MAY 1942

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VOL. XLIV, NO. 31 ITHACA, NEW YORK, MAY XI, 1942. PRICE, 15 CENTS HOTELMEN PROVE USEFUL IN WAR EFFORT By Professor Howard B. Meek, Head of Department of Hotel Administration Kevin E. Howard, who received the their studies in inactive status. Sixteen BS in Hotel Administration at Cornell This is the eleventh of our series on are cadet officers in the ROTC, thirteen in 1931, is now in charge of the equip- Cornell and World War II, outlining being assigned to the Quartermaster ment and operation of Pan-Anierican some of the contributions of various Corps. Another sixteen are in various Airways bases across equatorial Africa, Colleges and Departments of the Uni- branches of the Navy, eight in the used in ferrying US military planes to versity to the country's war effort. The Supply Corps. series began in our issue of February 26 the Near and Far East. Associated with Department Teaches Specialists him are ten other graduates of the and will continue in succeeding numbers. Department of Hotel Administration. What adaptation has been made in the Adolph M. Lucha '35, with six Cornell Hotel Administration curriculum? What men in his organization, is responsible feeding and housing problems associated acceleration is planned? Since the cover- for the feeding and housing of 50,000 with war industry and transportation. age of the curriculum as a preparation for munitions workers at the Ravenna, These results were to be expected, be- dealing with food and shelter problems Ohio, ordnance plant of the Atlas cause the present war is being fought by was already as nearly complete as staff Powder Co. specialists supported by specialists. The and facilities would permit, not many specialist in hotel administration is par- changes have been made. Hotel students Many Alumni In Service ticularly valuable, because he knows have considerable freedom of election; These are only two of many important about food, its selection, purchase, stor- twenty-four credit hours out of the 12.0 projects directly connected with the war age, preparation, and service, and he is required are taken from the wide range effort in which Hotel graduates are en- thoroughly grounded in business sub- of "Hotel electives" offered by the De- gaged. Of 544 active alumni, 145 are jects such as accounting, business promo- partment, and another twenty-four are known to be in military service, and tion, and personnel management. He chosen at will from any College of the more are going in daily. Forty of them has also covered a substantial program University. Students may, therefore, hold commissions in the Army and six- in maintenance engineering. shift the emphasis in their respective teen in the Navy, and fifteen are aviation Of the forty-six physically eligible programs by electing subjects like mathe- cadets. The Army Quartermaster Corps Hotel Seniors, thirty-two are enrolled in matics that may have a definite military and the Navy Supply Corps have natu- the armed services and have continued significance and usefulness. rally attracted many Instructors, too, are Hotel graduates. making adaptations by Among the calls re- changes in the selection ceived by the Depart- of illustrations and lab- ment for assistance have oratory exercises. The been requests from the popularity of the course Navy for a man to run in personnel manage- the base facilities at a ment given by Professor large Atlantic coast air- Andrew L. Winsor, Phd field, for two top-notch '2.9, has led to the or- men trained and experi- ganization of a new enced in cafeteria and course in Military Per- low-cost feeding - sonnel which has had tions, and a man to enrollment of 144 this manage a large club for term. In foods, atten- officers at an important tion is being given to shore base. The Army sugarless recipes, to has drawn its officer problems of canteen op- material chiefly from eration, use of mobile those trained in the kitchens, and the like. advanced ROTC, but Since the Hotel De- requests have been made partment has always for men to operate vari- operated on a twelve- ous billeting and feed- month basis, using the ing projects and ex- three summer months change services, and Thirteen Seniors in Hotel Administration have received commissions for required supervised for men who could be as second lieutenants in the Army and will be assigned to active duty practice in the industry, trained as mess inspec- in the Quartermaster's Department immediately after Commencement. and since both the Left to right above (top row): Gordon H. Hines, Baltimore, Md.; Ken- tors. Some of the Fed- neth I. Zeigler, White Plains; Conrad Engelhardt, New York City; Army and Navy have eral civilian agencies Douglas B. Shivers, Chipley, Fla.; Leonard W. Lefeve, Dannemora; Paul indicated their appreci- have called for men B. Handlery, Vallejo, Cal. Front row: Charles W. Jack, Rochester; ation of the value of trained to tackle hous- H. Ward Wannop, Kingston; James S. Patterson, Washington, Pa.; this experience, accel- J. Wilbur Wannop, Kingston; Harold W. Zimmerman, Washington ing problems. And many Court House, Ohio. Noble E. Fields of Dodge City, Kans., and Frank A. eration in the usual graduates are solving Crowley of Worcester, Mass., are not in the picture. Fenner sense is not possible. 406 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

No summer offerings are planned for tage of giving the student as strong a regular undergraduate Hotel students professional program as possible in the this year. Unless they have completed age interval between eighteen and twenty About the practice requirement, they are ex- (respectively the customary age at grad- pected to spend the summer at the usual uation from high school and the age of ATHLETICS supervised employment. The longer sum- possible military service), with a certifi- mer made possible by the shorter fall and cate at the completion thereof, and at the BASEBALL AT BOTTOM spring terms will, however, permit a same time permitting normal progress The basebal lteam dropped to the cellar larger number of students than usual to toward eventual graduation with the de- of the Eastern Intercollegiate League complete their practice in two summers gree of Bachelor of Science. The two-year last week by losing twice to Pennsyl- rather than three, thus shortening the program is not in any sense less rigorous vania, 5-4 and 2.-0, at Philadelphia Mon- total elapsed time necessary to earn the than the regular course. It will, in fact, day and breaking even in two games, degree. be more difficult, because in attempting both 8-5, with Harvard at Cambridge to include as much professional work as Offer Two-Year Program Saturday. In between, Cornell lost a non- possible in two years, some foundation League gkme to Syracuse, 6-4, on Hoy Further, to meet the needs of those courses have been omitted or postponed. Field Wednesday. students who expect to be called for mili- It is expected that many who complete The Pennsylvania games were post- tary service before they have an opportu- the two-year program will be allowed to poned from May 9, and were played nity to complete the requirements for continue toward graduation because of without the services of several key play- the BS degree, the Department has ar- the possibility of inactive duty with the ers who returned to Ithaca for necessary ranged a program of courses that may be Army or Navy through ROTC advanced class work. compassed in two school years (four course, the Navy Supply Corps, and the Standing of the League teams: terms and a summer of supervised prac- Navy D-V(P) and V-7 programs. A spe- tice), upon the completion of which, cial arrangement of the curriculum with W L PC with satisfactory grades, the Department extra emphasis on mathematics and Princeton 6 1 .857 will award a certificate. Holders of the physics has been set up and approved Harvard 4 3 .571 certificate will be eligible for membership for students in V-i, which is now pre- Pennsylvania 5 5 .500 in the Cornell Society of Hotelmen and requisite for V-7. Dartmouth 3 3 .500 will receive, so far as their training and In summary, the story is one of gradual Yale 3 3 .500 abilities warrant, the full support of the and increasing recognition by the Army Columbia 4 7 .364 Department placement office. and the Navy that in the Department of Cornell 3 6 .333 The two-year-certificate program will Hotel Administration they have a valu- The week's lone victory, over Harvard, be open to all those registered in the able source of supply of men trained to was pitched by Leo Hamalian '41. At Department as candidates for degrees, deal with a group of problems which, Philadelphia, he pitched a seven-hitter and only to them. The certificate will be while not directly related to fire-power, and struck out seven batters, but lost by awarded on request to all those candi- have much to do with the effectiveness one run through poor Cornell base run- dates who complete with satisfactory of fighting forces. ning and failure to hit at the right time. grades the specified courses. Credit in all of the courses will count toward the DANCE CLUB officers for next year are SIXTH IN HEPTAGONAL Bachelor's degree, so that when students Judith L. Kobrin '44 of Brooklyn, presi- The track team finished sixth in the are able to continue their education they dent; Gloria D. Denzler '43 of Baldwin, Heptagonal Games Association's annual may complete the remainder of the four- vice-president; Eunice Gitlow '44 of meet at Cambridge, Mass., last Saturday, year program. This plan has the advan- Yonkers, secretary-treasurer. with the host, Harvard, a surprise winner with 66 1/5 points. Yale scored 61 7/10, and the next four finishers were blanketed within a point: Dartmouth 2.6 1/3, Princeton 2.6 1/30, Pennsylvania x6, and Cornell 2.5 n/15. Columbia finished last with 8. Cornell took two of the fifteen first places, each good for 6 points. Charles E. Shaw, Jr. '43 won the 100-yard dash in 10:02.—slow time because of a stiff wind—and Robert A. W. Pullman '43, Captain Kenneth I. Zeigler '41, Gerald N. Bowne '43, and Arthur C. Smith '43, the mile relay in 3:2.5.x. Paul M. Kelsey '43 picked up 3 points with third place in the mile; Smith, 3 more with third place in the 880-yard run; Clark R. Sanford '44, 2. points with fourth place in the hammer throw at 136 feet 9 inches; Aubrey E. Robinson '43, Ward F. Moore '44, Roe E. Wells '44, and Shaw, x points with fourth place in the 440-yard relay; and Captain Zeigler, 1 point with fifth in the 880. Three Cornellians were involved in ties. John L. Haughwout '45 and Richard Students in Hotel Administration get practice in planning, preparing, and serving M. Junge '43 shared with three others food that makes them invaluable to the military services and in housing and supply third place in the pole vault at ix feet 6 of war industries. Fenner inches, picking up 2.1/5 points. Wells MAY XI , 194.x 407.

