Boston University OpenBU http://open.bu.edu BU Publications Bostonia 1952 Bostonia: v. 26, no. 1-4 Case, Harold C. Boston University Boston University. Bostonia: The Boston University Alumni Magazine, volume 26, number 1-4. 1952-1953. Archived in OpenBU at http://hdl.handle.net/2144/19705. http://hdl.handle.net/2144/19705 Boston University ①CT⑲聡離職, 且の5露 ㌻鯉 醐紺0Ⅳ 訂Ⅳ量Ⅴ踊朋輩 Reunion Classes and Secretaries for 1953 167 Burrill St.’Swampscott CLA: Miss Olive K. Pitman, ’03. Mrs. Paul E. Wadsworth, ’08. 51 Essex St., Cliftondale (Saugus) Miss Jessie M. Bailey, ’13. 51 Westboume Rd., Newton Centre Prof・ Robert E. Moody, ’23. 236 Bay State Road, Boston Mrs. Alanson C. Harper’’28. 135 Edgehill Rd・, Fairfield, Conn. Miss Nancy E. Carlock, ’33 . 14 Warren Sq.,/ Jamaica Plain Mrs. Wi11iam H. Coombs, ’38. 9 Reading Terrace, Radbum, N. J. Mrs. Earl R. Gray, ’48. 7 Bertrose Ave., Milford, Conn. Seymour DiMare’’48 . 99 Hammond Rd., Belmont CBA : Vice-Preside面Mr. Kenneth Eldredge, B’23 Mr、 Fred Samia, ’33. 26 Sterling St., West Newton 270薙Lawrence St., Lawrence Mr・ A. F. Raymond Cook, ’38 . 198 Palfrey St., Watertown 8 Howe Road, Needham 3 Harris Ave., Everett Mr. Everett Hicks∴43. Mr. James McCauley, ’48. 14 Shoreham St., Squantum ECC: Mr. Sumner M. Morss, ’38. 53 Park St., Brookline Mr. Herbert F. Scott, ’48. 184 Huron Ave., Cambridge PAL: Miss MaryTwomey’’23 Miss Elizabeth Baker, ’28. 21 Forsyth St.’Boston Mrs. Morton S. Pratt, ’83. 21 Crescent St., Natick Mrs. FIoyd L. Dodge, ’38. 40 Brightwood Rd・, Waltham Mrs Madeline Brown, ’43. 376 W. Roxbury Parkway’West Roxbury Mrs・ Arthur Antonopoulos, ’48 . 240 Pr王nceton BIvd., Lowel1 MUS: Mrs. Clarence M. Luther, ’38. Mrs. Wentworth A. Emst, ’43 . Miss Evelyn Velander, ’48 . SAR: Miss Beulah Putnam, ’03. 457 Washington St., Newton RFD Hudson, % H. Chamberlain 158 Holden St., Worcester 346 East University Parkway’Baltimore, Md・ Mrs. Samuel D. Woodhouse, ’08. 3375 Dale St.’San Diego’Calif・ Mrs. Jacob W. King, Jr., ’13 o Salem Teachers College, Salem Miss EIsie Doleman, ’18. l18 Griggs Rd・, Brookline Mrs. Robert Cook, ’23. Mrs. Ira T. May’’28. 52 West Market St., Bethlehem, Pa. 318 Williams St., Pittsfield Miss Mary J. Moriarty, ’33 . 57 Spring Hill Ave., Bridgewater Mrs. Leo Moran, ’38 . 2941 Oakford Rd., Ardmore, Pa. Miss Ruth Foley’’43 . 177 Gregory Ave., West Orange, N・ J. Miss Kathryn D. Carroll, ’48 . 8120 St. Paul St., Baltimore CGE: Mrs. Jeame Ohnemus, ’48 . Theo: Rev. Stephen J. Ca11ender, T’23 ・ 65 Cleveland Rd., Waltham 33 Colebrook St., Hartford, Conn. Rev. W. Wayne Yeater, T’48. 30 Audohon Rd・, Indianapolis, % Irvington Meth. Church Rev. William B. Cate, ’48. 9 Crombie St., Salem LAW: Judge Albert F. Hayden, L’88 . Home: Monomet, Plymouth. Bus言60 State St.’Boston William Shaw McCa11um, L’08 . 217 Whiting St., Dedham Mrs. Drexel Harris, L’48. 892 Gates Ave.’Brooklyn’N. Y. MED: Francis X. Corr, M.D., M’98. Mrs. Hunt Warren, M’48 . ED: Mrs. Harry A・ Johnson, ’38 ・ Mrs. Nicholas Bounakes, ’43 . Henry M. Stewart, ’48 (agent). SW: Miss Blanche R. Powell, ’48 . 215 Neponset Ave.’Dorchester Monument Beach, Mass. 126A Bucknam St., Everett 21 Chauncy St., Cambridge 6 Benedict St., E. Somerville 134 MacDougal St., N. Y. SPRC: Mrs. Warren S. Conlon, ’48. 1831 Wymnton Rd・, Columbus, Georgla GRAD: Dorothy Lockhart, ’5l . 43 Beal Rd., Waltham Members of the five- and telトyear Classes not listed for next year’s reunion are urged to contact the Alumni O能ce to supply us with the names of your present class o能cers or reunion chairmen. 、 -  ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄÷ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄〇〇〇〇〇 ̄ ̄ ̄ ◆ 曇 Cover: Bosto茄n pI.eSentS tO its readers CON冒EN冒S Ihe first Iook at the B’nai B?rith Hillel House oIl the Campus. It stands on 置he banks of the Charles RiveI., neXt 細0 the President9s Home. Le耽ers to the Editor An Invitation to Homecomlng The University ‥ ・ Hillel: A Sermon In Stone ‥ ・ Paragraph Pulpit ‥ ・ EDITORIAL STAFF Editor, Arthur E. Jenner, A’27 Associate Edito重・, George J. Aziz, PR’50 Sports Editor, John Collins, B,50 Summer Commencement Address by Dr. Harold C. Case: “The Road, The Load and the Goad”. ‥ Interesting Graduates ‥ ・ ``crutches Be Hanged!” AI.Ound The Campus on a Guided Tour ‥. Dr. Wi11iam C. Kvaraceus Sta嬬Photographer, George Serries Ca11ed to Turkey as Advisor ‥ ・ Parent-Teachers Conference..‥ Staff Ar亡ist, Pasquale Diotaiuti, A,42 Streamlining at S・P.R.C.二‥ New Rest Home Educa瞳on ServICe . ‥ Professor Merlino RecelVeS Honorary Degree from Middlebury. ‥ GENERAL OFFICERS Malden Sisters Win Degrees. ‥ “Mr. & Mrs.,, Negro Advancement President, Nicholas E. Apalakis, B,81 Team Win Degrees. ‥ Prof・ Irving C. Whittemore: An Insight on Vice-President, Frank Barton, M,24 the Scientific Advisory Committees of the Selective Service System Vice-President, Thomas Fitzpatrick, B,27 ‥ . Catholic Mass Schedule 2l Vice-President, David Lavien, L’29 Recording Secretary, Mrs. Margaret Keany Welch, P,26 Treasurer, E. Ray Speare, A,94 Executive Alumni Secretary, Arthur E. Jenner, A,27 ADVISORY COUNCIL The A量umni ‥ ・ “Follow Your Footsteps ‥ ・ Alumni Participation in血e Student Service Program . . Bob Davis, B,34, in Saudi Arabia ‥ ・ 1952 Pemanent Class O鯖cers ‥ ・ Family of Alumni Publications . ‥ We Remember: Percy E. Woodward and W皿am F. Rogers. ‥ Tributes: William Goodwin Aurelio, Mabel Flora Bamum, Carolyn Strong Newe11. ‥ J. W. Arbuckle, Latt’’90, Presents His Poetic “Coronation’’ 27 Dr. Royal M. Frye, A’ll Miss Esther M. Clement, A,24 Mrs. Ruth Fox Bettencourt, B,80 Miss Jane Donovan, P,45 Miss Jean Kelley, P,47 Mrs. Priscilla White, Sar’33 SpoI.tS. ‥ Terrier Sports Roundup ‥ ・ Winter Sports Schedule. ‥ Homecommg Committee . 40 C量ub News 46 Schoねrship InfoI.mat主on 52 A賞umni in Review. 53 Interview: A Boston University Doctor In Paris 54 Miss Marie Farrell, Sar,47 Rev. Norman L. Porter, Th’46 Hon。 Judge Augustus Loschi, Law,12 Dr. Thomas A. Kelley, M,29 Miss Joharma Dwyer, Nurs‘5l The Classes. ‥ Promotions, Weddings, Engagements, Births, Obituaries 55 PUBLISHING DETA工LS: No. 1‘, Volume XXVI, Octob.er, 1952. Published six times a year; Janual.y, April, May, July, August and October by the BOSTON UNIVERSITY ALUMNI ASSOCIATION. Member of the American Alumni Council. Editorial O餓ces: 808 Bay State Road, Boston 15, Massachusetts. Entered as second-Class matter at the Post O範ce, Boston, Massachusetts, under the Act of March 3, 1879・ Copyright, October, 1952, by the Boston University Alumni Association. Subscription: $2.00 per year’included in the Alumni Contribution. Single Copy 50 cents. `∴. 葦_占 ̄言・ I have just read the August The arrival of Dr. Samuel Perlman as was that Boston University seems to be Director of B’nai B’rith Hi11el Founda- catching up with the times and spending tion at Boston University places a slg- much e鮮ort on other than cultural courses. nificant landmark in血e development of It is fine to have all the wisdom one can acqulre but in these times one has to `∴ ‥ I want to congratulate you on a faculty and students. Rabbi Perlman’s record of leadership at Alabama and his surroundings. That seems to be a North Carolina was outstanding, and we paramount issue with the University… ・’’ are happy to welcome a co11eague of such Very cordially, experience and excellent academic and It deserves a blue ribbon as it shows what can and is being done to further a truly F. E. CLOUGH, M.D., A’0上 professional qua愉ca宜ons. San Bemardino, Califomia Dr. Perlman arrives at a strategic time both for Hi11el and for the University. As the Hillel Foundation building rises vital cause ‥ ∴’ RITA P. BENNETT, B’5I Temple, New Hampshire before our eyes, and the fine plans for “・ ‥ You’d probably like to know “ ‥. The July issue has just come to pastoral counseling and guidance for know more on how to adapt himse帖to truly wonderful issue of Bosfo毒a, the Brotherhood Weck issue (May 1952). On Hillel . . . number of Bostol海. What impressed me that, SOmehow, I’m recelVmg tWO COPleS facilities adequate to all needs of Jewish faculty and students come to fruition, We me, and I am sure the class of ’02, C.L.A., of each issue of Bost。’海・ Although it would not appreciate being pushed five is worth reading twice, I’m sure that you years further ahead, bu=he picture on could send the extra copy I’m getting to become increasmgly aware of the impact the new leadership, PrOgram and buildmg Will have on all phases of extra cur- someone my ricular education・ In the University, neW the Class of ’97 in the Mahogany Room extra copy around among some of the appointments in the o能ces of血e Dean at the Faculty Club・ Other college grads here. They all agree of Women, Dean of Men and Marsh page 25’Credited to ’02, is the picture of “I an sure that ’02 would appreciate a correction . . . ” Most sincerely’ VIOLA MACLELLAN DAY, else. I’ve been showing it is be壮er than their alumni magazines. Chapel, Signalize the growmg lmPOrtanCe This makes me very proud of my choice of non_Curricular education and counsel- of University‥ ・. Keep up the good mg m Our COmmunity. As Jewish Chaplain of the University, work on Bos青o海a… .’’ PFC. DoNALD P. CROOKS, A’50 Secretary, Class of ’97, C.LA. 844th Sig. Rad・ Rel・ Co. Camp Gordon, Georgla Springfield, Massachusetts “ .工sn’t there a mistake in Dr. Perlman will be an integral part of these developments. We look forward happily to his contribution. FRANKLIN H. LITTELL the Dean of the Chapel picture on page 25, uPPer left comer of your July Bosto毒a? It is supposed to be Our luncheon. Ours was in the Mahogany Room’by a change in the schedule, and I am sure these people pictured here Were nOt amOng the 80 of us at our luncheon….’’ “・ ‥ Just a note to express.sincere COngratulations to you once agam. We have just finished reading through the August Issue of Bosto海a, and we are cer- tainly very much impressed by the job Fのγ D轟訪c轟e G香fお that you have done. Your concept of a EDNA B. MILLER, A’02 (Mrs. Franz C.) (The editors extend a sincere apoIogy to members of the Class of 1897 and 1902 for this boner. A. E. J., G. J. A.) 置霊霊宝蒜置鵠薫 for Yo桝g a職d O械 扇$轟き九e the services Boston University is render- mg tO its community. I know that you are golng tO reCeive a terrific reaction BOSTON UNIVERSITY from your alumni to址s issue, and we The OR晒l甑し袖d L姐騰§T O剛9「 §8「V雨 Don’† †ake chancei Wi†h home iaundry o「 inferior骨aper serv- ices‥.uSe DY_D旺Se「vice and be sure! 丁蘭EREタS o博しY oN占 LOngwood 6-7O70 I379 BEACON STR蛙T, BROOKLINE just wanted to add our word of praise to the many others that will be comlng 1n. . . . S incerely, E. R. T., JR. B○○K STORES 園獲要因図四 現ing your own boss has many advantages-bu=o score a∴$uCCeSS yOu’ll have to answer信yes,, to some challenglng questions: Can you budget your time e伍ciently? Can you set a goa] and pursue it with diligence and persistence? lf these questions sound like “you,,, New Eng工and Mutual O節ers you a chance to be on your own-tO mOVe up the incomc Iadder )uSt aS high and as fast as your ilmbition and abilities can take you. We丘nance your leammg Period, and give you the advantage of a comprehcnsive trainmg PrOgram・ You,11 be WOrking with college-trained associates. You’11 be helping fami]ies-and businesses-aChieve丘nancial security. ノInd you,11 be representing the company that fo皿ded mutual life insurance in America鵜tOday one of t.he fastest groⅥ竜g companies in its五e工d (resources more than doub]ed during the past lO yearS). This is a real opportunity to form a satisfying association with a company that has attracted men from most of the jmportant co]leges of the country. Mail the coupon for the booklet in which 15 SuCh men tell Why they chose a life insurance career, With ‥. Th。 NEW ENGLAND ﹁ BO§TON U剛E鵬iTY aIum両owa軸eviれg §醐§§佃caree「s a§ 0…g軸§: l 「 ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄鵜 ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄“ “ NEW ENGLAND M廿TUAL - Box 333, Boston 17, Mass. ! 1 book量et, “Why We Chose New England Mutual.9l - Please send me, Without cost or obligation, yOur Thomas 」. Reid, ’22, Salem Wheeler H. King, CLU, ’23, Gen. Agt., New York - Ph描p B. SIeeIe. ’28, Gen. Agl., - Springfield 1 ﹂ _Sめie ∴ ∴ ∴ ∴ ∴ ∴ ∴ ∴ ∴ Bosloh H. Fran刷n Smilh, 」r., ’44, Worces書er Robert R. C。Ye, ’47, Bo§lon 」ames G. Summers, ’48, BosIon - Zone Raymond E. DesclUきeIs, ’4l, 」ohn P. Watson, ’34, BosIon 」ohn G. Khouri, Cし∪, ’37, Bos†on George W. Duffy,∵52, Newburyporl 岨掴地軸 曲鮒叩両me 融増刷抽出謝脚 So輪g Di如“eく州s go Ih細oUgh 書us書eI. When γollく組I看bγ肌軸be営 When you glVe the Long Distance Operator the out-Of-tOWn number you Wan亡, it saves time. She can then put your call through without first calling “Infomation,, in the distant city to get the number. So write down the local and out-Oftown numbers you already knoⅥ′・ If there,s a new number you don’t have -Or an Old one you’ve forgotten -be Sure tO add it to the list when the operator glVeS it to you. The Bell Telephone Company in your community wiユユgladly glVe yOu a free Telephone Numbers Booklet. B格しし 丁要しEPHONた SYS丁EM A _見巌左。n COMING HOME C誓言 HOME Jis one of the most soul-Satisfying experiences known一 ¥J whether it is coming home to the family circ工e at the end of a trying day or coming home at the end of a week or month of teaching, there 王s something in the ``coming’’that lifts the spirits and adds meaning to life. This up工ift is tremendously heightened in the experience of soldiers COming in to the West Coast from the Paci丘c and for travelers ralSmg the Statue of Liberty as they retum from Europe. How good Race Point Light looks to fishemen standing into Provincetown after a stomy trip on the banks! And, Oh how good is the sight of alma mater to the alumnus retummg after years of pursumg and achievmg. Here were the promises made! Here the skills forged, the strengths developed・ Here one dreamed and laid out the course. Now to retum-tO Visit the old friends’the old spots and to see the Changes. How retummg Satisfies the deepest longlngS Within us! P.S. If you can’t come home, hold a club Homecommg m yOur OWn COmmunitye Meet with other Boston University folks・ We,ll send last year,s Homecomlng創m if you wish. Faculty, Students, all of us here on the CamPuS, and above all, yOur COmmittee on Homecomlng Say in the wamest tems, “Won’t you please come home this year?,, A.U. Cons書棚C房on on Bos地肌Uれわer諦γ’s Ne撮, H棚el Ho `Se肋Oびe$のろead §意eα働母αれd rαp綿か. T轟eのかoぴe p九oめ,轟α鳥e職もγ S心αがP九o轟のgrαp九er George Serrこe8 fro桝拐e roof of拐e Unわer§旬CんαnCe鵬rγ,諒ou,S諦e Ne種のCeれ柁r訪言お夢ocα房0れαdio訪されgあe九の耽e o恒心e Preside融Of拐e U最ひer訪γ 0れBaγ S融e鰹oad. T九e o耕cさのJ ope諒Ig撮高職種α鳥e p庇e 轟部s 8ひ香れきer. T檀圏 掘控離竜SJTY 肋鵬挑N鋤) Proiec重a‡ Bosまon Un訪ers海曹s舶ore沈an a B撮闘わg -されs 4 ‡策動鯵の種物冨お粥 Hillelwho-lived the beloved, gentle sage in the land of Israel that imer spiritual fortification Which makes for maximum per- Jewish youth during their most reCePtive period-their college years. The Hillel program seeks to lead almost 2,000 years ago and whose SOnal and social adjustment? Will name is deathlessly associated with they have that knowledge of their these young people toward glad his teachings of love of fellow-man, identification with the Jewish peo- devotion to peace and justice, and PaSt and that insight into the Jewish role in the present that will dedication to leammg - is today make them creative participants in Ple through Jewish fe工lowship; toward uplifting insights into血e the symboI of a great Jewish educa- the building of a better democratic SOurCeS Of Jewish inspiration tional institution consecrated to his worldP through Jewish scholarship; and Reaching Its Youth the community and society at large ideals and servmg mOre than 150,000 Jewish young men and women On almost 200 college and Univer- toward valuable contributions to Hi11el reaches out to American through enlightened citizenship. Sity campuses. The B’nai B’rith Hil1el Foundations, Which are estab輸 1ished in his name, eXtend from the University of Alberta in the Canadian north, tO the University of Havana in the Caribbean south, and to our own Boston University. They carry on their work of teaching, COunSeling and guiding Jewish students from coast to coast in both the United States and Canada. A Na[ional Institution In the little more than a quarter Of a century since its work began at the Universitv of Illinois in 1923, Hillel has developed into a national institution. The Hillel program, Perfecting itseIf from year to year, is seeking with ever greater e鮮ec- tiveness to answer the followmg questions with a rmgmg ``Yes!’’ Will American Jews in the next B盤EAKING G鰹OUND - 0れJ事`ne 」2,上95ら gro電柵d-breα鳥わg cere- 肋o毒e$ for拐e Neoo H調e胃Ho棚Se α枕rαC書ed紺C九枕g耽れαγわs α§書方e Hon. generation be self-knowing, SeIf- C九arわ8 A・ Ro肋e, Dr. De撮,eγ D. S轟かれe, Dr. HαrO拐C. Cα§e,舶r.留d抑α「展 a能ming individuals possessed of E. Co九の,舶r. Fran泉S. S九apこro aれd肘r. Josep九Kapすaれ. 胃 WaS a thorough scholar and gifted 旺illel; Its Beginn宣ngS SPeaker, WaS PerSuaded to carry on The pIOneer in the Hillel move- Ben Frankel’s work. His name was ment and its first director was Abram Leon Sachar, and it was Rabbi Benjamin Frankel, Who as a under Dr. Sachar’s wise administra_ Student rabbi had been servlng tion and insplrmg leadersh主p in the Jewish communities in I11inois. It is interesting to note that the Wes- 1ey Foundations servlng Methodist Students also originated here, at the “①塵 鯵晒昂揖電場 壷 崩壊調定 next two decades that Hillel grew to its present stature and position in 型品J脚哀調増血調心頭桝読手地場一 the American community・ University of Illinois. Today the name of Hillel stands alongside the 興調獅 鯵訪土子調多く中華瑠調関狭排 name of Wesley, the names of the 両鵬,狭競壷劇聯血施e土鳩e哩鯵, other Protestant denominational re_ 血部長士∬ぢ坤勝,事轟雪舟排士華鯵,枇高 For a long while Jewish students at Boston University, Emerson Col- PuS, and the name of Newman 批静香血排哩鯵f調印調的刷上護龍 正和碓雌=扇一坤上抽肋間闘ま競 Which marks the work of the great 争卿担湖心訪抑頭重.’’ 1igious work agencies on血e cam- 撃車掌壷滴缶融訪地場,規子一 agency servlng Catholic students. built on faith’and in the first year U nivers ity lege and Boston Teachers’College met in a little loft on top of a Cop- RABBI CHARLES S. FREEDMAN, Former Director of the Hillel Foundation at Boston Universitv The Hillel Foundations were HiⅢel Comes to Boston 1ey Square building. Then in Aug置 ust 1947, a Small group of men from Amos Lodge, B’nai B’rith, ■l Of operation at Illinois’an abun- PurChased a building and an ad- dance of it was required・ Young joining lot at 233 Bay State Road, facing the Charles River. This was Ben Frankel did not know where to serve as the location for the new he would be able to secure the Boston University Hi11el House・ funds to support the wock he had The project moved rapidly from cut out for himself. This was some_ then on・ The committee appointed thing uniquely new on the Jewish the late Dr. Joshua Loth Liebman to get the ba11 ro11ing, and he did scene, ahd it took men of vision like Dr. Louis Mam of Chicago to un- just that. A member of the National Hillel Commission, Dr. Lieb- derstand that a great contribution WaS in the making. Dr. Mam con- man inspired his associates and Veyed that vision to a few of his friends, amOng them Julius Rosen- COntributors bv insisting that ``noth重 mg in B’nai B’rith is more magnifi- Wald, and before long funds for the Cent in all of its h王story than the Pioneering year of Hi11el were as- Hillel work - this positive creative sured. WOrk in our country. ∴, Before Rabbi Frankel died in 1927 he was able to initiate the Of Illinois. That young instructor enthusiastic support of a young inStruCtOr in history at the University Whose classes were among the most POPular on the campus, and who The committee set out to raise funds under the able chaimanship Of Mr. Edward E. Cohen, Who Pledged himself wholeheartedly to the task. Within two months $40,000.00 had been raised. .Charter OFFICERS OF THE BOSTON UNIVERSITY HILL圏L memberships were bought at $1,- HOUSE BUILDING CORPORATION 000・00 each・ Many were solicited, but many more gave of their own President: Edward E. Cohen time and money without waiting to be asked. The first charter membe〕: First Vice-President: Joseph Kaplan WaS a PrOminent community leader, Treasurer: Frank Se Shapiro Secretary: Philip Hamburg Mr. Joseph F. Ford. Because Hillel House at Boston Second Vice-Presidents: Jack Ansin, Maurice J. Bemstein, Morris Borkum, Nathan Brezner, Max Chemis, Henry G. Cohen, Joseph ect, the committee decided to per- F. Ford, Louis Isenberg, I・ Roy Levy, David L. Peskin, Emanuel University was a community pro十 mit all the B’nai B’rith lodges and Chapters to participate ih the work. H. Sulkis. In a year’s time the mortgage had Honorary Trustees: Dr. Harold C. Case, Dr・ Daniel L. Marsh, Dr. Abram L. Sachar, Dr・ Dewey D・ Stone, Hon・ Harry K. Stone, Hon. Charles A. Rome, Hon. Jemie Loitman Barron, Phil W. Lown. been paid, and the tally sheet boasted 150 charter members. By 1949 the building at 233 Bay (Co脇med o" Page 10) 8¥ Aれeαr母訪spec房0れ音あoαr a書H瑚e夢Ho榔Se訪c九ded Heれrγ∴∴∴ Ne訪γ 0γgaれあed Wo肌eれ’s D演§われOf H調e裏Ho事`§e eわc書ed Beγ耽れク留d撮,αrd E. Co九en, Dr. Haγ0物C. CαSe and Fγα職長 as o姉ceγS reCeれ叫,万o肋わf巨財rs. Jo$ep九C訪α桝On,柳eas- S加p訪0. 撮reγ;肘お§ FloreれCe Le訪れe, reCOγd訪g secre書αrγ;柑r§.舶わの Wo坊, preSまden書; Mr. Ed撮)αrd E. Co九en, H瑚e裏pre$蘭eれ点; 財r$.棚の暮読ce Sp轟,乃nαnC3α胃 se○reめrγ αれd 棚r§. JαmeS Kα九巧COrγeSpOれd訪g secre加rγ. H5脇W訪oかじeめN助, D香γeC意or鵜Heαd加心地gαe彊抑〆comきれg盤abb3 Sam椛i Per五れa耽れBos書oれUnわers函鵬re,錐a書ed, losep九Kapわn, Dr・ Danこel L・駒場h, Ed棚,αrd E・ Co九eれ, Frα最S・ S九a甘心0・ S加dこれg, Herbe塙He雇eれ, S融e融pre§擢巧 Josep九Foγd, Dγ・ De撮,eγ D・ Sめれe,紺orrおBoγ鳥α肋, E擢e C九arness, S加den自eader… Rab枕Per九州αn, P脇W. Lo細れ, aれd蹄αb♭i 棚a附きce Z3g耽o融, formeγ aα訪れg H調e青`諒ec如けa書Bo$かけn Unわers勘. Hi量工e耳(co偽れuedかo仰page 8) To the Hillel director, Students can State Road could not keep pace bring their intimate spiritual prob- with the students and their activi_ lems. Both as a spiritua=eader and ties and programs. So the commit- as a trained counselor he is able to tee rolled up its∴Sleeves, raised make contributions to their de- ?170,000.00 more and set to work razmg the building to make room Velopment and to the solution of their problems which can never be for a new Hillel House. When com_ Publicized, but which constitute the most valuable aspect of his service Pleted, aS is shown on this month’s to his students. Bosto海a cover, the magni丘ceI]t StruCture Will take on the appeal.ence of ``a sermon in stone,” as Dr. A Positive Con置riI)u置ion Sachar so eloquently stated・ Hillel’s alumn王are begimmg tO take their places in American Jew- How Does the Building Shape Up? ish life as B’nai B’rith leaders, aS rabbis and teachers, aS Jewish so- When it opens its doors tlふis Cial service workers, and as the Winter, Boston Universitv’s New loyal members of synagogues and Hi工lel House wi11 present the latest in architectural design and modemjsm, With facilities available to a11 groups withjn the University. The three-StOry StruCture Will have its main kitchen and a rumpus room COmmunity organizations・ If Hi11el Dr. Abrα耽L. Sα諒のr, Hon,鴇, has any measure of success in the ●`‥ . A Sermon In S古one ‥.,’ COntinumg Performance of its imCaPaCity for 50, tWO Classrooms, a game room and a terrace overlook- mg the Charles River. in the basement; the first丑oor wi11 POrtant taSk’then Jewry will be PrOVided with a reservolr Of seIfa紐ming, educated Jewish leaders Who wi11 be capable of conveylng house a lounge, library, a muSic Provides for Re量igion room and kitchen, a Check room, As a community center, Hillel House will provide for the religious integrated outlooks: The recogni- l土fe of Jewish students’Organiz申 tion of the importance of living cre- WOrld, and the proud consciousness auditorium, a Small kitchen and a Weekly worship services, Plamlng High Holy day services, making Chanukah a meaningful part of the dividing room・ On the third且oor COllege calendar and providing a Will be the stained-glass-Windowed home-1ife Seder at Passover time VerSity is proud to lend a helping ChapeI with an approximate seating for students unable to retum home. hand. and o償ces of the director and the SeCretary. The main lobby will be Iined with show cases. On the sec_ Ond floor will be located the main to the entire community those atti- tudes which will mark their own atively as a group in the modem Of belongmg tO that particular group・ To these ends, Boston Uni- A STATEMENT BY HILLEL’S NEW DIRECTOR (Rα的育Sα肌αd B・ Per拐αれ, Bo§相調U毒針§母,s Ne撮, H脇重D訪ecめγ, 00α$ bor耽読Ne飢, Yor鳥C壇町訪工905. He reひ読めed擢 bαC九e夢のr’s虎gree fro肋C海Co鵬geのf N帥Y〇㌔鳥丸工926. Fo附γeαr§ lα記rあ。 re。。読d椿盤。掘崩。α夢。rdわの房。職のれd施s肋 のf Heめr鋤, L混γα加re α書Ne撮, Yのr鵠Je譲れIれ融耽e of劇轟on・ Fo妨最高gあごs 〇着萌の房心れ,蹄αめきPe「l肋のれ伽S spirわ地のi leαder for co喝reg側訪0れS訪Ne80 Yor鳥, Pe耽れSγれα動きα αれd Ne撮, Jerseγ. Co競肋部のU諭er訪γ a○○αrde展丸さ肋椿P九〇D.訪重950. Pr香orわco,r訪og to Bostoれ拘わers砂, he sert,e杭I’高加加H香脇Fo肌dα訪oれα”九e U諭ers海of誰訪のmα fro耽]9雛-48, 話ere庇ou,αS訪sO e肌討融r“c‡orあれe depαr加e融of re晦;orl, αれd coαS H鵬Z Dさrector α=加U諭ersity of Nor暁CαrO萌oα fro肌」948-52・ He js pγe$e融γ柳の枕喝嵐高o肌e訪れ椿珂e αれd霊かee c心闘re7e α書44 S記のrれS Roαd, Broo脇ne.) The B’nai B’rith Hi11el Foundation a nation peoples of di鰐erent races’re- building that is being constructed wi11 1igious beliefs’and national orlgmS. We SPiri=hat obtains among the曹e堕ious PrOVide the facilities for meeting the have learned from persona虹es such as religious,臆SOCial, and cultural needs of pressive not only of the fine cooperative Ame HutchinsQn, Roger Williams, and groups on the campus of our great uniVerSity but also of the common goal of Jewish students at Boston University. This Emma Lazarus that d鮪erences may en- enlightened rehigious leadership that is is indeed a great achievement on the part rich and beautify a nation rather than Seeking to insplre and encourage Amer- of the o餓cers and members of the B’nai divide it. Within this HilIel軸ouse our ican youth to live by the spiritual values B’rith Building Corporation. The slg- Jewish students wi11 be encouraged to and ideals of our great Judeo-Christian drink deeply of the religious heritage of heritage. nificance of this structure, however, gOeS beyond its functional nature. This future home of the B’nai B’rith Hillel Foundation is not only a student the Jewish people that they.may more e任ectively contribute to AmerlCan SPirit- ua=ife. When the home of the B’nai B’rith Hi11el Foundation is completed, it will be dedicated to the service of God and to the activities building but also a symboI of There is still another way m Which that which made America a great spiritual nation. The spiritual development of our COuntry reCeived great impetus and en- this Hillel House is symbohc of our imity in which we宜nd the Daniel L. Director, B’nai B’rith Hillel richment from our strivings to unite into Marsh Chape] and our building is ex- Foundation at Boston University COu血y’s spiritual values. The close prox- 10 greater spiritual growth of our campus and our country. SAMUEL PERLMAN, E枇C訪びe Co肌肋庇e肋e肌bers of庇Bos書0れU競演er函Hj脇Ho鵬e訪叱れde; Sea柁d, A・ S・ B研g, E品,ard E. Co九eれ, pre8うde事項Jo§印轟Ka車高肌and肌§・掘れのWoけ・鍋肌品訪g αre Daれ香eJ 」 αd$書e職, Heれrγ Be崩れ, Fr同展S. S九αp香ro, Heγbeγ書Abra鵬 のn働碑のγr芯Bor鳥職耽. Gree品gs fro肋油e ChαnCeルr-Dr. Daれ拐L.舶ar8九oがer§ a 紳gi○○m肌g九αれdcla8p書o Rα掘さSα棚`d Per抗の職, ne撮〉 e∠枇C融のe 昂γeC章or o吊れe BosめれU諭ers函H脇夢Hの鵬e. A=加わf‡お Iosep九Kαp夢an,ガrs‡壷e-pγeS龍か, αれd α書e肋e肋e rig加お Ed帥ard E. Co巌れ, preS池eれ書. 11 Bos轟on U証ners訪y’s Sztmmer Commenceme融Address - 杉デ窃のみ妬き動のdの%d i‰多のd By PREISIDENT HAROLD C. CASE I音盤詳荒‡霊。C嵩 gandists, and by the threats of impending disaster. In such an at葛 tion, recurring themes・ One hears血ese mosphere, Prejudice thrives. Pic- Chie且y for “an angle,” but for ade- ideas stated over and over agam・ ture magazines replace serious Whether a person listens and reading. The book of the month is watches television,血at un且atter- better known than the classics. The knowledge, nOt Prlmarily for posibut for qua愉cations, nOt quaCy・ Consider, “the road.’’ ing exposure-meter Of individuals SOng hit of the week can be recog- I remember a roadside s工gn, let- and groups; Or hears a lecture; Or nized on ``Break the Bank,’’when tered in a scrawI on a weathered reads his favorite editorial writer, great music that has lived beyond board・ The road was unpaved・ he is likely to come across the a generation is unknown・ SIogans Same emPhasis. have been repeated until they have ant. The ruts were deep. The sign lost their value. Listeners endure read, ``Be careful which ruts you We need more knowledge, and the commercials, and hear ``what choose, yOu Will have to stay m better application of our leamlng SParks a champIOn, SParks you’’’or them for the next twenty miles.’’ Car Can uSe,’’ or ``Tide washes Critical acceptance of ideas, Or Pre手 dothes cleaner than any soap’” but udices. We must be careful which One of these themes is that in order to soIve the critical problems of our generation. The other theme is that we need ``the most powerful gasoline your The spmg rains had been abund- We get into ruts, from habit, un- better persons, With more integrity, actually they build resistance to ruts we choose for we may have to a keener sense of spiritual values, Such phrases, having leamed that Stay in them for the next twenty a larger loyalty to ideals, and a many selling slogans have little yearS. greater wi11ingness to adopt a cause and live for it, regardless of the basis in fact. OPPOSition. that they do not galn POise by There is an open road, Where one Bewildered people have found meets all sorts and kinds of people・ We are less and less able to be Often such speeches or articles Changlng breakfast foods, become restrictive. Once first-Class compart- CIose by condemning mankind for SuCCeSSful by lighting up a Lucky, ments in trains were occupied by Or aChieve popularity by創Iing up the wealthy, Or by royalty. Now their gas tank with Esso. trans-Atlantic planes place an im- ``selling its∴SPiritual birthright for a mess of material pottage・’’ Now there is much that looks like The simple fact is that people migrant and a Congressman, Or a §heer materialism today. There is Want deeper answers to more basic Salesman and a deposed Monarch, SuCh an emphasis on the amount in across the aisle from each other. 