VOLUME 42, NUMBER 5 OCTOBER 26, 1939 CORNELL HOSTS A Guide to Comfortable Hotels and Restaurants Where Cornellians and Their Friends Will Find a Hearty Cornell Welcome

ITHACA CENTRAL NEW YORK Sbφt 's 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 R.C. TIFFANY '36 New York L WIARD '30 R. S. BURLINGAME '05 J. WHEELER '38 New York Restaurant Manager Owner CARL J. GILLEΠE '28, Propr. SOUTH HARVEY'S NEW YORK AND VICINITY ROUTE 33, BATAVIA, N.Y. HOTEL Open April 1st - November 30th GOOD FOOD — ROOMS MARY WRIGHT HARVEY, Proprietor CAVALIER BEACH CLUB John P. Masterson, '33, Asst. Manager CAVALIER COUNTRY CLUB VIRGINIA BEACH. VA. PARK AVE 51st ϊfl 52nd STS HEW YORK ROLAND BATON'27. M NEW ENGLAND CORNELLIANS will b particularly welcome at Stop at the... WASHINGTON, D. C. The Stratford Arms Hotel 117 WEST 70TH STREET HOTEL ELTON CORNELL HEADQUARTERS IN WASHINGTON TRαfαlgαr 7-9400 NEW YORK WATERBURY, CONN. Thirty Minutes From The World's Fair "A New England Landmark" THE LEE HOUSE (Write (or reservations) Bud Jennings '25, Proprietor ROBERT C. TRIER, Jr. 32, Resident Manager Fifteenth & L Streets, N.W. KENNETH W. BAKER '29, Manager BERMUDA WiMΓam H. Horned, '35, Assistant Manager OFFICIAL HEADQUARTERS THE CORNELL CLUB OF NEW ENGLAND Glnftttvin CORAL ISLAND CLUB PARKER HOUSE 1715 G Street, Northwes^Washingto^D.C BERMUDA'S BEST Boston's Most Famous Hotel 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

The Bill of Rights ESTABROOK & CO. Hemphill, Noyes C& Co. deserves a place in every real American Members of the New York and Members New York Stock Exchange home, office and school. You can now get Boston Stock Exchange 15 Broad Street . New York copies for yourself and your friends. Beauti- INVESTMENT SECURITIES fully printed in blue, red and black on vellum Sound Investments Investment Counsel and Jansen Noyβs '10 Stantoπ Griff is '10 paper, 12x16 ready for framing. Send $1.00 Supervision L M. Blancke '15 Willard I. Emerson '19 each for as many copies as you want, to

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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. 5 ITHACA, NEW YORK, OCTOBER 2.6, 1939 PRICE, 15 CENTS

AWARD MOAKLEY CUPS Moakley Cups were presented to James SENIOR SOCIETIES ELECT New Trophy Presented B. Pender '39, for most outstanding work; Fifteen From Class of '40 I. Reeve Swezey, III '41 of Huntington, Track and cross country activity Fall elections to the Senior societies, 100-yard dash; Alexander E. Walker, opened publicly October 17 with the an- announced October 18, brought eleven Jr. '41 of Pittsburgh, Pa., 440-yard run; nual "track get-together" sponsored by new members to and four George M. Walker '40 of Somerville, Spiked Shoe. About 150 track enthusiasts to , to complete their Mass., and Willard C. Schmidt '41 of gathered in the Willard Straight Me-, chapters for this year. The following Rochester, 880-yard run; Matty L. morial Room for the presentation by members of the Class of '40 were elected: Urbanowitz '41 of Buffalo and Nathaniel Coach Moakley of the Moakley Cups E. White '41 of Wenonah, N. J., mile Sphinx Head donated by Cornell Clubs for members of H. Lyford Cobb, Bronxville; Arts; run; James S. Hall '40 of Groton and last year's track team who showed the chairman of the George E. Ranney '40 of Ithaca, two- best spirit and attitude in their several board of managers; Psi Upsilon. mile run; W. Harry Johns, Jr. '39 of Great events. William Dixon, Plainfield, N. J.; Me- Neck, high jump; Kirk Hershey '41 of A new trophy, given in memory of chanical Engineering; manager soccer; Philadelphia, Pa. (and this year's foot- Junius T. Auerbach '90 by his two sons Atmos; Phi Kappa Psi. ball team), broad jump; Frederic W. for competition in cross country among Francis C. Everts, Glens Falls; Arts; West, Jr. '41 of Lansdowne, Pa. (also of members of the Heptagonal Games As- player-manager 150-pound football; the football team), shot put; John W. sociation, was formally presented by Sigma Phi Sigma.. Borhman, Jr. '41 of Harrisburgh, Pa. R. W. Sailor '07, editor-in-chief of the Nixon Griffis, son of Stanton Griffis (substitute back this year), javelin ALUMNI NEWS. Auerbach was an ardent Ίo, New Canaan, Conn.; Arts; Varsity throw; Mervin G. Olinger '39, pole follower of Cornell sports, a founder of boxing; assistant editor Sun; Dramatic vault. the Cornell Club of New England, and Club; Book and Bowl, Sigma Delta Chi, for many years until his death in 1917 a Cornell Clubs which to last week had Psi Upsilon. successful lawyer in Boston, Mass. For participated by providing cups were Henry M. Jewett, son of Guernsey R. several years beginning in 1906 he gave those of Atlanta, Ga., Delaware, Elmira, Jewett '99, White Plains; Hotel Ad- a cup each year to the winner of the New England, Southern Ohio, Phila- ministration; managing director Hotel 1' Auerbach race'' of ten-and-a-half miles delphia, Western Pennsylvania, and ; Scarab, Phi Gamma Delta. Washington, D. C. It is expected that from Dryden which was a feature of the Richard T. Meister, Gates Mills, Ohio; other Clubs will take part in these fall sports season. His sons, the donors Agriculture; associate editor Sun; Varsity awards, as they have in former years. of the new Junius Auerbach Trophy, are golf; Scarab, Sigma Delta Chi, Chi Psi. both graduates of the University of New William C. Mogk, Jr., Brooklyn; Hampshire, Eugene K. Auerbach, alumni KANSAS CITY WOMEN Hotel Administration; Varsity baseball, secretary there, and Richard D. Auer- First meeting this season of the Cornell Junior-varsity football, Junior-varsity bach, secretary to U. S. Senator H. Styles Women's Club of Greater Kansas City basketball; Scarab, Phi Kappa Psi. Bridges. was a tea October 7, at the home of Paul C. Stark, Jr., son of Paul C. Stark First competition for the new trophy Gladys Beck, Grad '2.0. Bessie Gay Ίx, Louisiana, Mo.; Agriculture; 150- will be the new cross country race be- Secrest Ίx presided. Mrs. Ellsworth L. pound crew; president Ho-Nun-de-Kah tween Cornell, Columbia, Dartmouth, Filby (Marion C. Fisher) '19 reported on and Ag-Domecon Association; Psi Up- Harvard, Pennsylvania, Princeton, and the meeting of the Federation of Cornell silon. Yale, in Van Cortland Park, New York Women's Clubs in Ithaca last June, to Charles T. Stewart, son of Mrs. Wil- City, November 11. First to win it three which she was a delegate, and Margaret liam D. Stewart (Margaret Thorp) Ίz, times will have permanent possession. M. Gist '40, now employed in Kansas Edgewood, Pa.; Arts; manager basket- City, spoke on undergraduate life of the Emery G. Wingerter '40 of Red Bank, ball; Theta Delta Chi. Campus. Mrs. N. R. Beagle (Hermione V. N. J., cross country captain, and Walter James N. Trousdell, Glen Cove; Arts; Jones) '12. was appointed Club chairman W. Zittel, Jr. '40 of Buffalo, track Varsity wrestling, football; Beta Theta for the Federation Scholarship Fund. captain, presided at the Willard Straight Pi. gathering. The Moakley Cups were pre- Peter T. Wood, son of Walter D. Wood sented to Coach Moakley on behalf of '09, Summit, N. J.; Arts; manager the Cornell Clubs by Walter C. Heasley, wrestling and minor sports representa- Jr. '30, executive secretary of the Alumni tive on Athletic Advisory Council; Beth Fund and former Varsity hurdler, and L Amed, Chi Psi. Moakley made the awards. Sailor pre- Quill and Dagger sented the Auerbach Trophy to Robert Warren W. Hawley, III, son of Warren J. Kane '34, Assistant Director of Ath- W. Hawley, Jr. '14, Batavia; Agriculture; letics, former Varsity sprinter and as- Student Council; Scabbard and Blade, sistant track coach, who accepted it for Acacia. the Heptagonal Games Association. Nicholas S. LaCorte, Elizabeth, N. J.; Other speakers were Professor Bristow Arts; 150-pound football; formerly Stu- Adams, Agriculture Publications, Faculty dent Council; Seal and Serpent. track adviser; Professor John R. Bangs, Arnold Nye, Bronxville; Architecture; Jr. '2.1, Administrative Engineering and captain skiing; LΌgive, Delta Upsilon. assistant track coach; and Edward G. James R. Riley, Jr., Hopewell, N. J.; Ratkoski '35, assistant coach. Motion Mechanical Engineering; Varsity la- pictures were shown of last year's meet crosse, manager cross country; Atmos, with Princeton. CAMPUS LIGHT AND SHADOW Seal and Serpent. CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

