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as did those of no other Colleges. Alumni Reproduction Rates Largest number of children per grad- uate, per married graduate, and per By PROFESSOR WALFRED A. ANDERSON, PhD '29 married graduate with any children OPULATION Reference Bureau better record than for women of com- are reported by Agriculture men. Pof Washington, D. C., with which parable age in the general population. Neither men nor women graduates of the Department of Rural Sociology at Not only did the men of '21 marry any College are replacing themselves, Cornell has been cooperating, shows in much larger proportions than the as a whole.The deficit for replacement is in a study of fifty institutions that the women of that Class, but more of the greater among women than among men. graduates of men's colleges fail to re- marriages produced children. Of the The prospect for the future cannot place themselves by 45 per cent and married men, 79.9 per cent, and of the be viewed with encouragement if the those from women's colleges by 52 per married women, 69.8 per cent had one replacement of Cornell graduates gen- cent. What are the facts for Cornell or more children. The average number erally follows the pattern of the Class graduates? Do they furnish their of children per graduate reporting is of '21. The object should be to in- share of intelligent future citizens up- 1.67 for the men and 1.19 for the crease the proportion of our popula- on which our society depends? women. 2.22 children are needed to tion that includes the intrinsically able To find out the answer to these allow each child to reach the age at people, and here there is a serious questions, the Class of 1921 was asked which the parent graduated. The men falling short. last spring to furnish information on of 1921 are replacing themselves by the number of its children. This Class only 75 per cent and the women of '21 Jobs Open graduated twenty-five years ago last by only 54 per cent. June, so their families are completed JOB BULLETIN of the University and few if any additional children will Population Shrinking J Placement Service for August lists be born to them. They are an ideal When only the married graduates eighty positions available for men and Class, therefore, for making such an are considered, it is found that they a dozen for women. Engineers are analysis. too are not bequeathing a child each most in demand, but other careers are These graduates certainly responded to our population, for the married men also open. For instance, the War De- well. Of the 660 degree holders with average only 1.75 children and the partment needs engineers, economics known addresses, 534 or 81 per cent women only 1.67 children each. The majors, lawyers, administration ma- sent in the information requested. The 2.19 children per Cornell male parent jors, and public welfare students for women told us about their children in and the 2.39 children per Cornell fe- overseas civilian jobs with the Army larger proportions than the men, for male parent cannot therefore, com- of Occupation in Germany, Austria, 86 per cent of them compared with 79 pensate for the infertile marriages and Korea, and Japan; the UN secre-. per cent of the men, gave us the data. the unmarried. tariat wants typists, stenographers, But the proportions are very high for The accompanying table shows that and secretaries, bilingual if possible, both men and women, and these Veterinary alumni and both male and and offers taxless salaries. Cornellians are to be congratulated on female graduates of Arts and Sciences Job Bulletins are sent periodically their cooperation. married in larger proportions than to all alumni registered with the Place- those of other Colleges. But both men ment Service at Willard Straight Hall, 95 Per Cent of Men Married and women graduates of the Law Ithaca, or the Cornell Club of New Cornell men of 1921 can be proud of School who married all had children, York, 107 East Forty-eighth Street. their marriage record. Ninety-five per cent of them married (89 per cent of all men of comparable age married). Number of Children Married There had been only one divorce in Colleges No. Per Per married report- graduate Per graduate Per cent each 20 of these marriages and only ing report- married with Per with one instance of separation: a far finer ing graduate children cent children record than that for men of compar- Male Graduates, 1921 able age in our whole population. Arts 136 1.65 1.74 2.20 94.9 79.1 Only 71 per cent of the Cornell Agriculture 99 1.87 1.99 2.40 93.9 82.8 women of 1921 married. Nearly three Engineering 143 1.50 1.58 2.05 95.1 77.2 out of each ten had remained single. In Law 15 1.43 1.67 1.67 85.7 100.0 Veterinary 1.93 1.93 2.23 100.0 86.7 the general population, 91 per cent of 7 ' the women of comparable age had Total males 400 1.67 1.75 2.19 94.8 79.9 married. With such a relatively low Female Graduates, 1921 percentage of marriage, the chances of Arts 73 1.23 1.64 2.65 75.3 61.8 the women of this Class bequeathing Agriculture 29 1.17 1.79 2.27 65.5 78.9 children to replace themselves is Engineering 4 0.75 1.50 3.00 50.0 50.0 Law 3 1.33 2.00 2.00 67.0 100.0 seriously affected. Among the 1921 Home Economics 25 1.16 1.61 1.93 72.0 83.3 married women, there had been one divorce in each 24 marriages and no Total females 134 1.19 1.67 2.39 71.6 69.8 cases of separation. This too is a much Alumni Trustees Report as Their Terms Expire Reports of the two Alumni Trustees of the University whose five-year terms expired June 30, Robert E. Treman '09 and Tell Berna '12, were distributed at the annual meeting of the Cornell Alumni Association in Bailey Hall, June 22. Treman, who had been Alumni Trustee since 1931, was elected by the Board to fill an unexpired term from last April 16, and re-elected for the five-year term ending June 30, 1951. Berna was elected Alumni Trustee in 1941. Their reports are printed here for the information of alumni. By Robert E. Treman '09 By Tell Berna '12 FTER surviving an economic HE requirement in the by-laws A depression with its integrity Tof the Cornell Alumni Asso- unimpaired, Cornell has now, in ciation that "each Trustee repre- the past five years, come through senting the alumni shall make a another world war with credit and written report to this Association distinction. It can face the new at the end of his term of office" and confused problems of a chang- gives me a welcome opportunity of ing world with faith in its own des- expressing my thanks for the privi- tiny, with confidence in its own lege of membership in the Board leadership. during the past five years. It is an The vitality and scholastic tone experience which any alumnus of the University are demonstrated would enjoy, and one which gives in the fact that in the disruption him a renewed enthusiasm for the of war, and with many of its out- work which Cornell is doing, as standing scholars and experts bor- well as a deep sense of pride in the rowed by the nation, it has main- University. tained its standards of instruction There is a wealth of potential and research. Beyond that, it took Board material among Cornell on and accomplished the super- graduates, and I hope that there imposed task of training and send- will be a growing appreciation ing forth 5,234 competent young among the alumni of the impor- men in the Navy's V-12 college program, eluding as symptomic, these figures on the tance of sending our ablest men and women 4,376 in the Army's Specialized Training wholesome progress of the University's to represent us at Cornell. It is a distinction Program, 1,200 "Diesel engineers, 600 portfolio. that should not be reserved for athletes of steam engineers, 100 Naval Aviation ca- Year Book Value Market Value the pleistocene era, but for those who have distinguished themselves since graduation. dets, 800 deck officers, and more than 1931 $25,179,985 $22,885,598 It is most necessary that we give thought 1,000 midshipmen. The figures are yet to 1941 33,871,539 29,560,894 to the matter of geographical representa- be compiled dealing with the thousands 1946* 42,286,431 47,918,398 tion as well, for I have noted that the dis- of men and women, with the mark of Cor- * April 10, 1946 nell previously fixed upon them, who tance from Ithaca to some of our Mid- served in all ranks and in the most remote In a period of falling interest rates, the western alumni associations has grown quarters of the globe. yield on these investments has never fallen to excessive proportions, and the Alumni below 4.01%, nor has the task of broad- Trustees should be an effective link be- President, Trustees Active gauged planning for the future—primarily tween the University and these local I wish space permitted me to mention the responsibility of the Board of Trus- groups. the outstanding work here on the Cornell tees—been buried in the details of Uni- home front of certain Trustees, alumni, versity housekeeping. There has been a Board Needs Alumni and members of the staff. Many fine and gradual reorganization in the administra- It was with great reluctance that I de- unselfish performances have been turned tion set-up which by the creation of twΌ cided not to be a candidate for a second in that deserve an award of merit. additional Vice-presidents and a Provost term. I believe there is a principle involved One of the aspects of Cornell's activities has relieved the President of the weight of that is of importance to all of us. An alum- during the war of which every Cornellian much detail, and greatly strengthened the nus should not seek a second term as Trus- may be proud is the record of President entire administration at the higher levels. tee unless he is engaged in Board work of Edmund E. Day. As chairman of the com- New committees have been added. The continuing importance which would be de- mittee of college presidents having con- newly created Planning and Development layed if he leaves the Board. Some Board tinuous relations with the War and Navy Committee is projecting the needs of the committees are concerned in matters where Departments, he became a central figure University into long range; it is its task to experience in the affairs of the University in the vital relationships between the see the vision of the Cornell that is to be is an essential ingredient in sound judg- armed services and the universities; and and to translate that vision into reality. ment. But so far as the rest of us are con- it is not an overstatement to say that he There are grounds for more than hope that cerned, it is obvious that as many alumni is in all circles regarded as one of the out- some dreams will soon come true. as possible should have this experience, so standing educators of the country. Building Needs Foreseen that there will be an ever-widening circle During the past five years, the Board of of men and women among our alumni who Trustees have, in my opinion, reached The Buildings and Grounds Committee, understand the problems of the University their highest state of efficiency within my alive and alert, has not been thwarted by and will help intelligently to explain its memory. Under the brilliant leadership of the unusual restrictions of wartime short- policies to their fellow-Cornellians. If all H. E. Babcock, the Board has been re- ages and regulations. To an astonishing of you had an insight into the magnificent organized and revitalized. Every member degree, it has been able to foresee the de- possibilities which lie ahead for Cornell, now serves on at least one committee, and mands for physical expansion and meet the University's worst problems would be is doing effective work for Cornell. them as they came along. This state of much nearer to solution. It is, of course, in the accomplishments preparedness now turns out to be most In this way too, the Board meets a of the academic side that a university fortunate as we see new structures—tem- larger number of alumni, and can make a justifies the faith of its founders and its porary and permanent—going up every- wiser selection when there is a vacancy to continued existence; in the vision of its where to house the expanded student body be filled by the Board. administration, the devotion and pro- which Cornell, in common with other uni- However, I would oppose an arbitrary ductivity of its faculty, the soundness of its versities, is suddenly called upon to care limit to the number of terms an Alumni student body. But the academic side could for. When one considers that the colleges Trustee should serve. This is a matter that not long function unimpaired but for the and universities of the country will have requires intelligent consideration of the wise administration of its material re- 1,800,000 students this fall, an increase of factors in each case; no two are alike. It sources. For this administration, Cornell 500,000 over the pre-war years, and that takes less courage to set up an arbitrary has been fortunate enough to command 500,000 applicants will be crowded out for regulation that will decide this for us in the shrewd and gratuitious services of that lack of housing facilities, it is not difficult the future, but we have all learned in re- noteworthy group (now called the Invest- to see the problems that confront us here cent years that there can be such a thing ment Committee) who in recent years at Cornell. Nor is the expansion to be in as too much regulation. have guided the husbandry of its invest- numbers alone. The whole conception of a During the last five years, the admini- ments and resources. The details of their university's responsibilities in a strange stration of the University has been faced management are not for a report of this new world has been expanding. The cre- with a rapid succession of difficult prob- character, but I cannot refrain from in- (Conίinued on page 95) lems. During the war, there was a sub- 92 Cornell Alumni News stantial loss of Faculty members to the Government service. In some departments, Government training courses imposed an excessive load. Some had almost no stu- dents. It was almost impossible to set up a Now, in My Time! budget, in view of constant changes. These problems were handled with great skill, and it is enduring evidence of the ability of By the administration that the University came through the difficult war years with- out serious financial loss. correspondent dropped results of the system are not al- We now face a complete reversal in our in at Schoellkopf some weeks ways happy. The one thing that outlook. Faculty members are returning to their posts; vacancies in the teaching back when football application makes your alumnus maddest is a staff are being filled. We will have in Sep- blanks were being shipped out to detached, an impersonal, attitude tember the largest number of students we the alumni. They (the blanks) filled toward any communication he have ever had. Never in history has the a two-ton truck. We watched this sends to his Alma Mater; or to University faced so great a pressure on admissions. Not only veterans who wish to precious freight start off on its Sears, Roebuck. When he orders a take advantage of the provisions of the journey to the Post Office and in a new part for his electric toaster, he "G.I. Bill of Rights," but civilians whose reminiscent mood speculated with wants Mr. Sears to handle the families have prospered during the war, Miss McFerren on the probable transaction personally, or anyway clamor for acceptance. Vigorous steps have been taken to secure temporary housing returns from that pretty substan- Mr. Roebuck, and even though the for these students in time for the fall term. tial investment in paper, printing, acknowledgment must be on a But many will have to be turned away. and postage. printed form, he feels much better Miss McFerren said she expected when Mr. Sears adds a little inti- Admissions Priorities mate touch like "Hi-ya, Pinky?" or A limit of total enrollment of 9,000 a good return this year because students has been set. Each College and already she had detected a queru- "How's tricks, Screwball?" If he School has been given its proportionate lous note, signs of irritation and gets that personal note, it becomes limit, depending on its facilities. Admis- suspicion, in so much of the incom- a matter of only minor annoyance sions are being carefully screened, with when the new part doesn't fit the first priority going, of course, to those ing mail as dealt with football students in residence who are in good tickets. This she regarded as a toaster, or the seats are scarcely standing, so that they may complete their favorable symptom. It's only when inside the ball park. courses. Next priority goes to the returning alumni are calm and contented And that brings up the location Cornell veteran whose course was inter- of seats; a matter on which the rupted by war service. The remaining about the location of their seats places are divided equally between other that she has cause for concern; alumnus is just as suspicious and veterans and civilian applicants. State when they start writing bitter let- implacable as Molotov. It isn't that colleges must also recognize their obliga- ters (carbon copies to the President the seats are bad; there are few, if tion to give preference to applicants from of the University and the secretary any, complaints voiced after the the State of New York. kick-off. Every stall in the Cornell All applicants must first satisfactorily of the Alumni Fund), Miss McFer- meet the academic requirements, so that ren is assured that prosperity has Crescent commands an unobstruct- we may be sure that they can handle work returned. ed view of the entire playing area of college grade. As between two applicants The administration of college and a portion, at least, of the score- of otherwise equal standing, preference is board. But a large section of the given to those from Cornell families. The athletics is commonly handled by suggestion that Cornell sons and daughters two unrelated departments; (1) alumni persist in reading into the be put at the head of the list or be given "Clean Sport For All, Press Rela- location of the seats they get the greater preference will not stand analysis; tions, and Body Building/7 under University's nice appraisal of them, Cornell is an educational institution, not a their accomplishments, and their club. It is doubtful whether it would en- the immediate supervision of the hance the morale of a student to know that athletic directors; and (2) "Foot- potentialities as benefactors. Stalls he was accepted because of his father. ball Tickets/' which the athletic on the fifty-yard line are regarded When a College that can take in 350 directors avoid like so many rattle- as putting one among the nobility, Freshmen receives 5,000 applications, whereas anything in the neighbor- somebody must be disappointed. A great snakes and leave entirely to the many fine applicants are going to be re- Miss McFerrens of this world, a hood of either goal line is an inten- jected. It is, therefore, of importance that new type which with the years has tional brush-off on the part of alumni understand why this must be done. developed a special genius for tak- Merrill Hall. I have checked a great many cases myself, One of these days, perhaps, some- and I am satisfied that this task is being ing it without dishing it out in re- impartially handled by competent officers turn, and for continuing to count one will think up a system whereby of the University. money without errors when very the Football Ticket Department Cornell is a liberal institution in the best mad. can achieve efficiency and impartial sense of the word. If it is to grow in effec- fair-dealing without breaking tiveness, it must occasionally venture on The football ticket industry is hearts. But that day is not yet, and new paths to keep in step with a growing now essentially a mail-order busi- nation. The "area" courses are a case in until it arrives the astute athletic point. The success of this method in train- ness conducted along the lines per- directors will continue to stress ing officer and civilian Government em- fected by Sears, Roebuck & Co. body building and character mould- ployees during the war will undoubtedly and Montgomery Ward. Applica- ing during the fall months and leave result in its widening use in time of peace. tions are handled by trained spe- One of these courses dealt with the langu- the Miss McFerrens to deal with age, history, and economy of Russia. I cialists to whom everything on the the sordid minutiae of the business. hope that it will be repeated soon. We card is important except the name And the Miss McFerrens at scores desperately need in business and in of the applicant. In due course, the of ivy-clad foundations now face Government more men and women who tickets are allotted and mailed in speak Russian and who understand the the immediate future stoically, as Russian situation. the same detached and impersonal they watch the truckloads of Another forward step is the establish- manner. trouble depart, well-convinced by ment of the School of Business and Public If you stopped to think, you'd years of experience that the only Administration. I believe that it is des- tined to become one of the outstanding see that the business has to be con- football seats that they need worry Schools in the University. ducted in just that way, but the long about are the empty ones! (Continued on page 95) October /, 1946 93 For the Record Courtney D. Young '43, former Slants on Sports director of recreation for the City of Cortland, has joined the football coaching staff. He will assist Ray Van Football Squadat Work Peter P. Pascavage '48 of Frackville, Orman '08 in handling the Junior Pa., formerly of Fordham and the Varsity team. OOTBALL practice started on Seventh Army All-Stars; right tackle, Junior Varsity football game with Fthe south end of Hoy Field Sep- Harry B. Furman '45 of Elmira, who Yale, originally scheduled for Satur- tember 3, with a squad of more than played tackle on the 1943 team; right day, October 19, will be played in- fifty men. Just before the opening end, Harold M. Hargrave '45 of El- stead at 4:30 p.m. Friday, October 18, game with Bucknell September 28, it mira, a Freshman at Cornell before on lower Alumni Field. numbered approximately sixty, with the war and who played with Wydo at late comers offset by the decision of Nashville; quarterback, John D. some veterans not to play this season. Burns '48 of Nashville, Tenn., who Daily double drills were the order played for Vanderbilt and Maxwell Time Was . . . until the final week of practice, when Field; left halfback, Walter A. Kretz workouts were limited to the after- '45 of Amityville, who suffered a noon. On September 19, St. Bona- Twenty Years Ago broken leg in the second game of the October, 1926—The Masque is venture's squad came to Schoellkopf 1942 season but returned to play the Field for a practice game (minus dead. Cause was the abbreviation of last three games that year; and right Junior Week by one day, which de- kickoffs) of which no official score halfback, Carl R. Holland '50 of was kept. prives the Masque of one thoroughly Farmingdale, Army veteran who has suitable evening for its gallivantings. Cornell did not show too much played no college football. It was left with the choice of staging a promise in that game. Some of the This squad is considerably older rival performance to the Musical war veterans now on the squad have than the average. Fifty-five members Clubs or crowding between formal been slow in rounding into condition. of the original squad saw service in Friday night dinners and the Prom. Some men, of whom much was ex- the war. Hargrave and Lynn P. ALUMNI NEWS tabulation of the pected, did not measure up. Others, Dorset '49 of Miami, Fla., a back, current issue of The Widow classifies not too highly regarded in the early won the Distinguished Flying Cross. the subject matter of its jokes: scrimmages, surprised the coaching The squad's collection of citations in- Puns and double-meanings 26 staff with their improved play. cludes one Bronze Star, five Air Necking, legs, lingerie, etc. 14 Injuries have retarded the backs Medals, and four Purple Hearts. Local allusions 10 and some of the linemen, and it has Liquor 7 Letter Winners Back Incomprehensible 4 been impossible to keep one team in Anti-climax 3 action for any length of time. In the Former letter winners back from Nonsense (intentional) 3 practice session with St. Bonaventure, the service include Furman, Pastuck, Defying classification 20 now coached by Hugh Devore who Kretz, Martin, John B. Rogers '45 of was on the Notre Dame staff with Westfield, N. J., Stacy C. Mosser, Jr. Total number of jokes 87 Coach McKeever, changes in the '44 of Winnetka, 111., Theodore W. Fifteen Years Ago lineup were made on almost every Youngling '48 of Freeport (who played October, 1931—"The enrollment to play. As a result, team cohesion here and at Dartmouth as a Naval date shows 5,725 students, an increase suffered. trainee), Frederick A. Westphal, Jr. of 364 over last year's record. 5,725 '45 of Newark, N. J., Theodore H. hungry sheep, in Milton's words, Elect Martin Captain Lansing '44 of Cranford, N. J., Nor- pathetically looking up and asking Joseph L. Martin '44 of Camden, man Dawson, Jr. '46 of Oak Park, for the food of wisdom. The ardor for N. J., the 1941 fullback who suffered 111., William S. Wheeler '44 of Evans- knowing still torments young minds. a knee injury on the first play of the ton, 111., Winfred B. Wright '45 of Lincoln learned law by the firelight; Pennsylvania game that year, was Freeport, and Louis J. Daukas '44 of Ronsard and Baif studied all night in elected captain. Shortly thereafter, he Nashua, N. H. Wheeler, a halfback, shifts, to make use of the single candle. suffered a cracked rib, and he has had and Daukas, who played at center In the University of Toulouse in the to limit his participation in practice. and at blocking back in 1942, were sixteenth century, lectures were con- A Navy pilot during the war, he has elected co-captains for the 1943 sea- tinuous from five to ten a m. and from not regained the form he showed five son, but did not return to school. one to five p.m. all the rest of the day years ago. Martin started in the St. The 1945 letter winners who re- was spent in study. The craving for Bonaventure scrimmage, but \vas in ported are Joseph R. DiStasio '48 of understanding never dies. /Light! only a few plays. Newark, N. J., Robert J. Hirsch '45 More light!' cried Goethe on his The rest of the starting lineup was: of Buffalo, William E. Speece '47 of death-bed. 'More parking-space!' is, Left end, Matthew J. Bolger, Jr. '48 York, Neb., John P. Jaso Jr. '49 of, however, the cry that is now chiefly of Newark, N. J., a former Navy pilot Donora, Pa., Joseph F. Quinn, Jr. audible from the hungry sheep. . who played one year at Notre Dame; '49 of Baldwin, John E. Saylor '45 of "Some day I hope they will stop left tackle, Frank Wydo '50 of New Verona, N. J., Hillary A. Chollet '49 calling introductory meetings for Salem, Pa., who played for the Nash- of New Orleans, La., James R. Del Freshmen 'Get-Wise Meetings.' .The ville Air Transport Command and Signore '48 of McKeesport, Pa., phrase 'get wise' may have had some who was rated one of the outstanding Donald R. Souchek '49 of Onekama, sparkle in 1910; now it suggests only players in last December's North- Mich., Clinton C. Laux '47 of Belle- the middle-aged Boys' Worker wearing South game; left guard, John F. Hyle ville, N. J., William W. Heinith '45 shorts and talking adolescent slang, '48 of Columbus, Ohio, who played of Philadelphia, Pa., and Harold and talking it wrong. Get-Wise Meet- for Georgetown and the Cherry Devoid '49 of Minneapolis, Minn. ing, twenty-three skiddoo to you!" Point, N. C., Marines; center, Henry Hirsch and Devoid have since left —Morris Bishop '14 F, Pastuck '41 of Astoria; right guard, the squad. 