Boston University OpenBU http://open.bu.edu BU Publications Bostonia 1940 Bostonia. Volume 14 Marsh, Daniel L. Boston University Boston University. Bostonia: The Boston University Alumni Magazine, volume 14, number 1-10. 1940-1941. Archived in OpenBU at http://hdl.handle.net/2144/19534. http://hdl.handle.net/2144/19534 Boston University The Boston University Alumni Maggrai旦e∴量端弼 もぎ璃簿盟主_組駐 旺 FOⅢ, MAX題MUM USEFULN圏SS 題N NA音量ONA器 D細田細NS圏 ⅢⅢA量N I重電Ⅱ賞ND鵬鵬AWN 細田rO寒案meⅢtS foI? the C量ass o宣1945 PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT and the O鯖cials in charge of the National Defense Program emphasize the importance of university training previous to entering the land’Sea) and air forces of the nation. ALUMNI OF BOSTON UNIVERSITY have a grand opportunity of giving service of value to students of high standing, tO Alma Mater) and to the nation by directing prospective members of the ClaE叩f 1945 to the Department of Boston Universitv best餌ed to glVe them training for National SerVlぐe. SCHOOL OF EDUCAT重ON COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS ÅND GRADUÅTE SCHOOL In the field of BioIogy - bioIogical technicians, entomoIogists, and research workers. In the field of Chemistry - 1aboratory technicians and research chemists. In the field of Physicstraining m electricity) dynamics) radio) Photog- raphy, and ba11istics. In Geology and Geography - training for meteoroIogistsJ and in other fields` having bearmg On aViation) and map making・ Training in Goverpment and political science,誓 we11 as training m Economics・ Training m Teachers who will make education a vital force for the perpetuation of democracy. Directors and Coaches for physica】 education and recrea- tional sports. SARGENT COLLEGE OF PHYSICAL EDUCATION Women trained to be physiotherapists, also teachers and leaders in health development and physical education, reCreational work, and camp craft. SCHOOL OF MED重CINE Modem Languages now so essential for international rela,tions. COLLEGE OF BUSINESS ÅDMIN重STRÅTION Skilled medical practitioners, teChnicians, and laboratory assistants, nOW needed as never before, training for preventive medicine, hospital administration, and the teaching of nurses. Pre-medical training at the College of Liberal Art纏. Students prepared as business executives’and PrOducもion managers, also trained in merchandismg, marketing, aCCOunting’COSt COntrOl, business SCHOOL OF LAW Law students of today are the public servants of tomorrow. Men and women with legal tr8,in- staもistics, ]Oumalism’mOdem languages’radio 1ng are SOught by the Federal Bureau of In- writing and advertising, mili七ary science and VPStigation and other federal and state agen- tactics, and forelgn trade. The Reserve O伍cers’ cleS. Many of our graduates are servlng On the Training Corps, OPen tO a11 men in the Universi七y, makes it possible for s七udents to廿ain for amy service while continulng their studies. Upon completion of cour9eq in military science, draft boards under the Selective Service Act. Lawyers are required for the protection of the rights of people in peace and in war・ students may be commlSSIOned Second Lieu- COLLEGE OF PRACTICAL ARTS tenants in the O鯖cers’Reserve Corps, Army of AND LETTERS the United States. Women trained as dieもitians, PerSOmel workers, O鯖ce managers, bookkeepers, and secre- SCHOOL OF SOCIAL WORK AND COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ÅRTS Red Cross workers, SOCial group workers, psychiatric social workers, and leaders in Community organization. もaries. AIso training in the Modem Languages. SCHOOL OF THBOLOGY Training of chaplains and the development of moral and spiritua=eaders equlPPed to become creators and conservers for all walks of life. Bookht entitled白OPPORTUNITIES FOR COLLEGE GRADUATES TO PREPARE FOR MAXIMUM USEFULNESS IN NATIONAL DEFENSE,, may be obtained on request from the President,s O鱗ce, 688 Boylston Street, Boston, Massachusetts. BOSTON工A The Boston Universlty Alumni Magazine Subscription $l.00 per year Single copies 15 cents VOLUME XIV ' NUMBER 8 IN THIS ISSUE O MAY, 1941 Cover: Boston University’s student Pilots - Pムotograpムedめ7 Hbrbert F. M匂γerS, ’41. TABLE OF CONTENTS Paきe Professor Augustus Howe Buck, WI斑am 庇ねでs五a〃W料でen………………言・ 3 Augustus Howe Buck Scholarships. … … … 7 Boston Universityタs Student Pilots, H6rbert F.Mtッers‥‥.‥‥‥‥‥‥‥‥‥‥‥ BostonUniversityTrustees… … … … …. 9 Boston University May Music Festival … … 10 Boston university Law SchooI Association AnnualDinner…………………‥ 11 ThePermanent O飴cersofthe Classof1941 ‥. 14 Boston University Club ofRhode Island… … 17 Friends ofthe College ofLiberal Arts Library. 19 CommgEvents……………………… 24 My Ninetieth Year, DanIel Dorcムester… ‥ 25 InMemoriam………………………. 26 UniversityNotes……………………. 28 Edito富 EXECUTIVE ALUMNI SECRETARY Associate Editor ADMINISTRATION TOWER MURIEL VIOLA NOYES At the center of the Boston University Campus Published monthly from October to July indusive by the BosTON UNrvERSITY ALUMNI AssocIAT重ON Editorial O鯖ce’eO Beacon Street, Boston, Massachusetts. Entered as second class matter, at the Post O岱ce’Boston, Massachuselts, under the Act of March 3’1879. Title registered in U. S. Patent O鯖ce. Copyrigh七, May’1941・ by the Boston University Alumni Association. Will stand a replica ofthe tower of St・ BotoIph,s Church of Boston, England, a節ectionately known as the 白Old Boston Stump”. St・ BotoIph,s Church dates from the time of the Norman Conquest. PROFESSOR AuGUSTUS HowE BucK December 9, 1895 - Apri1 15, 1917 Professor Augustus Howe Buck WILLIAM MARSHALL WARREN the men and women who knew Professor Buck as ∪霊r藍蒜霊器i韮苦等豊島瑞 0芋 near量y e音ighty years ago; the second, a German whom he married in Germany, died in 1917. His son who honored him through unselfish energy of character, died as an eIderly man in 1933・ When Professor Buck was appointed as the first professor in Boston University College of Liberal Arts in 1873, he was a重ready thirty-SeVen yearS Of age, and indeed eight years older than the President of the University・ Professor Buck, aS from the firs=he senior nineteenth year, 1845, after studies without a teacher, he entered Amherst College, Which had been chartered in his own birth-year. He seems to have worked his way; and his course was interrupted・ According to Professor Coit’s account, he could take little more than half his COllege course jn actual attendance, and did not complete his A.B. requ重rementS unti1 1853, eight years after en- tering・ On the other hand, brief accounts compiled bv Students for early issues of拘e BeαCO?} and the College Of Liberal Arts annual called rんe H毒b, Say that he re- Ceived the degree of A.B・ in 1850 and the A・M. degree in PrOfessor’WaS known to his Junior colleagues, through 1853. From a search in contemporary catalogues and thirty years, mOre aS the man he then was than as the registers of alumni, it wouId appear thaもin fact Professor youth he had beep. Moreover he never talked much of his own past’Pra量SeWOrthy as it was. No wonder, then, tha=oday we have but meager knowledge of him through the years before his appointment to the College. Our most detailed sources of information about his early ]ife seem to be a page in the Biographical Record Of Amherst Co11ege Alumni 18Ql-1871 and an article writ_ ten soon after his death by his colleague, Professor JudsoII B. Coit, Published in Bo8tonわ, June, 1917. Because Professor Buck died in Germany m War time, the cabled message of his death was delayed, and the public obituary notices were brief. Augustus Howe Buck was bom December 9, 1825, in 乎Substantial home in North Ki11ingly, nOW Called Pu七nam, m the northeasterly comer of Connecticut. The reglOn is hilly; and the picturesque Quinebaug River, COurSing down toward New London’WaS already a鮮ording water POWer tO a long sequence of woolen and cot七on mills. Bu七Professor Buck,s diligent boyhood was nei七her in Buck spent one year, 1845-1846, and later one winter term, in Amherst Co11ege, and that he received from the College the degree of A.B. in 1853, nOt because he had COmPleted in class the usual four-year COurSe Of study but because by his own work’in this country and abroad, he had completed more than the equivalent. The College listed him in two ways: amOng the men recelV量ng honorary degrees’and among the graduates in the class Of 1849-an early examp賞e of class ass重gnmentバas of Some twenty years later Amhers七College gave him the degree of M.A. rんe GeneγαZ Oαさめgue of Amherst College 1821-1905 records the A・B. as granted in 1853, and the M.A. in 1875. Ye七in the Boston Universi七y Year Book for 1874, Professor Buck’s name has after it the degree A.M. and no one who knew him can believe he WOuld ever claim an honor before it had been awarded. He made his first visi七to Europe in 1850-5l. It was a busy absence of seven months, With a total outlay of three hundred do11ars・ On New Year,s Day, 1852, he married mill nor in shop‥ he grew up on one of those boulder- Miss Chloe Lindley Perry, a fellow-teaCher; She died in StreWn fams tha七have developed for thousands of New 1863, Ieavlng One SOn, Henry. Eng量anders strong wrists and shoulders, a Sturdy back, In August, 1853, Professor Buck, then master of Hopkins Academy in Hadley, the older town from which an unconquerable self-reliance・ and an unquestionmg regard for facts; Often’tOO, a deep desire for the etemal intangibles that are acquired no七with muscle but with mind and heart. The growmg boy had one broもher and two sisters. For a year he studied with a specia量teacher, a Clergyman who brought him’nOt ye七in his ’teens, through the twelve books of Vergi賞,s Aeneid・ This experience of e鯖ciency may have led to his own later teaching of boys, three or four at a time, While soJOum重ng in Europe. He attended two rural academies’One Of them, Quaboag Seminary’in Warren’Massachusetts; tWO termS in one, One in the other. He liked the Greek grammar. In his Amhers七had been set o鮮, WaS aPPOin七ed mas七er, mean- 1ng headmaster’Of the Roxbury Latin Schoo賞, founded in 1645・ After Mrs・ Buck,s death in April’1863, he spent two years on leave of absence in Europ?’Studying on his own account and teaching four Amer量Can boys. In 七his stay abroad he married Louisa C. Mehlbach, a German woman of the bes七type. In July’1867, he went again to Europe for two years; this time with three boys as pupils. The winter of 186970 he taught in the high school at Amherst, but because Of some throat ailment he moved to We量lesley, Which then was a part of Needham’a tOWn famed throughout Page Tんγee . Massachusetts for the health of its inhabitants. Here the human race; himself essentially alert, truth-1oving, he bought a pleasant estate on the main highway runnmg kindly and devou七. Being a11 this modestly, and doing easterly from Wellesley Square. His land was bounded On One Side by a zlgZaggmg brook, aS I know ye11, having in 1886 as a Junior in Professor Coit’s course m surveymg helped to measure and pIo七the property. His home, With Mrs. Buck’s genial aid, he made a place of warm hospitality. In Oc七ober, 1870 he was appointed to a mastership m his work with full sense of responsibili七y, Professor Buck rounded out a long life of action and revealed the best elemen七s of American manhood. In appearance Professor Buck was noticeable. As persons on the street when Phillips Brooks had met and passed them, WOuld tum to Iook back at him, SO eVen S七rangerS tOOk notice of Professor Buck. His fra聖e Greek and Latin (1ater wholly in Greek) a=he Boston WaS.POWerful withou七being ponderous・ His bearlng Public Latin Schoo萱, then on Bedford S七reet. With two ⅥγaS lmPreSSive without a hint of pompousness. His gait COlleagues, Gardner and Gay, he edited two Latin WaS quick; he seemed no=o know how to Ioi七er; he was textbooks. always upon the King’s business and in though七ful haste. Itwas in 1873 that he accepted the call to Boston He was strong in hand and arm; his shoulders recalled University. He had the dis七inction of conducting the first to his friends the years when his hold had steadied the Class exercise in the openmg College of Liberal Ar七s. PIow lurching through a stony furrow. When the public began to value the summer advan- Professor Buck’s face was of right design for his phy- もages of our New England ocean shores, Professor Buck slque,-Well proportioned, OVal, nO feature pinched or bought or built at HyamlSPOr七On Cape Cod a square OVergrOWn. It was framed, SO tO SPeak, by the trimly CO七tage Wi七h two stories and a tower. It stood on q CrOPPed hair a七his rounded temples, and by the short the harbor but also an unbroken sky-1ine circle, from beard so shaven back at the edges as to free his face almost wholly; his cheeks, his firm, SenSitive m?uth, and knoll-tOP COmmanding not only the little village an。 