13N INWίYIV TI3NLHOO Look, Pop! It's a Homer!" Not last week's game; not something that happened yesterday; not even a minute ago. But right now! Seeing things — miles away — at the very instant they happen! That's the new thrill that television now makes possible. UT television is destined to do more than the public — in factory, farm, and home. The B this for us. The foundation is laid for a new products and services made possible whole new industry—careers for artists; jobs for by their work have helped to produce the hundreds of engineers and thousands of skilled steady rise in the living standards of the workmen making television transmitters and re- American people. ceivers; jobs for thousands more selling and And right now, as television emerges from servicing this new product and providing the the laboratory to take its place among the raw materials required. These are important pos- ac lished marvels oί this age of electricity, o< V-\< I <•<-•< tic r^l f-/^l /α trί o< r\ι-\ -L . sibilities of television. these G-E pioneers are once again creating, not For more than 60 years, General Electric only "More Goods for More People at Less scientists, engineers, and workmen have Cost," but also MORE AND BETTER JOBS been finding new ways for electricity to serve AT HIGHER WAGES. G-E research and engineering have saved the public from ten to one hundred dollars for every dollar they have earned for General Electric GENERAL ( ELECTRIC

Please mention the NEWS ELL ALU I NEWS Subscription price $4 a year. Entered as second class matter, Ithaca, N. Y. Published weekly during the college year and monthly in July and August

VOL. XLII, NO . 4 ITHACA, , OCTOBER 19, 1939 PRICE, 15 CENTS

ALUMNI HOMECOMING for all alumni, their guests, and Columbia WOMEN WORK FOR FUND To Be November 4 alumni, undergraduates, and their friends. Club Federation Organizes Reservations already received for rooms A number of fraternities are planning Club and regional committees of the alumni dinners and meetings during the in and elsewhere Federation of Cornell Women's Clubs all in Ithaca indicate that many alumni week-end. over the country are renewing efforts for from near and far will be in Ithaca for Saturday night in the Drill Hall, the the Federation Scholarship Fund, with a the Alumni Homecoming week-end of Student Council will sponsor a Home- goal for this year of the principal needed coming Dance, for alumni and under- November 4. to endow three more scholarships to be Some events here, it is hoped, will be graduates both of Cornell and Columbia raised by next June. Mrs. R. H. Shreve reminiscent of the same November week- and their guests. The committee, headed (Ruth Bent ley) Όz, general chairman of end ten years ago, when the Varsity foot- by Richard E. Holtzman '41 of Millers- the Scholarship Fund committee, re- ball team beat Columbia, ιz-6, on burg, Pa. has announced the engagement ported to the executive committee meet- Schoellkopf Field. Again this year Co- of Al Donahue's orchestra for this, and ing in Ithaca October 7 that more than lumbia will play here, and again, as in promises a "real old-time party." $11,000 has now been pledged, principal 192.9, the Dramatic Club will play "Ten sum of $10,000 being required to endow Nights In a Bar-room" in the Willard CORNELL ENGINEER each scholarship. Straight Theater Friday and Saturday The Cornell Engineer for October an- Cornell Women's Club chairmen who nights. Of that other performance Mor- nounces in its leading article the plans are now at work for the Fund include: ris Bishop '14 wrote in the ALUMNI for the Robert H. Thurston centennial Albany, Caroline A. Lester 'z4; Boston, NEWS that it '' wowed them out of their celebration by the University October 2.5. Mrs. Samuel S. Evans (Ella M. Behrer) seats. The audience yelled, hissed, and Alan H. Morgensen 'z3 writes on'' Funda- 'zy; Buffalo, Mrs. George D. Crofts wept. . . .," the staging department hav- mentals of Human Engineering," based (Frances E. Johnson) '05; Chicago, ing borrowed the old curtain and tor- on his experiences in conducting training Eunice Stebbins '97; Cortland, Barbara mentors from the Lyceum to lend reality programs in work simplification in in- C. Fretz '2.3; Delaware Valley, Mrs. to the scenes. The Club this year promises dustrial plants all over the United William H. Hill (May A. Thropp) 'zo; States and Canada. Professor John R. just as thrilling a performance as was f Kansas City, Mrs. Rudolph Hirsch given by the undergraduate actors of Bangs, Jr. zι, Administrative Engineer- (Maude W. Martin) Όo; Middletown, that day. First show will be Friday eve- ing, contributes Part I of an article en- Fannie H. Dudley '15; New York City, ning, November 3, in the Willard titled, "Management Looks to the Mrs. Frank J. Pagliaro (Edith A. Bennett) Straight Theater. That evening, also, Future," in which he comments upon a '15; Northeastern Pennsylvania, Marion the Senior societies are planning a foot- Creed of Management adopted by the M. Bush '3z; Northern New Jersey, Mrs. ball rally in Bailey Hall. recent International Management Con- Russell T. Kerby (Regina Brunner) '15; Alumni who arrive Friday afternoon gress, and discusses its application in Northern New York, Margaret M. Owens will have opportunity to see the Varsity business and industry. This issue also '37; Philadelphia, Mrs. Russell C. Gour- and Freshman cross country teams in contains a welcome to Engineering ley (Marion W. Gushee) Ί6; Rochester, their second meet of the season, against Freshman by Dean S. C. Hollister, and Mrs. William F. Donoghue (Mary A. Syracuse, starting at 4:30 from upper one from the editors, headed by Beach Heughes) Όz; Schenectady, Mrs. P. Paul Alumni Field and finishing there also; Barrett '40 of Kew Gardens, editor-in- Miller (Sara E. Speer) 'zι; Southern Cali- and the Freshman football team in action chief. fornia, Anna C. C. Besig '23; Utica, against Blair Academy, on lower Alumni REPORT ON OPTICS Margaret C. Tobin '35; Washington, Field at 4:30. New president of the Optical Society Frederica G. Ritter '32.; Western Con- Annual meeting of the Cornell Law of America is Kasson S. Gibson Ίz necticut, Mrs. Charles E. Craven, Jr. Association, Saturday morning at n in formerly instructor in Physics and now (Charlotte Baber) Ό8; Western New Myron Taylor Hall, is expected to bring with the National Bureau of Standards York, Mrs. R. A. McCutcheon (Ethel many alumni of the Law School, to elect in Washington, D. C. He was elected Laverty) Όz. officers, hear from Dean Robert S. Stev- October 14 at the close of a three-day Ruth I. Stone Ίo, member of the execu- ens and from the Law placement com- annual meeting at the Lake Placid Club, tive committee from Chicago, is assisting mittee, and to vote on the Association's to succeed Professor R. Clifton Gibbs Mrs. Shreve in organizing the Fund affiliation with the Cornell Alumni Ό6, Physics. campaign in several mid-western states. Association. Delegation of Law alumni Among the papers presented was one District chairmen now active are: Ari- from Westchester County is expected to by Professor Frances G. Wick '05, an zona,'Mrs. William L. Chapel (W. Emma come up again this year with William authority on luminescence and now head Barrett) '34 and Mrs. Ashley Robey F. Bleakley '04 and Ralph S. Kent Όz, of the physics department at Vassar, on (Elizabeth E. Chadwick) '31; Northern president of the Law Association, and work she did at Cornell in luminescence California, Mrs. Francis G. Short (Louise to have their usual dinner downtown of sugar and ice. Carl W. Gartlein, PhD E. Baker) '19; Florida, Mrs. Charles S. Saturday evening. 'z9, Physics, reported on "Apparatus for Dion (Gertrude Martin) 'z3; Georgia, From 11:30 to 1:30 Saturday, the Uni- Investigation of the Aurora Borealis," Mrs. John W. McConnell (Corrinne G. versity will serve luncheon in the Drill and a paper on structure deviations in Messing) 'z8; Idaho, Dakotas, Nebraska, Hall for all alumni and their guests, mem- certain isotopes of antimony was given Mrs. William F. McClelland (Pauline B. bers of the Faculty and their families, by Diran H. Tomboulian, PhD '36, and Brooks) Ίi; Indiana, Mrs. Harry V. and all others who are going to the foot- Professor Robert F. Bacher, Physics. Wade (Agnes T. Lester) 'z6; Iowa, Helen ball game on Schoellkopf Field, begin- Professor Floyd K. Richtmyer '04, F. Smith Όi; Kentucky, Mrs. Arthur T. ning at z. Physics and Dean of the Graduate Ringrose (Guerine Tinker) '30; Maine, After the game there will be a recep- School, continues as editor of publica- Gertrude S. Bates Ί6; Minnesota, Mrs. tion in Willard Straight Memorial Room tions for the Optical Society of America. Ralph B. Ryan (Margaret W. Bent ley) 42- CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

'34; Montana, Mrs. Alvin V. Taylor heard of a fourth today) have the most (Helen J. Smith) '24;. North Carolina, hospitable and kindly librarians. Each is Mrs. William F. Glasson (Mary B. Park) LETTERS interested to see if you have the book '03; Central Pennsylvania, May M. Matt- Subject to the usual restrictions of space and good you're after and sometimes suggests an- son 'x3; South Central Pennsylvania, taste τ we shall print letters from subscribers on any other book or books in another library. side of any subject of interest to Cornellians. The Mrs. Wellington W. Kuntz (Margaret P. ALUMNI NEWS often may not agree with the senti- "Today Professor Meek was in the Coppens) '96; Rhode Island, H. Ruth ments expressed, and disclaims any responsibility Straight library browsing through the Requa Ίi; Tennessee, Helen F. Northup beyond that of fostering interest in the University. 'Fortunes' and making me feel that the '13; Texas, Mrs. Keets C. Baker (Ger- Faculty is standing by us and not over us. trude D. Kellogg) Ίi; Virginia, Mrs. THEY SHARE THE WORK "I have had 'Freshman cramps' too, Walter H. Kniskern (Katherine E. but now my legs are used to the hills and To THE EDITOR: Selden) '05, Alice E. Rowe '07, and Mrs. distances and I feel like a mountain goat Referring to your issue of September 2.8, Edwin M. Slocombe (Beatrice A. Gil- as I run up and down the hills. page 5,1 note your extract from the local son) '04. "Tonight I can't decide between a newspaper, and complimentary remark Besides Mrs. Shreve, Mrs. R. C. Os- movie, a dance, or an address on 'The about me. I do not deserve it, for others born (Agda T. Swenson) Ίo, president of World Situation.' Things have never have done a lot of work, particularly the Federation, has announced as chair- come so on top of one another. Max Savitt '2.6. I am sure he deserves men of Federation committees for this '' Yours for a Cornell with more hours more credit than myself. year Mrs. James W. Kideney (Isabel R. in its day.—M. S. S. '43." —GEORGE MUNSICK '2.1. Hauck) 'zi, Club scholarship projects; Although not written to the ALUMNI NEWS Mrs. Frederick D. Colson (Edna M. Mc- Readers will recall that we quoted comments nor by an alumnus, we reprint this letter from of W. J. Lee, sports editor of The Hartford Nary) 'oo, membership; Mrs. Allan H. because it reveals so Courant, concerning five of this year's Fresh- much about the University today, and be- Mogensen (Adele A. Dean) '213, relations men from Central Connecticut, and his credit cause it is quite typical, we think, of the with secondary schools, spring teas; Lois to "Cornell men in this section" for interest- Freshman Class.—ED. C. Osborn Ί6, Cornell Day for Women; ing them in Cornell. Munsick, president of the Cornell Club of Hartford, modestly disclaims Mrs. James B. Calkins (Gladys F. the principal credit for "rounding up this dele- Gilkey) '19, Conference on Fields of gation," which the ALUMNI NEWS attributed POUGHKEEPSIE STARTS Work for Women; Mrs. Oswald M. Milli- to him on good authority. We are glad to First dinner meeting of the season for gan (Clara Cagwin) '07, publicity; Mrs. print Munsick's disclaimer (though it wasn't the Cornell Club of Dutchess County was sent us for publication) because it indicates attended by thirteen members, at the Simon H. Gage (Clara C. Starrett) Ί8, that there is a working Cornell alumni or- scholarship awards. ganization in Hartford.—ED. Nelson House, Poughkeepsie, October 5. UTICA MAKES AWARD Next meeting, it was decided, will be at the new Cornell boathouse during a Cornell Women's Club of the Mohawk FRESHMAN IMPRESSIONS Saturday afternoon football game, with Valley held its first meeting of the year "To THE EDITOR OF THE SUN: a radio tuned in. Lloyd L. Rosenthal '3Z, at the home of the president, Mrs. Chester '' A letter from a' Frosh' who feels very vice-president of the Club, presided and A. Dill (Frances Grossman) '30, in Utica, much at home. Along with the numerous introduced L. Joseph Stone '33, instruc- with fourteen alumnae present. It was welcomings we have had this past week, tor in child psychology at Vassar Col- voted that the Club's annual award of there is a feeling of friendliness and, as I lege, who spoke on his work there. fifty dollars should be presented to Mary feel, a sort of co-ownership of the build- E. Whitaker '42. of Poland. The next ings and Campus. Everything, again as I meeting, a Hallowe'en party, was to be feel it, is for us and if anything were not FOOTBALL REALISTICALLY (R.B. in " State and Tioga,'' Ithaca Journal) October 19, at the home of Frances W. just right a word would change it. 1 The nicest spot from which to watch a Rendell '39. ' The libraries (I have found three but football game at Ithaca is the press box. That isn't because you can see the play better from that location. Indeed, the press box isn't a very good place from which to observe the formations and their execution. It's too low, the angle of vision is too flat, and in consequence the plays are obscured by the players. The box at the top of the Crescent allotted to scouts from the other colleges is a much better place to see what's going on, what happened, and what made it happen. The superiority of the press box arises solely* from the fact that the people around you are quiet, realistic, and de- tached. They let you alone to watch the game and are unaίflicted by emotion, alcohol, feathers, and other outward evi- dences of intense partisanship. They ob- serve the proceedings more in the man- ner of medical students in an operating CHICAGO CORNELL HOTELMEN GREET PROFESSOR MEEK theater who remain mute, however First week in October,^Professor Howard B. Meek, Hotel Administration, spoke at gratified, when the responsible surgeon the annual Hotel Exposition, which also brought to Chicago many Hotel alumni of finally achieves the appendix he was the Midwest. Chicago branch of the Cornell Society of Hotelmen gave a dinner for the fishing for rather than the innocent Professor at The Stevens Hotel. Pictured, left to right, are Richard D. Culver '36 of the kidney which at one time they rather Hotel Sherman, Chicago; Professor Meek; Joseph P. Binns fzS, general manager of feared would come up in the haul. The Stevens; Sidney N. Phelps '39, and C. Oscar Strand '39, lately promotion manager I like football and I like people; but and managing director? respectively, of Hotel , and now with The Stevens. not in combination. People defile foot- OCTOBER 19, 1939 43