94 Cornell Alumni News With this report I close my fifteen years front in that field unless we had Olin Hall Treman '09 Report as one of the Board of Trustees chosen for and the equipment that it houses. that office by the Cornell alumni. I am I hope that Cornell alumni will not rest (Continued from page 92) appreciative of the honor you have done content until we have securely in hand the ation of the new School of Business and me; grateful for the opportunity to have funds that are required to complete the Public Administration, the New York been associated, in a representative capa- buildings for the College of Engineering so State School of Industrial and Labor Re- city, with the shaping of what may well that it will again assume the position of lations, the projected Statler School of turn out to be great events. leadership that it held for so many years. Hotel Administration, are all evidences of In connection with all of these projects, Cornell's eagerness and ability to foresee it is of the utmost importance that the and meet the instant need of things. Berna Ί 2 Report University establish an effective organi- But what of our financial ability to carry zation to cultivate substantial gifts for on our time-honored and necessary func- (Continued from page 93) buildings and endowment. The work of tions in teaching and research while as- widening public understanding of what suming all these additional responsibi- Still another is the new New York State Cornell is doing and of strengthening the lities? And financial matters are not the School of Industrial and Labor Relations. allegiance of our alumni must be based on least of the concerns of a Board of Trus- This School will train men for industry and a wisely planned and consistent policy. It tees! A university's budget cannot be for the unions who can bring to the hand- cannot succeed unless it is an unrelenting fashioned of arithmetic alone; a certain ling of labor problems a broad understand- and sustained effort. The recent election of amount of faith and hope and reasonable ing of this delicate and most important Dean S. C. Hollister to the new post of expectation must go into it, too, if pur work. Industrialists have long felt that Vice-president of the University is the plans are not to be thwarted by timidity. many unions need better leadership, and first step in that direction, and we may And faith now seems justified by past ex- have had difficulty in finding men capable look forward to the laying of a broad and perience. The surest way for a great edu- of representing management in an effective strong foundation for the Cornell of the cational foundation to get financial sup- manner. Cornell is destined to make a great future under his wise leadership. port is to deserve it, and more and more contribution to the solution of labor prob- the deserts of Cornell are being recognized lems by means of this School. As part of in many quarters. this program, three distinguished labor leaders have been elected to the Board. I Represents University am sure that they will acquire confidence FFICIAL delegate of Cornell Alumni Give Generously in the University during their term of Our income now derives from many service and that they will help mightily to O University at the inauguration sources. It consists of State grants for the make the work of the School effective. of Arthur G. Coons as president of maintenance of State schools and scientific About two-thirds of the members of the Occidental College, October 3 in Los research, of returns from endowments, Board are Cornell alumni. The University Angeles, Cal., will be Samuel J. from student fees. At present, Cornell's is being run by its own graduates. This income is about equally divided between fact brings with it a great responsibility. Barnett, PhD '98, emeritus professor State aid and income from endowments. It is not one that we can lightly turn over of physics at Occidental. Grants from industry for the support of to the alumni members of the Board. We special studies and investigations, in- are facing a period during which costs will creasing both in number and amount, in- assuredly rise. It has long been the policy Argentine Club Meets dicate the recognition of our contribution of the Government to reduce the interest to scientific knowledge and the desirability paid on Government bonds; the interest /CORNELL Club of Buenos Aires, of maintaining those contributions. Fi- earned by the securities in the University's ^Argentina, meets regularly for nally, we come to the one item of annual endowment is falling steadily. If the work luncheon. Twenty-five alumni who income which has a significance out of all of the University is not to suffer, if we are proportion to its amount: the contri- to develop our facilities as we should to attended a recent meeting sent greet- butions of Cornell men and women across keep Cornell in the forefront of American ings to Emerson Hinchliff Ί4, Assis- the land, through their Alumni Fund, to educational institutions, all of us must as- tant Alumni Secretary, and thanks the support of their University. sume the responsibility of seeing to it that for his "Letter from Cornell." Club Growing steadily through the decades the unrestricted funds made available to and reaching $211,707 in 1945, the Uni- the Board are commensurate to the great Secretary is Henri R. Buenano '23, versity's unrestricted income from alumni task that lies before us. Bartolome Mitre 559, Buenos Aires. contributions seems likely to be no less than a quarter of a million dollars in 1946. Needs to be Met And there, I think, is the justification for the faith without which Cornell could not Many of the departments of the Univer- Michigan Club Starts sity need additional facilities. An addition undertake the projects we have mentioned. ORNELL Club of Michigan an- A quarter of a million dollars represents is now being erected to Balch Hall in order but a small proportion of the annual bud- to compensate for the loss of Sage College, C nounces for the 1946-47 season get of a great University, but the ten which stands on a site destined to be re- that it will hold Wednesday luncheon thousands of its sons and daughters who quired for part of the proposed new Engi- meetings, beginning October 2, at the neering College. Moakley Hall is assured, voluntarily supply the essential income War dell-Sheraton Hotel in Detroit. every year can safely be regarded, I think but construction has not been started. The as the unbound underwriters of Cornell's new Administration Building will afford First of the monthly dinner meet- future; as the assurance which justifies the welcome relief to many administrative de- ings, started successfully last year, University in voyaging out upon uncharted partments which are working under make- will be October 9 in the banquet room shift conditions. Other buildings are seas. Nor are those contributions without of the Wardell-Sheraton. These will some return in the personal satisfaction planned, which I do not have space to that the giver feels in being part of a great mention. be the second Wednesday evening of enterprise. A project of the utmost importance is each month, under direction of an ar- When the national cathedral was being the completion of the Engineering group rangements committee headed by Ben- erected in Washington, a spectator asked at the south end of the Campus. The first jamin H. Micou '16. Walker L. Cisler the same question of three masons: "What building, Olin Hall, has been in use for are you doing?" The first replied, "I am some years and was of inestimable value '22 is chairman of a committee to pro- laying bricks." "I am putting up a wall," during the war. Funds are in hand for part vide speakers and arrange for inviting was the answer of the second. But the of the Metallurgical Building. This unit, prominent Detroiters as guests of the when it is completed and equipped, will third said, "I am building a great cathe- Club and to participate in discussions. dral." Each year, more and more Cornel- give the College facilities for which there lians are coming to feel in their hearts, "I just isn't room in the Sibley group. Few of President Philip J. Kent '14 has ap- am building a great University." us outside of the engineering profession pointed John W. Drummond '29 A great University, it seems to me, must realize how far the frontiers of human chairman of a committee to invite knowledge have been thrust back in that do more than turn out highly skilled engi- participation of Cornellians who live neers, lawyers, scholars, agriculturists, and field, or how sadly our facilities have lag- doctors. It should turn out young men and ged behind those developments. outside of Detroit and its environs. young women of character, of sound mind It is true that it is the quality of the Henry E. Epley '03 continues as chair- and body, trained and equipped to go out Faculty that determines the effectiveness man of the committee on relations into their respective communities and, of a College; but we can't expect first rank with secondary schools, and Merton within the limits of their own capabilities, men to come to Cornell to teach in a shed, play their parts in continuing the effective and we couldn't have a splendid course in S. Carleton '15 is in charge of place- American life. Chemical Engineering that is in the fore- ment of alumni in the area, October /, 1046 95 man of the Trustee investment com- Catherwood, PhD '30, H. Edward Club Federation Meets mittee and a member of the executive Babcock, Frank S. Columbus, Ed- IRST annual meeting of the Fed- committee. ward R. Corsi, Louis Hollander, and Feration of Cornell Men's Clubs, As American Red Cross Commis- Thomas A. Murray. since its organization in Ithaca last sioner for the Pacific Ocean Areas Councils of the various Colleges October, will be at Willard Straight from October, 1944, to July, 1945, and Schools are organized "to advise Hall, October 19, at 8:45 a.m. Twenty- Griffis was awarded the nation's high- the administration and the Board of two Clubs are now active in the Fed- est civilian award, the Medal for Trustees with regard to policies and eration, and all Clubs have been asked Merit, and recently received the Navy programs designed to increase the to send delegates to this meeting. Department Medal for Freedom "for efficiency of the established opera- Each member of the executive com- personally directing the unprecedented tions, to add to the available resources, mittee will report on some phase of expansion of Red Cross activities con- to improve public and alumni rela- the Federation's objectives. These are currently with combat operations in tions, or in any way to strengthen the stated in its Constitution as ''further- the Marshalls, Gilberts, and Mari- work of the college or school with ing the interests of Cornell University anas." which the council is connected." through the establishment of Men's Cornell Clubs in all geographical areas IBM Cites Air Lab wherein adequate Cornell alumni re- side and through the strengthening of USINESS MACHINES, weekly all clubs and their programs of alumni B paper published by International relations and activities." Business Machines Corp., devoted Delegates will elect officers of the much of its July 9 issue to reports and Federation to succeed William F. pictures of the dedication of the Cor- Stuckle '17, president; Herman Berg- nell Aeronautical Laboratory in Buf- holtz, Jr. '25, vice-president; and Em- falo, June 25. met J. Murphy '22, secretary-treas- The Laboratory is equipped urer. Two members of the executive throughout with IBM measuring and committee will be elected for three- recording machines, donated by IBM. year terms, succeeding Charles H. Blair, Jr. '97 and John C. Trussell '28. Trustees Appointed Intelligence OVERNOR Thomas E. Dewey G has reappointed Stanton Griffis '10 to the University Board of Trus- tees for a five-year term ending June Flanigan (above), senior vice-presi- 30, 1951, and named Horace C. Flani- dent of Manufacturers Trust Co., 55 With registration almost upon us gan '12 to fill the unexpired term of Broad Street, New York City, and a for those students who have been ac- Edward R. Eastman, to June 30, director of Book-Cadillac Properties, τ , cepted for the University, 1947. Eastman resigned from the ~ α.., perhaps I should say again Inc., in Detroit, Mich., received the CompetΛon Board last February, following his CE in 1912; is a member of Zeta Psi. election to the New York State Board He studied in Munich, Germany, two anyone to have been turned down by of Regents. years, was an ensign in Naval Avia- Cornell this fall. And the same thing tion in World War I, and until 1937 will probably hold true for several was president of the Adams-Flanigan more years. Department Store in the Bronx; The real culprit in this situation is joined Manufacturers Trust in 1931. Hitler, who was responsible for piling He has been elected to the Trustee up several years' accumulated load of investment committee. college students into two or three years. Defendant No. 2 (culprit or fairy godmother, depending on the Enlarge SchoolCouncil point of view) is the GI Bill of Rights. OUNCIL for the State School of Unquestionably, it has deluged ad- C Industrial and Labor Relations missions offices with thousands who is enlarged with appointment by the would never have thought of going to •University Board of Trustees of college otherwise. One candid soul George Sturges, secretary of the Fed- answered the appropriate question on eration of Labor of Buffalo and his application blank by saying he Vicinity; Harold J. Garno, secretary- wanted to come to Cornell "to get as treasurer of the New York State CIO much GI education money as I can." Labor Council; Martin F. Hilfinger, Needless to say, he won't draw his president of Associated Industries of checks in Ithaca! Conversely, with a New York State, Inc.; and William bow to the fairy godmother, we shall A Trustee fifteen years, Griffis B. Groat, Jr., counsel to the State have many a wonderful student who (above) is a partner in the investment joint legislative committee on indus- could not otherwise have afforded banking firm of Hemphill-Noyes & trial and labor relations. Cornell. Co. in New York City; he is also chair- Other members of the Council are Tough competition all around for a man of the executive committee of President Edmund E. Day, chairman, reduced number of places! I can only , chairman of the Dean Irving M. Ives, and Trustees hope that disappointed alumni don't board of Madison Square Garden and Walter C. Teagle '99, John L. Collyer become disgruntled alumni, or at least Brentano's Book Stores. He is chair- '17, Mary H. Donlon '20, Martin P. that they don't stay in that unhappy 96 Cornell Alumni News state too long. Perhaps the lustre that lian endeavor. We'd venture to say this super bunch of undergraduates he's mixed up in more Cornellian ac- will shed on Alma Mater will eventu- From Far Below... tivities all the time than just about ally dim present frustrations. any loyal son or daughter you could name. More power to a fellow who believes that actions speak louder How about next year and the years than you-know-what! after? Please remember that the Alum- Here and There: Walter Pate '12, ni Office has no authority Colleges ZRA Cornell's grandson, Charlie president of the Cornell Club of New nor prerogatives as regards Select E Blair, was seventy-one last week. York, is one of the busiest men in the admissions. That is en- Students Some of the boys around New York business these days, being captain of tirely in the hands of the attended a look-in lunch in honor of the Davis Cup Tennis Team. . . . Director of Admissions and the ad- the youngster who as an Ithaca bad Marcel K. Sessler '13 has a Shangri- missions committees of the several boy used to show Cornell Trustees of La at Hanover, N. H. Imagine a Cor- Colleges, each of which latter has a Tompkins County where they could nellian of his fire right in the midst of high degree of autonomy in finally de- attend the best chicken fights in the the Indians! Must be boring from ciding who of those first screened by nineties. There were some speeches, within. ... Ed Becker '31, boasting the Admissions Office shall get the nod. some stories, and the honor guest about the prowess of that great Class, Parenthetically, this College auton- gracefully protested the observance points out that Fred Hartzsch '31, omy explains differences in speed of of the occasion. the wrestler, who picked up his MA selection and in emphasis on different and law Doctorate on the way, is now types of qualifications for entrance. Bob Burns '07 gave with some of his Gaelic stories whose excellence is a key in the Foreign Properties Con- The College of Engineering, for in- trol office in the German American stance, lays great stress on excellence only exceeded by their unprintable- ness, but it was too early in the day zone. Among his duties is that of in mathematics; Agriculture favors getting German industry, including those with a farm fackground and for his fine tenor. Dean McGovern (John T. Όθ) added his usual adept the Reichsbank, back on its feet. . . . evidence of ability to absorb Ithaca John D. Lincoln '24, who claims he training and willingness to put it to comment, and Toastmaster Walt Wing '07 acted as catalytic agent to was the man voted least likely to suc- the service of agriculture after gradua- ceed when he left Ithaca, is reported tion; Arts likes to see achievement in bring the thoughts of the day to a jelling point, with such luminaries as making history in the mountains of the humanities. Southern Virginia where he is ready- * * * Pink Bemis '08, Cy Weed '09, Ching Vaughan '08, Harry Close '05 and ing a plastic and aluminum house School grades are still the best pass- Brad Delehanty '10 on the bill. It was construction program for a national port to entrance into the University. a Cornell occasion for Charlie, but debut. Lincoln, who is also interested u j. -1.1 it But in the Apresent sit- τIntangibles" ,. , . . ,, , there was a sprinkling of Columbias in a hotel, a furniture factory, a chain ~ uation, being in the top of theaters, a soft drink bottling plant, Count £JM.1_ jv and Princetons looking on. fifth, or even the top Charlie was a top dog in football a cinder block factory, and a flour tenth, of a school class by no means and baseball at Ithaca, and in the mill, says he gets more fun out of guarantees an applicant's acceptance. forty-eight-odd years since he left the work than anything else. He puts in With only so many places to fill, it Campus has been on just about every a fourteen-hour day. Sounds logical. stands to reason that not all the stu- team that has engaged in any Cornel- dents in the top tenth of their classes who apply from all schools can be admitted. I am convinced that intangibles are reasonably taken into account; per- haps not quite so much as I might wish, but it certainly helps if a young- ster has a school letter in athletics, an editorship or class office, along with marks that are high enough so that he is reasonably certain of staying off probation. So be sure that the young- ster you are interested in is in a good school, is taking the college prepara- tory course, and understands that en- trance into Cornell is dependent al- most entirely on his or her own work; then pray. * * * Just a little tip. In letters of recom- mendation, make them factual if you are writing about someone Be else's child, and ask for the Factual same kind for yours. Don't just say that Jim comes from a good family and you think he would make TEMPORARY BUILDINGS ENCROACH FURTHER ON SAGE GREEN a good Cornellian. Tell why you think Prefabricated structures (left) erected by the State will house offices and classrooms he will make a success of the particular of the School of Industrial and Labor Relations. University offices of Veterans Education course he is after, and cite examples of and those ot the US Veterans Administration have moved into the huge Quonset hut which stretches from Campus Road to South Avenue, about opposite the Old Armory. things you have seen him do. At the right of the picture, taken from Olin Hall, is a corner of the Gun Shed erected by the Navy and now to be used by the Naval ROTC. October /, 1946 97 and the Calculus, or the Freudian Theories with Later Developments by Football Handbook Cornell Alumni News Vosberg" at a bazaar of the Women's UOOTBALL Handbook for 1946 is 3 EAST AVENUE, ITHACA, N. Y. Cosmopolitan Club, in December, *• distributed by Rogers Peet Co., FOUNDED 1899 1921. He was on the Varsity track and new advertiser whose message to alum- Published the first and fifteenth of cross country squads and a member ni will occupy our back cover every each month except monthly in July, of the Musical Clubs, Masque, and issue, beginning this time. The Hand- August, and September: twenty-one Manuscript Club; won the Clifton B. book, edited by W. W. (Pudge) Heffel- issues a year. Brown Medal and Sands Memorial finger, famous Yale guard of the nine- Owned and published by the Cornell Medal in Architecture; is a member of ties, contains up-to-date rules, an Alumni Association under direction of a Lambda Chi Alpha, Phi Beta Kappa, explanation of "Football for the Fan," committee composed of Phillips Wyman and the Savage Club. brief notes on famous coaches and '17, chairman, Birge W. Kinne '16, Clif- players, and 1946 schedules and 1945 ford S. Bailey '18, John S. Knight '18, and Term of Albert R. Mann '04 as Walter K. Nield '27. Officers of the Alumni Alumni Trustee expires June 30, 1947, results for all teams, alphabetically Association: William L. Kleitz '15, New and another vacancy is to be filled arranged. York City, president; Emmet J. Murphy which was caused by the coopting of '22, Ithaca, secretary-treasurer. Subscriptions $4 in U. S. and possessions; Mary H. Donlon '20 as a Board mem- Four Join Brown foreign, $4.50. Life subscription, $75. ber last June for the term expiring in Single copies, 20 cents. Subscriptions are 1951. T? ROWN University has announced renewed annually unless cancelled. The University Charter provides •*-* appointment of four Cornellians Managing Editor H. A. STEVENSON '19 that any ten degree holders may nomi- to its faculty this fall. Assistant Editors: nate a candidate for Alumni Trustee John H. Marchant, AM '28, PhD JOHN H. DETMOLD '43 by filing nomination with the Treas- 3 3, is professor of mathematics and RUTH E. JENNINGS '44 urer by April 1 preceding the election. director of research in the graduate As a gift to Cornellians in service, Willard Ballots will be mailed to all degree division of applied mathematics; a Straight Hall and Cornell Alumni Associa- holders shortly after April 1 for elec- lieutenant commander, TJSNR, during tion send the ALUMNI NEWS regularly, tion of two Trustees for five-year the war, he was previously a project upon reqμest, to reading rooms of Army engineer with the Pratt & Whitney posts, Naval stations, and military hos- terms beginning next July 1. pitals and rehabilitation centers. Aircraft Corp. George F. Carrier '39, son of Charles Member, Ivy League Alumni Magazines, Birge W. Kinne '16, 420 Lexington Ave., For Honest Elections M. Carrier '16, is assistant professor New York City 17, advertising repre- /, 111., Business Men's of engineering; he received the ME sentative. ^ Committee, seeking to eliminate in 1939 and the PhD in 1944; was a Printed at The Cayuga Press, Ithaca, N. Y. fraudulent voting in elections, spon- graduate instructor in Machine De- sored a rally August 27 in Orchestra sign. Hall, Chicago, attended by 1,000 per- Appointed assistant professors of Stotz ' 2 i Nominated sons. On the speakers' platform, along physics are Rohn Truell, PhD '42, with Governor D wight H. Green of and James A. Krumhansl, PhD '43, OMINATION of Charles M. Illinois, were four Cornellians, John both former graduate assistants in N Stotz '21 as a candidate for S. Knight '18, editor and publisher of Physics here. Alumni Trustee of the University for the Chicago Daily News, who made the five-year term beginning next the principal address; Frank J. Dur- July 1 was received by the University ham '16, who opened and closed the Coming Events Treasurer, September 17. meeting; A. Vernon Jannotta '17, Stotz practices architecture as a chairman of the group's activities member of the firm of Charles M. and committee; and Frederick M. Gillies FRIDAY, OCTOBER 4 Edward Stotz, Jr., 801 Bessemer '18, who discussed precinct politics. West Point: J-V football, US Military Building, Pittsburgh, Pa.; is a past- Academy, 4 president of the Pittsburgh Chapter, Adams Meets Clubs SATURDAY, OCTOBER 5 American Institute of Architects. He Ithaca: Soccer, Colgate, Alumni Field, 2 was for two years president of the Cornellians of War- West Point: Football, US Military Acad- Cornell Club of Western Pennsyl- ren, Washington, and Saratoga emy, 2 vania, was president of the Pittsburgh Counties gathered at the Hotel King- Cross Country, US Military Academy Architects Club, vice-president of the bury in Hudson Falls, September 17, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 11 city Art Commission, and for five for a joint meeting of the Tri-County Ithaca: Fall term registration opens years was chairman of the Western Cornell Women's Club and the Adi- Hamilton: J-V football, Colgate, 4:30 Pennsylvania Architectural Survey, rondack Cornell Club, which is now Syracuse: Soccer, Syracuse, 4:30 editing a book, The Early Architec- being reorganized after war-time in- SATURDAY, OCTOBER 12 ture of Western Pennsylvania, which activity. Ithaca: Football, Colgate, Schoellkopf was published in 1936 for the Buhl Field, 2 Guest was Professor Bristow Adams, Cross Country, Colgate Foundation. Extension, Emeritus, who spoke on He entered the College of Architec- "Present - Day Cornell Problems." MONDAY, OCTOBER 14 ture in 1918 after two years at Car- Mrs. Raymond LaFarr (Frances Ithaca: Fall term instruction begins negie Institute of Technology; re- Burns) '33, president of the Tri- TUESDAY, OCTOBER 15 ceived the BArch in 1921 and the County Club, presided at the dinner Ithaca: Chamber music concert, Walden MArch in 1922, holding the Univer- meeting, and Genevieve Bazinet '25 String Quartet with John Kirk- patrick, pianist, Willard Straight sity Fellowship in Architecture. He is was toastmistress. Chairman of ar- Memorial Room, 8:15 still remembered on the Campus for rangements for the joint meeting was his successful hoax in personifying Mrs. Orson C. Beaman (Bernice Mor- WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 16 "the great Dr. Hermann Vosberg from rison) '30. Wives and husbands of Syracuse: Dean Paul M. O'Leary, PhD '29, at Cornell Club dinner, Univer- the University of Budapest/' when he Club members were present, and sev- sity Club, 6:30 lectured in broken English on "Dreams eral undergraduates from the area. 98 Cornell Alumni News On The Campus and Down the Hill

