, former President of Cornell, and everybody seemed to feel pretty who three days earlier had celebrated his humble. This was one Commencement eighty-eighth birthday. The telegram when the Senior Class stole the show. was signed by H. Edward Babcock, They were on everybody's mind this chairman of the Board, and Frank E. year, and all else—visiting dignitaries, Gannett '98, chairman of the executive Trustees, Faculty, returning alumni—fell committee who was at one time secretary back into positions of relative insignifi- to President Schurman. It read: cance. You felt that. "The Board of Trustees of Cornell But the big difference became apparent University is mindful that fifty years ago the next day. Commonly, the University you assumed the presidency and leader- lets down momentarily with Commence- ship of the University. Your distinguished ment. Peace and quiet brood over the service remains a vivid and stimulating Quadrangle for a week or two. The few chapter in Cornell's history. Cornellians professors who still live along the elm- will always hold you in affectionate shaded avenues get a chance to relax and esteem. We extend to you our heartiest paint their front steps and trim up the greetings, good wishes, and good will." lilacs and prop up the Crimson Ramblers. Social director of Willard Straight In prompt reply, Dr. Schurman wired: But not this year! This year there was Hall next fall, succeeding Cecilia M. "lam much moved by your kind mes- no general exodus with the benediction. Werner, will be Eleanor Thomas (above). age of remembrance recalling my election On Tuesday following the Monday of She has been Placement Secretary of the to the Presidency of Cornell fifty years Commencement, the Campus presented College of Home Economics the last two ago. I had twenty-eight years of happy its common appearance of activity. Ex- years. A native of Iowa, Miss Thomas work in that office and your appraisal of cept that the tempo seemed to have received the BS at Iowa State College my service is more than gratifying. For been stepped up! It was as if the Univer- in 1930. She registered in the Graduate your own cordial greetings and good sity had said, "Now that's over! Let's School in 1936-37, and received the wishes I want to thank you and to say really get down to work now." Master's degree in student personnel that I most sincerely reciprocate them. From the whole episode I got the im- administration at Columbia University For your assurance that Cornellians will pression that this war had come just in in 1940. always hold me in affectionate regard, I the nick of time to save this country Miss Werner has resigned after three should be happy to believe that you cor- from itself, to shock all universities, in- years at Willard Straight Hall, to become rectly interpret their sentiment for it is cluding this one, into examining their July 1 dean of women at the Milwaukee, one I rank among the dearest and best own souls and giving them a good dose Wis., State Teachers' College. things in the world. And in this case I of flit wherever there were signs of moth The program of the Hall is carried on already return it, if I may say so, in and mildew. I think this University was by more than 400 men and women stu- advance." flitted over the week end of Commence- dents on twenty-one committees. 438 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

FORM NAVY FLYING UNIT CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS To Train as "Cornell Blasters" COMING EVENTS FOUNDED 1899 A week's visit to the University by Time and place of regular Club luncheons are printed separately as we have space. Notices of other Cornell 3 EAST AVENUE ITHACA, N. Y. Lieutenant Hosea C. Ballou '2.0, USNR, and a Navy examining board resulted in events, both in Ithaca and abroad, appear below. Published weekly during the University Contributions to this column must be received on organization of a Cornell unit of Naval or before Thursday to appear the next Thursday. year, monthly during summer. Aviation cadets. Named the "Cornell Owned and published by the Cornell Alumni Blasters" by its members, this unit of SATURDAY, JUNE 2.7 Association under direction of a committee prospective Navy fliers will report June Ithaca: First five-week Summer Session ends composed of R. W. Sailor '07, Phillips Wyman 2_5 at the Naval Aviation Pre-flight '17, and Walter C. Heasley, Jr. '30. Officers of MONDAY, JUNE 19 Training School at the University of Ithaca: Six-week and eleven-week Summer the Association: Creed W. Fulton Ό9, 1707 North Carolina, Chapel Hill. Sessions open Eye St., N.W., Washington, D. C, president; Walter C. Heasley, Jr. '30, 3 East Ave., Ithaca, Cornell Blasters expect to train to- SATURDAY, AUGUST 8 Ithaca: Six-week Summer Session closes acting secretary; Archie C. Burnett '90,7 Water gether as a unit. Enlisted as seamen, St., Boston, Mass., treasurer. second class, US Naval Reserve, they will MONDAY, AUGUST 10 receive a three-month "hardening" Ithaca: Second five-week Summer Session opens Subscriptions: $4 a year in U. S. and possessions; course at the new training school at the SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 12. foreign, $4.50. Life subscription, $jf. Single copies, Ithaca: All summer classes end IJ cents. Subscriptions are renewed annually unless University of North Carolina. From cancelled. there, rated as aviation cadets, they will FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER I.*) be assigned to a Naval Reserve aviation Ithaca: Freshman Week opens, for all Freshmen Editor-in-chief R. W. SAILOR '07 base for preliminary flight training and SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 2.6 Managing Editor H. A. STEVENSON '19 later to one of the three principal Navy Ithaca: Football, Lafayette, Schoellkopf Field Assistant Editor NAN W. BRUFF '09 flight training centers, at Pensacola, Fla., MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 2.8 Office Manager RUTH RUSSELL '31 Jacksonville, Fla., or Corpus Christie, Ithaca: University registration opens Assistant H. L. HOAG '40 Tex. Successful candidates will then be THURSDAY, OCTOBER I commissioned ensigns in the Naval Re- Ithaca: University classes begin Contributors: serve, Aviation, and assigned to duty SATURDAY, OCTOBER 3 ROMEYN BERRY '04 L. C. BOOCHEVER '12. with the fleet. Ithaca: Football, Colgate, Schoellkopf Field R. F. HOWES '2.4 W. J. WATERS 'iη Sixteen men are thus far officially re- SATURDAY, OCTOBER 10 West Point: Football, US Military Academy Printed at the Cayuga Press, Ithaca, N. Y. ported as enrolled in the Cornell unit, with a supplementary list of sixteen more SATURDAY, OCTOBER 17 to be enlisted. Any Cornellian who is un- Ithaca: Football, Penn State, Schoellkopf Field NEXT ISSUE IN JULY married, nineteen to twenty-seven years SATURDAY, OCTOBER 14 old, and who is otherwise qualified will Syracuse: Football, Syracuse This is the last weekly issue of the be accepted for the unit i£ enlisted before SATURDAY, OCTOBER 31 ALUMNI NEWS until fall. We have ac- June 18. Application may be made at New York City: Football, Columbia celerated our publication schedule to the Naval Aviation Cadet Selection SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7 accord with the University calendar, and Board, Third Naval District, 12.0 Broad- New Haven, Conn.: Football, Yale our next issue will be mailed early in way, New York City, or at any Navy July. We shall also publish as usual one SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 14 recruiting station. Ithaca: Football, Dartmouth, Schoellkopf issue in August, and resume weekly pub- Field Members of the Cornell Blasters re- lication beginning September 14. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2.6 ported as sworn in are Robert P. Clarke, Our office on the top floor of Alumni Philadelphia, Pa.: Football, Pennsylvania, Jr. '44 of Bronxville, William S. Burns, House will be open all summer. With the Franklin Field Jr. '43 of Ossining, James L. Kraker, Jr., University in session cotinnuously, it is '42. Class secretary, of Beulah, Mich., hoped that more Cornellians than usual Winslow W. Stillwell '42. of Staten Is- tion and fatigue on flying effectiveness. will take opportunity to bring their land, George G. Inglehart '41 of Water- Since the Navy has used his tests and in- families for visits to the Campus. Drop town, Robert D. Chaffe '43 of Paoli, Pa., troduced interviews by psychologists, in to see us when you are in town! David B. Artentzen '42. of Brooklyn, the percentage of students who "wash Richard C. Franklin '42. of Worcester, out" in flight training has been consider- PLACEMENT BUREAU CHANGE Mass., Donald L. Natapow '43 of Ro- ably reduced, it is reported. Most appli- Herbert H. Williams '2.5, Director of chester, Harry J. OΉara '44 of Syra- cants not adapted for flying are now dis- the University Placement Bureau since cuse, Mortimer W. Landsberg, Jr. '41 of covered before they are sworn in. it was established in 1933, has been ap- Mamaroneck, Carl G. Snavely, Jr. '41 of pointed administrative assistant to Dean Ithaca, Arthur A. Jansson, Jr. '44 of HU Ί4 IN OMAHA S. C. Hollister of the College of Engineer- Pearl River, Eskil B. Ringdahl '44 of Cornell Club of Omaha, Nebr., had a ing. He has an office in Sibley Dome and Rome, Louis C. Bufalino '41 of Swamps- table at a Chamber of Commerce luncheon continues also as Director of the Place- cott, Mass., Thomas R. Graham '44 of April xS addressed by Dr. Hu Shih '14, ment Bureau. Cleveland, Ohio. Chinese Ambassador. That evening, the Bureau office is now under the imme- Here with Lieutenant Ballou's exam- Club entertained the Ambassador at din- diate direction of C. Allan Smith '2.6, ining board was Ensign Barney Korchin, ner at the Blackstone Hotel. Among appointed assistant director. New mem- PhD '39. He devised the psychological those present were John W. Towle '94, ber of the staff is Russell J. Carter '41, aptitude tests which are now given to all Wayne C. Selby '17, Robert B. Edwards who is responsible for, part-time place- candidates for Navy flight training and '19 and Mrs. Edwards, Edward T. ment of undergraduates. was the first psychologist assigned to Schimmel '2.7 and Mrs. Schimmel, Dr. Naval recruiting duty. He was commis- Harold Gifford, Jr. '2.9 and Mrs. Gifford, MEMORIAL DAY address at ceremonies sioned in the Naval Reserve in June, 1941, Laurens Williams III '31, J. Lawrence in Ithaca was delivered by City Judge and at the Naval Reserve Aviation Base Cooke '34, and Captain J. Howard Cooke Harold E. Simpson '19. In the afternoon, at Floyd Bennett Field, Brooklyn, he '36 and Mrs. Cooke. Dr. Hu spoke in- an air show at the municipal airport was worked on problems of depth percep- formally of his experiences at Cornell largely attended. tion in landing planes and effects of emo- and since. JUNE 4, 1942. 439 ON THE CAMPUS AND DOWN THE HILL

