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6-1939

Maine Alumnus, Volume 20, Number 9, June 1939

General Alumni Association, University of Maine

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LEADERS Registration 1 ecords toppled when these classes came back for Commencement The Class of 1914, celebrating twenty- five years registered 42 for the largest Twenty-fifth in history , 1909, in the center, won the Twentieth Century Attendance Cup by ringing back 37 members for a 25%; the 1929 group registered 46 members for the largest class total of the day. ALUMNI DAY SETS NEW HIGH Reunion Records Boosted - - Pres. Hauck Honored - - Attendance Highest Ever

ATURDAY, , was Alumni June Kelley ’12 and Harold J Shaw ’14, by 1914 A painted elephant, Bolivar, Day at the University of Maine; any this was necessitated by the termination goats, cows, tractors, farm machinery, and S casual visitor would soon have known of the long and valuable services of two alumni, alumnae, waves, and children made that watching the gay crowds, the wide veteran members of the Council, Mrs. up the cavalcade Inside they proceeded to range of classes, the happy reunion groups William F Schoppe '08 and Harry E mix a birthday cake in honor of their with colorful costumes adding to the Sutton '09 twenty-fifth and treat the crowd scene. The more accustomed visitor, how- The new alumni member of the Univer- During the ensuing baseball game, the ever, would also have sensed something sity Athletic Board is George D. Carlisle effective pitching of Ernie Reidman ’38 else in the atmosphere of the day, would ’35, of Bangor, who will replace Clifford backed up by such former stars as Rod have realized that this Alumni Day was Patch ’ll, retiring after eighteen years of Elliott '38 Fern Bagley ’32, Carl Honer the biggest in the history of Maine. service Harold M. Pieice '19, having ’35. Louie Airoldi ’29, and Syl Pratt ’30 Fifteen reunion classes ranging from complete 1 the unexpired term of the late was sufficient to nose out a win over the 1889 to 1937 contributed a large share both Hosea Buck as Alumni Member on the seniors Meanwhile, in Balentine Hall to the spirit and to the size of the alumni University's Board ot Trustees, was rec- the women were invited to the tea spon­ attendance. Outstanding among them ommended to the Governor and Council sored by the combined alumnae sorority were the Attendance Cup winners—1909 for reappointment to this position groups of the vicinity Over one hundred and 1889. The 25% attendance recorded During the afternoon several reunion alumnae, wives, faculty members, and by ’09 brought them the Twentieth Cen­ classe-. put on well-executed stunts, headed guests took advantage of the opportunity tury Cup, while eight of the eleven living by the impressive Television in Technicol­ for a pleasant afternoon interlude Guests members of ’89, fifty years out, registered or by 1909 Ferdinand the Bull, staged of honor for the affair were Mrs. William for 72.7% to win the Class of 1908 Cup jointly by 1931 and 1929 was particularly F Schoppe ’08, of Auubrn, veteran mem­ Other classes, however, also deserve men­ enjoyed by the crowd, 1930’s Hill Billy ber of the Alumni Council, Miss Marion tion, for 1914 brought back the largest Wedding and performances by 1932 and Buzzell, of Old Town, member of the number of any Twenty-five year group in 1937 rounded out the program The big­ twenty-five year class 1914 and for many history with forty-two registeied, and gest thing in the stunt line, however, was years well known as a member of the fac- 1929 recorded the day’s largest number, the parade into the baseball game featured (Continued on Page 6) registering 46 members Last year’s Golden Group, 1888, registered seven strong, the same number they recorded on their reunion last year The total legistrations for the day came to the number of 459, topping last year’s previous high record by twenty-two and setting a new mark for the Association At the noon luncheon, given this year in honor of the members of 1889 on their Golden Anniversary, over four hundred alumni and guests paid tribute to the eight members of the class able to be present. Fred Knight ’09, president of the alumni and Dr Hauck for the University offered the congratulations of the Associ­ ation and the University and presented each member with a Fifty-Year certificate. Officers for the Year During the morning the reunion classes held meetings and class breakfasts The Association meeting was also held at this time, the business transacted is reported in detail elsewhere. Officers to serve for the year were re­ elected without change, Fred D. Knight ’09 to serve as president, George D. Bearce ’ll as vice president, Paul D. Bray ’14 as treasurer, and Maurice Jones ’12 as clerk. For the Alumni Council, Earl Gowell ’30, THE GOLDEN GROUP- The Class of 1889, celebrating their Fiftieth Reunion at Commencement, won the 1908 Attendance Cup with eight members returned of their F Drummond Freese ’15, and Andrew J. eleven living membership. Pictured above are, left to light, J W. Edgerly, Eben Beck ’13 were re-elected. Two new mem­ Haggett, honorary marshal for the day, John Reed, Elmer Greenwood, Ambrose White, bers to the Council were also elected, M George Gay, and Mott Wilson. Mr. George Freeman was also registered with the class.

Vol. 20, No. 9 the MAINE ALUMNUS June, 1939 Published monthly, from October to June inclusive, by the University General Alumni Association Business office, Room 414, 6 State St., Bangor, Maine, or the Maine Alumnus, University of Maine, Orono, Maine. Subscription price, 2 00 per year included in annual alumni dues of $3.00. National Advertising representatives: The Graduate Group, Inc., 30 Rockefeller Plaza, New York City, Boston. Chicago, , Los Angeles and San Francisco. Entered as second class matter at the Post Office at Bangor, Maine, under act of March 3, 1870

3 RECORDS AND REPORTS

S a preliminary to Alumni Day the develop plans and present them for action Treasurer, Memorial Fund Committee, Alumni Council met for its annual at the next Council meeting. Memorial Fund Treasurer, Necrology, A session Friday afternoon. The ses­ F. Drummond Freese ’15, as chairman Placement Bureau, and Alumni Associa­ sion was one of the most interesting in of the Commemorative Plate Committee, tion Treasurer. A copy of this set of re­ recent years. Fourteen of the eighteen reported that orders had been received for ports will be sent to any alumnus upon Council members were present. 183 dozen plates, far exceeding the early request. Two unusually important committees expectations of the committee. It is not ❖ ❖ presented reports during Commencement, expected that delivery can be made before U. of M. Foundation Meets one on a Visiting Committee Plan and late fall. The annual meeting of the University the other concerning a new University By unanimous vote Harold M. Pierce of Maine Foundation, organized to receive [library building. Leslie E. Little ’04, ’19, of Bangor, was renominated to serve and administer trust and other funds for chairman of the alumni committee to study as alumni representative on the University the benefit of the University, was held dur­ and if found feasible develop a preliminary Board of Trustees. Mr. Pierce was first ing the Commencement week-end. Stephen plan under which Visiting Committees nominated about two years ago to fill the Wheatland, of Bangor, president of the would be created reported that joint fac­ unexpired term of the late Hosea B. Buck. foundation, was re-elected to that office as ulty-alumni consideration resulted in a was Ralph Whittier ’02, of Bangor, to the recommendation that Visiting Committees Life Membership position of treasurer. be established. Subsequent action by the The By-Laws of the Alumni Associa­ Four new members were elected for the faculty approved the plan. The Council tion were amended to provide for Life coming year, George T. Carlisle ’09, Cur­ approved the recommendations. Details Membership dues in the amount of $100 tis M. Hutchins ’29, and Otto Nelson, all concerning this important action will be with the restriction that only the income of Bangor, and Harry Sutton ’09, of Bos­ published in a later issue. from the money shall be used. ton. Directors chosen for the year were From the committee on Library of which From the Alumni Activities Fund Trus­ Mr. Wheatland, Mr. Whittier, Mr. Nelson, Harry E. Sutton ’09 was chairman, came tees came the report of receipts and inter­ and Mr. Hutchins, of Bangor, and Mr. a report of their investigatoin of the situ­ est amounting to $284.65 during the year Raymond W. Davis ’ll, of Guilford. ation. The committee could see of no plan ending . The total of the Fund on whereby the present Library building that date was $3,643.09. ❖ ❖ could be altered, expanded or added to At the new style Alumni Meeting, Dean During Commencement, President satisfactorily. The five members were Arthur Deering ’12 spoke to the assem­ Hauck announced the receipt of a second unanimous in agreement that a new struc­ bled graduates on the subject of the Col­ payment of $5575 from the estate of the ture was an immediate need and further lege of Agriculture, describing its place late Charles F. Woodman, of Auburn, expressed the belief and recommendation in the life of the State and the University. making the total amount of the Woodman that alumni would be interested in and As a part of the streamlining motif to Fund $11,575. In addition, there was also willing to co-operate with the University speed up the annual association meeting, received a case of 70 fine specimens of in solving this problem. The Council and several of the reports were mimeographed Maine tourmalines which will be added to subsequently the Alumni Association in and distributed to those attending the ses­ the University geological collection. annual session voted unanimously to ap­ sion. Included in the bound collection The will of Mr. Woodman, who died prove in principle the recommendations were the following: Alumni Activities January 21, 1938, specified that the residue of the Committee and authorized appoint­ Fund, Dues Committee, Executive Secre­ of his estate should go to the University to ment of a committee or committees to tary, Memorial Building Committee be used under the direction of the Presi­ dent and Trustees to help “deserving and needy students, especially boys who are desirous of and willing to work and earn an education.” The Trustees voted to use the income from this fund for scholarships to be awarded in accordance with the pro­ visions of the bequest. Mr. Woodman had never attended or had any official connection with the Uni­ versity which in his will he described as “an institution with which I am familiar and of which I am an admirer.” ❖ Thanks to the interest of the New York Alumni Association a flag of the Univer­ sity of Maine will be flown at the New York World’s Fair along with banners of many other colleges and universities throughout the country. In line with the policy of the Fair officials one day will be designated as University of Maine Day at the Fair. The officers of the New York Alumni, desirous of having Maine represented at the Fair which among other features is VETERANS: Mrs. William F. Schoppe ’08 and Harry E. Sutton ’09 retired this year giving prominence to intercollegiate sport after long and valuable services on the Alumni Council. events, contributed the two flags required.

4 AT THE YEAR’S END

HE sixty-eighth annual Commence­ College and this year’s commencement University. John C Caldwell, ’28, Ste­ ment exercises of the University speaker, the degree of Doctor of Laws; phen A. Griffin, ’22, Lucille E Smith, ’21, Tsaw a total of 305 bachelor degrees and Raymond Henry Fogler, ’15, recent­ and Ruth A. Wray, ’20, received the awaided in Agriculture, Arts, Education, ly made president of Montgomery Ward, Master of Arts degree in Education, and Technology to the Class of 1939, formerly executive secretary of the Maine Frances H. Babb, ’30, in English, Edwin newest members of the Alumni Associa­ Extension Service, the degree of Doctor S. Costiell, ’38, in History, Lillian F. tion on Monday, Prominent of Laws. Loveitt, ’30, in History and Government; among the announcements of the day the Master of Science degree was award­ was the award of the Poitland Alumnae Class Day ed to Lester H Smith, 37, in Agronomy, watch given to the senior woman con­ The Class of 1939 also held the stage John S. Getchell, ’36, in Bacteriology, tributing most to the University to Ruth during Friday, , Class Day. Fea­ Hiram L. Smith, Jr, ’38, in Chemical A Pagan, of Deer Isle, and the Washing­ tured in the traditional Class Day pro- Engineering, Howard M. Goodwin, ’38, ton Alumni watch for the outstanding giam were Artemus Weatherbee, of Ban­ and John H. Lewis, ’38, in Economics man to Dana E. Drew, of Patten The gor, valedictorian, and Clark Kuney, of and Business Administration, and Avery Mary Ellen Chase Essay Pnze for the Boston, class orator. Miss Audrey J. E Rich, ’37, in Plant Pathology. year was awarded to F Clark Thurston, White, of South Portland, presented the The citations for the honorary degrees ’40, of Bangor. class poem, Frederick Patterson, son of were as follows Seven honorary degrees were conferred Judge Arthur W, '14, the piophecy for GLADYS HASTY CARROLL: by President Hauck at the traditional men, and Miss Virginia Maguire, of Brought up in South Berwick, Maine; exercises to leaders in education, science, Portland, prophecy for women Albert a graduate of Bates College; distin­ literature, and business Recipients were: Toner, of Lewiston, was chosen class guished writer, who interprets the life and character of Maine with affection and Gladys Hasty Carioll, eminent novelist chap’ain, and Eunice Gale, of Portland, understanding, author of three novels, of Maine life, widely known for her presented the gifts to women, and Paul of which As the Earth Turns is recog­ book “As the Faith Turns,” awarded Browne, of Bethel, gifts to men. nized as a classic of Maine farm life. In recognition of literary achievements the degree of Doctor of Letters; Lucien During the morning, the final class which have won merited praise and have Percy Libby, veteran English teacher of meeting of the seniors was held. Nor­ contributed to the prestige of Maine let­ Portland high school, the degiee of Mas­ man H. “Spike” Mayo, ’09, of Provi­ ters, we are happy to confer upon you ter of Arts; Paul Taylor White, a native dence, R I, was the guest speaker for the degree of Doctor of Letters. of Bangor and prominent composer and the meeting, introducing the newest mem­ LUCIEN PERCY LIBBY: Born and educated in Maine, a graduate of Bow- teacher of music, now with the Eastman bers into the General Alumni Associa­ doin College; for thirty-eight years a School of Music of the Univeisity of tion beloved and honored teacher at the Port­ Rochester, the degree of Doctor of Mu­ On Sunday, , the annual Bacca­ land high school; endowed with those sic; Erlon Lincoln Ncwdick, '18, promi­ qualities essential in a great teacher, he laureate exercises were held. “The Final inspires in his students an enduring ap­ nent worker in Maine Agriculture and Examination” was the subject of the day’s preciation of English Literature. Chief of the Division of Plant Industry sermon presented by the Reverend Ben­ The Trustees of the University of of the State Department of Agnculture, jamin B. Hersey, Pastor, Congress Square Maine, wishing to recognize your out­ standing services as an effective and de­ who received the degree of Master of Universalist Church, Portland. voted teacher, are happy to confer upon Science; Lowell Jacob Reed, ’07, (MS., In addition to Bachelor degrees, the you the degree of Master of Arts. ’12), Dean of the School of Hygiene and University awarded a total of twenty- PAUL TAYLOR WHITE: Born and Public Health at Johns Hopkins and nine Masters degrees at Commencement, reared in Bangor, Maine; gifted compos­ eminent authority on bio-statistics, the thirteen for the Master of Arts and six­ er, conductor, and teacher of music; a graduate of the New England Conserva­ degree of Doctor of Science; James Phin­ teen for the Master of Science Among tory of Music and for several years a ney Baxter, 3rd, President of Williams the recipients were thirteen alumni of the (Continued on Page 6)

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HONORED: Seven leaders in many fields of activity were honored with degrees by the University on June 12. Pictured above from left to right are Rev. L. S. Staples, of Gardiner, who offered the Commencement prayer, E. E. Chase, president of the Board of Trustees, Dr. James P. Baxter 3rd, Commencement speaker, given LL.D., Lucien P. Libby, of Portland, M.A., Lowell J. Reed ’07, Sc.D , Gladys Hasty Carroll, Litt D., Erlon L. Newdick’18, M.S., Raymond FI. Fogler ’15, LL.D., Paul T. White, Mus.D., President Hauck, and Governor Lewis O. Barrows.

