VOLUME 40, NUMBER 26 APRIL 28, 1938 When You Go CAMP OTTER JULY 6 TO AUGUST 27, 1938 East or West, Stop Off WHERE CORNELLIANS SEND THEIR SONS AMP OTTER gives your boy a chance to develop himself. Located as at C we are in the woods of Canada's Muskoka Lake Region, we live by ourselves and make our own rules. Your boy learns to mix with CORNELL others, to become self-sufficient in the woods, at home in and on the DAILY AIR CONDITIONED TRAINS water. He grows mentally, physically, and morally, through the give and take of living with other boys of the sort you want him to know. WESTWARD Light type, a.m. EASTWARD Read Down Dark type, p.m. Read Up 11:15 9:10 Lv New York Arr. 8:45 7:05 11:30 9:25 Newark 8:29 6:49 11:35 9:10 " Philadelphia ' 8:19 7:45 6:46 *4:45 Arr ITHACA Lv. 1:07 *1 0:46 Enjoy a Day or Week End in Ithaca

4:45 6:46 Lv. ITHACA Arr. 10:28 1:07 7:40 9:45 Arr Buffalo Lv. 7:30 10:15 4:40 7:15 " Pittsburgh " 10:35 10:40 11:19 2:05 Cleveland 12:20 11:45 4:55 7:30 Arr Lυ. 10:00 *Λ>M York sleeper open to 8 a.m. at Ithaca, and at 9 p.m. from Ithaca

Last summer a lot of us made Through all this time, it has become bows and arrows, and some became a tradition that Cornellians come to CORNELL HOSTS expert archers. "Doc" Showacre and Camp Otter, and lots of alumni who some of the others fitted up an excel- came here as boys now send their sons. Good Places to Know lent dark room at the Camp, and he Our counsellors are mostly Cornell showed us about photography. Other undergraduates, carefully selected be- boys developed interest in nature lore, cause they are leaders and know how ITHACA and learned to know the birds and to get along with boys. If your son DINE AT animals of the woods and waters. attends Cornell later, he'll find him- Still others went in for other kinds of self among old friends. GILLETTE'S CAFETERIA handicraft, with the counsellors lend- Cost Is Reasonable On College Avenue ing a hand from their own experience. The cost of eight weeks at Camp Where Georgia's Dog Used to Be Air Conditioned the Year 'Round We Live in the Woods Otter is $175. The Camp has no set CARL J. GILLETTE '28, Propr. Every boy at Camp Otter learns to uniform, but requires only warm, swim and dive in our own private serviceable clothes such as every boy Lake Otter. We all take canoe trips has. It is about 150 miles north of NEW YORK AND VICINITY with Bill Crewson and counsellors Toronto, accessible by Canadian Na- through the unspoiled wilderness of tional Railroad to Dorset, and thence In Beautiful Bear Mountain Park . . . Algonquin Park, with plenty of fish by boat through the Lake of Bays. BEAR MOUNTAIN INN and good wholesome grub the sum- It's a perfectly feasible automobile Palisades Interstate Park Commission mer through. trip, and many parents bring their A. C. BOWDISH '26 For eight glorious weeks this sum- boys up or come to get them, spending Manager mer, we'll be at Camp Otter again, a few days fishing or enjoying the Phone Stony Point 1 for Reservations along with a limited number of new- woods. comers whose applications come in Our 1938 booklet is illustrated with VIRGINIA before the quota is filled. pictures of the Camp and gives com- This will be Camp Otter's twenty- plete information that you'll want to ROLAND EATON '27 eighth season since it was first opened have. It will be mailed to you without Managing Director in 1910 by Professor C. V. P. Young obligation if you write Howard B. '99; the eighth year under the present Ortner ΊS, Director, 109 Irving Place, aτalier director. Ithaca, N. Y. G (This is the fourth of a series of advertisements addressed to Cornell Hotel and Country Clufc fathers and mothers—To be continued.^) VIRGINIA ELL ALU I Subscription price $4 per year. Entered as second class matter, Ithaca, N. Y. Published weekly during the college year and monthly in July and August VOL. XL, NO. Z6 ITHACA, NEW YORK, APRIL 2.8, 1938 PRICE, 15 CENTS

HOTEL EZRA CORNELL tions have already been received are SEEK NEW ENDOWMENT To Defy a Jinx Ralph Hitz of The New Yorker; Louis For Medical College-Hospital On Friday May 13, the thirteenth an- Toth and Arthur M. Fox of the hotel The Medical College in New York and nual "Opening" of Hotel Ezra Cornell accounting firm Horwath & Horwath; New York Hospital have launched a will take place when students of Hotel John Sherry and Henry B. Williams '30 campaign to raise $17,000,000 for expan- Administration headed by Gert W. H. of the Waldorf-Astoria; Robert K. sion of medical services and research Schmidt '38 as managing director, take Christenberry and John L. Shea 'z6 of and teaching. Of the additional endow- over the operation of Willard Straight the Astor; Milton C. Smith '32. of the ment sought, the income from $8,000,000 Hall. From manager to the bellhops the Westbury; F. W. Bering and Richard D. is required to make possible the full use entire personnel will be made up of stu- Vanderwarker '33 of the Hotel Sherman, of the Hospital plant, and that from dents, who have promoted, financed, and Chicago; Frank A. Dudley of United $9,000,000 to strengthen the pre-clinical now will operate "the world's only Hotels, Inc.; Wallace C. Blankinship '31 departments in the Medical College en- hotel-for-a-day." of Stouffer's Restaurants, Cleveland; gaged in teaching and research. The unusual theme suggested by the Richard B. Shanley '31 of the Hotel The medical center bounded by Sixty- thirteenth annual event to be held on Vendig, Philadelphia; Kenneth W. Baker eighth and Seventy-first Streets, York Friday, May 13, has been developed by of Lee House, Washington; William R. Avenue and the East River, operated by Schmidt, who purchased the thirteenth Needham '2.5 and H. Victor Grohmann a joint administrative board of the Med- share of capital stock in the enterprise, '2,8 of Needham & Grohmann, hotel ical College and New York Hospital, was whose automobile license plates bear the advertising; Albert E. Koehl '2.8 of erected in 1932. to endure "not less than numerals 13913, and who has been thir- Swafford & Koehl, advertising; Donald a hundred years." Henry G. Barbey, teen years in this country for which he C. Swenson '2.8 of Knott Hotels Corpor- president of the Hospital and chairman sailed from Amsterdam, Holland, on ation; Edward J. Vinnicombe '33 of Hotel of the joint board, points out, however, March 13, 192.5. Nevertheless, the board Puritan and Frank H. Briggs '36 of the that "its specifications provided for of directors, look forward to another Parker House, Boston; and Clyde A. floors and services which were beyond successful Hotel Ezra Cornell. Jennings '15 of The Elton, Waterbury. what could be put into operation at the The program will follow in general outset. There remain to be put into use those of past'' openings.'' All day Friday, MISS ROSE IN BERKELEY two entire floors of the children's hos- visitors are welcomed at Hotel Adminis- Miss Flora Rose, Director of the Col- pital, a floor of the psychiatry building, tration classes. At noon, guests and lege of Home Economics, was the guest and additional medical pavilions for the Senior^ will gather for a luncheon in the of honor at a luncheon meeting of the 'sick poor'; and there is need also for Terrace Room. Following, there will be Cornell Women's Club of Northern Cali- expansion and development of present a round table discussion on the subject of fornia at the Berkeley home of Mrs. D. service in the fields of neurology, diseases real estate, relating primarily to hotel Scott Fox (Grace Fordyce) '15, April 16. of the eye, ear, nose, and throat, and in properties, and Professor" Howard B. Miss Rose told of the expansion of the field of orthopedics. No part of the Meek, head of the Department of Hotel the College since the new building was $17,000,000 is to be used for additonal Administration, will give some observa- constructed, of trends in home economics, plant." The new endowment will cover tions on world affairs made during his and of the relations between the College the present annual operating loss of ap- recent trip around the globe. During the and Hotel Administration. proximately $1,000,000, and will pro- afternoon, ladies will be the guests of Mrs. Edwin W. Kramer (Olive R. vide these needed services with less de- Willard Straight Hall and girl students Edwards) '05 was reelected president of pendence on current donations. Included of the Hotel School. Friday night an the Club, and Mrs. Francis G. Short is provision to establish twenty-eight elaborate seven-course dinner will be (Louise Baker) '19 was reelected vice- fellowships for graduate doctors whose prepared by the student staff and served president. Mrs. Edward L. Markell work show^s brilliant promise but who by them in Memorial Room. Here Frank (Genevieve Williams), '13 Grad, is cor- lack funds to continue. A. McKowne, president of Hotel Statler, responding secretary, and Marian R. The board of governors of New York Inc. and chairman of the educational Ballin '31 is secretary-treasurer. Hospital have published an illustrated committee of the American Hotel Asso- volume of 132. pages, So Near the Gods, ciation, will be the principal speaker. which describes graphically the services Between the banquet and a gala dance, of the Hospital and Medical College and the Musical Clubs will present in Wil- points the needs to be met. It recounts lard Straight Theatre a special perform- that New York Hospital, chartered by ance of their recent road success, "Hells George III in 1771, was the first in New Bells." York City. It describes typical cases Saturday morning at ten, the Cornell cured and prevented by the work of the Society of Hotelmen will hold its annual Hospital and College, recalls the long spring meeting, in the North Room of association of the two, and outlines the Willard Straight, with the president, training provided for physicians and the Joseph P. Binns '2.8, managing director of research carried on and to be done. It The Claridge, Atlantic City, N.J., pre- points to the great metabolism tables siding. Following a luncheon for guests, compiled under the direction of the late alumni, and Seniors, the afternoon will Dr. Graham Lusk of the College and used be devoted to the renewing of old by physicians everywhere; to the work acquaintances at Taughannock Park, in endocrinology carried on by the De- where there will be an alumni-under- partment of Anatomy; to that in preven- graduate softball game and picnic. Photo Muller '30 tive medicine at the new Kips Bay-York- Among hotelmen from whom reserva- SPRING ON THE CAMPUS ville Health Center and in which the 358 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