ball, and football too often brings out the wolf in people, making them noisy, as- PUBLISH FRATERNITY GRADES sertive, truculent, and unpleasant. You For Last Academic Year don't get people in the press box—just newspaper men who see the proceedings Held back by the Department of Public 1938-39 1937-38 as what they are; a good game played Information until most fraternity and Average Rank Ave. R'k good-naturedly by skillful boys who, un- sorority pledging had been completed, Delta Phi 71.83 34 7i 73 48 Sigma Nu 71.71 like their elders, seem astonishingly able the University released last week (and 35 71.86 46 Delta Chi 71.40 71.61 the Sun published) a tabulation of their 36 5° to retain their sense of proportion and Alpha Delta Phi 72-2-5 37 71.86 34 their manners under the most disad- academic grades for last year. All houses Zeta Psi 71.2.4 38 69.60 56 vantageous circumstances. have been given notice, however, on the Kappa Sigma 71.18 39 71.31 4i authority of President Day, that next Sigma Pi 71.17 40 73.16 3i Psi Upsilon 71.09 1 fall their rankings will be published at 4 71-73 49 AWARD SUBSCRIPTION PRIZE Theta Kappa Nu 71.04 41 75 76 16 Lackawanna Cornell Club of New the opening of the University, "let the Cosmopolitan Club 71.91 43 75-53 *9 Jersey had fifty members participating in chips fall where they may." Theta Delta Chi 71.78 44 71.76 47 Sigma Chi 71.98 its first annual golf tournament, at the The list for last year shows a consider- 7i-73 45 44 Delta Kappa Epsilon 71.63 69.50 able amount of shifting in rank among in- 46 57 Murray Hill Country Club, Summit, Phi Kappa Sigma 71-54 47 71.00 43 September 30, and for dinner and a dividual houses, as compared with that Sigma Phi 71.44 48 74.14 M smoker afterward. of 1937-38; and noticeable improvement Sigma Phi Sigma 71.38 49 71.67 38 Chi Psi Prizes (including a year's subscrip- in average grades of some houses, espe- 71.2.5 5° 71.51 39 Lambda Chi Alpha 71.03 70.81 cially some of those who were near the 51 54 tion to the ALUMNI NEWS) were awarded Phi Kappa Tau 70.93 52- 71.17 52- to Donald E. Marshall 'xx, for a low bottom of the list for two years ago. It is 70.88 53 71.2.1 42- gross of 87; to Charles S. Yawger '02., notable, also, that whereas the former Alpha Sigma Phi 70.87 54 73 58 18 Sigma Alpha Epsilon 70.81 who won a toss with George C. Norman list showed three fraternities with aver- 55 72-75 36 Alpha Tau Omega 70.80 10 ages below 70, this list has but one. 56 75-34 '35, both with the low net of 74; and to Delta Upsilon 70.71 57 71.33 40 J. Waldo Myers '13, whose "brilliant Passing grade is still, of course, 60. Phi Kappa Psi 70.37 58 70.34 55 1x3" was high gross score. Average grades of independent stu- Chi Phi 69.08 59 69.19 58 dents in the University exceed those of WOMEN, SORORITIES THEATRE TO BROADCAST fraternity and sorority members: men 1.36 Alpha Epsilon Phi 79.07 I 81.64 I Sigma Delta Tau 78.98 1 79.64 1 per cent above the general fraternity University Theatre project for plays of Sigma Kappa 78.30 3 78.18 4 New York State, starting its second year, average; women 1.08 per cent above the Ind. Women 78.28 has announced a series of radio programs sorority average. Average grade of all All Women 77.81 Chi Omega 77.40 8 to be broadcast from Station WESG the women exceeds that of all men by 3.33 77 63 4 Delta Gamma 77 36 5 77-2-1 IO last Sunday of each month. A special per cent. All Sororities 77.20 company of University students will Last year was the first publication of Kappa Alpha Theta 77 i9 6 77-45 7 dramatize such stories as that of the such a compilation since that for the year Delta Delta Delta 77.06 7 77-72- 6 19x3-14, the last one done by the late Alpha Xi Delta 76-87 8 78.05 5 Taughannock "stone man;" the famous Kappa Kappa Gamma 76. 80 David F. Hoy '91. Tabulation for the 9 78.93 3 tunnel escape from the Confederate Kappa Delta 76.77 10 76.94 II prison in Elmira; the story of Ruloff, last two years has been directed by Alpha Phi 76.65 II 76.11 11 famous Ithaca philologist and murderer; George D. Haupin Ί6, Assistant Regis- Pi Beta Phi 75.81 11 77-35 9 Alpha Omicron Pi 75.09 75.11 Jemima Wilkinson; tales of the "under- trar. Averages and rankings: 13 13 ground railroad" as it operated in Central 1938-39 1937-38 For 1937-38 the "All Fraternities" New York; buried treasure of the Finger MEN, FRATERNITIES Average Rank Am. R'k average was 73.90 and there were twenty- Lakes region; the Wyoming massacre; Telluride Association 85.185.13 I 84.56 I five houses above it; last year it was 73.79, the story of the last witchcraft trial in Tau Epsilon Phi 83.05 1 and there were twenty-seven houses Sigma Alpha Mu 81.07 80.15 Central New York, and others which have 3 5 above it. "All Sororities" average two Alpha Zeta 81.77 4 81.15 1 been collected, written, or arranged by Alpha Epsilon Pi 81.54 5 78.31 7 years ago was 77.51 and there were six Professor Alex M. Drummond, Public Beta Sigma Rho 78.77 6 80.74 3 houses above it; last year it was 77.^0, Speaking, and Robert E. Gard, AM '38, Phi Sigma Delta 78.49 7 80.54 4 with five houses above it. Averages for Pi Lambda Phi 8 6 who has been in direct charge of the pro- 77.84 78.53 "Independent Men," "All Men," and Phi Beta Delta 77-2-8 9 77.46 8 ject since it was started last year. Tau Delta Phi 77.18 10 77.45 9 for "Independent Women" and "All It is possible, Professor Drummond Delta Tau Delta 77.01 II 73.88 16 Women" were not published for 1937-38. says, that several other radio stations in Alpha Gamma Rho 76.51 11 76.10 13 Alpha Chi Sigma 76.30 J large cities throughout the State may 3 75.68 17 NEW IN ARCHITECTURE Alpha Psi 76.14 X4 76.64 II carry transcriptions of these programs. J J Another appointment in the College of Omega Tau Sigma 76.01 5 75.89 4 Launched in September, 1938, with a Sigma Phi Epsilon 75-2-7 16 75.81 15 Architecture, announced last week, is grant from the Rockefeller Foundation Phi Epsilon Pi 75-x9 17 76.60 11 that of Efic Gugler as associate professor Independent Men and the aid of American Agriculturist, 75.15 of Architecture. His appointment was Acacia 74.80 18 71.69 37 J made necessary because Professor Francke the project has brought many plays deal- Zeta Beta Tau 74-68 9 77.10 IO ing with State lore, the best of which are All Men 74.48 H. Bos worth is on leave of absence this now being made available to schools, col- Kappa Alpha 74-44 10 70.96 53 year. Phi Sigma Kappa 11 30 leges, and community producing groups 74-39 73.10 Professor Gugler received the BArch Delta Sigma Phi 74.38 11 51 in the State. Some have been written at 71.35 at Columbia in 1911; received the Charles Alpha Chi Rho 74.10 2-3 74-54 11 the University; others were sent in by Beta Theta Pi 74-o8 2-4 74.01 2-5 F. McKim Fellowship for two years their writers over the State, including Phi Gamma Delta 7388 2-5 73-05 32- study abroad, and has since traveled ex- Llenroc Lodge Ass'n 18 those submitted in a contest sponsored by 73-87 16 75-65 tensively in Europe. He is a Fellow of the Kappa Delta Rho 73.80 2-7 73-43 2-9 American Agriculturist. Alt Fraternities 73.79 American Institute of Architects and The New York State play project is Theta Xi 73-71 18 71.78 35 chairman of its committee on competi- being continued this year. The season's Scorpion 73.11 2-9 73.00 33 tions; is a trustee of the American 73.18 11 first group of State plays to be presented Theta Chi 30 75-02- Academy in Rome and this year chairman Phi Delta Theta 73-03 31 71-94 45 by the Dramatic Club will be October τ.j of its jury in architecture; and is a mem- Alpha Phi Delta 71.97 32- 73 65 2-7 and 18 in the Willard Straight Theater. Pi Kappa Alpha 71.97 32- 74.41 2-3 ber of the board of overseers' committee 44 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS for the Graduate School of Design at '41 of Cedarhurst place-kicked the points. Harvard University. He was architect for Thus, within five minutes and without the remodelling of the White House About having registered a first down, Cornell offices in Washington, D. C., early in the piled up a 14-0 lead. present Administration; has practiced ATHLETICS The first touchdown was set up when architecture continuously since 1914 ex- Alva E. Kelley '41 of Tarentum, Pa., cept for Naval service during the world CORNELL 20, PRINCETON 7 partially blocked a punt by Allerdice, war; will retain his office in New York Three touchdown dashes, two of them the back who was easily the Princeton City for continuing his practice. by M. Witmer Baker '40 of New Cum- star of the game. The ball went out of berland, Pa., gave the football team a bounds on Princeton's 2_6-yard line, the FOOTBALL IN CHICAGO 2.0-7 victory over Princeton in Palmer third play of the game. The second came Cornell Club of Chicago announces a Stadium at Princeton, N. J., last Satur- after Allerdice had punted to Cornell's football smoker Thursday evening, No- day. i3-yard line. Baker ran the 87 yards vember Ί. sit the Stevens Hotel, with Baker scored twice within five minutes, without a threat, behind perfect block- "good food, good beer, superb music, first from the Princeton 2.6-yard line on a ing. pictures, headline personalities, and a reverse from Kenneth G. Brown '40 of Princeton rallied in the second period low price." November 18 Chicago Cor- Millerton and a few minutes later from as Allerdice began throwing passes. One nellians will be hosts, at this year's an- the Cornell 13-yard mark on an end was good for Ί.J yards, but Harold F. nual luncheon with Dartmouth, with a sweep. Both runs turned the Princeton McCullough '41 of Brooklyn intercepted direct wire from the field in Hanover. right flank. Both times Nicholas Drahos the next toss on the Cornell xo-yard line and returned to the 43. There Mortimer W. Landsberg, Jr. '41 of Mamaroneck picked up 6 yards. Kirk Hershey '41 of Philadelphia, coming around from left end, took the ball from Howard S. Dun- bar '41 of Roselle Park, N. J., after Landsberg had faked into the line, and ran 49 yards for the final Cornell touch- down. Princeton blocked the kick for the extra point. Thus the first half ended, 2.0-0. The second half was a different story. Cornell, apparently protecting its lead, settled down to a running game, but it made no progress against the stiffened Princeton defense. In fact, Cornell failed to make a first down in the last thirty minutes of play. Princeton, when it took possession of the ball, took to the air, for Princeton's running game was equally ineffective. Allerdice sometimes, through four passes in one series of downs, took desperate chances. His tactics finally produced a touchdown in the third period. The drive started from the Princeton 36-yard line. Allerdice passed 17 yards to Aubrey, 2.0 more to Stanley, and, after one run- ning play good for 3 yards, 2.4 more to Stanley for the score. Aubrey converted the point. Allerdice continued the passing game in the final period as Princeton sought another score. Once Princeton was inr terrupted and it looked as if Cornell might score another touchdown. Kelley broke through to block a punt, and Louis J. Conti '41 of Philadelphia ran the ball to the Princeton 7-yard mark. Landsberg plunged to the 3-yard mark, but Louis C. Bufalino '41 of Swampscott, Mass., fumbled as he dove for the goal o«. Lo/r line and Princeton recovered. Neither team threatened thereafter as Cornell Cof\Pi6-T6-Dl>A// o- - -O C intercepted four Princeton passes in the closing minutes. • Somewhat amazing were the statistics. Cornell registered two first downs to eleven for Princeton, but gained 2.2.9 Two GAMES IN Two HALVES—CORNELL xo, PRINCETON 7 yards rushing to 88 for Princeton. The three touchdown runs produced τ-ji. yards. In the air, Cornell completed two OCTOBER 19, 1939 45