5 faculty of Johns Hopkins University, r A 1 where he is now professor of bio-statis­ Athletic Board Report tics and Dean of the School of Hygiene and Public Health. In recognition of achievements which To the General Alumni Association Basketball Championship. Maine’s fine have brought honor to your Alma Mater, of the University of Maine. record for producing National Track the Trustees are happy to confer upon you Champions was continued this year when the degree of Doctor of Science. Herewith is submitted the Annual Re­ one of our representatives won the Na­ JAMES PHINNEY BAXTER, 3rd: port of the representative of the Alumni Born and brought up in Portland, Maine, tional hammer championship. During the a graduate of Williams College, doctor on the Athletic Board of the University. last eleven years, Maine has won five of philosophy at Harvard University; It has become customary for the retiring individual National championships in distinguished educator, winning recogni­ tion at Harvard as a great teacher and alumni representative to submit this re­ track, a record exceeded among the New port on behalf of the three alumni mem­ eminent scholar; widely known as an England Colleges only by Yale and Har­ authority in the field of American diplo­ bers of the board, and, inasmuch as I vard. matic history; trusted and admired leader have served on the board for a period of The writer greatly appreciates the of youth, now ably serving as President eighteen years, it seems timely to briefly of Williams College. honor and the opportunity he has had of In recognition of outstanding achieve­ mention the status to which athletics at serving the Alumni for so many years ments in your profession, the University the University have gradually developed as their representative on the Athletic of your native State is happy to confer upon you the degree of Doctor of Laws. during the past decade. Board. The associations with faculty, The growth in size of the student body RAYMOND HENRY FOGLER: coaches, students, and alumni have been Native son of the State of Maine, exem- at the University has, of course, been ac­ very enjoyable. plyfying the best in Maine character and companied by an increase in the number Respectfully submitted, tradition, a graduate of this university of students participating in athletics. in the class of 1915, Master of Arts from Clifford Patch ’ll Due, however, to improved playing facil­ Princeton University; after ably serving ❖ ❖ the University of Maine as Executive ities, to a greater variety of sports, to Secretary of the Agricultural Extension expanded schedules, or, in other words, At the Year’s End Service, modestly and quietly rising to to greater opportunities for greater num­ (Continued from Page 5) a place of leadership in the field of bers, the number of students taking part business administration, recently select­ member of its faculty; since 1923 associ­ ed as President of Montgomery Ward in athletics has increased at a rate even ated with the Eastman School of Music and Company; business executive of vi­ greater than the rate of growth of the in the University of Rochester. sion, fidelity, and courage; loyal friend student body as a whole. There are Your notable contributions to Ameri­ and devoted alumnus. can music as composer and conductor Your Alma Mater with pride and grat­ now approximately eight hundred men, have brought distinction and honor to itude confers upon you the degree of or about two-thirds of the male student your native State. In behalf of the Doctor of Laws. body, taking part in the athletic program Trustees, I am happy to confer upon you ❖ ❖ which is under the direction of the Ath­ the degree of Doctor of Music. ERLON LINCOLN NEWDICK; Alumni Day letic Board. Ninety per cent of the Born and educated in Maine, an alumnus (Continued from Page 3) students take part in the Intramural pro­ of this university; devoted public ser­ gram. vant who has contributed to the advance­ ulty in the Romance Language Depart­ ment of Maine agriculture, particularly ment of the University, and Miss Janie This large and desirable growth in in the development of the potato seed athletic participation has brought about industry; for twenty-six years a loyal Michaels, of Stillwater, member of the some difficulties as regards proper ad­ and efficient member of the staff of the Class of 1883. In charge of the program State Department of Agriculture, since this year was Mrs. Louise Durgan Ham­ ministration and coaching, since there 1919 serving as Chief of its Division of has been no increase in the executive or Plant Industry. mons ’31, of Bangor. coaching staff for a number of years. In recognition of your effective ser­ Alumni Banquet Conditions are especially difficult in the vices in your chosen field, your Alma Mater takes pride in conferring upon Feature of the day was the Alumni coaching of the large freshman squads, you the degree of Master of Science. and in the detailed and wide-spread work LOWELL JACOB REED: A gradu­ Banquet in the evening. In addition to of the Faculty Manager’s office. This ate of the University of Maine in 1907, the program of speakers starring Raymond Master of Science in 1912, and a Doctor most urgent need of the Athletic De­ H. Fogler ’15, president of Montgomery of Philosophy of the University of Penn­ Ward, Governor Lewis O. Barrows ’16, partment calls for the appointment, at sylvania ; teacher of Mathematics at this the earliest possible date, of a full time, university and at the University of Penn­ Dana Drew, Senior Class president, all year around, well-qualified man, who can sylvania; since 1918 a member of the ably introduced by Paul W. Monohon ’14 coach freshman teams and assist with as toastmaster, the event featured some­ the tremendous volume of work in the Nominations! thing special this year in the form of a tribute to President and Mrs. Hauck on Faculty Manager’s office Nominations are in order for the Lack of housing facilities on the cam­ the occasion of the completion of their award of next year’s Alumni Service first five years of leadership at the Uni­ pus for visiting teams may soon compel Emblem, a feature of the fall Home- the abandonment of Preparatory and versity. Mrs. William F. Schoppe ’08, coming program. veteran alumnae member of the Alumni High School meets and tournaments. Recipient of the award, based on Council, spoke in behalf of the alumni in During the past year there has been services rendered to the Alumni As­ presenting Mrs. Hauck with a tribute for constructed on the north side of Alumni sociation and the University, will be her service and graciousness. Field a new steel stand on a permanent selected from nominations made by Fred D. Knight ’09, as president of the concrete foundation and enclosed on the alumni; any alumnus may nominate alumni, then presented Dr. Hauck with sides and back • with a tile wall. This any person who he believes merits the sincere tribute of alumni in the form stand has a seating capacity of 3,000 and this signal recognition. of funds for the construction of two is a noteworthy addition to our athletic The closing date for this year’s new units of the Cabin Community so dear plant. New folding bleachers of the nominations will be soon. Name of to the president’s heart. The sum of best type have been installed on the floor persons suggested together with a $2,000 was the gift of nearly three hun­ of the Memorial Gymnasium, statement of their services should dred individuals and represented the deep During the past year Maine teams won be mailed to the General Alumni appreciation of alumni everywhere for the the State and New England Champion­ Association, 13 Fernaid Hall within leadership and ability which have charac­ ships in Cross Country and the State the next few days. terized Dr. Hauck’s administration.

6 advanced work for the protection and Alumni Trustee Report preservation of our timberlands. We are in hopes to obtain private funds, if not in full at least in part, for the erec­ To the Alumni Council Campus on -23 President Hauck tion of this building. University of Maine informed the Board of Trustees that such The University of Maine has outgrown a Conference was of importance and, Orono, Maine its present Library. President Hauck, It is with pleasure that I submit to through his efforts and the aid of the Chairman Chase, and the Board of Trus­ you this report for the college year Cainegie Endowment, this Conference tees recognize, without question, the was held The sessions of the Conference 1938-39 necessity for this addition to our educa­ We believe that this year has been weie well attended and enthusiastically tional institution. The University does marked with progress, and first let us received not have funds in sight to carry out the mention the additions which have been The University is continuously en­ construction of a Library Building. It and will be made to our physical plant. deavoring to co-operate with the State has been said that the Alumni of Maine Construction work is under way on of Maine in the advancement of general has never been a passive body and here the new Girls’ Dormitory. Funds for the welfare and the betterment of conditions is another constructive piece of work cost of construction and equipment for in the State. This is evidenced through that it can do. We hope the Alumni this $400,000 building will be obtained work being cai ried on in our new Soil will aid the University in the project from a P W.A. grant and bank loans. Mechanics Laboratoiy, the Marine Lab- of raising funds for this building. The bank loans will be liquidated over oratoiy at Lamoine, our College of Agri­ With deep sorrow and with appre­ a period of years from income derived culture Experimentation and Extension ciation for the valuable service rendered from dormitory operations. The new work, Chemical and Engineering re­ to the State of Maine and the Univer­ dormitoiy will provide modern, efficient search, and aid extended to the State in sity, of Maine, I wish to record the pass­ and attractive accommodations foi ap­ breeding and hbeiating 30,000,000 para­ ing of John Gyger on June 1, 1939. Mr. proximately 160 girls. sites to combat the damaging work of Gygei was a Trustee of the University Plans for the new Chemistry Building the saw fly in our timberland aieas of Maine from February 19, 1930. are nearly completed and construction A new position, that of business mana­ The loyal support and spirit of co­ will start very shoitly. The Trustees ger, was created by the Board of Trus­ operation of the Alumni Association and are desirous of obtaining a P W A. grant tees dunng the past jear The appointee Council during the past year has been which will aid in lelieving the financial to this new position is Henry L Doten, gratefully received by President Hauck, buiden to the University. This building ’23, of Augusta, a giaduate in Civil En­ Chairman Chase, and the Board of Trus­ is urgently needed to supply enlarged gineering tees, and may I express, in conclusion, space for the instruction of chemistry The immediate the future needs of their sincere appreciation. and chemical engineering. We are con­ University include a Plant Science Build­ fident that, when completed, this build­ ing and a Library Building. The Plant Respectfully submitted, ing will serve as a useful and attractive Science Building is needed to relieve a Harold M. Pierce T9 addition to our Campus. congested condition in the College of Alumni Representative A Poultry House, located near the Aguculture as well as for carrying on Board of Trustees college barns, is also under construction. The so-called Annis Farm, located near Presque Isle, Maine, was purchased this year This farm adjoins a University farm which is used for experimental purposes in the raising of potatoes. A new linotype was purchased for the University Pi ess and repairs to the Press building were made. A new Soil Mechanics Laboratory was constructed and equipped in the basement of Lord Hall. At the beginning of the year, the administrative heads of the various facul­ ty departments weie confronted with the problem of caring for the largest student enrollment in the history of the Univer­ sity, the enrollment number being 1,876. Despite this large enrollment we sin­ cerely believe that President Hauck and his faculty members are maintaining a high academic standard at the Univer­ sity of Maine. Faculty appointments and piomotions were authorized this year as usual al­ though few major changes in the ad­ ministrative staff were made. The summer session of the University was attended by the largest registra­ WATCH WINNERS: Ruth A. Pagan, of Deer Isle, and Dana Drew, of Patten, tion on record, there being an eniollment were this year’ winners of senior watches presented by the Portland Alumnae and Wash­ of 641 students. ington Alumni, for services to the University. Miss Pagan, a Dean’s list student, was I think it is of interest to mention the member of All-Maine Women, Arts Club, Women’s Student Government, President Canadian-American Conference which of Contributors’ Club, served on Class Committees, and participated in many other activities. Drew, also a Dean’s list tudent, was an outstanding athlete, member of Alpha was held at the University of Maine ti Zeta, Senior Skulls, Class President, Phi Kappa Phi, and active in many other ways. cey S. Robinson, Nelson E. Smith, Kenneth W. Downing, Donald Drew, Alumni Day Registration Elmer R. Tobey, Albert Verrill, Benja­ H. Richard FitzMorris, Mrs. Claire min B. Whitney, Mrs. Mildred Prentiss Callaghan FitzMorris, Harold S. Fol­ Wright som, Richard P. Gleason, Lyman S. 1873—George H. Hamlin 1912—Arthur L. Deering, Frank Fellows, Gray, Albert M. Harmon, Cecil J. Har­ 1876—Edward M. Blanding ribine, M. Josephine Hartwell, Marian 1879—Charles A. Morse Lloyd E. Houghton, Philip R. Hussey, Robert E. Hussey, Maurice D. Jones, Hawkes, Mrs. Beatrice Bryenton Heal, 1882— Charles S. Bickford, Will R. How­ Mrs. Ramona Poley Highlands, Nich­ ard Benjamin C. Kent, Frank H. Lancaster, Warren McDonald, Edward E. Saw­ olas G. Hodgman, Richard W. Holmes, 1883— Janie C. Michaels, George A. Sut­ Eunice M. Jackson, Loomis Kinney, ton yer, Mrs. Edith Folsom Sawyer, Wil­ liam E. Schrumpf, Clayton H. Steele, John H. Lambert, Jr., John R. La- 1884— Leslie W. Cutter Plant, Karl D. Larsen, Russell M. 1885— James N. Hart George F. Wentworth, Karl D. Wood­ ward Look, I. Gilbert Luce, Mrs. Mary 1886— Josiah M. Ayer Robinson McClure, George F. Ma­ 1887— Charles T. Vose, John S. Wil­ 1913—Edward E. Chase, Frank W. honey, Reginald H. Merrill, Ruth Me­ liams Haines, Carlton G. Lutts, Allan F. servey, Ralph F. Morrison, Wendall 1888— Frederick L. Burke, James K. McAlary E. Mosher, Robert Parks, Harold T. Chamberlain, Charles B. Gould, John 1914—Arthur W. Abbott, Harold P. Payson, Mary F. Reed, Emory F. W. Hatch, Thomas G. Lord, Ralph H. Adams, Woodbury G. Barrett, Estelle Ridlon, Mrs. Alice Webster Sinclair, Marsh, Nathan A. Ring I. Beaupre, Carl A. Blackington, Paul Mrs. Beulah Kneeland Weatherbee, G. 1889— Joseph W. Edgerly, George C. D. Bray, Marion S. Buzzell, Chauncey Albert Whittier Freeman, George M. Gay, Elmer E. W. L. Chapman, Ralph T. Coffey, 1930— Miriam S. Anderson, Perley E. Greenwood, Eben R. Haggett, John Richard F. Crocker, Charles W. Fen­ Armitage, Alice H. Bagley, Robert Reed, Ambrose H. White, Mott F. derson, Norman R. French, Edward L. Bancroft, Brenna Blaisdell, Richard S. Wilson Getchell, William W. Grace, Howe Bradford, Mrs. Jessie French Bryan 1890— George P. Gould, Frederick G. W. Hall, J. Russell Hudson, Frederick (Advanced), Mrs. Bertha Carter Cush­ Quincy S. Jones, John N. Junkins, Mrs. 1891— William M. Bailey, William N. man, Harold M. Cutler, Charles A. Mary Leonard Kavanagh, Lincoln Cutting, Stewart W. Donahue, Har­ Patten, Clarence Scott King, Mrs. Aileene Hobart Libby, old L. Downing, Horace S. Estey, 1892— William C. Holden Peter M. MacDonald, Leon S. Mc- Judson Files, Mrs. Sarah Pike Glea­ 1893— George F. Rowe, Harry M. Smith Lauchlan, William C. Monahan, Paul 1894— Charles E. Gilbert, Jesse A. Gray, son, Earle R. Gowell, Kenneth Has­ W. Monohon, John O. Olson, Harvey kell, Hector Hebert, Vera L Hill, Mrs. Wallace H. Jose, Herbert Murray, R. Pease, Roy W. Peaslee, Shenton John H. Ricker, George W. Rumball Jenny Robinson Hutchinson, Harold H. A. Peters, Ernest A. Rand, Mrs. Ethel Inman. Harland Knight, Saul Lait, 1896—Charles P. Weston Harrigan Scribner, George E. Sinkin- 1898— C. Parker Crowell Mrs. Helene Johnson Marshall, Eliza­ son, Roland E. Stevens, Joseph W. beth A. Mason, Glenn H. Perkins, 1899— Frank D. Fenderson, Archer L. Strong, Philip W. Thomas, William Grover, Mrs. Mildred Powell McGin­ Marion E. Rogers, Minnie E. Runnells, R. Thompson, Wayland D. Towner, Charles Schlosberg, Russell O. Scrib­ ley, Oliver R. Stover Elmer L. True, Guy R. Wescott, Max 1902— William E. Barrows, Edith M. ner, Prescott Spaulding, Edward Stern, L. Wilder, Sherwood H. Willard, Fred A. Sylvester Bussell, Ralph Whittier Frederick S. Youngs 1903— Edward G. Hartford 1931— Paul E. Bennett, Warren S. Block- 1904— Leslie E. Little, Albert L. Whip­ 1915— Mrs. Margaret Holyoke Adams, linger, Philip J. Brockway, Charlotte ple Douglas M. Beale, Joseph H. Bodwell, E. Cleaves, Ward B. Cleaves, Clifton 1905— Robert R. Drummond, Horace A. William H. Buck, Ava H. Chad- E. Curtis, Parker G. Cushman, Jessie Hilton, J. Harvey McClure, Freeman bourne, Harold Cooper, Raymond H. L. Fraser, Herbert Gallison, Mrs. Ma­ M. Sampson, Adelbert W. Sprague, Fogler, Margaret Graves, John W. rion Avery Gilmore, Mrs. Louise Dur- George S. Williams, Mary M. Wil­ Glover, Mary E. B. Hines, H. Walter gan Hammons, Mrs. Jennie Davidson liams Leavitt, Asa R. Mace Jackson, Raymond K. Lear, Raymond 1906— Albert A. Whitmore 1916— Lewis O. Barrows, Roger W. Bell, E. Marsh, Donald F. Marshall, Mildred 1907— Robert W. DeWolfe, William F. Llewellyn M. Dorsey, Mrs. Madeline E. Merrifield, Richard T. Page, Mrs. Schoppe, Abel P. Wyman Robinson Herlihy, Fred P. Loring, Frances Downes Parr, Mrs. Marguerite 1908— Milton Ellis, James A. Gannett, Walter W. Webber Lincoln Payson, Mrs. Hazel Parkhurst Ballard F. Keith, Mrs. Alice Farns­ 1917— Mrs. Grace Gibbs Berry, Charles Sawyer, Ermo H. Scott. William H. worth Phillips, William F. Scamman, E. Crossland, Bryant L. Hopkins, Smith. Charles H. Tweedie, Ellen Mrs. Marguerite Pilsbury Schoppe Richard E. McKown Wareham. 1909— Guy E. Albee, Thomas D. Austin, 1918— Weston S. Evans, Edward L. Her­ 1932— Mary G. Bean, Mrs. Muriel Free­ Harold M. Bowman, Bertrand F. lihy, Harry D. Watson man Brockway, Mrs. Geraldine Shean Brann, Clinton A. Plumly, Edward W. 1919— Harold M. Pierce Chase, Lovell C. Chase, Albert F. Ger­ Bridgham, Herbert P. Bruce, Mrs. 1920— Robert W. Averill, Frank A. Bes- ry, Willard M. Gilmore, Virgil T. Cora Shaw Calvert, George T. se, Stephen R. Buzzell, Harry Butler, Gross, Wallace H. Humphrey, Merle Carlisle, George P. Deering, Harry L. Walter W. Chadbourne, Mrs. Barbara T. Hilborn, Mrs. Helen Stearns Farnham, William A. Fogler, Joe W. Dunn Hitchner, Mrs. Priscilla Elliott Hincks, Maynard A. Hincks, Paul L. Gerrity, William H. Gilbert, Harold Knowlton Taplin, Kenneth S. Ludden, Smith C. D. Haggett, Ralph C. Harmon, Wal­ 1921— Roger C. Castle, George S. Gins­ McIntire, Alfred P. McLean, Roscoe ter O. Harvey, Howard R. Johnson, berg H. Masterman, Stacy R. Miller, Hugh Lawrence V. Jones, Charles W. King- 1922— Paul E. Murphy, Thomas H. Mur­ H. Morton, Mrs. Edith Talbot Ness, horn, Fred D. Knight, Scott S. Lock­ phy, Philip R. White Harry Paul, Olive Perkins, Mrs. Mar­ yer, Chase MacArthur, Jesse H. Ma­ 1923— Theodore S. Curtis, Lyle M. Da­ garet Merrill Pratt, J. Milton Sims, son, Harold P. Marsh, Norman H. vis, Henry L. Doten, Milton C. Pren­ Mrs. Mollie Rubin Stern Mayo, Elmer O. Pray, Harold A. Rich, tiss, Mrs. Antoinette Gould Torrey, 1933— John P. Farnsworth, Bryce H. Harry C. Riddle, Frederick D. Rogers, Mrs. Martha Sanborn White Jose, James W. McClure, Hazel M. Mrs. Christine Shaw Scamman, Dexter 1924— Hazen H. Ayer, Earl M. Dunham, Scully S. Smith, Harry W. Smith, George L. Harold L. Kelley, George E. Lord, 1934— Winifred V. Cushing, Carmela F. Smith, Harry E. Sutton, Elton L. Bernie E. Plummer, Jr., Theron A. Profita, Claire S. Sanders, John E. Towle, Harry A. White Sparrow Stinchfield, Martha Tuomi. 1910— Leroy W. Ames, Frederick R. 1925— Robert N. Haskell, Joseph M. 1935— Glendon A. Soule Bigney, John L. Collins, William E. Murray, Mrs. Mildred Brown Schrumpf 1936— Darrel B. Currie, Lester J. Meyer, Congdon, Horace J. Cook, Grover T. John Sealey, Jr. Corning, Frank E. Fortier, Albert K. 1926— Leone M. Dakin, Wallace H. El­ liott, Oscar L. Wyman 1937— Winifred C. Adams, H. Elizabeth Gardner, Clifton A. Hall, Ernest Lamb, Ashby, Edward F. Brarmann, Charles Albert E. Libby, Austin L. Maddox, 1927— Mrs. Sally Palmer Bogan, Albert D. B. Buck, Paul Burke, James C. Came­ Dimon E. Merrill, A. Scudder Moore, Nutting, Mrs. Lucy Farrington Sheive ron, Norman D. Carlisle, Elizabeth W. Edith M. Patch, Charles F. Smith, 1928— Earl F. Bennett, A. L. T. Cum­ Dill, Alan D. Duff, Jr., Mrs. Ruby Winthrop H. Stanley, Roy F. Stevens, mings (Hon.),David W. Fuller, Mrs. Black Elliott, Ernest M. Foster, Jack Charles E. Stickney, Herman P. Ruth Palmer Harribine Frost, Elizabeth Gardner, Ralph W. Sweetser, George A. Webster, Harold 1929— Louis A. Airoldi, Kenneth Ander­ Hawkes, Jr., George P. Hitchings, W. Wright son, Dean R. Bailey, Ida M. Bamford, George L. Houston, William F. Hun­ 1911— George D. Bearce, Frederick L. Clarence E. Bassett, Shirley Berger, newell, Barbara Lancaster, Robert E. Chenery, Jr., Raymond W. Davis, Del- Edward Blank, James C. Buzzell, Mrs. Laverty, Jeannette F. MacKenzie, Gus ton W. Folley, Avery C. Hammond, Lucille Spencer Cleveland, A. Russell McLaughlin, George FI. Mader, Wesley Harry Homans, Clifford Patch, Chaun­ Coggins, Mrs. Myrtle Walker Dow, M. Martin, Reginald F. Murphy, Irene 8 • WITH THE TEAMS •