College has always been a pioneer; to vention in the history of the State of In the seventh, another , another the John E. Berwind Maternity Clinic New York; the first since 1916. It will be walk, and a single by Pitcher Healey operated with the cooperation of the in session through the summer, to con- filled the bases with two out. Captain Medical College; to the psychiatric teach- sider and adopt proposed amendments to Lupein of Harvard, who had already ing of the College; and to many other the State Constitution, for submission to safely twice, lined out to Brown in center contributions and possibilities. It shows the voters at the general election next field after his drive over the right field that the cost of educating a student in November. Among the twelve volumi- fence went foul by a few feet. the Medical College is $1,945.48 an- nous documents prepared for the conven- The box score: nually, and that the tuition paid by the tion, two were compiled in Myron Tay- CORNELL (3) 2.75 students meets about one-fourth of lor Hall by the staff of the State Law AB R H PO A E this cost; that while the College has Revision Commission, of which Professor Johnson, ib 3 i i 2. i i J. Gannett, If-rf 300000 succeeded in balancing its budget, "we Charles K. Burdick is chairman and Pro- Polzer, ss 4 i o 5 2. i are never at peace with disease. The fessor John W. MacDonald '2.5 is execu- Lozier, ib 300900 Medical College should be put on a ' war- tive secretary and director of research. Howe, rf 4 o 2. i i o time' basis." A ten-year program of They deal with the annotation of the Mogk, If o o o o o o "minimum needs" is given, and a list of State Constitution and amendments pro- Brown, cf 100300 Gaily, 3b 301111 gift opportunities.'' posed from 1895, when it was last re- White, c o o o 2. i o Among the members of the board of vised, to 1937. a-Tuthill o o o o o o governors of The Society of the New b-Bogart o i o o o o York Hospital are Dr. Livingston Far- Kuchmy, c 100400 Stehnach, p 2. o o o 4 o rand, President Emeritus of the Univer- sity, and Dr. Henry P. deForest '84. About Totals 16 3 4 2.7 n 3 a—Batted for White in third, LEHIGH CHANGES SCHEDULES ATHLETICS b—Ran for Tuthill in third. With the change to daylight saving HARVARD (o) AB R H PO A E time in New York City and some other LEAD BASEBALL LEAGUE R. Gannett, cf 4 o i 2. i o larger cities, Lehigh Valley Railroad has Undefeated in two games, the baseball Johns, ss 400130 advanced the times of its night trains team tops the Eastern Intercollegiate Lupien, ib 401710 between Ithaca and New York and Grondahl, 3b 4 o o i i i League. A 3-0 victory over Harvard on Shean, ib 400330 Philadelphia. Hoy Field April 19 broke a first-place tie Soltz, If 400000 The Star, which formerly left New with the Crimson and sent the Varsity Hoye, rf 301000 York at 9:40 p.m. and Philadelphia at to the top. Doyle, c 400910 9:45, now leaves both terminals at 9:10 Healey, p 301010 As in the Yale game April 16, pitching c-Ulin i o o o o o p.m., standard time, arriving Ithaca at told the story. Michael N. Stehnach '39 4:45 a.m., where sleeper may be occupied of Dolgeville, who plays left field when Totals 34 o 5 14 14 i until 8. From Ithaca, the night train now he isn't on the mound, held Harvard's c-Batted for Healey in ninth. leaves at 10:46 p.m., arriving New York batters to five scattered hits. He was most Cornell ooi oio 01 x 3 at 7:05 a.m. and Philadelphia at 7:45 a.m. Harvard ooo ooo oo o o effective in the pinches. Stehnach fanned Runs batted in: J. Gannett, Howe. Three Black Diamond, westbound, now seven and gave two passes. Three Cornell a m aπ< base hits: Lupien, Howe. Sacrifices: Johnson, leaves New York at 11:15 ^ errors did no damage. Brown. Stolen bases: Lupien, Johnson i, J. Philadelphia at 11:35, arriving Ithaca at Cornell's hitting, however, was weak. Gannett, Lozier. Double play: Grondahl to 6:46 p.m. Eastbound schedule of the The team collected only four hits off Shean to Lupien. Left on bases: Harvard 9, Diamond remains as before, leaving Cornell 5. Bases on balls: off Healey 4, off Healey, the Harvard pitcher. Healey, Stehnach i. Struck out: by Healey 7, by Ithaca at 1:07 p.m., arriving New York however, gave out four walks and let Stehnach 7. Umpires, Diviney and Sawyer. 8:45 p.m. and Philadelphia 8:19 p.m. Varsity runners steal four bases. Two Time, 1:55. Ithaca and the University remain on Harvard errors contributed to Cornell's Cornell pitching was ineffective against standard time. scoring. Healey, like Stehnach, struck Colgate in a non-league game at Hamil- out seven batters. ton April 2.3. Colgate won, 10-4, collect- WORK ON CONSTITUTION Frank B. Howe, Jr. '40, son of Professor ing 14 hits off William E. Bensley, Jr. '39 The historic State Constitutional con- Frank B. Howe, Agronomy, scored one of Springville, Lawrence Halprin '39 of vention which opened in Albany April 5 of Cornell's runs with a triple in the New York City, and Worthington Dodd has among its 168 delegates nine alumni, eighth. He was thrown out at the plate '38 of Cincinnati, Ohio. Dodd had held and William F. Bleakley '04 of Yonkers trying to stretch the hit into a home . Yale to four hits the week before. is its vice-president. Delegates were Cornell started scoring in the third. Polzer and Howe each collected two elected last fall; all the Cornellians are Healey walked Fred A. Tuthill, Jr. '38 of hits off Colgate pitching. Republicans. Besides Bleakley they are Lowman, pinch hitting for White, and Jerome D. Barnum Ίz of Syracuse, Wil- Stehnach. Johnson sacrificed. Donald B. LACROSSE TEAM LOSES liam H. Coon '2.2. of Cortland, Philip Bogart '40 of Afton, running for Tuthill, The lacrosse team lost its second game Eltinge '89 of Kingston, Paul Folger Ό6 scored when Gannett grounded to Shean, April 2,3, to Princeton at Princeton, 9-1. of Rochester, Riley H. Heath '12. of Bogart beating Shean's throw to the William J. Brennan '40 of Geneva, first Ithaca, Benjamin Kenyon '07 of Auburn, plate. attack, scored the lone goal. Stephen M. Lounsberry Ίo of Owe go, Johnson scored the second run unas- and Harold Riegelman '14 of New York sisted. With one out in the fifth, he DROP TWO AT TENNIS City. William R. Lee '05 of Utica was singled, stole second, then third, and The good record of the tennis team in also elected, but declined to serve. came home when Grondahl failed to hold its spring recess engagements was offset Judge Bleakley is chairman of the a throw at third. April 2.2. and 2.3 when it lost to Princeton, committee on industrial relations and Twice Harvard, rated one of the favor- 9-0, and Navy, 6-3. workmen's compensation. Judge Heath ites to capture this year's championship, Princeton's superiority was so decisive is chairman of the committee on future threatened to score. An error and a base that Cornell won only one set, credited amendments and revision of the Consti- on balls put two Harvard runners on base to William T. Rathbun '38 of Toledo, tution. in the second, with one out, but Stehnach Ohio. Rathbun and Robert Boochever '39 This is the eighth Constitutional con- struck out the next two men. of Ithaca won their singles matches APRIL z8, 1938 359

against Navy, and Boochever paired with Dr. James Raycroft of Princeton gave Davy Hoy's forsythia a golden surf along Robert J. Schwartzman '40 of Bayside in the address of welcome, response being the edges of the field which is his tangible a doubles victory. made by Abington Goodden, British vice- monument. consul. John Kieran, sports columnist of Once a year, I think, every man should GOLFERS WIN TWICE the New York Times, Charles E. Parker go to a college ball game in the spring, The golf team scored two victories last of the World Telegram, and Asa S. Bush- for the good of his soul, just as once a week, both on its home course, the nell, executive director of the central year he should partake of dandelion Country Club of Ithaca. Cornell defeated office for Eastern intercollegiate athletics, greens and fried suckers (however much Colgate, 7j£-ιJ^, April 2.0, and Amherst, also greeted the visitors. he may detest such provender), as a 5H-3K, April 2.3. deferential gesture to departing customs. The Junior Varsity team lost to Penn State at State College, 8-1, April 2.3. NOW, IN MY TIME! Captain Charles S. Willcox '38 of NORTH JERSEY WOMEN Birmingham, Ala., had rounds of 71 and By Romeyn Berry Twenty-five members of the Cornell 73, one and two over par, in winning two Womens' Club of Northern New Jersey singles matches. James M. Bostwick '40 met March 30 at the Washington Inn in of Hamilton, Ont., also won two singles Maplewood. After dinner, Norma Nord- One day last week I put aside the matches in the week's play. strom spoke on the purpose, activities, weapons of agriculture, took the after- and problems at the International House FROSH WIN AND LOSE noon off and went to the Harvard base- in New York. Freshman teams broke even in two ball game. New officers were elected as follows: contests last week. They defeated Dick- Old timers would have enjoyed that president, Marian West '36; vice-presi- inson Seminary, 11-7, at baseball on Hoy game, as I did, because it turned out to be dent, Mrs. Dwight Copeland (Evelyn H. Field April 13. The lacrosse team lost to an old-fashioned contest in which the Miller) '2.2.; recording secretary, Mrs. Alexander Hamilton High School of defense predominated and where by Martin Goerges (Frankie B. Culpepper) Brooklyn, 2.1-5, on lower Alumni Field reason of good pitching and accurate '30; corresponding secretary, Mrs. J. V. April 2.2.. The Brooklyn school team was fielding on both sides the strategy of Starr (Rebecca E. Martin) '2.7; treasurer, ahead by one goal, 6-5, at the half, but both teams had to be directed toward Mrs. Harold Frevert (Edith M. Conrad) pulled away easily in the second half. whittling out the single run that spelled '2.5; and program chairman, Margaret the ball game from the start. In the com- Eberhardt '36. ODDS AND ENDS plete absence of consecutive hitting, it The rugby "season" ended last week was a continuing struggle to get a man on CORNELL ENGINEER without a game. Efforts to bring a team base and then advance him with all the In The Cornell Engineer for March, to Ithaca failed. Those interested in the arts employed by the Baltimore Orioles R. H. Shreve '02. describes and illustrates sport, however, expect to play in Ber- in the days of Hughey Jennings, John with photographs and maps some of the muda during the 1939 spring recess. McGraw, and Willie Keeler. It was planning and architectural problems in- Among the players who visited the island clever, adroit baseball, with adventurous volved in building the temporary city in during Rugby Week early this month base running and timely bunts substituted Flushing Meadows for New York were five football players who have been for high, looping flies into nearby stands World's Fair 1939. Walter J. Ryan Ό6, taking a whirl at the English game. which are called home runs under kindly logging engineer for the Weyerhaeuser The Carnegie Cup regatta on Lake ground rules designed to create fictitious Timber Company, discusses some of the Cayuga Friday, May 2.0, will begin at batting records for celebrated hitters. engineering developments in a Puget 5:15 p.m., the Athletic Office has an- Cornell, you might be interested to Sound district logging area eight by nounced. Cornell, Yale, and Princeton know, has the only field in the League of sixteen miles; and Gustav J. Requardt Freshman crews will row at that time, regulation size and arrangement. There '09, president of the Cornell Society of with the Junior Varsity race at 5 145 and are in consequence no special ground Engineers, devotes his "President's Col- the Varsity at 6:15. Weather conditions rules at Ithaca, in which situation we are umn" to a discussion of how to keep a will determine the course: east shore, unique. One must carve out his own hits job. west shore, or Inlet. There will be no and runs on Hoy Field, with no help The Cornell Engineer's Senior board observation train. If weather prevents from the legislature. for next year is headed by W. Harry the races Friday, the regatta will be held But while pleased by the game itself, Johns of Great Neck and the track team, either Saturday morning or afternoon. you would have been slightly depressed, as editor-in-chief. Managing editor is I think, by the people. College crowds, John G. Tammen of East Orange, N. J.; WELCOME CAMBRIDGE TEAM which once differentiated the amateur business manager, Albert T. Mayle, Jr. of As has been the custom for the last game from the professional by their Niagara Falls; circulation manager, fifteen years whenever a British varsity spectator manners, now seem to have Robert H. Nagel of Yonkers; advertising team has come over, the Cornell Club of gone completely Bronx in deportment. manager, Thomas L. Snowden of Niagara New York welcomed the Cambridge They steal balls that go into the stands Falls. University rugby team to America at a and are encouraged so to do by their luncheon April 5. Also in accord with compatriots. They heckle the umpires CORNELLIANS'"BEST SELLERS" custom, America's ambassador-of-sport- and hurl personal remarks of an uncom- Recent books by three Cornellians have extraordinary, John T. McGovern Όo, plimentary nature at visiting players. been consistently among the "best sell- presided as toastmaster and presented the This is, I suppose, a matter of contem- ers" of fiction since their publication, Cornell Club medal-to-distinguished-vis- porary fashion and not one of intrinsic and The London Times Literary Supple- itors. Several of the Cambridge party of morals. But whatever the cause, the ment of March 2.6 designates as "the twenty-five, all clad in their light blue departure of courtesy and politeness from two most striking American novels so blazers, responded and expressed their university fields saddens an observer far published in Britain this year" disappointment that rugby at Cornell whose ideas on these subjects were in- Northwest Passage, by Kenneth Roberts had not proceeded sufficiently to justify grained in a more mannerly era. Ό8, and The Rains Came, by Louis a trip to Ithaca. They expressed hope Low spirits, however, could not long Bromfield Ί8. Among others which that they might come again next year, endure under a warm April sun with the "stand out as distinctively individual bringing the Oxford team with them, teams playing the best of ball on the achievements" the Times mentions This and then might visit the University. greenest and smoothest of turf; with Proud Heart, by Pearl S. Buck, AM 'z5. 36c CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS TAKING CORNELL TO SECONDARY SCHOOLS Alumni, Faculty, and Students Find New Interest in Reaching Boys and Girls