WAR AND FOOTBALL Rarely does a team score directly by Cornell Club of Cleveland at its regular recovering a fumbled ball in mid-air. luncheon October 2.0 had as speaker Tell About Cornell scored its first two touchdowns Berna Ίz, general manager, National in that fashion as Harold F. McCullough Machine Tool Builders Association. He ATHLETICS '41 of Brooklyn and Kenneth G. Brown discussed'' The Role of the Machine Tool '40 of Miller ton stepped into the roles of Industry in Time of War." Harold D. CORNELL 47, PENN STATE 0 opportunists. Rollins, the Penn State North '07, former cheerleader, gave a The football team, playing a smashing quarterback, was twice the victim. spectator's report of the Princeton foot- game in the first half and with its re- Smashing at Cornell's right tackle, he ball game. serves almost as effective as the Varsity, lost the ball. McCullough grabbed it as It was announced that the Club's spe- crushed Penn State, 47-0, on Schoellkopf it spurted from Rollins' arms and ran cial train to the Ohio State game was Field last Saturday, with some 7,000 unmolested x6 yards for the score. rapidly filling, and that "after much persons in the Crescent. Nicholas Drahos '41 of Cedarhurst persuasion the Phi Beta Kappas have Penn State, undefeated, had been ex- placekicked the point. postponed their proposed discussion on pected to provide the stiffest kind of On the third play after the next kick- 'English Prose' and relinquished Bag- opposition. But Cornell forced two off, the same astonishing "break" oc- gage Car No. z" for an informal "Bag- "breaks" in the first ten minutes of play curred. Three Cornell tacklers hit Rol- gage Car Ball," with music and other and converted them into spectacular lins as he skirted Cornell's right end. entertainment! touchdowns. This time Brown snatched the ball and, with Dunbar contributing a vital block on the ioyard line, raced Δμ. yards for the touchdown. Drahos's kick skittered G to off to the left, and Cornell held a 13-0 lead. From that point, it was all Cornell. Penn State's running attack just could not function against the hard-charging Cornell line, and Cornell's secondary defense made only one miscue in generally snuffing out the flame of Penn State's twenty-three-pass aerial attack. The visitors, held to a net gain of fourteen yards rushing, made only one first down —a 30-yard forward pass play, Eigen- rauch to Vargo. With thirteen points stowed away, Cornell bagan to pour on the power. The third touchdown climaxed a 37- yard march as the first period drew to a close. Brown signalled a fair catch of Ickes' punt on Penn State's 37-yard line. Mc- Cullough threw a 14-^yard pass to Ray- mond Jenkins '41 of Philadelphia who had replaced the injured Alva E. Kelley '41 of Tarentum, Pa., at right end. On fourth down, with one completed pass ruled illegal, McCullough threw again to Jenkins for 18 yards and first down on State's seven-yard line. An offside penalty cost Cornell five yards, but McCullough found a hole in the right side of the Penn State line and burst through for a touch- down. Drahos converted with a place- kick and Cornell had a 2.0-0 lead. Stopped twice in the second period, once after moving the ball 67 yards, Cor- nell struck again for a score. Penn State punted, and Mortimer W. Landsberg, Jr. '41 of Mamaroneck returned the ball -LQ yards to Penn State's 41-yard stripe. Landsberg cut through center for 14 yards and first down. James T. Schmuck '41 of Jamaica, on an end-around play, picked up six yards, but Cornell was set back to Penn State's 2.6-yard line by an offside penalty. There Walter Scholl '41 of Port Richmond fired a forward pass. A Penn State man tipped the ball— square into the hands of Schmuck just SQUAD OF THIRTY-EIGHT OVERWHELMS PENN STATE beyond the line of scrimmage. Schmuck shook off two tacklers and scored. OCTOBER 2.6, 1939 59

Drahos placekicked successfully to give centers, Moran, Pastuck; backs, Landsberg, The Junior Varsity also dipped into Cornell a 2.7-0 lead. Borhman, Lewis, Murphy, Ruddy, Scholl, the 150-pound squad to use Henry J. Bufalino, Stimson, Viel, Snavely, Quigg, Penn State, completing the long pass Templeton. Wickert '41 of Albany at right end. from Eigenrauch to Vargo, then made Penn State substitutes: Ends, Washabaugh, In beating the Cornell lightweights, its only threatening gesture of the game, RadcliίF; tackles, Kniaz, Stravinski; guards, Princeton ran its i5o-pound victory string reaching Cornell's 45-yard line; but the Nemeth, Woodward; backs, Peters, Petrella, to nine straight. For two years now Krouse, Eigenrauch, Debler, Kins, Smaltz. visitors, stopped in the air and set back Referee, J. R. Trimble, Dubuque; umpire, Princeton has won the League champion- by a penalty, lost the ball on downs on Herbert Benzoni, Colgate; linesman, C. F. ship. Cornell this year has won one game their /μ-yard marker. Berry, Lafayette; field judge, R. E. Burt, and lost one. Assistant coach is George Five plays later Cornell had scored its Canisius. C. Rankin '36, who was on the Varsity fifth touchdown. Louis C. Bufalino '41 RUNNERS SPLIT AT ALFRED squad under Coach Gilmour Dobie. of Swampscott, Mass., raced 2.5 yards The Varsity and Freshman cross coun- Wright Bronson, Jr. '40, son of Wright through the line. Lands berg picked up try teams divided honors with Alfred at Bronson '12. of Akron, Ohio, has been seven more in two tries as one Cornell Alfred last Saturday. The Varsity lost, elected captain of the 150-pound foot- pass missed fire. Then, from the eighfr- 30-2.5, and seven Freshmen finished in ball team. yard line, Landsberg smashed through the first ten, to win by the excellent center for the score. Drahos converted SOCCER TIES NAVY score, 18-37. for a 34-0 margin. For the second straight year, the soccer Frank P. Hoag '41 of Poughquag was Heavy rain began falling at the start team played a scoreless tie with Navy at the first Varsity runner to finish, placing of the second half, and the teams ex- Annapolis last Saturday. second over the four and two-tenths changed several punts. Cornell finally The record for the season is now one mile course in 2.5 minutes 30 seconds. took possession on Penn State's 44-yard victory, one defeat, one tie. Rindall of Alfred, the individual winner, line and in three plays scored the sixth Cornell's attack developed at least was timed in 2.5 :o6. touchdown. John A. Lewis '41 of Bethle- thirty-five shots at the Navy goal. Captain Paul M. Kelsey of Ithaca won hem, Pa., picked up eight yards in two the two and one-tenths mile Freshman CAPTAIN EICHLER OUT plunges at center. On the next play, race in 11:39.1. Kelsey had been elected Leave of absence for the first term was Schmuck took the ball on the deceptive captain the week before the meet. He is granted E. Vincent Eichler '40, captain end-around maneuver and circled Penn the son of Professor Lincoln D. Kelsey, of the football team, last week. State's right end for 36 yards and the Agriculture Extension. Eichler injured a knee in pre-season score. Captain Alter of State blocked The order of scoring: practice. It failed to respond to treat- Lewis' placekick, and the score was ment and caused him pain when he stood Cornell 40, Penn State o. VARSITY Rindall, Alfred 15 :o6 up. For the Syracuse game he left the Despite two Cornell fumbles in the Hoag, Cornell 15130 Infirmary on crutches to see the contest Z : fourth period, both recovered by Vargo, Burgess, Alfred 535 from the sidelines. Penn State could make no headway, and Gamble, Alfred T-Y-YJ Physicians advised a long course of a poor punt by Ickes paved the way for Ayer, Cornell 15148 treatment, and Eichler will stay in the final Cornell score. The ball went Wingerter, Cornell 2.6:05.5 White, Cornell 2.6:05.5 Ithaca for a few weeks. He hopes to re- out of bounds on Penn State's 40-yard Hall, Alfred 2.6:19 cover sufficiently to return to the Uni- line. Cornell kicked, then intercepted a Dauenhauer, Alfred 2.6:19 versity in February. He will be eligible State pass, John W. Borhman, Jr. '41 of W. Schmidt, Cornell 2.6:2.5 for football if he returns next fall. Harrisburg, Pa., making the catch on FRESHMAN The exact nature of the injury has not State's 31. On the first play Borhman cut Kelsey, Cornell 11:39.2. II: been determined. X-rays have shown no through the Penn State right tackle, Jameson, Cornell 45 Kane, Alfred 11:53 ruptured cartilage or ligaments. reversed his field to the right to slip by Worn, Cornell 11:11 three tacklers, and ran for the touch- Holden, Cornell 11:12. ODDS AND ENDS down. Lewis, bucking center, converted Kvasny, Cornell 11:13 Four of Cornell's five future football the 47th point. Smith, Cornell 11:19 McGoffin, Cornell 11:36 opponents won last Saturday. Columbia Coach Snavely used a total of thirty- Coleman, Alfred 11:51 was the lone loser, dropping a 14-7 de- eight men, including nine Junior-varsity Killog, Alfred i2-*57 cision to Princeton. Ohio State defeated players whom he sent in together in the Minnesota, 13-10; Colgate won from St. last minute of the game. OTHERS WIN AND LOSE Lawrence, 31-0; Dartmouth defeated The line-ups: Two other football teams broke even Lafayette, 14-0; and Pennsylvania de- CORNELL (47) Pos. PENN STATE (O) in contests last week. feated Harvard, τx-j. Hershey LE Vargo The Junior Varsity eleven defeated the George W. Peck '39, former Varsity Blasko LT Platt Penn State reserves, 7-0, in twilight and halfback now in Elmira, came back to Duπbar LG Carbinski floodlight on lower Alumni Field last Ithaca October 14 as a football official. Finneran C Gajeckί Conti RG Mori Friday. The 150-pound team lost to He was head linesman for the Ithaca- Drahos RT Frketich Princeton, 18-0, in an Eastern Intercol- Olean high school game. Last Saturday, Kelley RE Alter legiate Lightweight Football League he assisted with the coaches' telephone Matuszczak QB Rollins game at Princeton last Friday. atop the Schoellkopf Field press box for McCullough LHB Patrick the Penn State game. Baker RHB White John A. Lewis *4x of Bethlehem, Pa., Brown FB Ickes scored all Cornell's points in the Junior Kennedy Randall, Jr. '41 of Staten Score by periods: Varsity game. He plunged over from the Island, captain of the tennis team, won Cornell 2.0 14 7 6—47 one-yard line after two first-period Cor- the fall Varsity tennis tournament, de- Touchdowns: McCullough 1, Brown, nell drives into State territory, and place- feating William E. GifTord '41 of Cleve- Schmuck (sub for Hershey) 1, Landsberg kicked the extra point. land Heights, Ohio, in the final, 6-3,1-6, (sub for Brown), Borhman (sub for Baker); points after touchdowns, Drahos 4 (place- Both Lewis, fullback, and Henry F. 6-1. Gifford reached the final by defeat- kicks), Lewis (sub for Brown) from scrim- Pastuck '41 of Astoria, center, were ing Louis C. Boochever, Jr. '41 of Ithaca, mage. taken out of the game to report for and Randall eliminated Jerome S. Affron Cornell substitutes: Ends, Jenkins, Trous- practice with the Varsity squad. Both '40 of Beacon in the other semi-final. The dell, Schmuck, Burke, RosokoίF; tackles, Lafey, Worcester, Van Orden; guards, Wolff, appeared in the Varsity game with Penn Freshman tourney was won by Leon C. Christensen, Jacobs, Vinciguerra, Kasparian; State Saturday. Sunstein, Jr., of Elkins Park, Pa. 6o CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