Orientation program, curtailed be- and President White were married in Raised eyebrows: "Engaged couple cause of the postponement of the 1890, his first wife having died in 1887. need apartment. No children. Please University's opening, will neverthe- She died October 29, 1944, at Kittery phone . . . ."—want ad in The Ithaca less devote five days, October 10-14, Point, Me. Her daughter, Karin A. Journal. Same column, same day, to breaking the Freshmen in gently. White '20, and a sister, Mrs. Beatrice "4 adults" advertise for an apart- Welcome booths will be set up at the Magill Robinson, were in Ithaca to ment: "Must have first floor home Lehigh Valley and bus stations and attend the service. with daughter." an information desk will be manned in the main lobby of Willard Straight Cornell house in Forest Park, at the Visitors to the Campus September 4-5 Hall by a committee representing the corner of Campus Road and Stewart were Leonard K. Elmhirst '21 and Student Council, Interfraternity Avenue, has been leased to Tau Delta Mrs. Elmhirst, who gave Willard Council, and WSGA. President Day Phi fraternity, whose own house at Straight Hall in memory of her first will miss the '50 Class assembly in 934 Stewart Avenue was gutted by husband, Willard Straight '01. With Bailey Hall October 11 to attend the fire a year ago. Ezra Cornell moved the Elmhirsts were their son, William, inauguration of Dean Sarah G. Bland- into the house in 1857 when he bought and niece, Eloise. At a tea in the south ing as president of Vassar, but he will the Forest Park property. When his lounge of Willard Straight Hall they address the Class, instead, October 13, second son, Franklin C. Cornell, was renewed acquaintances with many before the CURW dramatic presenta- married, Ezra turned the house over Campus friends. This was their first tion, "All Around the Town," in to him. Franklin C. Cornell, Jr. '89 visit to Ithaca since 1941. Bailey Hall. Upperclassmen will con- was born there, and lived in the house duct the Frosh on tours of the Cam- some sixty years, its longest tenant. Alumni Trustee Mary H. Donlon '20, pus; the Colgate game on Schoellkopf Before the war, the Architects used it chairman of the New York State will be followed by a dance in the Wil- for a dormitory and club. The Navy Workmens Compensation Board, dis- lard Straight Memorial Room; and used it as a dormitory and since then, cussed "Work Accidents and What the first day of classes, October 14, it has been used for storage. They Cost" before the Ithaca Rotary will end with an open house for all Club, September 18. "The costly and entering students in Willard Straight. Two old-timers died in Ithaca last troublesome problem of industrial month. B. Frank Lent, eighty-five, accidents and disabilities," she said, Politics in Ithaca took a singular turn who founded Lent's Music Store on "is properly the concern of the Gov- last month. Mayor James Conley, North Aurora Street fifty-three years ernment," as well as of industry and elected last fall as a Democrat, re- ago, was one of the oldest phonograph labor. signed when the State Liquor Au- and record dealers in the country. thority declined to renew the license His sons are Frank B. Lent '15 of Charles E. Treman '89 house on Uni- on his retail liquor store; as mayor, he New York City, and Ralph G. Lent versity Avenue, now being dismantled was technically head of Ithaca's Po- '26, manager of the music store. by the University, was designed by lice Department, and no police officer, Fleming W. Ackerman, eighty-three, Arthur N. Gibb '90, not by William under State law, may be licensed to the diminutive "Colonel Speck," H. Miller '72, the University's first sell liquor. Veteran Alderman Arthur known to many throughout the coun- student of Architecture. For two years N. Gibb '90, dean of the Common try as Patsy Conway's drum major, following his graduation in 1890, Gibb, Council and longtime chairman of its is best remembered by older Cornel- now acting mayor, served as Miller's finance committee, succeeded Conley Hans as the photographic assistant draftsman in Ithaca. as acting mayor. Both Republican employed by Robinson Studios. His and Democratic parties then nomi- daughter is Mrs. David W. Punzelt Conferences (last lot for the sum- nated Gibb as sole candidate for the (Mary Ackerman) '27. mer) : nearly 500 delegates and inter- office, so his election November 5 as ested farmers attended the sixth an- mayor of Ithaca is assured. Three Arts College Faculty has voted that nual meeting of the New York State times in past years, Gibb had de- henceforth the minimum of 120 credit Artificial Breeders Cooperative, Au- clined Republican nomination for the hours required for the Bachelor's de- gust 24, and learned that recent re- office. gree shall not include Physical Train- search at the University indicates ing or basic ROTC courses which all that by diluting semen, 500 cows can Memorial service for Mrs. Andrew Freshmen and Sophomores must take. be serviced from one extraction; the D. White, late widow of the first Cooperative's present enrollment of President of the University, was held 70,000 cows in the State is expected in Sage Chapel September 22. Her ALUMNI REGISTER, set up by the to jump to 110,000 next year. Forty- ashes were placed in the crypt under Alumni Association last June in the seven Extension Service administra- the Memorial Antechapel, beside the main lobby of Willard Straight Hall, tors from twelve Northeastern States remains of her husband, their two in- has in three months been signed by attended a workshop on Extension fant children, and the President's first more than 500 alumni visitors to the supervision, September 9-13, ex- wife, Mary Outwater White. Daugh- Campus. And this in the summer changed ideas and experiences, and ter of Edward Hicks Magill, second season, with no football games or considered specific supervisory prob- president of Swarthmore College, other extraordinary events to bring lems. Some 400 members of the dairy Helen Magill attended Swarthmore, Cornellians back to Alma Mater. industry gathered here September 12- Cambridge University in England, What proportion of returning alumni 13, learned to depend chiefly on taste and Boston University, where she is find and sign the Register remains and smell in grading dairy products, said to have been the first woman in unknown. and clambaked at the Livestock this country to receive the PhD. She Judging Pavilion behind Wing Hall. October /, 1946 99 PhD '34, Farm Management, Exten- "outstanding work in the office of the sion, spoke on "Technical Considera- Staff Chaplain of the Air Transport The Faculty tions in Levelling Milk Production" Command." One of the statements in at Purdue University, West Lafayette, the citation was: "You put yourself Ind., August 28. to great inconvenience to provide re- President Edmund E. Day has been Professor Glenn W. Salisbury, PhD ligious services of your own denomina- appointed chairman of the staff com- '34, Animal Husbandry, left by plane tional type in the isolated islands of mittee of the joint legislative commis- August 20 for Athens, Greece, at the the Pacific where such services are sion studying the need for a New invitation of the Near East Founda- rarely available." Major Chase had York State university, commission tion and the Greek Ministry of Agri- completed just then some 24,301 miles chairman Owen D. Young announced culture, to aid in rehabilitating the of travel by air in sixty days. Among August 24. President Sarah G. Bland- country's livestock. He was to return Cornellians he met were Lieutenant ing of Vassar College, former Dean of to Ithaca October 1. Julius L. Hoyt '42 on Guam; Major Home Economics, has been named John J. Jackson '42 and Captain chairman of the research program Colonel Leonard C. Urquhart '09, * William E. Fisher '40 in Manila; committee. former professor of Structural Engi- Lieutenant (jg) John Kreuter '46 in neering, now chief of the engineering Tokyo; and Colonel Henrik Antell Dean Irving M. Ives, Industrial and division of the US Engineers District '17 in Kyoto. Labor Relations, was nominated by Office in Honolulu, Hawaii, was Professor Robert A. Hall, Jr., the Republican State convention as awarded the Legion of Merit in a candidate for US Senator, opposing Linguistics, was elected in July to the ceremony at Fort Armstrong, Hono- board of directors of the New York the Democratic nominee, Former lulu, where he is stationed. Commend- Governor Herbert H. Lehman. Dean State Federation of Modern Lan- ing him for his outstanding service in guage Teachers. Ives is on leave of absence from the the Office of Engineers from July, University until November 9, the 1942, to March, 1945, the citation "Farm Water Systems," by Pro- School administered by a committee states: ". . . in key assignments in the fessor Forrest B. Wright '22, Agricul- of Professors Maurice S. Neufeld, Construction Division, Engineering tural Engineering, appeared in the who has been elected secretary of the Division and Engineering and Devel- September Better Farming Methods. School, Donald T. Shank, and Lynn opment Division, Office, Chief of En- A. Emerson. gineers, rendered service of far-reach- Dean William A. Hagan, MS '17, ing value to the War Department Oldest Graduate Dies of the Veterinary College, was named emergency construction program. His LDEST living graduate of the president-elect of the American Vet- achievements reflected his engineering O University, James Henry Stubbs erinary Medical Association, August skill, unusual administrative ability, '76, died June 25, 1946, at the age of 19, at the Association's convention in and loyal devotion to duty." Colonel ninety-four, in Haiku, Maui, Hawaii, Boston, Mass. He will serve as presi- Urquhart's address is PO Box 2240, where he had lived for twenty years dent-elect for one year before becom- Honolulu, Hawaii. following his retirement as a civil en- ing Association president. Profusely illustrated, thirty-six-page gineer. Born May 26, 1852, in Fram- September 7 issue of the Saturday brochure on cattle mange and other ingham, Mass., Stubbs entered the Evening Post features an article by diseases commonly known as "Barn Science course in 1872, transferred to Stephen M. Spencer on the work of Itch" has been prepared by Professor Engineering a year later, and received Professor Eugene F. DuBois, Para- Donald W. Baker '29, Veterinary the BCE in 1876. He married Fannie sitology, and Dr. Hugh De Haven '18, Parasitology, and published by the Barnes '78 in 1885 and she died in research associate in Parasitology at Veterinary College. 1902. the Medical College, who are develop- Records of the University Alumni ing new cockpit devices to save fliers Professor Everett M. Strong, Grad Office indicate that the oldest living from fatal injuries when crashing. The '24-26, Electrical Engineering, has graduate is now Mrs. George B. Up- project is sponsored by the committee been appointed a member of the Na- ham (Cornelia Preston) '74 of Boston, on aviation medicine, headed by Dr. tional Research Council for a three- Mass.; born September 6, 1852, she DuBois, of the National Research year period. transferred to Cornell after two years Council, with support from the Civil Professor Harold R. Smart, PhD at Vassar, received the BS in 1874. Aeronautics Administration. Dr. De '23, Philosophy, has been appointed William Hazlitt Smith '73 of Ithaca, Haven is director of the crash-injury assistant to the Dean of the College of a year younger than Mrs. Upham, is research, which is conducted at the Arts and Sciences for the academic the Universe's earliest living grad- College. The author credits this work year 1946-47. uate: he received the AB in 1873. with development of a successful "in- Oldest alumnus is Emmett L. DeBell ertia lock" for shoulder straps and Major William J. Chase, former ^ '75 of Hollywood, Cal. born February several other devices. chaplain to Episcopal students, visited 14, 1951, he entered the University in the Campus July 25-27 after returning 1871, stayed less than a year. Books on beekeeping, numbering from a seventy-day visit to Air Trans- some 30,000 volumes, is officially Listed below are the names of ten port Command and Air Communica- oldest alumni, according to present designated the "Everett Franklin tions Service installations in England, Phillips Beekeeping Library" as part records of the Alumni Office: France, Germany, Sweden, Denmark, Emmett L. DeBell 75 born Feb. 14, 1851 of the library of the College of Agri- Austria, Italy, Czechoslovakia, Spain, Edgar Williams 76 July 27, 1851 culture, in recognition of Professor and Morocco. He is deputy staff chap- Mrs. Cornelia Preston Upham 74 BS E. Franklin Phillips, Apiculture, Emer- lain at Headquarters Air Transport Sept. 6, 1852 itus, who established the collection. George M. McGuire 76 March 4, 1853 Command, Washington, D. C., for Addison L. Ewing '80 BS(SL), '85 MS He retired in June and is succeeded the remainder of this year. Last Sept. 16, 1853 as head of the Apiculture division of spring, he received the Army Com- William H. Smith 73 AB Sept. 24, 1853 the Entomology Department by Pro- mendation Ribbon from Lieutenant J. Duncan Upham 74 BS Nov. 7, 1853 fessor Elton J. Dyce, PhD '31. David W. Clark 76 May 9, 1854 General George, commanding general Mary Trumbull 78 Aug. 9, 1854 Professor Lowell C. Cunningham, of the Air Transport Command, for Arthur F. Crandall 77 Aug. 11,1854 100 Cornell Alumni News Personal items and newspaper clippings News of the Alumni about all Cornellians are earnestly solicited