Chatham Lights and Monomoy to Martha’s Vineyard his s七rongly modelled chin, Were a′1l clear to vleW. His and the wooded hills on Buzzard’s Bay. La七er Profess?r nose was well shaped. His eyes, gray-blue, Seemed his Buck sold the cottage to one of my bro七hers-in-law; lt own affair, like a millionaire’s priva七e o餓ce. They were became the summer centre for members of our half-dozen not set in cavems, like Webster’s or Beethoven’s, nOr families, and here for many years the first President of Were they over-large for their sockets: they seemed Boston University, an un七i工・ing sal七-Water SWimmer, en- merely hones七, friendly eyes, Suited to all good uses, SuCh as JOyed his summer home. hin七ing the pow9r behind a decision, reading small German In 1901, tWenty-eigh七years after Professor Buck’s ap- type or scannlng the Seven Stars and Orion abovc the midnigh七pro創e of this ro11ing earth. The well-fitted pointmen=o the Chair of Greek, he ceased his teaching・ Af七er a year of sabbatic absence in Europe he was ap- POinted Professor Emeritus of Greek. In 1907, With Mrs. Buck, he wen=o Germany for perma.nen七residence. Like Paul,s friends a七Miletus we sor- rowed, fearmg We Should see his face no more. In his ninety-SeCOnd year, and in the third year of hardship brought by the World War, Professor Buck died, April 15, 1917. His grave, Which Professor Bruce has found to be well marked, is in Rostock, an Old Hanseatic city On the Baltic, Where, aS in K6nigsberg, far七her east, an ancient universi七y looks ouもover an ever busy waterfront. As we sweep these bare facts wi七h a reflective glance, gold-rimmed spec七acles never seemed obtrusive. After the early fashion of Professor Buck’s generatiep, his apparel was rather of the old school, Plain but seml- formal. He wore regularly a full-Skirted black coat, reaching well toward his knees, and containing an ample POCket in the left rear skirt. This “Prince Albert’’cut of coat served him, aS many a Clergyman, On Stric七]y formal occasions. His neckties were just that, and black; never a Windsor, an Ascot, Or a four-in-hand. I camo七 recall any sight of him in shoes or Oxfords; he used the lacingless footwear then known as gentlemen’s fine boots. Only as style finally altered, did he cease to wear the tall silk hats commonly ca11ed “beavers’’. We Surely must see tha=hey outline one of New England’s WOrthies七types of human life. They tell the story of a strong man, bom of good family; trained in boyhood, 1ike Horace’s ideal soldier, in toil on a rugged farm; eager and encouraged by his elders to sもudy the bes=ha=he Greeks and Romans knew and felt and wrough七;’able to geもfor himself an education he had no means of buying; marry重ng a fellow-teaCher, and aga工n a WOmanly German; bury重ng a little daughter in Germany, a dis七ant land in those days, but a land that after that could never seem far away; rearmg a SOn WOrthy of his ances七ry; teaChing, year upon year, neVer meChanically, but in the spiri七of His voice was丑exible, aS a teaCher’s ought to be, and his enuncia七ion, eVen Of niceties in French, WaS dis七inct and accurate, With no tmge Of a鮮ec七ation. In his pho七o- graphs, look at the mouth: the handsome lips are those Of a clear speaker. When he, in his tum, COnducted the mommg Chapel service, his strong voice was always Iowered in pitch, aS if he sもood in awe a七the heavenly throne. Pictures of Professor Buck, Whether made by brush or 9amera, Seem tO be few・ An enlarged photograph・ hangmg in the o鯖ce of the Faculty’s Committee on Professor the living tru七h; always studying, nOt merely that he Augustus Howe Buck Scholars, is deservedly praised for migh七teach o七hers, but also that in himself he might its resemblance. The frontispleCe in the June issue of reach a fuller manhood; taking no pride in his own spe- Bo8わniα, 1917, pePrOduces in half-七One a gOOd cabine七 CeSS but quietly helping others to succeed; POSSeSSmg and usmg Within himself the wisest and noblest thoughts Plate appears in the Commit七ee’s pamphle七recording ap- Writ七en for mankind in ancient and modem days; at I)Ointments from the income of the Fund from 1917 to Photograph showmg the head and shoulders. A similar home in ei七her hemisphere; COunting himse量f into this 1928. The earlier issues of rんe Hub, When it Yas the astounding sum of ha距blind mul七i七udes that we call Co11ege’s annual, Show diminu七ive cuts or drawlngS Of Pαge Foαγ Professor Buck; rんe Beaco仇has one, in June, 1890; these been in schooIs for boys. It was wi七h boys tha七he had are rather unsatisfactory・ Perhaps the most impressive SPent SOme yearS Of s七udy and travel in Europe・ His Pic七ure is on the wall of a home-1ike corridor in the new OnIy daugh七er had died in infancy. And so, tO meet Roxbury Latin School building on St. Theresa Avenue. young women daiIy in his classes must have opened for This is a framed oil portrai七, abou=wenty-four inches him a new chapter. But he gave no hint of feeling by thirty within the frame’Slgned by E. T. Billings・ It embarrassed or unduly expectant. When the College, SeemS tO POrtray Professor Buck in his early forties. It then on Beacon Hill, mOVed a s七one,s throw from 20 WaS Well made and has had proper care. A七presen七it is Beaco埠Stree=o I盆Somerset, he promp七Iy asslgned to Withou七any identifying label・ In the New England the new Cla鮎n Room’Set aPa丑for the women’s use, the Magazine, June, 1895, the Reverend James De Normandie uno億cial but promptly adop七ed name of碕The Parthenon,,; included among the illustrations for his nine七een-Page ar- the man七el over the wide fireplace had been adomed ticle on the Roxbury Latin School, a half-tOne Cut Of With the head of Athena. Sometimes’for variety, he Professor Buck; it seems to reproduce the Billings oil- Called the room the Gynaeceum, an Old Greek name for POrtrait in reverse. the imer apartment in which the women dwelt. He Among the published reminiscences, Wi量liam C. Collar, brought from Munich some handsome outline drawmgS, a wide工y known successor of Professor Buck as head_ by Flaxman’if I remember’depic七ing Greek maidens, mas七er of the Roxbury La七in School, has wri七ten of his Well nourished and shapely’and as he explained, likely Senior coIIeague,s characteristics in two paragraphs : to sugges=o the women students wha=hey should try to become in bodily form and grace. “Mr. Buck was an exceedingly able disciplinarian and inst’ruCtOr. He was a scholar himself and had high ideals Of scholarship. No sIovenly, Slipshod work passed muster With him’and he impressed the boys with the need and Once in a whiIe he wouId speak to a woman student so P量ainly’Or Perhaps with so coeducationally impartial a dis・ regard of feminine taste and tendemess, aS tO bring tears Value of thoroughness and exactness. He was exactmg Or a皿ash of indignation. Once, tO a Classmate of mine himself and always made most careful preparation of all Whose attention he though七was falling short of its proper his lessons. I lived in his family for some months and Object, he remarked, tO the amusement of the whole class, WaS aCquainted with his habits of study. I remember how “I wish’Miss X-〇・ yOu WOuld tum those pretty o心s he wouid stretch himself out at ful=ength after supper On a Very long sofa, flat on his back, With copleS Of eight Of blue jelly to the blackboard.,, Later she revered Or ten German editions of Caesar,s Gallic War ranged on him’but without forglVeneSS for his reference to her the floor beside him’and not until he had compared read- twiIlkling eyes. Another time’before a whole class, he ings and annotations in them all, did he consider himself told an incompetent but sensitive girl tha七her proper ready for the next day’s class. Somehow there seemed to be time then for even a schoo]master to be a scholar. From Place was nearer to some kitchen pantry than to any him I leamed the invalual〕le lesson, Which I have always Shrine of the Muses. She wept silently, and her class- tried to practise, neVer tO gO before a class without ade- mates se=heir teeth. Yet his cus七omary classroom talk quate preparation. If teachers nowadays would depend less upon methods of instruction, and aim more to make WaS COnSiderately kind. He held sarcasm to be the lan_ themselves masters of their subjects, they would teach guage of the Devil・ In those years while co11ege education for women’eSPeCially collegiate coeducation, WaS a With more enthusiasm and more sense of power. ``We used then’ the first year Latin, a book by matter of eamest debate’instructors seemed on guard McClintock and Crook, in which the lessons were diluted against any discriminations based on chivalry. When to an extraordinary degree. It reminds me of a book Widely advertised in England years ago, entitled, Latin Without Tears’Or One Word a Day. Mr. Buck, thinking apparently that I was too much interested in general literature, Said, One day, “A man is not fit to teach that book (the Latin book referred to), Who does not study every page of it as he would a page of Thucydides.,, Professor Buck’s eminent colleague, Professor Bowne, began his teaching in the College, he called the rolls, the men and the women alike’by suma,meS On重y: Mr. Smith WaS Plain質Smith,, and Miss Jones was p量ain召Jones.・, In the classroom Professor Buck never los=ime by aimless wandering・ The agendum of the hour was the Professor Buck began all his teaching, aS Mr. Collar had observed, by mastering the subject, in i七self and its relations’and then keepmg On With deeper study as he business of the class・ Personal reminiscences, unless terse and pat, amuSmg StOries for relief of tension’Preferences in politics, discomected convictions in morals and re_ ligion’all these usual staples of co11egiate instruction never taught it. He followed the German advances in.the in his teaching hours detoured a d珊oulty or stripped theory and practice of wha七then was known by the the gears. too narrow name, “Pedagogics’’, and now by the too COmPrehensive name, “education’,. He served on the Faculty’s commitもee that first arranged an elective course for Seniors in the pnnCiples and history of educaもion. He gave me one of my first formal treatises on teaching, ZilIer’s “AIIgemeine Paedagogik’’. Never七heless he had He used odd tums of speech and recondite yords; he used common words oddly. He gave challenglng directions. He loosened impacted vocabularies. The tems he brought into play sen=he eagerer students to dictionary, lexicon’and source-book. One day, after a girl of shy type and domestic interests had五nished her no Iove of method for method,s sake and no praise for those who vlgOrouSly work the handles of dry pumps. transla七ion of a stanch passage in Demosthenes, he in- In describing for the early periodical called Bo雨On quired, Without staying for an answer,バYou noticed the U毒t’eγ8砂Node$ his own offered courses, he makes i七plain ParataCtic construction of the triads?,, 七hat he is not teaching Greek but guiding students of Greek. His studen七s used to write down his quainter phrases: SOme Of these notes have been printed in Bo$to綿わ, but It was from a boy’s school that he came to his duties most of them already are a fading part of the older in the open量ng College; mOSt Of his earlier teaching had College’s vanishing tradition. Here, Without illumination Pαge Fわe from the original context, are a few samples taken from generosity. When he gave the College the special relief c量ass-rOOm minu七es of my own: fund that like the Educational Fund will bear his name, through the years, he was only making perpetua’l the “Large ramifications of synonymy.’’ lend-a-hand chari七ies tha七had been his life-1ong habit. “Cats’homs,,. Such, then, in mere sugges七ion, WaS the man whom the “From yonder hitherward.’’ “Female scullions who performed the Cinderella duties.’’ College honors as i七s first-Chosしen teaCher,-Chosen for his mental powers; for his thorough education abroad, an education he never ceased extending; for his experience “The tricksy diabolism of countless devilkins.’’ “Our moribund subjunctive.’’ “A little flat, Mr. Y-, but quite syntactical.’’ in Boston schooIs of highest standard; and even more ``Doesn’t that smack of the e揮eもe?’’ for the inもegrity, the dignity, the kindness of his characteI.. “Rhetorically knookkneed.’’ “Please say it, Mr. Z-, Having known priva七ion, he helped those who were in in a more cheerful and humane peed・ Feeling the beauty and the power of what men in tlmeS anCient and modem have wrought with words, he tone.’’ ``Smitten with or smitten by?∴To be sure it might be taught his studen七s how to search for the matter in the both, if one were not judicious.’’ =Your theta,s are rather cracker-fed.’, form, for the truth in the rhythm and the phrasmg, for the warmth and coIor in the叩nshine of life, and for the To the Seniors comlng m at the cIose of a Freshman imperishable treasure in its rum. Seeing men as mankind dass, “After the verdure, the flower.’’ “That is an excellent passage to ruminate on: it will bear much chewing of the cud.’’ “Read it and feel your hear=hrob with a new revelation Of human grandeur.’’ And just one more, tO eXPlain perhaps all the rest: “I thought I would get in a new word and start a new a,nd the universe as God’s work, he bore himself not only as a scholar bu七also as a man among men and as a good steward of God’s manifold grace. For six college generations now his friendly voice has been still; already his place among us can ’know him no more. But the widening in租uence of his standards for t.he mind’s work, the spread of his feeling for the true, This cqusciously playfu量usle Of language had support, perhaps, 1n Oldtime Greek precedents. It gave a’ta,ng even to Professor Buck,s ordinary talk and particularly his letters to his friends. During the war th-e German censors of outgoing mail were thorough bu七hardly keen enough to see what he had written between his lines. On one post-Card he included the slgnificant statement, the good, and the beautiful, the plain example of his right living-these essentials in what he was and did, however they.may be blended with their kind and lost to separate vleW, Will remain perpetua11y active among the unseen factors that by day and night, age after age, on a11 the face of the earth, are Shaping humani七y’s future. “We need but lit七le, and (underlined)砂e ge訪王’ Professor Augustus Howe Buck Soon after Commencement in 1895 Professor Buck WrOte a letter to a graduated Senior who had retumed to her home in a half-hidden village on Cape Cod. I Chanced to call on her as I was making my way, Whether afoot or awheel I have forgo七ten, tO HyannlSPOrt. She gave me his let七er to read; and I wished then and there Educational Fund In comection with the article on Professor Augustus Howe Buck written by Dean Emeritus William Marshall Warren, aIumni of the University will be interested to that he could have seen as I did how much his carefully know of the educational fund established at the College ordered words had meant to her. And she was not the of Liberal Arts as a, memOrial to Professor Buck. red-Cheeked girl whom he used to call “DuZce Decu$’’・ But another,s gratitude was never his motive. Not un1ike St. Christopher, he wished to glVe his ample strength 七o service of the grea七es七master. The entry in the Treasurer’s Report of this fund is as fo量lows : “PROFESSOR AuGUSTUS HowE BucK EDUCA冒IONAL FuND When conducting a class, Professor Buck, after the CuSもOm Of the time’.uSually remained seated a=he desk, except when discusslng at Close range something written on the blackboard. But he seemed always in fulL controI of the room and of all it contained. One day, While he WaS tranSlating for the class, his outstretched hand had grasped the top of the gues七-Chair s七anding near’and but half consciously he was whirling it forward and back- ward on one of its legs. Breaking from his grasp, the Anonymous gif七for the est’ablishment of this fund as a memorial to Professor Augustus Howe Buck. Income availab]e to enable ypung men of unusual promise and of posit量Ve Christian character, but wi七h insu鯖cient means, tO reCeive a much more thorough education than they could otherwise obtain. Es七ablished 1916 … … … … $196,750.籍’’ chair s七artled the class by reeling away to an overtum across the room. He glanced after it with a querylng surprlSe, and quickly resumed his transla七ing. The income of the fund has been wisely administered. If one were to call the roll of the men of the College of Liberal Arts who before and after graduation bene帥ed Professor Buck,s in七erest in his students was not me血odically forced: it was natural and individual・ If he seemed to like some particularly, nO One Su鯖ered by this generous gift one would be calling the names of men already distinguished in important fields of service. in consequence; their classmates saw the grounds for During the twenty一五ve years in which the income of his interest and approved his judgment. Everyone the fund has been available, Bo$to毒a has from time to knew the essential kindness of his heart and his quiet time published the names of the fortunate recipients. PαgeSわ Augustus Howe Buck Scholarships ALBERT MoRRIS The Committee on the Professor Augus七us Howe Buck Educational Fund announces the appomtment by Presiden七Marsh of four Tuition Scholars for 1940-194l. These men’all with exceptional preparatory schoo量records, are In his junior year Mr. Cain received the Harvard Bo。k Prize as the outstanding member of his class, and was Senior president of the schoo量,s chapter of the National Honor Society・ He was a member of the track team. now enrolled as Freshmen in the College of Liberal Ar七s. The Professor AugustusI Howe Buck Educational Fund WaS eStablished in 1916 in honor of Professor Augustus CESA珊O PENA・ Who maintained an honor record during Howe Buck’Who for many years taugh七Greek at the his four years in the Quincy (Massachusetts) High College of Liberal Arts. Its purpose is to aid men of School’from which he was graduated Iast June. He was unusuaI promise and positive Christian characもer to ob- for two years a member of the track team and in his tain a better education than would otherwise be possible. Senior year was editor-in-chief of the year book, a mem- Since tha=ime’aPProXimately one hundred young men ber of the c量ass day committe音e, and a member of the have been aided through all or part of their college careers t重a鯖c squad. and, in some instances, through addi七ional periods of graduate study and travel. Many of them now hold POSitions of responsibility in the professionaI world as DAVID MICHAEL KYLLONEN’a high-ranking graduate COllege teachers, Physicians, and ministers. Their wriト Of the class of 1939 of the Monessen (Pennsylvania) mgS COnStitute a sizeable library. High Schoo量・ His interests included public speaking, The Professor AugusI七uS Howe Buck Educational Fund PrOVides for four levels of appointment:l Tuition Scholars, music, and joumalism. He was a member of the edito音重ial Staff of his schooI paper. Beneficiaries, Professor Augustus Howe Buck Scholars, and Fellows. Freshmen may be appointed as Tuition Scholars and continued through the other grades if their academic achievements waFTant it. This year,s Tui七ion RoBERT BIGNEY SLOCUM, an honor student in the class Of 1940 0f the Brockton (Massachusetts) High School. His extra-Curricular acもivities included membership in Scholars are: the cross-COuntry and basketball teams, and of the cIass  ̄≒ ∴ ̄嚢∴ ARTHUR JAMES CAIN, an honor member of the 1940 Class of the Lym (Massachuse七ts) English High School. ARTHUR CAIN CESAREO PENA executive committee. He was actively in七erested in the Brock七on Hi-Y Club. DAVID KYLLONEN RoBE即B. SLOCUM Page Seで)eタも Boston Universlty,s Student Pilots HERBERT F. MEYERS Under the sponsorship of the Civil Aeronautics Admin- for unforeseen emergencies, and for this reason the in- istration Boston University’s Civilian Pilo七 Training sLructor frequen七ly “cu七s the gun’,, simulating conditions Program is now under way, With twenty students enrolled which would arise in the event of mo七or failure・ In this in the intensive twelve-Week con七rolled course. Ⅵ′ay PraCtice is gained in developing judgment for forced The original limit to the student enrollmen七was nine male students and one co-ed, buもas a resul七of the un- expected number of applicants, a Petition requesting that the quota be doubled was granted・ Physica量examinations of all applicants were completed late in February’and student pilot cer七ificates were issued to those who qua臆ed. landings. When the minimum eight hours dual instruc七ion has been completed the s七uden七is glVen aバcheck 創ght,,, a七which time he mus七comple七e each maneuver precisely. After a period varylng from five minutes to an hour or more the ins七ructor steps out of the plane, and the student is allowed to make his firs七郎gh七around the field alone. The training program, Which is similar to those being In “stage B,, of the controlled course coordination exer- offered at other colleges throughout the country, is divided cises are required to improve the student,s召control into two parts‥ grOund school and鮎ght school. In the ground school, Classes are held in the Hayden Memorial on Tuesday and Thursday evenmgS’from 6:30 to 9:30. Primary instruction in practical air navigation’meteOr- ology, aircraft operation, and Civil Air Regulations is being glVen, and a total of 79 hours of class room instruc〇 七ion in these subjec七s will be necessary to complete the touch.,, This period is of five hours, duration and consists of al七emate dual and soIo periods of one-half hour. Eleven hours are devoted to存stage C,’’six of which are soIo periods. The requlrementS for this phase are precision spmS, 720-degree power tums’SPiral approaches, and ,Other advanced maneuvers. All鮎ght practice is c。Ordinated with instruction received in the ground school, and the most pr9証cal application comes in “stage D,,, the final s七age ln Which the student projec七s ground school requlrement・ Fligh吊raining, Which started early in March’is glVen by the Bayside Flying Service at Mu11er Field, Revere’ Massachuse七ts. The students are divided into two groups of ten students, With an instructor for each group. Each a compass course to a distant point and創es cross-COuntry and back along this course. There are two such鮎ghts, one with the instructor and one soIo. The Boston University pilots will make their cross-COuntry創ghts to the alr- student is expected t・O COmPlete three hours of flight in- struction per week. glウ乞hours of dual instruction and 13% hours of soIo flying will be necessary to complete the 35 hour創ght requlrement・ The airplanes being used in the鮎ght school are 55 horse-POWer Piper Cub trainers・ Ⅵ心ich may be equlPPed with either ’skiis or pneumatic wheels, depending on the weather・ port a七I]brtland’Maine’a distance of ninety air miles. The Civil Aeronautics Administration student is required to keep a record of his且ying time in his偉1og book・’’ Each鮎ght is recorded on a sepa’rate Page, tOgether with license and type of airplane used, time in the air, and weather conditions. During dual instruction periods the instructor certifies each entry and grades the student on The training schedule is known as aバcontrolled course,, an arbitrary scale from one to five・ When the創ght because all instruction is glVen by qualified pilots’Who course and ground school have been completed the stu- adhere to a program which is p′lanned and supervised by dent pilots will be prepared to take the Civil Aeronautics the local administrator of the Civil Aeronautics Administration. Exacting standards, Set by the C.A・A., are Cal- culated to insure utmost safety. Specific regulations provide that two hours shall elapse between each half-hour of 鮎ght instruction’and that no student shan且y more than one period per day. A minimum of eight hours of duaI instruction is necessary before the student is a11owed to 毎solo.,, From the student,s standpoin=he highlight of the course is the first soIo批ght. In two Boston University groups most of the students have comple七ed this stage-in an average time of nine and a half hours of dual instruction. The Civil Aeronautics Administration has designated this part of the course asバstage A・,, After being taught how to control the airplane in straight and level鮎gh七the would-be pilo七is glVen ins七ruction in takmg Offs and landings’both under normal condi七ions into the wind, and when the wind is b量owmg aCrOSS the runWayS ・ Af七er the sixth hour of dual instruction the student is initiated into his first acrobatic maneuveTS in the air, tail spmS. Emphasis is placed on preparmg the pilots Pαge Eig庇 Administration examination for血eir “private’’license, which will pemi=hem to且y aircraft of certain spec脆cations, and carry passengers non-COmmerCially. Also・ upon successful completion of this pr皿ary training pro- gram students may apply for the advanced course which Will be g量Ven in the summer. The Civilian Pilot Training Program at Boston University is being supervised by Professor Albert A. Thompson・ of the Co11ege of Business Administration. The鮎ght instructors for the two groups are Mrs. Ruth Hamilton and Mr. Wesley WilliamF. In the ground school instruction in navigation is glVen by Mr. Charles Hamilton; Civil Air Regula七ions by Mr・ Leonard Nelson; meteOroIogy by Mrs・ Hamil七on’and aircraft opera七ion by Mr. Wi量liams. The s七udents accep七ed for the program include: Andrew Anderson, Needham; Alden Avery, Win血rop; Jane T. Baldwin, Wo11aston; George R. Clack, Belmont; Albert B. Dawson, Pawtucket, Rhode Island; Lyda M. Dunham, (001aduded o7種Pαge F殖eeゆ Boston Universlty Trustees ● The annual meetings of the corporation are he量d on the SeCOnd Thursday of October each year. The other stated meetings are on Founders, Day, March 13, and on the Thursday preceding Commencement Day. A七the University Club on March 13, fo11ow宣ng the Founders, Day Convocation at Trinity Church, the Trustees met for their stated meeting and had with them Of par七icular interes七were the addresses of Dr. Henry R・ Luce, editor and pubIisher of L汚, Time, and Foγ海7Je; Dr. Zechariah Cha鯖ee, Jr., PrOfessor of Law at Harvard Universlty; and Dr. Herbert E. Agar, editor of the Louあ楊Ie Oou,7.ie7'-Joα〃章d. Fo重lowmg the luncheon’the Trustees held the regular as guests the gentlemen who at the convocation were Founders, Day meeting of the Board. The task of con- the recipients of honorary degrees. ducting a great university with an annual budget of two Hon. Frank G. Allen, Chairman of the Board of Trustees’PreSided and introduced the guests. The addresses vIγere Short, but were brilliant and timely. There m皿on doIIars where eighty per cent of the income is derived from tuition and where income from endowments has been grea七ly reduced is a d瓶cult one. WeI.e tributees to President Marsh and his leadership ln Each year the business of the University must be car- the educational world・ There were also expressions of ried on without deficits. The members of the Board the great educational service glVen by Boston University listened wi七h interest as President Marsh and Treasurer in these years as it helps to develop capaclty for self- Speare brough=o their attention important items re- govemment and an appreciation of democracy in the minds and hearts of more than thirteen thousand young qumng aCtion. PeOPle. Previous to adjoumment, a Photograph of the members Of the Board who were presen七was taken for Bo8わnd. BαCk Roto’JeJ“o r妨: NATHAN D. PRINCE’STEPHEN W. SLEEPER, CHARLES FRANCIS ADAMS・ MERTON L・ BROWN, PRESI。ENT MARSH, FRANK G. ALLEN・ E. RAY SpEARE, AuGUSTUS P. LoRING’JR.・ FRANCIS C. GRAY’RussELL S. HADLOCK’MRS. EvERETT O. FISK, MISS ELIZABETH C. NoRTHUP. 