of six passes for 2.2. yards, against twelve Villanova appeared to be the better GOLF COURSE STARTED of thirty-four passes for 155 yards for team until the middle of the second period Construction of a nine-hole golf course Princeton. when Cornell earned a safety as Lom- has been begun by workmen of the De- Cornell's pass defense, except for bardo fumbled and recovered in his end partment of Buildings and Grounds Princeton's one drive, was notably ef- zone. A few plays later, Philip D. Astry supervised by Robert Trent Jones, golf fective, with seven interceptions, three '42. of Shaker Heights, Ohio, threw a architect of New York City and Roches- of them by McCullough. Dunbar, who 2.3-yard pass to Calvin O. English '41 of ter. pulled out of the line on pass defense, Elizabeth, N. J., for a touchdown. It was Jones attended the University in 192.8- intercepted two. McCullough had the a spectacular play, Astry fighting off a 30 as a special student in Agriculture, edge in punting over Allerdice. would-be tackier and English making a taking courses in landscape gardening. Walter J. Matuszczak '41, the blocking diving catch. English place-kicked the He has laid out the course on the east back, was rested through most of the point for a 9-7 lead for Cornell at the side of Kline Road, which turns north second half. He was injured in the half. from Forest Home at the bridge there Syracuse game. His understudy was The second half was a rout. Astry over Fall Creek. Across the road, on the Richard L. Stimson '41 of Syracuse. In scored on an 18-yard run; English west side, is the course of the Country Matuszczak's absence, signals were called scored on a 70-yard run; Felix De Rosa Club of Ithaca. The new University by Baker, Scholl, or McCullough. '41 of Elmhurst raced 50 yards on a pass course is also across the road from the The victory was Cornell's eighth interception; and Astry plunged over and adjacent to the against Princeton since the first game in from the 2,-yard mark. broadcasting towers of Station WESG. 1891. Princeton has won eighteen and English started his 70-yard run when Trent has directed construction of more one game ended in a tie. Bronson, receiving a punt, juggled the than loo courses, among them those of Colgate University, the Montclair Ath- The lineups: ball. English cut in front of him, took letic Club, Bonnie Briar in Larchmont, CORNELL (2.0) Pos. PRINCETON (7) the ball in mid-air, and raced down the Schmuck LE Aubrey sideline unmolested. Bath Springs at Banff, Alberta, and the Lafey LT Tierney The Freshmen were just too big for the Seigniory Club at Montebello, Canada. Dunbar LG Balentine Scranton-Keystone team and had too The course, which is bounded on the Finneran C PurneJl east by Warren Road, will be 3,x6o yards Conti RG Worth many reserves, virtually every man on Drahos RT Bokum the squad getting into the game. long, with par of 36. It will comprise, Kelley RE Longstreth Marches of 5 5 and 40 yards - in the when finished in the fall of 1940, about Matuszczak QB Allerdice second period ended with Philip T. sixty-nine acres of the University poultry McCullough LHB Pearson farm and parts of the Hasbrouck and Baker RHB Rose Goldenberg of Hartford, Conn., scoring Brown FB Pettit from the 8- and i-yard lines. Goldenberg Warren farms recently acquired by the Cornell 14 6 o o—2.0 in action reminded some spectators of University. The work has been made possible by a Trustees' appropriation of Princeton 007 o— 7 Bart J. Viviano '33. Goldenberg also did Cornell scoring: Touchdowns, Baker 2., most of the passing while the first string $2.5,000 to the Department of Physical Hershey (sub for Schmuck); points after Education and Athletics. Although de- was in the game. touchdown, Drahos 2. (placekicks). tails are not determined, it is anticipated Princeton scoring: Touchdown, Stanley The third touchdown of the second that students will be charged a nominal (sub for Longstreth); point after touchdown, period was set up by a pass interception, fee for playing on the course. Aubrey. William J. Andrews of Philadelphia re- Cornell substitutes: Ends, Hershey, Burke; Sufficient land is available for future turning 48 yards to the i-yard line. tackle, Blasko; guards, Wolff, Christensen; expansion to eighteen holes. backs, Landsberg, Murphy, Scholl, Stimson, William H. Lehmacher of Glenbrook, Bufalino. Conn., scored. Joel R. Swanson, Jr., of Princeton substitutes: Ends, Stanley, Meyer- ODDS AND ENDS Harwick, Pa., place-kicked two of the holz; tackles, Rice, Herring; guard, Tschudy; John R. Tunis, writing in the October points, John S. Bonarek of Lackawanna centers, Alger, Robinson; backs, Wells, Van American Mercury about professionalism Lengen, Peters, Irwin. the other. in college football, brackets Cornell with Referee, W. D. Maginnes, Lehigh; umpire, Bonarek scored the fourth touchdown E. F. Hughitt, Michigan; linesman, W. L. Boston University, Colorado, Columbia, Cornog, Swarthmore; field judge, E. E. Miller, early in the fourth period on a 30-yard Harvard, Indiana, Kansas, Minnesota, Penn State. dash through the line and also converted Nebraska, NYU, Pennsylvania, Prince- the point. The final score came on a 35- ton, Stanford, and Yale, and says of this LIGHTWEIGHTS, FROSH WIN yard run by Thomas D. Wells of Farm- group: "Then come the colleges in which On the home football front last Satur- ington, Conn. A running play was at- a majority of the eleven are not paid, day, two Cornell teams turned in con- tempted for the point but it missed. either openly or covertly, but where one vincing victories. or two key men are helped through, In five hours of football for a handful SOCCER TEAM AHEAD often—though not invariably—by the of spectators who were more interested The soccer team turned in a 4-1 vic- alumni. The president usually knows in the radio story of the Varsity game at tory over Haverford on lower Alumni this, buί the chief business of college Princeton, the i5o-pound team defeated Field last Saturday, with Sidney L. presidents is not to allow the right hand Villanova, 33-7, in its opening Eastern Scott '40 of Upper Montclair, N. J., and to know what the graduates are doing." Intercollegiate Lightweight Football John H. Osborn '41 of Warwick East, Moses L. Goldbas '39, intercollegiate League game. The Freshman eleven, Bermuda, scoring two goals apiece. 12-5-pound boxing champion, is now in finishing under lights, blanked Scran ton- The victory left Cornell and Princeton the Law School. He weighs 165 pounds. Keystone Junior College of Scranton, as the two undefeated teams in the Bicycles used by football players dur- Pa., 34-0. Middle Atlantic Intercollegiate Soccer ing the summer have been put away be- The lightweights turned in a game League. The others are Pennsylvania, cause of the danger of accidents on the that, for thrills, matched any Varsity Lehigh, Swarthmore, and Haverford. Campus. Best use of a bicycle was encounter of recent years: Villanova Osborn's goal in the first period and credited to Mortimer W. Landsberg, Jr. scored a quick touchdown when Domi- Scott's in the third gave Cornell the '41 of Mamaroneck, who traveled to nic, end, fell on a Cornell fumble in the lead. Atkinson scored for Haverford on a and from his home on the wheel. end zone. Lombardo, fullback, kicked free kick in the third quarter, but Scott Coach Carl Snavely and Lynn Waldorf the point to give the visitors a 7-0 lead and Osborn each scored in the last of Northwestern will again coach a at the quarter. period. North all-star team for a game with a CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

South team at Montgomery, Ala., De- president of the Cornell Society of Engi- Beaman. These pills were referred to by cember 30. neers; former Alumni Trustee James W. the initiated as "speed balls" and you Coach of the Freshman soccer team is Parker Ό8, representing the ASME; and weren't supposed to tell your mother George W. Crowther '37, a Varsity Raymond F. Howes '2.4, secretary. you'd ever had one. player in 1936 and 1937. Later on, you remember, it was sugar. Kasimir E. Hipolit '41 of South Bound When a substitute on the far end of the Brook, N. J., who underwent an opera- NOW, IN MY TIME! bench was handed two lumps of sugar tion last year that will prevent his return By Romeyn Berry by Dr. Sheehan and told, "Here, suck to football, is assisting the coaching of them babies, don't chew 'em," he the Freshman squad. Hipolit was on the realized that the high command up at Varsity squad last season. There was a piece in the football pro- the middle of the field was preparing for gram which said, "The entire squad is A Standard Oil Company crew, coached the worst and contemplated the possi- by Norman Sonju, assistant rowing given two doses of gelatine daily. The bility of being obliged to use even him. training staff is convinced that gelatine coach, won a two-mile lifeboat race in Beef tea in the mop bucket, speed balls, restores energy. Football is, without New York harbor recently. lump sugar, and now gelatine! I'd say question, an energy-consuming sport. we were making progress and that it ill Science has found a way to maintain becomes old timers to talk. So far, too, energy and the Cornell staff has availed THURSTON CELEBRATION the score board confirms this opinion. Faculty committee on arrangements for itself of it." As a matter of fact, this gelatine isn't the Robert H. Thurston centennial cele- After the game your reporter was beset bad at all. They mix it with canned bration by the University and the ASME by a group of old timers who wanted to grapefruit juice and it tastes like canned October Ί.^, has been appointed by Dean know if this statement was true or grapefruit juice. I dropped in at Schoell- S. C. Hollister, Engineering. The com- whether it was press agent stuff. They kopf the other day and had a couple of mittee comprises Director William N. were assured it was both. They then in- fast ones on the house. After that I went Barnard '97, Mechanical Engineering, quired if the gelatine did any good and home and carried twelve large buckets who will have charge of exhibits of Dr. were referred to the Scoreboard. The of water out to the chickens without Thurston's publications and apparatus; only answer to a football question that turning a hair or once breaking my Professor Walter L. Conwell '09, Civil can be depended on to silence an old stride. Energy—a million! Engineering, in charge of the Bailey Hall timer completely is the score board. And a lot of those other old timers convocation and marshal of the academic And why should the ancients gag at we've been talking about couldn't do procession; Professor Charles C. Winding, the idea of gelatine—tell me that—after that, I bet you, not even on gelatine! Chemical Engineering, in charge of hous- all these years and after all the other After the first eight buckets they'd be ing of guests, delegates, alumni, and things? At one time Science used to pass clamoring for one of old Dr. Beaman's other visitors; Professor Robert F. Cham- hot beef tea along the sidelines at Percy "speed balls." berlain Ό8, Electrical Engineering, trans- Field. She used to pass it in a steaming portation; and Professor Frank O. Ellen- bucket and ladle it out in a tin dipper. wood, Mechanical Engineering, the Very tasty, too, although some com- CLEVELAND GOING STRONG centennial luncheon in Willard Straight plained that it needed more salt and Cornell Club of Cleveland reports that Hall. others of the more delicate and imagina- its first Fall Dance in years—for alumni, A general committee appointed by tive type could have wished that the undergraduates, and entering Freshmen— President Edmund E. Day last May has bucket didn't look so exactly like the was an unqualified success. "The Cornell Dean Hollister as chairman; its members, one that held the mop on week days. Club Scholarship Fund was benefitted Trustees Bancroft Gherardi '93 and Max- In another epoch energy was main- by $2.04. Q.E.D." Chairman of the com- well M. Upson '99; Director Barnard and tained both by harsh words from the mittee was Charles H. Day, Jr. '34. Director William A. Lewis, Jr., Elec- coach and by small pills administered to Weekly meetings in Cleveland started trical Engineering; Willis H. Carrier Όi, the lagging between the halves by Dr. September £9, with luncheons, every

