OCTOBER- NOVEMBER 1937

IN THIS ISSUE

PRESIDENT HARRY K. EVERSULL

THE FIVE YEAR FORWARD PLAN

&»* .fe BE SURE WITH PURE

• To thousands of motorists throughout 32 states the blue and white PURE sign, and Pure's attractive English cot­ tage-type station, are symbols of quality automotive products. Back of them is a completely integrated com­ pany with 5,000 production wells, located in nine states .. . seven modern and strategically located refineries . .. a well-balanced water, pipe line, railway transportation system. Quality is controlled from oil wells to service stations. Industrial buyers, too, rely upon Pure Oil for quality lubricants, scientifically applied. THE PURE OIL COMPANY * U. S. A. Presentation and Discussion of Marietta's New 5 Year Forward Plan

By CHARLES C. WHITE, '97, President Alumni Association

/7^/E alumni of Marietta Col- ready been accomplished. Pro­ of this sort cannot be made a suc­ plS lege are "citizens of no fessors' salaries have been restored cess solely by "soaking the rich." mean city." The college and the buildings have been "reno- The rest of us will have to do our looks back on a proud and worthy vized." (What a word!) Erwin little bit. Whether you can con­ past. Although the corporate life Hall, which in my unregenerate tribute or not you may be asked to of the college goes back only to days was called Science Hall, has serve on committees in the various 1835, its roots go back to Muskin­ been sand blasted down to its orig­ localities and it is to be hoped that gum Academy in 1797. Very ap­ inal color, and its face is now red. you will give the president and his propriately, in Professor Beach's The Mills residence has been pur­ associates your full cooperation history, it has been called "The chased by the college, has been re­ and support. Pioneer College." For one hundred furnished and will be the presi­ There is one part of the plan and forty years Marietta College dent's home. It is fortunate that that the alumni can cooperate in. and its forerunners have given to The president is relying largely on thousands of students the broad the alumni to help him get that 500 and liberal education appropriate students. If the members of the to the times. various Marietta College Clubs will There is a new ferment working get together in their local commun­ in Old Marietta and a new era is ities they will certainly be able to dawning. This new era definitely call the attention of prospective began on May 17, 1937, when the college students to the advantages trustees chose as president, Dr. of Marietta. It has been suggested Harry K. Eversull. It is no part of that each Club set as its goal the my job to write in fulsome praise acquisition of 10 students for the of Dr. Eversull, and he would not 1938 Freshman class. It is hoped thank me for so doing. But the that this class will reach the num­ concensus of those who have come ber of 200. And remember that in contact with him is that he is a the goal is not just 500 students very able man, with the energy and who have nothing but a vague am­ enthusiasm of youth, plus the wis­ bition for a college education, but dom of age. He is an indefatigable 500 selected students. We hope to worker, and withal he is modest. get students who will not fall by He has already demonstrated that the wayside at the end of the he has remarkable executive and Freshman year. administrative capacity. Charles C. White, '97, President It has been suggested, and the This is the day of Five Year suggestion seems a wise one, that Plans and Dr. Eversull has his. this building, which is one of the the various Marietta College Clubs First and foremost he plans within homes pictured and described in follow the example of the Colum­ the next five years to increase the Frary's "Early Homes of Ohio," bus Club, and try to hold monthly endowment by one million five hun­ has been saved for future genera­ get-together meetings. In the dred thousand dollars. That is a tions. larger cities at least this would lot of money, but it is not a pipe All of which is preliminary to seem feasible. dream, as the plans have been very the purpose of this article, to-wit: We talked above about the en­ carefully laid. "What can the alumni do to further dowment fund. But after all en­ The first part of the plan, and the plans for the new Marietta?" dowments do not always produce this need not necessarily wait five First and foremost they can, income and it is income that the years, is the increase of the stu­ when called upon to contribute to college needs. And that brings us dent body to the number of five the endowment fund, do something, to the Marietta fund, which has hundred. This has been the aim of even though that something may never produced an amount com­ the college for many years and not seem substantial. The opera­ mensurate with the size of the there seems no reason why this tion is going to be made easy, not body of alumni. The graduates part of the plan cannot be accom­ to say painless, by spreading the and ex-students of the college num­ plished much within the five year contributions over a period of five ber 2650. A contribution of $5.00 period. years. Most of us are in the lower per year from each of this body Some parts of the plan have al­ income brackets, but a campaign would produce $13,000 per year,

Page 1 which would certainly be a wel­ and read books that we do not care must depend on outside support. come addition to the college in­ to keep permanently in our libra­ To my mind this is a very worthy come. Larger contributions will of ries. Such books will be welcomed object of your generosity and it is course be welcome, but do not by the college library and you will hoped that "when, as and if" you hesitate to subscribe because you be doing it a real service, if you will are asked for a contribution (and think your contribution negligible. pass along the books you do not the contribution asked will always In connection with both the en­ care to keep. Cash contributions be small) you will respond with the dowment and Marietta fund, I will also be appreciated. feeling that you are supporting wonder how many of us realize The one subject in which the Marietta's one unique athletic that our education was either alumni are supposed to be inter­ activity. wholly, or partially, acquired be­ ested is athletics. And it is a sub­ The following quotation is taken cause of the generosity of someone ject on which the alumni are prone from an article on the college plans in the past. The income from a to give unsolicited advice to the in the Marietta Times: student pays not to exceed one-half college authorities. Now a small "There is to be a revision of the what it costs the college to educate college like Marietta cannot suc­ curriculum, retaining, of course, him. Some one has to pay the dif­ cessfully engage in big time foot­ Marietta's traditional high stand­ ference, and we of the present gen­ ball for instance, but it has one ards as a liberal arts college but eration should assume our share of unique athletic institution. I mean broadening it out for the express the burden, as it was assumed in purpose of teaching youth to do a its rowing crew. I say unique, be­ better job of straight thinking, for our student day by past bene­ cause Marietta is the only college more successfully charting their factors. in Ohio that has a place where re­ course, through a modern, complex, "The Friends of Marietta Col­ gattas may be held. Its two mile ism-ridden age." lege Library" is an institution that course on the Ohio is said to be one The old college has come out of merits your support. Marietta has of the best in the country and is the doldrums and is definitely always taken pride in its library, well located for spectators. But headed for a bright future. It is but the depression deprived it of the income from a race is small, up to the alumni to help it on its the income necessary to keep up on most of the spectators need pay way by cooperating with the pow­ the new books. Many of us buy nothing to see it, and the crew ers that be in every possible way.

"Friends" have added many books the past two years. Page 2 9*ttMMXAMU44G, OUR NEW PRESIDENT

^» R. Harry Kelso Eversull, who Jj was elected President of Marietta College by the Board of Trustees at a meeting April 7, 1937, arrived to take over his duties in Marietta on May 17. On the evening of his arrival Dr. Eversull was complimented with a dinner by the citizens of Marietta and the trustees and faculty of Marietta College. Two hundred and fifty were present. Following the dinner, Dr. Eversull was re­ ceived by the students of Marietta College at a midnight gathering at the Ohio Theatre. Dr. Eversull is the ninth presi­ dent of Marietta College. He was born September 20, 1893, at Cin­ cinnati, Ohio. He is the son of Mr. E. Elwood and Mrs. Matty May (Tallant) Eversull. While he was yet a boy he moved with his family to St. Louis, Missouri, where he finished his public school education. He entered Wabash College in 1915, and was graduated in 1919 with the degree of Bachelor of Arts. Following his graduation from Wabash College he entered the Divinity School of Yale Uni­ versity from which he was gradu­ ated with the degree of Bachelor of Divinity in 1922. He spent the next two years in the Graduate School of Yale University. He was ordained as a Congregational min­ ister at the Old Stone Church of East Haven, Connecticut, April 7, President Harry Kelso Eversull 1922, fifteen years to a day before his election as president of Mari­ etta. Dr. Eversull was the pastor increasing the benevolences of the Besides serving the Walnut Hills of this church during four years of congregation and originating many Church, he served for one year his study period at Yale. social service activities among its as moderator of the Miami As­ In 1924 Dr. Eversull accepted the members, extending into the com­ sociation of the Congregational call to the pastorate of the Walnut munity which the church serves. Churches. He was also the direct­ Hills Congregational Church of The Walnut Hills Church was ing head for one year of the Cin­ Cincinnati, Ohio. In the thirteen reluctant to receive the resignation cinnati Congregational Union. He years as pastor at Walnut Hills he of Dr. Eversull. He returned to has been an active member in the accomplished many things. He be­ Cincinnati as many times as pos­ Mid-West Regional Committee of came one of the outstanding sible during the past summer to fill Congregational Churches. preachers of the Middle West. He the pulpit on Sunday. He preached He gave his energy and influence made many improvements and ad­ his farewell sermon on Sunday, to many social and civic move­ ditions to the church plant, besides September 12. ments in the city of Cincinnati.

Page 3 He was president for two years ing," 1922; "The Evolution of an of the Cincinnati Federation of Old New England Church," 1924; Churches. In, 1934 he was called "The Congregational Church," to the membership of a committee 1925; "Howard Billman," 1935, and to survey the Cincinnati public many pamphlets. schools. This appointment called Dr. Eversull was married Sep­ for much work. The report of tember 18, 1920, to Miss Anita B. this committee fills a large-sized Mueller, the daughter of Mr. and volume. Mrs. Richard Mueller. Mrs. Ever­ While at Cincinnati Dr. Eversull sull is a native of St. Louis, Mis­ was on the preaching staff of the souri. In 1908 she moved with her Western College for Women, Miami family to Highland, Illinois, where University, Berea College at Berea, she was graduated from the High­ Kentucky, and Elon College at land High School in 1912. She Elon, North Carolina. He has entered Northwestern University served on the board of trustees of and was graduated from the North­ Elon College since 1932. He was western University School of Music the chairman of Elon's recent fund in 1917. She studied as a private raising campaign, the proceeds of pupil under Mr. Grant Schaeffer of which rebuilt the college following Chicago and Mr. Italo Picchi of the a disastrous fire a few years ago. Mrs. Harry K. Eversull Metropolitan Opera in New York. During the war, Dr. Eversull Mrs. Eversull began teaching in served as a first lieutenant in the 1917. She taught in the schools Army. He was a Masonic Orders, including 32° of Girardeau, Missouri, from 1917 director, 1929-1931, of the Inter­ Scottish Rite Masons and Knights to 1919 and at Riverside, Illinois, national Order Knights of the Templar. in 1919-1920. They have two Round Table. He is a member of He is the author of several sons, Gilbert Richard and Robert Phi Gamma Delta, Acacia, and books, "Warren Gamaliel Hard­ Elwood.

INAUGURAL CEREMONIES

C^» R. Harry Kelso Eversull will mony in the Field House, the aca­ College and Religion;" Colonel /j be inaugurated as the ninth demic procession will form and will Frank Knox, publisher of the .Chi­ president of Marietta Col­ march to the Betsey Mills Club cago News, "The Small College and lege on Wednesday, October 20. The Gymnasium where the Inaugural Citizenship;" and Dr. Rollo Walter inaugural ceremonies, to which the Luncheon will be served at 1:00 Brown, author and lecturer, "The public is invited, will be held in the P. M. This Luncheon will be at­ Small College and Learning." Ban Johnson Field House at 10:30 tended by the honored guests of A reception honoring Dr. and A. M. The program is as follows: Marietta including those taking Mrs. Eversull will be held the same part in the Inaugural Ceremonies, afternoon at four o'clock at the Organ Prelude the representatives of other educa­ Dorothy Webster Hall to which Invocation .... tional institutions and learned so­ are invited out of town guests, Rev. William James Campbell, D. D. cieties, a number of leaders in busi­ trustees, faculty, alumni and other Chorus ness and professional and public friends of the College. Dr. and Glorious Forever Rachmaninoff life, the trustees of Marietta Col­ Mrs. Eversull announce that the Prayer .... lege, and faculty. At the begin­ new beautifully remodeled home of Rev. James Gordon Gilkey, D. D. ning of the speaking program the the President will be open through­ Chorus balcony will be opened to the stu­ Hear, Lord Our God .. Tschaikowsky out the afternoon to all guests, dents and to the citizens of Mari­ alumni, and other friends. Presentation of the College Seal .... etta and the adjacent communities. .... Hon. George White, LL. D. Dr. Eversull extends hereby a cor­ The closing event of the busy Hymn— dial invitation to all who can day will be provided by the Mari­ Our God, Our Help in Ages Past attend. The Charge to the President .... etta College Glee Club—the time President Frank Lissenden Eversull, The Inaugural Luncheon will be and place to be announced later. Huron College in charge of one of Marietta's This will be an evening program The President's Response .... prominent alumni, Mr. Henry M. and will be held likely in one of the .... President Harry Kelso Eversull Dawes, '96, who will act as toast- churches. The two feature musical Hymn— master. Those who have accepted selections for this occasion are: O God, Beneath Thy Guiding Hand assignments to speak and their re­ "Hiawatha's Wedding Feast" and Benediction .... spective topics are: Dr. William "The Death of Minnehaha." The .... Rev. Henry Pearce Atkins W. Boyd, president emeritus of public, as well as the out of town Organ Postlude Western College and a member of guests, faculty, and students of the Inaugural Day will be crowded the Board of Trustees, "The Small College are invited. with events. Following the cere­ Page h I &$'f IBIBH ™ H H! ALUMN IN THE NEWS