姉捕o串e姉0袖庇: CHARLES A. RoME, HowARD D. BREWER・ P. A. O,CoNNELL・ VINCEN冒P. CLARKE, CouRTNAY GuILD, LEWIS O. HARTMAN, WII,LIAM‥ T. RICH, DANIEL T" O,CoNNELL, WILLIA}I F. RoGERS, HowARD W. SELBY, GEORGE A. DuNN, PLINY JEWELL. Pαge Nわe ● Boston Universlty May Music Festival U?tdeγ the au8p宣ce$ Q位he Bo8io?t U壷t)er8砂Wome壷Coum拐gわe脇b両he Bo$まon U壷ひer8物CoわびOCa訪o脇 Cho?.u8, α筋a8$emb切Qf海ee hu筋dγed毒ce$. Dr. Jame$ R. Houghきon, D訪edoγ・ This May Music Festival will be a吊he Charles Hayden Reserved seats are $1.00, general admission, 50c. Memorial auditorium Friday evenmg, May 23, a七8‥15・ Tickets will be on sale at al量Boston Universi七y Book- Participating in the program are the followmg Boston University organizations: stores BosTON UNIVERSITY rloNVOCATION CHORUS. This group and at the Women’s Council Building, 146 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston. The program will be as follows: is composed of seven choral organizations representing SeVen departments of the University. They provide the music for the regular convocations of the University at BOSTON UNIVERSITY MAY MUSIC FESTIVAL DR. JAMES R. HouGH冒ON, Co13dαctoγ Christmas and Founders’Day. The number of singers MAヱ93, 1941 is considerably over three hundred. CHARLES HAYDEN MEMORIAL AuI)I冒ORIUM BosTON UNⅣERSITY SEMINARY SINGERS. This group IS Bo紺ON, MASS. made up of studen七s prepanng for the Chris七ian Ministry at the SchooI of TheoIogy. They have made annual tours for the past eight years, four of these have been to and PRO GRAM Boston University Convocation Chorus from FIorida. I七has been their privilege to provide music at four of the General Conferences of the Methodist Church, One Of these being the Uniting Conference at Kansas City and another the First General Conference Hα棚物 Coronation Anthem. Cantate Domino Hα$$わγ Ecce, Quomodo Moritur Pde$加わα Credo Gγeわhα訪露o婦 Boston University Seminary Singers Of the united Methodist Church at Atlantic City. B αch Jesu, Joy of Man’s Desiring Boston University Convocation Chorus Bos冒ON UNIVERSI冒Y P.A.L. GLEE CLUB. The students COmPrlSlng this group are from the Department of Practical Arts and Letters. This is the second year of the existence of this chorus. Last year they appeared in a A Snow Legend Beautiful Dreamer this group come from three departments1 0f the UniverSiもy the majority are from the College of Business Ad- ministration, the rest comlng from the College of Liberal Bos冒ON UNrvERSITY GIRL’s GLEE CLUB. This group under Miss Marie Oliver is an All University Glee Club. They have had the pleasure of appearlng On SeVeral oc- Boston University P. A. L. Glee Club O Sacrum Convivium University of New Hampshire. Wんあわg Laudamus Pγ0栃eγO a Boston University Men’s Glee Club Bγαんm$ How Lovely Is Thy Dwe量ling P量ace Boston University Convocation Chorus Song of the Jolly Roger 0αndあh Joshua Fit de Battle of Jericho The Gospel Train Bα壷ho lo鵬の B糾すleigん Boston University Male Octet Let Us Now Praise Famous Men Alfγed H. Megeγ Boston University Convocation Chorus Boating S()ng Of Yo - Eh Neのめ Ne演n A Feast of Lantems Silent Strings BosTON UNIVERSITY DouBLE QuARTET. The members Of this group are ac七ive members of the Men’s Glee Club and are all from the College of Business Administra七ion. It is a new organiza七ion this year and has been very POPular both within and wi七hou=he University. They Ohγ轟iα郷el∂ Vわdα1調 The Hundred Pipers CaSions Iocally and this Spring represented Bos七o早UniVerSity a=he seventy-雛th amiversary celebration of the Bので)αγiα佃Fo雄So仰g Beautiful Dreamer Boston University Convocation Chorus Arts and the College of Music. The Glee Club makes amual tours and Iast year they had the privilege of makmg the tour to and from FIorida. Fo8きeγ Ho_1a_1i Spring Festival a七the Larz Anderson Memorial Center. BosTON UNIVERSITY MEN’s GLEE CLUB. The slngerS in Olo鳥eひ Bα鵬oc鳥 Boston University Girl’s G量ee Club Marie Oliver, Conductor Hallelujah Chorus Boston UIliversity Convocation Chorus Hal乙del Boston University Hymn (A宣ma Mater) Pγe$舌de庇Dα毒el L. Mαγ$h Jok仰P. Mαγ8kαll are under the leadership of Constantine HoupIS, aSSistanも conductor of the Men,s Glee Club. The Women’s Council Festival Commit七ee is in charge Accompanis七s: Minnie Calderara, Eleanor Babikian, Prisci量la A. Smith, FI.ederick Davis, Dana Gowen. Violinist, Frank Cosaro. Contralto, Estelle Reemie. Poge Tel Of the arrangemen七s. Mrs. James R. Houghton is chairman of this commiもtee. Assisting her are: Mrs. Everett O. Fisk, Mrs. Daniel L. Marsh, Mrs. Henry I. Harriman, (Coのduded on・ Page Ni7}eわe7?) Boston Universlty Law SchooI Association Annual Di皿ner Some three hundred graduates of the Boston UniverSity School of Law were presen七a=he amual dinner Of the Boston University Law SchooI Associa七ion. a=he Parker House Wednesday even量ng, April 16, tO honor the Honorable Matthew Francis McGuire, Class of 19Q6, Assis七an=o the At七omey General of the United States, and the HonorabIe J. Howard McGrath, Class of 1929, Govemor of the State of Rhode IsIand. When President Marsh came to Boston University in January’192l, he was cordially greeted by all friends of the University’bu=he friends of the University d輔ered in the prophecies made regarding Bosl七On Universlty and the years ahead・ I七is doub七fu工if a=ha七time any friend Of the University would have been su鯖ciently optimistic to have told him tha七aもthe firs七Commencement over Which he presided he wouId give the diploma of the Uni- VerSity slgned by him to Matthew Francis McGuire, aged 27’and that wi七hin珊een years tha七young man, as first Assistant Attomey General of the United Sta七es, WOuld be an important factor in the nationaI Iaw policies. The same friend would not have dared to saly that three years later in the CIass of 19Q9 he would give the dipIoma of the University with his s工gnature tO J. Howard McGrath’aged e6’Who within珊een years would be Govemor of the State of Rhode Island and in the contes七for that importan七position of public trus=ha七he W′Ould have defeated a distinguished and ab量e American Ⅵγho has carried with honor the name of William H. Vanderbilt. Not all the aIumni of the SchooI of Law present at the dimer were members of the Democra七ic par七y・ Hon. George C. P. OIsson, PreSiden七of the Law SchooI AssoCiation’Who presided, Iooks and acts as though some of his peopIe came from England in the May租oweI., and he Pαge Ele宅)e卯. has already won a place as an able and distinguished leader of the Republican party with before him THE DEAN OF THE ScHOOL OF LAW Hon. Melvin M. Johnson, Boston University, Boston ev王dently a distinguished career in the public service. Judges and important o鯖cials who received their appoint- ments from Republican govemors were at the head table Or in the assembly. THE DEAN EMERI冒US OF冒HE ScHOOL OF LAW Hon. Homer Albers, Boston Universi七y, Bos七on THE SECRETARY OF THE ScHOOL OF LAW The addresses made by Mr. McGuire and by Govemor McGrath were eloquent and effective. There was a feeling on the part of everyone presen=ha=he govem- Professor EIwood H. Hettrick, Bos七on University, Boston ment of the United States and the State of Rhode Island D工RECTORS have secured in these two men public service of the finest type, that they are able and loyal and devoted to the To JuNE, 1941 highest American traditions. The dimer was held on the evenmg Of a day when Hon. W. Lloyd Allen, District Court, Newton the war situation of the world was dark. It was reassurlng Jay R. Benton, Esq., 160 Congress Street, Boston Professor Arthur L. Brown, Boston University, Boston to feel that here were two leaders trained by Boston William C. Crossley, District Atty. of Southem District, University, yOung and forceful, ready and able to defend belief in God and in the democratic way of life. Edward M. Dangel, Esq., 18 Tremont Street, Boston Here was a vivid picture of whaもBoston University has done and is doing as its devoted faculties train for life the thousands of young people who throng its classrooms. President Marsh spoke with appreciation of the fine records that had been made by th@ gueStS Of honor and PrOPhesied for both distinguished careers in the public" SerVice in one of血e most important eras of our nationa1 1ife. Fall River Hon. Paul A. Dever, Attomey-General, State House, Boston W. T. A. Fitzgerald, Register of Deeds, Court House, Bos七〇n Hon. Felix Forte, Justice of Superior Court, Cour七House, Boston Anna Doherty McInemy, 12 Cherry Lane, Dedham Moses S. Lourie, Esq., 18 Tremont Stree七, Boston Addresses were made by Dean Melvin M. Johnson, Dean Emeritus Homer Albers, Hon. Paul A. Dever, Hon. Olin M. Je鱈ords, Justice of the Supreme Cour七of the State of Vermont, Hon. Hugh D. McLellan, Judge in the John J. O’Neill, Esq., 6 Beacon Street, Boston Samuel N. Salny, Esq., 341 Main Street, Fitchburg Hon. Jacob Spiegel, Municipal Court, Boston Hon. Robert A. Welsh, District Court, Provincetown United Staもes District Court in Boston, and Leroy B. “Pat’’Hanley. To JuNE, 1942 The head table was beautifully decbrated with scarleも and white camations and seated at it were the followmg guests: President Daniel L. Marsh, Dean Melvin M. Johnson, Dean Emeritus Homer Albers, Hon. Paul A. Dev-er, Hon. George C. P. O量sson, Hon. Olin Jeffords, Leroy “Pat’’ Hanley, Hon. Hugh D. McLe11an, Hon. Francis J. W. Ford, Hon. Dennis J. Roberts, Hon. Daniel T. O’Connel], Hon. Thomas H. Dowd, Hon. Joseph A. Sheehan, Hon. Francis J. Good, Hon. Francis I. McCanna. Hon. Allan G. Buttrick, Hon. Felix Forte, Hon. Arthur L. Eno, Hon. George F. Troy, Hon. Edmund J. Brandon, Hon. Charles A. Rome. Hon. Frank W. Tomassello, Chairman of the dinner William M. Blatt, Esq., 43 Tremont Street, Boston Virginia M. Briggs, Attleboro A. Murray Ginzburg, Esq., 333 Washington Street, BostoJ] Abraham S. Guterman, Esq., 82 Devonshire Street, Boston Professor John E. Hannlgan, Boston University, Boston Bertha R. Kieman, eO6 Broadway, Chelsea Charles A. Rome, Esq., 85 Devonshire Street, Boston Francis I. McCama, Esq., 49 Westminister Streetう Providence, Rhode Island Joseph J. O’Brien, Esq., 276 High Street, Holyoke John Lenahan O’Connell, 31 Milk Street, Boston I. Manuel Rubin, Esq., g31 Main Street, Brockton Arthur A. Sondheim, Jr., Esq., 73 Tremont Stree七, Boston James F. Sullivan, Esq., 24 SchooI Street, Boston COmmittee言ntroduced President Geo了ge C. P. OIsson Whose introductions during the evenmg Were happily To JuNE, 1943 worded. Mr. OIsson in七roduced the treasuIler Of the AsSOCia七ion, Hon. Harry K. Stone, and the secre七ary, Wi量liam J. Paquet, Esq. The Executive Commi七tee of the Boston University Law SchooI Association is as follows: Hon. William A. Murray, District Court, Milford Hon. Carl E. Wahlstrom, Probate Court, Worcester Raymond F. Barrett, Esq., 33 Broad Street, Boston George W. Roberts, Esq., gO9 Washington Street, Boston Frank C. VoIpe, Esq., 53 State Street, Boston THE OFFICERS OF冒HE AssocIATION Alexander Welch, Esq., 294 Washington Street, Boston Hon. Edmund M. Murray, District Cour七, Dedham Pre$ideク癌George C. P. OIsson, Clerk of Courts, Courも House, Brockもon Vice-Pre$訪e庇: Hon. Frank W. Tomasello, Municipal Court, Boston 裾ea鋤γeγ: Hon. H励rry K. Stone, Probate Court, Brockton Secre地相: Wilfred J. Paque七, Esq., 40 Broad Street, Bos七〇n. Pαge Tα)dt,e Anthony R. DeSimone, Esq., 43 Tremon七Street, Boston Hon. Thomas F. Quinn, District Cour七, Natick Hon. Daniel T. 0’Comell, Superior Court Justice, Court House, Boston William J. Hickey, Esq., e4 Milk Street, Boston Hon. Bert E. Holland, 73 Tremont Stree七, Boston Wi重Iiam E. Ginzberg, Esq., 1 State Street, Boston RECENT HoNORS FOR LAW ScHOOL MEN 工n reading over the biographical sketches a very in- teresting point is noted regarding their schooling in law. Alumni of the University will be interested to know that six graduates of Boston University have been ap- Six graduated from the Harvard Law School, Six from the Boston University Law School, tWO from the Northeastem Law School, and one from the Suffolk Law Scho。l. POmted Assistant District Attomeys by A七七omey-General Thus the members of the attomey-generalis o鉦ce re- Robert T. Bus-hnell. These men are FI‘ank G・ VoIpe, Ceived their legal schooling literally within the shadow of Co量lege of Liberal Ar七s CIass of 1907, School of Law Class the State House. Of 1909. Mr. VoIpe was President of the Medford Board Whether or not Atty.-Gen. Bushne賞l picked his sta揮with this in mind is not as important as the fac=hat he has Of Aldermen in 1917; aPPOln七ed Assistan七District-Attor- SurrOunded himself with capable men. ney of Midd工esex in 1928; Federal AppeaI Agent for the It is fitting, however, that all studied law in Massa_ Arlington Selective Service Board; member Boston and chusetts’schooIs. Midd量esex Bar Associations and First Lieutenant in the Ancient and HonorabIe Artillery. O量d CopleS Of The Law Review Joseph F. BacigaIupo was graduated from the Law School in the class of 1929 cum Zαude. He is a member Of the Lawrence Bar Association’Lawrence Republican Club’and Executive Commi七tee Italian voters of Massa- The Boston Universi七y Alumni Association has almost a complete set of “The Law Review,,. It needs Nos. l and 4ofVolume I, (19Ql) andNos. 