瓜e pay envelope as to make it PrOblems. If they could find perSOnal significance, if they could be- almost a disgrace to eam less than 1ieve in some enduring values, they one’s friend. There is an extemal- would be able to relax and to live Now a political caucus held while a ism, big and booming, Where speed more peaceably with all men・ One keynote speech is being delivered, is equated with fun and noise is a Of the most important tasks of or the blatant lack of the mood of COnSCious cover up for personal in- higher education is found in reverence during a Convention SeCurity・ There are many evidences these problems. Improved guid- Prayer, Or hot words in the creden- that morals have been lowered and ance must help students to avoid tials committee are revealed for mores changed, Without any good the mistake of wrong vocational What they are, and the asp工rantS tO COmlng Out Of the shift. choices, and to set their feet on the O龍ce, the “big-Wheels’’in the party Still, muCh that passes for loss road toward fu輪Ilment. E鮮ective machine and the city bosses are ex- of idealism is bewilderment. Like education must provide each stu- POSed before all voters who care to a f正ghtened deer, blinded by the dent with the tooIs of self-knowl- Iook or will take time to listen. headlights of a car, dashing into edge, that he may discover the This is good. It removes the arti- it damaglng the car and injuring Size of load he can carry, aCCePt ficiality of posi瞳on based on power itself; many PeOPle are rushing himself, StOP maSquerading,叩d or the chance of birth. It is also about hurting themselves, because live adventurously within his own alaming・ Unless we leam to trave工 they are confused・ area of ability. A powerful stimu- the open road in congenial groups, Once the secrets of govemment Were hidden from the populace・ Serious inroads have been made lus to continumg education must truth te11ing groups, unPrejudiced On Our POise by modem noise mak- be provided, that students will not ers, by contradictions of propa置 Strive mainly for credits, but for groups, religious groups, OPenminded groups, We traVel toward 12 CymCISm, authoritarianism and Paganism. PrePared me superbly for a bird,seye view of the world・ It taught Last spmg Boston University’s me how to recognlZe eaSily and in- Founders’Day program was de- Stantly the things that di任erentiate VOted to ``Brotherhood In Action.,, The results have been spectacular. The issue of Bo$tOnia, Our Alumni One Place or one people from an- magazine, rePOrting the addresses and discussions of that week, has been adopted as collateral material Other. Geography had instructed me in d鯖erences of terrain, re- SOurCeS, and productivity. ComParative culture had instructed me in the di群erences of background for courses in action by public and group interests. AnthropoIogy SChooIs. The upsurge of enthusi- had instructed me in the di任erences asm for improved inter-grOuP rela- Of facial bone structure, Skin plg- tions is re且ected in a workshop mentation and general physical as- held during the summer and at- PeCt. In short’my education pro- tended by teachers, Public o餓cials, tected me against surprise・ I was SChool administrators, P.T.A. o鯖一 not surprised at the fact that some CerS, housewives, business men and WOmen. Listen to one letter among PeOPle lived in mud huts and others in bamboo cottages on stilts; Or that many unsolicited comments about SOme en]Oyed music with a five note the workshop : SCale and others with twelve; Or T加 U耽れeγS函,s F雄心Pre§王denちDγ. that some people were vegetarian Haro物 C. Case,わαds 書九e acade毒c ``I have been teaching in College for the past seven years and have by religion and others by prefer- taught six years previous to this. B. U. Pねoきo Seγひ舌oe processき0n d鋤,n沈e α闘e α書Sγ柳p九のnγ Hall foγ I脆e 38沈 an肋a裏 S職肌肋er My educational background has ``… What my education failed to been varied. However, the Work- do was to teach me that the pm- Shop on Intergroup Relations has CIPal slgnificance of such di任er- Se§SわれCoかけれeれCem鋼亮eガerCうses. Dう_ rec砂子o夢lo毒ng a?・e Dγ. Ca高E. P軍需肌 書on and Dea事● A〃ee L. Percγ. been without doubt one of the most ences was that they were largely exciting experiences of my life. Without significance. The di任er- Once the emphasis on similarities ences were largely obliterated by has been made-We have started ``In the wockshop this summer, the most important factor, OutSide the similarities. My education had Our joumey on the road leading to Of the group itself, WaS the quality by-peSSed the similarities. The sim- understanding, gOOd wi11, and one Plest reality of a11 was that the human community was one- day’tO PeaCe. This educational Of leadership we had・ I could cite Page after page of examples of their deep understanding of the JOumey begins with the conviction that the Universe does not hold life democratic process’their iensitivity greater than the divergent faiths and allegiances or the depth and to individual needs and their un_ COIor of varylng Cultures. This haps one that is unlque, in our solar believable skill in leading students larger unity was the most important SyStem, On this planet. Human life to deeper levels of thinking・ People Central fact of our time-SOme_ PreSentS∴∴SOme Conbinations of grew before your eyes. thing on which people couId build faculties that raise it above other at a time when hope seemed misty’ foms. Creative intelligence, en- almost unreal. abling man to remember the past, This is a ma]Or taSk of the UniVerSity, tO bring together in the SPirit of harmony, PerSOnS Of varied religious, eCOnOmic, raCial and nationality backgrounds’nOt tO merge “It tumed out that my ability to get along with other people de- them into one pattem, but to de- Pended not so much upon my COmPrehension of the unlqueneSS Of Velop a two-Way Street-down their way of life as upon my com- Which all may travel for the valid understanding of each other; and Prehension of the things we had in COmmOn・ It was important to re- Cheaply. Life is a rare event, Per- COmPrehend the present and plan for the future, is reserved to man alone. Moral ideals, COnVictions, enduring love’intelligent faith, Per- SOnal dedication, human service, these are wonderful achievements, POrtrayed in millions of humans, in many nations. to help them to recognlZe that the SPeCt these d綿erences, Certainly’ elemental truth about people is but to stop there was like clearmg On a world scale it is not their similarity, nOt their di任er- the ground without any idea of the di任erences of language, but the ences. Thus they grow before your what was to be bui工t on it. When ability to communicate; nOt the you got through comparmg nOteS, Varieties of religion, but the uni- you discovered that you were both talking about the same neighbor- VerSality of faith; ,not that musical hood, that is, this planet, and the music is universal; nOt that fom COnditions that make it congenial and technique in art are distinct or hostile to human habitation.,, in one nation frdm anoth尋but eyeS・ Norman Cousins, editor of the Saturday Review of Literature, OnCe WrOte an article with the title, “Confessions of a Miseducated Man.’’ He said, “My education :’18 PattemS are di任erent, but that that all people produce artists who enced・ Sympathy has a hollow long since gained, have to experi- use coIor, line and mass to portray SOund from a person who has never ment, knowmg that they will fail beauty. known sorrow. But words of sym- about nine times and succeed once, far than he is separated・ All people Pathy from one who has walked the way of tragedy are full of rich sand times for one achievement. requlre air to breathe, food to eat, meanmg・ So man is more deeply uni丘ed b、′ Water tO drink. Moreover, man’s tenure here is so uncertain and his COntinued existence so precarious Or Perhaps they wi11 fail one tho虹 But we never know what kinds It is necessary to teach the alPhabet and the multiplication Of loads we can carry until we begm・ Back of the violinist who plays in Symphony Hall is a lifetime of that the behavior of any group be- tables. After a child leams to read, he will read. After he leams to COmeS the concem of all groups. add or subtract, he will do that. But Let one try to control an undue there is no guarantee that after he guages or History or Physics is a POrtion of land surface, Or tO gain a monopoly of natural resources, Or leams the Gettysburg Address, he lifetime of concentration, Of load Will demonstrate the proposition acceptance. PreVent Others from having access to food, faith, Or fellowship, and every precious element of humanity is under attack. that all men are created equal. There are millions who can recite the Golden Rule, but who do not PraCtice it. It is the business of education to To be e任ective, knowledge and teach about the larger unity of actioh must be joined・ Everyone mankind, that each person may be- must carry a load・ All useful dis- come concemed with human destiny - until all people respond・ COVeries, from a boy putting his knowledge of fishing into e任ect, There is also a private road to with homemade tackle, With which be trave11ed. From our first breath he pulls in his first fish-tO the to our last heart-beat, We Walk top scientist doing basic research, alone. After the parade has passed, require that knowledge be joined the guests have gone home,血e by responsible action, that persons children have been tucked into accept a load・ bed, and the radio and the lights have been tumed o圧, We muSt COme to terms with ourselves. There are not enough stimulants nor can we run far enough to get away from ourselves. Take this matter of loads. A good many people are complaining about the weight of the responsibiL ity they carry・ But if you know them well, yOu WOuld realize that raphy; tO gain reverence for life, including the precious JeOPardy invoIving every moment of exist- How about the goad・ Do we feel the stimulus to excellence? The surge for size threatens us With mediocrity. We talk of firstClass cities, aS having a certain population, and second-Class cities, aS below that number. But in the matter of quality, this rating may be reversed, for the largest city may be the inferior one by all the standards that indicate human wo rth We sometimes measure an educational institution by the thickness COurSe, O任ered by a professor with intellectual discipline’ emOtiona工 balance, CaPtivating ideas, love of Students and a creat王ve approach to truth, may far outweigh a dozen COurSeS taught for the sake of duty, by the method of memory, by an instructor who is too se輪sh to know his students personally. 1 1 to greatness in art, muSic, biog- 皿Dn。S 。細田 remember; tO meditate; tO reSPOnd r ing individuals to read and to them. a C e Education has the task of persuad- the loads were taken away from 工血中器ⅧfO r SOnS We are, tO COme home to. Mathematics, Or Romance Lan- Of its catalogue, When a s工ngle they would complain even more if It is important what kind of per種 PraCtice・ Back of the authority in OnCe telling my mother The hinge of destiny does not Seemed to me as if my tele- OPen tO the summons of size, but WOuld never stop rlnging・ I busy professional man and that each time it rang there responds to the stimulus of quality. Ticket window contacts o群er be another human problem greater opportunity for personalizing transactions than either cus- me to try to help to soIve・ My tomers or cashiers take advantage mother had been a widow for many Of, but at best they are not substi- living, for the quiet mind, for years, after a happy life with my father who had been a busy min- tutes for face to face relationships Su鯖cient time to think, tO SOIve ister. She smiled wisely, and said, I speak today for discip工ined PrOblems without developmg fears, for the mood of religious discipline living humb工y before God・ “But wait until the telephone does in which wam friendship is deVeloped ・ Co群ee dispensed from a vending StOP rmgmg・ That will be worse.” machine may come to you with So it ise We requlre these loads Cream Or black, SWeet Or bitter, and This is THE ROAD. if we are to achieve anything. The What best way to develop is to start. A it may satisfy an American habit but it camot take the place of a never knows about his strength Calculated risk is always invoIved・ friendly little cafe, With a few until he tries out his muscle. He Pe血aps we will faile But the crea- StOOIs and a counter, and a thought- CannOt tell about his capacity until tive thinkers and inventors+ those ful person behind the counter who he takes a calculated risk. He Who get beyond the rule of thumb, listens to a customer’s heartaches eannot be sure’u郎il he has experi一 Or the repetition of infomation and enjoys his successes, Or glVeS about The Load? One 聡 free advice or sympathy with a become a reminder of the dignity An increase of 10 per cent in血e good cup of freshly brewed co任ee. Of man, entruSted with the capacity food supply in Indo-China will take Each increase in the size of the for mqulry, for accura亡e observa- it out of the revolutionary sphere, frame in which life is cast, demands tion’for expIoring the outer reaches SO a meaSurable number of tons of an intensification of the concem for Of the Universe, for correlation of rice or wheat can change the fate the individual within that frame. knowledge. of a nation. During the dedication of the 200inch telescope on Mt. Palomar, Doctor Raymond Fosdick re- Mr. Bob Considine, radio com- The underly与ng meanlng Of our mentator’Said the other day that he Civilization is not found in the and Mrs. Considine had driven over SuPPly of gold at Fort Knox, nOr in minded his listeners that twenty the Trail Ridge Road from Estes the kinds of television sets avail_ years before that date, When that telescope was under discussion, One Park, CoIorado, tO Grand Lake, O皿 able in a store, nOr eVen in the the west side of the Continental number of miles of first-Class high- Of the Rockefeller Foundation trustees protested against providing Divide. It is one of the most spec- WayS in the nation. The real mean- tacular mountain highways in the mg Of our venture in culture is a funds for its design, manufacture, WOrld・ People who have trave11ed SPeCial kind of appreciation of the and location・ He asked, αAren,t we in Switzerland, India, and South individual・ The obligations of de- acqulrmg mOre knowledge than we America, retum again and again to CenCy’dignity and discipline are Can aSSimilate?’’ Dr. Fosdick an_ enjoy the ever changmg beauty of always on. SWered that discouraged trustee that CoIorado highwayo Mr・ Con- We need persons who travel the twenty years ]ater, Say工ng, “This Sidine said of it’``This is one glori- OPen rOad of human kinship’and the private road of d王scipline and telescope can fumish our stricken OuS rOad, reaChing to a point more SOCiety with some measure of heal- than 12,000 feet above sea level. meanmg; Who accept a maximum mg PerSPeCtive. This great new window will bring - into fresh focus Yet it does not make the tourist feel load and carry it for sheer JOy; Who Small. Rather it gives him a sense Welcome the goad, knowlng that Of personaI dignity.,, the ability to respond to a stimulat- -the mystery of the Universe.,, (Vitai Speeches, July 15, 1948. ) So it has’and for many, it has Size should do that, but it must never be worshipped・ SUMMER SESSION COMMENCEMENT : Families and friends of 887 Bos_ Of students and faculty’directed by ton University degree wimers Chief Marshal Eugene H. Floyd, 珊ed Symphony Halユ, Saturday, assistant to the President, and UniVerSity Marshals, Donald Bom, August 16, for amual Summer Commencement Exercises which dimaxed the 88th amual Summer Session and heard President Harold PrOfessor of English and Humanities; Arthur E. Jemer, eXeCutive mg atmOSPhere is proof of real Iiving. 887 DEGREES PrOfessor of philosophy; College of Business Administration: Mansfield Branlgan, aSSistant professor of mathematics and science; Douglas H. Be11emore, PrOfessor of econom- ics; College of Music: Hugo S. alumpi secretary; and John F. Mc- Norden’aSSOCiate professor of the C. Case address the class on “The Kenz工e, aSSistant to the Dean of the theory of music; CoIユege of Genera工 Load, the Road, and the Goad.,, Graduate School・ Organist for the Education: George Blackwood, in- The summer class which brought Commencement program was sam- the University,s graduation totals StruCtOr in political economy; Bill uel T. Walter, aSSistant professor Road, aSSistant professor of English to 3,400 for 1952, included repre- of church music. and humanities; SchooI of Law: Sentatives of 38 states’丘ve foreign Other participants included COuntries, Hawaii and Puerto Rico, Franklin H. Littell’ University and numbered in its ranks many Dean of the Chapel, Invocationこ schoo工 teachers who have taken COurSeS at the University’s schooI Of Education for graduate degreese There were 416 undergraduates, and 40l advanced degrees awarded・ Deans of the University’s co11eges Robert B. Kent, instructor in law; L. Kemeth SkoIfield, PrOfessor of law; SchooI of Education: James A. Carl E. Purinton’PrOfessor of re- Wylie’ PrOfessor o壬 education; 1igion, Benediction; Henry L. Fre- Stanley P・ Wronski, aSSistant pro- niere, Jr・, 1eading the Graduates’ fessor of education. P工edge. AIso SchooI of Public Relations Faculty Marshals were Edward and Communications: Homer J. R. Collier’PrOfessor of social sci- Dietmeier, instructor in motion p工C- ence’and Roy O。 Billet, PrOfessor tures, and Graduate School: Ca_ SOCiate degrees and ll ce亜ficates Of education and assisting them, millo P. Merlino, PrOfessor of ro重 for special study. from the College of Liberal Arts: mance languages; and Malcolm E。 The impressive ceremonies were William B. Norton’PrOfessor of Agnew, PrOfessor of c量assical lan- OPened by the academic procession history; John H. Lavely, aSSOCiate and SchooIs occupied the platfom・ The University also awarded 59 as- 且5 guageS. Bos轟onia Spotlights. ‥. 動初動数多錐の巌の勧 By DORIS TROCCHI, B’4了 Medica獲Information Expert SchooI of Medicine in 1938, and did Only College of Liberal Arts magna Receives Degree intem and residence work at hos- Cum laude graduate, aS WaS Robert pitals and in the amy unti1 1945. He was discharged as a.CoIonel lege of Business Administration. The medical profession’s public relations demand more than a chaming bedside mamer’in the oplmOn Of one of Boston University’s degree winners, Dr. John F. Conlin, Winchester, Since 1947 the director of medical information and education for the Massachusetts Medical Society. Dr. Conlin, Who received a Master of Science degree in public relations from 血e University’s SchooI of Public Relations and Communications, Said,血at ``No one field needs better public relations or has more public relations problems than the medical profesOne of the State’s leaders in pro- from the Amy Medical Corps Graduating cum laude from血e after spending four and a ha帖years Co11ege of Liberal Arts: James P. in the service, muCh of血is with Boyd, Jr., South Portland, Maine; General George S. Patton’s amy m Hercules Dantos, Haverhi11; John J. Europe. He became a graduate of the Harvard SchooI of Public Health in 1947. His wok in medical public rela- brook; Harry R・ Miller, Elizabe血, Pemsylvania; and Lewis R. Schultz, Dorchester. From the wondng mostly in publicizing the SchooI of Law: Russell F. Bath, Jr・, medical profession’s position on Newtonvi11e; Donald E. Eames, vivisection and chiropractic meth- Showhegan, Maine; and Noman ods. Other programs carried out under Dr. Conlin’s direction in- Ebenstein of Brookline. The Col1ege of Business Administration: clude the Boston Chest X-Ray Albert⑭ Parsi Arce, Ponce, Puerto people on public hea皿questions, and medical practices, Dr・ Conlin lay and professional people, and he has just been named general chair- sional training in the field・ He Kaden, Boston; Mark Karp, DorChester; Ludmila Malyshevsky, Cambridge; Albert H. Marcus, HoL man of the Massachusetts Committee for Medical Research in 1946 program, Massachusetts Health public infomation without profes- Gentili, Watertown; Stanley E. tions began when he became chair- moting more infomation for lay said that he took on his job of M. Bonin, Roxbury, from the Col- Conferences in 1949 and 1950 for Rico, and FIorence E. Tay19r Of Bosto租. AIso the SchooI of Nursmg: man of the Boston Accident Pre- Jeamette M. Nobile, Neptune, New Jersey; and Marion L. Os- Vention Program. trander of Southbridge・ started his Boston University graduate program last fall (1951) be- cause he said, ``while I have Twenty.Two Graduate Boston University Displaced With Honors Woman Grad Earns leamed to do my job血rough a combination of intuition, COmmOn sense, and trial and error, I felt the need of greater technical background in皿s new science of com- munication.,, Dr. Conlin likened Students who eamed top academic honors at Summer Com- Academic Honors A young gir工 who has been mencement included six winning forced by world con亜ct to live血e their degrees magna cum laude and ro工es of a Russian Revolutionary 16 wi血cum laude recognition. refugee’Geman forced laborer and Both the University’s school of a displaded person received her public relations techniques to the medical profession in its growing Law recommending Paul J・ Liacos, degree cum laude from Boston Uni- emphasis on scienti丘c research and Peabody, and George P・ Tsa任aras’ VerSity, Which she hopes will help Lawrence, more to develop new methods of Public Relations and Communica- Ludmila Ma工yshevsky, 27, Cam- communication. tions w珊John FIorena, Bel- bridge,血e daughter of a pre-Revo- Dr. Conlin has had a varied and 血e SchooI of her ful糾a life-1ong ambition・ surveys now being used more and mont, in血e public relations divi- lutionary Russian army o鍋cer and sion, and Frederick Blumberg, his wife from the favored class from 1923-1932 in Passionist mon置 Lym, in the radio division, had asteries in Eastem United States two candidates each in the magna before deciding to become a doctor. cum laude list. Sondra Claire He was graduated from Tufts London Rogal, Dorchester, WaS血e under the Tsar, is Iooking for a job where her knowledge of Russian language and history and her college degree will enable her to fight career, having spent nine years 16 Commu軸sm, While promoting un- lng also experienced ]ife in war- derstanding of the Russian people time Germany as a 15-year-Old Whom she believes are living under forced laborer. a reglme they do not support lOO Her father died when she was Per Cent. She came to this country less than three years ago and com- five・ When Germans invaded Yugo- Slavia, She and her mother were D親d of Seven Earns Master?s Among the 887 graduates who received degrees, the student boasting the largest family undoubtedly is Lawrence Fulton, 124 Gledhill Avenue, Everett. Pleted degree requirements by Studying two summers in addition Sent tO WOrk in a German factory and her brother joined an anti- RecelVmg a Master of Education to the regular academic year・ Bom Communist Russian unit fighting degree jn speech and hearmg ther- in Yugoslavia, Where her parents With the Geman Army, Where he apy’this Daddy to seven young- Were married after escaplng SePa- later died in action. The end of SterS, Who range in age from 10 rately from the Communists, Lud- hostilities meant only the d脆cult down to two-and-a-half months, has mila has never been to Russia, life in a displaced persons camp. managed to support his family a]though she considers it her native Finally Ludmila and her mother WOrking as a guard on the night arranged private sponsorship in Shift of the Metropolitan Transit Her personal knowledge of the America through an American Authority while attending college COuntry COVerS killings, mySterious amy o能cer and arrived in late during the day. disappearances and forced labor in 1949. New Year’s Eve, 1950, WaS A veteran of three years with the Siberia for most of her parents’ SPent in Wakefield where Ludmila Sea Bees’he retumed to college in dose relatives. The last word from realized that her life as a com_ 1946 after having completed a year her mother’s∴Sister who still re_ and a half of schooling before the mained in Russia, Came in 1940 Pletely free person was rea11y just begiming, although she was then describing bad living and health 25 years old. It is this kind of life leave to go to work. He married the former Claire McLaughlin of land. COnditions. Ludmila is strongly She fervently hopes some day will OutSPOken in her criticism of life be lived by the people of her under any totalitarian regime, hav- mother and father’s native land. depression years when he had to Charlestown in 1941・ They are the ParentS Of three girls and four boys. B.U.PわoわSeγ演ce SU棚舶ER CO財猶ENCEMENT Z952 Bos雷oれU壷舵手Sごまγ,s 3鋤annαa夢S撮m肋er Com柳ence肋e肋e朋rC香ses撮,ere九eld aきSγ肋p九onγ H仇u A喝的碓. A肌o喝庇 887 degree rec串eれきS撮,ere, fγ0事引e恒Dγ・ JohれF・ Co書初, Of W諒的九es拐・,萌融or of medき○α訪直が棚ささon and eあCa転職!or 庇脇ssac見境Se鵬腕枕訪So最e書γ,秒九o rece毒ed α maS書er,s de轡γee訪p調香c rda房心耶;のぽe壷g congra融a五鵬的Dr. Coれ" 祝言s Dean初ee L. Percy of ife Sz‘m肌er Ter肌・胸s. George W. W00d of Bostora,訪ose t!t’O y.の抑ge吊ro庇rs Ger調伽d A融0事●γ Gr桝九of S如けord, Co耽れeC轟巧00ere On加れd for庇cer鋼●0壷s; and玩p触o aきりg塙L撮d肋闘脇擁九鋤S短 Of Cα耽抗dge, α C棚肌先聞de gγαd削厄e fro肌CLA・ L蘭肋拐, a 27-γeαγ"O官d菰pbaced person, 00aS for肌e帝a GermaれfoγCed 繭のrer αれd α鰹挑S香aれReひ0庇われre撮gee・ Heγ mO庇γ,祝o no撮, reS香desわConcord, 00aS pγeSeれ巧or庇e舶r壷ほS. L記事毒lα a弼d九eす柳o拐erぐのⅣしe書o拐e Un轟ed S如意es九重949. 17 欝鰯縦鰯鰯醜さ鰯鰯 箋 1 -aひI勃依 釜 箋 箋 釜 邸重 器 釜 箋 登 登 覿㈱離鰯㈱3㈱3綴鰯翻 F講書書誌誓書篤ニ ture alumni brethren who are at- tending college the hard, unlque Way, With the assistance and en- COuragement Of Boston University. They are the disabled veterans of two wars, and the paralyzed and handicapped who do their studying by telephone and tape recorder under the Boston University HosPital and Home Study Program, introduced and operated as a branch Of the College of General Education. Before our conversation with Mrs. Alice H. Gamble, director of the extension program, We had ex- PeCted to meet a group of dejected and aimless youths. But we、were sharply and pleasantly awakened to discover that each of the handi- CaPPed and disabled veterans we talked with were men of vision - Calin and clear-headed, With a pur- POSe in life-that of winning a COllege degree in spite of all the B. U. PわoきO Seヶ所ce Disα境ed Veterα"§ JoJm棚l章c巌rlSOn, Pαnd S加のαnd WarreれGr王的oれS,品口調的rt /or !心e香r のee部γ COれ鋤加房0鵬の九九Co鵬ge oI GeれerαJ Ed榔Cα房0れ∴prOfe§SOr§, αγe諒ののれ“意の鳥香れg きeれ’’0れ寒肋e §あep$のきC.G.E. 18 Physical odds against血em. First there was STEVE LAM。 BERT? 24-year-Old Korean veteran 鱗鰯§㈱萱鶴亀鶴亀鰯8網8㈱ Hospital・ You’ll find a faculty 器 器 器 器 器 敏重 一掬似緋〃 器 器 器 器 器 鶴鰯㈱3総統離鰯鱗鰯撥 questions. Assistant Dean Colin H. member from each field of instruc_ Kerr has accepted two students for tion visiting the hospital regular工y this educationa工experiment. for conference work. Other hospl- Three students who began work tals represented during血e past in the Rutland Heights V・ A. Hos- four years under this unlque PrOgram are the Children’s Medica工 Pital with the first group in the Pilot Program have eamed the de- Center’the Mary MacArthur Res- gree of Associate in Arts. Two of Pirator Center, the Muやhy Amy them have been awarded their Hospital, and the Cushing V. A. bachelor’s degrees, While the third Hospital・ Dean Judson R. Butler is WaS admitted to the Law School. PreSently considering the applica- FRANCIS X. KELI.EY of Charles- tions of students from Middlesex, Mattapan, and Norfolk. CHARLE`S SIA of Waltham ma_ Through a still-neWer SyStem inaugurated at the Junior College, jored in psychoIogy. EDWARD J. WHITE of Hartford, Connecticut, Physically handicapped students WaS admitted to the Law School may now go to college by tele- but had to re-enter the hospital. town maJOred in physics; S. Phone・ Through this new p工an, the Now, tWO yearS later, he is about house-bound student is able to at_ to realize his dream and actually tend regular class lectures while at Start his work at the Schoo工of Law. home. LEO T・ POWER of Roxbury This venture has never before began his work at血e College of been applied in colユege instruction・ General Education but study was It calls for the use of a device interrupted by illness; SO he con- known as the償teacheaphone,,, a tinued his program while in the telephone instrument equlPPed hospital・ Later, When he was dis- With an amplifier・ The instrument Charged from the hospital, he con- is connected during a regular class- tinued his course in the Home Study Program and eamed his AsSOCiate in Arts degree in August, 1951. He expects to receive his from Somerville. Steve had served room lec七ure’and the handicapped With the Engineers in Korea and be- Student sits at home wi血his Ioud_ Came disabled while sti11 on the SPeaker, taking notes and asking line. The amy sent him to the Cushing V. A. Hospital, Where Steve spent two and a half years in a sick bed・ Permanently disabled, he began studies at Boston UniverSity with tape-reCOrded lectures; later’When he was well enough to travel occasiona11y, he made weekly trips to the University for consultations with his professors and for examinations. Steve now plans, after completing his course at C.G.E・, tO tranSfer to the Co11ege of L王beral Arts for his degree in Mathematics. Then we met 27-year-Old FRÅNK MACCHIAROLI of Framingham, and BILL SEAMAN? 83-year-01d Worcester native. Both men had SerVed with the U. S・ Navy during World War II; Bill served wi血the Submarine service. Both are mar_ ried and disabled; Bill spent four long years in a hospital bed・ Boston University still has `くstu- dent-Patients’’in its Pilot Program at the Rutland Heights Veterans Frのれ鳥MαC〇九このrO職のれd B調Seα肋のれ. 19 bachelor’s degree next June from the College of Liberal Arts. JOHN LAWRENCE, a regular Student in the University’WaS Seri- OuSly m甲red by a Sheman Tank during camp maneuvers last summer・ John transferred to Murphy Amy Hospital’and was able to keep pace with his classes through recorded lectures until he was physi- Cally able to retum to class. He WaS graduated last June・ They’re top-nOtCh students, these disabled and handicapped・ Thev’ve Set their goal and are gomg at it hard・ ``I’11 get back to the class- rooms just as soon as my crutches W皿take me there, SayS PAUL O,BRIEN, POlio victim・ “In the meantime,” he says, ``this is a good Way tO gO tO SChool. It works - I’11 finish the first year’s work this sum一 mer. タ, S書のe LαmberちSo肋e職〉瑚e. So事鵬掘れg S拐i Ne撮,eγ; T加 Teac九er-p九oれe. As§3s‡α融Deαn Cob訪Kerr αnd財γ§. A槻ce H. Ga肋部e are s九o地肌disc事l§S耽g 重心お耽れ事q耽e ‡e夢印九one香れs書r事`一 肌e蹄. E優毒pped章訪れa職の耽pl弼erクわき§ CO耽れeC書ed d軍需れg γegきL拐r cIαSSrOO肌 わc加γe§, and enab脆s α∴九αれdicαpped s脇deれ症αきれo細心e∴轟の∴carrγ On I壷 rの章L競れe cすassroo耽 撮〉Or鳥 かひね九 九3s c夢a§S肌の‡es. A7倒れdまhe αIn型`S On - U量刑軸 Turkish Govemment Cal量s (Kvaraceus) Delinquency Prone- Boston University Chi賞d Exper章 ness Scale and Checklist’, which early iden咄cation and care of chiL As Adv宣so富 Summarizes the results of his re_ dren vulnerable or exposed to the SearCh in the field of delinquency’ development of delinquent behav- Dr. Wi11iam C. Kvaraceus, Bos葛 ton University professor of educat土on and noted authority and author On PrOblems of exceptional children, Ieft for Turkey’September 5, a=he request of that country’s Ministry of Education to serve as an adviser to the education and training of exceptional children, a PrOgram reCently underway in Turkey. Boston University has granted Dr. Kvaraceus a SabbatiCal to release him for his year,s asslgnment OVerSeaS. The educator Wi1工also glVe COurSeS a=he Gazi Teachers Co11ege in Ankara on the Prevention and ControI of Juvenile Delinquency, the Teaching of the Mentally Retarded, and Educational and PsychoIogical MeasureA short time ago, Boston UniVerSity was host to a Turkish edu- CatOr, blind Mitat Enc, Who spent recent years on the problems of the Dr・ Kvaraceus has taught at the ior, WOrk which has led toward his Universities of I11inois, Vemont, WideIy used ``KV Proneness Scale,, Maine, and Loyola of the South・ Which helps predict” whether a Before JOmmg the faculty of Boston Child is heading toward de工in- University in 1945, he also had Served as assistant superintendent quency' He has served on the Mas- Of schooIs in Passaic, New Jersey, SaChusetts Advisory Committee on Service to Youth, and has been Where he was in charge of guid- WOrking cIosely with the Youth ance, reSearCh and curriculum de輸 Service Board since its inception. Velopment and also directed the Prominent during the Mid-Century WOrk of the Passaic Children,s Bur_ Conference on children and Youth, eau・ public he has also served as consultant to SChooIs he was director of guid- the Children’s Bureau of the Fed_ ance, Curriculum and research. eral Security Agency. At the Brockton Earlier experience included teach- 1ng at Brockton High School and Avon Old Fams School for Boys in Avon, Connecticut. With degrees from Boston College, Harvard University, and post- Parent“Teachers Conference As the final session of the three_ day Parent-Teacher Education Conference at Boston University came to a cIose July 8l, key national and graduate work at Columbia UniVerSity, Dr. Kvaraceus has concen- local o餓cers, aS Well as educators trated much of his research in to the idea of a statewide parent- and parents gave their full support two weeks with Dr. Kvaraceus gathering information in order to help improve the education system for Turkey’s 56,000 blind and thou- Sands more handicapped・ Educated in the United States since he was Stricken with bl王ndness while study- 1ng law 20 years ago, Mr. Enc had founded in 1951 the only school in Turkey exclusively for the blind・ He and Dr. Kvaraceus discussed teacher-training methods for exCePtional children, including the blind, deaf, WayWard and mentally gifted as we11 as retarded children。 