TWENTY-FIVE ENSIGNS of the US ERIC LINKLATER in his new book of Naval Reserve were graduated May 2.9 SUMMER TERMS in the Colleges of his travels, The Man on My Back, speaks from the course in Diesel engines, in an Engineering, Architecture, Veterinary, briefly of his stay at Cornell, "which . . . impressive ceremony in the new lecture and the Law School opened June 1 with sits on a plateau between two ravines room in Olin Hall. Detailed here since registration of some 600 students for that descend to a long narrow lake whose February, they have gone to sea as engi- the fifteen weeks of instruction ending hilly sides in autumn wear a bright rough neer officers on patrol vessels. Their Com- September 12. This brings the total cloak of scarlet maple trees and crimson mencement speaker was Lieutenant Com- number of students in summer courses sumac. . . ." Linklater was here the mander C. S. Sebring, now of the Bureau to nearly 1,000, not including 127 Naval winter of 19x8-19 from Aberdeen Uni- of Ships, US Navy Department. He was in Reserve officers in Sage and more to versity, with a Harkness Commonwealth command of the US Submarine Pollock come. Fund Fellowship. operating out of Pearl Harbor la'st De- cember 7, and his words of advice to the JOSEPH L. MARTIN '44, Varsity full- young officers were received with closest members of the University, and six un- back whose knee was injured in the first attention. Presiding at the exercises was dergraduates who vote their choices play of the Pennsylvania football game Lieutenant Arthur S. Adams, Assistant after listening to the Chimes from various last fall, appeared at practice with the Dean of the College of Engineering, and stations on the Campus. baseball team last week. Dr. Francis J. Dean S. C. Hollister spoke briefly to the McCormick Ίo performed a cartilage THIS SUMMER, a full program of the graduates. operation in the Infirmary during spring daily Chimes ringing is being played by recess and sent Martin home to Camden, the present head Chimemaster, Phyllis LATEST CLASS of Naval Reserve offi- N. J., to recuperate. He is here for the Dittman '43. cers, arrived last week, totalled seventy- summer term in Electrical Engineering three, and two other classes, of fifty-four BARNES-SHAKESPEARE PRIZE was and expects to play football again next officers, are also in training. A fourth won by John H. Detmold '43 of Long fall. contingent scheduled to arrive July 8 will Island City. He wrote on'' Poetic Imagery bring the number here to xoo. All except in 'Richard IΓ." The Prize was endowed ROBERT S. WEISZ '39 of Washington, those who are married are quartered and in 1887 by Mrs. Alfred S. Barnes, for the D. C, who received the PhD at the May take their meals in Sage College. best prose essay by an undergraduate on 2.5 Commencement, has been awarded the writings of Shakespeare. one of three fellowships for work at the OFFICERS' CLUB of the ROTC elected Westinghouse Electric Manufacturing as next year's Senior officers Robert J. CORNELL ENGINEER editor for next Co. research laboratories in Pittsburgh, Mitchell of Ithaca, president, and Paul year is E. Walton Ross '43 of Rochester. Pa. Receiving the AB three years ago M. Kelsey of Ithaca, vice-president. Other Senior executives will be Clyde H. "With Distinction in Chemistry and Loughridge '43 of Lakewood, Ohio, General Studies," Weisz will continue FRESHMAN CAMP for women, Sep- managing editor; Robert H. Flack of his work in ceramics, especially toward tember zi-2.4 at the County Recreational Ithaca, business manager; Thomas T. improving the properties of porcelains Camp in the Danby hills, will be directed Harrow, Jr. of New York City, treasurer; for electrical use. by Mary A. Dietrich '43 of Ithaca. Like Morris Bradt, Jr. of Erie, Pa., advertising the camp for men, it is sponsored by manager; Ellsworth F. Filby of Kansas CURW. BROADCASTING from Station WHN City, Mo., circulation manager. Speaker last week, Adrienne Ames, motion pic- ETA KAPPA NU, Electrical Engineering at the annual dinner of the board was ture actress, told of her adventurous trip honor society, has elected as its Senior William E. Kennedy Ίo, manager of to speak at a War Bond rally in Ithaca officers for next year Robert E. Hutton American Machinist and Product En- May 13. She was on the flood-stalled of Canandaigua, president; Donald L. gineering. train and spoke of the long wait at Easton, Pa., enlivened by the Class of Johnson of Chicago, 111., vice-president; HOTEL EZRA CORNELL next year Raymond V. Pohl of Vernon, corre- '17, Reunion bound; of being flown to will be in charge of James H. Barrett '43. sponding secretary; Dean B. Wheeler of Ithaca with Dr. Hu Shih '14, and of being He is the fourth generation of his family Hancock, recording secretary; Frank K. entertained in Ithaca after her arrival. to become a hotelman; his father is the Faulkner of Aft on, treasurer. She was the guest of Charles E. Treman, proprietor of The Bald Mountain Lodge Jr. '30 and Mrs. Treman, sang with stu- at Old Forge. WAR EMERGENCY made necessary the dents at the Beta Theta Pi house, and attended a steak roast for Captain Arthur selection of two new Chimemasters this HO-NUN-DE-KAH, Senior honor soci- B. Treman '13 before he left for duty year instead of one as customary. Jean ety which has combined the former with the Army Air Force. "My hectic Hofstadter '44, assistant Chimemaster, Helios and Heb-sa in the College of journey to Ithaca turned out to be one was married recently to William Reiss Agriculture, has elected as next year's of the most pleasant experiences I've of the US Army and left the University president John D. Turrel of Attica. ever had," she concluded. "I hope I can to be with her husband in Columbus, Ga. George H. Wilcox of Bergen is vice- go back again." This left Phyllis F. Dittman '43 to suc- president; Bernard W. Potter of Truxton, ceed J. William Sower wine '41 who was secretary; Benjamin J. Miles of Kendall, head Chimemaster this year. Among the treasurer. WINNER of the J. G. White Prize for twenty-five who entered the Chimes proficiency in Spanish is Joseph Sbunsky competition this spring, Fremont J. Mc- GOETHE PRIZE of $40 was awarded to '43 of New York City. He also won the Kenrick '45 of Ebensburg, Pa., was Werner E. Warnbrunn '45 of Venice Corson French Prize for this year. James chosen to the staff in the semifinal judg- Center, for his essay, "Goethe's Attitude G. White, PhD '85, has provided three ing. Of the finals, concluded just before Toward the Problem of Politics." The annual prizes of $100 each, to be given Commencement, Robert H. Frankenfeld Prize, endowed in 1935 by Ludwig Vogel- to English-speaking students for pro- '45 of Buffalo was the winner. Judging is stein, is awarded annually for the best ficiency in Spanish and to Spanish-speak- by vote of the Chimes staff, six adult essay on Goethe or on German literature. ing students for proficiency in English. 44° CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