GUEST SPEAKERS FOR UNIVERSITY'S ROBERT H. THURSTON CENTENNIAL CELEBRATION OCTOBER £5 Appointments of more than 100 official delegates have already been made by technical schools, colleges, and professional societies of the United States and Canada to the University's celebration of the looth anniversary of the birth of Robert H. Thurston, first Director of the Sibley School of Mechanical Engineering. All Cornellians are invited. Besides President Day and Dean S. C. Hollister, these four will speak at a convocation in Bailey Hall at 10 a.m. October 2.5. Left to right: Dr. William F. Durand, colleague of Dr. Thurston on the Engineering Faculty and his biographer; Admiral Wilson Brown, superintendent of the U. S. Naval Academy where Thurston first taught; Dr. James P. Adams, vice-president of Brown University where Thurston was an undergraduate; Dr. Harvey N. Davis, president of Stevens Institute of Technology where Thurston set up the first mechanical engineering teaching laboratory. OCTOBER 19, 1939 47

Friday except the first in each month, in This, with Mr. Kelley now doing his a private dining room at Fischer-Rohr's, FROM FAR BELOW . . . stint for the magazines (and every loyal ini Chester Avenue, at ιx:i5. First Yaleman hereabouts ready to crucify him Friday each month the Club is holding By Robert L. Bliss '30 on sight) seems to have brought about dinner meetings in the same place, at a state of emergency in New Haven 6:15. At dinner October 6 several former Rugged individualism flourishes at literary circles. * * * all-American players led a general dis- Dartmouth. There's something about cussion of "Football, Past and Present." the makeup of the mountains that Had your fall tonic yet? No, we don't October 13, at luncheon, Edwin S. Baker permeates the whole air of the place. Or mean boneset tea or any potpourri out '15 was scheduled to give an observer's maybe it was the character of that of the herb garden, but your first fall report of the Cornell-Syracuse game in staunch founding father, Eleazer trip to Ithaca. There's a great lift to that Ithaca. Wheelock. first trek that will yank you out of the TRENTON STARTS Anyway, Dartmouth's going to cele- Indian summer doldrums. The leaves are Cornell Club of Trenton, N. J., opened brate Thanksgiving on the old deal turning, and there's a snap in the air its season October 4 with eighteen mem- basis, November 30. And that's not so that makes you forget impending coal bers at a smoker at the home of Donald strange either. Seems when Eleazer bills and worry about turning off the B. Rice '14, on the grounds of New Jer- moved from Bristol, Connecticut, to water at the farm for the winter. It just sey State Hospital. William H. Hill 'xi Hanover back in the 1770*8, he'd al- gets you. Of course, the spectacle on the presided, and Howard T. Critchlow Ίo, ready celebrated the Connecticut Thanks- field makes your corpuscles do hand- chairman of the secondary schools com- giving on November 16. Then he found springs. But then, just to add a healthy mittee, led discussion of plans for the that New Hampshire was fattening its dash of whipped cream and ground nuts, year. It was decided to entertain under- turkeys for November 30. The states it's a victory—over Syracuse. Need we graduates from Trenton and vicinity dur- used to decree the day then, although in say more? ing the Christmas recess. A block of the subsequent trial of Eleazer for * * * seventy-five tickets for the football game breach of thanks, he stoutly maintained in Princeton was distributed. SHOTS OF THE WEEK: The red ivy on that the first Thanksgiving had been the southwest corner of the Drill Hall. AT VETERINARY MEETING set by God. We don't know what he'd . . . And on the west wall of Willard Many members of the Veterinary Col- do today with quite a bit of confusion Straight. . . . The students now calling lege Faculty and alumni attended the as to whether Mr. Roosevelt or God is Aaron Wells "Teddy Zinck". ... A seventy-sixth annual meeting of the in charge, or in fact, which is which. transport plane droning up off the Ithaca American Veterinary Medical Associa- Anyway, we admire our Indian broth- airport after easing down a batch of tion in Memphis, Tenn., August 2.8 to ers for their stand. Long live Dartmouth! Syracusans. . . . The crowd downtown September i. Dr. Cassius Way '05 pre- * * * after the game making the night hideous. sided as the new president of the Associa- And since we seem to be going the . . . The Ithaca Hotel clearing out every tion. Dean William A. Hagan, MS '17, rounds, we understand that the Yale stick of furniture before dawn the morn- was a member of the committee on educa- News, oldest college newspaper, is ing of the game. . . . That old reunion tion; Dr. Henry H. Dukes, Veterinary boosting circulation with broadsides to tintype man, foregoing his annual Physiology, was chairman of the com- Vassar, selling its new "woman appeal" southern trip to cover the football mittee on proprietary pharmaceuticals. which will make the sheet good reading. crowds. . . . Nobody talking about war. Dr. Jesse Sampson '30, Dr. Hugh S. Cameron '31, Dr. Herbert J. Metzgar Ί8, and Dr. Leonard J. Goss, PhD '38, formerly of the Veterinary Faculty, pre- sented papers. INTRAMURAL INVITATION All students as they registered this year received a small paper-covered Handbook of Intramural Activities, prepared for this season by Nicholas Bawlf, supervisor of intramurals for the Department of Physical Education and Athletics. Within its modest brown covers are a statement of aims and objects, a schedule of sports and the leagues into which they are divided, names of the student officers of the Intramural Athletic Association and its constitution, eligibility and other rules, explanation of the "point system" and awards, rules for various sports, and a table showing that last year 62.5 teams numbering 5,2.50 men took part in twenty-two different sports. 1938-39 champions in all sports and leagues are also named, and the standings of all fraternities are given for two years TOUCHDOWN IV is ACCLAIMED BY STUDENTS past, with the winners of the'intramural William S. Page '40 of Grosse Point, Mich., (son of Blinn S. Page '13) acts as master trophy since 192.7-8. of ceremonies at a mass meeting staged in front of Willard Straight Hall last week to Alumni who are interested can un- introduce the black bear cub which has been refused admittance to Schoellkopf Field doubtedly get a copy of the booklet by as a football mascot. Mildly interested at first, Touchdown soon scrambled out the writing to the Department of Physical car in which she was brought, and climbed an elm tree along Central Avenue, where Education and Athletics. she stayed until the party was over. Photo by Fenner CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS 48

officers and competitions, beauty spots CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS near Ithaca, and fraternities and associa- COMING EVENTS tions with addresses and telephone 3 EAST AVENUE ITHACA, N. Y. Time and place of regular Club luncheons are printed numbers. Several Campus illustrations FOUNDED 1899 separately as we have space. Notices of other Cornell are included, and of course many ad- events, both in Ithaca and abroad, appear below. Published by the Cornell Alumni Associa- Contributions to this column must be received on or tion. Weekly during the college year; monthly vertisements. before Thursday to appear the next Thursday. in July and August: thirty-five issues annually. Spiral-bound in heavy paper with a Subscription: $4.00 a year in U. S. and posses- faintly-printed picture of Ezra Cornell on SATURDAY, OCTOBER zi sions; Canada, $4.35; Foreign, $4.50. Single copies the cover, the Almanac is published by Ithaca: Football, Penn State, Schoellkopί fifteen cents. Subscriptions are payable in advance the Cornell Chapter of Sigma Delta Chi, Field, z and are renewed annually unless cancelled. University Theatre Films presents ' 'Lives of Editor-in-chief R. W. SAILOR '07 professional journalism fraternity, with a Bengal Lancer," Willard Straight Managing Editor H. A. STEVENSON '19 John H. Gray '40 of Newark, N. J., as Theater, 7:15, 9:15 Assistant Editor MARGARET V. SAMPSON '37 editor and Lawrence W.' Wheeler '40 of Alfred: Cross country, Varsity and Freshmen, Office Manager RUTH RUSSELL '31 Sterling, 111., as business manager. It was Alfred Annapolis, Md.: Soccer, U.S. Naval Academy Contributors: printed by The Altol Press, New York ROMEYN BERRY '04 L. C. BOOCHEVER Ίx Princeton, N. J.: i5o-pound football, Princeton F. M. COFFIN Ίz W. J. WATERS '2.7 City, of which Edgar Altholz '36 is a WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER Z5 R. L. BLISS '30 member. Ithaca: University convocation celebrating the Printed by The^ Cayuga Press looth anniversary of the birth of Robert H. Thurston, Bailey Hall, 10 BREWERS ELECT THREE Freshman soccer, Cortland Normal, 4:30 United Brewers' Industrial Foundation FRIDAY, OCTOBER Z7 COVER PICTURE at its third annual convention in New Ithaca: Dramatic Club presents four one-act Man on our cover this week is William York City October 5 elected as its chair- New York State plays, Willard Straight Theater, 8:15 J. Murphy, Jr. '41, of Glen Ridge, N. J. man Carl W. Badenhausen Ί6, president Columbus, O.: Cornell headquarters Deshler- Starting his third season in the backfield of P. Ballantine & Sons, Newark, N. J. Wallick Hotel of Cornell football squads, he played in Directors elected included Adolph Coors, Football dinner, University Club, 6—reser- both the Syracuse and Princeton games. Jr. '07, president, Adolph Coors Co., vations, George R. Schoedinger, Jr. '35, zz<2 East State St. Golden, Colo., and Alvin F. Griesedieck The photograph was taken at practice SATURDAY, OCTOBER z8 by J. Hubert Fenner, University photog- Ί6, president, FalstafF Brewing Corp., Ithaca: Freshman football, Penn State, 1:30 grapher. St. Louis, Mo. Soccer, Princeton, z:3o More than 500 brewers and representa- 15o-pound football, Pennsylvania, 3:30 Dramatic Club repeats four one-act New ROCHESTER CLAMBAKE tives of allied industries attended the York State plays, Willard Straight convention; heard reports from the seven Theater, 8:15 Sixty members of the Cornell Club of states in which the Foundation's pro- Cleveland, O.: Cornell Club special train Rochester enjoyed the Club's annual gram to abolish objectionable conditions to Columbus leaves Union Terminal 9:30 clambake, at the Newport House on —reservations, J. Bentley Forker, Jr. '2.6, surrounding the sale of beer is operating; Lake Ontario, October n. Songs and 46ιz Prospect Ave. voted to extend the program to other Columbus, Ohio: Football, Ohio State, z music were led by George S. Babcock states. Cornell headquarters Deshler Wallick Hotel Ί6, Joseph A. Alaimo '31, and Howard Buffalo: Cornell Women's Club bridge lunch- A. Sauer '17; and speakers were Henry eon, for Federation Scholarship Fund, "INFORMATION, PLEASE" W. Norwood '03, Ray F. Fowler Ό8, Buffalo Consistory Howard J. Ludington '17, Dr. Barton An ingenious "Cornell Information, State College, Pa.: Freshman soccer, Penn State Please" program gave hilarious amuse- TUESDAY, OCTOBER 31 Baker '2.2., and George D. Ogden '2.5. Ithaca: University Theatre Films presents Chairman of the committee was Thomas ment to eighty-one members of the Cor- "Storm in a Teacup," Willard Straight E. Johnson '32.. nell Women's Club of New York at the Theatre, 4:15, 7:15, 9:15 Ogden, who is a candidate for election first fall dinner, October 10, at the Hotel THURSDAY, NOVEMBER z Barbizon. A "board of experts" com- Chicago, 111.: Cornell Club football smoker, as judge of the Rochester city court, was Stevens Hotel, evening prised one of the elder Club members, the scheduled speaker at the regular FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3 Wednesday luncheon of the Club Oc- Mary R. Fitzpatrick '93; one of the Ithaca: Alumni Homecoming tober 18, at the University Club. His youngest, Madeleine Weil '39; and three Cross country, Varsity and Freshmen, subject was "Justice in Rochester." former presidents, Mrs. George W. Syracuse, upper Alumni Field, 4:30 Tucker (Elsie F. Rand) '07, Martha E. Freshman football, Blair Academy, lower Alumni Field, 4:30 CORNELL ALMANAC Dodson '07, and Fanny G. Selden Ίo. Football rally, Bailey Hall, 8 The Cornell Almanac for 1939-40—the Mistress of ceremonies was Jessamine S. Dramatic Club presents "Ten Nights In a third annual volume of daily reminder Whitney '05. It was announced that for Bar-room,'' Willard Straight Theater, 8 :ι 5 each question the "experts" failed to SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 4 and handy information—appeared in Sep- Ithaca: Alumni Homecoming tember, ready for returning undergradu- answer correctly, the membership com- Law Association annual meeting, Myron ates. More than 5,000 copies have been mittee would pay to the Club treasury Taylor Hall, ii distributed free in University dormi- ten cents; forty cents was thus realized Alumni luncheon, Drill Hall, 11:30-1:30 by the Club. Catharine M. Curvin '2.9 Football, Columbia, Schoellkopf Field, z tories, fraternity and sorority houses, Reception for all visitors, Willard Straight and over the desk at Willard Straight was chairman of the dinner and of the Memorial Room, after game Hall. committee which arranged the series of Dramatic Club presents "Ten Nights In a Like its predecessors, the book is de- eleven questions about the University Bar-room," Willard Straight Theater, 8:15 and Cornell personalities. Homecoming Dance, with Al Donahue's voted mostly to pages divided into daily orchestra, Drill Hall, 9:30-1:30 spaces through the University year, con- Miss Curvin also introduced Dr. Mary Swarthmore, Pa.: Soccer, Swarthmore taining for each that day's events in M. Crawford '04, a director of the Cor- Easton, Pa.: i5o-pound football, Lafayette sports, dances, and other undergraduate nell Alumni Association, who described Hamilton: Freshman soccer, Colgate events, with room for the owner's own her visit to Ithaca October 6 and 7 for TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 7 Ithaca: University concert, Emanuel Feuer- notes. It contains also such useful in- meetings of the Association directors mann, cellist, Bailey Hall, 8:15 formation as athletic eligibility ruless and the executive committee of the Fed- FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10 cocktail recipes, songs, WSGA rules, eration of Cornell Women's Clubs, and Ithaca: Freshman soccer, Syracuse, 4:30 the fraternity rushing agreement, a list spoke of the Federation Scholarship Syracuse: Freshman football, Syracuse of student publications and clubs, their Fund and of Club memberships. OCTOBER 19, 1939 49 ON THE CAMPUS AND DOWN THE HILL