Dr. Kvaraceus expects to renew his COntaCt With the Turkish educator in his work for the next year. Author of the volume ``JuvENIL票 DELINQUENCY AND THE ScHOOL and co-author of a forthcommg book on educational measurement as we工l as originator of the ``KV Dr. W調香α抑♭ C. K曾タのrαCe職$ 21 B.U.PねoわSeγ扇oe PARENT-TEACHER EDUCATION CONFERENCE - Regお!er訪g /or the §eSSior'S 3。eγe /ro事" le/" D「. Dl●ga掘4rb軍IC朗e, dうγeC書0γ OI s加de巾per§0耽れd働き重心e Uれわers函; C九αrわ8 Cre肋のs,州ir8. Frαれ鳥C. C九αce Of Gardner, Mr$. Lα撮〉renCe Bo肌 〇九のrd of Worces書er, J〇月肋C. LαれdrigαれOI Wα職見α肋αれd相場. Jα肌e8 PαppαS Of Gわ耽ce紳er. teacher conference each year・ The back to their local groups血e les- Variety of the program, because we Conference, CO-SPOnSOred by Bos- SOnS leamed on community action tackled problems from many di任er- ton University and the Massachu- at the Conference. “We look for- ent angles, and because all Massa- SettS Parent-Teacher Association, had lOO representatives of PTAs ward to another Conference next chusetts has shown its determina_ year, and are working toward that tion here to make community and throughout the State at the final end:’she told the group. SChool relations continually better.’’ An evaluation of the Conference Dean J. W印dell Yeo of the 血e Boston University Commons, WaS given by Mrs・ Marguerite Boston University SchooI of Educa- PreSided over by Mrs・ Frank C. Scheid, Director of Field Service, tion addressed│he丘nal session on Chace of Gardner, President, Mas- Nationa十Congress of Parents and methods for meeting unjustified at- SaChusetts PTA, Incorporated・ Teachers, Who congratulated Boston University on its initiative tacks on public schooIs. Mrs・ Chace complimented all members on a ``wonderful confer_ in co-SPOnSOring the conference. Conference was that ``土t has sought luncheon and evaluation sess王on in “Rarely does a private university ence.’’ She told them, ``we went On late into the night because there go ahead so actively in this field・ It Dean Yeo’s chief praise for the meins to improve communications between the school and the public, WaS nO desire to break up血e is usually a state teachers college the parent and teacher; that has meetings.’’Reviewmg a POll taken that we go to for these confer- been our main problem:’ He ex- Of the members to evaluate the pro- ences,’’she declared・ Having been PeCtS tO have the Conference con- gram she cited such remarks as “good speakers, gOOd leadership,’’ to 22 such conferences last year, tinue at the University next year’ and six so far this year’Mrs・ Scheid he said. He commented that the and ``beneficial,’’by people who ex- rated the present sessions with the PreSSed their determination to take best she臆has seen, “because of the - 22 ``pulling power” of the Conference is proved by ``th詰hcreased enro1ユー ment at each meeting・’’ This has Streamlined setup are: Public Rela- not been just a meeting of profes- tions, With a maJOr in public rela置 SOrs and teachers, he stated, but an tions; Joumalism, With majors in Cisions on policy and organization JOumalism and photo JOumalism; and Communication Arts, With With the advice of its unlque Board maJOrS in radio, television, mOtion Siona=eaders in public relations interested conference of parents, SChool experts and others with ex- Perience in community relations. A chief initiator of the Confer_ ence and active leader in it, Dr. The SchooI of Public Relations and Communications arrives at de_ Of Visitors, COmPOSed of profes- Pictures and theatre. Completely and communications elected by the aboIished is the fomer division of Dugald Arbuckle, director of stu重 Motion Pictures and Visual Aids, Trustees of Boston University on nomination by President Case. dent persomel and assistant pro- although its course o任erings are Present members of the Board are fessor of guldance at the SchooI of Sti11 in e紐ect in more integrated Education, COmmented on the Con_ fashion in the new divisions. ference with hope that each member found a lesson he could take home for concrete action. ``one of In its changeover from a two- James A・ Baubie, Public Relations, Chrysler Corporation; Erwin D. Canham, Editor, Chris青ian Scie性ce year course to four years, the Mon宛or; Harold E. Fe11ows, Presi- SchooI of Public Relations and dent, National Association of Radio and Television Broadcasters; Elmo the main objectives here was to Communications o任ers freshman heIp parents to go home to their and sophomore students one course local PTA units with an awareness Roper, Public Opinion Analyist; in Communication Arts for each Robert W. Samo任, Vice-President, Of what they can do, With a feeling SemeSter Of study・ The student National Broadcasting Company, that they are real community lead- elects the baIance of his courses for Inc.; and other notable experts in ers’’’he stated∴`I hope that many these first two years in the College the field. families will feel a responsibility to develop something beyond the Of General Education, the College Of Liberal Arts or the Co11ege of New Rest Home usual program,,, he added. ``If Business Administration. These Education Program Changes can be made in the atti- COurSeS give him background stud- A new kind of rest home service tudes of peop工e, We Can get a mOre ies in history, the arts, PSyChoIogy, for older people has been an- hamonious parent-Child relation- democratic citizenship’ Physica量 nounced by President Harold C. Ship ・’’ education’ SOCioIogy’ and many Case in cooperation with the trus- Stressmg the parent-Child rela- Other fields’PreParmg him for his tees of Lancaster Institute, in LanCaSter, Who will open the doors of tionship as a vita工key to better Career aS a COmmunications∴SPe- PTA activity, Dr. ArbuckIe ex- Cialist. The student,s final two years the fomer estate of many acres and Plained, “Most di鯖culties between COnCentrate On his chosen field. beautiful buildings on a non-PrOfit ParentS and teachers are over a lack Of understanding of their mutuaI relationship to the child, a Iack of a common viewpoint。 But if the ParentS know the chiId’s∴SChooI needs, and relate the needs to home environment, the more harmonious is the parent-teaCher relationship like工y to be・ StreamIining at S.P.R.C. A curriculum designed to meet the needs of today’s professional COmmunications expert’giving him a broad background in many fields Of study as well as a specialized knowledge, is the result of changes amounced for the SchooI of Public Relations and Communications. Three divisions of study instead of four, and a four-year instead of a two-year COurSe Will be o任ered stu- dents of the School this year. Each Of the three new divisions will also O任er graduate wo正for advanced students. The three divisions under the 耽ere αre α短of ooaγS書o reαd α boo鳥, αnd庇γ αre a町肌,庇se γ0桝g- 8書er$比のrれed α‥九e Bo錆0れU耽読r訪γ S事l肋mer Ses$香on De桝o耶折の房0れ C克s釣れRe肋ed闘Rea勝れg. T章の0 0f拐e 52 p関所Js fro肌Greα柁r B。S細事じ §C九ooIs α=九e se$§ioれS章ひere S‡α融0れBαrClαγ,上2, Of We$書Ne撮,あ。職のれd A耽れe S職〃わαれOf Dor〇九es記r. T九e grαdαのきe §脇de加-わαC九。r香s E巌の心e沈 C′α最のf Roc鳥γ H勘Con椛C宛巧訪oわのC九es α舟$書grαdeわHα可ord、 23 basis to help older people help other universities, in New York and themselves to bright, instead of fad- other states. ing, yearS. On a cost-Only basis of charge’ the Institute states as its aim “to Ma工den S宣s包ers in Educat宣o放 Get Boston Univers宣七y Boston University awarded a palr fruitful an experience as their in- Of Master of Education degrees to sisters, Helen and Ama Dillon of Boston University will o任er courses and workshops to the older PeOPIe, glVlng them a wide variety of choice. Education has much to glVe Older-aged groups’through Virginia Baptist Body’the Baptist Genera] Association of Virgmla, Degrees Together help members enJOy aS aCtive and dividual abilities will permit・’’ Mr. Lewis, 48, Who is the Pastor Of the Peaceful Baptist Church and the Recording Secretary of the 383 Highland Avenue, Malden, and Mrs. Lewis, 47, Who is the SuPerVisor of three schooIs in their hometown, have applied for a Fullbright Scholarship for study in the who have followed similar careers Union of South Africa of Negro in teaching. Both received Bache- history and culture to glVe them a lor of Science in Education from background for work in promoting Salem State Teachers College, the welfare of their race in this COuntry. teaching new ski11s in arts and Helen in 1945 and Anna in 1946 crafts, through presenting new and and since then they have taught to- interesting infomation on subjects of interest to them, and through gether, eXClusively, in Malden schooIs with Helen at the Emerson, Daniels and Beebe SchooIs and as Mr. Lewis∴Stated, ``I was here 20 making organized e鮮orts to bring the benefits of socia=ife and recre- SupervISmg PrincIPal at the Leon- years ago as a member of a choral ation into the everyday experience of these senior citizens. All the ard School, and Anna at the MapleWOOd and Beebe Junior High studies will be conducted on the SchooIs. Institute campus by Boston Univer- Boston Univers主もy AwaIfds sity professors who will travel from Degree, to So軸hem 66Mr. amd the University to Lancaster, 50 Mrs.,, Negro Adva皿cement甘e親m miles away. The Lewises came to Boston for Summer Study because they believe it is the center of American culture. group’and I have always wanted to retum.’’ Father Norman G. O,Connor, Mr. and Mrs. Frank P. Lewis, Ca亡hoIic Chaplaim of Boston University Newman C且調bs, 章he ceIeb富ation of聞01y Mass to be he且d ⑱孤吐e Camp収S, Last winter Boston Universitv in Lynchburg, Virginia, Who have a separate program inaugurated dedicated their careers to the bet- Evel.y First FI.iday and Holy Days “free retirement scholarships’’in its evening courses for people over 65 tement of the Negro race in the South, reCeived their Master of Ed- October 4 - Hayden Hall who wished to attend. The idea ucation degrees together at the has since been put into e任ect by Summer lCommencement. ’与へら Middlebur as fo拙ows : at 12:15 p.m.一Room 224 December 8 (ImmacuIate Con・ ception) - Hayden Ha置l College? August H? 1952 CAMILLO PASCAL MERLINO, Director of our Italian Summer School for ten s誓cessful and progressive years’We welcome you back to the Middlebury campus and to its Language SchooIs that have not ceased to profit frbm the energetic impulse which you gave us, and 仁Ifrom the cont露uing cooperation and 読upport which even in your absence we have gratefully received・ We honor you as a leader in Italian scholarship’and in the teaching of Italian in this country; as a central figure in the promulgation ゝOf Italian culture and its enriching influ- ence for our American culture. Your in- fluence has been increased by the warm personal friendliness and intense loyalty which mark all your relationships, ably seconded by your gracious and charming wife∴ Having trained many Middlebury 霊龍霊葦蒜霊羅i謹葦 honorary qlumni・ By virtue of the author- ity vested in me by the Board of Trustees, I now gladly confer upon you the degree of DOCTOR OF LETTERS, With all the PROFESSOR CAMILLO P. MERLINO, rights, Privileges and honors everywhere appertaining to this degree. Depar章肌eれきOf盤。肌のnCe Lang棚ageS・ 24 THE SC工ENT工F工C ADV工SORY COMM工TTEES OF THE SELECTIVE SERVICE SYSTEM By IRVING C. WHITTEMORE EDITOR’s NoTE: Dr・ Whittemore, Chair- assumes acute proportions. The man of the Department of Human Rela- temptation is to put a gun in the tions, College of Business Administration, hands of everyone of military age・ is currently on leave of absence as In 1948’realizing that the period Executive Secretary, Scientific Advisory Of mobilization upon which the Committees, SeIective Service SysteI早 Nation was then embarking was Washington, D. C. likely to last for a considerable Period of time, General Lewis B. Hershey, Director of Selective One of the aspects of the man- POWer PrOblem in the United States Service, aPPOinted a group of com置 Which appears to be little appre置 mittees under the general name of Ciated by the average citizen is the “The Scien咄c Advisory Commit- limited number of young men avail- tees on Specialized Persomel” to able for military service who reach make recommendations to him the minimum age in any one year. On OVera11 policv respecting the This number is approximately l,000- training and utilization of such 000. The Joint Chiefs of Sta任have PrOfessiona工people as engmeerS, recommended that the Armed Forces of the United States apPrOaCh and remain at a宜gure of SOme 8,700,000 in the immediate fu- SCientists, Physicians, teaChers and the like. He was motivated in so Prof. Ir扉ng C. W協職印のず・e doing by the requlrement that the System assume responsibility for ture. To sustain such a force for a Of the annual l,000,000, Only some- COnSiderable period of time with Where between 600,000 and 700,000 PrOViding adequate persomel to Satisfy the needs of the Nation in the fields of scientific research and SerVice Iimited to two years pre- are mentally and physically avail- SentS a di餓cult problem・ There is able for military servict3. This is little hope that more than l,500,- Only a little more than half the re- 000 young men can be made to development, and in the “fullest POSSible utilization of the Nation’s take an interest in military mat- quired number. If the armed forces are to be technoIogical, SCien亜c and other ters∴Su餓cient to guarantee that maintained at 3,700,000 men as Which he had been charged under Critical manpower resources’’with they wil=ook upon the amed serv- COntemPlated, a SuPPlementary ices as the basis for a pemanent SOurCe Of personnel must be found. the Selective Service Act of 1948. The geminal idea for Scieritific Advisory Committees had existed Career. If only l,500,000 continue A number of altematives present in service year after year, OVer themselves. No one knows what 2,000,000 persons will have to be in the fom of a special group m the decision of Congress will be the medical field whose function SuPPlied to the amed forces on With respect to this problem・ It SOme SOrt Of rotational basis. If, may mCreaSe the period of service had been to advise the Director With respect to the specialized as under present legislation, this to three or four years. Dependency rotational basis contemplates a pe- manpower in their area of interest. may be eliminated as a ground for riod of service not longer than 24 When the general committee was deferment. The onlv certain fact months, it follows that each year formed this medical committee is that within a comparatively short SOmething over l,000,000 men must be found to add to our force_in_ Period of time the manpower situa置 tion in this country wi11 become became a part of it although retaining a considerable degree of autonomy. ♯ being・ At first glance it might ap- Critical if we are to maintain an Pear that this number roughly cor- amed force of 3,700,000。 Some- responds to the amual crop of Visory Committees have been thing will have to be done about it, fomed, in the areas of (1) The 19-year-Olds’and that consequently When the manpower situation In all, Six of these special Ad輸 the problem would not be very se- becomes thus critical the problem # To Boston University readers it is a rious. Unfortunately the Amed Of the proper a11ocation of scarce matter of interest that a member of the Forces Exammmg Stations find it CategOries of persomel to the mili- impossible to accept some 35% of tary on the one hand, and the sup- PreSent Advisory Committee on the Healmg Arts is Dr. Donald G. Anderson, for- the registrants sent for induction. POrting economy on the other, 2う mer量y Dean of the Boston University SchooI of Medicine. Physical Sciences, (2) The AgriCultural and Biological Sciences, both standards. One of these was to be a satisfactory score on a and administered under contract (3) The Engineering Sciences, (4) The Social Sciences, (5) The standardized mental test such as by the Educational Testing Service has been used as a means of Of Princeton, New Jersey, has now Humanities, and (6) The Healing Selection for college entrance by been taken by over 400,000 persons. Arts・ At its丘rst meeting in 1948 a considerable proportion of the the general committee chose M. H. Trytten, Director of the fice of Specialized Persomel of National Research Council, aS educational institutions of the A second function assumed by the Scientific Advisory Committee COuntry. The other was to be a at the time of its organization was Dr. Ofthe its as it is popularly called, devised Class standing varylng With the a responsibility for making recom- Particular class of which the stu- mendations with respect to the chaiman・ Dr・ Trytten has con- dent was a member. When Gen_ tinued to serve in this capacity ever eral Hershey and his∴Sta鮮 had SPeCialized persomel・ The com・ Since・ The group has hence come COmPleted their study of the rec- mittee proposed the eventual es- to be known popularly as the “Tryt- Ommendations, it was decided that tablishment of a series of com_ ten’’'Committee. the manpower situation was at that mittees whose function would be utilization as we11 as education of Stead, the meeting of either one of experience of individuals whose methods of detemmmg the need for specialized persomel and the these standards was considered to services are needed in the civilian l 〇 十 . quested the Scien咄c Advisory the Committee became more spe- and the percentage standing in Committees to provide the neces- ards both with respect to test score SuPerior persons in tems of their ranged to take care of changes in which he referred to them for inte11ectual endowments and aca_ the nature of manpower requlre- Study・ Although the program is in demic capacity and in defemng ments. Thus by ralSmg the re- its early stages and still on a tenta- SuCh persons from military service quired score on the mental test or by insisting that a student obtain tive basis, the results obtained so untiI they could at least complete an education in accordance with a standing m a high percentile of Validity and utility of the infoma- their capacity to profit thereby. his class’it would be possible to The Committee finally decided to limit the numbers subject to defer- ment on this basis. Whereas when rather than on any attempt to de- manpower requlrementS became temine and isolate persons with less presslng it would be possible Particular abilities. It was clear to lower the score to be obtained far are encouraglng aS tO the tion supplied by the Committee’s investigators. In the begimlng the Committees COnSisted of groups of specialists with diverse interests. As time has from the experience of World War Or the minimum percentile of class I工that any e辞ort to discover in Standing reached and thus increase gone on they have developed into an integrated body whose concem advance what the necessary cate- the numbers of students who would is for the welfare of the whole gories of specialized persomel be allowed to continue their educa_ Nation・ Probably no more objec- WOuld tum out to be, WaS doomed tional careers. tive-minded group of distinguished to failure. Atomic scientists and Although under the law Iocal cultural authorities would not have boards are allowed to disregard the able in this country. To the been thought’Prior to the early Criteria of score or class standihg Advisory Committees it is as im- forties, tO have much value in a in determlnlng Whether to defer a POrtant tha=here be infantrymen military mobilization・ registrant, there is remarkably uni- as atomic scientists, and as neces- form adherence to the recom_ Sary that we develop language spe- 1950 recom_ mended standards throughout the Cialists as radar repalmen・ In the mended to the Director that two COuntry, and appeal procedures long run that which the Committee take care of the exceptional meri- Seeks is the greatest possible mili- torious case. tary and economic potential to dis- The ``selective Service College Qua愉cation Test,’’or S.S.C.Q.T. 26 PrOfessional men would be avail- COurage, and if necessary to meet, the enemies who would destroy us. i VeStigations in a series of cases i Sary maChinery for carrymg On in・ a sliding scale which could be ar- i Class might be readily e任ected on i Cific’the proper solution appeared SerVe the group. In March he re- to rest on the principle of locating to be deferred, be required to meet ﹂ Went On and the deliberations of the country, and that an individual, i POinted an Executive Secretary to Of the national economy. As time PrOCedures be set up for locating the better potential specialists in i January, 1952, the Director ap- POSals of the Committee lay in the fact that an alteration of the stand_ in i mendations been implemented・ In the military and -the civilian aspects Committee i feature of the committee’s recom_ One of the merits of the pro- the I economy. Only recently has this the student’s eligibility for defer- Cated to the respective needs of As the result of its deliberations, - be evidence adequate to estabIish PerSOmel would be properly allo- gamble on ``brains’, in generaI i Pracedures for assuring that such i Cies of preparation, trainmg and divergence of opinion as to the best 子 the detemination of the adequa- requlre the double standard・ In・ In the early days of the Com- 章 time not su能ciently pressmg tO mittee there existed considerable 場鶴田A五臓 The O崩ce of School and Conege Re鼻a房心nsお B霊最lγ Enco研agこれg S寂denめきo 昇級の豹筋私後砕4 By HORACE G. THACKER Alumni everywhere know of the development of the Commonwealth Physical centralization of the under the direction of the Dean of SchooIs and Colleges on the Commonwealth Avenue Campus has leaders’the financia工aid through the Chapel and his sta鮮of religious Avenue Campus which now houses eight of the SchooIs and Colleges, helped to make this possible-SO SCholarships’loans and self-help the many centra工ized bureaus that has the growth in student enrolユ- empIoyment, the thorough assist- render special services to students, ment - and so has the administra_ ance in securmg COrreCt and profit- and the a11-University administra場 tively plamed transition from coL 1egiate to University-Wide opera- able placement after graduation. tion and coordination of student Vided on a scale made possib]e by tive o能ces. Our Alumni, tOO, are quite gen- These and many more are pro- erally aware of the rapid growth of SerVices. By student services we the total student population in this mean all of those things’mOStly ten-year Period. non-aCademic, Which contribute to istrative attitude: It is the deter_ both full en]Oyment Of co11ege ]ife mined policy of Boston Universit〉7 But the growth and development Of Boston University has not been alone in buildings and in numbers Of students. Physical centralization has brought with it healthy administrative centralization and great工、, and to personal growth that the to give the丘nest in student serv- ices, tO make college days a happy bered as happy ones, Whi]e glVmg at the same time everything that COllege experience can give in prep- increased services provided to our Student community. The growth of the University does not mean that SOCial, and communi七v living・ tention than in fomer days or that the University is unable to provide Student enrollment, and by admin- four college years may be remem- aration for successful vocationaI, Our S山dents get less personal at- Physical centralization’by a larger S抽de弧t Se町vices By student services we mean the memory and to give in maximum quality and quantity a工I of the im- POrtant PrOducts’including the byPrOducts, Of college life that pre輸 Pare yOung PeOPle for successful adulthood. S弛dent Recru宣tment Program extensive array of organizations One of the administrative changes Which may be academic or non- Of the last decade is in the handling Student services common工y associ- academic in objec亡ive, COmmOnly Of the admissions and student re_ ated with the small college・ Rather, CaHed extracurricular; We mean the Cruitment procedures. Ten years ago there were six SchooIs and Col- today’s∴Student body in Boston University has far more opportunity for complete personal develop- Widespread guidance facilities, the PrOteCtion given to heal亡h, the fra- temity and sorority system, the stu- ment’and for total ``college life,, dent residence system, the demo- than in any year within my span of Cratic fom of govemment through association here, Which has been the student faculty assembly, the Virtually continuous since my own full attention glVen tO the religious Student days, 1916-1920. needs and activities of all faiths 27 1eges open to secondary school graduates - nOW there are eleven. Just about ten years ago the O鯖ce Of School and Colユege Relations WaS eStablished to perform student recruitment activities for the under_ graduate SchooIs and Colleges. Shortly thereafter the O餓ce of Ad- from September to June with more VerSity degree, a matter Of vital in- missions came into being to admin- than 800 high schooIs showing the terest and pride to every Boston ister centrally all undergraduate 刷m each year because while telling admissions functions. Logica11y at the story of Boston University the University graduate. Every Alumnus has real concem, this point the O餓ce of School and basic theme is guidance and it too, in the quality of the student Colユege Relations although continu- StrOngly supports the secondary body. I can say truthfu11y the qual- mg tO hold the identity of its name SChool guidance function・ ifications for admission are now in WaS merged with the O鯖ce of Ad- Guidance Bulletins containing general far more di鯖cult to meet ‘ than when I applied for acceptance Relations carries out its functions SOmel are prepared and distributed qulrementS, however, are mOre租ex- by rendering services to its con- two or three times a year. ible because of the wider range of - The O餓ce of School and College PrOfessional information for the use Of secondary school guidance per- in 1916・ Today’s admissions re- 1 ●ヽ - COurSeS Of study, the greater spread of academic and vocational inter重 i The members of our sta任 are featured frequently as platfom - Stituency. - mining the potential of a candidate ing good will for the University・ Sional conferences, and at programs for admission. Primarily our relationships are with Of Rotary, Kiwanis, P.T・A., and SeCOndary schooI principals, guid- Other community organizations・ ﹁ PrOgram Of building and maintain- meetings and sessions of profes- 1 We are engaged in a pemanent the increased tooIs available-SuCh - ests and abilities we now serve, and Participants in career choosing days, at SeCOndary school faculty SPeakers in school assemblies, aS ﹁ The methods used are dignified and ar6 conducted on a high professional and educational plane. 音 as educational test主ng - for deter- や PrOfessionally trained, and are readily acknowledged to be experts in to cement a strong relationship m CePtanCe Of these candidates. Sen- the secondary schooIs・ This, in Sible application of our admissions the field of guidance. They repre- tum, has been slgnificant in our Sent and bring great credit to Bos- Student recruitment program, Since PrOCedures and the variety of COurSeS Of study now available in ton University in rendering the this same sta任confers with seniors the University provide an oppor- in the secondary schoo工s about血e tunity for these young people to guidance services we sponsor・ Tes置ing Program Among these services is a group guidance testing program con置 / ment. Secondary schooI o餓cials the secondary schooIs are mature, 守 Boston University and in the name Of Boston University has done much 、 PrOSPeCtive colユege students, and - Ondary school age frequently point to applicants whose abilities are The high calibre of the sta任and of the educational services which they render as representatives of With parents. The sta任of five men ance directors and counselors, With who devote most of their time in 甲 Accumulated experience with and study of bovs and girls of sec- greatly superior to their achieve- recognlZmg this frequently urge ac- many advantages to be found through study at Boston University. These interviews are always con- get higher education when a generation or more ago the doors were ducted to assist high schooI seniors young people enroll in two-year CIosed to them・ Many of these bers prove their worth at once and and private secondary schooIs throughout New England are tested and a full consideration of their continue on to eam the bachelor’s each year through this service which The O鍋ce of School and College PrOgramS・ Surprisingly large num- 1ege by an analysis of their records 一 to choose wisely the SchooI or Col- き ducted in the secondary schooIs. 