1, 2, and 3 of VoIume IⅡ・ (1923). chusetts. WilIiam F. Hayes is the son of George H. W. Hayes, ’95 of Ipswich District Court; is a graduate of Holy Cross Any alumnus desirous of seIling these volumes pIease COmmunicate with Boston University Alumni Association, 20 Beacon Street, Boston. College and Boston Universlty Law SchooI Class of 1928; a member of the Ipswich Town Committee and United States Marine Corps Advisory Board Selective Service Ac七; Chairman Ipswich By-Law Committee; Chairman Ipswich SchooI Com- mittee. He is a member of the Salem and Essex County Bar Associations and Essex Republican Club. Battery質H,,, Fourth Defense Bat七alion, Fleet Marine Force, Marine Barracks, Naval S七ation’Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. Te重esphore LeBoeuf is a graduate of the Law School in February 14, 1941 the Class of 1907. He was a member of the Constitutional Convention and 19碧4 Republican Electoral College; former Vice-President Worcester County Republican Club; Chaiman Webster-Dudley American Supreme Boston University Alumni Association 20 Beacon Street, Boston, Massachusetts Chief of Franco-American Foresters and Presiden七 Federated Franco-American Societies; Webster moderator Since 19Q7; Assistant United States Attomey 1926葛1928; decorated by French Republic in 1930; Secretary Repub- 1ican Club of Massachusetts 1932-34; director and attorney Webster National Bank; member Sou七hem Worcester County, Worcester County and American Bar Asso_ To the Edi七or, Bostonia: PIease change my address in your創es to that given in the ]et七e血ead・ I wan=o be sure to get my Bo$to鋤ie as SOOn aS POSSible in the future. Have been here for about a month now and although it is no七my first visit here’i七has been my initiation to ciations. typical Cuban weather・ I七is either scorching or pour- J・ Burke Sullivan graduated cumめude from Boston University Law School in 1923. He was a member of WooIsack; Assistant Corporation Counsel for Bos七on, Chaiman State Board of Tax Appeals and Chairman of State Public Utilities Commission pr10r tO aPPOintment as Assistant Attomey-General in 1938. He was asslgned to try land damage cases for the Commonwealth n。W On COurt dockets・ Mr. Su11ivan is an active Democra七, nlember Knights of Columbus, Massachuset七s Law SoC萱ety’American Bar Association and Bos七on City Club. mg, Or bo七h. I am glad to see tha七many graduates of Boston Univer- Slty are entering the servlCe. I might add that young 901lege graduates who have not completed ROTC migh七 lnVeStiga七e the various Ma血e Corps SchooIs that will Pemi=hem to s七udy military subjects particularly pertinent to Marine Corps g中ssions and upon completion granb them a commiss10n m the Marine Corps Reserve. This is an excellen七oppor七unity for Bos七on University men to s七art a military career’nO七Only for the dura七ion H. Wells Kilboume graduated from Yale University Of the emergency’but for Iife’aS many Smgle second before a七tending the Law School as a member of the lieute誓ntS under g7 years of age can obtain pemanent Class of 1932. He is fomer Presiden七of the Westem COmmlSSions after once attaining a commissioned reserve Massachusetts Council of Young Republican Clubs; Royal S七a七uS・ They can obtain informa七ion in this matter bv Arcanum, Moose Grange’Kiwanis and Berkshire County COmmunica七ing with the Marine Corps ReserⅤe O臆ce at Bar Association. 七he Boston Navy Yard, Or by writing for infomation directly to Headquarters’U. S. Marine Corps, Washing七on, The Bo$きOn′ T7.αt,ele7. Of January 17, 194l, COntained the D.C. follow重ng edi七orial: Let,s糾up the Marine Corps wi七h B. U. men. WHERE THEY WERE SCHOOLED The staff of甜een assistants who have been picked by Atty.-Gen. Robert T, Bushnell to work with him at the State House is a representa七ive group. PARKER R. CoLMER Ist Lieut. USMC B.S. in B.A. ’37 Pαge Thi壷ee7き Fro庇Ro砂, ngわ7研き: NICHOLAs T. PHILLIPS, BARBARA G. TREAT, JAMES G. McDoNALD, MARY E. LEAHY, ELIJISTON WHI冒MORE’ JAMES A. CoNNELLAN, DoRO冒HY L. KIMBALL, MoRRIS KuRI冒SKY, BESSIE ARGUS・ Second Ro倣,, Ze串to dy紘CARLO GIORGI, AGNES WAIJKAMA, MARJORIE PLUMB, GENEVIEVE CoLLINS, ALISON PITKIN, LoIS A. ScHunERT, ELEANORA L. RICK, WAIJ冒ER D. RuDZIAK, WILLIAM P. LESTER. BαC鳥Ro“わく弗to海椋EMRI J. DIOSY, CHARLES D. ScHWA珊Z, J. HAROLD HADLEY, E. PARRER WEST, HAROIJD E. I皿S珊Z・ E。WIN A. THOMPSON, JR., A. THEOI)ORE TELLSTROM, JR., SuMNER GoLDBERG, JuLIAN FEINBERG. The Permanent O鯖cers of the Class of 1941 A complete list of the Pemanent C量ass O鯖cers is as follows: CoLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS CoLLEGE OF MUSIC ScHOOL OF MEDICINE Pγe$idel転 Carlo Giorgl Pγe8ide加: A, Theodore Te11strom, Jr. P7.e読de庇: Robert J. Brennan SecTeかけぴBessie Argus Secγetaγぴ Barbara G. Treat Secγeね7.gr Charles L. Tuttle Clα$$ Age庇: Nicholas T. Phillips Clα8$ Age庇: Dorothy L. Kimball Cla$$ 4gen′t: Menahen Cooperstein CoLLEGE OF BusINESS AD丸IINISTRATION SARGEN冒CoLLEGE OF PHYSICAL E。UCATION ScHOOL OF EDUCATION Pγe読de鵬: James G. McDonald Pヶe$ide妬Marjorie Plumb Pγe8bde祝: Edwin A. Thompson, Jr. Secγetwぴ Harold E. Lifshitz Secγe加げぴPauline Schneider Secγe加u砂Walter D. Rudziak Clα$$ Age庇Elliston Whitmore Cla$8 4gel頼Doris Cole Cla$8 4gel癌Lois A. Schubert EvENING CoLLEGE OF CoMMERCE ScHOOL OF THEOLOGY ScHOOL OF SocIAL WoRK Pγe$idel頼Julian Feinberg P7.e8ide庇: J. Harold Hadley P7.e$ide庇: Warren K. Braucher Sec7.etoγぴMorris Kuritsky Secγetoγぴ Charles D. Schwartz Secγetorぴ Margaret M. Zimmer Cla8$ 4ge庇: Sumner Goldberg Cla88 4gen雷 E. Parker West CoLLEGE OF PRACTICAI. A即S AND LETTERS ScHOOL OF LAW Cla$8 Age庇: Alison Pitkin GRADUATE ScHOOL Pゲe$拐e庇: Mary E. Leahy Pγe$ide庇: James A. Connellan Pγe$ide祝: Emri J. Diosy SecγetoγぴAgnes Walkama SecγetaγぴEleanora L. Rick Sec7.eね7.緋 Wilma Thompson Cloo$ Age庇: Genevieve Collins CZα$$ Age励: Albert P. Pettoruto Cla$8 4gen去 William P. Lester Pαge Fouγわe7a Each year the Boston University Alumni Association 9n tWO OCCaSions has as its gues七s at the Woman,s Build- 重ng, 146 CommonweaIth Avenue, the Permanent O餓cers Of the senior classes representing all the SchooIs and CoIleges of the University. On the first occasion the o鯖cers have the oppor七unity Of becommg aCquain七ed with each other. On the second OCCaSion the Permanen七O臆cers for the entire c量ass are Chosen and the photograph made showing the group. Tea is served at both of these mee七ings. There is a CIearer understanding with the passlng yearS aS tO how much these Pemanent O鯖cers wi11 figure in the fu七ure activities of the University. These meetings a紐ord the OPPOrtunity for the making of plans and the appointment Of committees in comection with the approaching Commencement. At the meeting he量d March 17, Elliston Whitmore 。f the Co量lege of Business Administration was elected Presi_ dent of the C]ass; Mary Leahy of the Cbllege of Practical Arts and Letters was chosen Secretary; and James A・ Connellan of the SchooI of Law was e量ected Class Agent. MARY LEAHY, E皿IS甲0Ⅳ WⅢ蝉0弼, Secreねγひ Boston Universlty C獲ub of Bridgeport’ Boston Univers調y C onnecticut Registration Statistics At the Ninth Amual meeting of the Boston University CoLLEGE Y玉AR 1940_41 Based oγ乙Net F細ure$ Co11ege of Practical Arts and Letters Secretary’Mr. Paul M. Boynton. CoIlege of Music 錐5 to the SchoIarship Loan Fund of the University and Chairman of the SchoIarship Loan Fund. School of Medicine 3 forwarded this amoun=o Professor A. Roy Thompson, Sargent College of Physical Education SchooI of TheoIogy School of Law SchooI of Education SchooI of Social Work Graduate SchooI の 5 8 1 0 Gaspar G. Bacon Lectures (之(望 31116 The Club has held three meetings during the year. At ’ , Benson; Member-at-large’Mr. Albert J. Del Vecchio; and 1 3 College of Liberal Arts Co量lege of Business Administration 14○○の Were eIected‥ President, Mr・ Aranson C. Harper; Vice- President, Miss Rhoda Dorkin; Treasurer, Miss Ulrika E. the meeting of January e5 the members voted a gif七of Cla88 Age伽 141 963撚5 675紳9300飢1 8 Club of Bridgeport, Comecticut’the followmg O鯖cers JAMES A. CoNNEI,I,A Pre$ide庇 甘otals Dr・ Henry S七eele Commager’PrOfessor of history at Columbia University, delivered the 15th annual Boston University Bacon Lectures on March 3l, April e and Apri1 4. Gaspar G・ Bacon lS nOW PrOfessor of Govemment and United States Citizenship on the Maxwell Foundation and chairman of the Committee on the Bacon Lec_ tureship’Which was established in 1926 by Mrs. Robert Bacon・ The purpose of the lectureship is to stimulate a deeper study of the Constitution, its antecedents, history and doctrine’With its results and implications. Dr. Commager’a Phi Beta Kappa gradua七e of the Total Regis七ratiop’inclusive of Summer SessIOn Of 1940 lQ,212 Total Registration, inclusive of Summer Session of 1940 and Extra-Mural Courses 12,697 Boston Universlty Student Pilots (0013d“ded JγOm・ Page E勾加) Quincy; Robert G. Fitzgerald, New七on, Willian Fitzgerald, Boston; Stuart R. Hall’Simsbury, Connecticut; An七hony University of Chicago’WaS the recipient of the Herbert C. Jannuzzo, West Newton; John D. Keefe, Canton; B. Adams History Award in 1929・ Dr. Commager fee]s Theodore Laputka・ Hazelton’Pennsylvanla; Roger L. that Joseph Story has been the most neglected of the dis- tinguished justices of the United States Supreme Court. His three Boston University addresses were as follows: バJoseph Story: A Portrait;,, αThe Nationalism of Joseph Macdomld, Somerville; Heめert F. Meyers, Portland, Maine; Richard T. Ober’Marblehead; John M. Oldsman, Stough七on; Earl R・ Rawson, Bridgeport, Comecticut; John G. Rogers’Cambridge; AIvin Simenson, Barre; Story;,, =The Conservatism of Joseph Story.,, Aaron Tenenbaum, BrookIine. Pαge F殖eelる ● Boston Universlty Alumni Clubs PRES IDENT SEC RETAR Y ALBANY, N. Y. R. RussELL THOMPSON, Business Administration ’30. MRS. ARTHUR J. ATKINS, Business Administration ,28. BRIDGEPORT, CONN. ALANSON C. HARPER, College of Liberal Arts ’28. 115 CしUR S 4 Chestnut St., Albany. 169 Adams St.. Delmar, Box. 3. BROCKTON, MASS. GEORGE C. P. OLSSON, Law ’26. 35 Belcher Ave., Brock- MRS. STEPHEN M. CoTE, Liberal Arts ’33. 190 Winthrop St., Brockton. ton. BUENOS AIRES, ARGENTINA RHODA BUFFÅLO, RALPH C. CROWLEY, Business Administration ,22. 38 NEW YORK PAUL M. BoYNTON, College of Business Administration '24. Central High School, Bridgeport. Dorothy St., Fair丘eld. C. EDMESTON, Graduate ’26. Camacua 282, ALLENA LucE, Liberal Arts ’14. Zapiola 1700, Buenos Aires. Buenos Aires. MRS. MERTON W. THAYER, Pra,C七ical Arts '22. 52 Mea- dowbrook Rd., Hempstead. Irving Pl., Buffalo. CENTRAL MAINE LEROY F. HussEY, Business Administration ,23. 8 Bangor St., Augusta. CHICAGO, ILL. To be elected. ADELE M. RIES, Religious and Social Work ,30. 740 Rush CINCINNATI. OHIO To be elected. A. GERTRUDE CuRTIS, Liberal Ar七s ’01. Wa,1nut Hill Classi- CLEVELAND, OHIO FRANK M. BAKER, TheoIogy ’11. 2416 East 9th St., LucY M. BuKER, Liberal Arts ’16. Fublic Library, CONCORD, N. H. Ca,1 High School, Cincinnati. Cleveland. ( HowARD R. KNIGHT, Liberal Arts ,12. 247 0akland Park Ave., Columbus. REV. JoEL M. WAREING, TheoIogy ’26. 13th and Madison HoN. Pres. Hon.WILLIAM H・ SAWYER, Law ,90. 4 SchooISt., MARY L. R. FARNUM, Medicine ’00. 46 SI)ring St., Pena- Concord. To be elected. DETRO賞T, MICHIGÅN Augusta. St., Chicago. Cleveland. COLUMBUS, OHIO A. MARIE FROST, Practical Arts '28. 8 Ma,nley St., Sts., Toledo. c○○k. REGINALD MACARTHUR, Business Administratio宣’28. SopHIA V. TICE, Religious Education ’23. 211 Sa,Vannah St., Detroit. To be elected. 1800 Penobscot Bldg., Detroit. EASTERN MAINE RoY L. FERNALD. Law ’27. Winterport. FÅLL RIVER, MASS. HoN. WILLIAM C. CROSSLEY, La,W ’14. 268 Montgomery FOOCHOW, CHINA HARRY WoRLEY, Theology ’15, Foochow Theologica.1 MRS. RoBERT BoGLE, Practical Arts ’24. 122 Madison St.. Fall River. St., Fa11 River. EDITH McBEE, Graduate ’27. Hwa, Nan College, Foochow. School, Foochow. HARTFORD COUNTY, CONN. ARTHUR B. BusHELL, Business Administration ’24. 85 HAWAII ALEXANDER W. MACDoNALD, Business Administration ’29. INDIA MRS. RuTH CALKINS McELDOWNEY, Graduate ’35. Hy- INDIANA MRS. MILDRED WRISTON PRATT, Education ,35. 2048 Nuuanu Ave., Honolulu. Honolulu Council of Social Agencies, Honolulu. REV. EARLE M. RuGG, TheoIogy ’16, Raewind Christian Institute, Raewind, Punjab. derabad, Deccan. INDIANAPOL重S, RAYMOND C. CALNEN, Law ’18. 23 Eastview St., Hartford. Newport Ave., West Hartford. PROF. J. R. H. MooRE, Liberal Arts ,99. 114 South Ritter Ave., Indianapolis. MABEL GuTTERY, Religious Education '21. 205 East 16th St., Indianapolis. │PSWICH, MASS. ALICE E. PERKINS. Liberal Arts ’06, 2 Green St., Ipswich. CHARLES E. GooDHUE. Liberal Arts ’17. 2 Labor-in-Vain KANSÅS C賞TY, WILLIAM H. FosTER, Liberal Arts ’14. Country Day G. CHARI,ES GRAY, TheoIogy ’12, Westminster Congrega- MISSOURI LAWRENCE, MASS. School, Kansas City. Hon. Pres. LouIS S. Cox, Law ,99. 7 Lowell St., Lawrence. EDWARD J. NANTOSKI, Law ’38. 21 Swan St., Lawrence. Road, Ipswich. tional Church, Kansas City. HoN. IGNATIUS H. BRUCATO, Law ’22. 301 Essex St., Lawrence. LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA LouIS LoMBARDI, Liberal Arts ’20. 850 Cumberland Road, PHILIP J. CoRLEY, Education ’26. 1208 East Park Avenue, Glenda1e. Glendale. LOWELL, MASS. BENJAMIN SANDLER, Law ’32. 30 Ware St., Lowell. BEATRICE HoAR, Busin:SS Administration ’17. 43 Burtt LYNN, MASS. FREDERIC R. WILLARD, Liberal Arts ’06. Lynn English St.. Loweu. To be elected. M ALDEN- EVERETT , HoN. EMMA FALL ScHOFIELD, Liberal Arts ’06. 194 Clif- M ANC HESTER , N. H. EDMUND F. JEWELL, Business Administration ’22. The MASS. High School, Lynn. Union-Leader, Manchester. MARLBORO. MASS. MINNESOTA JoHN E. RICE. Law ’11. Rice Building, Marlboro. REV. DR. J. RAYMOND CHADWICK, TheoIogy ’24. Hennepin NANK賞NG, CHINA REV. HANDEL LEE, TheoIogy ’22. Nanking TheoIogical Avenue Methodist Church, Minneapolis. GEORGE B. CuRRIER, eX葛Liberal Arts ,99. Wykagyl Gar- Manchester. DR. MIRON MoRRILL, TheoIogy ’24. Ha,mline University, ANNA L. GoLISCH, Graduate ’22. Methodist Girls’High School, Nanking. ALICE E. SouTTER, Sargent ’23. 520 West End Ave., New York City. NORTH CHINA dens, New Rochelle. J. C. Kuo, Graduate ,25. Peking Academy, Peking. NO RTHERN REV. DR. R. MARVIN STUART, TheoIogy ’34. 1132 Portola CALIFORN量A MARY MuRPHY, Practical Arts '24. 201 Walnut St., To te elected. St. Paul. Seminary, Nanking. NEW YORK (City) PHOEBE PATTERSON, Law ’33. 