VARSITY BASEBALL Fall Football Schedule VARSITY TRACK Colby 6—Maine 1 Sept. 30 Arnold at Orono State Meet Oct. 7 Rhode Island at Orono A fifth inning rally by Colby at Water­ For the second time since the arrival ville on May 6 broke a scoreless tie and 14 New Hampshire at Orono of Coach Chester Jenkins in 1928 Maine’s gave the Mules an advantage the Maine 21 Connecticut at Storrs varsity track squad had to be content with nine was never able to overcome. The 28 Bates at Lewiston a second place in the traditional state meet, game, second in the year’s state series con­ Nov. 4 Colby at Waterville held this year at Lewiston. A strong test, saw Paul Browne, of Bethel, a sen­ 11 Bowdoin at Orono Bowdoin squad ran off with top honors ior, battling against a freshman pitcher (Homecoming Day ) with 66 1/4 points, Maine following with for Colby, with honors about even, but 32%, Bates 18%, Colby 18. inability to hit when needed kept the pale blue from taking advantage of Browne’s New Englands hurling. Don Smith, smooth running junior from ❖ Easton, was the individual Maine star at New Hampshire 9—Maine 0 Durham, New Hampshire, on May 20, as he equaled meet records in winning both New Hampshire took the honors at the mile and half mile races, but the Maine Durham on May 8, holding the visiting team finished in a final fifth place with Maine nine to their first scoreless game fifteen points Other scores for Maine of the season. Strong pitching by the were made by Stan Johnson, of Brunswick, wildcat team and a decided advantage in and Bob Bennett, of Cranston, R. I., who the use of the bat made the Maine chances took second and third in the hammer few and far apart. ❖ throw. Maine 3—Bowdoin 2 I.C.A.A.A.A. National Champion • Robert Bennett ’41 Senior Paul Browne almost made it a Maine produced a surprise in the shape no-hit, no-run game against Bowdoin at of smiling sophomore Bob Bennett, of Orono on May 10, only to see his hopes New Hampshire 18—Maine 0 Cranston, R. I., among the nation’s great and almost the game go flying over the A decidedly superior New Hampshire at New York on May 27 when his throw right field fence as Melendy of Bowdoin pitching staff came to Orono on May 15 of 178 feet 11 1/8 inches won the hammer hit for four bases in the ninth. The upset and came within one scratch single of go­ throw with the second best mark in IC4A nearly cost Browne the game as Bowdoin ing home with a no-hit game, as three meet history. His great throw, called the scored again to tie at two all In the Maine pitchers were bowing under a tem­ best college effort in that event for the twelfth, however, pinch hitter Ken Clark, pest of hits and runs. Ten runs in the year, combined with a fourth in the same of Fort Fairfield, singled to bring home first inning by the vistors set the pace for event for Stan Johnson and a third in Sheldon Smith, of Bangor, with the win­ the game which never became a contest the record-shattering mile run for Don ning run. after that. Smith to give Maine a team score of ten. ❖ ❖ Bennett’s win makes him the fifth national Bates 9—Maine 6 Colby 4—Maine 2 champion to wear the Maine colors. A southpaw freshman pitcher led Colby Leading by three runs after the first ❖ ❖ to second place behind Bates in the State inning, Maine saw Bates rise up in the Series at Orono on May 16. With little Maine 15—Bowdoin 4 seventh to batter six runs from the pitch­ ability to gather hits when needed, Maine Maine revenged a previous Bowdoin ing of Art Chick, of Monmouth, and win. did not seriously threaten. Art Chick, of victory by completely outplaying the Polar A home run by Doc Gerrish, a junior, of Monmouth, pitched a capable game but Bears at Brunswick on May 24 and left Lisbon Falls, and supporting hits gave was not quite good enough to match the their traditional rivals in the well-known Maine its first lead. In the seventh, a slants of Colby’s Slattery. cellar of the state series. Errors on the costly outfield error followed by a triple, ❖ part of Bowdoin contributed heavily to a squeeze play, and timely singles contrib­ the result. uted to the Bates win Bowdoin 15—Maine 6 Paul Browne, senior member of Maine’s Maine 4—Colby 3 pitching staff, was generous with walks The final game of the series saw Maine A. Olsen, Fred W. Parsons, Mrs. at Brunswick on May 17 and Ken Clark Mabelle Ashworth Smith, Roger W. nose out Colby in one of the best games Smith, Winslow B. Smith, William P. who relieved him in the fourth inning was of the year, played at Waterville on May Stillman, Merton R. Sumner, Jr., Sam­ not much more strict. 27. Drew, playing his last athletic con­ uel E. Swasey, Helen Titcomb, Ralph ❖ test for the Pale Blue hit three times, E. Wentworth, Emery N. Wescott, Mrs. Henrietta Cliff Woodbury. Northeastern 6—Maine 5 driving in the tieing run in the third and 1938—E. Frederick Andrews, Mrs Al­ A close game with the Northeastern scoring himself in the twelfth for the win. thea Millett Brown, Mildred M. Dixon, team from Boston at Orono on May 20 Browne, also playing his final game, Ernest H. Donagan, Elizabeth Drum­ finally went to the visitors in the ninth pitched effectively to prevent Colby from mond, Wallace F. Gleason, Jr., John R Gowell, Bernice M. Hamilton, Jo­ in spite of the most impressive display scoring after the third. The game tumbled seph H. Hamlin, Gerald F. Hart, of batting and scoring power Maine had Colby’s hopes for a first place tie in the Moses H. Lane, Elizabeth H. Mitchell, showed for several games. Art Chick, series and left the final standing with Vincent D. Strout, Mary-Hale Sut­ Bates on top, Colby second, Maine third, ton, Edith L. Thomas, Marjorie M. pitching, only allowed six hits, while Maine Thompson, Mary Louise Wright took nine. and Bowdoin in the cellar position.

9

1 THE HONOR ROLL For the third consecutive year the Class of 1911 leads the Honor Roll by having the largest number of its members who have paid alumni dues for the last three years. On a percentage basis, the class of 1885 stands first, replacing 1879 which has been the percentage leader each of the past two years. # . . . „ In taking first honors and thus claiming leadership ever since the Honor Roll was inaugurated, 1911 boosted its regulars list from 53 last year to 59, thus completely outclassing 1910 and 1917, both of which have given 1911 keen competition heretofore. Right up to Alumni Day, 1936 was either leading or tied with 1911, but the “eleveners” increased their activity and gained leadership. Following are the high five in number of payments and in percentage. In Number of In Percentage I N X Payments of Payments 1911—59 1885—57.1% 1936—58 1879—50.0 1917—50 1887—43.7 1910—50 1894—41.6 1916—44 1899—36.2 The total number of names on the Honor Roll this year is 1330, a new record. Last year on similar date the total was 1186.

< Following is the 1938-39 Honor Roll

1876 Nealley, Calvin H. Hopkins, Mary Alden Russell, Roy E. Hanaburgh, Mrs. Flor­ Blanding, Edward M. 1893 McGinley, Mrs. Mildred Silver, Arthur E. ence (Balentine) (Powell) Stilphen, Charles A. Hilton, Horace A. 1878 Crosby, Walter W. Murray, William A. Thombs, William B. Huntington, George K. Chamberlain, Cecil C. Gould, Harris P. Nelson, William Webb, Arnold S. Malcolm, Hiram B. Webster, Otis C. Murphy, Charles C. Noyes, Herman F. Wheeler, Allen F. Manson, Walter B- Rowe, George F. 1879 Oswald, Herman H. Whittier, Ralph May, John 1894 Palmer, Edward E. ♦Clergue, Francis H. Wilson, Frank P. McClure, J. Harvey Bowler, Frank C. Pretto, Henry J. 1903 McGinley, Mrs. Mabel Decker, Wilbur F. Stephens, Allen W. (Powell) Gibbs, Charles W. Gilbert, Charles E. Coffin, Leroy M. Jose, Wallace H. Veazie, Marcellus M. Moody, Percival R. Libby, Mark D. Wescott, Arthur C. Cooper, Ralph L. Morse, Charles A. Ricker, John H. Freeman, George L. Pennell, Charles W. Wood, Edward B. Whittier, Charles C. Perkins, Mrs. Marion 1881 Gage, Arthur W. (Wentworth) 1895 1900 Harris, Philip H. Adams, Harry W Beedle, Harry W. Hartford, Edward G. Reed, Clarence E. Andrews, Mrs. Lillian Atwood, Gustavus G. Sampson, Freeman M. Boardman, Harold S. Bird, Alan L. Hilliard, John H. Ring Bowerman, Frank H. Hinchliffe, John H. Smith, Carl D. Dunn, Mrs. Isabel Folsom, Leroy R. Snell, Roy M. Martin, James W. Cargill, Walter N. Loud, Warren C. (Ring) Drummond, Henry F. McCready, John H. Sprague, Adelbert W. Osborn, Edwin W Moulton, Albion Stanley, Howard A. Sawtelle, William O. Forbush, Ernest C. Patrick, Stephen E. Simpson, Charles S. Hamlin, George O. Porter, Ernest A. Sweetser, Ernest O. 1896 Hayes, J. Arthur Thomas, Burton M. 1882 Simpson, Paul D. Weeks, Carl W. Reed, Fred M. Black, Frederick F. Hersey, Guy A. Small, Silas G. Kidder, Elmer E. Hobson, Ernest E. Soper, Henry M. White, Frank O. 1884 ♦Palmer, Perley B. Holley, Clifford D. Whitney, Harvey D. Williams, George S. Cutter, Leslie W. Pride, Frank P. Leavitt, D. Willard Wiley, Mellen C. 1906 Pattangall, William R. Randlette, Joseph W. Lombard, Charles H. 1904 Bailey, Frank L. Webber, William Rogers, Lore A. Mackay, John D. Banks, Frank A. Sargent, Paul D. Mann, Edwin J. Adriance, Mrs. Flor­ Bearce, Henry W. 1885 Starr, John A. Nason, Leon A. ence (Buck) Bearce, Winfield D. Chamberlain, George W. Weston, Charles P. Noyes, Frank A. Averill, Roy S. Burke, Walter H. Hart, James N. Weymouth, Frank E. Porter, C. Omer Bean, Paul L. Colcord, Joanna C. Keyes, Austin H 1897 Ricker, Percy L. Blanchard. Benjamin W. Currier, Charles E. Russell, Fremont L. Rollins, Frank M Buker, Edson B. Downing, Herbert P. Bryer, Charles S. Chase, Clifford G. 1886 Cosmey, Stanwood H. Smith, Edward H. Dunbar, Oscar H. Stickney, Grosvenor W. Copeland, Lennie P. Galland, Joseph S. Twombly, Sidney S. Holyoke, William L. Davenport, Arthur E. McCrillis, William G. Strout, Howard C. Hews, Wellington P. 1887 Theriault, Dana L. Day, Charles I. Laliberte, Joseph A. Porter, Dr. Byron F. Day, Eugene G. Black, Mrs. Alice Stevens, Howard E. Vose, Fred H. ♦Lord, Ralph E. ♦Webster, Frank E. Dorticos, Philip (Hicks) Urann, Marcus L. Marr, Leon H. Clark, Irving M. Williams, Dana S. Herbert, Thomas C. Nichols, Leroy C. 1898 Hopkins, Ralph T. Kennedy, James S. 1901 Olds, Robert F. Trask, Frank E. Crowell, C. Parker Huen, Charles J. Porter, Roy H. Vose, Charles T. Dearborn, John W. Bartlett, Charles W. Jordan, Alfred C. Prince, Charles E. Williams, John S. Dow, Leroy E. Buck, Thomas Knowles, Allen M. Richards, Earle R. Edwards, Llewellyn N. Butler, Ernest C. Larrabee, Benjamin T. Rogers, David N. 1888 ♦Lawrence, George W. Davis, Fred M. Lawrence, Leonard A. Simmons, Frederick J. Eastman, Fred L. Libby, Albion D. T. Davis, George H. Little, Leslie E. Sparrow, Arthur L. Lord, Edwin B. MacDougal, Wilbur E. Goodwin, George E. Livermore, Scott P. Stanford. Edward A. Manson, Ray H. Keller, Percy R. Pearson, Ralph H. Wallace, James G. 1889 Leonard, Herbert H. Quimby, John H. Haggett, Eben R. Merrill, Adelbert S. Weymouth, Arthur P. Merrill, Dana T. Martin, Fred L. Scott, Walter E. 1907 Reed, John Merrill, Elmer D. Pritham, Charles H. Small, Alvah R. 1890 Merrill, Harrison P. Sawyer, William McC. Taylor, Thomas F. Alexander. William B. Oakes, Louis Thompson, Samuel D. Turner. Roland L. Barrows, Lucius D. Drew, Albert W. Ward, Thomas H. Whipple, Albert L. Bean, Perry A. Farrington, Horace P. Starbird, Alfred A. Brann, Benjamin E. Gould, George P. Stevens, Ray P. Whittier, Clement 1905 Tarr, Roderic D. Burns, Caleb E. S. Hardison, Allen C. 1902 Bearce, Edwin F. Claflin, Francis M. Harvey, Chandler C. 1899 Barrows, William E. Breed, Archer F. Clayton, Robert E. Heath, E. Fenno Belcher, Wallace E. Boland, M. Genevieve Chalmers, Arthur S. Cobb, Fred L. Quincy, Frederick G. Brown, J. Wilson Chadbourne. Henry W. Cowan, Benjamin M. Connell, Bennett R. 1891 Caswell, Winfield B. Cole, Henry E. Cowles, Harry D. DeWolfe, Robert W. Arey, Ralph J. Collins, George Elliott, Wesley C. Crowe, Francis T. Erskine. Fred S. N. Bailey, William M. Crosby, Charles E. Kneeland, Henrv W. Crowe, Joseph W. Hall. William D. Patten, William N. Downing, Marshall B. Lowe, Sumner S. Dinsmore, Ernest L. Hamlin, Roy G. Fenderson, Frank D. Lyon, Alpheus C. Drummond, Robert R. Hayward, Guy E. 1892 Grover, Archer L. Rackliffe, Clinton N. Foubert, Charles L. Kierstead, Horton W. Holden, William C. Haney, William W. Ross, Edwin B. French, Prentiss E. Knowlton, Herbert A.