Literally thousands of high school ranged by Russell D. Welsh'i3, he was a dinner of the Cornell Club of Central students, west to Denver, south to cordially received at two high schools, Florida at the Orlando Country Club Miami, and in many centers within that and spoke to fifteen alumni at luncheon, were Dean Alexander B. Trowbridge '90 area have heard about Cornell in the last with Charles Lahr '15, president of the and his son, Professor A. Buel Trow- few weeks from members of the Faculty Cornell Club of Colorado, presiding. bridge, Jr. '2.0, of Rollins College, George and at alumni meetings. Hundreds of Alumni Brave Blizzard Beebe, Jr.'82., and Herbert E. Millholen boys and girls have been given oppor- An unprecedented April blizzard pre- '89, a founder of the Sun and for twenty- tunity for personal conferences about vented Professor Jordan's arriving in time five years with the Associated Press. The coming to the University; they have seen for a Cornell Women's Club tea for high meeting was attended by twenty alumni motion pictures of the Campus and Cor- school girls in Kansas City arranged by and their wives, presided over by George nell teams, and heard about the varied Bessie Gay Secrest '13, president of the E. Cornwell, '15, president of the Club. offerings of the University at Ithaca. Club. After repeated attempts to get Professor Durham's address at the Senior All of this has developed through the through the storm, he visited Southwest High School in Orlando was described cooperation of the University Adminis- High School, the Pembroke Country by students and school officials as the tration, Faculty, alumni in Cornell Clubs Day School, and Westport High School most effective ever given there. and as individuals, and undergraduates. where arrangements had been made by Following a talk to 600 juniors and The program has included Cornell meet- Ellsworth L. Filby '17 and Philip S. seniors at the H. B. Plant High School ings over the country and conferences Lyon '2.7, president and secretary of the in Tampa, arranged by Peter A. Blate with school officials, by President Day men's Cornell Club, and spoke at a '2.4, a teacher there, Professor Durham on his recent trips and by three members smoker of the Club at the Hyde Park spoke at a dinner attended by fifteen of the Faculty during spring recess. Men Hotel. In Tulsa, Okla., his visit was members of the Cornell Club of South and women Cornellians are in touch with under the direction of Nelson K. Moody Florida. Chester A. R. Kurtz '19 pre- the schools of their own communities to '99 and included visits to Central High sided, and among the guests were Pro- see that information about the Univer- School and University of Tulsa and a fessor Clarence A. Martin '90, Architec- sity is put into the hands of promising meeting of the Cornell Club. J. Stanley ture, Emeritus, who came over from his boys and girls, and with it all, alumni '09, Walter L. Skoglund Ίo, and home in Sarasota, and George D. Custis, are gaining new interest and enthusiasm Robert S. Millar '^ had made arrange- Jr. '40, home for vacation. Twenty-seven for their University. ments for his visit to St. Joseph, Mo., alumni from Miami and nearby towns Meet President, Professors where Dr. Jordan formerly lived and enjoyed hearing their visitor and asked Largely in the hands of Cornell Clubs, taught, and where he spoke at the school many questions at a dinner of the Cornell of both men and women, this spring's and interviewed a number of students. Club of Southeastern Florida, at the program has included the President's In Dayton, besides his interviews with University Club in Miami. He was intro- visits, the spring recess travels of Pro- prospective students he spoke to an en- duced by Archibald B. Morrison Όi, fessors Riverda H. Jordan, Education, thusiastic gathering of alumni and secretary of the Club, who had arranged Charles L. Durham '99, Latin, and John youngsters at the Biltmore Hotel, the for him that morning to address students R. Bangs, Jr. Ίi, Engineering; vacation arrangements having been directed by at the Ponce De Leon High School in meetings of Cornell Clubs with under- Howard W. Feight '2.7. Coral Gables. graduates and prospective students; and Durham Conquers South Bangs is Santa Glaus two notable gatherings arranged by the From the South have come most en- Professor Bangs traveled with a snow- Cornell Clubs of Essex County, N. J., and thusiastic accounts of Professor Dur- storm in the Middle West for most of New York City, where the University ham's visits, reporting not only a stirring his trip. He hadn't caught up with it in was virtually brought to schoolboys and interest in Cornell among the schools Pittsburgh, where he spoke, at a luncheon their parents. Some of these meetings but a rejuvination of alumni enthusiasm of the Cornell Club of Western Pennsyl- have been more or less preliminary to for the University. vania, and in the afternoon interviewed Cornell Day, May 7, when Cornell Clubs In Savannah, Ga., where Ormond B. schoolboys and members of their families will bring boys to the Campus for a day, Strong '98 is superintendent of schools whom the secondary school committee and to Cornell Day for Women April 30, and George Ball '2.4 is principal of Chat- had invited to the University Club to when a similar program is arranged for ham Junior School, Professor Durham meet him. Thomas C. McDermott '19 girls. spoke to an assembly of 1600 students at was in general charge of his visit. The three "traveling professors" made the high school and later to 150 members Sunday evening in Detroit he charac- one- or two-day visits in sixteen cities of of the Latin classes. Arrangements were terizes as one of the best meetings of his the Middle West and South. The general in charge of H. Sol Clark '2.8, who pre- trip. Robert C. Hargreaves '09, chairman program included talks at school assem- sided at a Cornell luncheon at the Sa- of the secondary schools committee of blies arranged by local alumni, confer- vannah Hotel, where another speaker the Cornell Club of Michigan, and Mrs. ences with interested boys and girls, and was Judge Gordon Saussy '96 of the Pro- Hargreaves had invited to their home a Cornell Club meetings at many of which bate Court. In Jacksonville, Fla., the number of principals, students, their youngsters and their parents were guests. traveler spoke to juniors and seniors at parents, and alumni, to talk with the Professor Jordan opened in Omaha, Robert E. Lee High School and inter- visitor from Ithaca and for a buffet sup- Nebr., April 4 and concluded his trip with viewed many later. Guests at a Cornell per. The next day he spoke and inter- a visit to Dayton, Ohio, April 14. With Club dinner in the George Washington viewed youngsters at Cranbrook School, arrangements made by James L. Paxton, Hotel included Professor Nathaniel Detroit University School, Southeast Jr. '30, president of the Cornell Club of Schmidt, Emeritus, and Mrs. Schmidt, High School, and was taken to the Omaha, he spoke at assemblies and with who prolonged a visit with Michael A. Grosse Point School by Blinn S. Page '13. individual students at three high schools Khoury, '2.4 Grad, for the meeting. J. In Cleveland he was taken by John W. and to sixteen alumni at dinner at the Robertson Hoy Ί6 presided, and was Holt OS to interview students at Lake- Omaha Club at which six students were responsible for local arrangements. wood High School, where several came guests. During two days in Denver, ar- Besides Professor Durham, speakers at in from Rocky River; to participate in a APRIL 2.8, 193 8 36ι

panel discussion with representatives of At the Rock Spring Country Club March spring meeting May 2.0, at which Presi- other universities and confer with stu- 2.5, the former Club had 150 boys and dent Day will be guest of honor. dents during "College Week" at Cleve- school principals and headmasters and Double-Header in New York land Heights High School; and to the about loo alumni at the annual school Cornell Club of New York put on high school in Shaker Heights, where party. Each member of a large committee, double performances April 15, at. the students came also to meet him from headed by Aaron Van Poznak 'z5, is Club, for boys invited from the high Shaw High School in East Cleveland. assigned the year around to a particular schools and preparatory schools of the That evening he had dinner with a small school or schools with the duty of rep- entire Metropolitan District. Bartholo- group of alumni, including Tell Berna resenting Cornell and the Cornell Club mew J. Viviano '33 was master of cere- Ίx and John Paul Jones '13, who were of Essex County. From these schools monies. First in the afternoon and again much interested in seeing track movies likely boys were invited by these repre- in the evening, to a total of about 100 Bangs had with him. sentatives to the party. They were shown boys, he introduced, each in his own Alumni Make Arrangements sound pictures of Cornell, entertained corner of the Club lounge, Professors Escorted by James M. Acklin, Jr. '34 with Cornell songs, addressed by Profes- Howard B. Meek, head of Hotel Admin- and William T. Ayers, Jr. '40, the latter sor Bangs and Ray S. Ashbery '15, istration, A. Wright Gibson '17 of the home for the holiday, Professor Bangs Alumni Field Secretary, and had oppor- College of Agriculture, and Bangs repre- talked at an assembly at Waite High tunity to ask questions and talk over senting Engineering, with Professor Gil- School in Toledo and conducted inter- Cornell with these representatives and more D. Clarke 'ϊz and John A. Hartell views at Scott and De Vilbiss High Dr. Eugene B. Bradford, Director of 'z4 relieving each other from the College Schools. That evening he spoke and Admissions. So well had the committee of Architecture, and Dr. Bradford and showed motion pictures at a meeting of done its work that Dr. Bradford remarked Ashbery. Guests were invited to talk the Cornell Club of Toledo called by the that every boy to whom he talked knew with the representative cf the College president, Henry W. Seney 'zz, at the about the University's entrance require- which interested them. University Club. Among those present ments and was scholastically qualified. Afterward, they were taken to the Club were several prospective students and Joseph Kastner Ίz, president of the Club, dining room for a buffet luncheon, sound their parents. In Chicago he was intro- introduced Andrew J. Whinery Ίo, movies of the Campus, and entertainment duced by President Frederick H. Bird Ίi Alumni Trustee, as toastmaster for the by R. Selden Brewer '40, magician, the at a large Cornell Club luncheon meeting evening. five-man quartet'' of Robert H. Bodholt to which a number of schoolboys had Essex County a New Club '38, Robert M. Faulk '38, William C. been invited. Carrying out arrangements The Cornell Club of Essex County was Kruse '38, George S. Smith '38, and G. made by the secondary school committee formed last October by the integration Edward Stewart '39, and Edward H. headed by Alfred H. Hutchinson '09, of the former Cornell Clubs of Newark Sargent, Jr.'39, soloist, of the Glee Club. Alumni Trustee of the University, Pro- and Montclair, many of whose members Students Speak at Teas fessor Bangs was taken to New Trier commute to New York City and so were In preparation for Cornell Day for Township and Senn High Schools by unable to attend the usual luncheon Women, April 30, when about eighty William H. McCaully '09, and by Ed- meetings. Its monthly evening meetings girls from secondary schools of the East mund H. Eitel '07 to Lake Forest Acad- and special meetings have brought out will come to Ithaca, a number of teas for emy, where he was a guest at a school large numbers of active and interested prospective students were given by Cor- dinner of students, teachers, and parents. alumni, stimulated by President Kastner nell Women's Clubs at which prospective They Do It Differently Here and Milton H. Cooper '2.8, the secretary, students met undergraduates home for Nearer Ithaca, the Cornell Club of and the monthly luncheon meetings in the spring recess. These were arranged Essex County, N. J., and the Cornell Club Newark are well attended by those who through a committee of the Federation of New York are operating their school are in the vicinity through the day. The of Cornell Women's Clubs headed by activities on a somewhat different plan. Club's next large gathering will be the Mrs. Edwin Knauss (Dorothy Pond) Ί8.