25’000 students in about 150 public SOme tO maSter’s and Of 20 career monographs written to serves as the centralized student ganization and educational facilities save and serve many young give accurate descriptions of these Career fields and supplied free to Admissions for the eleven under_ PeOPle who have ability for success in college and for the careers in so- young people or to the schooIs. The demand for these monographs has graduate SchooIs and Colleges. Ciety for which college prepares. become nation wide to the extent Of Interes=o A重umni : PrleStige recruitment arm in the O鯖ce of Alumni Participation that now approximately 75,000 In all of our far-且ung activities We should like to have every COPleS are distributed amualユy. An- the aim allVayS is to bring prestige Alumnus take an active part in Other popular service is the thirty- to the University. This is important to Alumni because additional prestige accruing to the University increases the value of the Boston Uni_ helping to continue the high level eight minute coIor sound糾m, ``careers初fhe Ma妨g’’・ Fourteen COPleS Of this糾m are on the road 28 Of our student body. President Case has made this wish known through his news letters. Our first step to で Standards, Can by its academic or- Whole, and in many other ways 丁 leges, and about the University as a schooIs themselves. So is the series erature for and about each of the ice as well as a genuine aid to血e Other descriptive promotiona1 1it- - - undergraduate SchooIs and Col- Relations prepares pictorial and tial oI)jective test records and re- guidance and is a community serv- i degree doctorate degrees. The results of these procedures are convincing, and Alumni may Well be proud that their University, While maintaining high admissions PrOVides the schooIs with substan- POrtS. This is a positive aid to good ﹁ needs and objectives. encourage Alumnl Participation was taken last winter when the Presi_ dent authorized the appointment of In conclusion, I should Iike to PaSS along these thoughts: O餓ce of School and College Rela- (l) The coming generations Of students at Boston Univer_ tions, tO devote his fu11 time to as_ Sity will get more total college Everett E. Hicks to the sta任of the SOCiation with Alumni. In the ar_ life and be better prepared for ticle which fo11ows’Mr. Hicks gives life than in any per王od of the tangible evidence of the very real past・ and active acceptance of our con- (2) EnroIlment of the stu_ dent in a smgle schooI or coL Play an important role in attracting 1ege provides as always the faculty that is common to the terials brie租y descriptive of the Small college atmosphere・ Ships with fellow students and SeVeral undergraduate SchooIs and Were retumed to this o範ce in grat- ifying numbers. In the commg year through this means, We hope for an eVen greater OPPOrtunity to send the story of Boston University to abroad wi11 prove. (5) There is not an over. abundance of green grass on Pretty tO Iook at is not an esSential element of the finest in higher education and campus PerSOnal and friendly re工ation置 The second step was the preparation and mailing to Alumni of ma- addresses of prospect王ve students COmer Of this country and 工ife. Students for Boston University・ Colleges. The postal cards which Student enro工lment which COmeS from every nook and Our CamPuS but grass while Viction that our Alumni wish to Were enCIosed to give names and residence system and at our (6) Allofus canbeproudto recommend Boston University to our own sons and daughters and the sons and daughters of (3) Whereas the combined enrollment of the University is anyone else・ 工arge there is far greater (7) There is no more v王tal Strength and advantage in that Way’and in fact no way by for the students of a11 the SchooIs and Colleges than any Which most Alumni can sup_ POrt the University better and get more personal satisfaction in doing it than by having a of us realize. (4) We誓nOIongera`;喜一 Part in building and maintain’ young people who are recom- muter’’or roomlng house col輸 ing our continuously fine stu- mended by AIumni・ lege, aS a look at our student dent body. G調香dαれCe Co脚S。or$ Of庇s棚of庇0卸e of S〇九00青くnd Co鵬ge翻勧め鵬九㌦d a reg訪r con加も訪れ胸. HoγαCe G. T九のc鳥er an展肌・ Dona夢d L・ 0巌r・ From夢坊Bernardず・ W抽e, Rα姉E・棚0γeクJo九n P.枇Cαr旬,臨. T加c鳥er and舶r. 0杭eγ, Cαr巌on鯵・ TrαCγ, Eびer調H崩s αnd鋤αr私的拙● Spαr鳥e§. 盆9 Et’ere枕Hic鳥s Prese肋s c肋Jnsig短く申 告ああ%ク姦局) I joined the O龍ce of School and College Relations last February. I had been away from the UniVerSity for nearly ten years - and I quickly found how much there was for me to leam - SO muCh had taken place in those ten years. It was April and the end of the SChool year was fast approaching before I reallv began to invite se- 1ected Alumni and Alumnl grOuPS to cooperate in some of the plans We had in mind. Then I quickly found how wholeheartedly these Plans were accepted臆how willing these Alumni were to work with Boston University in student recruitment and at the same time to render a community service to the COllege-minded young people of their home areas. Professor Thacker’s article which PreCedes this tells how the recruitment procedures of the O餓ce of School and Co1工ege Relations are tied in with the perfomance of good practices. The selection of a COllege is a guidance problem・ Ac- curate and reliable information is essential to the right selection of a CO11ege. Therefore any assistance Which can be given to young peo- Ple in giving them accurate and reliable infomation about co]leges is a perfomance in good guidance・ That is what we are asking our Alumni to help us to do for and about Boston University. Those Who help are providing a community service while glVmg aCtive sup- POrt tO the University in a worthWhile project・ Last year’s experience in con- ducting student gatherings in several communities has indicated, Very POSitively, the popular appeal Of the Program・ Both the high schooI students who attended these meetings, and the alumni who sponB. U. Pね,0わSeγOice SOred the get-tOgethers, have glVen their wholehearted approval to the E章)ere請H香c短のれ億Pα書Andeγ§On,のろのおP.A.L."心o耽れd. PrOject・ 80 Hou) O棚r A寂m読Hat;e Ass占sted肋m jn房ue αゐe勧釘多紡織 FITCHBURG, MASSACHUSETTS MR・ EvEBETT H. DuDLEY, L’27, Of HuNTER, B’26, an eXeCutive at the FIorence Stove Company. Mr. POrtation to and from the meeting・ And once again, aS in other com- house for students last April. The Hunter wasted no time in rounding up a group of loyal Boston Univer- PrOgram WaS held in the pla)′rOOm ity a]umni to assist him in the pro十 first-hand, Objective presentation of the in且uence of college life・ The Fitchburg sponsored the丘I.St OPen munities’the approximately 20 students who at亡ended were glVen a Of the Dudley home’Where a group ect・ Willing and eager to take part Of potential coIlege students met to Were MR. FRANK TooHEY, B’82, DR. Gardner alumnl grOuP tOOk upon ta工k over their educational plans LEONARD B. THOMPSON, M’8Z, MB. itself the pleasant task of telling the and problems with Mr. and Mrs. PAUL BRYANT, B’28, MR. MARK D. Dudley, and their son, Everett, Jr., STEVENS, B’24, MR. LAWRENCE H. Who is a student here at Boston RoBINSON, B’26, and MR. FRANK K. University as were his mother and HIRONS, SPR’50. dad・ The youngsters were treated The recrcation hall at the Simplex With tasty refreshments; the)γ Time Recorder Company on Lynde WatChed the showmg Of the Boston Street took on a complete Boston University創m, “Careers In The University atmosphere when the Making, and then spent a pleasant “Student Night,, arrived・ Each evemng talking over their p量ans for member of this outstanding alumni - COllege with the Dudley family and COmmittee saw to it that student With me. They discussed scholar- Ships, Curriculum, and student youngsters, in man-tO-man fashion, just how Boston University helped PrePare eaCh of them for their PreSent CareerS. The youngsters WatChed the showlng Of the創m, “Careers In The Making,,, asked dozens of quest土ons concemmg血e University, and went away feeling that their home town certainly had guests from his particular neighborhood were provided with trans- its share of prominent Boston UniVerSity men in its midst. It wi工l also be of interest to alumni to say that many students now at the Univer- CamPuS life, and certainly carried away with them a brighter, better- infomed picture of your university, that will aid them in deciding Which co11ege they will attend. LAWRENCE, MASSACHUSETTS MARIE B. ToRPEY, E’51, OPened her home to a group of top-nOtCh Students in Lawrence. Marie, a SChool teacher’is also a very active member of the Merrimac Valley Boston University Alumni Club. AIso present at the infomal huddle to assist Marie with the punch- POumg and queStions were the Club’s president, BRUNO PIETUCHOFF’C’46, FRED SAMIA, B’35, and MRS. LEWIS ScHWARTZ, A’」6. The magnitude of their co11ege and busi- ness experience added a great deaI to the discussion・ These alumni, all distinguished leaders in their particular fields’gaVe the students a Among庇a九m毒fγO肌Gaγdれer,胸ssac九職§e撫,約九o arγanged a s加 first-hand appraisal of the value of d掘れきg加progra肋α‥九e Si叩わα T香me Recorder Companγ椛贈 higher education at Boston Uni_ fro耽l坊Frαれ鳥K・ Hこrons,珊鵬汚r調のnd com肋erc闘p九oめgrap九er; VerSitv. Mr・ P訪Brγa加0恒心e Co肌肋oれ00ea妨耽れαfαC加γ訪g Con●pαれγ;肌. GARDNER, MASSACHUSETTS My first contact in the Chair.Citv Of the World was MR. ARNOLD E. 晩r鳥D・ S書eびe耶Of庇Heγ撮,00d Wα鳥e周d Co肋panγ; αれd舶・r. Frαれ鳥 To〇九eγ Of庇0・ W・ S闘e競Co叩αnγ・掘s$香れg品e事出ろe加o書の柳の§ 融e職のere肌・ Arれ0物H関所er oI庇FloγeれCe S加e Co肌panγ, Dr. Leo職の手d B・ T九o肋p§On αれd肌. LaooreれCe H. Rob訪§0れ. 3l Sity had registered here after they A selected list of secondary became interested in Boston UniVerSity at one of these infomal SChool juniors and seniors in the Boston University was contributing area were invited to be guests of to their happlneSS and plans・ They meetings. the Club・ The program itself was Were: JoAN CoFFIN, A’52, Man- And so it went in several other towns and cities throughout the Planned carefully by BILL MACKAY, Chester, JoHN MuLLIN, B’54 West A’8ヱ, the Club president, the com- Hartford, WILLIAM NoLAN, La State. Down in Bamstable, MR. mittee members - ALLAN TAYLOR, East Hartford, MARTIN RESNICK, PrOblems and ambitions, and how 汚4, and MRS. JoHN TuLIS, E’34, Played B’29, and PHIL WHITMAN tOgether E’58, New Britain, ・CAROL ScHLIP- the part of hosts for an evemng; 1n with the O能ce of School and Col- BACK, PAL’55, Rockvi11e and PAULINE MESSENGER, Sar’55, Simsbury. Lowell it was MR. and MRS. ARTHUR lege Relations. The letter of invi- ANTONOPOULOS, B’50, With the as- tation (reproduced below) wh主ch Our own JoHN McCARTHY, A’30/ Sistance of JosEPH NoRMANDY, E’5ヱ, Went tO the high schooI students E’88, COntributed greatly by his PreSident of the Lowe11 Alumni Club; in Fa11 River, the REV. tells the story of the program・ It in able leadership of the panel dis重 no way, however, reVeals the en- THOMAS R. BunNS, A’26/T26, PrO置 thusiasm of a11 concemed for the vided the facilities of the Union values that came out of it. Methodist Church’s social Ha11, and CROSSLEY, L’」4, anOther successful Student night was held・ In GIoucester MR. and MRS. JoHN W。 BLACK, JR., L’」7, OPened up their home, and in Taunton, MR. and MRS. N. LouIS STONE, B’22, did 血e greeting. In Taunton MR. STEW- ART GooD, A’50, Guidance Coun- selor in the College of Liberal Arts assisted me. Attomey MoRRIS S・ WALDMAN, L’25, President of the Boston Uni一 We cordia11y invite you to be our guest at eight o’c量ock on the evenmg Of Marc‘h membership of the Hartford Alum- Choosmg a CO11ege and choosmg the right course of study in college requlreS ni Club has voted already to repeat your best thinking. It is to help in this that we are sponsormg a SPeCial guidance PrOgram. The program will be in two parts. First’ We have been most fortunate in securmg of Youth Services, State of Comecticut Department of Education. Other Boston University Clubs in Second, We are happy to present a preparmg for wideIy di任erent careers and each is enrolled in a d締erent co11ege of Boston Universi七y. Assistant Professor John P. McCarthy, Guidance Counselor in血e Boston University O能ce of Sehool Attomey Waldman and the young- and College Relations will serve as panel sters were the Hon・ Judge LuIGI chairman. NELL, L’08. Mrs. Waldman’s very delightful repast was another high1ight of the evening for the stu- We sha1=ook forward to seemg yOu 珠 ♯ ♯ THE HARTFORD CLUB SpoNSORS HIGH ScHOOL N工GHT SPeCial programs of this nature. Your Part in Creating FutuI.e Alumni You, aS an alumnus of Boston University, Can make a very real COntribution to your communitv and to your Alma Mater by o任er- mg tO SPOnSOr an informal student a prospective Boston University student, gathering in your home, at yOur club, Or at SOme Other convenient the evenmg tOgether will be one of genu- meeting place. As many or as few and we believe whether or not you are ine valuel and pleasure・ Dr. Mahoney has an outstanding reputation in the guidance world and the stu- dents. dered a distinct service. The O範ce of School and College in the Hartford area. These students are Court Justice JEREMIAH E. O’CoN- tainly Boston University was ren- Relations will gladly cooperate with home to ̄meet with him and tw DEPASQUALE, L’Z8, and Supreme dence that there was real value in the project for the Club itself・ Cer- honey’Supervisor of Guidance, Bureau vited a group of stu part in the infomal discussion with the program this year, amPIe evi- as our guest speaker, Dr. Harold J. Ma- Panel of co11ege students’eaCh o壬whom is a graduate of one of the high schoo工s Boston University alumni・ Taking Of this program to the guest audi- ence of high schooI students. The 18 at the Y.W.C.A., 262 Ann Street. versity Club of Rho other outstanding Rhode Island There can be no doubt of the value Students can be invited as you think feasible for the available facilities. dents under the able Chaimanship of Among the students in your neigh- Professor McCarthy will bring to you borhood that voluntarily make in- discussions of co11ege and career choice qulrleS tO the University each year PrOblems from the student point of view. Cordially yours, WILLIAM MACKAY, President Last March the Hartford Alumrli and students you know personally, there is always an enthusiastic group available. Among the seniors in high school, CO11ege and career Club in cooperation with the stu- DR. HAROLD MAHONEY, E’48, Pre- dent recruitment policy of the Uni重 sented with his customary e任ec- Plaming lS Vitally important, and their desire to get more infomation versity held an extremely worth- tiveness the importance of wise王y On these subjects is unlimited・ while High SchooI Night・ This was Select王ng a coIlege and pIaming a I will work very cIosely with the a club e任ort and吐e general pat- career. The six Boston University SPOnSOr On a11 arrangements and tem of血e program might well be students were a real credit to them葵 details. I will be on hand for the copied by Boston University Alum- selves and we were proud of them meetings with a 38-minute Koda- ni Clubs in other communities. as they talked about experiences, color sound糾m entitled, ``careers 3豊 ー叫〇〇〇〇 -回1Y together with MR. WILLIAM C. The invitation read as follows: From all points of views this coOPerative venture was a success. A耽ong Bos意oれUn読rsききγ Aわm訪ねo九αびe Opeれ初九e掴omesめprospec庇軸d躯読書九e S融e融Se轟ce Progγa肋aγe, fro肌擁Ar庇r A加nopo琉ク弼0, an祝香s擁,脇de杭e, P,48, Ceれ夢eγク0′ Lo雛〃; and A触れeγ Jo砧W・ Blac鳥, Jr., L,エア, Of Glo事`CeS書er. In The Making・,’Individual Koda- Man〉7 queStions are directed to COIor slides covermg the many know you can answer them. Any the alumnus who is present at these facets of student life at Boston Uni_ alumnus or alumna who wishes to infomal meetings. Students wi量l VerSity are also available. I wi11 be COOPerate in this worthy project Want tO know how your college ex- Will have a very satisfactory per- Perience aided you with your ca- SOnal experience・ My o餓ce is Io- ready to answer all questions con- Cemmg admission requirements, reer. They want to know if higher SCholarship opportunities and per- Cated at 705 Commonwealth Ave_ education - and Boston University nue and I shall be happy to hear SOnal educational problems・ 葛is worth the effort invoIved. We from you・ The fo工lowing statement written by JoHN W. BLACK’JR.’L’」7, Who sponsored the GIoucester meeting gives a host,s appraisal of the inherent values in these programs. a烏龍甘藍請書謹嵩霊器豊富謀壷霊霊黒岩善書r講書電器誓言 first educa心onal crisis. It allays血e confusion and bewilderment which’mOre Often than is generally realized, I think, hinder careful decision as to the what’When’Where and how of chooslng higher education which sha11 qualify for and dovetail into a plamed career. Here Boston University leaves its campus and walks into the home of an aIumnus for awhile, and, Without fuss and feathers calls in a few prospective students’inqulreS into their educational background and attainments’aSks their plans 9r desires as to their future careers and tells them wherein Boston Universtry can serve them, Or CamOt SerVe them. Most mPOrtant, they are told how they may MAKE Up PAST EDUCAT工ONAL DEFICIENCIES at Boston University and s副go on to the goal to which they asplre Via the University,s reguIar courses. In short’this program not only glVeS a green light to the qua蹟d, but counsels the de宜cient in the matter of HowHE MAY REPAIR PreVious educational deficiencies that in the PaSt have stood as bugaboos and bars to further higher education. One reason’Perhaps, for America,s continulng, and now alarmlng, dearth of newly tralned scientists, engineers’Physicians, SurgeOnS and nurses. Thus the ``impossible,, in higher education is made both visible and attainab工e and a worthy student is started, Who might otherwise have felt blocked・ We can specu工ate to what extent such a program also kindles that insatiab工e inquisitiveness which is ever the basis and the ha11mark of scholarship. However, We need not speculate as to the va量ue, tOday, Of 語謹聖霊霊器蔀請悪罵露悪蒜葦葦藍霊董母親豊 島主謀器群議豊荒露盤嵩豊島謹輩等豊謹書every respect I fee工 JoHN W. BLACK, JR., G工oucester, Massachusetts Laの’」7 33 窃〆クのαゐ,多きタブあ与毒の`あ/動のaあ Boston University graduates, like “I left the States in July, 1951, to build houses to shelter them, Robert H. Davis, B’84, O任er one StOPPed o荘in Paris and in Rome’ utilities to service them, SuPPly reason why men choose teaching as and finally made Beirut and spent foods to satisfy their individual an intensive month at the American University, in Arab dialects and tastes, PrOVide recreation and fire a vocation・ ``unless you have a pas- sion for the eventual success of Middle East History. Eight hours PrOteCtion・ We run three cities - teacher” was the advice of an ex- of class work comes hard to one out We built them-We POPulated them - We trained them in citizenship Perienced teacher to one of his Students. Being prepared reinforces Of school these many years. Then and sanitation - We SChool them, On tO Arabia-Dhahran, On the each separately according to the the n濃ural daring of youth, and Persian Gulf. needs of the individual and the ra- young people, don’t become a eventually we have the picture of ``we live in the land of the Old Cial, religious and nationalitv re- the graduates of the University oc- Testament, OnCe yOu get four miles CuPylng POSitions of importance away from any company conces置 Bob’s reference to Aramco’s sig- OVer the globe, feeling at home Sion area・ In the area you see the nificant educational program sug- among strangers・ most advanced 20th Century ma- 工 do not wish to embarrass a Chinery expIoiting this waste of qulrementS.’’ gests Harry Ellis’s series of fascin- ating articles recently appearing in sand and limestone at a rate of al- Tんe Chris訪an Science Mol諦or. most l,000’000 barrels of oil a da)′・ Most ``educated” natives are steeped Wish to quote freely from a stimu- . ‥ It’s fabulousness is awesome. in the Koran, the Mohammedan lating letter from him; let him Its frustrations (in spite of profits) Book of Wisdom; hence it is deli- speak for himself in a way, unless are bewildering… ・ Civilization cate business to educate in the I am much mistaken, that both has touched some people, but the American way without giving of- friends and strangers wi11 find of Civilization is well wa11ed up within fense. interest. the concessions. We frequently visit But to retum to the Davis letter: ``Here in Dhahran, We have every- good friend by citing him as an example; few of us like that. I rather Bob is now in Saudi Arabia, With The Arabian_American Oil .Com- nearby vi11ages where there hasn’t been a change in 2,000 years. thing that Brookline has-and bet- Bearded men on donkeys pass you ter. craig’s (his ’son) school is What his position is and what his in streets and courts in settings that modem, Sta任ed by good American SurrOundings are will appear in Cha11enge the imagination… ・ The teachers - gym, SWimmmg POOl, SOme quOtations of original phras- CIothes, the diet, the architecture, bowling alley. Kindergarten teach- mg from his letter. the diseases, the mores - nOthing ers start at $605.00 a month and get Pany, Widely known as Aramco. “First o任一yOur letter of life in Georgia (where Mrs. Franklin and I spend the winter)創1ed us with PangS Of loneliness -nOt for the a lO9Z) increase every 18 months. Changes. “Of course, Where American com- We have nine grades. After that merce has forcibly exerted itself, the company pays l/3 of all college the change is all the more won- expenses at American University at U.S.-just for fishing. We miss drous・ Utilities, Street lights, taXis, Beirut, Plus且ying back and forth Lake Mohawk (New Jersey) and 1arge buildings have sprung up. twice a year (12,000 miles each the almost-daily sortie for large- And all Semites are as alike as peas Way)・ mouth bass, Calico bass, bream and in a pod when it gets down to busi- “Speaking of且ying, Our OWn P正 ness. They love to haggle over vate air-Heet is ranked 19th when PrlCeS. Indeed you insult them and take away their pleasure if you COmPanies in the world・ We own the light-taCkle, fresh-Water Vari- don’t harangue loud and long. The and operate: 2 DC-6’s; 13 DC-4’s; 8 ety. Here the fish are heavy, the bigger the crowd of bystanders, the C-47’s; 8 Beechcraft; 11 Navions; 1 tackle is heavy; fishing becomes an better・ I haggled for an hour every Helicopter, and four others・’’ In- `operation’・ However’it has one ad- Friday for six weeks to purchase an dustry on wings! Vantage: the fish are strange, neW, antique bowl・ The Hofu宜merch- He further writes of the arrogant highly coIored, and thus tactics ant started at 45 rivals. I started at and independent Bedouins’Of the d亜er to that degree that it is a 10. A month and a half later, I gave frightfully high death rate of babies, Challenge to hook and land one・ in and paid 19. Of the diseases and the blindness, PerCh・ Sure, the Persian Gulf is at Our back door, teemmg With fish, but it isn’t the relaxing fishing of ``our labor contracts with the I’ve always claimed that the best COmPared with a11 the commercial and of the 4l-year aVerage life ideas and solutions to di鍋cult prob- king of Arabia, the govemment of SPan; then tums back to say a word 1ems have usually occurred when I Egypt, the labor o鯖ce of Rome, the for his amazmg COmPany, Aramco; had a 4-OunCe且y rod in my hand! govemment of Pakistan, make a Now you try to beat that for ration- C.I.O. contract look like sissy stu任. alization ! We don’t just hire them鵜We have $4 its concession for two_thirds of the entire peninsula; its Persian Gulf bases; its three cities. The company POPulation is 27,000’COnSisting of the Arab Tribes’’; and, from the re- land, CraCkers from Sweden and 27 nationalities. The common la_ 1igious angle, Dr・ Charles Mat- England, Vegetables from Asmara, thews’``palestine - Mohammedan meat from Australia (創et mignon, Holy Land’’, and says “it is ad- 44 cents a pound; kidney lamb borer is Arab; the skilled and professional ones hail from China, India’Iran, Pakistan, Iraq, Aden, venture to have this book on one Chops’52 cents, and prlme ribs of Muscat’ Yemen, Syria, Lebanon, knee and the Bible on the other_ beef, 84 cents). ‥ and what with Palestine’Somaliland, Sudan, Italy’ for comparative purposes.,, non-reSident exemption from all Egypt, Asmara, Holland, England, U.S. taxes, We Often say, `wonder Further adt’e励re is∴SuggeSted and 8,000 Americans. As a “melt_ in this; ``Since starting this scribble, ing pot’’, it seems to take prece- I have had an assignment to Jeddah So ends an account of an extra_ dence over the U.S.A. He contin_ On the Red Sea, from July 15 to Ordinary transplanting of one of ues’“Persomel problems here aren’t August 15. rll且y home every Our Boston University graduates ]ike anything in the States, and it Thursday. The first week in Sep場 and his family. Student readers of WaS this cha11enge (plus d〇一〇gOOd tember Dotty and Craig fly to Bosto海a may be tempted to follow dough), Plus travel opportunities Beirut with me. We’11 visit Da_ the leader. BUT all students had for the family, that brought me mascus ahd Jerusalem and then fly better go along with their able here.’’Then Bob uses ``the profes- to Cyprus for a two-Week vacation. teachers and finish the guidance SOr’s trick’’of suggesting ``outside “We’re living like kings in mod- What the poor people are doing?’ and preparation as Bob Davis did・ reading to糾in the gaps・,, He em houses, With air conditionmg, May all finish the course and have recommends H. R. P. Dickson, With a couple of houseboys (Is my as happy a landing! whom he knows and knows to be )Wife (Dotty) getting lazy!), and persona ”On grata with the King; also C. G. Campbe11,s “Tales from excellent food. Our butter is Dan_ ish, Our Cheese direct from Hol- GEORGE B. FRANKLIN Professor Emer宛u$ j952 PERMANENT CLASS OFFICERS鵜PγeSeれ` a‥九e αmαal砧nc九eon hor.o証g t九e Per肌ar.e融CJass o輝ers aき 庇Fac融y C硯rece融y ooere Jeame地肌rvo掘e, SN; n妬ry Boy’e, SN;財urわれKer鵬r, PAL;脇ry E. Ho訪ねのn, IId; Pα証uこのW九y’e, SPRC; Feγrγ脇r訪u, CGE! Eioise W掘ng'or., PAL; Donald Ze鵬rs, CBA; Josep九蹄c枕y’CLA; T九o肌のs S海er, Med; Joha跳ねeγ, Mus亘れα Dα演s’Ed; Robert梢er, CBA; Doれαld H. Ford, SPRC.棚ey αre S九o8/I筋“)軸4ssoc轟orl Pre弱e巧購c九o疑E. 4pαJa擢, stand訪g a”九e Jefちaれd Aha肋れi Secre競ry, J4r調朋γ E. Jemer, α汗ar r香g加. 0庇r per肋αれe加Cderss o輝er$訪chade Fredα Torr轟ar.初如ry CoJombo of CLA; Jα肌eS Connors o/ SPRC ; D側融Weのか er,闘ljan Green αれd Janice脇2rer.’Mus; Lo最ee Pec鳥, Ed; Jαne書Fe朗読, E妨r. Gra棚の九an伽d E杭0γ Neafseγ O/ Sargent; Ho肋er L. TαyJor, Aれnα J. HααC鳥αれ引航rrαγ M.舟eed o/ Med;胸c九ad J・ Wα施er and Jo加Jo九nstone oI CBA; Rober書G. Woolf, F九eodore肌Tα九のn ar.d Jos印九T. Doγle of Law; Bαγbaγa E. 4bbo# of Nurs; George Spαr蘭抗0, Jo加Pa扉nrca, αれd Bαγrγ Ko軽のr. of CGE;肌s. FloreれCe R. Pe庇γこc鳥,誰roe P. CarαS αnd T九o肋as F. Hobαn, Jr・, O/ Grad;肋rry F. Boo巧 S. E昭ene Co脇t αれd梢c九の「d W. Cα訪of Theo;胸硯訪e D訪れe Of PAL; aれd Jsrαe aれd鰹ober農Dこれ§fr香eれd oI SW. 35 S巌r, Dorot母KopeJ, Jo九rl Rel蘭α 細の`物帝 /綾織%i勧幽細線%4 H O W T O R E C EI V E T H E S E I N F O R M A TI V E P U B LI C A TI O N S l. Our own Bosめ所a, bigger and better with each succeeding issue, Can be receive youl.S Six times a year by merely joining the Alumni Association. A contribution to the Alumni Fund makes you a member, and an automatic subscriber can be obtained by dropping a pos七card with your name and address to the 七〇 Bos古o短a. Bosfo庇a. There is no subscription charge for the News Letter. It Alumni O鯖ce. 5. The PR Review, Still in the experimental stage of pl.Oduction, is produced 2. The BMO, Published under the auspices of Boston University School of Medicine and Massachusetts Memorial Hospitals, is available in March, June, by Tau Mu Epsilon fratemity at SPRC. Published qual.terly, it will be Sep千ember and DeCember. Subscription rates are $2.00 per year; Single Tau Mu Epsilon, at SPRC, 84 Exeter Street, Boston. available to all alumni of the School and others wishing a copy. Address copleS are 50ら and student subscr土ptions are ?1.00. All communications should be addressed to the BMO, 80 East Concord Street, Boston 18, Mass. 8. The Saγge庇Aねmγ脇e O“a汚e旬is published by and for Ipembers of the Sarg9nt Alumnae Associatio11・ It includes features on alumnl PerSOnalities, reunlOn nOteS, alumnae news and news of the Alumnae chapters. Mrs. Mary Kelley McHugh at 810 Spring Avenue, Ridgewood, New Jersey, Will be glad to add your name to her mailing lists if you drop her a check for $4.00 to cover your alumnae dues and subscription price. 6. The Boston University Law Review is distributed without charge to a丁1 students at the University’s SchooI of Law. Its quarterly issues contain latest infomation and comments on variou5 CaSeS Of law, On COnStitutional law and legislation, and book reviews pertainlng tO the pract土ce of law. It is available by subscription at $3.OO per annum ($3.50 abroad) or $1.00 per number. Address Law Review Editorial O鉦ce, 11 Ashburton Place, Boston. 7. An up-tO-date review of current graduate and research activities in the 4. The PγeSide硯,s Net。S Le坊eγ gOeS tO all alumni and friends of Boston Graduate University during months in which Bosきo所a does not publish. An informal, Graduate Joumal.’’ Published monthly except July and August, COPies are chatty letter.written by the President of the University, it is intended to keep all Alumni ln tOuCh with their alma mater, Particularly those who do not School is contained in the University’s newest publication, ``The available by writing to Professor Malcolm Agnew, Editor, Graduate Joumal, 725 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston. 36 幼名おのe%aあ,,タイ, WILL工AM F. ROGERS and PERCY E. WOODWARD With the death last July of Wil- Mr. Rogers leaves his wife, Mrs. several hundred art and archaeo_ 1iam F. Rogers at a Braintree Mabe] (Sawyer) Rogers; a daugh置 1ogical objects, Which represented the development of various reli- nursmg home, the Town of Milton ter’ lost one of its greatest friends and Dominica, B. W. I.; a SOn, Charles Boston University one of its most S・ Rogers of Oakland,.Califomia; Woodward Co11ection, it is housed two sisters, Mrs. William Hilton of in the library at the SchooI of The- Bangor, Maine, and Mrs. C. E. Holt Of Portland, Maine; a brother, Alton Rogers of Maui, Hawaii; and interpretation of the collection was devoted trustees. Mr. Rogers was the senior member of the Metro_ POlitan District Commission and Mrs. Leo H. Narodney of glOuS ideals. Now known as the OIogy. A complete presentation and three grandchildren, Penelope, Ivan and Peter Narodney. A graduate of Greenville High School, Greenvi11e, Maine, he also graduated from Cobum Classical Institute, Waterville, Maine, in 1890. He was president of his class at Boston University. For four years he was emp工oyed by Alden Spears Sons and from 1898 to 1900 he worked in the ad農 Vertising department of You脇’s Companio性。 He was chaiman of the National Bureau of Advertising eight years’PaSt PreSident of the Boston Advertising Club and presi- dent of the Appalachian Mountain Club from 1922 to 1923. It was during his administration that the Tl・at)eきer Phoめ Club acquired its o能ce at Joy 舶r. W蹴am F. Roger$ Mr. Percγ E. Woo品,aγd, Of We鎌Ne撮,一 Street, Boston. Mr. Rogers was also moderator had devoted much time and e任ort for the First Congregational OVer the years in the development Church, a member of Delta Ma- of the Blue Hills reservation in Wh王ch Milton plays a very promi- SOnic Lodge of Braintree, St・ John’s 心のれ,九oldきれg O棚aれYきれ,拐e Jαpα職eSe goddes$ Of肌onβγ・撮,心o九o物s沈e $a肌e plαCe訪B霊`d祝お肋as拐e V3γg香れ財のrγ わo物§香れC加お房a職印. Be九㍍d巌か吊s α B事Idd九料for加撮れe書かれeeJ. Commandery Knights Templars, nent part. He was the first member Of Norfolk County to serve on the former director of the Better Busi_ featured in the March, 1952, issue ness Bureau and of the Boston of Bo$tO寂a. COmmission, having been appointed Chamber of Commerce, former in 1928 by Govemor Fuller. He reslgned from the commission in 1948. Mr. Rogers was instrumental in PreSident of the Sales Managers’ Club and former chairman of the Bureau of Advertising of American Newspaper Publishers Association. the construction of the Ponkapoag Mr. Woodward was also one of the founders of the Waldorf System, Incoxporated. With Oscar Kinney’he opened the first Waldorf lunch in Springfield in 1903. In 1919 the system was organized, Golf Course, the Chichatawbut The Boston University Alumni Lookout, and the famous Skyline Association notes with regret the New York, Ohio and here in Massa- Trail for pedestrians in the Blue PaSSing of Percy E. Woodward, One chusetts. With lunchrooms in Comecticut, Hills. In 1950, Mr. Rogers was honored by the Metropolitan Dis- tees・ He died August 12 at Wolfe- trict Commission when they named boro Hospital in Wolfeboro, New and eight years later he sold his the new ski area in the Blue Hi11s Hampshire・ He was 81. interests in the corporation to or- Of the University’s most noted trus- Mr. Woodward was elected president of the corporation in 1920, the ``william F. Rogers develop- A Boston University trustee since ment.’’ He has been called a任ec_ 1927, Mr. Woodward honored the tionately the “Father of the Blue University last year with a presen- to develop Brigham’s candy Stores Hills.’’ tation of an unusual collection of throughout Greater Boston. 