• • e~ MAY, 1958 Vol. XIX No.5

3-9 REPORT ON ASIA-three articles that illuminate current con- ditions in India and Japan 10-11 UNIVERSITY TV SHOWS WIN BIG AUDIENCE 12-13 THE MORALITY OF SCIENTIFIC PROGRESS 14-15 COMPUTING CENTER'S "NUMBERS GAME" A BOON TO RESEARCH 16-21 THE UNIVERSITY-New Deans and Director Appointed ... On The Couer Treasurer's Report ... Dr. Dunkel Heads English Department ... Robert Hutchins is Commencement Speaker ... Physics Educational significance of River Conference Moves to Europe ... New Microscope Aids Cancer Campus reorganization is ex­ Research ... McCann Room Dedicated at Medical Center ... plained by President de Kiewiet, 22-23 MASTERPIECE COMES TO ART GALLERY Joseph C. Wilson, U R Trustee, 25-29 CLASS NOTES-all colleges, schools and divisions of the Uni· and Prof. Joseph Gittler, faculty­ versity represented in this collection of news notes administration committee chair­ 29 IN MEMORIAM man, on University Commentary 30-31 FACULTY, STAFF RELAX, KEEP FIT TV program. In the foreground is 32-51 UNIVERSITY OF ROCHESTER FUND-1957 Report Don W. Lyon, Director of TV and Radio for University. See pages 10 and II for story on the Uni­ versity's successful TV activities.

Editor CHARLES F. COLE, '25 MAY CIC/smotes Editor 2-3 STAGERS PLAY, Saroyan's "Time of Your Life." MARJORIE TROSCH, '43 Strong Auditorium, 8: 15 p.m. Art Di1'ector 3 VARSITY BASEBALL, Rensselaer at Rochester. 3 MOVING-UP DAY CEREMONIES. Eastman Ouadrangle, 2 p.m. LEE D. ALDERMAN, '47 5 VARSITY BASEBALL, St. Lawrence at Canton. Published by The Uni­ 6 VARSITY BASEBALL, Clarkson at Potsdam. versity of Rochester for 7 VARSITY BASEBALL, Buffalo at Rochester. the Alumni Federation 8 U OF R PLAYERS performance. Strong Auditorium, 8:30 p.m. in cooperation with the Federation's Publication 9 DANCE CLU B recital. Strong Auditorium, 8 p.m. Committee: 10 MEN'S GLEE CLUB concert. Strong Auditorium, 8:15 p.m. 10 VARSITY BASEBALL, Union at Rochester. MARGARET WESTON, '24 14 VARSITY BASEBALL, Hobart at Rochester. Chait'171an 15 ALL-UNIVERSITY SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA concert. Strong Auditorium, 8: 15 p.m. HOYT S. ARMSTRONG, '23 17 VARSITY BASEBALL, Hamilton at Rochester. DR. JACOB W. HOLLER, '41M DONALD S. JUDD, '53U JUNE PAUL S. McFARLAND, '20 6-8 REUNION-COMMENCEMENT WEEKEND. BETTY M. OATWAY, '43N 7 VARSITY BASEBALL, Buffalo at Rochester. FLORENCE ALEXANDER SCHOENEGGE, '24E

HARMON S. POTTER, ' 38 Published five times per year in January, March, May, Sep­ Executive Secretary tember and November at the Art Print Shop and mailed without charge to all alumni. Editorial Office, University of Rochester, River Campus Station, Rochester 20, N. Y. Entered as second class matter, November, 1952, at the post office at Rochester, N. Y. Report on INDIA has been independent since 1947 when the British departed, but she is only at the beginning Asia of her struggle for freedom. She is torn by internal conflicts, economic and social problems. In the

area of higher education, teaching staffs in Indian

universities are generally of good quality, but

they suffer from a paucity of teachers, and there

is resistance to curricular changes.

Japan has reorganized her government and

economy, and rejoined the world community as

the eightieth member of the United Nations,

but she is insecure and uncertain, too much

so to give much support to the West in

our search for security against Communism.

The economic, political and social

conditions in these nations pose

grave problems for the United

States and the rest of the free world.

They are analyzed for Review readers in the

following articles by three experts on

the University's faculty who have

studied them at first hand.

India at the Crossroads by Vera Micheles Dean Director, N on-Western Civilizations Program

Impressions of University Education in India by Willson H. Coates Professor of History

Japan-Uncertain and Vulnerable by Warren S. Hunsberger Haloid Professor of International Economics beset with internal conflicts in her struggle for freedom

By Vera Micheles Dean Director, Non-Western Civilizations Program

HE MONSOON SEASON, with its sudden daily downpours T and brief intervals of clearing when the cloud-burdened sky is suddenly irradiated with fresh-washed azure and gold, has a dual psychological effect. The seemingly ceaseless rain, beneficent as it is for India's urgently needed crops, can also wreak havoc as rising rivers flood the countryside and sweep away homes. The immobili­ zation of physical activity encourages, at worst, passivity, and at best, a spirit of contemplation. But when the sun breaks through, spirits rise. The prospect of a good harvest stirs hope. People who had just been taking refuge in doorways or huddling under the huge black umbrellas which give a funereal air to monsoon-swept streets come out to enjoy the respite; and the landscape blooms with the women's color­ ful saris. Ten 'years after independence India is in a monsoon mood. It feels neither the elation of 1947, when with the de­ parture of the British it looked confidently to its future as a free nation; nor the sense of expectation generated by the launching of the First Five-Year Plan in 1951. A decade of profound change and often painful readjust­ ments has left its imprint on India. It is now clearly realized that independence from foreign rule marked, not the end, but the beginning of the new nation's struggle for freedom. The political revolution which united India against Britain is seen as the first stage of a long and arduous process which must bring an economic and social revolution if India is to garner the fruits of its efforts and not have them swept away in a torrent of internal conflicts. India's mood today is sober-among some, even somber. There is a sense of pessimism, of frustration, as the myriad problems of building a united nation and modernizing an

Dr. Dean is known in this country and abroad as a brilliant educator, writer and lecturer on foreign policy. She came to the University in 1954 to organize and direct the unique un­ dergraduate Program on Non-Western Civilizations, origi­ nated by President de Kiewiet. Last summer she occupied the new chair on American Institutions and Civilizations at the Graduate School of International Studies of the University of New Delhi, India. She t'ecently received an honorary degree, her ninth, from Western College for Women, Oxford, Ohio. MADEMOISELLE magazine in February received the Brother­ hood Award of the National Conference of Christians and Jews for publishing Dr. Dean's article, "Paying the Price of the U.N." Dr. Dean also is editor, research directot· and direc­ tor of publications at the Foreign Policy Association, . which may be noted. I neither saw nor heard of panty raids by Indian students, but manifestations of immaturity in the form of student strikes for frivolous or irrelevant reasons can be more disruptive to scholarly activity. The tendency to rote learning common to many Indian university students has been attributed to the examination system, but the same examina­ tion system elicits quite the opposite traits in Britain. Some graduate students I met in India seemed to me to display an ·. . higher education is hampered intellectual naivete not to be found among the same group in by poverty and lack of teachers the . On the other hand, there are others among recent graduates of Indian universities who convince me that no one could be more delightful, sparkling, and sophisticated than the best-educated young Indian man or woman. Thus, to anyone who wishes well for Indian higher educa­ in addition some aid and direction from the central govern­ tion there are both discouraging and encouraging features­ ment. This situation and some historical factors make for uni­ and the difficulties do not all stem from Indian poverty. formity among universities in India. There are, to be sure, When, for example, both in higher education and in other differences in administrative structure, in the curricula avail­ aspects of Indian life there is a gap between formal decisions able to students, and in several other respects, but the diver­ and real implementations, it is legitimate to conclude that, sity in India is not as great as in the United States. despite conspicuous exceptions among individual Indians, an The quality of the teaching staffs in Indian universities is Indian national weakness is being exposed. On the other hand, generally good. A large number of the teachers have received there are some difficulties in higher education which are in­ advanced training in Britain or the United States, occasionally herent in a complex situation, and are not due to any national in other Western countries, but those whose whole training failing. The most notable of these is the language problem has been in India are not necessarily inferior to the foreign­ which is far from having been resolved. For the record, Hindi educated group. Considering the fact that Indian university is to be the national language of India and is to replace Eng­ teaching staffs are greatly overworked because they are under­ lish as the chief medium of instruction in the universities. manned, one can only admire the extent of their scholarly Quite apart, however, from the natural reluctance to put productivity. through this change on the part of Indians in the many areas The poverty of India is, of course, the main reason for the where Hindi is not the native language, there is the inade­ paucity of teachers, as it is for many other inadequacies in quacy of Hindi as a medium of communication especially for higher education, such as in library facilities, in scientific lab­ modern science. The language question is an explosive issue oratories, and in student dormitories. Although Indian educa­ in India, and one on which foreigners, especially English­ tors are very much aware of financial needs, they do not ex­ speaking ones, hesitate to pass judgment. I can express admir­ hibit a defeatist attitude in a situation which would be dis­ ation, however, for the whole tone of a recent report of a couraging to many Westerners. Indeed, there is evidence that national committee on language to the University Grants the enormity of the tasks confronting Indian educators has Commission. the effect of intensifying the dedication of some. For instance, There are other heartening aspects of Indian higher educa­ there are scientists who are spurred to employ their own and tion. Despite the strength of Indian nationalism today, the their students' ingenuity to improvise substitutes for expen­ Indian universties are not caught in an intellectual lockstep, sive equipment which their laboratories lack. This is, in itself, but are centers of freedom without losing touch with the com­ good education. . munity. Responsible political leaders and newspaper editors There is no doubt, however, that the acquisition of knowl­ freely criticize the higher educational system. At the same time edge in India is retarded by too many obstacles. There is, some of its best critics are among the members of its own moreover, the bare fact that, again for reasons of economy, teaching staffs. Moreover, some Indian university and college the educational span in India from elementary schooling to administrators display courage in maintaining standards, and the bachelor's degree is one or two years shorter than the resisting the pressures of nepotism and favoritism. In short, normal span in the United States. No doubt the best schools there is enough evidence of intellectual and moral vigor to in India partly make up for this deficiency by more intensive justify an attitude of qualified hopefulness about Indian uni­ education, but the Indians have the additional and necessary versities. burden of much more language work than is normally re­ quired in the United States. Admittedly, to the extent that more Indian than American university students are bilingual or trilingual, to that extent are they better educated, but the language demands coupled with the shorter educational span make necessary a premature specialization for the Indian stu­ dent, thus resulting in an educational imbalance. In other words, the price of Indian poverty is a dilution of its whole educational process. I hesitate to draw the logical conclusion that the average Indian university student is less mature than his American counterpart. The truth or falsity of such a generalization could only be determined by an exhaustive and difficult analysis. Pertinent to such an analysis, however, are a few impressions j~r~~ ·vulnerable physically. psychologically, economically

By Warren S. Hunsberger Haloid Professor of International Economics

N THE THIRTEEN YEARS since the surrender ceremony I aboard the USS Missouri, Japan has risen from the ashes, re-built burned cities, reorganized her government and econ­ omy, and re-emerged into the world community as the eight­ ieth member of the United Nations. Japanese trade has again grown so large that American in­ terests are demanding protection against Japanese competi­ tion. A security treaty binds Japan and the U. S. in defense against Communist aggression. The Occupation-imposed con­ stitution of 1947 is being modified by the conservatives who dominate Japansese politics, but these modifications are being challenged and limited' by the Socialist opposition. Many Occupation reforms have now been in force long enough to give some hope that Japan will grow more and more demo­ cratic, more and more stable, and friendlier to the West. But Japan remains far too insecure to lend much support to the West in our search for security against Communism. Physically, psychologically, and economically, Japan is ex­ tremely vulnerable. Consequently, neither political stability nor friendliness to the U. S. can be regarded as assured. Communist regimes rule most of the land areas near Japan. Islands under Russian control can be seen across narrow straits from Hokkaido, the northernmost of Japan's four main islands. China, North Korea, and North Viet-Nam are also under Communist control. These neighboring Communist areas-

Masamichi Yamagiwa, Japan's highest banking authority, called his nation's attention to an article by Professor Huns­ berger, "Japan's Exports and American Market," published last September in the Far Eastern Survey, Yamagiwa termed it "the most inspiring article 1 have come across of late" and agreed with Professor Hunsberger that "it is necessary for (Japan) to watch its step and to correct things that ought to be corrected before we make any requests to other countries." Professor Hunsberger, co-ordinator of the University's N on­ Western Civilizations Program, is an expert on intftrnational economics, particularly with respect to Asia and Latin Amer­ ica. As far back as 1940 he participated in a study commis­ sion for the Japan Economic Federation, visiting Japan, Manchuria and Occupied China. During World War II, serv­ ing with the U. S. Navy, he served as Japan Branch Chief with the State Department, and as chief of the Division of Research for the Far East. In 1955 he spent three months in the Far East as consultant for a business firm in a survey on business prospects for trade with the U. S. He will return to Japan this summer under a research grant for a broad study of Japan's economic relations with this country, and he will be on leave from the University next year to write a book on that subject, working at the Council on Foreign Relations in New York City. especially China and Russia-are far more important in Jap­ But fear for Japan's economy also has much justification. anese thinking than most Americans are aware. There is Despite all the growth that has taken place during the century strong sentiment in Japan for doing business with China. At since Commodore Perry, Japanese incomes are very low by the same time, Japan is exposed to sudden devastating attack any standards except those of other Asian countries. Per capita from Communist bases nearby. income (gross national product) is about $300 a year, on the The Japanese have never recovered psychologically from basis of official statistics converted at the prevailing exchange the atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki ih August, rate. Efforts to raise total production and income encounter 1945. I was in Japan in 1955 when the tenth anniversary of two limits, one domestic, the other international. The do­ these tragic events was marked with ceremonies, publicity, and mestic ceiling is determined by Japan's present productive solemn declaratiQns that such terrible attacks must never be capacity and the limitations on capital available for expanding repeated. While observing the morbid attention given to de­ this capacity. But Japan's past performance makes expansion tails related to the Hiroshima and N agaski attacks, one could of facilities seem quite possible except in the very short . hardly fail to note the apparent lack of concern over the com­ The more important economic ceiling, therefore, is the for­ parably destructive and much more prolonged Tokyo fire raids eign one. How much can Japan buy and sell abroad? Japan's of March, 1945, and of other lesser but also terrible fire imports continue as in the past to exceed exports by a large bombings. The explanation for this contrast lies partly in the margin. The gap is now closed mostly by special purchases in shock of newness, and the face-saving path to surrender pro­ Japan made for U. S. military and foreign aid use in Asia. vided by the nuclear weapons. Another part of the explana­ This "special dollar income" has for several years been about tion seems to me to lie in the world-wide Communist propa­ as large as total Japanese exports to the U. S., Japan's largest ganda campaign against A-bombs in the years after 1945. In market. The amount of this special income will tend to drop Asia this propaganda has repeated endlessly the point that with expected progressive U. S. troop withdrawals from Japan. the U. S. used atomic bombs only against colored Asians, not Senator Knowland has recently suggested that to counter against white Germans. (Such propaganda conveniently ig­ the present recession such U. S. Government expenditures nores the fact that the A-weapon was not perfected before should be made in the U. S., not in foreign countries. The Germany surrendered.) Senator apparently did not stop to consider that such a re­ Japan's excitement over nuclear weapons was reinforced by duction in U. S. outlays would cut foreign purchasing power, the much publicized fall-out accident in 1954 when the Japa­ and U. S. exports would consequently decline unless Ameri­ nese fishing boat, Lucky Dragon, was covered with radio­ can aid were increased. active dust in the Eniwetok area following one of our early The most difficult and most important economic task facing H-bomb tests. Today Japanese sentiment runs very high Japan is to expand exports. Some Japanese and some Ameri­ against H-bomb testing and against U. S. basing of nuclear can observers feel that there is a definite ceiling on what weapons in Japan. This sentiment extends to Okinawa, where Japan can sell in the U. S. and elsewhere. Certainly the suc­ the greatest U. S. military base in the Western Pacific has' cess that protectionist forces have recently been having in the been built. Japan is recognized by the San Francisco Peace U. S. lends support to this view. In 1956 and 1957 the Japa­ Treaty as retaining residual sovereignty over Okinawa. But nese adopted quota limitations on exports of cotton textiles the continuing U. S. military government there is a sore point to the U. S. These quotas, called "voluntary" despite the that transcends the nuclear weapons issue for a very vocal lengthy "discussions" which took place beforehand between group of Japanese. U. S. and Japanese government representatives, place rigid Economically, Japan grows more vulnerable each year. The quantitative limits on products for which Japan was finding population is far too large to be supported by japan's agri­ a growing market here. Japan faces other export difficulties cultural and mineral resources alone. Every year the popula­ in the U. S. as a result of the current economic recession, and tion grows, although a truly remarkable decline in the birth in Asia because of the very slow pace of economic growth in rate in the past decade gives hope that population growth will most non-Communist Asian countries. The pessimists have a continue to slow down, and may in time cease altogether. strong case. Still, Japan's farming area cannot grow significantly, and Jap­ anese mines yield their coal, and a few other minerals, only My own view is that Japan might, with a carefully planned with deeper and deeper digging' into progressively smaller and appropriately administered export drive, gradually expand seams. Until the non-Communist world's trading system be-, sales in the United States. I see no necessary reason why our comes far plore dependable and offers resource-poor nations huge economy could not in time absorb several timys the much more opportunity than at present, Japan's economy can­ present flow of Japanese goods. Present imports from Japan not be very secure. are in the neighborhood of $600 million a year, a very small What has actually happened to Japan's economy since volume compared to the $434 billion of total income (gross World War II justifies both hope and fear. Hope can be national product) of the U. S. in 1957. To be sure, U. S. based on the remarkable recovery Japan made in the years trade barriers are a great hazard. 1950-1957, when industrial production trebled and ind'ustrial Japan, thus, is still seeking its fortune. The quest continues capacity more than doubled. Just as impressive as the actual thirteen years after surrender brought an end to the old im­ growth in the economy is the evident and effective will of the perialist approach. This fact should temper any satisfaction Japanese leadership to follow policies that keep the Japanese we may feel at apparent democratic trends, political stability, economy healthy, especially in relation to foreign trade. Twice and international cooperation from Japan. The temporary since the Occupation ended in 1952, the Japanese government character of Japan's economic arrangements may not be fully has adopted very stringent financial policies to stop inflation apparent to all Americans. And few seem to remember that and serious losses of foreign exchange. In 1953 and again in it was the 1930 depression which permitted Japan's militarists 1957, the policies were severe and painful in many ways. But to assert the power that sent them to Manchuria, China, Pearl in both cases the measures taken proved effective in turning Harbor, Southeast Asia, and after much bitter fighting in the the foreign exchange deficit into a surplus. ' . Pacific War, to the surrender aboard the USS Missouri.

9 On University Commentary program, in which panels discuss wide range of subjects from economic problems to over-the-counter drugs, six girls on phones take questions from viewers which are answered during broadcast. Don W. Lyon, at desk, University Director of TV and Radio, is moderator. University TV Shows

ENS OF THOUSANDS of people in Western New York and T beyond feel a warm kinship with the University and a heightened awareness of its many contributions in teaching, research and public service as a result of its highly effective television and radio programs over the past five years. Under the talented direction of Don W. Lyon, the pro­ grams avoid the pitfalls of both over-popularization and of academic constraint. They give viewers and listeners a close look at the University's many activities at the River Campus, the Medical Center, and the Eastman School of Music, and familiarize them with its outstanding teachers, scholars and scientists. Judging from the public response, the programs appeal to people in all walks of life. Subjects range from the basic origins of the American vo­ cabulary to atomic fission and fusion, from the secrets of win­ ter to the rocks and minerals of New York State, from eco­ nomic problems to drugs, sleep and new developments in medical research. Among special features have been perform­ ances by the Glee Clubs and the Chapel Choir.

Robert F. Hinman of English faculty dicusses basic origins of American vocabulary and un· usual changes that occur when foreign words become part of our language. His subject, "Talk about Words," was so successful that a sec­ ond program was given in response to popular demand from listeners. He appeared on the 100,00 University Open House Television programs. A new experiment in daytime educational television was begun this year with three series of lec~ures for women con­ ducted by University School. A half-hour segment of each class was presented over the air. Here Dr. Frances Hamblin of Philosophy Department is lecturing on "Is It Ethical?" Community standards. religious ethics were among topics. Win Big Audience

This fall will mark the beginning of the sixth year for the The response showed clearly that the women welcomed this two major TV programs-University Open House and Uni­ chance to broaden their horizons. About 130 were enrolled in versity Commentary, both on Channel 5, WROC-TV, which the courses, and the mail received, telephone calls and actual have been sponsored during the past five years by the Lincoln­ ratings on the televised portions were gratifying to both the Rochester Trust Company. Audience measurements taken by University and the television station. professional national services last fall indicated 55,000 homes Typical of the many letters received were these comments: in Rochester and Monroe County alone tuned in with an "It is a very welcome relief from the usual run of inanity average of 2.3 members per set. It did not include the sizable spoon-fed to the housewife on TV during the day." "Please audience beyond Monroe County. The March audience figures send me the list of books and outline of discussions for your indicated that 100,000 homes were tuned in. ethics course. I am a housewife-twenty-two years old, and A successful innovation begun last September was a day­ peeking out from under piles of dishes, diapers, babies and time series of weekly classes for women of the community on other tasks. It certainly is refreshing to come upon a better Channel 10, WHEC-TV. The classes ran from an hour to TV program such as yours. Contrary to other mediocre pro­ an hour and a half, one-half hour of each being televised, grams presented during the week, it reminds me that I have and were taught by University School. Sponsored by the a mind and am perfectly capable of using it if I so desire." Alumnae Association, they offered intellectual escape and Plans call for a continuation of the series next fall, featur­ stimulus for housewives. Three courses were given, one in ing Dr. Vera Micheles Dean, Director of the Non-Western logic, entitled "Therefore, Ladies," the second on the inter­ Civilizations Program, Dr. Lincoln Canfield, Chairman of the relationships of art and culture, entitled "From Demons to Foreign Languages Department, and a third series yet to be Democracy," and the third in ethics, "Is It Ethical?" worked out.

Homes Tune in to Programs

11 HE MEANING of the terms "science" and "prog­ itself. In this connection, science has come into con­ T gress" are not universally agreed upon. To avoid flict with organized religion and theological dogma. possible confusion, we shall here use "science" to This is the conflict between observable "fact" and mean knowledge, especially that derived from sys­ inspired "revelation." The organized religions of the temized study, and "progress" to mean merely West have, for the most part, accepted the principles "movement forward, as in time." "Scientific prog­ of Evolution, but this is just the beginning. It seems

ress, JJ in this sense, is the growth of systematically reasonable to presume that with the passing years derived knowledge, with the passing of time. scientific progress will markedly alter our concepts It has often been written that science is devoid of of the Creator and of man's place in the over-all ethical significance. After all, knowledge, df itself, "scheme of things." is neither good nor bad. It is the use to which knowl­ Scientific progress will even alter the "needs of edge is put which involves questions of morality. men" which traditional religion has, in large meas­ Perhaps this fine distinction between knowledge and ure, fulfilled. The soon-to-come control of motivation, its use is philosophically important and theoretically mood, and mind by drugs and environment raises sound. Certainly, it once was. Practically, however, sticky questions of an ethical character. Traditional it is the nature of things today that this distinction religion has always striven to be a good influence on is difficult to make and, once made, is of little signi­ motivation, mood, and mind. What will religion do ficance. Scientific progress means an ever-increasing with absolute control? WiJl religion inherit this supply of new knowledge, from which it follows that control? there is also an ever-expanding, ever-changing choice of new uses. While one can draw a distinction be­ Effects on Social Environment tween knowledge and its use, it is more difficult to The remolding of religious concepts is, however, distinguish between growing knowledge and the only one consequence to be expected of scientific ad­ growing applications which automatically accrue. vance. There is a fundamental interdependence be­ It is this capacity for self-growth, then, implicit in tween the social and political order and scientific the term "scientific progress," which raises questions progress. The organization of society determines, to of morality. And these questions take on special sig- a large extent, the uses of new knowledge while new

nificance when we examine the growth process itself. By William F. Neuman The growth of knowledge is autocatalytic, i.e., each Associate Professor of Pharmacology new fact begets others. With each new insight comes an awareness of several new vistas hitherto unsus­ Chief of the Biochemistry Section in the Atomic pected. The process is somewhat analogous to a nu­ Energy Project at the Univet'sity Medical Center, Dr. clear chain reaction which, if uncontrolled, proceeds Neuman, a leading authority on the composition and at an ever-increasing rate until the whole of the development of bone and the effects of radioactive nuclear fuel is consumed in one tremendous explo­ materials that tend to localize in the bone, has for sion. The analogy breaks down in that the "fuel," several years been outspoken in warning of the haz­ new undiscovered knowledge, seems to be in limit­ ards to humanity from the tests of nuclear and ther­ less supply. The growth of science, though it started monuclear weapons. He has testified before a joint rather slowly, is now well on its way to chain-react­ Congressional atomic energy subcommittee on the ing violence. There would be less reason for con­ subject, and in 1955 was an adviser to the American cern if violent scientific progress were not so all-per­ delegation at the "Atoms for Peace" conference in vasive, invading as it does all phases of man's envir­ Geneva. onment: spiritual, social, and physical.

Effects on Spiritual Environment knowledge often renders outmoded the existing so­ First, let us look at scientific accomplishment In cial institutions. relation to religion. How often we have heard of Scientific research is almost exclusively supported the analogy of the watch and the watchmaker: "Who by its would-be users, government and industry. The can look at a watch and deny the existence of the product of research, knowledge, is bought and paid watchmaker?" And then, "Who can look on the uni­ for in advance. By this arrangement, the use of new • verse and deny the existence of a Creator!" But in knowledge is predetermined by the existing policies studying the watch and its parts one cannot help af­ of the purchasers, government and industry. This, fecting one's concept of the watchmaker. Similarly, however, is a narrow view. The use to which new a study of the development of life-forms has placed knowledge is put is largely predetermined by the a severe strain on the literal acceptance of certain world organization into which this new knowledge chapters in Genesis. Science has extended our basic is introduced. Thus, the hydrogen bomb, introduced understanding of the origin of the universe, the na­ into a world which is polarized into two armed ture of the universe, the origin of man and of life camps of opposed and irreconcilable ideologies, is

12 social and political institutions and the rate of tech­ nological advance. Social evolution, always slow and faltering, has quickened its pace, but it is still a snail's pace relative to the mushrooming growth of science and technology. Decisions are reached for us while we are still debating the issues. For example, before this country had fully decided what construc­ tive ends could be served by our atomic monopoly, the monopoly itself had slipped away. The future is now no further away than tomorrow. The explosive growth of science relative to the slow evolution of social and political institutions can be likened to the cancerous growth of an organ system, which, in un­ checked expansion, not only fails to perform its nec­ essary service functions but instead goes on to feed on its host.

Effects on Physical Environment However, it is when we examine science in rela­ tion to man's physical environment that we raise really interesting questions of morality. Consider, for example, that man himself is the product of evolu­ tion through which life-forms unadaptable to a changing environment died out and the well-adapted forms prospered. The environment was always na­ ture itself, or, as the theists say, "in the hands of God." Today, science is remaking the environment. How we handle nuclear radiation in the next decades will have important consequences in the mutation rate of all life-forms. Medicine, in preserving gen­ etic abnormalities by life-saving operations and chem­ ical procedures, is returning to the human genetic pool mutations which in ages past would have been lethal. Like it or not, in gaining control of his en­ almost certain to be used, questions of morality not­ vironment, man has gained some measure of control withstanding. over his own destiny. Already, man has unwittingly The Industrial Revolution, with all its social up­ meddled with his genes. By war, he has selectively heaval, can logically be attributed, in the final analy­ killed off the physically and mentally fit leaving the sis, to the application of early science. We are now physically and mentally less fit at home to breed the entering the early phases of what, in later ages, may future generations. Thus far, this has had little effect, be termed the Scientific Revolution. The world, al­ but let us look to the future. Even if we optimis­ ready shrunk, is shrinking further and science is now tically assume that global war will be averted and reaching out to shrink the solar system. With tech­ that the world will enter into an unprecedented era nological advance, interdependence has progressed of comfort and plenty, the alarming growth of the from tribal relations rapidly through state, national world's population will pose some interesting prob­ and international levels. There seem to be two paths lems. With science whittling away at the causes of to the future: a continued improve~ent in material death, which have, till now, largely offset man's comforts in a setting of strained and outmoded so­ procreative powers, the world will soon be overrun cial and political institutions or, alternatively, a new with people! Someone some day will decide who will social and political order newly conceived and insti­ breed and when and how often and with whom. tuted to adjust to the ever-increasing products of sci­ These are God-like decisions but they will be forced ence and technology. Looking to the future, these on mere men. alternatives lead to frighteningly different ends. On It is well to end our discussion on the theme that the one extreme, there is global war and the destruc­ mere men must make God-like decisions. Even- this tion of the civilized world, perhaps, even the end of superficial consideration of a few specific examples man. On the other hand, there is man's old dream of has shown again how inextricably "means" and Utopia, where, freed from want and privation, man "ends" are intertwined philosophically. Science may could spend most of his time in creative pursuits, in be amoral-a mere means to moral or immoral' ends. search of beauty and truth. Between these extremes, However, the available means determine, .in large the range of possibilities is enormous: from world­ measure, the ends that can and will be achieved. It wide tyranny, from a world-wide enslavement of takes God-like vision and wisdom to see today just man by his own artifices to a world-wide democracy what ends the ever-growing means (provided by sci­ . which is basically good but far short of Utopia. ence) will ultimately bring into being. However, we Viewing the future in this way, the discouraging dare not sit back and let it all happen to us. Man's aspect is the disparity between the rate of change of very destiny is at stake. This, any fool can see.

13 Computing Center ttNumbers Game"

••• A Boon To Research

By Thomas A. Keenan Director, Computing Center

ASKILLED ENGINEER can solve the complicated problem at the bottom of this page in a week. One of the University's computers can come up with an answer in five minutes. suIt, a machine program was prepared and tested The problem was put to the Computing Center by against parts which had already been made. This pro­ a company engaged in research on guided missiles. gram proved so successful that almost all these parts All parts that go into guided missiles have to be able are now being designed by automatic computers. to take tremendous accelerations. The company had developed an ingenious machine which would pro­ In the two years that have passed since the estab­ duce these accelerations for testing missile parts. lishment of the Computing Center, programs have However, each machine that is produced must be been developed by the staff and the graduate ­ able to accelerate in a different way. The way it ac­ ants at the Center which keep the high speed IBM celerates is determined by a small metal part which 650 and the Burroughs Computer busy almost 200 must be made differently for each machine. The com­ hours a month. These programs deal with research c~n~ern pany wanted to know how this vital part could be of .to many departments, to the University designed quickly and economically. A mathemati­ Admm.IstratlOn, and to local industry. On campus, cal study of the requirements on the design of the the ChIef users of computing equipment have been part showed that the cross-sectional area, which is facul.ty members and graduate students in Optics, t~e impor.tant factor, would be given by the expres­ PhyslCs, Psychology, Cqemistry and Biology, working SIOn, reprmted below, at each point x. for the most part on sponsored research. But the as­ sistance of programmers and the services of the com­ The staff at the Computing Center determined that puters have been made equally available to faculty the evaluation of this expression by a modern com­ without special research funds. In the twelve months puter could be done in about five minutes. As a re- follow.ing July 1, 1956, such "free time" provided a subSIdy of more than $9,000 to otherwise unspon­ sored research. The Computing Center is able to pro-

Dr. Keenan, who received his Bachelor of Science degree from the University in 1947, was named administrator of the Computing Center when it was estab­ - C - lished two years ago as a service to the -- t University's own research and teaching programs and to local industry. Previously he had been an assistant in­ structor in physics for five years at Pur­ due University, where he was awarded his Ph.D. degree in theoretical physics in 1955. He is a member of the American Physical Society, the Association for Com­ puting Machines, Sigma Pi Sigma, hon­ o:ary physics society, and Sigm,a Xi, na· IlOnal honorary science society.

14 vide this subsidy because both International Business Machines Corporation and Burroughs Corporation allow substantial reduction in rentals when their ma­ chines are used to facilitate research, and especially research from which the Center receives no income. From the beginning the Center has sought oppor­ versity departments or faculty members who are tunities through seminars and actual demonstrations working with industry in a consulting capacity, and to illustrate the uses of computing equipment to by making its facilities directly available to concerns faculty and students. It has also sponsored or co­ engaged in technical and scientific program~. sponsored such courses as "Introduction to Da~a The uses of the equipment at the Computmg Cen­ Processing," "Numerical Methods and ElectronIC ter have ranged over a wide variety of subjects, such Computing," and "Digital Computer Programming." as statistical projection of population trends in New Instructors for these courses have been recruited from York State, designs of many types of optical systems, the Center itself, the University Administration, and research studies in theoretical nuclear physics, design the ranks of Eastman Kodak Company. This type of of electronic networks, imitation of the reproductive cooperation between the University and industry. is abilities of viruses, research in colored photography, equally characteristic of much. of the research bemg and the design of various mechanical parts such as done. cams, gears, orifices and metering devices. The Computing Center has been of service to in­ Many design tasks could be cited, and they all .in­ dustry in at least three ways: By providing training volve these basic steps: First, a study of the phYSical opportunities for persons interested in the use of problem involved; second, a mathematical analysis high speed computing equipment, by assisting Uni- of the requirements; third, a preparation of a com­ puter program; fourth, testing the program against known results to make sure that it really works. The number and variety of jobs under way help to explain the Center's lack of respect for the tradi­ tional eight-hour day.