Fund is loaned without interest, Capt. Scott, and there is a repayment record of almost one hundred per cent. Dur­ ing 1936 the San Diego auxiliary Social Service loaned $56,256.79. The Navy Relief Fund can be credited directly to "King Foot­ Director ball." In 1903 the University of Pennsylvania, on whose grounds fijt J HAT happens when the fleet the annual Army-Navy game was i/%y is away and the sailors' played, made a profit of $18,000.00 wives and sweethearts are from the contest and contributed left behind? Captain Evan W. this sum to both contestants. A Scott probably knows better than suggestion was made that the anyone else. Besides his duties as Navy's share be used for service chaplain in the United States Navy men's widows and orphans, and forthwith the Navy Relief Society was organized. Captain Scott re­ cites a list of some of the things he has done with this fund—emer­ gency hospital care provision fund, loans to meet urgent and worthy debts, and readjusting finances of a family. Dr. Charles H. McCloy, '07 Captain Scott finds in addition to his duties as a clergyman and physical instructor in the old banker many demands for advice. Goshorn Gymnasium. He was He has conducted an average of awarded the degree of Master of 6000 office interviews per year, of Arts by Marietta College in 1910. which about two thousand new He was instructor in physical cases are opened. He is a social training during the last two years worker of the highest class. of his undergraduate period. Following his graduation he went to Yankton College where he Dr. McCloy, President was director of physical education American Physical and head of the Department of Bi­ Captain Evan W. Scott, '00 ology. From 1900 to 1911 he was Education Association a Y. M. C. A. physical director at at the base of the Pacific fleet at Danville, Virginia. From 1911 to San Diego, Captain Scott is chair­ Dr. Charles H. McCloy, Ph. D., 1913 he was associated with the man of the Navy Relief Society. professor of the Department of Public Athletic League of Balti­ more, Maryland. In one month of 1937, seven hun­ Physical Education of the State dred fifty persons with problems of University of Iowa, was elected at Mr. McCloy then went to China one kind or another called at Cap­ the annual meeting in April, presi­ where he was secretary of the De­ tain Scott's office for personal con­ dent of the American Physical Ed­ partment of Physical Education of ferences. Various are the compli­ ucation Association. Dr. McCloy's the National Council of the Y. M. cations which arise when the fleet's recognition comes after a period of C. A. He was in this position for out, not in. Bluejackets some­ years in which he has helped to eight years following which he was times—many times—fail to make develop this organization to its director of physical education in allotment of their wages to their present high standard. the National Southeastern Uni­ dependents. Sometimes there is a Dr. McCloy was graduated from versity of Nanking. delay in the allotment already Marietta College in 1907. He Returning to America in 1926 he made. He often makes advances stayed in Marietta for some period became instructor in physical edu­ out of the Navy Relief Fund. This thereafter during which he was cation at Detroit Teachers College.

Page 5 The following year he became brought the attention of news­ Scientists Aghast secretary for research for the Na­ papermen, who from time im­ The heresy burst like a storm over tional Council of the Y. M. C. A. in memorial like what appears to be the gathering. Scientists sprang to their feet to comment acidly and to New York City. It was during this an argument or difference of protest with scholarly pomp. There time that he continued his studies opinion. The New York Times of was a luncheon afterward, and Dr. at Columbia University for the de­ September 10 gave much space to Corwin, watching with gay blue eyes, gree of Doctor of Philosophy. The the incident, as did many other found himself the target for many a barbed jest. Since then letters degree was awarded in 1932. He newspapers, including the Balti­ have poured in upon him from chem­ went to his present position in more Sun of September 21, which ists in many parts of the country, 1930. is reprinted herewith. The Sun criticizing and questioning him. Dr. McCloy is the author of a writer relates the facts in lighter, Structure of Haemoglobin long list of books, articles appear­ yet more understandable vein. Dr. To express Dr. Corwin's innova­ ing in periodicals in both the Chi­ Corwin's researches and his subse­ tion in the simplest terms, he has nese and the English languages and quent statements have initiated a found that emery is better than as­ text-books and teaching manuals more intensive study of the sub­ bestos or sand in preparing gases to be weighed. A material called for physical education. Over one ject by scientists. hopcalite, which was used during the hundred titles are listed in a bibli­ war in making gas masks, is better ography made up by the Univer­ WEIGHING OF DUST PARTICLE than lead dioxide. After preparing sity of Iowa. STIRS SCIENTIFIC DISCUSSION his gas tubes with these substances, he uses a simplified microbalance— As an authority in his field, he is Hopkins Chemist is Center of Con­ insulated against body heat, for even in great demand as a speaker in that small warmth is enough to the state physical education asso­ troversy Involving a Gamma, or weight the scales and make the re­ ciations from Texas to Minnesota One One-Thousandth of sults wrong. Milligram Dr. Corwin, who has been at Hop­ and from New York to California. kins for five years, coming there He may be heard also on the radio Speaking of currency... . from Harvard University, is not pri­ over WSUI, the University of Measurements involving a gamma marily interested in microbalances. Iowa station. or two are now the subject of a wide­ He is an organic chemist, and at the spread scientific controversy, at the time he adopted this sideline he was center of which is a redheaded young studying the structure of the haemo­ man at the Johns Hopkins Univer­ globin—the molecule in the blood Dr. Corwin Attacks sity, Dr. Alsoph H. Corwin, associate which gives it its red color. in chemistry. He wasn't satisfied with the tra­ ditional methods of weighing the Pregl Method When you consider that one gam­ tiny particles he was working with, ma equals one one-thousandth of a and it was in seeking a better milligram you realize how little it method that he discovered his differ­ takes to stir the feelings of a mod­ ences with Pregl. Weighing a ern chemist. To express the unit in haemoglobin is quite enough to wear commonplace terms, a very small on a man's patience if his scales are particle of dust would weigh one not pretty accurate, since an ordin­ gamma. ary haemoglobin molecule weighs Fight Brewing for Years from twenty to sixty Angstrom units. An Angstrom unit, as you The fight has been brewing for know, amounts to one ten-thousandth years. Since the science of micro- of a millionth of a meter. chemistry originated, the scholars who pursued it have labored day and night to find means of finding out "The Last Words in Sports" the size and composition of the minute substances they wanted to Charles J. Nevada who has been study. Most important of all the a sports writer on the Chicago microchemistry was an Austrian, the Tribune for the past nine years late Dr. Fritz Pregl, who is called accepted a similar position last the father of that science. There are followers of his who venerate spring on the Milwaukee Journal. him and all his works. Mr. Nevada besides being a pro- But certain processes in weighing motor of sports in the city of Mil­ microscopic materials which he rec­ waukee is conducting a regular ommended have been used for years daily broadcast at 11:05 P. M. over with very indifferent results. The figures would work out satisfactorily WTMJ, the Milwaukee Journal sta­ sometimes, at other times they would tion at 620 kilocycles on your radio seem to be way off. The devout dials. The title of Mr. Nevada's chemists assumed that they were broadcast is "The Last Words in wrong, and they started their ex­ Dr. Corwin, '28 periments all over again. Nothing Sports." could be wrong with Pregl's method, Mr. Nevada while on the staff of Dr. Alsoph H. Corwin, professor they thought. the Chicago Tribune conducted a of Organic Chemistry at Johns Suspected Master Erred number of sporting events includ­ Hopkins University, made a no­ ing the Silver Skates Tournament, But the suspicion has been creep­ the Golden Gloves Tournament, table contribution to the annual ing in that the master sometimes meeting of the American Chemical erred, that when in weighing sub­ boxing, football, and polo contests. Society at Rochester, New York, stances in little glass tubes—as mi- Charlie began his newspaper ex­ September 9, in a paper in which crochemists do—he passed the gas to perience on the Wheeling News in be weighed over asbestos, or sand, or he declared that there were errors lead dioxide, before inclosing it in 1920. While in college he was a in the Pregl method of weighing. the tubes, that his process was not regular reporter on the Marietta Dr. Corwin stated that the Pregl always reliable. Register. Soon after his gradua­ method, today considered one of So the chemists worked around it, tion in 1924 he entered the law hoping to learn eventually the cause the scientist's most important of their error in applying the mas­ school of Drake University and tools, was giving them inaccurate ter's principles. And nobody ever while there was a regular staff answers. Mr. Corwin's paper said that Pregl was wrong. writer of the Des Moines Register.

Page 6 SCHOLASTIC - ATHLETIC - SOCIAL - ETC

M. R. PATTERSON, News Editor

Mjf^ Manley acknowledges the peared in mathematical journals, yfrf receipt of the letters sent by the principal ones of which are as follows: former students. He is very Hypocycloids—American Mathemat­ grateful for them and will answer ical Monthly, 1922. them later on, when he has more Mapping by Invariant Curves— leisure. American Journal of Math., 1926. C\ Stereographic Projection—American * * * * * * Mathematical Monthly, 1927. Faculty Changes J ML* X In the past summer, Marietta College has lost by resignation Professor Thomas F. Cope and Mr. John F. Cuber. Professor Cope has accepted a position in the Mathematics Department of Queens College, a new institution in the New York City system of undergraduate colleges. Mr. Cuber has gone to Kent State University, Kent, Ohio, where he will be an instructor in the Department of Economics. Two of the faculty are on leave Prof. Johnson of absence, Professor W. B. Black­ burn, who is in graduate study at son's thesis has for its title, "New the University of Iowa for the first Orleans During the Civil War." semester, and Professor T. D. Phillips, who has accepted a tem­ porary position in the United States Bureau of Standards in Theodore Bennett Washington. Professor Theodore Bennett was Prof. Bennett called late in August to take the Professor Manley, who retired place of Professor Thomas F. Cope. Professor Bennett is a member last June, will continue to live in Professor Bennett was graduated of Phi Beta Kappa, Sigma Xi, and the city of Marietta. from Cornell University in 1921. Phi Kappa Phi. After two years of graduate study Howard Palmer Johnson he was awarded the Master of Arts Mrs. Walter N. James Howard Palmer Johnson, Ph. D., Degree from the University of who succeeds Professor Joseph Illinois. In 1926 he received his Mrs. Walter N. James is the new Manley is a native of Georgia. He Doctor of Philosophy Degree from director of student activities at the same institution. Marietta College. In addition to was prepared for college at Phillips her position as director she will be Exeter Academy. Following his From 1921 to 1928 Professor matron of the men's dormitory, graduation from Yale in 1931 he Bennett taught in the Department Fayerweather Hall. was a student in the Yale Graduate of Mathematics of the University School until 1933. The next year of Illinois. The following year he Mrs. James is a native of Mich­ he spent in teaching in St. John's was National Research Council Fel­ igan. She was graduated with Phi College, Annapolis, Maryland, and low at Princeton University. He Beta Kappa honors at Grinnell Col­ the year following was research has been teaching in the Depart­ lege in Iowa. Following her gradu­ assistant in the University of Chi­ ment of Mathematics at the Uni­ ation she taught two years in a cago. Mr. Johnson completed his versity of Wisconsin since 1929. high school at La Salle, Colorado. work in 1936-1937 for his degree Mrs. James then entered Oberlin of Doctor of Philosophy which was Professor Bennett is the author College Graduate School. In 1916 awarded him last June. Dr. John- of several articles which have ap­ she was married to Reverend W.

Page 7 studies and was given the degree WPAR, a Columbia network of Master of Arts in 1927 at the radio station at Parkersburg, West same institution. He received the Virginia, has installed a studio in degree of Doctor of Philosophy the basement of Andrews Hall. from the University of Chicago in This station will serve to broadcast 1933. all programs originating in Mari­ Mr. Blumenthal has held teach­ etta and adjacent territory which ing positions in Seton Hill College, will include plays by the Players Greensburg, Pennsylvania, 1932- Club, programs by the Glee Club 1934, Dartmouth College, 1935- and addresses by students and 1937, and Alabama State Teachers faculty. Mr. Robert Ebert, '38, College, Florence, Alabama, sum­ who has been associated with mer, 1937. WPAR for some years as an an­ nouncer will have charge of the He is the author of "Small Town Marietta studio. Stuff," published in 1932; "The Place of the Term 'Culture' in So­ ****** cial Sciences," 1935; "The Nature The Young Women's Christian of Culture," 1936; and "Culture Association has initiated a popular Consists of Ideas," 1937. Mr. Sunday afternoon fireside hour in Blumenthal is also the author of an the Fayerweather Hall lobby for all article soon to be published in a students. The hour, five to six, periodical entitled "The Nature of is taken up with group singing and Gossip." a brief address by a faculty man Mrs. James or some other speaker after which a supper is served in the Commons. These "hours" which are open to N. James, a divinity student and both men and women are well at­ later a clergyman and YMCA tended. secretary. For the past eleven years, or until his death in 1937, Mr. and Mrs. James were directors The Criterion, an undergraduate of Fellowship House at Ohio State literary publication, has made its University. Mrs. James has a first appearance on the campus. daughter, Miss Doris James, who The publication will contain a vari­ has entered the freshman class of ety of subjects, drama, sports, science, etc., using literary forms Marietta College. for their presentation.