'93—In the '93 Class Reunion pic- '12 BS, '13 MLD—John R. Van ciety, he was selected to deliver the ture in the August ALUMNI NEWS, Kleek of Hotel Miramar, Macuto, important Campbell Memorial Lec- page 51, the man labelled Walter L. Venezuela, is designing and construct- ture before the ASM in 1938. Eastman is not Eastman, but Charles ing a new resort town, Caribe, of about '15 ME—Captain John J. Chew, * W. Robinson '93, ME '94, of 314 10,000 people capacity, on Mar Caribe CEC, USN, has been detached from Owasco Road, Auburn. The secretary about thirty miles from Caracas; also duty in the Bureau of Yards and of '93 apologizes to both of these men a thirty-hole golf course at Bogota, Docks where he has served since De- for the mistake.—C.S.N. Columbia, and camps for various oil cember, 1941, and has been ordered '93 MME—William H. Boehm of companies. His son, Peter, seventeen, to the US Naval Shipyard, Brooklyn, 225 West 106th Street, New York is at St. George's School and his as public works officer. Address him City, has been retired as vice-presi- daughter, Jean, fifteen, is at Emma there at Quarters E. dent of Fidelity & Casualty Co. in Willard. charge of steam boiler and machinery '13—Richard H. Depew, Jr. is vice- insurance since 1938. Before joining president and general manager of the company in 1901, he was an in- Ludington-Griswold, Inc., Saybrook, structor in mechanical engineering at Conn. This summer he wrote to Jessel Washington University, St. Louis, S. Whyte '13, president and general Mo., 1894-97, and professor and dean manager of Macwhyte Co., Kenosha, of engineering at Clemson College, S. Wis.: "As you may possibly remem- C., 1897-1901. Boehm has designed ber, I was one of that small band of engines, cotton gins and presses, cot- 'nuts' who founded the Cornell Aero ton seed oil machinery, and steel roof Club in 1909. You may remember that trusses; a duplicate of an experimental we built some gliders and flew them engine at Clemson College for which off the hill out near the Ag barn, be- he wrote the specifications was built hind Beebe Lake. I made my first solo for Cornell. He originated fly wheel flight in an airplane in an old Farman insurance, out of which grew engine in France in 1911 and am still flying and turbine generator insurance, and as a pilot, although not nearly as much then power machinery insurance as as I would like nowadays. Therefore, now written by casualty companies. I have always been particularly inter- A founder and first secretary-treasurer ested in your own work in supplying of the Boiler and Machinery Rating much needed sinews for aviation in the Bureau, he is the author of two books: form of Macwhyte tie rods, of which I Ί5AB—Edward G.Williams (above) Steam Boiler Explosions and Power have used a great many. It is a small has been elected president of Ameri- Machinery Accidents. world after all." can Type Founders, Inc., Elizabeth, N. J., manufacturer of printing '08 ME, '09 MME; '09 AB—Sidney '14 ME—J. Carlton Ward, Jr., D. Gridley and Mrs. Gridley (Joseph- presses, type, and other printers' sup- president of Fairchild Engine & Air- plies. A member of the ATF organi- ine Brady) '09 live at 88 Morningside plane Corp., New York City, delivered Drive, New York City. Mrs. Gridley zation since 1932, he became vice- an address, "Industrial Planning A president and director of the company is a landscape painter; has studied Safeguard of Peace," before the Amer- in 1936, executive vice-president in under William Chase, Hugh Brecken- ican Society of Mechanical Engineers 1939, and last year was elected presi- ridge, and Daniel Garber. Gridley is a June 18 in Detroit, Mich. sales engineer. dent of an associated company, Ameri- '15 ME—Alfred L. Boegehold, in- can Type Founders Sales Corp., a '09 BS—Grosvenor C. Manrow for cumbent vice-president of the Ameri- post he continues to hold. sixteen years has been caretaker and can Society '16 BS—G. Hale Harrison, presi- gardener on the estate of Mrs. F. M. for Metals, dent and general manager of Harrison Peters in Greshen, Wis. has been Bros. Nurseries, Berlin, Md., re- '10 ME—Thomas H. Farrington re- nominated ceived an honorary degree in agricul- cently transferred from the division president of ture at commencement exercises of office of the Public Buildings Admin- the Society the University of Maryland, June 8. istration in San Francisco, Cal., to for 1946-47. Atlanta, Ga. He is assistant division Nomination '16 AB—Walter E. Higgins has engineer. Address: 214-M, New Post is tanta- moved from Oroville Inn to 2061 Bird Office, Atlanta 3, Ga. mount to Street, Oroville, Cal. He has also dis- '11 ME—Thomas R. Cox was * election. solved his partnership of Taber & promoted to lieutenant colonel, AUS, Boegehold is Higgins, general building contractors, August 13. He is president of the head of the and is now doing business alone as a Broadway Savings Bank, 5 Park metallurgy real estate developer (builder, owner, Place, New York City 7. department of General Motors Re- and operator). Ίl ME—Charles C. Trump is a search Laboratories, Detroit, Mich., '16 AB—Benjamin H. Micou was consulting engineer for Management and holds numerous metallurgical recently appointed an associate gen- and Research, Inc., which moved its patents; was designated a Modern eral agent in the Detroit, Mich., executive offices and plant to Primos, Pioneer by the National Association agency of the New England Life In- Pa., in August. His mailing address is of Manufacturers in 1940. Past presi- surance Co. of Boston. A naval veteran Merion Station, Pa. dent of the Detroit chapter of the So- of both World Wars, he was released October /, 1946 101 with the rank of captain after service munίty Welfare" for public health have a Cornell party every so often. in the Aleutians. He lives in Birming- nursing students at Teachers College, Just a few words about my Army ham, Mich. Columbia University, last spring. background. Went into the Army in '16 CE—George W. Rapp has been '20, '19, '21 BS—J. Stanley Earl of July, 1942, as a draftee and got my president of The Bowman Co., Inc. Unadilla was elected president of the commission the hard way at Fort (successors to A. H. Bowman & Co.), New York Artificial Breeders' Co- Washington, Md., May 19, 1943. Louisville, Ky., since 1944. He lives operative August 24 in Ithaca. He suc- Spent sixteen months in Alaska as at 412 Jarvis Lane, Louisville 7, Ky. ceeds Assemblyman Harold L. Creal assistant base censor and later assist- '16 Reunion Crew—I refer to the note '19 of Homer who served six terms ant post engineer. Back to the States in September ALUMNI NEWS giving the since organization of the Cooperative. to Military Government School at make-up of the 1916 Reunion Crew. Pos- A new building is planned to house Princeton, N. J., October to Febru- terity should be informed that the Crew thirty more bulls. ary, 1945, and then to Civil Affairs had direction as well as power. In other Staging Area, Monterey, Cal., until words, in addition to the eight men men- '21, ;23 BS—Hicks W. Putman has tioned, there was a ninth man in the boat August 18, 1945, when I was flown to —Coxswain Willis (Shrimp) Conklin. a used car and garage business with Manila as one of the first Military Yours in the interest of accuracy, I am— his son-in-law in Lambertville, N. J. Government officers to leave for the Meyer Willett. He lives on RD 1. Occupation of Japan." '16 ME—John K. Stotz is with '21, '22 BS—Frank J. Quinlin of '23 ME—William B. Gregory of Fairbanks Morse & Co. in Beloit, 522 Albro Street, San Pedro, Cal., 3536 Rankin Street, Dallas 5, Tex., Wis., where he lives at 650 Park writes: "Completed June 28 approxi- visited the Campus with wife and Avenue. mately four years' active duty in the Joan and Bill, Jr., August 22. Gregory '17 ME—John Haydock, Jr., for- US Coast Guard Reserve as lieuten- is assistant manager of the Dallas merly executive editor of American ant commander, and returned to office of A. M. Lockett & Co., Ltd., Machinist, has been appointed editor newspaper work." Mrs. Quinlin was contracting mechanical engineers who of Design News. His address is 1516 Gladys Williams, AM '21. represent Worthington Pump & Ma- Watchung Avenue, Plainfield, N. J. '21 ME, '27 MME; '26 BS— chinery Co. and Babcock & Wilcox '18—Burdge O. Bushnell of 117 Nairne F. Ward is employed by the Co. in the Southwest. He is the son of West Ninth Street, Los Angeles 15, US Government as a specialist in jet the late William B. Gregory '94. Cal., is president of Bushnell Controls propulsion at the US Naval Air & Equipment Co. of Los Angeles and Station, Alameda, Cal. He and Mrs. San Francisco, Cal. Ward (Janet Nundy) '26, who is '18 BS—J. P. Hopkins Healy re- secretary of the Cornell Women's sumed his landscape architectural Club of Northern California, live at practice in Sherrill May 1 after three 2330 Rose Street, Berkeley 8, Cal. and a half years in the Navy, includ- '22 ME—Sydney G. Berliner re- ing one year with the Seabees in the turned to the United States in August Solomons and six months' transport after two years as chief engineer on service. "War has greatly improved as the Caracas, Venezuela, water system. War since we were in World War I," He lives at 14 Franklin Avenue, New he comments. Rochelle. '18—Stanley W. Smith, member of '22 BS—From Captain Walter * the ALUMNI NEWS Advisory Board, D. Popham, AUS, CI and E, GHQ, has been appointed advertising direc- SCAP, APO 500, San Francisco, Cal. : tor of Family Circle Magazine, with "I am now arts and monument officer office at 25 West Forty-fifth Street, on GHQ, SCAP, Tokyo. In the lan- New York City. guage of a civilian that means more or '19 AB—Randlolph C. Griffith less on General MacArthur's staff in married Mrs. Margaret McKiernan General Headquarters, Tokyo. The work of our division is the protection Hewitt, University of Iowa '32, July '23 BChem—Elliott B. McConnell 22 in St. Petersburg, Fla. They visited of works of art and cultural values in Japan during the period of the occu- (above) has been appointed vice-presi- the University August 2 on a trip dent in charge of manufacturing and north. Griffith has had a public ac- pation, and protection means both protecting them from the souvenir elected a director of The Standard Oil counting office since 1923. His address Company (Ohio), it was announced is PO Box 1722, Orlando, Fla. hunting Lt. Cols, and GI's and trying to assure that in this very trying September 6. He joined the company '19 BS, '20 MLD—Lieutenant * period of readjustment the cultural in 1928 and the following year was Colonel Norman T. Newton reverted treasures of the Japanese people aren't made assistant to the vice-president to inactive duty June 29 after more allowed to disappear. The work is very in charge of manufacturing. Last year than four years in the Army Air interesting and includes all sorts of he was made general manager of the Forces. He returned to Cambridge, unexpected assignments—like return- manufacturing department. Credited Mass., this September, where he is on ing the sacred tooth of Buddha to with fifteen patents in the petroleum the faculty of the graduate school of Siam, getting a new roof on a dam- field, McConnell was called to Wash- design at Harvard University, and aged temple or museum, or trying to ington in 1942 to serve for several has also taken up from there the con- keep the higher brass from moving in months as special assistant to the di- sulting practice in landscape archi- on some of the better sites and build- rector of the refining division of the tecture which he formerly conducted ings here. ... I see a number of the Petroleum Administration for War on from offices in New York City. Japanese Cornellians frequently: Toki- aviation gasoline. '19 AB—Fern Lowry of the faculty suke Yokogawa '21, Paul Tono, MLD '23—Charles W. Putman retires of The New York School of Social '22, and Hiroshi Mitsui '39, in par- from the New York City police force Work taught a course in 'Orientation ticular. There are a good many Cor- next year. His address is 11421 118th to Social Work in Family and Com- nellians in the Army here too and we Street, Ozone Park. 102 Cornell Alumni News '25 BS, '30 PhD—Donald T. Ries '30, *31 AB—Richard 1. Edwards Md. The ushers were all Beta Theta has been appointed assistant pro- has rejoined as a captain Pennsyl- Pi fraternity brothers of the groom: fessor of biology at Illinois State Nor- vania-Central Airlines, by whom he Richard M. Bentley '31, Ernest R. mal University, Normal, 111., effective was employed before the war. Now on Pope '31, and Herman Steutzer, Jr. September 9. Recently released from inactive status as a lieutenant com- '31. Mrs. Taylor is a graduate of the active duty as captain in the Sanitary mander in the Navy, he spent four College of Notre Dame of Maryland. Corps Reserve, he was park naturalist years and two months in service, Taylor is an architectural engineer at Starved Rock State Park, Utica, mostly as a pilot in the Naval Air with Anthony P. Miller of Atlantic 111., before he went into service in Transport service. His address is 49 City, N. J. They live at 2707 Tivocy 1943. He is the son of Professor Hein- Forrester Street, SW, Washington, Avenue, Baltimore 18, Md. rich Ries, Geology, Emeritus. Mrs. D.C. '31 AB—Mrs. Harry Horowitz Ries is the former Mary E. Davis, '30 ME, '31 MME—Leslie E. Her- (Ruth Levy) of 18 Kempshall Place, MS '38. bert has returned to Edgewood Arse- Elizabeth, N. J., and her husband '26 MD—Typed volume of let- * nal, Md., in a civilian capacity as were registrants at the Vassar College ters received in this country from Ma- chief of design, Chemical Warfare Summer Institute for Family and jor Elizabeth Brakely, while she has Service. He was fifty-seven months Community Living. Their children, been with the UNRRA in Italy, is with CWS as chief of design, and held Peter, nine, Elizabeth, eight, and Paul, being compiled by the Montclair, N. the rank of lieutenant colonel at his three, were in the children's school of J., Library for its local history file. release. Recently, he met Thomas H. the Institute. Major Brakely went abroad June 26, Kisk '30 in Detroit, where Kisk is '32 CE—Elmer L. Gates, Jr. re- 1945, to serve as a doctor for the with Ethyl Gas Corp. Herbert lives cently passed the Civil Service exami- UNRRA. at 1512 Pentridge Road, Baltimore 12, nation for associate utilities engineer '27 ME; '27 BS—Arthur C. Mo Md. with the California Railroad Com- Hugh of 76 Burhans Place, Elsmere, '30 BS—Lawrence H. Levy, re- mission. His address is 708 State Albany County, is valuation engineer leased from the Navy as a lieutenant Building, Los Angeles, Cal. for the New York State Public Serv- last October, is operating hotels and '32 AB, '37 MD; '09 PhD—Ad- * ice Commission, Albany. He and Mrs. motor inns in California. He was dress of Commander Horace L. Jones, McHugh (Ruth V. O'Connor) '27 have senior executive officer on a destroyer Jr., Medical Corps, USN, is US Naval four children: Arthur, Jr., fifteen; escort in the Pacific for eighteen Hospital Staff, National Naval Med- Virginia Ann, fourteen Robert, eleven months. His address is 1036 Berkeley ical Center, Bethesda, Md. Com- and Mary Esther, four. Street, Santa Monica, Cal. mander Jones is the son of Professor '27—Colonel Carroll K. Mof- * Horace L. Jones, PhD '09, Greek. fatt has been commissioned in the '30 CE—Lieutenant Colonel Jς '33 PhD—Dr. Charles E. Foster has regular Army. While serving in the John D. Payne, Corps of Engineers, been promoted to professor of zoology Southwest Pacific he received the AUS, married Lieutenant Kate H. at Colgate University, Hamilton. He Bronze Star Medal with Oak Leaf Kinnee, USNR, April 17. Colonel has been on the Colgate faculty for Cluster and the Combat Infantryman Payne was recently reassigned to duty twenty years. Award. Colonel and Mrs. Moffatt with the Engineer Section, Head- (Claire Moody) '29 and their son live quarters Air Defense Command, Mit- '33, '34 BS—Norma A. Kenfield is at 44 Chestnut Street, Garden City, chel Field, from Headquarters Fourth tax analyst for Cooperative GLF Ex- Long Island. Air Force, San Francisco, Cal., where change, Inc., Ithaca. She lives at '27, '28 CE—G. Gordon Mitchell is he had been stationed since his return 207 Linn Street, Ithaca. manager of the industrial relations from the Philippines last November. '34 AB, '35 AM, '37 PhD, '40 MD— division of E. I. duPont de Nemours His address is Quarters 324, Mitchel Dr. Samuel A. Guttman of 255 South & Co., Wilmington, Del. He lives at Field. Seventeenth Street, Philadelphia, Pa., 612 Lindsay Road, Wilmington, Del. '30 BS—Captain Nicholas A. * was recently appointed instructor in Milone has been awarded the Army psychiatry at the University of Penn- '29 AB, '31 LLB—Morris P. Glu- sylvania medical school. He will con- shien has been appointed associate Commendation Ribbon for the period duct lectures and clinics in child general counsel of the National Labor from July, 1944, to September, 1945, psychiatry. Dr. Guttman is also clini- Relations Board in Washington, D. while on duty in the Chemical War- cal assistant in the Philadelphia Psy- C., with general supervision of the fare Service. "As Chief, Service choanalytic Institute. Board's court work, including the en- Branch, Granite Peak Installation, forcement and order sections. He will Utah, Captain Milone's expert coordi- '34 ME—J. Willard Marshall is also assist the general counsel occa- nation of services rendered by mete- president of the Milwaukee Spring sionally in dealing with problems aris- orology, photographic, and communi- Co. of Milwaukee, Wis., which he ing in the review section, and will cations sections permitted all missions organized for the production of me- handle Supreme Court assignments. to be accomplished with efficiency and chanical springs after his discharge Formerly assistant chief of the en- dispatch. He organized and reported from the Navy as a lieutenant com- forcement section, Glushien rejoined field data with unusual celerity. With mander last January. His address is the Board in January after his release utmost resourcefulness, he devised a 2718 North Prospect Avenue, Mil- from the Army where he was a staff novel photographic developing process waukee 11, Wis. sergeant with the Signal Intelligence which expedited procurement of field '35 BChem; '34, '35 BS—A second Service; spent one of his three years data by color photography," his ci- son, William Ellison Taylor, was born of duty in India. From 1938-39, he tation states. Milone has returned July 24 to Ellison H. Taylor and the was a teaching fellow in Law. after a four-year absence to his former former Ruth Young '34 of 106 Outer position of district sanitarian for the '29 ME—Gerald K. Hcllenbeck of Drive, Oak Ridge, Tenn. Taylor is New York State Department of 1045 Napier Avenue, Lawrence Park, assistant director of the chemistry Health, Poughkeepsie. He lives at 4 Erie, Pa., is with the refrigerator division of Clinton Laboratories, Mon- cabinet division of the General Elec- Jesse Court, Troy. santo Chemical Co., Oak Ridge, Tenn. tric Co. Erie Works. He is married '31 CE—Frank H. Taylor married '36—Kenneth W. MacDonald is and has two children. Frances I. Cain June 8 in Baltimore, vice-president and general manager October /, 1946 103 of MacKenzie Muffler Co. and Buffalo husband, John Thomson, Jr., is work- Kaye, Scholer, Fierman & Hays Pressed Steel Co., Youhgstown, Ohio. ing on the atomic bomb project. where partners include James S. He lives at 328 South Belle Vista, '39 BS; '37 AB—Gustavus A. Bent- Hays '22 and Richard C. Flesch '29, Youngstown, Ohio. ley and the former Margaret Kincaid and associates include Alfred J. Swan '36 AB, '39 DVM; '36 AB—Dr. '37 of 1005 Prendergast Avenue, '36. He lives at 1615 Avenue I, Frank M. Birch, major in the Army Jamestown, have a daughter, Ann Brooklyn 30. Veterinary Corps until June 10, is Margaret Bentley, born July 24. They '40—Major William J. Schwab, * quality supervisor for Whitehouse also have a son "Pete," age three. a pilot in the Army Air Corps for four Milk Co. He and Mrs. Birch (Mar- '39 AB, '41 LLB; '41 AB—Richard and a half years, is receiving a medical jorie Dean) '36 have two sons and J. Bookhout, who was separated last discharge October 20; he lost the sight live at 916 New York Avenue, Mani- spring from the Army in which he of his left eye while in India flying the tonoc, Wis. Birch is the son of Pro- served as a lieutenant in Military In- "hump." He plans to organize a small fessor Raymond R. Birch '12, Vet- telligence, has opened a law office in flying school. The Schwabs, including erinary. Oneonta. He and Mrs. Florence three-year-old Jackie, live on Park Street, Holland. '36 BS; '37—J. Prescott Blount, Fieg Bookhout '41, with their two assistant vice-president of sales for small daughters, live at 31 Woodside '40 BS in AE(ME); '00 ME(EE)— Slick Airways, Inc., transferred June Avenue, Oneonta. Sidney L. Scott, son of Charles R. 1 from San Antonio, Tex., to San '39 BS — Spencer H. Morrison, Scott '00, has returned to the National Francisco, Cal. Formerly superin- Graduate student and assistant in Carbon Co. after five years in the tendent of perishable traffic with Animal Husbandry, married Cath- Army Signal Corps. Called to active United Air Lines, Chicago, 111., he erine J. Fleming, Grad, May 18. He service in February, 1941, with the joined the Slick Airways last April. is the son of Professor Frank B. Mor- rank of second lieutenant, he served He and Mrs. Blount (Alice Crawford) rison, Animal Husbandry and Animal in this country, England, and France. '37 live at 161 Elinor Avenue, Mill Nutrition. Last February he was released to in- Valley, Cal. '39 BS—Mark T. Muller is with active duty, as a lieutenant colonel. Bynam Cooperage Co., Dermott, Ark. He and Mrs. Scott live at 11863 '37 BS—A daughter was born July Edgewater Drive, Lakewood 7, Ohio. 31 in Utica to Mr. and Mrs. Edward '40 BS in AE(ME)— Hardy M. C. Bailly, Jr. (Louise Odell) of 255 Cook, Jr. started work in process en- '40 AB—Mrs. John G. Webb, Jr. Soundview Avenue, White Plains. gineering at Western Electric Co.'s (Martha Sweet) of 302 Caroline This is their second child. Bailly, Point Breeze Plant in Baltimore, Md., Street, Fredericksburg, Va., has a Yale '38 and Columbia law school '41, April 1. He married Elizabeth Frierson son, Richard Sweet Webb, born July served as an instructor in the Army in Union, S. C., February 26, following 29. Air Force Training Command through- his discharge from the Army. Address: '41—Ralph A. Corley is working for out the war. 55C Westway North, Baltimore 21, his father at The Corley Co., 103 East '37, '38 BS; '09, '13 BS—Ralph H. Md. Main Street, Plainville, Conn. The Wheeler, Jr. reentered the State De- '40; '42 AB—A daughter, Nancy Corleys have twin daughters, born partment last February immediately Lee Crittenden, was born May 28 to May 7. after he was released from the Navy Charles E. Crittenden and the former '41—Ralph P. Cline has accepted as a lieutenant (jg), and is now in the Ruth Freile '42, acting Class Secre- the position of herdsman and manager Foreign Diplomatic Service of the tary, of 103 Oakview Avenue, Maple- for Belvedere Farms, Inc., Laurens, Department at Dublin, Ireland. Son wood, N. J. the herd being seventy purebred Ayr- of Professor Ralph H. Wheeler '09, '40 BS—Helen L. Crum has re- shire cattle. The Clines have a daugh- assistant Treasurer of the University, turned from thirty months overseas ter, Jocelyn Leigh Cline, born June 10. he was formerly assistant in the office as a recreation worker in American of Clay Merrill, US vice-consul in Red Cross clubs in England, , Hamilton, Ontario, Can, His address southern France and, most recently, is American Legation, Phoenix Park, at a club with a district constabulary Dublin, Ireland. outfit in Austria in American occupa- '38 BS—Jean C. Doren is a social tion territory. She is visiting her par- case worker for the Family Service ents, Dr. Harry H. Crum '97 and Mrs. Association, Cleveland, Ohio. She Crum at 115 Glen Place, Ithaca. was formerly a psychiatric social '40 AB, '43 MD—Lieutenant (jg) * worker at the Child Guidance Clinic, Francis Greenspan, USNR, is sta- St. Paul, Minn., which she joined tioned at the US Naval Hospital, after receiving the master of social Treasure Island, Cal. He married work degree from the Smith College Bonnie Jean Fisher of San Francisco school for social work in August, 1944. and the University of California, Oc- Her address is 11722 Miles Avenue, tober 25, 1945. Cleveland, Ohio. '40 BS — A son, John Barton * '38 BS; '40—David H. Dudgeon Pratt II, was born to Captain John B. began as assistant to the manager of Pratt and Mrs. Pratt July 24 in Wash- the Birdseye-Snider plant at Fulton in ington, D. C. Captain Pratt is now a March. Mrs. Dudgeon (Myrta Munn) member of the regular Army and is '41—Martha C. Colovos (above) of '40 is bookkeeper in the plant office. with the Military Intelligence Sec- 15 Snook Avenue, Scranton, Pa., re- They live at 211 South Third Street, tion. His address is Room 2B-683, turned to her UNRRA post in Am- Fulton. MIS, Pentagon Building, Washing- berg, Germany, August 15, via Pan '38—Mrs. Margaret Gill Thomson ton, D. C. American World Airways Clipper, of 107 Tomlinson Road, Oak Ridge, '40 AB, '42 LLB—Jack L. Ratzkin, after visiting her sick mother in Scran- Tenn., has a daughter, Susan Whit- after discharge from the Army, be- ton. She has served with the UNRRA field Thomson, born February 22. Her came associated with the law firm of in Germany for thirteen months. 104 Cornel/ Alumni News SERVING THREE GREAT GROUPS OF PEOPLE