"WE MAKE OUR TRUSTEE WORK," SAYS THE CORNELL CLUB OF ESSEX COUNTY Andrew J. Whinery Ίo, Alumni Trustee of the University, is an active and interested member of this New Jersey Club, and a member of its secondary school committee. He is in great demand as master of ceremonies, as he is shown here at a recent Club gath- ering. Behind him is the Club orchestra, of Frederick G. Porter '33, Charles C. Porter 'z9, Alfred F. Sulla, Jr. '2.9, William W. Sproul 'zS, Guy A. White '17, and Donald F. Hackstaff '33 at the piano. 36z CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

Saturday, April 9, teas were given by Palmer Ί8, executive secretary of the Syracuse bunch at the recent intercol- the Cornell Women's Clubs of New York, Cornellian Council, who talked particu- legiate boxing tournament here. It was Philadelphia, Boston, Schenectady, Pitts- larly on things of interest to the pros- a ringside bench and a Syracuse man was burgh, Poughkeepsie, Batavia, and West- pective students. up, and it looked like Cornell was root- ern Connecticut. The New York tea, ing for him. But the' C' man was a second under the direction of Mary Fitzpatrick PRESIDENT GOES SOUTH and the Cornell heavyweight, who came '93, was held in the Solarium of the President Day spent April 19 and zo in on later, won through to a championship, Hotel Barbizon. Charlotte von der Heyde Philadelphia and Washington, and most so I guess the means justified the end." '38 was the undergraduate speaker. of his appointments in those two cities Charles J. Rowland '17, associate pro- In Philadelphia the tea was at the were with alumni. The President and his fessor of economics at Penn State, was home of Mrs Charles T. Walker, Jr. speeches were received with the same elected the new president of the Cornell (Gladys E. Hobart) '04. Jeanne White cordiality and enthusiasm that has Club of State College, and Mrs. Arthur '38 spoke and showed colored movies of marked his visits to alumni centers since W. Co well (Harriet Lyndon) Ό6 was the Campus. he went into office last fall. re-elected secretary. At the Poughkeepsie tea, given by The Cornell Women's Club of Phila- Mrs. Henry C. Strahan (Martha Wool) delphia entertained him at luncheon at PALMER IN DETROIT 'z/j., Eleanor Bahret '39 was the under- the Bellevue-Stratford Hotel. Mrs. F. Archie M. Palmer Ί8, executive secre- graduate speaker. Barbara Ives '38 spoke Arthur Tucker (Marion F. Milligan) '31, tary of the Cornellian Council, was the in Boston, Janet Dempster '38 in Schen- president of the Club, presided. The speaker at a luncheon of the Cornell Club ectady, Margaret Paddock '39 in Pitts- President was the only speaker, but he of Michigan at the Old Wayne Club in burgh, and Ruth Davis '38 in Bridgeport, was accompanied by Otto V. Kruse '09, Detroit, March z6. Harold M. Hastings Conn. president of the men's Cornell Club. Ίo showed motion pictures taken during Batavia alumnae held an unusually The men had their celebration in the his trip to Europe last year. large tea in the YWCA building of that evening, when 150 greeted Dr. Day at city. Thirty-five high school girls from dinner at the Union League Club. Kruse RECKNAGEL IN PORTLAND Western New York at tended. Nine under- extended a welcome on behalf of the Professor Arthur B. Recknagel, Fores- graduates were present and each spoke Club and introduced Colonel Charles D. try, on sabbatic leave at the University briefly about Cornell. Young Όz as toastmaster. Alfred F. of British Columbia, spoke to the Cornell Washington women gave their tea Sulla, Jr. 'z9, well known master of the Alumni Association of Portland, Ore., at April 3 and had Elizabeth Olesen '40 as banjo, came over from New York to a dinner meeting in Hilaires Restaurant the speaker. Movies of the Campus were give several selections. The Orpheus April zz. Roy R. Clark Ίz, president of also shown at this party. Quartet of Philadelphia sang several the Club, presided. Other speakers were April 6 was the date of the tea given songs and during the dinner there was Wells Gilbert '9z and Edward A. Stevens by the Utica Club at which Frances much congregational singing. Delega- '09. Rendell '39 spoke: and April iz in Cort- tions of Cornellians were there from land the undergraduate speaker was "HEARTBREAK HOUSE" Trenton, Wilmington, Lancaster, and If the Broadway production of Bernard Harriette Vane '38. other points. Shaw's "Heartbreak House" which Cornell Women's Club of Buffalo held In Washington ιz5 alumni of the men's opened this week is any better than the a large tea for prospective Cornellians and women's Clubs joined for dinner at March 5 at the home of Mrs. George performance of the play given by the the Columbia Country Club in Chevy University's Laboratory Theatre April Crofts (Frances Johnson) '05. Chase. Professor John G. Jenkins 'z3, Z3, it should have a long run! A good- Cornell Day for Women recently appointed head of the depart- sized audience in the Willard Straight Girls who come for Cornell Day, and ment of psychology at the University of Theatre gave merited applause to a their alumnae "chauffeurs," will be Maryland, was toastmaster. Creed W. performance that held their attention for entertained in the women's dormitories. Fulton '09, vice-president of the Cornell three hours and a half of Shaw's biting Saturday morning the girls will be taken Alumni Corporation, spoke on alumni commentary on British pre-War society. on a tour of the Campus, later to gather activities. Dr. Albert Osborn 'yz spoke Except for M. Elizabeth Brown '39, in the North Room of Willard Straight briefly. Albert E. Conradis 'z3 was chair- who capably filled the lead role of Ellie Hall where they will be addressed by man of the banquet committee. Dunn, the cast was composed of graduate several members of the Faculty and by students in Dramatics. They were direc- Dean R. Louise Fitch. In the afternoon STATE COLLEGE ELECTS ted by Professor Alex M. Drummond, a tea has been arranged in Willard Cornell Club of State College, Pa., held director of the University Theatre, Straight Memorial Room, at which its annual dinner meeting at the Univer- assisted by Earle Ernst, AM '38. Settings President Day will welcome the guests. sity Club April 9, with Ruth E. Graham were also designed by Professor Drum- The annual Pan-Hellenic "songfest" will '13, the Club president, presiding. Speak- mond, with J. Colby Lewis '33; the old also be given for their entertainment. ers were Dr. James F. Shigley Ί6, Mrs. ship captain's room of the first and second The Women's Cornell Day committee Vernon R. Haber (Julia Moesel) '19, Dr. acts being especially effective. is headed by Virginia Lauder '35 of Asa E. Martin '15, Professor John R. The entire cast were excellent in their Binghamton. Ithaca members are Mrs. Haswell '09, and others. Haswell writes: parts, the performances of Clare M. Foot R. C. Osborn (Agda Swenson) 'zo, Mrs. "We 'viewed with enthusiasm' and as Mrs. Hushabye, Georgiana J. von Olive Northup Snyder 'zz, Dean Fitch, also 'with alarm' a number of clippings Tornow, AM '38, as Lady Utterword, Mrs. Anna Fielden Grace Ίo, Ruth E. cut from the ALUMNI NEWS. . . . What and Robert E. Gard as Captain Shotover Davis '17, and Harriette Vane '38, chair- I view with alarm is not the fool stuff being especially well done. Hilda M. man of the undergraduate committee. some of the long-haired and nosed fellows Fife, AM '33, was convincing as Nurse write for the Areopagus, or how a few Guiness, and Arthur F. Neumann '37 was DELAWARE GATHERS BOYS such can lead a relief expedition of half- a properly villanous burglar. T. Nelson Cornell Club of Delaware was host to baked enthusiasts to do things the ma- Magill, AM '37, was the useless Hector a small group of preparatory school boys jority will be ashamed of in years to Hushabye; Helmuth W. Hormann was who will visit the University for Cornell come, or the Cornell ROTC delegation Mazzini Dunn; Joseph W. Miller '35, Day, at the University Club in Wilming- at summer camp quartering themselves Mangan; and Leland Schubert was ton, April 6. Kenneth B. Spear 'zz, presi- with men from Syracuse. But a wearer Randall Utterword. " Heartbreak House" dent of the Club, introduced Archie M. of the'C' sat on the same bench with the will be repeated April Z9 and 30. APRIL 2.8, 193! ON THE CAMPUS AND DOWN THE HILL YOU CAN'T BEAT these hotelmen when INTERFRATERNITY COUNCIL has it comes to business! To Thomas M. BIGGEST NEWS of the week was the amended its by-laws to provide that Smith '38 of Oswego the Hotel Ezra summary handling by University author- "There shall be no liquor sold in any Cornell staff delegated the purchase and ities of underclass disorders. Before he fraternity at Cornell"; and that "Every sale of automobile radiator screens to took the night train April 18 to be gone member of a fraternity must purchase his advertise the Hotel-for-a-day. He bought ten days, President Day conferred with liquor from a licensed retailer." It is the screens, all nicely lettered, but found Freshman and Sophomore leaders and further provided that members may check it a bit difficult to sell them to students. reached agreement to curb public dis- their liquor within the houses (i) in So he sold the whole to to a Dryden Road turbance of the peace and bodily injury. lockers, or (2.) "with a party hired for gas station (at a good profit) and con- This was after Martin Schultz '40 of that purpose"; and members and their vinced the proprietor that it was good Brooklyn had been injured by a fall into guests may be served by such employee business for him to give them away. Fall Creek gorge. A statement from the either from the member's or the guest's Thus, neatly, Smith accomplished his President in the Sun next morning said supply. object of getting publicity for the Hotel, that while the new Administration is not at a profit. And he's only the second averse to reasonable release of pent-up SAGE CHAPEL PREACHER May i is assistant manager! physical energies of the two lower the Right Rev. Charles Fiske, of Balti- Classes at this season of the year, "... I more, Md. The Rev. Hugh Black, who FIFTY-SIX FRATERNITY soft-ball shall not be disposed to be lenient with preached last Sunday his forty-sixth teams, a record number, are working off those either directly or indirectly respon- engagement at Sage Chapel, came the the series on six diamonds on upper sible if the current excesses are not first time November 2.6, 1905, having Alumni Field. Independents and denom- brought promptly to an end." Further just completed a ministry of ten years in inational leagues use three diamonds on ruling was made April 20 by the Faculty Edinburgh, This week he sailed for a Sage green. Some thirty boatloads of committee on student conduct through year's holiday in Scotland, and has said fraternity, independent, and College its chairman, Dean Cornelius Betten, that last Sunday's may be the last of his oarsmen are being coached on the Inlet PhD '05, that "all Class rivalry except long series of pleasant visits to Cornell. by William C. Babcock '35, now a Senior the approved rush on Saturday shall in Law, and Henry B. Risley '37. cease entirely . . ." ITHACA COMPOSERS' CLUB gave a After another Sophomore, Matthew J. recital of members' compositions before CARLOS D. HART Ό6, since graduation Freda of Callicoon, was injured in a fall 150 persons at the Sunday evening music with the Western Electric Company and from a moving car, Saturday morning's hour in Willard Straight, April 2.4. now superintendent of cable manufactur- Sun announced the cancellation of all Among the works presented were orig- ing at their Point Breeze, Md., plant, that day's events: underclass rush, Soph- inal instrumental numbers by Professor spoke to Engineering students April 2.2. omore smoker, and Freshman banquet. Luther M. Noss, University organist; on "Mechanical and Electrical Develop- Dean Betten explained that consultations Professor Walter H. French '19, English; ments in Telephone Cable Manufactur- with student groups had not served to and Dr. John H. Curtiss, Mathematics; ing." He has frequently visited the control "a number of young men who and two songs by Dr. Harry G. Bull Ό8. Campus as lecturer and employment are not restrained by their own judg- representative; has one son, Robert N. ment, by the rulings of University author- FACULTY RESIDENCES, in architects' Hart '32., and another soon to enter the ities, or by the sentiment of their fel- drawings, photographs, and models, the University. lows," and that "The risk that these work of Cornellian architects and land- turbulent elements may express them- scape architects, are among those dis- TRAVELING STUDENTS in two more selves still further impels the committee played in the art gallery at Martha parties set out in the interest of their to rule that the Class events scheduled Van Rensselaer Hall until May 15. studies. Ten Seniors in Hotel Adminis- for this Saturday afternoon and evening tration, members of the Hotel Ezra Cor- are cancelled." The committee's action COLLEGE AVENUE will have a new nell board, spent the week end at the was upheld by the Sun editorially and by drive-in gasoline station at the southeast New England Hotel Exposition in Bos- the general opinion of the community. corner of Dryden Road. The old rooming ton. They were guests of the Parker Most out-of-town speakers for both house on that corner is being torn down House, where Frank H. Briggs '36 is evening events were headed off, but Jeff to make way for progress. A corner store executive assistant to the president. A Davis, King of the Hoboes, arrived at built onto it used to house the Dick party of sixty-five Faculty and students noon and proved an entertaining guest Couch sporting goods emporium, and in Civil Engineering spent four days this of the Sophomore smoker committee at more recently has been occupied by week in and around Pittsburgh inspecting the Phi Gamma Delta house until he left restaurants. steel plants and engineering projects. that evening. Monday they sold their They were entertained at meals by the beer mugs in Willard Straight lobby. RUNNER-UP for individual honors in Carnegie- Steel Company, the Thirteen members of the Freshman ban- the Intercollegiate Women's Fencing Allegheny Steel Company, and the Uni- quet committee dined together in the Arsociation meet at the College of Wil- versal-Atlas Company. Willard Straight cafeteria in dinner liam and Mary, Williamsburg, Va., clothes, with a Class banner, songs, and April 9, was Carol E. Young '38 of DISTINGUISHED VISITOR to the Cam- "welcoming" address by Robert A. Seneca Falls, captain of the Cornell team. pus April 10 was Dr. Kiichi Miyake, Summers of Boston, Mass., chairman of She was the only entrant to defeat the PhD Ox, who is shortly to return to the committee. champion, Marie Cerra of Hunter Col- Tokyo, where he recently retired as head lege. Cornell stood third in the day's of the botany department at the Imperial bouts, behind NYU and Hunter. Other University. He visited many of his old He has been in this country since Novem- members of the team were Grace V. friends of the Faculty, was entertained ber, visiting botanical gardens and Switzer '38 of Ithaca, Cynthia J. Kerr '39 at luncheon at Willard Straight Hall, and commissioned by his government to study of Ithaca, Geraldine S. Mason '39 of told an Ithaca Journal reporter that aquariums, which Japan will build for Martinsburg, W. Va., and Ruth W. American newspapers have been unfair to the World's Fair to be held during the Howell '40 of Ithaca. Miss Mason was Japan in its undeclared war with China. Olympic games in 1940. elected president of the Association. 364 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