.IS The lJniversity New Deans, Director Appointed; Reorganization Program in Effect Sept. I

HE FAR-REACHING reorganization of the Schools and Col­ The U. S. Community Facilities Administration has ap­ T leges on the River Campus, announced in February, with proved a $1,140,000 loan to the University for the new build­ the establishment of three new professional education units, ing, a four-story structure of Georgian architecture, Harvard is moving briskly forward with the appointment of two new brick and limestone construction harmonizing with the other Deans and a Director. five men's dormitories. When the dormitory is completed for To the immense satisfaction of faculty, administration, and the 1959-1960 academic year, the University will have dormi­ students, Dr. W. Albert Noyes, Jr., the distinguished educa­ tory facilities for about 950 undergraduate men on the River tor-scientist who has been Acting Dean for the past two years, Campus. Interest on the forty-year government loan, which is has accepted the appointment of Dean of the College of Arts expected to cover construction cost, will be 2V8 per cent. and Science. As an educator, researcher and scientist-statesman, Dr. It is unanimously agreed that it would be difficult indeed Noyes is a man of national and international stature. He took to find anyone more admirably qualified to lead the College part in the original drafting of plans for the United Nations in the vital new era on which it is launched under the re­ Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization and for the organization plan with the growth in enrollment and strength­ past six years he has served on the National Commission for ening of the educational program and faculties. UNESCO. As a member and officer of the International Union Dr. William A. Fullagar, Chairman of the present Division of Chemistry, and the International Council of Scientific of Education, has been named Dean of the new College of Unions, and as consultant to government defense and research Education, and Dr. John M. Brophy, now Chairman of the agencies, he has made over thirty trips to Europe and others Department of Business Administration, will be the Director to Australia, New Guinea and Panama in the past fifteen of the new School of Business Administration. Yet to be years. He has been a guest lecturer at universities in England, chosen is the Dean of the new College of Engineering that Scotland and France. will replace the present Division of Engineering when the In an address last year in , when he received the reorganization goes into effect September 1. dinstinguished Willard Gibbs Medal of the Chicago Section The expansion program has met with wide approbation. of the American Chemical Society, he advocated a U. S. for­ The enthusiastic reaction was well summed up in an editorial eign policy in science, and proposed that a top scientist be in the Rochester Democrat and Chronicle, which hailed the given cabinet rank (Rochester Review, September, 1957). announcement as marking the University's "dedication to the Early this year, the proposal came up again when Senators task of serving more young people better and its confidence McLennan and Humphrey announced they would introduce a in the future." bill in Congress establishing a U. S. Department of Science "The University's expansion plans," the editorial said, "are in line and Technology. with the determination of non-tax supported universities to meet the Space does not permit listing all of his attainments. He has needs for trained personnel by relying heavily upon their own re­ been Professor of Chemistry at Rochester since 1938. He sources. A new report to Governor Harriman includes the U. of R. has held the Charles Frederick Houghton Professorship in among 110 of such institutions in New York State which plan to spend nearly half a billion dollars on expansion of facilities that will Chemistry since 1940, and was department Chairman from enable them to raise student capacities from 110,000 to 185,000 by 1939-1955, and Dean of the Graduate School from 1952­ 1970.... 1956, when he was appointed Acting Dean of the College. "The establishment of Colleges of Engineering and Education and a School of Business Administration ... broadens and deepens the He is a former chairman of the National Research Coun­ University's capacity to serve. The Colleges of Engineering and Edu­ cil's Division of Chemistry and Chemical Technology, and cation will emerge at a time when the demand for engineers and has served with the National Research Committee as chief of better teachers is at a peak. The School of Business Administration the technical division of the Chemical Warfare Service, to ... is of a more local character; the industrial and business com­ mention a few of the important posts he has held. munity of Rochester depends in large measure on the U. of R. for executive personnel. Dr. Fullagar, the new Dean of the College of Education, "In the field of education the University aspires, by producing came to the University of Rochester in 1956 as Professor and more and better teachers, to improve the scholastic fiber of high Chairman of the Division of Education. Formerly on the Uni­ school graduates.... versity of Florida faculty, he was prominent as a consultant "The reorganization, in time, will change the profile of the Uni­ to public school systems in that state. versity, physically, as higher enrollments, more facilities dictate ex­ pansion. The inner change will be felt even more because it is in­ Dr. Brophy, Director of the School of Business Adminis­ dicative of the University's resolution to meet the new, titanic chal­ tration, has been at Rochester since last September, after hav­ lenges of higher education." ing been on the faculty of the School of Industrial and Labor As another step in its River Campus program, the Univer­ Relations at Cornell University since 1947. He is a graduate sity this spring began construction of a new dormitory, adja­ of Stout Institute, Stout State College, Wis., and holds a mas­ cent to Lovejoy Hall, in the men's residence hall quadrangle. ter's degree from the University of Minnesota and a Ph.D. It will provide additional accommodations for 174 under­ from Cornell. He has had wide experience in industrial educa­ graduate students. tion and training and has been a consultant to industries.

16 Treasurer's Report: Annual Costs $18,715,839; Gifts $12,941,620. Mainly for Medical Research, Fellowships

HE UNIVERSITY'S annual operating cent, for salaries of the University's 3,350 T and research costs again rose to a employees, and for contributions to the new peak in the 1956-1957 fiscal year, University's employee retirement, life in­ with a total expense of $18,715,839, an surance and health insurance benefits. increase of $829,559 over the 1955-1956 Fundamental research sponsored by figure, reports Raymond L. Thompson, the U. S. Government, New York State, Senior Vice President and Treasurer of foundations, and industry, amounted to the University. $4,339,717. Gifts and bequests to the University Income from endowment funds paid endowment funds during the year also only 22.4 per cent of the total operating reached an impressive amount, $12,941,­ costs, and tuition and student fees, 15 620. Most of this sum was earmarked by per cent. Grants-in-aid and sponsored re­ Dr. W. Albert Noyes, Jr. its donors for medical research and fel­ search accounted for 23.8 per cent; hos­ lowships, however, and cannot be used pital patients and Municipal Hospital, for general University purposes. 26.3 per cent; dormitories and dining From the estate of Ralph Hochstetter facilities, 5.2 per cent; other gifts, 3.3 of Buffalo came the largest bequest, per· cent; miscellaneous, 4 per cent. $7,024,910, to establish post-doctoral fel­ Mr. Thompson again called attention lowships for medical research. Another to the need of the College of Arts and was one of $1,050,000 from the estate of Science for additional endowment funds. Mrs. Ernest H. Woodward of LeRoy in It required 38 per cent 'of the income part payment of her bequest giving 70 per from unrestricted sources to extinguish cent of her residuary estate to the Uni­ the College's deficit of $409,154 for the versity, the income to be used to operate year. the Edith Hartwell Clinic for cerebral Total expenditures of the University palsy children in LeRoy and Woodward Medical Center in 1956-1957 were House, her former home, now used as a $10,747,635 for the year, or 57 per cent center for University educational activi­ of the total University operating costs. ties. Scholarships and loans granted to A payment of $460,400 was received undergraduate and graduate students from the estate of Mrs. Bertha H. Bus­ amounted to $672,995, which equalled well, Mr. Hochstetter's sister, for the 21 per cent of the amount received in fund she and her late husband, Dr. payment of student tuition and fees. Henry C. Buswell, established for re­ The University's endowment funds are search in the Department of Medicine. allocated among its various divisions. The This sum brought to a totalof$3,552,855 operating results for each of the endowed the amount paid into the fund from her schools or colleges are determined after estate. allocating to each all of its earned in­ The Ford Foundation gave the Univer­ come and the income from its endow­ sity $4,111,500, including $3,100,000 ment funds for the fiscal year. Income for the School of Medicine and Dentistry from the University's unrestricted funds to provide income for instructional pur­ is appropriated as far as possible to poses, and $992,500 to help raise faculty meet deficits in the individual schools. salaries in the College of Arts and Sci­ The endowments are set up as follows: ence and Eastman School of Music. College of Arts and Science, $15,758,­ Alumni, through the annual Fund cam­ 545; School of Medicine and Dentistry, paign, special gifts and bequests, contrib­ $33,657,145; Eastman School of Music, uted $157,129 during the year. Gifts $11,206,925; University General Fund, from business and industry for unre­ $16,048,950; Strong Memorial Hospital, stricted use totaled $267,35,0. Other gifts $195,763; Memorial Art Gallery, $678,­ to endowment came to $294,810. 765; University School, $497,287. Contributions in 1956-1957 raised Market value of the University's en­ the University's endowment funds to dowed assets was 175 per cent of the $78,043,379, as compared with $65,101,­ book value as of June 30, 1957. Income 759 during the preceding fiscal year. on investments was distributed at the rate The total cost of $18,715,839 for the of 5lh per cent figured on the book Dr. William A. Fullagar year included $12,533,876, or 67 per value of endowment funds.

17 The lJniversity

Dr. Dunkel Succeeds Dr. Koller As English Department Chairman

ROF. WILBUR D. DUNKEL, whose ~_nd the Arts in Contemporary Society" P classes in Shakespeare and the drama on March 7 and 8 was one of the most have enriched the college experience of successful. The speakers were Paul Ru­ hundreds of students in the past thirty­ dolph, chairman of the department of three years, is the new Chairman of the architecture at Yale University, designer Department of English, effective in Sep­ of the much-discussed Wellesley College tember. Art Center and other noted buildings; He succeeds Prof. Kathrine Koller, John Ciardi, poetry editor of The Satur­ who was appointed Chairm~n in 1946, day Review.J professor of literature at the first woman to head a major depart­ Rutgers, and author of numerous books ment in the University. Professor Koller of poetry; William Kienbusch, well­ continues as Joseph H. Gilmore Profes­ known artist; and Prof. Harry Levin, Dr. Wilbur D. Dunkel sor of English, and is resigning her ad­ chairman of the department of compar­ ministrative duties after twelve years to ative literature at Harvard, author of devote her full time to teaching, research many works of criticism and scholarship. professor, with promotion to full pro­ and writing. She will be on leave for the A distinguished newcomer to the Eng­ fessor in 1954. At Cincinnati he has con­ 1958-1959 academic year to complete her lish faculty next September will be Prof. ducted courses on the English novel of book on "Death and N eo-Stoicism in the George H. Ford of the University of Cin­ the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, English Renaissance." cinnati, an authority on Victorian prose Victorian prose and poetry, and semi­ The change in its administration serves and the novel, who has been appointed nars on the novel. In addition to teach­ to spotlight the creative activity and vi­ Professor of English at Rochester. Among ing undergraduate courses, he has di­ tality of the department under Professor his published books are "Dickens and rected the theses of graduate students. Koller's leadership. The series of confer­ His Readers" (Princeton University His other books include "Keats and ences which she inaugurated in 1948 has Press, 1955), which one reviewer called the ViCtorians," (Yale University Press) brought many of the leading figures in "the most important work on Dickens and "The Pickersgill Letters" (Ryerson literature to the River Campus to discuss published since Johnson's biography" Press). He is a member of the Interna­ such subjects as American literature, the and "one of the genuinely illuminating tional Association of Professors of Eng­ novel, poetry and modern writers, and books on Dickens and on the Victorian lish, the Modern Language Association English literature in lectures and in­ novel in generaL" and its Victorian Committee, the Amer­ formal meetings with students and fac­ Professor Ford was graduated from the ican Council of Learned Societies, and ulty. Robert Penn Warren, Elizabeth University of Manitoba in 1936, and re­ Delta Upsilon fraternity. Dr. Ford was Bowen, E. E. Cummings, James Farrell, ceived his Ph.D. degree in 1942 from married in 1942 to the former Patricia Alfred Kazin, and Prof. Louis B. Wright Yale University, where his doctoral the­ Murray of Winnipeg. They have two of the Folger Library, are only a few of sis won the John Addison Porter Prize. children, a daughter, Leslie, six, and a the noted writers and critics who have He taught for several years at the Uni-. son, Harry, two. taken part. versity of Manitoba, going in 1946 to Another addition to the faculty will This year's conference on "Literature the University of Cincinnati as associate be Prof. Raymond 1. Brett, who holds the chair of English at the University of Hull, England. Professor Brett will come as Visiting Professor of English under the exchange professorship program sup­ ported by the R. T. French Company of Rochester and Reckitt & Colman, Ltd., of Hull. Dr. Dunkel taught at the Uni­ versity of Hull in 1955-1956 under this plan. Since Professor Koller became chair­ man, the English Department faculty has been increased from twelve to twenty John Ciardi, poetry editor members and the graduate study program of the Saturday Review, extended to include a Ph.D. degree that talks with students during English conference offers training in the teaching of English. in March on "Literature and In addition to full teaching schedules, the Arts in Contemporary the faculty has an impressive record of Society." These conferences draw many noted writers creative work. Besides Dr. Koller, five and critics to the campus. other members will be on leave in 1958- At the '08th Commencement:

Dr. Robert Hutchins to Give Address; Receive Honorary Doctor of Laws Degree

.A S PRESIDENT of the University of Field took place, on December 2, fi Chicago from 1929 to 1945 and 1942, which led to the development chancellor from 1945-1951, Robert of the U. S. atomic bomb program. Maynard Hutchins introduced many Mr. Hutchins built up the science de­ changes, often of a controversial na­ partments at Chicago, and instituted ture, that caused American higher edu­ a 12 million peacetime nuclear and cation to re-examine traditional teach­ metals research program, adding two ing methods. A staunch and eloquent Nobel Prize winners to the faculty, champion of academic freedom, he Harold C. Urey and the late Enrico opposed the loyalty oath for univer· Fermi. sity faculty members, insisting that Before going to Chicago, Mr. Dr. George H. Ford membership on a faculty should be Hutchins was Dean of Yale Law determined by the competence and in­ School. He is a graduate of Yale, and tegrity of the individual. holds many honorary degrees. 1959 to do research and writing. Associ­ ate Professor Hyam Plutzik will be Now president of the Fund for the away the first semester to work on a long Republic, an independent organization poem, "Elegy for the Six Million," (the of the Ford Foundation, he directs its victims of Hitler), as well as shorter activities to eliminate restrictions on poems and a play based on the Athe­ freedom of thought, inquiry and ex­ nians' attack on Syracuse. Professor pression in the United States and to Plutzik's book of poems, "Aspects of develop a policy to protect those Proteus," won the 1949 Poetry Society rights. of America award and also the $1,000 Mr. Hutchins will be the speaker at award of the National Institute of Arts the University of Rochester's 108th and Letters for creative work in the fields Commencement on Sunday, June 8, of literature. and will receive an honorary degree Associate Professor William H. Gil­ of Doctor of Laws. man will continue his research on Emer­ Among the innnovations during his son during the first semester under a twenty-two year regime at Chicago grant from the American Council of were "The Chicago Plan," the "Great Learned Societies. He has been named Books Program" and the minimizing visiting professor at Leland Stanford for of intercollegiate athletics with the the second semester. abolishing of intercollegiate football in Assistant Professor R. James Kaufmann 1939. He devised the plan for a four­ will spend the year on his book, "The year. liberal arts program, beginning in the junior year of high school, Tragic Tone," a study on tragic experi­ Robert M. Hutchins ences in the drama from Marlow to Dry­ which was adopted in 1937 at Chi­ den. Associate Professor Joseph Frank cago. He instituted adult courses in When he' went to Chicago, Mr. great books in 1946, and was editor­ will be on leave for the year to complete Hutchins, then thirty, was the young­ in-chief of "Great Books of the West­ his book on the beginnings of the Eng­ est man ever to be chosen president of ern World." a major university. He resigned as lish newspaper in the seventeenth cen­ Some of his colleagues regarded president in 1945 and became chan­ tury. him as a fanatical liberal, others as cellor, and also chairman of the Board William D. Snodgrass, instructor, won reactionary, and still others as the of Editors of the Encyclopedia Bri­ a 4,000 poetry fellowship in February apostle of a new and better era in tannica. After the war he abandoned from the Hudson Review, literary publi­ higher education. He was opposed to his former isolationist position, and in cation, in which many of his poems have "uneducated specialists," and advo­ 1945 became president of the Com­ appeared. cated a system where students of the mittee to Frame a World Constitution. Professor Dunkel, who holds the en­ biological, physical, social sciences and In 1948, under his prompting, the dowed Roswell S. Burrows chair of Eng­ the humanities could obtain their de­ University of Chicago organized a lish and has been a member of the Roch­ grees as soon as they passed the Board two-year project to help re-establish ester faculty since 1925, is at work on a of Examiners' achievement tests. cooperation between higher education book, "Bernard Shaw's Playwrighting," During his colorful era as president in Germany and the United States, and is the author of a critical biography of Chicago, the first controlled nuclear with exchange professorships between of ir Arthur Pinero. chain reaction experiment at Stagg Chicago and Frankfurt.

19 Another of the commission's responsibil­ The lJnive,·sity ities is to foster greater cooperation be­ tween physicists of the East and West. One of its major decisions in Geneva will be to determine whether next year's Rochester Nuclear Physics Parley conference will be held at the University of Rochester or in . In the event Moves to Europe Research Center that Moscow is chosen, Rochester will be the scene of the 1960 conference. Before going to Geneva, Dr. Marshak will lecture at the Nordic Institute for OUR MEMBERS of the Physics Depart­ work in that field at Rochester. Theoretical Physics in Copenhagen, Den­ Pment will take part in the sessions of The 1958 international conference will mark, June 22-26. President of the insti­ the annual Rochester Conference on be held at the European Center for Nu, tute is the famed Niels Bohr, winner of High Energy Physics June 27-July 5, to clear Research (CERN) in Geneva. Dur­ the first $75,000 Atoms for Peace Award. be held this year in Geneva, Switzerland, ing the conference, the first meeting of Dr. Marshak also is one of sixty-two after having been at the River Campus the Commission on High Energy Physics nationally prominent physicists, includ­ for the past seven years. will be held. It was created by the Inter­ ing four Nobel Prize winners, chosen by Dr. Robert E. Marshak, Chairman of national Union of Pure and Applied the American Institute of Physics to help the department and "father" of the con­ Physics in Rome, Italy, last October. Dr. improve the teaching of physics in high ference, which he first organized in 1950, Marshak, one of five American scientists schools and colleges by visiting and lec­ representing the department's theoretical chosen as official U. S. State Department turing at 100 colleges and universities group, will be chairman of one of the delegates to the Rome meeting, is secre­ throughout the country. He has been vis­ meetings, and Dr. Sidney W. Barnes and tary of the commission, which includes iting lecturer under this program at the Dr. Arthur Roberts, of the cyclotron two Soviet members. University of Minnesota and at Hope group, will report on research with the It was established to handle all future College, Holland, Mich., and also met University's 240-million volt synchrocy­ arrangements for the Rochester confer­ with students and assisted faculty mem­ clotron. Dr. Morton F. Kaplon, head of ence, because of the important interna­ bers with curriculum and research prob­ the cosmic ray group, will report on tional status the conference has attained. lems in physics.

New Polarizing Microscope Bares Secrets of living Cells,

Dr. Shinya Inoue, research scholar in biology, with his polarizing micro­ HE CONQUEST of cancer, muscular dystrophy and other scope, a powerful new research tool which gives scientists the clearest diseases of the muscles, including the heart, may be a look now possible at living cells. It is 20 times more sensitive than T previous devices and permits photographs of muscle fiber structure. long step closer as a result of a new microscope developed by a brilliant young University of Rochester biologist, Dr. Shinya Inoue, in collaboration with Dr. W. Lewis Hyde of the Amer­ ican Optical Company. The powerful new research tool gives scientists the closest look now possible at living cells, both normal and abnormal. It permits photographs of muscle fiber structure never seen before and gives a much clearer idea of the organization of chemicals in the fibers than was heretofore possible. It is twenty times more sensitive than previous instruments. Dr. Inoue (pronounced In-ou-way), Research Scholar and Assistant Professor of Biology, describes the apparatus as a "high resolution, high sensitivity polarizing microscope." It depends on the fact that arrangements of molecules influence the speed and direction of beams of polarized light passing through them. This principle is called birefringence, and be­ cause of it, orderly groups of molecules can be detected even though their size is too small for the resolving power of the best conventional microscopes. Electron microscopes can dis­ tinguish smaller detail than is possible with a polarizing mi­ croscope, but the special requirements limit subject matter of the electron microscope to tissue that is not alive. The first application of Dr. Inoue's microscope was the ob­ servation of division of living cells. This is now being com­ bined with biochemical studies in which some proteins are extracted and then put back, and the fibers stimulated to con­ tract, giving more complete understanding of the role of each protein in muscle contraction. Conference Room At Medical Center Named In Honor of Dr. McCann

ITTINGLY NAMED in honor of Dr. FWilliam S. McCann, Emeritus Profes­ sor of Medicine and one of the men of vision who helped guide American med­ ical education to its present world leader­ ship, the Department of Medicine has a new conference room and library that al­ ready is filling an important place as a center of communications. A handsome room with cherry panel­ ing and attractive furnishings, the Mc­ Cann Room was dedicated on March 23. It was made possible by contributions from many of Dr. McCann's students, professional associates and friends. When used to capacity, it seats approximately sixty persons. A small kitchenette off the main area permits weekly departmental luncheons after staff conferences. A fold­ ing door divides the large room into two High tribute was paid to Dr. William S. McCann (left) when the Department of Medicine's beau­ small classrooms when needed. tiful conference room was dedicated to the Emeritus Professor of Medicine. The ceremonies in­ At the presentation, President de Kie-' clude presentation of the fine portrait of Dr. McCann shown here by the Class of '57, repre­ sented by Dr. Charles Collins (right). Also taking part were President de Kiewiet and Dr. Lawrence wiet recalled that when Dr. McCann was E. Young, new Department Chairman, who praised Dr. McCann's leadership in Medical education. (Please tum to next page)

This knowledge is intrinsically important, but it has added significance for cancer researchers because the mitotic spindle Aids Cancer Research is one of the few things that go demonstrably wrong in some, though not all, cancer cells. Dr. Inoue's research on muscle fibers was done in collabora­ As a result of the advances made possible by the new in­ tion with Dr. Andrew G. Szent-Gyorgyi, a biologist at the strument, the Department of Biology is planning a training Institute for Muscle Research at the Marine Biological Labor­ program for post-doctoral and visiting scientists, on the phys­ tory, Woods Hole, Mass. His photographs revealed trans­ ical and optical analysis of fine structures of living proto­ formations never before seen taking place as the muscle fiber plasm, under Dr. Inoue's direction. contracts. These involve the bands or striations which make Dr. Inoue's research is supported by grants from the Amer­ up each muscle fiber and which never have been fully under­ ican Cancer Society, which did him the rare honor of nam­ stood. He noted through the polarizing microscope that the ing him a Scholar of the Society, and by the U. S. Public bands, which are of different composition, change po ition Health ervice. and size and even merge during muscle contraction. This The newest model of his microscope was financed by the opens up a new direction of research into how muscles func­ American Optical Company, which is considering duplicating tion. the instrument on a special request basis for the use of re­ Studies of parts of living cells previously invisible also are search laboratories throughout the world. It was built by made possible with the new microscope, permitting scientists Rudolf Hamberger, instrument maker in the Institute of to see how molecules are lined up and to find clues to the Optics. forces active within the cells. The factors which control growth His colleagues regard Dr. Inoue as a remarkable cientist and reproduction, of importance also in studies of cancer, who has a commanding knowledge not only of biology but may now be observed. also of the science of optics. His background is unusual: The A particular cell structure which scientists can observe son of a Japanese diplomat, he was born in London in 1921, through Dr. Inoue's microscope is the mitotic spindle, by brought up in Portland, Ore., and Sydney, Australia, and which the hereditary particles of the cell are separated into trained in Tokyo and the United States. He attended high two groups when the cell divides. In some cancerous cells the school in Japan, and was graduated from Tokyo University spindle is abnormal, and in such cases, the new cells formed with a major in zoology. After the war he went to Princeton also are abnormal. University where he developed his first microscope, reporting It has long been known that the spindles exist and have on it as his Ph.D. thesis in 1951. His second model was de­ a role in the separation of chromosomes, but whether or not veloped at the University of Washington, where he was an the spindles have any interior structure of their own has been instructor in anatomy, and where he married the former Sylvia disputed among biologists for over seventy years. With his McCandless. They now have four children, Heather, nine, uniquely sensitive microscopes Dr. Inoue has provided clear Jonathan, fourteen, Christopher, three, and Stephen, one. evidence that the spindles do have interior fibrous structure. Dr. Inoue came to the University of Rochester in 1955.

21 Interfaith Chapel at Medical Center HE BOND between the healing arts contributions are still needed for fur­ T and the power of prayer will be nishings and equipment. Gilbert J. Mc­ closer at the University Medical Center Curdy, chairman of the building com­ with the completion of a new interfaith mittee and a University Trustee, said chapel to be started this spring. It will that it is hoped the necessary amount will be for the use of patients, staff and visi­ be obtained in time to open the chapel tors. this year. The interior of the chapel, which will The chapel, to be located in the court seat sixty persons, will be of comb­ just behind the main lobby of Strong grained oak paneling, and the wall of Memorial Hospital, will have movable the semicircular nave will be of verti­ chairs in place of fixed pews to permit cally-laid brick. The altar will be a white accommodation of wheel chairs and bed­ marble block on a dark base. Behind it ridden patients. will be an illuminated mosaic of the Serving with Mr. McCurdy on the Twenty-third Psalm in red and blue let­ building committee are Raymond L. tering on a gold field. Light will be ad­ Thompson, Senior Vice President and mitted from the surrounding court Treasurer of the University, Dean Don­ through windows high on the side and ald G. Anderson, J. Milo Anderson, Ad­ rear walls. Walter V. Wiard, '22, is the ministrator of Strong Memorial Hospital, architect. and Dr. Lawrence A. Kohn, Associate Financed by contributions from people Professor of Medicine, who has been of all faiths, among them doctors on the working for many years on the chapel staff of the School of Medicine and project. Dentistry, it will be available to all faiths "The faculty and staff of the hospital for religious services or ministering to have long recognized the need for a patients, and there also will be retiring chapel," said Dean Anderson. "We are rooms for families of acutely ill patients. grateful to Mr. McCurdy and his associ­ Funds now in hand are sufficient to ates, and to members of our own staff complete the basic structure, but further who are working to make this possible."

Conference Room stitutions, he said, of whom Dr. McCann (Continued from page 21) was a leading member. in high school, it could not be said that Raymond N. Ball, Chairman of the American medical schools were the best University's Board of Trustees, and Dr. Master in the world; it was necessary to go to Albert K. Chapman, Eastman Kodak Berlin, Paris, Edinburgh or Vienna for Company president and also a UR Trus­ the highest level of training. The present tee, headed a friends committee, and Drs. primacy of American medical education Lawrence E. Young and Frank W. Love­ was brought about by a group of men at joy, Jr., were co-chairmen of the profes- the University of Rochester and other in- ional committee.

22 Confiscated by the Nazis and recovered after the war, this rare and impressive 14th century Florentine altarpiece has been purchased by the University's Memorial Art Gallery. The work of Nardo- di Cione, it was cited by America's leading art magazine, "Art News," as one of two important old master acquisitions made by an American- ml.!­ seum in 1957. Still boasting its hand-carved. gold-tooled and arcaded frame, the polyptych features a compact yet graceful Madonna and tJ'ece Comes to Gallery Child in its center panel with strongly-painted, half-length figures of St. Francis, St. John Baptist, St. Peter and St. Dominic in flanking niches on either side. Painted in tempera in warm tones of reds, yellows, greys, and greens, with striking accents of black and white, the panel glows with rich color against a patterned gold background. The Gallery purchased the work from the gallery of Dr. Paul Drey, who obtained it from the famed von Nemes Collection in German-y.

:13 When he"s ready for coUege ...

will college A distinguished visitor to the River Campus this spring was Henry de Torrente, who is Switzerland's ambassador to the United States. The ambassador is shown in the above photo speaking at a coffee hour in the Welles Brown Room, Rush Rhees library. Seated on the davenport at his right is Presi­ be ready for him? dent de Kiewiet, who introduced him to the students and faculty. Ambassador de Torrente opened the gala festival, "April in the Alps," that evening in the University's Memorial Art Gallery, given to raise funds for scholarships to the children's art classes. The Gallery was transformed into an Alpine village for the festival, which proved to be so successful that it was held for two extra days. He's a bright kid. And he should go to college. Will he? By 1967 college applica­ tions will . No matter how well qualified and able a. student may be, it could be tough for him to get in col­ lege-anywhere. More and better paid pro­ fessors and instructors are needed to maintain scholastic Cost of season tickets, $5.00 standards. Already classrooms for four home games. and laboratories are over­ crowded. Colleges and uni­ [Individual game cost, $2.00 \ Schedule versities are doing their best per ticket) to expand facilities, but they September 27 Allegheny* lack the funds. October 4 Hobart America needs educated October II Union* people as never before. For Please reserve 1958 Season Tickets October 18 Vermont* the sake of your children and @ $5.00 each. My check is enclosed. the future of your country, October 25 Kings Point help the colleges and univer­ Nome . November I DePauw sities of your choice-now! November 8 Tufts* Address . *** November 15 Rensselaer 1£ you want to know what the col- lege crisis means to you, write for City . a free booklet to: HIGHER EDUCA­ (Make checks payable to the University of TION, Box 36, Times Square Sta­ Rochester and moil to the Athletic Ticket Of- tion, New York 36, ew York. fice, The University of Rochester, River Campus .::::./ Station, Rochester 20, New York. No reserva- :..... tions will be accepted until remittance is re- {t * home game ceived.) Tickets will be mailed in advance :::;",: ~:::::::=~u:."'~(,,''- =Jc. of t'he opening game. _ UtI",V te'" '0' h!,. pany, was elected president of the Rochester and also State Senator, 'has announced that he ociety for Quality Control for 1957-1958. The will eek the post of Lieutenant Governor in Rochester Society is a section of the national the coming state election. organization, American Society for Quality • 1938 Control. 20th Class Reunion, June 6, 7, 8, 1958. THE REV. GEORGE E. ULP was honored on WYLIE . ROBSON has been appointed assist- January 30 by more than 300 friends, associates ant to the director of sales administration, East­ and parishioners on the occasion of his twen­ man Kodak Company, Rochester. tieth anniversary as pastor of the Brighton HOWARD L. GERMAN was awarded the doc­ (N. Y.) Presbyterian Church. tor of philosophy degree by Ohio State Univer­ • 1931 sity in December. JOHN 1. NUGENT, vice president and for­ • 1940 merly director of manufacturing of the Ritter JOHN H. KISTLER has been elected assistant Company, Inc., Rochester, has been appointed secretary of the Indemnity Insurance Company director of the company's engineering program. of North America. • 1933 A son, Paul David, was born on January 25 25th Class Reunion, June 6, 7, 8, 1958. to Mr. and Mrs. EDWARD AGY. College of Arts ~ Science HARRY L. FULLER has been promoted to as- • 1941 sistant treasurer of the Continental Casualty ELMER F. BROOKS, JR., has been promoted Company, Chicago, Ill. to general sales of the Aeolian Amer­ Arts And Science-Men • 1934 ican Corporation, Rochester. HUGH J. KNAPP has been promoted from • 1942 • 1893 assistant manager to manager of the export 65th Class Reunion, June 6, 7, 8, 1958. ROBERT W. BURNETT is now associated with sales department, Eastman Kodak Company. the Genesee Valley Newspapers, Inc., Rochester. • 1898 60th Class Reunion, June 6, 7, 8, 1958. Knapp recently returned to Rochester after ten KENNETH J. SMITH, a member of the edi­ years abroad as Kodak's representative in Ja­ torial taff of the Lawyers Cooperative Publish­ • 1903 pan, Korea and Okinawa. 55th Class Reunion, June 6, 7, 8, 1958. ing Company, Rochester, has been appointed • 1935 • 1908 assistant district attorney. He will work pri­ 50th Class Reunion, June 6, 7, 8, 1958. ANTHONY J. MURABITO has recently been marily with the nineteen Monroe County towns. appointed principal of the Fitzhugh Park Jun­ • 1910 • 1943 WILLIAM Roy VALLANCE, until recently as- ior High School, Oswego, N. Y. 15th Class Reunion, June 6, 7, 8, 1958. sistant to the legal adviser of the Department • 1936 • 1944 of tate and counsel for the United States in WILBUR MEYERHOFF has recently been pro­ LELAND RAYSON has been selected as candi- matters before the International Joint Commis­ moted to Colonel, United States Marine Corps. date for the United States House of Represent­ sion, United States-, has opened an of­ He is head of the Marine Corps Base Planning atives from the Fourth Congressional district, fice for the general practice of law at 1129 Office at Camp Lejeune, N. C. Chicago, Ill. Vermont Avenue, Washington, D. C. He is WALTER LITTEN has been named assistant • 1945 secretary-general of the Inter-American Bar As­ manager of the industrial and scientific adver­ DR. MOSES PASSER, associate professor of sociation. tising division, Eastman Kodak Company, chemistry at the University of Minnesota, Du­ • 1913 Rochester. luth, spent three weeks last summer in Russia 45th Class Reunion, June 6, 7, 8, 1958. • 1937 as a member of the five-man "Technical Peat WAYNE P. GOODENOUGH, senior vice presi­ ROBERT S. BABCOCK, associate professor of Exchange Mission to the USSR" which studied dent of the Lincoln-Rochester (N. Y) Trust political science at the University of Vermont the Soviet peat industry. The mission visited Company, retired in January. • 1918 40th Class Retmion, June 6, 7, 8, 1958. • 1921 ACTIVITIES CALENDAR FOR REGIONAL CLUBS CHARLES HEDLEY, leading tenor of the opera department in the early days of the Eastman BUFFALO School of Music, is director of the Wilshire May 15 Annual Business Meeting. Fine Arts Studio, Los Angeles. He specializes in speech and singing training. DENVER • 1922 May 22 Dinner Meeting, Denver Athletic Club, President de HARRISON E. WEMETT recently announced Kiewiet, Speaker. the removal of his law office to 55 Liberty Street, ew York City. DETROIT • 1923 May 10 Dinner Dance. Annual Business Meeting. 35th Class Reunion, June 6, 7, 8, 1958. LOS ANGELES • 1924 DR. MILTON A. PALMER was elected presi- May 24 Dinner Meeting. President de Kiewiet, Speaker. dent of the Buffalo (. Y.) Eye Bank and Re­ search ociety, Inc., in January. • 1928 May 6 Monthly Luncheon, Hotel Adelphia. 30th Class Reunion, June 6, 7, 8, 1958. May 7 Annual Meeting. Dr. Howard Hanson, Speaker. LOWELL H. MACMILLAN was recently named June 3 Monthly Luncheon, Hotel Adelphia. station manager of WHEC, Inc., in Rochester. SAN FRANCISCO • 1929 Roy J. LINGG, secretary and treasurer of the May 26 Dinner Meeting, Engineers Club. President de Kiewiet, Vogt Manufacturing Company, Rochester, was Speaker. elected a director of the corporation at the an­ WASHINGTON nual meeting of stockholders recently. May 25 Picnic. • 1930 RABBI JULIUS KRAVETZ is teaching and tak- WAYNE - ONTARIO ing graduate cour es at the Hebrew Union Col­ May 22 Annual Business Meeting. leg~Jewish Institute of Religion, New York City. Alumni l'esiding in al'eas where Regional Clubs are organized will receive special ELMER F. LALONDE, supervisor of quality announcements containing full details of each program sponsored by their clubs. control engineering for the motion picture and sheet film division of Eastman Kodak Com- llU otes /25 about a dozen research, agricultural, and indus­ by the Glycerine Producers Association for new trial establishments of the peat industry in and research contributing to the applications and Fund Honors Hazel Wilbraham around Moscow, Kalinin, Leningrad, and uses of glycerine or glycerine derivatives. Boxitogorst. • 1951 Friends, associates and former • 1946 ANGELO A. COSTANZA has recently become students of Hazel J. Wilbraham, ORMAN EAGLE has been appointed school associated with the law firm of Van Schaick, '27, Associate Professor of Physi­ psychologist of the Elizabeth (N. J.) public Woods, Warner, Strathman and Costanza in cal Education at the time of her schools. Rochester. JAMES A. MCGILL and Dagmar B. Henze JAMES S. McAsKILL, who is associated with death last June, have established were married in Metuchen, N. ]., on Decem­ the law firm of Dudley, Stowe and Sawyer in a memorial fund in her honor ber 26. McGill is an Ensign in the U. S. Navy Buffalo, passed the ew York State Bar exami­ which will be used for student aid. attending flight school at Pensacola, Fla. nations in ovember. Friends wishing to make contribu­ HENRY R. GRAF recently joined the staff of • 1948 tions may send checks, payable to the Tonawanda Laboratories of the Linde Com­ 10th Class Reunion, June 6, 7, 8, 1958. the University of Rochester Hazel MURRAY BECKERMAN has become associated pany, division of Union Carbide Corporation, with a new law firm, Salitan, Beckerman and and is now working in the argon and rare gas Wilbraham Fund, to the Univer­ Shapiro, with offices at 1021 Union Trust section of the engineering laboratory. sity of Rochester Fund Office, Building, Rochester. ROBERT H. QUADE was elected assistant ec­ River Campus, Rochester 20, New JOHN D. FASSETT has been made a member retary of the Rochester Savings Bank at the York. of the law firm, Wiggin & Dana, ew Haven, board of trustees meeting in January. Conn. He is a member of the New Haven FRANK E. WOOD is attending graduate County Bar Association, the Connecticut Bar school at Carnegie Institute of Technology, Association and the American Bar Association. Pittsburgh. Commendation Ribbon with metal pendant at WALDEN PRATT and Janice Eddy were mar­ CHARLES 1. SKELLY and Emily Kiszkiel were ceremonies at the Cheektowaga Army Reserve ried in Palo Alto, Calif., on December 21. They married in chenectady, . Y., on October 26. Subcenter. As a first lieutenant at Fort Bliss, are residing at 1375 Otis Street, Lakewood. They are residing at 50 Oxford Road, New Texas, Brown was an instructional supervisor Colo., where Pratt is associated with the U. S. Hartford, . Y. Skelly is employed in the light in the administrative office, ike Ajax Divi­ Geological Survey in Denver. military electronic equipment department of the sion, Guided Missiles Department, Army Air THE REV. JOHN C. SCOBELL was installed as General Electric Company, Utica, N. Y. Defense School. His series of lesson plans and rector of the Episcopal Church of the Ascen­ • 1952 outlines include "innovations being incorpor­ sion, Claymont, Del., on December 22. BORIS KOSTA was recently admitted to the ated into every level of instruction" according ARDEN O. LEA, JR., was awarded the doctor ew York State Bar. to the citation. His efforts resulted in "tremen­ of philosophy degree by Ohio tate University LLOYD BURLINGHAM is chief provincial of­ dous increases in effectiveness of instruction." on December 20. ficer of the United States Information Service • 1954 • 1949 in Thailand. JOHN C. ROBINSON, who was graduated HAROLD S. NORRIS, JR., was elected presi- DR. JEAN 1. LEVY is a resident physician in from the American Institute for Foreign Trade, dent of Ontario Metal Supply, Inc., in January. internal medicine at the Edward Meyer Me­ Phoenix, Ariz., in January, is now associated ROBERT W. PEELLE was awarded a Ph.D. morial Hospital, Buffalo. with the First ational City Bank of ew York degree in physics by Princeton University in • 1953 where he is training for a position in the bank's January. 5th Class Reunion, June 6, 7, 8, 1958. overseas operations. • 1950 New concepts in the training of missilemen PVT. JAMES S. ARMSTRONG has been serving DR. GUIDO V. MARINETTI, assistant profes- are ALLEN H. BROWN'S contribution to U. S. as the NCO in charge of public relations for sor of biochemistry at the UR Medical School, defense. Brown, an engineer for Sylvania Elec­ the Army Recruiting Service in southern Maine. was recently awarded $300 for research study tric Products, Inc., recently received the Army's He expects to be discharged from the Army in July, 1958. • 1955 JUPE W. MOSSEL and Anne S. Scheer were married in ew Canaan, Conn., on Decem- E. Willard Dennis, '10, Honored on Retirement ber 22. LT. (j.g.) DONALD P. WEFER is serving aboard the destroyer U. S. S. Daly until his A SA HIGH school student, E. Willard of his retirement, at which he was cited release from active duty in June, 1958. He then Il. Dennis, '10, started working for for his "willingness to help others," his plans to re-enter Yale Law School and also Sibley Lindsay & Curr Company, Roch­ "imagination, ingenuity and persever­ serve on the staff of the Yale Law Journal. ester's largest department store, in a ance" and "the credit he has brought to • 1956 series of part-time jobs as bundle boy, the Sibley store." JOHN B. RANDALL has been promoted to Lieutenant (j.g.) in the Navy Supply Corps. wrapper, delivery helper and necktie Active in civic affairs, Dennis has also He is serving abroad the U. S. ·S. Maury. salesman. On January 31, Dennis retired had a leading role in UR alumni activi­ RICHARD LEAVITT, a student at Harvard Uni­ as chairman of the board of Sibley's af­ ties. In 1953 he became the first president versity School of Theology, is assistant concert­ ter fifty-five years of devoted service to ,of the Alumni Federation and that year master of the North Shore Philharmonic Or­ the store. was named to the University's Board for chestra, Lynn, Mass. In the years between, Dennis held a three-year term as one of the first of WILLIJ\M E. HERMANCE and Margaret C. Cunningham were married in ew Rochelle, what is probably the widest variety of the alumni-elected Trustees. His "stead­ N. Y., on December 28. assignments anybody has ever filled at the fast devotion" to the University was rec­ LT. ARTHUR J. OKEN was awarded his silver store. In his career he has been, among ognized by an Alumni Citation presented navigator wings of the United States Air Force other things, sales clerk, floor walker, to him at the 1956 Commencement. in ceremonies at Harlingen Air Force Base, Texas, recently. customer complaints expert, manager of To Dennis, the words "retirement" home furnishings, store superintendent, ROBERT 1. GRANATH and Marilyn 1. Atti­ and "inactivity" are not synonymous. He nasi were married in Rochester on ovember executive vice president, president, and, will still be serving the store from hi~ 30. They are residing in Hawthorne, Calif., since 1954, board chairman. office in the Sibley Tower Building as a where Granath is employed in Los Angeles by Some 250 of his friends and associates consultant and will continue to work Douglas Aircraft Company. paid warm tribute to Dennis at a testi­ with the numerous retail and civic groups GALEN A. GRIMMA, JR., was awarded the degree of doctor of philosophy in December monial dinner given for him on the eve to which he belongs. by Ohio State University.