DEPARTMENT OF PHYSICAL EDUCATION AND ATHLETICS ATHLETICS SHOW PROFIT Financial Report July 1, 1938—June 30, 1939 For the third successive year, the De- partment of Physical Education and Ath- I. DIVISIONS OF PHYSICAL EDUCATION AND INTRAMURAL SPORTS letics has closed its books with an operat- INCOME Student Fees. . ._. $43,967.85 ing profit, as shown in its financial report Gym Account (Roller Skating, etc.). x, 2.58.92. for the year ending last June 30, released Intramural 1,055.50 by Director James Lynah '05 this week. Trustees' Appropriation 4,337 3o Again, football is the only intercollegiate EXPENSE $51,619.57 sport to show an operating profit, its Salaries of Instruction $34,850.00 Salaries of Special Coaches 900.00 surplus of nearly $141,000 serving in the Equipment and Supplies 3,118.41 main to carry the expense of all other Gym Expense .' 1,985.ix sports. New Construction & Repairs 6,740.80 The Divisions of Physical Education Maintenance—Fields & Tennis Courts 3,000.00 and Intramural Sports are sustained Women's Activities 1,0x5 M 51,619,57 mainly from student fees and University II. DIVISION OF INTERCOLLEGIATE SPORTS (C.U.A.A.) appropriation; consequently, the pro- EXPENSE INCOME gram is limited according to this income. Baseball $ 9,916.43 i> z,i3i.oi Operating surplus of $8,2.90.64 was Basketball 15,095.36 7,566.19 ~Beeb *e Lake.* " . ,489.6x 2.,i68.o5 paid to the University to reduce indebted- Johnny Parson Club. ,x64 x9 513.02. ness incurred in past years by the Ath- Boxing. >4I9 44 1,196.76 letic Association. It was derived after Crew 15,171.47 1,2.56.2.x two major appropriations last year, of Cross Country 1,336.64 $15,000 for construction of a University Fencing 1,383.14 2.00.00 Football 5x,833 55 194,6x4.04 golf course, and $6,000 for preliminary Golf 3°° 34 75.00 architects' studies for indoor sports build- Hockey 990.36 3x5.00 ings for men and women. During the Lacrosse 1,963 .xo X50.C0 year, also, nearly $2.1,000 was expanded Skiing 167.95 for improvement and repairs of the ath- Soccer x,i5o.xo 350.00 Swimming x,38o.5x 900.00 letic plant. Expenses also included in- Tennis 1,2:31.47 X91.00 terest payments to the University of Track X3,o3x.i3 3,3ox.88 $10,571.43. After application of the Wrestling 1,3x4.69 52-7-93 operating surplus, the Athletic As- Administrative Expense: Awards x,6o6 9i X6.50 sociation's debt to the University at the Coaches' Summer School 330.00 end of the year stood at $189,112.. 89. Express X30.16 Insurance 1,318.37 Membership in NCAA X5.00 MEET WITH PRINCETON MEN Miscellaneous 578.30 1x4.83 Fifty Cornellians of Philadelphia were Postage 1,168.40 guests of about as many members of the Salaries 11,785.15 local Princeton Club at a pre-football- Stationery & Office Supplies 603.03 Taxes 32-56 game buffet supper and party at the Telephone & Telegraph 41X.66 Princeton Club, October 13. John Wurtz, Traveling Expense 1,949.18 Princeton '31, showed motion pictures of 2 Alumni Memberships ->475 °° Princeton games, including the one with Buildings and Grounds:—Operating Expense 6,63x.ox Cornell in 1937, and Howard H. Ingersoll Construction and Repairs xo, 890.04 Maintenance & Equipment Handling 15,703.07 '15 of Atlantic Refining Company showed Broadcasting 7,500.00 sound pictures, "Atlantic Highlights," Coach's Residence 600.00 of crucial football plays of recent years. General Equipment 1,761.36 Interest io,57X 431 Medical Service and Trainers 11,354.31 PENN GAME LUNCHEON Publicity x,8x8.i9 All Cornellians who go to the Penn- Programs 3,830.70 6,448.56 sylvania game this year, November 2.5, Season Tickets 35,3x6.50 Special Appropriations:—Cash Register 1,745.61 and Pennsylvania alumni, with their Gymnasium 6,ooo.oo2 families and friends, are invited to a Golf Course X5,ooo.oo3 4 luncheon before the game sponsored by Spring Day 9X0.4X the Cornell Club of Philadelphia and ,97 Pennsylvania's General Alumni Society, Balance, applied on note 85X90.64 'Varsity Club, and Division of Intercol- 3x69,099.91 legiate Athletics. Luncheon will be 1 Interest paid to , July I, 1938-June 30, 1939: (a) On mortgage on football coach's residence, $8,000 @ $XΛ% $ 440.00 served in the new and enlarged Houston (b) On Crescent loan, $66,225.52 @ 6% 3,973-53 (c) On advances from University, 1933-34 deficit $34,000 @ 5% 1,705.00 Hall, Pennsylvania's union building, (d) On University appropriation, 1934-35 deficit $28,000 @ 5% , 1,400.00 3417 Spruce Street, from 11:30 to 1:45, (e) On University advances, 1935-36 deficit $61,078.01 @> 5% 3,053.90 at one dollar. For those who drive, park- $10,572.43 2 Appropriated by Board of Trustees upon recommendation of Council on Physical Education and Athletics ing spaces are convenient both to the to cover costs of studies, plans, sketches, and models of proposed indoor sports buildingsfor men and women. 3 Appropriated by Board of Trustees upon recommendation of Council on Physical Education and Athletics luncheon and the game, on Thirty-third for construction of nine-hole golf course. Street north of Franklin Field and on 4 $427.26 from 1938 Spring Day committee. South Street south of the Field. ADVANCES OUTSTANDING FROM UNIVERSITY TO ATHLETIC DIVISION Reservations are requested before No- Stadium $ 57,934.88 Operating deficits:—Prior to June 1934 $34,100.00 vember 13. Remittance, with ten cents 1934-35 x8,ooo.oo added for mailing tickets, should be 1935—36 61,078.01 1x3,178.01 made to The General Alumni Society, Mortgage on 101 Delaware Ave 8,000.00 University of Pennsylvania, 3401 Spruce Total $189,111.89 Street, Philadelphia, Pa. OCTOBER 2.6, 1939 6l