10 Lambe, Emerson P. 1910 Merrell, James R. Whitten, Alice I. Swaye, Ira A. Lekberg, Carl H. Nason, Fred W. Young, George E. Thurrell, Robert F. Lincoln, Samuel B. Ames, Leroy W Arnold, Frances E. Noyes, Robert 1914 Weeks, Jedediah E. MacDonald, Karl Parsons, Wallace E. Wilbur, Oscar M. Martin, Mrs Mildred Battles, J. Edmund Abbott, Arthur W. Bigney, Frederick R. Patch, Clifford Woodsum, Edmund N. (Mansfield) Peaslee, Dana N. Adams, Archie A. Bird, Roy J Adams, Harold P. 1916 Mitchell, Robie L. Bragg, Lester M. Phinney, Chester S. Perry, Tedcastle B. Rhodes, James E., 2nd Beaupre, Estelle I. Barrows, Lewis O. Philbrook, Earle W. Burke, Alfred K Blackington, Carl A. Clancy, Frank B. Richardson, Arthur B. Blackman, Charles L. Purington, Heber P. Robinson, Chauncey S. Boothby, Ralph H. Burke, John A. Reed, Lowell J. Clifford, Harold L. Bray, Paul D. Collins, John L. Robinson, John T. Campbell, Murdock A. Reed, Mrs. Marion Royal, Mrs. Florence Brown, Joseph L. Chase, Chauncey L. (Balentine) Conlogue, Frederick W. Buzzell, Marion S. Cook. Horace J. (Taylor) Coffin, Harold W. Riddle, Harry C. Scales, Nelson Cobb, Harold V Crimmin, Erlon V. Saunders, William H. Cook, Walter A. Driscoll, Frank G. Corning, Grover T Smith, Nelson E. Davis, Arthur L. Stevens, Albert W. Smith, Russell S. Fenderson, Charles W. Dorsey, Llewellyn M. Talbot, Richard F. Dyer, John R. French, Norman R. Fox, Kent R. Tobey, Elmer R. Edes, Omar K. Totman, Arnold W. Vaughan, William, Jr. Gerrish, Maurice S. Edminster, Winfred H. Washburn, Willis F. Gardner, Albert K. Waite, Sumner Getchell, Edward L Faulkner, William T. Wyman, Abel P. Gooch, C. Joseph Walden, Harold G Hall, Howe W. Folsom, Charles H. Goodrich, George P. Ingalls, Mrs. Imogene 1908 Walker, Ernest T. Fox, C. Calvin Hall, Clifton A. Warren, Benjamin O. (Wormwood) Greenleaf, Florence E. Beedle, Arthur L. Harmon, W. Warren Wertheim, Leslie J. Jones, Frederick S. Ham, Everett G. Cobb, William A. Hill, Herbert S. Whitney, Benjamin B. Kavanagh, Mrs. Mary Hamblen, Archelaus L. Dixon, Leon S. Hobbs, Ralph E (Leonard) Hargreaves, Frank I. Drew, Pierce A. Jordan, Harvey H 1912 King, A. Lincoln Herlihy, Mrs. Madeline Ellis, Milton Kavanah, Gladys E Leavitt, H. Ralph (Robinson) Fessenden, Thomas W. Ketchum, Charles C, Ash, John E. Boyle, James L. Lewis, Fred J. Higgins, Daniel E. French, Cecil S. Lamb, Ernest MacDonald, P.eter Kriger, Lewis H. French, Frank D. Libby, Albert E. Carleton, Edward F. Chase, Alden Maines, Esca A. LaCrosse, Waldo J. Gannett, James A. Maddox, Austin L. Monahan, William C. Lane, C. Kent Gordon, Harry L. Merrill, Dimon E. Deering, Arthur L. Dyer, Samuel Monohon, Paul W. Libby, Clarence E. Hanscom, Arthur S. Merrill, Walter S. Morse, Wilson M. Loring, Fred P. Heath, Ralph C Moore, A. Scudder Fisher, Herbert L. Gordon, Robert J. Murray, Paul E. Mackin, William J. Johnson, Charles A. Norton, Raymond P. Peaslee, Roy W. Mangan, Thomas G. Keith, Ballard F. Oak, Allen E Gray, William M Hanson. Walter K Pendleton, Mark Mansfield, Everett K. Knight, George R. Patch, Edith M Rand, Ernest A. Merrill, Earl S. Lanpher, Stacy C. Philbrook, John N. Hebard, William E. Holmes, Gay E. Scribner, Mrs. Ethel Moore, Robert M. Libby, Paul Pratt, Charles O. (Harrigan) Nickerson, Arno W. McNamara. William S. Scales, Eugene M. Houghton, Lloyd E. Huggins, Leslie M. Shaw, Harold J. Packard, Ansel A. Morton, Fred C. Scales, James G Sinkinson, George E. Peabody, Myron C. Perkins, Howard L. Simonton, Philip D. Hussey, Philip R. Jackson, James F. Skolfield, Herbert N. Philbrook, Lawrence E. Phillips, Mrs. Alice Snow, Edward N. Stiles, Robert M. Rendall, Raymond E. (Farnsworth) Stevens, Roy F. Jones, Maurice D. Jones, Roy E. Thomas, Philip W. Robie, Frederick Scamman, William F. Stickney, Charles E. Towner, Wayland D. Rogers, William N. Skillin, Carroll B. Stover, I. Maxwell Kelley, M. June Kent, Benjamin C Weick, Carl A. Small, Norman C. Stewaid, Robert I< Stuart, George A. Wescott, Guy R. Tarr, Omar F. Sturtevant, Merle A. Sweetser, Herman P. King, George E. Lancaster, Frank H. Wilder, Max L Taylor, Helen P. Sturtevant, Walter L Webster, George A. Youngs, Frederick S. Totman, James E. Vickery, Earle N. Wentworth, George J. Lilly, Walter H Martin, George A. 1915 Webber, Walter W. Weston, Clarence M. Wentworth, William H. Weeks, Thomas N. Winters, Amos A. McDonald, Warren Adams, James A. 1909 McKeen, Ellis W. Baker, David S. Woods, Basil G. 1911 Austin, Thomas D. Miller, William J. H. Beverage, Harold H. 1917 Bennet, DaCosta F. Bearce, George D. Mountfort, Oscar W. Bickford, Miretta L. Bowman, Harold M. Blaisdell, Allen H. Nickels, Albert M. Caswell, Lester W. Baldwin, Dudley Brann, Bertrand F Burden, Harry P Perkins, Walter E. Chadbourne, Ava H. Beckler, Warren B., Jr. Bridgham, Edward W. Chenery, Frederick L. Rowe, Wilfred S. Cooper, Harold Blanchard, Arthur N. Bruce, Herbert P. Conley, Albert D. Savary, Warren H. Creighton, Maynard J. Bright, Elizabeth M. Carlisle, George T. Cooper, Parker M Schrumpf, William E. Crispin, Russell M. Carter, Ray M. Chandler, Bernard A. Cushman, William P. Smith, Montelle C. Danforth, Mis Elizabeth Chaplin, Leola B. Chase, Mary Ellen Davis, Raymond E. Steele, Clayton H. (Hanly) Clapp, Elwood I. Emerson, Walter L. Davis. Raymond W. Sturtevant, Arthur L. Danforth, Stephen P. Cobb, Sumner C. Fogler, William A. Day, Ralph R Sweetser, Harlan H. Fogg, Harry W. Crossland Charles E. French, Guy C. Derby, Frank H. Thompson. Harry E. Fogler, Raymond H. Crowell, F. Donald Gerrity, Joe W. Dwinal, Olaf W. Witham, Walter Freese, F. Drummond Dempsey, Edmund J. Gilbert, William H. Eastman, Henry H Woodward, Karl D. Goldsmith. Chester FI. Dodge. Richard B. Gulliver, James L. Haggett. Harold D. Eaton, Arthur C 1913 Dole, George E Hamor, George H. Everett, Jaspei W Hall, Preston M. Farnham, Walter E. Harmon, Ralph C. Geery. Louis D. T. Ames, Forrest B. Hall, Mis. Rachel Fides, Avery M. Harvey, Walter O Gerrish, Leo M. Beck, Andrew J. (Winship) Fraser, Ralph E. Kinghorn, Charles W. Gooch, Winslow L Bigelow, Elson H. Hill, William B Freese, Langdon J. Knight, Fred D Goodwin, Alexander W. Buzzell, Ralph W. Hines, Marv E B Furbish, Mrs. Dorothy Lockver. Scott S Gould, Daniel I Chandler, Clifton Hopkins, Carl H (Mercier T MacArthur, Chase Greenwood, Ralph H. Chase, Edward E. Hutchinson, Albert F. Gilpatrick. Verner E. Marsh, Harold P Haley, George Haines, Frank W. Kelly, Frank A Godfrey, Noel D. Mason, Jesse H Hammond, Avery C. Hettinger, Frederick C Ingalls, Everett P. Hamilton Guy B. Mavo, Norman H Haskell, William O. Hews, Ray D Leavitt, H. Walter Higgins, Dorrice M Miller. Harold R Hilton, William Huntington, Richard T. Luther, Harris G Higgins. Royal G.. Jr. Nash, Henrv L. Holmes, Ralph M. Jackson, Raymond O. McIntire, Charles S. Hill, M. Langdon Osgood, William T. Homans, Harrv Jones, M. Ernest McKenney, Maurice R. Hilton, Cecil M Parker, Horace A Houghton, Thomas E. Lutts, Carlton G. Merrill, Gladvs H. Hollis. Harold W. Philbrook, Howard G. Howe, George H . Jr. McAlary, Allan F. Noyes, Elwood A. Hopkins Bryant L. Pray, Elmer O Tones, Sidney M. Merrill, William H. Pinkham. Llovd F. Libby, Philip N. Rich, Harold A. Keen, Lewis A Murray, Walter E. Ragon, Mrs. Mollie Libby, Seth E Rogers, Frederick D LaMarche, George E. Norton, Carlos E. (Hutchins) Mank, Nelson F. Smith, Dexter S Lycette, Cecil L. Ober, J. Larcom Shaw, Harry M. McCusker, Joseph A Smith, Harry W. McCarthy, Maurice F. Richards, Harold A. Shaw, Merle B. McKown. Richard E Sutton, Harry E. Maxey, Everett H. Ricker, Elwyn T. Sleeper, Harvey P. Metcalf, Edwin S. Thomas. Deane S Maybury, Mrs. Imogene Rogers, Luther B. Slocum, Paul F. Morse, Mayland H. Towle, Elton L. Bumps Wardwell, Hubert M. Stewart, Loren P. Mower, Clyde F

11 Prescott, Glenn C. 1920 Libby, Mrs. Minnie Thompson, Mrs. Hussey, Mrs. Serena (Wood) Preti, Frank P. Averill, Robert W. (Norell) Constance (Turner) Remick, Edward C. McCrystle, John D. Townsend, John L. Johnson, Marada L. Barker, Corinne M. McGary, Donald F. Robinson, Veysey H. Besse, Frank A. Manchester, Mrs. Julia Wentworth, H. Bernice Rowley, Levi T. Beverly, Verne C. (Gilpatrick) West, Frank R. Mahoney, John H. Sidelinger, Claude L. Boynton, Ray M. Moore, Mrs. Ardis Whitcomb, Morton C. Milliken, Harold E. (Lancey) Nutting, Albert D. Stackpole, Miner R. Bruce, Harold L. 1925 Stephens, Frank O. Butler, Harry Nason, I. Estelle Plaisted, Leigh C. Stephenson, Joseph N. Butler, Henry R. Nason, Frances S. Abbott, Floyd N. Poor, Bernard T. Stevens, Ray R. Chadbourne, Walter W. Pinkham, Seth H. Baker, Chester A. Purinton, William A. Stoddard, Stanley W. Cornforth, R. Gardner Priest, Conan A. Behringer, John S. Rounsville, Sherman H. Sweet, George F. Currier, Stanley M. Ray, Homer F. Blake, Ralph S. Rowell, Paulyne Treworgy, Forrest Donovan, Mrs. Doris Smith, E. Lufkin Brookes, George S. Sawyer, Elizabeth L. Watkins, Herbert E. (Williams) Sprowle, William J. Brown, Stephen S. Smith, Louie H. Wood, Frances A. French, Dwight M. Tabbutt, David W. Buley, Mrs. Arline Stewart, John E. French, Marion E. Turner, Henry P. (Besse) Swift, Ralph J. 1918 Hacker, Edward P. Watson, Myron E. Chandler, J. Winthrop Tobey, Raymond E. Ham, Miles F. Welch, Everett P. Erskine, Paul F. Trask, Henry O. Abbott, Voyle E. Webster, Earle R. Harriman, Alonzo J. 1923 Gay, Thomas E. Atherton, Raymon N. Hitchner, Mrs. Barbara Hanington, Edith M. Whitehouse, Philip A. Bridges, H. Styles Haskell, Robert N. Winch, Eugene C. Carter, George M. (Dunn) Allen, Mrs. Doris Holbrook, Dorothy (Twitchell) Henderson, Mrs. Ann 1928 Cram, Beryl E. Jackson, M. Eleanor Beckett, Clarence B. (Thurston) Crawshaw, Thomas H. Houghton, Amory M., Jr. Ames, Fred G. Creamer, Walter J. Jones, E. Prentiss Blackwood, Harold F. Bell, Horace E. Knowlton, Mrs. Blanchard, George V. Hussey, Frank Bennett, Earl F. Davis, Manley W. Irish, Clifford V. Dennett, Winburn A. Priscilla Elliott Bryant, Lyman G. Carson, Warren P. Lingley, Alfred B. Connelly, William J. James, Ruel L. Closson, Luke E. Dow, Kathryn M. Johnson, Charles E. Evans, Weston S. Peabody, Gertrude D. Curtis, L. Everett, Jr. Conro, Wray C. Potter, George A. Curtis, Theodore S. Lawler, Elizabeth Cotton, Linwood S. Hall, Sumner A. Libby, Carl F. Hill, Roger B. Roberts, Everett L. Davis, Lyle M. Cummings, A. L. T. Hogan, Louis W. Snow, Charles A. Davis, Philip D. Lincoln, Donald C. (honorary) * Tolman, Walter S. Dolliver, Franz R. Lord, Mrs. Louise Fuller, David W. Kellogg, Thelma L. (Quincy) Larrabee, Callie H. Towner, Mrs. Betty Doten, Henry L. Goodspeed, Allen W. (Mills) Eastman, Mrs. Helen MacDougall, Julia D. Hartman, Harry R. Leighton, Arthur W. MacLean, Donald N. Libby, Frank D. True, Nathan F. (Humphreys) Haynes, Whitcomb Lovejoy, Raymond H. Turgeon, Henry W. Fernaid, Roy L. May, Marie E. Highlands, Matthew Merrill, C. Neal Whitcomb, Ruel W. Gibbs, Kenneth E. McCobb, Robert Ingalls, Harold E. Newdick, Erlon L. 1921 Harkness, Elizabeth A. Murray, Joseph M. Lewis, Ardron B. Newman, I. Leavitt Adams, Andrew Hay, Lloyd G. Osborne, Elwood N. Lovejoy, Delmar B. Oakes, Ralph G. Barton, Frank E. Johnson, Vernon L. Repscha, Albert H. Lovejoy, Kenneth C. Perry, Donald B. Beale, Frank S. Jones, Cecil R. Schrumpf, Mrs. Mildred Manter, Nelson L. Rich, Robert Berry, Perley L. Judkins, Eshburn O. (Brown) Masselink, Francis H. Ring, E. Raymond Bowles, Mrs. Rena Lappin, C. Roger Smith, Virgil C. Medeiros, Harold A. Rolfe, Weldon H. (Campbell) Lord, Leonard Thornton, Prescott E. Nanigian, Moses Russell, A. Mason Brown, Mrs. Carol Matthews, Guv O. Vallee, Rudy Reid, William S. Miller, Thor Shaw, Albert L. (Hamm) 1926 Stone, Charles P. Sherman, Allen Castle, Roger C. Place, Francia M. Viles, William P. Cohen, Robert J. Rogers, Arthur E. Babb, Myron F. Ward, Elmer H. Small, Clive C. Stickney, Fernaid S. Tomlinson, Bertram Corbin, Paul F. Buck, Laurence L. 1929 Turner, Ernest J. Crocker, Percival B. Stuart, Richard B. Bunker, Carleton H. Vrooman, Lee Curran, Raymond J. Thomas, Ralph E. Burr, Maurice H. Ames, John B. Watson, Harry D. Deering, Howard A. Weatherbee, Harriet Crawford, Earle D. Billings, Maurice P. Wentworth, Ralph C. Eastman, Medeleine G. Weaver, Mrs. Evelyn Crawford, Mrs. Marjorie Birch, Oscar L. Wilkins, Clyde L. Foley, Francis L. (Thomas) (Myers) Bixby, George D. Froberger, George A. J. Winslow, Eunice H. Dakin, Leone M. Booker, Mrs. Catherine 1919 Ginsberg, George S. Winslow, John C. Dunning, Wilhelmina F. (Buck) Hersey, Lilia C. 1924 Eaton, Henry B., 2nd Bostrom, Frank P. Bridges, Mrs. Alice Josselyn, Mrs. Emilie Elliott, Wallace H. Brown, Kenneth T. (Cahill) (Kritter) Ames, J. Wesley Fletcher, Carlton W. Buzzell, James C. Collins, Samuel W. Juel-Larsen, Niels Ayer, Hazen H. Guernsey, Thompson L. Coggins, A. Russell Demeritt, Dwight B. Lancaster, Ralph B. Baker, Gregory Harmon, Carl M. Dow, Mrs. Myrtle Donovan, Frank E. Littlefield, Alton T. Barney, George C. Jordan, Bryce M. (Walker) Gooch. Marjorie Marcoux, Eli A. Beal, Carl L. Ladner, George O. Horton, Elmer G. Hall, Ella M. Osborne, Donald C. Callighan, Olin W. McCann, Everett F. Hurley, Charles J. Harrington. Randall A. Plumer, Wesley C. Carter, Ray H. McDonald, Gordon S. Hutchins, Burleigh M. Hodgdon, Paul E. Salley, Florence U. Chalmers, James A. Morse, Walter P. Kimball, Harold Jones, Philip A. Stewart. Katherine D Davenport, Bruce I. Pendleton, Emily Kinney, Loomis S. Kirk, Edward B. Sullivan, Eugene L. Dunham, Earl M. Sawyer, Herbert H. Larsen, Karl Larrabee, Clifford P. Tapley, Paul D. Eastman, T. Clifford Stevens, Alfred F. Libby, Abram J. Leddy, Percy A. Taylor, Wilfred A. Harriman, Philip A. Tate, Robert A. Lincoln, Alice R. Lewis, Carl A. R. Tibbetts, Harold S. Hatch, Theodore Uong, Diong D. Look, Russell M. Lloyd, K. Marie Underhill, Orra E. Hayes, James L. Wilson, Kenneth C. Mahoney, George F. Macquarrie, Kenneth G. Vaughan, Frederick R. Hills, F. Gilbert Wyman, Oscar L. McClure, Mrs. Mary Mann, Mrs. Adele Hovey, Mrs Bessie (Robinson) (Hopkins) 1922 (Harris) 1927 Mosher, Wendall E. Melcher, Edmund C. Blake, Foster B. Little, Mrs. Beatrice Ames, Isabel Z. O’Connor, Roderic C. Merrow, Lawrence E. Chamberlain, Lucy E. (Johnson) Anderson, John R. Parks, Robert D. Merrow, Mrs. Faye Clough, Raymon W. Lord, George E. Bogan, Mrs. Sally Parsons, Merton S. Smith Craig, Ivan L. Mayo, Mrs. Louise (Palmer) Powell, Harold N. Pierce, Harold M. Dana, Mrs. Helen (Messer) Brown. Clare H., Jr. Reed, Mary F. Robbins, Hamlyn N. Pulsifer Merritt, Carleton W. Clark, Richard G. Smith, Archibald V. Robbins, Mrs. Estelle Dearborn, Errol L. Oak, Philip T. Cogswell, Cyril G. Smith, Gordon (Spear) Eastman, Charles L. Oakes, Karl R. Culbertson, Harry F. Stewart, Frank R. Rose, Hester M. Gantnier, Jerome B. Percival, Ethelvn M. Dolloff, Richard C. Strout, W. Jerome Stewart, Clyde W. Glover, Stanton Pierson, Ellen V. Dow. George F. Tracy, Donald E. True, Norman E. Hatch, Lynwood S. Richardson. Harrison L. Elliott, Ernest A. Wheeler, Whitney L. Wallingford, Vernon H. Hathorne, Helen L. Shorey, Lena E. Engel, Edward M. Yates, Mrs. Gertrude Wallingford, Mrs. Jessie Hill, Henry F„ Jr Skolfield, George L. Fernaid. Waldron E. (Gray) * . (Prince) Hutchins. Leslie W. Small, John A. Grant, Ernest H. 1930 Wilkins, Ralph A. Johnson, Stanley J. Sparrow, Theron A. Howard, Henry G. Avery, Dexter L.