jVot • 1957 Putnam, Conn. He is a research physicist with A son, James T., was born on October 25 the American Optical Company in Southbridge. in Norfolk, Va., to Mr. and Mrs. ROBERT A son, Douglas Wilson, was born on No­ MUMFORD. vember 13 to DORIS KENNELL PALMER and her ROY HENDRICKSON, sculptor and graduate husband. student at Cranbrook Art Academy, was one A fifth child, Robert Anthony, was born on of three artists whose works were exhibited at June 15 to Robert and ANN HOULIHAN KEEFE. Eastma n School the "Jurors Show" in January at the Memorial A fourth child, Ann Alison, was born on Art Gallery, Rochester. July' 13 to W. Robert and JEAN HOYT MEL­ LT. DAVID M. LEVEY, USAF, and Barbara VILLE. • 1923 November were married in New York City on A son, Peter Todd, was born on July 22 to 36th Class Reunion, June 6, 7, 8, 1958. November 23. Arthur, '50U, and JEAN HOFFERBERT MAR­ • 1928 CHARLES H. CICCARELLI and Louise Greene SHALL. 30th Class Reunion, June 6, 7, 8, 1958. were married in Needham, Mass., on Decem­ A third son and sixth child, Thomas Joseph, • 1933 ber 27. was born on June 30 to Peter, '39, and DORO­ 25th Class Reunion, June 6, 7, 8, 1968. THY MURPHY MEADE. • 1938 ARTS AND SCIENCE-WOMEN A third child, Richard, was born in June, 20th Class Reunion, June 6, 7, 8, 1968. 1957, to Lester and JANET GRUSCHOW REED • 1943 • 1903 in Austin, Texas. 55th Class Reunion, June 6, 7, 8, 1958. 16th Class Reunion, June 6, 7, 8, 1968. • 1908 • 1948 • 1948 50th Class Reunion, June 6, 7, 8, 1958. 10th Class Reunio11, June 6, 7, 8, 1968. 10th Class Reunion, June 6, 7, 8, 1968. • 1913 DOROTHY ROSENBERG PASSER is the coordi- • 1951 45th Class Reunion, June 6, 7, 8, 1958. nator of auxiliary services with the St. Louis JAMES E. BRAUNINGER and Eva Miller, '55G, • 1918 County Welfare Board, Duluth, Minn. were married in Fredonia, Kans., on August 40th Class Reunion, June 6, 7, 8, 1958. • 1949 25. They are residing in Bellingham, Wash., • 1923 IRENE FIELD was awarded a Ph.D. degree in where Brauninger is teaching violin, viola and 35th Class Reunion, June 6, 7, 8, 1958. fine arts by the University of Wisconsin in conducting the string orchestra at Western • 1928 January. In February she left for Rome, Italy, Washington College. 30th Class Reunion, June 6, 7, 8, 1968. where she has a position with the American • 1952 • 1933 Commission for Cultural Exchange. Her ad­ JAMES S. ANDERSON has been named a field 25th Class Reunion, June 6, 7, 8, 1968. dress is Barberini 86, Rome. representative at Accra, Ghana, East Africa, by • 1938 A daughter, Nancy Virginia, was born to 20th Class Reunion, June 6, 7, 8, 1958. George, 50, and VIRGINIA BARRETT COOPER • 1941 on January 16 in Louisville, Ky. Conductor Becomes III, CATHERINE MACLARTY PERHAMUS, her hus- • 1951 band, Charles, and five children are residing at A first child, Tucker James, was born on No- Quick-witted Violinist 49 Main Street, Caledonia, N. Y. vember 11 to William and SALLY LEE BLACK • 1943 BIERBAUM in Union, N. ]. Leads tMet' Orchestra 15th Class Reunion, June 6, 7, 8, 1958. A. LUNETTE CAMPBELL and Stanley F. Hale A third child, Daniel Theodore was born were married on November 16 in Greenwood, HEN Conductor Pietro Cimara was on December 28 to Jack, '44, and PEGGY Lou N. Y. . W suddenly taken ill during the first DAVIS GAIR in Denver, Colo. A first child, Anne Elizabeth, was born on act of a Metropolitan Opera presentation, • 1946 January 24 to Edward and JACQUELINE SIMON­ during the Met's winter season, of Ver­ LOIS SCHRAMM SIEGMUND and her husband, SON KREIDER in Zanesville, Ohio. Walter, '45, have moved to a new home at di's "La Forza del Destino," the per­ • 1953 formance was carried on without inter­ 5th Class Reunion, June 6, 7, 8, 1958. A son, Thomas John, was born on August ruption because the orchestra's quick­ Jane Stellwagen, '47 29 to Jerry, 53, and MADELINE ZIMMERLEIN witted second violinist stepped from the Student Activity Head WARNOCK. pit to the podium and took over for the • 1955 ailing conductor for the remainder of the ANE STELLWAGEN, '47, placement of­ HINDA P. MANSON and Morris]. Starsky, scene. J ficer and assistant vocational coun­ '55, were married on February 16 in Rochester. They are residing at 910 West Washington The violinist - turned - conductor was selor for women in the College of Arts Street, Ann Arbor, Mich. Starsky is completing Walter Hagen, '42E, who said he con· and Science, has been named director of work on his Ph.D. at the University of Michi­ ducted from memory and by ear. Not­ student activities in the Arts College, ef­ gan. ing that Cimara was ill, Hagen began fective in September. • 1956 ELIZABETH A. RICHARDSON and Kenneth W. beating time for the orchestra, and then. She will succeed David C. Ferner, Keuffel were married on December 28 in Rich­ at the request of several of the players, '57G, student activities director for the mond, Staten Island, N. Y. They are residing got up on the podium to conduct. He last two years, who has resigned to study in Lawrenceville, N. J., where Keuffel is an was relieved in the next'scene by one of for his doctorate in education at Teachers English teacher and football coach at the Law­ the Met's regular conductors. Hagen's renceville School. College, Columbia University. quick action was noted by nationally syn­ • 1957 Before her appointment to the place­ CAROL ANN NICHOLS and Richard B. Lewis dicated columnist George E. Sokolsky, ment office in 1952, Miss Stellwagen had were married in Utica, N. Y., on December 28. who cited him for exhibiting "the cour­ been a sales supervisor with the Fanny RUTH A. VAN LARE and Robert W. Stanton age and aptness such as gave Arturo Farmer Candy Shops, and later a member were married in Rochester on December 27. Toscanini his start." BEVERLY G. ROBERTS is teaching first grade of the personnel department of Eastman at the Washington School, West Orange, N. ]. Holder of a Rochester Prize Scholar­ Kodak Company. An economics major at' This spring she appeared in the production of ship while at the Eastman School, Hagen the University, she was president of Sta­ "Song of Norway" presented by the Montclair has been with the Met since 1946. He is gers, dramatic society, and served both as (N.].) Operetta Club. conductor of a group of the Met's or­ news editor and business manager of the MARION MERKER and Lt. (j.g.) John Dos­ chestra men who play regularly for vet­ kock were married in Jacksonville, Fla., on Tower Times, Women's College news­ August 30. They are residing at 1267 McDuff erans' hospitals. His wife is the former paper. Avenue, Jacksonville. Carolyn Fenton, '47E.

lass Notes /27 Goodyear International Corporation. His sales history at Crozer Theological Seminary, Ches­ Haloid Company, Rochester, delivered a paper territory will include French Guinea, French ter, Pa. on the principles and applications of xerogra­ Sudan, French Togoland, Ivory Coast, Liberia, • 1936 phy before the New York Chapter of the soci­ Mauritania, Portuguese Guinea, Togoland, DR. CHARLES D. KOCKAKIAN, professor of ety of Photographic Scientists and Engineers in Senegal, Sierra Leone and the Upper Volta. physiology at the University of Alabama Med­ January. • 1953 ical Center, recently received a $26,073 grant • 1954 5th Class Reunion, June 6, 7, 8, 1958. from the American Cancer Society to continue DR. FINN BRUDEVOLD, outstanding clinician, A daughter, Holly Caryn, was born on De­ his work on hormonal studies. teacher and investigator in the field of dental cember 28 to Lloyd, '53, and JOY RIEFLER • 1939 medicine, has been appointed by Harvard Uni­ RICHARDS. DR. CHARLES H. FINNEY, chairman of the versity and the Forsyth Dental Infirmary to the • 1954 division of music and art at Houghton College, post of professor of dentistry and chief of den­ recently became director of music and organist tal medicine at the Forsyth Dental Infirmary MARY BARBARA WILLIAMSON, contralto, at the First Presbyterian Church, Bradford, Pa. beginning August 1, 1958. gave a recital in Town Hall, New York City, on February 26. • 1940 • 1955 DR. IRVIN]. BELASCO has been promoted to BOGDAN GUMOWSKI recently joined the de- A son, Lee Frederick, was born on Novem­ senior research biochemist at the Du Pont Com­ velopment department of Union Carbide Chem­ ber 12 to Sherman and JOAN BEALS RHODES pany's Experimental Station, Wilmington, Del. icals Company, Division of Union Carbide Cor­ in Spokane, Wash. poration in South Charleston, W. Va. • 1948 • 1956 LAWRENCE T. ROOT, citizenship education • 1956 LT. ROBERT ZALE, USAF, was awarded his teacher, was appointed principal of the new MARION B. FOLSOM, JR., is teaching at the silver pilot wings at ceremonies at Goodfellow Brighton (N. Y.) Council Rock Grade School University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, in Air Force Base on December 19. He is now in April. addition to completing work on his doctorate with the 3625th Combat Crew Training Group JAMES R. SEBASTE has been appointed by the in English. He recently resigned from the at Tyndall Air Force Base, Fla. Rochester Board of Education to fill the newly United States Information Agency. created post of coordinator of personnel. • 1957 JOHN M. FRANCO and Suzanne MacMillan • 1949 THE REV. CHARLES BODDIE, pastor of Mount were married in Rochester on December 21. Olivet Baptist Church, Rochester, and a noted youth leader in the American Baptist Conven­ tion, addressed the student body of Keuka (N. Y.) College in January. • 1950 ROSEMARY CLARKE accepted a professorship • 1932 at the University of Dubuque (Iowa) in Sep­ THE REV. F. BREDAHL PETERSEN accepted tember. In November she performed her second the call of the Seventh Baptist Church, Balti­ piano concerto at the Louisiana Symposium of Medica I School more, Md., to become minister of the 112-year­ Contemporary Music and this spring presented old church on March 1. Dr. Petersen and his a series of concert recitals in Iowa. • 1940 family returned from Denmark in the spring • 1952 DR. JAMES PULLMAN has been appointed DR. GEORGE R. MOTT, physicist with the of 1957 when he became professor of church clinical assistant in medicine at the UR Med­ ical Center and assistant physician at Strong Memorial Hospital. He will continue his local practice in Hornell, N. Y. • 1945 DR. LEON 1. MILLER and Elizabeth]. Plumb were married in Rochester on February 1. • 1947 DR. RALPH W. HASWELL has been appoint­ ed assistant medical director specializing in occupational medicine of The Travelers, insur­ ance company in New York City. • 1948 DR. JAMES J. FOSTER has been elected a fel- low of the American College of Surgeons. Dr. Foster who practices medicine in Corning, N. Y., is also a diplomate of the American Board of Surgeons. • 1952 Dr. and Mrs. JOHN F. SEIDLIN have recently moved to 605 Fairview Blvd., Rockford, Ill., following the completion of his internship in Buffalo, N. Y. • 1954 DR. SAMUEL J. CHAPIN has opened an office at 608 East Capitol Avenue, Springfield, Ill., where he is specializing in internal medicine. • 1956 MARIMBA MASTERS IN TV NETWORK SPOTLIGHT DR. WILLIAM E. NoTZ and Jocelyn 1. Bull, Composed of advanced players of the Eastman School of Music percussion department and '58, were married in Rochester on December formed originally as a laboratory group to gain ensemble experience, the Marimba Masters are 28. They are residing in Rochester where Dr. increasingly in demand for professional appearances. One of their performances this year was Notz is a resident physician at Genesee Hos­ with the Ed Sullivan Show. and they are shown in the above photo on that occasion with the pital. famous Mr. Sullivan himself. • 1957 Organizer and director of the group is Gordon Peters, '56E, who expects to get his Master of DR. ERIC T. LINCKE and Constance Sprague Music degree this June, and who stands just behind Sullivan. The other members are Vivian Emery, concert mistress, Ronald Barnet, Jane Burnet, Edward DeMatteo, string bass, Mitchell Peters, and were married in Belleville, N. ]., on January Peter Tanner, who is just out of the picture at the left. The ensemble's private and public appear­ 25. They are residing in Hanover, N. H., where ances include those with the Arthur Godfrey television and radio shows (two weeks), the Geneseo Dr. Lincke is an intern at the Mary Hitchcock State Teachers College Artist Series, and the Rochester Civic Orchestra. Memorial Hospital.

2B / Cia 8 Notes A son, Jeffrey Philip, was born on December • 1957 ' 31 in Hoosick Falls, . Y., to Dr. Philip and A son, Richard Alan, was born on Decem­ GLORIA HARRINGTON MARTINEZ. ber 18 to Lt. (j.g.) Robert, '56, and BARBARA ~ I ·. I, '.\.' lESSER ADAMS. . D' • A third on, Douglas Edward, was born on December 14 to the Rev. Hugh, '49, and BAR­ NANCY Rupp is studying for her bachelor's .... ~. BARA LONGSTAFF OUTTERSON. In February the degree at the University of Michigan. tI Outtersons left for Venezuela where he is serv­ SANDRA TADDUNE is clinical instructor at Nursing School ing as pastor of a newly organized American Ellis Hospital, chenectady, N. Y. Overseas Union Church at Amuay, Venezuela. • 1928 A daughter, Cynthia, was born on ovem- 30th Class Reunion, June 6, 7, 8, 1958. ber 26 to Robert and JANET CANNING RAE. • 1930 A third daughter, Susan, was born on De­ MARY ROGAN is living in Santiago, Chile, cember 14 to Donald and MARGARET McNEIL where she is with the World Health Orgarfiza­ STOLTMAN. tion helping with the development of an ad­ Kenneth and MARILYN GREGG ROTHWELL vanced nursing education program. are residing in Lawrence, Kans., where he is Un iversity School • 1933 teaching in the English department of the Uni­ 25th Class Retm;on, June 6, 7, 8, 1958. versity of Kansas. They have one son. • 1951 • 1938 • 1952 JOHN A. OAKLEY has been elected secretary 20th Class Reun;on, June 6, 7, 8, 1958. BARBARA J. BARRETT and William H. Shan- of Ontario Metal Supply, Inc., Rochester. • 1943 non were married in Binghamton, N. Y., on 15th Class Reunion, June 6, 7, 8, 1958. ROBERT R. BLESSING has been promoted to ovember 30. development engineer in the Component Appli­ • 1947 A third child, Jay Donald, was born on Jan- • 1953 cations Engineering Department of the IBM uary 3 to Donald and F. WINONA FENTON 5th Class Reunion, June 6, 7, 8, 1958. Product Development Laboratory in Pough­ SCOTT. ALICE ARMSTRONG and Harold H. McKer- keepsie, N. Y. ANGIE PALMISANO is with Aramco in nan were married in Phoenix, Ariz., on Janu­ Dhabran, Saudi Arabia. Her address is Res ary 24. Tenura, Box 555, Dhahran. • 1954 A daughter, Sharon Eileen, was born on Sep­ SYLVIA V. GUZICKI and Emmett B. Boylan tember 8 to William and DOROTHY MOSLEY were married in Utica, . Y., on January 18. IN MEMORIAM ALEXANDER. Ther are residing at 142 Woodbine Avenue, • 1948 Rochester. EDWIN W. FISKE, '00, died in Rochester or. 10th Class Reunion, June 6, 7, 8, 1958. A daughter, Linda Marie, was born on Oc­ February 23, 1958. He was a partner in the • 1950 tober 6 to Robert, '55, and ROSEMARY WET­ Fiske & Handy funeral home in Rochester, and B. Clifford, '54U, and JOAN STURDEVANT TERINGS BURCH. was a life-long member of Lake Avenue Bap­ MOHNEY anr:.ounce the arrival of a daughter, A son, Craig Edward, was born on Decem­ tist Church. Mary Joan, on August 9. The Mohneys live in ber 27 in Fort Knox, Ky., to Edward, '54, and BENJAMIN GOLDSTEIN, '07, died in Roch­ Birmingham, Mich. RUTH HELEN MEHRHOF. ester on February 12, 1958. At the time of • 1951 • 1955 his death he was executive secretary of Tem­ A first child, Marie Lynn, was born on Jan- SALLYANN REED and Ens. Robert W. Rice ple B'rith Kodesh. Mr. Goldstein had been uary 19 in Dansville, . Y., to William, '55U, were married in Schenectady, N. Y., on De­ associated with the temple for nearly fifty and DOLLY McFADDEN KELLY. cember 21. years. He formerly had been a board member and director of the religious school. As execu­ tive secretary, he conducted religious services HERBERT F. YORK, '42, GIVEN TOP POST when the rabbis were absent. He was a founder, IN NEW U.S. RESEARCH PROJECTS AGENCY board member and a past president of the JYM & W A. At the UR Mr. Goldstein was elected to Phi Beta Kappa in his junior year. R. HERBERT F. YORK, JR., '42, 43G, director of the radiation laboratory OLE N. DE WEERDT, '18, died in Beloit, D Wis., on February 8, 1958. From 1923 to of the University of California at Liver­ 1942 he was chairman of the psychology de­ more, has been named chief scientist of partment at Beloit College. the Pentagon's new Advanced Research DR. NELSON J. CROWELL, '23, manager of Projects Agency. In his new post he staff training for the California Texas Oil heads the agency's division of the Insti­ Company, Ltd., died February 26 in New tute for Defense Analysis, which was set York City. After his graduation from the UR, up to provide scientific and technical ad­ he did graduate work at the University of Paris and received a Ph.D. degree in social vice on weapons systems to the Secretary sciences from the University of Lausanne, of Defense and the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Switzerland. He taught at Cook Academy, Last December Dr. York was appointed Montour Falls, N. Y., the Pawling ( .Y.) to the President's Science Advisory Com­ School, and was a master at the Lawrenceville (N.J.) School from 1931 to 1941. He joined mittee. During the war he was consult­ California Texas in 1945, after service in the ant to the Oak Ridge Laboratories and Navy as an intelligence officer in World War from 1946-50 did atomic research un­ Dr. Herbert F. York II. He was a member of Theta Delta Chi fra­ der Dr. Ernest O. Lawrence and Dr. Ed­ rector since 1952. ternity. ward Teller at Berkeley. In 1951 he He was among the ninety-eight distin­ FLORENCE B. COOK, '29, died in ew York served as a consultant in atomic energy guished scientists and their wives who City on January 19, 1958. at Los Alamos, and was co-leader of the attended the White House science-mili­ DR. FREDERICK S. DICKSON, '48M, died in Detroit, Mich., in December, 1957. Atomic Enegry Commission project, tary dinner in February, the first time in "Operation Greenhouse," in the South history that the President of the United WALTER L. SCHOFIELD; '50, died in San Bernadino, Calif., on October 25, 1956. Pacific. Currently on leave from the Liv­ States and his wife had given a formal ermore Laboratory, he has been its di- state dinner in honor of scientists.

lUll ote /29 Faculty, Staff

ROFESSORIAL dignity and erudition P go by the boards in the democratic campus sports and recreational activities in which deans vie with members of the maintenance staff, military brass in the ROTC programs with painters or plumb­ ers, learned philosophers, scientists, his­ torians, and psychologists with electric­ ians, accountants or carpenters. That's the way it is in the University bowling league, officially known as the U. of R. Engineer Bowling League be­ cause it was started by members of the

Th~ Alumni Gymnasium swimming pool also is used by University faculty and staff for relaxation. Below, Dr. Frank Brayer, assistant professor of radiation biology, executes swan dive. Champ of the University bowling league for this year is Dr. J. Fletcher McAmmond, Chief Medical Officer of the College of Arts and Science, who is shown in action at far left a bove. His average for the season was 179. Relax, Keep Fit In the center photo (from left to right) are Professors Vincent Nowlis (Psychology) lincoln Canfield (Spanish), and Thomas Faucett (En­ gineering), and Ward Taylor, Placement Offi­ Engineering Department faculty and staff cer. In right foreground of the next picture are eleven years ago. Harold Cary, assistant superintendent of build­ ings and grounds, on the right, and George There are other recreational programs Pearse, of the mechanical engineering work­ shop. Keeping score is Lynn Miller, heating for faculty and staff- games, plant fireman, Howard Clugg, of service staff. Sunday afternoons in the Alumni Gym for University personnel and their fam­ ilies, handball, squash, swimming, ten­ nis-but the bowling league draws the McCrae Hazlett, Dean of Students, at right largest number and is the most highly below, and Joseph McGurn, Director of Men's organized. Residence Halls at River Campus, are among those who find a lively handball game in the Its schedule begins in September and Alumni gymnasium a stimulating relaxation. runs well into April, with twenty teams of three members each, plus about twenty substitutes bringing the number of par­ ticipants to about eighty. The league plans to expand next year. The teams play every Tuesday, beginning at 4: 30 p.m. Competition is lively, and prizes are awarded at an annual banquet. In a hell­ for-leather windup of the season, the Heaters, composed of players from the heating plant, won the championship by two points, nosing out the Mariners, com­ posed of Dr. J. Fletcher McAmmond, chief medical officer of the College of Arts and Science, Don MacDonald, head carpenter at the River Campus, and Clyde Black, chief storekeeper for the Navy ROTC. Among the other divisions of the uni­ versity represented in the league are the cyclotron staff, Air and Naval Science departments, chemistry, history, English, engineering departments, service person­ nel, purchasing, and Educational Testing and Counseling office.

3.1 The University of Ro chester Fund

lOWEll MacMillAN, '28 DONALD E. McCONVillE, '35 General Chairman, Vice Chairman for Alumni, 1957 Alumni Fund Campaign University of Rochester Fund

SUMMARY

COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCE Men's Division Special Gifts $35,067.50 General Campaign 26,518.22 $61,585.72

Women'J Division Special Gifts .. ..$ 7,100.50 General Campaign 13,293.19 $20,393.69

INDEX EASTMAN SCHOOL OF MUSIC .. $ 4,542.00 DIVISION PAGE SCHOOL OF MEDICINE AND DENTISTRY Special Gifts 35 Alumni .. $17,120.43 Women's 36·43 Medical Residents 744.00 $17,864.43 Men's 36-44 Memorial Gifts 44 SCIiOOL OF NURSING .. $ 2,164.85 Eastman School of Music 44-46 Eastman-Graduate 46 UNIVERSITY SCHOOL .. .. $ 2,577.00 Graduate 46-47 School of Nursing 47-48 GRADUATE SCHOOL ' . $ 836.65 School of Medicine & Dentistry 48-50 GRADUATE SCHOOL-Eastman . $ 542.50 Medical-Graduate 50 Medical-Resident 50 $110,506.84 University School 50-51 Regional C1ubs 51 ALUMNI GIFTS TO SPECIAL PURPOSE FUNDS.. $ 20,385.10 $130,891.94 MEN'S COLLEGE WOMEN'S COLLEGE EASTMAN'SCHOOL MEDICAL SCHOOL OF NURSING UNIVERSITY SCHOOL Graduate Graduate YEAR School Eastman % of % of % of % of % of Pledged % of Partici- Pledged % of % of Pledged % of % of Quota Quota Partici- Pledged Quota Partici· Pledged Quota Partici- Pledged Partici- pation pation pat ion pation Quota pation Pledged Pledged

1854 $100.00 1886 60'00 1887 25.00 1891 15.00 1895 15.00 1896 5.00 1897 10.00 1898 265.00 1899 175.00 Class Summary 1901 385.00 68 55 1902 365.00 107 23 $55.00 110 100 1903 645.00 161 64 150.00 43 67 1904 27.00 90 42 527.00 100 38 1951 Campaign 1905 490.00 163 52 118.00 454 67 1906 13518.50 2704 64 190.00 100 62 1907 443.00 89 54 35.00 109 60 (As of March IO, I958) 1908 430.00 108 62 284.00 164 77 1909 762.50 59 44 44.00 88 38 Total Contributions $130,891.94 1910 1902.00 103 42 445.50 106 89 Number of Contributors 6,744 1911 2070.00 230 45 107.50 90 45 Percentage of Participation 33 1912 492.50 49 36 179.00 85 58 1913 805.00 53 48 208.00 116 56 Average Gift 19.40 1914 565.00 38 41 316.00 105 57 Per Cent of Quota 105 1915 238.06 40 23 190.00 73 56 1916 770.00 77 33 177.00 111 58 Quota 125,000.00 1917 910.00 57 45 583.00 91 49 1918 640.00 53 40 468.00 102 49 1919 950.00 79 31 285.50 100 47

1920 985.00 66 41 255.50 77 44 1921 462.00 51 38 368.00 86 32 1922 1172.00 73 40 262.00 55 39 1923 977.50 75 31 234.50 77 44 1924 815.00 74 28 528.00 87 54 $55.00 92 33 1925 1203.00 75 33 760.00 87 34 25.00 36 12 1926 1~0 87 38 365.00 74 38 213.00 101 22 1927 592.50 46 24 309.15 73 36 100.00 91 28 1928 778.00 71 37 393.50 83 46 73.00 73 18 $57.00 163 40 1929 550.50 50 24 501.50 87 34 88.00 42 17 $540.00 34.00 113 47

1930 1289.00 72 40 273.50 67 28 108.00 62 18 1118.50 28.00 93 25 1931 1715.50 86 40 402.50 89 36 148.00 118 17 366.00 42.00 140 36 1932 1100.00 85 38 272.50 59 29 99.50 38 12 350.00 66.00 102 73 $ 6.00 $ 5.00 1933 1453.00 104 44 400.00 100 '36 128.00 71 8 433.00 19.00 95 22 10.00 35.00 1934 1445.50 90 39 433.00 106 32 333.00 139 20 961.00 35.00 155 55 1935 1496.50 80 45 643.00 107 34 70.00 54 11 776.00 70.00 140 38 3.00 1936 983.00 82 32 495.00 83 41 200.00 105 24 873.00 32.00 128 39 1937 1555.00 113 43 413.00 92 37 236.00 124 15 440.00 86.50 216 70 45.00 5.00 1938 1105.50 85 33 342.00 83 32 130.00 90 13 765.00 42.00 105 38 50.00 5.00 1939 1002.00 77 32 461.00 92 30 145.00 104 20 684.00 49.00 109 47 12.50 45.00

1940 1097.00 98 28 273.50 76 32 148.50 50 19 731.00 33.00 94 35 30.00 26.00 1941 692.00 68 25 558.00 112 44 221.00 68 19 572.00 18.00 80 19 40.00 35.00 1942 654.00 65 28 285.50 59 34 379.00 165 23 505.00 123.00 103 42 25.00 531.00 (MaL) 1943 706.00 74 39 318.50 83 29 166.50 III 17 800.00 lOec.) 27.00 42 17 30.00 10.00 1944 967.00 105· 36 334.50 87 37 134.50 79 19 543.00 86.50 108 32 102.00 5.00 1945 360.00 44 27 588.50 115 31 250.00 185 25 642.00 101.00 184 27 25.00 22.50 1946 476.00 60 29 526.50 94 36 70.00 58 13 433.50 94.50 90 20 $10.00 100 40 10.00 10.00 1947 448.50 56 24 1297.50 213 50 157.50 113 13 65'0.00 162.00 77 22 25.00 83 11 32.00 13.00 f948 586.50 101 35 393.50 86 31 137.00 91 13 380.50 83.00 III 26 77.50 97 53 25.00 50.00 1949 894.50 89 23 367.50 95 26 12300 88 18 363.60 58.50 167 29 201.00 100 43 155.65 9.00

1950 1416.50 71 35 963.50 214 39 47.00 52 11 640.00 94.00 134 46 347.50 116 40 5.00 43.00 1951 746.50 62 30 340.00 85 28 136.50 136 13 472.00 84.00 120 43 521.50 145 43 5.00 31.00 1952 566.29 71 24 330.00 83 20 67.50 48 11 413.00 116.00 145 69 242.00 142 43 33.00 56.00 1953 643.50 92 30 256.50 73 24 64.00 85 11 254.50 91.10 101 33 304.00 92 43 55.00 10.00 1954 299.00 50 21 341.79 98 23 83.00 128 10 321.00 88.50 197 32 182.00 114 41 35.00 15.00 1955 407.00 74 28 311.25 89 29 97.50 150 12 253.00 34.00 76 12 221.50 105 53 25.00 2.00 1956 190.50 38 16 208.50 83 19 62.00 124 14 111.83 117.25 235 31 278.00 III 60 62.50 55.00 1957 248.77 62 25 223.50 112 33 . 46.00 7 2.00 118.0J 590 24 167.00 167 32 40.00 30.00

34 Special Gifts Honor Roll

The Special Gifts Honor Roll lists the names of contributors who comprise the top one-third of the donors whose pledges were secured through the efforts of the Special Gifts Committees.