Professor Fuertes then sat down, NOW, IN MY TIME! glared all around him, put his head in his FROM FAR BELOW . . . hands, and burst into a storm of tears. By Rotneyn Berry There followed a tense and embarrassed By Robert L. Bliss '30 moment in the Faculty meeting, Dean Speaking of illuminated manuscripts Hammond said, who told me these Two of Cornell's staunchest football —as we did two weeks ago in connection things many times; until Dr. Law got up rooters are Fritzi Swanstrom and Susie with the White Library—you might be and went at the situation with the tools Martin, a brace of smart young advertis- interested in hearing about the time the of tact and winsome Scottish speech. Dr. ing women whose joint baby at the mo- University of Bologna became 900 years Law said he could feel for the Professor ment is Knox Gelatine. That's the stuff old and resolved to celebrate it. of Civil Engineering. He, too, found that fires you full of energy and has the The invitation to the party was a himself frequently pained by the failure Big Red's opponents hanging on the hand job in Latin, engrossed on parch- of the University to observe the tradi- ropes. You remember the box with the ment and embellished with gold leaf and tional amenities of academic intercourse. head of a Jersey calf on it. We used to cut water color. Morrill Hall replied, quite He agreed fully > he said, that Cornell them out as a kid because they matched correctly, that it would be delighted to ought to put on more dog and he would our cut-outs of the Cow Brand Baking accept and had assigned the learned gladly support the previous speaker in Powder's cow. Oldsters will be glad to doctor, Estevan Fuertes, its Professor of his proposed crusade. But he was far know that the company's affairs are still Civil Engineering, to appear in its be- from agreeing that the University had being run by eighty-three-year-old Mrs. half and to present its greetings. So far so been disgraced at Bologna. Indeed, he Knox up at Johnstown (the one near good, but unfortunately both the ac- felt that we had brought honor and dis- Fonda, not the one that floods). ceptance and the delegate's credentials tinction upon ourselves by departing The girls claim great things for their were written on half-sheets of letter from custom in this instance; for whereas product. They pointed out that on the paper (from the job press of Andrus and the other foundations had sent illumin- Saturday before the day we lunched with Church) and were couched in Tompkins ated manuscripts to Bologna we had done them, all their teams won or tied: Cor- County English. a far, far better thing in sending an nell, Notre Dame, Columbia, and one At that time we were pretty gauche in illuminated MAN! that's secret. They're probably known matters of pomp. This is no longer true. That, of course, fixed everything up in around the plant as the Gelatine League. Such business now goes over the desk of a split second. Ravished by the delight- They tell us that other colleges are be- Mr. Woodford Patterson '95, and Mr. ful compliment, The Mogue staggered ginning to prick up their ears and that Patterson is widely recognized as the over to Dr. Law, threw his arms about the they'll probably send gobs of it to Syra- Emily Post of academic punctilio. Nowa- little Scot, and wept quarts of Spanish cuse and Princeton after the season closes. days, Bologna would get its Latin, its tears upon his vest. Incidentally, they think Cornell's parchment, and its gold leaf right back The blot of Bologna having been thus trainer, Frank Kavanagh, is one of the and in the eye. But not then! wiped up, the Faculty meeting could— smartest in the business. He knew all When Professor Estevan Fuertes got and did—turn to "new business" and about the oomph value of gelatine al- back from Italy in the fall he was still take up what to do about the many re- most as soon as the Knox people did, and mad about his credentials being on that grettable features of the (then) recent was looking for them when they came Andrus and Church letterhead, and he Sophomore Banquet. around. Seems now they're finding that made a scene about it in the very first the stuff will do things for peptic ulcers Faculty meeting. He said Cornell had and all kinds of miseries that football CHIEF BERNARD J. REILLY of the been belittled in the eyes of European boys don't have to worry about until Ithaca Fire Department was tendered a scholars. He himself had been personally they come up into the stands for the testimonial dinner in the Department humiliated. He would see to it that balance of their lives. headquarters on Seneca Street October 11, nothing of the sort happened again, and celebrating twenty-five years in office. * * * he bespoke the support of his colleagues City officials and Chief Edward W. Several Princetonians commented with in this high purpose. He got madder and Gieselman of the Syracuse Fire Depart- disappointment that the highly touted madder as he went along, and the Spanish ment and Lawrence Daw secretary of the Cornell band wasn't on the field at came out on him like a rash. He moved State Underwriters' Association, paid Palmer Stadium. For immediate release, out into the aisle and plunged up and tribute to Chief Reilly's administration. that wasn't Cornell's dexterous ROTC down as he gave a dramatic imitation of that painful episode. First, he portrayed the procession of gaily-hooded delegates filing up to the rostrum and unrolling their illuminated, Latin addresses bright with every hue of the expiring dolphin. Salamanca, Upsala, and Oxford; Grenoble, Gδttingen, and Lima; Cambridge, Utrecht, and the Sor- bonne: each more fragrant than the last with the odor of antiquity, academic ceremony, and organ music. And then he depicted Cornell blunder- ing into the Middle Ages in the person of the poor old Mogue wearing his last year's Benny Rich suit and dropping into the font that lousy half-sheet of note paper from the job press of Andrus and Church. It was awful, he said. It was un- TRACK MEN GET MOAKLEY CUPS PRESENTED BY CORNELL CLUBS speakable! Never again could he lift his Left to right (see story, page 57): Borhman, West, Hershey, Schmidt, Heasley, head in the company of self-respecting Alexander Walker, George Walker, Captain Zittel, Hall, Urbanowitz, White, Kane scholars. and Sailor with the new Junius Auerbach Trophy, Coach Moakley. Photo by Fenner CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS clef and cymbal circus that graced the members may gather to hear broadcasts west stands, but a private troupe as- of Cornell football games. Walter S. sembled by Francis T. Hunter Ί6, the Merwin '35 announced that Professor COMING EVENTS Time and place of regular Club luncheons are printed great Cornell tennis player who had Frederick G. Marcham, History, would separately as we have space. Notices of other Cornell himself about ioo guests for the game. be guest of honor at a Club smoker Oc- events, both in Ithaca and abroad, appear below. His band served to lead the tired business tober 2.7. Harry E. Harding '05 said that Contributions to this column must be received on or men and their group (which included President Day would speak at the an- before Thursday to appear the next Thursday. Jack and Charlie, Billy Seeman '13, nual banquet February X4, 1940. Sport Ward Ίi, et al) from the railroad SATURDAY, OCTOBER 2.8 Ithaca: Freshman football, Penn State, 1:30 siding to the stadium and back after the BOSTON WOMEN Soccer, Princeton, 2:30 game; and they were as proficient on Cornell Women's Club of Boston, 150-pound football, Pennsylvania, 3:30 "From Blue Cayuga" as "Take Me Out Mass, had twenty-three members at a Dramatic Club repeats four one-act New To The Ball Game." York State plays, Willard Straight meeting October 19 at the home of Mrs. Theater, 8:15 It wouldn't have been cricket to pit Louis C. Graton (Josephine E. Bowman) Cleveland, O.: Cornell Club special train their dazzling girl baton twirler against Όo in Cambridge. Mrs. James B. Palmer to Columbus leaves Union Terminal 9:30 the Tiger band's straight man, though. (Martha L. Kinne) 'x4, president of the —reservations, J. Bentley Forker, Jr. '26, 4612 Prospect Ave. And while the plucky little group might Club, presided, and reports were given Columbus, Ohio: Football, Ohio State, 2 have made a small baseball "C," they by chairmen of committees: Mrs. Samuel Cornell headquarters Deshler Wallick Hotel never could have marched off a football S. Evans, Jr. (Ella M. Behrer) \j, schol- Buffalo: Cornell Women's Club bridge lunch- or crew letter, and they surely never arship; Mrs. M. Gregory Dexter (Jennie eon, for Federation Scholarship Fund, would have stretched out even to the A. Curtis) '14, membership; Mrs. Clyde Buffalo Consistory State College, Pa.: Freshman soccer, Penn State middle of the second syllable in "Bal- J. Heath (Betty M. Lowndes) '33, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 31 lantine's." program. Ithaca: University Theatre Films presents * * * After the business meeting, Mrs. "Storm in a Teacup," Willard Straight Theatre, 4:15, 7:15, 9:15 SHOTS OF THE WEEK: Walt Kuhn Ίi at Graton described and showed maps and Princeton, sporting a Cornell hat calcu- motion pictures of a geological survey THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2 Chicago, 111.: Cornell Club football dinner, lated to "enhance the most fastidious trip through New Zealand, Australia, Stevens Hotel, 6 rooter." . . . Coke Miller '1.9 in from and Bali which she and Graton Όo took FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3 Des Moines putting a war correspondent in 1937-38. Ithaca: Alumni Homecoming on the Rex. . . . Crab Magoun '12. and Cross country, Varsity and Freshmen, EZRA COUNTY FAIR, the second open son Ace '40 passing like ships in the Syracuse, upper Alumni Field, 4:30 house of the year at Willard Straight Freshman football, Blair Academy, lower night, one bound back to Ithaca, the Hall, complete with cider barrel, apple- Alumni Field, 4:30 other to New England, dropping sail at Football rally, Bailey Hall, 8 bobbing, a husking bee, and square the Club. . . . Professor Everett Ward Dramatic Club presents "Ten Nights In a dancing, attracted about 900 student Olmsted '91, whose Sunday nights en- Bar-room," Willard Straight Theater, 8:15 members of the Hall. deared him to older generations of stu- SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 4 dents, stopping in before going to his Ithaca: Alumni Homecoming Law Association annual meeting, Myron winter home in Mexico. . . . Retired CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS Taylor Hall, 11 now after completing forty-six years of 3 EAST AVENUE ITHACA, N. Y. Alumni luncheon, Drill Hall, 11:30-1:30 Football, Columbia, Schoellkopf Field, 2 teaching last year—first at Ithaca as FOUNDED 1899 Professor of Romance Languages and Reception for all visitors, Willard Straight Published by the Cornell Alumni Associa- Memorial Room, after game later at Minnesota as Dean—he rounded tion. Weekly during the college year; monthly Dramatic Club presents "Ten Nights In a out fifty years in Beta Theta Pi last in July and August: thirty-five issues annually. Bar-room," Willard Straight Theater, 8:15 month and the boys marked the occasion Subscription: $4.00 a year in U. S. and posseS' Homecoming Dance, with Al Donahue's with the gift of a handsome watch. . . . sions; Canada, $4.^5; Foreign, $4.50. Single copies orchestra, Drill Hall, 9:30-1:30 fifteen cents. Subscriptions are payable in advance Swarthmore, Pa.: Soccer, Swarthmore and are renewed annually unless cancelled. Easton, Pa.: 150-pound football, Lafayette Editor-in-chief R. W. SAILOR '07 Hamilton: Freshman soccer, Colgate PITTSBURGH WOMEN Managing Editor H. A. STEVENSON Ί9 TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 7 Fifteen members of the Cornell Wo- Assistant Editor MARGARET V. SAMPSON '37 Ithaca: University concert, Emanuel Feuer- men's Club of Pittsburgh met at the Office Manager RUTH RUSSELL '31 mann, cellist, Bailey Hall, 8:15 College Club October 7, with their Contributors: FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10 speaker Howard McKinney, Negro city ROMEYN BERRY '04 L. C. BOOCHEVER '12. Ithaca: Freshman soccer, Syracuse, 4:30 Syracuse: Freshman football, Syracuse detective who organized Hill City in one F. M. COFFIN '12 W. J. WATERS '17 of Pittsburgh's slum districts, its govern- R. L. BLISS '30 SATURDAY, NOVEMBER II Printed by The Cayuga Press Ithaca: Armistice Day meeting on the subject, ment carried on entirely by the juvenile "Can America Keep Out of War and residents. Mrs. S. I. Lasner (Norene How?" Bailey Hall, 11 Fischer) '36presided. Hostesses were Mrs. Soccer, Colgate, 1130 PENNSYLVANIA LUNCHEON Football, Colgate, Schoellkopf Field, 2 Peter H. Curry (Cecilia B. O'Neill) '98, Announced elsewhere in this issue, the New York City: Heptagonal cross country Jane E. Anderson '09, Dr. Irene Davis luncheon run by the University of Penn- meet, Van Cortlandt Park Ferguson '2.1, and Helen Calkins, PhD '3Z. sylvania before the'' Thanksgiving Day'' New Haven, Conn.: 150-pound football, Yale game November 2.5 should be a welcome State College, Pa.: Freshman cross country, Penn State ASHBERY IN BUFFALO event for visiting Cornellians. Not only FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 17 Ray S. Ashbery '15, Alumni Field does it eliminate the confusion of a quick West Point: Junior varsity football, U. S. Secretary, spoke on Campus activities lunch and hurried trip before the game, Military Academy and the University's alumni program at but it gives opportunity—or at least SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 18 the regular luncheon of the Cornell Club paves the way—for wider acquaintance Ithaca: Soccer, Lehigh, 2 of Buffalo October 10 at the Buffalo and better understanding between alumni 150-pound football, Rutgers, 2 Hanover, N. H.: Football, Dartmouth, 1:30 Athletic Club. Sixty members were of Pennsylvania and Cornell. Chicago, 111.: Cornell-Dartmouth gridgraph present. President Neil M. Willard Ί8 If the innovation is as much of a con- luncheon, Old Town Room, Hotel Sher- announced that the Club has reserved a venience as it seems to be, readers of man Philadelphia, Pa.: Freshman football, Pennsyl- special room at the Buffalo Athletic the ALUMNI NEWS will help it along by Club every Saturday afternoon where sending in their reservations promptly. OCTOBER 2.6, 1939 ON THE CAMPUS AND DOWN THE HILL FIRST BROADCAST by the University PHEASANTS are plentiful this fall in Theatre of a weekly series on New York TWO-DAY MEETING of the Board of Tompkins County, and many hunters got State themes will be "Scenes From the Trustees Friday and Saturday brought the limit opening dajf, October 16. More Life of Ruloff," from Station WESG nearly a full complement to Ithaca, in- ducks are to be seen on the Lake than October 2.9 at 1:3 c Career of the famous cluding three State officials, Lieutenant- usual, too, and other game is abundant. philologist and murderer of the Finger Governor Charles A. Poletti, Dr. Frank First of the season's deer to be killed by Lakes Region began about 1841 and P. Graves, Commissioner of Education, an automobile was on the Brooktondale- ended in the hangman's noose at Bing- and Holton V. Noyes, Commissioner of Wilseyville road last week, and down at hamton in 1871. Agriculture, ex-officio members of the the airport they caught a gray 'possum Board. Friday, the Board had luncheon in a trap. VISITOR in Ithaca last week was Wil- in the Green Room of Martha Van liam H. Forbes '06 of Cleveland, Ohio,t Rensselaer Hall, the meal prepared and FIRST FROST came the night of Oc- Cornell's representative on the board of served under the direction of Richard tober 17, when the temperature fell to 2.8. stewards of the Intercollegiate Rowing E. Cummings '40 of Knoxdale, Pa., Association. He stayed at Willard entirely by students in Hotel Administra- TRIPHAMMER BRIDGE over Fall Straight Hall, paid a visit to the boat- tion and Home Economics. Then the Creek on Thurston Avenue is closed for house and the ALUMNI NEWS, and stayed Trustees were taken in ten Faculty cars new planking and sidewalks. City Engi- for the Penn State game. through a beautiful fall afternoon for a neer T. Frederick Marble '14 says that two-hour tour of the 1800 acres of Uni- every effort will be made to have the COSMOPOLITAN CLUB opened its versity farm lands, out the Fall Creek bridge opened again for Alumni Home- season October 16 with its annual recep- valley through the site of the proposed coming November 4. tion to foreign students, at the clubhouse, Arboretum, along the foot of Turkey with about 300 persons attending. The Hill, and back along Cascadilla Creek JUDGING TEAM of the College of Club will cooperate with the board of and to the University orchards to see Agriculture took third place in an inter- managers of Willard Straight Hall this some of the experiments being carried collegiate contest at a recent livestock year in celebrating national holidays of on there by the Department of Pomol- show in Baltimore, Md. They followed the countries which have students here ogy. The tour was led by Dean Carl E. University of Maryland and University with displays of their flags in the lobby Ladd '12, Agriculture, and even some of North Carolina. Robert H. Stevely '41 and a brief description of each holiday Alumni Trustees said they had learned a of Palmyra was individual winner. thus noted. lot about their far-flung University. MAPLE SYRUP industry leaders of FRANCHOT TONE '27 came back last North America met in Fernow Hall Oc- week to the Willard Straight Theater "I KNEW A SAINT," by Hendrik Wil- tober zo for their third annual conference where he played as an undergraduate lem Van Loon '05 is the leading article to discuss prevention of lead contamina- member of the Dramatic Club. This time, in Omnibook Magazine for September. tion of maple products. Professor Joshua though, it was on the screen, for two Van Loon pays tribute to a person un- A. Cope, Forestry, presided, and the well-attended performances of "The named whom he met at the train when forty-five present included research men Lives of a Bengal Lancer," with Gary Van Loon first visited Ithaca. The Sun and administrators from Canada, Wash- Cooper and Richard Cromwell. reprinted the article and next day re- ington, D. C, Albany, the Geneva Ex- ported that speculation in Ithaca could periment Station, and Montpelier, Vt.; PENN STATE ALUMNI of Ithaca num- not decide between Frank (Lehigh) Win- representatives of all manufacturers of bering about thirty met in Willard ger t and Professor George L. Burr '81. maple syrup equipment; and those of all Straight Hall Friday evening with Ed- Most alumni, we think, would decide wholesale dealers in maple products. ward K. Hibschman, Penn State alumni that it is Burr that Van Loon writes One of the latter was Robert B. Willson secretary. President of their Ithaca club about. '17 of the John G. Paton Co., Inc., New is Professor John E. Perry, Railroad York City. Engineering. PREACHER October 2.9 is Dr. Rufus M. Jones, professor of LECTURES for the week, besides the CEREMONY after the game on Schoell- philosophy in Haverford College. speakers at the convocation at Bailey kopf Field, and broadcast over the net- Hall October 15 celebrating the cen- work, was presentation to Coach Carl RAVEN AND SERPENT, Junior wo- tenary of the birth of Professor Robert Snavely of a gold cup which his football men's honor society, has elected for its H. Thurston, include Professor Alex- team of fifteen years ago at Bellefonte this year's chapter Elizabeth L. Alt of ander G. Christie, Grad '05, of Johns Academy won as national preparatory Buffalo, G. Barbara Benson of Hartsdale, Hopkins, president of the ASME, before school champions. Presentation was Helen E. Bourne of Hamburg, Ruth E. the Ithaca branch, October 14; and the made by James R. Hughes, formerly Cothran of Gasport, Agnes D. Hansen of British musical scholar, Dom Anselm headmaster of Bellefonte Academy, Scotia, Margery G. Huber of Buffalo, Hughes, Prior of Nashdom Abbey, Burn- which school was discontinued some Shirley A. Richards of Staten Island, ham, Bucks, England, on "John Dun- years ago. Snavely coached there from Dorothy J. Talbert of Teaneck, N. J., stable, Leader of Fifteenth Century 19x3 to Mary J. Webb of Cleveland Heights, Composition," October 2.5, on the Ohio, and Angelina S. Wessels of Blue Gold win Smith Foundation. ROTC BAND marched and played in the Mountain Lake. rain on Schoellkopf Field last Saturday ARMISTICE DAY will be celebrated in eleven files of ten men each with two NEWMAN CLUB, celebrating its silver this year with a panel discussion in more as file-closers. Some say they need anniversary this year, has elected An- Bailey Hall at 11, November 11, on the a band shell built at Schoellkopf, both thony J. DeFino '40 of Brooklyn, its new subject,'' Can America Keep Out of War? to reflect the music from across the field president; vice-president, Mary M. Nes- If so, How?" Student speakers are being to the Crescent and to protect men and selbush '41 of Buffalo; secretary, Georgina invited from Colgate and Columbia, and instruments when it rains. Drums were M. Selzer '40 of Earlville; treasurer, the Student Council has made an ap- played with their covers on Saturday. Donald W. Bunte '41 of Prescott, Ariz. propriation for expenses of the committee. CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS 64