of the Commission from 1914-39, honor- ary president since, and a director of the Concerning NECROLOGY Thomas Alva Edison Foundation. He was the inventor of many electrical and light devices. Sister, Stella E. Sharp PhD '98. THE FACULTY '85 BS(EE)—DAVID EMMET LAIN, April 2.1, 194.x, in Seattle, Wash. A pio- '96 PhB—MARY ALINDA LATHROP, April 2.4, 1942., in Montclair, N. J. She : Teacher at neer in the early development of electric Michigan and Cornell" is the title of an attended the Attleboro, Mass., High railways, he designed the first electric article by William A. Frayer '03, former School and taught mathematics there, motor of its kind to be geared to a truck. professor of history at the University of 1888-94. She became head of the French A trial road on the north shore of Long Michigan, in the spring Quarterly Re- department of the Ithaca High School Island in 1890 was so successful that view of the Michigan Alumnus. He tells in 1896, remaining until 1907 when she Lain's motors replaced the horsedrawn of White arriving in Ann Arbor in 1857 went to Montclair, N. J., as head of the cars in Yonkers where he worked. He as the newly-appointed professor of his- French department of the high school. was superintendent of the new trolley tory and English literature," destined to Retiring in 1911, she lived in Montclair. line for its first five months, but resigned go far as administrator, diplomat, She was treasurer of the New Jersey because of ill health in 1891, and did not scholar, and eminent citizen, while re- League for the Hard of Hearing for many actively engage in engineering again. For maining always the teacher," and points years. Kappa Kappa Gamma. the last thirty years, he was a patent at- out the significance of the dedication to torney in Bellingham and in Seattle, '96 AB—LYDIA FIDELIA ROOT, April his Autobiography written fifty years Wash. Era editor. Daughter, Mrs. later, "To my old students this record of Roderick K. Smith (Marion A. Lain) '13. ix, 1941, in Kew Gardens. After graduat- ing at Skaneateles Academy, she at- my life is inscribed," commenting that nearing the end of his life as at the be- '91 AM—Mrs. Frank H. Burt (LOLA tended Wellesley College for two years. ginning he wanted to be known as a MADDOX) September 10, 1941. She re- She then taught for two years before teacher." In conclusion Professor Frayer ceived the AB at Knox College, Gales- entering Arts in 1894. She was a teacher says, "Honors were heaped upon him. In burg, 111., in 1890. She and Mr. Burt lived in Mt. Vernon for four years, and from every truth he had become one of Amer- for many years in Galva, 111. 1901 until her retirement in 192.7, she taught Latin and Greek in Jamaica, L. I. ica's most eminent citizens. But I think '92. ME(EE)—THOMAS WILSON VOET- Sisters, the late Eva R. Root '02. and Mrs. his thoughts went back to his first read- TER, February 5, 1942.. He entered Sibley Fanny R. Danser (Fanny O. Root) '96 of ing of Stanley's life of Arnold which College from the Pittsburgh, Pa., Cen- 81-09 Lefferts Boulevard, Kew Gardens. brought him to understand how real tral High School. He was an engineer for an influence an earnest teacher might Westinghouse Electric & Manufacruring '00 MD—Dr. CHARLES LEA REA, July exercise upon his country." Co., and a draftsman for Mclntosh Hemp- 2.6, 1941. He entered Medicine from the hill & Co. in Pittsburgh until 1895 when Carrollton, Mo., High School. He was a ERNEST E. COLE '95, of Bath, Trustee of he retired for five years because of ill physician in Kansas City, Mo., for many the University as State Commissioner of health. He was chief clerk of the US In- years. Education since 1940, will be retired dian School in Santa Fe, N. M., for June 30. Reaching the retirement age of several years, and later served as Ameri- Ίi BArch, '12. MArch—DAVID CLOSE seventy last November, he was asked to can consul at La Guaira and Caracas, COMSTOCK, May 19, 1942., in New York serve until the end of the fiscal year. In Venezuela, Antofagasta and Valparaiso, City. He entered Architecture from the recognition of forty-seven years of ser- Chile, Curacao, N.W.I., and Saltillo and Brooklyn Boys' High School. He was vice as a teacher, lawyer, legislator, and Guaymas, Mexico. Since his retirement with the architectural firm of Voorhees, administrator, Cole was awarded the about ten years ago, he had lived in San Walker, Foley, & Smith, 101 Park Ave- honorary LLB at Colgate University Diego, Cal. nue, New York City. In World War I, he May 17. At the presentation, Dean Carl served in with the camouflage A. Kallgren said: "He will always be '93 ME(EE)—WALTER WOODHOUSE division of the 40th Engineers. Gargoyle. remembered by a grateful State for his SIBSON, February 8,1942., in Mt. Airy, Pa. valiant and devoted service ... His career, He entered Sibley College from the Phil- Ίi MD—Dr. CARLHELMUTHMUELLER, rising from the position of a teacher in a adelphia, Pa., Central High School. He May ii, 1942., in Brooklyn. He entered one-room country school to that of Com- was secretary and treasurer of the Phila- Medicine from Polytechnic Preparatory missioner of Education, administrative delphia Drying Machinery Co. for forty School, Brooklyn. An eye, ear, nose, and head of all schools of his beloved State, years, and designed many improvements throat specialist, he was a member of the is itself an inspiration to our youth." in machinery for drying, conditioning, auxiliary staff of the WyckofT Heights finishing, and conveying industrial prod- Hospital and a consultant of the Bethany COLUMNIST JIMMIE POWERS in his ucts. He was also president of Sibson & Deaconess Hospital of Brooklyn until his Power House" column in the New York Stern, Inc. and the Germantown Braid retirement because of ill health about a Daily News May 15 describes Stanton Co. Brother, Horace E. Sibson '93; son, year ago. Phi Alpha Sigma. Griffis Ίo, University Trustee, as "the Walter W. Sibson, Jr. '30. most important individual, financially, '12. ME—JOHN PAUL SHAMBERGER, May in the amusement industry." He is in '95 PhD—CLAYTON HALSEY SHARP, 2., 1942., in Redlands, Cal. He received the virtual control of Madison Square Gar- May 13, 1942., in White Plains. He re- BS in ME at Maryland Agricultural Col- den, chairman of the executive committee ceived the AB at Hamilton College, in lege in 1908 and entered Sibley College of Paramount Pictures, and a backer of 1890; was instructor in Physics until 1900 in 1910. He was an engineer for the Rock Broadway productions. He is also owner when he became technical, director of the Island Railroad, Moline, 111., was a of Brentano's book stores. At present, Electrical Laboratories in New York government engineer for several years, Griffis is promoting athletic events in City of which he was later vice-presi- and was an engineer for Westinghouse the Army and Navy for the benefit of the dent. In 1933, he became a technical con- Electric & Manufacturing Co. Pittsburgh, dependents of men in service. sultant in electricity and light. A dele- Pa. A resident of Baltimore, Md., he gate here and abroad to meetings of the went to Redlands three months before THE REV. H. GRUBER WOOLF, who re- Electrotechnical Commission, he was his death. signed as Episcopalian University pastor president of the United States committee in 1938 and later became rector of the JUNE 4, I942. 441