tied with two others for fifth place in Quinn came to Cornell in 1936 to assist the high jump at 5 feet 8 3/4 inches, SCORES OF THE TEAMS Snavely and to coach Freshman football, picking up 1/3 point. basketball, and baseball. He gave up the Earlier in the week, the squad elected Baseball basketball assignment to J. Russell Smith and Lyman W. Warfield '43, Pennsylvania 5, Cornell 4 Murphy and succeeded James M. Tatum hurdler, co-captains for 1943. Pennsylvania 2., Cornell o as Varsity baseball coach in 1940. The Syracuse 6, Cornell 4 team, which had tied Harvard for the FIVE CREWS RACE Cornell 8, Harvard 5 championship the previous year, won Defeated in three earlier races, Prince- Harvard 8, Cornell 5 the title that season. The 1941 team ton's varsity crew defeated Cornell and Track finished second to Princeton. Yale to win the Carnegie Cup on the Heptagonals: Harvard, 66 1/5; Wolff came to Cornell in 1937 as coach Housatonic River at Derby, Conn., last Yale, 61 7/10; Dartmouth, 2.6 1/3; of boxing and 150-pound football. He Saturday. Princeton, thus accomplishing Princeton, 2.6 1/30; Pennsylvania. became assistant baseball coach in 1940, the upset of the Eastern rowing season, x6; Cornell, 2.5 11/15; Columbia, 8. directing the Freshman team that season won by three-quarters of a lengtn over in the absence on leave of Coach Gullion. the two-mile course, with Cornell the Golf He assisted Quinn with the Varsity squad same distance ahead of Yale, the pre- Cornell 6, Bucknell 3 this year. When intercollegiate boxing race favorite. Syracuse 5, Cornell 4 was given up after the 1941 season, Cornell's Freshman and undefeated Cornell Freshmen 4^, Manlius Coach Wolff continued to direct the Junior Varsity crews won their races School 4J^ sport on an intramural basis. handily over the same course, with Lacrosse Princeton second in each race and Yale third. The Junior Varsity won by one Navy 7, Cornell 2. Syracuse Freshmen 9, Cornell and one-half lengths, the Freshmen by 1942 CORNELLIAN three. Times of the races: Freshmen 3 Weather conditions cancelled the 1941 Cornellian appeared at the Li- Varsity: Princeton, 10:46.x; Cornell, brary Arch for distribution May 10. It is 10:49.8; Yale, 10:52..8. Cortland Normal and Pennsylvania tennis matches and the Syracuse an impressive volume, bound in white Junior Varsity: Cornell, 1112.4.8; Prince- freshman baseball game; gasoline fabrikoid with red stamping and a gold ton, 11:32..x; Yale, 11:55. rationing, the Mercersburg Acad- seal of the University on the cover and Freshman: Cornell, 11:07; Princeton, emy-Freshman track meet. an animated map of the Campus and 11:19.8; Yale, 11:34.4. vicinity printed in white on its red end- Cornell's Varsity, with Richard O. papers. Jones '44 in the stroke seat for the first An editorial foreword explains that time, held to a low beat until the race The Varsity closed its season with two the theme of this year's volume is was almost over, rowing 2.9 strokes a victories and four defeats; the Freshmen "Reflections," and this theme is carried minute from the half-mile to the mile lost only one of four games. mark and keeping at 30 and 31 strokes out in the photographic division pages until a quarter-mile from the finish. By where the headings in block letters are CANCEL POUGHKEEPSIE RACE pictured on mirrors. The editors explain: that time it was too late to overtake the Cancellation of the annual regatta of surprising Princeton eight. "Since the events in December which the Intercollegiate Rowing Association, precipitated the into a long On Princeton's Carnegie Lake the same held at Poughkeepsie, was announced day, Cornell's 150-pound crew finished and severe war, the University has taken last week. Asa S. Bushnell, secretary, on a different aspect for us. This is a fourth in the Eastern Collegiate Rowing said that the cancellation was only for Association's annual Wright Cup regatta. time when we must examine our college 1942. and not for the duration. life and determine its real worth. Many Princeton won, a half-length ahead of Inability to find an acceptable date Pennsylvania, with Harvard third. Co- Cornellians will have to leave the Hill as brought the action. The races were the nation calls o them to come and serve lumbia and MIT trailed Cornell. Prince- tentatively scheduled for June 6 on ton's time for the Henley distance of a in her armies. To all of us there comes a Onondaga Lake after the usual Pough- new awareness of the importance in our mile and five-sixteenths was 6:40.8. keepsie site was ruled out because of Cornell's Freshman 150-pound crew lives of the years that we have been tidal conditions. fortunate enough to spend here." won over the same course in 6:50.8, de- The Poughkeepsie regatta was can- feating Pennsylvania, Princeton, and celled during the war years of 1917-1919 Picture of President Day accompanies Columbia in that order. and in the depression year of 1933. his message to the' Class of '41, and Trustees, Counselors of Students, and GOLF BREAKS EVEN COACHES JOIN NAVY Deans are also pictured, together with The golf team split two matches last Campus scenes, members of the Senior Two more coaches have been commis- week to finish its season with six vic- Class, and all student organizations. sioned in the US Naval Reserve. Head tories and five defeats. There are many pictures of athletic coach of baseball, Mose P. Quinn, is now After a 6-3 victory over Bucknell on events and teams, with the season's a lieutenant; Alfred B. Wolff, boxing the University golf course Monday, records, and several pages of candid coach, is a lieutenant, junior grade. They the team lost, 5-4, to Syracuse at Syra- pictures of Campus events and prominent reported to Annapolis Monday to begin cuse. Seniors. an indoctrination course to become in- The Freshman golfers played a 43^-4y 2 structors in the Navy's physical fitness Class History preceding the men's tie with Manlius School at Manlius. program for airplane pilots. Senior pictures and biographies is by LACROSSE TEAMS LOSE Gregory G. Zitrides, assistant football Frank Abbott, and that for the women, The Varsity and Freshman lacrosse coach, was the first to enter that branch following, is by Dorothy Dodds and teams were defeated last Saturday, the of the service. Madge Palmer. US Naval Academy winning the varsity Carl Snavely, head coach of football, Editor-in-chief of the 1942. Cornellian game at Annapolis, 7-2,, and Syracuse will direct the Varsity baseball team in its is Robert D. Hughes, Jr. of Dayton, taking a 9-3 decision in the freshman three remaining games with Dartmouth Ohio. Business manager is James L. game at Syracuse. and Columbia. Kraker, Jr. of Beulah, Mich. 4o8 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

MEDICAL CENTER REPORT York Avenue at Sixty-eighth Street, ROTC CLOSES ITS YEAR At Ten-Year Anniversary New York City. Newly accelerated three-year course of With President's Review Medical College the Medical College, stepped up to meet Our cover pictures the reviewing group and The Society of the New York Hos- wartime needs for physicians, will have at the President's review of the ROTC in pital have issued an attractive illustrated eighty-five students entering July 6, it is Barton Hall May 8. It was a part of the brochure celebrating the thirtieth an- announced. They were selected from 1,306 annual War Department inspection of niversary of their affiliation and the tenth applicants, the largest number in the the Corps of some 2.,500 undergraduates anniversary of the opening of the joint history of the College. The new students and fifteen Army officers detailed here. Medical Center in New York City. come from thirty-eight colleges and uni- Nearest the camera is Cadet Colonel Titled "They Shall Be Healed," the versities, from fifteen States, Hawaii, James M. Cake, Jr. '42. of Norfolk, Va. report traces the history and contribu- and India. Twenty-four of the candidates Next is President Edmund E. Day; then tions of the College and Hospital, out- accepted are sons of physicians, and three Colonel Edwin R. Van Deusen recently lines and pictures the present work of the are sons of alumni of the College: Robert ordered to Cornell; the War Department Medical Center in teaching, research, and S. Cleaver, Jr., son of Dr. Robert S. inspectors, Lieutenant Colonel David E. care of the sick, and shows the needs for Cleaver Ί6; Forrest C. Eggleston, son of Cain, Field Artillery, Lieutenant Colonel its future development and support. Dr. Cary Eggleston '07; and George M. Edward L. Sherwood, Ordnance, and Concept of the Medical Center since it Longbothum '43, son of Dr. George T. Major E. Appleton, Signal Corps; Dean was established in 1932., the report points Longbothum '06. S. C. Hollister, Engineering; Clarence F. out, has brought a new approach to the Morse '14, district commander of the social problems of sickness. "In this con- REPRESENT UNIVERSITY American Legion; and Lieutenant Colonel cept, health is a positive factor in in- At the fiftieth anniversary celebration Jewett D. Matthews, recently detailed dividual and group life. It is attained not of the founding of Rhode Island State here as Field Artillery instructor. merely by the treatment of the sick, but College May 2.3, George E. Adams '00 is This year, 199 Seniors from the ROTC by the complete integration of medical the official representative of Cornell will receive Reserve commissions as sec- care, teaching, research, and preventive University. He is Dean Emeritus of the ond lieutenants and be ordered to active medicine. During the first ten years, the school of agriculture at Rhode Island duty immediately. value of this integrated approach has State College in Kingston. Cadet Colonel Cake was selected to re- been clearly demonstrated. It has been Official delegate of Cornell University ceive the Barton Cup as the student who shown that under this system the latest at the centennial celebration of the has done the most for the advancement developments in the scientific laboratory founding of Roanoke College, Salem, of the ROTC this year. The cup is become available promptly to the physi- Va., May 2.9-31 will be Dr. Harry B. awarded annually by Mrs. Barton in cian and his patients. The laboratory Stone, of Roanoke, Va. Dr. Stone at- memory of her husband, the late Colonel worker benefits by a more intimate tended the Cornell Medical College in Frank A. Barton '91, who was Com- knowledge of the needs of the practicing mandant here. physician. The student benefits because Designated "honor graduates," with example is the best of all teachers. Good Cake, were Robert A. Beck of Milton, medical instruction demands and also in- Mass., Robert M. Coors of Ithaca, James sures the finest possible care of patients." M. Goodwillie of Bethlehem, Pa., Bur- Stressing the need for additional funds ton T. Goulko of Ithaca, Jonathan H. to carry on essential services during war Harwood, Jr. of East Greenwich, R. I., time, the report declares: "The first ten Myron S. Lewis of Rochester, Robert C. years have been only a beginning. The Lewis of Fulton, Joseph C. Littleton of Medical Center still has far to go before Corning, John F. Mattern of Thompson- its potentialities are completely realized. ville, and William F. Robinson of Garden Those who see most clearly the inevitable City, Field Artillery; Frank A. Bishop effects of the present world crisis believe of Syracuse and Paul W. Leighton of that the rate of development must be Twin Falls, Idaho, Infantry; John J. greatly accelerated." Barnhardt, Jr. of Concord, N. C, and The work of these first ten years can- Robert T. Edmunds of New Hartford, not be told in terms of figures, but these Ordnance; and Thomas S. Carnes of New at least provide a clue to its scope: York City, Signal Corps. 600,000 patients have been treated for Sons of the American Revolution gold virtually every affliction known to medals for leadership in each branch medicine; 35,000 babies have been born; were awarded to Payne C. Barzler, Jr. 72,000 children have been cared for; 650 '41 of Scranton, Pa., Field Artillery; doctors have graduated from the Medical Leighton, Infantry; Peter M. Wolff '42 College; 300 nurses have graduated from of Highland Park, 111., Ordnance; and the School of Nursing; 1,400 doctors AT WORK TO CONTROL HOOKWORM Daniel Schwarzkopf '42 of New Ro- have received special or graduate training John Yin Chieh Watt, PhD '41, works chelle, Signal Corps. in the clinics and pavilions; and 1,500 at the Medical College in New York to Highest classroom averages in major papers have been published by the staff on determine if, through diet, resistance can Ordnance subjects were attained by problems of medical investigation." be developed against the hookworm Richard W. Eustis '43 of Birmingham, A joint administrative board, controll- which infests millions of his countrymen Mich., in the first-year advanced course ling the affairs of the two institutions, is living in the Yangtse Valley area of and by B. J. Walker '42 of Erie, Pa., in composed of President Edmund E. Day, China. Head of the parasitology labora- the second year. of the University, chairman, Neal D. tory of the Public Health Training In- Scabbard and Blade sabers for next Becker '05, Joseph P. Ripley '12, J. stitute of China until the Institute was year were awarded to these members of Pierpont Morgan, Langdon P. Marvin, bombed out of Nanking and Hankow, the first-year advanced course as the out- Henry S. Sturgis, and William Wood- Dr. Watt came back to America and en- standing members of their respective ward. The report may be obtained from tered the Graduate School in Ithaca in branches: Robert D. Ullrich '42. of Man- Cornell University Medical College, February, 1940. Medical College Quarterly hasset, Field Artillery; Roy V. Johnson MAY 2.1, 1941 409