of Savings and Loan Associations; a direc- tor of Ithaca Enterprises, Inc.; and in the Concerning NECROLOGY attorney's division of the United States Building and Loan League. He organized and reorganized the financial structure THE FACULTY '97 LLB—C(HARLES) STANLEY PRICE, of many of the fraternities in the Univer- September, 1939, in Los Angeles, Calif. sity. Entered Law from Ithaca High DR. LIVINGSTON FARRAND, President He had lived in Salt Lake City, Utah, School in 1902.; Theta Lambda Phi; Emeritus, is to be the speaker at a lunch- and of late years in La Angelica, Calif.; Sigma Phi Epsilon. eon during the annual Girl Scout Convene practiced law in both states. He was a tion in Philadelphia, October 2.3 to 2.7. Spanish-American War volunteer. En- '31 Grad—DANIEL HUGH VERDER, June Dr. Farrand is technical advisor for the tered Law in 1895; Delta Chi. 7, 1939, in Orlando, Fla. He lived at American Children's Fund and chairman Lowry Hall, Kent, Ohio. He entered the of the health and safety advisory com- '06 LLB—HARRY CLARK BALDWIN, Graduate School from Columbia Univer- mittee. He will speak on how to carry October 17, 1939, in Ithaca where he had sity in 1931 received the AM degree out a comprehensive and effective health lived most of his life. After graduation from Harvard University in 1917. and safety program for Girl Scouts. he practiced law with Morris S. Halliday, '42.—ROBERT HASSLER THAYER, August LLB '06, of Cleveland, Ohio. In 1918 he PROFESSOR LYMAN P. WILSON, Law, was appointed acting city judge of Ithaca 30, 1939, in Buffalo. He entered Adminis- trative Engineering in 1938 from Bennett addressed the annual meeting of the and held that office intermittently until Ithaca section of the American Society 1931 when he was chosen acting county High School, Buffalo; recipient of two scholarships—one district and one State. of Civil Engineers, October 19, in Wil- judge and special surrogate. His life work lard Straight Hall. His subject was, "A had been to build the Ithaca Savings and Lawyer Looks at Languages," with Loan Association, established in 1915. EXTENSION ECHOES, published in special reference to engineering contracts At that time he was made secretary- the College of Agriculture, nominates and specifications. attorney of the organization and held the Professor Louis M. Massey, PhD Ί6, position until January, 1939, when he Plant Pathology, to select the team to PROFESSOR PAUL J. WEAVER, head of the was made president. He was also presi- play in the Rose Bowl this year. He has Department of Music, was invited by dent of the Family Welfare Society; at- three qualifications: was elected presi- Cordell Hull, Secretary of State, to torney for the Federal Land Bank of dent of the American Rose Society; won attend a conference on inter-American Springfield, Mass.; president of the Sav- a recent prize of Station WESG for relations in the field of music in Wash- ing and Loan Bank of New York State; naming winners in a football contest; ington, D. C, October 18 and 19. On past president of the Tompkins County and won thirty gallons of gasoline for October 2.1, he attended a meeting in Bar Association; member of the executive the closest prediction of the Cornell- New York City of the National Musical committee of the New York State League Syracuse game score. Council, which he helped to organize