44 Ivy Rd., Malden. ton St., Malden. MAR重E ADAMS, eX-Religious and・Social Work ’21. M. E. Mission, Peking. Street, San FrancISCO. REV. D. CLIFFORD CRUMMEY, Graduate ,36. 190 East Blithedale Street, Mill Valley. NORTH SHORE, WILLIAM D. SABOURIN, Business Administration ,33. 2 Walter St., Sa,1em. MILDRED C. JuNKINS, Liberal Arts ’2l. 8 Harmony Street, OしD COしONY D賞STRICT, MASS. PHILÅDELPHIA, PA. To be elected. MuRIEL J. GouDEY, Pra,Ctical Arts ’27. 24 Edgemere Rear-Admiral J. DuNCAN MACNAIR, Liberal Arts ’05. 329 Brookline Boulevard, Upper Da,rby. MRS. LEE H. ADAMS, eX-Business Administration ’27. PITTSBURGH, PA. REV. SANFORD W. CoRCORAN, Theology ,06. Smithfield PITTSFIELD, MASS. HoN. JoHN C. CROSBY, Law ’82. 517 West St., Pitts丘eld. MRS. C. HERRICK CooK, Practical Arts ’26. 19 Endicott PORTLAND, MAINE WILLIAM RICHARD K. GouLD, Law ’29. 192 Middle St., Portland. PORTLAND, OREGON DR. LuTHER T. NELSON, Liberal Arts ,05. 445 Medical MASS. Salem. Road, Quincy. 4653 Woodland Ave., Drexel Hill. CHARLES W. WILDER, LiberalArts ’99. 564 East End Ave.. Pittsburgh. St. a,nd 7th Ave., Pittsburgh. Street, Pittsfield. B. MAHONEY, Law '17. 120 Exchange St., Portland. Ar七s Building, Portland. MISS DuLC重NA BROWN, Social Work ’25. Room 310, Y. M. C. A. Building, Portland. PUERTO RICO To be elected. T. J. PARTHENAIS, Business Administration ’27. Univer- PORTSMOUTH- STANLEY M. BuRNS, Law ’25. 60 Cushing St., Dover. ARTHUR W. JoHNSON, Business Adminis七ration ,22. Box RHODE ISLAND HoN. JEREMIAH E. O’CoNNELL, Liberal Arts ’06. Superior CHAIRMAN OF BoARD OF GovERNORS FRANC重S I. McCANNA, RO CHESTER, FREDERICKW. CoIT, Law,04. 509 Wilder Bldg., Roches七er. ELEANOR GooD, L;beral Arts ’01. c/o Hickey-Freema.n HoN. EDWARD F. MEDLEY, Law ,10. 1011 American Ba,nk MRS. HALLETT S. MISNER, Liberal Arts ’21. 3228 West Sity of Puer七o Rico, Rio Piedra,S. 464, Durham. DOVER, N. H. Court, Providence. Co., 1155 Clinton Ave. North, Rochester. NEW YORK SEÅTTLE, WASH. Law ,00. 49 Westminster St., Providence. Building, Seattle. 62nd Street, Seattle. SPRINGFIELD. FREDERICK P. HoLDEN, Business Administra,tion ’25. 295 HELEN E. McQuADE, Practica,1 Arts and Letters ’30. ST. LOUIS, REV. Ross W. ADAIR, Religious and Social Work ’28. MRS. GEORGE SMITH, Liberal Arts ’07. 400 Be11eview Ave., MASS. MISSOURI SYRACUSE, NEW YORK Worthington St., Springfield. 1730 North 13th St., St. Louis. PROF. DwIGHT M. BECK, TheoIogy ’22. 920 Lancaster HoN. PRES. DR. EDWARD H. ToDD, TheoIogy ’93. College of WASH量NGTON, D. C. REV. ERNEST P. GouLDER, TheoIogy ’32. 1209 South 43rd Puget Sound, Tacoma. St., Tacoma. To be elected. Pαge Sゐ亮ee仰 MRS. JoHN M. DARLING, eX-Sargent ’29. 1001 Rainier Place, 01ympia. MRS. F. FuLTON STRETTON, eX-Practical Arts ’29. 526 Powha,tan Place., Washington. HARRY S. GAUCHER. Law ,22. 670 Main St., Willima,ntic. MRS. E. H. CoRTTIS, Liberal Arts ,08. Lock Box 67, EDWARD F. SIMPSON, Medicine ’30. 332 Main S七., Wor- MARY BERNARD, Practical Arts ,33. 111 Granite St., CONN. WORCESTER, MASS. FDITH QuICK, Graduate ’19. 1202 Harrison St., Syra,CuSe. Ave., Syracuse. TACOMA, WASH. WINDHAM COUNTY, 1499 Memorial Ave., W. Spring丘eld. Webster Groves. CeSter. North Grosvenordale. Worcester. ● Boston Universlty Club of Rhode Isla皿d J・ HowARD McGRATH, PRESIDENT MARSH, DENNIS J. RoBERTS On Tuesday evenmg, March e5, SOme tWO hundred Boston University alumni who are members of the Boston Universi七y Club of Rhode Is量and assFmbled at the Narra- gansett Hotel to attend a dinner glVen in honor of the Hon. J. Howard McGrath’Govemor of Rhode Island, School of Law CIass of 1929’and Hon・ Demis J. Roberts, Mayor of Providence, SchooI of Law Class of 1931. Presiding Justice Jeremiah E・ O,Connell, PreSident of Marsh’Dean Melvin M. Johnson, and Dean Emeritus Homer Albers were aIso guests of honor. The arrangements for the dime音r Were in the hands oI ?Ommittee whose interest and loyaIty made the ga七her- mg an outstanding one in the history of the Rhode IsIand CIub. Seated at the head tabIe were: President Daniel L. Marsh’Dean Emeritus Homer Albers, Judge Alberic A. Archambault, Professor EIwood H. Hettrick, Dean MelVin M・ Johnson, Francis I. McCama, Govemor J. Howard McGrath’Judge Jeremiah E・ O’Comell, Hon・ George C・ P・ OIsson’John J・ O’Neill, David Patten, Judge Elmer J. Demis J. Roberts, George Clegg, Jr.’John F. Colling, Isabella M. Connon, Victoria A. Da量coe’Maurice Dannln, Judge Robert M. Dann重n, Luigi DePasquale’E. Harold Dick, James A. Ugo Gasbarro, Quentin J. Geary, Samuel Gerebo鯖, Wiト Iiam V. Gri鯖n’Dr. Morris L. Grover’Francis Hutchins, Louis V・ Jackvony’Eugene L・ Jalbert, Leo L. Jacques, Jeremiah S. Jeremiah’Ruth V. Johnson’Carrie B. Keyes. Francis I. McCama・ Associated with him was an active Mayor S. Budlong, Ralph K. Carleton’ CaIvert E. Casey, AIexander L. ChurchiIl’HaroId Clarkin, Hugo A. Clason, Dooley’John J. Doyle’Rosalie Fenton, Ame B. Galvin, the Club acted as toastmaster. presiden七Daniel L. Ra七hbun, Eugene Brody’Zeta I. Brown, C. Warren Bubier, WiIford Dr. James F. Rockett・ Charles A. Rome, Judge Harry K. Stone, Professor James l「・ Toner’Uni七ed States Attomey George F.冒roy. Seated at a special table for Iadies we.re: Mrs. J. Howard McGrath’Mrs. Jeremiah E. O・Connell, Mrs. Daniel L・ Marsh’Mrs. James McGrath, mO七her of the Govemor, Mrs. George A. Saxon, and Mrs. Morris Waldman. In addition to those a=he head table, Alumni were PreSent aS follows: Erving T・ Amold, Raoul Archambault, Francis J. BarIow’Morris Berick’Samuel H. Bremer, WiIliam Kanelos, Phillip Knauer, Jr・, Joseph Knox, MelVin Koppe, Louis Kirshenbaum, Arthur T・ Levy, Francis A・ Manzi・ RoIand E・ Meunier’Judge Francis J・ McCabe, George E. McCarthy, Agnes McCaughey, Grace McCaughey’Mildred McDermott, Edward M. McEntee, Mary E. McKema, Peter McKieman, John S. McKieman, Timothy J. Murphy, Joseph R・ Murray, Guillaume Myet七e, CoI. Edward J. Noons, John F. O,ConneIl, Frank A. Page’Charles W. Palmer, John Quattrocchi, W皿am E. Reddy’James F. Rocke七七, Carmela Santini, Ge音Orge A. Saxon, Regina SchIossberg, James E. Smith, Harold B. SoIoveitzik, Conrad K. Strauss, Walter H. Strauss’Felix J. Symkowicz’Wal七er I. Sundlun’George F・ Treanor’Mary T. Walsh’Florence E. Ward, Elmer C. WiIbur’Maxwe1量Waldman’Morris Waldman, BenJamin Winicour’Lee Worrell’and Harold B・ Wright. Judge O,Comell made a model toas七master. The in_ troductions of the honored gues七s were as foIIows: PRESIDEN冒DAN工EL L. MARSH No dimer of the Rhode Island Alumni Associat,ion of Bos七on University would be complete withou七the presence of our dis七inguished and beloved President. I have Page Seで)e庇een the honor of know重ng PerSOnally the Presidents of many age and determination to carry his well-COnSidered pro- of our presenもday co11eges and universities’and I know gram into e鱈ec七and to permi七his adminisもration to be you wi11 agree wi七h me in my appraisal, When I say that judged wholly by its achievements. President Marsh towers like a giant among them all’in qualities of mind and heart’Of vision’Of leammg, Of One of the youngest govemors in this country today> he possesses a wisdom and a maturi七y of judgment, Which leadership and wha七I know he himself prlZeS mOSt Of a11, many an older statesman migh七well envy and I con- in human sympathy and understanding・ fidently predic=hat he is destined for still higher honors Although he is a great man and an extremely busy one, at the hands of the electora七e of this state. cIothed with great responsibili七ies as the head of a large A gradua七e of Providence College, a member of the university, he is one of the most approachhole of men. I have had occasion to send a number of people to him with letters of introduction, and although his duties as Rhode Island bar, a former Chairman of the Democratic S七ate Central Commi耽ee, former United States District Attomey, and now Govemor of Rhode Island, it is with President are manifold, eaCh recipient of my letter re- a deep feeling of pleasure and of pride’that I present our ported laもer, that he was received as graciously and fellow alumnus, the Honorable J. Howard McGrath. listened to as patiently, aS if that were the only thing MAYOR DENNIS J. RoBE珊S President Marsh had to do that day. He is truly a remarkable man with a real love of people and a marked ability for making and keepmg friends・ Some college presiden七s are scholars and educators but not administrators, Others are administrators, but not The o七her special honor guest of this occasion’like- wise a graduaもe of Boston University Law School’in the Class of 1931, is the Mayor of Providence, Rhode Island,s largest city. Though sti11, like Govemor McGrath, a scholars or educators. But Presiden七Marsh is not only relatively young ma早he has had a training ln POlitical a scholar and an educator, but an administrator as well, a combination which has notably lnCreaSed the prestige a蹄airs and in the sc工enCe Of govemmen七, that admirably of Boston University since his providential selection as Presidenも. qualifies him for that high position・ Under the new city char七er, Operative for the first time under his ad- ministration, Which provides for aバstrong ma,yOr,, system, The recipient of honorary degrees from many of the leading institutions of leammg, both at home and abroad, Providence is particularly fortunate in its choice of Mayor Roberts. an author with a pungency and a li七erary style unsur- By training, by temperament and by character’he passed, a forceful and an eloquent speaker with a per- possesses those qualities which spell success and which fecもion of dic七ion in these days mos七rare, he is yet one assure an e鯖cient and a business-1ike administration. of the most modes七of men, aPParen七ly without realization Already he has demonstra七ed a fine grasp of the finan- Of his own greatness. cial structure and problems of our city and a, determina- Boston Universi七y is his life・ Boston University is his tion to do awa’y With methods and practices which have pride・ He glories in its history and in its traditions. He led to waste and extravagance. We may expect many lives and plans for its future. We too Iove Boston University and we too glory in its splendid and long overdue refoms under his guidance and leadership. history and in its achievements and in the high position His rugged honesty’his high e七hical standards and his it holds in the educational world of today. But much keen appreciation of the obligations of his o臆ce and of of i七s grea七ness is due in no small parもto President Marsh 七he trust reposed in him by the citizens of Providence’ himself, Who honors us with his presence tonighも・ Let us rise and drink a toas七to the head of Boston University, Our President, Dr. Daniel L. Marsh. are a guaran七ee of a successful and an e鯖cient ad- ministrat,ion. A graduate of La Salle Academy, a nOted Fordham Athlcte, a member of the Rhode Island bar, for several GovERNOR J. HowARD McGRA冒H years the Democratic leader of the Rhode Island Sena七e’ This association, On SeVeral previous occasions, has taken the opportuni七y to honor some of its distinguished and now the Chairman of the Democratic State Central Committee as well as Mayor of Providence, I am proud to present another distinguished fellow alumnus’ the alumni a七its annual or biennial ba,nquet, but none has been more worthy of this honor or of our recognition’ than the two gen七lemen who are the special honor gues七s Of this evenmg. The first, Whom I shall presently present’is the Chief Honorable Dennis J. Roberts. Govemor McGrath is an eloquen七 speaker. His tribute to Boston University regisもered with all who were present, Particularly those paragraphs which described Executive of this S七ate, Who since his graduation from how much the University had done for him, glVIPg tO the Law School in 1929, has lived up to the highest and him high ideals and openmg the way for public servICe・ the best traditions of Boston University and has brought great credit and dis七inction to himself and to our Alma Mayor Roberts spoke in similar vein. In particular he expressed appreciation of the loyalty and the service McGrath, the more I have come to admire him and to which graduates of Boston University were glVmg tO Providence and to the State of Rhode Isla,nd. Cordial receptions were glVen tO Dean Emeritus Homer appreciate his true charac七er. Progressive but not radical Albers, Dean Melvin M. Johnson, and Presiden七Marsh. Mater. The longer and the be七もer I have known Govemor conservative but not rF-aCtionary’he has a keen percep場 President Marsh made the address of the evenmg. He もion of social, eCOnOmlC and political problems’COuPled mentioned by name the distinguished judges who were wi七h a宜ne sense of‘mOral values. present a=he dimer and exp丁essed the hope tha七many He possesses紐st of all a desire and a purpose to be a good govemor’an honest govemor’COuPled with a courPαge Eig加eeれ years of splendid public servICe aWaited Govemor McGrath and Mayor Roberts. Friends of the College of Liberal Arts Library A meeting of the friends of the Library of the Co11ege There were also on display the books glVen tO the Col- Of Liberal Arts was held on Thursday evenmg, Februar事′ 1ege Library by Epsilon Chapter in honor of the six members of the Faculty who have recently been placed on the Emeritus roll. 20’1941 in the new Periodical and Reserve Room, With Professor John E. Hanmgan Of the Law School as chairman of the evemng・ Dr. Bennett F. Avery, Dean of the Med王cal School’WaS the guest speaker. Dr. Avery,s ad- dress on the educational and social backgrounds of the Near East was based on first-hand knowIIedge acquired during his ten years in Syria, and proved most infomative and interesting to his audience・ It was unanimously VOted to make Dr. Avery an Honorary Memb-er Of the Friends of the Library. The exhibit of gif七s which had come to the Library Since the previous meeting of the Friends aroused such AIso the followlng Which had been presented from an anonymous glVer at the December meeting. Autographed letter of John Addington Symonds. Autographed manuscript of W皿am Johnson Fox. A=he conclusion of the formal part of the meeting, CO紐ee was serⅤed in the Gamma Delta Room and a social hour was enJOyed by the members and their guests. The next meeting of the Friends of the Library will be held On Thursday, May 8. 