37 ganize the Textile Thread Com重 Pany in Watertown・ He also helped WILLIAM GOODWIN AURELIO 鵜A MEMORIAL the beneficiary the g班was not without theories; the concrete nature of his in- its responsibilities. For William Goodwin telligence kept him cIose to the facts. His Aurelio was a living dynamo, the kind of ideal was “active-mindedness:’and this To so identify his life with that of an individual who rests from one labor by meant to him the determination to have institution as to make of that institution undertaking another. Se工dom has plain the facts and to relate them. “To think,’’ a great cause must seem the achievement living and high thinking been so steadilv he would insist, “meanS tO aSk questions.’’ of William Goodwin Aurelio, 1ate Pro- maintained. And though in all that mat- His favorite whiplash for the flaggmg fessor of Greek at the Co11ege of Liberal Arts, Boston University, tO those col- tered he had a delicate and sure sense S血dent was the epithet “pupil.,’ some- Of could times he was criticized for making his leagues and students who knew him well・ resist the fire of such enthusiasm? He entered Boston University as a stu- One must have stayed with him, aS did you did not neglect the old digamma・ In dent in 1890; here his brilliant record Ied a long succession of his “boys, On the the Latin class, yOu WOrked out the eventually to an appo音intment as Jacob family fam in Falmouth to know ``prof・ La宜n declensions from the Greek. Mem_ Sleeper Fe1low for three semesters of best. Professor AureIio Ioved nature as Ory for him never did the work of under- Study in Europe. He had previously done graduate study in Greek under the a Wordsworthian for whom there was Standing. He could drill tirelessly, but great teacher Augustus Howe Buck, the heart. But he aIso Ioved to get down into the soil of his garden and spend long was exhausted. Yet never for a moment Sun置it hOurS in meticulous weeding. And SOme SeIf-Created reglOn Of art or knowl- Whose memory he was to serve so well in the many years in which he worked the student’s autonomy, Who COurSe tOO di能cult. If you studied Greek, a “Presence” in the woods as well as in Only when every possibility of inference did he glVe the impression of straying m On the Augustus Howe Buck Educational he made no premature dichotomies of edge unrela亡ed to this world・ He had the Fund Committee. In September, 1901, SCience and poetry. He loved his vege- grea=eacher’s mysterious gift of making he began a career at his Alma Mater that tables as weIl as his Howers; there was a his subject vitaI and morally fomative, WaS tO end fomally in 1940, When he became Professor of Greek, Emeritus, but SCientific way of tending them as well no matter how removed it might seem as a moment for contemplating them a七 from what the plain man calls ``life・,’By Of which successive phases had seen him nightfall or with the mommg dew upon experience as well as temperament he as assistant professor of Greek and Latin’ them. And the student leamed them a11 was disinclined to substitute a ``shot in the am’’for culture, yet few teachers as professor of Greek’and as professor by name even as he took lessons in of German and Greek. In the last two botany and scien亜c agriculture・ Or he have been more profoundly democratic in decades of his life he took an increaslng might recite German declensions or Greek the warmth of their “invitation to leam- interest in his course in the “Appreciation conlugations to “Prof・” at the other end ing’士o anyone and everyone who will pay Of the Bible,” and it is this smgle course Of the row of com. When night came, he the prlCe・ that he taught as a voluntary o鮮ering to WouId enJOy, and also study, the constel- It was characteristic of William Good_ the University until about a month be- 1ations with “Prof・’’and at appropriate Win Aurelio that his ``productive scholar葛 fore his death on December 29, 195l. times Iook at the craters of the moon Ship’’should be inscribed in individuals Students of Professor Aurelio will feel, through the fine telescope in the turret and not in books. He had a deep respect Perhaps, that the course in Bible gave the greatest play to a spirit able to back of the garden. You went indoors. There was a volume perhaps on the for the technical scholar, yet his own Sharpen the issues of philosophy to the ``Modem Use of the BibIe” that you read teaching he saw not as a ``contribution to knowledge’’but as the process of in- together and discussed, Or a book on modem nationalism or intemationalism, formmg the whole man with the finer Or On the problems of peace. Fa誼ng such him disinterested devo宜on to the cause and the prophet allowlng the religious OCCuPation’there was always some Ger- Of men under God・ Though a shy man imagination to expose the follies and the man story to be translated, Or the niad in the Greek. But there was no wastipg and reticent in public, he could speak and Write boldly in favor of unpopular causes. POint of religious decision. He was at OnCe the scholar sympathetic to the modem critical approach to the Bible shams of modem life. He illuminated bv SPirit of knowledge and this meant for his own thought and pracdce the gospel of love, Which was for him a means of Self-Criticism, a Challenge to seIf-dedica- Of the midnight oil. At ten o’cIock you In the last three decades of his life he took your lamp up to your room; and as Su任ered deeply because of the folly of tion・ and a source of insight. The best mommg, there was “Prof・’’at the sma11 Of the Protestant spirit was in this Ameri- Organ he had taught himself to play. He under modem conditions was more Can humanist’Who, though one leamed had been out to take a宜rst look at the unChristian than it was unintelligent. it from others’COuld trace his ancestry garden and to feed the chickens and now he was practicing one of those hymn VerSity more and given themselves more tunes in the old German style he loved Wholly, life and purse・ His patience and his back to the Pilgrims. Greek, then, and the Bible: it is a you came down to breakfast the next war. He was no ToIstoyan, but he would have found it hard to decide whether war Few men can have loved Boston Uni_ to compose, tuneS like himself, StrOng ln Ioyalty were complete. Wi11iam Goodwin Aurelio was a modem who stood squarelv in jt and manifested its power even the bass. Were you to express an interest Aurelio put his faith in his ideal of educa一 in musical theory’he had taken you on, 也on, Which was one with the ideal Boston for our day. One need hardly add: “and before breakfast! And in winter, there U正versity’into his life・ In that life one were invitations to use that second bal- may discem, amOng the failings and in- great tradition’ and Wi11iam Goodwill gladly teach・” He used to define love as the “sharing of life’’; this also defines his COny Seat beside “Prof’s’, own at Boston adequacies that且esh is heir to, the clear teaching・ Never having married, he could Symphony concert that’throughout the contour of a humanism committed to make his students all the more his splr- years’``prof.,’made available to students. itual children. To the last momen七that To be a student of William Goodwin a failing strength and indomitable cour- Aurelio’s, then, WaS tO find yourself in the age allowed he tutored, and not for pay. tonic atmosphere of liberal education. As a teacher he did no七consider himself Science, history, Philosophy’ religion, Sent tO SaVe the intellectua11y superior. Everyone with a will to leam found in philoIogy, literature, muSic and the宜ne nothing but the best for the people in an a臆rmation of faith in life yet edged by a Puritanism of finest grade. Through many years, Professor William Goo音dwin Aurelio had held determinedly to the purpose of providing for Boston University a slgnificant endowment for him a tireless instructor. Yet he was arts-for in the last two decades of his life he had acquired through study and always on the watch, in the classroom travel a solid competence in European area of his own teaching interests. By painting, SCulpture and architecture - all plain living and thrift he saved the these he o任ered to those who had the means for careful investment, aCCumu- appe址e. lating a considerable estate now be一 and outside the classroom, for those who Seemed willing to receive a larger measure of what he was so glad to glVe・ For He was not 38 a man of easy the support of instructional work in the queathed to the Trustees of Boston UniVerSity in trust under his will. At the time of his decease the net value of his brary Science・ After working for a graduated from the Iocal High School in Short time in the library of the Boston 1890’and from the College of Liberal Atheneum, She became assistant and then Arts of Boston University in 1896. There investment estate was approximately one ac宜ng librarian in the College of Libera工 followed some years of teaching in high hundred thousand do11ars. Arts in 1912. In 1913 she was appointed SChooIs, and later, her marrlage tO Pro- hbrarian, SerVmg in this capacity until fessor Newell. honors with the Iate Miss Ida Wallace, VerSity his telescope of 6ウ乞inch Brashear her retirement in 1948. From then until her death in February 1952, She lived With a married sister in Independence, Refractor, his Bausch and Lomb com_ Kansas. “For the benefit of the Co11ege of Liberal Arts” professor Aurelio be_ queathed to the Trustees of Boston Uni- POund microscope, all of his books (save When the history of the library of the She shared high schooI valedictory and was one of the considerable group Of this class, the largest number of one Class up to this time, tO gO On tO COIlege. a few designated for re工atives and friends ) Co工lege of Liberal Arts will be written, The high schoo工pmCIPal was the late in the number of nearIy four thousand VOlumes, his bookcases, and his home the name of Mabel FIora Bamum must WaIter C. Hill of Stoneham, an ardent be entered as the first expert custodian of its books. AIways extremely frail in student of the classics. PrOPerty in FaImouth, Massachusetts, COnSisting of a two and one-haIf story health’She su任ered all her life from long dwelling-house, Out-buildings, Observatory, and nine and three-quarterS aCreS Of land, tO be held for special use or to yieId income, and to be sold if and when the Trustees may deem it inexpedient to Periods of illness and from serious accidents w址ch hospitalized her several As Carolyn Strong, Mrs. Newell ex- times. Yet her abi工ity to administer a Ce11ed in the cIassics during her college library from a sick bed was nothing short of miraculous. From her earliest associ_ COntinue possession・ Such receipts as ation with our library to the day of her may be derived from the use or saIe of death, her chief interest in life was our the Fa工mouth property, tOgether with library. She was indefatigable in her income from the sale of his fumiture and e鮮orts to improve the鵬rary m eVery PerSOnal effects, Professor Aurelio indicated, are tO be added to a fund to be es[ablished in trust and composed basically of his investment estate. “The income from said trust fund shall Way POSSible. She could make a do11ar StretCh as no other librarian. She had an uncamy sense in choosmg books of permanent value and discarding the ephemeral・ We reverently record here our be invested and reinvested and added to said fund until the prmCipal thereof, in the judgment of said trustee, Shall be Criminating intelligence, her wam de- Su餓cient in amount to establish and COurage. maintain in the College of Liberal Arts two professorships as hereinafter provided. admiration and appreciation for her dis- VOtion to duty and her indomitable One-half of said fund shall be withdrawn and shall be constituted a pemanent fund, the income only of which shall be used for the maintenance of a professor- Ship of the Greek language and literature in the College of Liberal Arts, and the remammg One-half shal工be constituted years, and held, in her junior and senior years’the post, by faculty appointment, Of proctor of girls, her duties being Similar to those of a dean of today. Her teaching began in Pawtucket, Rhode IsIand, and con血ued in the high school in Wakefield. There will be those belongmg tO the 1894-1897 classes who will recall her brilliant instruction in Greek and Latin, for she was one of thase who made the classics “come alive.” After her mamage tO Professor Newell - a Smgularly happy one - Mrs. Newell, as an alumnae, became closely iden亜ed With Boston University a任airs, and served 頼れ研e of青he Faculきりof the Couege 。f Liberal Arts. for several years as a member of the Women’s council; and she rendered other services to her alma mater. “When in the judgment of said trustee Said prmCIPal sum is∴Su餓cient therefor, It was he who encouraged the rather exceptional boys and girls of this class to Seek a college education. CAROLYN STRONG NEWELL To older Wakefield residents, the news Of the passmg On Apri1 1, in Brookline, 工n the last decade or so, She had been increaslngly a su紐erer from arthritis, re- qulrmg the services of a nurse. All who knew Mrs. Newell will speak Of Mrs. Lyman C. Newe11 (Carolyn Of the high qua賞ities of her mind and Strong) brought a quick memory of one heart・ She was a skilled and insplrlng who deserves to be called one of Wake_ teacher of Greek and Latin’and loyal to field’s distinguished women. She was the value of these studies for life. a permanent fund to establish and maintain in said Co11ege of Liberal Arts a PrOfessorship of Appreciation of the CORONATION Bible . . . “The professorships so established shall The stoms and strife and stress of time and place subside be known as `The William Goodwin Aurelio Professorship of the Greek Language and Literature’and the `wi11iam Goodwin Aurelio Professorship of AppreCiation of the Bible.’” Memorial脇硯青e adop青ed b陣he Co手 Iege of Libe7.aZ Art8 Facu軌March 7, 1952. MABEL FLORA BARNUM _ A MEMORIAL Mabel FIora Bamum was for thirtyfive years Librarian of the College of Liberal Arts. She received her A.B. de_ gree here in 190l and was a member of Phi Beta Kappa to which she was elected treasurer in 1918. After teaching for a few years in schooIs in Massachusetts, As now I stand upon the shore and wait the tide・ When tw揖ght deepens and the night begins to fall And darkness mutes the noise of life, I hear a ca11. The transient scenes of earth grow dim and fade away; Then wake the dawnmg glories of Etemal Day. The light that streams from ou=he realm beyond the spheres Consoles my yeammg heart and calms my timid fears; And in the melody that sounds the Heavenly score I hear the answermg Pledge and find the open door To banish doubt with visions from supemal skies And dissipate the mists before my strainlng eyeS. The Power that fomed this Paradise and set the goal And tuned the hamony that thrills my eager soul, That shed the glow in which I see the pleading smile And outstretched hands of welcome’unPerCeived a while, That糾s my breast with love and promptings and desire, Shall seal the trust and crown the faith my hopes insplre. She enrolled in Simmons College where J. W. ARBUCKLE, La砂’90, WateI.loo, Iowa. She received the degree of B.S・ in Li- 39 諺彬虎形影釣忽賃乾の%碑名 By JOHN COLLINSI B?50? Spor七s Puも量icity Direc軸 Bu鮮Donelli is begiming his sixth Coach Doug Raymond,s cross SeaSOn aS head coach and his second COuntry team OPenS defense of its as director of Athletics and indica_ undefeated streak early in October Part of the pleasure of being a tions are that 1952-53 wi11 be one With a team of veterans that cap- Of the brightest in the history of tured the New England champIOn- Terrier sports fan is the enJOyment athletics at Boston University. Ship a year ago. A re-inforced Wichita team and Basketba11 is a sport that has those of football, hockey and track before too many seasons pass. derived from watching the coIor- ful athletes which this University attracts by its size and diversi五〇 always tough Syracuse might have Su鮮ered because of inadequate dulled the luster a bit by the time facilities at Boston University, but this issue of Bos青o海a reaches your no one can talk with new coach England schooI can boast a Harry hands but no one can deny that Matt Zunic without catching some Agganis in footba11, a Dick Roden- Cation of studies. What other New Terrier athletic teams are improvmg Of his enthusiasm and commg aWay heiser in hockey, a Marty Reisner in both in quality and competition in With the impression that Terrier hoop teams will be on a par with basketball or a Johmy ``Jackrabbit’’ all sports・ Ke11ey in track? Time was when Boston University WaS tOO big for the small co11eges to play and too sma11 to match blocks and tackles with the big fellows. Now we have reached the Stage Where the Boston University football team can have Maryland, the No. 1 football team in the coun_ try’On its schedule along with such national powers as Marquette, SyraCuSe’ Miami, William & Mary’ Temple and ViⅡanova. Harry Cleverly’s hockey team, twice宜nalists in the NCAA toumey at CoIorado Springs, and uncrowned Eastem champIOnS last year, Can look back on a meteoric five-year growth which has seen the puckChasers rise in prestige until血is year they will play the best, nOt OnIy in New England, but in upState New York and Canada as well. A拐0 “B妨’’Done搬and購c虎Apα胃α鳥香8 αre S九o撮,れ00〆co肋これgゎ庇fo弛 拐eれe種0 Terrあr Eれd Coac九,碑a請Z事`nきc. 41 These fellows are outstanding Sophomore quarterback Tom Gast- Backing up the starters were individual athletes but they still all, lanky athlete from Fa11 River’ quarterbacks Phil O’comell’ a achieve successes as members of has used his natural basketball and growing Brockton sophomore des- teams _ teamS Which can win and baseball ability to win himself the tined to帥Harry Agganis’shoes, and fiery little Johmy Nunziato of further enchance血e growing repu- starting o任ensive right end spot・ tation of Boston University in sports ‥ ・ On the opposite flank’tall and Somervi11e…. Halfback replace- until the athletic program is equal fast Len D’Errico has successfully ments include George Schultz, a in its field to the educational stand- made the surprlSlng SWitch from Starter last year, Titus PIomaritis, ing of the University. So to all Boston University alumni We Say, ``come see Boston U. teams him as the last minute change from Luciano… ・ Playing behind Petroka tackle to line-backing guard who at fullback are underclassmen guard to end・. ‥ You’ll remember Bill Taylor, Joe Terrasi and Frank - SuPPOrt them and soon you’ll find did so well against Co11ege of Mario Moriello, Joe Stoico and Nick that a bit of the new Terrier enthu- Pacific last year. Polymeros. The pivot squad is headed by Sinko has a fellow whom he con- letteman John Pappas on o任ense selves with these teams and be glad siders to be one of the best he has and defensive standouts Frank that you,re FOLLOWING THE ever coached and one who is des- Guiliano and Dick McNally’both TERRIERS! tined to be an all-time Terrier SOPhomores… ・ Top guards beforehe graduates.. ‥ He’s Ray the aforementioned Cataloni siasm will have rubbed o任on you・ better team but we are playing a much tougher schedule’’’says Bu任e ``As Iong as Harry Agga正s is in there we are bound tQ have an expIosive o丑ense and, if the defense continues the improvement it has shown we are capable of beating any team on a glVen day.’’ Loss of Captain Bob Capuano r prospects this fall… ・ “We’re a Cataloni, a ]unior from Foxboro. Mavropoulos, Gerry Keane ‥ ・ Weighing in at 190-POunds, Tony Rando… ・ While at the Cat has speed and agility appro- the Terriers have their size i t 〕ノ varsity starter as a sophomore, Ray will probably be playing both ways Strength with Bob Dobias, senior tackle, Mike Vendetti, Fraser, Tony Assad, Gerry in the Boston U. 1ine this year‥ ‥ neault and Seymour Pollack Priate for his nickname。 ‥ ・ A He has the stamina to do the job・ e FooTBALL. ‥ Head coach Bu任 Donelli is cautiously optimistic over a SCARLET SPORTS SHORTS Mik。嘉薫諾 工n the middle of the line Steve You,ll be proud to identify your- An old friend retumed to the Prior to the opener Bu任had Terrier sta任when ex輸quarterback named a starting o任ensive lineup Billy Pavlikowski decided to work that contained only one senior - on his master’s degree and Bu任 the fabled Mr. Agganis… ・ With appointed him freshman coach‥ ‥ the balance of the lineup made up Probably the most underrated ath- lete to play in New England in recent years’Pav had the misfortune healthy future for Terrier football・ to play behind Billy Tighe and John . ‥ The backfield unit contained Toner as a sophomore and behind two ]uniors and a sophomore. ‥ Toner and Agganis as a junior‥ ‥ Lou Petroka, a Junior and heir When he finally took over the No. amazed to see the job that the apparent to the footba11 mantle of 1 spot in 1950, he played only a Cranston, Rhode Island, Senior did Johmy Kastan, has shown in drills blow to the Terrier?… ・ Capple was not only a standout o任ensive end but a bear on defense‥ ‥ Looking over last season’s Co11ege of the Paci丘c movies Bu任has been Cap moved in to spill the Tiger ball carrier or pile up the interference to make the rumer a setup for the defensive halfback. that he has the all-rOund ability and 訪en more speed than the lad who holds the scoring and ground-gaming records in Terrier town・ Junior Don DeFeudis of Worces- 甜iS on defense.. ‥ Time after time g game and a half before breaking h of seven ]uniors and three sophomores it’s one that indicates a through i11ness has been a decided am against St. Bonaventure. The Bonnies and Dukes of Duquesne, along with Brown, Amy and Harvard葛Whom the Terriers scrimmaged that year - Will never Partially compensating for the ter shows slgnS Of becoming the forget his passing and ball-handling loss of Capuano was血e retum of biggest and most pleasant surprlSe 丘nesse. to Terrier followers‥ . . He is a Looking forward to the home months in the Marine Corps‥ ‥ 185-POund speedster who can run OPener’Boston U. will play Miami Not as versatile as Bob, Lavery, at like Lindy Hanson and has 20 under the lights of Fenway Park six feet, five inches, Still makes an pounds more to back him up when exce11ent target and was fast regain- he runs into a tackler…. At right William & Mary will give the Scar- ing his 1949 football savvy as the ha推 was DeFeudis’ redheaded let a second home night game on two-Week session at Sargent Camp counterpart’SOPhomore Paul Salis- giant end Tom Lavery after 21 On Friday, October lOe Saturday, October 18, a game that was origina11y scheduled for after- A quarterback and a guard were bury of Arlington. . . Joining with Agganis the quartet gives the also re-inforcing the end platoon as Scarlet one of the heaviest back- day night game in Boston, interest- Boston University opened its foot- fields ithas everhad…. One that ingly enough since the Terriers and ba11 season against Wichita・ ‥ ・ will average about 190 pounds・ Indians met at Fenway Pack in 1947e came to a cIose. 42 noon…. Itwill be the first Satur- November l and a visit from the VARSITY SHORTS… ・ Alden Cooley, Sandall has moved to the head- Terrapins of Maryland highlights Who last spring headed up the Field COaChing berth at Weaver High, the Terrier season at Fenway Park. Day Committee, is new president of Hartford, Comecticut,... Jim . ‥ This, aPPrOPriately enough, the Varsity Letteman’s club‥. ・ ・ has been designated as Home- Other o鯖cers include: 1st vICe- Cassidy has left Attleboro to become head coach of footba11 at Case COmmg Day… ・ Since a sellout PreSident Jack Keenan, 2nd vice- CrOWd is anticipated, it is suggested PreSident Nom Gledhill, 3rd vice- Of Swansea.. ‥ Biff Daily’basket- ball captain in 1947, has switched that all alumni obtain tickets as PreSident Whit Cummings, treaS- from Biddleford, Maine, tO Taunton SOOn aS POSSible. urer Joe Sicuso (珊ing in for Sid as head basketball coach… . 1949 Silburberg who is ilユ) and secretary guard AI Stewart has moved from HocKEY.. ‥ Coach Harry Cleverly loses his top defensive Palrlng and three excellent forwards but still has a retuming group of nine lettemen headed by goaler and captain Paul Kelley… ・ Sopho- mores Dick Rodenheiser, Who took top freshman, tOP forward and first team all-Star honors as a freshman last year, and burly defenseman Dick Lee head the list of retumees Which includes Jerry Deming, Mario Zanetti, Paul Whalen, Frank Toperzer, Andy Cicoria and Ray Kelley・ BASKETBALL. . . Service calls leave only four retummg lettemen for the hoopsters… ・ Capt. Marty Reisner, tOP bucket man in New England who last year broke his OWn Boston U. sconng reCOrd, has lettemen Bob Spence, Johmy Nunziato and Don Doane with him. Malone, New York, tO Foxboro Irving Brown. ALUMNI NOTES. . . Terrier alumni continue to rate high in the OPlnlOn Of school authorities ac- COrding to Placement Coordinator Carl Erickson who reports the fol- 1owing new positions : Mario Casali, hockey player two years ago, Phys- ical education instructor, Newport, (hope he can find us some more Ray Cataloni’s)‥ ・. Anibal Oliver has moved from Southwest Harbor, Maine, tO become basketball coach at Tewksbury High… ・ His replacement at Southwest Harbor is another Terrier, John Killilea of Milton. Rhode Island; Bob Barrett, defense- Johmy Walsh, Who has been man last year, Physical education in- COaChing at Thomton Academy, has StruCtOr, Hingham; Jack Kelley, allNew England defenseman last year, become assistant director of physi- head coach of basketba11 and foot_ Melrose‥ ・ Track Manager ba11 assistant at Vineyard Haven; Hank Freniere, Organizer of many Johmy Lucas has joined the Natick SChooI system; SWimmer Bob Deane cal education and assistant coach at Terrier rallies, Class-rOOm teaCher at is at West Hartford∴Comecticut; Cohasset; and Dit)k Preston, SOCCer letteman, Physical education inStruCtOr at Punchard High of Andover. While 1951 football captain Lindy Hanson is head coach of baseball After two years as undefeated COaCh at Skowhegan, Maine, Ed and basketba11 and football assist- ant at Plainville ( Connecticut) Academy. See you in January‥ ‥ . ‥ Service calls have taken Bemie McDonald and Joe O’Leary・. ‥ Footballer Tom Gasta11 and pitcher Nom Luoni could help‥ ‥ But Matt Zunic will be kept busy looking for replacements to go the length of the 21-game SChedule. CROSS COUNTRY… ・ Doug Raymond’s harriers, Who won five dual meets and the New England ChampIOnShip last year, are back minus only two of last year’s run- ners - CO-CaPtains A工Roberts and John Phi11ips… ・ Back to hill and dale for the Terriers are ]unior Johmy Kelley, tOP COllegian distance rumer in New England, AI Co11ins, Jim lCameron, Gary BeckWOrth and sophomore Billy Smith, the area’s top half-miler last spring・ ‥ ・ AIso due to help the Scarlet in its seven-meet Slate are two trans- 重952 Terrこer Gr香d CoαC競れg S鋤がーFrom沈eわf書are Coac九es肘の枕 fer students, Harry Wood and Phil Z耽れ香c,厨d F夢のれagαれ, Hα「rγ αeひerlγ, A棚0 “B事`が, Doれe掘, Jo鳥肌Toれe「, Palamountain. B香ll Pa後筋鳥o撮)§鳥香 αれd S書e章)e S訪鳥0. 43 /鯵乞‰e∽紛あ多く第紛紡霧穣 MAJOR CHARLES W・ ABBOTT, 31 Chesterfield St・, Milton / ARTHUR C. ANTONOPOULOS, Chairma性 General Promotion, 240 Princeton BIvd・, Lowell MR. N工CHOLAS E. ApALAKIS, Cha存個m e紅0弗cio, 610A Main St., Stoneham JoHN INGL工S, 22 Hollingsworth St・, Lym ARTHun E. JENNER, 308 Bay State Rd・, Boston EuNICE D. JoHNSON, 377 Amold St., New Bedford MARVIN S. KAPLAN, 19 Marshall St., Brookline JoHN H. KEENAN, 306 Hyde Park Ave., Jamaica Plain MRS. N工CHOLAS E. ApALAKIS, 610A Main St., Stoneham JAMES W・ KELLEY, 3 Cla鮎n Rd・, We11esley DuGALD S. ARBUCKLE, 101 Billings St・, Sharon JEAN KELLEY, 55 Eliot Crescent, Chestnut Hill GEORGE J. Az工Z, 308 Bay State Rd・, Boston MRS. JoHN W. KILEY, 15 Ima Ave・, Watertown MoRTON BAGKER, 169 Hartmann Rd., Newton DAVID LAVIEN, 27 State St., Boston CHRISTOPH田R BARRECA, 81 Kensington Ave・, Pittsfield 丁oHN P・ LINDSAY, 12 Richard St・, S・ Portland, Me. MR. & MRS. PAUL BERGHOLTZ, 45 Middlesex Ave., Reading FRANKLIN H. LITTELL, Marsh Chapel, Boston University MR. & MRS. A. W. D. BLACK, 4 Salem Rd., Beverly WALTER McCARTHY, 20 Cla鮎n Rd., Brookline PROFESSOR DoNALD BoRN, 40 Arlington St・, Cambridge ELSBETH MELVILLE, C弘短rma卯′, Co荘ee Hour 18 Bonwood St., Newtonville ARTHUR P. BoYLE, 20 Adams St., Charlestown AL工CE T. BRENNAN, 11 Garland Ave., Malden MRS. JANET B. MERROW, 43 Charles St・, Boston VIRGIN工A M. BRIGHAM, 15 Bellevue Rd., Belmont RoBERT E. MooDY, 153 Fair Oaks Park, Needham RussELL S. BROAD, 17 Brush Hill Rd., Newton Highlands WILLARD G. MoRAN, 66 Pearl St., Melrose CoL. JAMES W. BROWN, 9 Balch Ave・, Cohasset EDWARD H. MoRSE, 101 Dean St・, Mansfield IRV工NG BROWN, 18 Tremont S七., Boston WALTER G. MuELDER, 755 Commonwealth Ave., Boston RuTH BuLGER, 589 E. Broadway, S・ Boston PROF. PHILIP BuNKER, Co-Cha6γman, Game Activities 264 Bay State Rd・, Boston JoHN CALKINS, 26 White Oak St., Waban JoHN J. O’HARE, 36 Cedarwood Rd・, Jamaica Plain W工LLIAM F. ONDRTCK, 175 Wilcox St., New Britain, Com・ JosEPH PATERNO, 32 Faimount St・, Salem MR. & MRS. LouIS P工CKERTNG, 30 Bay State Rd・, Boston PRES. & MRS. HAROLD C. CAS田, 225 Bay State Rd・, Boston PAUL A. PoLLOCK, 25 Main St・, Somerville BRUCE CHANDLER, 58 Manchester Rd・, Brookline O. LEONARD P随SS, Lexington, Ky. MRS. E. R. CoLL工ER, 308 Bay State Rd・, Boston PAUL G. PREUS, 25 Blagden St., Boston NEWTON CoNGDON, Water Street, Foxboro LAMBERT S. RALES, 103 Come11 St., Boston A. F. RAYMOND CooK, 198 Palfrey St・, Watertown LoL工RAPHAEL, 47 Mason Terrace, Brookline RoBERT CooK, 312 Washington St.’Wellesley MR. & MRS. GLENN RINK, 45 Diab Lane, Weston ALDEN H. CooLEY, 85 Temple St., W. Newton MILDRED RoBL工N, 1519 Beacon St・, Brookline ALDO T. DoNELLI, 382 Bay State Rd・, Boston DR. ENSIO RoNKA, 125 Sheman Rd・, Chestnut Hill CARL ERICKSON, 206 Beacon St., Milton WILLIAM RosENBERGER, 2139 Mass. Ave., Lexington PHILIP ERNST, 73 Central St., Waltham GEORGE SoRENSON, 308 Bay State Rd・, Boston PETER FEENEY, 49 Federal St., Boston ELINOR STANFORD, 4306 28th Place St・, Mt. Rainier, Md・ THOMAS H. FITZPATRICK, 27 SchooI St・, Boston R. VICTOR STOUT, 832 Bay State Rd・, Boston EuGENE H. FLOYD, 84 Trowbridge St・, Arlington PAUL SuLL工VAN, 7 University Drive, Natick HENRY L. FRENIERE, 70 Clement Ave・, W. Roxbury WILLIAM G. SuTCLIFFE, 685 Commonw’皿Ave・, Boston DR. RoYAL M. FRYE, 11 Whitcomb St・, Belmont HELEN SwEENEY, 104 Lewis Rd・, Belmont CoRODON S. FⅢLER, 7 Howard Ave., Foxboro ’‘¥ AuGUSTINE S. GANNON, JR., Cha6rman, Pre-Game Bu任et D. MoRTON SwIFT, 72 N. Main St・, Sharon VIRGIN工A TIERNEY, 1217 Main St・, Hingham Lunch, 107 Oxford St., Cambridge MARY GARRIGAN, 11 Guemsey St., Marblehead DoRIS TROCCHI, 308 Bay State Rd・, Boston MARK WALTCH, 156 Coolidge St., Brookline FRANK J. GILLIS, 205 Kelton St., Allston STUART GooD, Cha存.77?an, Display & Decoration 219 Commonwealth Ave., Chestnut Hill JoHN WATERS, 232 Bay State Rd・, Boston RuDOLPH WEEKS, Brigham Street, Northboro CECIL F. WETHERBEE, 7 Mecha正c St., Foxboro SiMUEL B. GoⅢD, 775 Commonwealth Avee, Boston ALBERT A. HAMILTON, 308 Bay State Rd・, Boston W工LLIAM WHELTON, 127 Allerton Rd・, Milton DAVID H・ WINNICK, 41 Engremont Rd・, Brookline JoHN HARMON, 332 Bay State Rd・,.Boston RoBERT HILL, 94 Ashley St・, W. Springfield GEORGE D. WooD, JR., Chaiγman, Publicity 76A Phillips St., Boston J. OsBORNE HoLMES, 18 Gardner Rd・, Norwood 44 ヱ952 VaFS宣言y W主軸七er Sp①師S SchedⅢ量e Hockey B asketbalエ ‘ Dec. 6 at Clark University Dec. 4 at BI.OWn lO at Brandeis University 10 冒皿f章s 13 at Ho量y Cross 13 Harvard 17 Northeastern 17 at Yale 19 Co量by 26 Round Robin Tournament Jan. 8 at M.I.T. Jan. 3 Harvard 10 Northeastern lO at Princeton 14 Boston Col量ege (At Boston Garden) 14 Boston CoIIege 15 at University of Mass. 17 NoI.theastern 24 at West Point Feb. 5 a置Boston Co1量ege 31 Boston College 7 Tufts Col賞ege 10 at Brown UniveI.Sity Feb. 2 at St. Lawrence (Canton, New York) 14 at Co量by Co11ege 3 at C冒arkson Tech (Potsdam, New 16 WoI.CeS置e〇・ Polytechnic Institute York) 18 Boston College 11 Tufts 20 St. Michael?s 13 Bos軍on CoIIege 23 Brandeis UniveI.Sity 18 Brown 25 HarvaI.d 27 Dartmouth 28 UniveI.Sity of COnneCticut March 4 at Universi置y of New Hampshire Mal-Ch 2 at Dal.tmOuth 7 at Tufts 6 Northeastern 、字覇 ミ艶子、詮隼鯵 .’