From statement by Walter S. Gifford, President, American Telephone

and Telegraph Company, at 1946 Annual Meeting of stockholders

"It is not without significance that our Annual Report opens with the statement that The Board of Directors of the American Tele- phone and Telegraph Company presents herewith the management's accounting of its stewardship for the information of stockholders, employees, telephone users and the entire American people who have entrusted to private enterprise the responsibility for carrying on this essential national service/

"There is every reason for the management of your company to treat equitably each of the three parties concerned, namely, the telephone users, the employees and the stockholders. For in the long run, the interests of these three great groups of people, individually and collectively, are mutual and interdependent.

"More and better service at the least cost is as much in the interests of stockholders and employees as it is of the telephone users.

"Well-paid employees with steady employment; with opportunities open to all for advancement; and with reasonable protection against contingencies of illness, accident, death and old age are as much to the benefit of telephone users and stockholders as to employees.

"A stable and fair return on the money invested in the business — sufficient to attract the new money needed to develop and expand facilities — is as good for the telephone users and employees as it is for the stockholders/' WALTER. S. GIFFORD

BELL TELEPHONE SYSTEM '41 BS-—Richard Hildreth is farm- Mrs. Albert Bertalott III (Eileen (Kathryn Fiske) '42, her roommate ing on the "home farm" on RFD 1, McQuillin) of 4107 Fifty-third Ave- λvhile at Cornell, was a bridesmaid. Herkimer. nue, Bladensburg, Md. The Seebalds live at 26 South Thir- '41 BS in AE(ME)—Charles W. '41 BS-—John A. Matthews oper- teenth Street, Allentown, Pa. Lake, Jr. married July 4 in Troy ates Paddle Ranch in Clairemont, '42 BS; '07 LLB—Twin sons were Louise S. Sprague, a graduate of the Tex. born August 28 to Mr. and Mrs. Alga University of Michigan and a member '41 BS—Robert A. Summers has L. White (Mary Stutz) of Rio de of the general news bureau staff of been appointed manager of Middle- Janeiro, Brazil. Grandfather of the the publicity department of General bury College's dining halls. From last babies is University Trustee Harry G. Electric Co. Lake was assistant engi- December until recently he managed Stutz '07, editor of The Ithaca neering officer at the Watervliet ar- St. James Hotel, Woonsocket, R. I. Journal. senal from 1941 until his discharge Prior to that he was a lieutenant in from the Army March 15; is now with the Navy Supply Corps. Mail may be '42 B ME—Abbott A. Putnam, for- R. R. Donelley & Sons Co., 350 East sent to Dining Halls Office, Middle- mer instructor in Mechanical Engi- Twenty-second Street, Chicago, 111. bury, Vt. neering, has joined the division of fuels technology of Battelle Memorial '41—Virginia L. Vaughn was dis- '41 BS; '41 BS—Jesse B. Neu- Institute, Columbus, Ohio. He has charged from the WAVES June 10, hauser, Jr. and Mrs. Neuhauser been an engineer with the National (Catherine Dunham) '41 purchased and is now at 15 Sycamore Avenue, Advisory Committee for Aeronau- New Rochelle. the Major Pelham Hotel, Pelham, Ga., tics, Hampton, Va. last January. They have a son, J. B. '42; '43 BS—Fay W. Brands is a Ill, and a daughter, Marline, three pilot for American Overseas Airlines, '42 AB; '42 AB—Myron S. Lewis and two years old, respectively, who flying between New York and Europe. and Mrs. Lewis (Katherine Robinson) "gaze each night at a Cornell banner He and Mrs. Brandis (Mary Pearson) '42 are both attending Law School, in their bedrooms." Neuhauser spent '43 live at 115-05 Parkway Drive, and are living at 105 Highland Place, almost two years in India and Burma Elmont, L. I. Ithaca. Lewis, who has just returned with the Army Air Forces. '42 BS; '42 BS—Bradley P. Burke from Europe and received his dis- and Phyllis A. Colling '42 were mar- charge, writes that his brother, E. '41 BS—James S. Fortiner is ex- ried June 1 and are living in Che- Charles Lewis '43, returned from Ger- ecutive resident manager of Arrow- pachet. many this July and will enter Penn- head Springs Hotel, San Bernardino^ '42 BS—Gladys I. McKeever was sylvania dental school in the fall. Cal. The Fortiners have a daughter married June 1 to Henry A. Seebald, Jean Scott Fortiner, born April 30. '43 BS—Winona M. Brower is former Army captain released in home demonstration agent for Jeffer- '41 AB—A daughter, Joan Berta- March after three years in the Pacific son County. She lives at 323 Gothan lott, was born August 21 to Mr. and Theatre. Mrs. H. Joseph Weikel Street, Watertown. fool 'QUACK means means

but BALLANTINE Ale & Beer always means: Purity, Body, Flavor.

A bottle of PURITY, BODY and FLAVOR is the happy way to wind up any day. Always look for the famous 3-ring trade mark—always call for Ballantine. America's finest since 1840.

Pres., Carl W. Badenhausen, Cornell 16 Vice Prβ$.r Otto A. Badenhausen, Cornell Ί7