12 Oxford County Alumni gathered from Rumford, Paris, Norway, and other towns in the vicinity for a meet­ LOCAL ASSOCIATIONS ing at South Paris on May 17 with Dean Paul Cloke of the College of Technology as guest speaker. Fifty-eight alumni and friends participated in the banquet and Cumberland County Alumni Androscoggin Valley Alumni elected officers for the coming year at a met on May 12 in Auburn to welcome annual business meeting. Officers elected joint meeting on May 13 with the Port­ President Hauck and Alumni Secretary were Emerson Stymiest ’30, president, land Alumnae. Hugh Morton ’32, as pres­ Crossland as guest speakers. Sixty-eight Richard F Blanchard ’31, vice president, ident, Harland Knight ’30, as vice presi­ members and guests turned out for the Mrs. Minerva Anderson ’20, secretary. dent, Howard Forrestall ’38, as treasurer, meeting. During the business meeting the Besides Dean Cloke as principal speaker, and John Sturgis ’31, as secretary made up group selected Henry Turgeon ’20 as new Alumni Secretary Crossland and Rev. the slate. Guests of honor for the meeting president and Harold Redding ’18, vice Rensel H. Colby, of South Paris, spoke were Dr. Hauck of the University, Dr. president, Mrs. Robert Pendleton, secre­ briefly. Mary Ellen Chase ’09, and Alumni Sec­ tary, Mrs. Anthony Pelletier, treasurer. ❖ retary Crossland. The excellent attend­ ❖ Portland Alumnae ance of 185 alumni, alumnae, and guests Piscataquis County Alumni met on May 4 at the Columbia Hotel to made it one of the outstanding meetings held their sixth annual meeting on May make plans for future meetings and to of the year 10 in Guilford with Dean Arthur Deering re-elect the officers serving during the ❖ ’12 and Alumni Secretary Charles Cross­ last year—Mrs. Olive C. O’Brien, presi­ Missouri Alumni land as guests for the evening. During dent, Mrs Margaret M. Pratt, first vice welcomed Dr J. H Huddilston at the the business meeting officers for the year president, Mrs Christine E Stanford, DeSoto Hotel in St Louis on April 4. were elected with Claude Sidelinger T7 second vice president, Miss Dorothy A total of twenty-one alumni and friends chosen as president, Mathew Williams Frye, secertary, Mrs. Freida W. Prouty, attended the meeting and enjoyed the ’28, vice president, and Mrs. Eveline Cross treasurer. talk by Dr. Huddilston. Clifford L. Dra­ ’20 secretary-treasurer. Talks by the Roberta A. Lewis ’35, was appointed per ’08 was elected president for the com­ guest speakers and others were followed as new corresponding secretary. The at­ ing year and Mrs F. H Daley, wife of by informal discussion. tendance totalled twenty-three. Frank Daley ’ll, as secretary. (Continued on Page 14)

Bagley, Alice H. 1932 Libby, Mrs. Elizabeth Somers, Dwight Chute, Kenneth M. Bates, Niran C. Buck, Mrs. M. Anna (Tryon) Stevens, Howard W. Clunie, Robert L. Booker, James F. Denaco, Alden F. Lincoln, Roger B. Williams, Roger C. Corbett, Alan C. Bradbury, Hortense Dickson, John D., Jr. Linscott, Edward L. 1935 Crane, T. Willard Bradford, Richard S. Hall, Walter L. Lull, Eloise C. Currier, Carolyn E. Corbett, Ralph A. Hanaburgh, David H. Lutts, Herbert W. Anderson, Arline E. Day, James O. Crimmins, Geoige W. Hardison, Clayton H. Marcho, Henry E. Anderson, Henry C. Dean, John R. Gowell, Earle R. Hathaway, William F. Nivison, Helen T. Arey, Robert C. Dexter, Charles F. Hunt, Edward D. Hincks, Maynard A. Peirce, Mrs. Polly Bailey, Dean M. Dole, Ira F. Inman, Harold H. Hincks, Mrs. Helen (Brown) Bean, Paul W. Farrer, Lawrence A. Larrabee, Franklin (Stearns) Plummer, Evelyn M. Bicknell, Charles E. Flanagan, J. Wilfrid Matthews, Rachel Howes, Henry F. Pi escott, Theodore W. Bucknam, Richard D. Frame, George M. McIntire, Clifford S. Huddilston, Homer W. Prout, Stanley R. Collins, Earle O. Fuller, Georgia I. Morris, Mrs. Dorothy Kuntz, Peter J. Quimby, Maynard W. Copeland, Ralph L. Gardner, Edith O. (Mayo) Libby, Winthrop C. Randall, Coleman C. Eaton, Hilda T. Garvin, Paul L. Murphy, Maxwell K. McGowan, John G. Rawson, Mrs. Evelyn Etter, Howard E. Gordon, Richard O. Palmer, Edward E., Jr. McIntire, Smith C. (Gleason) Flagg, Warren H. Grant, Clarice J. Palmer, John M Merriam, Wheeler G. Scully, Hazel M. Frye, Dorothy C. Haggett, James W. Perkins, Ralph Miller, Stacy R. Smith, Kenneth E. Hanson, Otis T. _ Hall, Margaret E. Pratt, Horace A. Morton, Hugh H. Stoddard, Joseph R. Harmon, Norman Hanson, Edward C. Riddiough, William R. Paul, Harry Turbyne, John Hathorne, Raymond C. Harvey, Natalie F. Smith, Thomas B. Pearson, John J Wiers, Frederick E. Henderson, Stanley D. Hennings, J. Porter Sweatt, Athalie P. Wight, John C. Hoyt, J. Winston Higgins, Clyde E. Poland, Harland O. Knight, Paul I. Hill, Edith B. Sylvester, Fred, Jr. Piince, Ralph N. 1934 Vose, Edward R. Rumazza, O. Lawrence Mansfield, Clifford S. Hoctor, Cathryn R. York, Gerald Attridge, James M. Martin, Marion E. Ireland, Kenneth L. Smith, Albeit J. Ballard, Delmont L. Mosher, Stuart H. Jacques, Charles, Jr. 1931 Smith, Mildred E Beazley, Edward H. Otis, Arthur B. Jordan, Grenville E., Jr. Billings, Stacy Taplin, Paul L Beazley, William E. Palmer, J. Edward Keene, Norton P. Blanchard, Richard F. Thompson, Oscar T. Black, Frederick R. Porter, John L. Keene, Mrs. Elizabeth Brockway, Philip J. 1933 Brown, Earl D. Randall, Elmer W., Jr. (Jordan) Crosby, Luthan A Barry, Jane Chatto, Lawrence A. Sanborn, James W. Kenny, John C. Farnsworth, George A. Bates, Howard C. Corbett, Donald Sparrow, Kenrick A. MacLean, Charles B. Gross, Doris L. Caklerwood, Samuel H. Coibett, Mrs Francelia Staples, Basil G. Me Alary, Francis J. Hamblet, William P. Callaghan, Ruth (Dean) Titcomb, Carl A. Mehann, Royal O. Knox, Floicnce L. Chamberlain, Geneva F. Dcsjai dines, Lionel L Turner, Max E. Meyer, Lester J. Lapworth, Kenneth E. DcLibro, Mrs Lona Feeio, R. Hazel Whitman, Carl A. Morton, Rutledge Lord, Mrs. Vitolia (Mitchell) Fletcher, Dorothy H. Wishart, Robert F. Roberts, Arthur L. (Lobikis) Desmond, Thomas J Gray, Norman H 1936 Saunders, Ernest, Jr. McGillicuddy, George E. Dickerson, Kenneth J. Hardison, Lewis M. Sawyer, Mildred L. Page, Richaid T. Doane. William H. Hersey, Thomas M. Abbott, Actor T., Jr. Sealey, John, Jr. Sezak, Samuel Elliott, Richard E Hill, Robert A. Bacheller, Chester D. Sewall, Margaret G. Smith, M. Stetson Farnsworth, John P. Lyon, Alphcus C, Jr. Beverage, Gerald G. Somers. Thomas J. Stiles, Willis L. Forrestall, Arthur T. Moore, Ernestine S Boardman, James Sylvester, Asher E. Stiles, Mrs. Mary Giddings. Edwin L. Pai sons, Philip S. ♦Boardman, Rosemary Sylvester, Ruth (Cai ter) Hagan, F Wilbur Rich, Wayne S Brown, Eileen E. Taylor, Carlton L. Strecker, Edward Haggett, Edward G., Jr. Rodeiick, Drusilla M. Burke, Roger W Torrey, Glen W. Sylvester, Mary E. Harrison. M. Winona Rogers, Hayden S. Cann, Dorothy V. Treinor, Mary R. Weeks, Gilbert E. Henry, Blanche I. Rosen, Doris E Chapman, Franklin S. Yeomans, Bernice Williams, Edwin R. LaFrancc, Mrs. Elizabeth Senuta, Joseph F Chittick, Robert H. (Hillikcr) 13 Death Ends Services Of Trustee J. T. Gyger • ALUMNI PERSONALS • The death of Representative John T. Gyger, of Cumberland Foreside, serving Deaths By Classes his second term as a member of Univer­ sity’s Board of Trustees, occurred on 1898 1897 June 1 following several weeks’ illness. George W. Lawrence, of Greenfield, Marcus L. Urann, head of the Cran­ Mr. Gyger was stricken with a heart at­ Massachusetts, formerly president of the berry Canners, Inc., of South Hanson, Mass., which corporation produces two- tack during the legislative session. Western Massachusetts Companies, prom­ inent electric utility organization, died thirds of the nation’s cranberry crop, Mr. Gyger was elected a member of the May 28 at the Massachusetts General Hos­ was elected a director on the Farm Credit State House of Representatives in 1936 pital in Boston. A native of South Gardi­ Board at Springfield, Mass. There are and re-elected in 1938, serving with con­ ner, Mr. Lawrence received his electrical 95 local associations of this organization engineering degree in 1898 from Maine. and these associations elected Mr. Urann spicuous ability. By profession a teacher, for a three-year term. his administrative abilities were recognized During his long professional career he worked for the General Electric Company, 1899 by his appointment as superintendent of after a period of service in the Spanish- Hall F. Hoxie, of Belfast, had a schools for the towns of Falmouth, Cum­ American War, and with the American daughter, Margaret, graduate from the berland, North Yarmouth, and Cape Eliz­ Smelting and Refining Company in Mex­ University on June 12. abeth where he had a record of efficiency ico, before becoming associated with the group of utility companies in western 1900 and progress during his eleven years of Massachusetts which later became the Matthew McCarthy, law school gradu­ service. Western Massachusetts Companies. He ate. of Rumford, had a son, William E., In 1930, Mr. Gyger was appointed by served in this organization in many capaci­ graduate from Maine on June 12. Governor William T. Gardiner as a trus­ ties, including chairman of board of the Pittsfield Electric Company, president of 1902 tee of the University and has since that the Turners Falls Power and Electric Henry W. Chadbourne is application time been most active and helpful to the Company, and chairman of the Board of engineer on mining projects .with the University as a member of the Board. the United Electric Light Company. General Electric Company, Schenectady, New York. He resides at 29 Bruce St., His death is deeply regretted by all con­ 1900 Scotia. nected with the University. The Alumni The death of Frank E. Webster, of Edwin S. True, under the firm name of Association in recognition of his services Providence, R. I., occurred after a year’s Estru Electric Service in Chicago, is passed on June 10 a resolution of apprecia­ illness on April 23. A native of Patten, specializing in prevention of electroly­ sis and corrosion in buildings and under­ tion to be entered upon the records of the Mr. Webster was associated for many years with the Narragansett Electric ground systems. A paper by him on Association. Company as mechanical engineer. He was “Cable Corrosion,’’ the first of a series, ❖ ❖ active in many fraternal organizations dur­ was published in a recent issue of Tele­ ing his life, including his college frater­ phone Engineer. Washington, D. C., Alumni Edwin B. Ross is vice president and held their annual meeting at the home of nity Alpha Tau Omega His death oc­ curred at the age of 61. sales manager of Clark Equipment Com­ Mr. and Mrs. Henry Bearce on May 27. pany located at the Buchanan, The regular feature of Maine baked beans 1910 Plant. This firm, with which he has attracted about sixty alumni and friends. Report has just been received of the been connected for over 30 years, manu­ factures Automotive Railway and Agri­ For the coming year Marion Lord ’27 was death of Fay D. Kinney, of Southbridge, Massachusetts. Mr. Kinney underwent cultural Equipment. elected president with George Hitchings an operation in Brookline, Massachusetts, Percy H. Mosher, who was chief engi­ ’37 vice president, and Mildred Merrill ’13 from which bronchial pneumonia devel­ neer on the construction of the Summer secretary-treasurer. oped. Death occurred on April 16 Traffic Tunnel under the harbor to East Boston, since its completion in 1933, has ❖ 1911 been retained by the Metropolitan Dis­ New York Alumnae James W. Dunn, of Cumberland Center, trict Commission of the State of Massa­ gathered for their annual picnic at Camp died on October 9 from pneumonia at the chusetts as consultant on tunnel plan­ Gaw, N. J., on . Horseshoes, under age of 46. Mr. Dunn, a native of Cumber­ ning and construction. He resides at 7 land, had been since 1931 an R F.D Car­ Sunnyside St., Hyde Park. the able eye of A. D. T. Libby ’98, at­ rier for the Cumberland Post Office. Arthur E. Silver, of 360 North Fuller­ tracted the men while the usual Maine ton Ave., Upper Montclair, N. J., has a baked beans were being made ready. A 1921 daughter who graduated from Mt. Hol­ Austin S. Buck died on March 13 in yoke on June 12. most enjoyable time was reported by all. Fort Fairfield where he had resided for ❖ some time. Further details of his death 1903 Knox County Alumni are not known at this time. James W Cunningham, son of Pearl welcomed Dr. Harry Trust of the Bangor G. Cunningham, of Old Town, was grad­ uated from the University June 12. Theological Seminary as guest speaker at their meeting on May 16 in Rockland. Alumni residing in Maine and those who 1904 Twenty alumni and friends enjoyed the may be visiting in the State during the Carrol S. Chaplin is regional co-chair­ summer are invited to attend the second man of the Portland area of the Colby visit of Dr. Trust and Alumni Secretary Maine Million Committee. Charles Crossland. annual alumni outing which is to be held at the University Marine Biological Sta- 1905 ❖ The son of the late Andrew J. Hayes, Washington County Alumni toin in Lamoine, Sunday, August 13. of Orono, was graduated from Maine met on May 15 at Eastport with Dr. Jo­ This event last year proved to be so suc­ in the class of 1939. seph Murray ’25 and Alumni Secretary cessful that it is being sponsored again 1906 Crossland as guests for the evening. Fifty- jointly by the Hancock County Alumni Secretary Ickes recently announced the Association and the General Alumni As­ appointment of Frank A. Banks, Fede­ five members and guests turned out to ral construction engineer of the Grand greet the speakers. sociation. Included in the program will Coulee Dam since 1933, as acting ad- > ❖ be games, swimming, boating, and an in­ ministrator of the Bonneville Power expensive but good fish dinner. Project in the Pacific Northwest. In Somerset County Alumni 1937 Mr. Banks was appointed to the met on May 18 in Skowhegan. Dean Ar­ Announcements will appear in the press U. S Department of the Interior on the thur L. Deering ’12 with the Alumni Sec­ and a card giving details will be sent to Advisory Committee for the administra­ retary were guests of honor for the meet­ all who would like to receive further in­ tion of this power project. ing. Fifty-eight members and guests were formation about ten days prior to the out­ Maude B. Colcord is at 31 Everett St., present. Cambridge, Mass. She is a hostess and ing. house mother at the Lesley School