V V V • V w Professor Raymond G. Guthrie of the Department of Education, spent the summer of 1937 as a member of the faculty at the summer session of the University of Toledo.

rjC ff '& JJ> ;> )f As one of the principal chain of Prof. Long events of the Federal celebration of the Ordinance of 1787 and the Theodore Parker Long opening of the Northwest Territory to settlement, Marietta will cele­ Professor Theodore Parker Long brate its one hundred and fiftieth who is taking the place of Pro­ anniversary, April 7, 1938. The fessor T. D. Phillips is a native of event will be marked with a three Iowa. He was educated at the or four day program beginning the University of Missouri and has evening of April 6. On April 7 the practically completed the work for Federal Commission's party of men the degree of Doctor of Philosophy who will make the journey over the at the University of Cincinnati. pioneer trail from Ipswich, Massa­ He has taught in the high school chusetts, will arrive and present an Mr. Blumenthal at Kirkwood, Missouri, Northeast historical pageant. Albert Blumenthal Missouri State Teachers College Marietta will be the scene of an­ and Miami University. He has other event of the Federal Cele­ Albert Blumenthal will be as­ made several contributions to sci­ bration on July 15, the one hundred sistant professor in economics and entific and professional periodicals, and fiftieth anniversary of the sociology in the place of John F. some of which are: "Stimulation of founding of government at which a Cuber who resigned to accept a Growth of Soy Bean Seeds by Soft monument will be unveiled. It is similar position in Kent State Col­ X-Rays," "Structural Changes in expected that President Roosevelt lege. Mr. Blumenthal is a native Leaf Tissue of Soy Bean Plants by will speak at the unveiling cere­ of Philipsburg, . He was Irradiation of the Dry Seeds by monies. graduated from the University of X-Rays," and "An Experiment on A detailed program of all events Montana in 1926. He continued his Variable Linear Flow of Heat." will be printed in the January issue.

Page 8 MMMH RmBI^^HIHwiisKg **- First Row: (Left to right) Williams, Ogdin, C. Penny cook, O'Donnell, Giebell, McGee, Whiting, and Savasten. Second Row: Marcot, Archibald, Nesha, Tate, Tracy, Burger, hitman, J. Penniicook. Third Row: Hart, Burton, Grady, Arkle, Howell, Davis, Treadon, Fogle, Stockwell. Last Row: Drumm, line coach, Daymont, Morin, Harvey, Coach Hayes.

Marietta's Football team has from Marietta, the distribution by that members of her alumni group played three games of their 1937 states is as follows: West Virginia, are, more and more, sending their schedule with scores as follows: 77; New York, 19; Connecticut, 14; sons and daughters to the institu­ Morris Harvey 7—Marietta 6 New Hampshire, 9; Pennsylvania, tion at which they received their Miami 75—Marietta 6 6; Illinois, 4; Massachusetts, 4; undergraduate training. Among Capital 26—Marietta 0 New Jersey, 4; Kentucky, 2; Mary­ others are the following interesting The remainder of the schedule land, 2; Arkansas, 1; Minnesota, 1; family connections to be found in will be: Vermont, 1; and China, 1. glancing through the student di­ Present indications are that the rectory: Ann Elizabeth Blazier, Oct. 15 (night game) ... Wittenberg total college registration will be daughter of George J. Blazier, '14 At Marietta about the same as last year when (Marietta); Ruth W. Brokaw, Oct. 30 Otterbein the student body numbered 366. daughter of Harry E. Brokaw, '03 At Westerville It speaks well for the College Continued to page 18. Nov. 6 Washington & Jefferson At Marietta Nov. 13 Muskingum At New Concord Nov. 20 Ashland At Ashland ***** Two of Marietta's fraternities and sororities have moved to new quarters the past summer. Alpha Tau Omega may be found at 501 Second Street at the Wooster Street corner and Chi Omega at 305 Sixth Street near the Whites Road intersection.

Interesting Statistics Concerning Marietta College By LILLIAN R. SPINDLER, Registrar Nearly one-half of the students of Marietta College are drawn from territory outside of Ohio, representing 14 states and one for­ eign country (China). Although Ohio ranks first with a total of 214, 106 of which are Sandblasting Erwin Hall.

Page 9 CAMPUS PROGRE:

<*t-\'< W'MHMii

ALUMNI HALL now houses the departments of Biology and Geology. Rooms one and three have been joined into one large lecture auditorium and fitted up especially for the presentation of scien­ tific subjects. Room two is the office of Professor H. R. Eggleston, and Room four is the Bacteriology laboratory. The Third Floor, which replaces the former Balcony, is used wholly for Biology. The Second Floor which has been the Department of Geology for the past few years has been remodeled for the more efficient study of the subject. ANDREWS HALL has been renovated from basement to attic. New rest rooms have been built into the basement. The WPAR broadcasting studio occupies one of the rooms therein. The Second Floor exclusive of the Chapel is the English Department. Upper left, New Home of the President. Professors Christie and Patterson have offices adja­ Upper center, Parsons Hall and Administration Building. cent to their classrooms. Loiver left, Fayerweather Hall. ERWIN HALL has undergone a surface trans­ formation. The outside walls have been sand-blasted

Ye 0\ - IN PICTORIAL -

and restored to the original red color. All the frame parts .of the outside have been painted white. OTHER BUILDINGS have been improved. New lighting has been installed in the LIBRARY and the basement of the Fifth Street side has been made into a Trustees Room. This room can be used also as a committee room and alumni visitors' room when the Trustees are not in session. PARSONS HALL, home of the Presidents from Dr. Simpson to Dr. Parsons, has been made into class rooms and offices for the faculty. FAYERWEATHER HALL and THE COMMONS have been reconditioned and the efficiency of the building much improved. THE ADMINISTRATION BUILDING which houses the offices of the President, the Financial Secretary, the Registrar, the Dean of Women and the Dean of the College, has been improved much in the addition of new floor coverings, new lights and some additional Upper right hand corner, Erwin Hall, looking up the Campus. office equipment. An extension, which encloses an Lower right hand corner, the Library. area used formerly for a porch, has been built to the President's office. REGIONAL ALUMNI MEETINGS

Columbus Alumni Dinner H. McCoy, e'10, Mr. and Mrs. Ken- gram. He was introduced by Helen The annual Columbus Alumni ner McConnell, '11, Reverend and Ludwig, '27. Dr. Eversull re­ Dinner was held at the University Mrs. Chester J. Oxley, '12-'13, Miss sponded with a brief address in Club of that city on the evening of Mary Edith Sniffen, '12, Mr. and which he spoke of his anticipation April 23, 1937. The feature of this Mrs. George J. Blazier, '14, Miss of entering the office of the presi­ meeting was the first appearance Gladys Martin, '15, Mr. and Mrs. dent of Marietta College. before a Marietta group of the Fred A. Sheridan, '15, Mr. and Mrs. Other speakers called upon dur­ newly elected president of Marietta David M. Auch, e'18, Mr. and Mrs. ing the evening were: Andrew U. College, Dr. H. K. Eversull. The Herbert R. Mooney, e'18, Mr. Thomas, '21, president of the dinner was given in honor of Henry N. Wilkin, '18, Mr. and Mrs. Alumni Association, and Professor George E. Elliott, superintendent Arthur C. Mechling, e'19, Mr. and E. L. Krause. of buildings and grounds of Mari­ Mrs. Harold H. Buell, e'20, Mr. An­ Officers for next year were etta College for the past forty-four drew U. Thomas, '21, Mr. and Mrs. elected as follows: President, years. Ninety-nine alumni and Theron A. Arthur, e'23, Mr. Leslie Henry W. Manz, '18, vice president, friends were present. C. Ward, '23, Miss Mildred Gray, Ralph Eddy, '27, secretary, B. '24, Mr. and Mrs. Harold E. Rice, Gates Dawes, '17, and treasurer, Dr. William W. Boyd, '84, intro­ '24, Mr. Leon F. Stroefer, '24, Mr. duced Dr. and Mrs. Eversull with Mrs. Thomas L. Bush (Louise Harold F. Brown, e'25, Mr. and Hornbrook, '27). A promotion an appropriate address. Dr. Boyd Mrs. James E. Hale, '25, Mr. and introduced first Mrs. Eversull who committee composed of Ralph Mrs. Almond F. Shafer, '25-e'26, Zimmerman, '27, chairman, Mrs. rose and smiled her greetings. Dr. Mr. Harold Youmans, '25, Mr. and Eversull in his response outlined Katherine Sniffen Langhorne, '07, Mrs. Harold Rowland, '27, Mr. and and Helen Ludwig, '27, was ap­ some of his ideals for higher edu­ Mrs. Harold W. Ward, '25, Mr. cation. pointed. John C. Dunn, e'27, Mr. Frederick The dinner was under the direc­ Other speakers called upon dur­ B. Goebel, '28, Mr. and Mrs. Ed­ ing the evening were: Richard G. tion of the officers of the group: ward N. Warner, '28-'29, Miss Dor­ Ronald C. Stillman, '29, president, Lewis, '76, oldest alumnus present, othy E. Gray, '30, Mr. and Mrs. T Andrew U. Thomas, '21, president and B. Gates Daw es, '17, secretary. Paul J. Seyler, '30-'28, Mrs. Char­ Those present were: Beman G. of the Alumni Association, Pro­ lotte White Hamilton, '30, Miss fessor Harla Ray Eggleston, Dean Dawes, e'90, Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Olive E. Dickson, '31, Miss Ruth Langhorne, '07, Reverend and Mrs. D. T. Schoonover, George J. Bla­ Mildren, '31, Mr. Robert Hall, '32, zier, '14, Charles C. White, '97, Herman L. Meister, '11, Henry W. Miss Jane Hancock, '32, Mr. and Manz, '18, Attorney and Mrs. An­ George E. Elliott, and E. J. Mil- Mrs. Ernest W. Wakefield, '32, Mr. dren who spoke in behalf of the drew U. Thomas, '21, Mr. and Mrs. and Mrs. William P. Mildren, e'25- Thomas L. Bush, '22-'27, Mr. and Northwest Territory Celebration. '33, Mr. Edward S. Brigham, e'34, The musical program of the Mrs. Carlos B. Dawes, '22, Dr. Ber- Miss Joanna Badger, '35, Mr. nice E. Eddy, '24, David R. Pew, evening included two numbers by Charles L. Gramlich, '35, Miss a Marietta College quartette of stu­ '26, Dr. Clyde M. Dummer, '27, Dr. Helen H. O'Hara, '35, Mr. James Ralph W. Eddy, '27, Helen Ludwig, dents. The group was composed of Greene, '36, Mr. Jack W. Penny- William J. Hindman, '40, Charles '27, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph C. Zim­ cook, '38, Mr. Evan Williams, '38, merman, '27, Mr. Ronald C. Still­ H. Schafer, '38, Robert C. McKin­ Mr. Charles H. Schafer, '38, Mr. ney, '39, and Jack W. Pennycook, man, '29, Miss Margaret Sarbeck, Robert C. McKinney, '39, Mr. Wil­ John J. Brunner, '30, Ralph E. '38, under the direction of Pro­ liam J. Hindman, '40, Mrs. Allan E. fessor John E. Sandt. Mrs. Her­ Cors, '30, Harold R. Latimer, '30, Beach, Professor George S. Chapin, Charles P. Devore, '32, Selden R. bert R. Mooney, a graduate of the Professor H. R. Eggleston, Mr. music department of Western Col­ Flemming, '32, Ruth H. Kelley, George E. Elliott, Dr. and Mrs. H. e'33, Arthur H. Blickle, '34, Ruth lege for Women at Oxford, gave a K. Eversull, Mr. E. J. Mildren, Pro­ piano solo. M. Drew, '34, Mr. and Mrs. John E. fessor Merrill R. Patterson, Mr. Grier, '34-'35 (Hope Davis), Mar­ Officers for the coming year and Mrs. R. Douglas Pinkerton, Mr. were elected as follows: President, jorie M. Taylor, e'38, Mr. and Mrs. and Mrs. P. L. Rea, Professor John Jacob Taylor. Almond F. Shafer, '25; vice presi­ E. Sandt, Dean Draper T. Schoon­ dent, Arthur C. Mechling, e'19; over, Miss Katherine Seymour, ****** secretary-treasurer, Frederick B. Miss Geneva Stephenson, Mr. Al Goebel, '28. String, Mr. and Mrs. Truesdel, Pro­ Huntington, W. Va. The dinner was under the direc­ fessor Russell Lee Walp. The Marietta College alumni of tion of a committee composed of Huntington, West Virginia, held the officers: James E. Hale, '25, their annual meeting May 14, 1937, president, Almond F. Shafer, '25, at the Frederick Hotel of that city. secretary, Frederick B. Goebel, '28, Cincinnati Alumni Dinner Gilbert W. Gerhold, '25, and Paul treasurer, and Charles A. Ward, The annual meeting of the Cin­ Scott, '90, made up the committee '90. cinnati alumni was held at the who arranged the dinner. Mr. and Those present at the dinner Hotel Gibson April 30, 1937. Mrs. E. L. Christie and George J. were: Mr. Richard E. Lewis, '76, Thirty-seven alumni and guests Blazier represented Marietta Col­ Mr. and Mrs. William W. Boyd, '84, were present. The newly elected lege. Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Ward, '90, president, Dr. H. K. Eversull, was Those present were: George W. Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Corwin, '92, Mr. present for the Dinner, but on ac­ Summers, '88, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Charles C. White, '94, Mr. and Mrs. count of two previous engagements Scott, '90, Mrs. Agnes McKay John P. Farson, e'05, Mrs. Mary of long standing, could not stay Henking, '99, Mrs. Juliette Cham­ Reed Masse, '07, Mr. and Mrs. John through the entire speaking pro­ berlin Newsome, '06, Clyde W.