BABCOCK & WiLcox Co. SHOWS OPERATIONS AND LISTS ITS CORNELLIANS Engineering College exhibit gives names of George R. Ashton '35, marine engineer, New York City; James E. Brinckerhoff '17, sales manager, refractories division; Paul M. Brister '36, field service engineer; Dale Bumstead, Jr. '2.1, salesman, Seattle, Wash.; Henry E. Chambers, Jr. Ίi, district manager, Dallas, Tex.; John S. Craig '36, junior salesman, Pittsburgh, Pa.; Cornelius C. Crusel '2.2., salesman, New Orleans, La.; Joseph C. Delibert '36, marine technical analyst, New York City; William B. Gregory '2.3, sales- man, Dallas, Tex.; James F. Harvey '35, stationary boiler analyst, Barberton, Ohio; Thomas B. Holt '19, sales manager special prod- ucts division, Barberton, Ohio; James D. McCullough Ί6, technical engineer, refractories division, New York City; Cornelius W. Middleton Ί6, vice-president; Thomas H. Paterson '38, student engineer, New York City; Will H. Rowand '19, technical service engi- neer, New York City; Henry J. Runge Ίo, district manager, Galveston, Tex.; Elwood F. Searles Ί4, sales engineer, New York City; Rolfe Shellenberger 'xx, technical service engineer, New York City; William H. Shipman '2.2., statistician, Barberton, Ohio; Sidney M. Walzer '35, contract analyst engineer, New York City; William J. Weakland, Jr. '36, draftsman, Barberton, Ohio; Gerald S. White '37, student engineer, New York City; Wilho Wiitanen '36, student engineer, New York City. OCTOBER 1939

last winter. The organization parallels received the AB degree in June from Dart- to a large extent the National Council for Concerning mouth College. the Advancement of Science. Its member- '08 AB, '13 PhD—Burton J. Lemon, ship includes over thirty national musical engineer in the United States Rubber Co., organizations, representing various as- THE ALUMNI writes that he "keeps busy week-ends pects of the music profession. The Coun- Personal items and newspaper clippings rehabilitating an ancestral farm at cil acts as a super organization correlat- about all Cornellians are earnestly solicited. Bethel." ing the work of the separate groups and '09—George M. Chapman is with the acting as a central fact-finding and '89—Dr. Nathan B. Van Etten, presi- General Electric Co., zx5 North Michi- propaganda body for movements of na- dent-elect of the American Medical As- gan Avenue, Chicago, 111. tional scope involving any phase of the sociation, considers "unwise" the gov- music profession or industry. Ίo ME—George E. Robinson has ernment designs "to bring American moved to 15403 Stahelin Avenue, De- medicine under the governmental thumb.'' troit, Mich. FOSTER M. COFFIN ΊI, director of He says that "thirty per cent of the Willard Straight Hall and past president country's hospital beds are unoccupied Ί1—Paul V. Shields of Shields & Co., of the Association of College Unions, right now," but that the government brokers, 44 Wall Street, New York City, spoke at the dedication of the new wants to establish more hospitals. Van is chairman of a committee to draft Houston Hall at the University of Penn- Etten will take office in June, 1940, as brokerage rules. The committee will sylvania, October 12.. Houston Hall, the Medical Association head. make a detailed study of the advisability which has now been almost doubled in of separating the brokerage and under- size, was the first student union building '01 BSA—A bronze marker near the writing functions of Stock Exchange in this country. edge of the Gabriels-Paul Smith's high- member firms. way in the Adirondacks designates the '12. BArch; '12. BS; '14 AB; '14; Ίi grave of Clifford Pettis '01, known as the PROFESSOR LEONARD S. COTTRELL, JR., BArch; Ίi DVM—In a letter to Donald "father of the New York State forest Rural Social Organization, and Professor C. Kerr Ί2., Carlos L. Locsin '12., wrote, preserve.'' After graduation he was State Ernest W. Burgess of the University of in speaking of the Cosmopolitan Club,'' I Forester for eight years, and from 1910 Chicago have written a book, Predicting have lived several long months in those until his death in 192.7 was superintendent Success or Failure in Marriage, based on rooms during the first days of the club- of the State forests. examination of 100 detailed case studies house. ... We did not have radiators then; and 5x6 questionnaires from married per- '04 BS; '04 AB; '36 AB, '39 MD— we got our heat through the tile in the sons. Cottrell said in an interview to the Albert R. Mann, former University Pro- concrete floor. Racing to and fro in full Sun that premarital economic factors vost, now vice-president of the General overcoat while studying was an ordinary such as income, savings, regularity of Education Board of the Rockefeller sight." His son is studying pulp and employment, etc., had a very low correla- Foundation, and Mrs. Mann (Mary D. paper technology in the University of tion with marital adjustment. He em- Judd) '04 have moved from New York Maine and Locsin hopes that he "will phasized that economic factors are much City to 3 Midland Avenue, Bronxville. some day have occasion to take a special more important after marriage than the Mann was awarded Doctor of Agronom- course of some kind at Cornell." Refer- premarital economic history of the ics, Honoris Causa, by the University of ring to the appointment of Dr. Hu Shih couple. Sofia, Bulgaria, on its fiftieth anniversary '14, as Chinese Ambassador to the United in May. He writes that their son, Dr. Mal- States, he said, "I could not help opening IN AN EDITORIAL of a recent issue of colm J. Mann '36, is living at 171 Raleigh my old picture album, and there I found Nature Magazine, Professor E. Laurence Street, Rochester. a picture of' Doc' Hu playing chess with Palmer Ίi, Rural Education, wrote of '06 AB, Ίi MD; '17 Sp Ag—William Nai Nab (Nai Nab Salakshana) '14 of DeWitt Clinton's travels through this F. Lee, son of Dr. W. Forrest Lee '06, and Siam. I wish 'Doc' Hu could see it . . ." section of the country in i8xo, and of f Mrs. Lee (Ruth J. MacClelland), Sp 17, Locsin also wrote that Tomas Mapua ' 11, some of his observations. According to '' has his MIT in Manila (Mapua Institute Palmer, Clinton referred to the Finger of Technology), one of the leading schools Lakes Region as "The West" and de- in the Philippines;" and that Dr.Victor scribed it as "the finest wheat country Buencamino Ίi is manager of the Na- in the world." Dr. Palmer is director of tional Corn and Rice Corporation and nature education, The American Nature president of the Manila Rotary Club. Association. The same issue of Nature Magazine printed a photograph of and a '13 ME—Edmund W. Butler, former short article by Professor Simon H. Varsity football captain, has assumed Gage y-j7, Histology and Embryology, ownership and management of the Mid- Emeritus. wood Grill, 1143-1151 Flatbush Avenue at Dorchester Road, Brooklyn. PROFESSOR ROLLINS A. EMERSON, Plant '14 BS—Ray Huey is an assistant State Breeding, and Mrs. Emerson have re- statistician in Albany in the Department turned from more than a month's stay of Farms and Markets. in Europe, where they traveled in Eng- land, Scotland, Norway, and Sweden. They remained in Edinburgh, Scotland, 15-25-40 for ten days, while Professor Emerson attended the International Genetics Con- '15 AB—Everett W. Newcomb, a gress. certified public accountant with offices in Elizabeth, N. J., lives at X4i Sixth PROFES:OR JOHN R. BANGS '2.1, Admin- Avenue, Roselle, N. J. He is married and istrative Engineering, addressed the In- THERMOID COMPANY LISTS TWO ALUMNI has two children, Everett, Jr. and Nelson. ternational Business Machines Club at a This exhibit contains the names of '15 CE—Matthew Carey, Alumni Trus- dinner at the IBM Country Club, Endi- Carl F. Ogren '17, assistant chief engi- tee and secretary of the Class of '15, had cott, October 10. The title of his address neer; and Walter C. Dyer '07, Chicago an article entitled "Speaking of Delin- was * * Management Looks to the Future. district sales engineer. quent Taxes," in Real Estate and Build- 66 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS ing, official publication of the Detroit 'x3 AB; *X5—Louis E. Reed, a lawyer Tool Works, where he has been employed Real Estate Board. He is president of the with the firm of Matthews and Reed, since graduation. He is starting his fourth Michigan Tax Adjustment Bureau, 1406 Grants ville, W. Va., has been elected year as treasurer of Worcester Engineering Union Guardian Building, Detroit, Mich. president of the board of trustees of Society. Address: 9 Davidson Road, Davis and Elkins College, Elkins, W. Va. Worcester, Mass. CORNELL His wife, the former Ruth Baldwin '2.5, f2.y; '01 CE—Jane W. Potts, daughter of is reported recovering from tuberculosis. Clyde Potts Όi, was married August 2.5 1916 — CD — 1941 *X3—Francis B. Reckitt is with the to John D. Collins, 3d. Mrs. Collins, 2$ YEAR KEUMICW Atlantis Sales Corp., 350 North Clark directress of the Jane Potts Studio, of Street, Chicago, 111., and lives at 116 Morristown, N. J., will continue her Ί6 AB—John M. Van Horson is Ninth Street, Wilmette, 111. dancing activities. manager of the merchandising depart- '14; '96—William M. Duncan, Jr., son '2.7 BS—Adrian R. Quillinan is em- mentof Young &Rubicam,Inc.,advertis- of William Duncan '96, is a director, as- ployed by the United States Forest Ser- ing, x85 Madison Avenue, New York sistant secretary and assistant treasurer vice, in Cassville, Mo. City. He has been four years with the of the Wheeling and Lake Erie Railroad 'i9—Thurlow Purdy has moved to 1 merchandising staff. Co., with offices at 1848 Union Com- Bronx ville Road, Bronx ville. He works Ί6 AB—Mrs. Gladys C. Terry was merce Building, Cleveland, Ohio. He is for the Standard Statistics Co., Inc., 345 married, September 30, in Hingham, also vice-president, secretary, and direc- Hudson Street, New York City. Mass., to Thurber W. Cushing. Cushing tor of the Automatic Sprinkler Co. of '2.9 BS, '38 MS—Grace J. Bowell was graduated from the University of America in Cleveland. teaches home economics in elementary Chicago in i9ix, was vice-president for '2.4 ME—Allan F. Dodson is life under- schools in Rochester. six years of the Maibohm Motors Co., writer for the Massachusetts Mutual Life '30 MS—Jessie M. Rannells is head of Sandusky, Ohio, and was with The Insurance Co., 2.0 Pine Street, New York the home economics department at Newark News from 1914 to 1937. He has City. Arizona State Teachers College, Tempe, been an investment counsel in New York '2.4 BS, '2.6 MFA—James E. Davis is an Ariz. City for the last two years. Mrs. Cushing extension forester at the Illinois State '30 AB, '35 MD—Dr. William R. has been research assistant in psychiatry College of Agriculture and State Natural Richards is at Bellevue Hospital, Twenty- at Johns Hopkins University and for the History Survey, at the University of sixth Street and First Avenue, New York last three years has been research as- Illinois, Urbana, 111. City. sociate in neurology at Columbia Uni- '14 ME—Norman L. Egbert, member of versity. Last year she published two '30—T. Woodbridge Brooks studied the board of directors of the Cornell Club books, Fever and Psychoses, and Analysis architecture in Europe for three years and of Syracuse, is agency manager for the of Parergasia, based on her work at the is now in Columbus, Ohio, working in Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Co., two institutions. The Cushings will live modernistic architecture. His work has 72.5 Chimes Building, Syracuse. at 430 East Eighty-sixth Street, New been featured in The Architectural f York City. '2.5 PhD; *3 AB—Ernest W. Nelson Forum. '17 BS—Dr. Roger E. Stewart's ad- and Mrs. Nelson (Rowena Morse) '2.3 '31 PhD—Russell Milliser is in the de- dress is 910 Cobb Building, Seattle, are the parents of a son, George Anthony partment of pathology at Ohio State Uni-> Wash. Morse, born August 15, in Cambridge, versity, Columbus, Ohio. Mass. Nelson is on sabbatic leave from Ί8—Kenneth W. Higgs is an estimator '31 MS, '34 PhD—Ernest M. Norris Duke University, Durham, N. C, and is in the Budd Wheel Company. Pre- is at Prairie View State College, Prairie working at Harvard University. Their viously he has worked in the Chalmers View, Texas. address is 2. St. Johns Road, Cambridge. Motor Company and the Chrysler Motor '31 BS; '33, '34 BS; ΊoMSA, '13 PhD— Company. He lives at Grosse Point 'x5, '2.7 BArch—Edward J. Driscoll Donald Russell and Mrs. Russell (Isabel Farms, Mich. married Anne Clarey, September 2.9, in Guthrie) '33, daughter of Professor Ed- Ί8, '2.1 AB—Henry W. Roden, presi- Ithaca. Mrs. Driscoll was graduated ward S. Guthrie, Dairy Industry, have a dent of Harold H. Clapp, Inc., has moved from St. Mary's Convent in Buffalo. She second child, a daughter, Kathryn Rus- his offices from New Brunswick, N. J. to worked for eight years until 1936 in the sell, born September 19 in Washington, 157 Cornelison Avenue, Jersey City, N. J. Cornellian Council office and is now with D. C. Russell is in the production credit Ithaca Enterprises, Inc. Driscoll is secre- division of the Farm Credit Administra- '19—Morrison Worthington is an at- tary-treasurer of Driscoll Brothers & Co., tion. They live in Alexandria, Va., 3108 torney at law, with offices at 2.0 North Ithaca. Their address is 413 East Seneca Circle Hill Road. Wacker Drive, Chicago, 111. Street. '31 AB—Pauline B. Carpenter, secre- '19 BS, '35 PhD—Frank L. Manning '2.6 CE—William M. Stallman is in the tary in the Agricultural Economics and is teaching at Ursinus College, College- Brooklyn office of A. T. & T. Co., and Farm Management Department, has had ville, Pa. lives at 2.08 Dodd Street, East Orange, three poems published in American 'i9~'io Grad—James G. Gee is dean of N.J. Voices, the 1939 World's Fair edition of Sam Houston College, Hunts ville, Tex. 'x6 AB—Ruth Purdy was married poems published by Avon House of New \i AB—Theodore L. Bennett is at August 8 in Ovid to the Rev. Frank S. York City. They are entitled "Shooting Marietta College, Marietta, Ohio. Hewitt, pastor of the Lodi and Ovid Star," "One Person," and "Praying '2.2., '14 ME; '14 AB—Albert H. Presbyterian Churches for the last seven Hands." Blackwood is research engineer in charge years. Hewitt received the AB and AM '33 AB; '36 BS—Rev. Henry E. Horn of the automotive laboratories and de- degrees at McGill University, Mon- and Mrs. Horn (Catherine H. Stainken) velopment work on automotive fuels in treal, Canada, and the BD degree at '36 live at 7415 Tabor Avenue, Burholme, the Standard Oil Development Co., Auburn Theological Seminary. Mrs. Philadelphia, Pa. Elizabeth, N. J. Mrs. Blackwood is the Hewitt has been teaching English at the '33 AB—Herman Rahn, son of Profes- former Pauline Mclntyre '14. Boynton Junior High School since 192.9. sor Otto Rahn, Bacteriology, married '13—Victor J. Rosell is shareholder and 'x7 ME—A. Bradford Reed, vice-presi- Katharine F. Wilson, August 2.9, at manager of a farm in Trujillo, Peru, dent of the Cornell Club of Western Shippan Point, Stamford, Conn. Mrs. South America. His address is Hda Julcan, Massachusetts, has been elected treasurer Rahn was graduated from Smith College via Hda Motil, Trujillo. of Rolled Thread Die Co. and Reed Small in 1937 and since then has been a student OCTOBER 2.6, 1939 67