'43 of Tarentum, Pa., Ordnance; Robert more poignant this year, but I don't H. Flack '43 of Ithaca, Signal Corps. NOW, INΛfrTIME! think you need feel sorry for the boys. Clarke Brinckerhoff '42. of Mt. Vernon If you have sympathy, save it for the and Paul J. Weaver, Jr. '43 of Ithaca re- By Romeyn Berry parents. The boys are feeling fine, but ceived gold medals from Ithaca Post 2.2.1, the fathers and mothers are due to have American Legion, as the most valuable some pretty desperate moments. This year, Commencement marks the members of this year's ROTC rifle and Most of the Class of 1942. will come spot where Youth jumps off into the dark pistol teams. Paul M. Kelsey '43 of back to live out reasonably useful, without knowing where it is going to Ithaca received the US Field Artillery reasonably humdrum, lives. But some of land. But it has always done that, and I Association medal for outstanding sol- them won't. The Cornell Faculty is don't believe the boys mind much—or dierly characteristics in the first-year richly sprinkled right now with men who ever have. It is their elders who have to advanced course. once departed, presumably for France, suffer anxiety and doubt. Youth is sus- on their graduation day and then came tained by the anodyne of youth and the back to spend forty years teaching CLUBS TO HEAR BROADCAST spirit of excitement and adventure. Cornell Club of New England invites Physics 1, or French 5, or Philosophy 12.. What the boys really mind is the un- But there are many more men and boys all nearby alumni to a Reunion Smoker familiar responsibility of having to make May 2.3 in the Hotel Lenox, Boston, whose names are carved in stone down vital decisions. Once they've made the in the cloisters at the War Memorial. Mass., to hear the 7:30 Blue Network decision—or have had it made for them broadcast from Bailey Hall in Ithaca It's that cloister that's going to make it —the rest follows along easily and with- hard this week for everybody. and from the Reunion dinner at the out upsetting their serenity. After all, Hotel Astor, New York City. Other Cor- these boys are sure of a job. We weren't. nell Clubs throughout the country are That puts the Class of 1941 one up on HOTELMEN ELECT DIRECTORS also expected to meet to hear this most of its predecessors as of the date of Hotel Ezra Cornell, operated by stu- country-wide broadcast. Commencement. dents of Hotel Administration in Wil- Speakers in Ithaca will be President I dare say that half the graduates of lard Straight Hall May 9 and 10, brought Edmund E. Day and Dr. Hu Shih '14, Cornell never heard their Commence- a number of alumni among the hotelmen Chinese Ambassador to the United ment address because what they were who attended. States. The Glee Club will sing, the thinking about at the moment was Speakers at the banquet which pre- Chimes will ring out, and the Univer- whether they'd get out in time to catch ceded the annual dance in Willard sity's war activities will be briefly the D. L. & W.'s noon train for New Straight Memorial Room were Robert dramatized. From Bailey Hall, listeners York where they were going to see a K. Christenberry, managing director of will be taken to the grand ballroom of man about a job. the Hotel Astor in New York City, the Astor, where more than 1,000 Cor- Commencement was supposed to be President Edmund E. Day, Professor nellians of all Classes will hold a Re- over at noon. The train left the station Howard B. Meek, and Frank H. Briggs union Dinner. Professor Dexter S. Kim- at 11:05, an impossible connection. But '36, president of the Cornell Society of ball, Engineering, Emeritus, now with through the blessed configuration of the Hotelmen. the War Production Board in Washing- Ithaca landscape, it took a good fifteen At the annual meeting of the Society, ton, will preside; prominent Cornellians minutes for the Cannonball to work its these directors were elected from the will speak; and Dorothy Sarnoff '35 and way up South Hill and out of town. You even-year Classes of the Department of Arthur Kent 'x8 will sing. could catch it, you recall, at the second Hotel Administration: Harry A. Mac- Class Reunion gatherings will begin switch if you got there by iz zo, a Lennan '2.6, Royal Connaught Hotel, at 4 in private rooms at the Astor, and feasible ambition if your staff work had Hamilton, Ont., Can.; Frank J. Hynes alumni will dine at Class tables arranged been good and your hack from the livery '2.8, Hillcrest Hotel, Tampa, Fla.; Rob- by their local representatives. The Class stable functioned properly. You had to ert W. Lewis '30, New Capital Hotel, gatherings and dinner in New York will leap from your marks at the crack of the Frankfort, Ky.; Ralph H. Bevier '31, largely take the place of the usual Re- benediction, of course, and you needed Fairmont Hotel, Fairmont, W. Va.; unions in Ithaca, which many alumni help from one of the Brothers in the David M. Connor '34, F. & M. Schaefer cannot attend this year. Bond if you were to make it. He'd have Brewing Co., Brooklyn; Jacob S. Fassett to be waiting outside the Old Armory III '36, Jefferson Hotel, Watkins Glen; ITHACA WOMEN ELECT with your livery rig and suitcase, ready Urban A. MacDonald '38, Hotel Cadil- Annual meeting of the Cornell Wo- to relieve you of your cap and gown lac, Rochester; Lee E. Schoenbrunn '40, men's Club of Ithaca was May 9, at the (rented for the occasion from the late Haverford Court Hotel, Haverford, Pa.; home of Professor Frank B. Morrison, Louie Bement) and later to hunt up your Frederick R. Haverly '42., managing di- Animal Husbandry, and Mrs. Morrison. diploma and mail it to you. An undigni- rector, Hotel Ezra Cornell. It was a silver tea for the benefit of the fied exit, to be sure, from a dignified and Milton R. Shaw '34, manager of dining Federation Scholarship Fund, and the impressive ceremonial, but one that kept rooms at Willard Straight Hall, was first recipient of the Scholarship, Thelma you too occupied to feel the pain of elected first vice-president of the Society; E. Emile '45, played piano selections. parting. A hasty farewell to the helpful Richard D. Vanderwarker '33, Hotel Guests also were Dr. Egon Petri, Pianist- Brother, a leap into one of Mr. Seaman's Sherman, Chicago, 111., second vice- in-Residence, with whom Miss Emile is funeral hacks, and Youth was off into president; and Professor John Courtney studying, Mrs. Petri, and Thelma L. whatever the future might hold for it. '15 was re-elected secretary-treasurer. Brummett, Counselor of Students. The lines and stage directions have It is reported that at the annual picnic Newly elected officers of the Club are been changed with the years, but the at Taughannock Park, the baseball team Mrs. Robert L. Webster (Alice Schade) act itself remains essentially the same. of the even-numbered Classes, captained '31, vice-president; Rebecca S. Harris Commencement still ends everything; by Albert E. Koehl '2.8, administered '13, secretary; and Mrs. Arthur J. Mas- starts anything. There's still the same stinging defeat to the team of the odd- terman, MS '2.8, and Mrs. Paul H. Under- momentary heart-gripping—an instant year Classes which was managed co- wood (Eva Humphreys) '03 to the board of poignant recollection and misgiving— operatively (?) by Edgar A. Whiting '2.9 of directors. Gertrude B. Dean Ί8 re- when the Danby peaks shut off the view and William H. Harned '33. Neither the mains as president, and Mrs. William E. of the towers and the Lake for all time. box-score nor details of play were to be Bostwick (Mary North) '31 is treasurer. That instant will, of course, be even had at press time. CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