of the Ford Instrument Company of Long Island City. He had previously been head NECROLOGY of the Westinghouse Electric and Manu- Concerning facturing Company plant in Cleveland. THE FACULTY '80—FRANK GIFFORD TALLMAN, April '04, '05 MD—HARRY BAIN AVERY, i, 1938, in Washington, D. C. His home February z6, 1938, at Hudson. He had PROFESSOR FLORA ROSE, Director of the was at 1401 West Tenth Street, Wilming- practiced in Germantown, Pa., New York College of Home Economics, left March ton, Del. He spent one year in the City, and Honduras, C. A. Father, the lo on a two-months' sabbatic leave. She Mechanical Engineering Course. He had late Stephen F. Avery '73; sister, Mrs. has visited the Tennessee Valley, the been vice-president and director of the Clarence A. Rogers (Christine S. Avery) Grand Canyon, and the Painted Desert, E. I. du Pont de Nemours Company for '09. and is now in Santa Barbara, Cal. After several years. He had also served as visiting the Tennessee Valley, she wrote, director of purchases, president of the du '05—RAY PRATT McLouGHLiN, March "When I see the poverty of the people, Pont Building Corporation, the Hotel du Ί.-L, 1938, at his home in the Hotel Utica, the suffering floods must have caused, the Pont Company, and the du Pont Play- Utica. He spent two years in the Arts inroads erosion has made, the poor house Company. Shortly after graduation, College. He was at one time manager of quality of the soil, soil conservation, he spent some time as general superin- the McLoughlin Textile Corporation. more provision for abundant living, I'm tendent of the steel mills of Carnegie, Phi Delta Theta. sold for life on the things which the TVA Phipps & Company, Beaver Falls, Pa. '07 AB—OSWALD DREW ING ALL, March may come to mean—has come to mean Tallman had been a generous giver to the 17, 1938, in Altadena, Cal., where he to these people." Of Santa Barbara she University since 1910, in 192.7 contribut- lived at 1500 Morada Place. Hospital says, "For things other than gardens and ing $50,000 to complete the fund of attendants had rescued him, ill with sunshine and sea and pleasures suited to $zoo,ooo for the establishment of the heart disease, from the threat of flood the very young or the inactive old, I'm John Edson Sweet Memorial Professor- waters on March 2.. For many years he afraid it leaves something to be desired. ship. He had been a student and life had been secretary and treasurer of the I love it both in memory and in fact; but long friend of Professor Sweet. Son, Frank Island Service of Nantucket, Mass., if I decide to live in California, the spot G. Tallman, Jr. '17. dealers in coal, lumber, ice, wood, and I choose must be nearer the firing line '94—JOHN CARL THAYER, January, 1938. gasoline. He graduated from the Yale than this." Professor Mary F. Henry, He spent one year in Architecture. He Forestry School in 1909 and was in the Grad '2.1, assistant director of the College, was city engineer in San Leandro, Cal., Forest Service for a time. First wife, the has assumed Miss Rose's duties, until her having been in the general practice of late Elizabeth Hoyt Church '05; uncle, return May 10. civil engineering and architecture in Oak- Jasper R. Rand, Jr. '97. Bandhu; Les DIRECTOR LLOYD R. SIMONS Ίi, Ex- land, Cal., for many years. Cabotins; Deutscher Verein; La Tertulia; Cosmopolitan Club. tension, is a member of the advisory com- '95 ME—TAYLOR WILLIAM Ross, March mittee of the American Youth Congress, a 2.5, 1938, in Madison, Ind., where he had Ό8—WALTER JOSEPH DINGENS, August federation of national youth organizations been with Thomas Graham & Company, 18, 1937, in Buffalo. He spent two years with headquarters in New York City. manufacturers of vehicle wood stock, in Civil Engineering. At one time he was JAMES C. HENING, assistant professor since 192.4. Previously he had been super- State sales manager in Nebraska for the and associate in research in the dairy J. B. Colt Company of New York City. intendent of repairs and docks with the division at the New York State Agricul- Newport News Shipbuilding and Dry- tural Experiment Station, Geneva, has dock Company, Newport News, Va. '19—JAMES WILLIAM MACPHERSON, March 2.7, 1938, in Port Washington. been granted a six-months' leave of '97 ME(EE)—MICHAEL JOSEPH MILMOE, He spent three years in the Mechanical absence for study in England. March 2.2., 1938, at Glen Ellyn, 111., Engineering Course. He was an architect, PROFESSOR WILLIAM J. WRIGHT, State where he lived at 396 Main Street. He was practicing mainly on Long Island. In leader of 4~H Clubs, attended a meeting vice-president of the F. B. Redington 192.7 he designed one of the first steel- of the executive committee of the Company, Glen Ellyn, owner of the Glen frame residences which was built in Port National 4~H Club Congress, held in News Printing Company, and publisher Washington. Chicago, 111., April 4, to decide on con- of the Glen Ellyn News. He had been in tests and awards. Glen Ellyn since 1914, prior to which he '2.2., '2.3 BChem —EDWIN THOMAS was a linesman with the New York MAIER, January 2.3, 1938, in Phoenix, DR. ERL A. BATES, adviser in Indian Telephone Company, and, from 1900, Ariz. He was an engineer, at one time Extension, has returned from his first- with the Woods Motor Vehicle Company, with the Wichita County Water Improve- term sabbatic leave, which he spent in Chicago, 111. ment, Tex., and later with the United research at the Rockefeller laboratory in Verde Copper Company, Clarksdale, Santa Fe, N. M. He also delivered the '99 MD—DR. ELLEN B. SCUDDER, April Ariz. Montezurna lectures at the University at lo, 1938, at the Clifton Springs Clinic, Mexico City. Clifton Springs. Her home was at 547 '2.3 AB—MRS. HERBERT W. OLMSTED Riverside Drive. She retired in 1935, after (IDA GERTRUDE MELLEFONT), January 31, PROFESSOR STANLEY J. BROWNELL, Ani- serving for thirty-five years with her 1938, at her home, 896 Normal Street, mal Husbandry, Extension, will attend husband in Southern India. She was a Springfield, Mo. From 192.3 to 19x9 she the thirty-third annual meeting of the pioneer in obstetrical work among the was an engineering assistant in the New American Dairy Science Association in poor in the Madras Presidency and estab- York Telephone Company. Phi Beta Columbis, Ohio, June 14-17. He is vice- lished a women's medical clinic and dis- Kappa; Phi Kappa Phi; College honor chairman of the extension division among pensary in Tindivanam, India. group; State cash and tuition scholar- sectional officers. ships. '02. ME(EE), Ό8 PhD—DR. CARL PROFESSORS PAUL J. KRUSE, Rural Edu- GEORGE SCHLENDERBERG, April 9, 1938, '37 MD—DR. RICHARD HUTCHINS cation, and Bristow Adams, Agriculture in Cleveland, Ohio. His home was at WHELPLEY, Decembei 9, 1937. His address Publications, will give courses at the 1063 Wilbert Road, Lakewood, Ohio. He was 161 West Sixteenth Street, New York summer school for Extension workers at was vice-president and general manager City. Colorado State College, Fort Collins, APRIL 2.8 , 193 ί 365