DETERMINED CAMPAIGN waged in CORNELL QUARTERLY was proposed the Sun editorial and correspondence FIRST SNOW came to Ithaca last Satur- as a new literary magazine at a meeting columns for official recognition of day — just a few scattering flakes, as if to of interested undergraduates in Willard Touchdown IV as Cornell's football remind us that the hunting season for Straight Hall this week. Members of mascot has been met with stony silence pheasants, rabbits, squirrels, and par- Sigma Delta Chi, national professional from the Athletic Office. The bear has tridge was to open Monday. For several journalism fraternity, and of Book and not appeared with the team. This week weeks flying wedges of Canada geese Bowl, honorary literary society, are said it was pointed out to us that the Sun did have been passing southward, and a to be interested. The last Campus literary not promise to have Touchdown IV on blue haze lies low over the Lake and periodical was The Columns, was which the field at the Syracuse game, as we said hills toward evening. published monthly from April, 1916, last week, but said instead that "spon- through June, 1932.. sors of Touchdown V" promised its ap- December i. He will live in Philadelphia, pearance. We are told that the promise but will preach here through the re- NEW DORMITORIES for women stu- was made good with the appearance of a mainder of the year. New head of Temple dents have been made from one wing of dummy bear in front of the Crescent Beth-El, and director of the Hillel Foun- the Faculty apartments built by the Uni- between the halves of the game. dation at the University, is Rabbi David versity on Thurston Avenue. The build- A. Polish, who came from Cedar Rapids, ing has been rearranged to accommodate STUDENT COUNCIL last week ap- Iowa, replacing Rabbi Ephraim Fischoff. groups of three and four women, and proved by a 7-6 vote a proposal made by Two other new student pastors are the they use a private dining room at Pru- the Campus traffic office that all student Rev. William J. Chase, Episcopalian, re- dence Risley Hall, nearly across the drivers be required to carry liability in- placing the Rev. James A. Rockwell; and street. Head resident of the new dormi- surance. It wasn't quite the same pro- the Rev. Frederick H. Allen, Jr., Presby- tory is Grace Sawyer, a graduate of posal, though, when the Student Council terian, assisting the Rev. Hugh Moran. Syracuse. WSGA has appointed Phyllis finished with it, as the one the traffic L. Andre '40 of Drexel Hill, Pa. as office submitted and which had been FRESHMAN TROPHY for the highest president. approved by the Faculty committee on scholastic average in the College of Agri- student affairs. The original proposal LECTURES this week include a public culture, presented annually by Alpha meeting of the American Student Union, exempted graduate students and said Zeta, has been awarded for last year to nothing about Faculty members. But the October 19, with Professor Carl L. George L. Suhrland '42. of Schroon Lake. Becker, History, leading a discussion on Student Council included both these His average was 87.03. classes of drivers in its recommendation. "The International Situation and Its Origins." Quid pro quo! Now the proposal goes to MRS. EMMONS L. WILLIAMS, whose the Board of Trustees for its decision. husband was University Treasurer and PREACHER October 2.1 Comptroller for forty years, died at her is The Rev. Paul C. Johnston, minister CORNELLIANS in Princeton for the home in Ithaca October 5 . She had lived of the Third Presbyterian Church, game were invited to attend a Big Red here nearly fifty years; was active in Rochester. Hop in the Princeton University Gym- Ithaca charities, social service, and hos- nasium Saturday night. Decorations were pital activities. First married to Ezra CAMPUS VISITOR last week was Wil- in Cornell colors. During intermissions Cornell '87, grandson of the Founder, liam M. Stowell '85, the first time he a table tennis exhibition was given by after his death she became the wife of had been here since he received the BME Kreer and Nelson, Princeton's intercol- Mr. Williams, who died in fifty-four years ago last June. He was legiate doubles champions, and Bish driving through from his home in Spring- White's Quartet from the Triangle Club VISITOR at the College of Engineering field, 111., with Mrs. Stowell and their show sang. last week was Toshio Yamamoto, a mem- daughter, on their way to the New York ber of the administrative staff of the World's Fair. Only familiar buildings NUMEROUS CHANGES have taken Fujihara Institute of Technology in to him were Morrill, McGraw, White, place among the pastors and student Yokohama, Japan. The Institute was Sibley, Cascadilla, and the Old Armory, pastors of Ithaca churches this fall. The founded and endowed last June by Gin- and he expressed surprise to learn that Rev. Raymond H. Huse, for four years jiro Fujihara, Japanese industrialist, and the University Chimes had been moved pastor of the First Methodist Episcopal now has xoo students in a three-year from McGraw Hall tower. He was quite Church, has been transferred to Syracuse preparatory course to be followed by amazed at the size to which the Univer- as superintendent of the Syracuse West three years of university work. Yama- sity has grown, when he was taken district of the Central New York Con- moto is visiting leading engineering col- around the Campus by Walter C. Heas- ference; is succeeded here by the Rev. leges in the United States and will pre- ley, Jr.* '30, executive secretary of the John A. Redmond, from the Central pare a report for the trustees and officers Alumni Fund. Methodist Church, Utica. In the First of the new Fujihara Institute. Congregational Church, the Rev. Wil- TICKET SALES for University concert liam F. Hastings has been succeeded after STUDENT DELEGATES numbering series, both in Bailey Hall and Willard twelve years here by the Rev. Edward L. more than zoo attended the annual New Straight Theater, are substantially ahead Christie, from Marietta, Ohio. The Rev. York State Intercollegiate Conference of of the same period last year, the Music J. Irving Reese has resigned from the the Student Christian Movement here Department says. Last year about 1800 Tabernacle Baptist Church to enter October 13-15. They were addressed by of Bailey Hall's zo4i seats were sold for evangelistic work in Binghamton, and President Day and other leaders from the series, leaving about 2.^0 for single his successor has not been* announced. other places, and five separate discussion concerts. All artists who will appear The Rev. Paul C. Payne, pastor of the groups considered and reported on ' ' How here this year are either already in this First Presbyterian Church, has been Religion Can Count," toward a personal country or have definite assurance of elected general secretary of the Board of philosophy of life; in citizenship and being able to get here, according to Pro- Christian Education for the Presbyterian public affairs; in international relations; fessor Paul J. Weaver, so the war will Church in the United States, effective the work of the church; and education. not interfere with any performances. 5° CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

lege. In 1931 he became dean emeritus. He was a member of many scientific NECROLOGY societies and the author of numerous Concerning articles on engineering and related sub- jects. He entered as a graduate student in THE FACULTY '91 ME(EE)—HERBERTMCADAM WILL- Mechanical Engineering in 1899 from SON, June i, 1939, at his home in Sharon, Stevens Institute, having received the BS FRANK E. GANNETT '98, University Pa., where he lived most of his life, and and CE degrees in 1894 and the ME degree Trustee and chairman of the National where he was a member of the mercantile in 1897 from West Virginia University. Committee to Uphold Constitutional firm of J. M. Wϋlson & Sons. Phi Gamma Sigma Xi; Phi Beta Kappa; Tau Beta Government, urged Congress, in a tele- Delta; president, Electrical Association. Phi. gram to important Senate and House committees, to repeal all grants of power '94 PhB—JENNIE MARIA JENNESS, June '05—WILLIAM BEACH MYERS, May 2.9, which might be used by the President'' to 8, 1939, in Brooklyn, where she lived at 1939, in Dubuque, la. where he lived at get the nation into war without consent 1113 Prospect Place. Miss Jenness was ap- 595 West Eleventh Street. Until 192.8, of the people's representatives." He pointed to the staff of Girls High School when he retired from active business, he added that by declaring that an emerg- in 1894, and taught chemistry there for was associated with his father and ency exists, the President can now take forty-four years. She entered the Arts brothers in the Myers-Cox Co. of Du- advantage of a clause which gives him College in 1890 from Girls High School buque. He entered Civil Engineering "absolute, unlimited power to stop free in Brooklyn. Goede; The Wayside Club; from Dubuque High School, and re- speech over the radio at home. He can Cornell Congress; '86 Memorial Speaker; mained three years; Zeta Psi. take over the entire radio broadcasting Class Secretary (1894). Sister, Mrs. of the nation." Frederic Brickelmaier (Edith Jenness) '09 AB—MAGDA KRETSCHMAR, July 4, '04; sister-in-law, Mrs. John Brickel- 1939, in Washington, N. J. She had been MRS. HERMAN C. DAVIDSEN, wife of maier '99; niece, Mrs. Allan Campbell a teacher since 1912., and for the last Professor Davidsen, Grad '3o-'3i, former (Jane Brickelmaier) '37. fifteen years had taught French and Ger- member of the German Department, man at Richmond Hill, where she lived sailed two weeks ago to rejoin her hus- '95 PhD—LAURA CHARLOTTE SHELDON, at I02.-XO Eighty-fifth Avenue. She en- band in Berlin, where he is a member of April ii, 1939, in Haddonfield, N. J., tered Arts and Sciences in 1905 from the Berlin foreign office. While in the where she had lived since her retirement Erasmus Hall High School in Brooklyn. United States, Mrs. Davidsen was for a after many years of teaching, in Taunton, Deutscher Verein. short time the guest of Professor A. W. Mass., Mt. Vernon, Auburn, and Green- Boesche, German, and Mrs. Boesche. wich, Conn. She received the AB at '13, Ί6 CE—CHARLES HAROLD OLM- PROFESSOR Louis M. MASSEY, PhD Ί6, Vassar in 1887; studied History and STEAD, February i, 1939, in Washington, Plant Pathology, was elected president Economics in the Graduate School from D. C. He lived at 4804 North Twenty- of the American Rose Society, October 6, 189^-95. fourth Street, Arlington, Va.; since 1937 at the forty-first annual meeting in had been consulting engineer" for The '97—COLONEL (ALLAN) COPLEY ENOS, Brooklyn. February 2.1, 1939, in Chaumont. He Barrett Company, New York City. He entered Civil Engineering in 1893 from was for a time with the New York State A SON WAS BORN October 8, 1939, to the Ithaca High School and remained a highway department in Buffalo, then Professor Charles K. Thomas 'zz, Public year. Daughter, Barbara A. Enos '36. for many years in Nashville, Tenn., with Speaking, and Mrs. Thomas of 610 the State highway department. During Mitchell Street. '97 LLB—BRADLEY FULLER, Septem- the War he was a second lieutenant in PROFESSOR MORTIER F. BARRUS, PhD ber 19, 1939, New York City. After the Army Air Service, at Kelly Field, '12., Plant Pathology, sailed September graduation, he was admitted to the Bar, Tex. He entered Civil Engineering in 19 for Venezuela to organize the exten- and practiced law for several years. In 1909 from Troy High School, with a sion workers there and to help overcome 1908 he was appointed assistant dis- State scholarship. Pi Kappa Alpha. plant disease problems. His co-workers trict attorney in Oneida County and in include Dr. Carlos S. Chardon '19, 1910 was elected district attorney and '14 ME—HAROLD WAIT STEVENS, May former president of the University of then re-elected, staying in office through 4, 1939, in Los Angeles, Cal., where he Puerto Rico, and Albert S. Muller '13. 1916. From 1919 to 1917 he was counsel had been manager of the Pacific Coast for the Dairymen's League Co-opera- Elevator Co. since 1932.. He entered the PROFESSOR WILLIAM I. MYERS '14, tive Association, Inc., serving as presi- University in 1910 from Central High Farm Finance and head of the Depart- dent for one year. He lived in Utica, 2.4 School, St. Louis, Mo.; was for a time ment of Agricultural Economics and Talcott Road, where he was in the law with the Cutler-Hammer Manufacturing Farm Management, was a speaker at the firm of Fuller, Brown, Hubbard and Felt Co. in Milwaukee, Wise., and joined the annual meeting of the Ohio extension of whom two, besides Fuller, are Cor- Llewellyn Iron Works in Los Angeles as staff, October 10-13, at Ohio State Uni- nellians: Gay H. Brown '2.3 and Ernest an engineer in 192.5. He served in the versity* Columbus, Ohio. P. Felt '2.8. His son, Kenneth W. Fuller Navy during the World War. Eta Kappa PROFESSOR ANDREW C. HAIGH, Music, '2.8, former president of the Cornell Club Nu. and Mrs. Haigh gave a piano recital at of Utica, is also with the firm. Fuller the opening meeting of the Ithaca Wo- entered Law from West W infield Aca- '19—OLGA WOLFE, in June, 1939, in men's Club, October 2.. October 6, they demy, West Winfield, in 1895. Vice- Phoenix, Ariz., where she had lived for played at Hiram College, Hiram, Ohio, president Senior Law Class. many years. She entered the Arts College in 1915 from Canastota High School, for the benefit of the refugee fund. Their Όo MME—CLEMENT Ross JONES, Au- left after two years because of illness, out-of-town schedule follows: October gust 16, 1939, in Baltimore, Md. Since and returned for 1918-10. 19, Women's Club, Hamilton; October 1895 he had been teaching engineering at 2.0, Colgate University Chapel, Hamil- West Virginia University, Morgantown, '40—DANIEL HENRY SEIPT, September ton; November 6, Town Hall, New W. Va., where he lived at 317 Willey 30, 1939, in an automobile accident in York City; January 31, College of Wil- Street. In 1901 he received a full profes- downtown Ithaca. He entered Engineer- liam & Mary, Williamsburg, Va. Besides sorship in the college of engineering and ing in 1936 from George School, Pa. Phi these four recitals will be given at Wil- from 1911-1931 was also dean of the col- Sigma Kappa. lard Straight Hall. The Haighs introduce OCTOBER 19, 1939 51