JOSEPH MORRISSEY, '32 Chairman, Special Gifts Committee

Harold Alling John B. Goetsch Ernest A. Paviour David M. Allyn Emmanuel Goldberg Charles Payne Richard 1. Altier Swayne P. Goodenough Peter J. Prozeller Leonard Altimari George C. Gordon Louis H. Rappaport Russell Anderson Robert M. Gordon Fred Ratcliffe Edwin J. Appel Fred H. Gowen John W. Remington MONICA MASON McCONVILLE, '35 Wesley F. Ashman David S. Grice Thomas H. Remington Chairman, Special Gifts Committee Raymond N. Ball Ezra Hale Charles 1. Resler Isadore G. Berger Henry W. Hays Rush Rhees, Jr. Samuel Berger Elihu Hedges Wylie S. Robson Wilson D. Bond Rufus Hedges Eugene C. Roeser L. Gordon Booth Howard Henderson Charles 1. Rwnrill Joseph R. Brady, C. Grandison Hoyt Donald W. Saunders R. Mervin Briggs N. David Hubbell James S. Schoff Bryant]. Brooks James S. Hunt George G. Smith Merle K. Alling Edith H. Lapi Mercer Brugler Charles Hutchison Donald F. Southgate Jane B. Blizard Esther 1. MacMullin Gorman 1. D. Burnett Stuart Hyland G. Alfred Sproat Agnes B. Boucher Monica M. McConville John F. Bush Lawrence Isaacson John A. Stahlbrodt Catherine B. Browning Hazel C. Merriman T. Joseph Carney William M. Jackson Arthur 1. Stewart Bernice W. Brugler Ruth Missal Bloss Chace Milton Karz Charles W. Sutton Ruth D. Burritt Irene Muntz Philetus M. Chamberlain Kenneth J. Kugler Wadsworth C. Sykes Miriam B. Carpenter Mary G. Olney Rae A. Clark C. John Kuhn Kenneth 1. Tanger Agnes J. Chace Edith N. Oviatt Herman M. Cohn Elmer F. Lalonde Hugo F. Teute Jean H. Clark Wilma 1. Perkins Nelson Corkhill Raymond A. Lander Raymond 1. Thompson Eleanor C. Crary Eunice Prien Richard B. DeMallie Louis Lapi John W. Thorne Ruth McKie Cross Esther H. Ratcliffe E. Willard Dennis Matthew D. Lawless Knight Thornton Mary 1. Davis Ruth G. Samuels William G. Dobbs William H. Levis Martin F. Tiernan Lois A. Debes Esther H. Saunders Justin Doyle Arthur M. Lowenthal Conway 1. Todd Alice K. DeMallie Ethel Shields H. Raymond Drysdale George C. Ludolph Lawrence J. Wagner Blanche K. Egner Barbara R. Sibley Leo H. East G. Carroll Madden William H. Webb Mildred M. Freer Betty Sieger Franklin J. Enos Harry A. May John 1. Wehle Katherine B. Gale G. Elizabeth F. Smith William H. Ewell Donald McConville Robert Weingartner Jean W. Gardner Norma S. Spinning Robert]. Exter James E. McGhee Leo D. Welch Eleanor Gleason Alice T. Sutton ]. Donald Fewster Isadore Messinger Ernest 1. White Mary B. Grice Helen F. Sykes Harold 1. Field Frederick R. Metzinger John B. Whiteman Josephine B. Hale Molly B. Taylor Ivin R. Forman Elmer B Milliman Joseph H. Williams Charlotte S. Hooley Jean P. Terry Donald Forsyth William H. Moll Joseph c. Wilson Marion 1. Hubbard Virginia Thornton John D. Fowler Joseph E. Morrissey Joseph R. Wilson Thelma B. Hyland Linda S. Thurston Rufus Fulreader Joseph 1. Noble Richard U. Wilson Esther O. Hyman Kate H. Trahey Donald A. Gaudion Frederick F. O'Connor Cornelius Wright Charlotte W. Johnson Cora Warrant R. Reed George Robert G. Ocorr Eugene Zacher Elizabeth W. Johnston Gladys Welch Albert E. Gilbert Dwight C. Paul Virginia M. Kuhn Alice P. Wickes

35 W(()men~ s Division

Helen Thomas Kates Leah M. Uebel 1910 Judith Ogden Taylor LEADING CLASSES IN Decade Chairman 1907 Hazel C. Merriman Emalaine Haap ClaJI Agent EACH DECADE Clau Agent Hazel B. Aprile Ethel Rogers Florence Galloway Bardsley (Based on Participation) Lucy Higbie Ross Elizabeth Farber Barry Bessie Pettis West Marion Taylor Bohacket Clara Vogel Young Anna 1. Colcord 1902 100 Katharine Bowen Gale 1910 89 Ruth E. Goodwin 1908 Ruth G. Hattersley 1924 54 Dorothy Dennis Cora Palmer Hutchinson Class Agent Edith Jackson 1936 41 Frances Angevine Keef 1947 50 Edith Briggs Andrews Marion Bowen Kenyon Marian Salisbury Anthony Edith M. Lauer 1950 39 Alma H. Austin Lucia H. Lee Sue Taylor Barker Pearl E. Loomis ETHEL SHIELDS, '14 Carolyn M. Bolger Frances Slayton Marble Mary Lane Brewer Ethel C. Pickard Chairman, Women's Division Annis Dunn Brown Olive F. Pye Grace Fowler Cropsey Helen Richards Clara Abbott Duncan Frances Somers Riggs 1902 1905 Beulah Fuller Alice Challice Robinson Ollie Braggins Watkeys Florence Levis Fisher Jessie Owler Gurney Martha K. Schoonmaker Decade Chairman Justine Tiffany Hickok Helen D. Taylor ClaJI Agent Ruth Galloway Marsh Miriam Seligman Elizabeth Wilcox Bing Lois Turner Katherine Halstead Anderson 1913 ClaJI Agent Gertrude Salisbury Craigie Florence Mosher Zetta Doolittle Atherton Mary De Land Helen Rogers Cross Marion D. Mosher 1911 Martha Betz Judith Ogden Taylor Mary C. Gillette Mayme Smith Edgerly Grace Hall Pratt Marian Maguire Sullivan Florence E. Carman Class Agent Ruth Tappan Symonds ClaJI Agent Jane Crowe Maxfield Ethel Turner Ruth Connor Clymer Margaret Neary Bakker 1903 Gertrude Bancroft Miller Ethel Bills Wickens Margaret F. Barss Edith Mason Dye Edna E. Bayer Eleanor Gleason Grace Salter Reynolds Ina Eldridge Beach Ruth Sergenor Gallup Ruth Wooster Brown ClaJI Agent Alvalyn E. Woodward Jessica Requa Cole Agnes Thistlethwaite Gay Annie Louise Craigie Ruth Dennis Burritt 1909 Jessie D. Holloway Edna M. Haggith Edith Allen Haglund Myrtle Cheesman Keith Marian Laley Alice Booth Holmes 1906 Mary Moulthrop and A. Leila Martin Dora E. Neun Anna Seely Hunt 1904 Ethel McKay Kates Ruth Jennings Hodge Marion MacLean Newhall Helen Marsh Newell Carolyn Kintz Mae Lawler Cole Class Agent Class Agents Jennie Fenner Stolbrand Edna Pardee Margaret Weaver Little Clau AJ{ent Eleanor M. Lawless Frances Henderson Cross Cora Warrant Blanche Corcoran Randall Elinor Bliss Ludington Miriam Bagley Carpenter Enid Morris Bates Isla Slocum Judson Marion Ruth Riley Madeline A. Madigan Lulu Covey Keople Lilian 1. Crafts Ruth Maddock 1912 Frances Glotzbach Steve Marguerite Uebel May Annie Rosenberg Lipsky Blanche King Egner Mary Cook Merritt Marguerite Castle Edith Barker Swigart Louise Haines Riggs Lois A. Reed Charlotte Stone Hooley Edna 1. Parker Class Agent Frances Ruliffson Tennent Irene Larzalere Schouton Men~s Division

1899 1905 Charles W. Coit Arthur 1. Stewart LEADING CLASSES IN Albert F. Dillman Class Agent James B. Forbes Louis J. Bailey George C. Gordon Fred 1. Bennett EACH DECADE C. N. Jameson Floyd E. Bernard Robert B. Pattison Leroy Halbert Charles C. Stone Raymond C. Keople (Based on Participation) Frederick C. Line 1903 64 1901 Edward E. Morris Frederick W. Coit Frederick Weik 1906 64 Charles W. Watkeys Edmund W. Westervelt 1913 48 Co-Agents Charles A. Higbie 1906 1920 41 Charles Frederic Macon Arthur Rathjen Frederick G. Morse Class Agent 1935 45 Harry M. Ramsay Herman Bartholomay 1943 39 Eugene C. Roeser Harry W. Bosworth Dean 1. Simpson Albert Bowen 1950 35 John B. Whiteman E. Roy Bowerman CHARLES L. RESLER, '3D elson Corkhill 1902 Chairman, Men's Division Ernest 1. White ~fft~~· :'is~~~ter Class Agent Raymond A. Hardy Charles 1. Resler Edward F. Feely Charles 1. Harris Chairman 1895 Charles W. Hennington William H. Higbie David W. Stewart Arthur H. Simpson Manley G. Osterhoudt Charles H. Holzwarth AJI't. Chairman Lloyd S. Tenny Carr G. Horn Ward D. Jordan Harry Bloom 1896 Howard W. Lyman Carl F. W. Kaelber Edwin H. Brooks Roy D. Kinney John D. Fowler 1886 to 1910 Carl F. W. Betz 1903 Jacques 1. Meyers E. Willard Dennis Joseph R. Wilson Walter S. Meyers William E. Kinney Arthur S. Hamilton Decade Chairman ClaJI Af!.ent W. Robert Neel Frederick F. O'Connor Curtis D. Hart 1897 Robert J. Barker Charles P. Oliver Harold O. Stewart Lloyd R. Kneeland 1886 Curtis W. Barker I. Brooks Clark Lewis G. Reynolds George T. Sullivan Charles D. Marsh Lewis E. Akeley ClaJI Agent William F. Love Robert O. Saunders Earl W. Taylor Samuel Porter William M. Northrup Albert E. Gubelmann Alfred Martens William A. Searle Edgar F. Van Buskirk Norman H. Stewart Azariah B. Sias Charles A. Simpson Henry 1. Wilder Archie W. Symonds 1887 Harold S. Stewart Martin F. Tiernan Maurice A. Wilder William B. Gubelmann 1898 190 1. Foster Wood Ralph P. Webster Dean T. Pryor 1891 Class Agent 1904 1907 Harold E. Akerly 1909 Harold Pattison Joseph P. Hogan George T. Sullivan Co.Agents Raymond J. Fowler William A. Perrin William Betz Class Agent Benjamin Goldstein A. H. Allen Matthew D. Lawless Edward F. Davison George Fuller Co-Agents Roy D. Anthony Co-Af!.ents 1894 Charles F. Hutchison James H. Hanford Howard P. Barss Ernest F. Barker Sidney Alling R. Lewis Ashley Edwin O. Terrill Arthur J. White Herman M. Cohn Hiram 1. Barker Harvard Castle

36 Avadna Loomis Seward Charlotte Attridge Harmon Eleanor Gregg Kingston Clara Lee Lockwood Alice Kreag DeMallie Lorna Carpenter White Clara Kaiser ~~~~raM~C~~drd Doris J. Lamoree Roberta Peters McFarland Margaret Flynn Elizabeth D. Wright Eleanor Merz Keenan Florence D. McNair Ruth Rowland Lee Margaret Tracy Noonan Helen Berman Greenstone Bessie Schooler Yalowich Emily Cutler Kruger Alice Saxton Meeker Faith G. Leffler Emma Kittredge Quinn Janice B. Harrington Florence Laley Evelyn Crouch Menzie Emily Sauer Morford Ruth Goldstein Samuels Marjorie Easton Jennings 1914 M. Elizabeth Marsh Clara Harvie Morris Beatrice MacCargo Padelford Eva Rudman Sherman Alice Teute Justice Ethel A. Shields Elsie G. Neun Wilma Lord Perkins Mildred Long Reitz Stella Sherman Stolley Katharine Kerrigan ClaJS Agent Julia Rogers Ernestine Krieger Sasse Jane Latimer Reitz Mildred Smeed VandeWalle Esther McGowan Low Helen Holden Bennet Alma Rouch Elizabeth Wagner Slater Alice H. Schermerhorn Ruth Loomis Wager E. Helen MacLachlan Corinne Kintz Blair Linda Schneider Thurston Norma Storey Spinning Helen Foulkes Sykes Dorothy O. Wedner Ethel M. Manchester Laura Battams Davis Isabel K. Wallace Mary Copeland Thomas Emily Otto Trimby Margaret McCormack Muriel Day Elizabeth Garbutt Leslie Somers Watt Beulah Watkins 1923 Lillian Scott Miller Pamela Matthews Fields Whittemore Florence Wolff Miriam Goldblatt Wershub Belle London Sherman Florence Gunson Morse Blanche Reitz Fisher Susie Marie Williams Clan Agent Arloa Kennedy Neuman Mildred Murenberg Freer Gladys White Wise 1919 1921 Mary Draper Pentland Ottilie Graeper Rupert Laura Hewlett Warren Mae Lauterbach Bailey Eleanor Rand Place Lillian Blakeslee French Margaret Benedict Baker Ruth Warren Porter Ruth Becker Hanna 1917 ClaJS Agent ClaJS Agent Helen Lawrence Ashbery Merle Kolb Alling Elizabeth K. Benedict Louella Stacy Posey Henrietta Bancroft Clara Bowen Sage Frances Crombie Brouwer Eunice Prien Henderson Edna DeNio Carter Marie Hartung Binkley ClaJS Agent Florence M. Chittenden Marjorie Swarts Brown Gladys E. Reed Grace Ware Line Isabel Mayo Barden Belmont Thompson Cook Ruth M. Christler Helen Smith Detwiler H. Marjorie Burnett Frances Smith Rogers E. Virginia Martin Mildred Bowen Bodette Beulah Brusie Compton Emily 1. Rowe Maude Lambert Peterson Rena Stebbins Craig Eleanor Hicks Edwards Pauline Claffey Mary C. Foley Bernice Adwen Crone Helen Gosnell Sayres Eulalie Richardson Nan McGlennon Comstock Laura Martin Friel Elizabeth Filkins Gessler Pauline Fritz Louise Olmsted Ewell Dorothy DuMont Schumann Helen Hartung Robinson Lorena M. Cooper Olga C. Graeper Marion Weaver Soule Julia 1. Sauer Lucia Gridley Winifred Genung Christine DeZutter Covert Margaret Lieber Kirsch Gladys VonDeben Hammond Katharine Barber Swift Irene Van Horne Olive Crocker Rachel Messinger George Gille~te Helen Seifert Wolgast Mabel Ross Kulp Mabel Graham Green Ethelypne Hazen Kate Hale Trahey Ruth McKie Cross Esther Bentley LeMessurier ClaudIa Goldstetn Hyman Elizabeth Turner Helen Curtis Gilman Ruth Hahn Mary White Macauley Thelma Benedict Hyland Maude E. Kahler Phoebe Day VanRiper 1915 Josephine Booth Hale Juliet Schooler Levin Helen Westcott Watson Josephine DeLalys Bassett Esther Olsan Hyman Honora Miller Rilleva Parke Mack Dorothy Ovenburg Edith Nusbickel Oviatt Mary 1. Lockwood, Marion J. Webster ClaJS Agent Johanna Ramsbeck Kall Mabel Winegard Parmerter Dorothy Leonard Norton Maude J. West Vina Biggart Bezant Flora C. Pease Elizabeth Schleyer Esther Henckell Ratcliffe Mildred E. Walter Av}s Johnson Oehlbeck Margaret Weston Ethel 1. Bloomingdale Elberta Hudson Reeve Helen R. Roblin LO.ls. Patchef! Rosemary White Florence M. Broxholm Jane K. Salter Gladys Welch Aurelia Hillman Sanders Hannah Spencer Welton Mmam DavIs Rohl Marion Booth Wiard Hazel Clark Esther Hale Saunders EI izabeth Baker Sayre Bernice Ginsburgh Rosenson Lucille Rohr Williams Winifred Edwards Cleland Isabel H. Tuttle Helen Spinning Werner Thelma Sager Smith Gladys Baxter Youden Marjorie Mandeville Seward Lydia M. Wuensch Jean Goldstein Cohen Helen E. Weston Alice Morse Snider Violet Jackling Somers Olive Hogan Fleckenstein Sadie R. Weilerstein Della Allen Somers ~~~~etnsuPt~r Steele Velma Hallauer Hand Mildred D. Wilcox Lois M. Walker 1922 1925 Wilhelmina Horn Elizabeth C. Whalen Phyllis VanCise Elizabeth Barr Walden Edna Fairman Alice Collyer Hunnicutt 1918 Class Agent Helen Kies Weston ClaJS Agent Doris Hawks Kennell Alice Paddock Wickes 1920 Doris Gillette Anthony Charlotte Garland Alexander Rose Curtis Lapham Class Agent Lillian Scott Miller Edith Sheldon Brayer 1924 Lee Ashenberg Jeannette Kies Moore Anna 1. Ball Decade Chairman Edna Butterfield . Marian Curtiss Booth Alethea Keys Perry Jessie Woodams Barry Esther A. Horn Elizabeth Shempp Colclough Mafle LeMay Woodams Bernice Whitham Brugler Isabel Griswold Schrader Lois Richmond Braggins Class Agent Olive Flint Cornwell ClaJS Agent Mildred R. Burton Mabel M. Truesdell Muriel Handy Brown Bertha Kannewischer Arlidge Delora Hopkins Engert Martha Spinning Ashton Naomi Hull Carman Mary Weaver Dorothy W. Curtiss Helen Kennedy Crino Lois E. Fisher Marion Clark Bailey Martha Cobb Marion 1. Flowers Emily Oemisch Dalton Ruth Fisher Adair Wellington Grace Green Courtney 1916 Elsa Dossenbach Foulds Margaret Weinman DeNagel Dorothy Griffith Bartholomew Ruth Snider Crossland Mildred M. Laley Ruth Gentles Lila M. Fenner Sabra Twitchell Harris Ethelyn Butcher Batty Marian Cummings ClaJS Agent Ruth Otis Gillete Ethel French Ruth Blaesi Hathorn Margaret J. Bennett Hazel Ganiard D'Amico Mary Edwards Bacon Elizabeh Grover Ethel M. Gordon Cordelia E. Hewes Dorothy Lobett Burdick Marian Boddy Englert Katherine Smith Connell Jean Mac Alpine Heer Elizabeth B. Gruppe Sabra J. Hook Dolores Kellogg Carver Doris Myers Erb Emma Collyer Donlon Elizabeh Mullan Keil Irene Hess Charlotte Wescott Johnson Florence Bradstreet Cooksley Harriett Feary Clara Hoffman Gilt Margaret C. Klem Ida Thurston Kilgus Minna Clifton Lee Hazel Kolb Cowles Dorothy Edwards Fraser

F. Stuart Chapin Hugh W. Stewart Walter J. E. Schieb I Fred E. McKelvey Wadsworth C. Sykes E. Harry Gilman H. Carlisle Taylor 1914 Jacob Schooler Douglas Newcomb DeMille 1. Wallace Herbert E. Hanford Edwin W. Whitmarsh Leo Dwyer Elmer K. Smith Harold J. Peet Joseph H. Williams William C. Hanford Robert M. Williams ClaJS Agent Herbert C. Soule Dwight 1. Riegel John S. Williamson S. Park Harman Fred B. Arentz Donald F. Southgate Henry M. Rogers Henry E. Wondergem A. Barton Holcombe 1912 William W. Bouton Earl B. Strowger Harry A. May Harry N. Kenyon Bryant J. Brooks 1917 Milton R. Whitmore 1921 Joseph J. Rosedale ClaJS Agent J. Arthur Connors Samuel E. Berger 1. Wayne Woodard Raymond A. Taylor C. Storrs Barrows Frederick J. Converse David Mendelson Earl Uebel Cornelius R. Wright Albert Bretschneider Raymond C. Fisher Ellsworth Nickles 1919 ClaJS Agent William D. Conklin Carl M. Gilt Co-Agents Paul Kreag Dorland J. Allan 1910 Ernest E. Davis Louis R. Gottlieb idney C. Alden David Moody John W. Baybutt Raymond B. Lewis Charles E. Dorkey N. David Hubbell Hosmer H. Case Co-Agents Henry Bloom William H. Levis Harvey J. Hauck George F. Hutchison A. M. Cominsky Bloss D. Chace John S. Carman Co-Agents Henry E. Marks Julius E. Kuhnert Thomas Crone Lyle K. Doane Ford 1. Crocker Alden F. Barss H. Archibald Mason Joseph A. Lazarus Albert F. Fishel' Donald Harris Arthur J. Garson Francis E. Cassidy Karl N. mith Abraham Levy Alfred M. Geis Harold F. Jennings R. Reed George Edward W. Conklin Coy A. Riggs George C. Ludolph Howard Jones Henderson Kenneth B. Keating R. Whitney Gosnell E. Willard Dennis Milton K. Robinson Alvin A. Miller Daniel 1. Hint William B. Ketcham Guy D. Harris Roswell M. Eldridge William A. Schell G. Kibby Munson Earl C. Karker George W. McBride W. Charles Jennings Harold 1. Field Charles R. Stephens E. Potter Remington Floyd S. Lear James E. McGhee Dwight E. Lee Leopold Gucker Irvin J. Schoen Harvey F. Remington Isadore Messinger Harold H. Levin Donald M. Lewis 1913 Lloyd D. Somers John W. Remington Garson Meyer Paul A. McGhee Ernest A. Paviour Joseph J. Ernst McNaughton Wilkinson Herman A. Sarachan Elmer B. Milliman George F. Rugar Benjamin A. Ramaker James Spinning 1915 Frank G. Silvernail George Durfee Newton James S. Schoff Ray Robinson Co·Agents ~~ra!ci ~~y~~ers Otto M. Ostendorf H. Earl Spencer Isidor Schifrin Harold 1. Alling Alfred A. Johns James H. Snyder Dwight Van de Vate Edwin P. Smith Howard E. Bacon ClaJS Agent Roland P. Soule Harry J. Vick Basil R. Weston Louis J. Summerhays Raymond N. Ball Robert F. Barry Roscoe 1. Taylor Leo D. Welch William J. Youden William R. Vallance Paul W. Beaven C. Willard Burt Raymond 1. Thompson Frederick M. Chesbro 1920 1911 H. Dwight Bliss Russell B. Williams 1922 John Carey Leslie E. Freeman George W. Willis Walter Mylacraine Walter Mylacraine Henry Hays E. Dana Caulkins Emmanuel H. Giedt Wilbur G. Woodams Decade Chairman ClaJS Agent Decade Chairman F. Teal Cox Gordon H. Gliddon 1918 Monroe Blumenstiel Herbert N. Baird Lester O. Wilder Floyd W. Elliott Edward A. Kotary Class Agent Maurice Brindisi Class Agent Charles K. Eves C. Stewart Nash Goodman Sarachan William G. Arlidge John F. Bush, Jr. Walter C. Allen Elliott T. Dewey Fred Ratcliffe Class Agent Louis I. Bunis John M. Dodson Hiram H. Amiral Hamilton J. Foulds G. Frederick Wolters Carl Allen Herbert R. Childs Ralph T. Doughty William J. Clancy Azel Gay 1916 Gilbert F. Ault Jacob R. Cominsky Ralph A. Eckhardt Walter D. Edwards Ellis Gay Sanford Baker Otto W. Cook O. Roland Fleming Harvey W. Funk Swayne P. Goodenough Fred Armbruster ClaJS Agent Wendell E. Borncamp Charles R. Dalton Erwin 1. Gienke tanley H. Hutchinson Claus A. Harwick Herbert A. Brady E. LaRue Ely John T. Harbison Henry H. Keef Roy H. Hendrickson Sidney C. Adsit H. Emmett Brown Franklin J. Enos Floyd F. Hovey Ellsworth P. Killip H. Walter Hughes Edwin J. Appel Kenneth I. Brown John T. Ferner David F. Hummel Raymond A. Lander Julius C. Kaelber Walter R. Attridge William E. Brown Herbert M. Gosnell George H. Janes Ernest Little Carlyle 1. Kennell Joshua Bernhardt Felix H. Clossey Arthur R. Hutchinson Richard H. Kerbs Arthur M. Lowenthal Henry F. Kurtz Henry E. Childs 1. Ring Coleman M. Stuart Hyland Victor E. Kimmel Donald J. MacPherson Morris Lazersbn Edward S. Cross Harold E. Cowles C. Irving Lusink Claus F. Kirsch MacDonald G. Newcomb Bayne C. Leet Kenneth H. Field David L. Ellerman Luigi Mauro Karl A. Kreag Frank J. Osborne John 1. Merrell Nathaniel Gold Clyde Evans Paul S. McFarland C. John Kuhn Richard R. Powell Charles E. Pratt Isadore Goldstein Edwin A. Gruppe Raymond Naramore Oscar Marth Thomas H. Remington Leo P. Redding Ezra A. Hale Alfred P. Harmon Carlyle B. Newcomb Charles T. Mason Harry P. Ruppert Harold W. Soule, Charles H. Hawks, Jr. A. Gould Hatch Dwight C. Paul Donald B. Mason Oscar F. Schaefer Edward C. Strauchen John A. Lanni Henry W. Hays Robert Reilly Donald J. McKie George G. Smith Henry J. Weiland Clarence T. Leighton Leonard H. Henderson M. George Scheck T. Howard Miller Hamlet A. Smyth William C. Wolgast Charles R. Mowris . Halford Johnson Cyril ]. Staud Charles 1. Rumrill Edward W. Spry W. Bert Woodams Elton Punnett Donald Marks C. Shelton Sullivan Donald W. Saunders

37 Elizabeth Roblin Bertha R. Owen Anna G. Schafer Ruth Thulin Women's Division Mary Meagher Schifferli Marian H. Phillips Marion Leffler Stalker Helen VanAlstine Edith Yossie Seatter Dorothy Thayer Pullen Helen Williams Stevenson Helen Zorsch White Elizabeth B. Sinclair Rose Riwkin Esther Beckler Tatelbaum Lois S. Smith Ruth Wentz VanOstrand Helen Kathryn Tobin 1931 [rene Downs Gendreau Ruth Hollander Hill Caro FitzSimons Spencer Dorothy Voss Beulah Stottle Travis Dorothy Fillingham Elizabeth Wolters Kennedy Elizabeth Genung Steadman Elizabeth H. Waldock Edythe Kraatz Tumalty Marion Bushman Corby Greenfield Florence Kenyon Jane Dye Stirling Marion G. Warren Anna Rose Victor Class Agent Lura Schanck Hanley Margaret E. Lang Helen Tanger Louise Gelli Wendt Lolita Wilcox Alberta Tupper Aradine Gladys Colcord Havens Marjorie Sidam Lowden Vera Tweddell Helen Scott Wi~ht Lorene Karleskind ~i~Fe~ :!1~d~~r~gm Ruth Tuthill Hoffmeister Margaret Merrell Eva Haines Ulp Cynthia Gay Wright Zimmerman Gertrude J. Howe Flora Miller Helen E. Whipple Margaret Hutchinson Alice Cohen Cameros Frances Kenyon Ruth Rosenberg Missal Evelyn . Wishart 1929 Zornow Ida Campbell Virginia Mansfield Kuhn Irene Muntz Dorothy B. Champney Gladys Adams Kykendall Sallie Metzger Nagle Ma~tha J. Church 19'30 Mildred Cramer Virginia Patchen Lauterbach Mary Terwilliger Newell 1928 Cla.rs Agent Marion Flaherty DeRight Ida Watt Lynch Ethel 1. Newman Agnes Geddes Dorothy Forster Abercrombie Dorothy B. Champney ~~~tir~deDCo~tin Winifred Weet MacKenzie Mary Lutz Ordway Class Agent Manon PhillIps ;Armstrong Decade Chairman Dunn Rose Abramow Mary ChamberlalO Bahler Ruth Harmon Fairbank Margaret O. Meier Eleanor M. Ratcliffe Mabel Beach Banning Mabel Golden McCleary Frederica Hagaman Neuman Barbara Haslip Robinson Dorothy Andrews Bertha Brewer Ferguson Marion W. Olney Marion Gell Roller Julia Ruth Armstrong Beatrice K. Bassette Class Al(ent Janet Brown Fisher Mary Louise O'Reilly Estelle Spies Sanford Elizabeth H. Beam Leona Cook Beck Michalina Corsica Alaimo Elma Gormel Garlock Ruth Page Dorothy Marples Seuffert Ruth Beeton Marion Richardson Bleyler Bertha Bartholomew Ernestine Giles Dorothy Brown Redding Jenny Elferink Bos Agnes Jordon Chace Abrona Batz Holliss Kemp Gunnison Florence Stein Rubens Virginia Whipple Brooke Jessie M. Cole Ruth Young Bentley Alice H. Gustafson Elsie M. Seward 1927 Margaret Burdick Burroughs Jean MacMicken Coleman Beatrice Boardman Bibby Beatrice Howard Hall Alice Purssell Campbell Esther Corwin Jean Higbie Crowley Dolores Barker Haller Pauline Meader Stalker Lucile Miller VanDelinder Lois Chadsey Bertha Meltzer Cramer Helen Eberle Ethel Gage Heckel Marcella Statt Class Age1lt Mabel Snyder Stell Marion Kellogg Christie Eva Gurnee Deane Edith Fishbaugh Stella Rand Hill Marion Forristal Sweeney Zora Emery Barker Anne Thomas Clarke Dorothea M. DeZafra Nancy Bolton Foxton Hildegarde Petri Jamison Florence Fisher VanSlyke Mabel E. Brockway Antoinette Syracuse Den i Charlotte VanAlstine Miriam Fuhrman Helen Ashenberg Karger Marion Houlihan Brown Adelaide Dorn Diamond Luella Hovey Gann Elizabeth Scheible Killip Evelyn Forster Westburg Catherine Cardew Jessie Cook Estes Florence Sweetnam Dickson Lillian S. Hershberg Edith Bork King Leonora Granata Willett Ruth Handy Carter Agnes McManus Farwell Mildred Worthington Mabel A. Hicks Hannah Kraus Mildred Scribner Winslow Frances Telford Comstock Henrietta S. Feeser Falsioni Jeanette Wilburn Hitchman Ethel Latzalere Leach Martha Pratt Wood Bertha Taylor Crothers Helen Fremd Pluma Babcock Emerson Elizabeth T. Hoelscher Dorothea Lortcher Helen Higgins Davis Mabel Teute Gardner Eunice Dehmler Frank Amelia H. Hood Jane Havill Mehrhof 1926 Ethel May Dunn Marian B. Halstead Sarah Woodworth Gay Jeannette Berger Howlett Ijain Renckert Meltzer Franc Cutler Ebray Lelia M. Haugwout Veronica Dollen Goeltz Ruth Clark Hunt Geraldine Julian Mermagen Lucretia C. Hicks Mary Fisher Alice Peck Hess Mildred M. Goldstein Claire Imrie Ida Theis Meyhoefer Class Ag,ent Ruth Groves Garnish Esther H. Holyer Margaret Ball Hallock Esther Newman Jenkins Katherine LeFevre Miller Dorothy Dunn Allen Clara A. Hamel Laura Kellogg Truby 1. Henry Frances Kersner Helen Marshall Mix Marion Winkelman Andrew Helen Allen Hayes Margaret Earl Kennedy Lois Speares Howe Mary 1. Ottaviano LaRaia Emma M. O'Keefe Julia E. Bishop Jeannette Hoefler Grace McCarthy Knitter Hazel A. Johnson Mildred Karweick Lauer Marie Freer Porter Viva Blackburn Helen Hincher Hood Alice Bark Knubel Helen Phillips Johnson Adeline Kaman Levine Flora Jean Rizzo Marjorie Brownell Jane Telford Hovey Hazel Hilfiker Lalonde Kathryn Miller Kreag Katherine G. Love Florence Briggs Robin Cathorin W. Brown Ruth Asmus Howard Alta Poze Lapides Myrtle H. Lesslie Helen M. Marth Miriam Rotkowitz Rudin Julia Zuck Brown Jennie Jacques Lillian Lerner Leffert Jean MacLeod Mary Williams McAmmond Marion Hall Smith Cathleen Cole Burditt Ruth Greene Linfoot Lydia F. Lenox Alice Morrissey McDiarmid Elizabeth Alfriend Phyllis Smith Margaret E. Butterfield Myrtice Splitt Mault Mary Leader Lewis Dorothy Wellington McLaughlin Ruth Ries Smith Orrilla Wright Butts Elizabeth Bitter Mitchell Louise Stearns Linder MclIroy Helen Geraghty McNally Carrie Sonderman Dorothy Houck Cox Dorothy Abert Morsheimer Lucille Luppold Virginia Pierpont Miller Irene Murphy Clara W. Spear Ruth Denio Eunice Gates Mullan Grace Elma Madden Mary Page Norris Josephine Raeppel Helen Fuller Steenrod Jessie Ramsay DeWitt Alma Frankenfeld O'Brien Mary Ascroft McNall Manan Clarke Powell Lillian H. Remmel Ruth Mellor Stevens Emma C. Donk Elizabeth Westbay Penney Irene Meyn Ruth H. Richardson Beatrice Poulton Rogers Ann Turula Mildred Forster Helen Blackburne Power Annette St. Helens Norris Elsie Lisser Rockowitz Dorothee Kellner Schwartz Edith Reed VanHorn Lois Dildine Harrison Clara Husted Present Mary E. Oemisch Gertrude Rosenthal Helma Cilotzki Straub Onnalee Durkee Vaughn

Glyndon G. Van Deusen Fred J. Fumia Joseph J. Kaufman Frederic 1. Wellington J. Howard Garnish 1929 Lester C. Kelley Men's Division Claude T. Westburg Orrin Greenberg Frank Haugh Robert F. Knight Thomas S. Wolff Karl W. Gruppe Class Agent John Kraai J. Lawrence Hill, Jr. Gerald R. Barrett Julius Kravetz Donald C. Silver Myron Glaser Ronold W. P. King Robert W. Biccum Kenneth G. Kugler G. Alfred Sproat Francis E. Green 1926 William J. Klem P. Austin Bleyler Braynard E. Kurkowski John T. Sullivan G. Dwight Greenfield Gerald A. Lux Myer Braiman William Lister Lake Angus M. Turner Merlin 1. Groff William McOuat Malcolm C. McBride Hubert Brown Elmer F. Lalonde Richard D. VandeCarr C. Elihu Hedges Class Agent Watson C. Patte George W. Buchan Silas Rosswell Langlois Walter V. Wiard Richard D. Hickox Phillip J. Barnes George H. Reed Clifford J. Bull Saul C. Lapides John J. Zeeb Elmer J. Hoare John H. Berman Richard F. Roda Elton J. Burgett Herbert A. Lauterbach C. Grandison Hoyt William M. Bush Abraham Schtulberg ~~~~IPX~ 8~jk~r Gregg J. Merrell Lawrence E. Isaacson Harry W. Cleveland Eric Sitzenstatter Grant S. Miller 1923 Clarence J. Stady Leroy B. Conklin Anastase E. Statius Jacob DeWeerdt B. Emmett Norris T. Joseph Carney Conway 1. Todd A. Vernon Croop John W. Thorne David Eichen Herman J. Norton Class Al(ent Ernest J. Underwood Glen E. Curtis George H. Tolley Philip Emerson Gifford P. Orwen Ralph Allen Claude 1. Wallace H. Raymond Drysdale Nathan R. Gilbert Gilbert J. Pedersen Donald H. Bartholomew Donald B. Warren Alexander D. Dunbar Horace J. Grover Louis H. Rappaport Fred Bittner Myron R. White Clyde H. Erwin 1928 William H. Havill Charles 1. Resler Clayton H. Brown Isadore Wilinsky Henry F. Foote Earl J. Howard Richard O. Roblin, Jr. William A. Burdick Donald L Wood Leonard B. Geyer Edward P. Loeser Roy J. Lingg C. Dalton Scott George H. Chapman Phillip Gordon Class Agent Vincent H. Maloney Lloyd A. Smith John'L. Chilson Robert M. Gordon Allen H. Ottman Angelo J. Syracuse Richard 1. Greene Francis F. Abercrombie Clifford 1. Prosser Richard B. DeMallie 1925 Eugene G. Alhart George E. Ulp Eaton Hammond Edward J. Hanna David P. Richardson Bert Van Horn Frank A. Saunders Kenneth C. Hausauer M. Selig Apperman Bernard Schneider James S. Hunt Class Agent Wesley F. Ashman lohn E. Watts Shimo Kiumj ian Rufus Hedges Leo J. Tanghe Dana A. Weeks Jacob Abramow Charles W. Joyce Charles E. Bahler Hugo F. Teute Louis 1. Lapi Edward R. Becker Roger D. Wellington William 1. Levinstein Anthony J. Betten Philip M. Linfoot Chester M. White Fred H. Willkens Stephen 1. Briggs Alfred T. Loeffler Nicholas E. Brown Oscar E. Loeser Donald R. Clark Leon Winans Leon N. Mayer Mercer Brugler Herbert Marth Ralph Yeaw Charles W. Burgess Ralph Martin Garratt Crebbin Saul Moress Paul C. Durkee 1930 Eugene G. Zacher, Jr. Charles A. Morrison John G. Callaghan Frederick R. Metzinger Charles F. Cole Louis M. Nourse Samuel Feld Nelson W. Spies Paul R. Noetling Francis 1. Fennell Decade Chairman Carl D. Ott Jerome Cowan Carl Payne 1931 Daniel 1. Dole Rush Rhees, Jr, J. Donald Fewster Peter J. Braal Lloyd C. Patchin Kenneth C. Fisher Edwin W. Hart E. Stewart Peck Gerald N. Dyer Laurence O. Richens Co-Decade Chairma11 Justin F. Englert Bernard Sanow Gerard J, Grassi Class Agent Kenneth B. Popp Charles H. Green Gilbert H. Kirby Jacob Abramson Francis K. Remington David Francis David H. Shearer Class Agent Rufus E. Fulreader Norman Stevenson George Drexel Gridley David M. Allyn Clarence Albert Shepard Milton Hall Joseph Anderson Robert H. Bechtold anford G. Slocum E. Blakeney Gleason Harold 1. Suttle James W. Gray Harol~ E. Truscott Donald W. Hallauer Isadore G. Berger Karl B. Benkwith Lawrence .T. Wagner Willis T. lensen Charles W. Blackmon Peter Braal Elmer C. Walzer Edmund T. Grosselfinger G. Robert Witmer J. Clarence J. Henry Mark A. Kreag Robert R. Burrage David B. Brady Edward E. Ward Frederick W. Conner Henry E. Brayer George Weber, Jr. lohn Jameson Claude 1. Kulp Mitchell C. Jossem 1927 Eugene Lowell Joseph S. Corsica Robert S. Burrows Joseph P. Leone lowell H. MacMillan John N. Eggleston Jewett B. Butler 1924 Carl W. Luther DeWitt Pike Walter O. Macoskey Mathew E. Fairbank Maurice Cameros Albert H. Makin Class Al(ent Harry M. Mount Charles Fairbanks James 1. Cole Leo East Ralph H. McCumber Harold V. Ackert Robert E. Platt Andrew A. Falsioni George W. Coomber Class Al(ent Benedict 1. Miller Peter B. Andrews Milton V. Pullen Alan M. Glover Harold D. Corris Wareen W. Allen Clarke W. O'Brien Percy Cohen Walter A. Schmitt Paul R. Guggenheim Lawrence 1. Culiano Hervey E. Bennett William T. O'Neil Tames Crombie A. J. Tatelbaum M. Justin Herman Robert E. DeRight R. Mervyn Briggs Edward W. Pfluke Bernard H. Dollen James Thornton Edward Hoehn Herbert Dietz William W. Dietz E. William Place, Jr. Tustin J, Doyle Raymond 1. Warn Edward S. Hoffman William G. Dobbs William H. Ewell John G. Shaw Paul E. Emerson W. Howard West Norman M. Howden lohn H. Donoghue Walter W. Fischer Austin C. Tait Carl Ernst Wm. M. Witherspoon Milton Jacobstein Milton A. Ellis