at the Smith College Graduate School of Architecture and Landscape Architecture e're Perpetual Post-Graduate Students in Cambridge, Mass., where she recently received the Master's degree in landscape ...and Proud of It! architecture. Rahn spent the year follow- ing graduation at the University of Kiel, Germany. In 1938 he received the PhD at the University of Rochester, and since then has been a national research fellow at Harvard. They will live in Laramie, Wyo., where Dr. Rahn is in the department of biology at the University of Wyoming. '33 AB; '35 AM, '37 PhD—Richard H. Jordan, son of Professor Riverda H. Jordan, Education, married Mary K. Irvin, August 2.6, in Lancaster, Pa. Mrs. Jordan, a graduate of Wilson College, Chambersburg, Pa., has been teaching at West End Junior High School at Lan- Cordovan Brogue, $1675 caster. Jordan teaches at Port Washing- ton (L. I.) High School. Hoover H. We're students of shoes . . . always thinking about them, work- Jordan, PhD '37, was best man. '34 AB, '37 MD—Dr. Kenneth A. ing on them, improving them. Then we transform thoughts Tyler and Mrs. Tyler have a daughter, into action and dreams into fact. The result is that we make the born June 4. Dr. Tyler practices medicine in Boulder, Mont. finest shoes in America, for quality-conscious men who appre- '34, '35 DVM—Dr. Richard L. Stone ciate style that is built in—not added on as an afterthought. married Charlotte E. Duffey, June 2.1, in Batavia. Mrs. Stone was graduated from Miss Wheelock's School in Boston and has taught in the kindergarten of the New York School for the Blind for the last six years. They live on South Main FIFTH AVENUE 47th-48th Streets NEW YORK Street, Albion, where Dr. Stone is prac- ticing veterinary medicine. 225 OLIVER AVENUE—PITTSBURGH, PA. 112 WEST ADAMS STREET, FIELD BUILDING—CHICAGO, ILL '35 AB, '39 MD—Thomas L. Ball is at Geisinger Memorial Hospital, Danville, '36 BS—Albert E. Palm teaches agricul- Pa., as an interne. ture at Greene. He is married and has a THE MERCERSBURG ACADEMY '35 ME—Thomas E. McMahon, Jr. is son, Charles. Prepares for entrance to all Colleges and Universities. Especially successful in pre- with the Combustion Engineering Co., '36 AB—George A. Lawrence married paring boys for College Entrance Board Inc., loo Madison Avenue, New York Mary L. Keeler, August ix, in Ham- Examinations. Located in the picturesque City. His residence address is 2.57 Ascan mondsport. Lawrence is a commercial Cumberland Valley at the foot of the Blue Avenue, Forest Hills. representative of the Taylor Wine Co. in Ridge Mountains. A large faculty from the Hammondsport, with offices at 82. York leading colleges and universities of the '35 BS in AE—William E. Ryder mar- country give thorough instruction and aim ried Jane E. Woodruff, August 16, in Street, Brooklyn. to inspire in every pupil the lofty ideals of Chicago, 111. Ryder is with Thomas •36 AB, *39 MD; '2.0—Walter R. thorough scholarship, broad attainments, Edison Co., in North Canal Street, Buerger, brother of Otto M. Buerger 'xo, sound judgment and Christian manliness. Chicago. is an interne in the Buffalo General BOYD EDWARDS, D.D., LL.D. '35 AB, '39 MD—William S. Armour Hospital. Headmaster, Mercersburg, Pa. is interning at the Fifth Avenue Hospital '37; '39 CE—Ludmilla Koshkin, daugh- in New York City. of Professor Simon J. Koshkin, Engineer- '36 AB—Tanya Kunitzky is in the ing, and Mrs. Koshkin, was married to engineering department of The Dorr Co., Carl-Eric Beve, August ix. Beve is a civil Inc., 570 Lexington Avenue, New York engineer with White and Burke, engi- CORNELL N PICTURES "The finest book of Cornell pic- City. neers, 9 Andrew Street, Springfield, Mass. tures ever published; superb in They live at 95 Federal Street. selection, arrangement, and re- '36 AB—Peter M. Marcus has left the production ... a real thrill." du Pont Film Manufacturing Corp. and '37 BS—Lois G. Haring was married is now with the Frederick H. Levey Co., in Sage Chapel, July 10, to Clifford Hol- Only $1.00 postpaid manufacturers of printing inks. Address: den. Mrs. Holden has taught home eco- Thirty familiar Campus buildings 332.1 Spring Garden Street, Philadelphia, nomics in Moravia for the last two and scenes—air views—gorges— Pa. years. Holden is an employee of the L. C. waterfalls. In decorative portfolio '36 BS; '36 ME, *38 MME; '2.9, '31 AB Smith-Corona Typewriter Company, Inc., with plastic binding — each one —On September z, at Chaumont, Lucille at Groton. They live in Ludlowville, suitable for framing. Case became the bride of Leo C. Pigage where Mrs. Holden is teaching in the Write name and address on '36. The Rev. Edward T. Horn '2.9 per- high school. margin, clip this ad and mail formed the ceremony. Pigage is on the '37, '38 AB; '40; '38-—David W. Ross with dollar bill to staff of the college of engineering at married Florence J. Shutts, September 13, CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS Duke University. Their address is Box at Balls ton Spa. Almeda Shutts '38 was 3 East Ave. ITHACA, N. Y. Z47, College Station, Durham, N. C. her sister's maid of honor. Ross is with 68 CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS

the Household Finance Co., Germantown, Philadelphia, Pa. They live at 12.8 East PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY Washington Lane, Germantown. '37 BS; Ίi AB; Ί5; '39 BS; '15 BS, Ί6 OF CORNELL ALUMNI MSA; '15 BS—Katherine Doyle '37, daughter of the late Henry L. Doyle Ίi and Mrs. Doyle (Katherine Stebbins)'i5, ITHACA NEW YORK AND VICINITY was married August 15, 1939, in Sage Chapel to Lynn Banner '39, son of the REA RETA*—Folded and interfolded racial tissues LANG'S GARAGE for the retail trade. late Erford L. Banner '15 and the late Mrs. John W. Tickell (Pearl Decker) '15. GREEN STREET NEAR TIOGA S'WIPE'S*—A soft, absorbent, disposable tissue; packed flat, folded and interfolded, in bulk or They live in Warsaw, where Banner Ithaca's Oldest, Largest, and Best boxes, for hospital use. teaches science in the Warsaw High Storage, Washing, Lubrication, Expert Repairs FIBREDOWN*—Absorbent and non-absorbent School. ERNEST D. BUΠON '99 JOHN L. BUTTON '25 cellulose wadding, for hospital and commercial use. '38 AB—Ann Rosenberg was married FIBREDOWN* CANDY WADDING—in August zo to Dr. Sidney Sussman, who is BALTIMORE, MD. several attractive designs. a chemist with E. I. du Pont de Nemours FIBREDOWN* SANITARY SHEETING— & Co., Wilmington, Del. He was gradu- WHITMAN, REQU ARDT & SMITH For hospital and sick room use. ated from Polytechnic Institute of Brook- Water Supply, Sewerage, Structural, Trade mark reg. U.S. Pat. Off. Valuations of Public Utilities, Reports, lyn and received the PhD degree from THE GENERAL CELLULOSE COMPANY, INC. Plans, and General Consulting Practice. MIT.Their address is 12.15 Spruce Avenue. GARWOOD, NEW JERSEY EZRA B. WHITMAN, CE. Ό1 D. C. Taggart '16 ' - - Pres. - Treas. G. J. REQUARDT, CE. Ό9 '38; '2.8—James A. Rockey, assistant B. L SMITH, CE. "14 manager of the Penn-Lincoln Hotel, West Biddle Street at Charles HENRY M. DEVEREUX, M.E. '33 Wilkinsburg, Pa., married Margaret Fassett of Elmira, September 16, in Sage YACHT DESIGNER WASHINGTON, D. C. Chapel. Robert A. Anderson '2.8 is man- 295 CITY ISLAND AVE. ager of the Penn-Lincoln Hotel. THEODORE K. BRYANT CITY ISLAND, N, Y. '38 BS; '37 ME; Ίo ME—Walter P. Naquin writes that he is an assistant LL.B. '97—LL.M. *98 LAW OFFICES MaHtf Patent Law, G.W.U. OS agriculturist in training for the Hawaiian WILLIAM HARRIS '09 Sugar Planters Association in Honolulu, Patents and Trade Marks Exclusively T. H., where he lives at VLII Mohala 309.314 Victor Building 60 Park Place NEWARK, N. J. Way. He adds that John J. Serrell, Jr. '37, Phone, Cable Address son of the late John J. Serrell Ίo, stopped KENOSHA, WIS. Market 3-2520-1 -2-3 "Wilhar" in Honolulu on his way home from Hong- kong, China, where he has been doing MACWHYTE COMPANY YOUR BUSINESS CARD some work for the Sharpies Corporation of Philadelphia. Manufacturers of Wire and Wire Rope, Braided Wire In the Professional Directory reaches Rope Sling, Aircraft Tie Rods, Strand and Cord. 5000 interested Cornelίians. '38 BS; Ίo, '12. BS; '38 BS; '14; '38 AB Literature furnished on request For Special Rate write: —Helen Brew, daughter of James D. JESSEL S. WHYTE, M.E. Ί3, PRES. & GEN. MGR. CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS Brew ' 10, formerly of the Dairy Depart- R. B. WHYTE, M.E. '13, GEN. SUPT. 3 East Ave. ITHACA, N.Y. ment, was married July 1, in Knoxville, Tenn. to Thomas A. Rich '38, son of George T. Rich '14. Marion L. Howe '38, of Ithaca, attended the wedding. During the last year, Mrs. Rich taught home economics at the Remsen High School. ALUMNI NEWS FLASH They live at ix Ditton Street, Lyons, where Rich is a teacher of agriculture in To THE EDITOR: Here is a news item for the CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS the Lyons High School. 39—September 2., Jerome B. Rice, 3d, married Ellen S. Brown in New Lebanon. Mrs. Rice attended Wellesley College and is a graduate of the University of Michi- gan and of the Katharine Gibbs School. They live in Douglas, Wyo., where Rice is with F. H. Woodruff & Sons, Inc. '39 BS—Deloss A. Rose is employed at the Colgate Inn, Hamilton. '39 BS in AE; '96 ME—Ralph Mc- Carty, Jr. is working for The Aluminum Co. of America, with offices in Fairfield, Conn. He is the son of Ralph McCarty Signed.. Class.. '96. '39 BS in AE; '06, Ό8 ME—Robert Address. Mann, son of Harvey B. Mann '06, is with Fischer & Porter Co., manufactur- Clip this out and mail to Cornell Alumni News, 3 East Ave., Ithaca, N.Y. ing engineers, Philadelphia, Pa. His home address is 5805 Morris Street, Germantown, Philadelphia, Pa. If You Drive Gifts With Cornell Insignia To The Game JEWELRY BANNERS November 4 BOOKENDS BLANKETS Use the STEINS GLASSES TWO NEW PHOTO ALBUMS SCRAP BOOKS PARKING AREAS RADIOS ASH TRAYS SCARVES PLAQUES 1) KITE HILL EAST OF THE BRIDGE TABLES BILLFOLDS CRESCENT WILL ACCOMMODATE PILLOWS ETCHINGS 250 CARS ETC. 2) EAST ITHACA ADJACENT TO EAST ITHACA STATION Order from WILL ACCOMMODATE 500 CARS THE CORNELL CO-OP FEE: FIFTY CENTS Ithaca, N. Y.

FOLLOW THE ARROWS

GOOD HOT LUNCH While in Ithaca Columbia Game for the November 4 home-coming

The University serves Columbia Game a hearty buffet lunch- eon in the Drill Hall Be sure to get a pound or half-pound tin from 11.30 to 1:30 of Cornellians' favorite Pipe Tobacco 60c ABERDEEN Park your car before Packed for and distributed to lunςh. Plenty of time to Cornellians country-wide by eat leisurely and walk across to the Crescent early. ITHACA Ralph C. Smith '15, Propr. Meet Your Friends at the MAYERS SMOKE SHOP Drill Hall Luncheon ITHACA, N.Y. Sorry I can't be in Ithaca soon. Send me pounds Aberdeen at $3.00, postpaid. half pounds Aberdeen at $1.60, postpaid.

NAME ...... ADDRESS CORNELL- COLUMBIA THE HOMECOMING GAME SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 4 Enjoy your trip "home" to Ithaca by using fast, comfortable LEHIGH SERVICE

lβ ROUND TRIP ROUND TRIP Ί3 From NEW YORK «1070 From NEW YORK $ ROUND TRIP 1455 From PHILADELPHIA 75 From PHILADELPHIA Ίl NEWARK f I A40 Round Trip From NEW- USING UPPER BERTH IN PULL- MAN SLEEPING CAR (Plus $2.90 IV ARK Upper Berth Charge FOR THE in Comfortable Coaches ROUND TRIP

ROUND TRIP $ 20 ROUND TRIP From NEW YORK 16 From PHILADELPHIA ( 20 14 NEWARK TICKETS GOOD IN OTHER PULLMAN ACCOMMODATIONS (Pullman Charges Additional)

ONE WAY PULLMAN CHARGES: Parlor Car Seat $1.50 Lower Berth $2.10 Section (Single Occupancy) $2.80 Ϋ»9g* Upper Berth $1.45 Compartment (2 or more persons) Section (2 or more persons) $6.30 Drawing Room (2 or more persons) $3.25 $7.35) Bedroom (Single Occupancy) $3.80 Bedroom (2 persons) $4.20 LEHIGH VALLEY TRAIN SERVICE TO ITHACA The Black Daily Diamond(a) The Star(b) Leave Pennsylvania Station, New York 8:10 A.M. 9:40 P.M. Leave Newark (Pennsylvania Station) 8:25 A.M. 9:55 P.M. Lv. Philadelphia, Reading Terminal, Rdg. Co 8:30 A.M. 9:45 P.M. Arrive Ithaca 4:10 P.M. (c)5:21 A.M. (a) Air Conditioned Observation Sun Room Lounge car, Dining car, Coaches. (b) Air Conditioned Sleeping Cars. Club-dining car for evening service and Breakfast. Coaches. (c) Sleeping Cars may be occupied until 8:00 A.M.

LEHIGH VALLEY TRAINS USE PENNSYLVANIA STATION, IN NEW YORK AND NEWARK, AND READING TERMINAL, NORTH BROAD ST., AND WAYNE JCT., IN PHILADELPHIA.

SPECIAL EQUIPMENT WILL BE RESERVED FOR CORNELL. For Tickets and reservations: any Lehigh Valley or Reading Company Agency or NEW YORK PHILADELPHIA Room 1108 500 Fifth Ave. 1506-08 Girard Trust Bldg. Telephone Longacre 5-4021 Telephone Rittenhouse 2815 *HANDY"WAY TO ORDER Lehigh Valley Railroad BALLANTINE'S ALE & BEER • The Route of the Black Diamond *

President, Carl W. Badenhausen, '16 Vίce-President, Otto A Badenhausen, Ί7

Please mention the NEWS