in France. The United States having en- events of the Summer Sessions and some CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS tered the war, most of these men trans- of the classes and field expeditions. FOUNDED 1899 ferred from ambulance service for which Guest cards admitting to these events they had enlisted to that of transporting may be obtained at the Summer Sessions 3 EAST AVENUE ITHACA, N. Y. munitions for the French Army. They office in Goldwin Smith Hall after June Published weekly during the University were joined by others, and as TMU 5x6 30. year, monthly during summer. this unit, in command of Captain Tink- Owned and published by the Cornell Alumni ham, left its base camp for the Aisne Association under direction of a committee front May 14, 1917, armed with carbines composed of R. W. Sailor '07, Phillips Wyman COMING EVENTS '17, and Walter C. Heasley, Jr. '30. Officers of and driving five-ton ammunition trucks, Time and place of regular Club luncheons are printed the Association: Creed W. Fulton '09, 1707 to become the first American combat separately as we have space. Notices of other Cornell Eye St., N.W., Washington, D. C, president; organization in active war service. events, both in Ithaca and abroad, appear below. Walter C. Heasley, Jr. '30, 3 East Ave., Ithaca, Military Records of Cornell Univer- Contributions to this column must be received on acting secretary; Archie C. Burnett '90,7 Water or before Thursday to appear the next Thursday. St., Boston, Mass., treasurer. sity in the World War lists 8,851 Cornel- Subscriptions: $4 a year in U. S. and possessions; lians who were in the armed forces, 2.64 SATURDAY, MAY 13 foreign, $4.50. Life subscription, $γj. Single copies, of whom lost their lives in consequence. Ithaca: Class Reunions if cents. Subscriptions are renewed annually unless Incomplete records indicate that more College of Architecture Alumni Association cancelled. Cornellians served as commissioned offi- meeting, White Hall, 9:30 Editor-in-chief R. W. SAILOR '07 cers in the last war than the combined Association of Class Secretaries meets, Wil- Managing Editor H. A. STEVENSON '19 total from the US Military Academy at lard Straight Hall, 10 Directors, Cornell Alumni Association, Assistant Editor NAN W. BRUFF '09 West Point and the US Naval Academy meet, Willard Straight Hall, 11 Office Manager RUTH RUSSELL '31 at Annapolis. Buffet luncheon, Willard Straight Memorial Assistant H. L. HOAG '40 Room, 12.-2. Federation of Cornell Women's Clubs meet- Contributors: ROOMS FOR STUDENTS Freshmen who enter the University ing, Willard Straight Hall, 2. ROMEYN BERRY '04 L. C. BOOCHEVER '12. Senior-alumni stag party, Library Slope, 4 June 2.9 will be assigned rooms in the R. F. HOWES '14 W. J. WATERS '17 Class dinners, as arranged, 6 University dormitories about June 1 and Reunion broadcast, President Day and Hu Printed at the Cayuga Press, Ithaca, N. Y. thereafter as their applications are re- Shih '14, NBC Blue Network, 7:30 ceived, according to Mrs. Anna Fielden Cornell Alumni Association annual meeting, Bailey Hall, 8:30 WAR MEMORIAL SERVICE Grace Ίo, Manager of Residential Halls. New York City: Class Reunions and Cornell For those entering next September and dinner, Hotel Astor, 4 Twenty-five years, to the day, after a for present students who apply for rooms Boston, Mass.: Cornell Club Reunion Smoker, Cornell unit carried the first American in the dormitories, drawing will be to hear broadcast from Ithaca and New flag to the front in combat in World York dinner, Hotel Lenox, 7 July 1. War I, the University will hold a me- SUNDAY, MAY 14 morial service at the War Memorial. DETAIL SUMMER PROGRAMS Ithaca: Mortar Board breakfast, 9 Sunday noon, May Z4, in the presence Quill and Dagger breakfast, Willard Announcement of the expanded Sum- Straight Hall, 9 of some of the alumni who were mem- mer Sessions may now be obtained on re- Sphinx Head annual meeting, Tomb, 10:30 bers of that first Cornell unit commanded quest to Professor Loren C. Petry, Direc- Memorial service, War Memorial, 12. by the late Edward I. Tinkham Ί6, tor of the Summer Sessions. It contains Academic procession & baccalaureate ser- simple ceremonies are planned rededicat- mon, Rev. George A. Buttrick, Bailey complete information about the four Hall, 4 ing Cornellians and the University to the Summer Sessions of varying terms and Class Day and Senior singing, Goldwin American cause. A committee headed by the fifteen-week summer term that will Smith portico, 7 Trustee Robert E. Treman '09 has in- offer instruction continuously from Com- MONDAY, MAY 2.5 vited some eighty-five living members mencement Day, May 2.5, to September Ithaca: Five-week Summer Session opens of the Tinkham unit and other alumni 12.. Registration for the first five-week Commencement, Barton Hall, 11 Baseball, Dartmouth, Hoy Field, 2.30 who received the Congressional Medal Summer Session, Professor Petry says, is of Honor, Distinguished Service Cross, more than 300, composed almost entirely WEDNESDAY, MAY 2.7 Hanover, N. H.: Baseball, Dartmouth and top-ranking British and French of Cornell undergraduates many of whom decorations, to come to Ithaca for the will take technical courses in prepara- FRIDAY, MAY 19 ceremonies. A number have replied that tion for entering military service. New York City: Intercollegiate track meet they will be here. Attending also will Veterans' annual dinner of the ICAAAA, The Announcement contains a com- be alumni of Reunion Classes, members Cornell Club, 7 plete listing of the courses offered in the of the Faculty, Naval Reserve officers SATURDAY, MAY 30 two Summer Sessions of five weeks each, detailed here, and Seniors and their Ithaca: Baseball, Columbia, Hoy Field, 2.130 the regular six-weeks' Summer Session Commencement guests. New York City: Intercollegiate track meet June 2.9 to August 8, the eleven-week Syracuse: Regatta, Syracuse, three crews, Treman will preside, and after the Summer Session June 2.9 to September 12., Onondaga Lake National anthem by the ROTC Band and those in Chemistry, Physics, and MONDAY, JUNE I and an invocation by the Rev. Edward Military Science and Tactics which will Ithaca: Summer terms in Architecture, Engi- T. Horn '19, Romeyn Berry '04 will be given for the summer term of the Col- neering, Law, Veterinary open speak briefly on behalf of the alumni. leges of Engineering, Architecture, Vet- SATURDAY, JUNE 2.7 Trustee John L. Collyer, president of the erinary, and the Law School. Ithaca: First five-week Summer Session ends Class of '17 here for its Twenty-five-year The booklet tells also about admission MONDAY, JUNE 2.9 Reunion, will place a wreath in the War requirements, fees, living accommoda- Ithaca: Six-week and eleven-week Summer Sessions open Memorial cloister as a tribute to the tions, and outlines the summer program war dead. President Edmund E. Day will of recreation and public events. A weekly SATURDAY, AUGUST 8 Ithaca: Six-week Summer Session closes speak for the University, and the pro- calendar of concerts, lectures, excursions, gram will close with "Taps." and all public events will be published MONDAY, AUGUST 10 Ithaca: Second five-week Summer Session opens Twenty-two Cornellians, recruited here June i9 to August 8. by Captain Tinkham as a Cornell unit of Alumni and their families who spend SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 12. Ithaca: Eleven-week and five-week Summer the American Field Service, sailed from summer holidays in Ithaca are again in- Sessions close New York City April 14, 1917, for duty vited to attend for a few days the public MAY ZI, 411 ON THE CAMPUS AND DOWN THE HILL INTERFRATERNITY COUNCIL has NAVAL TRAINING STATION on Sen- decreed that there shall be no summer THEME of this year's Senior Ball is eca Lake about twenty-five miles north rushing or pledging of Freshmen. Rush- "Blues in the Night." Whether this and west of Ithaca was announced last ing will start Sunday evening, September theme was chosen because the commit- week by the Secretary of the Navy. 2.7, before Freshman registration, and tee likes the popular song of this title or Construction cost will be $15,000,000, the system of preferential bidding at a because it typifies the feeling of the Class, and 30,000 men will be trained there. central headquarters used last year is was not disclosed. The dance, unlike The new Naval station will be on the again prescribed. previous Senior Balls will not be limited east shore of Seneca Lake, north of Wil- to Seniors only. It is May 23 in Willard lard. It is one of four to be built for the SOPHOMORE SMOKER met with a Straight Memorial Room. Frederick M. Navy; the others in Idaho, Maryland, succession of vicissitudes this year. To Shelley III '42 is chairman of the com- and California. obviate temptation of interference with mittee. the Freshman banquet, the committee SIXTY JUNIORS in the ROTC advanced set another date than the evening the Field Artillery course spent a recent week Freshman gathered. Then it was post- were made by Elmer S. Phillips '32. in end at Pine Camp, where they were poned, and finally announced for May the Campus studios of Station WHCU. guests of the Camp, observed artillery ii, with. Tony Galento, former heavy- So far, eighteen episodes have been pro- firing, and inspected the motorized equip- weight prizefighter, as the chief attrac- duced and sent by the State War Council ment of the 4th Armored Division. They tion. The morning of the event, how- to thirty-five radio stations in New went in command of Captain Clifton W. ever, the Sun announced cancellation of York State. Loomis '35 and Lieutenant Frank P. the smoker because Galento could not Boyle '39. come, and said that money paid for CLASS OF '41 men last week elected tickets would be refunded. James L. Kraker, Jr. their Class secre- RECENT VISITOR at the University, tary. Son of James L. Kraker '12. of with his wife and their eleven-year-old STUDENT COUNCIL, organizing last Beulah, Mich., he is a member of Kappa son, was Eduardo Luque y Diaz' 2.3. He week under the new president, Roy B. Sigma and Quill and Dagger; holder of a is chief engineer of the Mexican Power Unger '43, elected Louis G. Helmick, Jr. McMullen Regional Scholarship in En- and Light Co. in Mexico City. '43 vice-president and treasurer, and gineering; was business manager of the Robert W. Ballard '44 secretary. 1942. Cornellian. Women's Class secre- PAN-HELLENIC COUNCIL decreed last tary is M. Grace Agnew of Great Neck. week that until rushing starts September PRESIDENT DAY announced at the an- Student in Arts and Sciences, she is a 2.7, members of sororities are forbidden nual Student Council banquet last week member of Pi Beta Phi, was vice-president to wear sorority pins from their arrival that the University budget for next year of the Dramatic Club and president of in Ithaca. Council members, however, includes an appropriation of $1,000 for her Junior Class. will wear their Pan Hellenic badges at the work of the Council. all times and are authorized to answer FACULTY and Ithaca artists exhibited questions from Freshmen. ANNUAL SALE and show of Aberdeen- their paintings in the Willard Straight Angus cattle in the stock judging Hall art gallery last week. The collection DRAMATIC CLUB held its annual pavilion M&y 11 brought stockmen from included paintings of the Ithaca region year-end "Beano" in Willard Straight all over the East. The sixty-five animals by Professor William C. Baker '98, Hall May 19, with Professor Alex M. offered brought average price of almost Alison M. Kingsbury (Mrs. Morris Drummond, Director of the University $400. Manager of the sale was Myron M. Bishop), and Tarmo A, Pasto '32., Theatre, and Professor Henry A. Myers, Fuerst '30 of Pine Plains. drawing instructor in Agriculture. PhD '33, English, as speakers. New president of the Club is Jean M. Saks '43 ALPHA PHI won the women's intra- FORESTRY PRIZE of $50 given by the of Hackensack, N. J. Mary E. Rolfs '43 mural tennis finals, defeating Alpha Xi Charles Lathrop Pack Foundation for of Arlington, V(a., is vice-president; Delta, 6-0, 6-4, in singles matches and the best essay on "some subject related Margaret R. Dilts '43 of Pennington, 6-2. in doubles. Championship team was to forestry, treated from the public point N. J., secretary; Charlotte S. Kornit '43 composed of Katharine L. Rogers '43 of of view," was awarded to Earl L. Stone, of Albany, treasurer. West field, N. J., and Cynthia P. Adams Jr., Grad, of Spring water. He wrote on '41 of Detroit, Mich., singles; and Vir- "America's Forests, Now and After the RAVEN AND SERPENT, Junior wo- ginia M. Lowe '45 of Jenkintown, Pa., War." A second prize of $2.5 went to men's honor society, has as new president and Mary L. Treadwell '43 of Benton, Gaston E. Vivas-Berthier '43 of Caracas, Marjorie O. Sandy of Glenshaw, Pa. 111., doubles. Venezuela, whose subject was "Possi- Secretary-treasurer for next year is Grace bilities of Rubber Production in South M. Davis of Yonkers. "THE ALLEN FAMILY," a typical America." family in a small up-State city, and their ALPHA OMEGA ALPHA, honor soci- lives in war-time have been dramatized ROTC RIFLE TEAM received the Hearst ety in the Medical College in New York at the University for a radio serial that Trophy for second place in intercollegiate has initiated from the Class of '41 Wil- will be distributed to broadcasting sta- matches within the Second Corps Area. liam A. Geohegan '19 of Dayton, Ohio, tions in the form of recordings. Mrs. Presentation was made May 16 by Colo- Bruce M. Esplin '39 of Miami Beach, Katharine Small, editor of the College nel Edwin R. Van Deusen, USA, as one Fla., O. Whitmore Burtner, Jr. of New of Home Economics and her radio com- of his first official acts after he arrived in York City, Vincent A. Gorman of Kings- mittee of the College collected material Ithaca to relieve Colonel Clinton I. Mc- ton, Carlton C. Hunt, Jr. of New York on the effect of the war on a typical Clure as Commandant of the Corps. He City, Katherine W. Swift of Whitins- family. Five-minute scripts were written presented the trophy to Clarke Brincker- ville, Mass., and W. Francis Whitmore by Robert E. Gard, AM '38, and the hoff '42., captain of the rifle team, in the of Amityville. New members from the radio group of the University Theatre presence of his team-mates, Donald L. Class of '43 are Robert D. Deans '40 of under direction of Professor Alex M. Johnson '43, David B. Crane '44, Robert Ridge wood, N. J., and Francis S. Green- Drummond produced them. Recordings S. Doig '44, and George H. Martin '45. span '40 of Perth Amboy, N. J. 412. CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