Page 12 Davis, '10, and his mother, Mrs. Susan Witten Neal, '14, Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert W. Gerhold, '25, Henry Schroeder, e'29, Floyd W. Bules, '33, Professor and Mrs. Christie and Mr. Blazier. Anna L. DeNoon, '09, who had expected to be present was prevented from do­ ing so by an injury which occurred the day before the meeting.

Marietta College Club of Washington, D. C. Summer Picnic The Marietta College Club of Washington, D. C, held its annual summer picnic on Saturday after­ Cincinnati Picnic noon, August 7th at Rock Creek Park near the Taft Bridge. Fol­ Academy: Miss Pearl Deucher, D. Barnes (Beulah Nott, e'16) and lowing a picnic supper the mem­ Miss Edith Edwards, Dr. Edwin H. daughter, Miss Helen Barnes, Mr. bers of the group engaged in Etz, Miss Pearl W. Mason. and Mrs. Henry W. Manz, '18, Mr. games, talk "fests" and reminis­ and Mrs. Thomas L. Bush, '22 cences. Thirty-one were present. * * * * * (Louise Hornbrook, '27) and daugh­ Those attending were: Mr. and Marietta College Alumni Club ter, Miss Eleanor Bush, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert H. Lawhorn (Gladys of Cincinnati Mrs. A. Vernon Bowen, '27, Miss Mason, '07) and nephew, Mr. Joe Helen L. Ludwig, '27, Mr. and Mrs. L. Mason, Mrs. Blanche Smithson Summer Picnic Ralph C. Zimmerman, '27, Mr. and Smith and daughter, Mrs. Charles The Marietta College Club of Mrs. John W. Deen, e'28, and S. Morgan (Florence Gross, '11) Cincinnati held its annual summer children, Mr. and Mrs. Ronald C. and daughters, Misses Jeanne and outing at Mount Airy Park Satur­ Stillman, '29, Mr. and Mrs. David Suzanne, Mrs. Forest E. Kemp­ day, July 31st. W. Schuhler, e'29, Mr. Harold R. ton (Aline Fenner, '12), Mr. and Henry Manz, president of the Latimer, '30, Mr. Charles P. De- Mrs. Samuel N. Dicken, '24, and Club, was the chief cook whose vore, '32, Mr. Selden R. Flemming, son Charles, Dr. Bernice E. Eddy, duty it was to fry steaks for the '32, Miss Elizabeth B. Watkins, '37, '24, Mr. and Mrs. S. Stuart Wilson, hungry alumni, their hunger not and Mrs. Jane Fahrion. '27, Dr. and Mrs. Robert C. Thomas being lessened by a strenuous Under the energetic leadership of (Marian Wells, e'27), Mr. Homer J. horseshoe session. Ralph Zimmer­ President Manz, the Club is trying Hall, '31, Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Han­ man is listed in the report as bottle to get together every three months son (Margaret Ludwig, '31), Miss washer and Miss Helen Ludwig, and in September the first issue of Helen V. Nicholas, '31, Mr. Robert food boss. It is reported that this a monthly news letter was sent B. Youmans, '34, Miss Carolyn H. capable committee provided well. to all local members. A hallowe'en Peters, '36, Miss Edith Hall, Mr. Following the dinner a song ses­ party in October is the next event Martin J. Reitz, Mr. Jack Smith, sion and talk "fest" was held. the Club has planned on its social and the following from Marietta Those present were: Mrs. Earl calendar.

Page 13 NEWS OF OUR ALUMNI

'74 "It was not until I began to read While a boy he moved with his family up on the subject that I found that to Columbus, Ohio. He was prepared * EDWARD POWELL FOSTER * others had had the same thought; for college at the Central High School of that Descartes, father of modern that city. He entered Marietta as a 1853-1937 philosophy, had said that such a lan­ freshman in 1870. Death came at the Marietta Memorial guage was possible and that it would Immediately after his graduation Mr. Hospital, July 17, 1937, to Rev. Edward enable a peasant to look as deeply Layman entered newspaper work at Cin­ Powell Poster, '74. Mr. Poster's death into the truth of things as a phil­ cinnati where he was a reporter on the came after a critical illness of two or osopher can now do, and that the use Cincinnati Enquirer. Later the same year three weeks. His home in recent years of it ought to be learned in six hours; he became a reporter on the Columbus has been in Waverly, West Virginia. Mr. that Leibniz had given much time Dispatch. Six years later he became Foster was in the eighty-fourth year of and thought to the problem; that editor and publisher of the Sandusky, his age. He was born at Bloom Furnace, Bishop Wilkins, brother-in-law of Ohio, Journal and in 1886 managing edi­ Ohio, October 5, 1853. Oliver Cromwell, and first secretary tor of the Pittsburgh Post which position Mr. Foster was prepared for college at of the London Royal Society, had the he held for three years. From 1889 to Ashland (Kentucky) Academy. He en­ backing of the Society in the publi­ 1891 Mr. Layman was in the mercantile tered Marietta College in 1870. He be­ cation in 1668 of an elaborate vol­ and insurance business in Parkersburg, came a member of Alpha Sigma Phi ume in advocacy of a philosophical West Virginia. Following his newspaper Fraternity. He was graduated with language; that the Chinese literati, experience, he was sought by the Chi­ honors in 1874. He was elected to mem­ thousands of years ago had con­ cago Short Line Railroad Company for bership in Phi Beta Kappa at the end of structed in the same principle what the position of director of publicity. his Junior year. is perhaps the most marvelous lan­ After a brief period in this position, he guage that ever existed, one that became financial editor of the Cleveland Immediately following his graduation cemented together the most populous News. He was a special writer on busi­ Mr. Foster entered Yale Divinity School, nation of the earth, while the civili­ ness forecasts including investment bank­ where he was a student for two years. zations of ancient Persia, Babylon, ing and railroad statistics. A little later He transferred in 1876 to Union Theo­ Egypt, Greece and Rome were tum­ he became editor of the Traffic and In­ logical Seminary, from which he was bling in ruins. dustrial Review, a periodical devoted to graduated. He then entered the ministry railroad interests. In the years before of the Presbyterian Church and held "Did it ever occur to you to won­ der where our words came from? the World War he was general agent of pastorates at Florence, Kansas, 1877- the Cincinnati, Indianapolis and Western 1880, and Caldwell, Kansas, 1882. In and why they are what they are? why the building you live in is called Railroad Company. During the War he 1883 he became a professor at Park Col­ was appointed manager of the Central lege at Parkville, Missouri, where he a house, and the animal that was frequently seen before automobiles Region of the United States Shipping taught for three years. He spent the Board. In recent years he has had a years 1880 and 1881 in foreign travel were invented is called a horse, as if the one letter of difference in the position in the General Freight Depart­ studying at the Universities of Berlin ment of the Baltimore and Ohio Rail­ and Leipzig. names showed that there was but one point of difference in the things road at Pittsburgh. In connection with In 1886 Mr. Foster became the pastor themselves? why such words as joy his positions, he was the author of num­ of the Storrs Congregatonal Church of and pleasure and happiness and erous monographs, financial and statis­ Cincinnati. In 1890 he left the pastorate felicity and delight and bliss and tical. of this church and became a publisher ecstacy and rapture and gladness Mr. Layman was twice married, first, and editor. His last pastorate was in a mean almost exactly the same thing to Miss Katherine Reber of Sandusky group of Congregational churches near and yet are so different in them­ whose death occurred many years ago. Marietta from 1910 to 1912. selves, why birds of a feather flock He was married May 17, 1917, to Miss Since 1912 Mr. Foster has been known together and yet we have words like Mary Larkins who survives him. as the founder and author of an inter­ goose and swan and duck and cor­ Mr. Layman's funeral was held June national language which he named "Ro," morant and pelican and flamingo 25 at Pittsburgh. Interment was made and author of the grammars and diction­ and crane and albatross and stork at Sandusky, Ohio. aries pertaining to that language. Ten and heron and ostrich and pheasant years ago Mr. Foster in writing in the and turkey and pigeon and sparrow '75 Marietta Alumnus revealed how the plan and robin and nightingale and hawk of a universal language came to him. and eagle and hundreds of others all * JOHN E. SATER * "My subject is Ro, a language of which are names of birds and yet 1854-1937 project that never entered my mind have not a single letter in common until thirty years after I received to show what kind of birds they are Judge John Elbert Sater, a former my college diploma. Then it came, so nor even that they belong to the United States Federal Judge for the dazzlingly vivid as to take complete bird family at all?" Southern District of Ohio, for many possession of me from that moment. years one of the most useful and influ­ "So I did not begin Ro with any Mr. Foster was married at Florence, ential citizens of Columbus, Ohio, and a thought of attempting to rival or Kansas, June 28, 1882, to Miss Julia loyal alumnus of Marietta College, died supplant English or Latin or Esper­ Fitch. Mrs. Foster, who has been his at his home on July 18, 1937. Judge anto or any other language. All I assistant in the myriad of details in the Sater was in the eighty-fourth year of can now remember of it was the founding of the new language, survives his age. He was born near New Haven, sudden thrill of astonishment that him. Hamilton County, Ohio, January 16, came over me when I first noticed 1854. that there was nothing whatever * FRANK ABBOTT LAYMAN * Judge Sater entered Marietta College about a written or printed word that 1854-1937 as a junior in 1873. He became a mem­ gave any indication of its meaning. ber of the Delta Upsilon Fraternity. He I could not comprehend how up to Frank Abbott Layman died at his was graduated with Phi Beta Kappa that moment I had failed to see a home at Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, fol­ honors in 1875. He received the honor­ thing so obvious or why somebody lowing an illness of two weeks on June ary degree of Doctor of Laws from both else had not seen it long ago and 23, 1937. Mr. Layman was in the eighty- built a language that would remedy Miami and Marietta. this defect. fourth year of his age. He was born in Judge Sater was first a teacher. He Marietta February 26, 1854. was elected superintendent of the schools