106 Cornell Alumni News '43 AB—Strabo V. Claggett, Jr. en- (Helen R. Wells) of 40 East Eighty- tered Harvard Business School June eighth Street, New York City. 12, the same day his terminal leave '43 BChemE; '43 BS—A son, John THE ended. He was lieutenant (jg) in the Edgar Zabel, was born June 15 to Navy and gunnery officer on the de- Robert P. Zabel and the former Doris COOP stroyer USS Stoddard; saw twenty- Lee '43 of 100 Chestnut Hill Drive, two months of service in the Pacific, Rochester. Zabel is with Eastman COLUMN including the invasion of Okinawa. Kodak Co. '43 AB—Nina A. Fenson is director '44 BS—Mrs. George Ploetz (Marie and owner of the Academy Employ- Buenning) has a son, Laurence Jeffrey ment Service, 406 Ackerman Build- Ploetz, born August 10 in Hornell. ing, Binghamton, a private employ- Her husband holds a research fellow- ment service for all types of office, ship at the New York College of sales, technical and executive posi- Ceramics at Alfred. Address: Box 78, tions. She has certified membership Alfred. in the National Employment Board '44 BS; '48—Fern H. Chase was and the Employment Counselors As- married August 31 in Ithaca to Jesse sociation of the United States. D. Whitehurst, Jr. '48, student in OT yet, but soon! '43 AB; '44—Captain Hugh M. * Electrical Engineering, who was dis- The postponement of col- Grey, Jr. returned from Tokyo, Ja- charged from the Navy in November pan, August 24 after spending twenty- after three and a half years' service as lege opening has given us a two months overseas. He is at 2979 a radio technician. Mrs. DuBois L. little more time to get set for the Jenkins (Doris Holmes) '44 was Southwest Fifth Street, Miami, Fla., onslaught of more than 9,000 matron of honor. The Whitehursts with Mrs. Grey (Lucille Jones) '44 Cornell students, and to write and two-year-old daughter, Leslie live at 330 West State Street, Ithaca. Carol. At the end of his terminal leave '44 BS; '43 AB—Peggy L. Clark ads like this one. November 3, he will become a field and G. Champlin Salisbury, Jr. '43, First, we would like to intro- son of George C. Salisbury '12 were representative in Connecticut for his duce Varsity Vic. We guess that father's firm, the Hugh Grey Hosiery married August 3 in Yonkers. Mrs. Vic would be called a figurine, Co. of Concord, N. C. G. Burke Wright (Jean Hammer- '43 AB; '07 CE—Mary J. Linsley, smith) '43 was matron of honor and but he wears a Varsity sweater daughter of Charles W. Linsley '07, Priscilla Reed '46 was maid of honor. with a big "C" and he is defi- is a secretary with Standard Brands, John F. Harper '43, Charles A. Col- nitely a BMOH. There must be bert '43, William R. Hoff '43, and Inc., New York City. She lives at 30 a spot for Vic in your game room Robert L. Harris '42 were ushers. East Sixty-second Street, New York or den, and he arrives postpaid City 21. Salisbury returned to this country and was discharged from the Army in for $1.25. '43 BEE—Donald L. Johnson of January after sixteen months in the 3833 North Tripp Avenue, Chicago, And you must have a spot ETO; is with thpPittsburgh Glass Co. 111., returned from overseas in early somewhere for one or more of September and is now on terminal The Salisburys live at 176 North Dithridge Street, Pittsburgh, Pa. the new Cornell Library Tiles. leave. He was about a year in Japan, with the Chief Signal Officer of Mac- '44 BS—Mr. and Mrs. Paul E. They are six inches square, the Arthur's headquarters. Arnold (Laurel DuBois) have a daugh- picture is reproduced in sepia, ter, Lynn Margaret Arnold, born Au- '43, '46 BS; '12 ME; '13, '14 CE— and they are $1.00 each, post- gust 10. Their new address is 84 East Donald E. Kastner, son of Joseph paid. Fifth Street, Oswego, where Arnold Kastner, Jr. '12, married Louise S. has been attending State Teacher's Page, daughter of Blinn S. Page '13 And then, you might like a College since his discharge from the of 1128 Devonshire Road, Grosse copy of the Fall Sports Schedule Merchant Marines. Pointe Park, Mich., September 7 at and this doesn't cost anything '44, '43 BME—Lieutenant (jg) * Grosse Pointe Farms, Mich. The except your name and address George Durham, USNR, son of Pro- bride is a member of the class of '45 on a penny post card. of Wells College. fessor Charles L. Durham '99, Latin, and Mrs. Durham, married Shirley All the old favorites are here, '43 BS; '07 ME—Richard R. Nick- Dusinberre, daughter of Mrs. Rhea or will be here soon: Mascots, erson, upon his discharge from the Dusinberre of Ithaca, and the late Army in June, joined the personnel Dr. A. B. Dusinberre, June 26 in Pennants, Banners, Blankets, division of Worthington Pump & Sage Chapel. The bride was given in and Pillows. Too many sizes Machinery Corp., Holyoke, Mass. marriage by her brother, Rodney H. and kinds to list in this ad, but Son of Ralph R. Nickerson '07, he Dusinberre '45, and his wife, the for- we'll send a list to anyone who was a first lieutenant, QMC, serving mer Marilyn Roesicke '45, was matron is interested. for the last fifteen months with the of honor. Forrest Durham '38 was Office of the Chief Quartermaster, best man. Joyce Jarnagin '48 was a ETO. Address: 9 Silverwood Terrace, bridesmaid and among the ushers were South Hadley, Mass. Archibald G. Durham '31, David H. '43, '46 BS—Edna R. Suydam of Durham '36, and Robert O'Rourke 503 Sunset Road, State College, Pa., '45. became engaged to Charles G. Ed- '44 B ME—Lieutenant (jg) Har- * THE CORNELL CO-OP wards IV, Purdue University, July 3. old C. Eilen, USNR, captain of the '43 AB—Twins, John Ernest and USS YP 287, expected to return home BARNES HALL ITHACA, N.Y. Thomas Jerry Polivka, were born In August. His address is 866 Dickens July 17 to Mrs. Jan Γ. Polivka street, Woodmere, October /, 1946 107 '44 BS—Barbara S. Flagg, daughter held August 29 at Mason General of Colonel Kenyon P. Flagg '16, was Hospital, Brentwood, where he is married to William M. Atlee July 20 medical inspector, post food super- at the home of her uncle, Dr. Henry visor, and veterinarian. The citation, (CnnwU OHttb B. Sutton '16, in Ithaca. Mrs. John J. which was awarded for meritorious Droz (Elizabeth Scheidelman) '44 service as food supervisor from De- was matron of honor and Mrs. Wil- cember 28, 1944, to June 3, 1946, liam H. Barber, Jr. (Mary Sutton) '47 states that "By his professional skill, was bridesmaid. The couple are living keen foresight, and initiative, Captain in Lexington, Va., where Atlee is Lukens installed and maintained a completing his course at Washington very efficient food conservation pro- lEaat and Lee University after serving in gram which aided the service of his the Navy. country economically and improved ytlj '44 BS—Jacqueline M. Graff of 66 the care of the patients. . . ." Riverside Drive, Riverhead, is en- '44 AB—Mrs. Harold McCullough Nm forfe, N, f. gaged to Madison L. Courtenay, Jr., (Joan Och) has joined the faculty of recently discharged from the Navy Ohio State University to teach fresh- after being a Japanese prisoner-of- man English during the fall, winter, war, and who enters the University and spring quarters. She lives at 394 this fall. Miss Graff has been accepted West Eighth Avenue, Columbus 10, as a stewardess with American Air- Ohio. lines, beginning a five-week training '44 BS in ME—Charles A. Perelli course in Tulsa, Okla., in October. of 1 Strobridge Avenue, Tabor, N. J., '44 B ME—Donald A. Lietzke of is a thermal engineer with The Con- Hemphill, Noyes CSk Co. 59-C Elizabeth Road, Hampton, Va., ditioning Co., Newark, N. J. Released is designing flight testing instruments to inactive duty in the USNR as a Members New York Stock Exchange for the National Advisory Committee lieutenant (jg) June 23, he was engi- 15 Broad Street New York for Aeronautics at Langley Field, Va. neering officer aboard USS LCI (L) He is engaged to Rachel Chapman of 619 in the Pacific Theatre from Au- INVESTMENT SECURITIES Statesville, N. C., who is also with gust, 1944, until June, 1946, partici- Jansen Noyes ΊO Stanton Griff is ΊO the NACA. pating in four amphibious landings in L. M. Blancke '15 Willardl. Emerson Ί 9 the Philippines. Jansen Noyes, Jr. '39 Nixon Griffΐs '40 '44 BChemE—Everett F. Ferryman BRANCH OFFICES was discharged from the Army in July Albany, Chicago, Indianapolis, Philadelphia, and is now on a temporary assignment with Kraft Cheese Co. in Sullivan, Pittsburgh, Trenton, Washington Ind. His home address is 930 West Loucks Street, Sheridan, Wis. '44; '44, '43 AB—Robert Rosenberg and Mrs. Rosenberg (Joyce Kane) '44 have moved to 145 Saxon Woods Kastman, Dillon & Co. Road, White Plains. MEMBERS NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE '44 BS—Mrs. John J. Droz (Eliza- beth Scheidelman) of 435 Larchmont Investment Securities Avenue, Utica, has a son, John Julian Droz V, born March 29. Her husband, DONALD C. BLANKE '20 a graduate of Marietta College, is with Representative the engineering department of a Car- 15 BROAD STREET NEW YORK 5, N. Y. rier air conditioning dealer in Utica. Branch Offices '44 AB—Seymour Silverman is with Philadelphia Chicago the enforcement division of the Office Reading Easton Paterson Hartford of Price Administration. Since his dis- Direct Wirβf to Branches and Los Angeles charge from the Army last May, he and St. Louis has been living in Kew Gardens, awaiting entry into the fall session of the Law School. He is married to the '44 DVM—Captain Walter B. * former Marjorie Midoff of Miami RKO PATHE, INC. Lukens, λ^eterinary Corps, is shown Beach, Fla., and their address is 141- 625 Madison Ave. 333 N. Michigan Ave. above receiving the Army Commenda- 48 Seventy-ninth Avenue, Kew Gar- New York 22, N. Y. Chicago, 111. tion Ribbon from Brigadier General dens. STUDIOS: New York City Hollywood, Calif. Charles M. Walson, surgeon for the '45 AB—Alberta S. Friedenberg of Producers of Motion Pictures First Army Area, at a retreat parade 5011 Waldo Avenue, Riverdale, is for secretary to Dr. Max Ascoli of the Business—Industry—Institutions New School for Social Research. Her Training Merchandising engagement to Alfred S. Eiseman, Jr. Labor Relations Education CAMP OTTER Fund Raising Public Relations For Boys 7 to 17 of New York City, Dartmouth '40, "The Rooster Crows," our booklet on con- IN MUSKOKA REGION OF ONTARIO has been announced. tract pictures will be sent at your request. No more vacancies for 1946. Enroll for 1947 PHILLIPS B. NICHOLS '23 '45 AB—Marjehne Andrae, daugh- HOWARD B. ORTNER '19, Director ter of Professor William C. Andrae Sales Manager Camp Otter, Dorset, Ont., Canada '15, Mechanical Engineering, and 108 Cornell Alumni News Mrs. Andrae, was married April 21 in '45, '44 BS in AE—Richard H. sachusetts Institute of Technology Sage Chapel to Albert Hoefer II, son Frost is in the mechanical engineering where he was elected to Sigma Xi. The of Professor Albert Hoefer '16, Ex- department of the H. K. Ferguson Macdonalds are living in Boston, Mass. tension Service, and State 4-H Club Co., industrial engineers, Cleveland, '45, '44 BS; '45 DVM—Pauline J. Leader, and the former Helen Paine Ohio. He lives at 1490 Cohassett Upson, dietitian at the Niagara Falls '27. Mary E. Wilson '45 was maid of Avenue, Lakewood, Ohio. Memorial Hospital, was married to honor, and Professor Hoefer was best '45 AB—Maxine L. Katz is a sales- Dr. Carl N. Wallace '45 July 27 in man for his son. Robert L. Kenerson woman for E. A. Straw, Inc., invest- Hamburg. They live at 262 William '45 was an usher. The couple live at ment securities, Manchester, N. H. Street in Tonawanda, where Dr. Wal- 250 West First Street, Oswego, where Her address is 60 Oak Street, Man- lace is practicing veterinary medicine. Hoefer is attending State Teachers chester, N. H. '46 AB—Solomon J. Cohen, re- College. '45 DVM; '44 AB—Dr. Walter M. cently discharged from the Navy after '45 DVM; '44 AB—Dr. Walter M. Klein and Jean A. O'Bryan '44 were service in the Philippines, has become Klein has started a veterinary prac- married last November in New York an instructor in chemical engineering tice in Spring Valley, Wis. Mrs. City. Two months ago, Dr. Klein at the Cooper Union School of Engi- Klein was Jean A. O'Bryan '44. started his own mixed veterinary neering, New York City. His address '45, '44 BS in AE — Corporal * practice in Spring Valley, Wis. is 195 East 163d Street, New York Stephen E. Lane is doing personnel '45 AB—Edna H. Smith is a social City 56. classification work at Geiger Field, worker at the Fifth Street Community '46 BCE—John P. Gnaedinger of Wash. He is the son of Charles Lane Center in Philadelphia. She lives at 644 North Elmwood Avenue, Oak '16, a member of Brach, Gosswein & 2021 Mt. Vernon Street, Philadelphia Park, 111., is doing graduate work in Lane, certified public accountants, 30, Pa. soil mechanics at Northwestern Tech- 1328 Broadway, New York City. '45 AB—Margaret M. Taylor was nological Institute, and working in the '45 BS; '44—Ernestine A. Rowland married to Lieutenant (jg) James R. office of C. A. Metz, consulting engi- is completing her apprenticeship in Macdonald, USNR, in New York neer. His brother, Richard Gnae- occupational therapy under the Vet- City August 3. G. Elizabeth Finley '45 dinger, enters the University this erans Administration at Sawtelle Vet- was maid of honor and John J. Roscia fall. erans Hospital, Los Angeles, Cal. Her '42 was an usher. Lieutenant Mac- '46, '45; '21 PhD; '23 AM—R. Fitz engagement to Edward J. Whiting donald, now on terminal leave, grad- Randolph, son of Professor Lowell F. '44, now back at the University fol- uated from Williams College where he Randolph, PhD '21, Botany, and the lowing his discharge from the Army was a Phi Beta Kappa and from Mas- former Fannie Rane, AM '23, is a in March, was announced last Sep- tember. '45, '44 AB—A son, John Berliss A BOOK TO Rubinstein, was born July 7 to Mr. and Mrs. Frank Rubinstein (Tina INTEREST EVERY Berliss) of 160 Lyons Avenue, New- ark, N. J. Mr. Rubinstein is complet- THINKING- PERSON ing his studies at the Newark College of Engineering. '45, '44 BS; '47—Henrietta Burgott and Nicholas Gehshan '47 were mar- ried July 7 in Brooklyn. They are living at 315 College Avenue, Ithaca, while Gehshan continues his course in Bacteriology. Mrs. Gehshan taught home economics in Corning North Side High School for two years. '45, '44 AB—Reta Davidson is em- BY CHARLES V. R YOUNG ployed by the Ramapo Valley Inde- pendent in Suffern. She is the daugh- A N Can the lives of ter of J. Edgar Davidson '08 and the some of the great former Reta Keenan '09. ADVENTURE characters of '45, '44 BS in ME—Aaron N. Wald- INTO THE man of 128 Kearny Avenue, Perth history serve Amboy, N. J., was discharged from UNKNOWN AND the Navy in May and has accepted a at least as a position with Wright Corp., Wood- U NKN OWABLE ! basis of speculation ridge, N. J. as to what lies beyond '45 BArch; '45 BArch; '45 AB—- Marilyn E. Seiden of 845 Riverside the curtain of Drive, New York City, is on the staff IYSICAL DEATH? of Gerson T. Hirsch, architect, de- signing country homes for suburban New York. She writes that Marisa Colombo '45 and her sister, Gigliola AVAILABLE AT ANY BOOKSTORE Colombo '45, have returned to Rome, Italy, "to survey the possibilities of PUBLISHED BY R ICHARD R. SMITH using their skills in rebuilding Italian 120 EAST 39TH ST NEW YORK towns." October I, 1946 109 student engineer with the Elliott Co. He lives at 102 Metoxet Street, Ridg- way, Pa. Within the next year he will P ROFES S 10 N A L D 1 R ECTO RY be at each of the company's three plants at Ridgway and Jeannette, Pa., o F CO RN EL L AL uMNl and Springfield, Ohio. Then he will be- come a field engineer at one of the district offices. '46 AB—Barbara J. Schaefer has NEW YORK AND VICINITY PHILADELPHIA, PA. been working in the farm supplies de- partment of the GLF in Ithaca since graduation in June as a secretary to James W. Crofoot '29 and V. L. William L. Crow Construction Co. PHILIP A. DERHAM & ASSOCIATES Timerson. She is the daughter of ROSEMONT,PA. Established 1840 John J. Schaefer '17 and lives at 310 PLASTICS Turner Place, Ithaca. 