三二三∴ - Soccer Cross Co皿ntry Oct. 8 Brandeis Oct. 4 Dartmouth 15 HarvaI.d 10 New Hampshire 2l at Springfield 17 Brown and HoIy Cross at Franklin 25 at Clark Park 29 Connecticut 23 Connecticut 28 at Tufts, and SpringfieId Nov. l at Worcester Polytechnic Insti血te 4 M.量.冒. 30 at Providence 7 Dartmo皿th Nov. 10 New England,s 12 a置Tufts 17 IC4A?s in New York 19 at University of Mass. 45 一∴ ∴∴ Dγ・ Cα§eお諒の鋤,耽れeγe pぬc訪g α Iαrge撮,「ea重心0競拐e grαl,○ ○f Lee Cわ華加 厭αγ肋0れd Mα訪れこのれd Lα重のγ○れCe Cα加は§きof l九e M母0γd Cわらiのあ まれ 活e S書αれd訪g同比九九高調のγe (lefきめγこg鼻′り; R創ereれd Kわγ, Mrs. Beγんα S地肌れeγ cα$き Of 霊血e Medo∽γ Pわγe「S i畑I pre§eれ書“G○○dbγe, Mγ FαれCγ’’ foγ 沈e Draper, SeCre書arγ Of沈e Cわ彫れFαmiZy 4ssocさの書es; Dr. CZa彫れ, Pres!deJ高 be"eかof彊s〇九olαr8厭p f事`れd・ CαSe, Cんα手脆s MoれgeOれ, Preside加Of 霊鳥e M訪ford C弛b;岬のれ鳥ed bγ mαれy のf l九〇 〇餅○○γS αれd肋e肋beγS Of重心e C′霊`b軸,んの調,ere p「e§eれ七α=九〇 cere肋のれγ. 龍のγ Mαj扇職も pαS書 p「esまde動き of l心e C晶b, Sきαれds 訪 jro蘭書 oj 重心e gro事や・ Pγe§ide7書きHαrO!d C. CαSe 「e○eわes rep職cα Of ○○「?●erS!0れe fγO肋 Mr. E. C. Dodd, O“,れeγ Of I五e Dodd Moれ榔me動きCo肋pαれγ. αde /ro肋 !Zford P訪泉 G「α耽れe,おおpo耽志んed, C重くl αnd cα「t)ed泣沈e jo「肋のj α耽れjα弛rc of !五e Orゆれαl ○○rれerS書のれ○ ○j拐eか8書 b職訪d訪g eγe○暮ed oれ 拐e U高砂e「S訪γ’s競eOO Cα肋p暮`$. S書のれd訪g oo弛れ Pres壬deか CαSe a「e (Le巧 めrig短大 AJ Hの肋航0れ, Fie請E京eα●きれe; A手書高調γ月. Jeれけひer, E絡e○!証びe Al地肌動きSecγe章のrγ了; Mr. E. C. Dodd, P「es香de 鯵CαSe, C九αrfes MoれgeOll, Dr. Cわ揮れαれd Ha「oZd M. orαれ. More沈αれ63肋e職bers of重心e M訪foγ寄C地心gα重心ercd oれ重心e por〇九of重んe Lαr〇九esこれHopedαわあのooe青○○れe P「esideかHαrOid C. CαSe・ Heαd鯵の蘭e g章.色S18れ・ c最de証(s書αnd!れg, lefき!o塙s加) Hα「OZd . o「αれ, yiee"Pres番de所oj Ihe 均yoγd C′事`も; Dr. Haro重d C. Ciα〃訪, Presiden! of I九e R九ode Jsわれd Co"ege o/ Pんのr職αCγ α′l寄Pre§きd伽高 のf 書方e Cさα捗れ Fα動き夢γ As8○○読書cs; M「s. T九の肋の8 H. Wesら Aγ重心職r E. Je競れeγ,倍支○○暮`きれe A近耽れき Se○rlうめrγ; Mr. Tんの耽α8 H. Wesち Preside所o/沈e DrαPer Corporのきjon; HαrO!d C. CαSe, Presきdeれt Oj Bosto" U扇t,erS五男Cんαrわs J. MoれgeOれ, Presideタじきo/沈e M訪jord Cfub; Mr・ C. E・ Dodd, の地,れe手Of拐e Dodd Mon耽れe蘭書Compαれγ; Mrs. Ar重んα「 E.音Je耽れe手のれd Re章)e「e競d Mα五〇されC. Kier柳九〇 gαt)e重心e境essれg be了のre章庇e肋eのき. 掘Jford Lamches 4n O事鵬tandこれg 4c訪oe PγOgra肋and W玩s T茄s Mo加硫BostonまaんUard一 物〆彰i‰徽%該 Continually growmg Since it was DINNER - at Chicken Pete’s Milford Pink Granite to be used as fomed in 1949, the Milford Club With recordings and harpsicord at a paperweight. It is cut and carved has rightfu11y eamed its place at 6:30 P.M. on December 13, 1952. Chairman: Miss Rose Farese. in the form of a miniature of the the top as this issue of BosTONIA goes to press・ In 1950 the young DINNER-On Apri1 8’1958, at building that was erected on the Club presented a Collegiate Dic- 6:30 P.M., With a speaker on World tionary to a worthy student of each Affairs. Chairman: Ray Mainini・ Of the followmg tOWnS: Medway, Milford and Hopedale. In ]951, the dub sponsored ``Ruddigore,, given by Boston University Music Clubs and as a result of this en_ deavor three scholarships to Boston University were awarded to pupils from each of the above towns. Late last sprmg the MiIford CIub sponSOred the comedy hit “Goodbye, My Fancy presented by the MedWay Players. As a result of this Original comerstone of the first University’s new campus on com- ANNUAL MEETING - June 3, monwealth Avenue, Boston. The StOne WaS the gift of E. C. Dodd, 1953, PreSentation of Charter by PreSident of the Dodds Monument Arthur E・ Jemer, Executive Alumni Co. On the front of the stone is Secretary, Election of O鯖cers be- CarVed the university seal and the ginnmg at 6:30 P.M. Chaiman: Lawrence Catusi. Club O餓cers for this year: Charles J. Mongeon, President; Harold M. Moran, Alex DiGiannantonio, Gabriel DiBattista, Vice- Presidents; Miss Dorothy Droney, Secretary; Miss Mary DiBattista, COmmemOrative date・ An engraved brass plate on the front side bears the inscription αTo President Har- Old C. Case, from the Boston Uni- VerSity Club of Milford, September 20, 1952.’’ Before the luncheon was served, the reception was held in the VerSity on scholarships. At the time President Case Honored at lounge at The Larches. Harold M. Moran, a Vice-PreSident of the Boston University Club of Milford, Of this writing the Milford Club Luncheon in Mi萱ford PreSented the 63 members and Perfomance, three more students are starting classes at Boston Uni- infoms us they already have su餓一 Cient funds in the treasury for three more scholarships to be awarded in 1953. The year’s program outlined by the ambitious Alumni Club in MiI_ ford is as follows: On September 20, 1952, President Harold C. Case WaS tendered a reception at The Larches in Hopedale. Invitation to P.T.A. Meeting on October 16, Lynch Auditorium, With Treasurer. Dr. Harold C. Case, PreSident of guests to President Case. In the Boston University’WaS the guest of recelVmg line with Dr. 1Case were honor on Saturday, September 20, Thomas H. West, PreSident of the at The Larches in Hopedale, Where Draper Corporation; Club Presi- the Boston University Club of Mil- dent Charles J. Mongeon; Dr. Har- ford heId a reception and luncheon 01d Co Cla鮎n, PreSident of the for him on the occasion of his first Rhode Island College of Phamacy Visit to this area since becommg and also president of the Cla鮎n PreSident. Charles J. Mongeon, Of Hopedale, PreSident of the loca工 at the meetingo ton University Alumni Association, and Albert Hamilton, aSSistant to Presented Gift Mr. Jemer. At the luncheon, Mr. Mongeon Boston University Club, PreSided Dr. Dugald Arbuckle as the speaker・ MIKADO - PreSented by the Music Club of Boston University On December 4, 1952. Family Association; Arthur E・ Jen- ner, eXeCutive secretary of the Bos- President Case was presented With a handsome pleCe Of polished 47 PreSided as toastmaster. The bless- mg WaS aSked by Rev. C. Malcolm Keir, PaStOr Of the local Methodist years ago. Mr・ Jemer then pre- Case was given a proIonged and enthusiastic approval by the group, Sented Dr. Case to the group. The Club members and guests Who rose in respect to a scholar then sung by Miss Virginia Batty Of Hopedale. She was accompanied On the planO by Alex DiGiaman- listened in admiration and with rapt and leader. tonio. They are also Boston Uni二 esteem of faculty, Student body, and Dr. Case, Who was then presented VerSity graduates and members of alumnl grOuPS Who have had the with the miniature comerstone by the local Boston University Club. Pleasure of meeting and listening Church and a graduate of the uni- VerSity. An appropriate hymn was Seated at the head table with attention to President Case, Who Mr. Mongeon expressed the has already won the respect and thanks of himself and the Club to E. C, Dodd. to him・ His personal and dignified President Mongeon were Dr・ Case, appearance’his wam friendly man- Mr. and Mrs. West, Mr. and Mrs. ner, educational background, eXPe- Trib耽te Paid to Memory of Lee C量a皿in rience and philosophy assure the After the program was over at Dodd, and Vice-President Moran. (CIose to the head table were Mrs. university of great progress during The Larches, SeVeral of the alumni Bertha Sumner Draper’SeCretary Of In his remarks President Case Jenner, Dr. CIaflin, Rev・ Keir, Mr. the Cla亜n Family Association; Mrs。 E. C. Dodd; Mr. DiGiamantonio, his tenure of o能ce了 POinted out that Boston University has become recognized as one of Vice-PreSident in charge of mem- the greatest universities in the bership; Miss Dorothy Droney, SeC- WOrld, drawing students from every retary; Miss Mary DiBattista, treaS置 urer; Raymond Mainini, PaSt state in the union and from many foreign countries. Its laboratories PreSident for the two previous are now engaged in a four-million years; Miss Batty, Atty. William F. dollar research program, aS COm- McAvoy, Miss Alice Ga鮮ney and Mrs. FIorence Rose, all of whom are directors. In addition to these there were special seats reserved for the students who won the three scholarships awarded by the Milford Boston University club this Pared to $125,000 that was spent in research lO years ago. It is making outstanding contributions in the field of scholarship and research・ Dr-Case referred particularly to the work of the University laboratories in making the world’s largest and Club o鯖cers ]Oumeyed to the Pine Grove Cemetery in Milford, where Lee Cla亜n is buried with several of his ancestors and de- SCendants. A simple and impressive ceremony was held there with the following eulogy being de1ivered by Dr. Harold Cla亜n, Presi- dent of the Rhode Island College of Pharmacy and also President of the Cla亜n Family Associates. ``Lee Cla亜n, the飾th generation in the direct line from Robert Mac Cla触n, vyaS a life-long resident of Hopkinton, Massachusetts. (Robert was the first Claflin to come to this country, PrObably as a Scotch year: Emest Mastroiami from Mil- and most powerful aerial camera, soldier captured by Cromwell非 ford, nOW enrOlled at the College now under rigid govemment con- the Battle of Dunbar. Our first of Liberal Arts; Emest Narducci of Hopedale, a freshman at the Col- trol, tO the work gomg On at the record is that he was admitted a university in cancer control and townsman November 16, 1661. atomic research. AIso to the greatly Robert died in 1690.) lege of Music; and Warren Carberg of Medway, also at the College of improved athletic programs and ``Lee Cla純n was bom in Hopkin- Liberal Arts. accomplishments, tO the long-range ton, November 19, 1791, and died PI.eSident Speaks building program that will even- February 23’1871・ In 1819 he¥is tually house most of the departments recorded as proprietor of a tamery After the meal, President Mongeon gave a resume of the accom- Plishments of the Club in the past on the Commonwealth Avenue campus, and to the pIOneemg e輔orts at Milford, later at Hopkinton where he manufactured boots and of the College of General Educa- shoes. He was prominent in his tion in developing a program in community in the political,丘nan- year 1952-1953 were placed at each general education that now serves as a pattem that is being adopted cial and socia=ife. In 1834 he ¥vas a member of the Massachusetts who welcomed Dr. Case and the Club to The Larches. He expressed by several other universities as one House of Representatives’and in the personal pleasure of himself attainment. and of its plans for the future・ Printed program booklets for the seat. He then introduced Mr. West, of their basic o任erings for scholarly and Mrs. West in meeting the guest The Club was pleased to hear of honor and in welcoming him to Dr・ Case say that ground for the the community. Mr・ Mongeon next Student Union building will soon Called upon Executive Secretary Arthur Jemer, Who was Ioud in his be broken on the new campus in or- 1868, a member of the Massachusetts Senate. He was the first President of the Milford Bank, the first President of the bank at Hopkinton, and the first President of the Hide and Leather Bank of Boston. “He was noted for his generous der to continue a friendly and tol- the Milford Boston University Club, tics, and society that is character- gifts to the religious and benevolent life and enterprlSeS Of his day and with which he has been cIosely as- istic of the new university. At the for his many benefactions to the sociated since it was started three conclusion of his address President poor・ Educationally, he wIS One praise of the accomplishments of erant attitude toward religion, POl主- 48 Of the founders of Boston Univer_ large且oral wreath of red and white Sity in Boston, the largest univer- Camations on the grave of one of award, Allan S. Taylor, President Of the Boston University Club of Sity now Iocated in New England・ Our three wo轟hy gentlemen found- Hartford, StreSSed that Mario’s abil- AIso because of his generous gifts, ers who envisioned what is today a ity as an athlete is not the reason he reality’One Of the greatest uni- fs recelVmg this scholarship・ He is Claflin University, Orangeburg, South Carolina, WaS named for him. VerSities in the world. l’eCelVmg it because of his outstand- This is a co-educational institution mg reCOrd as a citizen of his school for members of the Negro race and was established welユ before HARTFORD CLUB AWARDS most similar institutions. FIRST SCHOLARSHIP ``He also contributed most gen- erously to the Methodist Church of Milford, all his life, and at one time made his church the gift of a par- The Boston University Club of Hartford inaugurates its plan of and community. The special committee on scholとIrShips included LeOnard Joll, Peter Kovatis and Franklin Gross. awarding yearly scholarships to de- SerVmg High SchooI Seniors. CLUBS IN THE MAKING Mario A. Sottile, Jr・, SOn Of Mr・ SOnage・ ``He married Sally Adams of Hop- and Mrs. Mario A. Sottile of 47 Grea章er Huropean Enfield Street, Hartford, reCeived the scholarship from the Hartford Boston Universi軍y Club k王nton on December 9, 1815, and Club after the Club had carefully ant, United States Air Force, is SCreened many applicants. Young busily engaged gathering names they had three children as- 1isted below・ She・died on Apri1 6, 1834・ ``w湖iam, bom March 6, 1818. Carl E. Johnson, First Lieuten- Sottile’a graduate of Weaver High and addresses of alumni now living (Govemor of Massachusetts 1869- School in June 1952, reCeived one in Europe. Lieutenant Johnson is 了0-7l and Trustee of Wellesley Col- Of the school’s highest honors, the Frederick W. Stone award which is Plamlng an amOunCement tO be lege. ) ``charZes Lee, bom September l, 1829 - died September 5, 1880. “W#bαr F巌, bom March ll, PreSented to the athlete judged OutStanding in ``mora=eadership’ ference or meeting at some central SCholastic diligence and citizenShip’’・ 183l. released through the news media in Europe in an e任ort to have a con- In amouncmg the、 scholarship POint to discuss the possibilities of a pemanent Boston Universitv Alumni Club in Europe. ``During his life, Lee Cla鮎n ex- exemp愉ed the admonition of the Writer who said ``Let us live our ユives, that those who come after us, the children who prattle at our feet, the generations yet unbom, Shall be wiser, better, healthier and happler because we have passed this way・” Dr. Cla鮎n concluded his remarks by quo血g the followmg POem be- CauSe Of its appropriateness to the OCCaSIOn : “We l土ve for those who Iove us, Whose hearts are kind and true, For the heaven that smiles above us, And awaits our spirit too. For the human ties that bind us, For the task by God asslgned us, For the bright hopes left behind us, And the good that we can do.” Author unknown. Taps were played by Anthony Areano, a junior at Milford High School and a member of its school band. Dr. Case o任ered a silent A耽れS・ Tαγlor, Presきde加Of書九e Bosかon U毒びerS砂C′重心of Grea書er Hαγげord, preSe油症8 α f章`肌的轟0れSc九oわr訪うp轟の肘αrこのA. So据わ, Jr.,の! Hαrげord・ Loo成れg oれαS So請海receわes拐e A撮,αrみガrs出O be prese加ed Prayer in company wi血the many bγ沈e rαp油か・grO扇動g Hαrげord Cわb, 3s Fran掘れS. Gros$, C九α香r肋の alumnl PreSent and then placed a OI重心e Sc九のJαrSねこp Co肋肋勧ee. 49 Serving boy and girl in Dorchester. BANGOR, MAINE Boston University Alumni in Maine will gather for a dimer at It is hoped that the first recipient of the Hotel Penobscot, Bangor, at the scholarship will enter Boston 6:00 P.M. on Thursday’October 30, NEW CLUB FOR叩S IN Whereby scholarships will be DORCHESTER Under the guidance of Robert Geller, the Boston University Club of Dorchester has been formed. First meeting took place at the DorChester Girls High SchooI Audito- awarded each year to the most de- rium where the film ``Careers in the University in January. 1952. The dimer is being held in connection with the Maine Teach- ARMENIAN CLUB FORMING Making’’was shown. Present at the Leo Kharibian, the new presi- ers Convention which is being held in Bangor, October 30th and 8lst. first meeting from the Alumni O能ce dent of the Armenian Club at Bos- Present at the dinner will be Presi- Were Arthur E. Jemer, Executive Alumni Secretary and AI Hamilton, Field Executive of the Alumni As_ SOCiation in charge of Club activi- ton University tells us that plans for forming an Alumni Group to raise dent Harold C. Case aIid Chancel_ lor Daniel L. Marsh. Nicholas E. Apalakis, President along rapidly. of the Alumni Association is also iies・ Temporary o鯖cers appointed John Topjian of Somerville has been named chairman for the expected to attend together with Were Leo Flym, President, and Bob Bremer, Treasurer. PIans are already under way funds for scholarships are going alumni activity and they are plan- Arthur E. Jemer, Executive Alumni Secretary and Albert A. Hamilton, ning a meeting for next month. Field Executive. 棚αrわA・ So融e, Jr・, γeC串eれ‡ oI拐e庫s‡ $〇九o夢arsねこpのer preSe職場d吋弓加Bo紺のれUれわers函C九b of Harげord, reCe混s con・ gγa加的五けさons万o肌肋e肋bers o在れe Greα書er H優rげord C′事′b’s Sc九oJars巌p Co肌肌加ee (施f=o r香g加) ; Fraれ鳥競れS. Gross, C九αさr・ 耽an; Mrs. Noγ肌a Coa)eγ, So頂わ,舶rs. FLoreれCe Lα1側0職αれd楯r. Leonard Joil. No書§九ol〃職もeca霊ISe九e l伽§心霊18γ露鳥訪g書加 p海関γeお肋e βf耽れen話er of活e S〇九o夢のr$茄p Co肌棚諦ee,舶r. Pe書eγ Ko砂の書きs. 50 VARS量TY CLUB entire coaching sta群including, WOMEN?S CLUB OF The Varsity Club held its foot- Steve Sinko, Harry Cleverly, Jim Nesworthy, Larry Dargie, John An- WO韓CES甘圏蹴 ba11 outing at Peterboro, New derson, Capt. Jim Smith, and Colin ACTIVITIE S Hampshire’On Saturday’September Kerr. Matt Zunic, neW basketbal工 Sixth. An enthusiastic group of and assistant footba11 coach, re- fomer letter winners thoroughly Ceived an enthusiastic welcome and enjoyed the day at Sargent Camp Murray Kramer, feature speaker of and witnessed a bruising scrim- the evenmg, SPOke entertainingly mage during the aftemoon. There about the various teams in this area. WaS general agreement among the armchair quarterbacks that this After the speaking program all ad- Squad was far advanced from last JOumed to the next room where COffee and doughnuts were served. year’s at the same time of year・ Moving pictures of the 1951 World The Boston University Women,s Club of Worcester held their an_ nual tea on september 20, 1952, in the Baroque Room, Hotel Sheraton, Worcester・ Eleanor Reardon, mem- bership chaiman, infoms us of a record tumout with twenty neⅥ′ members JO工mng・ The臆grOuP WaS entertained by Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth D. Custance, OutStanding muSicians on the harp. Mr・ Maurice LawIor, manager Of the hotel is a Followmg the scrimmage the vari- Series cIosed out the program. bus members of the sta鮮infomally Over 75 attended and enJOyed the discussed the squad and this year,s OPPOrtunity of meeting with the PrOSPeCtS. The players, COaChes, members and guests then met at COaChes as well as saymg hello to ATTENTION! LAWRENCE old friends. ALUMNI the dining hall for a wonderful Boston University graduate. Plans are now being made for Plans are now being made for a meal before starting the trip home. the “Captain’s Dinner,, which wi]1 On Tuesday night the sixteenth meeting of all Lawrence alumni. be held at the Mvles Standish 。n It is expected to be held the first or October 3l. Due to the fact that this dimer has become part of SeCOnd week in November. There Wi11 be a speaker from the Uni- Homecommg Weekend and is open VerSity, refreshments∴SerVed and Of September’the first meeting of the entire club was held at the Uni_ VerSity Commons. ``coaches Night” featured talks on the prospects for this year by ``Bu鮮,, Done11i and the to all, SeatS muSt be reserved on a new o能cers elected. More deta11ed first come、 first served basis. information will be mailed to you. 回 国 回 田 回 国 国 回国回国回国回国回国回国回国回国田圃回国回国回国回国回国回国回国回国回国回国回国回国回国回国回国回国回国 回国回国回国田圃回国回国回国回国回国回国田圃回国回国回国回国回国回国回国回国回国回国 固 駐OS甲ON UN耳V田配S菖甲Y Co棚轟的e o胃e S謙0地場h車s αnd且0α鵬 撞認諾護叢謀議葦葦r羅鵠露 語 For incomlng freshmen the following scholarship assistamce is available: 旺轟轟欝轟轟 語 G。職。ra闘。胃ar擁s 語謹話叢葦を萬諾護憲叢翫露悪 回 国 Va胃or Sc九o転rs巌ps 彊認諾葦罵誓三雲三蹴畳豊 麗襲輩議鶉輩轟輩欝嵩器量護 国 Na血a聴耽dこ§極れ。さ。rS輝 彊護謹篭籠輩議護驚韓驚 回 755 Commonwea皿Avenue, Boston 15, Massachusetts. 回 国 財us壬c Sc九oさars九番ps 彊輩聾講聾輩襲撃轟輩警 回 国 回 国 回 国 回 国 回 国 回 国 回 国 回 国 回 国 回 国 固 回 国回国回国回国回国回国回国回国回国回国回国 5望 ALUMN工IN REVIEW MAKING PRAY ER REAL, Organize the Children’s Court for by Lynn J. Radcli任e, T’22, Abing- the county. He has held other pas- don-Cokesbury Press, Nashvil工e, torates in Boston and Somerville, - Tennessee. Dr. Radcli任e is pastor I Massachusetts; and Oak Park, Illi- 広 い 、 nois; and has lectured at colleges Cincimati, Ohio. and universities across the nation. Of Hyde Park Methodist Church in ′ Such an awakenmg Will be rea]- He holds degrees from Wesleyan, ized, the author maintains, Only Boston and Syracuse Universit王es, “by glVmg Prayer the major role and had made advanced studies in it deserves in each Christian life,,, PSycho量ogy at Harvard. and by ``accepting the discipline necessary to a productive prayel. 1ife.” He traces a ``mounting pro- NEW FOOTPRINTS OF A gression of degrees of conscious- TROJAN HORSE, by Herbert ness of God’s presence,,, and shows how all Christian acts of prayer and devotion can be fitted somewhere Carleton Mayer, A’40; Farrar’Straus and Young, Inc., 101 Fifth Avenue, New York 3, New York; Price $l.75. Troy withstood a heroic amy but into ``址s ascending trail toward the mountain peak of devotional fell victim to in創tration. experience.’’ In an interview, the author said, Dr・ Lγnn J.舵ad諸がe, T,22 ``we are trying here to chart the COurSe tO a mOre e任ective prayer life for those who want and need to be heIped by prayer ‥ ・ and for those who want to he]p others by prayer and to feel more cIosely the presence of God while praylng・ The lives of the great christian leaders through the centuries have given us血e lessons ‥ ・ it is only necessary to collect and eva工uate and interpret them・ This book attempts to trans賞ate the rich litera- ture of devotion into tems the average Christian can understand and into techniques he can uSe. ブタ The volume gives printed pemanence to a series of seminar studies COnducted by the author throughOut 20 states in the past 25 years under the sponsorship of many 工eading Protestant denominations. These forums e亜sted the support Of Christian ministers, Students, and Mi11ions of peopIe today are confused by the “cold war”; the war of 1aymen, aS Well as women,s and economic’SOCial and political pres書 young people’s groups. They have SureS, and above all the war of been endorsed by such recognized ideas. Lenin and Stalin chose their Christian leaders as E. Stanley WeaPOnS - the underground, the Jones, George Buttrick, Kagawa, Georgia Harkness, and Edgar S. Brightman, Who urged Dr. Rad- modem counterparts of the Trojan C舶e to prepare them for publica- tion in book form. SeCret Cell, the action committee - Horse. The progress of the Red leaders in their amounced conquest of血e The author is reported to have WOrld for Communism has been far One Of the best and most complete too successful to be brushed o荘as Private libraries of devotiona=iter- idle dreams of fana畦cs. ature in this country, and has attempted in his own book a thorough Survey Of the subject from every angle of religious doctrine and every level of Christian approach. Dr. Radcli鮮e has served on vari_ OuS COmmittees of the National Council of Churches; aS Chaiman Of the Interracial Commission of the Chicago CounciI of Churches; Who can gauge the power or measure the menace of臆an evil idea? Can it be stopped by reso1utions, SPeeChes, laws? Or bullets, gu土ded missi工es, atOmic bombs? These may stop the people who have the idea, but not the idea itSeIf・ There is only one defense against a bad idea, and that is a good idea. and as Chairman of the.Crime Pre_ Vention Bureau in Syracuse, New Americans need to know what the stakes are. They need to know Yo血u In that c王ty he also helped What the Politburo plans, What 53 Communism has cost the Russian against Communism, the thing Sta- PeOPle, and what it might cost us. 1in fears most. The prese11t VOlume seeks to meet the current need to understand and fight the Communist threat. This They need to know how the Reds NEW FooTPR士NTS OF THE TROJAN fight - nOt just the military cam- HoRSE is a sequel to ``Footprints book is purposely short and chal- Paigns, but the technique of in- Of the Trojan Horse’’which was 1enging so that the reader will not 創tration by Red termites who ea七 Published in 1940, describing the out the timbers of our economic, in針tration methods of Hitler’s Na- be lost in words. Its unlque fomat, designed for easy reading, follows SOCial and politica=ife. And they zis. More than three and a half mil- the same style already proven e任ec- need to realize that in The Ameri- ]ion copleS Of血e earlier book were tive in αKnow Your Isms’’by Mar- Can Tdea, We have the best defense 子 tin Dodge・ G. J. A・ Printed and sold・ A BOSTON UNIVERSITY DOCTOR IN PARIS くくNo!’’ ``Did you remain in Paris during ating life since graduating from Boston University.’’ “工t has been eventful, tO Say the World War II?’’ “Yes, I cared for some Ameri- cans, an Irish group, SOme POOr, ill, least, and Paris almost seems like home.’’ French people and a large English With reluctance I said, ``Au re- coIony. I was decorated by the voir’’to a new-found friend, Dr. British govemment for this service Merrill, American doctor in Palis. by award of the Order of the British Two days later I received a note: “It has been a very great pleasure Emplre・’’ ``Any other war incident which remote now but never alien. You teresting?’’ renew my ties with my beloved ``why, Perhaps yes! I wrote some VerSeS Which were posted up in the Dγ. T九eodore C.舶er高的肱,98 Dear Alumni: While on a European trip this Summer, I had the good fortune to to meet you visitant from a sphere our folks back home would find in- COuntry:’ ``I encIose these small souvenirs. Embassy just as the latter was dos- The photograph is not too good, ing・ The last two lines refer to a but the only presentable one I have・ fine portrait of Washington which Bon voyage, all the best thoughts stands on the lawn at the entrance gate. The portrait and statue were and wishes to accompany you・ The WOrld is a wondrous place indeed meet Dr. Merrill in Paris. As he Carefu11y safeguarded during血e toId me of his story, I realized it OCCuPation of Paris by the Ger- delights. Let me hear from you WaS a glowing example of persis- mans.” (.CIosure of the U. S. Em置 When you take up your avocations tence generating success. Here it is : bassy. ) in `the land of the bean and the “I leamed that my medical de- ``Any other item, Dr. Merrill?’’ ``I took wood from the Washinggree would not permit me to practice medicine in France and the ton Elm at Cambridge, Massachu- French coIonies. It was a bitter setts, had it fashioned into a star, blow ! ’’ framed against red velvet and ex- “Just what was the requirement?’’ “That I complete a period of hibited at an Exposition held in 1932 (two hundredth anniversary and I felicitate you expIorer of its cod.’’’ Most truly and sincerely, THEODORE C. MERRTLL, B. U. SchooI of Medicine, 1899 P.S. There are now onIy some nine SurVivors of this class, but I propose to continue to survive for another three years medical work including Of Washington’s birth) and later two months attendance at each of deposited in the Library of the In- eight of the large municipal hospl- Stitut de France. Other fragments The two souvenirs mentioned tals of Paris.’’ Of this wood are preserved in the are ``stars in Their Courses’’ and “Then?” “I obtained the o餓cial diploma・’’ Virginia Historical Society at Richmond, Virginia・’’ “Were any new laws passed gov- ``Have you written any publica- Century’at least・ ``Lapsus Diaboli’’written by him. Professor Brigham and bridge enthusiasts especially take notice! Later on, Perhaps, yOu WOuld en- eming French medical practice?’’ “Yes, in 1942 o餓cial continuance tionsP’’ in practice was authorized by spe- medical subjects appearmg in Who possesses plenty of /Oie de演- cial decree.’’ Standard medical joumals, Ameri重 ore in addition to a spirit that wins Can and French・ History of the In- in spite of overwhelming odds. “Yes, a number of papers on “Since then has any other Ameri- Can Physician been o餓cially au- Stitut de France published in Sci- thorized to practice medicine in France?” “You surely have led an exhiler- 54 ]Oy tO hear more about Dr. Merri11 Until then, Yours for Boston University, GRACE M. OTIS, A’26 Co鵬geのf Lめeγa重Ar瞭 home of his sister, LEOLA COLE COR。 delicious food. Lunch was enlivened bv 1896-A few weeks after our Re_ MAC ’07, When LOUISE A. THACHER reports from each on her present activi- union on Alumni Day, Susie Page and by Bertha Maynard at her home in BeL Of Merrimac, Massachusetts, MARGARET SHIRLEY TURNER of Quincy, LAURA M. SANBORN of Andover, and mont. Estelle especially appreciated this AMY D・ DORSETT of Stamford, Con- OPPOrtunity to JOm∴Susie in meeting necticut, a1工winter-VaCationmg ln nearby Mrs. Maynard and hearing about the Remion Lunch which she had been Winter Park, FIorida, joined in the ex輸 Sun Change of reminiscences and current the absence of our president, Dr. BREN- notes on college mates. The FIorida sun added warmth to the occasion, aS did the TON LUTZ? and our Treasurer, KATH- unions which some of us are privileged to attend at Mrs. Maynard,s home are PreSenCe Of Mrs. HATTIE COLE of Sided・ RUTH HATCH kindly served as most Holliston and Mr. FRANK CORMAC o壬 SeCr竺ry for this meeting・ The Secre- Estelle Inga11s Lansmg Were entertained Obliged to miss. These “continbation,, re_ enJOyable and heユp to keep our Orlando. Class interest alive. /1897-The Class of 1897 met for ties and interests. Hort and Mo11y were WOrking strenuously in the political camPalgn PreParatOry to the approaching PreSidential conven轟ons. Following Iunch we assembled in血e rOOm for a business mee血g. In ERINE HILLIKER,血e Secretary pre- tarys report for 1951 was read and 1913-A le壮er from EL重ZABETH approved. The Treasurer had informed luncheon at血e Fac山y Club, On Alumni E. HOYT? reCently retumed from B正ish the Secretary that class funds were the Day, May 8l, 1952. Thirteen members East Africa, reads as fo11ows: `・My year,s Same aS last year. Were PreSent-Ethe] Britton Perry, Study was on the e鮮ects of economic We were happy to hear that Katherine EIoise Esther Change on the native culture of British Hilliker had accepted chairmanship of the committee for our 40th reunion in Crocker’ Lena Glover, Dodge’ Viola MacLellan Day’ Grace East Africa, and my headquarters were Gri億ths Pearson’Mary Bames Holden, Kampala, Uganda, Where I was attached 1953, and voted that she should choose Cecil N. Marble, Emma F. Ripley, Eliza- [o the Institute of Social Research, her own committee. beth Putnam Clarke’Annie Hatch Chase, Makerere college・ Makerere is a捌iated The matter of a 40th anniversary cIass Stanley Plimpton’Charles H. Hinckley. With the University of London・工had an gift to the College was discussed, but no We had hoped to have Ida St・ George 鵠t謹告0言等霊霊霊 final action taken。 