1941. enthusiasm that it was fel=hat readers of Bo$tonわwould CoME AND BRING YouR FRIENDS find the description of this exhibit of special interest. tO the ANNUAL DINNER AND MEETING EXHIB工TS SHOWN AT THE MEETING OF THE FRIENDS OF THE COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS of the LIBRARY HELD ON FEBRUARY 20, 1941 FRIENDS OF THE LェBRARY OF THE CoLLEGE OF L皿ERAL ARTS Two interesting contribu七ions to the Library collection of Memorabilia: From Miss Ruth L. S. Child, C.L.A. 1893 WHEN: 6:30 p.M・, Thursday, May 8, 1941 WHERE: 688 BoyIston Street, Boston WHAT: 1. Dimer, $l・00 (including tip). Reserva- Program of the Latin play the Captives of Plautus, tions must be paid for unless cancelled two PreSented by the Latin Department of the College on May 16, 18 and 19, 1896, at the Bijou Opera House under the days before meeting. direction of Professor Thomas Bond Lindsay. 碧・ Brief business meeting, annOunCement Of The dipplng from the Bo8め” SmdαひGZobe accompanylng gifts’rePOr七Of nominating committee. the prog]眼m StateS tha=his was the first presentation of 3. Address: CHINA and JAPAN. 血is play in this country and that Govemor WoIcott and members of his sta鱈attended the performance on May 18. The cast is of especial interest, COntaining the names of SeVeral undergraduates who later achieved distinction in WHO: James H. Powers’C.L.A・ ’15, OutStanding American ]Ouma量istic authority on the Far academic fields. Among these were Wi11iam E11ery East, lecturer on curren七events, forelgn edito音r Channing Leonard, Marshall Blakemore Evans, /彊erbert and editorial writer for the Boston GIobe. Charles Sanbom, Maro Beath Jones and Freeman Marshall Josselyn. AIso in the cast were Lucius Hatfield Bugbee, George William Bell, Howard Tribou Crawford, Edward Rochie Hardy’and Raymond Adams Robbins, aS Well as Professor Lindsay and Professor Joseph Richard 富aylor. Come and hear our distinguished alumnus on this subject of far-reaChing s重gnificance. Please send your reservations by May 5. Reservations may be paid for a七the door. JoHN E・ HANN工GAN, P7.e8ide庇 From Everet七W・ Lord, C.L.A. 1900, Dean of the Col- 1ege of Business Administration Book of mernorabilia compiled in connection with the fo正eth reun10n Of the dass of 1900. This contains pro高, grams of earlier reunions and also a complete collection of PrOgramS and newspaper dipplngS Se七ting forth the Commenc?ment aCtivities of t,he Class・ These are unlque for the pICture they glVe Of a college commencement at the tum of the century. From Melvin M. Johnson, Dean of the School of Law LouISE F. B耽KE, Secre地相 May Music Festival (Co,8dαdedかom Pαge Teγ)) and Mrs. William F. Rogers; Mrs・ Charles E. Be11atty and Mrs. Philip E. Bunker’CoIIege of Business Administration; Mrs. William L. Stidger’SchooI of TheoIogy: Mrs. Jesse B. Davis’SchooI of Education; Miss Hazel Two fine]y illustrated books on Duke University. M. Purmort, College of Practical Arts and Leも七ers; Mrs. From Professor Rober七E. Moody, C.L.A. 19念2 mittee is as follows: Doris LipplnCOtt’College of Liberal A冊ed H. Meyer, College of Music. The student com- SeveI.al books. Arts’Chairman; Dino HoupIS’College of Business Ad- ministration; Ann Gerotheau’College of Music; Judith From Lillian V. Salsman, C.L.A. 19鬼1 Italian doorways, by McGrew. Lipetz’Co量lege of Practical Arts and Letters; and Priscilla Smith, Gir]s’G]ee Club. Pαge Nあe‡e鋤 BOS丁ON UN漢VERS寡丁γ SUMMER SESS菓ON 山漢y 7・August漢6, I94l OSTON UNIVERSI冒Y agam Welcomes血is oppor七unity to invite members of the Alumni and fomer s山dents to take advan七age of the unusual opportunity to retum to their 図 (27th Annua書§es§ion) Alma Ma七er and combine attendance at the Na七iona] Educa七ion Association Conven七ion Wi七h vacation pleasures and opportunities for educational advancemen七during the six weeks of t.he Summer Session. More than three hundred courses’many Of them bearlng On PreSent WOrld conditions and 七he National Defense Program, are O鯖ered in the followmg Subject departments: A ccounting Bio萱ogy Fine Arts French G cography German Gov emment Broadcasting History Advertising and Marketing B acterioIogy Biblical Literature Ch脚is血y Ital i an Classical Literature Joumalism Music Nurslng Education Philo sophy Physical Education Physics Psy chology Public Speaking Religious Education Commercial E ducation La七in Shorthand Drama Law Social Work Economics and Finance E ducation E ngli sh M anagement M ath em atics S ociology Spanish Typ ewriting The Summer Session faculty consists of approximately one hundred sixty persons, including many of those on the regular University Faculty mos七widely known in their respective五dds. A few outstanding leaders in par七icular fields will augmen七the regular s七a鯖・ The courses are of SPeCial interes=o college studen七s’teaChers and schooI o範cials, gradua七e studen七s, and those in七erested in cul七ural improvemen七, and are open to bo七h men and women. All courses carry degree credit, and a number of them are being o蹄ered for the firs七time in the Summer Session. Numerous oppor七unities for gradua七e study are available. In addi七ion to the regular academic work, a StrOng aC七ivi七ies program, under血e direc七ion of the faculty, has been arranged・ This includes excursions to literary, art, and historic shrines, and to impor七an七industrial centers. Conferences of special interes七to teachers also are being arranged. For bulletin and further information, address : ATLEE L. PERCY, D定γeCto7. 688 Boylston Page Tu,eク吻 Stree七 Bos七on, Massachusetts Easter Convocation In connection with the Religious Emphasis Week at BLACKER & §HEPARD COMPANY 器UMBER Boston University an Easter Convocation was held in the new Old South Church Wednesday, Apri1 9, at 12: 15. The program was as follows: `’励eけ書ふれg有〇億を調○○あoんの九〇g寄れy ,, 409 A]bany Street, BOSTON, MASS. Organ Prelude Dr・ α海McK諦eg Symphonic Chorale,バJesus, Telephon● HANcock 9730 Branch Yard: S叩種ntu血SI., N○○foll Dom8 Lead Thou On,, Kaγg-Ele毎 Invocation Dr・ Bu$$elb H.枇(妨0γd Anthems by Men’s Glee Club Dr・ Jα肋e$ R. Hoαgkto7t (Dみecわr) LINEKIN LODGE “Ave Maria,, A γcαdeめ ’`O Sacrum Convivium,, Vあdαm BAYVILLE, MAⅡNE Scripture Reading Deαn EαγZ B. Mαγla枕 Zechariah 4: l-14 Congregational Hymn, No. 117 A well・aPPOinted small hotel ``O God Our He量p in Ages Past,・ 0γ0串 了■ Easter Meditation Dγ. Dα毒eZ L. Mαγ$ん “Re量igion’the High Way of Life,, in Boothbay Harbor. Unusual food, and home atmosphere. Send for folder. University Chorus “HalIelujah Chorus,, Hα微7e l Benediction A. M. SUMMERS O qpわあA・ Bog Tho伽p$On Organ Postlude =Finale from First Symphony,, Dγ・ 0αγさM励eg Vier彬 In Reminiscence (T7‘ibu・わわ挽e ZαわProfe$$0γ助γγg B. Ce庇eγ Of Bo細れU諭鉢物). Life is not now as fierce, lmpetuOuS, In thinking or in candid word and deed; Wisdom has tamed what was spontaneous And mellowed lustiness to lesser need. Youth was so certain aIways and in quest Of zeniths that we now know are beyond Ful糾ment in a chang宣ng WOrld. Our zest May Iead the way for others, be the bond Between our generation and the next. 91 Bay State Road, Boston And so’in age’Perhaps our dreams of youth May be achieved in ways we had no七guessed. Fol]owmg eVer Will-O,一W重SPS Of tおuth, Whi量e life flows on towards the etemal sea, We Ieave w皿oもhers our philosophy. ⑨FFERIN。 。Ⅴ。ry 。。nV。ni。n。。 t。 the permanent and transient guest. Function facilities for large and small groups. Moderate charges. Sheraton -FLORENCE E. WHI叩IER, eX輸C.L.A.,22 Roof for dining and dancmg in the (Written for Professor Harry B. Center, my first University. >i 煎ー >を Summer. Nearest hotel to Boston JOumalism teacher at Boston Universlty, begun in 1933 On the occasion of presentation of John F. Hi量liard,s oi】 NEWTON L・ SMITH, Ge eγα! Ma叩geγ POrtrait of Professor Center to Bos七on University, finished in 1938, but not de量ivered to him until December, 1940, HOTEL SHERATON during his last illness at hospital). May枕′e郎Igge∫吊hαi you夕aironize oαγ aduer擁er$ Pαge Tα,en切-01膨 Members of the Boston Universlty Alumni Hon・ Dewey Short Orator at The Association for Whom we Have no Address Sunset Supper, Alumni Day Alumni of the Universi七y will be delighもed to know LIFE MEMBERS: tha七the Honorable Dewey Short, Republican Congress- Mrs. Hazel Smi七h Lo鮒er, B17 man from Missouri and one of the most eloquent deba七ers Mr. Emil M. Reubens, B鰯 in the Na七ional House, has accepted the invitation of the Alumni Associa七ion to make the prmCIPal address at the ANNUAL MEMBERS: Miss BIanche H. Edwards, E40 Mr. David Elgart, Mus40 Miss Helen G. Gooding, E40 Rev. Donald R. Prismon, T40 Mr. Saul Richman, A40 Mr. Rober七D. Wilder, Mus40 HoN. DEWEY SHORT Sunset Supper on the Charles River Campus Saturday eTenmg, June 7. Congressman Short graduated from the Boston University SchooI of TheoIogy with the Class of 19幾. While in the school he was appointed a Frank D. Howard Fellow. After leav重ng the University he studied aもHarvard, Berlin, Heide量berg, and at Oxford Universities. In 1930 hc received the honorary degree of Doc七or of Laws from Drury College in Springfield, Missouri. Representing the State of Missouri, he was a member of the 71st Congress from 1929-31 and a member of the 74!th, 75th, and 76th Congresses from 1935-4!l. He served as a lieutenant in the Uni七ed States Infantry during the first World War and is a member of the American Legion. Testimonial Dinner to Honor Dean Hverett W. Lord On Sa七urday evenmg, May 17, at Six o’cIock at the CharlelS Hayden Memorial Audi七orium the Boston Uni- versity College of Business Administration Alumni 「四囲圏園 Page Tue庇ひ-T伽)0 May粉e Jugge5i ;hai you olγOnize o初・ Odt/e海i5eγS Association is sponsormg a dimer in honor of Dean Everet七W・ Lord, Who since he reached his seventieth birthday on January 3l, 1941, retire音S this year as Dean 晴 JOHN G. ALDEN Yacht Broker-Naval Architect Of the CoI賞ege of Business Adminis七ration. Alice A. Blais’Class of 193l, aSSistan=o the Manager Of the University Bookstores, and John Waters, Class of 1929’Regis七rar’are SerVmg aS CO-Chairmen of the com- mittee in charge ` Of the arrangements. Other members Of the committee are: Professor Philip E. Bunker ’20, Marine Insurance 131 State Street, Boston, Massachusetts Edgar B・ Pitts ,盆3, Professor Raymond L. Mamix ’23, Professor Horace G・ Thacker ’鬼O, and Professor Max Grossman ,盆6. Faculty’Students’aIumnI, and their wives, husbands, 叩d friends are invited to be present. The reserva七ions m the auditorium are limited to six hundred. Reserva_ tions’made after that ntlmber of tickets has been sold, Will be asslgned to tables m the lobby or in another room. Checks for tickets and reservations should be sen七to Professor Philip E. Bunker’685 Commonwealth Avenue, Bos七〇n. Since the College of Business Administraもion was opened in 1913・的y thousand students have been enrolled, and the college which Dean Lord has directed for twentyeight years has been a steppmg StOne tO better things for faCh one. Many wiIl desire to greet Dean Lord. Ther。 1S eVery PrOSPeCt Of an oveI岨ow. Books on Chinese Art The G抽of Dr・ John C. Ferguson Dr. John C. Ferguson has agaln eXPreSSed his constant interest in his Alma Mater by anether splendid gift. Recently through President Marsh there came to the College Library two more important books on Chinese Art which form a notable contribution to our KIMBALL,、 Glいvl∧N grow重ng COllection of works on the arts of the Orient. The first & C○○ is a “Survey of Chinese Art,,, a' ri血Iy i11ustrated review Of objects recently made availabIe for study and enきOy- ment, Which considerably ex七end our knowledge of the 紺d・ The book is especially rich in objects of the :0Called minor arts, i.e・ fumiture, jades, teXtiles, CeramlCS and the ]ik-e’Of which many fascinating examples are glVen. A considerable number of these are from Dr. Ferguson’s own remarkable collection. INSURANCE OF ALL KINDS The second book is a magnifioent example of Chinese book-making, reVealing the superb combination of richPeSS, delicacy, and restraint scarcely met elsewhere. I七 lS a delight for eye’hand, and mind alike, this beautiful 137 Milk Street PreSentation of負Noted Porcelains,,, in which Dr. Ferguson COllaborates with Hsiang Yiian-Pien. The exquisite plates BOSTON afford a vivid survey of the extraordinary variety and beauty of China’s achievements in this great realm, iII Which she is supreme. Boston University may we量l be proud in con七empla七ing these fine fruits of Dr. Ferguson,s Iong Iife of devo七ion HARRY W. to China, Which has helped so much to deepen the mutuaI appreciation of two great nations for one another. GILMAN WALTER R. J. SM重TH STANLEY O. MacMULLEN -MERVYN J. BAILEY May tt′e SuggeS星ha‘ you Pairo巌e our adt/eγiisers Page姉oe庇g-Thγee Gommg Events May 3 Varsity Crew - Dartmouth - Charles River. Gradua[ion sトould nor rake you away from you富Universiry … Varsity Track - Tufts鵜Medford. 6 Varsity Baseball - Boston Co11ege - Nickerson Field. 