101 Park Avenue New York DESIGN ENGINEERING '46 AB—Patricia L. Snow became JOHN W. ROSS Ί9, Vice President MODELS DEVELOPMENT an assistant chemist in the research PHILIP A. DERHAM Ί 9 and development laboratories of Merck & Co., Inc., Rahway, N. J., September 8. She has been vaca- The General Cellulose Co., Inc. tioning at Harwich port on Cape Cod, Mass. Power Plant Equipment Converters and Distributors of Cellulose '46 BCE—Alfred J. Wood is a Wadding and Absorbent Tissue Products Machine Tools structural designer for the Nickel Garwood, New Jersey Plate Railroad in Cleveland, Ohio. New—Guaranteed Rebuilt D. C. TAGGART '16 - - Pres.-Treas. His address is 1262 Hird Avenue, Lakewood 7, Ohio. Write for Catalog 544 '46, '45 AB; '45—Natalie T. Finkel- STANTON CO.—REALTORS Everything from a Pulley to a Powerhouse stein and Richard F. Kessler '45 were married May 26 in New York City. GEORGE H. STANTON '20 THE Q BRJEW MACHINERY CQ. Nita F. Thorner '46 was a bridesmaid. Real Estate and Insurance 113 N. 3rd ST., PHILADELPHIA 6, PA. Mrs. Kessler was with the social serv- ice department of the New York Poly- MONTCLAIR and VICINITY Frank L O'Brien, Jr., M. E., '37 clinic Hospital. Kessler, discharged Church St., Montclair, N. J., Tel: 2-6000 from the Army in October, is attend- ing New Jersey Law School. He was with the 4th Division, taking part in BALTIMORE, MD. the D-Day invasion of Normandy, The Tuller Construction Co. and later with Military Intelligence J. D. TULLER, '09, President WHITMAN, REQUARDT & ASSOCIATES in France and Germany. The Kesslers live at 320 West Eighty-sixth Street, BUILDINGS, BRIDGES, Engineers New York City. Ezra B Whitman '01 Gusίav J. Reqυardt Ό9 DOCKS & FOUNDATIONS Richard F. Graβf '25 Norman D. Kenney '25 '46—Elizabeth C. Lainhart is a Stewart F. Robertson A. Russell Vollmer '27 WATER AND SEWAGE WORKS Roy H. Ritter '30 Theodore W. Hacker Ί7 hostess for Eastern Air Lines, based in Atlanta, flying to Chicago and New A. J. Dlll nb ck Ί1 C. P. B ylαnd '31 1304 St. Paul St., Baltimore 2, Md. C E. Wαllαe '27 Orleans. Her address is 886 Virginia Avenue, Hapeville, Ga. 95 MONMOUTH ST., RED BANK, N. J. '46—Ralph E. Patterson, Jr. of 1455 WASHINGTON, D. C Main Street, Bethlehem, Pa., was dis- charged from the Navy June 15. He was an ensign aboard the USS Guam, LOS ANGELES, CAL. THEODORE K. BRYANT a battle cruiser being "put in moth- LL.B. '97—LL.M. '98 balls." He hoped to return to the Uni- Master Patent Law, G. W. U. '08 versity this month. RAMSDELl S. LASHER '14 Patents and Trade Marks Exclusively '46 AB—Elinor K. Baier writes that Suite 602-3-4 McKim Bldg. she, Ann McGloin '46, Anne Aungier INVESTMENT PROGRAMS No. 1311 G Street, N.W. '46, Betty Nosek '45, and Dorothy Analyzed Planned Supervised Harjes '46, spent a week immediately after graduation at the fiftieth anni- KENOSHA, WIS. versary convention of Alpha Omega HOPKINS, HARBACH & CO. Tau at Port Huron, Mich. Miss Baier lives at 2461 Seneca Street, Buffalo. 609 SOUTH GRAND AVE. MACWHYTE COMPANY LOS ANGELES 14, CALIF. '46—James L. Hutchinson expected Manufacturer of Wire and Wire Rope, Braided Wire, discharge from the Navy early in Rope Sling, Aircraft Tie Rods, Strand and Cord June. His address is 67 Elm Avenue, ^Members* Literature furnished on request JESSEL S. WHYTE, M.E. "13 PRES. ft GEN. MGR. Floral Park. NEW YORK CURB EXCHANGE (Assoc.) R. B.WHYTE M.E.i13 / '47—Frank S. Senior, son of the LOS ANGELES STOCK EXCHANGE Vice President In Charge of Operations late Frank S. Senior '96, was dis- charged June 6 as a private first class no Cornell Alumni News after thirty months in the 28th Divi- designed the Empire State Building and June 26, 1946. He had been an engineer sion, seven of them overseas, during several Campus structures, September 10, with the Cherry-Burrell Corp. Son, Homer 1946, at his home, 50 Euclid Avenue, L. Wightman '40. Kappa Psi. which he was wounded in action. He Hastings-on-Hudson. Shreve was an in- was here for the Summer Session and structor in Architecture from 1902 until '17—Donald R. Vreeland, owner of D. returns this fall. 1906 when he joined the firm of Carrere & R. Vreeland & Co., woolen textile sales Hastings, in which he later became a part- agency in New York City, August 11, ner. He had been clerk of works for this 1946, in Norwalk, Conn. His home was at firm during the construction of Goldwin 83 Maple Street, Summit, N. J. Phi Necrology Smith and Rockefeller Halls. In 1924, he Kappa Sigma. organized the firm of Shreve & Lamb, '31 AB—Captain Stanley Arthur * which subsequently became Shreve, Lamb Loewenberg, Army Air Forces, has been '89 ME(E)—Bryant Harmon Blood of & Harmon. He was chief architect for declared killed by the War Department, 18 Hawthorne Road, Old Greenwich, Parkchester, the country's largest slum having been listed as missing in action for Conn., August 18, 1946, in Stamford, clearance and housing project, in New three years. Shortly after Pearl Harbor, Conn. He was for many years works super- York City, and for three others now in he went to the Southwest Pacific with a intendent for The Celluloid Co. of New- progress there. The firm designed the new Fighter Group. He had served in New ark, N. J., and then general manager of Campus development of the College of Guinea for about a year when he went on the Pratt & Whitney division of Niles- Engineering, of which Olin Hall of Chem- a mission in an unescorted B-17 which was Bement-Pond Co. at Hartford, Conn., ical Engineering is the first building, and never heard from again. His home was at from 1917 until he retired in 1924. Brother, are architects for the proposed Materials 253 Sea Cliff Avenue, Sea Cliff. Brother, the late Arthur R. Blood '84. Son, Harold Testing Laboratory. In 1929, Shreve es- Jerome L. Loewenberg '29. Sigma Alpha L. Blood '13. Delta Upsilon. tablished the Shreve, Lamb & Harmon Mu. Fellowship, providing a year's employ- '91 CE—Albert Sears Crane, hydraulics ment in his office to the outstanding stu- '32 Grad—Horace Harry Robinson, engineer, a director of J. C. White Engi- dent of each graduating class in Archi- April 19, 1946, in El Paso, Tex., where he neering Corp., New York City, of which tecture. Former president of the New was president of the H. H. Robinson he had been vice-president from 1913-28, York Building Trades Congress and di- Foundry & Machine Co. Mrs. Robinson August 25, 1946, in Bar Harbor, Me. A rector and president of the American In- (Dorothy Hall) '34 lives at 4226 Man- specialist in the design and construction of stitute of Architects, Shreve served on the chester Street, El Paso, Tex. Delta Sigma large earthwork dams, Crane built thirty board of design for the World's Fair and Phi. of them and sixty masonry dams; was the as chairman of the International Congress designer of ten irrigation projects in Mex- of Architects in 1939. He had lectured at '36 EE, '37 MME—Lieutenant Ed- * ico which the White firm built for the the University, was a member of the ad- ward Porter Ellis, USNR, who has been Mexican Government. He lived at the visory council of the College of Architec- missing in action since July 27, 1945, has Engineers Club of New York, 32 West ture, 1937-43, and president of the Cornell been presumed dead by the Navy Depart- Fortieth Street, New York City 18. Chi Club of New York, 1924-27. Mrs. Shreve ment. The plane in which he was flying Psi. is the former Ruth Bentley '02. Their sons took off from Motoyama Field, Iwo Jima, '92 LLB—Henry Irving Gordon, No- are Richmond B. Shreve '31, Robert W. on a combat mission against Japanese vember 30, 1945, at his home, 95 South Shreve '36, and Thomas C. Shreve '41. shipping, and was last heard from twenty Union Street, Rochester. He had prac- miles north of Nachijo Jima, Nanpo ticed law in Rochester for many years. '02—Dr. William Henry Walker, Jr., Shoto. Enlisting in June, 1942, Lieutenant August 28, 1946, in Crestwood, where he Ellis trained as a radar specialist in Naval '92 BS—Lenard Brown Keiffer, partner lived at 27 Crestwood Avenue. aviation and then went to assignments in in the brokerage firm of Beer & Co., Sep- '03—Edmund Ireland Davis of 421 the Aleutians, Hawaii, Marianas, Iwo tember 7, 1946, in New York City, where Jima, and Okinawa. He has been awarded he lived at 103 East Eighty-sixth Street. Walsh Street, Grass Valley, Cal., August 8, 1946, in East Corinth, Me. A retired posthumously a unit citation. He was He joined Beer & Co. in 1937, after seven formerly an electrical engineer with Han- years as treasurer of City Stores Co., New engineer, he was successively from 1903-33 with the US Bureau of Reclamation, the son-Van Winkle-Munning Co. and West- York City, of whose subsidiary, Maison inghouse Electric Co. Mrs. Ellis lives at Blanche Co., New Orleans, La., he had Corps of Engineers, Peru, S. A. (as chief engineer), the Puerto Rico Irrigation Serv- 167 Main Street, Matawan, N. J. Beta been president for twenty years previ- Theta Pi. ously. Delta Kappa Epsilon. ice (as division and consulting engineer), and the US Corps of Engineers. In 1942, '37 MS—Leendert Abraham van ^ '92—Louis Philip Lang, lawyer, Sep- after serving as engineer for various cities Melle, a gunner in the Dutch army, was tember 25, 1945, in Syracuse, after a long in Oregon, he went to represent the engi- drowned when his ship was torpedoed by illness. He lived at 225 Amherst Avenue, neer on the $3,000,000 Navy Project 13 a Nazi submarine, according to The Inter- Syracuse; had been secretary of the Syra- for The American Forge Co., Berkeley, national House Quarterly for Spring, 1945. cuse chapter of the Izaak Walton League Cal. Later that year, he joined the interests He was secretary of the Cosmopolitan of America. Phi Delta Phi. of Henry J. Kaiser in Oakland, Cal., where Club. His home address was 101 Wolfhez- '95—Harry Alfred Nichols of 56 Twen- he was senior engineer until 1945. Beta erweg, Wolfheze, Gelderland, Holland. tieth Avenue, San Francisco, Cal., Febru- Theta Pi. '41—Darwin Day, former Navy pilot ary 27, 1946. '05 ME—Ivan Albert Boyce, mechanical who became a transport pilot for Andesa '96 PhB—Mrs. Frank P. Ufford (Bertha engineer with International Business Ma- Airlines, killed in a plane crash at Cuenca, Hazard Tierney) of 605 Old Railroad Ave- chines Corp., November 8, 1945. Mrs. Ecuador, July 22, 1946. He was a special nue, Haverford, Pa., August 1, 1946. Boyce's address is Box 66, Greene. Sons, student in Agriculture for two years, and She was Senior Class poet. Russell I. Boyce '31 and Newton Boyce '43. was art editor of the Widow. As a lieu- '98 ME—Alexander Hamilton Cooke, '08 ME—William Cargill Capron, who tenant (jg), USNR, he served in the vice-president of the Atlantic Coast Fish- retired in 1940 from Anaconda Copper Pacific. His home was at 200 Lockwood Mining Co., Anaconda, Mont., where he Avenue, Yonkers. eries Corp. and a director of the Brooklyn was mechanical superintendent, June 3, Bridge Freezing & Cold Storage Co., Au- 1946, at his home near Pasadena, Cal. '42—Second Lieutenant Charles ^ gust 19, 1946, in New York City. He held Theta Delta Chi. Michael Kearns, Jr., Army Air Forces, several basic patents on quick-freezing missing in action over Japan since May 5, devices. His home was at 11 Lilac Lane, '08—Dr. John Otto Seibert, August 22, 1945, was presumed dead by the War De- Manhasset. Delta Upsilon. 1946, in Cincinnati, Ohio, where he was a partment, May 6, 1946. He was a student '99—Frank Bannerman VII, senior part- gynecologist ancj a member of the staff of in Arts and Sciences. His home was at 28 Deaconess Hospital. Graduate of the Long South Bergen Place, Freeport. ner in the firm of Francis Bannerman Sons Island Medical College, he had served as of New York City, the world's largest president of the Deaconess Hospital staff '43—Ensign Ben Herbert Crebbs, * private dealers in second-hand military and was a founder and editor of the Cin- USNR, former student in Engineering, equipment, August 31, 1946, at his home, cinnati Journal of Medicine. He lived at September 17, 1945, in a typhoon off 327 River Avenue, Patchogue. Since 1918 Davar Acres, Loveland-Milford Road, Okinawa. His home address was Apartado he had directed the purchase and sale of 709, Caracas, Venezuela. his firm's used arms and munitions which near Milford, Ohio. are stored at 501 Broadway and in a fort- '09—Dr. James Joseph Martin, dentist, '46—Irwin Louis Zinke, January 3, Jt ress, "Bannerman's Island Arsenal/' on an August 17, 1946, in North Hero, Vt. He 1944, in Ithaca, while a student in the island in the Hudson River. lived at 205 East Sixty-ninth Street, New Navy V-12 course at the University. He York City. entered Arts and Sciences as a civilian in '02 BArch—Richmond Harold Shreve, 1942. His home was at 4 Byron Avenue, senior member of the firm of Shreve, Lamb '16 ME—Rolan Jay Wightman of 662 White Plains. & Harmon, New York City architects who Meeting House Road, Elkins Park, Pa., October /, 1946 Ill CORNELL HOSTS A Guide to Comfortable Hotels and Restaurants Where Cornellians and Their Friends Will Find a Hearty Cornell Welcome