Page H to the Thirty-third Degree, the Elks, the France. During his war service he was Izaak Walton League of America, and in the office of the General Purchasing the Columbus and Pelee Fishing Clubs. Agent for a time, and from July, 1918, He was also a member of the Phi Delta to December, 1919, was Purchasing Agent Phi Law fraternity. of the A. E. F. for Portugal. He received a citation for "conspicuous and meritori­ '80 ous service." CHARLES E. BAILEY * Mr. Dyar was married, February 10, 1892, to Miss Fannie W. Shumard who 1858-1937 with their daughter survives him. Death came to Charles Emerson Bailey as a result of a heart attack January 5, '97 1937, at Los Angeles, California. Mr. Bailey was in the seventy-ninth year of Harry Briggs, former president of a his age. He was born in Warren Town­ bank at Beallsville, Ohio, was recently ship, six miles from Marietta, September appointed receiver for the National bank 16, 1858. He was a descendant of Caleb at Chester, West Virginia. Emerson who was a member of the first '98 Board of Trustees of Marietta College and served until 1853. The address of Mrs. Louise Chamberlin Folsom is R. F. D. 2, Fort Wayne, Indi­ Mr. Bailey entered Marietta Academy Judge John E. Sater, '75 ana. Mrs. Folsom makes her home with in 1874. Having completed his prepara­ her daughter, Mrs. Mary Folsom Zahrt, tory course in 1876, he entered Marietta e'28. College and was graduated with honors at Wauseon, Ohio, in August following in 1880. He was a member of Phi Beta '99 his graduation. In 1881 he left this posi­ Kappa. tion for the Ohio State Department of * THORNTON MILLS PRATT * Commons School, where he was made After teaching school for one year Mr. chief clerk. From the time of entering Bailey entered the office of a civil en­ 1876-1937 this position until 1884 he studied law, gineer in 1882 to learn the profession. also under the direction of Attorney J. After a few years of study and experi­ Thornton M. Pratt died following an H. Collins, a prominent attorney of ence he went to the Lake Superior copper illness of several months at his home in Columbus. He was admitted to the bar country as a mining engineer. He pur­ Chicago, May, 1937. Mr. Pratt was in June 3, 1884. sued this profession until within a few the sixty-second year of his age. He was days of his death. born at Bridgeport, Ohio, February 16, Judge Sater's entire professional life 1876, the son of David Perkins Pratt, as a lawyer was spent in Columbus. As Returning from Michigan in the early who was a graduate also of Marietta in a citizen he was appointed to many posi­ nineties, he established himself as an the class of 1866. tions of responsibility. He was a mem­ engineer in Cincinnati for a few years. Mr. Pratt was prepared for college at ber of the Board of Education for five He then went to California where he Portsmouth, Ohio. He entered Marietta years, during which time he worked lived for the remainder of his life. College in 1895 and was graduated Sum- earnestly for the raising of high school Mr. Bailey is survived by his daughter ma Cum Laude in 1899; one of the four standards which would guarantee gradu­ who is an employee of the RKO Studios, alumni to receive such high honors. He ates to enter the best colleges and uni­ Inc., of Los Angeles. Mrs. Bailey died in was also a member of Phi Beta Kappa. versities. This was realized before his 1932. After his graduation Mr. Pratt was em­ term of office expired. He was also the '83 ployed for one year in the indexing and head of the Columbus Chamber of Com­ cataloging of the Rodney M. Stimson merce, and a member of the Columbus * WILLIAM WADE DYAR * collection of Americana. He then en­ Library Board of Trustees. tered the Law School of the University 1860-1937 of Pennsylvania, where he was graduated He was appointed to the Federal bench in 1903 with high honors. He was ad­ by President Theodore Roosevelt in 1907. Major William Wade Dyar died at his home in Tacoma Park, D. C, August 20, mitted to the bar the same year and be­ While a Federal judge, he brought about gan the practice of his profession in a change in the laws and court practices 1937. Mr. Dyar was born October 29, 1860, and was in the seventy-seventh Chicago, in which city he spent his whole covering contributory negligence, the professional career. He was a senior adoption of a compensation law, and bet­ year of his age. Mr. Dyar was born on the Dyar farm near Devol's Dam. He member of the firm of Pratt and Zeiss ter laws relating to employer-employee from 1923 until his death. relations, particularly in strikes. His de­ was the son of Mr. Augustine and Mrs. cision on the Ohio uniform tax law re­ Elizabeth (Pollard) Dyar. He was a Mr. Pratt was married November 6, mains an authority and it led to the brother of Hon. Charles P. Dyar, '79. 1907, to Miss Josephine Townsend of changing of the law. His judicial genius Mr. Dyar was graduated from Marietta Chicago. She and their three children, was seen also in his decisions in the Ohio College in 1883. He was a member of one son, Thornton M., Jr., '30, and two Juvenile Court Law, the Mechanics Lien the Apha Di Gamma Fraternity. He daughters survive. Law, the Federal Narcotic Law, the was well known in College for his ath­ He was a member of the Congrega­ Selective Service Act, the Volstead Act, letic skill in football, rowing, and track tional Church, the Loyal Legion, and the the Federal Search Warrant Act, and the sports, high and broad jumping. Chicago Union League Club. War Powers of Congress Act. He was also a leader in bringing about an amend­ Mr. Dyar, on graduation from Mari­ * FRANK HAYES SIMPSON * ment of the Federal judicial code permit­ etta, entered the law office of the late ting the clearing of overcrowded court Judge Hiram L. Sibley where he studied 1875-1937 dockets. for a year. He then entered the Cin­ cinnati Law School, from which he re­ Death came to Frank Hayes Simpson He was also called to serve in other ceived the degree of LL. B. He began at his home in Charleston, West Vir­ Federal Courts. One decision while serv­ the practice of law in Cincinnati in 1886. ginia February 8, 1937. Mr. Simpson ing in the state of Michigan, known as After four years of law practice in Cin­ was in the sixty-third year of his age. the House of David Case, led to an in­ cinnati, Mr. Dyar edited law publications He was born in Pennsville, Ohio, January vestigation of that body by the State. for the West Publishing Company of St. 1, 1875. Paul. For this work he lived in Wash­ Mr. Simpson entered Marietta Acad­ Judge Sater retired from the Federal emy in 1893. After completing his pre­ bench in 1924. He presented his resig­ ington, D. C, until 1899. In 1900 he took up the practice of law in Boston. paratory work, he entered Marietta Col­ nation in person to President Coolidge. lege in 1895. He became a member of Since that date he has been a member Mr. Dyar was called into the public the Alpha Sigma Phi Fraternity. of the firm of Sater and Sater, a partner­ service several times. He was an attor­ Following his graduation in 1899, he ship formed with his nephew in 1903. ney in the solicitor's office of the De­ accepted a position with the National He was married October 15, 1889, to partment of Agriculture, the solicitor's Supply Company of Toledo, Ohio, and Miss Mary Lyon of Wauseon. To them office of the Department of Justice, and remained in the service of that corpora­ were born two sons and one daughter. more recently a special assistant to the tion until 1922. He then entered the real A son and a daughter survive him._ He Attorney General. During the World estate and insurance business in Charles­ was a member of the Congregational War he served in the United States ton, West Virginia. Church, the Masonic bodies, both the Army, rising therein to the rank of He was married in November, 1913, to York Rite and Scottish Rite, the latter major. He served eighteen months in Marian G. Gies. To them were born two

Page 15 daughters, one of whom lives with her etta and taught Public Speaking and the Geological Department. His office mother at the family home in Charleston. Oratory. In 1914 he became Master in is in the Shell Building, St. Louis, Mis- English at Port Deposit, Maryland. On • '01 April 8, 1918, Mr. Bard entered in the service of the Federal Government and '17 The address of Dr. Thomas Griffiths, was assigned to the editing of manuals Walter G. Springer is in the firm of '01, and Mr. Thomas H. Griffiths, e'29, is for the Finance Department of the Air Will, Folsom and Smith, Inc. of 25 West 427 South Westlake Avenue, Los Angeles, Service. Following the War, Professor Forty-third Street, New York City. California. Bard was associated with the Univer­ Mr. Thomas J. Summers, who has sity of Vermont as a representative, with '18 been Governor of the Southern Ohio Dis­ headquarters in Boston. In more recent trict of Rotary for the past year, at­ years he was principal of the Elmhurst Henry W. Manz who is associated with tended the Rotary International Conven­ School at Connersville. Indiana. the Cincinnati Post has been elected tion at Nice, France, early in June. recently First Vice President of the Following the Convention, Mr. Summers, He was married June 15, 1915, to National Association of Classified Adver­ who was accompanied by Mrs. Summers, Alfreda Coil who died in 1918. He is tising Managers and editor of the na­ toured Italy, Switzerland, Germany, survived by a daughter, Constance Par­ tional publication. Mr. Manz is also the England and Scotland. They returned ker Bard. president of the Cincinnati Advertising to Marietta on July 25. '11 Club. '19 '04 The address of Frances H. Putnam, e'll, is Box 693, Lawrenceville, New The address of Charles Dudley, Jr., An Associated Press Story of the Jersey. e'19, is 14 Georgian Road, Morristown, Coronation of King George VI printed New Jersey. in American newspapers on May thir­ '12 teenth contained news of a Marietta Glenn M. Mcllyar is an investigator '20 College man as follows: ".... In Pica- for the state tax commission of Ohio. At the graduation exercises of the dilly Circus, a Kentuckian who missed His headquarters are in Dayton. University of Pittsburgh, June 9, Mrs. his first Derby in thirty-one years Helen Sheets Hickman was awarded the watched the merry swirling crowd and '13 degree of Master of Arts. Mrs. Hick­ decided it was worth while. He was J. The address of Carlena J. Michaelis, man's thesis was "The Possibilities of Franklin Wallace, an elderly lawyer e'13, is 6350 Seventh Avenue, Kenosha, Savings through Standardization of from Lexington. 'This is rich,' he kept Wisconsin. Sizes, Types, and Specifications of Wrap­ repeating in astonishment." ping Materials." Dr. Albert Rhys Williams has written '14 a book recently entitled The Soviets, '21 9 JOHN WILLIAM LANSLEY * which is being published by Harcourt, Charles Kenneth Hunter, '21, is vice Brace and is selling for $3.00. This book 1892-1937 president of Hogan and Farwell, Real­ answers in its 554 pages, the 88 questions tors, in Chicago, Illinois. Mr. Hunter's most frequently asked on Soviet Russia. John William Lansley, '14, died at business address is 664 North Michigan The work contains also a reading list of Montgomery, Alabama, April 17, 1937. Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. His home ad­ four hundred and fifty references. Just before his death Mr. Lansley had dress is 608 Sheridan Road, Evanston, been suffering from a slight nervous col­ Illinois. '07 lapse and was on his way south seeking rest and recreation. He was in the '22 * MRS. OTTO B. HARTE * forty-fifth year of his age. He was born in Beverly, Ohio, February 12, 1892. Lieutenant and Mrs. Robert W. Be- -1936 dilion, (Martha Daker), e'21-'22, are liv­ Mr. Lansley was prepared for college ing at Round Bay, Severna Park Post Belated news has come to us of the at Marietta High School, from which he Office, Maryland, to which place Lieu­ death of Mrs. Otto B. Harte (Willa A. was graduated in 1910. He entered tenant Bedilion, U. S. N., has been Frost) who died July 24, 1936, at Buffalo, Marietta College the same year. He be­ transferred. , where she had lived for a came a member of the Alpha Sigma Phi number of years. Fraternity. He was graduated with Phi '23 Mrs. Harte went to Wyoming in 1911 Beta Kappa honors in 1914. During his Hubert D. Collins is vice president and where she taught in the high school until last two or three years of college he was manager of the Lamtex Equipment Cor­ her marriage in 1913. She was inter­ laboratory assistant to Professor Ed­ poration, Fort Worth, Texas. ested in education and was one of the mund S. Merriam, in the Department of leaders in establishing parent-teachers Chemistry. Dr. and Mrs. Gordon M. James (Lil­ associations in that state. From 1929- lian Summers, '23) are living in Seattle, 1934 Mrs. Harte was State Director of Following his graduation Mr. Lansley Washington, where Doctor James is asso­ Education. taught Chemistry in Marietta College. ciated with Doctor Jackson K. Halloway, She is survived by one daughter and Late in the year 1914 he entered the ser­ an eminent surgeon of that region. two sons. vice of the Mobile Gas Company at Mo­ Doctor James has charge of the Port bile, Alabama. He held similar positions Gamble General Hospital at Port Gamble, '10 at Mt Clemens, Michigan, and Waukegan, Washington. Illinois. During the World War he Dr. Robert W. Murphy, D. O., e'23, is * HERBERT DRAKELY BARD * served in the Chemical Warfare Service. practicing his profession in Daytona In 1920 he became a member of the staff 1868-1937 Beach, Florida. as gas engineer of the Illinois Commerce David E. Beach, e'23, is associated with Death came to Herbert Drakely Bard, Commission, which has the control of the McClanahan Leonard Pipe Line Com­ former instructor in the Department of public utilities. Mr. Lansley as a scien­ pany, Mount Pleasant, Michigan. English at Marietta College, on July 13, tist grew to be recognized as an author­ 1937, at his home in Connersville, Indi­ ity in his field, the evaluating of public * RALPH MICHAEL HANNAN * ana. Mr. Bard had been in failing health utilities, and many times his testimony for some years. became the basis of important decisions. 1900-1937 Mr. Bard was born at Dunbarton, New Mr. Lansley's funeral was held in Hampshire, on December 2, 1868. He Dr. Ralph Michael Hannan, e'23, well Marietta, and interment made in Oak known dentist of Washington, D. C, died received his preparatory schooling at Grove Cemetery. Phillips Andover Academy at Andover, after a brief illness, July 22, 1937, at the hospital of Georgetown University. He Massachusetts. He received his higher '16 education from the University of Ver­ was in the thirty-seventh year of his age, mont from which he entered the Emer­ Married, at Marietta, Ohio, September having been born in Marietta, August 11, son College of Oratory in Boston where 11, 1937, Mildred L. Butts to Mr. William 1900. he was graduated. He studied also at S. Eberle. Mr. and Mrs. Eberle live at Dr. Hannan entered Marietta College the University of Leipzig and Harvard 308 Bellevue Street, Marietta, Ohio. in September, 1921. He was a student University. Before coming to Marietta Dr. Gordon E. Savage, M. D., is the here two years, leaving in 1923 to study in 1908 Professor Bard taught for a time health commissioner of Greene County, in the Georgetown University Dental in the Emerson College of Oratory, the Ohio. Dr. Savage has his headquarters School. He was graduated therefrom in College Preparatory Department of Bos­ at Xenia. 1927. ton Y. M. C. A. and Worcester Academy. Sydney S. Smith is associated with the Dr. Hannan is survived by his widow, He was instructor in English at Mari­ Shell Union Oil Corporation as head of Mrs. Amy Hannan, and a daughter.