American Church in Rome, is on his way ARTS DEAN'S LIST back to this country. In November, 1941, Dean's List of the College of Arts and Concerning he was arrested by Italian authorities on Sciences for the first term has been pub- charges of "suspicion of espionage" and lished by Dean Robert M. Ogden '00. It according to the Associated Press was contains the names of the twenty-five THE ALUMNI tried secretly, sentenced to thirty years' highest ranking students in each Class: Personal items and newspaper clippings imprisonment, and held incommunicado about all Cornellians a*re earnestly solicited for nearly six months before being par- CLASS OF 1942. Irving Baras, Brooklyn; John J. Barnhardt, '93—SYLVANUS D. LOCKE runs the doned May 12. by King Vittorio Eman- Jr., Concord, N. C; Anne H. Chambers, uel. His release, it is said, was arranged Rochester; Evelyn R. Cohen, New York City; Locke Steel Chain Co., Bridgeport, as a condition for reparation of certain Jessie L. Cohen, Sunnyside; Philip J. Dunlay, Conn. He is president of the park board Italian notables in this country. Manlius; Mary L. Fagley, Cincinnati, Ohio; and a member of the zoning commission, Stanley B. Greenfield, Brooklyn; Paul S. Hall, recreation board, and of the financial DR. JAMES A. WINANS '07, Evans Pro- New York City; Robert M. Hankin, Brooklyn; Edward W. Heiderich, Utica; Wanda M. advisory board of Bridgeport. fessor of Public Speaking at Dartmouth Jablonski, Mountain Lakes, N. J.; Caryl Jen- College, has retired at the age of seventy. nings, Glen Ellyn, 111.; Leo Mandelkern, CLASS OF 1897 He received the AB in 1897 and the AM Brooklyn; Herbert J. Marks, New York City; By J. K. Fraser, Correspondent Warren H. Miller, Bay Shore; Irma R. Moses, in 1903 at Hamilton College and last $00 Fifth Avenue, New York City Newburgh; Helen F. North, Ithaca; Gwen- year was honored by his alma mater dolyn C. Schmidt, Tenafly, N. J.; Christian WILLIAM M. CLYDE for some thirteen with the honorary Doctorate of Humane R. Sporck, Saranac Lake; Miriam Stein, New years was in charge of research statistics Letters. He became instructor in Elocu- York City; William C. Stokoe, Jr., Linwood; with Robert A. Cline, Inc., Cincinnati, Mortimer L. Welkowitz, New York City; tion and Oratory at Cornell in 1899, re- Richard S. Young, Waverly; George S. Zarou, Ohio. For the last year he has been in- ceived the LLB in 1907, and was ap- Brooklyn. active. His present address is 9969 Rob- pointed professor in 1914, remaining CLASS OF 1943 bins Drive, Beverly Hills, Cal. until he went to Dartmouth in 19x0. Gerald J. Aronson, Brooklyn; Biagio J. Address of BENJAMIN K. HOUGH is 2.01 Bonazza, Rochester; Tatiana Davis, New York Devonshire Road, Boston, Mass. His son, THE REV. JAMES A. G. MOORE, resign- City; Albert A. Dorskind, Brooklyn; Howard ing as Congregational student pastor Benjamin K. Hough, Jr., MIT '2.8, form- Feld, New York City; Paul Foote, Auburn; erly in charge of the Army Engineer after twenty-three years of service, will Miriam Freund, Albany; Richard I. Fricke, become September 1 associate superin- Ithaca; George Geller, Harrison; Robert S. Corps laboratory at the University, is a Gordon, Bridgeport, Conn.; Allan Gray, For- captain on active duty in the Army. tendent of the New York State Confer- est Hills; Arnold Hoffman, Rochester; Jack ence of Congregational Churches in A. Kaman, Rochester; Benjamin Kaplan, New Rochester. Rev. Edward L. Christie, York City; William E. Leuchtenburg, Elm- '89 PhB—PERRY POST TAYLOR, senior pastor of the First Congregational hurst; Jean F. Lewinson, White Plains; James member of the firm of Taylor, Mayer & Church of Ithaca, will succeed him as H. Lorie, Kansas City, Mo.; Daniel R. Ohl- Shifrin, attorneys, who has practiced law baum, New York City; Shirley L. Pierce, for nearly fifty years in St. Louis, Mo., student pastor. Cooperstown; Katharine L. Rogers, Westfield, N. J.; Joseph Sbunsky, New York City; Jack is retired from active practice. He writes PROFESSOR CHARLES E. CLADEL '2.8, J. Schwartz, Newark, N. J.; H. Priscilla that he enjoys meeting fellow Cornellians Hotel Administration and Mrs. Cladel Slimm, Utica; Barbara Wahl, Brooklyn; Fran- and hopes that those who are in St. of Glenside, Ithaca, have a daughter cis J. Worcester, Middletown; Catherine J. Louis, whether temporarily or perman- Young, Clifton, N. J. born May 19. ently, will look him up. His home is at CLASS OF 1944 PROGRESS in the manufacture of syn- 5811 Bartmer Avenue. Richard H. Adler, Buffalo; Laurie M. thetic rubber on a commercial scale was Brown, Brooklyn; Ralph W. Clemments, '98 AB, '06 PhD—DANIEL C. KNOWL- recently reported to the Senate committee Douglaston; Raymond D. Fear, Ithaca; TON is retiring as chairman of the de- investigating national defense by John George A. Gallagher, Deposit; Carol Gold- partment of social studies in the New L. Collyer '17, University Trustee and farb, Brooklyn; Joan Greenberg, New Ro- York University School of Education. chelle; Amy B. Hall, New York City; Harold president of the B. F. Goodrich Co., L. Herman, Brooklyn; Thomas H. Herring, Dr. Knowlton was head of the history Akron, Ohio. He said in his report, East Schodack; John A. Jacquez, New York department in the Ithaca High School "We still have a lot to learn about syn- City; Alan W. Kaplan, Richmond Hill; Joseph from 1900-03, and was a President White Moscarella, Brooklyn; Marylee Myers, Ithaca; Fellow in History in 1903-04. Before join- thetic rubber. Frankly, the problem of Beatrice Noback, Flushing; David M. San- making satisfactory truck tires with some, Ridgefield, Conn.; Arthur Schwartz, ing the School of Education faculty in synthetic rubber is still a big one. We New York City; Milton Shoshkes, Newark, 1930, he was head of the department of have made strides and will reach that N. J.; David Simon, Brooklyn; C. Lawrence history in the high schools of Mont- Swezey, Goshen; Hubert L. Thomas, Utica; goal, if day-and-night effort brings the Peter S. Tolins, Long Beach; Daniel H. Wel- clair, N. J., and later was associate pro- results in the weeks and months ahead ner, Albany; William Work, Ithaca; Norman fessor at Yale and Harvard. that it has in the past." B. Yourish, New York City. '99—JOSEPH B. FISK is retired and lives AMERICAN ASSOCIATION of Economic CLASS OF 1945 at 2.56 Woodbridge Avenue, Buffalo. Entomologists has named Professor E. Saul B. Appel, New York City; Richard L. '00—JOHN R. BENSLEY is vice-president Franklin Phillips, Apiculture, chairman Bach, Scarsdale; John A. Clements, Auburn; of the Mercury Tractor Co., 3933 Ellis Meta M. Flamberg, Bay Shore; Robert H. of a committee on coordination of en- Frankenfeld, Buffalo; Manuel Furer, Brook- Avenue, Chicago, 111. tomology with the war effort. The com- lyn; Beatrice G. Gottlieb, New York City; '01 CE—WILLIAM BUTLER, member of mittee ideals with the control of insect George Greenberger, Brooklyn; Virginia R. the board of directors of the United Casu- pests attacking food and fibres and a pre- Harriman, Hollis; Philip S. Herbert, South Orange, N. J.; Florence M. Jacobson, Kings- alty Co., 60 John Street, New York City, liminary report will appear in the next ton; Howard M. Kaminsky, Long Beach; and general council of the Company issue of the Journal of Economic En- Madeleine L. King, Ithaca; M. Robert Lust- since 192.6, was recently elected a vice- tomology. gar ten, Brooklyn; Helen E. Muenscher, Ithaca; president. He practiced law privately for Ruth E. Phelps, Corfu; Anita Pomeranz, about ten years before entering insurance THE REV. LEO A. SMITH, Catholic Beacon; Seymour B. Rockowitz, Monticello; student pastor in 1931-3Z, died May 15, Leonard Rush, Richmond Hill; William W. legal work. From 1912.-2.6 he was in Shepard, Cincinnati, Ohio; Dorothy Socolow, in Rochester. He was chaplain of St. charge of the legal affairs of the London New York City; Phyllis L. Surwillo, Roches- Guarantee & Accident Co., New York Mary's Home for Boys and St. Patrick's ter; Camille Tebsherany, Utica; Bertrand Home for girls in Rochester. Tenenbaum, New York City; Morley Walker, City. He was one of the organizers of the Birmingham, Mich. claim department in the National Bureau 442- CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS of Casualty & Surety Writers which is his return he will report to Governor Mrs. CECIL SNYDER in Kenosha, Wis. now the claims bureau of the Association Bacon of Delaware who recently ap- The others present were Mr. and Mrs. of Casualty & Surety Executives. For pointed Colonel Bullis chairman of the JESSEL WHYTE and Mr. and Mrs. WALTER the last fifteen years he has been president State committee on youth participation BRIDGEMAN. It would add a touch to be of the Metropolitan Claim Conference in home defense. He will also report to able to say that Mesdames Snyder, of which he was one of the organizers. He Paul V. McNutt, Federal Security Ad- Whyte, and Bridgeman were Classmates is also a member of the National Con- ministrator, and to the British Children's at Smith, but such a statement might ference on Street and Highway Safety. Fund of Canada. draw three protests. In any event, each Όz AB—WILLIAM H. PIKE is in the Ίo ME—JEROME A. FRIED, proprietor of them was a member of the best class general insurance business and also in the of the Ithaca Scientific Instrument Co., at Smith. theatre business. His address is Box 30, has expanded his business to occupy new Las Vegas, Nev. quarters in the former D. B. Stewart Co. '14 ME—ROBERT A. SWALM is with Aircraft Export Corp. Room 3x43, 30 '03—EDWARD E. WALKER is president building at Z09-13 South Tioga Street, Rockefeller Plaza, New York City. of The Walker Corporation, Erie, Pa. He Ithaca. may be addressed at the Erie Trust Build- '14 AB—Dr. Hu SHIH, Chinese Ambas- 1911 MEN sador to the United States, received the ing. By Oscar G. Miller, Class Secretary of Doctor of Letters at '05 CE—VINCENT R. STERLING may be 60 East Forty-second Street, New York City the 173 d commencement of Dartmouth addressed at Room 500, Federal Reserve HAROLD EPSTEIN recently resigned as College, May 10, and the honorary LLB Building, Cleveland, Ohio. general manager of the Buffalo Sewer at the 109th commencement of Oberlin Authority. "EP" is now project manager '06—HIRAM W. SIBLEY has a new ad- College, May 2.6. dress: Tres Fuentes Rancho, Nuevo, Cal. for The Foundation Co. and can be ad- dressed in care of his company at 2.Z9 '14 BS—Major LEONARD C. TREMAN is '07—Colonel ROBERT I. RANDOLPH is Marginal Street, East Boston, Mass. depot quartermaster and purchasing and on active duty at the Port of Embarka- contract officer for the Army in Ogden, Electrical engineer for the Philadel- tion, Seattle, Wash., and lives at the Utah, where his address is 1051 Twenty- phia Electric Co. is ROBERT A. HENTZ. Olympic Hotel. In World War I, he was sixth Street. a colonel in the Engineer Corps. In 1933- Bob is also a country gentleman, with a 34 he was an official of the Century of home and farm near Newt own, Pa. His 1915 MEN business address is 1000 Chestnut Street, Progress Exposition in Chicago. By Hugh C. Edminston, Correspondent Philadelphia, Pa. BOB HENTZ, JR. '38, Short Hills, N. Y. '07 ME—EARL W. ZIMMERMAN is US is with the Westinghouse Electric & engineer at the new Rome Airport. He HAROLD C. BROWN lives at 34 East Manufacturing Co. in Philadelphia. married Mrs. Maud Fairbanks Byam of Middlesex Road, Buffalo, and is one of North Adams, Mass., last March 7. the few remaining bond salesman in the 1912 MEN Class. '08 ME—The Westinghouse Order of Charles A. Dewey, Class Secretary BRATON R. GARDNER teaches journal- Merit for distinguished service has been Cornell Bldg., Pleasantville, N. Y. ism at Penn State. He lives at 814 West awarded to CHARLES C. BRINTON, en- EVERETT H. RANKIN, after thirty years Foster Avenue, State College, Pa. gineer for the Westinghouse Electric & with the Standard Oil Co. in India, has Manufacturing Co., Pittsburgh, Pa. Brin- SIDNEY R. JANDORF has been in the retired and returned for the Thirty-year Packard business in Elizabeth, N. J. ton was recognized "for excellence in the Reunion of his Class. A native of Ithaca, Last address: 2.02. Fifth Avenue, Roselle, field of mechanical engineering as ap- he will live near Ithaca in a country N. J., where he was reported offering plied to the assembly and repair of heavy home recently purchased. large reward for a satisfactory hair machinery both in the factory and in the C. HAROLD BERRY is Gordon McKay restorer. field, and for his ability in analyzing Professor of Mechanical Engineering in TOM KEATING has his own insurance field problems and inspiring both custom- the Graduate School of Engineering, ers and fellow workers with confidence agency in New York City, and lives at . 2.14 Carol Avenue, Pelham. in his judgment." Thirty-three years FRANKLIN E. HOLLAND is vice-presi- with Westinghouse, he was appointed dent of Murphy Paint Co., Ltd., and of Ί6 AB—Mrs. John D. Barnett (GRACE superintendent of the generator division Thorp-Ham brock Co., Ltd., 2.182. Lin- L. BENNETT) lives at Babb, Mont., on 1932., was promoted to assistant mana- coln Avenue, Montreal, P. Q., Can. ger in 1936, and in 1938 was transferred where she and her husband have a small LENNOX B. BIRCKHEAD is drill sales ranch and raise white-faced cattle. Re- to the service department, becoming manager of Bucyrus Erie Co., South cently Mr. Barnett offered his services to manager of electric service in 1941. He Milwaukee, Wis. His home is at 3452. the Government and, before leaving, lives at 317 Chestnut Street, Edgewood, North Hackett Avenue, Milwaukee. Pa. made arrangements for a farm hand to help his wife during his absence. It was '09 ME—WILLIAM G. SEYFANG is man- 1913 MEN six weeks before the man came, and Mrs. aging engineer, Board of Education, City By Class Correspondent Barnett ran the ranch single-handed. Hall, Buffalo. He lives at 116 Dorchester His predecessor in the title having re- Report is that'' she even bullied the bulls Road, Buffalo. signed to become chairman of the Trunk with a pitchfork." '09 ME—Colonel H. EDMUND BULLIS, Line Association, CEDRIC A. MAJOR was director of the Delaware Mental Hygiene appointed general solicitor of the Lehigh Society, has been granted a-leave of ab- Valley Railroad, according to the New sence to go to England at the invitation York papers of May 1. Major has been of the British government to study war on the legal staff of the Lehigh for many By Herbert K. Johnston, Class Secretary effects on British youth from fourteen to years. Tennis continues to be his favorite 81 Tacoma Avenue, Buffalo, N. Y. eighteen years of age, paying particular sport; he is secretary of the West Side GERALD M. BEST, 511 North Sierra attention to evacuation problems, par- Tennis Club at Forest Hills. Drive, Beverley Hills, Calif., regrets that ticipation in home defense, and war time ROGER HYATT is now Lieutenant-Com- he could not be with us for our Twenty- education. He will also study the possi- mander Hyatt, US Naval Reserve, on fifth, but would attend the local Cornell bility of expanding the hostel movement active duty. Reunion gathering if one was held for Los in which he is interested as vice-president A Cornell 1913-Smith College Reunion Angeles and vicinity. of American Youth Hostels, Inc. Upon was held recently at the home of Mr. and Louis C. HUCK, of the Huck Engineer- JUNE 4, 1941 443 ing Co., 32.45 Wight Street, Detroit, '2.2. AB—Mrs. James W. Kideney County, N. J., by Governor Charles Edi- Mich., attended our Twentieth in 1937, (ISABEL R. HOUCK) has been elected New son. but writes that pressure of war work York State president of the American As- '2.5 AM—PEARL S. BUCK will receive makes it impossible for him to get away sociation of University Women. Her an honorary LLB at St. Lawrence Univer- this year. We missed you, Lou. home is in Buffalo at 2.73 Summer Street. sity June 8. '2.2. BS, '2.4MLA—WALTER A. EWALD, '2.6 BS—HAROLD R. LABONTE is man- Ί8 ME—CRAWFORD C. HALSEY was assistant professor in the College of Ar- admitted January 1 to partnership in the ager of the Cayuga Beverage Co., West chitecture 193Z-34, married Mary L. public accounting firm of Pogson, Pelou- State Street, Ithaca, and a trustee of the Preston of Abingdon, Va., May 16. Com- bet & Co., X5 Broadway, New York Tompkins County Memorial Hospital. missioned a captain in the Army Air City. His home is in Montclair, N. J., at His home is on Cayuga Heights Road, Force, he expects to be assigned for train- 56 South Park Street. Ithaca. ing to the California Institute of Tech- Ί8, \i ME; '2.0, '2.2. AB—ROBERT nology, Pasadena, Cal. '2.6 AB—Address of Lieutenant FRED C. MOFFITT is a major in the Corps of GRETSCH, JR., USNR, is Naval Air Sta- Engineers, US Army, in charge «of the '2.3 AB—Summit, N. J., Herald of tion, Cadet Regiment, Corpus Christie, construction division in the office of the May 14 said "Schreyer Wins First in Tex. He was treasurer of the Fred Gretsch District Engineer, US Army, Seattle. Photo Contest at Central Jr. H. S." It Manufacturing Co., and was recently His brother, THOMAS E. MOFFITT '2.0, re- refers to George Schreyer, son of WIL- elected a trustee of the Lincoln Savings turned from the Army to civilian life LIAM A. SCHREYER '2.3, who won first Bank of Brooklyn. last August and is a chemical engineer prize in the third annual photography contest sponsored by the Central Junior '2.7 AB, '2.9 LLB—WARREN M. CARO is for Hooker Electrochemical Co., Ta- a lieutenant (jg), US Coast Guard Re- coma, Wash. High School with his picture, "Gothic Grace," of the corridor of Myron Taylor serve, in training at the Port of Balti- '19 BS—Mrs. Leonard S. Allen (ELIZA- Hall. more, Md. BETH CHURCHYARD) lives at 1402. East '2.7 ME—HENRY S. GERMOND III is Nineteenth Street, Tulsa, Okla. She has '13 AB; '2.3 AB—LEON MANDEL has sales manager for elevators and lift- a daughter Constance, seventeen, and reported for active duty as a major, AUS, trucks of the Revolvator Co., North two sons, Leonard, Jr., fourteen and Air Corps. He informs us that HOULDER Bergen, N. J. His home address is Box Thomas, twelve. HUDGINS 'Z3, now deputy director of pur- 146, Little Silver, N. J. '19 BS, '2.0 MLD—NORMAN T. NEW- chases for WPB, says that at the present TON has a leave of absence as assistant time the Shoreham Hotel in Washington '2.7 CE—C. HERBERT MOORE has been professor of landscape architecture at is not unlike Sheldon Court. You see all a sanitary and hydraulic engineer in Harvard University to enter service as a the old familiar faces and find that the various parts of the country since captain in the Army Air Force for work bearers are living in one room, just as graduation. For the last three years he in camouflage. they formerly did, and eating at the has been a consulting engineer at 904 '1.0, 'zi ME—Lieutenant ALBERT R. nearest cafeteria. South Layton Boulevard, Milwaukee, NOLAN is assigned to the Detroit Ord- '2.3 AB—Captain ARTHUR B. TREMAN Wis. Engineering News Record recently nance District, First National Bank of the Appointment and Procurement published his article "Sewage Disposal Building, Detroit, Mich. Division, US Army Air Forces, reported for a Housing Project." Moore lived in '2.0 BS—DONALD HOAGLAND is an ad- for active duty at Boston, Mass., May Ithaca and attended East Hill School vertising salesman for the Reinhold Pub- Z5. He was Ithaca district manager of when his father, the late Herbert M. lishing Corp., Chicago, 111. He has two Carl M. Loeb, Rhoades & Co., New York Moore, was University pastor at the sons. City. Presbyterian church. '2.4 PhD—"The effect of bombings of '2.8 EE—DAVID J. C. WERNER has been 1921 MEN commissioned a lieutenant E(V)S in the By Allan H. Treman, Class Secretary civilians is good for war, but bad for Ithaca, N. Y. peace,'' declared Dr. JOHN P. NAFE, chair- US Naval Reserve, and is attached to the ANDY (ANDREW C.) DAVIDSON who man of a two-day conference at the sev- Bureau of Ships in the interior communi- was with a mortgage company for enteenth annual Midwestern Psycho- cation and fire control section, Naval eleven years, has been connected since logical Association held recently in Chi- Munitions Building, Washington, D. C. May 1, 1941, with the real estate depart- cago. Though convinced that freedom 'x8; '2.5 BS—FRANCIS J. HYNES is man- ment of Barry, Wainwright, Thacher & from Fascist slavery is a bargain at any ager of the Hillsboro, Tampa, Fla. He Symmers, attorneys, at 72. Wall Street in price, Dr. Nafe predicted that the present succeeds JOHN M. CRANDALL '2.5 who is New York City. His home address is 333 war will exact the highest price ever with the Quartermaster Corps, Atlanta, Longview Road, Port Washington, Long paid in the history of the world and that Ga. Island. He was a second lieutenant of the face of post-war Europe and China '2.8 DVM—GEORGE H. HOPSON is vet- Infantry during the last war, and is a would be like that of Europe after the erinarian for DeLaval Separator Co., member of Alpha Tau Omega. Napoleonic wars or of the post-Civil War USA and Canada. From 1936-41 he was JOHN B. HAWLEY, JR. is an executive of South in the United States. Dr. Nafe, veterinarian for the New York & Kings the Northern Pump Co. of Minneapolis, who received the AB at the University County Medical Societies. Minn. US Navy spokesmen hailed as "a of Colorado in 1911, is head of the psy- production miracle" the job that he has chology department at Washington Uni- '2.9—FRANK L. NEWBURGER, of New- done in cutting red tape to make his "the versity, St. Louis, Mo. burger, Loeb & Co., 1419 Walnut Street, outstanding plant under Naval jurisdic- '14 CE—M. MEAD MONTGOMERY is a Philadelphia, Pa., has been ordered to tion." Commander B. K. Culver, resident lieutenant in the US Naval Reserve and is active duty as a captain in the US Med- Navy inspector, said adjectives can't stationed in Washington, D. C. ical Corps, administrative branch. compete with the cold statement that '2.4, 'z6 BChem—HENRY C. GIVAN, JR. '2.9—Mrs. Vincent T. Raymond (LIL- "it's the largest gun mount assembly in is a captain, Army Air Force, reporting to LIAN I. ASAI) has a position with the the world." The company is said to be Santa Ana, Cal., May 8. He was sales USO Office, Fifty-second Street and Lex- two years ahead of schedule and increas- promotion executive of Equitable Gas ington Avenue, New York City. Her ing the margin daily, and the result of Co., Pittsburgh, Pa. home is at 314 West Ninety-fourth operations apparently elicit great praise Street. among Navy men. '2.5 BS—CLYDE C. JEFFERSON has been appointed prosecutor of Hunterdon '30 BS; '33 AB—EVERETT E. BURDGE, 444 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