We voted to assess and Rev. Willard Shattuck with us, but they were unable to come at the last men’ the first generation away from and reunion expenses. tribal society’in fact by no means altogether away from it; for tribal a靴a- The secretary was instructed to inform Dr. Lutz and Professor Brigham that the tions are stiII very lmPOrtant at Makerere. Class wishes them to select and purchase’ Letters of greeting from those unable to come were read. AIso one from pro_ each member five dollars for class g班 fessor TayIor who sti量l keeps his interest I traveled over large parts of British before our next reunion, the books which in the earlier classes, and he and Mrs. East Africa and into the Sudan, the Beト the class voted, SOme time ago’tO PreSent Taylor have been present at many of our glan Congo’Ruanda-Urundi, Portuguese East Africa and the Union of S。uth One member passed away during the Africa’for observations on comparative year; Mrs. Elizabeth Young Rutan, a Change・ Since I came back I’ve been 1953 luncheon and business meeting. member of the Class for the Senior year. busy wri血g articles and making some Plans for the afternoon of that day were arrangements for African students to informally discussed・ The President, Mrs. Clarke’aPPOinted a nominating committee’Lena GIover, Annie Chase’and Mary Holden to pre- Sent a candidate for President to serve for the next five years. The name of Emma F. Ripley was presented and she COme tO the United States.,, to the College of Liberal Arts Library. It was announced that a room at the Faculty Club has been reserved for our It was suggested that we invite Dean Emeritus 盤のn育on Repor書of 」9」3, C. L. A. 1913-Once agam, On a COO工and lovely Saturday, June 7, 1952, a grOuP Wil量iam M. Warren, Dean Ralph Taylor’ and Professors Taylor, Rice, and Waxman to be our guests in 1953. Seven of those present paid the five- WaS unanimously elected。 Of C. L. A. 1913-erS met at Hotel M。n_ p書誌轄謙語葦蕊 POnSett aS gueStS Of their classmate, dollar assessment for next year. Were HARRIET STONE, Reunion Chairman, RUTH HATCH? her assistant, from BRENTON LUTZ’LEWIS BRIG・ HAM9 MARY MARTHA STEVENS MOFFAT’LENA GRACE LAWRENCE, HELEN POR" CHANDLER MASON, HORTENSE HARRIS? ELEANOR BERG, MIL- TER9 CLARA MACOWBER’LOUISE e鮮orts of Grace Pearson’and the help of the A]umni Association O餓ce. DRED WHITTEMORE, RUBY TRAIS BROWN? STEVENS? M量LDRED METCALF, AGNES RHODES, HELEN DURGIN LILLIAN BALLOU RINKS’ CLAR" RICHARDSI ELSIE CAMP WELLS’ ETTE ROGERS, MILDRED PHIPPS WOODSUM, MARJORIE BAILEY. WOLFSON9 KATHER量NE HILLIKER9 dent for the past five years. The meeting adjoumed until next 叢h誓言董嵩諒恕藍誌 VIOLA MACLELLAN DAY, Class Secretary 1907 - An impromptu inter-Class re- MARY O?BRIEN S.CHUIDLER. They 1 拾 う union of ’06一’07 took place last February After a ramble about the grounds to in Orlando, Florida, Which is the winter home of HAROLD O. COLE ,06 and the admire the garden and beautifu=ake, We forgot our waistlines and enJOyed Molly,s ○○■ ●"l じ.⊃ We listened with interest to messages SULLIVAN SARRITY, ALEXANDER FRYE, EVA MOSHER HARRIET WHITAKER’ ALICE SARMAN, MARION HARDY RUTH BARTLETT. Illness, Other engagements’Or distance kept many loyal members from being present. from CLA. He is a First Lieutenant sta- We are grateful to EIsie Camp Wells place in May at the Union Methodist for our extremely interesting letter about Church in Fall River. They are making her life in a small Vemont village-a their home in Quincy.. ‥ Alice Jean Earle is piloting C-47’s and his assign- 旺e糾ed with useful community pur- Richardson bf Middleton became the ment is the air evacuation of wounded suits and research in Vemont history. bride of WILLIAM RUTHERFORD troops from the front lines; gr申fying BROWNE of Gardner last May‥ ‥ work for it has saved hundreds of lives. HELEN D. RICHARDS divides her tioned at Seoul City Air Base in Korea. ELEANOR M. STOCHAJ of Webster ‥. VINCHNT WALL田N is sti11 with the Virginia and two in New Hampshire. received her Master,s degree at the 62nd Air Force stationed at Mitche11 Air Forcさ She greatly enIOyS her four grandchildren. annual commencement exercises held at Base on Long Island・ Vin is married 血ne among her four children’tWO in MARION H. WOLFSON would gladly have joined us if she lived nearer than -Ar五〇na ! RUTH BARTI.EFT, Whose mother requlreS muCh care, Writes that she is retiring after 88 years of teaching’31 of them in Califomia. After a heartfelt vote of thanks to ou千graCio甘s hostess, the meeting was adjourned, and we departed reluctantly Clark University this past Tune. She and is the father of a baby girl’Adrian. majored in BioIogy… ・ ANN H. TOM- His job at Mitchell is the development LINSON of Buzzards Bay has been com- of tests to measure the qua愉cations of missioned a First Lieutenant in the aimen for various types of duties. Vin Women’s Air Force,. She is also a gradu- was ate of Becker Junior College in Wor- First Lieutenant and in his spare time is CeSt er. doing work towards a master’s degree at 1950-Mr. and Mrs. Starr M. King of Beverly announce the recent marrlage of their daughter Dorothy to ALEX・ ANDER for Boston and way stations‘ 1913-erS, yOur SeCretary reminds yo岨 血at 1953 is an important milestone for us. Begin planmng NOW to be with your classmates on Alunni Day, 1953. GARNER of the Naval Research Laboratory in Washington, D. C. where he is a Budget Specialist・ Paul writes that we’1l音soon be able to call him a bureaucrat, for he can 控。‡葦慧嵩豊嵩詰謹 see the early indications, big words and gestions. Let’s Thanks! J. get the ball MARJORIE rolling. BAILEY, Secretary promoted to the rank Long Island University‥ ・. WAI月ER CONATY graduated from the Simmons Co11ege School of Library ScienCe in longwindedness. DON WHITE’A’5」, is also in Washington where he is with the FBI. . . . EARLE F. TOWNE, JR., was recalled to active duty with the Air Force immediately after he graduated Detroit Public Library in Michigan‥ ‥ JOAN BEAVEN APPLETON and her husband, Thomas, became the proud parents of a son on April l. They have decided to call the baby Thomas W. Appleton’III. The Appletons are living in a suburb of Albany, New York. 195l-Mrs. Donald K. Wrigley of Lynn amounces the engagement of her daughter, Elizabeth Am NichoIson, tO MALCOLM A. BROWN, also of Lynn. 1925-Rev. RICHARD K. MORTON of the Smithfield Avenue Congregational Church’ Pawtucket, Rhode Island, WaS aWarded the honorary degree of Doctor of Education at Gommencement exercises at Rhode Island College of Education this past June. 1942 - Dr. NORMAN L. BEREZINう a navy veteran, is a practicing dentist in Newton. 1944 - Miss MARY THERESE WILLNER of New Haven, Connecticut, became the bride of William S. Monahan, Boston attomey, 1ast June・ They are making their home at 278 Highland Avenue, Quincy. 1946-MORTON RUBIN of Dorchester completed requrements for Ph.D. in socioIogy and social anthropoIogy at the University of North Carohna in 1950. For the past two years he has been engaged in social work among Jewish immi- grants and refugees and social research for the Israel Ministry of Social Welfare. 1948 - Frances Christine Weindel of East Greenwich, Rhode Island, became 血e bride of WALTER DAVID BRIGGS, JR.’Of Springfield, Massachusetts, last March 22. He is a practicing attomey m Middletown, Comecticut…. FRANCIS F. CRISCI received the Bachelor of Divinity degree from Gordon Divinity Schoo=ast Spring・ 1949 - Eleanor Ruth Griggs of Pon- tiac, Michigan, WaS married recently to JOHN STEWART BANNISTER of Manchester…. The wedding of TULIA Jαれe書Bわse職の応, A,52, becα肌e附§・腕§CO枇船舶rro撮,, PR,53, a‡∴α CLARA DeAMICIS of Fall River and pre枕γ鵬d視g cere肋oれγ peγfor肋edきれ庇→ Daれ拐L・晩rs九C九αpd Glenn E. Whitham of Wollaston took のn A構g職§意2. 56 oぜ June, 1951, and is now empIoyed at the Roxbury‥ PAUL J. MACKENZIE is empIoyed at Write your friends to come! Plan to reunion! Send along your ideas and sug- recently has been asslgned to the Special Services Section of Japan Logistical Command in Yokohama. 1941 - GEORGE HANSEN has been as his bride’August 2, the former Miss Paulette Allaire’a工so of了Gardner. Charlie is with the FIorence stove company m that city. appointed supervisor of accoun血g for the Plastics department of the General Elec. tric Companys chemical division. He resides with his family at 39 Grace Ter- Co鵬ge of PγaC虎ca胃Aγ瞭and Le枕eγS 1938 - MARY COURTNE・Y race, Pittsfield. O?TOOLE has recently been elected to 1942 - Lieutenant CoIonel EDWARD L. FARRELL, JR., Of Watertown, WaS honorary life membership in the National Social Science Honor Society’Pi Gamma Mu, AIpha Chapter’in Washington, D. C. graduated June 27 from the Army Command and General Sta任College at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas. 1945葛Harold Cabot & Company’In- COrPOrated, annOunCeS the appointment of BETTY PARKS as assistant copy chief・ She has been with the agencys copy Sta任since 1945‥.. Mr, and Mrs. AL. BERT J. L量EBERMAN announce the birth of a daughter, their second child, - ÷ ミ ニ ︼ 轟 ﹁ - - - 1 1 i i 鴬 弱 Judith Helen, bom March 7, 1952. Mar轟猶のrさされ香an, A,軸,おゎαC競れg a書 KOWICZ, 28, Of New Bedford, died Edgaγ心の関れ Hig九 S〇九〇o事 0れ 舶ar章九α,s June 6, 1952, at Cushing Veterans Hos- V訪eγard. Pital in Framingham after a short illness. A World War II veteran, he had served Of Fitchburg recently graduated from as a captain in the Corps of Engineerse Frank Harp of New Paltz’New York, annOunCeS the mamage Commissioned O鯖cers Academy at Gab- Of her daughter, Bessie Marie, tO 1ingen, Germany. THOMAS J. ELL量OT of Brookline. B霊場きれess Ad肋まれ香s折a房on GERTRUDE 1949-HELEN E. SAFGREN of Arlington became Mrs. Virginio Minervini last May 3 at St. John’s Episcopal Church in Arlington.. ‥ JANET BEVERLY BROWN was married in March to En_ Sign John Wright Morton, II, U.S.N., in York City… ・ Honeymoonmg m Bemuda in May were Mr・ George Wes- ley Hamblen of West Roxbury and his bride, MAY MACKBA of Roslindale. 1950鵜M. IRENE CLEVELAND of Mattapan became the bride of Calvin E・ A. Solエa of Bristol, Pennsylvania, last 1950葛Mrs. the lO9th Infantry Regiment,s Non- Co棚egeのf ELLEN Angeles last April. New 1948 - Attomey EDWARD J. TO肌 . ‥ Corporal CHARLES V・ LINDBERG 1946葛Miss BARLOW McNALLY of Fall River be_ Came Mrs. Thomas Curl Peek in Los 195l -Janet Grant of Chestnut Hil] became Mrs. STANLEY PHILLIPS, JR., last April at a wedding ceremony per- Apri l. 195l - HLIZABETH F. CARLSON Of Gloucester became Mrs. Theodore Natti in St. Paul’s Lutheran Church last June… ・ MARTHA PEABODY PARKE Of Melrose and ERNEST RAYMO′ND PENDLETON, JR., B’5J, became hus- 1924-OLIVER S. QUIMBY, 50, Of Cambridge, PaSSed away in May. He formed in West Roxbury Congregationa] band and wife at ceremonies in the First Church…. had been in poor health.for some time. For the past ten years he had been em- Congregrational Church in Melrose last Mrs. GERALD BRUCE DAVIS in the Ployed by the Cambridge Paper Box Company. 1928 - Lieutenant CoIonel LEON C. SMITH of Fitchburg lS nOW SerVmg With the U. S. Military Advisory Group to the Repu皿c of Korea Army. 1929-EDWARD A. SISSON, 45, member of Lynn City Council for 13 years’died May 80e Joan Doree Finch became York City last May.. ‥ EDWARD AUGUSTUS TELLIER of Belmont took as his bride last Apri工the former Miss June Irene Giannotti, also of Belmont. ‥ ・ Nancy Jane Stewart of Chestnut Hi11 became Mrs. ROBERT CADY GATES last June in Union Church, Waban. Bob is a Lieutenant in the U. S・ Army’s Finance Corps… ・ Mr. and Mrs. Francis J. 1930-A. DONALD WEST of WoL Ryan of Cambridge announce the en- laston, mathematics teacher at North gagement of their daughter, RosemarJ, Quincy High School and fomer track COaCh, died in May. He was a native of JR., Of West Somervi11e… ・ Miss Jane Dorchester. 1932 - Lieutenant CoIonel LAW. RENCE B. MARKEY graduated June 27 from the Army Command and General Sta鯖 Colユege at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas. He has been asslgned to the Sta任and faculty of the Finance School at Fort Benjamin Harrison, Indiana. 1938 - Major BERNARD B・ BECK of Brighton was graduated in June from the Amy Command and General Sta任Col- May・ Li廿1e Church Around the Comer in New Louise, tO JEREMIAH J. MULVIHILL, Burke of Framingham became Mrs. EUGENE BURLINGAME May 10‥ ‥ PHYLLIS STOMBERG, E’5J, became Mrs. EUGENE CALDERARO on June 22 in Blaisdell Memorial Baptist Church in Melrose. They are now residing in Northport, Long Island, New York. ‥. Far from home, in the Church of See- Af柁r eo,叩疑うng鋤鍋厄γ“書の0肌O耽れs o! graben, Zurich, Switzerland, M. DORO" THY ARAUJO of New Bedford was married in May to Martin Emil Glaettli B’50クOf Looo調う8 COngγα融α‡e寄bγ $eγ壷e訪Koreα,舶αiのr Jo九n蹄. A俄e, Eきg九番九 Aγ肋γ TraれSpOr妬きのれ 0姉cer lege at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas. of Zurich, Whom she met when he at- Coき・ Ho撮,ard A.舶α競れ, α$肘のior Ad香e tended New Bedford TextiIe Institute. 1939 - First Lieutenant THOMAS J. MORAN of Portland, Maine, has been awarded the Bronze Star Medal for pγepareS書o脆aひe for r側o§igれmeれきれ ‥ ・ Shirley Almira Williams of Lym be- 書加Un穣d S捌e8・ T九e Lo撮加重の姉cer Came Mrs. MILTON TENNYSON JEFFERSON, II, in the First Methodist 加S Serひe(雷 玩・砂αγこo事`§ 柑αれspOr調うon meritorious achievement in Korea. . . . Church in LyI]n On June 14. . ass鳴れ肋e融§ わ らの霊鳥∴脚α鳩r αれ働 α香章 Captain RALPH E. KEENE of Reading CHARLES LANGLOIS of Gardner took 57 αγrわed玩KのγeaわA職g鵬ち重950, αれd 嬬轟0れOperα枕0れS. 1952-On May 24 EVELYN NATA" Sαγge融Co管掲e of P九γ§わaさ L賞E DeVITO became the bride of James Ed事あCα虎on Albert Callanan of Stoughton… ・ Mr. 1947-Mrs. William F. Herr, the former DORIS WALTHER, Writes that and Mrs. Charles Outchcunis of Brockton announce the engagement of their daugh- ter, EVA OUTCHCUNIS to John C. Sede1l of Brockton… ・ Beth Israel Syn- agogue at old Orchard Beach in Maine 器量S蒜語群モ監嵩薯 TANER of Bangor, Maine・ became Mrs. Stanley Charm… ・ FRANCES HELEN ZUCCO became Mrs. Donald P. McEwan in Springfield last June… ・ PATRICIA JOAN CRANE’s engagement was an- nounced by her parents recently to Mr. Merrill Carpenter Nutting, Jr., Of Newton Center. Couege of相関育c 1942-Married last March at the Unitarian Memorial Church in Fairhaven were JEAN FISHER MARKS and Charles Warren Brodrick of Wolfeboro, New Hampshire. she and Bill have a daughter’Martha Landes Herr, bom May 80, at Lancaster General Hospital. Doris and Bill are now living at Spring Meadows Fam, Co1umbia, R. D. No. 2’Pemsylvania‥ ‥ JEANNE HAMMONDS of New York was married to William A. Peatfield of Ipswich in June… ・ KATHRYN D. CAR・ ROLI. became the bride of Bemard L. Hagberg, Jr., Of Baltimore, Maryland, 1ast June・ 1952 - NANCY VAN METRE BROWN of Saline, Michigan, became the bride of Samuel Durant Leighton of Edgartown last June. SoIoist was JO. ANNE LEWIS, a Classmate. C調egeのf Generα胃Ed棚Ca扇on George Hansen, B’4上,九a§ bee職 のp- DON GUILD, JR., 1ast May 17‥ ‥ po融ed鋤per壷or of acco】・訪れg foγ 沈e がa§轟s depar加e巧 の‡ Geれerα基 195l _ PAUL C. BLACK of Hoosick THOMAS OATES, former star end for Bu鮎Done11i,s gridders’WaS married in cises held May 80 at the American In- i Saugus became Mrs. NORMAN BRAY・ Falls, New York, reCeived a Bachelor of Foreign Trade degree in graduation exer- 帝 1950-Miss Shirley Jane Spence of 馴ec加毒c,s c九em香ca! d巌§壬o耽 れ P諦s・ βe肋. June to Miss Marion Peterson of Watertown… . Miss Doris L. Gonyer of stitute for Forelgn Trade at Thunderbird Waltham became the bride of RICHÅRD Field, Phoenix, Arizona・ He specialized CHACE of Arlington in May. They are in Spanish・ making their home in Wa皿am・ ‥ 1952-Married in June were Miss JOHN MARTIN, JR.’Of Belmont took Diana Marie Supple of Waban and as his bride last Spring the fomer Miss MAURICE R. PEPIN of Lowell. Jane Maxine Carroll. The fomer hockey star had as his best man John Antonelli, Boston Braves pitcher… ・ Miss Rita EIsie Carlozzi of South Braintree became the bride of NAZARENO FRANCIS CUGINI of Brighton last April… ・ Miss Frances M. Rogers of Amesbury was mar- ried to EDMAN J. GLEED in May. 1951 _ TADEOSZ STOKLOSA of Taftville, Connecticut, reCeived a certificate of graduation in graduation exer- cises May 80 at the American Institute for Forelgn Trade at Thunderbird Field, Phoenix, Arizona. He speciahzed in Latin America, Where he plans to assume a career in American business or govem- SchooI of T九eo胃ogγ 1889_ Rev. LOUIS ELLMS of Newmarket, New Hampshire’91 years old on Apri1 6 and for 62 years a Congregational minister, WaS gueSt PreaCher at Porter Hall, Ocean Park, Maine, reCently. He has been summermg at Ocean Park for 12 years. He has been preaching actively for 50 years. 1902 - Dear Class of 1902, B.U.S.T.: 工am very sorry for dehy in this report but we visited relatives in New York, P軸adelphia, Owego, New York, and Chicago before retuming to Sioux Falls and then we taught a week in an Inter- mediate Institute at Lake Poinsett, South IT RUNS IN TH囲FA舶ILY-A書α receれ‡ Bo§き0れUn訪eγS函Sarge批 Co妨ge r鋤毒0れ鵬re a胴ち肋O庇r aれd dα喝庇手話o ooere pres綿e融Of 庇香γ reSpe〇品e dαS§e8, αれ億撮,訪れerSの恒心e To品e§§ Aooαrd,極れe§き Dakota. We had a wonderful time at our Reunion in Boston, May 8lst to June 2nd・ There were eight of us present:一Hart- れoれOr霊血e Co鵬ge心es書0撮,S. Fr。肌坊=o r王g加αreわのders oI庇C九聯S O月9上9,掘8§ A耽れKean, N。けe Da肋。 Co鵬ge, Bα極肋ore,のろere訪eおd香recわr Of串γ訪α夢ed耽α房。n;胸§.碓〇九αe! 」 α鵬rsoれOf Lαれ§dome, Pen鵬砂αn毒C九購S Of ’22 αnd九。r dα関g加er,脇高の耽れe Pα鵬γSOn O! Ne撮硬調謝e, C砧8S Of ’5工・ 柑αγ香anれe香s a p九γ諭の夢e血Cα房0耽れ購打切C轟のr訪Ne融0れ・ 58 man, Hi11er, Folk, Girelius, Martin, Sandifur, Stockdale, and Hauser. This was on saturday; On Sunday Fred McConnell joined us. Our first meeting was at Wayside Inn, ち Sudbury, Where Bishop and Mrs. Hart- most congenial associations. 「1`hey are man invited us J() a mOSt delicious break- both active workers in the social activi_ fast. There were twelve of us, including ties of・the community. Mrs. Atkinson is Mesdames Hartman, Folk, Martin and President of the Litchfie]d Women’s so- Hauser. Then we moved from the dining Ciety of Christian Service・’’ Atkinson room to the room where Longfellow wrote Writes: ``I was asked to supply the village “Tales of a Wayside Im.’’Bishop Hart- church of Litchfield after retirement. For several years previously I had noticed man was elec土ed President of the Class and Hauser’Agent. Hiller led in a fer- an increasmg halt in walking・ At the Kel- Vent Prayer and then Charles Girelius was logg Sanatarium, the correct diagnosis Called upon to read his poem: - WaS : `progressive Muscular Atrophy,’in- - - - - - - - - i - - - ・ ・ - 1 ÷ 罵 思 す i し : 主 よ l Curable, nO 瞳nkering! Two years as FOLLOWING THE VISION SuPPly and my waHdng days ceased・ Colleagues : Crutches. Next a folding wheel chair. On the sIope of Beacon Hill, there stood I have not stood on my feet for over宜ve a schooI of prophets’ years. Three丘ngers of each hand and each leg refuse to function・ So I write Where we tarried for a season, felt pro- by index punch system. I take・my Chair Phetic impulse; After which, With highest hope we trav- to the bedside at night. In the mommg I hoist myself into it, Shave, dress, gO tO the dining table, Sit at the desk, at the typewriter, by use of a hassock I manlPu- eled forth, To serve with eagemess humanity and God. late a loungmg Chair. A ramp leads to We felt the thri11 of challengmg adven- the car and I go riding. I have not ture, Saw a new world rising鵜far better than touched the steermg Wheel for over咄r- ] P Hau§er, T’02 teen years. The sentence, `He that the old, l Saw the Christ-Spirit movmg Within the soul of man. So we thought in our awakened zeal, As we looked out upon the world’s dark Places, And saw wi血in the unfolding horizons 瓜e commg kingdom of our dreams. A world that was soon to be delivered from its sin and war- We to serve as guides, fo11owmg the heavenly vision, So we thought and so we preached in all good faith, Seeking to save the world from hideous WrOng, But war followed war, and nations clashed in madness Ti11 Hiroshima saw the climax of destruc_ A reverent hush came over us as the names were called of those of our Class Who had passed to the Great Beyond: - Wi11iam Orvi11e Allen, Charles H. At- road of History - Wondering ! As now we celebrate our half Centurys S址ving, We look back (honestly, We truSt) with eyes of seIf-aPPraisal, must be cheerful・’ I keep in touch by Phone with a few aged house plants hke myself・’’ He is now 85. The Atkinsons Bushnell, Edward G. Copeland, Fred L have a son and a daughter, both married・ Danie量s, Jesse S. Dancey, William John Dowmng, Isaac F. Edwards, Richards Evans, Elmer V. Exelby, Ambrose Field, He is a great inspiration to all of us. BlessmgS On yOu, Litchfield Heroes! EDWARD S。 BELDEN_No letter Ross Lee Finney, James Melvin Fuqua, from Belden but Girelius told us of hav_ Samuel F. Halfyard, Henry Hindle, DesCOm D. Hoagland, Ezra Hodges, Charles 1ng been with him at Wesleyan Univer- E・ Hodges, Charles Henry Johnson, Ed- ward H. Lutterman, Albert A. Mason, Stry tO Celebrate the雛tieth anniversary of their class in 1949. W. W. CONSTEIN-“There is no Guv W. McCreery, Frank N. Miner, Manly J. Mumford, George A. Shahan, POSSibility of my a壮ending the Reunion Charles F. Skillings, Arthur E. Spencer, Or tO any Other gathering around here・ Francis E. Swinehart, Timothy R. Wat- for I do not even get to go to church My eyes and hearing give me no satisfaction either at lecture or television. I Bishop Hartman ca11ed on FoIk to lead in prayer. am able though to do all the work about the house and yard including my big (NoT田: There are 80 names above. If 田園 Mo鮮att’s translation, `visitors to the sick kins, Arthur Grant Boynton, John J. tive passion, While mankind stands upon the cross- Showeth mercy, in Romans, reads in you know of any of them who are still alive, Please advise me. J. P. H.) garden. I can see well in reading and near objects. My heart and mind are as keen as years ago and I am now in my We then proceeded to talk over our 82nd year, but my flesh is weakening and experiences and to read messages缶om myの呼ne, Which produces the motions Regre咄ng many things left unachieved, SOme Who were not present・ Here is the and movements, is∴SIowlng down. My And things done we should not havc roll-Call of the present membership : - Wishes and prayers are for an extended done. We have erred in setting our dreams too high - Perhaps! But lives are enriched by faults acknowl- edged; We have done the best we knew and God requlreS nO mOre, While the rest of the task we leave to those who follow, And through them we shalユhave part in the work of commg ageS’ It is enough now that we see the world in its travail, And have labored therein, Others shall witness the triumph. Girelius was heartily applauded for this stirring poem. WILLIAM JOHN ATK工NSON - life for all the boys:’ John GEORGE LOWRY DAVIS一“If it with us, but he could not make it. In Were POSSible for me to be in Boston on How we longed to have W皿am April, he and Mrs. Atkinson ceIebrated May 81, I would be there, but I cannot their餓tieth wedding anniversary. This make the trip, SO that is the end of the from the Michigan Chr繭alt Ad。OCafe: trouble. I was highly honored by the “Mr. Atkinson was a member of the New Hampshire Conference for twenty years letters from the President, Trustees and Faculties, but that did not save me the and served as Superintendent of Sunday heart_aChe that came from the loss of SchooI work under the Methodist Board Of Social Service in New Hampshire and Vermont, COmmg tO Michigan under the same Board in 1917. Having served Seemg the boys. Shortly before Rev. G. 47 years in the ministry’he retired by Edgar Folk left for the North he was in Winter Park and we had a very pleasa址 Visit. Knowmg that it was impossible for me to go, I asked him to glVe my age limit in 1940. The Atkinsons have blessings to the crowd. Irma and I unite made their home in Litchfield for almost in sending our best wishes.” twelve years, en]Oymg life under the H. H. DOWNEY南“I have been in 59 //〆 起因 the ministry continuously smCe my gradu- and poetry. Occasionally I have written ation - Bu揮alo, Z years; Rochester’New SOmething for Zio壷He脇d・ My mind SchooI classes, etC. At 85 still golng for- York’8 years; Fuman Church’Syra- has been dominated by an idea工for a ward.” cuse, 24 years (one-half my entire min- new world and a good life・ Last May BERTON L. JENNINGS - “Dear istry). I was in St. Paul’s, Kansas, tWO my wife and I visited Boston. Our Bishop Hartman: - I have delayed an- daughter, Who has ̄ been taking a post swermg, hoping I might be able to make one-haIf years. While there a new church graduate course in the department of the trip. I have anticipated the possibility was bu址, COSting one million two hun- PSyChology at Boston University, tOOk us of seeing the long time friends and class- dred and twenty-eight thousand dollars. through the splendid array of new build- mates agam. Boston is a long ways from ings・’’ 0. L. GRISWOLD一``when I came Los Angeles and until it moves nearer or until Los Angeles incorporates Boston in States. Four years ago (in 1948) I took to Boston I was transferred from the its city limits, I am afraid I shall not be the retired relation but am still preaching North Ohio Conference to the New Eng- able to make the journey. Please re- as pastor of Woodlawn Church’Syracuse’ 1and Southem Conference and have re- member me to the boys and tell them New York.’’ mained a member of this Conference. I carry them deep m my memOry and I retired automatically twelve years ago. heart. I士would be great to greet them “I am seriously disappointedo Duty to I am now 86 years of age. I have sup- Boston University in this instance means Plied pulpits for most of the time since I face to face. If you will all come to Los Angeles, Or better still to Pasadena, We that Ralph is more needed at home for re血ed・ Am living here in Mansfield, Jemie is not well enough to be left to Massachusetts.” years’and in Detroit’Michigan’five and 、豊S嘉蒜豊艶ぶ宝器悪霊 RALPH TYLER FLEWELLING 一 血e care of others and餅ty-nine years of hing with the writer, While they have been unmingled joy to the undersigned, LEWIS O. will kill the fatted calf and make merry・’’ EARL C. LINDSEY一“I have been HARTMAN - From Bishop Hartman’s letter of August 8, looking forward to the Reunion of the Class of 1902 but now find I shall not be 黒芸落書。盤謹∴霊)霊 able to go. And工, While in pretty good sha11 dream of the Reunion and of both Richard, a Senior in Bates College. In trip. The chief reason is that my wife those there and not there, remembering 1944 I w・しS elec‘七ed to the epISCOPaCy by is what I should say if I were actually to her. I am almost 80 years of age. I wish this’I shall try to make good in the the Northeastem Jurisdictional Conference and asslgned to the Boston Area. In 1948, being 72 years of age, I was only way I have, by mailing each of you retired from active service. Since that My son’Alton’is a professor in Purdue a copy of my recent book.’’(Greatly ap- date I have been teaching in B.U.S.T., University, in the department of bioIogy. `Ministerial Ethics’and `studies in Ecu- He has his Ph.D. degree from Comell have sadly depleted her strength・ So I See yOu. Since I am to disappoint you in PreCiated, Ralph! ) health, WOuld not be able to make血e in poor hea皿and must not leave I lived nearer Boston. I shall be great事y disappointed not to see you all agaln. months University’Ithaca’New York.一One o丘 ago I was elected Librarian of the New our daughters is married and living here England Methodist Historical Society. The Library recently was moved from (Ararat, Virginia) on the side of the Blue Ridge Mountains under the Blue the old guard・ Folk is a great hobbyist. 581 Boylston Street to the new building Ridge Parkway. They have extensive At one time he was ralSmg prlZe Chickens Of the TheoIogical SchooI on Common- apple orchards. My wife and I built a but when he had won a prlZe in Madison Wealth Avenue. I manage on the whole house on their place and will probably Square Gardens, he gave that up. Later to keep busy during the week and am end our days in this delightful climate he raised gladioli, and recently he has PreaChing frequently on Sundays.” G. EDGAR FOLK -Folk told of some of his experiences. He also brought the Class picture and all present had a good time trying to identify the faces of menical Christianity.’ A few and situation.’’ of J P HAUSER-“From 1902 to 1948 GEORGE A. MARTIN 一“Genial Arts show in Tampa・ ``with twenty-nine I was a missionary of our church in George’’has had a long fight with arth- clubs in compe咄on’One Of my black Mexico, ritis but he has not lost out. He and his and whites took the first award. I have Other hobbies planned for quiet times’if District Superintendent and later a professor in the Union TheoIogical Seminary ever such come to me, for my sIogan is: in Mexico City・ AIso Treasurer of the won some pnzes in血e Federation `Not to plan dying, but to die plaming!’” CHARLES G. GIRELIUS一“I have had very few contacts with members of the Class and that’ I suppose, is my Penalty for leaving the Methodist fold・ I became unhappy in the ministry and in 1912 I took up social work’first servmg the Russe11 Sage Foundation for a few months and then spending almost twelve a Part Of血at time being a Mission. Mrs. Hauser was engaged in many phases of missionary work. We have been home now three years and a half・ For the last two years we good wife came over to the meeting from nearby Dedham and with his gracious smile and high optimism George became the “life of the party.’’ EDWARD LAIRD MILLS一“I regret very much that other engagements have will preven七my foregathering with the had the high honor of starting a third bunch at Boston. I have missed the fel- Methodist Church in Sioux Falls, South lowship Dakota, known as `Asbury Methodist are of course Boston men around but Church.’” of the real old竜mers. There anybody who came out prlOr tO 1916 is C. C・ P. HILLER - “I have spent my life in Massachusetts since we were in regarded as pre-historic. Where does that drew me, however, and in 1925 I went Churches’nOt quite top grade, in general find us? I retired technically in April, 1943, but actually in September, 1950. The intervenmg yearS Were SPent in a into the Unitarian Denomination and have served Unitarian churches in Ells- OPmlOn Or Salary, but above the average. variety of interesting activities which in- I was Iong one of the Board of Massa- cluded the writing of a history of Mon- WOrth, Maine; Jamestown, New York; Chusetts Sunday SchooI Association and tana Methodism w址ch sold over 3,000 New Orleans, Louisiana; and Bamevald, President for a time. We had great con- copleS and produced a surplus of more New In Ventions. As a delegate I went to Zurich than?l,000o Three years were spent as my earlier life I served two Methodist to the World’s Sunday SchooI Conven- Minister of Marriage at F王rst Church’ Churches and one circuit in Mary量and and tion. I have had a happy聯e, en]Oyed Reno, Nevada・ During that time I per- a Presbyterian church in Williamsport, my pastorates and the District Superin- formed over 4,400 weddings. The in- Pennsylvania・ I have tried to do a few tendency. Mrs. Hi11er’s six years of in- come was well over $40,000. This was good deeds as a social worker, I have validism were tough but she was glorious. divided about equally between overhead PreaChed as we11 as I know how, and I have done some writing both in prose Since her gomg I have been quite well and gifts to Methodist mission work in Nevada. It cost $100 a year for altar years in child welfare work in New Jersey and Maryland・ The ministry still York, Where I am now servlng・ school. I have had some excellent and have been helping as opportunities 60 圏 o鮮ered. Still supply some, teaCh Sunday candles and $900 for the assorted litera_ for Wf]S Six months in healing. Am leavmg ture glVen tO the couples served・ Now I myself I must admit that my achieve- tonight for University of Pennsy量vania am happily married and living in Palo ments have not been what would be re_ Hospital in Philadelphia for special X-Ray treatment. Retired in 1947 and built a When any of you visit the West Coast, garded as illustrious unless perchance by myself・ Brie鱒y I might relate that my house looking out on the Blue Ridge drop in for a look-See and a talky-talk. active ministry since 1902 was∴SPent in Mountains・ Had expected to re址e from Park Avenue Presbyterian Church, New the pleasure of talking with Fred and three Amual Conferences, Viz., I11inois, CoIorado and Oregon. I asked to be loCated from the last Conference, in 1920, his wife on Sunday. They櫨ve in Allen- as I was not able to educate my children Dr. W. P. Merril and me, but Scar- town, Pennsylvania (819 North 18th in borough-On-Hudson begged me to preach Street). Old days and old incidents were hampered by impaired vision so natura11y there and stayed nine years. At 70 I was recalled. I took up the study of Optics and entered the practice of Optometry, and was pro- glVen final retirement. Give my love to all the 1902 men, WOuld delight to see Alto’the seat of Stanford University. Best wishes for a bi智time.’’ FRED M. McCONNELL-We had CHAS F. MOTT一``Hearty personal greetings to each one of you. Allow me to congratulate you on being privileged to attend the餅tieth anniversary of your FRANK that N. SANDIFUR一“As relation. A工ways I have been I have been looking forward to this date Wi血great expectations. With deep re- gret I find myself wholly unfit to meet the physical requlrementS Of such a ]Oumey. For seven weeks, OWmg tO a heart condition, I have been in the care Of our resident physician and much of that time in bed・ This工assure you is a them・ When I recover from this slege, I and gave my whole time to my practice hope to write them.” till 1947. It is a real source of joy to me A心o調書 0αr Depar書ed Broきろe7・S - that I continued in ac瞳ve Christian work Bishop Hartman tells us that Mr. and and o紐ered Mrs. C. D. ATKINS gave $85,000 to血e and taught Sunday SchooI classes except preached as opportunity TheoIogical School… ・ Mrs. Lula C. the last two years. I was married before Daniels writes that her husband, FRED I entered B'U.S.T. and my wife was a L. DAN量ELS9 PaSSed away on Novem- he工pmeet indeed・ After 53 years of mar- ber 24, 195l. He was 80 years o量d, ried Iife, She passed away on August 7’ ind had su任ered for years from a bad 1948・ I have three sons and one daughter’ heart‥ ・ aI=iving and married. I have ten grand- Minnesota I received this note -ROSS chiIdren.” From the University of L. FINNEY died Feb. 24, 1934‥ . b距er disappointment to me・ May you ALLEN A. STOCKDALE - Stockdale One and all enJOy a Weekend never to be had successful pastorates in Congregational churches in Boston, ToIedo, Rod- forgotten. We reJOICe in the bril工iant Avenue Churches were united and re址ed fessor of the same in two Optical Colユeges gradua宜on. I feel I owe an apoIogy for not being present myself・ For some years York Citv, When the Brick and Park and very successful ]eadership of Dr. Harold C. Case, the new President of gers Park’ Chicago, and Washington, Our beloved School. For six years, Mrs. been Dean of the Speakers Sta鮮of the D・ C. “For the last thirteen years I have Flewelling writes about HENRY H量N- DLE言`He was my roommate for two years. After about a year in the ministry he went to Puerto Rico to teach and to become an empIoye of the State Depart置 ment there and remained with them until his retirement. I met him in Los ̄Angeles MemoriaI Home Community founded by merchant J. C. Pemey in memory of his NationaI Association of Manufacturers. My special mission is an educational and inspirational one for a better understand- Since.’∴.. Mrs. Oliver Jacobson (Wini- PreaCher father and of his mother. Espe- mg Of the industria=ife of America and fred Halfyard) writes: “My father, Cially have we appreciated the wonderful better human and labor relations between SAMUEL associa宜ons and fellowships of this place; Management and Labor. The territory of December 8, 1948. I am sure my dad my work includes the entire United States and most of Canada. I retain my minis- WOuld have been the first one at your terial relations and credentials and preach in February’this year’in Florida. His Mo壮and I have greatly en]Oyed this missionaries from India, China, South America and Malay, aS Well as Christian in 1945, but have lost track of him HALFYARD9 PaSSed away reunion.” ‥. FRANK N. MINER died workers from all over the United States including four from B.U.S.T. God be frequently. I s瞳ll have the same lovely death came as a shock to all of us. He With you all till we meet sooわin that wife as when a student in old B.U.S.T. WaS a gOOd correspondent and always be壮er world where we shall 虹ve for_ We have ce冒ebrated our 53rd wedding hopeful・ The Michigan Chγ樹an Adoo- anniversary. I have one son, married and Cate Published an appreciative obituary. CHARLES T. MURDOCK - ``Byron 工iving in Lakewood, Ohio.’’ W九伽A心o暮lききhe Wわe$ W九o Weγe α書 WaS right when he said, `Dear is the CHARLES M. TIBBETTS一“My An- 重心e Re事ln言orl? - Mrs. Hartman, known SChool-boy spot we ne’er forget, though nual Conference will be in session during Commencement and that seems to have the first claim. I began preaching in as “The Bishop’s chau揮eur’” was the We are forgot・’ In regard to myself, I have had rather a checkered career. gracious hostess and made us all feel at home; Mrs. George Martin was most aト For over thirty years I was an itinerant, 1900, joined New Hampshire Conference tentive in carmg for her husband. Mrs. SerVmg POStS in and around Pi壮Sburgh, Folk, Who is interested with her husband Six years I was a solicitor for the Ch主l- in 1902. At the 1949 Conference I was retired by the law of the church but have COntinued to preach. Am preaching now dren’s Home of Pennsylvania and traveled in Merrimac, New Hampshire, Where I COnVerSation; Mrs. Girelius was deep量y the State, preaChing, 1ecturing and solicit- lived as a boy and joined the church, interes亡ed in every phase of the proceed- mg PrOminent people for funds. We suc- November l’ 189l・ Nothing startling, Which Conference I joined in 1902. For Ceeded in keepmg the doors of this institution open during the depression. It then had a record of over five thousand Children adopted into Christian homes. I want to live to be a hundred to see how the present crisis is gomg tO eVentuate. I have been married twice and both wives have gone into the Beyond・ I have two WILLIAM N. ROBERTSON and DWIGHT L. ROUSH-No word from these two boys. much to the occasion by her bright mgS; Mrs. Fred McConnell was a pleasant bu=ogether with my good pal, Ida B., COnVerSationalist; Mrs. Hauser, for 43 We have had a very happy life・ Sorry years with her husband in Mexico, WaS to miss seemg yOu Old boys but I am looking forward to the sixtieth anniverSary, When I hope to see you all!’’ EDMUND M. WYLIE - (letter dated the scribe to keep the reoord of the events. TH鰐 OTHER EVENTS OF CO殖財ENCE舶ENT J7EEK May 19, 1952) “Am writing from bed. Saturday, Luncheon-As soon as Have had my first experience in a hos- We had finished at the Wayside Inn, We Pital in my 74 years and ten months. Were driven to the new Theological daughters’both happily married and with families :’ in art and singlng in the choir, added Had an accident last October, WOrking School to enJOy a fine luncheon. The With heavy lrOn PIPlng here in our own Class of ’27 was also there and at the Place (`Glencroft: Tryon, North Caro- hour of speeches, We joined them・ They 1ina). Result, an infected limb. UIcer had as guests President Case’ Bishop 61 Booth, Dean Muelder, Dean Emeritus Baccalaureate Services - At 3:30 we Knudson and others. President,s Reception - At three attended these services in Boston Garden. a large auditorium over North Station. o’cIock we a廿ended the reception in “The It took nearly a half-hour for the fomal Castle,” the fine President’s home・ A procession of the faculties, the graduates’ the honored guests and the President・ great host of f正ends were there. Organ Recital - The recePtion was fo11owed by an Organ Recital in the beautiful Marsh Chapel with Samuel Walter at the organ. The semon by Dr. Case was a masterlv address. Graduation and that “He camot be overcome in his own world.” Fratema11y yours’ J P HAUSER 1925 _Professor FRANK A. LIND・ HORST of the College of the Pac絶c received the honorary degree of Doctor of Divinity at the College of Idaho’s Address-At lO:00 0n 62nd Commencement exercises recently. Monday we were agaln in Boston Garden Band Concert- Boston University 1926-The Rev. DAVID D. BROX and this time the place was more com- has been appointed Superintendent of the Band entertained us for half an ho平On “The Plaza.” PleteIy帥ed than on Sunday. The 2’485 Glens Falls District of the Troy Confer- “Alumni Banquet-This began at 5:30. There were some 600 present in the Commons. It was a lobster or beef menu・ The University colors of red and white abounded・ Mr. Nicholas Apalakis, President of the Alumni Association, Presided with great fitness. After various reports we were surprised to have our own Allen Stockdale called to the head table. He was glVen a medal for “meritorious Public Service.” The citation was a high compliment of the work Mr. Stockdale is doing・ He was called upon for a speech and rose to the occasion with feheitous remarks and apt stories. And then another surprlSe aWaited us -the awarding of the William Fairfield Warren Cup for Attendance. This came to our Class as we had the highest percent of attendance this year. As there were eight Of us of twenty-five living members’Our PerCent WaS 30.1; last year it was won by a class that had 20.5 and the year before that by 20 percent. So we felt pretty proud and a great shout went up as we received it. Do we have to wait another 雛ty years before we get it graduates with their coIorful caps and ence of the Methodist Church…. The gowns’required all the space of the main Rev. DOUGLAS P. COOLE writes that floor. The entire service was impressive・ his new address is Sibu, Sarawak, Bomeo. Dr. David E. Lilienthal gave a great ad- He and Mrs. Coole have been assigned as missionaries to Sarawak under the Meth- dress. Ten honorary degrees were conferred. It was most impressive to see the graduates march up to the platfom to receive their dipIomas. Conclusion - So ended three days of fe11owship and inspiration. To Bishop Memorial School. His previous asslgnments took him to India, Malaya and China. and Mrs. Hartman, tO Dr. and Mrs. Case, to Mr. Arthur Jemer, the Executive Sec- received a master’s degree in rehgious retary of the Alumni Association, and education from The Il鯖SchooI of The- to all others who helped in the program oIogy in Denver, CoIorado. of these days, We glVe Our hearty thanks. It was good to get together and talk over 1942-The Rev. JOHN DAVID ERB9 PaStOr Of the Park Avenue Method- 1927-LENORA MAY DRAIS has the old days. Our deep regret was that ist Church in Worcester, WaS reCently not all the twenty-five stalwarts could elected secretary of the New England Conference Board of Education of the be present. Let us pray for one another. Let us keep in touch with each other by fre- quent correspondence, eVen though it be Methodist Church. 1944-The Rev. and Mrs. DAVID by post cards. When an important event YOOST write that their daught料, Mary happens in your life, Please let Arthur Jane, WaS bom in Youngstown, Ohio’ Jenner, 808 Bay State Road, know and if COnVenient, Please send me a wordo Let us renew our faith that God is good, that he has a purpose for us here again叩 odist Church, and he wi11 assume the prlnCipalship of the Gerald Summers June 14, 1952, and《weighed nine pounds. 1952 - The Rev. DAVID H. BLACK" BURN, aSSistant minister of the Im- manuel Methodist Church of Waltham, The main address of the evenmg WaS and his wife, the former Ramona Slaughter, left for service in the Aleutian Islands by Dr" Abram L. Sachar, President of under the Methodist Mission Board fol- Brandeis University. It was a scholarly lowing their wedding June 21. address on present world tendencies and their solution. He placed emphasis on Sc九のoI of Laの SPiritual values. 1929 - Attomey LEWIS H. MILLER Sunday, June lst - We attended the of Brockton is one of three lawyers in momlng Service in Marsh Chapel・ Our the United States to be selected by血e Bishop Hartman led in a memorial prayer. American State Department to work in Chancellor Daniel L. Marsh, gaVe a Europe with representatives of westem tribute to the Alumni. President Case European nations in preparmg the ex- led in the dedication of the o鯖cers of 血e Alumni Association. It may be change code for commercial operations of between them and the United States. interest to know that Boston University 1947-Miss GIoria Augusta Miller has an alumni roll of lOO,000. Dean Franklin H. Littell preached a semon became the bride of DAVID BALCH WILLIAMS last June. on “A CIoud of Vitnesses.”虹was an impressive hour. We also visited the 1950-Miss Madeline I. Burke of Meditation Chapel and the Memorabilia Waltham became Mrs. B圏RNARD A. Room located on the lower leveI of the DELANEY, JR., Orl June 7 in Waltham. Chapel. They COngenial time with table conversations and no speeches.  ̄言直d. Note: Cup was awarded to All- University Class of 1902. Attendance PerCentage WaS 8l・6%.) in Sacra置 of Saugus and RICHARD BRABROOK WALSH, JR., O壬Lowe11. Following a wedding trip to Bemuda’血ey are makL書. Co?. JαC鳥§On J. Ho妨, L’29, Of Bγ00朗されe, for肌er U. S. α桝O耽eγ,九αS ing their home at 15 Irving Street, Worcester. beeれreわαSed fro肋のC訪e働あけαf書er 195l - BRADLEE M. BACKMAN is 重7 mo庇う彊of recα棚Seγ演ce. He加§ now a practicing attomey and is a靴ated γe弛rれed 轟の 最§ ねの βr耽 れ Bosかon. Wi血his father in Lynn. ‥ First Lieu一 62 、¥ ¥ home wedding date for Miss Patricia Bell Wyatt Faculty Club・ It was a most friendly and ¥ 、 their Class and those of ’27 were the invited fine luncheon in the Boston University ㌧= ∴¥ making mento, California‥ ・ . Apri1 19 was the guests of President and Mrs. Case at a 、¥ ¥ are Sunday Noon - The members of our tenant WILLIAM JOSEPH DOYLE has took as his bride last June the fomer been assigned to the Judge Advocate Sec- Miss Mary M. Baer of Worcester. tion of Headquarters First Army, Govemors Island, New York‥ ‥ S〇九oo夢of Ed棚ca枕心n Attomey FRANCIS H. LEBLANC of Gardner will take as his bride, October 4, Miss Ruth Parker, also of Gardner. 1952-Miss Barbara Wood of Hol_ yoke became the bride of ROBERT 1938-ARNOLD D. GREENE re_ Ceived his master’s degree in education at St・ Lawrence University in Canton, New Yo重k. 1941 -DOROTHY L. BACKUS re_ LOUIS HILL of West Sprin姉eld in Ceived a master of arts degree in educa- ApriI・ They are living in BrookHne. tion from Washington University on June ll. S〇九〇〇夢のf拙edきcされe 工945 - Mrs. ANNE KARLON KIB. 1943-Dr. JEAN C. AVERY of Framingham received a Master of Public Health degree at Harvard University last June. RICK’aSSistant professor of nursmg at Simmons College’WaS One Of two ap- POintments for a fellowship of the HarVard Foundation for the advancement of 1944-Dr. and Mrs. EDWARD L. leamlng and research・ She also holds a ZARSKY (LEONA NORMAN) amounce master’s degree from Columbia Univer- the birth of their first chi量d, a daughter, Sity・ Barbara Judith, bom February 24, 1952. 1948 -ELEANOR RUTH SEATON 1947 - Dr. and Mrs. WILLIAM FAR. RAR BROWN of Madison, Wisconsin, Of Edgewood, Rhode Island, has been a announce the birth of a son, Robert MacLeod, bom May 17, 1952. Mrs. Brown is the former Miss MARILYN MACLEOD, Mt/S’50. 1951 - Miss Constance Mary Phillips Of Uxbridge was married to Dr. GUY N. TURCOTTE of Lewiston, Maine, in May. ‥ . Miss Gloria DiTomasso of Evere壮 became Mrs. P. ANTHONY PENTA in St. Anthony’s church in Everet七last May. Dr. and Mrs. Penta are now making their home at l16 Woodlawn Street in Evere壮. 1952 - Dr. THOMAS F. S量LVA, JR., took as his bride in June the fomer Miss Nancy Gertrude Quigley. Following a Wedding trip to Bermuda the couple will make their home at Massachusetts Me_ morial Hospitals’86 E. Newton Street, Boston. 1955 - JOHN L. McVEY of Wobum Student at the Hartford TheoIogical Seminary, Where she is studying for the Bachelor of Divinity degree… ・ Miss Dr・ S香肋o事● D. Jo九nson,舶’23, is Sαper一 Phyllis E. Hamaway of Lynn became 訪われdeれ書of Lα煉れS意α‡e Ho$pおの れ Mrs. JAMES B. PARKS in Lym’s st・ Lα鳥わ, We§‡ V諒g香れさa. Patrick’s church last May 3. The couple honeymooned in Lake Placid, New York. HARRIET JANE PARSONS of Hyde ‥∴ ANTHONY F. KOZLOWSK量was Park became Mrs. Haro(1d Walter BIom_ awarded his master’s degree in educa- berg ]ast June. tion at the University of Southem Ca虹 195l-The marrlage Of Eleanor T. Gionfriddo and BRUNO R. DeMARCO, fomia this past sprmg. of both of New Britain, Connecticut, tOOk Arlington took as his bride the fomer Place on May 24… ・ Boston University’s 1949鵜RICHARD J. GRANT Miss Rose E. James of Milton. The wed- Daniel L. Marsh Chapel was the scene of ding took place at Camp Atterbury, In- the wedding of EL宣ZABETH A・ CHASE diana, Where he served as a field director of Sharon and WILLIAM F. READ of with the American Red Cross. Concord・ The wedding took place in 1950-Miss Rita Ann Kilgari任be- Came Mrs. CHARLES EDWARD SE. May… ・ Barbara Whiteman of Guilford, Comecticut, became Mrs. EDWARD T. NEY in April. Charles is a faculty SULLIVAN last April 19… ・ R重TA member at Williams Memorial Institute ANNE KING of Manchester, New Hamp- in New London, Connecticut. . Shire, became the bride of Dr. Frede正ck R. Maher last April… ・ BARBARA BOSQUET of Grafton and Walter Fletcher Tidman were married in May at West Congregational Church, Grafton. ‥. Miss AV量S ADELLA CARTER be_ Came the bride of Lieutenant Gregory G. Gebert in a candle虹ght service perfomed at the bride’s home in Bath, Maine, 1ast March. . . . LOIS SHEILA MARGIL Of Newton Highlands became Mrs. MelVin J. Sa量len last June at a double ring CeremOny Performed in the Statler Hotel. 1952 - Miss Margaret Kee of Malden, became Mrs. FRANK FAVORAT, JR., at Robinson Memorial Methodist Church, With Rev. Wi11iam Ogle o鯖ciating. Sc九oの夢of Soc香a夢Wor鳥 1939 - ASHTON M. TENNEY of Gardner received his M.A. degree from Clark University last June. He majored in psychoIogy. 1949 - Doris Moore Ambrose of Arlington became the bride of FREDERICK E. CURT量CE of Merrimac in KoreaれAmbαSSadoγ Yo職C九のn Yαれg,舶,22,壷轟のされの0撮れdedびe柁raれ§ Of沈e Koreα?3 Wαr α‡ Be拐e§da Hosp轟!. 63 May. They honeymooned in Bemuda, and are now residing in Boston. 1950 - CELIA S. LAIT was married Apri1 28 in Montrea宣, Canada, tO Dr. Leon Nemon. They are making their home in Portland, Maine. Sc九oo夢のf P撮め巌及e鴨の房ons and Co肋肋耽れ育ca枕0れ§ 1950 - GORDON GROLMS is work_ 1ng for the govemment in South America・ . ‥ BARBARA J. WINNE of Rexford, New York, reCeived her Master of Science ih Social Administration from the SchooI Of Applied Social Sciences at Westem Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio, 1ast June… ・ HENRY M. KEEZING has been named news editor of The E叩’e$$, a Thomaston, Comecticut, Weekly newspaper. . . E. ROY NEEVEN took as his bride on Easter Sunday 書ea肌ed掘s pa§書鋤肋肋er OOわ九α for肋er 、S加de巧Geoγge “Wooみ’’ O’Neil of A誼ngton. GEORGE GIL- Sわαn, P厭,5らof Wes書Bγα拐eboγ0, Ver耽o所,心のpreseれ厄α §eγie§ Of LESPIE? a Classmate of Roy’s’WaS besヒ “Freedo肋Fes轟αi§,,香れ財のSSaC九蘭§e請$ 轟の紗鵬Ieα加r訪g 重心e sめγies of man. . . . Mr. and Mrs. JOHN J. dこsp夢aced persons, nO撮)闘香れg九ere, aれd ofわαd訪告か肋肌SpeOpわ孤九o書調 are former making Ame S弛れeγ A. D青柳oれd, Bos桝on U耽れer諦γ αSS轟a融 pγOfe§SOr Of γαdさo, E量izabeth AZIZ the their home at 6-A 九o関白見eγ九at)e九eわed書見e ca鵬e Of A肋e『3can万eedom. Webster Street in Nashua, New HampShire, followmg their wedding trip to Colorado. John is with the Sears, Roe- graduation exercises May 80 at the buck Management Training System・ American Institute for Forelgn Trade at Thunderbird Field, Phoenix, Arizona. 195l -ARTHUR D. DURGIN, JR., WaS reCently promoted to the rank of Air- 1952-DAVID LEWIS has joined man Second Class. ‥ . Miss CeIestine the Press ReIations section of血e pub置ic Louise Doran became the bride of H. PAIGE BASSFORD in April. NICHOLAS E. ONORATO has joined reIations department for the Borden Com- the teaching sta任at Becker Junior Col- Grad棚aめSc九oo重 Pany in New York City. lege in Worcester. Nick completed his master’s degree requlrementS at Clark University last Spring・ He is living with his wife Betty and son Gary at 62 Wellington Street, Worcester… ・ KERMIT G・ TURLEY of Mimeapolis received a Bachelor of Foreign Trade degree in in Korea and has been asslgned to the 5th Regimental Combat Team, aCCOrding to word received at the Alumni O鯖ce. In舶emoria肋 Lieutenant HILDRETH L. PAYNE, PR’49, an Associated Press Newsman, WaS killed in a plane collision over Japan in June. He leaves his wife and two chiL 1943 - MARGUERITE G. MAN. NING writes that she is in her sixth year dren. Word was received of the death of on the sta任of the Riverside Church, New EL量ZABETH K賞MBALL KENDALL, York, aS aSSistant to the minister in charge 97, PrOfessor emeritus of history at Of religious education・ Wellesley College. She died in England・ 1944-Dr. C. MILO CONNICK, Chaiman of the department of religion at Whi咄er College, WaS reCently elected Vice-PreSident of the Na瞳onal Association of Biblical Instructors (Pacific Coast Section ). She was a graduate of the University’s SchooI of Law in 1892. LISIMACO MONI, L’25, died in May at his home in Providence. He was 57. Dr. ELIZABETH H量RST, M’上8, Of Melrose died at her home in June a庇er a 1945-Mr. and Mrs. Frederick C. Figenbaum of West Roxbury amounce the mamage Of their daughter, MURIEL CONSTANCE FIGENBAUM, tO Mr. Walter Philip Drinkwater Robinson of Belvedere, Kent, England, On March 15, brief illness. She was 61, and had prac- ticed medicine in Melrose for 87 years. Rev. DAVID H. HICKEY9 T’」0, PaStOr of the Robinson Memorial Methodist Church in Boston for six years’died at 丁ohn Adams Veterans’Hospital in Chelsea 1952. last June. E章樹毒喝Co鵬ge of Co肋肋eγCe Mrs. FLORENCE WASHBURN JEWETT, Ed’27, died in June at her home in 1941 - STEPHEN P. TURKE, 88, Of Milton, general manager of the Davidson Rubber Company of Charlestown, died Ju量y 3 at the Peter Bent Brigham Hospital・ 1947鵜Gordon Chapel of the Old Pittsfield public schooIs for 17 years, WaS ki11ed in Bowling Green, Ohio, While ding scene of Miss Evelyn Lorraine Law- motoring home to visit her mother. Mrs. Tucker are making their home aヒ §iaが訪N“ひYor鳥. Mrs. ANTO量NETTE RUBERTO PET- South Church, in Boston, WaS the wed- TUCKER, JR., Of Reading. Mr. and ioこれed 調は∴鰹orde鵬 P暮`b枕c 舵e庇われ§ She had conducted a private school and also taught music. RONELLA, Ed’3J, a teaCher in the son of North Quincy and WILL置S F・ Da演d L. Leのきs, GC,48/PR’50,九の§ Vero Beach, FIorida, after a long illness. 249 Wobum Street, Reading. 1953 (Ex) -Private FRANCIS G. FREDELLA of Medford recently arrived 64 DR. HERMAN P. GROSSMAN, M,27, Chief surgeon of the department Of ophthalmoIogy at Charles V. Chapin and Miriam Hospitals in Providence’died after a short i]lness at his home in June. He was 52. BOSTON UNIVERSITY ALUMNI ASSOCIATION COMMITTEES 1952。53 EαeC棚虎ひe Co肋肋拐ee GENERAL OFFICERS : PγeSidel諦 Nicholas E. Apalakis, B’81, 50 Oliver Street, Boston Vdc e-Pタ・esさd e庇s Dr. Frank E. Barton, M’24, 29 Bay State Road, Boston BOSTONIA ADVISORY COUNCIL Miss Esther M. Clement, A’24, 16 Exeter Street, Boston Dr. Royal M. Frye, A’11, ll Whitcomb Street, Belmont Miss Marie Farre11, Sar,47, 155 Hillside Road, Watertown Mrs. Priscilla White, Sar,83, 84 Trowbridge Street, Arlington Miss Jane Donovan, P’45, 25 Bay State Road, Boston Thomas H. Fitzpatrick, B’27, 27 SchooI Street, Boston Miss Jean Kelley, P’47, 55 Eliot Crescent, Chestnut Hil】 David Lavien, L’29, 27 State Street, Boston Rev. Norman L. Porter, Th,46, Greenwood Memorial Church, Dorchester Tl・easurer E・ Ray Speare, A’94, 755 Commonwealth Avenue, Brighton E崇eCt〆るt)e Secγe細rg Miss Johanna Dwyer, Nurs’51, 822 St. Paul Street, Brookline Mrs. Ruth Fox Bettencourt, B,30, 8 Lewis Road, Belmont Hon. Judge Augustus Loschi, Law,12, 53 State Street, Boston Dr. Thomas A. Kelley, M’29, 52 Central Street, Somervi11e Arthur E. Jenner, A’27, 308 Bay State Road, Boston Recordわog Secγetoγg Mrs. Margaret K. Welch, P’26, 1999 Commonwealth Avenue, Brighton CHRISTMAS SING: Anthony Tercyak, Mus’50 ( Chairman), SchooI Dpt., Waterv王lle, Maine U)rわe短句Pre$;de海 Dr. Harold C・ Case, T’27, 755 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston Mrs. Marion Parsons, A’20, 20 Second Street, Medford Miss Ruth Annis, E’41, 851 Winthrop Avenue, Revere C. Emerson Fox, Jr., M’34, 255 The Great Road, Bedford Emil Hartl, T,81, 27 Wheeler Street, Boston Arthur Antonopoulos, B’50, 242 Princeton Boulevard, Lowe11 宝書誌謹詣鴇端整鰐#窪寺結語hBedford) co-Chairmen Dr. Royal M. Frye, A’ll, 11 Whitcomb Street, Belmont F. Glenn Rink, B’85, 240 Park Square Building, Boston Miss Jean Kelley, P’47, 55 Eliot Crescent, Chestnut Hi11 ALUMNI AWARDS : C. Emerson Fox, Mus’84, 255 The Great Road, Bedford Mrs. Priscilla White, S,33, 17 Hatfield Road, West Newton Rev・ William Ogle, T’46. 19 Cottage Street, Cambridge Stuart Good, A’50, 219 Commonwealth Avenue, Chestnut Hill F. Glem Rink, B’85, 240 Park Square Building, Boston Miss Laura Campbell, P’31 (Chairman), 18 Oakley Road, Watertown C. Emerson Fox, Jr., M’34, 255 The Great Road, Bedford Philip Sherman, Esq., L’21, 40 Court Street, Boston Dr. Kenneth Christophe, M,28, 1101 Beacon Street, Brookline James Cronin, E’24/81, Lincoln Junior High School, Malden Howard J. Parad, SW’48, 11 Charlemont Street, Medford Miss Kathleen A. Plummer, S’26, 190 Williams Street, E. Lynn Miss Eunice D. Johnson, N’46, 877 Amo1d Street, New Bedford Anthony C. More11a, Jr., GE’50, 88 Monmouth Street, E. Boston David Brickman, B’81/82, 119 Wyman Street, Medford Rev. Wilbur C. Ziegler, T,46, Cliftondale Methodist Church, Saugus Alexander Welch, Esq., L’86, 47 Larchmont Avenue, Waban Olive MacPherson, G’38, 367 Medford St., Somerville Miss Dorothy Anderson, A’88, 86 Mason Road, Swampscott Dr. William F. Croskery, M’27, 1101 Beacon Street, Brookline Arthur Antonopoulos, B’50, 242 Princeton Boulevard, Lowell Miss Ruth E. Annis, E’41, 851 Winthrop Avenue, Revere Anthony Tercyak, Mus’50, SchooI Department, Waterville, Maine Miss Elma G. Bidwell, SW’44, 21 Temple Street, Boston Leo Sherry, L’24, 18 Tremont Street, Boston Miss Olive L. Nelson, N’46, 25 Deaconess Road, Boston Dr. Ensio K. F. Ronka, M’27, 125 Sherman Road, Chestnut Hill S. Robert Rowe, PR’49, 7 W. 87th Street, New York, N. Y. Miss Ida Johnston, E’42, 1 Newport Street, Cambridge Mrs. FIorence M. Petherick, G’45, 8 Garrison Street, Boston Miss Priscilla Hayden, SW,48, 27 Chester Street, Newton Highlands Richard C. Underhill, PR,51, 870 Linden Street, We11esley ALUMNI FUND: Dr. Frank Barton, M’24, 29 Bay State Road, Boston William L. Sullivan, G’52, 20 Darius Court, Boston MEMBERSHIP COMMITTEE : Mrs. Edna Kelleher, A’41, 68 River Road, Brookline Miss Constance Albanese, GE’50, 164 Hudson Street, Somervi11e Dr. Royal M. Frye, A’1l, 11 Whitcomb Street, Belmont Dr. Royal Frye, A’ll, 11 Whitcomb Street, Belmont Miss Esther M. Clement, A’24, 16 Exeter Street, Boston Willard Lombard, L’11, 18 Tremont Street, Boston F. Glenn Rink, B’85, 240 Park Square Building, Boston Miss Margaret Lanigan, A’27, 2161 Dorchester Avenue, Dorchester Mrs. Charles Wyke, B,35, 82 Brooks Road, Quincy Dr. Emil Hartl, T’36, 27 Wheeler Street, Bo§tOn Miss Jean Kelley, P’47, 55 Eliot Crescent, Chestnut Hill Miss Ruth Setterberg, 84 Ash Street, Cambridge Miss Helen Burns, P’89, 14 Devens Street, Charlestown C. Emerson Fox, Mus’34, 255 The Great Road, Bedford ALUMNI COMMITTEE ON ATHLETICS: Mrs. Eugene FIoyd, Mus’89, 226 Bay State Road, Boston . Rev. William Ogle, T’46, 19 Cottage Street, Cambridge Rev. Otis R. Fischer, T’34, First Methodist Church, Temple Street, Boston 油 措 乱 丁 - David Lavien, L’29, 27 State Street, Boston Philip Sherman, Esq., L’21, 40 Court Street, Boston Arthur Antonopoulos, B’50, 242 Princeton Boulevard, Lowell G. Joseph Tauro, Esq., L’27, 15 Bradlee Avenue, Swampscott Joseph Patemo, B’34, 32 Fairmount Street, Salem William LeVan, PR’50, 31 Abbott Road, Wellesley Hills Dr. Ronald W. Adams, M’8S, 182 Homer Street, Newton Center George Abodeely, E’85, 890 Main Street, Worcester Dr. Kenneth Christophe, M’28, 1101 Beacon Street, Brookline Arthur Boyle, E’50, 20 Adams Street, Charlestown James Cronin, E’24/3l, Lincoln Jr. High SchooI Miss Ida M. Johnston, E’42, l Newport Street, Cambridge David Winnick, B‘36, 41 Engremont Road, Brookline Howard J. Parad, SW’48, 11 Charlemont Road, Medford Anthony Tercyak, Mus’50, SchooI Department, Watervi11e, Me. Miss Eleapor Lehman, SW’47, 894 Bowdoin Street, Dorchester Edward F. Flynn, Esq., L’16, 18 Tremont Street, Boston Miss EunlCe D. Johnson, N‘46, 877 Amold Street, New Bedford Anthony C. More11a, ]r., GE’50, 88 Monmouth Street, E. Boston Miss Margaret E. LeTourneau, N,46, 128 Flash Road, Nahant William Whelton, B’38, 127 Anerton Road, Milton David Brickman, B’32, 119 Wyman Street, Medford Stuart Good, A’50, 219 Commonwealth Avenue, Chestnut Hill Carroll Hills, 711 Boylston Street, Boston Alden Cooley, A’88, 85 Temple Street, W. Newton O!ive MacPherson, G’38, 867 Medford Street, Somerville Edson G. Waterhouse, T,28, 92 Aubum Street, Watertown Virginia Brigham, G’45, 15 Bellevue Road, Belmont Dr. Thomas Kelley, M’89, 384 Boylston Street, Boston Miss Marguerite Holmberg, P,86? 616 Watertown Street’Newtonville Mrs. M. K. Henders9n, S’33, Buttonwoods, Wrentham Miss Margaret Lannlgan, A’27, 2161 Dorchester Avenue, Dorchester Miss Olive Nelson, N’46, 25 Deaconess Road, Boston STUDENT ÅLUMNI RELATIONSHIP : David Lavien, L’29 (Chairman), 27 State Street, Boston William L. Sullivan, G’52, 20 Darius Court. Boston Willard G. Moran, L’29, 66 Pearl Street, Melrose CENTURY CLUB : Raymond DeSautels, B’49, 40 Fairmount Street, Dorchester Ricnard Lombard, B’82, l18 Conant Road, Weston Judge Emma Fall Schofield, A’06 (Chail.man), 26 Beacon Street, Boston Deme,trius Pilalis, B’89, 6 Bayberry Road, Hingham Victor Stout, B’82, 832 Bay State Road, Boston Dr. Kenneth Christophe, M,28, l101 Beacon Street, Brookline Joseph Krohn, L’27, 26 Alton Court, Brookline Richard C. Underhill, PR’51, 370 Linden Street, Wellesley MAGAZINE PROJECT COMMITTEE : Miss Dorothy Anderso-1, A,88. 36 Mason Road, Swampscott Richard C. Underh組l, PR,5l> 870 Linden Street, Wellesley Lawrence D. Bridgham, G’48, 55 Park Dr工ve, Boston SENIOR BREAKFAST : Arthur Antonopoulos, B’50, 242 Princeton Boulevard, Lowe11 Stuart Good, A’50, 219 Commonwealth Avenue, Chestnut Hill CONSTITUTION : Dr. Emil Hartl’L,81, 27 Wheeler Street’Boston Paul Liacos, A’50, Sparrow Lane, Peabody Mrs. Marion Parsons, A’20, 20 Second Street, Medford Nancy Popkin, P’50, 114 FIoral Street, Newton Highlands William Sullivan, G’52, 20 Darius Court, Boston Irene Roman, P’50, 9 Stanley Street, Dorchester Willard Lombard, L’11) ll Whitcomb Street, Boston  ̄蹄毛頭蒔 き敦謡焉r 諾裏 罫注記寒搬な㌢ も は〇〇〇回 音ふ、、埴 LET,S 〇 一 0 Go _0 _0 - 0 -O ALUMN工!! 0 寡 e 1 さ勅あ定s〆」蜘〆n iんe αeer 0 書 ⑲宅Ce a立a定n一 書 0 皿O剛園田CO聞音量NG 1 案 e L 用地reI 0 書 Oe七①由e甘3量, NoveⅢ阻めe着工,碧 1 0 e 書 耶肥Gr己d Bα枕めげまわe椛ar Be勅eeれ l e醐隅胴囲珊鵬量冊,=弧珊鵬脚川棚附蝿馳棚田隙脚醐 I e FRIDAY yOUR PROGRA拙 e 量 e O 2:30-At #羊霊宝書芸蕊‡r Pups wi量l take on the gridders of Admiral Billard Academy of 1 1認二艶話等謹叢話話語蒜輩器器量謹諾諾○ 害二:;霊‡謹謹呈霊::霊:詰霊宝三宝霊宝霊宝蒜 and Mrs. Harold C. Case. Tickets by ReseI.Vation Only. 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