Colo., from June 18 through July 9. Pro- to occupy a site of 12.0 acres in . fessor Kruse's course will have to do with Professor GilmoreD. Clarke '13, Regional educational psychology as applied to Ex- Concerning Planning, New York City planning and tension activities; Professor Adams will landscape engineer, is also on the board. repeat the course on publicity in Exten- THE ALUMNI The development will require three years sion Service that he gave last year. Personal items and newspaper clippings for completion and will consist of houses about all Cornellians are earnestly solicited. designed for families of moderate and low PROFESSOR DEXTER S. KIMBALL, Engi- income with provision for "complete neering, Emeritus, and Mrs. Kimball are recreational and social life. The area making a visit to California and the West. '79 BS—Clayton Ryder, lawyer of Carmel, while visiting in St. Petersburg, acquired is one of the largest single un- On the way back, Dean Kimball will developed properties within the greater give the commencement address, June 15, Fla., in March, entered the chess divan in Mirror Lake Park and was one of three city. Its size will permit the planning of a at the East St. Louis (111.) High School. completely balanced community contain- As announced in the ALUMNI NEWS out of twenty-five contestants to defeat Julius C. Eppens, nationally known chess ing all facilities for family life, including February 2.4, the Trustees have accepted necessary stores, schools, churches, parks, a fund of $188,000 from the estate of player. '94 ME—Orrie P. Cummings writes, and playgrounds. It will not only help in Albert C. Murphy which will support supplying the existing need for housing two generous scholarships each year for "The A. B. See Elevator Company, with which I have been asssociated since at moderate rents, but it will provide boys entering the University from East continuous employment to the building St. Louis. graduation, was acquired by the West- inghouse Electric Elevator Company trades and construction industry for PROFESSOR FREDERICK G. MARCH AM, during the last year. I am now associated three years." History, told the Current Events Class of with that company at 9 Rockefeller '03 PhD—Edwin W. Kemmerer, pro- Willard Straight Hall April 18 that Plaza, New York City." fessor of economics and director of the Great Britain is more concerned "to '95—William A. Baldwin, formerly a Bureau of International Finance at keep up the fence around the property" of vice-president of the Erie Railroad, is Princeton University, will speak on '' Our European nations than to preserve now president of radio station KOY, of American Monetary Position—Where democracy. He pointed out that "as an the Salt River Valley Broadcasting Com- We Are and Where We Are Going" at a international power, England's relation pany, Phoenix, Ariz. meeting of the National Association of to Europe is worked out in terms of the Mutual Savings Banks, to be held in '95 CE—Reginald H. Keays, PWA pro- whole international situation, and as New York City, May 4-6. ject engineer, attended the ceremony such she endeavors to maintain a so-called April ii, formally signalizing the start of '03 ME—Raymond P. Morse is presi- balance of interests throughout the subsurface work on the twin vehicular dent of the Safetex Company, manu- world." tubes which will link Manhattan with facturers of Latex products, with offices PROFESSOR LEONARD C. URQUHART '09, Brooklyn and Queens some time in 1940. at 160 Montague Street, Brooklyn. He Civil Engineering, is president for This is a $58,000,000 PWA-financed has been secretary of his Class for many 1938 of the newly-formed Tompkins project. years and is now in charge of prepara- County Contract Club. The club will hold '98 AB; '35 AB— Mrs. Joseph Matson tions for its thirty-five-year reunion next weekly duplicate contract bridge games. (Kathleen O. Connor) '98 is now travel- June. ing in Hawaii with her husband, Colonel '04 AB—Alfred E. Mudge, trustee of GEORGE BOOCHEVER of New York City, Joseph Matson, Coast Artillery Corps, the Brooklyn Institute of Arts and brother of Louis C. Boochever Ίi, retired, hoping to recover there from the Sciences, was recently elected to the Director of Public Information, has been effects of an automobile accident, on Institute's executive committee. awarded the Order of the White Lion, the December 16, near their home in Altadena, '05—Charles M. Seymour is an engi- highest honor bestowed by the Checho- Cal., in which both were injured, their neer, having designed several types of slovakian government on foreigners. The son, Edward, a graduate of the California machinery. His address is 1553 North Order was bestowed on him for "his Institute of Technology, was killed, and , Chicago, 111. extraordinary services and interest in their son, Donald '35, was also injured. '05 AB, '07 AM—Dr. Bert S. Butler, of American-Czechoslovakian relations.'' Donald, who is in his third year at the United States Geological Survey, He is chairman of the board of the Harvard Medical School, was soon able collaborated in the preparation of a American-Czechoslovakian Chamber of to return to his studies. bulletin, "Geology and Ore Deposits of Commerce, which he organized many '98 LLB—Charles E. Chalmers prac- the Tombstone District, Arizona," re- years ago. It was presented to him April tices law in the Lincoln Building, Suite cently published by the University of 18 by Colonel Vladimir A. Hurban, 601, 60 East Forty-second Street, New Arizona Press. In addition to the accurate Chechoslovakian Minister to the United York City. scientific information given on general States. Όo CE—Reginald B. Mildon, vice- geology, ore deposits, classification of CURTIS KEYES, Grad, instructor in president of the Westinghouse Electric the ores, favorable rocks, and the bright Floriculture, has solved the costly plant and Manufacturing Company, has been future of the Tombstone district, the mystery as to why gardenias fall off their made manager of the East Pittsburgh, history is also recounted. The book is stems at a time when they are expensive. Pa., division of the company, leaving heavily illustrated with maps, pictures, Gardenia plants drop their blossoms in Philadelphia, where he had charge of cross section drawings, and charts, and midwinter, when worth a dollar each, steam and stoker departments. has a supplement envelop filled with but in spring, with the price about four Όi ME—Colonel Russell B. Putnam maps. cents wholesale, the blooms stay on the has been advanced to the position of pay- Ό6 LLB—Harry C. Baldwin, Ithaca plant until picked. The solution is that master of the Marine Corps, with rank of lawyer and secretary of the Ithaca Sav- when the temperature of the greenhouse brigadier general, to become effective ings and Loan Association, has been at night is 80 to 90 degrees, the blooms May i. appointed a member of the attorneys' fall off; they stay on if the '' hothouse'' is 'cα BArch; '13 BS—The Metropolitan division of the United States Building cooled to 58 to 60 degrees. Gardenias Life Insurance Company has appointed and Loan League for 1938. "Membership gather food during the day and grow at R. H. Shreve '02. chairman of the board of on this committee constitutes an impor- night. If the temperature is too high, the design for their projected "largest garden tant responsibility, since it sponsors the rapid growth weakens them. apartment community in the country," Legal Bulletin, a monthly review of all 3 66 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

litigation and legislation relating to sav- Ίz, '13 ME—Henry J. Helfrich is a '14—John C. Page, United States Re- ings, building and loan, which goes to all development engineer with the Houde clamation Commissioner, spoke before the associations." Engineering Corporation, Buffalo. He is Nebraska Engineering Society at Omaha, Ό6 ME—Thomas C. Gordon is execu- a member of the Society of Automotive Neb., April z. He said that society needs tive vice-president of the Richmond Engineers and is active in the Masonic the "engineer plus" to meet the modern Foundry and Manufacturing Company, order. He has two sons and a daughter; challenge of drought, dust, and floods. Inc., Richmond, Va. His home is at 3507 his address, 105 Saranac Avenue, Buffalo. "The engineering profession," he said, Brook Road, Richmond. Ίz, '13 BS—Albert B. Genung is senior "must make its influences felt further '07, Ό8 ME—Walter W. Storm is with agricultural economist in the Bureau of than the drafting room, but it cannot the Wilmington Iron Works, Wilming- Agricultural Economics of the United unless it applies its thought to social and ton, N. C. States Department of Agriculture. He has economic problems and lends its influence and leadership to their correction. The '07—Samuel B. Kanowitz was appoint- four daughters; lives at 1651 Myrtle times cry loudly for the engineer with a ed chairman of the milling committee of Avenue, N. E., Washington, D. C. social conscience, both in the service of the industrial minerals division of the Ίz—Rafael Garcia is assistant super- the government and in private practice." American Institute of Mechanical Engi- intendent of the Ninth Lighthouse He said that the new national emphasis neers at the February meeting in New District, San Juan, P. R. on conservation "means we are turning York City. He also read a paper on our backs upon the practice of exploiting "Developments in Pulverizing and Air our national resources for temporary and Separating." immediate gain without regard for the Ό8 PhD—John W. Turrentine, presi- future. It means that we have substituted, dent of the American Potash Institute, rather, a policy of husbanding our re- Inc., Washington, D. C., has been award- sources in a manner which will result in ed the gold medal of the Academic their broad and beneficial use in our d'Agriculture de France for his collabora- generation, and yet will preserve their tion in the preparation of the book, usefulness for future generations.'' Potash Deficiency Symptoms. Written in German, French, and English, and '15 DVM—Dr. Albert L. Brown, direc- printed in Leipsig, this book has just '13—Max H. Doyne is a construction tor of the New York State Fair for the been issued in its second edition. The engineer, with offices at 1930 Railway past two years, has been named field di- Department of State has appointed Dr. Exchange, St. Louis, Mo. His home is at rector of the Bang's disease campaign. Of Turrentine an official delegate to repre- 764 Clara Avenue, St. Louis. the appointment, Holton V. Noyes, sent the United States at the Tenth Inter- '13 AB—Charles H. Newman, Tomp- University Trustee and Commissioner of national Congress of Chemistry, to be kins County attorney, has been appointed the Department of Agriculture and held in Rome, starting May 15. a member of the State Association of Markets, said, "The State Bang's disease Ό8 AB—Carl J. Schmidlapp and Mrs. County Officers' legislative committee to campaign is just beginning and the Schmidlapp arrived in New York City serve during the Constitutional Conven- pioneering work now done will largely determine the success of this important April 13 on the Europa after extensive tion. March 30 he spoke at the school for endeavor. With his background, training, travels in Europe and on the southern justices of the peace conducted that week shores of the Mediterranean. They first at Hobart College. His subject was and experience, Dr. Brown is well pre- visited Egypt, whence they travelled to defenses in Justice Court, with particular pared to assume this responsibility." Dr. Brown lives in Belleville. England, where they saw the Grand references to the defense of infancy, statute of limitations, and statute of National Steeplechase at Aintree. Later '15 LLB—Robert A. Hutchinson of fraud. they spent a week in Paris, before em- Ithaca participated in the bowling barking for home. '13 ME—Paul Arnold Franklin is an world's series, held in Chicago, 111., Ίi ME—Richard Meyer has been with architect and engineer in Port Washing- April 9 and 10. He was in the doubles Walter Eagan, 1612. Vine Street, Phila- ton. He has one daughter; enjoys golf event. He is secretary of the Ithaca delphia, Pa., for the past fifteen years. He and sailing. Bowling Association. '13 ME—Henry Cape, Jr. is an invest- lives at 100 East Plumstead Avenue, '15, Ί6 BS—J. Carl McKinney of Lansdowne, Pa. ment advisor with White, Weld & Com- pany, 40 Wall Street, New York City. He Dryden has been elected president of the Ίi, '13 ME—Howard A. Lincoln is Tompkins County Development Associa- with Bemis and Call Company, Spring- is director of the Baltic Mills Company, the Baltic Water Company, and the tion. He is also State deputy of Pomona field, Mass. He lives at 85 Western Drive, Grange. Longmeadow, Mass. Textile Finishing Machine Company. His hobby is "studying market trends and '15 AM—Elmer A. Sperry, Jr. has Ίi—A review of the second yearbook diagnosing them." He has one daughter. leased a four-story and basement of the Ornamental Pheasant Society of His home is at Irvington-on-Hudson. house with garden at ιz6 East Seventy- America says,'' New York's distinguished eighth Street for five years. He is vice- ornithologist, Lee S. Crandall, curator of '14 ME—Stuart M. Ford, of Cavel president of Sperry Products, Inc., and birds at Bronx Park, contributes a con- Circle, Roxboro, N. C., writes that he consulting engineer of the Sperry Gyro- densed but informative treatise on jungle has a daughter, Margaret S. Ford, who is scope Company. fowl, which are accredited members of a freshman at the College of William and the pheasant family. He discusses the Mary, Williamsburg, Va. '15 CE; '33—Morris Stone recently Sonnerat, Ceylon, Java, and the com- '14 BS—Frederick R. Bauer has a 450- married Rosalie Boblasky of Savannah, moner red jungle fowl of India, Burma, acre farm at Lakeville, Conn.; raises beef Ga. They now live at Z95 Guypark and Indo-China." cattle. Avenue, Amsterdam.