14 1907 the State Young Men’s Christian Asso­ May 17. He has also been named chair­ ciation of Maine. man of the third annual trail ride to be Ray mon A Quint lias notified the Benjamin C Kent, of Bangor, was sponsored by the organization September Alumni Office that he wishes mail to go elected grand commander of Maine’s 8-9. to Cottage St, Bridgton, Maine. Grand Commandery, Knights Templar, John L. Sciibner, of Orono, who did Fied P. Hosmer is retired and is at in Portland in early May research and promotion work in the Sunset, Maine southern states for the state department Philip A. Corrigan, son of the late 1914 of agriculture this winter has returned Mrs Edith Aiken Corrigan, of Calais, Twenty-five year holdci of reunion at­ to his business in Orono was graduated from Maine in the class tendance recoid with forty-three regis- of 1939. teied on June 10’ 1918 1908 Sons and daughters of this group grad­ Prof. Weston S. Evans, president of the Carroll B. Skillin, Portland attorney, uated this year are - Barbara Grace (Wm. Maine Association of Engineers, presided has been elected by the dnectors as act­ W Grace, Lynnfield Centre, Mass), at the afternoon session of the Maine Re­ ing piesident of the Maine State Cham­ Richard F Crocker, Ji , (Richard F. search Day progiam held in the represen­ ber of Commerce Mr Skillin is to Crocker, Fort Kent), Katherine K True tatives’ chamber of the State House in serve until the next members’ meeting. (Elmer L True, Hope), and Carleton Augusta on May 18. At the evening ses­ Elwood Howaid, potato grower of H. Clark (Herman R Claik, deceased), sion Professor Evans gave an address on Sangerville, had a son, Richard H , gi ad­ of Springfield, Mass “Engineering Research in Everyday Life.” nate from the Univci sity this year. Wiliam W Giace is a general insur­ Major Donald M Libby, of Portland, ance agent and broker at 40 Broad St, was general chairman of the Convention 1909 Boston. His home address and mail is Committee which prepared for the State The winners of the Twentieth Century 447 Main St, Lynnfield Centre, Mass Convention of the Maine Department of Cup for June, 1939! Philip W Thomas is an engineer with the Reserve Officers’ Association. Hany R Elder, law' graduate, who the Rumford Falls Powei Co in Rum­ 1919 has been listed in our Alumni Directory ford His home is at 350 Washington St as lost or unknown, has been found. He The new President of the Camden Ro­ Leroy F Hussey, of Augusta, is a direc­ is at 14 West 55th St, New York City tary Club is Elmer Tiue tor of the State Young Men’s Christian Dr. Maiy Ellen Chase, professor of Richard F. Crocker, pi incipal of Mada­ AssQciation of Maine. English hteiature at Smith College, was waska Training School in Fort Kent, is 1920 to be one of the visiting instructors at speaker at the Skowhegan High School R Arline Wray, of Brewer, received Commencement Exercises. the summer school at Washington State Normal School. He will conduct three an M.A. degree in Education at the Uni­ 1910 courses, “The Application of Psycho­ versity on June 12. 1910 Sons and Daughters! Beitram logical Fact to the Teaching of School 1921 W. Ames (Leroy W Ames, Bangor), Subjects”; “Science at the Elementaly Lucille E Smith, of Brewer, received Owen Wentworth (Geo. J. Wentworth, Level”; and “Mental Health as an Ob­ an M A. degree in Education at the Uni­ Kennebunkport), Venoia M Stinchfield jective of the Public Schools.” f versity on June 12. (John F. Stinchfield, deceased), of Clin­ Joseph A. Frohock, vice piesident of Newton B. Thompson is superintendent ton, Francis B. Fortier (Frank E For­ the Crystal Mines Co of Montana, is of transmission for the Tata Hydro Elec­ tier, St. Petersburg, Florida), and Caile- also associated with McCutcheon-Miller tric Companies in Bombay, India. His ton Doak, Jr. (Carleton Doak, Belfast) Corp (investments) with office at 33 mail and residence address is Tata Bunga­ received diplomas from the University 4th St., So., St. Petersburg, Floiida. Mr. low', Kalyan, India. on June 12. Frohock is president of the Kiwanis Harold L Clifford is located for tw'O Club in that city and is quite actively 1922 years on a dam site at Kewagama Abi- connected with many civic clubs there. Stephen A. Griffin, of Livermore Falls, tibi County, Quebec He is general su­ His residence has been given as 801 received an M A. degree in Education at perintendent for the DuFresne Construc­ 46th St No., St. Petersburg. Maine this year. tion Co , of Montreal, Quebec. 1915 Miss Rachel Connor, of Bangor, was George J Wentworth, Maine Senator recently elected president of the woman’s from Kennebunkport, has announced that The present address of Walker M golf association of Penobscot Valley he will aw'ard a handsome cup to the Philbrook has been reported to the Alum­ Country Club. angler taking the largest striped bass ni Office. He is located at 1941 Duarte Mrs. Law'rence W. Davee (Muriel -during the summer season Mr. Went­ Rd., San Gabriel, California. worth and others interested in this con­ Lois P. Leavitt is the only daughter test arc in hopes of stimulating greater of a 1914 graduate in the class of 1939. RICE AND MILLER CO. interest in taking striped bass with rod Her Dad, H. Walter Leavitt, is a pro­ and i eel The award is to be known as fessor at Maine and they live in Orono. Hardware and ‘‘The Wentworth Striped Bass Tiophy.” “In Rio on the Ouvidoi” is the title of a volume of poems written by Mrs Sporting Goods 1911 Elizabeth Hanly Danforth, of Rio de 117 Years on Broad Street Sons and daughters of 1911 who re­ Janeiro, Brazil. ceived diplomas as members of the class Bangor of 1939—Elizabeth W. Homans (Hany 1916 Homans, Bangor), Mary L Bearce E Lucille Bell, class of 1939, the (Geoige D Bearce, Buckspoit), Mary daughter of Roger W Bell, of Albany, E. Cooper (Parker M. Cooper, Albion), New York, was graduated June 12 OLD SOUTH William R Hilton (William Hilton, 1917 Bangor), and Thomas D. Verrill (Albert PHOTO ENGRAVING Verrill, of Cumberland Mills). Post office change has come to us for Merton R Sumner is mechanical en­ Wm. Nash from Chicago to 503 E. Cen­ CORP. ter St., Itasca, Illinois gineer with the Federal Power Commis­ Makes Plates for sion of Washington, D. C. He gives Effective July 1, 1939, Major H. E. his residence and mail address at 306 Watkins will be at N. G. Armory, 1579 The Maine Alumnus Shady Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. His perma­ Bedford Ave, Brooklyn, N. Y nent address, however, is 5339 Nevada F Owen Stephens, of Auburn, was Y73 Summer St., Boston, Mass Ave, N. W., Washington, D. C. re-elected president of the Maine Horse Association at the fourth annual meeting 1912 Sons and daughters of 1912 who were m the class of 1939—Elizabeth R. Dixon (Thomas L Dixon, Old Town), Alden BUILDING SUPPLIES ,Lancaster (Frank H. Lancaster, Presque •Isle), and Donald B. Haskell (Benja­ WHITE PINE LUMBER, MOULDINGS, FIR PLYWOOD, CLAPBOARDS min E. Haskell, deceased), of Portland. AND NOVELTY SIDING, CEDAR AND ASPHALT SHINGLES, GOLD BOND Dean Arthur L. Deering, of the College WALLBOARD. of Agriculture, has a daughter, Marjo­ rie, member of the class of 1940, who was recently elected a member of All-Maine JORDAN LUMBER CO. Women. Marjorie is also president of PHONE 45-12 OLD TOWN •the Women’s Athletic Association for 1939-40. Dean Deering is a director of Goodrich) has been elected president of manages The Sunshine Apartments in St. Alumni Business and the Woman’s Club of Tenafly, N. J. Mrs. Petersburg. Davee has recently returned from Atlantic J. Murray Hamilton is Junior member Professional Cards City, N. J., where she attended the con­ of the firm, Simon Stahl & Son, dealers vention of the State Federation of Wom­ in coal, wood and oil at Berlin, N. H. en’s Clubs. His business address is 100 Maine St. “The History of Secondary Education and his residence address, Madison Ave., CROWELL and LANCASTER in Knox and Lincoln Counties in Maine,” both in Berlin, N. H. Architects by Frank L. S. Morse, of Rockland, ap­ Clarence A. MacGregor is Salesman peared in The Maine Bulletin of April, for Rand Avery Printing Co., 871 Com­ Eastern Trust Bldg., Bangor, Me. 1939, under University of Maine Studies. monwealth Ave., Boston, Mass. He lives C. Parker Crowell, ’98, A. I. A. at 55 Commonwealth Ave. 1924 Walter S. Lancaster, A. I. A. Harold McKenney, of Old Town, and Class news is rather scarce these days— Miss Mildred S. Russell, of Veazie, were are you all getting modest and reticent? married March 22, 1939. He is employed Please, if you went to Commencement, at the Bangor store of Sears Roebuck Co. Wholesale DAKIN Retail write and tell me who was there and what Charles O. Myatt gives his business you heard about other ’24ers. It’s a grand address as 17 Battery Place, New York, THE SPORT SHOP time to garner information. I’m in the N. Y. His residence is 38-17-206th St., SHEP HURD ’17 M. A. HURD ’26 midst of whooping cough and don’t ex­ Bayside, L. I., N. Y. Mgr. Bangor Mgr. Waterville pect to be able to attend! Philip A. Rowe is a manager in the Store BANGOR Store John L. Townsend is now living at 30 New England Tel. & Tel. Co. at 62 Canal PORTLAND WATERVILLE So. Maple Ave., East Orange, N. J. St., Laconia, N. H. He lives at 16 Or­ I have just had news of the death of chard St., Laconia. E. Edgar Harris, who received his de­ John K. Schroeder is principal of the gree with his daughter in 1924. He has York High School, York Village, Maine. BANGOR BOX CO. been at various times a minister, teacher Karl F. Switzer and Miss Barbara PAPER BOXES, FOLDING CARTONS and superintendent, and has lived in Rounds Witmore were married February Cranston, R. I., since retiring from active 16, 1939, at Portland, Maine. COMMERCIAL PRINTING life seven years ago. His daughter, Dr. Austin H. Wilkins spoke recently to 75 So. Main St., Brewer, Me. Mary Harris Michal, passed her medical the Agrciulture Seminar at the University. H. F. Drummond, 1900 exams last summer and is now practicing His subject was “The Organization of the Pres, and Treas. in Canton, No. Carolina. All this in ad­ Maine Forest Service.” dition to taking care of two children! Oscar Wyman was co-author of the Barbara Hunt Lamb article “Bacterial Wilt and Soft Rot of 22 Monument Square the Potato” which appeared in the Ex­ STEVENS & WOOD Portland, Maine tension Bulletin of March. He also as­ INCORPORATED 1925 sisted in preparing the bulletin on “Seed Edward F. Curran, Attorney and Judge Potatoes for Growers of Table Stock.” Engineers and Constructors in the Washington Police Court, was The twelve brothers of Sigma Alpha University of Maine representative at the Epsilon of 1926 have continued a round­ 30 Broad Street, New York Georgetown University Sesquicentennial robin letter since their graduation. This can be compared with the splendid record Celebration during the week of May 28 of these same brothers while as under­ to June 3. Judge Curran is a native of graduates, in that the brothers are pretty Edward E. Chase, President Bangor and lives at 6607 Western Ave., N.W., Washington, D. C. well scattered around the country, one in Raymond S. Finley has been elected as California, Wisconsin, North Carolina, MAINE SECURITIES COMPANY Superintendent of the Madison-Skowhe­ Pennsylvania, New York, two in New Jersey and the other five in Maine. The 609 Fidelity Bldg. gan schools for a two-year term beginning August 16, 1939. Finley has been Su­ round-robin has resulted in the determi­ nation and promise of all the brothers to Portland, Me. perintendent of the Pittsfield Union for the past eight years. Finley will receive gather this year for a reunion. The date his Master’s degree at the University of is set for late in August and the place Maine this year. somewhere in Maine. A. D. T. LIBBY Frank W. Hussey, of Presque Isle, has Beulah O. Wells been elected as a director of the State 60 Oak St. Patent Attorney Y.M.C.A. Orono, Maine Federal Trust Building Rudy Vallee will play at the Harrison, 1927 Newark, N. J. Maine, Summer Theatre this season.. He Dear Classmates: DESIGNS — COPYRIGHTS — plans to commute from his Lovell Lake After giving you all sufficient time to TRADEMARKS Lodge. Mildred Brown Schrumpf deluge me with news and not getting any, 6 University Place I decided to make a canvass of the Bangor- Orono, Maine Brewer area and see what I could do on A. B. FOSTER a person to person appeal. And I found Maine ’02 1926 several people in town that I haven’t Rose M. Adams is teacher of Remedial seen since graduation—showing how large Patent Attorney Specializing in English at the Oxford' School, Hartford, Bangor is. Chemical Processes and Products Conn. Her residence address in Hartford Ray Berry was my first victim. He is 724-9th St., Washington, D. C. is 16 Lexington Road. still working for Mack Baking Co., liv­ Over 25 years at this address Mr. and Mrs. John Donald Babb, of ing at 166 Parker Street in Brewer, and Pittsburg, Pa., are receiving congratula­ is kept busy outside business hours by tions on the birth of a son, John D. II, who Mary Lou, Constance, Sandra and John. arrived December 10. Don has his insur­ Mrs. Bockus reported Cuddy as still WYMAN & SIMPSON, INC. ance office at 902 Chamber of Commerce chemical engineer at the Eastern Mfg. Hydro-Electric Plants, Mill, Bldg. He is also State Registrar for Co. in South Brewer. Suzanne is now 4 Railroad, Highway, and Bridge the Sons of the American Revolution. years old and they live at 58 Grant Street Construction Kenneth W. Barker has resigned from in Bangor. While we were talking, Cuddy the Foxcroft Academy faculty to enter called out and wanted to know if it wasn’t Waterville and Augusta the field of insurance as salesman for the time we started thinking about reunion— Maine Mutual Life Insurance Co., of New York. and you will be hearing more about this Maurice Burr, of Northeast Harbor, is ere long. They had no special news of • Secretary of the Mt. Desert Chamber of the Daniel Websters, but Dan is still in Maine Teachers’ Agency Commerce. Moline, Ill., as agent for the Travelers W. H. Holman TO, Mgr. Francis G. Buzzell, of Fryeburg, was Insurance Co. Eastern Trust Building elected president of the New England Had quite a chat with Eleanor Ford Bangor, Maine Cattle Breeders’ Association at the annual who is busy “at home” at 145 Chamberlain meeting, April 16, 1939. St., Brewer. 61 years of service to Maine Gordon H. Fait conducts a grocery Mrs. Samuel S. Goodman of 173 Broad­ teachers and school officials store and restaurant in Northeast Har­ way turned out to be Hilda Friedman bor during the summer, and in the winter and we had a fine time marveling how