38 Cora Weeks Janet B. Champney Grace Line Ruth Yalowich Rosenberg Helen Sage Platt Janet Burt Russell Anne Aab Weingart Katherine Drum Coddington Emily S. Madden Gertrude Roushorn Rossin Marguerite Smith Robertson Frances Jones Savage True Wilson Doris E. Crawford Jeanne Groet Maloney Edna Schaich Saxton Ann Eisenberg Rosenberg Helen M. Shaddock Phyllis Fulton Young Mabel G. Crellin Bertha Milbrandt Marsh Elizabeth White Schaeffer Elizabeth Schwartz Sarah Mosher Sheehan Ruth E. Cripps Emily W. McKibbon Marguerite Fellows Seguine Louise Sullivan Mary Selden Short 1932 Bertha Cuyler Virginia Luehm Medden Kathryn Albrech Smith Ruth Graves Stahlbrodt Elizabeth Galloway Smith Grace DeSmit Dobbins Atelia Picciotti Melaville Florence Stolt Ruth Rubinson Strassberg Frances M. Smith Anna Marie Rauber Mary Bigelow Dunlap Selma Kahn Mintz Marion Sullivan Stella Strzeciwilk Dorothea Small Taylor Class Agent Mary F. Fisher Mary Boughton Nugent Janet Surdam Harriet Frank Tatelbaum Isabel Lawrence Taylor Helen C. Addicott Adele Lefkowitz Herz Helen Pettengill Helen MacDowell Sutterby Helen Hatch Taylor Eleanor Martin Van Cassele Doris Adkins Helen C. Hess Helen Corbett Ritz Mildred Talluto Betsy Conant Thacher Margaret Doerffel Waasdorp Beth Manning Anderson Leah Bennett King Helen Kress Rogers Gladys Lehr Treichel Helen Wishart Thorne Clara G. Walker Anne Atkinson Anna Bullis Koch Leore Dempsey Schauman Alice Maijgren Walker Maime J. DiPasquale Madeline M. Weaver Janette Wilson Atkinson Jane Harper Larmon Ruth Sparr Challice 1. Weiss Turchetti Lois Bean Welke Helen Miller Benz Marian Latz Mary Jane Stephenson Evelyn Hunter White Ellenmae Viergiver Mary A. Westbrook Betty R. Berman Marion Ludwig Irene Wray Swanton Helen Poffenberger Wilkens Rhea Cook White Eleanor Breemes Wiley Frieda M. Chapin Marian LeFevre Manly Dorothy Tozier Helen VanZile Wojnowski Helen Abramowitz Wilner Marjorie Williams Chapman Adelaide Geraghty Matthews Marian Redfern Ulp Annette Briggs Young fnez Blair Cox Marion A. McCarthy Elizabeth Bonner Wood 1936 fda Cramer Gladys Little McGuire Margaret D. Wood Wilma F. Kujawski 1937 Helen Cromwell Curtis Gertrude Fitzgerald Millner Margaret R. Wril;ht Class Agent Marion Karle 1938 Alice Johnston Ewing Edna Muntz Florence Metz Wuerges Clara G. Albert Class Agent Jean Obdyke Kinney Mildred Grant Gariss Frances Mildern Nassel Anne Piccarreto Alle~ro Helene Berman Angevine Class A.f!,ent Gertrude- Stiller Goldberg LaVerne Loysen Nolan ~~:n GH~~~lLna ~t~ Esther Leah Averill Marjorie Knopf Altamore Marjorie Butler Hart Fern Huxley Palmer 1935 I Susan Vogt Bender Edna Bennett Arnold Isabel H. Hawkins Marjorie Reichart Roberta Wilder Brockway Margaret Bailey Benford Lucille Beal Boughton Marjorie Mathes Ashe Pearl Whited Howland Meredith Dadswell Russell Class A.f!,ent Violet R. Blazey Shirley Cohn Brodows Marjorie Bent Bald Dorothy Erlich Kanwischer Dorothy Cripps Salo Lillian Trombley Brooks Wilma Doughty Brady Grace W. Bronson Trene Clark Ballinger Elizabeth Mears Lauchlan Mildred Randall Stalker Mary Lusk Bruce Mary E. Cashman Dolores Schwink Brown Jean Kenyon Bartlett Clara Leeper Virginia Pierson Thornton Clara Doscher Crump Edith B. Colman DQrothy Beecher Burton Hazel S. Bastian Marian Lucius Dorothy S. Truesdale Mary Lay Davis Sylvia Asnas Commins Phoebe Gifford Clapp Louise S. Baxter Dorothy Karr Markham Jane Gordon Wilson Esther Dunn Ruth Macomber Connor Miriam Klonick Corris fone Hinman Buyse Marjorie Sherman Mather Susanne Bogorad Dworkin Ruth Whipple Cross Eleanor Collier Crary Rosemary Cherry Carlson Dorothy Sheldon McLean Mildred Ehaney Mary A. Cupolo Eleanor Alexander Drake Ruth Lunger Coakley Bessie Posner Miller 1934 Angelina Polsinelli Ferrari Jane Mangan Denniston Elizabeth Winship Drisko Eleanor Carson Davis Anna Morrow Molly B. Taylor Catharine A. Forster Marion Jones Dick Norval Kramer Dwyer Mary C. Dick Marion Weston Neun Class Af!,ent Catherine M. Frank Virginia C. Ester Helen Martin Emery Mary Dwyer Elizabeth Burr Nixon Frances Clark Beard Eleanor Sullivan Gleason Helen Coapman Ewing Harriet Cross Gale Sally Pike Farnham Margaret Powell Dorothy Pearlman Bohm Marion C. Glidden Margaret Glynn Foster Leona Edelstein Germano\\' Marie D. Fennemore ofia Rodriguez Minnie A. Booth Julia L. Granato EI izabeth C. Frisinger Barbara Brown Gorton E. Lusk Griswold Marian Smith Lois Wing Bulterman Mary Burns Grice Marjorie Gilles Eleanor Nicholson Alice Collins Hanvey Julia Ursula Szinkunas Helen Cashman Marie Finn Haas Marion Ogilvie Hamilton Humphrey Kathryn Parker Harvey Helen Bonner Taff Jean Holton Clarke Gretchen W. Hartman Louise Hendryx Helen Quigley Kalwas Dorothy Macomber Hetzel Jane Viall Wallace Ethel Morey Collier Ruth Bretschneider Alice Ramsay Hill Ruth Henion Karslake Ann S. Kelly Jean Watkeys Dorothy VanGraafeiland Kannwischer Margaret Hokensen Regina K. Kennedy Betty Bullen Kendall Gsolotte Kellner Wratten Connelly Elizabeth Ward Kariher Grace Storandt James Doris Fellows Kimball Lois Carr McPherson Hazel Coxe Nancy Form King Anne E. Johanson Gertrude Morley Lines Jean Griswold Mead Alice Vanderbilt Del]unco Elizabeth Harris Kraai Muriel L. Jones Ruth Schlosburg Lowy Shirley Dutemple Morabito 1933 Evelyn Millner Despard Edith Harman Lapi Sylvia Gray Lipton Florence E. Lyddon Martha Hulek Morlock Eleanor Long Corlett Agnes Donohue Claire Meyer Leopold Ruth Waugh Lloyd Tustine Lynes Elsa Reith O'Brien Class Agent Marjorie Freer Monica M. McConville Suzanne T. Lovejoy Helen Groves Moore Jane Carhart O'Brien H. Virginia Allen Juanita Border Gardner Mabel Gleason Olney Edith G. Lyon Helen Schlegel Moretz Charlotte Keeling Owen Frieda Mikel Altes Alice Fletcher Harris Grace Poelma Frances Ensign Marks Ruth P. Oakley Janice Lembke Peary Julia Arnott Eunice Vass Harris Catherine Salo Popper Helen J. Martin Janet G. Platzer Jane Rambo Reed Mary Heydweiller Benson Leone Reeves Hemenway Mildred Potter Jean Wallace Meyerhoff Ruth Goodman Rand Alice Green Reed Lulah Vedder Boyce Mary Vullo Lambiase Virginia Pammenter Redfern Barbara Olsan Florence Bates Reid Maysie Calder Rich Alice Brown Cesare Frances Smith Leadley Catherine Leiter Roider Ruth Seebach Parker Margaret McGlashan Ruch Jeanette Radder Ross

Carl E. Fisher Elmer J. Koepplin Seymour Gray Frederick C. Cook Anthony F. Rizzo Michael J. Gerbasi Edward Krockmalski Clyde M. Gridley Milton F. Cummings 1935 Donald E. Roda Andrew J. Giambrone Frank H. Lines Harold W. Grosselfinger Harry 1. Davis Ernest L. Aponte Alfred G. Scheible Leigh Greenfield Alden H. Livingston Morris Hamburg Ward Clifton Davis Charles B. Kenyon Otto C. Hahn William L. Madden Willard E. Hardies Richard A. Deane Class Agents gh~~fesSB~zSkinner F. Milton Hathaway Joseph E. Morrissey Charles Hendershott Gerard W. Del Junco Howard W. Bartlett Jacques E. Sloan Alfred J. Henderson Maurice Ozer Leland E. Hildreth Wilfred D. Despard James R. Benford Howard A. Spindler Henry A. Imus Lawrence A. Paley Willard W. Holbrook Fred H. Dettmar William P. Blackmon John A. Stahlbrodt Brownell R. Jamison Melbourne J. Porter John S. Houseknecht Anthony L. Dividio Lyle A. Bliss Charles W. Sutton Lewis A. Klein Max H. Presberg Robert 1. Howland James B. Forbes, Je. J. Francis Canny Lawrence E. Unger Ralph H. Lewis Frazer D. Punnett Max Kaplan Charles H. Foster James P. Conti Donald A. Van Stone Neils G. Madsen Philip Reed Alan E. Kappelman Richard J. Fox M. Sherman Cotton Charles E. Vaughn Otto W. Mannhardt Julius Rock Milton Karz James Frank Russell E. Craytor Gordon L. Waasdorp Henry J. Martens Hervey J. St. Helens Harold A. Ketchum Charles M. Furtherer Peter Paul Dale William C. Walzer Gerald McGuire George W. Sawdey George F. Leader J. Webster Goodhue Homer S. Davey Frederic L. Warder Irving L. Mix Emmett J. Schnepp G. Carroll Madden Mack D. Griswold E. Paul Dean Robert F. Weller Robert S. Moehlman Arthur W. Schwartz Elias J. Margaretten Ralph E. Hansen John F. Dobbins Cedric F. West John 1. Nugent Norman H. Selke Robert F. Metzdorf Thomas F. Keyes Neil H. Duffy Raymond J. White Robert G. Oeorr Milton L. Shurr Oscar E. Minor George C. Krauss John P. Erdle Ralph E. Wickins Donald R. Philllips Paul A. Stewart Howard B. Mouatt Richard H. Lansing Robert J. Exter herry K. Wood Charles W. Pritchard Elvryn W. Thomas William R. Murlin Laurence C. Liberatore Joseph Farbo Charles G. Zutes Lloyd A. Schermerhorn Herbert E. Thompson, Jr. Truman O. Murrell Everett J. Mann Donald B. Fischer A. Howard Smith Knight Thornton Karl T. Naramore Henry S. Marshall John P. Frazer Milton Tatelbaum Tohn R. Turner Vernon H. Patterson Paul E. McNamara Norman C. Fromm 1936 Floyd S. Updyke Paul F. Valerio Trving L. Posner Karl H. Meng Arthur S. Gale, Jr. Willard F. Wadt Robert J. Zimmerman Porter M. Ramsay Frederick S. MillIer George B. Gardner T. Paul Ford Frank M. Waterhouse Francis C. Regan Francis H. Milligan Henry E. Goebel Class Agent Alan R. Wile Arnold Rubenfeld Roland C. Moore John B. Goetsch Arthur J. Ashe Joseph c. Wilson 1933 Robert Sabin Grantier L. Neville Robert B. Gordon Roger Coakley George A. Wishart Joseph A. Scarlett Robert C. Nixon Tom J. Gorham Gordon A. Coleman Arden Howland Arthur Schiller Joseph L. Noble Class Agent David S. Grice Saul Commins Harmon B. Senzel Theodore P. Noun David L. Gundry William P. Connolly 1932 Vincent Alessi Eli Sokol Donald W. Peters Reed H. Hardin~ Richard E. Contryman Arthur W. Allen Theodore H. Solomon Harold S. Rand Robert Earl Hams Joseph B. Cramer Jerome E. Doyle Edward S. Stahlbrodt Class Agent George K. Anderson John J. Reed James c. Hart John R. Dale Paul F. Andrew Paul M. Stoehr Edward J. Rosenberg Howard Hennington Myron Davis Paul W. Aradine Nicholas Ange John L. Tupper Eli H. Rudin Neil J. Hickey Earl De Ryke Ralph A. Arnold Wesley H. Behler Edgar F. Van Buskirk, Jr. Leonard V. Salisbury H. arlo Hoadley George C. Dick, Je. Gerald M. Barbour Armin N. Bender Leander Walker Lawrence Schooler Eric Insley Richard O. Edgerton Benjamin B. Bastian ]. Nelson Bettner John \Valter Samuel C. Shoolman Donald T. Imrie Theodore F. Elliott John O. Benz Julius Bland Ward R Whipple Benjamin T. Simmons Martin M. Josephs Frank A. Ferrari Chester F. Burmaster L. Gordon Booth E. Biden Whitney Pincus Sobie Elwin E. Kneale John F. Flagg Kenneth R. Chapman Samuel Brim Howard A. Splitt George Lapham Henry W. Fogarty James W. Collins Lincoln V. Burrows Gordon M. Stewart John P. Lee Gilbert B. Forbes Charles W. Deane Victor S. Chambers Robert C. Stewart Charles A. Manuele Henry H. Forsyth, Jr. Roy S. Demenint Donald Christie 1934 Trwin H. Stolzar Kenneth P. McConnell Samuel B. Foster Edward Ehre Weld Conley Hugh J. Knapp Udell B. Stone Donald E. McConville Harold Friedman Herman Fiocca Mortimer S. Copeland Class Agent Charles 1. Sull ivan William H. Merwin Donald A. Gaudion Edward W. Fisher, Je. Eli H. Cross Kenneth L. Tanger John R. Morey Lee Jay Geismar Harold W. Glidden Joseph DiFede George H. Alexander George D. Taylor Anthony J. Murabito Paul G. Gilbert Emanuel Goldberg John E. Eisold Herman S. Alpert Louis J. Teall Hiram J. Neun Willia'm L. Grossman Fred H. Gowen Robert S. Fancy A. Buell Arnold Arthur P. Ticknor Arthur R. Nolan Arthur W. Haas J. Elwood Hart Thomas R. Forbes Nathaniel D. Arnot Robert ]. Trayhern Arthur E. Nyquist Everett P. Hall Herbert Heesch Harry Fullier Elton Atwater Leonard Weisler John K. Parks C. Watson Hamilton Allen L. King Elmer T. Gannon William E. Beel Richard U. Wilson 'Donald C. Pease James Harper Charles B. King Richard W. Gardner Grover C. Bradstreet CharlesR. Witherspoon,Jr. Ronald E. Prindle Rupert A. Havill Joseph R. Kirchmaier Charles F. Gay Lewis D. Conta Charles P. Zorsch Ellis Ring Richard L. Henderson

39 Cornelia Painter Eleanor Bettys Munson Betty Heise Gietz Ruth Goodland Women's Division Pauline Parce Parks Bette Taylor Murphy Barbara Carpenter Grace Jane Lacey Harding Rachel Foulkes Playford Mary Richards Murr Frances Seeger Green Elizabeth Kellas Harvey Bertha Field Schellberg Frances Hill Noonan Harriet Davis Hamilton Gladys Greenwood Elsbeth Appelt Smail Gretchen Frizzell Paviour Justine F. Harris Holtzman Mabel Kysor Rugg Genevieve Plant Lorraine O. Smith Fay Muxworthy Peck Janet Stone Holmes Althea Haass Houck Jean Graves Scheible Margaret 1. Rathbun Mary Sutton Smith Ann Wellington Phreaner Gretchen VanZandt Johnson Beverly Marks Koval Joann Guggenheimer Florence Dunn Richardson Helen Zimmerman Stewart Carol McGregor Plass Harriet Gallup Jones Jane Warren Larson Schreiner Ethel Davis Roberts Esther Teller Swarner Margaret Stevens Riggs Barbara Steddom Keighley Floris A. Lent Lillian Kaplan Shucklin Elizabeth Kilmer Saunders Elizabeth Gay Terry Joan Reed Saunders Ruth Chapin Koomen Mildred Newhall Ethel Klein Snapper Elizabeth Pierce Schwab Mildred Jenkins Treumann Elizabeth Fisher Adeline Sears LaPlante Marjorie C. Pfaudler Bessie W. Stanford Elinor Jack Sessions Ruth McGregor Vick Scharfenberger Jane Beale Lee Ruth Wunder Philipp Jane Wolcott Steinhausen Anne Johnston Skivington Verna Claire Volz Regine Seidler Jean Adkins Lefferts Martha Nichols Rakita Rosemary Seiller Terry Dorothy B. Smith Marjorie Hall Winchell Eva Rosenow Sherwood Betty Startup Lotridge Verna Renaud Rex Margaret Graham Toeppen Frances Meulendyke Stefano Dorothy Geyer Woodams Barbara Ray Sibley Marcella Pugh Mathews Dorothy Hunter Schaefer Edith Chapman Wemett Helen Baybutt Summermatter Dorothy Schroeder Young Marjorie Mercure Sinclair Mary Hawley McCaulley Jane Schmitt Margaret Brunssen Whedon Bertha Hendryx Trueheart Alveira Andrews Zeiter Jean Rissberger Slaymaker Ruth Meyer McCleary Millicent Boyd Schongalla Marion Devendorf Van Laak Virginia Robinson Snow Edna Johnson McDonald Claire Gale Small Margaret Hewins Waldo Alice Taylor Sutton Helen Nyquist Monroe Mary Lou Head Sottong 1939 Mary Wallace Wetrich 1941 Dorothy J. Symonds Gertrude Scott Nicholson Agnes C. Lin Sze Margaret Stebbins Farris Emily Little White Alice Taylor Sutton Mary Kelly Taylor Laura Baker Palmer Evelyn Laufer Taylor Class Agent Nancy Gay Winn Class Agent Jean Prozeller Terry Leora DeLelys Powers June Bleyler Terry Clara Bates Allen Susan Wolters Van Arsdale Helen Verian Powers Bethyne Pink Thomas Norma Brostedt Abbate Constance Merwin Jennette Rausch Van Patton Irene H. Wilson Price Eleanor Rambert Trombetta Kathryn Steele Abendschein 1940 Anthonsen Bette Mason Wall Barbara S. Robeson Marjorie Trosch ~au~h

Frank B. Tracy Frederick Sherwood Millard Sessions Franklin A. Miller Ellsworth VanGraafeiland Nelson W. Spies Oscar Spiehler, Jr. James E. Minges Men's Division Charles E. Walker Albert W. Stoffel Walter C. Stugis Edward J. agy James F. Walters Harmon V. Strong William Summerhays Thomas Pammenter Edward H. Walworth, Jr. Clyde T. Sutton Leo C. Summermatter Norman M. Parkhill W. Kenneth Hovey Warren B. Daly William H. Webb Frank Taylor Norman J. Timmons Walter C. Paul Richard J. Hughes Marvin 1. Davis Robert F. Weingartner Robert B. Taylor Earl ]. VanLare Robert F. Paviour Robert M. Jacobs Sidney S. Dorfman Hugh F. Wendt Jack E. Thomas Edwin B. Watson Charles C. Perry Curtis 1. Kaufelt Darwin G. Erdle David 1. Williams William R. Weller Robert 1. Wells Harry S. Phillips Willard F. Leusch Cameron B. Estes Gerald B. Zornow Roy A. Wemett Lampher C. Weston Thomas C. Pryor Joseph R. Ligozio Arthur F. Fisher H. Elwood White Roy F. Roberts Walter Litten Arnold 1. Form Fred 1. Witt Donald Lloyd Smith Henry G. Lyon Everett 1. Gardner 1938 1939 Harvey A. Wolff Harold J. Stiles, Jr. Mortimer H. Maier Robert P. Giddings Howard A. Yatteau Julius Stoll, Jr. Wilbur F. Meyerhoff James S. Glasgow Ross G. Weller Kenneth J. Hoesterey J. Benjamin Ziegler Davis J. Stolzar John B. Munson Robert J. Grabenstetter Class Agent Class Agent Paul J. Suter Herbert A. Norton John H. Grossman Charles H. Addington Herbert K. Arthur Sherwin H. Terry Philip A. Payne Edwin W. Hammond, Jr. John 1. Alhart Myron T. Bantrell 1940 Randal M. Tobutt Peter ]. Petry Joseph T. Hochstein Casper J. Aronson David Z. Beckler Charles T. Tuke William T. Plumb Abe A. Hollander Norman J. Ashenburg Gordon D. Brady Allen Brewer Robert G. Ulrech Michael Pulcino Willard H. Janneck Franklin O. Baer Robert N. Burr Decade Chairman J. Donald Urquhart Charles J. Quilter Frank M. Jenner Felix J. Balonek Hubert J. Cole Donald A. Koch Norman C. Wall Wilfrid V. Robertson Adolf E. Kannwischer Elmer E. Batzell Robert W. Cordwell Co-Chairman John 1. Wehle Howard F. Rogers Ralph A. Kelly Morton S. Kircher David G. Decker William J. Hoot ]. Westcott Wright Spaulding Rogers Charles O. King Joseph 1. Caliri Robert Henry Dicke Class Agent Wilbur H. Wright Otto E. Schaefer, Jr. Donald J. Kridel Philetus M. Chamberlain Walter D. Erskine Leonard F. :Alderman W. George Swalbach Noel H. Kuhrt Chester C. Champion, Jr. Samuel Feier Edward Thomas Auer Philip Tierney Richard S. Lee Harold 1. Chase Morton W. Finch John E. Baybutt 1941 Herbert 1. Tindall, Jr. Stanley V. Levey Joseph G. Christ John A. Gersbach Myron Bernhardt Robert H. Riggs J. Emmett Tune S. B. Licata Edwin W. Cissel James E. Harvey Peter G. Brandetsas Class Agent Robert F. Walters Mortimer A. London Leonard E. Coger Richard C. Hendrickson Allen M. Brewer Edward J. Anderson Maurice A. Wilder, Jr. Robert Maher Dudley T. Cornish Richard E. Herbrand orman R. Cole C. Gifford Beach Richard W. Wrighton Alfred Maurer Philip M. Davies Thomas G. Hildebrandt David Courtheoux Kenneth B. Bowen Edwin C. Yaw Donald S. Meech Robert E. Dickinson Robert J. Hudak V. Ethan Davis Lee M. Brechbuhl Edward H. Yewer Richard T. Milazzo Louis J. Fortmiller Arthur E. Jones, Jr. Alfred M. Decker Emerson E. Chapin Hyman J. Zimmerman Frederick C. Moll Frank 1. Foote A. David Kaiser, Jr. Howard A. DeLaney Elmer M. Conway William H. Moll Leo Geyer George Kaiser Charles P. DeNeef Richard F. Conyne Domenic J. Morabito Albert Gilbert Jacob Koomen, Jr. S. Samuel Depalma William B. Daly 1937 Lowell E. Moss Arthur 1. Haskins Joseph Kline Frank P. DiMarsico John DeMallie John George Bantel Elmer W. Myers Anthony A. Iati John Robert Ladd Richard M. Drake Harold P. Dygert, Jr. Class Agent David Penn William M. Jackson G. Prescott Lane Max R. Fitze Roger W. Erskine Robert V. Adair Frank S. Perego Robert Kaley Dean H. Lapp John F. Fox William E. Fahy Russell J. Anderson Harold C. Perry Morton S. Kircher Robert P. Larson Budd 1. Gambell Ivin R. Forman George A. Bachers James W. Phillips Angelo ]. Madonia Leo A. MacSweeney, Jr. Raymond H. Goldstein Thomas F. Frawley Joseph E. Barnes Ralph E. Pike Don F. McPherson Donald D. McCowan Harry Grace' ., John R. Geary, Jr. Donald W. Berry Joseph B. Platt Kenneth R. Miller Lansing W. McDowell William E. Hawley' Harry J. Hart Robert J. Bloor Peter J. Prozeller, Jr. Hugh S. Mosher William R. McEnroe Anthony J. Izzo Michael A. Insalaco William S. Bloss Alexander Rakus Wilbur K. Neuman Peter G. Meade Ralph H. Kellogg William H. Liesenbein Richard E. Border John Shelton Reed Karl Pilger Allen F. Mock David Kelsey Ivar A. Lundgaard Albert C. Bracker John 1. Reid, Jr. Matthew ]. Pillard C. Burton Newman John H. Kistler William R. Mann Ivan W. Brown, Jr. Charles D. Robeson Harmon S. Potter Michael P. Petitto George B. Lufkin, Jr. Thomas McCleary Wilbur S. Buholtz Charles O. Sahler Frederick 1. Price Carroll W. Potter Alan Hunter Martin George C. Monroe, Jr. Leonard C. Buyse Elbert 1. Scrantom Wylie S. Robson Newcomb Prozeller Frederick J. Martin George M. Mullen Frederick D. Clapp Norman E. Siems Arthur A. Schade G. Earl Rich Albert A. Mattera Richard G. Myers George R. Clark Paul Smith G. Robert Schermerhorn Edward S. Roat Stephen Mayka Wayne G. Norton Edward O. Stephany George H. Schreiner Robert W. Rugg Leonard T. McLaughlin William H. Oldenbrook gh~~f:s \. CC~~n~r;ll Samuel S. Stratton Edgar M. Shantz Herbert Scheuer Bernard J. Mezger David M. Paige

40 Ruth Burritt Greenbaum Mary Ault Morris .Esther Hood Lazenby Lucille Allen Dewey Martha Bolles Keith Ruth Ber~man Sandler Ellen Baist Heidenreich Eileen Anna Murphy Annette Levin Lee Frances DeFresco Di Roberto A. Mischler Kraemer Mary Elame Sears Winifred Christ Hines Elizabeth Rowe Noyer Judith Taylor Lehmann Dorothy Wallace Droser Joan Lane Margaret Wallace Sexton Jane Taylor Jameson Marjorie McGregor Palmer Cecile Zilver Lester Arabelle Williams Dubois Elizabeth Krihak Lansdale Dorothy Cochran Shaw Doris Greeno Jones Ruth Bentley Parker Marilyn Lester Losee Charlotte Woods Elkind Mary Firra Leahy Barbara Winebrenner Mildred Ferraro Kowalski Nada Blake Phillips Shirley Parmington Madison Jessie French Engan Theresa Marotta Livingstone Shepard Marjorie Webb Kriebel Constance Bentley Randall Marion Comerford Mallory Louise Hediger Engel Rosemarie Fay Loomis Barbara Stevens Shirey Dorothy E. Kuhnert Eunice Lisson Robbins Jane Woodin Mallory Arlene V. Fritz Antoinette Dellaira Loysen Shirley Stein Sigel Anita Manning Little Sally Ingalls Rohrdanz Margaret S. Mattison Carol Farnum Gavett Nancy Jones Lyke Pattie Watkins Simpson Marjorie Sullivan Lowenthal Alice Yasko Rothing Dorothy Constantine Margaret Kall Gugel Esther Levering MacMullin Elva Yawger Smith Sally Murphy Betty Bebb Sager McCarthy Mildred Myers Gunther Joan MacLean Mahoney Ruth Krautwurst Sorensen Jane Robertson Petty Gloria Perryman Shambroom Dorothy Murphy Meade Julia Page Hafner Frances Galvin Miles Patricia A. Spencer Margaret Gilligan Phillips Violet G. Smithers Jean Hoyt Melville Pauline Hansen Fannie Miller Mindel Joy Ann Cohn Starr Winifred Aitchison Robinson Nancy Devans Solan Jean Colley Negus Catherine Linehan Heier Mary Dalton Morgan Jane M. Stellwagen Margaret Warner Scandling Jane Thompson Southgate Patricia Robinson Neill Elaine Burk Hey Suzanne Naruse Doris MacRae Stone Juliana Singer Schier Dorothy Pardi Stiles Doris Kennell Palmer Helen Aude Hightower Irene Nowak Patricia Kelley Summers Barbara Larson Schiff Alice Jean Tennent Nancy Larson Quigley Marjorie Park Hile Marjorie Stern Nussbaum Mildred A. Tausch Betty Sieger Edith Sumeriski Trybalski Fay Sand Reed Janice Miller Hill Nancy Farnum O'Dea Elizabeth Larson Tellier Elizabeth Dale Smith Muriel Ehrich Van Deusen Elizabeth Hoch Reese Elaine Fischer Hoffman hirley Owens Palmer Martha K. Trytten Ruth Ballard Tilden Ida Josephine Versaci Martha Havill Russell Jeanette Riley Hunt Jane Roberts Pastel Barbara Groth Vasselli Ruth Diller Woods Corrine Rosenkrantz Ziman Joanne Bradford Sakrison Joyce Mann Hursh Helen Auringer Reis Betty Eisenberg Wejman Margaret Happold Doris Robinson Jones Jean Ellen Ross Ernestine Blauw White Schaninger 1945 1946 Ruth Haftenkamp Schlegel Esther DeLong Beal Jean Hofferbert Marshall Barbara Happold Sherman Class Agent Class Agent Lois Schramm Siegmund Ruth Weingartner Aldridge Betty-Lu Widmer Adams Phyllis Renckens Smith Judy Rebasz Anthony Margery Kerbelis Bablin hiela Smith Elizabeth Gillette Baker Jane Barhite Beverly Field Splittberger Betty Pearson Baybutt Lois Schwind Boyd Ina Skuse Thompson Jane Berggren Blizard Barbara Bishop Bullock Anne Richards Thompson Agnes Blamer Boucher Jean E. Burnham Eleanor Kirch Wabnitz Dorothy Huxley Cantin Margaret Johnston Carlson Virginia Sharp Carpenter Mane Meisel Cedars 1947 Ruth Hudak Chapin Florence M. Chapin Helen Thomas Coleman Esther Spencer Clark Jean Conner Ferris Evelyn Meyers Currie June Wedell Dailey Margaret Greene Kindig Elizabeth Lockard Davis Thelma DaYis Class Agents Ruth Weber Dickinson Marjorie Cohen Abrams Ann Goodenough Dinse ~:Cif:rge~r~r~P D~:;~~r Barbara Wheeler Ashton ue Cooper Eddy Hope Harshaw Evans Jean Nichols Barber Ruth Keene Forsyth Marilyn Gorin Feldman Stephanie Henoch Barch Hazel Gordon Frank Marion O'Neil Foster Nancy Bartlett Elaine Debrine Gates Yvonne Reese Furth Gloria Knic1