a novelty in concert programs in giving '98 LLB—Willard M. Kent, Tompkins a combined recital on one piano, in- Concerning County Judge, attended the seventh an- cluding duets and solos, where only one nual conference of the New York State piano is available. THE ALUMNI Association of Judges of Children's Courts in Albany, October 5, 6, and 7. Personal items and newspaper clippings THREE OF AMERICA'S rarest birds, the He is a member of the executive and trumpeter swan, the Attwater prairie about all Cornellians are earnestly solicited. children's court problems committees. chicken, and the California condor, were The Children's Court Act and court forms color-filmed and their songs recorded by '79—Since 1915 Dr. Frank D. Game- were under consideration. Professor Arthur A. Allen Ό8, Orni- well has been a trustee of Yenching Uni- 01 ME—William B. Rawson has thology, on a four-months journey to the versity in Peiping, China. For the last moved to 1762. Clarkstone Road, Cleve- Southwest and the West Coast. The fifty-six years, he has spent most of his land, Ohio. songs of more than one hundred birds time in China, his chief interest there be- '03 ME—Charles E. Murray works for were recorded, and no species were taken to ing religious education. From 1889 the Union Carbide Co., 30 East Forty- in color film. The expedition was financed 1900, he was professor of chemistry and second Street, New York City. by Albert R. Brand, Sp '33, research physics, and acting president of Peking associate in Ornithology. David Allen, University, which previously he had '04 DVM—Dr. Ward L. Beebe is presi- thirteen-year-old son of Professor Allen, helped to reorganize under the name of dent of Beebe Laboratories, Inc., St. and Charles Brand, son of the sponsor, the Wiley Institute, then a secondary Paul, Minn. The laboratories are "bi- were Professor Allen's assistants. school. In 1900, he was chief of staff on ological, clinical, chemical, pharmaceu- fortifications of the British Legation in tical." He lives at White Bear Lake, SEVERAL MEMBERS of the Cornell faculty Peking and was partly responsible for Minn. attended the Third International Micro- saving the lives of 3,500 people during the '05 LLB—Dorothy H. Ransom, daugh- biologists' Congress in New York City Boxer siege. Gamewell has always had a ter of former Judge William L. Ransom the week of September 8. They are Pro- great interest in all the departments at '05, was married in Pelham Manor, June fessor Walter H. Burkholder, PhD '17, Yenching University, but he devoted ±4, to Lawrence W. Fairfax. Mrs. Fairfax Plant Pathology, Jean Ferguson '31, re- most of his time to the School of Re- was graduated from the Madeira School search assistant in Veterinary Medicine, ligion. In 1919 in the company of Dr. and Wellesley College. Her father was I. C. Gunsalus, Bacteriology, James M. Jacob Gould Schurman, then the Ameri- president of the American Bar Associa- Sherman, Dairy Industry, and Dr. Clif- can Minister to China, he laid the corner- tion in 1935-36 and one of the organizers ford N. Stark, PhD '2.6, Bacteriology. stone of Ninde Memorial Divinity Hall, of the Cornell Law Association. He now given in honor of the late Rev. Dr. Ed- practices law as a member of the firm of DR. DALE R. MITCHELL '2.1, has been ward S. Ninde, Mrs. Gamewell's brother. Whitman, Ransom, Coulson & Goetz. appointed acting president for one year Dr. Gamewell now lives in New York Fairfax was graduated from Williams of Bradford Junior College, Bradford, City. College and is with Moody's Investment Mass. He is the first man in more than a Service, 65 Broadway, New York City. hundred years to head the College. For '84 BS—Edward Maguire, formerly in ten years after graduation, Mitchell the engineering department of Westing- Ό6, '07 ME—Warner D. Or vis, a mem- taught English here, while continuing house Electric and Manufacturing Co., ber of the New York Stock Exchange his studies, and in 1930 received the PhD. and Mrs. Maguire celebrated their golden and senior partner of Orvis Brothers & In 1931 he joined the English department wedding anniversary, July 2.4, 1939. Co., 60 Broadway, New York City, has at Bradford Junior College. He succeeds Their address is 611 Whitney Avenue, been elected chairman of the board of the Dr. Katherine M. Dentworth who has Williamsburg, Pa. Citizens' Savings Bank of New York been president for twelve years. Mrs. City. He has been a trustee of the bank Mitchell is the former Margaretha F. for twenty-six years. Lyon '30. Ό8 CE; Όi CE— Two Cornellians are the chief engineers of Canada's two major PROFESSOR GEORGE S. BUTTS '2.5, Super- railroads. They are John E. Armstrong visor Farm Study Courses, left September Ό8 and Collingwood B. Brown, Jr. Όi. i for Washington, D. C. where he is en- Armstrong has had forty years of experi- rolled in the graduate school of the ence with the railroads. In 1912. he went United States Department of Agriculture. to Canada as assistant engineer with the He is on sabbatic leave for the next six Canadian Pacific Railways; in 19x8 he months. was promoted to assistant chief engineer, a position he held until this year when he PROFESSOR HARRY J. LOBERG '2.9, Engi- was appointed chief engineer. Brown neering, was a leader in a clinic on went to Canada immediately after gradu- market research at the National Indus- ation, anft became associated with the trial Advertisers' Conference in New Canadian Pacific Railways. In 1913 he York City, September 2.0-2.-$. He discussed joined the Canadian Government Rail- sales analysis with the aid of a series of ways as assistant general manager and specially prepared charts. chief engineer. SIXTEEN NEW MEMBERS have been ap- '09 CE—Isidore Walzer is secretary and pointed to the staff of the College of treasurer of the Long Island Dredging Home Economics. Among them are: Corp., engineers and contractors, Ja- Dawn Rochow '39, assistant resident in BETHLEHEM STEEL PLANT EXHIBIT maica, and a member of the American the Department of Economics of the Lackawanna plant has Edward F. Society of Civil Engineers. His address is Household, and Jessie Freeman '36, ex- Entwisle Ό6, J. Harry Costello Ό6, 8x-oι Grenfell Avenue, Kew Gardens. tension instructor in the same depart- Harold C. Harding Ίo, Robert W. Ίo—Thomas R. Rollo is a consulting ment; Emma J. Brown '35 and June Graham '15, Achilles E. Michel '13, John civil engineer in private practice at Thorn '39, research assistants in the H. Berean '2.7, William Pfaff '31, and Mendota, Wise. Address: Box xo, Men- Department of Foods and Nutrition. Robert F. Fallan '35. dota. CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

Ίi AB—Margaret J. Porter has moved Coffee Shop, Inc., 2.04 Quail Street, Al- manufacturers, i West Forty-Seventh to the Hotel Imperial, Broadway at bany. Formerly she lived in Glen Rock, Street, New York City. Thirty-second Street, New York City. N.J. Ί8, '2,1 WA—Lawrence G. Brower is '12. BS; '37 AB—James D. Brew is now associated with the H. J. Lucas Co., teaching in the department of bacteri- CORNELL Inc., an advertising firm with offices at ology at the University of Tennessee, 305 East Forty-fifth Street, New York Knoxville, Tenn. His son, James D. Brew ri1916 City. Jr., teaches at the Interdale School for 25 YEAR EEUIMICly ' 19 ME—Frederick W. Cuffe has moved Boys on the Leland Stanford campus, to 4589 Emerson Road, South Euclid, Palo Alto, Calif. Ί6 AB—Anthony O. Shallna, Cam- Ohio. He is in the commercial engineer- '13—William W. Munro works for T. bridge attorney and former president of ing section of the appliance and mer- J. Ronan Co., Inc., manufacturers of the Cornell Club of New England, has chandise department of the General paint varnishes, 749 East 135th Street, been appointed by Lithuania and con- Electric Co. firmed by the United States Government New York City, and lives at 309 West '19, 'xo AB—Henry F. Pringle, vice- as honorary Lithuanian Consul. Shallna Eighty-sixth Street. president of the Authors' Guild of the studied at the School of Foreign Service Authors' League of America, was guest '14 ME—Roger S. Brown has moved to at Georgetown University to prepare for of honor on "Author! Author!" pro- 18 Bellvale Road, Mountain Lakes, N. J. diplomatic service. His address is 305 gram over WOR, October 2.. In 1931 he '14 CE—Adrian K. Webster is in the Harvard Street, Cambridge, Mass. received the Pulitzer Prize for his biogra- real estate business in Texas. His address Ί6 BS, Ί6 MSA—Clarence Moore has phy of Theodore Roosevelt. He is also is Blackstone Hotel, Tenth and Tyler a farm at West Henrietta. author of Alfred Smith: A Critical Study. Streets, Amarillo, Tex. Ί6 BS—Mrs. Harry Clark (Beatrice A. '2.0 MS—Moacyr A. De Souza is at Farrall) lives in Bergen, RFD 2.. Escula Nacional de Veterinaria, Rio de '17 MME—Charles E. Oakes has been Janiero, Brazil, and lives at Rua Sabara 15-25-40 elected president of the Birmingham 74- '15 ME—Max J. L. Schulte is vice- Electric Co., Birmingham, Ala. He will '2.0, '2.2. BChem—Edward W. Large is president of The Rawlplug Co., Inc., also serve as general manager. He was working for the Sherwin-Williams Co., with offices at 98 Lafayette Street, New graduated from the Oregon Agricultural Roseland Station, Chicago, 111. York City. The company, makers of fibre College with a BS in EE and after receiv- 'xi MS—Thomas I. Matthews has screw anchors to hold screws fast, has ing the MME from the University, he moved to 348 West Twenty-third Street, factories in New York City, London, was appointed assistant electrical engi- New York City. Birmingham, and Paris. neer in the Bureau of Standards at Wash- 'zz MS—Roy L. Martin is an agronom- '15 ME—Francis D. Martin is in the ington, D. C. Later he was employed by ist in the Civilian Conservation Corps at Lindsay Wire Weaving Co., manufac- the Federal Power Commission, and in West Point, Miss. turers of wire cloth, 140x5 Aspinwall 19x3 he began work for the Pennsylvania '2.2. BS—William H. B. Hutchings is Avenue, Clevelandj Ohio. His residence Power and Light Co. is at 19001 Oxford Road, Shaker Heights, with the Ralston Purina Co., Somers, Ί8, '19 ME—Harold Raynolds is di- Conn. Cleveland. rector of the fine arts division of the '15 BS—Bertha H. Wood is at Wagar's Devoe and Raynolds Company, paint '2.3—Ralph M. DeRose is vice-presi- dent of American Oil Inc., with offices at 4x3 Stapleton Building, Billings, Mont. '2.3; '2.7—Howard F. Peckworth and Mrs. Peckworth (Martha F. Dana) have moved to South Carolina where Peck- worth is resident engineer inspector for PWA on the Santee-Cooper project near Charleston, S. C. Their address is Box 2.415, Moncks Corner, S. C. '2.3 BS—Henry E. Luhrs, of the Beistle Co., Shippensburg, Pa., was elected presi- dent of the Toy Manufacturers of the United States of America, Inc., at the twenty-third annual meeting, September I 2-9- II 'x4—Arnold H. Exo is district advertis- i ing manager of the Household Finance Corp., 919 N. Michigan Avenue, Chicago, 111. '14 BS—Philip Dorf teaches history at the James Monroe High School, Boynton Avenue and ιj2.ά Street, New York City. He is the author of a recent textbook. ARMCO EXHIBIT FOR COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING '14—Leslie M. Darby is in the oil pur- American Rolling Mill Co. lists Calvin Verity Ίi, executive vice-president and chasing department of the Magnolia general manager; Earl A" Emerson Ίo, president Armco International Corporation; Petroleum Co., Box 900, Dallas, Tex. Newman Ebersole Ίo, general purchasing agent; Arthur R. Edwards '2.2., assistant '24 BS—Mrs. Leo E. Foley (Helen L. managing director, London, England; Horace A. Benedict '2.6, manager Armco Inter- Larkin) has a son born June 2.2.. They live national Corporation New York office; Fred R. Dorner '2.7, secretary Armco Railroad at 93-01 Fiftieth Avenue, Elmhurst, L. I. Sales Co.; Joseph S. Thomas '17, salesman midwestern division; William L. Cressman 'x5 Grad; '2.5 BS—Dr. Joseph H. Kusner '2.8, salesman New York district. is at the University of Florida, Gaines- OCTOBER 19, 1939 53