Page 16 '24 26, 1937, Ronald C. Stillman to Miss of the Civic Research Institute. The Magaret Sarbeck. Mr. and Mrs. Stillman Civic Research Institute of Kansas City Samuel N. Dicken, an instructor in the live in Cincinnati, where he is associated was begun about twenty years ago. It University of Minnesota, spent the sum­ with the Proctor and Gamble Company. is a non-partisan body, supported by con- mer doing special work for the United The address of Allen A. Witt is Inter­ trbutions by Kansas City business men. States Soil Conservation Service. Pro­ national Petroleum Company, Limited, Mr. Long went to Norfolk, Virginia, fessor Dicken spent a part of the sum­ Tulara, Peru, South America. from the University of Virginia, where mer at New Philadelphia, Ohio. The address of Dr. Gustav A. Kranz, he had been in the graduate school since Dr. Bernice E. Eddy is located in e'29, is Universitats-Augenklinik, Hin- leaving Marietta. Washington, D. C, where she is em­ denburgstrasze 22, Halle (Saale), Ger­ J. Howard Rees is a graduate student ployed in the U. S. Public Health Service. many. at Ohio State University. Dr. Eddy's address is 402 Francis Scott Frances M. Schneider who has been Key Hotel, Twentieth and F Streets, '30 teaching home economics in the high N. W., Washington, D. C. school at Kingston, Ohio, is now manager Clark E. Lynch, who has been the George L. Meyer is manager of the Kelly News, Marietta, Ohio. of the cafeteria at Marietta Junior-Senior principal of the High School at New High School. Matamoras for several years has ac­ Everett W. Reiter who has been teach­ ing in the schools of Steubenville, Ohio, cepted the superintendency of the con­ '33 solidated schools at Buckland, Ohio. has accepted a position as instructor in Married on Wednesday, June 16, 1937, the Arsenal Junior High School of Pitts­ Married, at Marietta, Ohio, August 23, Helen Palmer, '24, to Mr. Fred Melvin burgh, Pennsylvania. 1937, George W. Lovell to Miss Mazie Thomas. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas are at Born, at Cody, Wyoming, on May 21, Warner. Mr. and Mrs. Lovell live in home at 1028 Indiana Street, Martins 1937, to Mr. and Mrs. Harry Olson, Buchanon, West Virginia, where Mr. Ferry, Ohio. (Jeanette Siggins, e'30), a son named Lovell is located in business. Oscar Fred. French R. Fogle, after spending the '25 summer in Scotland, has resumed his '31 Raymond E. Penn has accepted the studies at Columbia University for his position as head of schools at Houston, Oran B. Farren is principal of the Ph. D. degree in English. Mr. Fogle's Ohio. grade schools of St. Marys, West Vir­ address is 712 Furnald Hall, Columbia ginia. University, New York City. '26 Ruth M. Howe is teaching in the con­ Myra P. Berg is teaching in the public Dr. Wayne Dennis, associate profes­ solidated high school at Roulette, Penn­ schools of Marietta. sor of Psychology at the University of sylvania. Harold L. Burk is in business in St. Virginia, who has been studying Anthro­ Married in New York City, June 17, Marys, West Virginia. pology at Yale for the past year, will be 1937, Margaret Ruth Ludwig to Mr. Jesse The address of Richard C. Cliffton is visiting professor of Psychology for the B. Hanson. Mr. and Mrs. Hanson are at 2759 Hampshire Road, Cleveland, Ohio. coming year at Clark University, Wor­ home at 2228 Fortieth Place, N. W., Clyde F. Collins is the manager of the cester, Massachusetts. Professor and Washington, D. C. Odessa, Texas, branch store of the Mrs. Dennis and their daughter, Mary, Helen V. Nicholas is in the United Jerecki Manufacturing Company of Tul­ have spent the summer in Arizona and States Reemployment Service, Procedure sa, Oklahoma. New Mexico in connection with some Division, with address at 715 Bond Build­ Myron J. Hertel is connected with the research among the Indian inhabitants ing, Washington, D. C. Boston Baptist Bethel at 332 Hanover of that region. Geraldine M. Smith is teaching in the Street, Boston, Massachusetts. Dr. G. Richard Trott, Ph. D., is teach­ high school at Elmore, Ohio. Otha R. Hoskinson is a commercial ing mathematics at the Blue Mountain Married at Zanesville, May 7, 1937, representative for the Maytag Washer College, Blue Mountain, Mississippi. Claire C. Stebbins, e'31, to Miss Frances Company. Mr. Hoskinson is living in Knowlton. Mr. and Mrs. Stebbins will McConnelsville, Ohio. '27 live in Zanesville where he is on the Lewis F. Rosenlieb is Superintendent editorial staff of the Zanesville Signal. of Schools of Pleasants County, West Born, at Cincinnati, Ohio, August 3, Virginia, and lives in St. Marys. 1937, to Dr. and Mrs. Clyde M. Dummer, '32 Marion B. Sloan, who is associated a daughter, named Jane. with the Girl Scouts of Akron, Ohio, was Married, at Marietta, Ohio, September the assistant camp director at Camp '28 5, 1937, Dorothy A. Bergen to Dr. Harold Ledgewood at Peninsula, Ohio. Miss Married, at Groveland, Ohio, July 4, W. Oyster. Dr. and Mrs. Oyster live at Sloan is living at 208 A. C. & Y. Build­ 1937, Donald W. Bingham to Miss Polly 319 Fifth Street, Marietta, Ohio. ing, Akron, Ohio. J. Hickox. Mr. and Mrs. Bingham live Married, at Marietta, Ohio, September Mary C. Strecker is associated with at 26 Grand Street, Haverhill, Massa­ 1, 1937, Mary Frances McCormick to the Family Welfare Society of Balti­ chusetts. John R. Gibson. Mr. and Mrs. Gibson more, Maryland. Thomas L. Bennett is associated with are at home at 77 Crescent Street, Wal- Robert W. Burk, e'33, was appointed the General Electric Company, Bridge­ tham, Massachusetts. on July 1 the clerk of the United States port, Connecticut. Married at Rochester, New York on District Court for northern West Vir­ Married at Pomeroy, Ohio, June 12, August 14, 1937, Dr. Ralph W. Alex­ ginia. Mr. Burk's office will be in Par­ 1937, Walter Raymond Farnham to Miss ander and Miss Gladys Robin. Dr. and kersburg, where he has been practicing Dorothy Lindsey Russell. Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Alexander will live in Philadelphia, law since January 1, 1937. Farnham live in Pomeroy where he is Pennsylvania, where he is serving an Married at Osgood, Indiana, June 2, teaching in the high school. The wed­ intemeship at the Jefferson Hospital. 1937, Mary Louise Hall, e'33, to Mr. ding was a double ceremony, the other Ruth L. Bergen is teaching in the pub­ Kenneth Forshey. Mr. and Mrs. Forshey couple being Mr. William Harrison lic schools of Marietta, Ohio. live in Marietta where Mr. Forshey holds (Tippy) Dye and Miss Mary Kennedy At the annual Graduate School Con­ a position in Remington Rand, Inc. Russell, a sister of Mrs. Farnham. vocation of Brown University on June James R. Jones, e'33, graduated in the Born September 5, 1937, at Iowa City, 19, 1937, Edward Wheeler Dempsey re­ early part of the summer from the Iowa, to Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur L. ceived the degree of Doctor of Philos­ medical school of the University of Schramm, a daughter. ophy. Mr. Dempsey's thesis was "The Maryland. Dr. Jones will spend a year Married at Marietta, May 22, 1937, Experimental Induction of Oestrus in the as interne in the Mercy Hospital, Balti­ Normal and Ovariectomized Guinea Pig." more, Maryland. Kathryn V. Stacy, e'36, to F. Richard Mr. Dempsey received the degree of Ede, e'28. Mr. and Mrs. Ede live in Master of Science from Brown Univer­ The address of Mrs. Rolland Wahlers, Marietta where he is employed in the sity in 1934. (Gladys M. Lynch, e'33) is R. F. D., Port New First National Bank. Clinton, Ohio. Born, at Williamstown, West Virginia, The address of Mrs. Irwin Earnhardt (Ruth Maier) is 3570 Mynders Avenue, '34 on July 20, 1937, a daughter to Mr. and Memphis, Tennessee. Mrs. Lewis W. Gettings (Reina Ashton, Robert E. Hall is working for the Married on Wednesday, June 30, 1937, e'28). Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation at Catherine Shaw Barker and Charles The address of Dr. G. Albert Cook Columbus, Ohio. Gardner Remley. Mr. and Mrs. Remley Ph. D., e'28, is 275 West Hazeltine Jane P. Hancock is head of the Ohio live at 314 Second Street, Marietta, Ohio. Avenue, Kenmore, New York. State Library Extension project in Married in Marietta, Ohio, on August Washington County. 16, 1937, Freda Fay Brickwede to Mr. '29 Corbett Long who has been in research Emearl Stanley. Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Milton G. Rosenbusch is principal of work for the past three years in the city will live in Marietta where he is asso­ the high school at Sycamore Valley, Ohio. of Norfolk, Virginia, has accepted a posi­ ciated with the Standard Oil Company. Married, in Cincinnati, Ohio, on May tion in Kansas City, Missouri, as director Randolph F. Johns&n was graduated