Milton Pearlman Douglas Nicholson William P. Hagenbach David D. Perkins John 1. O'Brien Richard R. Haig John P. Powell William R. Patton Walter H. May Dennis A. Radefeld Leo H. Pearson Robert J. McMahon George H. Rappole, Jr. Theodore H. Peck Gerald D. Meyer Benjamin Shimberg Richard E. Posner Elwyn M. Montfort J. Douglas Sinclair Charles F. Post John F. Murphy Edwin T. Smith Charles C. Ransom, Jr. Leonard W. Niedrach William H. Smith Eugene F. Richner Donald A. Norris Frederick W. Steul William T. Rudman Arnold J. Pehta David W. Stewart Marshall Salvaggio Roy J. Philipp Vay Stonebraker Robert Paul Smith William J. Raab Peter Stranges Paul M. Spiegel George Rentoumis Arthur W. Taff James B. Terry David D. Robinson Peter Valenti Anthony H. Tubiola Philip H. Rogers, Jr. F. Cameron VanZile Edward 1. Valentine Mark R. Rosenzweig Richard E. Walker David D. VanHorn Jack H. Rutz Harvey E. Weingartner Gordon J. Watt William J. Scheerens Willard A. West Davis E. Whitcomb Robert J. Schier John R. Williams Frederick D. Williams Edward R. Schongalla Frederick ]. Wolff Robert A. Woods Richard Secrest Richard S. Woods Herbert F. York William Stepka Charles R. Young Rodney T. Swain William 1. Engan Raymond E. Speth Richard C. Mack John W. Tarbox 1. William Gavett Gardner W. Stacy Alexander G. Major 1942 1943 George C. Trombetta Alfred Ginkel Homer H. Marks Henry S. Vyverberg {.qim~mF D~tS~;~rt Edward A. Mason Frank Okey Robert H. Plass Robert H. Weiser Frederick J. Halik Class AKent Class Agent John G. Hamilton E. Gregory Thomas Marcus W. Minkler William A. Wheeler William 1. Parry George A. Agoston George H. Allison Harry C. Wiersdorfer John W. Hamilton G. Harold Tishkoff John W. Handy Maurice 1. Townsend Eric H. Phinney Ralph Alparone Theodore J. Altier George O. Williams Jack E. Presburg Melvin F. Anderson Clarence E.' Avery, Jr. William Yates Warren T. Heard Frederick A. Wiedman Alexander Angelidis David S. Baldwin William C.Henion Mitchell T. Williams James P. Rizzo John P. Baumer William H. Bagley Robert Hills, Jr. Boris Yovanoff William F. Scherer Myron C. Beal Harry 1. Barrett, Jr. 1944 Robert J. Hoe James 1. Secrest Alfred D. Becker William R. Baxter Robert C. Gray John M. Keil 1945 Henry C. Senke Jack W. Kennedy Walter P. Siegmund Floyd E. Bliven Victor M Becker Class Agent William P. Ewald Robert W. Burnett Severn P. Brown Ralph Ameele Robert E. Kesel Myron S. Silver G. Edwin Kindig Class Agent Herman H. ]. Stoll Philip Chenoweth Lowell T. Burke Howard E. Bacon, Jr. Irving R. Abel Clifford E. Swartz Charles F. Coit Edward H. Clark John E. Barber John A. King Donald R. Koerner Frank F. Allen Julio ]. Taddie George Robert Darcy Richard N. Close David W. Bareis Irving J. Baybutt Hendrick C. VanNess Michael T. DiRoberto John E. Cranch James E. Beach Richard Kriebel Robert E. Bergner Ernest F. Dukes Clement A. DeFelice James R. Beall August A. Kuhn C. S. Bergstrom William H. Eilinger Richard E. Fang Charles A. Bergerson Edward A. Langhans E. Payson Clark, Jr. 1946 John F. Faulkner Griffith Bowen Jack W. Leet Rae A. Clark Charles B. Gray gh~r~~~s l' F1:k~~d Robert J. Feeney James G. Brandetsas Jerold S. Marks Eldridge S. Cole Class Agent William 1. Ginkel Donald A. Forsyth William A. Bramley Robert E. Marks Richard F. Eisenberg H. Curtis Barber William Gioseffi John F. Forsyth Vernon A. Breitenbach W. Randolph Mason Alfred Feinman Gorman 1. D. Burnett Charles . Greason Nelson W. Grabenstetter William J. Carnahan, Jr. Gordon McCowan David T. Fitzelle Mark O. Camp Roy W. Goetzman Arthur M. Holtzman Carlos A. Chapman, Jr. Donald B. Miller Edward D. Fuoco Earl S. Christman Blair A. Hellebush Robert B. Houck Franklin Clapper William G. Moir Allan Gates Joseph M. Culotta Douglas F. Jones Robert E. Kennedy Carl J. Claus Donald E. Newnham Hyman Goldlberg Robert E. Curtis Charles G. Kamin Gordon H. Kester Donald Clough Victor A. Noel John M. Harris Myron F. DeWolf Alvin D. Keene Myron W. Klein J. Monroe Cole William Robert Nolan Robert F. Hause John M. Dinse Randall A. Kenyon Richard T. Kramer Donald N. Curtiss Richard J. Nowak Marvin ]. Hoffman Thomas 1. Dinsmore Robert W. King Warren Kunz Albert O. Daniels Dean H. Parker tephen A. Jones Arthur H. Dube John Clyde Lane Herbert A. Lautz Patrick J. DeCill is Frank Ratner Jerome E. Korpeck Frank K. Faulkner W. Thomas Newman Otto C. Layer, Jr. Peter J. Drago John W. Simpson Ralph R. Lohene James K. Feely

41 Shirley Kelly Griggs Gertrude Blackwood Barbara Longstaff Outterson Joan Sigler Hujar Women's Division Norma Schaller Guyon Cotanche Ruth Stiens Parr Helen Drew Isenberg Miriam Harnish Louise Allen Crain Marie Hoadley Pletenik Mildred B. Kantor Adele Harmon Heffer Dorothy Hill Crim Jean MacMullen Putzier Elizabeth Reichard Kelsey Phyllis Kroemer Henderson Helen Baker Crouch Marjorie Sauerbrey Quade Katherine Connell Koch LaVerna Miller White Eleanor M. Lofthouse Margaret Hoff Elizabeth Stell Curtis Phyllis Cary Rose Ann Davies Lamb Ruth Woodcock Willet Patricia Perry Mauro Eileen B. Kern Howard Jean A. Dimond Ruth Swanker Sauer Charlotte Ann Lane Doris Child Wooldridge Carol Pfleeger McKeehan Margaret Connell LeVan Bette Wadsworth Dischinger Mary Louise Scanlan Dorothy Nothhard Leidig Lois Clark Wright Doris Yetra Michaelson Christine Slocum McCoy Harriet Doty Helen Schantz Marion Jean Maracle Mary Jane Wurmer Ferol J. Montgomery Shirley Stevens Miller Mary Lou Keck Eckert Margaret Soble Sklarsky Grace Hicks Mastin Phyllis Ludwig Zillman Eleanor J. Muhs Nancy Carlyon Millett Gisela Cloos Evitt Virginia Neel Skuse Shelagh MacPherson Beatrice Sayuri Nakahata Joan Sturdevant Mohney Beverly Rose Fedoryshyn Ellen Flaum Stempel Maxwell Rose Mary Shevchuk O'Brien Rose Moukous D. Geier Finegan Elizabeth Pratt Stewart Anne Kendrick McNabb 1948 Beth Bishop Odell Mary Segar Myers Elizabeth Babcock Fisher Marylin Johnson Still Sallie Melvin Helen York Koch Hope N. Ohashi Millicent Price Neese Diane M. Fleishman June Levin Stornelli Mary Meyeserian Class ARent Constance Gordon Oriani Jane Lois Nelson Patricia Monfredo Furey Barbara Perkins Stuart Carol Adams Mikonis Margaret Brant Adams Dorothy Rosenberg Passer Joan Henner Nolan Anne Thalheimer Futterman Ruth Clapp Van Buren Sally Gaus Miller Jane Harding Albee Kate Watkins Pratt Esther Lee Northrup Anne Corcoran Geier Doris J. Warin~ Mary Louise Murphy Mary Anne Kennedy Angell Jean Rathjen Jane Shaver Pack Vera Grunthal Gleason Marie Ostendorf Wells Patricia Costello orris Jean Hall Apetz Jean Parsons Ross Muriel Nixon Rising Beverly Goebel Eiluned Jones White Constance Young Peterson Joan Fitzgerald Bayer Maryella Helms Ruth Patricia A. Rohrer Madeline Goldstein Katherine Hurl Young Diane Rathjen Rock Joanne Bailey Beyerlein Kathleen Zismer Saxe Eleanor Jennings Savastano .Toae Graham Alice Davis Zloth Jane Norton Rosa Mary Proctor Bissett Ruth Carroll Smith Elizabeth McFadden Schulte Shirley Morrison Gray Barbara Berkowitz Rubin Shirley Allart Blackett Joan Thurston Spear Lois Bennett Sheats Elizabeth Chapman Hall 1951 Mary Meltzer Russell Phyllis Miller Boughner Mary Elizabeth Stewart Gertrude Saperstone Helen Worthington Hemmer H 11 K h EI 11 Lucille Boeltz Rutz Gretchen Thomas Claudia Elliott Sturman Sheinfeld Jean Cutler Henty 0 y oc we Sarah 1. St. Helens Brukilacchio Irene Tillim Jane Tatlock Shurts Barbara Ferrell Hill Class ARent Marjorie B. Schlosser Esther Harvey Bumpus Elizabeth Griffith Titus Catherine Johnson Siebert Virginia Gilbert Hoesterey Ruth Saltzburg Aisenberg Emily A. Scinto Anna Roberts Bundschuh Jean Hunter Tomat Hester Margaret Smith Nancy Yanes Hoffman Nancy Fisher Alley Helene Weste Scribner Alice Nemetz Castner Virginia Kin~ Turner Arline Peterson Spinell Cynthia R. Holt Lois M. Anderson Elaine Aser Sigler Kristin Gustavsen Cook Florence Kremer Wecksler Shirley Knoeckl Storey Carol Ernst Hopkins Beverly Czerkas Andersen Eileen Churchill Slocum Kathryn Sanney Cotner Janet Bagley Williamson Betty Mae Velenta Marion Levering Hubbard Barbara Ball . loann Paul Sokol Virginia Haggerty Davis Margaret Morian Willis Phyllis Van De Walle Shirley Cowles Jacobs Anita Broob Bennett Jeannene Lyon Tylee Ellen Pierce DeWolf Barbara Peters Winn Margery Leet Wemyss Mary Martha Dowd Jacobs Sally Black Bierbaum Virginia Castillo Walker Shirley Blair Dodenhoff Kathleen \'

Dominic F. Bronte Donald K. Smith Austin R. Leve Douglas P. Baird George A. Brown Richard B. Smith N. M. Lieberman Richard D. Barley Men's Division Henry E. Byers Andrew Stalder Joseph G. Liska Donald R. Barry John W. Castle, Jr. Donald W. Still Paul W. Ludwig E. Karl Bastress George F. Harris Joseph M. Claparols Robert G. Sutton Kenneth M. McNeill Harold H. Baxter Axel R. Freed William T. Hart Edwin Ivan Colodny R. Dale Sweigart Martin E. Messinger Edward J. Beikirch Peter G. Gleason Warren M. Haussler Robert G. Cook. Jr. Roger Tengwall Kenneth F. Meyers Arthur C. Bennett Alfred C. Goetz MunrQ K. Haynes Richard Gosner Creadick David J. Whalen August Miale, Jr. Glenn M. Berggren Louis Goldberg Carl R. Honi~ Harry N. Cripps James B. Williams Robert Miles Alfred 1. Bloch Peter 1. Gucker William G. Howe Robert J. Currie. Jr. Burt Wixson John W. Mills Irwin S. Booth Edward Gunther Robert E. Hubbard Pierce B. Day Howard G. Womack Winthrop G. Morrison William H. Bosworth James T. Henderson J. Edward Jackson Harold L. Dillenbeck William W. Young William P. Myers Richard D. Brightman Robert E. Hyatt Robert Barton Kaman William R. Dirksen Roger W. Zaenglein Harry R. Nickles Edward S. Brown Robert R. Jones James F. Kinney James Ernest Dubois Daniel W. O'Dell Robert C. Bruton Werner Kunz Norman A. Lempert David D. Dudley 1949 Frederick G. Ostendorf Isadore Caplan Bruce M. Lansdale Joseph G. Mack William E. Easton Robert W. Peelle John J. Castellot Frederick R. McKeehan Noel T. Maxson John D. Fassett H. Scott Norris, Jr. James W. Pelton Kenneth B. Chase John H. McKeehan Charles W. McAllister Robert P. Fedder Class Agent Richard A. Pettinger Norman Chodosh James D. McMahon Stephen Michel Donald C. Fisher Hugh S. Adams Charlton I. Prince John W. Clark John R. Melin Charles F. Moreland, Jr. Alvin C. Foster Richard Altier Henry S. Reuter, Jr. Stanley S. Clarke Salvador P. Perez Donald S. Nash Arnold Gietz Donald W. Bailey Edward M. Rex Richard H. Coates Howard Platt Andrew H. Neilly, Jr. David C. Gilkeson Andrew' N. Baker Robert K. Rickard James G. Cotanche William O. Robertson Joseph c. Nelson Allan A. Gilman Zygmund J. Bara William B. Sabey Robert S. Dean Edward J. Roche, Jr. Robert C. Pu~h John W. Guyon Donald M. Barnard John E. Schlauch Donald W. DeMott Edwin D. Savlov Thomas E. Putnam David A. Haller. Jr. Donald P. Beattie David Schreiber William J. Deyle Hugh F. Schaefer Warren S. Richardson Joseph D. Helwig Paul J. Bourgeois Stuart E. Smith Robert M. Dinse Gordon Shillinglaw Corwin 1. Rickard Irving Hollander Joseph Richard Brady Donald B. Tatlock William Dodenhoff Everett Shocket Henry W. Sakrison C. David Hollenbeck Robert J. Branigan George S. Terry, Jr. Raymond J. Doughty David M. Smith Sylvester J. Sanfilippo John D. Hopkins James R. Brobeck R. Bruce Thompson, Jr. James G. Dox Dura W. Sweeney Richard Harold Saunders Walton Howes Saul Z. Cohen Donald E. Tuites Norman S. Drake Russell M. Tilley Karl' F. Schoch Henry Joseph Kirsch William S. Cook, Jr. Howard W. Vogt John W. Dreier Theodore F. VanZandt Leo F. Smith Arden O. Lea. Jr. Edward William Corsetti Charles E. Wheten David J. Dupre Theodore S. Woerz John D. States Norman A. Levin Stewart T. Cottier Grosvenor S. Wich Glen C. Durkin Duncan C. Wormer Franklyn H. Taylor Henry A. Martin George 1. Dischinger, Jr. Warren F. Williams Richard W. Eckler Thomas S. Tibbs Weston S. McKane Robert H. Eisenberg Roger D. Williamson Vernon G. Eisenbraun Bruce Till Robert E. Moore Paul J. Elsenheimer Paul K. Witti~ Ingvar E. Eliasson 1947 Shaffer Truax George R. Morrison Louis R. Epstein Geor~e F. Wooster Jay M. Etlinger George E. Verity Eugene J. Moscaret Michael' Fedoryshyn \'qarren R. Zimmer Norman W. Farnham Edward T. Kern David H. Walworth Harry F. O'Neil Robert J. Ferris Robert B. Faroo Class ARent Daniel E. Wertman John J. O'Neill J. William Fisher Frank Ferrara Arthur G. Bailey Clifford Orman hckson 1. Fleckenstein 1950 Robert W. Fertig Robert J. Fisher Richard E. Baldwin Daniel Owerbach Donald P. Fox Daniel Lanni David C. Barton 1948 Philip F. Peterson Alfred T. Freeman Charles B. Frame James Freiert Decade Chairman Lee C. Fridd Thomas E. Cardillo Donald A. Koch Sheldon Phillips b. Donald B. Clark Hugh McLean Pratt Jay Marc Friedman Charles F. Greeno William C. Gamble Douglas D. Decker Class ARent Frederick J. Raible, Jr. Kenneth J. Fuoco Class ARent Eugene J. Gangarosa Leonard 1. DiLella Louis Aikins Robert O. Richards David Ramsey Gair John V. Adkins Carl W. Garland Edward H. Dowling Leonard Altimari Gerald R. Rising Richard A. Garnish D. Hugh Albee Joseph Gattuso William J. Draksdorf lohn H. Anderson Golden D. Romney Joseph P. Gastel Neil 1. Alexander Robert P. Gehrig William F. Erbelding Theodore Auerbach Robert S. Rosborough Richard E. Hawes Richard M. Altman John S. Geil George T. Fitzelle James K. Avery Fred B. Rothell Robert J. Heier John H. Appel Raymond H. Gerber C. Benn Forsyth, Jr. Graydon Bailey John Joseph Ryan Howard F. Hoesterey Dean B. Arlidge Albert C. Giesselman Arthur R. Frackenpohl Curtis J. Ber~er Donald Sand Robert J. Kanka Thomas Armstrong James F. Glenn Warren P. Ganter Norman W. Blake Raymond A. Schneider Ronald A. Kraftschik Edward C. Atwater William E. Goetz Joshua N. Goldberg James W. Blumer Ross C. Scott, Jr. Leo J. Krolak Harold T. Auburn Arthur W. Gourley Charles F. Harrington Richard Bowllan Robert J. Scott Arthur D. Ladds Wilbur 'Eugene Ault David M. Gray Edward La Verne Harris William C. Britton Donald 1. Severe Carl F. Leavens John C. Baas Robert E. Greenfield

42 Marion Becher Francis Joan Bell Marden Joenne Piatt Murano Evelyn E. chutz Anne Mewart Frost Dorothy Ray Marengo Joan Davidson Stephens Shirley Gantz Garvin Doris Delong Morgan t~b~iie BG~:n~rOhlwiler Cynthia Dunbar tevenson Elli Wurzburger Gupp Margaret Neubrand Harriet Word Peters Jean Cason Strickholm Joan Asher Henley May Humm Payne Ann Hurlbut Prentice Carol Lewi Turner ~e world judges the right of a Helen Kleinhenz Hill Nancy Holcomb Peterson Katherine Gilmer Nancy Smith Ursprung Margaret Holmes Jules Ruth Maier Phelps St. Phillips Phyllis Owens Weber college to seek the cooperation of Hazel Uttley Lane Jane Tector Reilly Joan Frosell Schuyler Beatrice Peh-li Wei Thelma Bierwagen Lyman Willetta C. Riley Nancy B. Seward Diana Smith Wrench others in planning for the future Barbara Wickenden Marks Mary Ellen Russell Dorothy Thompson impson by the extent of the support ac­ Dori Urbach Melman Bertha Meisel Santirocco Helen Renick Welty Marilyn Adler Miller Nancy Knoblock imler Faith Wright 1956 corded to it by its own alumni. An Elizabeth Cockrell Minetree Eleanor Lindahl mith Dama A. Zefers Sally E. Miles Barbara Johnson Murphy Evelyn Karla Sokolowski Ctass Agent institution that cannot rally to its Marilyn Kehrig Nahabetian Joanne Niles Stoller Marilyn Rouse Abbey financial assistance the men and Amelia Lupe Owen Jane Gouverneur Ten Eyck 1955 Dorothy Doble Betler Betty Brownell Pitts Madeline Abbot Thomas Donna Linfoot Dewar Pauline Hughes Blossom women who know it best is in a Elizabeth Lingeman Popper Enis Adele Versaci Ctass Agent Elizabeth A. Brinkman Virginia Curran Shipman Mar-Le Maillian Wendt Miriam Seligman Ageloff Lucille Ann Bruce poor position to ask assistance from Frances Levin isson Catherine Yaeger Zukosky Mary Haskins Atkinson Carol A. Carpenter any others. What the alumni give Marjorie Allison Smith Helene Reiser Baskir Myra Somerville Carrier Mary E. Cone Snyder Mildred C. Bigelow Althea Milbank Cochrane is important; that they do give is Marte Burkhardt Sorel 1954 Pauline Pommerenke Anne Stevenson Coons ellie Kenien pits Sally Ann Slayton Braiman Ann Klefeker Doane indispensable. Anne Morgan Stadler Class Aj(ent Dorothy McCarthy Brennan Marylyn J. Ernest Martha Holcomb Van Zile Pri cilIa mith Armstrong Mary Schotland Castellion Christine Gratto CHARLES W. ELIOT Marion H. Weber Adair H. Bartholomew Edith E. Celette M. Patricia Hathaway Pot'mer President, Vera Spoor Wheten Bernice Jameson Belt Claire Kremer Chace Sally Smith Hercher Catherine M. Wilson Marion Bayer Caulkins Florence Sokolski Cox Anna Morlang Karrash Harvard University Anna Bater Young Sarah Johnson Cloughly Betty Denick Mary Dysart Kirchner Charlotte Bloom Cohen Joanna R. Donk Cynthia Grissom Letarte Ruth Richardson ColI ier Patricia Kraut Fleischer Marilyn J. Light 1953 Sally Joanne Crump Joan M. Fuller Jeanne Miller McIntosh Janet Bon Fedder Mary Healey Donnelly Nancy A. Gannon Mary Boat Miller Patricia Kelly Cusack Jane Radigan Me abb Ctass ARent Carol Catherine Dowd Abby Schlein Greenberg Barbara Ann Oakes Roberta Allbert Dayer Mary Louise Myers orah M'Gonigle Barcay Frances Rowe Dowling Ann Kelley Guiffre Gail Ann Pettit Carlena Matthews DeDeyn Beverly Ann Myers Jane Torr Bissell Patricia Gajewski Dreyfuss Sarah Hess ~~fi~i: ~~fe~r ~~hl~eter Gail Detgen Carol Ann Nichols Margaret Aikens Brady Dorothy Exley Erickson Ann Putnam Hetherington Shirley Abbott DeVries Ellen Louverna Older Emily Dye Cassebeer Joan Campanella Fama Betty Selkirk Hine Josephine M. Schramm Cynthia H. Down Norine Galo Orsini Carol Pufeles Cohen Mary Lou Doerflinger Farr Mary Lou Hinkel Veronica Norton Smith Roberta Gay Eisman Joyce Tolf Petz Carolyn A. Cramton Julie Ann Fay Ellen M. Joachim Ann Dalrymple Stanford Sandra Beckman Fitterer Jane Portman Phelps Barbara Bailey Credon Cornelia Kuhlman Fulton Vivian Horn Lafontaine Ann Leland Stewart Doris J. Gardner Beverly Gail Roberts hirley Winfield Doolittle Betty Leahy Goldstein Bernice Green Lange Sandra Taddune Sally Grimes Hahn Linda D. Robinson Joan Espen Dowling Madelyne Welshon Greaves Dale Goldsmith Lindstrom Livonia B. Westcott Suzzan E. Hawes Kay Hatton Ryder Ruth Fisher Mary Jane Mack Healy Patricia Pulver Loock Joan Fay Zabadal Gail D. Hitt Margaret Evans Scher Elizabeth Pious Graham Shirley Kurucz Horbatuck Carol St. Clair Lowe Marian Anne Jacobs Carol Smith Beverly Rebman Harlow Barbara Jane Jacoby M. Gail Hodgins Lucker 1957 Anne S. Kahl Toby Susswein hirley tam Heeks Phyllis Schwartz Kasdin Carolyn McCamey Joan E. Grant Eva 1. Kataja Judith Kantack Temperley Mary Henry Heinrich Elizabeth G. Kleiber McPherson Ctass Aj(ent Georgia Katz Grace Adele Vallier Joyce Marie Hines Helen Foley Knapp Joan Abel Moses Concetta Marie Angeli Barbara J. Keady Ruth VanLare Jose Betty Leone Hoffman Melpomeni Koukides Priscilla D. Nytch Jessica Angell Elizabeth Flora Klaver Joanne Mathes VanPatten Helen M. Kansas Natalie Frohman Leffert Blanche J. Peets P. Kathleen Bear Gail Thomson Klein Merle Weiss Florence C. Kille Gertrude Boslov Lieberman Jeanne Hamilton Rathjen Judith Elizabeth Benz Gwendolyn Smith Lansky Marian A. Werner Claire Forster Latham Carol A. Miller Miriam Sher Rogachefsky Marilyn G. Bickle Lawrence Putnam Leger Grace Belle White Anne Woodams Levering Winona Holmwood Terri Feinglass Ross Claire Frances Buckley Mary Williams McAmmond Edith Ann Wingate C. Joan Doyle Lieb Montgomery Julie Keyser Sanford Louise Carmen Burton Janet Anne McCraig Shirley Wolitzky Janet E. Maney Cynthia Esther Morse Dorothy H. Schaer ally May Child Mona Abramson McGurk Janet Marlyn Yahn

Arthur J. Grimaldi Eldon J. Renaud William R. Carlton John E. Rodwell Guildford L. Isherwood Hugh H. Breneman John G. Hart Marvin J. Renner Michael M. Roiger David T. Kearns James W. Brennan Robert E. Heath Paul E. Richardson ~~~:~t ~e C~~:~{do Arthur H. Rosen Donald B. Killaby John W. Bru~ler Ralph H. Henty Albert E. Rosenbauer Jack R. Caulkins Robert C. Saintey Thomas R. Knapp Lyle G. Bunv1l1e Marvin WI. Herrick Richard G. Ross W. Bromley Clarke Francis J. Santini David 1. Kuehne Peter Carrillo Rolla B. Hill Nicholas Santoro Franklin Paul Cobb Arthur K. Satz Richard M. Lieb Robert A. Charron Thomas E. Hoffman James B. Savage Charles G. Cochrane Roy D. Seifert Lester H. MacLeod Paul D. Coleman A. Donald Hopkins James F. Scheible Peter Cohen Miles H. Sigler Robert N. McFadden Jules Cohen Robert 1. Hopkins Truman G. Searle Angelo A. Costanza Stanley T. Smith Otto Muller-Girard Walter A. Connolly Kenneth A. Hubel Paul W. Seely Robert F. Cunningham Robert 1. Steinberg Norman P. Neureiter Robert F. Deprez J. S. Hursh George B. Seligman Milton P. Darcy Donald E. Stocking Linus J. O'Connell Robert S. Dewar Thomas C. Iaia Harry Shrier R. Bruce Davey Berge Tatian C. Diehl Ott Arnold J. Dixon William C. Ingersoll Thomas F. Siebert William H. Dean Russell A. Temple George E. Owen John F. Erbland Harold N. Johnson Charles D. Smith John C. DeMocker Brent M. VanVleet Donald H. Painting David M. Erickson Ray C. Johnson Donald 1. Smith Lawrence R. DeVitis 1. Burrows Vought Richard C. Payne Joseph A. Federico R. H. Johnson Frank G. Smith John M. Donohue, Jr. Donald R. Whitney James T. Pitts Rufus E. Fulreader Ru sell D. Johnson, Jr. Howard O. Smith, Jr. William H. Dumbaugh, Jr. Bruce R. Williams James R. Randolph Edward W. Garfield Richard F. Kaiser Marvin 1. Smith Richard 1. Dunham Charles T. Willis Robert H. Randolph Peter ]. Genga Harold Kaplan Irving Starr Robert W. Erb Donald W. Winters William R. Rennagel Gordon R. Griffin John R. Keagle Charles W. Statt Harold 1. Esterman Warren H. Woerner Earl A. Richardson Raymond J. Hasenauer, Jr. Clement W. Knight W. J. Stuber Glenn C. Fowler Frank E. Wood 1. Carl Romer Donald R. Hauler Thomas R. Koszalka William E. 'Sweetman Edward E. Gartland William R. Young Edgar Rummier Louis Hawes, Jr. William Kotary Erick N. Swenson Hugh 1. Garvin Dean R. Youngman Willard A. Sanscrainte Wilbert G. Huch tephen Kowba Gabriel Tiberio David H. Geschwind Frank S. Zahniser Raymond A. Santirocco William D. Hulbert Justin E. Lacy, Jr. Marvin Trott Peter E. Graf John F. Schroth, Jr. Mark D. Hull Daniel G. Lanni Gale E. Tymeson Robert E. Grammer Burton G. Schuster John P. Hummel William A. Leet Charles H. Wadhams, Jr. Robert G. Greenler 1952 Carl F. Schwind Donald F. Istvan Eugene E. Leidecker Alfred D. Heggi, Jr. Eugene J. Welch William D. Bare David C. Seelbinder Peter A. Jensen David A. Leidig John M. Wermuth Richard J. Helmkamp Henry E. Snyder William E. Kriegsman James G. Lennox Lawrence F. Witherow Robert W. Hendricks Class Agent David B. Strong Eugene C. Letter Thomas F. Lodato Robert J. Worbois William K. Heron A. Roy Auchinachie, Jr. Lee Sylvester Lloyd H. Leve Charles E. Lorson Robert G. Yeager Richard H. Hoeffel Joseph T. Bagnara Vincent A. Tacci Mark M. Lewis Abraham Manevitz Charles E. Hogan Edwin D. Becker Roger A. Thompson James W. Lotocki Thomas W. Mapp Frank H. Howd Herbert A. Bell John B. Turner, Jr. Donald K. McKay Guido V. Marinetti 1951 Frederick G. Howland Merrill R. Benson Jack E. Ursprung Henry Metzger Donald P. Marston F. Kay Huntington Malcolm S. Black, Jr. David D. Wallace Donald Bleier Alan M. Bloomfield ~~glte~~r~N~fllmery William J. Martz Class Aj(ent Elliot F. Jaquith, Jr. Richard 1. Weis Donald W. McClellan R. Tenney Johnson James J. Borror Stanley 1. Wiener Henry T. Oskamp George 1. McKelvey Robert O. Angell Arthur G. Keegan Arnold K. Brenman Joseph 1. Williams, Jr. Joseph S. Pagano Robert G. Metzger James E. Anthony Harold C. Kellogg, Jr. Robert P. Burbank Robert J. Wilson Tohn D. Parkes Howard J. Meyer Milford P. Apetz Jay T. Last orman A. Burgess Jerome J. Zukosky luergen N. Peters Louis H. Meyer Richard W. Appel Ralph W. Leurgans Lloyd Burlingham Eugene P. Phelps Roger D. Moore Donald F. Belt George A. Lombart. Jr. Michael ]. Buzawa George A. Piatt Thomas D. Mullen Guy B. Bennett David MacKenzie D. Bruce Cloughly Gillis G. Pratt, Jr. Anthony J. Nardone William F. Beveridge Gilbert D. Mal'erk Richard G. Cornell 1953 Ray E. Rahn Robert B. Ogden Leonard J. Biracree John R. McGonigle Robley E. Curtice, Jr. Heinz C. Altmann Henry Rie Donald J. Parker George W. Bitler Charles T. Meadow William E. Cusack, Jr. Murray 1. Rosenthal Theodore Pella James O. Blanton Norman A. Miles John A. Dietz Class Agent Philip J. SanFillipo Edward T. Pesch Herbert S. Block Raymond F. Newell, Jr. Warren H. Dillenbeck Alan David Adler Roger E. Schwingle Donald E. Pickett Wilson D. Bond Harvey M. Nusbaum Willard F. Emmons Theodore Baldino, Jr. William E. Secor William M. Pierson, Jr. Allan J. Braff William T. O'Brien Philip K. Fitzsimmons Kenneth Baron George R. Simpson Robert Polumbaum Norman Brill Frank B. Ozmun Robert P. Frankenthal Henry H. Beckler Graham Wood Smith Arthur Principe Edward 1. Bronstien Donald A. Parry Andrew J. Graham John C. Bennett Charles 1. Stephens William U. Pulsifer Donald B. Brown, Donald W. Pearson Robert E. Grochau Seymour Berger Ernest R. Stettner William D. Randtke Harold A. C. Bumpus Constantine F. Philips Ernest 1. Happold Noel A. Blackwell Thomas E. Stetz Herbert F. Rapp William E. Burgess William C. Piarulle A, Roger Hauck Kent A. Blakeslee, Jr. T. Stacy Stevens John 1. Remington John J. Callahan Robert H. Quade Robert E. Heeks Paul S. Brady Wolcott E. Stewart

43 Memorial ((] ift Eastman

Contributor In Memory of LEADING CLASSES IN Mary heldon MacArthur } Janet Strong Jameson Henry Strong-1854 EACH DECADE Theodore Sheldon (Based on Participation) Maude Nilson Crandall Trafton M. Crandall-1905 Nellie G. Knapp Wheeler Allen-19i2 1924 33 1936 24 Esther Henckell Ratcliffe ! 1945 25 Fred A. Ratcliffe 1949 18 Esther Hale Saunders Katherine Van de Carr-1919 Aurelia Hillman Sanders Norman A. Lempert! Esther Hale Saunders Donald W. Gilbert-1921 Ruth Martha Me ally Esther Henckell Ratcliffe 1923-1924 Doris Davison Patek . Dorothy Pund Allen Esther Pierce Fred A. Ratcliffe Decade Chairman Margaret Brucker Platzer Esther Levering MacMullin Belle Sernoffsky Gitelma n S. Paul ReJin } Marion Henckell Levering-1919 ClaSJ Agent Charles Siverson Marion Levering Hubbard Hazel Miles Hughes Charles Stickney Alfred O. Ginkel .T. Richard Long Ernestine M. Klinzing Genevieve Falk Surasky Catherine Klem Martin Carlton Wagner Helen Auringer Reis Florence Alexander Gratia Beaumont Woods Jean Conner Ferris Schoenegge Elizabeth Wood Wyman Ruth Northrup Tibbs Nancy Farnum O'Dea 1931 Lucille Allen Dewey Mary Jean Finnegan-1947 1925 Doris Davison Patek Dorothy Cochran Shaw Catherine Rooney McDermott Decade Chairman Margaret Kall Gugel ClaSJ Agent Florence Kovel Polsky Helen Wilson Ferris Class Agent Margaret Greene Kindig Herbert Inch R. Tanner Albert Shirley Starn Heeks Harriet Sauer Ott Lorena Austin Wallace A. Van Lier Helen Brandt Bloom Carol Farnum Gavett Geoffrey Broughton Helen Schatvet Erlandson James Harper Rebecca H. Kakinuma 1926 Louise Leonard Hedges Ruth Walker White MllI~ery Alter Hunt ClaSJ Agent PhilIp D. Kaufman Reginald Cory Olivia Martin Kaufman Adelaide Fish Cumming Adelaide Hooker Marquand Marion Banghart Drew Lucille Youn~ Marshall Alice Wollston Fitch Charles R. Nicholls Thomas G. Shannon Elizabeth Hazeltine Gibaud Helen Munger Oakland Men's Division John E. Shantz 1957 Lucille Thompson Gruntler Allen Rogers Douglas A. Smith Robert E. Mates Mary C. Keefe Margaret C. Tolson Robert L. Stern Catherine Rooney McDermott ClaSJ Agent 1932 Melvin S. Stiles 1955 John E. Stoller Marian Hendershot Earl B. Stroup James E. Strom Jack G. Aginsky Winebrenner Ruth Jeffery Dewart Roger S. Welton Robert F. Horn William C. Tapley Norman D. Anderson Louise R. Young Class Agent Donald P. Wichman Class Agent Stephen R. Taub Charles B. Andrus Frances Dunlap Alterman Frederick W. Tausch 1927 Jane A. Cowell Peter Avakian Everett S. Ascher Helen Hagood VandeVate George F. Towne Ralph P. Barker Nathan Emmanuel Charles A. Beeman Schuyler C. Townson Class Agent Ruth Zimmer Humby 1954 Elmer L. Bergstraser John C. Urbach Leslie S. Blicher Gertrude Broadwell Briggs J. Stanley King Karl Berkelman William H. Braam Jane Mather Butterfield ClaSJ Agent Committee C. Richard VanNeil Hermann R. Maier Arthur M. Bernhang James R. VanOstrand R. Craig Brown Margaret I. Fitzmaurice Martha Smith Patrick G. Marshall Abbey Clifford H. Block Robert G. Wiltsey Stanford Z. Burday Rose McChesney Larrison Marjorie Maddicks Pococke Donald C. Anderson Robert A. Burch Nathaniel Wisch Kim J. Calvin Kathryn Makin Loeffler Laura Putnam Rein James A. Armstrong Francis C. Cacciola Ronald J. Wyatt John R. Coleman Clara Milem Lytle Lillian Friedman Rosenberg John F Atkinson James D. Chace William D. Yule Edward W. Doane Ralph H. Robbins MacKenzie L. Smith David K. Catlin S. Anthony DeDeyn Justin E. Doyle Bertha Steinbeck Theodore D. Vosburgh Thomas A. Detro Benjamin S. DeYoung Atta Bartlett Tuites Frederick K. Duell Robert F. Edgerton William F. Deverell I. Carrie Baird Waters 1933 Lee 1. Edwards 1956 Solon Finkelstein Edward N. Waters Robert J. Drexler Robert R. Freeman Arline Piper Putnam William G. Dunn Frank W. Eleder Robert A. Ghedi Theodora Youtchas Class Agent David W. Epp Anton A. Fuierer George H. Eastman ClaSJ Agent Elizabeth Root Cosad Hugh W. Ernisse Joseph R. Gerbasi Donald R. Gardner 1928 Hazel Sampson Duncan S. David Farr John G. Gleichauf Andrew L. Ageloff James D. Greenfield Dorothy Bingham Haupt Marie Erhart Francis R. Grebe James P. Goldfrank Fred W. Armbruster Thomas E. Guerdat Class Agent Florence Reiter Flanders Gerald M. Greenberg George D. Goodrich William L. Baker Donald N. Hadley Ella Mason Ahearn Eleanor Strong Jones Rainer V. Guggenheim Seymour B. Goren Marvin L. Becker Frederic A. Herbst Dorothy Pund Allen Anna Wright Kosmaler James T. Haggerty Frederick W. Hahn Norman J. Blum William L. Holland Mildred Elgin Bumphrey Virginia Harding Lichty Robert B. Hayes John D. Harper John Donaldson Richard E. Hughs Grayce Laube Cameron Carol Keppel Rogers John 1. Healey D. Michael Harvey Robert S. Fraser Raphael G. Jacobs Dorys Gould Deverian Frank W. Hetherington William G. Hine Roger B. Friedlander Marion Gillette Laird 1934 James B. Hilbert Robert C. Kelly Ian T. Hill Marvin W. Gettner William J. Koepplin Margaret Sisson Larsson Catherine E. Williams David . Holt William C. Jennings Thomas L. Gibbbns Edna McLaughlin Class A~ent Jack R. Kirchner Paul Kenyon William C. Goodlett Donald U. Kreppein Henry F. Osborne Ruth E. Carroll Robert P. Levinson James E. Kincaid Albert M. Gordon Harry Kroger Elvera Wonderlich Ruth Thompson Colman Donald E. Liebers John J. Klein John W. Holland Richard R. Leger Claire Deene Eugene F. Lilly Thomas W. Koch Jack W. Howitt David Michael Levey 1929 Ruby Case Delong Eric T. Lincke Leslie R. Koval Ralph H. Lane Hinrich D. R. Martens Gertrude Crowell Strayer Crystal Ewing Robert E. Mathieu George J. Landau Richard W. Leavitt James A. Madin ClaSJ Agent Doris Wuensch Grygo Bruce R. McAvoy Carl Lauter Richard D. Leonard James A. Marvin Carol Frank Clement Jessie Boyd Harman Edward G. Mehrhof Arnold Lederman Seymour Lerner Douglas Menzie Esther Cleveland Ruth Simpson Hartwell Daniel S. Mickel John H. Letarte Arnold L. Lisio Jessica Requa Cole Abigail Kursheedt Hoffman I. Donald H. Meyer Malcolm A. Nanes Harold Machonkin Gerald Lucovsky Edward Morrison Jennie Cossitt Kent W. Kennan Emmanuel C. Paxhia {Vim~mPE.MM~~ison John T. Lurcott David N. Muirhead Ruth Davis Davies W. Thomas Marrocco Walter 1. Pinsker Donald R. Messina V. Ehrhardt Follette Doris Schaefer Miller Robert W. Place ~~sJfr~c:'~p~l;~~sn Charles A. Morrison Robert E. Mumford Elizabeth Hutchinson Grover Frances Alexander Miller Richard A. Rampson Thomas M. Older Willard B. Olmstead Ruby Wilder Harding A. Viola Peterson George A. Reynolds Bruce H. Moses William E. Powell John R. Packard Raymond J. Hasenauer Ruth Fix Posner James L. Roth Hiram Paley William Power . Mark G. Perlroth Gladys Metcalf Leventon C. Benjamin Schammell James J. Saturno Donald E. Paul Edward A. Record John W. Sewell Harriet Harris McCulloch Aaron Solomon Marvin Scher C. W. Brian Peoples Mathew Rimmer Mark Sharnoff Marie Whiddit Remick Margaret Sanders Stallman Ira H. Schulman Stuart F. Platt Richard A. Ryder Joseph D. Silverberg Grace T. Towsley Jane Gillman Ticknor Morton Shulman Samuel Rosenzweig David F. Sahler Gordon H. Spencer Frederick L. Tooley Harold W. Sobel Donald C. Ross Carl M.· Sheusi Morton A. Tanenbaum 1930 Richard G. Stellwagen Peter D. Russell Carl E. Silver Archibald A. Temperley Donald F. White 1935 Donald C. Stewart Jonathan L. Steepee Class Agent Millard B. Taylor John M. Strong Edward D. Russell Robert C. Taylor Donald R. Tickner Edward R. VanPatten Lois Bell Benedict Class Agent Paul H. Tanner Walter J. Rybacki William C. Vail Emeline Wintermute Crum Roger C. Boardman Robert L. Walker Albert B. Schultz Alan Ward Marjorie Gillette Katherine Green Condon Robert W. Warren William J. Scouler ~~be~' ~~n~:~N1:1 Charles D. Whittier Marie C. Harper Vir~inia Gustafson Fisher Albert C. Weber Robert B. Segal Irwin Wa.sman Donald Wiig Eric Howard Lewis Benjamin Garry Donald D. Wilson Rene Sevigney William J. Wiithlin harles W. Zimmerlein Eleanor Manning Thelma May Kenison