war. He received the BA at Wesleyan University in 1933 and the BArch at Concerning Columbia in 1937, has been instructor in LETTERS Architecture since 1940. Subject to the usual restrictions of space and good THE FACULTY taste, we shall -print letters from subscribers on any side of any subject of interest to Cornellians. The The REV. FREDERICK W. BRINK, pastor of ALUMNI NEWS often may not agree with the senti- the First Presbyterian Church of Woods- ments expressed, and disclaims any responsibility PRESIDENT EDMUND E. DAY was the town, N. J., will succeed Dr. Hugh beyond that of fostering interest in the University. principal speaker May 7 at the ninety- Moran as University pastor for Presby- fifth anniversary Charter Day cere- terian students, September 1. Brink re- monies of the College of the City of New ceived the AB at Middlebury College in DEVOTION TO CORNELL York. He told 1,500 students, faculty 1933, the Bachelor of Theology at To THE EDITOR: members, and alumni of City College Princeton Theological Seminary in 1936, I noticed the "personal" in the that "Americans must recognize and de- the Master of Sacred Theology at Temple ALUMNI NEWS on the occasion of my fend the three great loyalties: personal, University in 1940, and will receive the birthday. It was very full and complete institutional and ideational loyalties Doctorate in the department of church and I appreciate very much the compli- upon which the nation is built . . . We history at Temple in June. He is a mem- ment of its insertion in the NEWS. Your may have been pushed into this fight ber of Chi Psi. statement that I had been a Trustee at because we were stabbed in the back in Cornell for forty-one years rather startled the dark, but we must pay this off. Let me, but of course you are correct in your us know what we are fighting for and figures. I think perhaps in that time I let us make no mistakes. Let us keep NECROLOGY have at least established with those who faith with the great loyalties that make know me a reputation for steadfast de- life worth living. ..." votion to Cornell. I hope so. Ί6 AB—LEE CEYLON SHEARER, Sep- With good luck to you always, be- LOUISA W. FARRAND, daughter of the tember 8, 1941. He entered Arts from lieve me—FRANK H. HISCOCK '75 late President Livingston Farrand and Ithaca High School. His career as a Mrs. Farrand, has gone to England as banker began in 1916 with a banking ARMY TRAVELS a member of the staff of Bernard S. scholarship at the National City Bank of Somewhere in the South Pacific Carter for the American Red Cross. New York, New York City. He went for To THE EDITOR: the National City Bank to Buenos Aires, PROFESSOR ROBERT E. CUSHMAN, Gov- It has been a long time since I have Argentina, and Montevideo, Uruguay, ernment, has been appointed by Attorney written you and now I am writing from a and since 1936 had been manager of The General Biddle a member of the Enemy long way away. I was called to active National City Bank in Rosario de Santa Alien Hearing Board, an adjunct of the duty August 6 to Camp Forrest, Tenn. Fe, Argentina. He was the son of the late Department of Justice. After appre- Immediately we left on maneuvers in Professor John S. Shearer '93, Physics. hension of alien enemies by direction of Louisiana and returned from them the Brothers, Harold M. Shearer '2.1, Howard the Attorney General, the facts bearing first part of October. J. Shearer fzi. on their cases are reviewed by a district On December 13 I left Camp Forrest to board, for recommendation as to interne- '30—Mrs. R. Ellwood Wilson, Jr. go to Fort Sill, Okla., to the Field Artil- lery School there. January 13 I received a ment, parole, or release. The Attorney (DOROTHEA DAVIS) died suddenly May 9, General describes the work of these un- 1941, in Ignatio, Colo. She entered Arts wire that my battalion was moving out paid boards as "an extremely important from Ithaca High School and transferred of Camp Forrest, and that I was to pro- part of our war effort." to Home Economics, leaving in 1919. ceed immediately to Camp Forrest my- She was the daughter of the late Pro- self. I was at Fort Sill with my com- PROFESSOR BRISTOW ADAMS, Agricul- fessor E. Gorton Davis, Architecture, manding officer, and we drove together ture, told college news bureau heads at and Mrs. Davis who is living in Ithaca with another officer, arriving January their annual convention May 8 in at 2.13 Fall Creek Drive. She and her 17. The battalion had already moved, so Columbus, Ohio, that straight news is husband, who is the son of R. Ellwood we left for New York where we caught the best publicity. He also criticized the Wilson '17, lived in Albuquerque, N. M. up with them the night of January zi, amount and form of government press Her brother E. Gorton Davis, Jr. '36, is six hours after the boat was scheduled to releases. with the US Army Air Corps in Baton leave. However it hadn't done so yet, Rouge, La. Alpha Phi. and we saw later that we had plenty of DR. HERBERT M. MOORE, former Uni- time to spare. versity pastor of the Presbyterian Church, Finally we left New York in convoy, died May 7, 1941. Preceding Dr. Hugh A. '33 AB, '35 LLB—STEWART GORDON and arrived in Panama February 1, where Moran, he was University pastor from COOK, May 3, 1942., of blood poisoning, we stayed for one day. We still didn't 1913-19 but was on leave much of that at the Great Lakes, 111., Naval Training know where we were bound, but we time doing war relief in Europe. In 1910 Station. He entered Arts from the strongly suspected that our destination Dr. Moore became president of Lake Newark Valley High School. Following was Australia. On February 2.7 we Forest College, 111., where he had re- his admission to the Bar in 1935, he was entered the harbor of Melbourne and ceived the AB in 1896. His son, C. Her- secretary to US District Judge Harlan W. sighted land for the first time in twenty- bert Moore '17, is secretary of the Cor- Rippey, in Rochester, and continued as six days. Solid ground under foot was a nell Club of Milwaukee. his clerk when Judge Rippey became as- sociate judge of the New York Court of treat for sore eyes as well as feet, which COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY has awarded its Appeals. He continued as deputy clerk were shortly sore as we were marched five eighth Schermerhorn Traveling Fellow- of that Court until a few months ago miles to a park to get away from the dock ship to Charles H. Warner, Jr., Archi- when he enlisted in the Naval Reserve. area which was considered to be danger- tecture, as the result of a competition Three days before his death he received ous due to the arrival of the convoy. open to all graduates of the Columbia the rating of yeoman, second class. Five miles, after we had been on board for School of Architecture. His portrayal of Delta Theta Phi, Glee Club, University five weeks, was quite a bit for soft feet. a summer camp won the award of $1,500 Orchestra, Clef Club, State and Univer- The next day we were entrained and which will be held for him by Columbia sity scholarships. taken to an outlying city where we were University to be used for travel after the billeted. Here we were treated as the MAY ZI, 413 troops of a nation have never been treated RUSSELL ΊO last February in San Fran- before. The Australians could not do cisco, Cal., before a meeting of the enough for us. I was billeted with four Concerning American Association of School Admin- other officers at the house of an Austral- istrators. The problems Dean Russell ian doctor. He and his wife had a little THE ALUMNI outlines are four: "For the school ad- girl, Prudence, and a little boy, John, Personal items and newspaper clippings ministrator, How to administer educa- who couldn't get over the strange about all Cornellians are earnestly solicited tion as a part of community services and "accent" the American soldiers talked maintain efficiency of the educational with. We spent one afternoon there '84—Mrs. Molly Merrill Rose, wife of process; For the political scientist, How buying the kids toys. I think we had HUDSON P. ROSE, retired real estate man, to support education from federal funds more fun buying them than the kids died May 11 at their home, 940 Park and at the same time maintain the con- ever will playing with them. The Avenue, New York City. She was a trol of the mind in the localities; For the doctor's wife said she was glad we were former director of the Lafayette Guild teacher,. How to teach people to pull leaving for only one reason; she was and of the Winfield Day Nursery. together like a college crew and not like afraid we would spoil her children. •90 BS (Arch); Ί6 BArch—Office of slaves in a galley; For all Americans, And maybe she was right. ARTHUR N. GIBB in Ithaca he has closed How to be peaceful and kind, and at the The Austrailians are people that are "for the duration." Gibb has been an same time control the gangsters locally, very much like our own people, and after architect in Ithaca for fifty years and nationally, and internationally." Dean the war we will see many American boys lives at 102.2. Stewart Avenue. His Russell is the son of JAMES E. RUSSELL staying there. There are unlimited com- partner, JOHN V. LEONARD Ί6, lives at '87, who is dean-emeritus of Teachers mercial opportunities and our boys won't 42.1 West State Street. College which he organized as the first college of education in the world. miss them. '01 AB, Ίi PhD—Dr. EMILY G. A week after we left Melbourne we re- HICKMAN, professor of history at the turned and again embarked. A week later New Jersey College for Women since 1911 MEN we arrived at our present station. I can 192.7, spoke on "Total Mobilization of By Oscar G. Miller, Class Secretary 60 East Forty-second Street, New York City write nothing in the least informative, our Resources" at the twenty-second and as that would be of the most interest annual convention of the New Jersey Our Continuous Reunion Club will to you, I might as well quit. We are League of Women Voters May 14 at the meet at the Hotel Astor, New York healthy, happy, and have cigarettes and Essex House, Newark, N. J. Lecturer for City, at 4:00 p.m. Saturday, May 2.3. good food, so we'll get along. the Rutgers University Extension Serv- CHARLES (Chuck) C. CHEYNEY is with As I remember it, I have a two-year ice, Dr. Hickman is president of the the Buffalo Forge Co. and resides at 2.55 subscription for the NEWS that will take League of Nations Association of New Lincoln Parkway. His son, HOUSTON C, me up to June, 1943. From now on please Jersey, chairman of the public affairs 'is a member of the Class of 1944. send it to me as Lt. R. T. Gilchrist, board of the National YWCA, and is ALFRED M. TILDEN was a recent visitor T. F. 6814-D, A.P.O. #916, c/o Post- active in the National Peace Conference to the big town. "Bun" is one of the master, San Francisco, Cal. and the National Committee for the largest citrus fruit growers in the South. —ROBERT T. GILCHRIST '40 Cause and Cure of War. His winter headquarters are at Orange- wood Groves, Winter Haven, Fla. He '04 AB—WILLIAM F. STRANG, senior has two daughters, and a son who is a member of the law firm of Strang, 'OLD WIDOWERS" DELIVER senior at Wesleyan. "Old Widowers' Issue" of The Cornell Bodine, Wright & Combs, Rochester, Widow is the last number for this year. was installed grand master of the Ma- 1912 MEN Conceived and carried out by the new sonic Lodge of New York State at the Charles A. Dewey, Class Secretary editor-in-chief, Knox B. Burger '43, who 161st annual convention held recently in Cornell Bldg., Pleasantville, N. Y. is the son of a former Widow art editor, New York City. He is a director of the JAMES D. BREW is teaching bacteriology Carl V. Burger '12., this issue includes Rochester Trust & Safe Deposit Co., and at the University of Tennessee, Knox- the offerings of a long succession of past president of the Rochester Bar ville, Tenn. gifted Widowers. There are illustrations Association. FREDERIC H. FAIRWEATHER is an archi- by Charles S. Cobb '05, Hendrik W. '07 ME—W. DiCKSON SHIELDS is an tect with the US Department of the vanLoon '05, Richard C. Bishop '09, engineer with E. W. Voss, machinery, Interior, Room 1001 Grace Securities Burger Ίz, Charles Baskerville, Jr. '19, Pittsburgh, Pa., and lives at τ.ij Chest- Building, Richmond, Va. John A. Hartell '14, Joseph C. Nobile nut Road, Sewickley, Pa. RALPH E. HOPKINS is shop superin- '14, Walter K. Nield '27, and one by the '07 CE—LAWRENCE J. CONGER is in tendent of the Athens plant of Ingersoll late Louis A. Fuertes '97. sales and product development with Rand, 762. South Main Street, Athens, Pa. Hugh Troy '2.6 contributes an illus- Lyon Metal Products, Inc., Aurora, 111. His son, RALPH E. HOPKINS, JR., is a trated '' Spinning Song for a Little Lady His home address is 50 North Mallory Junior in Administrative Engineering. in Black." Articles, mostly reminiscent, Avenue, Bat a via, 111. GEORGE C. SALISBURY is vice-president are by Romeyn Berry '04, George Jean of Burlington Mills, Wis., Inc. He lives Nathan '04, R. W. Sailor '07, Kenneth '09 ME—RALPH BOLGIANO is with The at 2.92.0 East Hampshire Street, Mil- Roberts '08, and Robert L. Bliss '30. Duraflex Corp., Baltimore, Md. His son, waukee, Wis. His son, GEORGE C. Not the least interesting is the editor's RALPH BOLGIANO, JR., is a Sophomore in Electrical Engineering. SALISBURY, JR., is a Junior in Arts. account of how it all came about, and a JAMES L. KRAKER is a fruit farmer in full page reproduction of letters of trans- '09 ME; '39—JOHN T. JOHNSON, JR. is Beulah, Mich. His son, JAMES L. KRAKER, mittal from the contributors. president of Akron Pump & Supply, Inc., JR., is secretary of the Class of '42.. Alumni may obtain copies of this num- and also of Simplifold Container Corp., ber by addressing Mrs. F. O. Smith at 500 Washington Street, Akron, Ohio. The Widow office, Strand Building, His home is at 2.32.4 Ridgewood Road. '14 ME—Lieutenant Colonel ALFRED Ithaca. The price is twenty cents. He is the father of JOHN T. JOHNSON '39. C. DAY is stationed at Fort Lewis, Wash. Ίo AB; '87 AB—Teachers College '14, '15 BS, '17 MF; '15 BS, Ί8 MF— FRESHMAN WOMEN have elected as Record of Columbia University for April FREDERIC H. MILLEN and Mrs. Millen their Sophomore Class president M. prints an address on "Post-War Educa- (MABEL G. BECKY) '15 live in Pompton Elizabeth Rumpf of Garden City. tion" delivered by Dean WILLIAM F. Lakes, N. J. Their son, Frederic N. Mil- CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