for the last six years manager of the '33 AB, '36 LLB—Private RICHARD H. '35, '36 BS—HUGH A. MORAN III is Anthony Wayne Hotel, Hamilton, Ohio, BEYER is in Co. A, 2.d Platoon, Tenth Bn, with the firm of Salisbury & Robinson, has been transferred to St. Joseph, Mo., AFRTA, Fort Knox, Ky. attorneys, 840 Roosevelt Building, Los as manager of the Robidoux Hotel, a '33 AB, '37 LLB—First Lieutenant Angeles. His wife was recently admitted unit of the American Hotels Corpora- RAYMOND J. COTHRAN is assistant adju- to the California Bar and is with the tion. His wife is the former AMY E. tant in charge of personnel at Madison firm of Claude I. Parker. They live at CLARK '33. Barracks. He was practicing law in Lock- 1134 North Jackson Boulevard, Glen- '30 AB—ROBERT L. BLISS married port. dale, Cal. Moran is the son of the Rev. Friede Smidt of New York City, May 16, '33 CE—IRVING H. KINGMAN is as- Hugh A. Moran and Mrs. Moran of in Cornwall. GEORGE E. BLISS '2.5, L. signed to the xist Engineer Regiment. Ithaca. SUMNER FUERTES '2.7, WlLSON HAMILTON Langley Field, Va. His home address is CLASS OF 1936 '2.7, LEWIS H. DURLAND '30, R. PAUL RFD 1, Christie Hill Road, Darien, Conn. SHAROOD '30, FABIAN W. KUNZELMAN Women '34 MD—Dr. ADOLPH MELTZER is By Mary T. Nigro, Class Secretary '38 and CARL T. SPANG '39 were ushers. practicing medicine in Worcester, Mass., 68 Bird Avenue, Niagara Falls, N. Y. Bliss, a member of the Cornell Club of and is junior visiting surgeon at the Beth New York, and of Psi Upsilon, is with BETTY CHUCKROW SIMON (Mrs. Hubert Israel Hospital, Boston. Compton Advertising, Inc., 630 Fifth K.) lives at 14 Washington Place, East, Avenue. Mr. and Mrs. Bliss will live at '34; '37 ,MSA, '40 PhD—MAXINE New York City. Fox Hollow, RFD 3, Newburgh. (MOORE) and MILO J. PETERSON, MSA LEWRAINE MAGEE BUCKINGHAM (Mrs. '37 have a daughter, Karen Maxine, Henry M.) has moved to 5x1 Linden '30, '31 AB—Private ARTHUR P. HIB- born May 5. Mrs. Peterson is the daugh- Avenue, York, Pa. LEWRAINE has two BARD is in Co. D-3, 6th Medical Training ter of Professor Clyde B. Moore, Rural daughters now. Bn., Camp Lee, Va. Education. Peterson is teaching in Clem- CHARLOTTE (PUTNAM) REPPERT and '30 CE—JOSHUA W. ROWE is a captain son University, Clemson, S. C. CHARLES '34 have bought a new house in the 104th Observation Squadron, US '34 BS—FRANK M. KING, JR. is man- and are now installed at Z651 Andover Army, stationed at Atlantic City, N. J. ager of the Sagamore Golf Club and lives Road, Columbus, Ohio. His address is E-i Providence Court. He at The Westbury, 15 East Sixty-ninth DOROTHY CONVERSE SCHNUR may now has a daughter, Nancy Elizabeth, born Street, New York City. He has a daugh- be addressed at Box 413, Northbrook, last November 2.5. ter, Olga Anne, born April 13. 111. Men '30 BS—ARTHUR B. BUTLER lives at 333 '34 BS; '39 EE; '04 ME—Mrs Robert B. Sunset Avenue, Corpus Christi, Tex. He By Charles E. Dykes, Class Secretary Roe (ELIZABETH S. FOOTE) has a short has a daughter, Rebecca Bell, born last 22 j South Albany St., Ithaca story, "Tailspin," in the June issue of February 2.5. JIM AYERS is in the Army and is lo- Thrilling Love magazine. She is the wife cated in Surinam, Dutch Guinea. '31 AB, '34 MD—DR. LEROY WARD- of ROBERT B. ROE '39, who is an engineer DWIGHT ROCKWOOD and wife are living NER lives at 83 Park Avenue, Saranac for the Sperry Gyroscope Co., Brooklyn. at 818 Sixth Street, Lake Charles, La. Lake, and has his offices at 38 Church They live at 79 Maple Street, West Hemp- They have a son, Dwight Nelson, Jr. Street. stead. ROE is the son of MAYO E. ROE '04 DICK CULVER has deserted the hotel '31—THEODORE S. RYAN lives in Salis- of 332. Bird Avenue, Buffalo. business to become secretary-treasurer of bury, Conn. His business address is Room '34 EE—RICHARD F. HARDY received a the Benson-Rixon Clothing Co., Chicago, 1004, 1 East Fifty-seventh Street, New commission as lieutenant (jg) in the US 111. York City. Naval Reserve last April and reported to CHARLIE LOCKHART is located at '31, '3X AB—JOSEPH W. ALAIMO is the Officers' Training School at Norfolk, Randolph Field, Tex. He expects to re- with the law firm of Baker & Carver, May 4. He is living at the US Hotel ceive his wings in July. 801 Genesee Valley Trust Building, Chamberlin, Old Point Comfort, Va. JOHN MESSERSMITH is with the Navy Rochester. '35 ME—WALTER H. MORRIS is a first Medical Corps, stationed on the aircraft '31, '32. ME—CARL W. PEPPERMAN is lieutenant in the Signal Corps, US Army, carrier, USS Wasp. chief engineer of The Lewis Engineering with the 911th Signal Depot Company, JOHN HART recently received his wings Co., Naugatuck, Conn., where he lives Sacramento, Cal. His home address is 816 t Brooks Field near San Antonio, Tex. at 59 Woodlawn Avenue. Oak Avenue, Columbia, Miss. WILLIE WRIGHT is assistant cashier of '3Z AB—JOHN H. WALKER is a feature '35, '36 AB—JOHN P. BATCHELAR re- Equitable Life located in Toledo, Ohio. writer and war analyst of PM Sunday cently married Laura Sidwell of Wil- He and his wife live at 3769 Lockwood Magazine, Brooklyn. He was editor-in- kinsburg, Pa. Avenue, Toledo. BOB HOOK is stationed at Camp Davis, chief of The Cornell Daily Sun. '35 BS; '35 AB—JAMES P. SCHOFIELD N. C. '31 AB, '35 MD—DR. WILLIAM T. and Mrs. Schofield (MARIAN STILWELL) MEDL is resident physician at St. Luke's '35 of Perry, Ohio, have a son Herbert CLASS OF 1937 Hospital, New York City. He recently James, and a daughter, Cora Diane, born married Janet W. Thompson of New recently. Women York City. Dr. and Mrs. Medl are living By Carol H. Cline, Class Secretary '35 AB, '37 CE—BENIGNO RODRIGUEZ- 1053 Cumberland Avenue, Ό ay ton, Ohio at 536 West 136th Street. SANTOS is secretary of the Porto Rico HELEN LUIPPOLD is married to Marion '33 AB; '04 AB; '05 AB—WINIFRED I. Salt Works, Mayaguez, P. R., of which S. Reed and is living at 85 Columbia SCHADE will be married to Ralph E.Mc- his father is president. His address is P O Terrace, Weehawken, N. J. Reed is in Kinney, insurance counselor, of Akron, Box 148, Mayaguez, P. R. the service. Ohio, June 13. She is the daughter of '35 BS—WILLIAM C. HAYNES, who has Someone forwarded a clipping from JAMES W. SCHADE '04 and Mrs. Schade been working in the US Regional Re- the New York Times which tells of (MARION W. ELLIOTT) '05 of 189 Merri- search Laboratory at Peoria, 111., is now JOAN SLUTZKER'S engagement to Sergeant man Drive, Akron, Ohio. a lieutenant in Field Artillery at Fort Eli Smith. Sergeant Smith is stationed at '33, '34 BS—Sergeant LAWRENCE B. Sill, Okla. Fort Dix. Joan's a deep-dyed Cornellian, CLARK has been transferred from Camp 35' 37 BS—ARTHUR C. HILL is adju- you know; her dad is JOSEPH SLUTZKER Sutton, N. C, to the Officers' Candidate tant of the Fifty-Seventh Signal Bat- '08, her mother is the former PAULINE School at Fort Sill, Okla. talion, Camp Edwards, Mass. HIRSH '09, and her sister MARCIA is '41 JUNE 4, I942. 445