44 Adlyn Kremer Siller Philip M. Slates 1950 . Bonita Grant Staples Arthur and Mary Kroll Carl M. Steubing Culver John T. Thomas Class Agents chool of Music Francis Tursi John M. Adams Minna Keel Chandler Walter S. Hartley 1948 Melba Potter Palmer Anastasia Jempelis Albert J. Saurini Class Agent Carol Morse Van Hoesen Robin Allardice Karl D. Van Hoesen Barbara Matz Bliss Dorothy Kline Wingate Joan Compton Bonner Oliver' J. Yost Mary Matteson Brown Louise Tyre Escott 1951 Dorothy Merriam Happel Giles F. Hobin Bruce R. Holcomb Class Agent Lily Roberts Ireland Jo Anne Harvey Anderson Edward J. Krolick Ralph E. Bigelow Bettye Maxwell Krolick Robert Bolger Alice Pillischer Kujala Frank J. Cipola Walfrid Kujala Angelo Frascarelli Mary Watson LeBlanc Lilajane Hiatt Frascarelli Charlotte Black Marty Kathleen Whyte Henry Gretchen E. Rhoads Igor Hudadoff Bernice Fieldman Ring Donald Knaub Nancy Allen Shackelford Charlotte Seifert Knaub Guelda Kirkwood Sherman Dorothy Housel Regis Jean Stutzman Slates Mary Wilford Shelton Joanne Patton Steubing Annette B. Smith Anita paulding Swan Gloria Cammorota tampalia Waldo E. Woodworth Gay Tapley Margaret tephens Zimmerman 1952 Clair W. VanAusdall 1949 Class Agent Sally Hagaman Avery James S. Anderson DOROTHY CODNER FENNELL, '36E FREDERICK FENNELL, '37E Decade Chairman Carolyn 1. Bunting Karolyn Sage Betts Ina Burlingham Forbes Co-Chairman, Eastman School of Music Division Co-Chairman, Eastman School of Music Division ClaJS Agent Margaret Van Ringelesteyn Evelyn Aultfather Adams Grainer Paul R. Allen Mary K. Green David Baumgartner .John M. Heard Lillian Rubin Biben Joseph B. Henry Virginia M. Brosius Janice Johnson Christine Kamola Krasz Mildred Banasik 1942 1945 Joyce Elmiger Denhoff Robert W. Montgomery Janet tahl McConnell Rosario Celentano Eleanor Schwarm Detroy William W. Preucil Marian Wolfe Ming Barbara Graff Cutler Class Agent-Committee Class Agent-Committee Frazer J. Eggert William Arrowsmith Donald D. Snow Lucille Jensen Tough Peggy Kennedy Farish Lois Hathaway Amsbury Audrey J. Hach William O. Stamm 1936 Muriel Fouts Norma Holmes Auchter Eleanor Wright Batjer Allegra Turner Haefner Yvonne Porter Tolivar Wallace P. Gause Jacob D. Avshalomoff Joyce Wimpenny Bennett Edward J. Jantschi Rudolph Von Unruh, Jr. Robert Sprankle Frank Henck Jack Beeson Mildred Carruth Justine Cleary Johnston Class Agent Robert 1. Hull Robert S. Dike Katherine Dryer Fitzpatrick Jeanette Walkinshaw 1953 Arthur Austin Elizabeth L .Jones Dorothy Ornest Feldman Jean Halbing Hay J. ormand LeBlanc Margaret DeMond Beckwith Margaret Waterlow Morton Violet L. Fraser Elizabeth Stiles Leffingwell Rox. L. Lee Constance Perloff Green Eleanor Knight Colwell Earl George Mueller Frank J. Gerzina Zelda Goodman Manacher Mrs. Rox. L. Lee ClaJS Agent Eugene A. Dimond Elizabeth Banta Packard Ernest Gloe Calixto O. Marques Joanne Gill Makris Margaret Schiemann Brower louise Snyder Edgar Angelina Macri Parnall John D. Haldane Muriel Phillips McCarl Walter C. Marquardt Rudolph V. DiFelice Dorothy Codner Fennell Theodore Petersen E. Earnest Harrison Peter Mennin Byron M. McCulloh Grace Butiste Hepburn Ruth Brigham Gibson Robert A. Rosevear Nelson M. Hauenstein Dorothy Pennington Robert E. Moran Barbara Miller Margolis Charles Gigante Ruth Solomon Salzman Martin C. Heylman Shirley Mowry Reichenberg Clara Nardi Thomas V. Miller Herbert Harp Barbara Todd Sprenkle Fred Daniel Hinger Phyllis Alwin Sanders Jean Getchell Peterkor Sally Lou Jarvis Norem Lois Van Vechten Harp Walter Westafer Elizabeth Enright Kocher Yolanda Giuflrida John M. Racz Richard F. Norem Margaret E. Hondelink Madelyn Logan Laugesen Sauciunac G. Jane Saunders Ray Frank W. Pinkerton Herald Jones 1940 Bonnie Tramp Moeller Helen Pearson Schweizer Robert E. Restemyer g~~~l~ ridw~~aestevens Erna Gilcher MacArthur Florence Palatsky William Sprigg Roy S. Thrall LeRoy Morlock Roy E. Thrall Shirley Cohen Pearlman Glennis Metz Stout Kathryn Leh Woodworth Rachel E. Ewing Donald W. Morton Decade Chairman Evelyn Paperny Rothstein Ruth Wadsworth Sullivan J. Wilkinson Mueller Class Agent-Committee Joanne Waite Scott Miriam Wagenschein Gardner Read Ruth Dinger Barnard Wilbur Sheridan Claire McLamore Watson Kay Kettering Reid Margaret Stalder Beadling Robert H. Willoughby Jane Coleman Welch Hugh Robertson Kin~ Turnbull Bradburn Janet DeGroote White Janina Gorecka Robinson LouIse Vicary Curtze 1943 Mary Therese \Vood Phyllis Kershaw apienza Leon Dallin Milton Steinhardt Eugene DeWitte Anthony V. Bruno Mildred Stebbins Turney Harriet Conant Dearden ClaJS Agent 1946 G. Elizabeth Ward Arlene Black Feyder Carl Baumbach Frank M. Hruby Arthur J. Bazeley Dorothy Purdy Amarandos 1937 John L. Kinyon Dorothy Jones Coutant ClaJS Agent Gladys M. Rossdeutscher Arthur J. Kufel Edward H. Easley Helen Woolston Anderson ClaJS Agent Irene Schano Maricle Margaret Lafferty Gilbert Edwin R. Betts Christine Colley Ahrendt Mildred Reitz Elizabeth Hewitt Frank A. Clement John Celentano Lester E. Remsen Louise H. Johnson Evelyn Meyers Currie Frederick Fennell Madelyn Robb Harvey Krasney Gloria Runge Gebhard Robert P. Giddings Milton Sandel Constance Main Muriel Blumberg Donald Smith Janeth Wharry McGreal Gundersheimer ~~;h~ertin~A~it~ ~~fI~~an Barbara Shattuck Tellier Inez L. Nease Newton Hoffman Albert McConnell Mary Reed Walker Betty Snyder pfabe Anastasia Jempelis athalie Coward Snow Sarah Simons Williamson Janet Remington Jo Ann Lansberry Theodore C. tapleton William E. Whybrew Robert W. Mols Bernhardt Tiede Rayburn B. Wright Mary Gardner Pardee Mary Wilda Tinsley 1941 -Dorothy M. Ziegler Mary Lou McVey Pogue Prescott Whitney Blair Cosman Mary Mitchell Raper Frederick I. Woolston Class Agent 1944 Norma Frisch Rosenbloom Ann Watkins Shepherd 1938 Beatrice Buck Class Agent-Committee Jane Albright Solomon Dorothy Dahlberg Cordwell Vincent Armand Ellen McCullough \'

45 Doris Nicol Gaver Eastman School Barbara J. Grenoble Mary Ann Wix Hargrave Priscilla Potter Hilbert tanley E. Easter Barbara Ann Knipper 1954 Georgetta F. Eberl Eleanor Konzer Lindboe Catherine McFadden Graduate Judith Corwin Engberg Anne Bowditch Ogden Dunning Samuel J. Fricano Gordon Benes Peters Class Agent Doris Gazda Dorothy Jean Pozniko Franklin Fitch Butler Isabel H. Higgs Priscilla Jean Riley 1905 Dorothea Michelson DeZafra Marvin 1. Davis Jon E. Engberg Thomas D. Hohstadt Barbara W. Tressler Agnes McManus Farwell Douglas H. Ewing Ruth Dennis Burritt Beatrice Howard Hall Marie Finn Haas Anna Gerotheau Gallos Linda C. Johnston Elizabeth Twaddell C. W. Watkeys William D. Gaver John Paul Krance, Je. Mary Jo Trevor Urbach Willis T. Jensen Morris Hamburg Donald Ross Hunsberger Josef A. Orosz, Je. Frances Kersner Robert E. Hopkins Frances Roberts Miller Catherine Dufford Paulu 1907 Allen L. King Stanley V. Levey Daniel J. Patrylak Barbara Donaldson Petri Edgar J. Fisher Ralph H. Lewis Donald F. McPherson Doris Bogen Preucil Vienna M. Prioletti 1957 Frank H. Lines Karl H. Meng Donald F. Zale Kazmera C. Schenk Phyllis M. Rochow 1908 Marion R. Meyers Robert F. Metzdorf Donna Geis Zale Walter . Meyers Florence Briggs Robin Ralph E. Pike i~~asB~f:~i~ano George W. Sawdey Bessie W. tanford John T. Garvey 1909 John R. Turner Leonard Weisler 1955 1956 Helen Zorsch White Helen Scott Wight ydney P. Hodkinson Mary C. Gillette Betsy Fincke Stevens Gladys Levy Kanack Virginia K. Kellogg Class Agent Class Agent Virginia Wieland Mast 1934 1940 Betty lou Child Burge Ronald T. Bishop Barbara Walpert Pickus 1911 Doris M. Adkins Mary A. Moulthrop Paul W. Aradine x~~i~e~~a::e1hG~u~d rkey Alberta Tupper Aradine Charles W. Gould 1912 Chester F. Burmaster J. Lawrence Hill, Jr. Raymond C. Keople Mildred R. Burton Margaret E. Hondel ink Harry W. Cleveland Willard H. Janneck 1913 Weld Conley Elizabeth Scheible Killip Ruth Jennings Hodge Helen Eberle Marion 1. Ludwig Ernest little Clyde M. Gridley William C. MacQuown Dorothy Griffith Milton V. Pullen 1914 Janice B. Harrington John J. Reed EastJITffi(811[1l Esther H. Holyer Edith Barker wigart G. Earl Rich Pearl Whited Howland Walter A. Schmitt 1. Foster Wood Marian Lucius Everett le Roy Timm Eugene J. Selhorst Dorothy O. Tozier 1928 William Sprigg 1915 Ralph W. Martin Robert F. Weller Herbert Inch 1944 Carl M. Steubing Arnold Rubenfeld Edward N. Waters Muriel Day Dorothy Cripps Salo 1941 Norma Holmes Auchter Marguerite Zappoth Henry H. Keef Paul A. Stewart 1930 Charlotte Stevenson Burgess Whybrew Leo P. Redding Herbert E. Thompson LeRoy W. Apker Jane Mather Butterfield John W. Woldt Elizabeth Turner Anthony J. Betten Jennie Cossitt Erna Gilcher MacArthur Lillian Trombley Brooks 1951 1918 Mary Lusk Bruce 1931 1945 Jean M. Abramson Gordon H. Gliddon 1935 Dorothy B. Champney Adelaide Hooker Marquand Margaret Bussell Edwin R. Betts Anna 1. Ball Bertha Peterson Cory Genevieve Falk urasky Elizabeth Enright Kocher Kurt Frederick 1919 David B. Brady Gerhard Dessauer Peter Mennin Charles Gigante Edna M. Haggith Charles H. Carver Robert Henry Dicke 1932 Evelyn Paperny Rothstein Arvilla Terrell Harrold Johanna Ramsbeck Kall Lewis D. Conta Lester B. Foreman George E. Troup Eleanor S. Leek Smith Walter S. Hartley Doris E. Crawford George M. Gantz 1933 Ward 1. Woodbury Patricia Ann James 1920 Charles W. Deane Robert J. Grabenstetter Charles S. Kent Daniel 1. Hint Robert Edward DeRight James Harper Charles R. Nicholls Edward J. Krolick Richard J. Fox Louise Hendryx Ruth Zimmerman Steese 1946 Dorothy Edwards Fraser Karl Ahrendt Byron M. McCulloh 1921 Laurence C. Liberatore Ara Zerounian Alan M. Glover Ethel Davis Roberts 1935 Christine Colley Ahrendt Rena tebbins raig Emmanuel Goldberg Alan J. Cope Lorraine O. Smith Florence Reiter Flanders 1952 Alfred James Henderson Mildred Jenkins Treumann Wallace A. Van Lier Evelyn De Long 1922 Jeannette C. Hoefler Peggy Kennedy Farish Wilma Reid Cipolla Floyd S. Updyke Giovannina De Blasiis Dwight E. Lee Charles W. Joyce Helen Van Zile Wojnowski 1936 John D. Haldane Robert F. Metzdorf Haven B. Hasel Nancy Jane Draper Azariah B. Sias Kent W. Kennan Lilajane Hiatt Frascarelli Edward W. ~pry Harold S. Rand Margaret C. Tolson P. Holloway Newsome Edward J. Rosenberg 1942 Dorothy Pennington H. Merrills Lewis Cyril J. taud Ruth T. \'{fatanabe Robert J. Trayhern Wj]]iam B. Daly 1937 Phyllis Alwin Sanders 1923 Dorothy S. Truesdale V. Ethan Davis Gardner Read 1953 DeMille 1. Wallace Mary Anderson Gazley 1947 Earl C. Karker Dorothy B. Smith Milton Steinhardt Ralph E. Bigelow Maurice A. Wilder Chester M. White Theodore D. Vosburgh Violet 1. Fraser Angelo Frascarelli Elizabeth Dunbar Wright 1938 Michael A. Galasso Walter S. Hartley 1936 1943 Lee Hardy Barbara Ferrell Hill 1924 Paul W. Aradine Rose C. Engelman Albert T. Luper Rosa Drake Julstrom Dorothy 1. Johnson Virginia Hoyt Hammond Florence Bradstreet Cooksley Frances Clark Beard 1939 Ruth C. Lakeway Blythe Owen Catherine A. Forster Jerome J. Howland Louis G. Lane Annette B. Smith Elmer F. Lalonde Regina K. Kennedy Loren Crawford Robert W. Mols Austin H. Truitt 1925 Laurence C. Liberatore Helen Rydquest Moseley Frederick Fennell Inez 1. Nease William E. Whybrew Adair Wellington Karl H. Meng Mildred Lintner Potter Dorothy Codner Fennell Mary Mitchell Raper Bartholomew Robert W. Sabin Anna Marie Rauber Charles S. Kent Wilbur Sheridan 1954 Charles A. Morrison Benjamin T. Simmons James R. Vaughan, Jr. lucille Young Marshall Forrest D. Stoll Virginia M. Brosius Irene Wray Swanton Dorothy Voss Marion Wolfe Ming William E. Whybrew Wallace R. Gray 1926 Lawrence E. Unger Herbert F. York Blaise Montandon Mary Katherine Green Ethel 1. French Leonard Weisler Gertrude Pierce Wolpert 1948 Edward J. Jantschi Elvera Wonderlich 1944 Eugene A. Barnard Gerald R. Meier 1927 1937 Isabel H. Dill Charles O. Bowers Thomas V. Mj]]er Marjorie Brownell Boulls E. Paul Dean Ronald C. Heidenreich 1940 Margaret Bickler Duncan John D. White Robert M. Gordon, Sr. lone Hinman Buyse Ethel May Dunn Peter J. Petry Edward H. Easley Ward 1. Woodbury Frances Angevine Keef Mark R. Rosenzweig Mary Beeson Ellison Crystal Ewing ~th~fIL. ~~e~dting Lawrence A. Hanley 1955 Phyllis Weyer Garriss 1928 Paul G. Gilbert Raymond J. Hasenauer Anastasia Jempelis Roderick N. McKay Margaret E. Butterfield 1945 W. Thomas Marrocco Albert Gordon Hill Ann Logan Dickinson Louise H. Johnson Allen 1. King Alice McElroy Procter Peter Labella, Jr. 1956 1929 Anne Slater Dunlap Carlton Wagner Udell B. Stone Betty Stein George Peter Mennin D. Hugh Albee Dorothy Wellington McIlroy William C. Walzer Leon Raper Ruth McPherson Allen Sabra Twitchell Harris 1941 Benjamin Scammell Edwin C. Yaw Kathryn Parker Harvey Martin C. Burton David R. Burge 1930 Philip M. Slates Jon E. Engberg J. Ruth Armstrong 1938 Robert E. Hopkins Frances J. Buxton Ruth Northrup Tibbs Lewis V. McCarty John Celentano Marion Ida Hackbarth Clara Husted Present Robert V. Adair Everett 1. Timm Thomas D. Hohstadt Chester M. White Frances M. ewton Blair P. Cosman Francis Tursi Helen C. Addicott Ruth Wunder Philipp leon Dallin J. Normand LeBlanc 1931 Janette Wilson Atkinson Eleanor Martin VanCassele. Donald 1. Engle 1949 Melvin B. Lucas John O. Benz Frank M. Hruby Roderick N. McKay Bernard H. Dollen Victor S. Chambers 1946 Robert 1. Hull Dennis Andal M. Zimmerman Oppelt Horace J. Grover Dorothy Houck Cox . Herbert Inch Lester P. Chappell William W. Preucil Helen Hincher Hood Milton F. Cummings Ruth Keene Forsyth Evelyn Goddard Watterson John G. Detroy Evangeline 1. Rimbach Gifford P. Orwen William 1. Grossman Eileen Anna Murphy Arthur R. Frackenpohl Donald V. Rupert Leo J. Tanghe Alfred A. Johns Mildred Newhall 1942 Elizabeth Artman Hagenah Robert W. Sherman Grace McCarthy Knitter Dorothy Brown Redding Dorothy Dahlberg Cordwell Mary E. Malcolm Donald D. Snow 1932 Herbert A: Norton Frank A. aunders Jeanne Shieber Milder W. S. Wright North Oliver J. Yost Joseph Anderson Marguerite Smith Robertson Clifford E. Swartz William F. Osseck Mary Mitchell Raper Robert H. Bechtold Harvey J. St. Helens Robert J. Thompson, Jr. Frances Newman Thiel John T. Thomas 1957 Robert E. DeRight Robert E. Schellberg Hendrick C. VanNess Austin H. Truitt Martin C. Burton Alan M. Glover Mary A. Sheehan Jane Sylliaasen Will 1950 Frank J. Cipolla Norman M. Howden Edward O. Stephany 1947 Ella DeLos Reyes Kurt Frederick Henry A. Imus Robert F. Walters James E. Beach 1943 John H. Diercks Mary Ann Wix Hargrave Vernon 1. Parks Nils Y. Wessel Vernon A. Breitenbach Herbert Harp Walfrid Kujala Warren H. Lengel Walter J. E. Schiebel Margaret R. Wright Lowell T. Burke lois Van Vechten Harp Mary Fisher Landrum Robert Lloyd Oppelt Clotilda M. Cerasani Walter Kob Mary Blake Leonard Dorothy Jean Pozniko 1933 1939 Robert E. Curtis Sylvia M. Muehling Robert E. Restemyer Paul Andrew Tarabek Harold E. Akerly Casper J. Aronson William L. Engan Robert A. Rosevear Gretchen E. Rhoads H. Robert Williams Warren W. Allen Rooert F. Barry Arnold 1. Form

46 1954 Theodore Auerbach E. Karl Bastress, ] r. '8 cho Joan Butmore Freitas 01 Frances Seeger Green School of Robert E. Heeks Clarence G. Heininger, ]r. Lee Jay Geismar 1950 Arthur H. Herz William P. Hagenbach Ray C. Johnson Wilbur K. Hartman H. Curtis Barber Thomas R. Knapp Roy E. Hunt Frank A. Clement Hazel Hilfiker Lalonde Nursing Elwyn M. Montfort Norma Crittenden Victor G. Laties Robert H. Plass Irmabeth Good Dittmer Ernest C. Manske Elizabeth Schleyer Elizabeth Lahser Ewald Otto Muller-Girard Ruth Phelps Yackel Lois Dildine Harrison Richard Henry Percy Dorothy Roediger Barclay Beth Bishop Odell Harmon . Potter Mary Barrett Gibbs 1948 Thomas E. Putnam Edgar M. chantz EACH DECADE Elizabeth Ward Kariher Paul M. Spiegel Charles 1. tephens Gertrude Meeh Kloos David C. Barton Fred G. Sturm Della Ziegler Olivey Franklin R. Clapper Robert G. Sutton LEADING CLASSES IN Amelia Donatelli Police Lucille Allen Dewey 1955 Esther Webster Sweet Edward H. Dowling (Based on Participation) Richard F. Eisenberg 1951 Jane Snyder Frederickson 1937 Alma E. Haessig Edward E. Banker Melvyn 1. Halbert 1932 73 Jean Fiester Fisher atalie Forone Hawley Lawrence E. Clapp Shirley Stam Heeks Class Agent Abe A. Hollander David D. Dudley Peh-Sun Ku 1942 42 Elizabeth Boryzewski Agnese Robert E. Hubbard Pluma Babcock Emerson Louis J. Marianetti 1952 69 Helen Hawelka Ashe William E. Fahy anto P. Marzullo Naomi B. Baker ~lft~~ 1t~~e~~sonolan Robert J. Hoe Dorothy M. Meehan Elizabeth Werner Cull Walter C. Paul Nancy Carlyon Millett Franklin A. Puff Carroll W. Potter Daniel W. O'Dell George F. Sheats ~f~:~o;OI{ae~:r~cr~rJ~ Franks Charles C. Ransom, Jr. Harry F. O'Neil Joseph F. Stauffer Helen Agate Hurd Elizabeth chwartz D. Rosenberg Passer Louise Lambert Malec Zachary D. heldon Gerald R. Rising Leora De Lelys Powers Gordon Shillinglaw Clifford E. wartz 1956 Ann Eisenberg Rosenberg Lois chramm ie.l\mund Cosimo J. Culotta Helen Hatch Taylor Donald Lloyd SmIth 1952 John M. Greene Jean E. Tower Thomas S. Tibbs David 1. Kuehne Mary A. Furbish Weaver Ann Turula William E. Burgess William Edwin Lovett Edna May Butterfield arah 1. St. Helens 1938 1949 ~~fe~e \~~ ~:i~~n Helen A. Schantz Committee Barbara Anne Sheehan Mary H. Bechtold Cameron Ainsworth Ronald G. Heidenreich Robert Maurice Speer Dorothy R. Hall Gordon A. Allen George A. Lombart, Jr. Edith Sumeriski Trybalski Mary Hobbs ancy Bartlett Edward K. Ott Frances Ensign Marks James R. Beall Michael M. Roiger Margaret McGlashan Ruch James Ernest DuBois Walter P. iegmund 1957 Louise ullivan mith Max Rudolph Fitze Marvin 1. Smith Annette Briggs Young Charles . Gleason Edward D. Woyksnar Douglas R. F. Borlen John W. Guyon Seymour C. Zloth Dorothy VanGraafeiland 1939 Clara Alice Hamel Connelly Fanny Matheus Morone Warren M. Haussler Donald W. DeMott Class Agent Walter E. Kaskan 1953 Rufus E. Fulreader, Jr. Edna Bennett Arnold Laura Kellogg David Ackerman Jesse H. Haines Irene Clark Ballinger Edward A. Langhans Peter W. Alland Edith Conrad Halbert Virgina M. Stewart DeWald Willard F. Leusch Morris H. Ball Miriam E. Harnish R. Moore Di Manno Marcus W. Minkler Ruth Smith Barton Robert E. Heeks Carol 1. Dunning Kurt H. Mueller John Deyo Chipp Thomas R. Knapp Eleanor M. Lofthouse Donald S. ash Pierce B. Day Joan Ruth Lansberry Lois Carr McPherson Charles C. Perry John William Dreier Donald R. Messina Eleanor Welker Mozingo Jane Hunt Putnam Bruce Dropesky Leon R. Neese Charlotte Keeling Owen Corwin 1. Rickard William E. Goetz Patrick K. O'Neill MARY WEMETI, 'S7N Doris Puffer Potter Milton 1. Rock Frank Hawver Howd John A. Price Maysie Calder Rich David M. Smith Donald A. Koch Dama A. Zefers School of Nursing Division Jane Wolcott Steinhausen Charles E. Walker Frederick J.Wolff, Jr. Jerome J. Zukosky 1940 Marion Bowerman Laughlin Shirley Morrison Thompson 1928 Helen G. Riefel Decade Chairman Elsie Veatch Zimmer Ruth I Adams Rowley Regina Yodkwicz Decade Chairman Janet Davis Saunders Witherspoon lola Aab Peth True Wilson Class Agent Class Agent Frances Clark Withee Marie Cadelka Christiansen Margaret A. Breth A. Lucille Hammond Wood Mary Shaw Cosgriff Lucy F. Hoblitzelle Margaret Stebbins Farris Vera Higham Sullivan 1933 Jean Watts Gaudioso Helen Persing Teagarden Verna Moore Ei enhauer Grace M. Size Howley Esther 1. Quance Whalen Class Agent I. Rodriquez MacDowell Doris Williams Josephine Carter Bergener Martha Hulek Morlock Dorothy Berry Fisk Faith Barnum orton 1929 Mildred Grant Gariss Elinor Jack Sessions Marion H. Phillips Ruth Coxford Wolfe Anne Johnston Skivington Class Agent 1934 Gladys O'Keefe Yunker Darrin Mary Reding Eckl 194 1 Doris Jeffrey Everett Class Agent Florence Danielson chirmer Hazel Gordon Frank Gertrude Hummel Desbrow Class Agent Mary Jane Kirk Violet Elston Graves Louise Fairbanks Jumonville Anna Rettie Pollock Gladys Vanderhoof Elizabeth 1. Royer Bessey A. Roy Luxenberg Eleanor Wallace Terry Elizabeth Waldorf Tague Madeline 1. Ritter Anna Bater Young 1930 Atlanta Page Rumble 1942 Meredith Dadswell Russell Mary Farley Arline Wadt Seidman Jean Newell Doherty Class Agent Jeannette Hayden Sohmer Class A~ent Emma Otto Schuler Helen S. Sommer Joan PetCle Albone Ruth Smith Van Dyck Crystal 1. Wallace Elsie Siegl Ashenburg Elsie Veatch Zimmer Evelyn Schumacher Alberta V. Carlson Willoughby Adelaide Briggs Carter 1931 Lois Horton Chalecke Dorothy Curtis Jones 1935 Rhita M. Shafer Florey M. Schaller Dacks Florence Monaghan Jacox Jean Stewart Friar Leonora Rosiecki Floriano Class Agent Jane Ladd Gilman Lauretta Wamp Graning Frieda M. Chapin Marjorie R. Graham Laura Kellogg Lois Swanson DeGraff Lenore Bond Harvey Marian Case Marx' Margaret Yewdall Dennison Emma N. Hathaway Mildred Farnsworth Miller Margaret Schaefer Fitzgerald Inez Rothman Lipman M. Bunyon Mishler Melda Russell George Ruth T. Stevens Mulligan Marian M. Spencer Rachel Howland Latcher Jean Pinder Rudman Mabel Sine Wadsworth Ruth Hunt Lopez Sanchez Barbara Smith pindler Virginia Luehm Medden 1932 Jane Havill Mehrhof 1943 Clara W. Leeper Gertrude Frink Reed Glendora Wilcox Wingrove Class Agent Class Agent Marion E. Carnes 1936 Frances Seeger Green Kathryn Barth Carey Dorothy Widmer Mulcock Geraldine Dewan Hoff Josephine Chappell D'Errico Class Aj{ent Marjorie Lee Jeroy Lillie Kreisberg Gladys Robin Alexander Marcella Pugh Mathews