len, received his wings and commission ington, BOB CARR in Buffalo, and HOW- '19—Captain EDWIN C. HIGBEE is in as second lieutenant, May 6, at Brooks ARD LUDINGTON in Rochester fighting it the tanks and combat vehicles division Field, Tex. Another son, David D. Mil- out for second honors. of the Ordnance Department, US Army, len, is an Army aviation cadet in training CHAN BURPEE and DON MACLAY of at Cleveland, Ohio. He was president of at Bennettsville, S. C. Philadelphia were in Ithaca for Cornell Higbee Fur Ranch of Canada. His home 1915 MEN Day, chaperoning prospective Cornel- is at 2.349 Cedar Road, Cleveland. lians. BERT CUSHING, from Buffalo, was '2.0, '2.1 BChem—DONALD C. BLANKE By Hugh C. Edmiston, Correspondent also there on a similar mission. Bert's Short Hills, N. Y. and Mrs. Blanke, the former Catherine son "BUD," a Sophomore, starred in V. Baldwin of Greenwich, Conn., have Seen in Ithaca, dining in the Dutch Carl Snavely's practice football game a daughter, Cynthia, born May 8. Kitchen Saturday night, May 9: TOM staged for the benefit of the high and NOLAN and his lovely older daughter up prep school guests. 1921 MEN on a visit to Freshman son in the Uni- CHAN, DON, and your secretary en- By Allan H. Treman, Class Secretary versity. Correction: Charming daughter joyed WALT HEASLEY'S hospitality at a Ithaca, N. Y. turns out to be old man Nolan's wife meeting with Mrs. ANNA FIELDEN GEORGE MUNSICK is chairman of the (and charming!). GRACE ΊO and WALT to make final plans committee in charge of blood donations Mrs. Edmiston was accompanied by for our Reunion. All Eastern centers will in Hartford, Conn., which has perma- your humble reporter and their daughter be represented, with prizes for distance nent headquarters and expects to have a Cornelia down from Wells for a May Day going to ELS FILBY of Kansas City and mobile unit in operation in about a month blowout. Oz PRIESTER of Davenport, Iowa. in order to build up a store of blood Flitting from table to table was ED About half of the fellows have re- plasma. He wrote that he was much in- Dixon, making all Classmates welcome. ported that they will find a bunk in terested in the picture on page 345 of the GEORGE W. DORRANCE has had his own their fraternity houses or won't go to April 16 ALUMNI NEWS showing opera- insurance agency at 912. Southern Stand- bed at all on the night of May ZT,, which tion of the Rochester Red Cross blood ard Building, Houston, Tex., since 1930. shows that Class spirit can't be downed, donor unit in Ithaca. Lives at 1604 North Boulevard, and has regardless of wars. two daughters and a son, George W. To the fellows who can't get back: Jr., age ten. '23—Lieutenant Colonel ALBERT S. We'll be thinking of you and wishing BARON is in the Anti-Aircraft Artillery 1916 MEN you were with us. Our Twenty-fifth at Fort Bliss, Tex. He has two children, By Weyland Pfeiffer, Class Secretary\ won't be a celebration but it will be a Albert, twelve, and Patricia, nine. z$i Madison Road, Scarsdale, N. Y. Reunion; a get-together of old buddies who will look forward to greater op- '24 ME; '93 MME—EDWIN W. FOL- The 1916 Class is planning a real get-, SOM is materials officer of the Third portunities for our "biggest and best— together for that Reunion at the Hotel Reconnaissance Squadron, Mitchell Field. Cornell's Biggest and Best"—when the Astor, Saturday, May 15. The committee Before being called to active duty last world has been made safe for free peoples wants to have your reservation in at July, he was a supervisor for New Eng- once. Send it to New York Cornell Re- in the pursuit of health, happiness, and cooperation. land Mutual Life Insurance Co. in Tampa, union Committee, Room 12.60, 630 Fifth Fla. A son, Allan Reed, was born last Avenue, New York City. December 9. The baby is the grandson The following have said they plan to of EDSON F. FOLSOM '93. attend: HAROLD BACHE, TED JAMISON, '2.6 BS—JOHN L. SLACK, who received GEORGE CRABTREE, FRED POTTER, SAM the AB at Lafayette College, Easton, HICKS, FRANK THOMAS, JOE INNIS, MEYER Pa., in 192.4, is a captain in the US Army WILLETT, HARRY BYRNE, BUB PFEIFFER, Air Corps and is stationed at Miami BIRGE KINNE, GRANT SCHLEICHER, and Beach, Fla. PAUL SANBORNE. '2.6; '97 AB; '99 AB, '01 AM—Captain FRANCIS T. HUNTER married Jane Bill of New Rochelle, May 15. After a two GEORGE W. KNOX is in the 2.12-th Coast Artillery (Antiaircraft). He recently weeks' trip, they will live at Hampshire visited his aunts, Helen M. Knox '97 House, 59 Central Park West, New York and Sara C. Knox '99, in Forest Home, City. Ithaca. '2.7 LLB—EDWARD J. CASEY is a lawyer Ί9Π in Ithaca with offices at in South Tioga Street. He is US Conciliation Commis- U. —in '42" sioner for Tompkins County. By Herbert H. Johnston, Class Secretary 81 Ύacoma Avenue, Buffalo, N. Y. '2.% 'x8 BChem—FREDERICK E. BACON AT LAST 1917 has received a favorable is metallurgist for Union Carbide & "break" even though a small one. Ex- Electrometallurgical Laboratories, Niagara Falls. He lives at 608 Buffalo emption from gasoline rationing in cer- *i8—JOHN S. KNIGHT (above) was tain sections of the Eastern States has elected vice-president of the American Avenue, Niagara Falls. boosted our Reunion prospects immeas- Society of Newspaper Editors at their 'x8, '2.9 BS—ALBERT J. MCALLISTER urably. Western New York and Pennsyl- recent convention in New York City. He has been commissioned a second lieuten- vania attendance will be doubled with is president of Knight Publications, Inc.; ant in the US Army at Fort Benning, Ga. the new ruling. Our Twenty-five-year owns and publishes The Akron (Ohio) He received basic training at Camp Rob- Reunion still promises to be our best, if Beacon Journal, The Miami (Fla.) erts, Cal., and served in the intelligence not our biggest, and there are probabili- Herald, The Miami News, and The De- division before entering the Officers' ties that our 1937 records will be sur- troit (Mich.) Free Press. Member of Phi Training School at Fort Benning. passed. Sigma Kappa, he left the College of Arts '2.9 BS—ARTHUR C. HUNT has re- EDDIE ANDERSON and his New York and Sciences in May, 1917, for the Army, ceived a commission as a lieutenant(jg), committee will send at least fifty to became a second lieutenant of Infantry USNR, and is stationed in Boston, Mass. Ithaca, with "SHEP" SHEPARD in Wash- attached to the Air Service in France. His engagement to Jane White of Chi- MAY II, 1941 4*5