ville, Fla. He and Mrs. Kusner (Juanit address is in care of the Counsellor of the ing for the Spencer Lens Company in F. E. Vail) '2.3 live at University Station, Chinese Embassy, 49 Portland Place, Buffalo, where he lives at i Le Brun Gainesville, Box Ί.6^. London W i, England. Road. '2.5, 'z6 ME—Charles M. Merrick, 3d '30 AB, '36 LLB—Leonard Marcussen, *3Z AB—Martha E. Beardsley works in married Catherine M. Kramer in Phillips- with Root, Clark, Beakner and Ballan- the Washington Self-Help Exchange, burg, N. J., August iz. tine, New York City, since graduation, Inc., in Washington, D. C. She lives at 'z6 BS—Gertrude E. Rumsey became has accepted an appointment as special 8301 Sixteenth Street, Silver Spring, Md. Mrs. Michel, April 30, 1938. She teaches attorney in the anti-trust division of the *3Z Grad—Kay H. Beach is working home economics in Public School 8z in Department of Justice, Washington, for the PhD in the botany department Buffalo and lives in East Aurora. D. C., under Thurman Arnold, and is at the University of California, Berkeley, engaged in the investigation of the con- 'z6 CE—Captain John R. Noyes, Corps Calif. His address is Apartment 18, 1810 struction industry. of Engineers of the United States Army, Euclid, Berkeley. is in the United States Engineer Office, '30, 'z9 BS—George Lamont Bidwell, '33 AB, '35 LLB—William R. Geary, Mobile, Ala. Jr. is assistant plant superintendent of the Jr. married Inez Hearn of Texarkana, 'z6 AB—Melford K. Magaw married Riegel Paper Corp., Milford, N. J., presi- Tex., July 2.9, in New York City. Mrs. Eloise G. Nelson August 10, in Denver, dent of the Clymer Springs Water Co., Geary attended the Parsons Art School. Colo. He is with the American Telephone and general chairman of the paper manu- Geary is a lawyer with Coombs & Wilson and Telegraph Company; -$2. Sixth Ave- facture committee of the Technical As- in Brooklyn. nue, New York City. His residence ad- sociation of the Pulp and Paper Industry. '33 BS; '34 BS; '97 Grad—Elizabeth K. dress is 46 Hendrickson Avenue, Rock- His address is Riegelsville, Pa. Pasto was married August zo to Benjamin vίlle Centre. '31 BS—Katherine L. Rummler is in Bradley, son of Mrs. Lyman R. Bradley '2.7 AB, '30 MD—Dr. Alfred S. Ambler the accounting department of The (Katharine Lewis) Grad '97. Bradley is is with the United Fruit Company at Dorr Co., Inc., engineers, 570 Lexington with the State Conservation Department Alnivante, Republic of Panama. Avenue, New York City. in Albany. '31, '3z AB, '32, EE; '99; '31 ME; '2.9 '17, 'z8 AB—John C. Whitridge, Jr. '33 BS, '35 MS, '37 PhD; '30 AB; 'zo has been promoted to manager of Inter- AB—Frank B. McMullin, son of Frank PhD—Joseph B. Moore and Mrs. Moore V. McMullin '99, is attending the Re- national Business Machines Corpora- (Jane E. Ross) are living in Wenatchee, tion's first sales division with headquar- serve and National Guard officers' course Wash., where Moore is working in the ters in New York City. Whitridge at the Field Artillery School of Fire at fruit substation of the Washington Ex- Fort Sill, Okla. Two other alumni are joined IBM in 1931 and in 1937 was made periment Station. He is the son of Wil- also there: Henry C. Garretson, Jr. '31 district manager for electric accounting liam Moore, PhD 'zo. and Francis H. Schaefer, Jr. ^9. machines. In his new job, as manager of '34 BS—Russell Hill teaches agricul- the first sales division, he will direct '32. MS—Aubrey W. Crawford is work- ture at Honeoye Falls High School. IBM sales in nine states—New York, New Jersey, Pennyslvania, Maryland, Delaware, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, and Maine. '2.7—John C. Ranney is working in the United States Steel exhibit at the New York World's Fair and lives at 167-10 Crocheron Avenue, Apartment 2. P, Flushing. '2.7, '2.8 AB—Alice Archibald was mar- ried August 19, to Kenneth B. Watson, a graduate of Clarkson College of Tech- nology in the class of 192.9. "2.8 BS—S. Reuben Shapley is engaged in the land-use program as a district county agricultural agent, with head- quarters in the central farm .bureau office at Roberts Hall. '2.9 ME—William D. Phelan is an em- ployee of the Western Electric Company in Kearny, N. J. GENERAL ELECTRIC COMPANY LISTS CORNELLIANS IN MANY DEPARTMENTS '2.9 BS—Constance E. LaBagh is now For many years Cornellians have occupied responsible positions in the far-flung Mrs. William H. Sorenson. Her address General Electric organization. This neon-lighted exhibit prepared for the College of is Christiansted, St. Croix,Virgin Islands, Engineering lists the names of about 150 alumni now active in various departments. Box 684. Among Cornellians who have helped to build General Electric are William Dal ton '90, '2.9 AB—Mung Yee Yap has "man- consulting engineer; Walter S. Goll '96, former manager Fort Wayne, Ind., works, and darinized" his name so that he is now Edward A. Wagner Όi, former manager Pittsfield, Mass., works, both retired; Arthur known as Yui Ming. After leaving Cor- L. Jones '03, commercial vice-president Rocky Mountain division; Nelson J. Darling nell, he received a law degree at the '07, manager Lynn, Mass., and West Lynn works; Alexander C. Stevens '07, in charge Comparative Law School at Shanghai, of educational sales, Schenectady; Howard V. Whitney '09, manager Richmond, Va., and then entered the diplomatic service. sales office; Elmer D. Spicer Ίo, manager Schenectady works; Clayton S. Coggeshall When the Japanese army took the city, he Ίi, manager turbine division, Schenectady; Robert W. Davis '13, supervisor incandes- was forced to leave and became the cent lamp department; Edward D. Stryker, Jr. '14, in charge of promotion, lamp de- counsellor of the Chinese Embassy at partment; John J. Mat son '15, machinery manufactures section; Percy R. Holmes 'zo, Moscow. Now Yui Ming is doing gradu- division engineer, incandescent lamp department; Ernest L. Thearle 'zi, in charge me- ate work at Balliol College, Oxford. His chanical section, research laboratory. 54 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

CORNELL HOSTS A Guide to Comfortable Hotels and Restaurants Where Cornellians and Their Friends Will Find a Hearty Cornell Welcome

ITHACA CENTRAL NEW YORK

DINE AT DRUMLINS N. TOWNSEND ALLISON '28 Pittsburgh GILLETTE'S CAFETERIA ERNEST TERW1LLIGER '28 Detroit At Syracuse, N.Y. B. F. COPP '29 Cleveland On College Avenue OPEN ALL YEAR AROUND R.W.STEINBERG '29 New York L. W. MAXSON '30 New York Where Georgia's Dog Used to Be CAFETERIA DINING ROOM TAP ROOM H. GLENN HERB '31 New York W. C BLANKINSHIP '31 Cleveland Air Conditioned the Year 'Round GOLF TENNIS WINTER SPORTS J. W. GAINEY '32 Cleveland L WIARD '30 R. S. BURLINGAME '05 R. C TIFFANY '36 New Yor<< CARL J. GILLEΠE '28, Propr. J. WHEELER '38 New York Restaurant Manager Owner

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122 E. 42nd St. New York City Cornell Luncheon Every Monday at 12:30 J. S. FASSETT '36 A. C. HILL '37 CARMEN M. JOHNSON '22, - Manager MANAGED BY JACK BATTEN *37 HELEN J. ROGERS '38, - Asst. Manager

Hemphill, Noyes <& Co. CORNELL - PICTURES "The finest book of Cornell pic- The Bill of Rights tures ever published; superb in selection, arrangement, and re- Members New York Stock Exchange production ... a real thrill." deserves a place in every real American 15 Broad Street . New York Only $1.00 postpaid home, office and school. You can now get copies for yourself and your friends. Beauti- INVESTMENT SECURITIES Thirty familiar Campus buildings and scenes—air views—gorges— fully printed in blue, red and black on vellum Jansen Noyes '10 Stanton Griffis '10 waterfalls. In decorative portfolio paper, 12 x 16 ready for framing. Send $1.00 L. M. Blancke '15 Willard I. Emerson '19 with plastic binding — each one suitable for framing. each for as many copies as you want, to BRANCH OFFICES Write name and address on margin, clip this ad and mail Albany, Chicago, Harrίsburg, Indianapolis, with dollar bill to THE CAYUGA PRESS Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Trenton, 113 E. Green St., Ithαcα, N.Y. Washington CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS 3 East Ave. ITHACA, N. Y.