(the remaining member of her family we The last we heard he was "on the ready" Men don't speak of—kid brother Dick went to be sent overseas. He flew home to By Tom Book, Class Secretary to Princeton!). Lewistown early in January, to marry Box 96, Massena, N. Y. YOUR CORRESPONDENT spent the last Gerry Walck of Niagara Falls January 8. Helen Adler was married to JOHN two weeks in April visiting with the Doc PRES WEADON is another one of WOLFF sometime after the first of the Navy at Pensacola, Fla. We heartily these engaged guys. The girl is Lenore year. recommend joining the Navy Flying Macdonald of Garden City. Pres gradu- ED DEVINE'S engagement to Betty School down there and lying on the ated from Cornell Medical College in Janke of Detroit was announced in beach at the Officer's Club when not on 1941, and is on the surgical staff of January. duty, getting a suntan and watching the Bellevue Hospital, New York City. FRED WISE wrote late in March with seaplanes practice landing and taking off. KEN ST. JOHN is supervisor of the Farm some news of himself. He is working in All the men look so fit, and it gives one Security Administration field office in the drafting section of the Naval air- a thrill to realize those are the men who Avon. All of you who are in the Roches- craft factory in the Philadelphia Navy are helping to defend us and our way of ter district be sure and turn your radios Yard. He says he understands WALT life. to station WHAM on Saturday mornings FOERTSCH is applying for a commission Men at 6:45. He often broadcasts his com- and hopes to get into active service. By William G. Rossiter, Class Secretary pany's weekly series. EVERETT RANDALL sent a letter telling Melville Shoe Corp., 2/ West Forty-third Street, GARRY PEAVY has changed his address. that since March, 1940, he has been New York, N. Y. It is now 41 Bellair Drive, Dobbs Ferry. working for the Soil Conservation Ser- My hat's off to JERRY WEIERBACH! he's Heard from COLEY ASINQ^ the other vice as a surveyor. He is stationed in the first '37 man to answer my plea—oft day, and I want you all to sit up and Rome, Ga. He saw BILL BARNUM at repeated—for news of Classmates' do- take notice. He is now Captain C. D. Fort Wheeler in Macon, Ga., where Bill ings written on the back of a penny post- Asinof, commanding Company "A." His is stationed in the Army. card and addressed to me. I quote: "Dear address is 601 T. D. Bn., Camp Blanding, RALPH MCCARTY is responsible for the Bill, Glad to see '37 men have a column Fla. He says he recently visited with following news about some of his fra- all their own, small as it is. I haven't JACK THOMAS and wife ("Cookie") at ternity brothers: "BILL CHANDLER is in much news myself except I'm with the Narragansett Terrace in Riverside, R. I. Texas at Fort Bliss. BOB MANN was en- Best Made Silk Hosiery Co. and presi- gaged to Betty Swartley and said they dent of the Lions Club here in Quaker- CLASS OF 1939 would be married in March. Russ town. BUD CLEMENT is in training in the Women HOPPING was married in Texas where he Naval Reserve on the Schoolship Prairie By Sally Splain Serbell, Class Secretary is a lieutenant in the Army." Ralph him- State at 138th Street, New York City. $33 Springfield Avenue, Summit, N. J. self is still working for the Aluminum Last I heard of DICK BRAYTON he was in Several girls have written me lately. Co. of America at the Fairfield works. Samoa!" Many thanks for your con- It's more satisfactory to hear directly RUSTY CONDON was commissioned a tribution, Jerry. I hope it's the first of a than by the grapevine which isn't always second lieutenant in the Medical Ad- deluge of news. reliable. However, I'll take the news any ministrative Corps of the Army, March WILLIAM S. (Bill) GAVITT was com- way it comes and be very happy to pub- 2.8, and on that same day he was married missioned a lieutenant in the Signal lish it. to JEAN RODGER '40, Cornell Theta. Corps, US Army, at Fort Monmouth, MARJORIE BERGMANN, now Mrs. Aaron Rusty and his bride are living in Ana- April 10. Since volunteering last January Douglis, writes, "Ever since last Decem- costia, D. C, and Rusty has started a 6, Bill has really seen the country. ber, I have been teaching at Pratt Insti- course in the classification section of the From Fort McClellan, Ala., to Tennessee tute in Brooklyn. EVELYN WILLIS is an Army personnel system in Fort Wash- to Arkansas to Louisiana to California instructor there also and we often have ington, Md. Address: c/o Mrs. James and then back to New York, not to men- gay times together. On December 18, I Flaherty, Route 4, Anacostia, Md. tion the States covered enroute. married Aaron Douglis who is now in CHARLES P. CLARK last February re- the Army. He is a graduate of Chicago On the land, in the air, on the sea, our ceived a commission as captain in the University and before enlisting was an Classmates are doing their share. What, Army and married Mary McGiffert of economist with the Surplus Marketing where and how? You tell me and I'll Oklahoma. He is stationed at Camp Administration." tell the Class! Sit down now and send me Shelby, Miss. the needed postcard filled with news. ELEANIR DODGE HASSETT writes, "On This is all for the time being. Let me April 11, I was married to THOMAS C. have your letters; they have been com- HASSETT '40. He's a sergeant and is sta- ing in fine. 1938 MEN tioned at Fort Knox, Ky. I am working By William C. Kruse, Class Secretary as a technical librarian in the Colgate- 194O WOMEN Kingsivay Apartments, Wayne, Pa. Palmolive-Peet Co. in Jersey City, NJ." By Carol B. Clark, Class Secretary The latest address of HERB MAY is 565 JANE (DAVISON) and CHARLES FAST '37 41 Laurel Ave., Binghamton, N. Y. Congress Avenue, Havre de Grace, Md. have a son, Peter Morgan, born last PEG STINARD Hacker can be reached First Lieutenant ANTHONY (Nino) March z. Many thanks to both of you at Box 300, Red Mill Road, Rensselaer. GIOIA has been called to active duty. for the news, and best wishes for the MARY HEWLITT is out in Wisconsin Nino is located at Fort Bragg and is at future. again, working on her Doctor's in phy- present working with a battery of Other news by way of the Alumni sics. Write her at Sterling Hall, Madison, selectees. Give 'em a break, Nino! He Office: HILDA KELLER was married to Wis. says his best mailing address is Box 108, HARRY S. MYERS '38, December zo, 1941. ALICE CHISM is in Reno—working; 575 Rochester. She is living at 17 North Park Street, Ridge Street, Reno, Nev. Lieutenant BILL ORR is, or rather was, Clyde. I believe her husband is in the ELEANOR WEBER, a two-year Cornel- at Camp Stewart, Ga., in the 241st C.A. Army now. lian, is an advertising solicitor, doing