cago, III. and Bellaire, Fla., was recently '35, '36 CE—JAMES F. GOODWIN mar- when you arrive, don't forget to register announced. ried Winnie F. Anderson of Balboa, so we'll know where to find you. See you 'z9—Captain THEODORE C. OHART was Canal Zone, in New York City, March in Ithaca! recently promoted to the rank of major, i9 He is with the Republic Steel Corp., Mrs. Calvin H. Lawrence (WINNIE Ordnance Department, US Army, at Pica- Port Henry, having recently resigned HUNNIFORD) lives at 449 Mountain View tinny Arsenal, Dover, N. J., where he is from the special engineering division of Avenue, Orange, N. J. the Panama Canal. stationed. Before being called to active Men duty he was a sales engineer for the lamp CLASS OF 1936 By William G. Rossiter, Class Secretary department, General Electric Co., Sche- Melville Shoe Corp., 2j West Forty-third Street, nectady. Women New York, N. Y. By Mary T. Nigro, Class Secretary '30; '39—JAMES P. DONOHUE, partner 68 Bird Avenue, Niagara Falls, N. Y. Here's a note of interest from ED in the plumbing and heating firm of ZALINSKI for all those who will be in or We've heard of two new arrivals: Donohue & Halverson, Ithaca, has gone near New York City May z.^. He says: Congratulations go to MAIDA (HOOKS) with Bendix Aviation Co., Rochester, "That old song titled 'She had to go and DOUG LEWIS '35 and to ALLEGRA but he is working out of Brooklyn. His and lose it at the Astor' has been changed (LAW) and Harry Lotz. Maida and wife, the former ROSEMARY WALLACE to ' We'll see you at the Astor May 13!— Doug announce the arrival of Roger M. '39, and their three sons are in Ithaca at and how!' Ye olde Fifth Reunion! Boy, Lewis '6x, April 2_. They have moved to their home on Berkshire Road. are we getting long gray beards! But let 12. Gloucester Court, Great Neck. me tell you we've really got everything '31 AB—Coronet magazine for May Allegra and Harry have a daughter, fixed up swell. A private room and all contains an article, "Hitler's Baby Lito, born last Easter Sunday, named for the fancy fixings for only $4.50. Eight Boomerang," by ERNEST R. POPE who LiTo W. LAW '05, the baby's grandad. hours of drinks, banquet, speeches, was a foreign news correspondent in They live close by the Law home, twelve-piece orchestra—and stuff! The Germany for six years. "Kaydids," in Collins. '31 AB—EDWARD J. MINTZ has been party begins in our private room at 4 BLENDY writes that ELEANOR ELSTE p.m. Saturday, the 2.3rd,- banquet at 7 commissioned a second lieutenant in the was married May 2. to Charles B. Gump, p.m. at the Hotel Astor, Forty-fourth US Army Air Corps and is stationed at Jr. They will live in Bellevue, Pa. Jo Mitchell Field. He received the LLB at Street & Broadway, New York City. BIDDLE McMeen and RUTH WISCH Cooley This is our last chance to have a real St. Lawrence University and was practic- were bridesmaids. ing law in New York City. Cornell party until after the Men war, so tell all our fellow Cornellians to '31 AB—THOMAS J. REISIS with Season- By Charles E. Dykes, Class Secretary set this date aside now! We're counting good & Mayer, 2.04 Ingalls Building, 22j South Albany St., Ithaca on everybody anywhere near New York Cincinnati, Ohio, and lives at 711 Clin- BERNIE MARCUS married Sylvia Peli- to come. And, incidentally, we're short ton Spring Street. He has a daughter, kow March 15. They are living in Mt. of correct addresses. Please send change Mary, born last September. Vernon. in your address to BILL ROSSITER." '32. BS—RALPH MUNNS has given up WALLY LEE is engaged to Doris Card of CHARLES SHUFF is now First Lieutenant his lease on the Coleman Hotel, Lewis- Bridgeport, Conn. ShufF, Army Air Corps pilot stationed town, Pa., and is now located at his other BOB SAUNDERS and wife are the proud somewhere in California. Nice going hotel, The Cambria, in Ebensburg, Pa. parents of a son. Their address is 4x0 "Charlie"; it's a far cry from your '33 BS—WILLIAM W. SHIELDS is now West Court Street, Ithaca. former office in the Chrysler Building, assistant manager of the Statler Hotel in DAVE AMSLER married Georgia Butler, but a lot more interesting. Cleveland, Ohio. March 14. They are living in Syracuse NEWELL CUMMINGS goes into the Naval where Dave is with Pass & Seymour Co. '33 BS—Lieutenant SAMPSON DUTKY is Air Corps shortly, keeping '37 evenly stationed at Fort Bragg, N. C. CLARE DUGAN is stationed at Fort represented in both Navy and Army. Leonard Wood, Ohio. ALFRED W. (Al) WOLFF, who is in the '34 AB, '36 ME, '37 MME; '05 MME; Carbon Sales Division of National Car- '01 AB—JAMES F. HIRSHFELD is an engi- CLASS OF 1937 bon Co., has been transferred to the neer with Stran Steel division of Great Women Pittsburgh area and lives at 2.Z0 Osborne Lakes Steel Corp., Detroit, Mich., and Lane, Sewickley, Pa. lives at 2.530 Iroquois Avenue, Detroit. By Carol H. Cline, Class Secretary lΰj β Cumberland Avenue, Dayton, Ohio A second daughter, Susan Buhl, was born recently. He is the son of the late Have you written to GRACE JONES CLASS OF 1938 Henley (Mrs. Earl B.), 10 Monroe CLARENCE F. HIRSHFELD '05 and Mrs. Women Street, New York City, to tell her you Hirshfeld (ELIZABETH WINSLOW) ΌI. By Mary E. Dixon, Class Secretary will be in Ithaca for that Frivolous Fifth 34 Crane Avenue, White Plains, N. Y. '34, '35 BS—ARTHUR C. KENAGA has Reunion May 2.3? If you haven't, come CAY STRIFE was married on April 18. been appointed commissary manager of a along anyway! You have all received the She is now the wife of Captain William new ordnance plant in Aberdeen, Miss., Class news letter from EL RAYNOR and Laird of the US Army, and they are being built by the government and which MARGIE KINCAID, and know what good living at Fort Wadsworth, N. Y. will be operated by Procter & Gamble Co. times are in store for you. If you have HELEN DAWLEY Wright's address is '35 AB—Lieutenant PEREZ B. HOWARD your undergraduate Class blazer or your RD 2., Warren Road, Ithaca. is detailed to the Adjutant General's '37 hat and jacket costume from our first Since we are low on news, we'll an- Office, First Corps Area, Boston, Mass. Reunion, be sure to wear it. Saturday nounce the acquisition of a Columbia His engagement to Nancy Amend of noon, afternoon, and evening we are Master's degree by your secretary, who Cataumet, Mass., was recently an- promised "big doings," so plan to be in fondly hopes never to go to college nounced. Ithaca all day Saturday at least. And

Use the CORNELL UNIVERSITY PLACEMENT BUREAU Willard Straight Hall H. H. WILLIAMS '25, Director 416 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

Men ring! She is engaged to Sergeant Edward By William C. Kruse, Class Secretary Nerli, Fordham Law School '39, now in Hemphill, Noyes C& Co. Kingsway Apartments, Wayne, Pa. Pine Camp. After an early summer JOHN D. HAMMOND is a senior at the wedding, Peg has a job with Sullivan & Members New York Stock Exchange College of Physicians and Surgeons, Cromwell, 48 Wall Street, New York Columbia University. He recently be- City, beginning September 1. Her Ithaca 15 Broad Street New York came engaged to Daphne L. Bell who address is 109 Triphammer Road. graduated from Vassar College in 1939 Send mail to CHARLOTTE HITCHCOCK at Box 83, Delevan, N. Y., where she INVESTMENT SECURITIES and from The Royal Academy of Dra- matic Art in London. teaches school. Jansen Noyes '10 Stanton Griffis '10 GUNNER VAUGHN recently became the I saw GEBBY CALLAGHAN (Mrs. JOHN L M. Blancke Ί5 Willard I. Emerson '19 proud papa of a little girl. He is secretary T.) SHEEHAN who is temporarily in and in charge of priorities for the Vaughn Ithaca. Mail should be sent to her home BRANCH OFFICES Machinery Co. of Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio. at ii5 Lake Avenue, Saratoga. John '40 Albany, Chicago, Harrisburg, Indianapolis, The Vaughns' home address is 695 is in Camp Claiborne, La. Pittsburgh, Trenton, Washington Mentor Road, Akron, Ohio. LIBBY CLARK lives at 1804 South Grant BILL MCCLINTOCK is now Lieutenant Street, Arlington, Va., working with William F. McClintock, US Army Air Hott Shoppes. Corps, and he is an instructor at an air IANTHA SHELDON is now Mrs. A. base at Boise, Idaho. The same afternoon Russell Papero of Poughkeepsie and has Bill was commissioned, he married a baby boy, Daniel Vale, born April x6. The Bill of Rights Charlotte Lowry of Owego. Papero is a physical education teacher. BILL LUCE is in the Army and stationed Since graduation, Iantha had been work- Charter of American Liberty at Fort Devens, Mass. ing in the Vassar Nursery School at It deserves a place in every real American Rumor hath it that JOHNNY PERRY is Lincoln Center. home, office and school. You can now get in the Army. We would like to have some copies for yourself and your friends. Beauti- word from him. CLASS OF 1941 fully printed in blue, red and black on vellum Here's the dope about GEORGE HOLLEY. By Ruth E. Cothran, Class Secretary paper 12 x 16 neatly framed. Send $1.00 On Sunday, April 12., he got married. 403 Elmwood Avenue, Ithaca, N. Y. each for as many copies as you want, to His bride was Elizabeth H. Ellis of Stam- Another '41 baby to add to our list: ford, Conn. The Holleys live in Grosse Linda Rae, born April 2. to Mr. and Mrs. Point, Mich. BURTON MARKHAM. Both MELROSE (MAR- THE CAYUGA PRESS, INC. DICK BRELOS is in the Army, but we RIOTT) and Burt are Class of '41 and they 113 E. Green St., Ithαcα, N. Y. know not where. He can be reached by live in the Varna apartment house on mail at 5807 Main Street, Williamsville. Route 13 out of Ithaca. Stop in and look Bill's engagement was announced to over the new arrival if you're in the Jayn Funk of Williamsville last Christ- vicinity! R. A. HEGGIE & BRO. CO. mas Eve. BETTY HERROLD phoned me when she Jewelers to Cornellians Since 1875 was in town to leave news, that she's leaving her copy work for Science and We still make Quill & Dagger, Sphinx Head, 1939 MEN Maiura, Mummy, Aleph Samach, and other By Tom Book, Class Secretary Scientific Monthly in Lancaster, Pa., to pins and charms. Send us your orders. Box 96, Massena, New York be a biochemist in Gilliland Labora- 136 C. State St. Ithaca, N. Y. From HARVEY MCCHESNEY'S letter we tories, Marietta, Pa. have the further items: "JOHN EVANS is JOYCE HOVEY is student dietitian in a staff sergeant at Fort Belvoir, Va., Englewood Hospital, Englewood, N. J. THE PHILLIPS EXETER ACADEMY doing aerial photography mapping. JAMES ALEINE (Ruth) DE GRAW writes that 24TH SUMMER SESSION AUSTIN is working with his father on she's been doing psychiatric social work their farm in Hamlin. HAROLD MAYER at the Rochester State Hospital since Advanced work or review for admission was married in March, 1940, and is work- last July. Her address is 1600 South to school, college or the services ing for his father in Madison, Wis. JOHN Avenue, Rochester. July 7-August 28 CHURCH is working in Shidler, Okla., for Inquire: Director oί the Summer Session an oil company, and is married. GEORGE Men EXETER NEW HAMPSHIRE SCHAAF '38 is an ensign in the Naval By Ensign Raymond W. Kruse, Class Secretary 131 Washington Street, Brighton, Mass. Reserve. To continue, PAUL SCHAAF is working for Dravo Engineering Co. at Lieutenants BOB HOYLE and BILL KIRK KISKI SUMMER SCHOOL Newport News, as is CARL HARGER. have travelled somewhere westward and*have the address of A.P.O. 501, care All subjects for college entrance avail- ROBERT G. SMITH '42. is working for able under regular Kiski faculty. Combi- Pratt & Whitney in East Hartford doing Postmaster, San Francisco, Cal. nation of instruction with unexcelled re- flight test experimental work with their HERBERT COHEN is no longer Herbert creational activities in beautiful Allegheny test pilot. DANA WARING is there also. Cohen. He has changed his name to foothills. Saltsburg, Penna. (35 miles east HERBERT COGAN. Home address is 3199 of Pittsburgh on Route 80). RICHARD L. SMITH is working in New- port, R. I. FRED MEYERS is an ensign, Bedford Avenue, Brooklyn. USNR, and is now in Norfolk. JIM PHILIP (BUZZ) KUEHN is still another PENDERGRASS is also an ensign and is now of the 41'ers who have joined the ranks CORNELLIANS in Bermuda." Thanks for that fine letter of husbands. Buzz married May Holley Harvey. of Grosse Pointe Farms, Mich., sister of IN SERVICE GEORGE HOLLEY '38, March 14. Ushers Especially Enjoy the 1940 WOMEN at the wedding included HARRIS BARBER By Carol B. Clark, Class Secretary and DICK HAMILTON. BUZZ is with the ALUMNI NEWS 41 Laurel Ave., Binghamton, N. Y. Wisconsin Cold Storage Co., and he and Special Rate of $3 with Your PEG DUNWELL is finishing Law School May live now at 334 East Florida Street, Own Subscription very soon and is wearing a diamond Milwaukee, Wis. PROFESSIONAL Comfortable Living If s Easy To Visit Ithaca DIRECTORY Overnight From OF CORNELL ALUMNI