Use the CORNELL UNIVERSITY PLACEMENT BUREAU Willard Straight Hall H. H. WILLIAMS '25, Director APRIL 2.8, 193 !

acid to two quarts of water; reapply after each washing." 25 YEAR '2.1 EE—Eric M. Rickard received the AM at Columbia University in 1936 and since then has been an instructor in NEW! 1916 1941 mathematics at the Foxcroft School, Middleburg, Va., where he may be ad- The Cornell Handkerchief dressed at Box 161. ΊV'ZZ WA—William H. Whittemore or Scarf/ pure silk in Cor- REUNION is a cruise director with the Swedish- American Line, spending much of the nell colors with the Cornell time aboard ship. He recently visited the seal in one corner. Ί6 BArch, '2.2. MArch; '04 AB; '13 BS, Beta Theta Pi chapter at the University '14 MLD—J. Lakin Baldridge and Mrs. for twelve days, and is quoted in The Baldridge of Ithaca are now at Cassarenis Beta Delta News of Beta Theta Pi as Cottage, Belmont Manor, Bermuda. They saying,'' After four successive West Indies recently entertained at the Blue Room of cruises I decided that I needed a real rest, the Manor, with Miss Grace H. Seely and that the best place would be Ithaca, Ί.OO '04, head resident of Sage College, and so I dropped in to meet the boys and to Professor Edward Lawson '13, Archi- see if they are much different from POSTPAID tecture, among the guests. those when I was in college; and they Ί6 Grad—Jasper C. Gaither is division aren't." manager for the R. J. Reynolds Tobacco '2.2. BS—Harold A. Merrill, assistant Company, with offices in Rooms 311-311 executive officer of the National Resources Tenth Street Building, 10 Tenth Street, Committee, Washington, D. C., spoke on Richmond, Va. He lives at 3002.-A Mont- the relationship between national and THE rose Avenue, Richmond. local planning at the annual meeting of '17, '19 AB—Charles V. Bender is a the Tompkins County Development CORNELL CO-OP building counselor with offices at 2.2.5 Association in Ithaca March 31. Merrill East Jackson Street, Muncie, Ind. He is now acting as technical planning BARNES HALL lives at Kenmore, Muncie. councilor for Region z, comprising New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Dela- ITHACA, N. Y. CORNELL ware, Maryland, Virginia, and North Carolina. He was for a time with the 2CYEΛR 1 ζ|1 C REUNION Finger Lakes State Parks Commission.

At Ithαcα, June 16-18,1938 '2.3 MS, '30 PhD—Dr. Frederick P. Weaver resigned March i as head of the HEMPHILL, NOYES & CO. Ί8 BS; '35 AB—Clarence S. Denton has department of agricultural economics at Members New York Stock Exchange married Catherine L. Dumond. Denton is Pennsylvania State University, due to ill 15 Broad Street . New York county agent of Delaware County. health. He had joined the agricultural INVESTMENT SECURITIES Ί8 ME—Fred W. Armbruster, of 4456 extension service in 1915 serving as assistant director until 19x5 when he was Jansen Noyes '10 Stanton Griffis '10 St. Paul Boulevard, Rochester, is a L M. Blanckθ '15 Willard I. Emerson '19 manufacturer of humidifying equipment. appointed head of the department. An expert on taxation problems, he was BRANCH OFFICES ΊS, '2.0 AB—George B. Corby runs a Albany, Chicago, Harrisbυrg, Indianapolis, called upon by both Pennsylvania's dairy farm at Honeoye Falls, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Trenton, former governor, Pinchot, and by Presi- Washington Ί8, '19 LLB—Arthur Jennings, a dent Hoover to assist in ironing out dif- lawyer at 514 Reynolds Arcade Building, ficulties confronting them. In November, Rochester, is president of the board of 1933, he was appointed director of the visitors of the Albion State Training Federal Land Bank of Baltimore. He was When You Come To Ithaca School, the Rochester School for the also called upon to act as collaborator Deaf, and the Rochester Historical for several months in the dairy division Visit Again Society. of the Agricultural Adjustment Adminis- The Republic Inn '19—John P. Franklin is treasurer of tration. above Freeville, among the Hills the David Gessner Company, 41 Fermont '2.3 AB—Leon Mandel, II married Street, Worcester, Mass. He has four The Ideal Headquarters Senorita Carola Panerai of Havana, Cuba, For Your Campus Visits children, three girls and a boy; lives at 2.5 April 9. That same afternoon he was Otsego Road, Worcester. Meals and Comfortable Accommodations decorated with the Distinguished Service At Reasonable Rates '19, '2.3 WA—Joseph Fistere, Jr. is with Medal of the Cuban Army by President Send For New Folder the National Aniline and Chemical Com- Federico Laredo Bru, in recognition of his activities in promoting sports in CHARLES E. HADLEY '19, Propr. pany of the United States, now located in Freeville, N.Y. Shanghai, China, where his address is Cuba. Mandel, owner of the Mandel P. O. Box 653. Brothers Store, Chicago, 111., is a member '2.0 BS—The following item appeared of the 12.4th Field Artillery polo team of in Vol. i, No. i of the magazine Ken; Chicago, which played the first inter- TROUT VALLEY FARM "Beddie Bye . . . Now you can smoke in national series , with the Cuban Army BEAVERKILL, N.Y. bed with safety, Clarence Johnson, team last January in Havana. He and Excellent dry fly fishing in the famous Schenectady County agent, having in- Mrs. Mandel are on a cruise in the West Beaverkill. Golf course, swimming, and Indies on his yacht, Buccaneer. ideal resort for a Summer vacation. Chris- vented fireproofiing of sheets which tian management, moderate rates. Write won't injure color or fabric. Just dip '2.4, '15 LLB—Elliott W. Gumaer has for booklet. FREDERIC W. BANKS, 1917 sheets in solution of seven ounces of boric moved into a new law office at the As- 3 68 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

sociated Trust offices of the Rochester '34 AE—Rawson Atwood is engaged to Trust and Safe Deposit Company, Ro- Margaret Parkhurst of New York City. chester. He was formerly with the firm She is a graduate of the Katharine Gibbs of Mann, Strang, Bodine and Wright, School, New York City. They will be Rochester. Married, he has a daughter, married in June in Garden City. seven, and a son, four. '34 EE—Kendall C. White, son of Pro- '2.5 MS—Arthur E. Anderson has been fessor Edward A. White, Floriculture, is vice-president and secretary of the engaged to Margaret T. Lupton of Ithaca, Berkeley Bank for Cooperatives, Fif- at present assistant to the secretary of the teenth and Clay Street, Oakland Cal., College of Arts and Sciences. White is an for the past four years. He was instructor in Administrative Engineer- formerly a member of the department of ing. The wedding will take place during agricultural economics at the University the summer. of California and director of extension in '35—Robert S. Snow married Clele South Dakota. He lives at 1561 LeRoy Slaght of Trumansburg, April 9. Mrs. Avenue, Berkeley, Cal. Snow was graduated from Ithaca College '2.7 ME—Ernest W. Possum is engaged in 1933. Snow is now with the GLF. to Marion A. Moore of Greenwich, Conn. '35 BS—James A. Mullane, manager of '2.9 BArch—S. Belmont Segar is man- the Colonial House, Palm Springs, Cal., ager of Spir-it, Inc., Maiden, Mass. He writes,'' During the season I have had the lives at 47 Linden Street, Allston, Mass. pleasure of coming in contact with many Cornellians. At some time or other dur- '2.9 ME—Leonard J. Lewis is engaged ing the season I have met Dr. Michael M. to Marian L. Stang of New York City. Tetelman, MD '2.4, of New York City Lewis is an engineer with the Re-enforced and Robert L. Hays '2.4 of Cleveland, Paper Bottle Corporation, New York Ohio. Frank Morgan (Frank P. Wupper- City. man) '12. is a frequent visitor for cock- '30 AB, '34 MD—Dr. James A. Moore tails and dinners, as is C. Gardner Bullis married Doris V. Conklin of Brooklyn, Ό8 of Los Angeles." April lo. '36 BS; '36 GE—Barbara J. Congdon, '30; '31 AB—John H. Way and Mrs. daughter of Arthur R. Congdon, manager Way (Eleanor Eggleston) '31 have a son, of Sheldon Court, was married to Andrew Thomas Cooper Way, born April 13. W. McElwee of Forest Home April 9. They live in Binghamton. They spent two weeks in Florida; now '31 AB, '31 LLB; '05 CE; '32.—Julius live at 2.06 University Avenue. McElwee F. Brauner '31, son of the late Julius F. is in the contracting business in Ithaca. Brauner '05, married Ruth E. Gordon '32. '36; Ίi—Maurice A. Smith, II, son of HOTEL of Philadelphia, Pa., April 16 in Sage Maurice A. Smith Ίi, will marry Chapel. The reception was at the home Patricia Keating of Pittsburgh, Pa., of Brauner's uncle, Professor Olav M. April 2.8. SYRACUSE Brauner, Architecture. The couple are on '37 BS—James W. Page, Jr. is engaged a trip through the South; after May 15 to Jeannette L. Clark of Ithaca. They will they will live at 59 West Twelfth Street, be married late in June. New York City. Brauner practices law in '37 BS—Ruth M. Rich is an assistant New York City. in the Gloversville division of the Rome , A/. J/. '31 AB, '34 MD—LeRoy H. Wardner State School under the direction of the is a physician, associated in practice with New York State Department of Mental FAY B. MARENESS, MGR. his father in Saranac Lake, where his Hygiene. She lives at 2.3 East State address is 38 Church Street. His engage- Street, Gloversville. ment to Carolyn W. Potter of Saranac '37 ME—Robert H. McKane now lives Lake was announced April 16. The at Grosscup and Bridge Roads, Charles- THE MERCERSBUR6 ACADEMY wedding will take place in the late Prepares for entrance to all Colleges and ton, W. Va. Universities. Especially successful in pre- summer. '37 BS; '36 BS—Harold A. Dillenbeck paring boys for College Entrance Board '33 AB—Ruth C. Walker, regional is manager of a restaurant in the Hot Examinations. Located in the picturesque superintendent of WPA nursery schools Shoppes chain, Washington, D. C. He Cumberland Valley at the foot of the Blue Ridge Mountains. A large faculty from the in the Ithaca district, was married to and Mrs. Dillenbeck (Mary M. Crary) leading colleges and universities of the Oliver M. York April 7. A graduate of '36 will live at 1805 Irving Street, N. W., country give thorough instruction and aim Colgate University, York is a teacher in Washington, until October i. to inspire in every pupil the lofty ideals of the commercial department of the Ithaca thorough scholarship, broad attainments, '38 AB—Jean W. Botsford, daughter of sound judgment and Christian manliness. High School. They now live at 42.7 East Professor Harold E. Botsford Ί8, Poultry Seneca Street, Ithaca. BOYD EDWARDS: D.D., LL.D. Husbandry Extension, has accepted a Headmaster Mercersburg, Pa. '33, '34 AB—J. Bruce Boyce, who will position as teacher of French in the Port be guest soloist at the annual concert of Leydon Central School, Port Leydon. the combined Men's and Women's Glee She graduated in February and is now in Clubs and Instrumental Clubs April xS, the Graduate School. MOTORS TRANSFORMERS will give a recital in the Town Hali, '38; Ίi—Jack W. Slingerland of Ithaca GENERATORS PUMPS New York City, May 12.. left March 30 for Atlanta, Ga., to join COMPRESSORS BOILERS '34, '35 BS—J. Richard McGraw has the C. S. Robinson ('2.1) Aerial Surveys. JHE OΈϋί§ϊl MACHINERY (Ό. been transferred by the Oliver Farm '39—George F. Weisel is a timekeeper 113 N. 3rd St., Philadelphia, Pa. Frank L. O'Brien, Jr., M.E. '31 Machinery Company from Easton, Md., for the Clifton and Applegate Contracting to Aroostook County, Me. Company, Spokane, Wash. SEE US CORNELL DAY PROFESSIONAL CORNELL UNIVERSITY Next week the University will be host at DIRECTORY Cornell Day to several hundred high school and prep school boys from all over the East. OF CORNELL ALUMNI Summer Session More and more alumni are coming to realize that this week end in May is an ideal time July 5-Aug. 13, 1938 to send their sons to see the University. ITHACA Last summer two hundred alumni of the University at- LANG'S GARAGE tended the Summer Session for further training in their GREEN STREET NEAR TIOGA particular fields of work. We Ithaca's Oldest, Largest, and Best consider this a good record. Storage, Washing, Lubrication, Expert Repairs But the most important ERNEST D. BUTTON '99 JOHN L. BUTTON '25 function of the Summer Ses- If your boy is coming this year, ask him sion is to put the facilities of to look us up while he's here. Sheldon the University at the disposal Court is right at the College Avenue en- trance to the Campus. Tell him to come in NEW YORK AND VICINITY of persons who would other- through, the Triangle Bookstore entrance, wise be unable to use its op- and ask for Mr. Congdon. portunities. For thirty-five years I've been making newcomers to Cornell welcome and com- THE BALLOU PRESS Alumni and former students fortable here at Sheldon Court. I'd like to can help us greatly by sending show your son around, just so he can tell Printers to Lawyers you when he gets home where he'd like to the names and addresses of live next year. CHAS. A. BALLOU, JR., '21 persons who may be inter- Boys like our comfortable, pleasant ested in Summer Session rooms in this modern dormitory building, 69 Beekman St. Tel. Beekman 3-8785 with its own restaurant, bookstore, and work. Address: barber shop, all under one roof. In the meantime, may I mail you our new LOREN C. PETRY, Director folder giving complete information, floor Office of the Summer Session plans, and room diagrams? Just drop a HENRY M. DEVEREUX, M.E. '33 post card to: Cornell University YACHT DESIGNER Ithaca, New York SHELDON COURT A. R. CONGDON, Agent ITHACA, N.Y. 295 CITY ISLAND AVE. CITY ISLAND, N. Y.