Page 17 with the degree of Bachelor of Divinity Primaire, Aix-en Provence, France, is an 9, 1937, Pauline V. Ballentine, e'38, to from the Crozer Theological Seminary assistant in the Department of Spanish Lieutenant Robert B. Miller. Lieutenant on May 26, 1937. Mr. Johnson will con­ of the University of Wisconsin. and Mrs. Miller live at Newark, New tinue in residence at the Seminary until Married, June 20, 1937, Hope L. Chil- Jersey, where Mr. Miller will attend the February 1, 1938, during which time he ders and Robert Tucker Butterfield, a New Jersey Bell Telephone school for will complete his work for the degree of junior in Marietta College. special technical postgraduate work as Master of Arts from the University of Malcolm E. Kelley has enrolled as a an officer in the United States Army. Pennsylvania. student in the School of Business Ad­ Lieutenant and Mrs. Miller are living at Madeleine P. LaVallee is associated ministration, Harvard University. Apartment D 12, 780 Broadway. with the Ohio Bell Telephone Company Charlotte E. Brown is teaching in the at Zanesville, Ohio. high school at Lower Salem, Ohio. Mary L. Meister is assistant piano Among the scholarships awarded for Interesting Statistics teacher in the Music Department of Ohio this year at Brown University, one has State University. Miss Meister's ad­ been given to Vincent J. Collins, Haver- Continued from page 9. dress is 2104 Iuka Avenue, Columbus, straw, New York. Mr. Collins was a (East Liverpool, Ohio) ; G. William Ohio. graduate student at Brown in 1936-1937. Brokaw, son of George L. Brokaw, Married at Fort Worth, Texas, on June James B. Greene is assistant instructor '01 (East Liverpool) ; Ann M. 2, 1937, David E. Sloan to Miss Ruth in the Zoology Department of Ohio Uni­ Cullen of Marietta. Mr. and Mrs. Sloan versity. Chamberlain, daughter of J. Dudley will live in Odessa, Texas, where Mr. Lida M. Magnani sailed out of New Chamberlain, '13 (Marietta) ; G. Sloan is employed by the Cosden Oil York City September 25 for San Ger­ Blaine Darrah, Jr., son of G. Blaine Company. main, Porto Rico, where she will be an Darrah, '12 (East Orange, New Married, August 25, 1937, Murray B. instructor in English in the San Germain Jersey) ; Kathryn K. Dedman, Wilson to Miss Gladys Welsh. Mr. and Polytechnic Institute. Mrs. Wilson reside in Morgantown, West Helen I. Martin is teaching in the high daughter of Henrietta Kirby Ded­ Virginia. school at Beverly, Ohio. man, '06 (Marietta) ; Jean H. Davis, Married, at Marietta, Ohio, September George B. Miraben is instructor of daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dexter 16, 1937, Helen L. Dickson, e'34, to Mr. English, and is the coach in the high Davis (Margaret Hamilton), '12- Raphael B. Watts. Mr. and Mrs. Watts school at Kingston, Ohio. live in Storrs, Connecticut, where he is Married, at the Methodist Episcopal e'15 (Marietta). an instructor in bacteriology at Connecti­ Church in Sistersville, West Virginia, on Janet E. Dawes, daughter of Mr. cut State College. June 19, 1937, Emily Jane Raspillaire and and Mrs. Beman G. Dawes, Jr. Brooks E. Wigginton is an architect Lloyd Arthur McKibben. Mr. and Mrs. with the Burwell Nursery, Columbus, McKibben will live in Dexter City, Ohio, (Janet Newton), e'17-'19 (Cincin­ Ohio. where he is associated with the Standard nati), and granddaughter of Mrs. Married, June 21, 1937, Louise Evelyn Oil Company. Elsie Eaton Newton, '24, former Uhl to Mr. John G. Tiffany. Mr. and Married, July 22, 1937, Margaret Vir­ Dean of Women at Marietta Col­ Mrs. Tiffany will live in Parkersburg, ginia Schramm to Mr. John Van Gilder West Virginia. Webb. Mr. and Mrs. Webb live at lege, and granddaughter of Beman Edward S. Brigham, e'34, is connected Athens where they are students in Grad­ Gates Dawes, '90, and great grand­ with the City National Bank, Columbus, uate Schools in Ohio University. daughter of John Eaton who was Ohio. Married on May 19, 1937, Berneda Cor- president of the College from 1885 Married at Washington, D. C, Septem­ rine Stage and Mr. Herbert Edwin to 1891; Helen Louise Gramlich, ber 17, 1937, Lieutenant James M. Clark, Boney. Mr. and Mrs. Boney live at 637 e'34, to Miss Frances N. Cook of Long Phillips Street, Marietta, Ohio. daughter of the late Charles C. Beach, California. Lieutenant and Mrs. Charles J. Stanley who has spent the Gramlich, '12; Martha H. Hayes, Clark will live at Quantico, Virginia, last year in the Graduate School of Har­ daughter of Frank L. Hayes, '19 where he is stationed with a regiment vard University, is instructor in English (Marietta) ; Katheryn L. Hender­ of the United States Marine Corps. at Cheeloo University in Tsinanfu, Shan­ Married, July 3, 1937, Joan Elizabeth tung, China. son, granddaughter of Henry Clay Stehle, e'34, and Mr. William West. Mr. Married, August 5, 1937, at Mancelona, Henderson, e'67; Lucretia J. Hill, and Mrs. West live in Marietta. Michigan, Selden A. Stone and Miss Mar­ daughter of E. W. Hill, Jr., e'll guerite Frevert. Mr. and Mrs. Stone will (Marietta). '35 live in Clay City, Illinois. Henry H. Walker is associated with Martha E. Hyre, daughter of Married at Chicago, Illinois, May 23, the McClanahan Leonard Pipe Line Com­ Julia Corwin Hyre, e'18 (Parkers­ 1937, Conice A. DeVol to Mr. Paul F. pany, Mount Pleasant, Michigan. burg) , and granddaughter of C. E. Gratke. Mr. and Mrs. Gratke live at Josephine F. Weber is teaching at 6355 Blackstone Avenue, Chicago, where Bloomingburg, Ohio. Corwin, '92, and great grand­ he is librarian in the Meadville Theo­ The address of Floyd E. Yarnall is 115 daughter of the late Rodney M. logical Seminary. Sixteenth Avenue, Columbus, Ohio. Stimson, '47; Harley W. Magee, son Martha E. Drake is living at 14 Frank­ Born on June 29, 1937, to Mr. and Mrs. of Harley W. Magee, e'17 (Chi­ lin Avenue, Athens, Ohio, where she is Harry Haney (Pauline Gorrell, e'36), a cago) ; Lauraiean Rood, daughter taking postgraduate work at Ohio Uni­ son, named David Lee. versity. of Melville H. Rood, '13 (Arlington, The address of Mr. and Mrs. Emerson Josephine W. Gregg is instructor in E. Mulford (Mary Ellen Johns), e'36-e'36, Massachusetts) ; William E. Ross, English, and is the Librarian in the con­ son of Luther G. Ross, e'18 (Mari­ solidated high school at Cherry Creek, is 1561 Lakeland Avenue, Lakewood, New York. Ohio. etta) ; Florence Springer, daughter Married on Sunday, June 27, 1937, Married at Lock 18, near Marietta, of Walter G. Springer, '17 (Mon­ Edward William Smith and Catherine May 25, 1937, Eleanor E. Yates, e'36, to trose, New York). Louise Schramm, e'38. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. Oliver F. Smith. Mr. and Mrs. Smith live at 604 Fifth Street, Marietta, Smith live at 11119 Lake Avenue, Alba- William Stanley, son of Mr. and Ohio. villa, Cleveland, Ohio, where he is asso­ Mrs. Charles A. Stanley (Louise C. Helen A. Smith is teaching in the high ciated with the Lawyers' Cooperative Hathaway), '01-'01 (Shantung, school at Geneva, Ohio. Publishing Company of that city. Mrs. China), and grandson of Charles A. Katherine Weber, e'35, is teaching in Smith was graduated as a registered Stanley, '58, and Seymour Judson the Home Economics Department of nurse from Christ Hospital in Cincinnati Salem-Liberty High School. in the class of 1937. Mr. Smith was Hathaway, '69; Mary Ceola Tuttle, graduated from the University of Cin­ daughter of Hurd A. Tuttle, '08 '36 cinnati and also the law school of the (Youngstown) ; John R. Warren, same institution. He was recently ad­ Born on August 19, 1937, to Mr. and mitted to the Ohio Bar Association. son of John R. Warren, e'16 (Mari­ Mrs. R. Jamieson MacGregor, a daughter, etta) ; Phyllis Wood, daughter of named Geraldine Jean. Married, August 31, 1937, Dorothy M. '38 the late Walter W. Wood, e'07. Purtle, e'36, to Charles K. Langdon. Mr. Married, at St. Marys, West Virginia, In addition to the above, there and Mrs. Langdon will live in New York June 10, 1937, Mary H. Gruber, e'39, to are many in the student body who City where he is newspaper correspond­ Elijah D. Forrester, e'38. Mr. and Mrs. have come through the influence of ent for the London Times. Forrester are living at 1011 East Four­ William H. Roberts, e'36, who has been teenth Street, Ada, Oklahoma. relatives other than parents, who teaching in the primary school, L'Ecole Married, at Marietta, Ohio, September are members of the alumni group.

Page 18 THE CLASS OF 1937

A professional survey reveals the fol­ William B. Eubank; Home address: Charlotte Manning; Home address: 125 lowing fields of concentration in which Flemingsburg, Kentucky. Myrtle Street, Boston, Massachusetts. the members of the Class of 1937 are Betty V. Fenn; student, business col­ Eileen M. Moore; Home address: 523 settled for the coming year: Applied lege, Cleveland, Ohio; Home address: 732 Central Avenue, New Haven, Connecti­ Science, 9%, Business, 21%, Fine Arts, Second Street, Marietta, Ohio. cut. 4%, Journalism, 1%, Library Work, 1%, Postgraduate Study 34%, Social Work, Betty Jean Gephart; teacher, Warren, Daniel M. Moyer; postgraduate stu­ 1%, Teaching, 14%, and Unclassified, Ohio; Home address: 405 Marion Street, dent, Law School, Columbia University; 15%. Marietta, Ohio. Home address: 411 Monroe Street, Jean S. Goodwin; nurse, Cleveland Easton, Pennsylvania. More specifically, those whose occupa­ Heights School System, Cleveland, Ohio; E. Virginia Myers; secretary, Libra­ tions are known are as follows: Home address: 869 E. Seventy-fifth rian's Office, Marietta College; Home A. Vaughn Abercrombie; pastor, Street, Cleveland, Ohio. address: 821 Third Street, Marietta, Ohio. Orange, Connecticut; student, Yale Di­ C. Dean Gramlich; Peoples Banking Joseph B. Myers; sales representative, vinity School; Home address: 18 Priscilla and Trust Company, Marietta, Ohio; Realsilk Company; Home address: 732 Court, Bridgeport, Connecticut. Home address: 533 Fifth Street, Mari­ Fifth Street, Marietta, Ohio. Raymond L. Beck; Home address, Til- etta, Ohio. Lester E. Noe; Monongahela West tonville, Ohio. W. Maxwell Griffin; postgraduate stu­ Penn Company, Marietta, Ohio; Home James W. Bergen; Bergen Brothers, dent, Albany State Teachers College, address: 104 Poplar Street, Marietta, Marietta, Ohio; Home address: 722 Albany, New York; Home address: Wal­ Ohio. Seventh Street, Marietta, Ohio. ton, New York. Irene G. Ouellette; teacher, Massachu­ Richard L. Bergen; chemist, Dupont Joseph M. Handlan; postgraduate stu­ setts; Home address: South Ashburnham, Company, Old Hickory, Tennessee. dent, Law School, University of Virginia; Massachusetts. Home address: 111 Eleventh Street, Edgar E. Poulton; postgraduate stu­ Chris E. Best; chemist, American Cy- Parkersburg, West Virginia. anamid Corporation, Stamford, Connecti­ dent, University of Cincinnati; Home cut; Home address: 414 Wooster Street, J. Garwood Hart, Jr.; employee, de­ address: Rinards Mills, Ohio. Marietta. partment store, Bridgeport, Connecticut; Paul B. Reall; State Sanitary En­ Home address: 35 Huntington Road, gineer, Marietta, Ohio; Home address: Mary Rachael Blair; student nurse, Stratford, Connecticut. Bellevue Hospital, New York City, New 425 Mulberry Street, Marietta, Ohio. Margaret V. Hazel; student, Marietta Kathryn B. Reichardt; teacher, Bell- York; Home address: Harrisville, West Business Institute; Home address: R. D. Virginia. brook, Ohio; Home address: R. D. 2, 2, Marietta, Ohio. Marietta, Ohio. P'reda M. Boyle; secretary, Nash Kel- C. Edith Henry; postgraduate student, vinator Corporation, Washington, D. C.J Ohio State University; Home address: F. Howard Rexroad; postgraduate stu­ Home address: 824 Connecticut Avenue, R. D. 5, Marietta, Ohio. dent, California Institute of Technology; N. W., Washington, D. C. Home address: 411 Sixth Street, Parkers­ George W. Hill; student, Marietta burg, West Virginia. June Chandler Broughton; Home ad­ Business Institute; Home address: Water- dress: 826 Second Street, Marietta, Ohio. ford, Ohio. Helen E. Richards; teacher, Hamers- Clarence S. Bundy; salesman, Cleve­ Edward L. Jacoby; teacher, Glendale ville, Ohio; Home address: Hamersville, land Roofing Company, Cleveland, Ohio; School; Home address: 905 Greene Street, Brown County, Ohio. Home address: 1628 Elsinore Avenue, Marietta, Ohio. Cecil H. Robinson; student, Crozer East Cleveland, Ohio. Robert R. Johns; salesman, Monarch Seminary; Home address: 2914 Dudley C. Milton Bunnell; Woodhous & Corn­ Tank Company; Home address: 190 Avenue, Parkersburg, West Virginia. wall Insurance Company, Bridgeport, Sanders Road, Apartment 2, Buffalo, Winton C. Sharpe; postgraduate stu­ Connecticut; Home address: 1810 Hunt­ New York. dent, Ohio State University; Home ad­ ington Turnpike, Bridgeport, Connecticut. Joseph C. Johnson, postgraduate stu­ dress: 409 Wooster Street, Marietta, Helentroy Diamond Bush; Home ad­ dent, Brown University; Home address: Ohio. dress: P. O. Box 883, Parkersburg, West 1522 Seventeenth Street, Parkersburg, West Virginia. Merrill Shutts; Home address: 704 Virginia. Greer Avenue, Vienna, West Virginia. H. Ethelyn Jordan; teacher, Maderia, Irene Campbell; student, Marietta Bus­ Ruth Spargo; teacher, Quincy, Massa­ iness Institute; Home address: 106 North Ohio; Home address: 66 North Pine Street, Newark, Ohio. chusetts; Home address: 115 Roberts Seventh Street, Marietta, Ohio. Street, Quincy, Massachusetts. John L. Clark; Republic Steel Corpor­ Kenneth E. Joseph; Home address: 809 ation, Youngstown, Ohio; Home address: Euclid Avenue, Martins Ferry, Ohio. Marjorie B. Spindler; teacher, Water- Schley, Ohio. John T. Keenan; postgraduate student, ford, Ohio; Home address: 713 Eighth Law School, Western Reserve University; Street, Marietta, Ohio. Paul A. Clifford; postgraduate student, Home address: 916 Market Street, Par­ Peter J. Staluppi; Home address: 184 Kent State College; Home address: 32 kersburg, West Virginia. Church Street, Peace Dale, Rhode Island. Bay Twenty-ninth Street, Brooklyn, New Hayward W. Kehl; teacher, German- York. Kenneth L. Cummings; medical stu­ town, Ohio; Home address: Whipple, dent, University of Louisville; Home ad­ Ohio. John E. Starr; chemist, Union Carbide dress: 33 Coleman Street, Bridgeport, & Chemical Company, Charleston, West Connecticut. Lena D. Kicula; Home address: 631 Virginia; Home address: 2905 Murdoch Lee Avenue, Youngstown, Ohio. Avenue, Parkersburg, West Virginia. Maurice C. Davies; postgraduate stu­ Martha H. LawTrence; Home address: dent, Penn State College; Home address: 500 Twelfth Avenue, Huntington, West Nancy V. Stone; student nurse, Yale Conger Avenue, Haverstraw, New York. Virginia. School of Nursing; Home address: 1718 Denver J. Davis; student, Crozer Sem­ Avery Street, Parkersburg, West Vir­ William R. Lombardi; chemist, Calco ginia. inary; Home address: 116 North Seventh Chemical Company, Bound Brook, New Street, Marietta, Ohio. Jersey; Home address: 38 West High Jean N. Stout; librarian, Park Grade Herbert R. DeBussey, Jr., student, Street, Bound Brook, New Jersey. School, Parkersburg, West Virginia; Parkersburg Business Institute; Home Riley M. Lorentz; chemist, Marietta Home address: 324 Sixth Street, Mari­ address: 1726 Beaver Street, Parkers­ Dyestuffs, Marietta, Ohio; Home ad­ etta, Ohio. burg, West Virginia. dress: 705 Washington Street, Marietta, Dorothy H. Taylor; postgraduate stu­ Joe A. Driscoll; chemist, Youngstown Ohio. dent, Columbia University; Home ad­ Sheet & Tube Company, Youngstown, G. Pearl Lowe; Home address: Lock dress: 222 Oliver Road, Wyoming, Ohio. Ohio; Home address: 152 Morrison 17, Marietta, Ohio. Joseph C. Thackery; reporter, Evans­ Street, Struthers, Ohio. William C. Ludwig; psychiatric aide, ville Press, Evansville Indiana; Home Robert M. Dyar; postgraduate student, Hartford Retreat, Hartford, Connecticut; address: 212 W. Water Street, Urbana, University of Detroit; Home address: Home address: 512 Cutler Street, Mari­ Ohio. Lowell, Ohio. etta, Ohio. Continued to page 20.