47 Ann Wright Conrad School of Nursing Janice Jacobs Currie Jo Anne Hickman Duke Janeen Lane Fowler Marion Becher Francis Betty M. Oatway Wilburetta McDonald Mary L. Franzen School of Irene Wilson Price Wilder Alice Monroe Gannon Ardis Borglum Vokes Frances Cordwell Woods Shirley Gantz Garvin Betty Datthyn Walker Betty Palmgren Wurzer Elli Wurzburger Gupp Dorothy Grosse Willett Dorothy Gaylord Johnston Lewis A. Klein Harry F. Smith 1949 Hazel Uttley Lane 1929 John J. Lehner Howard A. Spindler 1944 Elsie Turcotte Hill Joyce Mickel La Viola F. Sullivan Hassett Earle B. Mahoney Edward A. tern Ruth Wood Pape Class Agent Alice Armstrong McKernan Class Al(ent* Frank Meola Raymond . Szatkowski Class Agent Mary Sales Allison Ethel Alice Nelson Jerome Cowen L. Secord Palmer Thomas A. Weave;:. Jr. Gladys Burdick Becker Janet A. Amendt Phyllis Ann Padgett Elmer L. DuBois Robert W. Pollock Philip M. Winslow Lois Chamberlain Carey Virginia Pike Bornstein Jean Upton Pelham Jacob D. Goldstein Lawrence J. Radice Mary Ellen Lesch Centner Esther Harvey Bumpus Emma R. Rohman Percy L. Harris Theodore Seidman 1939 Marion Scutt Cole Mary Jane Mellinger Cave Mary E. Cone Snyder Augustus H. Hillman George M. Suter Leona M. DeForest Margaret Campbell Cole Barbara Silvernail Stento John Jameson Philip Wasserman James E. Cross Betty Bostwick Evans Dorothy Mundy Dodds Anna Morenus Van Slyke Benjamin W. Knopf John S. Wolff. Jr. Class Agent Eileen Kern Howard Lois Ferguson Hill Phyllis Welker Vervaeke Joseph P. Leone Frank Wood John N. Abbott Dolores K. Heim Carol Pfleeger McKeehan Marion H. Weber P. Frederick Metildi Ralph Yeaw Chester W. Brown Arlene Miller Koerner Bette Crouse Mele Donata Labella Zartman John B. Polansky Mary Steichen Calderone E. Walkley Last Rose Mary Shevchuk O'Brien 1954 Donald D. Posson 1935 Harold M. Clarke Jean Cooper Masters Maryella Helms Ruth *deceased E. Joel Davis Dorothy Maciol Osika Ruth Carroll Smith Emily Oliver Donald S. Grover Sidney Eisenberg Marjorie C. Pfaudler Class Agent Class Agent John P. Frazer Anne E. Vainask 1950 Norah M'Gonigle Barcay 1930 Donald W. Bovet Warren E. George Thirza Ecker Wittig Joanna R. Donk Audrey Engemann Breth Edward J. Manwell Francis B. Carroll Lewis J. Graham Decade Chail'man Phyllis Frankson Bricker Class Agent James F. Conner Roger A. Harvey 1945 Elizabeth Weterrings Smith Rosemary Weterrings Burch Norman Egel Rupert A. Havill Mary Johnstone Biggs Class Agent Shirley Winfield Doolittle Arthur Elden Matthew E. Fairbank Atlee B. Hendricks Class Al(ent June Neuscheler Allen Nancy Lyons Evarts Karl W. Gruppe Edson H. Fuller Donald T. Imrie Thais Levberg Ashkenas Jeannine Mathyer Ansell Ruth Fisher Herbert A. Kuppinger John D. George. Jr. Frank S. Janas Mabelle Burke Helen Tranter Carrese Ann Garland Paul Levin Michael J. Gerbasi John A. Knapp Jane Santway Cook Marjorie Thomes Chapin K. Mitchell Herd Einar Lie Helen B. Hart Edgar A. Knowlton Jane L. Curtiss Adelaide Millar Daly Janet Sherk Holland Claire Cutten Manwell Frederick D. Hughes Lyon K. Loomis Mary Babcock Fyles Velma Cavagnaro Durland Florence C. Kille Veda J. Mathews John J., Jares Frederick B. Mears Johanna Sohn Giroux Jean McCullough Engman Marjorie Bush Kincaid Thomas R. Nichols Sidney Leibowitz William F. Owen Jean Peters Harney Jean Morrell Evory Janice Daykin King Luther W. F. Oehlbeck Gerald McGuire James Pennoyer Ann Pryor Jayne Ruth Gardner Foos Joan Bell Marden John M. Scott Edith Gardner Mead Miriam Mellon Pennoyer Joyce M. Measor Margaret Gan;son Ruth Jelen Mehrhof Gordon M. Meade William A. Phillips Sally Murphy hirley Kelly Griggs Gail Hill Murphy 1931 John W. Mead Arnold F. Sammis Isabelle La Beouf Parker Mary K. Harris Margaret Neubrand William E. Merrill Ernest W. Saward Margaret Gilligan Phillips Donabeth Shoop Jensen Jane Tector Reilly I William A. Lell tanley B. Peters William Stiles Jean Spoor Stevens D. Van Caeseele Kondolf Phyllis Dahlgren Robertson Class Al(ent Barney Puglisi Robert J. Willoughby Jocelyn Breen Sutherland Joanne Larson Linn Carol Greenwald Scouler Lyman C. Boynton Edwin W. Roberts Ralph B. Woolf Shirley Morrison Thompson Jeanne Wooden MacPherson Marjorie Ann mith Joseph Chassell Ralph F. Schneider Lawrence E. Young Shirley Donatelli Weber toan Sturdevant Mohney Evelyn Willer Sperry Gerard J. Grassi Richard H. Sloan Philip Lewis Gray John R. Williams 1940 1946 C~~~lr p~~:sfp~~:~: 1955 Grace Loveland John H. Zimmerman Rita Sheridan Studley Martha White Schreiner Garland G. Grover Philip Moorad James P. B. Goodell Class Agent Jane Tatlock Shurts Class Al(ent Edward B. Nugent 1936 Class Agent Helen Mitchel Brabant Evelyn Saff Stevens Bernice Jameson Belt Moses S. Shiling Ruth A. Boak Robert J. Thomas Harold W. Grossellinger Angus M. Brooks ~i~aliiu&oC~~rc~erasani )a asmuth ~~thh Ji;hn:~d~o~loC~h\~r Herbert F. Van Epps Class Agent Robert L. Corcoran Ruth Weber Dickinson 95l Willard W. Van Graafeiland Ralph W. Alexander Richard C. Forman Muriel Ryberg Fears Roberta Netzman Kalsbeek Sandra Gerring Raymond L. Warn Achsa M. Bean Henry H. Forsyth. Jr. Arlene Black Feyder Class Al(ent Evelyn M. Lutz Louis D. Zeidberg Orlo H. Clark Myron Franks Flora Jackson Gramm Lois Archer Brown Winona Holmwood William L. Dorr Harold Friedman Rosalie Woolshlager Harris Laura Hakes Brown Montgomery Sidney Feyder Alexander Hatoff Cynthia Allen Hart' Roberta G. Collett Phyllis Buell Nye 1932 Dudley B. Fitz-Gerald Arthur W. Hazenbush Helen Waasdorp Henion' Gertrude Blackwood Isabelle Guenter Ohlwiler Anthony J. Morreale Charles F. Gay Edward R. Higgins Rosemary Kenneweg Jones Cotanche.. Ann Johnson Powell Class Al(ent Francis E. Golino Robert W. Hurd Katharine B. Morris Dorothy HIll Cnm Gail Robyn Seeley Andrew M. Henderson Lucille West Hutaff Virginia Tischer Muxworthy Beverly Wood Eisenbraun ~~~~:Pfe?J~its~ewart Lauren V. Ackerman Donald H. Kariher Edward G. Jones Nada Blake Phillips Janet Faulkner Henry Brody Chris P. Katsampes Warren S. Kelley Rosalyn Libglid Schreiber Verna Bean .Izzo Helen Renick Welty Helen Kingsbury CoRin Charles H. Kosmaler Victor E. Koerper Irene Czarnota Sieracki Margaret WIlson Jensen Bernard S. Epstein S. Arthur Localio Howard B. Leve Muriel Ehrich Van Deu~n Gloria Harrington Martinez 1956 Paul A. Ferrara Burton S. Marsh Frank W. Lovejoy Louis A. Goldstein Alice Wightman '~o~~eM~~te~cIntosh Sally L. Hill Edwin J. Medden John B. Miale Class Agent Kenneth O. Hamlin Max H. Presberg Frederick C. Moll 1947 Barbara Longstaff Outterson Pauline Pommerenke Donald R. Insley Francis C. Regan Russell J. Nicholl Margaret Brown DeWeese Gretchen Towner Parry Braiman John A. Lichty, Jr. Gordon L. Richardson Samuel P. ixon Class Agent Margaret McNeill Stoltman Dorothy McCarthy Brennan Joseph K. Newton Julius Rock Russell C. Norton Florence M. Chapin Barbara Byrne Vair Jane Iellield Brooks Lynn J. Seward George V. Taplin S. S. Piacente Joycelyn Chapman A. J. Tatelbaum Jean Watkeys Abram Pinsky Margaret Stroup Davis 1952 Clair E. Troutman M. Kridler Edwards Barbara Becker Congdon James Pullman. Jr. Marjorie Fenton Garrett Norma Gibson Griffith Anna C. Daniel Albert W. Van Sickle 1937 Albert C. Snell, Jr. Gloria Burgett Green Class Agent Joanna R. Donk C. Wilbur Westin Joan Follet Jewell Nancy Fisher Alley Ann Kelley Guiffre 1933 George F. Bantleon Richard L. Woodruff Eris Olds Kimble Elizabeth A. Bramer Mary Lou Hinkel Class Al(ent Phyllis Norman Knobel Lee Willoughby Brumet Carol Hemmings Like Russell E. Sangston Joseph K. Bradford 1941 Dorothy Lloyd Krolak Barbara Doud Cameron Jane D. McDonald Class Agent Dwight E. Clark Bernice McAusland Lambie Janet O'Brien Carroll Joan Abel Moses Carl B. Alden Gerard W. Del Junco Richard Williamson Marian Erickson Lappin Arlene Downey Coco Patricia Devine Muirhead Rudolph Angell Joseph B. Furst Class Agent Esther Hood Lazenby Louisa Bliven Coffin Beverly Ann Schulz Charles M. Carpenter Carl Goetsch George Baron Lucile Beaman McGarrah Jean Ritchie Cooper Jeanette Leffingwell Kenneth L. Cooley David M. Keedy Francis F. Baker Elsie Hotchkin Moon Lois Brooks Davis Shepardson Peter Cohen Thomas F. Keyes ~~~~~t Barbara Lotze Norman Harriet Telander Eckler Mary Test Joseph W. Cooney William L. Madden PC;.BE'f!enhardt Angie A. Palmisano Marylyn J. Ernest Beatrice Phe-Li Wei David Fertig John A. Olivet Roger H. Emerson Nancy Larson Ouigley Carol Fridley Gardner Janet Welch William Hale Havill Roland E. Stevens Clement A. Finch Bernice Lipschitz Sklar Barbara Williams Heggie Diana Smith Wrench Charles C. Heck William J. Teufel John H. Grossman Phyllis Renckens Smith Marilyn Shelansky Hudson Carolyn Van Order Wyatt Richard B. Josey Joseph I. Thaler C. S. Hellijas Doris Rowe Spano Roberta Owen Johnston • Elizabeth Burton Zwergcr Richard S. Knowlton Robert R. White Jacob W. Holler Esther Hagberg Swales Barbara Smith Kandt John Kraai Stanley W. Widger Eleanor Nicholson Elizabeth Gay Terry Elizabeth Reichard Kelsey 1957 Philip H. Landers Frederick N. Zuck Humphrey Yvonne Carmel Vincent Patricia Ruppert Klinkroth Carol J. Forsberg Chester H. Lauterbach Harry D. Kingsley Flora Chindgrew Vogt Katherine Connell Koch Class ARent Alexander Petrilli 1938 Edward E. Malarkey ;;::~~iD~i:~c£:~b Marilyn G. Ahern Abou D. Pollack George A. Moll 1948 Lynn Elaine Barber John Joseph Rooney A. Gordon Ide Ruth P. Oakley Norma Yanke Horn Dorothy Johnson Lickers Dorothy Doble Betler Class Al(ent Joseph A. O'Grady Class Aj!ent Joan Everhart Malerk Pauline Hughes Blossom George K. Anderson Myron L. Pardee Catherine Bentley Browning Margaret Pinker Carol A. Carpenter 1934 Lucius L. Button Willard S. Pheteplace Margery Fancher Da.1y Lucille Boeltz Rutz Bonnie Lau Collipp Michael J. Lepore Robert H. Cross Lloyd S. Rogers Frances DeFresco DiRoberto Barbara Barrett Shannon Patricia Jeanne Dhonau , Class Agent Clarence E. Dungan Donald M. Ruch Gula Pendleton Greil,1er Eileen Churchill Slocum Ruth Rhoadhouse Ellman " Roy C. Ainsworth George F. Emerson Frederick Sherwood Ruth T. Plass Henry Mary Anderson Talbot Doris Elizabeth Garland idney Beck H. Braden Fitz-Gerald Frank P. Smith Pearl Hakes Hungerfo'rd Maureen Collins Warren Cynthia Grissom Letarte Karl B. Benkwith John B. Goetsch Theodore Steinhausen Joyce Ford Manning Mary Elizabeth Willams Marilyn J. Light Harold A. Cole Robert L. Graham Allen E. Walker Crystal Isham Michel Donna Wagner Witt Jeanne Miller McIntosh George Dacks David S. Grice Alvin D. Wert Phyllis Church Moore Aina Carlson Youhill Mary Elizabeth Mullen Elbert Dalton Ralph F. Jacox G. Donald Whedon Suzanne Naruse Barbara Ann Oakes William G. Dobbs Edward K. Kloos Richard R. Woods Lida Vosburg Secor 1953 Sandra Taddune Forrest Mansel Dunn Carl W. Koerper Loretta Miller Smith Sally Armstrong Welker Mary F. Wemett Charlotte M. Gast William R. Murlin Patricia A. Spencer Class Al(ent Elizabeth Seaberg Harry S. Good Frank M. Glrich 1942 Faith Burrell Tristan Joanne Liersch Bodwell Woodward George P. Heckel Richard F. Platzer Thomas B. Shipley E. Regina Wiggins Martha Fuller Clay Joan Fay Zabadal Albert C. Johnson Jean C. Sabine Class Al(ent

411 James J. Lux Frederic D. MacDuffee Spencer C. Manrodt ~ ~ Ernest P. Mennillo Robert G. Menninger edicine and Dentistry George J. Meyer John R. Price , Robert B. Rosen Myron Saltz Richard J. Ackart Richard C. Fowler Bruce 1. Brown Hendrika B. Cantwell Victor J. Tofany Raymond A. Schneider Charles H. Addington Robert G. Gale Donald H. Brown Vincent J. DeRisio George G. Trombetta Bernard Schreiner James R. Allen James F. Gardner Nathan Cedars James A. DeWeese Theodore F. Van Zandt Lloyd H. Taylor William M. Asher Sawyer A. Glidden Jason O. Cook Evelyn J. Eddy George M. Welsh Bernard J. Winter Robert W. Cordwell Baldwin G. Lamson Roswell G. Daniels Herbert M. Epstein Philip C. Young Earl Yonehiro William 1. Dennen Lawrence W. Linderberry Clement A. DeFelice Francis E. Foley Harold C. Messenger, Jr. Raymond James Dern Stuart M. Frame, Jr. gh~~f:s ~.Eh~~~n Charles F. Post Robert F. Ehinger Donald H. Gaylor 1951 1953 Charles Gaylord Frederick W. Shull Victor Emmel Thomas H. Gilmore Dean Coddington Hobart Brockway Howard P. Haswell Leonard K. Smith George Elwin Ewing Peter G. Gleason Class Agent Class Agent Walter B. Kreutzmann William H. Smith David T. Fitzelle Frederick M. Golomb Edith M. Lipphardt Albert W. Sullivan Frank W. Furth Raymond Gramiak Norman J. Ashenburg John C. Alley Oliver R. McCoy Roger Terry Theodore R. Haley George S. Harris H. Wayne Bayless Donald Gilman Alton Theodore H. Noehren Victor P. Totah 1. Miller Harris Jay c. Hornberger Francis Armstrong Board Patrick 1. Anders Arthur J. Redmond Hiram B. Van Deusen John K. Irion Maurice 1. Kelley Bernard B. Brody Rebekah Yates Anders Paul C. Ronniger Paul E. Wesson Harold W. Jayne E. Russel Kodet Thomas E. Cardillo Norman 1. Avnet Albert P. Rowe William D. Welton, Jr. Robert A. Kelley Robert Lawrence H. Sol Cersonsky J. Neil Boger Margaret S. hipley Richard S. Wilson George B. Kempton Ruth Anderson La wrence Lane M. Christ Samuel S. Brenner, Jr. John P. Smith Stanley W. Wright David R. Kominz Alma K. Leong Nyla Jessamine Cole Robert 1. Brent S. Willard Smith Henry T. Lang Carl A. Lindstrom Thomas J. Coleman Robert C. Buckingham E. Margaret Sullivan William T. Lucas Alice Marsh Garrison Jack 1. Connelly Carl Butenas Howard T. Thompson 1945 James V. Maloney, Jr. Frank M. Muldoon Carlo C. S. Davis R. Bruce Christian Lloyd D. Tuttle John S. McRoberts Louis A. Nelson, Jr. Morris S. Dixon, Jr. Frank J. Colgan Anthony J. Jzzo Bernard F. Donovan Margaret Thomson Colgan Class Agent Myles C. Morrison, Jr. Robert D. Neubecker 1943 William 1. Parry William Onest George 1. Fischer Richard T. Cushing Frederick W. Anderson Anthony]. Pizzarelli Walter T. St. Goar Thomas Frank James M. Dennis, Jr. Helen Van Alstine Orlando J. Andy George William Plummer William 1. Saunders William T. Hart Joseph F. Finelli Class Agent David S. Baldwin Jack E. Presburg John B. Slingsby Franklin W. Heggeness David Ramsey Gair Gerald M. Barbour Muriel R. Benton Max 1. Roh reI' Walter R. Stern Jean R. Hess Michael M. Gold Martin S. Barnes Floyd E. Bliven Robert W. Saunderson Otto F. Thaler Martin A. Hoffman Arnold Golodetz Raymond G. Benjamin Robert 1. Burdick Carmen J. Scarpellino Bruce Till Iwao G. Kawakami Richard Handschin Harold Ware Brooks Irwin D. Chow William F. Scherer Virginia Edwards Till Richard Koch Ralph Noble Hayden Robert B. Burton Michael T. DiRoberto William P. Thomas Richard B. Tobin Wolfgang Lederer Patricia Wills Hayden William Chalecki John C. Donovan William G. Wilt Ben T. Uyeno Merrill 1. Lipton James S. Hursh, Jr. Priscilla Cummings I-Iarlow D. Dunton William D. Woods John F. Muxworthy Kyle W. King Royal S. Cutler Anne F. Emmel 1948 Eric J. Ostrom Donald G. Langsley Frank P. DiMarsico John B. Flick, Jr. Edward C. Parkhurst Mary Firra Leahy William A. Dickson John R. Holmes Burton M. Cohen 1950 John A. Richardson Austin R. Leve W. M. Edmonstone Harry D. Hunter Class Agent William N. Jones Charles Edward Riley, Jr. E. Stuart McCleary Malcolm M. Ellison Howard A. Joos David Wheelock Alling Class Agent Sidney H. Silverman Ward D. Noyes Donald M. Ervin Charles Kennedy Edward W. Bird Carolyn B. Albrecht William Ernest Smedley William H. R. ye Harry W. Hale, Jr. Jacob Koomen, Jr. Richard S. Blacher George . Allen Anthony R. Terepka Hugh P. Robinson Arthur 1. Haskins Herbert A. Lautz Alexander E. Dodds Alfred J. Angelico Hubert M. Upton S. Rowland Schweitzer William M. Jackson Rudolph G. Matflero James F. Dougherty, Jr. Elisha Atkins Russell E. Watts Ansell B. Shapiro John R. Jordan Francis W. Masters Marvin A. Epstein Merrill A. Baratz John 1. Shaw Lois Fess Jordan William J. McDermid Alice Hopkins Foster Thomas B. Browning 1952 Gabriel Smilkstein Thomas Rogers Ki rk Richard S. Meltzer James J. Foster Arthur Reid Clemett Kirk R. Stetson Richard H. Koenemann Leon 1. Miller Edward D. Fuoco Morris Goodman Charles Lobeck Leo F. Stornelli Theodore G. Martens Jay B. Moses Robert A. Graves Alexandra 1. Feldmahn Class Agent Leonard J. tutman Frank W. McKee Bernard R. Nebel Edward M. Hard James]. Ferguson, Jr. Walter 1. Anders, Jr. Paul W Taylor, Jr. Priscilla Foote Oliver Lucille M. Heggeness G. Harold Tishkoff Edwin A. Moody Roy Philipp Donald M. Foster Gertrude Archer Bales Arnold A. Nutting .T. John R. Jaenike Ross H. Gray Harold W. Bales, Jr. lean G. White Manderson W. Phillips Glenn E. Jones Kenneth W. Woodward Donald C. Phillips Antonio F. LaSorte Robert E. Hyatt Walter M. Ballard Harry S. Phillips Hugh S. Richards Frederic T. Joint Donn C. Barton Edward ]. Zebrowski Martin F. Randolph Franklin H. Schaefer Jean Peters MacFarlane Ernest 1. Levinger Louis Campbell Clarke, Jr. evin S. Scrimshaw Jack B. Mohney Earle P. Dale John F. Rudolph David 1. Seibel Thomas W. Moir George R. Logsdon 1954 W. George Swalbach Ralph C. Monroe Fred Vance Lucas Robert Wesley Dole David C. Thurber Morton Smith-Peterson James B. Macrae Lloyd J. Filer, Jr. Joae Graham Ralph G. Victor Richard T. Snowman Patricia Perkins Frederick R. McKeehan Allan J. Fisher Class Agent Raymond M. Wetrich Philipp C. Sottong Ruth T. Rogers Gardner N. Moulton Gerald 1. Glaser Chloe Alexson Earl G. Witenberg Wellington B. Stewart Chales Michael Ross Alvin 1. Ureles Edwin David Savlov Dudley V. Powell John 1. Goble Harold Louis Brodell Louis J. Zeldis Harry Schwippert Helen P. Preisler Kenneth G. Goss John J. Castellot James Lloyd Secrest Robin M. Rankow Peter B. Gram amuel J. Chapin 1943 1946 Thomas H. Shepard Maurice S. Reizen Robert H. Greenlaw James G. Cotanche, Jr. Wade H. Shuford Harold D. Robertson Adele D. Hoffman William K. Cotton Frederick ]. Martin Kelly M. Berkley Edward .1. Roche,Jr. Milton M. Howell Rudolph C. Dangelmajer Class Agent Leslie A. Walker Class Agent David H. Walworth Golden D. Romney Thomas A. Huffman Robert C. Dickerson William S. Adams William S. Abbey Fred B: Rothell Donald D. Hutchings Eugene S. Farley, Jr. Theodore 1. Bartelmez Walter H. Abelmann Mary Elaine Sears Robert B. ,Jackson Albert Fink David Blanchet Phillip 1. Bates 1949 Robert Paul hanewise Lois M. Johnson Frederick ]. Flatley William F. Boucher Chauncey G. Bly William O. Robertson George B. mith Isadore Levine Eugene ]. Gangarosa Robert A. Bruce J. Monroe Cole Class Agent Leif G. Suhrland Bernard Levinson Frank G. Gregory, Jr. John R. Carter John W. Colgan George Altman Cohn Frederick M. Curtiss Norman S. Cooper Albert O. Daniels Alfred M. Decker Marion Davis Robert M. Dumm James B. Dukes Gregory K. Dwyer Charles W. Field Leonard D. Fenninger Nathaniel E. Fowler John R. Geary Tohn A. Frantz William M. Howe Dell Moore Gray Ralph H. Kellogg John G. Hamilton George R. Miller David R. Hawkins Anson Perina John A. King Frederick G. Pleune Donald R. Koerner Ralph W. Prince Morris W. Lambie Margaret 1. Rathbun John D. Leidholt Edwin A. Robinson Norman 1. Mathews Charles A. Rowe William .T. Natoli Richard H. Saunders, Jr. Richard J. Nowak tanwood S. Schmidt John B. Perkins John H. Schulz Robert N. Philips Charles E. Weber Ralph H. Potter, Jr. Edward B. Wells James A. Rafferty John M. Wendell Malin B. Shaw Herman D. Zeifer F. Miles Skultety Charles R. Sullivan Horace B. Taylor 1944 Kippen Clift Wells Mary Jane Bird Eleanor A. Woodhury Class Agent Philip Baron 1947 John .I. Butler Henry T. Clark Richard J. Collins Felix M. Cohen Class Agent Robert W. Coon Irving]. Baybutt John E. Edwards Harvey J. Blanchet, J r. James F. Fortune Patrick F. Bray choo 0 edicine a d enti try Universit~ Donald A. Henderson James c. Brown Dou~las Ramon Hill Fred George Conrad 1956 LansIng C. Hoskins John C. DeMocker Joseph A. Leistyna athaniel J. Hurst A. cott Dowling Class A.l:ent 1946 Deane L. Hutchins Donald M. Eldredge Joseph Amdur David Noel Kluge Linda Fabry Farley Cynthia Jean Baldwin Clifford A. ertl Wilbur R. Koehn Donald Wm. Frank Martin H. Conheady Robert H. Leahy Richard Marvin Gardner, Jr. ~~b~;t EH.BCa~:~~ Chairmen Arthur E. Lindner Richard J. Glavin, Jr. Wesley M. Clapp Robert A. Close James B. MacWhinney Alden S. Gooch Charles G. Cochrane Josephine Kelly Craytor eal A. McNabb John A. Grant Marjorie Cushman Howard J. Meyer Robert M. Greendyke Kenneth H. Doolittle 1947 anford Meyerowitz Samuel Gross Richard C. Elton Herbert J. Brauer George R. Morrison Alden B. Hall . Thorne Griscom Perry W. adig Douglas B. Hansen Hugh Raymond Hayward 1948 David A. Ohlwiler John D. Hare Alfred D. Heggie, Jr. Charman F. Palmer John Bernard Henry Walter E. Linaweaver, Jr. Anthony Catalino John C. Peachey Rola B. Hill William C. Luft Robert Corbitt Clifton E. Peterson Paul Victor Hoyer Carlton M. Davis Allyn G. May C. Robert S. Phillips F. Kay Huntington Charles F. Merwin Ronald Heidenreich Robert M. Rene Allen Evans Inglis James F. Morrissey Theodore Charles Huber H. Norman Richardson John P. Kelly Gerald W. Murphy Donald N. Hulbert Kenneth C. Richmond G. Paul Kenyon Robert S. Pinals William R. Ross Joseph G. Seeger Glen H. Kumasaka Richard H. Pollen Lloyd F. Seebach John J. Shinner William A. Little Walter E. Reckling, Jr. Vernon P. Thayer Paul Otis Simenstad Huntington Mavor Vincent P. Ringrose, Jr. Otto F. Smith J. Denis McCarthy 1949 Burton Seife Edward E. Banker Dirk Jacobus Spruyt August Miale, Jr. Richard K. Shaw James G. Utterback, Jr. Saul Steven Milles Bert D. Butler Robert S. J. Sparkes Sofia M. D'Andreano Robert C. Webster William B. Norris David D. Wallace Stanley Willner Edward P. Passaro Joseph T. Francati Stanley L. Wiener Alan J. Frick Robert G. Wright Walter J. Pories Joseph L. Williams, Jr. Brock H. Powell Carl E. Graupman David L. Rogers Cameron C. W. Jameson MARTIN H. CON HEADY. 'SSU James F. Schwartz Gardner H. Johnson 1955 Hugh V. Sickel 1957 Dorothy Tripp Klein Co-Chairman, University School Division Russell M. Lane Richard W. Snodgrass Jean Van Riper Bayless Florence 1. Kunes Class A1!.ent Donald P. Tucker Jules Cohen Russell A. Lincoln Stephen J. Barcay, Jr. Herbert Irving Walker Eric T. Lincke Robert J. MacDonald William P. Beetham, Jr. Oliver Wolcott Vivianne Thimann Charlotte C. McKeon Douglas B. Bell Francis S. Wright achmias Florence McKerrow Thomas F. Minges LEADING CLASSES IN Chester W. Opperman Anthony M. Partigan EACH DECADE David F. Rogers Charles E. Rowley (Based on Participation) Robert M. Speer Howard B. Stiles 1956 60 Joseph M. Tacci Allison F. Taylor ]M[edlicali Graduate Bayla F. Weinstein Seymour Weinstein Jobn Leon Wiatrak Peter A. Broikou Donald T. Coates 1911 1938 1948 Frederick C. Brown David . Connolly Alvalyn E. Woodward Augusta McCoord Peter Paul Dale 1950 Robert J. Casey ehry R. Cramer Fred S. Acomb Frank V. Cortina George L. Fischer 1923 1939 1949 James S. Alexander Cosimo J. Culotta Theodore J. Ellstrom M. Elizabeth Marsh Marian LeFevre Manly Harriet Davis Hamilton Albert 1. Aroesty Joseph Arthur Dutton Edward C. Freed Herbert E. Thompson Mary Jane Izzo Vincent Armand Donald J. Fisk Brazelton Fulkerson 1926 James J. Axtell Jack L. Frenz Gerald D. Heveron Sabra J. Hook 1940 1951 James E. Barry Joyce H. Gardner B. Nicholas Iannone Norman J. Ashenburg Paul W. Taylor, Jr. Donald K. Beach Angelo P. Gatto Cecil A. Knott 1927 Helen Wilson Horn G. Harold Tishkoff Charles F. Biggs Maurice A. Goldman Virginia A. Kreig M. Elizabeth Marsh William F. Bristol Roy C. Hannan Eugene M. Lamb John B. Polansky 1941 orman E. Burnett John C. Henry Teresa ]. Leene Ellenmae Viergiver 1952 1928 James K. Avery Leon C. Carson Robert ]. Hirsch Gerald C. Liebel Ruth Eleanor Rumery David Rodney Cox William G. Hirschman Eugene P. MacConnell Marian Cummings 1942 William L. Downs John E. Hoff Donald G. Mallory Kenneth P. McConnell Robert S. Elwell Robert F. Hoff Merle F. Matteson 1929 1953 Raymond L. Estes Robert T. Honan Elenore MacNally McKie Ruth Snider Crossland 1943 Chauncey G. Bly Joan M. Fitzgibbons Samuel Itkin Calvin A. Miller Anthony J. Izzo William Louis Downs Robert C. Frank Theodore H. Johansen Richard R. Miller 1933 Guido V. Marinetti Dean M. Frederick Richard G. Keeley Bernard J. ewmark Michael J. Gerbasi 1944 tanley G. Gester Maurice J. Kleiman Francis J. O'Boyle tanley B. Peters Ruth L. Goodland 1954 Robert G. Gottschalk Joseph P. Leahy Fred M. O'Brien Michael A. Insalaco Thomas Edward Putnam Hoyt S. Gunt John W. LeRoux Erving Perlman 1934 Richard C. Harris Robert H. McGlashan Donald 1. Pero Dorothy Sheldon McLean 1946 Arthur H, Herz Barry B. McGrane Michael P. Petitto Chauncey G. Bly 1955 Eugene]. Gangarosa E. Frances Hickerson W. Gilmore McKie Daniel J. Riley 1935 Marlene Falkenheim Robert C. Kelley Frank R. Monfredo Irwin S. Rosenbloom Ruth Snider Crossland DeLancie 1956 Charles G. Kopshac Charles V. Munier Maurice F. Sammons Marian LeFevre Manly Joanna Mackay Gurney Donald M. Lamb Frank Alonzo Myers Robert D. auer Carl G. Welty, Jr. Robert H. Leene John A. Oakley Clifford A. Sertl 1937 1947 Robert J. Lehr Joseph E. O'Keefe Donald E. Spetz Thomas R. Forbes Joseph T. Anderson 1957 Charles B. Lestin Stanley S. Otto Robert ]. Vogt Kenneth P. McConnell Chester F. Burmaster James M. Colville Dale C. Lindenmuth Raymond E. Owen amuel H. Verb Catherine alo Popper Beatrice Harrison Humm Madeline Goldstein Arthur D. Marshall Wayne R. Pierce Charles M. Wall Fred C. McCrossen R. J. Reynolds William D. Wilbur Helen McVean McGill Cleland B. Ross Nicholas Micket Kay James Rote 1953 Frank A. Mindach Louis P. Ruggeri Erminio L. A. Adorante Verna H. Moore Daniel V. Ryan Morris H. Ball Edward L. Mulen Robert L. Sant Audley P. Blake Wilbur F. Napier Reinhart chaUn John R. Courneen John M. eady Frederick G. Schoeneman,]r. Francis J. Davie Albert Newman Marye 1. Scoville Ludwig P. Gluchowski Me e Frederick L. Schuman Myrtle Goldstein ileal es t Evelvn Maima Parenti Franklin A. Puff Robert W, Sharkey Jacquelyn Haas Marvin J. Hoffman Bettina Warburg Warren S. Richardson Edgar R. Smith Willis E. Hallowell 1953-MR Nolan Kaltreider John D. Young, Jr. Francis H. Ryck Richard G. Soule John J. Hart J. Worden Kane Paul N. Yu Herbert L. Sadinsky Richard J. Susat Frederick G. Hartley John A. Abbott Lawrence Kohn Joseph J. Salamone Carl A. Talbot Robert M. Hewitt John A. Benjamin Sidney Larson Samuel R. Salamone Joseph J. Vaeth Manuel Hirsch Thomas M. Blake Ralph R. Lobene I954-MR Sherwood Shulman Josephine Versace Donald S. Judd Richard J. Bloor James H. Lockhart, Jr. Stanley E. Stahura Paul W. Whitcomb Fred L. Jung Harry G. Brown Joseph D. Mann John H. Morton Rosalind Hartt Tuites Charles P. Wolfe Mary Marple Jung Saul Commins Norman Margolis Mary Wheatland Schley Robert F. Williams 1952 Roger E. Kellogg Elinor F. Downs George R. Meneely James H. Thorpe Harl A. Wright John R. Mangan Ward L. Ekas J. Merrell Parker Robert J. Allan Santo P. Marzullo Edward F. Falsey Richard P. Sexton 1951 Donald J. Bittner Clyde J. Moon Wayne W. Fox Richard M. Shaw 1955-MR Miles A. Bailey Harold Bollotin Donald C. ickason Henry Freund Charles T. ullivan Arthur J. Beane Newell W. Britt Charles N. O'Brian Roy B. Greer Jack E. Thomas Heinz Valtin Robert J. Bolger Paul Christoff Dorothy M. Phillips

50 Ilivision Summary o[ C mp ig ~ Y

Reg 9 nal CI bs

SCHENECTADY

Roy E. Hunt, J 47G, Co-Chairman Leonard ied-rach,'43, Co-Chairman Per Cent of Participation-55 c Amount Pledged-Sl,025.

CLIFFORD A. SERTL, '52U Co-Chairman, Universitv School Division

Jose Ramon Puente Edwin A. Rathbun 1956 John L. Salzer Richard H. Arfman Harry J. Sapienza Edward W. Barkley William F. Seeler John Robert Benzoni Edward elznick David Arnold Blide Ann Rose Skalny Donald W. Burns Clarence E. Smith Arthur A. Chambers Loretta Miller Smith Robert W. Colebeck George W. W ixsom Robert M. Comstock Edward F. Coyle 1954 Frank C. Dixon Byron B. Blake Henry J. Fischer Mathew P. Cornelia Edith Fishbaugh Frank J. Drago Rose A. Frawley Thomas Jay Erdman Betty Lou Freeman DETROIT Irving . Gordon Rose Marie Germano Francis J. Erhart Anthony V. Giusti John J. Griffin Lois M. Groth J\1r. tmd Mrs. Amold Gielz, Co-Chairmen Francis J. Gruenauer Kathryn B. Holyer John W. Henner William E. Kane Per Cent of Participation-33% Donald W. Herbison Harold A. Kelso Elsie M. LaGas T. Richard Kenny Amount Pledged~$348. Raymond P. Lang Robert J. Kenyon Louis ). Marianetti Ferdinand A. Maine Richard E. Maxwell Gennaro Maiorino B. Clifford Mohney Margaret B. Mayer Jean B. Powers John B. McKelvey Richard M. Rapp Roderick C. Meier Angela Marie Roncone Robert H. Neilson James D. Sharps Madeline C. O'Keefe Bernard M. Spinell Frank E. Pitts Ruth G. tewart Elizabeth B. Rauh Dorothy A. Taylor Raymond A. Schirmer icholas L. Weeks Carol Greenwald Scouler John F. Welch Charles W. Sekol Nelson J. Zimmer Donald R. Spear Eugene 1. Stell PHILADELPHIA 1955 Jerome A. Stern Barbara M. Allen Robert L. Stoffel Garratt Crebbin, '28, Chairman John Paul Bader Barbara F. Swift James L. Barry Edward B. Taylor Per Cent of Participation-26% Robert Bloom William L. Thompson Joan Sharpe Burke John R. Tracy Amount Pledged-$430. John James Burns Lyle A. Warner Martin H. Conheady William G. Wilson Ralph DeFrank Walter G. Dunn Merton R. Embling Courtland W. Fiero 1957 Mario G. Frati Kathryn S. Altpeter Onofrio V. Germano Paul R. Bray Ernest J. G ra ves Joan Penner Cohn John C. Haelen Robert J. Cone Charles R. Hasenauer Richard Conrad Clement G. Hilberer Frank R. Esterheld Clay Morgan Hood Diana W. Fearby Merrill W. Killick Robert W. Greeley C. Melville Kless atalie P. Guran Alexander F. Kowalski John E. Heimrich Charles G. Lang John C. Henderschott WAYNE-ONTARIO Cataldo A. Maggiulli Helen .J. Kelly Walter George Maher Helen R. Mitlof Eugene Bernard Michelsen William E. Morris C. Burton ewman, J 39, Chairman Leon R. Neese Joseph J. Murray Virginia King Norris Katherine M. Pancoast Per Cent of Participation-17% Roger J. Quinn Joan Chancey Perna George R. Ramsey Alexander A. Piccirilli Amount Pledged-$289. Thomas L. Randall Emma R. Rohman Kenneth R. Reitz Lorraine B. Sevcovic Oliver H. Saucke Lincoln W. Smith Peter P. Saunor Robert P. Stoll Marvin J. Schroeder Phyllis Surwillo Leslie D. Stroebel E. Regina Wiggins Thomas . Wheeler George E. Wrisley

51 POSTMASTER: Return postage guaranteed by University of Rochester Alumni Federation, Rochester 3. New York.

Three members of Navy ROTC naval science staff register mixed emotions during a close game in faculty-staff bowling league series. From left, Lieut. Henry Nix, Maj. Joseph Schim­ menti, Col. Noah RodehefFer. Please turn to page 30 for story.