Use the CORNELL UNIVERSITY PLACEMENT BUREAU Willard Straight Hall H. H. WILLIAMS '25, Director CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

her own copy and layouts, for The 8 Raleigh Times. Her address is X2.o Hills- boro Street, Raleigh, N. C. Peter Avery Anderson sounds like the A distinguished light name of Patty's baby to me! He was Whisky from choicest born early in April. Address Mrs. PATTY of Highland Stocks. AVERY ANDERSON at Noank, Conn. BELLE AYERS and JIM PLUNKET '39 were married recently. Write Mr. and Mrs. James C. Plunket at Roxbury. BARBARA THRO is now Mrs. F. C. Kotka, 12.8 West Queen Street, Ingle- wood, Cal. CLASS OF 1941 BLENDED SCOTCH WHISKY 86 proof Women By Ruth E. Cothran, Class Secretary Court House, Plattsburg, N. Y. PEGGY (MARY) RETTGER is having a e

Mass., for other duties at the South- western Proving Ground, Hope, Ark. CASCADILLA Lieutenant PAUL SCHOELLKOPF has re- cently been stationed out at San Diego, SUMMER SCHOOL Cal., in the Coast Artillery, "where CAMP OTTER they have searchlights ready and wait- ing." PAUL may be addressed at Box 443, For Boys Our summer session July 7— Niagara Falls. TOM ANDERSON is about to join all the August 21 will assist many students rest of the ensigns in the Naval Reserve. 7 to 17 years toward admission to Cornell in He is taking a course down at Annapolis September or to securing mathe- preparatory to going into the Navy. DONALD A. BEDELL has enlisted in the The Camp staff has been com- matics credit required for V-1 meteorology division of the Air Corps pleted with its various specialists status in college. and is now taking courses in meteorology in nature study, swimming, riding, in New York City, living at 2.162. Uni- handicraft, first aid and hygiene, versity Avenue. canoe trip and athletics. The ac- BILL SCHMIDT, a medical student at the celerated program will give each CASCADILLA SCHOOL University of Rochester, is also coach of boy a real program in physical fit- Catalogue ITHACA, NEW YORK Rochester's frosh track team. Recently ness and genuine camping. Bill Bill's team took a sound beating down Crewson will take out more canoe Ithaca way. After finishing school there, trips than ever. Bill enters the Naval Reserve in the A resident physician and nurse Hemphill, Noyes C& Co. Medical Corps. will assure absolute safety and EDWARD C. FRANK, JR. is among the health. Members New York Stock Exchange Army officers recently promoted to first The special car will leave Buffalo lieutenant. He is now out at Fort Sill, July 2. 15 Broad Street New York Okla., in command of a battery. His ad- dress is 2.0th F.A.S., Fort Sill. INVESTMENT SECURITIES HAROLD ZOOK, from all reports, is travelling all over the central part of Jansen Noyes '10 Stanton Griffis ΊO the country doing work for an archi- 1. M. Blancke Ί5 Wίllard I. Emerson Ί9 tectural concern engaged in building defense plants. His headquarters are at BRANCH OFFICES 614 North Twenty-ninth Street, Parsons, Albany, Chicago, Harrisburg, Indianapolis, Kan. Philadelphia, Trenton, Washington If s Easy To Visit Ithaca THE PHILLIPS EXETER ACADEMY 24TH SUMMER SESSION Overnight From The nearly completed roster of Advanced work or review for admission fifty boys for this 32nd season indi- to school, college or the services cates (1) that many are sons of July 7-August 28 Cornellians; (2) that a majority Inquire: Director of the Summer Session PEN expect to go to Cornell; (3) that a EXETER NEW HAMPSHIRE substantial number are sons of STATf former campers. KISKI SUMMER SCHOOL NEW YORK In a war torn world it is more and NEWARK or All subjects for college entrance avail- important than ever that our boys able under regular Kiski faculty. Combi- READING TERMINAL, PHILA. should enjoy and benefit by the nation of instruction with unexcelled re- WESTWARStandarD d LighTimt typee (Wa, a.mr. TimeEASTWAR) D creational activities in beautiful Allegheny Read Down Dark type, p.m. Read Up long summer ahead. Camp Otter foothills. Saltsburg, Penna. (35 miles east 11:05 t11:45 ί10:20Lv.NewYorkAr. 8:10 8:45 of Pittsburgh on Route 80). 11:20 1ϊ2:00 ί10:35 Newark 7:54 8:29 with its ideal location offers an un- 11:15 1ϊ1:00 ί10:15 Phila. 7:45 8:30 6:40 |6:50 # 6:49 Ar.lTHACALv. 11:45 12:58 usual vacation for boys to develop, and relax under conditions that are R. A. HEGGIE & BRO. CO. Enjoy a Day or Week End not affected by the outside world. Jtw lers to Corntlliant Since 1875 In Ithaca o There are just a few vacancies 6:40| y6:54|° 9:28 ILv. ITHACA Ar. 111:32112:52 We still make Quill & Dagger, Sphinx Head, 9:35 I Oz9:45 |°12:45 |Ar.Buffαlo Lv. | 8:30110:05 so send in your application at once. Majura, Mummy, Aleph Saπiach, and other 7:25 11:15 " Pittsburgh 10:30 11:35 pins and charms. Send us your orders. 7:15 5:20 " Cleveland " 12:30 2:15 • 136 E. State St. Ithaca, N. T. 8:40 12:30 Ar. Chicago Lv. 10:10 •[Daily except Sunday. °Daily except Monday. Season July 3 to Aug. 26 XSunday only. ^Monday only. sArrives 6:49 a.m., yLeaves 7:03 a.m., zArrives For information and booklet 10:20 a.m. on Monday 7 New York sleeper open to 8 a.m. at Ithaca, and at Write 9 p.m. from Ithaca CORNELLIANS Air Conditioned DeLuxe, Coaches, Parlor, Sleeping, IN SERVICE Club Lounge and Dining Car Service. Especially Enjoy the Howard B. Ortner 19 ALUMNI NEWS 109 Irving Place, Ithaca, N.Y. Special Rate of $3 with Your THi RΰUTf OF TH6 tCACKΌIΛMOUD Own Subscription

Please mention the CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS 448 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