Page 19 A New Alumni Magazine We wish that every alumnus of The Marietta News Letter, Vol­ Marietta College could meet Dr. ume I, Number 1, appeared on Sep­ ^•^ HE Alumni Council at the Eversull this year, and it is his tember 27, 1937. This publication / annual meeting last June plan to go out to the regional cen­ is the news organ of the Marietta voted to change The Mari­ ters to meet as many of you as is College Club of Cincinnati edited etta Alumnus into a magazine possible. With the exceptions of by Miss Helen Ludwig, Tom Bush more adequate for our alumni body some parts of the Far West and, and Ralph Zimmerman. of 3,000 men and women. The likewise, of the South, you can Congratulations to these pro­ Alumnus for the past five years meet him at some alumni center gressive Cincinnatians for an ex­ has but partially met the needs, without having to travel far. cellent idea! but it was all that we could afford Dr. Eversull's present plans $ $ $ )|i $ $ in depression times. The Alumnus consist of "getting acquainted" in its new form now goes to you trips to Louisiana, Texas, Okla­ The Class of 1937 and we hope you will welcome it. homa, Kansas and Missouri; Wash­ Continued from page 19. The opportunity is given you ington, D. C, Philadelphia, and Josephus T. Thomas; Sherwin Williams also to cooperate with the editorial New York City; and the Far West, Company, Cleveland, Ohio; Home ad­ board in every way possible,—with dress: Y. M. C. A., Cleveland, Ohio. including San Francisco and Los Elizabeth B. Watkins; secretary, Cin­ news of the alumni, with letters Angeles; as well as Cleveland, cinnati, Ohio; Home address: 4163 Har­ expressing opinion on matters that Youngstown, and the Wheeling rison Street, Bellaire, Ohio. will make for the building of Mari­ area. Other trips will be scheduled Philip B. Wilkin; Home address: 127 for the winter and spring. W. South Street, Hillsboro, Ohio. etta College, with your interesting Edward T. Williams; teacher, Garfield experiences and your reminiscences Dr. Eversull is a brilliant and in­ Junior High School, Cleveland, Ohio; of college generations of other spiring speaker. It is the hope Home address: 12612 Maplerow Avenue, days. Cleveland, Ohio. that you as alumni will arrange for William L. Williams; pastor, South We want to make The Alumnus him to address your high school Ashburnham, Massachusetts; student, interesting with many items of assemblies, your service clubs and Andover Newton; Home address: 160 news of the alumni themselves. your church groups. He will be Gaylord Avenue, Plymouth, Pennsyl­ We shall make it also the organ vania. glad to accept if it is possible to Elizabeth H. Wilson; teacher, Copley, for helping to carry on Marietta's fit a time into his busy schedule. Ohio; Home address: 2319 Woodstock Five Year Forward Plan. We shall In the first month of his presidency Avenue, Swissvale, Pennsylvania. give you the news of the Campus (May and June) he was speaking William L. Wolfe; Rig and Reel Com­ and such news of the Marietta at a high school commencement pany, Parkersburg, West Virginia; Home area that may be of interest to address: 1907 Twentieth Street, Parkers­ almost every night. burg, West Virginia. alumni. Juanita C. Wood; postgraduate stu­ ****** ****** dent, Columbia University; Home ad­ dress: 720 Third Street, Marietta, Ohio. Dr. Harry K. Eversull Homecoming, November 6 William H. Yoho; postgraduate stu­ Dr. Harry K. Eversull has been dent, University of Iowa; Home address: the active head of Marietta College Alumni should plan to come to R. D. 1, Byesville, Ohio. Marietta for the Homecoming Kenneth H. Ziegler; employee, hard­ for five months. During that ware store, Chicago, Illinois; Home ad­ period, Dr. Eversull has made a game, November 6. Washington dress: 22 Pittsburgh Circle, Ellwood City, thorough study of the situation of & Jefferson will be the food on the Pennsylvania. the institution, the problems con­ football bill of fare. In addition Married, November 16, 1936, Roma fronting it, and the policies for there will be the usual fraternity Atkinson, e'37, to Mr. William K. Mill- baugh. making it go foward. He has and sorority reunions the evening Ellis T. Bookwalter, e'37, who has been been able to come to some very preceding and the get-to-gether on associated with the Amsterdam, New definite conclusions, and has set Saturday evening following the York, Y. M. C. A. has accepted the posi­ out to realize without any delay game. It will be an opportunity to tion of boys' work secretary at the Y. M. C. A. of Kingston, New York. Mr. Book- whatsoever the potential possibili­ visit the Campus Buildings and to waiter took up his new duties on Sep­ ties for Marietta to become one of see the improvements which have tember first. the foremost colleges of the great been effected. Alumni should plan Married at Belpre, Ohio, on May 30, Middle West. Everyone who has to eat at least one meal at The 1937, Russell S. Pride, e'37, to Miss Ruth Commons and there mingle with Maness. Mr. and Mrs. Pride will live in seen him and has heard him tell of Belpre where he is associated with the plans is ready to cooperate with the students. Come, the team will Peoples Banking and Trust Company's him in every way possible. welcome your presence. Belpre Branch.

Page 20 REGIONAL CLUBS Marietta College Club of Chattanooga Organized October 17, 1925 <1U Marietta College Club of Cincinnati President Organized 1855 Secretary President Henry W. Manz, '18 Cincinnati Post, Cincinnati, Ohio MARIETTA Vice President .... Dr. Ralph W. Eddy, '27 Marietta College Club of Washington, D. C. Secretary B. Gates Dawes, '17 Organized October 17, 1925 1724 Carew Tower, Cincinnati, Ohio President S. Stuart Wilson, '27 Treasurer .. Mrs. Louise Hornbrook Bush 230 Rhode Island Avenue, N. E„ ALUMNUS Washington, D. C. Marietta College Club of New England Vice President Dr. Edwin H. Etz Issued Quarterly Secretary-Treasurer .... Subscription $2.00 per Year Organized April 4, 1E02 President Edward C. Moore, '77 .... Mrs. Gladys Mason Lawhorn, '07 21 Kirkland Street, Cambridge, Mass. 6309 Georgia Street, Chevy Chase, Maryland Vol. 17 October-November No. 1 Secretary James H. Sheldon, '28 Hart School, Adams Avenue, Stamford, Conn. Marietta College Club of Detroit Published by Organized April 16, 1926 THE ALUMNI COUNCIL OF Marietta College Club of New York President J. Lawrence Buell, '92 MARIETTA COLLEGE Organized April 4, 1902 8120 East Jefferson Avenue, Detroit, Michigan President Henry F. Corwin, '14 Secretary .. Mrs. Corrine Bohl Toepel, '16 Marietta, Ohio 55 Broad Street, New York City 369 East Grand Boulevard, Detroit, Michigan Secretary Charles F. Jennings, '32 Member American Alumni Council 1802 Quentin Road, New York City (Brooklyn) Marietta College Club of Wheeling Treasurer Irvin A. Johnson, '22 Organized April 23, 1926 President Roy B. Naylor, '92 GEORGE J. BLAZIER, '14, Editor Marietta College Club of Columbus 502 National Bank Building, Wheeling, W. Va. Associate Editors: Organized January 26, 1904 Secretary Roy E. Wilson, '24 Orchard Terrace, Indianna Street, Charles A. Ward, '90, President Almond F. Shafer, '25 Martins Ferry, Ohio The Pure Oil Company, 529 Huntington Bank Building, Columbus, Ohio Vice President .. Arthur C. Mechling, e'19 Columbus, Ohio Secretary-Treasurer .... Marietta College Club of Parkersburg Emmett Sutton, Jr., '27, .... Frederick B. Goebel, '28 Organized September 5, 1928 Houghton Mifflin Company, Pure Oil Company, Columbus, Ohio President William F. Leeper, e'09 386 Fifth Avenue, 835 Quincy Street, Parkersburg, W. Va. New York City Marietta College Club of Chicago Vice President Donald F. Black, '29 Bradford C. Wells, '32, Organized March 23, 1905 Secretary Mary Louise Taylor President Harry B. Gear, '92 1005 Quincy Street, Parkersburg, W. Va. 3800 14th Street, N. W., 72 West Adams Street, Chicago, Illinois Washington, D. C. Secretary-Treasurer .... Marietta College Club of Seattle Joseph M. Handlan, '37, .... Mrs. Ada Swingle Camp, '05 824 Seward Street, Evanston, Illinois Organized June 17, 1929 University of Virginia, President Charlottesville, Virginia Marietta College Club of Cleveland Secretary Sibboleth DeLancey, '26 Professor Merrill R. Patterson, Organized April 11, 1923 8304 Thirty-second Avenue, Seattle, Wash. Marietta College, President Charles C. White, '97 Marietta, Ohio 314 Plain Dealer Building, Cleveland, Ohio Secretary Mildred Palmer, '17 Marietta College Club of Charleston THE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION 1849 Taylor Road, East Cleveland, Ohio Organized November 23, 1629 President: President Stanley C. Morris, '14 Kanawha Valley Bank Building, Charles C. White, '97, 314 Plain Dealer Marietta College Club of Akron Charleston, West Virginia Building, Cleveland, Ohio. Organized February 19, 1925 Secretary R. G. Merrick, '16 President William S. Wolfe, '10 City National Bank Building, Vice President: Charleston, West Virginia Seiberling Rubber Company, Akron, Ohio Frank B. McKinney, '98, Marietta, Ohio. Secretary Mrs. Lee Kanaga, e'06 67 Hurlburt Street, Akron, Ohio Secretary: Marietta College Club of George J. Blazier, '14, Marietta College, Fort Worth-Dallas Marietta, Ohio. Marietta College Club of Syracuse Organized March 29, 1930 Organized April 20, 1925 President William Paul Gage, e'98 MEMBERS OF President Charles P. Wortman, '97 729 Kirby Building, Dallas, Texas THE ALUMNI COUNCIL 212 West Beard Avenue, Syracuse, New York Secretary Fred C. Cutter, '10 Secretary David R. Cooper, e'03 Fair Building, Fort Worth, Texas Terms to expire 1938: 515 Dillaye Building, Syracuse, New York Miss Anna Richards, '99 Judge Carl C. Hoyt, '11 Marietta College Club of Philadelphia Marietta College Club of Toledo Stanley C. Morris, '14 Organized April 22, 1925 Organized December 3, 1930 E. Wayne Jordan, '24 President John K. Payne, '98 President Edgar W. Norris, '20 Wilbur L. Schramm, '28 133-5 South Fourth Street, Philadelphia, Pa. 540 Nicholas Building, Toledo, Ohio Terms to expire 1939: Vice President .... Clarence M. Jones, '17 Frank B. McKinney, '98 Secretary ...... Mrs. Caroline Kast Miskimen, '02 Marietta College Club of Los Angeles Mrs. Ethelyn S. Hancock, '99 Organized September 30, 1932 5501 DeLancey Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Dr. James B. Penrose, '02 President.. Reverend Edward E. Clark, '83 Berton S. Levering, '12 5423 Rockland Avenue, Eagle Rock, California Marietta College Club of Pittsburgh Harry E. Schramm, '18 Secretary John M. Penrose, '30 Organized April 28, 1925 254% S. Coronado Street, Los Angeles, Calif. Terms to expire 1940: President John K. Payne, '98 Vice President F. Ross Altvater, '13 Mrs. Florence S. Mautz, '08 9 Wood Street, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Marietta College Club of Huntington Corwin L. McMahon, '20 Secretary-Treasurer .... Organized May 15, 1937 Donald F. Black, '29 .... Margaret S. West, '13 President •- Paul Scott, '90 Dorothy H. Taylor, '37 Coronado Apartments, East Liberty Street, Secretary Clyde W. Davis, e'10 Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Page 21 \htp^

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