16 we’ve managed to so thoroughly avoid William Signey (“Sid”) Perham is a time. Under his teaching and leadership each other all these years. Sam is owner physician at New Road, Woodbridge, the vocational agriculture department of ot the Moose River Shoe Co. in Old Conn. Gorham High School has increased its Town and Hilda is occupied at home with Dr. Louis Cohen is an oithopedic sur­ enrollment from 14 boys in 1931 to 54 this 6 year Ronda, 3 year James, and 10 weeks geon at 146 Barrett St, Schenectady, year, or 71 per cent of all the boys regis­ old Hannah. N. Y. tered. This department is now the third Gallaghers Market in Bangor is owned Fred B. Savage is located in Old Town largest in the state, exceeded only by those by no less than James F. Gallagher. Jim­ where he is practicing dentistry at 10 N. at Presque Isle and Houlton. In addition mie is married and lives at 69 Highland Main St. His residence address is 109 to the high school classes, the boys have Avenue. Middle St. Dr Savage received his de­ farm projects which Linwood inspects The teller at the Brewer Savings Bank gree from Tufts Dental College during his summer vacation and during is Wyman Gerry. The Gerrys live at 14 Barbara Pierce Skofield School Street and there is a 16 months 52 Harlow St. old Anne. Brewer, Maine Wilson James is still with the F. L. Don’t Forget To Wight Fur Co. in Bangor. The home 1929 address is 23 McKinley Street and there Arline Palmer was married last Decem­ Drop In are two children, Janet 4% and Donna ber to Mark Bowsher. She is living at just 1. 425 D St S.E., Washington, D. C. FOR THAT BANNER I called Ruth Rudman’s given address Guy Furbush is Regional Representa­ SOUVENIR and her mother was quite puzzled when I tive for the Keystone Readers’ Service asked for her. It seems she has lived at with headquarters at 581 Boylston St., or 32 Lenox Road, Brooklyn, N. Y., for the Boston He is living at 369 Summer St., JEWELRY past 10 years, has a daughter Deborah, 2J4 Stoughton, Mass. years old, and her name is now Mrs. Al The new manager of the Narragansett When on the Campus Tobias. division of the Metropolitan Life Insur­ Edith O’Connor Thaxter has been in ance Co. is Don Tracy. Don has been This Summer print several times this year but as a latest in the insurance business since 1929. report she has been elected president of Cecil Harribine is with the U. S Treas­ , Open the Chi Omega Alumnae chapter. ury Dept., Bureau of Customs and is liv­ All Summer That finished my home town news and ing at Easton, Maine. the Alumni office offers two items. Laurie Merrill is in charge of refores­ From Mrs. Iva S. Waring has been elected to tation of mahogany and is located in St. Seven-thirty to the Orono School board for a three year Croix, Virgin Islands. Four term. Joe Cooper and his wife are announc­ Ernest Elliott who was a Pre-dental at ing the arrival of a daughter, born in Maine, received his D.M.D. from Har­ April. UNIVERSITY STORE CO. vard in 1928 and is now a dentist in Port­ I hope you’ll all turn over a new leaf land (476 Stevens Avenue). His home this summer, and send in some news this address is 6 Highland Street. fall. Have a grand summer, write me all Marian Hawkes about it, and start thinking about reunion. 11 Linnaean St. SCHOOL DIRECTORY Peggy Preble Webster Cambridge, Mass. 93 Norway Road GIRL’S SCHOOL Bangor, Maine 1930 1928 Norwood Mansur and Miss Harriette OAK GROVE Ellen Moody, of Bedford Road, Bath, were Prepares for College and Gracious Living. Music, The engagement of Miss Janet Lowell, married on May 26 in Bath. Mrs Mansur Art, Expression. Upper and Lower Schools. Grad. of Westbrook, Maine, to Philip Edwin Course Sec. Science. New Fireproof Buildings. was educated in the public schools of Bath Biding included. Mr. and Mbs. Robert Owen, Farley, of Lancaster, N. H., was recently and was graduated from Morse High Box 170, Vassalboro, Maine. announced by Miss Lowell’s parents. The School in 1933. She has been employed wedding will take place in June. Miss at the offices of the State Police, Bureau BOY’S SCHOOLS Lowell was graduated from Westbrook of Identification. Norwood is a member High School and Colby College. of the firm of Mansur’s, Inc., of Augusta. HEBRON ACADEMY Mose Nanigian who has been sub-mas­ Jack Moran w'as recently elected pres­ Thorough college preparation for boys al moderate ter, coach and head of science and math ident of the Eastern Maine Baseball cost. 79 Hebron bojs freshmen in college this departments at Madison High School was League. He was also guest speaker at year. Write for booklet and circulars. Ralph L, recently appointed athletic coach at Ban­ the annual banquet of the staff members Hunt, Box G, Hebron, Me. gor High School. of the Maine Campus held at the Tarra­ Ernest Legere is also on the faculty of WILLISTON ACADEMY tine Club, the last of May. Jack is sports Unusual educational opportunities at modest cost. Bangor High He is a teacher of French editor of the Bangor Daily Nexus. Over 150 graduates in 40 colleges. New recrea­ and Faculty Manager of Athletics. He Ruth Taylor is a Junior Assistant Li­ tional center, gym, pool. Soparato Junior School. resides at 30 Bryant St. in Bangor. brarian, Zoology Division, Bureau of An­ A. V. Galbraith, Box 3, Easthampton, Mass. Dot Steward Say ward (Mrs. Elmer H.) imal Industry, Dept, of Agriculture, sent me a “newsy” letter just too late for MOSES BROWN SCHOOL Washington, D. C. She is residing at Help and inspiration for each boy a century-old last month’s column—Many thanks, Dot. 1801-16th St. tradition. Excellent college record. Secluded 25-acro The Saywards have a daughter Marcia The entire capital stock of the Bar campus. Pool. Lower School. Moderate tuition, Ellen, born December 14, 1938. They also Harbor Times Publishing Co. was re­ L. R. Thomas, 293 Hope St., Providence, R. I. have a son, Galen Robert, who was 7 last cently purchased by Asa V. Wasgatt and February. THE MERCERSBURG ACADEMY Jesse B. Lewis. Both have been employed Prepares for entrance to all colleges and univer­ Matthew (“Baldy”) and Ruby (Carlson at the Times office. sities. Alumni froru 24 nations. 680 former students ’29) Williams have a son, Matthew Carl­ Pauline Hall Leech now in 113 colleges. Boyd Edwards, D.D., LL.D., son Willjams, born November 11, 1938. Homer Folks Hospital HEADMASTER, MEIICERSRUnC, PA. “Baldy” is practicing law in Dover-Fox- croft. Oneonta, N. Y. ★ CARSON LONG INSTITUTE ★ Boys’ Military School. Educates the whole boy— Mr. and Mrs. John Keller (Hazel Lind­ 1931 physically, mentally, morally. How to learn, how say) are now residing in Minneapolis, This month like all others finds our to labor, how to live. Prepares for college or busi­ 'Minn. They have three sons, John aged news coming from all corners of New ness. Rates $500.00. Camp & Summer Sossion, $125.00, four and twins, Douglas and Duncan aged England as well as from Orono. Box 45, New Bloomfield, Pa. two this June. Ed Merrill is an account executive with “Phil” McSorley is a sales engineering Young and Rubicam, Inc advertising­ COEDUCAT’NAL SCHOOL representative of the Cincinnati Milling agency located at 285 Madison Ave., New MERRICOURT Machine Co. and resides at 5122 Kenwood York City. •‘JUST THE PLACE FOR CHILDREN** Rd, Cincinnati, Ohio. The McSorleys Frances Fuger Northgraves is still con­ For small selocl group—girls and boys 3-12—by have a three year old son, Philip, and an­ nected with the Bureau of Social Welfare month or )ear— understanding care in unique country boarding school and camp every facility other son born this past January. in Augusta. for health, happiness and social development. Albert M. Parker is a Patent Attorney Frances Dow is an interviewer with Mr. and Mrs. J. II. Kincsbury Berlin, Conn. for the American Flange & Mfg. Co., Inc., the Conn. State Labor Dept. Mail will 30 Rockefeller Plaza, N. Y. C. He re­ reach her at Box 289, New Haven, Conn. For further information write directly to above schools or camps or to the Graduate Group Educa­ sides at 18 Bar Beach Road, Port Wash­ Linwood Brofee makes the news again, tional Bureau, 30 Rockefklleb Pl., New Yobk, N.Y, ington, L. I., N. Y. but not for his athletic directorship this the past year a night and part-time course man of the play reading committee of the the North Haven Dairy and Pasteuriza­ has been given for adults. Bar Harbor Little Theatre last April. tion Plant and is serving his second term Beryl Bryant has taken a position as Charlotte Cleaves, who for seven years in the Legislature. “Washie” has been medical teaching supervisor at the Maine has been home demonstration agent in in summer camp work and also a tea room General Hospital in Portland. So far I Penobscot County, has been promoted to hostess in Portland and in New Hamp­ haven’t seen anything of her, but I imagine the position of State Extension Clothing shire. The wedding will take place in the I shall some day on Congress St. It’s a Specialist. As clothing specialist, Char­ early fall. pretty good place to find “Maniacs.” lotte will supervise the clothing work of A third engagement was announced this Vivian Drinkwater was elected chair- the Extension Service in the State. month—that of Lawrence Sweetser to Don Goode has been elected president Louise Amelia Williams, a fellow faculty of the Bangor chapter of the American member at Presque Isle High School. Institute of Banking at their recent annual Miss Williams, of Taunton, Mass., was meeting. , graduated from Taunton High School and Also in Bangor is Charlie O Connor Bates College in the class of 1935. She who is coaching track at Bangor High has taught English and coached girls’ and trying his best to renew interest there basketball in Presque Isle for the past in track. four years. The wedding will be an event Thanks, Kay Jackson Small, for your of the early summer. card. Information as to Kay’s where­ Helen Stearns Hincks abouts, class, is that she’s private secre­ 36 Main St. tary to Dr. W. D. Kells, 520 Beacon St., Orono, Maine Boston—and is living at 102 Beacon St. Thanks, too, to Jay O’Loughlin for his 1933 note informing you all through me that he Well, here I was just about finishing is not only proprietor of O’Loughlin’s the write-up on Rosamond Cole’s grand Greenhouses, Florists, 262-266 Mt. Hope job in Paris—when along came the in­ Ave., Bangor, but from August 21 to 26 teresting news that Rose had resigned he is to be a busy man at the Bangor Fair her position on the Paris edition of the where he is Supt. of Exhibits. New York Herald-Tribune to fly to And lastly, thanks to you all who have Rome, Italy, to become the bride of Rich­ helped out this news-gathering task for the ard Mowrer, correspondent of the Chi­ past five years. The arrival of Margaret cago Daily News. They immediately Alice Stiles on May 12, keeps Bill and left, after the ceremony, by motor on a me from reunion and me from thanking honeymoon trip to Paris. “Paris in the you all personally. In the future, keep Spring—Tra-la, tra-la.” Ah me! Best up the good work—for I shall want to see of everything to you both. your names still in print. As ever for Helen Clements is a supervising Home ’31 Economics teacher at Monmouth Acad­ Mary Carter Stiles emy in Monmouth, Maine. 110 Revere St. Jack Farnsworth returned my inquiry Woodfords, Maine card, writing “women are the most 1932 curious people.” Jack is still with the city engineers and is living at 72 Gray Geraldine Chase is attending the Prince St., Portland. Jack and his wife have School of Store Service Education. She an enghteen-months old son and it is is living at 108 Marlboro St., Boston, generally believed that the Bowdoin Mass. team of 1960 had best take heed. (I’ll Mr. and Mrs. Henry H. Favor of 136 pass this last bit of news on to my Seaman Ave., New York City, announce nephew—Bowdoin may have a real team the arrival of a daughter, Marcia Dorothy, by then!) Charlie Fobes is in the same on February 4, 1939. office with Jack, and Dick Robinson ’33 Franklin Heald is mechnical engineer is a teller in the Canal National Bank with the Rumford Falls Power Co., in here in Portland. Mr. and Mrs. Robin­ Rumford, Maine. son have an eight-months old daughter, Mrs. Hildred Hughes Moran is living Carol Ann. at Hampton Manor, Rensselaer, New Raymond Jackson is living at 23 Silver Member Federal Reserve Bank York. St., Waterville. I should have written, William Keith is credit investigator for Mr. and Mrs. Jackson are living there— Dun & Bradstreet, Inc. He is living at yes—it was only the other day that I 43 Mississippi Ave., West Orange, N. J. learned “Slugger” had been married for Winthrop C. Libby and Betty Tryon over a year to Miss Bertha Selwood, of ’33 were married June 10 at the home Perry. Congratulations. Ray is with of the bride in South Portland. They will the Maine Central Railroad Co. reside in Caribou for the summer, return­ Bessie Anderson Cox writes that she ing to Orono in the fall, when Win will has been married for three years. Bes­ take up his duties as Assistant Professor sie has supplied the pulpit in the Machias Young men and women will of Agronomy at the University. He was Congregational Church during the win­ always find this banking in- co-author of the bulletin ‘ Seed Potatoes ters and at this time is busily engaged for Growers of Table Stock” appearing in in putting on two health clinics in her . stitution interested and help­ the March issue of Extension Bulletin. local community. ful in their business progress. Lionel A. Maillet’s new address is 123 Spent a very pleasant evening with Water St., Waterville, Maine. Kay and Art Lufkin last week. They’re Responsibility is reflected by Wheeler G. Merriam is teaching at the fine and are planning to spend the sum­ a checking account, which is F. A. Day Junior High School. His ad­ mer at Pine Point, Scarboro, Maine. dress is 93 Floral St., Newton Highlands, Mr. and Mrs. Lyman Cousens, Jr. also a factor in establishing Mass. (Helen Findlay) and Lyman, 3rd, have credit and standing. The engagement of Harry Paul and moved from Vaughan Street to a house Miss Gretchen Brenner, of Boston, was overlooking Back Bav—3 Deerfield Road, announced recently. Miss Brenner is a Portland. graduate of the Child-Walker School of The engagement of Dorothy Blair to The Arts, and is employed as secretary at John C. Bohnson. Jr., ’32 was recently Liberty Mutual Ins. Co. The wedding announced Dotty is associate teacher-, will be in September. We hear Rudy of dancing at Craig’s Dancing Academy. Merrill Vallee is to be Harry’s best man. Johnnie is employed by the Maine Cen­ Louise Washburn’s engagement was an­ tral Railroad in the engineering depart­ Trust Company nounced recently to Lloyd F. Crockett, ment. With twelve offices in state representative from North Haven. Louise Clement is engaged as an assis­ Eastern Maine Representative Crockett is a graduate of tant librarian in the circulation depart­ North Haven High School, Bridgton ment of the Rochester Public Library Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. Academy, and attended Bowdoin College. in Rochester, N. Y. Her address is He is at present proprietor and owner of 368 Alexander St., Rochester, N. Y.

18 Bob Stubbert is employed as Market Any of you driving through East Jaf­ Inspector in the Dept, of Agriculture, frey, N. H., this summer be sure to stop State of Maine. He is living at 82 Col­ at Morris Judd’s restaurant. I’m not lege Ave., Waterville. collecting from Morris for this bit of Mrs. Sherman Pike (Margaret Davis) advertising, but I believe in boosting was recently re-elected president of the Maine. Pi Beta Phi Alumnae Chapter in Ban­ Milt Attridge sent a change of address gor. from Rolla, Missouri, to Willow Springs, Eleanor Cross is living at 34 Addison Missouri. He is in the U. S. Forest Ave., Rutherford, N. J. She is still Service. employed at the Commercial National Henry Finks is one of our men in Bank, 56 Wall St., N. Y. C. white with an M.D. after his name. He Tommy Desmond has a new street is now interning at Wesson Memorial address—146 East 5th Ave., Roselle, Hospital in Springfield. New Jersey. Marion Martin was the principal speak­ Eloise Lull is secretary to the presi­ er at the annual All-Maine Women ban­ dent of the Service Life Insurance Co. quet. Miss Martin is a good example of in Omaha, Nebraska. Her residence the things which “All-Maine Women” address is Fort Crook, Nebraska. represent. We do not often boast such Mrs. H. Parker Frost (Phyllis Web­ famous members. ber) was recently elected president of From now on until next September, the Bangor Junior Woman’s Club. I’m going to start a campaign to check If any of you hear of any gossip floun­ up on many of the members of our class dering around this summer, please snatch who have not appeared in print for some it up and mail it to me as fast as you’re time. I’d love a little help, so any bright able. This business of writing your col­ thoughts and choice bits could be sent umn each month is really a heck of a to me at 220 Fisher Ave., Roxbury, Mass. job! However, please observe that your I want lots and lots of news to make up “Winchelite” will have a change in ad­ for the scarcity I’ve had this spring. dress, after July 15th address the letters, Maybe you’ve all had picnic fever, I etc. (optimistic) to 39 Falmouth St., know I have. See you in the fall. Portland, and oh, yes, my name will be Peanut Bunker, R.N. slightly altered, too—Mrs. John R. Car- 220 Fisher Ave nochan after 3:30 p.m., June tenth Roxbury, Mass. Have a grand summer, everyone. Dorothy Findlay Carnochan 1935 39 Falmouth St. Another June, and we are the ancient Portland, Maine of 1935. Four years have passed quickly, 1934 yet everything that has happened has made a new era in our lives. This is It seems quite fitting that I should be really not wishful thinking about yes­ trying to get a sun-bath at the same time teryear, but just pleasant reminiscing. I’m writing this column. I remember We must start another year of being at Class Day it was prophecied that I alumni by telling you about all the prodi­ would be president of a nudist colony— I’m doing the best I can by spending my gies of ’35 who will carry on! two hours off duty out on the back lawn in a bathing suit. It’s fun to think that on Balentine roof coeds are still getting their tans and the engineers find sur­ veying much more interesting in that vicinity. This year has flown on wings and here we are back to reunion time. Help Someone Succeed Even though unofficial our class is going to be there—the lucky ones. Still I’ll BY SENDING US HIS NAME be able to get only second-hand news— institutions don’t care much about the nostalgic yearnings of old college gradu­ If you know some worthy and ambitious man or woman ates—life is cruel sometimes. who wants to find a way to win a fair reward in a life work, Having seen the clippings, pictures, do this: etc. of Rachel Adams wedding, I’m feel­ ing a little older this month I thought Suggest a career in life insurance field work and if you she was going to stick with me but it think this individual might be interested send us the name got her too. Rachel was married May to the address below. 2nd to Nathaniel Barker, of Presque Isle. Mr. Barker is a graduate of Bowdoin The Mutual Life Insurance Company of New York College in the class of ’29 and a member places a high value on sincere recommendations if based on of Zeta Psi fraternity. He is now in personal knowledge of the character of those recommended. the insurance business in Presque Isle. Art Hoyt was best man al the wedding. To selected individuals who possess energy, common Anothei Presque Isle wedding was sense, character, stability and genuine sympathy with that of Kermit Crandall on April 3. He others, The Mutual Life offers personal direction and mariied Miss Mary Amalie Rutland, of training in life insurance field work, leading to permanent Williston, Florida. Mrs. Crandall at­ tended the public school of Williston, careers in the communities chosen. Fla., the Skyland Girls’ School at Clyde, The Mutual Life’s new 32-page booklet “Can I Make a Living as a Life No Carolina, and Bryant & Stratton Insurance Representative?” is available to those who wish to consider Business College She has been employed the subject seriously; also name of nearest Mutual Life manager. at the Maine Potato Growers and Ship­ pers Committee office in Presque Isle. Address : Vice President and Manager of Agencies Kermit is now in the insurance business in Presque Isle. Another Maine baby is Patricia Lee Vaincy, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lew Varney. The Varneys are living in Lisbon Falls. Patricia was born April 4th. Lee Ingeison Black checks her occu­ pation as housewife. Lee and Walter are living on Rosemont Ave. in Portland, MAfatoau fflreet'. J\rcur Q/ork, Maine Carroll Duigin is a chemist with Pratt & Whitney of Hartford Conn.