More about Lieutenant BOB KILIAN: Men PROFESSIONAL He married Norma Chamberlain of Hart- James L. Kraker, Jr., Class Secretary ford, Conn. Bob is with the Ordnance Beulah, Mich. DIRECTORY Department of the Army in charge of in- JOHN Y. G. WALKER, JR. married OF CORNELL ALUMNI spection of raw materials and allocation Mary L. Riter of Wynne wood, Stone- of material in the Springfield, Mass., bridge, May 9 in the First Congregational area. His address in Springfield is io church of Montclair, N. J. NEW YORK AND VICINITY Federal Court. WILLIAM D. EBERLE becomes a student HARRY LENGYEL, mind you, married engineer in the Panama Canal 'Zone. His HARRY D. COLE Ί8 the major's daughter! She is ELIZABETH home is in Jersey City, N. J., at 511 PRICE '41. Harry is now stationed with REALTOR Garfield Avenue. Business, Commercial and residential the Army at Camp Barkeley, Tex. properties in Weβtchester County DANIEL MCCONNAUGHEY is now sta- HENRY A. SUPPLEE, son of GEORGE C. Appraisals made. tioned with a Signal Service regiment at SUPPLEE '13 of Bainbridge, will attend RKO Proctor Building Mount Vernon, N. Y. Fort Monmouth, Red Bank, N. J. Law School. REA RETA*—Folded and interfolded facial tissues Lieutenant DICK FRASCATI writes that ALVIN S. KLEIN is enrolled in the (or the retail trade. he is stationed at the Headquarters ind Veterinary College. He comes from S'WIPES*—A soft, absorbent, disposable tissue, Corps Area, in the Adjutant General's Saugerties. packed flat, folded and interfolded, in bulk or boxes, for hospital use. Department, doing personnel placement JEROME S. JAFFE is going to do radio FIBREDOWN*—Abiorb nt and non-absorben. work. Dick's address is Hotel Holley, announcing. His home is in Saugerties at cellulose wadding, for hospital and commercial use. Washington Square West, New York 2.61 Main Street. FIBREDOWN* CANDY WADDING-Hn City. several attractive designs. LAWRENCE KNOX will be at Fort Sill Dick also sends news that Second y FIBREDOWN* SANITARY SHEETING— Okla. For hospital and sick room use. Lieutenant HOWARD FREEMAN, Field *Tradβ Mark reg. U.S. Pat. Off. Artillery, is the commanding officer of a RICHARD C. FRANKLIN, son of JOHN P. THE GENERAL CELLULOSE COMPANY, INC. howitzer battery at Camp Sutton, N. C. FRANKLIN '19, will be in Naval Aviation. GARWOOD, NEW JERSEY FRED LERMAN wrote a while ago en- RAYMOND JENKINS will be in the Army. D. C. Taggart Ί6 - - - Pres.- Treas. closing a contribution for the Alumni His home is in Philadelphia, Pa., at STANTON CO.—REALTORS Fund, not knowing where else to send it. in6 Lindley Avenue. GEORGE H. STANTON f20 In the first place, FRED, you're taking an ROBERT E. LACROIX, son of ARTHUR E. Real Estate and Insurance awful risk sending me money; I'm liable LACROIX Ί6 of Newton Center, Mass., to spend it. And in the second place, if will be a second lieutenant in the Army MONTCLAIR and VICINITY any of the rest of you don't know where Air Force. to send contributions, the place is the 16 Church St., Montclair, N. J., Tel. 2-6000 Cornell Alumni Fund, 3 East Avenue, JOHN R. HULL will be an ensign in the Navy through the A-V(s) program. Ithaca. Thanks a lot for the contribu- The Tuller Construction Co. tion, Fred, and here's hoping everybody CHARLES R. SWEENEY is on his way to J. D. TULLER, '09, President else follows suit. Fred is at Cornell Medi- Africa as assistant port steward for Pan BUILDINGS, BRIDGES, cal College and is living at 1014 East American Airways, Inc. Jersey Street, Elizabeth, N. J. DOCKS * FOUNDATIONS HOWARD W. HARING of South Lansing WATER AND SEWAGE WORKS received his "wings" and commission A. J. Dlll.nb ck Ί1 C. P. B.ylαnd -31 CLASS OF 1942 as second lieutenant May 2.0 at the Lake C. E. Wαllαc '87 T. G. Wαllαc '34 Women Charles, La., flying school which pro- C. E. B v '38 Λί. Grace Agnew, Class Secretary duced its first class of Army pursuit 95 MONMOUTH ST., RED BANK, N. J. 3J Barstow Road, Great Neck, N. Y. pilots. PHYLLIS V. STEVENSON starts work A. BAIRD MITCHELL was commissioned BALTIMORE, MD. June 15 in the publicity department of as an Army pilot April 2.9 at Brooks General Electric Co., Schenectady. She Field, Tex. WHITMAN, REQUARDT & SMITH will live at iiii Grand Boulevard, Sche- Water Supply, Sewerage/ Structural, CHARLES C. LEIGH is a junior sales en- Valuations of Public Utilities, Reports, nectady. She is the daughter of H. A. gineer with the B. F. Goodrich Co. of Plans, and General Consulting Practice. STEVENSON '19. EZRA B. WHITMAN, C.E. Ό1 Akron, Ohio. G. J. REQUARDT, C.E. Ό9 JOAN A. BLqττsτEiN is married to S. B. L SMITH, C.E. Ί4 Louis MIREL '40. Her home address is JOHN G. DODD was commissioned a Offices in Baltimore and Albany, N. Y. 1300 Harrison Street, Wilmington, Del. second lieutenant in the Army Air Force, April*X4, at the Victoryville, Cal., Fly- MARJORIE J. BUCHAN announced her ing School. WASHINGTON, D, C. engagement April 2.9 to DEXTER C. THEODORE K. BRYANT SEYMOUR II '40. JOHN E. LAIRD, JR., of Scobeyville, N. J., has a second lieutenant's commis- LL.B. '97—LL.M. '98 SHIRLEY D. SCHATZ is engaged to Law- rence Wisham, Chicago Medical College. sion in the Army. He is the son of JOHN Master Patent Law, G. W. U. Ό8 E. LAIRD Ί8. Patents and Trade Marks Exclusively Her home is in Haverstraw at 43 Gurnee 309-314 Victor Building Avenue. RICHARD L. QUIGG, licensed pilot who PEGGY H. BOLT has a position with the has been instructing in the civilian pilot KENOSH A, ΛVIS. Liberty-Mutual Insurance Co., Boston, training course at Ithaca Airport, is in Mass. Her home address is 1141 Green- the Army Air Force. His home is in MACWHYTE COMPANY wood Boulevard, Schenectady. Pueblo, Col. Manufacturers of Wire and Wire Rope, Braided Wire DOROTHY E. CLARK will teach in Bing- JAMES L. KRAKER, JR., Class secretary, Rope Sling, Aircraft Tie Rods, Strand and Cord. Literature furnished on request hamton. Her home is in Severance. has joined the Cornell Naval Aviation JESSELIS. WHYTE, M.E. "13, PRES. * GEN. MGR. CONSTANCE M. HOLLISTER will teach unit which enters training June 2.5 at R. B.WHYTE,M.E.'13, in Poland. Her home address is 308 West Chapel Hill, N. C. Until further notice, Vice President in Charge of Operations Water Street, Painted Post. address him at Beulah, Mich.

Please mention the ALUMNI NEWS CORNELL HOSTS NEW YORK AND VICINITY PHILADELPHIA, PA.

Your Home In Philadelphia HOTEL ESSEX 13TH AT FILBERT STREET John P. Mαsftrson, '33, Asst. Manag r "One Square From Everything" 225 Rooms—Each With Bath Air Conditioned PARK AVE 51 st TO 52nd STS - NEW YORK Sfaifer'Restaurants Restaurants Cleveland: B. F. Capp *29, Louis J. Read '38. HARRY A. SMITH'30 . . MANAGER Detroit: Ernest Terwilligβr *28, J. W. Gainey '32, J. Wheeler '38. New York: R. W. Steinberg *29, L. W. Maxson '30, H. Glenn Herb '31, W. C. Blankinshίp '31, R. H. The Grosvenor Hotel Blaisdell '38, Bruce Tiffany '39. STEPHEN GIRARD HOTEL FIFTH AVENUE AT 10TH STREET Pittsburgh: N. Townsend Allison '28. CHESTNUT ST. WEST OF 20TH For those who desire Modern Comfort and Quietness in a Convenient Location PHILADELPHIA, PENNA. 300 Rooms—all with tub and shower bath CENTRAL NEW YORK Nearest downtown Hotel to P nna. 30th St. Single from $3.50 Double from $5,00 and B. & O. Stations A Cornell Welcome Awaits You DONALD R. BALDWIN Ί 6 JOHN L. SHEA'26 WILLIAM H. HARNED *35 Manager Treasurer Manager Owned by the Baldwin Family THE HOTEL CADILLAC ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. Elm and Chestnut Sts. ROCHESTER, NEW YORK HOTEL LATHAM "Air Conditioned for Year'Round Comfort1* 28TH ST. at 5TH AVE. - NEW YORK CITY Urban A. MacDonald '38, Manager 400 Rooms - Fireproof DRUMLINS SYRACUSE SPECIAL RATES FOR FACULTY AND STUDENTS Open All Year Round CAFETERIA DINING ROOM TAP ROOM J. Wilson Ί9, Owner DANCING EVERY SATURDAY NIGHT Winter Sports AKE this your home when you motor R. S. BURLINGAME '05, President M to New York. Park your car free, com- WASHINGTON, D. C. mute to the city and avoid traffic hazards, annoyances, and worries. The Beechwood Hotel Summit, New Jersey j/φMonJjoίel Ben B. Adams, '37, Managing Director

On Route 97 to Ithaca... Recommended by Bob Bliss Hotel Minisink Wagar's Coffee Shop Cafeteria Port Jervis, N.Y. Western Avenue at Quail Street on Route 20 1715 G Street, Northwest, Washington, D.C. For Luncheon—Dinner—Overnight ALBANY, N. Y. CARMEN M. JOHNSON '22 - Manag r H nry Schick, Sp. '36, Manager Managed by Bertha H. Wood CENTRAL STATES NEW ENGLAND SOUTH

In Detroit it's . . . Stop at the ... THE WARDELL HOTEL ELTON Woodward Avenue at Kirby WATERBURY, CONN. 650 ROOMS WITH BATH "A New England Landmark" Transient & Residential Bud Jennings '25, Proprietor Robert J. Rilβy '24, Mgr.

Comelliαns EAT and TRAVEL CHARLESGATE Restricted Clientele CONVENIENT LOCATION Five Thousand Loyal Alumni Prefer New England Food to Patronize the HOTEL* CORNELL HOSTS Cornell and Faculty Discounts Whose Ads they Find Here VISIT REASONABLY IN BOSTON For Advertising at Low Cost write: Robert Summers '41 3 East Ave. ITHACA, N. Y.

Please mention the CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS Sell the Man with the Most Influence when he is most receptive!

It is axiomatic that the man who is most able is most willing nostalgic scene that formed them and made them endure . . . to buy! the scene that has developed his finer sensibilities. You reach him best in the publication in which he has a sense of pro- It is also true that the Alumnus of the Ivy League Group of col- prietorship . . . which surely makes him most receptive. You leges and universities is the most affluent and influential American thus serve him and you serve yourself and your firm. today.

Q. How then to reach this alumnus with your sales message? The seven Ivy League colleges and universities have associated their alumni magazines to publish your advertising to reach a total of A. Isn't it logical to try to find him when he is most receptive? 67,000 subscribers. Your firm can now reach these Ivy League Alumni—America's most influential reading group — at an attractive group rate. Q. When is this man most receptive? A. When he is at ease I For their application to your specific sales problem write Q. When is he most at ease? IVY LEAGUE ALUMNI MAGAZINES A. Usually when in the quiet of his home . . . with hie family. You reach him most easily through the publication that will CHARLES E. THORP, Representative recall to him his closest friends, past and present, and the 370 Lexington Avenue, New York