NEW YORK AND VICINITY PEN HARRY D. COLE Ί8 STATΪ REALTOR NEW YORK Business, Commercial and residential and NEWARK or properties in Westchester County READING TERMINAL, PHILA. Appraisals made. For thirty-eight years, we at RKO Proctor Building Mount Vernon, N. Y. WESTWARStandarD d LighTimt typee (Wa, a.mr. TimeEASTWAR) D Sheldon Court have been welcom- Read Down Dark type, p.m. Read Up RE A RET A*—Folded and interfolded Facial tissues ing Cornell students and making 11:05 111:45 10:20 Lv.NewYorkAr. 8:10 8:45 for the retail trade. , 11:20 H 2:00 ί10:35 Newark 7:54 8:29 S'WIPES*—A soft, absorbent, disposable tissue, them comfortable. We know boys, 11:15 t11:00 $10:15 Phila. 7:45 8:30 16:50 # 6:49 Ar.lTHACA Lv 11:45 12:58 packed flat, folded and interfolded, in bulk or and select ours to be congenial. 6:40 boxes, for hospital use. Sheldon Court rooms and suites Enjoy a Day or Week End FIBREDOWN*—Absorbent and non-absorben. are sturdily and completely fur- cellulose wadding, for hospital and commercial use. In Ithaca nished, well lighted, warm, and 6:40 oy6:54 9:28 ILv. ITHACA Ar. FIBREDOWN* CANDY WADDING—in O 111:32112:52 several attractive designs. clean. The building is modern, 9:35 z9:45 °12:45 |Ar.Buffalo Lv. I 8:3θhθ:O5 " Pittsburgh " 10:30 11:35 FIBREDOWN* SANITARY SHEETING— 7:25 11:15 t virtually fireproof, quiet. Boys like 7:15 5:20 " Cleveland " 12:30 2:15 For hospital and sick room use. it here, with a good restaurant, 8:40 12:30 Ar. Chicago Lv. 10:10 *Trade Mark reg. U.S. Pat. Off. bookstore, and barber shop all tDaily except Sunday. °Daily except Monday. THE GENERAL CELLULOSE COMPANY, INC. XSunday only. ^Monday only. GARWOOD, NEW JERSEY under one roof. sArrives 6:49 a.m., yLeaves 7:03 a.m., zArrives 10:20 a.m. on Monday D. C Taggart Ί6 - - - Pres.-Treas. Desirable accommodations for 7 New York sleeper open to 8 a.m. at Ithaca, and at 1942.-43 are- still available. Write 9 p.m. from Ithaca Air Conditioned DeLuxe, Coaches, Parlor, Sleeping, STANTON CO.—REALTORS for folder. Club Lounge and Dining Car Service. GEORGE H. STANTON '20 Special Summer Rate $3 and $4 Real Estate and Insurance a week, Single Room MONTCLAIR and VICINITY SHELDON COURT Arthur R. Congdon, Mgr. ITHACA, N.Y. Mi RAILROAD 16 Church St., Montclair, N. J., Tel. 2-6000 THE ROUTE OF THβ BUCK-DIAMOND The Tuller Construction Co. J. D. TULLER, '09, President BUILDINGS, BRIDGES, DOCKS & FOUNDATIONS WATER AND SEWAGE WORKS A. J. Dlllenbeck Ί1 C. P. Beylαnd -31 C. E. Wallace '27 T. G. Wallace '34 C. E. Beve '38 95 MONMOUTH ST., RED BANK, N. J. In the Summertime When you come to New York this summer BALTIMORE, MD. you'll be wise to choose a beautiful and com- WHITMAN, REQUARDT & SMITH fortable part of town to stay in. Water Supply, Sewerage, Structural, In the heart of lovely, tree-lined lower Fifth Avenue, the Gros- Valuations of Public Utilities, Reports, Plans, and General Consulting Practice. venor provides large, airy rooms, fine air-conditioned restaurant EZRA B. WHITMAN, C.E. '01 G. J. REQUARDT, C.E. Ό9 and bar, quiet nights for restful slumber, and an inviting atmosphere B. L SMITH, CE. Ί4 that cloaks the guest with a sense of good-living that goes so far Offices in Baltimore and Albany, N. Y. to make a visit more rewarding. WASHINGTON, D. C. You'll like the varied advantages that bring so many New Yorkers THEODORE K. BRYANT to live at the Grosvenor the year 'round. LL.B. '97—LL.M. '98 Master Patent Law, G. W. U. Ό8 Patents and Trade Marks Exclusively Hotel Grosvenor 309-314 Victor Building FIFTH AVENUE AT 10TH STREET NEW YORK CITY KENOSHA, WIS. MACWHYTE COMPANY All rooms have tub and shower bath and circulating ice water. Single from $3.50 to $5.00—with twin beds from $5.00 to $8.00. Manufacturers of Wire and Wire Rope, Braided Wire Rope Sling, Aircraft Tie Rods, Strand and Cord. Literature furnished on request DONALD R. BALDWIN Ί6, Treas. JOHN L. SHEA '2.6, Resident Mgr. JESSEL S. WHYTE, M.E. Ί3, PRES. & GEN. MGR. Owned by the Baldwin Family R. B. WHYTE, M.E. Ί3, Vice President in Charge of Operations

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Your Home In Philadelphia HOTEL HOTEL ESSEX 13TH AT FILBERT STREET "One Square From Everything" John P. Masterson, '33, Asst. Manager 225 Rooms—Each With Bath Air Conditioned PARK AVE 51 st TO 52nd STS NEW YORK Restaurants HARRY A. SMITH f3O . . MANAGER Cleveland: B. F. Capp '29, Louis J. Read '38. Detroit: Ernest Terwillίger '28, J. W. Gainey '32, J. Wheeler '38. New York: R. W. Steinberg '29, L. W. Maxson '30, The Grosvenor Hotel H. Glenn Herb '31, W. C. Blankinship '31, R. H. STEPHEN GIRARD HOTEL FIFTH AVENUE AT 10TH STREET Blaisdell '38, Bruce Tiffany '39. CHESTNUT ST. WEST OF 20TH Pittsburgh: N. Townsend Allison '28. For those who desire Modern Comfort and Quietness PHILADELPHIA, PENNA. in a Convenient Location Nearest downtown Hotel to Penna. 30th St. 300 Rooms—all with tub and shower bath CENTRAL NEW YORK and B. & O. Stations Single from $3.50 Double from $5.00 WILLIAM H. HARNED '35 . . Manager DONALD R. BALDWIN Ί6 JOHN L. SHEA '26 A Cornell Welcome Awaits You Treasurer Manager Owned by the Baldwin Family THE HOTEL CADILLAC ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. Elm and Chestnut Sts. HOTEL LATHAM ROCHESTER, NE\V YORK "Air Conditioned for Year1 Round Comfort" Hfii mmmmm m mma CITY 28TH ST. at 5TH AVE. - NEW YORK CITY Urban A. MacDonald '38, Manager 400 Rooms - Fireproof :.v* ff&fgf ^'V^ ****** ^ SPECIAL RATES FOR FACULTY DRUMLINS SYRACUSE AND STUDENTS Open All Year Round •;•;'•• C?N THE BomnwktM K ' f J. Wilson Ί9, Owner CAFETERIA DINING ROOM TAP ROOM DANCING EVERY SATURDAY NIGHT Winter Sports AKE this your home when you motor WASHINGTON, D. C. M to New York. Park your car free, com- R. S. BURLINGAME '05, President mute to the city and avoid traffic hazards, annoyances, and worries. The Beechwood Hotel Summit, New Jersey QφMonJjotel Ben B. Adams, '37, Managing Director

On Route 97 to Ithaca... Recommended by Bob Bliss Hotel Minisink Wagar's Coffee Shop Port Jervis, N.Y. Western Avenue at Quail Street on Route 20 1715 G Street, Northwest, Washington, D.C. For Luncheon—Dinner—Overnight ALBANY, N. Y. M. JOHNSON '22 - Manager Henry Schick, Sp. '36, Manager Managed by Bertha H. Wood CENTRAL STATES NEW ENGLAND SOUTH

Stop at the ... HOTEL ELTON WATERBURY, CONN. "A New England Landmark*' Bud Jennings '25, Proprietor

Cornelliαns EAT and TRAVEL CHARLESGATE Restricted Clientele In Detroit it's. CONVENIENT LOCATION Five Thousand Loyal Alumni Prefer New England Food to Patronize the THE WARDELL HOTEL* CORNELL HOSTS QUIET SPACIOUS ROOMS Woodward Avenue at Kirby Cornell and Faculty Discounts Whose Ads they Find Here 650 ROOMS WITH BATH VISIT REASONABLY IN BOSTON For Advertising at Low Cost write: Transient & Residential Robert J. Riley '24, Mgr. Robert Summers 41 Res. Mgr. 3 East Ave. ITHACA, N. Y.

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