Please mention the NEWS OCTOBER 1939 55

'34 AB, '37 MD; Ό6, '07 MD—Ernest AM; '07 LLB; '35, '33 BS, '36 MS—New E. Keet, Jr., son of Dr. Ernest E. Keet Ό6, appointments to the staff of the Ithaca married Jane Welton, September 6, in public schools include several alumni. Brooklyn. Mrs. Keet is a graduate of They are Robert F. Kingsbury, Grad '36, When Packer Collegiate Institute and attended physics; Clarence D. Moseman, MS '38, Barnard College. Keet is a resident in mathematics; Delbert J. Pugh, Grad '38, You Go medicine at Long Island College Hospi- social studies; Frederick Stutz '35, son of tal, Brooklyn. They live in Brooklyn Harry Stutz, '07, social studies; and East or West, Heights. George A. White '35, chemistry. '35 AB—Corydon T. Johns is with the '36 AB—Clare J. Hoyt has passed the Stop Off Liberty Mutual Insurance Co. in Wor- State Bar examinations and is with cester, Mass., and lives at 46 South Street, Scott and Sneed in Newburgh. at Northboro, Mass. '36 AB—Howard Heintz married Ruth '35 PhD—Philip L. Gamble married Brodhead September 8 in New Rochelle. CORNELL Elizabeth D. Scales, August 7, in Mount Mrs. Heintz attended the Connecticut DAILY AIR CONDITIONED TRAINS Vernon. The bride is a graduate of Mount College for Women. Heintz is a credit and WESTWARD Light type, a.m. EASTWARD sales correspondent with Carbide and Read Down Dark type, p.m. Read Up Holyoke College and the Katharine Gibbs 8:10 9:40 Lv. New York Arr. 8:35 7:45 School in New York. Gamble was gradu- Carbon Chemical Co., Eveready Build- 8:25 9:55 Newark 8:18 7:29 8:30 9:45 " Philadelphia " 8:15 7:45 ated from Wesleyan University; is as- ing, Long Island City. 4:10 *5:21 Arr. ITHACA Lv. 12:52 *11:12 sistant professor of economics at Massa- '37 AB, '39 LLB; Ό8 LLB—William J. chusetts State College, Amherst, Mass. Daetsch, Jr. is working in the firm of Enjoy a Day or Week End '35 BS, '38 LLB—Frank Albanese has (William J.) Daetsch (LLB Ό8) & in Ithaca opened offices in the First National Bank Pfeiffer, 6ox Iroquois Building, Buffalo. 5:21 4:10 Lv. ITHACA Ar. 11:01 12:52 Building in Ithaca, for the practice of 8:20 7:05 Arr. Buffalo Lv. 8:05 10:00 '37 AB—John S. de Beers married 4:55 7:30 Pittsburgh 10:35 11:45 law. 3:00 1:15 Cleveland 12:20 5:41 Marianna Hill, a graduate of Radcliffe, 9:30 7:40 Chicago 10:15 '35—Dorothy Curtiss became Mrs. Arr. Lv. June i6 in Brookeville, Md. De Beers is *New York sleeper open to 8 a.m. at Ithaca, and at Douglas Williamson, June 10. William- employed by the Tariff Commission in 9 p.m. from Ithaca son attended Johns Hopkins University in Washington, D. C. Baltimore. They live at 3901 Canterbury '37 AB, '39 LLB; Ίi—Thomas L. Avenue, Baltimore, Md. Driscoll, Jr. is associated with (Howard '36 BS, '38 MS; '36, '37 BS; Ό8 ME; Ίo A.) Fluckiger (Ίi) & Chave, Mineola, AB—Gordon M. Cairns has been ap- L. I. pointed head of the department of animal iarnond '37—William A. Drisler is employed by husbandry at the University of Maine. Cannon Mills, Inc., 70 Worth Street, New For eight years he was a 4~H Club York City, and lives at n Church Street, member, and for two summers served as Bronx ville. 4-H Club assistant in Monroe County. He was also on the extension staff of the '37 AB, '39 LLB—Walter E. Hopper, * * * ALUMNI University, specializing in junior exten- Jr. has opened an office in the First sion work. Mrs. Cairns (Ruth M. Sharp) National Bank Building, Ithaca, for the HEADQUARTERS? '36, daughter of Harry L. Sharp Ό8, and practice of law. Mrs. Sharp (Catharine M. Allen) Ίo, has '37 AB—Edmund L. G. Zalinski mar- been acting as associate county 4~H Club ried Matilde Mittendorf, July 15. Mrs. agent in Tompkins County. Zalinski was graduated from the Lenox '36 AB, '39 LLB—William H. Borger School and studied at Chateau Brillant- is associated with Walter A. McDermott, mont in Lausanne, Switzerland. Zalinski Nyack, and is opening his own law office is an agency organizer with the New in Pearl River. York Life Insurance Co., with offices at 60 East Forty-second Street. '36 AB; '36 AB, '39 DVM; '12. DVM, Ί6 PhD—Marjorie A. Dean was married '37, '38 DVM—Milton H. Covert + An Interesting question. July i, 1939, in Sage Chapel to Frank M. married Marie Fisher of Lodi, September During his college years the 2.. They will live at 32.7 West Avenue, Birch '36, son of Professor Raymond R. undergraduate attended spark- Birch Ίι, Veterinary Medicine. Howard Rochester. E. Babcock, Jr. '36, was best man. Other '38 BS; ΊxSp—Alfred W. Boicourt, son ling banquets, dined and danced Cornellians at the wedding were Ray- of Alfred A. Boicourt Ίz, married Ruth at the hotel, and reserved rooms mond Kruse '41, John Ayres '39, and Closson, a member of the Faculty of the for vi*siting parents. When he College of Home Economics, September Edwin Sunderville '35. The Birches live returns as an alumnus, he natu- at 919 East State Street, Ithaca. z. Boicourt is an instructor in the Depart- '36 AB, '39 LLB—Louis J. Dughi is ment of Floriculture and Ornamental rally expects to find his friends with the law firm of Herrigel, Lindabury Horticulture. where he last saw them. & Herrigel, 1060 Broad Street, Newark, '38 BS—Rhea L. Casterline has been N.J. made assistant to the residence manager '36 AB, '39 LLB—Nellie M. Gordon is at the New Haven (Conn.) YWCA. working in the Boston Bargaining Ag- '38 BS in AE—Norman R. Anderson is flOTΪLJtOa ency, Boston, Mass. working for the Youngstown Sheet and SYRACUSE, N. Y. '36 AB, '39 LLB; '2.8 AB, '30 LLB— Tube Co., Indiana Harbor, Ind. His resi- Emanuel Duke is associated in law dence address is 66zι South Harvard • MEMBER practice with Nathaniel Rubin '2.8, 2. Avenue, Chicago, 111. Cannon Street, Poughkeepsie. '38; '39—Richard W. Brooks, Jr. mar- Intercollegiate Alumni Hotels '36 Grad; '38 MS; '38 Grad; '35 AB, '37 ried Eleanor H. Lange '39 this summer. CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

Brooks is a test engineer with the Knickerbocker Laundry Co. in Long PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY Island City. '38 Sp—David R. Donovan married OF CORNELL ALUMNI Mary D. Grandin, June 17, in Warren. Mrs. Donovan is a graduate of Rosemary Hall in Greenwich, Conn., and of Mount ITHACA NEW YORK AND VICINITY Holyoke College. Donovan attended Harvard before he entered the University REA RETA*—Folded and interfolded facial tissues LANG'S GARAGE for the retail trade. as a special student in Agriculture. They GREEN STREET NEAR TIOGA live in Virginia. S'WIPE'S*—A soft, absorbent, disposable tissue,- Ithaca's Oldest, Largest, and Best packed flat, folded and interfolded, in bulk or '38 PhD—Leonard J. Goss married boxes, for hospital use. Carol M. Hollands, July i, in Ithaca. Mrs. Storage, Washing, Lubrication, Expert Repairs FIBREDOWN*—Absorbent and non-absorbent Goss has been teaching at St. John's ERNEST D. BUΠON '99 JOHN L. BUTTON 'J5 cellulose wadding, for hospital and commercial use. School, Ithaca. Dr. Goss was graduated FIBREDOWN* CANDY WADDING—in from the college of veterinary medicine BALTIMORE, MD. several attractive designs. at Ohio State University, where his FIBREDOWN* SANITARY SHEETING— father is a member of the faculty, and WHITMAN, REQUARDT & SMITH For hospital and sick room use. received the Doctorate in Veterinary Med- Water Supply, Sewerage, Structural, *Trade mark reg. U.S. Pat. Off. Valuations of Public Utilities, Reports, icine at Cornell. He is engaged in research Plans, and General Consulting Practice. THE GENERAL CELLULOSE COMPANY, INC. at Kentucky State University at Lexing- EZRA B. WHITMAN, CE. '01 GARWOOD, NEW JERSEY D. C. Taggart "16 - - Pres. - Treas. ton, Ky., where they will live. G. J. REQUARDT, C.E. '09 '38 AB; '38 ME—Eleanor M. Little B. L SMITH, CE. Ί4 West Biddle Street at Charles HENRY M. DEVEREUX, M.E. '33 was married September z in New York City to Sherwood A. Clow. They live at WASHINGTON, D. C. YACHT DESIGNER z/j.0 Richmond Avenue, Buffalo, where 295 CITY ISLAND AVE. Clow is associated with the Buffalo Forge Co. THEODORE K. BRYANT CITY ISLAND, N, Y. '39 BS; '39 BS—Frank P. Boyle, Jr. LL.B. '97—LL.M. '98 LAW OFFICES married Elnora M. Knapp of Waverly Master Patent Law, G.W.U. '08 this summer. They live at 303 Hill view Patents and Trade Marks Exclusively WILLIAM HARRIS '09 Place, Ithaca. 309-314 Victor Building 60 Park Place NEWARK, N. J. '39 BS—William Bensley played base- Phone, Cable Address ball this summer with a Chicago White KENOSHA, WIS. Market 3-2520-1 -2-3 "Wilhar" Sox farm club at Longview, Tex. His home address is 30 Franklin Street, MACWHYTE COMPANY YOUR BUSINESS CARD Spring ville. '39 LLB—Lester H. Chase, graduated In the Professional Directory reaches Manufacturers oF Wire and Wire Rope, Braided Wire '' With Distinction,'' is with Davis, Polk, Rope Sling, Aircraft Tie Rods, Strand and Cord. 5000 interested Comedians. Literature furnished on request Wardwell, Gardiner & Reed, lawyers, 15 For Special Rate write: Broad Street, New York City. JESSEL S. WHYTE, M.E. Ί3, PRES. & GEN. MGR. CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS R. B. WHYTE, M.E. Ί3, GEN. SUPT. 3 East Ave. ITHACA, N.Y. '39 AB—Eleanor Dodge has a teaching fellowship at Smith College, where she will work for the AM degree in chemis- try. Her address is 30 Belmont Avenue, Northampton, Mass. '39 LLB—George R. Williams is with ALUMNI NEWS FLASH the firm of Sutherland & Sutherland, 810 Union Trust Building, Rochester. To THE EDITOR: Here is a news item for the CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS '39 LLB—John E. Berry married Helen H. Hickox, September z, in Syracuse. Mrs. Berry is a graduate of Syracuse Uni- versity and Berry received the AB degree there. He is affiliated with Hinman, Howard & Katell law firm, Security Mutual Building, Binghamton. Their address is 41 Murray Street. '39 BS; 'zo PhD—Helen Gustafson, daughter of Professor Axel Gustafson, PhD 'zo, Agronomy, and Mrs. Gustafson, is teaching homemaking at the Gorham High School. '39 BS; '37—Kaisa Karikka was mar- Signed Class ried to Gordon J. Cloney, June 6, 1938. Cloney received the AB degree from Col- Address gate in 1931 and, after attending the Law School here, received the MS Clip this out and mail to Cornell Alumni News, 3 East Ave., Ithaca, N.Y. degree in political science at Syracuse University in 1938. They live in Bing- hamton. The Big Red Team TRAINS ON KNOX GELATINE

HE Knox Gelatine Energy Drink now Thas a definite place on the training tables of leading universities. Coaches and trainers have found that athletes have more endurance, recover more quickly from hard competition, show noticeably fewer muscle strains and injuries when they get their Knox Gelatine every day. Men and women in all walks of life are increasing their endurance and lessening fatigue by this same simple method. Try it yourself. Take the Knox Gelatine Energy Drink every day for a few weeks. See if you, too, don't feel better, work better, play better. Most people need all the energy they can get to win out in the game of life.

Please mention the NEWS Follow pur team PLAY-BY-PLAY with Atlantic

Again this year The Atlantic THE ATLANTIC FOOTBALL FORECASTS Refining Company invites you Don't fail to see the Atlantic Foot- to follow your favorite team ball Forecasts which are posted through the facilities of the every Wednesday at all Atlantic Atlantic Football Network. So whenever you can't Dealers. This is the amazingly accurate system — get out to the game yourself, tune in one of the sta- compiled by Dick Dunkel — which has predicted the tions in the box below and enjoy a lot of football winners of practically every college game in the fun the instant it takes place out on the gridiron. country for the past nine years with better than 80 % accuracy, exclusive of ties. This year, let it help you pick your winners , . . every week. THE ATLANTIC FOOTBALL GAME Be sure to stop at your neighborhood Atlantic Dealer's for your free copy of the Atlantic Football Game. You can actually see FOOTBALL FUN ALL SEASON exciting football action take place right before your Atlantic wishes you a lot of football eyes; you never know what's going to happen next. enjoyment this season, and hopes you Here's loads of fun for you and the whole family. will follow your own team — as well as many others You'd better hurry because the supply is limited. — over the Atlantic Football Network.

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