BALTIMORE, MD. ALUMNI NEWS FLASH To THE EDITOR: Here is a news item for the CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS WHITMAN, REQUARDT & SMITH Water Supply, Sewerage, Structural, Valuations of Public Utilities, Reports, Plans, and General Consulting Practice. EZRA B. WHITMAN, C.E. Ό1 G. J. REQUARDT, C.E. '09 B, L SMITH, C.E. '14 West Biddle Street at Charles

KENOSHA, WIS.

MACWHYTE COMPANY Manufacturers of Wire and Wire Rope, Braided Wire Rope Sling, Aircraft Tie Rods, Strand and Cord. Literature furnished on request JESSEL S. WHYTE, M.E. Ί3, PRES. & GEN. MGR. R. B. WHYTE., M.E. Ί3, GEN. SUPT.

WASHINGTON, D. C Signed . Class..

THEODORE K. BRYANT LL.B. '97—LL.M. '98 Address.. Master Patent Law, G.W.U. '08

Patents and Trade Marks Exclusively Clip this out and mail to Cornell Alumni News, Box 575, Ithaca, N.Y. 309-314 Victor Building CORNELL CLUB LUNCHEONS Many of the Cornell Clubs hold luncheons at regular intervals. A list is given below for the benefit of travelers who may be in some of these cities on dates of meetings. Unless otherwise listed, the meetings are for men: Name of Club Meeting Place Time AKRON (Women) 2nd Saturday Homes of Members 12:30 p.m. Secretary: Mrs. Thayer Parry '25, 254 Storer Ave., Akron ALBANY Monthly University Club 12:30 p.m. Secretary: W. Richard Morgan '27, c/o N. Y. Telephone Co., Albany. BALTIMORE Monday Engineers' Club 12:30 p.m. Secretary: Norman D. Kenney '25, West Biddle St. at Charles, Baltimore, Md. BOSTON Monday Hotel Bellevue 12:30 p.m. Secretary: William G. Mollenburg '24, 15 Elkins St., South Boston, Mass. BOSTON (Women) Monthly Homes of Members Afternoon Secretary: Mrs. C. S. Luitweiler '27, 26 Stowell Road, Winchester, Mass. BUFFALO Friday Buffalo Athletic Club 12:30 p.m. Secretary: Neil M. Willard '18, 73 Forest Ave., Buffalo. CINCINNATI Last Thursday University Club 12:30 p.m. Secretary: Starbuck Smith, Jr. '34, 2530 Handasyde Court, East, Walnut Hills, Cincinnati, O. CHICAGO Thursday University Club 12:15 p.m. Secretary: Richard Vanderwarker '33, The Sherman Hotel, Chicago, 111. CLEVELAND Thursday Mid-Day Club 12:15 p.m. Secretary: J. Bentley Forker Jr. '29, 4614 Prospect Ave., Cleveland, Ohio CLEVELAND (Women) Homes of Members Evenings Secretary: Bessie DeWitt Beahan '78, 2213 Bellfield Ave., Cleveland Heights, O. COLUMBUS Last Thursday University Club 12:00 p.m. Secretary: Charles Jones '34, 83 Burt St., Columbus, Ohio. DENVER Secretary: Russell D. Welsh '13, 738 Dexter St., Denver, Colo. DETROIT Thursday Intercollegiate Club, Penobscot Building 12:15 p.m. Secretary: Edward E. Proctor '25, 2250 Nat'l Bank Bldg., Detroit, Mich. ESSEX COUNTY, N. J. 2d Friday Downtown Club, 744 Broad St.,Newark, N. J. 12:30 p.m. 3d Monday Mon tclair Golf Club, Prospect Ave., Montclair, N. J. 8:00 p.m. Secretary: Milton H. Cooper '28, 744 Broad Street, Suite 1905, Newark, N. J. FLORIDA, CENTRAL 1st Thursday Angebilt Hotel, Orlando 1:30 p.m. Secretary: Theodore J. Lindorff '07, Box 1126, Orlando, Fla. HARRISBURG, PENNA. 3d Wednesday Hotel Harrisburger 12:00 noon Secretary: John M. Crandall '25, Hotel Harrisburger. Los ANGELES Thursday Hotel Hay ward, 6th & Spring 12:15 p.m. Secretary: John B. Shaw '21, 1334 Sinaloa Drive, Gendale, Calif. Los ANGELES (Women) Last Saturday Tea Rooms Luncheons Secretary: Miss Bertha Griffin '09, 3004 W. 79th St., Ingle wood, Calif. MILWAUKEE Friday University Club 12:15 p.m. Secretary: Henry S. Ruess '33, 828 N. Broadway, Milwaukee, Wis. NEW YORK (Women) Wednesday Elizabeth Reynolds, 15 E. 48th St., 12:30-1:00 Secretary: Miss Lillian Jacobsen '25, 231 E. 58th St., New York, N. Y. NEW YORK Daily Cornell Club, 245 Madison Avenue Secretary: Bertel W. Antell '28, 24 Monroe PL, Brooklyn. PHILADELPHIA Mondays, Wednesdays & Fridays, Cornell Club, 1219 Spruce Street Secretary, Robert B. Patch '22, 134 North Fourth St., Philadelphia, Pa. PHILADELPHIA (Women) 1st Saturday or Friday Homes of Members Afternoon or evening Secretary: Miss Gertrude Goodwin '31, Sharon Ave. & Spring St., Sharon Hill, Pa. PITTSBURGH" Friday Harvard-Yale-Princeton Club 12:15 p.m. Secretary: John L. Slack '26, University Club, University PL, Pittsburgh, Pa. PITTSBURGH (Women) Monthly Homes of Members Afternoon Secretary: Mrs. Emerson Venable '31, 414 S. Trenton Ave., Wilkinsburg, Pa. PROVIDENCE 1st Tuesday Middlestreet Cafe 12:00 noon Secretary: H. Hunt Bradley '26, 146 Medway St., Providence, R. I. QUEENS COUNTY 3d Monday Secretary: Mrs. Gustave Noback, Grad., 11 Groton St., Forest Hills, N. Y. ROCHESTER Wednesday University Club 12:15 p.m. Secretary: Floyd G. Kirkham '27, 333 State St., Rochester, N. Y. ROCHESTER (Women) Monthly (usually Monday) Homes of Members Evening Secretary: Mrs. Walter R. Scholtzhauer '33, 47 Hollywood Crescent, Irondequoit, Rochester, N. Y. ST. Louis Last Friday American Hotel 12:00 noon Secretary: F. W. Boecker '34, 221 West Adams Ave., Kirkwood, Mo. SAN FRANCISCO (Women) 2d Saturday Homes of Members Luncheon or Tea Secretary: Mrs. Nairne F. Ward '26, 2330 Rose St., Berkeley, Calif. SPRINGFIELD Wednesday University Club 12:00 noon Secretary: Harry C. Beaver, Jr. '26, 118 Meadow brook Rd., Longmeadow, Mass. SYRACUSE Wednesday Chamber of Commerce 12:30 p.m. Secretary: Robert C. Hosmer '02, 120 E. Genesee St., Syracuse. SYRACUSE (Women) 2d Monday Homes of Members 6:30 p.m. Secretary: Miss Julie S. Sorenson '24, 105 Elk St., Syracuse, N. Y. TRENTON Monday Chas. HertzeΓs Restaurant, Bridge & S. Broad Sts. Secretary: George R. Shanklin '22, 932 Parkside Ave., Trenton, N. J. TUCSON 1st Thursday Pioneer Hotel 12:30 p.m. Secretary: G. Van McKay '31, 103 E. Second St., Tucson, Ariz. UTICA Tuesday University Club 12:00 noon Secretary: Willis D. Morgan '23, 139 Eastwood Ave., Utica, N. Y. UTICA (Women) 3d Monday Homes of Members Dinner Secretary: Miss Sarah Ellis '33, 1446 Elm St., Utica, N. Y. WASHINGTON, D. C. Thursday University Club 12:30 p.m. Secretary: Earl S. deWitt '19, 438 Woodward Bldg., Washington, D. C.