NEW YORK CITY PENNSYLVANIA

Hotel Grosvenor WELCOME YOU IN THESE CITIES Your Home in Philadelphia FIFTH AVENUE AT 10th STREET For chose who like the comforts of home and Cleveland Pittsburgh HOTEL ESSEX the fast-stepping conrenience of Detroit New York Chicago 13TH AT FILBERT STREET a modern hotel Minneapolis Philadelphia 'One Square From Everything" Every room with tub and shower 225 Rooms—Each With Bath Singles from $4.00 Doubles from $).50 Air Conditioned Restaurants Donald R. Baldwin, '16, President John M. Yates, Manager NEW ENGLAND HARRY A. SMITH '30 Owned by the Baldwin Family Stop at the .. . Recommend your friends to HOTEL LATHAM HOTEL ELTON WATERBURY, CONN. 28τH ST. at STH AVE. - NEW YORK CITY The St. James Hotel 400 Room - Flr piool "A New England Landmark" 13th and Walnut Sts. Bud Jennings '25, Proprietor IN THE HEART OF PHILADELPHIA SPECIAL ATTENTION FOR CORNELLIANS Air-conditioned Grill and Bar Air-conditioned Bedrooms J.Wilson'19, Owner WILLIAM H. HARNED '35, Mgr. A CHARMING NEW ENGLAND INN IN THE FOOTHILLS OF THE BBRKSHIRΛS POCONO MANOR INN YELL! POCONO MANOR, PENNA. YELL! IWI SHARON C01W. 155 miles south of Ifhαcα directly enroute to ROBERT A. ROSE '30. GENERAL MANAGER YELL! AT * Philadelphia o rNβw York (100 miles) 9 9 Superb Food — Excellent accommodations — LEON & EDDIE'S All sporting facilities 33W52 NEW YORK ^ FLORIDA Bob Trier, Jr. '32, General Ma PHIL ENKEN '40 9

WASHfNGTON, D. C GθOO FOOD

Mabel S. Alexander '41 Manager Olr^Hon, American Hotel* Corporation

1 71 5 G Street, Northwest Washington, D. C.

CENTRAL STATES CARMEN M. JOHNSON '22 - Manag r

CORNELL HEADQUARTERS in WASHINGTON TOPS IN TOLEDO At the Capitol Plaza SINGLE from 52.50-DOUBLE from J4 HOTEL HILLCREST Henry B. Williams '30, Mgr. iOWARD D. RAMAGE '31 DODGE HOTEL GENERAL MANAGER Cornellians Prefer ROGER SMITH HOTEL to patronize these WASHINGTON, D. C CORNELL HOSTS PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE AT 18 STREET. N.W. Frank J. Irving, '35 Art Taft, '26 For special advertising rates in this Located in the Heart of Government Activity Visit the West Coast of directory, write Preferred by Cornell men Sunny Florida this Winter CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS A. B. MERRICK'30 . . . MANAGER 3 East Ave., Ithaca

112 Cornell Alumni News Which do you love most?

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