1

i •>r i i ___ _ a Joe Connors is now daddy to a daugh­ Crandall is a graduate of Farmington liam A., Purington ’27, of Bangor. Dr. ter, Joan. Ann and Joe showed their Normal School, and he is principal at the Purington is also a graduate of Tufts ingenuity in naming the baby, she is Jo Oakfield grammar school. The wedding Medical School. He interned for a year and Ann. Congratulations! Joe is su­ will take place in the early summer. at Pawtucket (R. I.) Memorial Hospi­ perintendent at the Farmington Shoe Dick Gallop is with E. B. Badger and tal, three months at Charles V. Chapin Factory in New Hampshire. Sons, of Boston, and is living at 18 Cedar Hospital in Providence, and a year at the Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Fellows, Oscar St. in Wakefield, Mass. Oscar Taylor E. M. G. Hospital in Bangor. He be­ and Angela Johnson ’37, have a daugh­ is living at 57 Bangor St., Augusta, Maine, gan private practice in Bangor in 1935. ter, Rebecca. Oscar is practicing law, and Fred Roberts is living at 86-44 He is a member of the E. M. G. H. medi­ and has an office at 6 Columbia Building, 143rd St., Jamaica, New York. Maybe cal staff and of the National Board of Bangor, Maine. now that we’ve located them, we can find Medical Examiners. On April 23rd at Rockland, Dick Stod­ out what’s happening to them all. Chester Smith is engaged to Miss dard was married to Virginia Leach. I’d like to suggest that the house cor­ Lena Martin, of Amherst, Mass. Miss Mrs. Stoddard attended Ballard Busi­ respondent do a little checking up for Martin is a branch and children’s libra­ ness School and has been employed as a us and send a list to me of the 35ers rian of the Jones Library, Inc., having secretary. Dick is a salesman for St. from each house; what they are doing been engaged in the work since 1932. Clair and Allen, of Rockland. Dick and and where they are. Chester has one of those complicated Virginia are at home at 6 Talbot Avenue. Bill Farwell is teacher of Vocational titles which I have spoken about before. Bob Bucknam was married on April Agriculture at Greely Institute, and is It is, Assistant Agric. Economist, Dairy 15th to Miss Virginia Ann Campbell, of living at Cumberland Center. Randolph Section, Division of Marketing and Mar­ Rutherford, N. J. Mrs. Bucknam is a West is employed by the Soil Conser­ keting Agreements, Agriculture Adjust­ graduate of Montclair State Teachers vation Service at Presque Isle. Dean ment Administration, U. S. Dept, of Ag­ College and Bob is District Forest Rang­ Bailey is Assistant Horticulturist at riculture. er in the U. S. Forest Service, located in Tennessee Agricultural Experiment Sta­ Now we come to the weddings. Dubois, Wyoming. Charley Bicknell was tion and is living at 143 Underwood Richard Higgins was married to Miss one of the ushers at the reception. Place, Knoxville, Tenn., and Clayt Tot­ Marjorie Goode, of Bangor, on April 15. The engagement of Christine Homer man is an officer in the United States Marjorie was graduated from Bangor to Marshall Crandall, of Oakfield, has Marine Corps—Commanding Officer of High and attended Maine for one year. been announced. Christine attended the the Maine Detachment at the U. S. Fleet Richard is a general agent of the Union New York School of Social Work after Training Base at San Clements Island, Mutual Life Ins. Co. with headquarters she was graduated from Maine, and California. in Bangor. The couple will reside at she is employed by the State Bureau of Elmer Randall has been visiting at 427 Essex Street, Bangor. Social Welfare in Skowhegan. Mr. both the San Francisco and the New Don Rollins and Miss Constance Fiske York Fairs. Elmer is coming east and were married April 18, in New York to Maine for the first time in 25 months. City. Mrs Rollins graduated from Ban­ Marge Church Honer and Carl are gor High in 1933 and since then has been BAYNES & CHALMERS CO. living in Bangor now. Carl was trans­ employed by the F. W. Woolworth Co. A. S. Chalmers ’05, Treas. ferred recently to the Bangor Agency in Bangor. Don is with the American of the Union Mutual Life Insurance Mutual Ins. Co. in New York. They HARDWARE Company from Portland, and he is man­ will reside at 42-25 Layton St., Elm­ ager of the Bangor Branch Office. hurst, L. I., N. Y. BANGOR MAINE The engagement of Phil Lamb ’35 to Philip Webber and Miss Velma Mil­ Miss Norma Maxine Gillis, of Augusta, der, of Alton, were married April 18 at has been announced. Phil transferred to Belfast. Mrs. Webber is a graduate George Washington University Law of Old Town High and has been em­ Masons and Builders Supplies School, from Maine, and he is now city ployed by the Maine Unemployment solicitor of Gardiner; Miss Gillis has Compensation Commission at Augusta. ACME MFG. CO. been employed with the engineering de­ Two new additions to the “Class of partment of the New England Public ’36 offspring’’ are Paige Whitfield Nau- G. A. Hersey, ’00 Service Co. 'gler (parents Reggie and Dot Naugler, T. M. Hersey, ’34 Ray Wallace’s engagement to Law­ of Brewer) and John Francis Murphy, Bangor rence L. Currie, of Portland, has been son of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Murphy, also announced. Ray is assistant dietitian of Brewer. at the Maine Eye and Ear Infirmary in And we now come down to the busi­ ALWAYS DEPENDABLE Portland. ness world. On February 18th, Dick Barstow was Catherine Delaney is teaching com­ Years of Experience and Modern married to Miss Hilda Elizabeth Gray, mercial subjects in Oxford High School. Equipment insure Satisfactory a teacher in the Auburn schools. Gerald Beverage is an appliance ser­ Results Well, I seem to have come to the end vice man for the Central Maine Power MYERS STUDIO of all the news. So, a very pleasant Co. at Damariscotta. summer to you all, and, if you’re driving J. Clifford Lynch (can that be Can­ Old Town through Biddeford, I’d love to see any one dy?) is employed by the A. & P. Tea of you ’35ers. Co. in Boston, Mass. He is in the Fish Agnes Crowley Division, wholesale merchandising dept. 59 Western Ave. Donald M. Brown is a Highway Con­ YOU WILL FIND IT AT Biddeford, Maine struction Junior Engineering Aide in HARDWARE New Haven, Conn. 1936 Carolyn Currier, retiring president of and VARIETY Here it is June again and our third the Bangor Junior Women’s Club, was year out of college. Are you beginning presented a gold bracelet in apprecia­ 31-37MILL ST. ORONO to feel old? I do sometimes when I hear tion of her splendid leadership of the of the engagements, marriages, and group from its inception two years ago. births which are taking place. I hope it And so ends another year—Please do doesn’t have that reaction on you, be­ a lot of exciting things this summer Underwood Motor Camps cause I have quite a few of each for you and write and tell me all about them so this month. that we may start the ’36 column off Falmouth Foreside, Maine Lee Dorr’s engagement to Kenneth with a bang next fall. Wiley, of Glendale, Calif., was recently Phyllis Hamilton Webster Located on U. S. Route 1 announced. Mr. Wiley was graduated 338 Pine Street Six miles east of Portland from the Los Angeles schools and the Lewiston, Maine Curtis-Wright Institute of Aeronautical Telephone Portland, Maine, 3-9474 Engineering, in Glendale. He is now 1937 Cabins employed in the engineering department By the time this issue of the Alumnus Restaurant of Vega Airplane Co., a subsidiary of is published, our first class reunion will Lockhead Aircraft Corp, of Burbank, Trailers ■be over. I hope all of you had a grand Calif. They plan to be married in the time at Orono and everyone saw every­ Tenting early summer in California where they one else. H.W. Wright TO M.P. Wright’ll will reside. There are so many weddings for this M. L. Wright ’38 W. P. Wright ’40 Ev Tracy, who trained in the Eastern issue—I want to give them first place Maine General Hospital in Bangor after and wish them all much happiness and leaving Maine, is engaged to Dr. Wil­ many congratulations.

20 I

Emery Wescott and Barbaia Harlow Stan Fugei was married April 15th Joyce Allen was announced by Mr and ’39 were married on May 21 Emery, to Miss Viola Smith in the State Street Mrs Archie Allen, of Allen Ave, Port­ as you know, is working for the Merri­ Congregational Church in Portland. Miss land Miss Allen graduated from Port­ mac Division of Monsanto Chemical Co. Smith is the daughter of Mr and Mrs. land High in 1934 and Maine General in Everett, Mass. Their address is 27 Harry Felder, of White Plains, N Y. Hospital of Nursing in 1937 She is Andiews St, Everett, Mass. Their address is 22 Frederick St, Hait- now nursing in Brooklyn, N. Y. No Charles Sawyer was married to Mina ford, Conn date has been set for the wedding. Har­ McKeen at Searsport on May 31 Walter Smart is a student doing sales vey is employed by the Underwriters Charles taught school at Searsport for engineering work for the Fafnn Beanng Laboratoi les, Inc, as assistant electrical awhile but is now managing the W. R Co, New Britain, Conn His addiess engineer His residence address is 5313 Gilkey filling station. They are to live is 12 Lake Court, New Britain, Conn No Wa\ne Ave., Chicago, Illinois on Water Street in Searsport Dick Stevens is a first-year student in Dick Barker was married May 13 to Alan Duff, in April, was married to Harvard Dental School. 'His address is Julia Gerrish, of Bucksport. Dick is now Vera Mahan at Manassas, Va. Duffy is now 67 Otis St, Bangor, Maine working m the laboratory of the Maine employed by Dupont at Arlington, N J. Harvey Kenneson’s engagement to Miss Seaboard Paper Co as Pulp Tester. Their address is 17 Devan St, No Ar­ lington, N. J . Another of oui class who is now mar­ ried is Darrel Jordan whose mairiage to Katherine Johnson, of Oiono, took place in April. They are living at 18 Summit St, Fairfield, Maine He is woiking in the tire retreading business in Waterville On March 11, Harry Connor was mar­ ried to Connie Davidson, of Ste Cathe­ rines, , at Ste Catherines Harry is with the International Paper Co. at Niagara Falls The Connors aie resid­ ing at Park Place Apartments, Apt 9, Third St, Niagara Falls, N Y Elmer Crowley is in Richford, Ver­ mont, employed by the Atlas Plywood Corporation He is learning the veneer business Thanks a lot for the letter Frances Jones is a secretary at the Boston Ice Company, Boston, Klass Her addiess is 223 Beacon St, Boston, Mass. Ralph Wentworth has received a grad­ uate scholarship to study at Haixard for next yeai He has been teaching at Monson Academy K. Stanford Blake was appointed sec­ retary of the Dexter Chamber of Com­ merce He has been doing journalistic work until now Another marriage that I haven’t writ­ Interior of the palatial ten of is Wendell S Brewster who was LUXURY LINER. married to Ruth Knight, of Phillips, in AVE real fun the year ’round! Visit April. They are living in Dextci, Maine, historic spots. See the World’s Fairs. for the present Best wishes Explore interesting, out-of-the-way places. Elizabeth Story Hoyt HFollow seasonable sports. GO—spring, sum­ 29 Maple Ave mer, fall and winter—and always enjoy the Farmington, Maine finest accommodations at amazingly low cost 1938 with a new Schult Trailer. Barbara Brown and George Roundy Ten beautiful models include such features were married April 8 in the Methodist as super-insulation and Temperature Control Episcopal Church in Wollaston, Mass for all-weather comfort, electric refrigera­ The ceremony was performed by Rev. tion, oven range, showers—in fact, every Sawyer of that church. Barbaia has modern convenience. And Schult affords the widest range of sizes, room arrangements, been living in Bath, Maine, and Wollas­ Two interior views of ton, Mass, since giaduation and George new Schult models* finishes, and prices of any trailer manu­ is working foi the Massachusetts State facturer. $498 to $3600. Forestry Dept George and Baibara Large quantity production makes possible are going to be living at Lake Mospcnoc low prices. Every model an unbeatable value. neai Walpole A Schult factory 3-year maintenance war­ Marjonc E Thompson, of Biddeford, ranty goes with every trailer sold. is starting a new Home Economics coui se From now on enjoy life the new way—take at Old Town High next year She has 52 vacations a year in a Schult Trailer. been teaching Home Ec at Madison this See your dealer’s display of Schult Trailers. past year Congiatulations, Midge. Or write today for illustrated Free Catalog! Ronald Bai nes was mai ried May 5 to Miss Ruth Foss Miss Foss is the SCHULT TRAILERS, INC. daughtei of Mi and Mrs William Foss, DEPT. 2306 ELKHART, INDIANA of Fort Fail field Mis. Baines is a giaduatc of Fort Fairfield High School in 1936 A reception was held Saturday evening at the home of Mr and Mrs George Barnes, Presque Isle Ronald and lus wife will live at 154 State St., Presque Isle, where he is employed by the Soil Conscivation Sei vice Jean Kent’s new addiess is 135 West­ minster St, Spnngfield, Mass As you know, Jean started working for the The beautiful 24' LUXURY LINER for 4 persons. Federal Land Bank there May 1 Charlie Cain and Mrs (Helene Diehl) aie living in Apt. #7, 334-lst St., Ni­ agara Falls, N. Y They were married in Quincy, Mass, March 18. Charlie is SCHULT TRAILERS employed by the International Paper Co.

21

I After a short wedding trip, the couple address is 48 Glenham St., Providence, I’ll be there if you will and I’ll have to will make their home in Bucksport. R. I. . come 430 miles. See you in the fall. James D. Thompson is working for Penn Hussey is employed as chemist Johnny Gowell Armour & Co., Bangor. His residence at W. S Libbey Co., Lewiston, and lives John’s address is changed to Old Mill address is 10 Cedar Street. at the Y.M.C.A., 62 Turner St., Auburn. Place, Trumbull, Conn., where he is Gordon Chute is Field Assistant for the Jim Stanley was married to Miss living with seven other fellows. Northeastern Forest Experiment Station, Frances Reynolds, May 8, 1939, in the Johnny also writes that Don Kelley is New Haven, Conn. Residence address, All Souls Congregational Church. Mrs. working as a Sales Student for Westing­ 276 So. Main St., Athol, Mass. Stanley is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. house Electric & Mfg. Co. of Pittsburg, Dave Carswell is employed by the Clarence Reynolds, of 56 Madison St., Pa. Address—400 Center St., Bridge­ National Park Service on a canal project Bangor. She is a graduate of Bangor port. in Washington, D. C. His residence High, attended Leland Powers School Mary Deering address is 2641 Garfield St., N. W., of Dramatics in Boston, and is a graduate Court House Bldg. Washington, D. C. of Bishop Lee School of the Theatre in Binghamton, N. Y. Tom Lynch’s new address is 3027 Boston. ❖ ❖ Edgehill Rd., Cleveland, Ohio. I should Lawrence Philpott is working for the Reunion Class Reports think you’d break down and tell us what Standard Electric Time Co., of Spring­ you are doing way out there, Tom! field, Mass., in the Engineering Dept. The results of the several class meetings Alvin Hersey is herdsman on the His address is 128 Cambridge St., Spring­ as reported to the Alumni Association of­ Pleasant Plain Farms, Annapolis, Md. field Mass fice are briefly summarized in the follow­ His address is R.F.D. #1, Edgewater, Fran Jones writes that Al Owens is Maryland. staying another year at the University of ing paragraphs. Lawrence Denning has recently been Illinois to complete his M.A. work. Fran Senior Alumni—Officers elected—Pres­ transferred to Providence, R. I., where has left Illinois to go to Harvard to work ident, George H. Hamlin ’73; Vice Pres., he is employed by W. T. Grant. His on Interregional Competition and will John S. Williams ’87; 2nd Vice Pres., complete his M.A. and go on to his Ph.D. Ralph H. Marsh ’88; Sec.-Treas., John work there. Fran writes that he never N. Hart ’85. Executive Com.—The above thought he’d end up at Harvard, of all officers and chairman of committees. Bangor Furniture Co. places! 1891—President, William N. Patten; Johnny Gowell has a message for you Secretary, William N. Bailey. Complete House Furnishers all— 1909—President, Frederick D. Knight; 1st Vice Pres., Howard G. Philbrook; 2nd 84-88 Hammond Street At the annual alumni banquet last Sat­ urday night, our class received special Vice Pres., Kenneth A. Rollins; 3rd Vice Bangor, Maine recognition during the presentation of Pres., Elton L. Towle; Secretary, Harold two thousand dollars to the Hauck five- A. Rich; Treasurer, George T. Carlisle; year gift fund, for having had more Auditor, Jesse H. Mason. Executive Com. contributors toward this amount than —Walter O. Harvey, Norman H. Mayo, Ford Mercury any other class. Fine spirit, ’38ers. Harry E. Sutton. Lincoln Lincoln Zephyr Keep it up! 1911— President, Ernest T. Walker; Vice Pres., Raymond W. Davis; Sec.- WEBBER MOTOR CO. If you all could have been back this Treas., Avery C. Hammond. Executive year you would have found greater class Com.—Ernest T. Walker, George D. Bangor, Maine spirit prevailing on Campus than you’ve Bearce, Harry Homans, Clifford Patch, ever dreamed of before. Everyone had Parker Frost ’35, Salesman Irene Cousins. a grand time this year, but I’m predict­ 1912— President, Karl Woodward; Vice ing that the ’38ers are going to have a grander time next year, so let’s all be Pres., June Kelley; Treasurer, Maurice making up our minds to attend our first D. Jones; Sec., William E. Schrumpf. reunion next June. Plans are rapidly 1914—President, Howe W. Hall; Vice When in LEWISTON taking form and we’ll guarantee there Pres., A. Lincoln King; Sec., Richard F. will be plenty of fun for all. Crocker; Treas., Frederick S. Jones; Per­ Stop at sonals Editor, Marion S. Buzzell. Execu­ While on this subject, I’d also like to tive Com.—Arthur W. Abbott, Roland mention that a new cup, to be known as E. Stevens, Paul D. Bray. HOTEL LITTLETON “President’s Cup,” is to be awarded next 1929— President, Robert Parks; Vice Commencement. So, let’s walk off with Pres., Mrs. Beatrice B. Heal; Sec., Mrs. Rooms, hot and cold water $1.50 this cup. too. It will be no easy job, Caroline C. Lowell; Treas., Loomis Kin­ With private bath $2.00 though, for there are many of the classes ney ; Personals Editor, Barbara Johnson. that think they can beat us. Executive Com.—James C. Buzzell, Clar­ Free Parking Last, but not least, let’s plan on a ence Bassett, Richard Holmes, Mrs. Mary get-together next fall at Homecoming. R. McClure. Contribution to Alumni Chas. W. Hinds We can have special tables at the Lunch­ Activities Fund—$25.00. Manager eon just before the Bowdoin game and 1930— President, William H. Daley; can get together in the morning at the Vice Pres., Sylvester M. Pratt; Sec., Ken­ M.C.A. and make some reunion plans. neth Haskell; Treas., Richard S. Brad­ ford ; Personals Editor, Mrs. Pauline H. Leach. Executive Com.—Earl R. Gowell, Ralph A. Corbett, Glenn Perkins, Mrs. Sarah P. Gleason, Vera Hill. Contribu­ NORTHEASTERN UNlVERSITY tion to Alumni Activities Fund—$25.00. 1931— President, Clifton E. Curtis; Sec.- Treas., Doris Gross. Executive Com.— School of Law Philip J. Brockway, William C. Wells, Mrs. Mabel L. Stewart. DAY PROGRAM . . . Three Years 1932— President, Winthrop Libby; Vice Pres., Lovell C. Chase; Sec., Mary G. EVENING PROGRAM . . . Four Years Bean; Treas., Maynard A. Hincks; Per­ sonals Editor, Mary G. Bean. Executive A minimum of two years of college work required Com.—To be appointed by the president. for admission. Contribution to Alumni Activities Fund— $25.00. A limited number of scholarships available to 1937—President, Leslie Hutchins; Vice college graduates. Pres., Wendell Brewster; Sec., Mrs. Hen­ rietta C. Woodbury; Treas., Robert Oh- LL.B. Degree conferred. Admits men and women. ler; Personals Editor, Mrs. Henrietta C. Woodbury. Executive Com.—Alton Bell, 47 Mt. Vernon St., Boston John Bennett, Clarence Keegan, Carol Stevens. Contribution to Alumni Activi­ ties Fund—$25.00.

22 The L A S T C A L L

for "First Edition” Maine Plates

By special arrangement with the plate manufacturers it has become possible to extend the final date for First Edition Maine plates to . All orders, therefore, received on or before this day will bear the distinctive identifying backstamp marking each plate as a “first”—a mark of real historic value, and a distinction never again available.

Production of Maine’s “Memory Plates” will be undertaken immediately after the close of the First Edition date and it is hoped that plates will be available for shipment in the late fall in time for Christmas use. A set of Maine plates will make an appropriate Christmas gift for a Maine alumnus. Remember that plates can now be ordered in less than half-dozen lots. Orders are now being accepted for one or two or any number of individual plates at a price of $1.50 for each plate, payable at the time of ordering. And these too will be First Edition until June 30.

To be sure of First Edition plates your order should be sent at once to the Alumni Office, 13 Fernaid Hall, Orono, Maine. Just mark the number of plates wanted and pick out your choice of center designs on the order blank below. Prices are: $15.00 for twelve, $10.50 for eight, $8.00 for six, or $1.50 per plate for less than six, plus express charges collect from Boston.

General Alumni Association, University of Maine, Orono.

Please reserve for me. . Maine Plates. I enclose deposit of $ .1 shall pay the balance when Plates are ready for delivery. (Deposit: for one dozen, $5.00; for eight, $4.00; for six, $3.00; for less than six, price of $1.50 per plate payable with this order.)

For color I prefer: .Staffordshire Blue ...... Green

I wish the following center designs (please indicate number of plates of each design): Alumni Hall ...... Alumni Memorial Library .Winslow Hall . .. .Stevens Hall Wingate Hall Coburn Hall ...... Merrill Hall

Ship Plates to: . ... (Name)

(Address)

9

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