8 Friends of the Co11ege of Liberal Arts Library It Costs onIy $1.50 a Year - Dinner meeting - 688 Boylston Street, Boston, - 6:30 p.M. - Address CHINA and JAPAN by James H. Powers editorial writer for the Bo$ton Globe - Dinner $l.00 - See to receive the BOS丁ON UNIVERSI丁Y Page 19. 10 College of Practical Arts and Letters Alumnae N且Wi Annual Luncheon - Parker Hbuse, Boston l:30 p.M. (30 issues) Varsity Crew臆Rutgers and Dartmouth - New Brunswick, N. J. ● Let the NEWS be your weekly letter from Boston Uni▼e職ity. Keep infomed on the activities of your Varsity Track W.P.I.一Nickerson Field. 15 Varsity Baseball - Clark - Worcester. former professors and college friends. 17 Boston University College of Business Ad- ● Alum。i血e world over receive the NEWS. Put your ministration Alumni Association will sponsor Testimonial Dinner in honor of Dean Everett 蒜霊宝#s器S mailing list・ It shou】d be there for W. Lord - Charles Hayden Memorial Audi- ● Send Subscriptions to the Circulation Manager, 685 Commonwealth Åve., Boston, Massachusetts. torium - Tickets a七$1.50 may be obtained from Professor Philip H. Bunker, 685 CommonWealth Avenue, Boston - See Page e2. Varsity Crew - Dad Vail Regatta - Marietta, Ohio. Boston University Women GI.aduates’Club Amual Luncheon - The Co11elge Club, 40 Commonwealth Avenue, Bosもon鵜1:30 p.M. Varsity Track - E.I.C.A.A. ChampIOnShips - W.P.I. Varsity Baseba11 - Tufts - Medford. Have γou a 20 Varsity Baseball - R. I. S七ate - Nickerson Field. §qua「e Pe8 」ob? 23 The Boston Universlty Women’s Council will sponsor the Boston Universi七y May Music .. . 0ne書轟寄書もc bf書八〇rdあ〇月〃 Festival - Charles Hayden Memorial Audi- ・ ‥書届書耽q証re●ヰp○○iα′葛調誼玩gんr関〇〇〇●●? torium - 8 p.M. - Tickets $l.00 and 50c at のrjbあお書o徹す書鼻e章を加の寄れ〇着重○○の田のん章 書鼻c pαr宛魅心r po訪われ・事もr eの〆ッe購読の〃 opes of ○○的綿es “,○ ○確r九〇心証●e心c,hg のen or重○○の伽 書γ寄れcd寄書 B○○書on U読むe地誌か 読書鼻ese儒肋; Women’s Council Building, 146 Commonwealth Avenue and Boston University Book Stores. - See page 10. Varsity Baseball - Trinity - Hartford. May23- -24 Varsity Track葛N.E.I.C.A.A. ChamplOn- MEDICINE A最冒 B口s重NESS PHT救CAI, E。UCAT重ON E。UCAT│ON RELIGIOUS EDUC▲調ON HEAL富H Sc重囲NCE HoME EcoNOMICS SECRE冒Am│. ScIENCu i最葛的 Soc重A重SE京ⅥC田 ships-M.I.T. 24 Varsity Baseball - Wesleyan - Middletown. COMMENCEMENT WEEK June 7 Alumni Day - Hon. Dewey Shor七prmCIPal SPeaker at Sunset Supper. BosTON UNIVERSITY BuREAU OF AppoINTMENTS 25 Blagden Street Boston, Massachusetts WAmBN E. BENSON, DiγCctor KEN調o賀ヒ之86o 8 Baccalaureate Service - Sermon by President Marsh. 9 Commencement - Speaker, Dr. Ode′ll Shepardタ Professor of English in Trinity College, Hartford, Connecticut, and Lieutenant Govemor of Connecticut. THなR農IS∴NO CH▲RG重 FOR THIS S重RV重cR Boston University Night at the Pops - See PrOgram On inside back cover. Pαge T竹花かg-Foαγ May砂e ∫uggeSi ihai youクαironあe Our adひeγliser∫ My Ninetieth Year DANIEI. DoRCHESTER I am in the last quarter of my nine七ieth year. Most Of the relatives and friends of my generation finished their earthly career when they were much younger; they are now in what is said to be a bet七er worId and are there facing the realities. They know the answers to my lm- POrtunate queStions. They are in the places for which they are餌ed; and there they have plenty of congenial WOrk. “They fo11ow the Lamb’’, iもis said, “Whi七hersoever he leads’’. And whither does the Lamb, the e七emal re- mobiIized to strangIe what is best in man and supplant it by wha七is base. In every crisis there has been, aS nOW in Britain, a SummOnS毎to blood, eVil, tearS and sweat Our civilization has no ins,titution or tribunal which has Su鯖cient power to settIe the disputes of nations and safe- guard their rights. The town, the city, the state and the na七ion, eaCh in its own sphere has such power and its judgments are accepted, though often with a patient or rebe11ious shrug・ But each nation does what is召right in demptive passion in the heart of God, lead? “Apart from its own eyes,, and often trampIes upon the rights of us’,, the apostle says’バthey are not made perfec七,,. That Others. Hence, WarS are inevitable. Force con七ends with means plenty of work for their ransomed powers. I still cling to the life here with its limitations, un- force until one yields and there is a breathing time of PeaCe. War is not the bes七thing in the world nor the Certainties’tragedies’and mysteries’and I find it good・ Like Brown工ng,s ar七ist monk, Who was a gayfellow, I Iove this present world’its召wonder’bloom, Changes, and sur- yorst. I七is our common human nature in arms. There lS nO fiercer hatred on the field of battle than that which rages in business’POlitics, and society. There is no血er PrISe雪It means intensity and means good; tO find i七s heroism or nobler sacri丘ce than thaもof the soldier who meanmg lS.my meat and drink,,・ The good I see and glVeS his life for his country. War has taught salutary experience lS a Very Small part of the goodness I dimly See and understand. The supreme vocation, Whether here or hereafter’is to know God and do His will, What- ever happens, and in whatever circumstances.. This is to live etema11y. Most of my mner household fumiture is still intact. Reason, memOry, and imagination s七i11 function and bring to me choice gifts. I have the Bible and the “Friend- Ship of Books,,, Without which I should fee=ost, but With which I have congenial companionship. My body, lessons, righted wrongs and made readjustments which Were long due, and sorely needed. War has also made the bad, WOrSe; i七has made nations bankrupt; it has broken families, and has been one of the greates七curses Of mankind. “War is hell,,, but hell has its uses. It brings the deed with its terrible consequences home to the door; and it points the way to repentance and purification. An eminent English divine has this answer to those Who would abblish war;質Why has not Christianity done WiLh its wonderful senses'’thaもdear. yoke-fellow, Which away with civil govemment as carried on by force and has brough七my soul so much to transmute, Still serves by the in鮎ction of punishment, Chains, and dea七h? Yet, me and has no aches or pamS WOrth the mention. Because of the loss of a vocal chord I can do no preach1ng Or Public speaking; but I am mercifu11y compelled to 気commune more with my own soul; and my spirit must We do not blame iもfor not having substituted love for COmPulsion here; therefore why should we blame it for not having done so in the case of nations? War and evil are branches of one common stock. Civil govemment with make diligent search,, to make質my calling and election Sure’’・ The impaIment Of my hearmg COndemns me to be a lost soul so far as listening to preaching IS COnCemed, but I am stiIl寝on pray置ng grOund,,・ I tum to my choice hymns and repeat them while the preacher does his Stunt・ The poetry of religion’eSPeCially that of the Bible and literature’does me the most good・ “Art,,, Said Dante’存is God’s grandchild.,, Poetry belongs to His family. Systems and creeds, though valuable, are.distant relaもions. Not only do I find life in this sin and war-CurSed world its sword is a kind of war with man; it has prac七ically arisen out of conquest, Which collected the scattered fragments of society together, bound them into tribes and COngregated mankind in a su鯖cient mass to admit of it,,. This English divine frankly recognlZeS the differences be七ween Christian ideals and Chris七ianity.毎Christianity is weighted with human nature and has, tO admit within its pale a scale of relationships, full of dreadful disorder. Yet it stoops to conquer; it grapples with the coarse elemen七s of human nature, descends to the dust with man in order to raise him out of it.,, good, but I also believe that there never was so much This I have always believed and pieaChed. Man is goodness at work in human a節airs as there is now. It made in God,s image; bu七a good coin m Circulation has has many more forms of beneficence; and it is on a much larger scale than ever before. 工am painfu11y aware, however, that there is a most masterly mobilization of evil forces in Europe. I七knows no God but mili七ary force and no use for man but t。 COnSCript him for its base uses. Evil has always warred agains七the good・ To go no farther afield: a七the first Christmas’HeI.Od sough七パto slay the young child,,, “in Whom all the worId was to be blessed,,・ Through all the Sinnmg’ aSPlr⊥ng Centuries since, malign forces have SOme alIoy; and man renders Caesar his due. Our human insti七utions are broken lights; they cast some dark Shadows. God does no七condemn a m叩who is useful because he is some sinful bu七takes palnS tO make him better・ God hates war and its awful progeny. He has 七ravailled in pain to persuade nations to find a peaceful Way tO Settle their disputes and establish justice for all. Resistance or failure to obey God’s gracious promp七ings brings trouble and disaster. When the righ七eous relax their e紐orts’human malignity seizes its chance and makes Page r e7旬一都tJe . Satanic use of it. Britain, SO Iong culpably blind despite 量││ Memoriam repea七ed wamlngS, 1S nOW rePentan七; and she is pour量ng Out “blood, tOil, tearS, and sweat’’fighting for her own Francis M. Carroll life and civilization. “Wake up, Christian! The enemy lS a=he gate.’’ Francis M. Carroll, College of Liberal Arts Class of Margorie Alice Leonard 1897 and Law SchooI Class of 1899, died a七his home in Jamaica Plain on March 29 a吊he age of 67. The recen七publica七ion of the University of Denver con- tains a picture and a brief biographical sketch of Margorie A量ice Leonard. Dean Everett W. Lord of the Col- Mr. Carro11 was bom in Ware, Massachusetts, reCelVmg his preliminary education in the local schooIs. In 1900 after his graduation from the La,W School, he became lege of Business Administration writes as fo量lows regarding PrlnCipa量of the Ware High School. In 1903 he was Miss Leonard: admit七ed to the Massachusetts Bar and established an In the fall of 1938 a new Depar七men七was established o鯖ce in Boston. He served as Fire Commissioner of Boston during the administration of Mayor John F. Fitzgerald and was appointed by Govemor Curtis Guild a Trustee of the Medfield Asylum. He was active in local and state POlitics for many years. While a member of the Democratic Sta七e Commi七tee he was a pre-COnVention leade重・ active in the campalgn for the nomination of President Woodrow Wilson. Mr. Carroll leaves a widow, tWO daughters and two Larkin Thorndike Trull Larkin Thomdike Trull, Bos七on University School of Law Class of 1883, PrOminent attomey and banker in the City of Lowell, died at San Ma七eo, FIorida, April e. In 1875 Mr. Trull graduated from the Boston Latin School and in 1879 from Harvard College. He was a member of a family prominen七in Middlesex County for more than 180 years. In 1884 he married Hamah J. Bailey of Lowell who died about a year ago. They had MARGORIE A. LEONARD Mrs・ Belle Smallidge Knowles in the University of Denver under a gran七from the Alfred P. SIoan Foundation to train young men for the Mrs. Jerome H・ Knowles (Lilla Be11e Smallidge) C叫 critical analysis of govemment fiscal policies and to pre- Iege of Liberal Arts Class of 1899, is senior partner m pare them for the conduc七of investigations in the field the Knowles Company of Northeast Harbor, Main′e. She of local govemments. Although amounced only for WaS the first woman in Maine and among the first in the young men, amOng the ten Fellows of the second class United Sta七es to make a profession of real estate. It was selected in 1939 there was included one young woman, Margorie Alice Leonard, B.S. in B・A.’C?んm Zαude, Boston Universi七y, 1939. Miss Leonard has successfully com- due in no sma11 me音aSure tO the wisdom and foresigh七of Mrs. Knowles that Northeast Harbor was so successfu1量v developed as a Maine coas七resort. p】eted the course with field work in Chicago under the d主rection of the Civic Federation and Bureau of Public E鯖ciency, aSSisting m a SurVey Of the classification of ac- counts and the financial reporting systems of the City of Chicago. Miss Leonard has eamed high commenda置 1ion a=he University of Denver. Mrs・ Lillian Tudbury Bumham Mrs. L皿an Tudbury Bumham, College of Liberal Arts Class of 1890, died a=he home of her brother, 11 HemmgWay Road, Salem, Apri1 19. Mrs. Bumham was bom in Peabody and was gradua七ed from the Peabody High NEW ADDRESS SchooI previous to en七-ering Boston Universi七y. Shc graduated from the University with the highes七honors, recelVlng membership in Phi Beta Kappa. For many Name ‥‥‥‥‥‥‥.‥.‥.‥‥.‥‥.‥‥‥.‥ Addre88 .‥‥‥‥‥‥‥‥‥‥‥.‥‥.‥.‥‥.. years she was an instructor in the Biddeford, Maine, High School. She was a pas七president of the New Engla,nd Federation of Women’s Clubs and past president of the Maine Federation of Women’s Clubs. Mrs. Mail to Bos七on University Alumni Association 20 BEACON STREE冒, BosTON, MASS. Bumham was present at the fi貼eth reunion of her class in 1940 and was a guest at the Presiden七’s Dinner on the even重ng PreCeding Commencement. Page Tu,el旬-S読 FORMS FOR BEQUESTS B嵩蒜…蕊霊語義菩提豊翫盤霊露語諾意器謹 as to the proper wording thereof’there are glVen below forms for the convenience of those Who plan to remember Boston University in their wills. L U五γeStγicted I give and bequeath to the Trustees of Boston University, a COrPOration existing under the laws of the State of Massachusetts and located in the City of Boston in said state, ‥‥・‥‥‥‥‥‥‥・‥‥‥・‥‥‥‥‥‥・‥‥・‥‥.‥‥..dollars.to be used for the benefit of Boston University in such manner as the Trustees thereof may direct. 〃 Tb凪Jab嵐h a Pわmanent FLmd, hcome U元γeStγicted I give and bequeath to the Trustees of Boston University・ a COrPOration existing under the laws of the State of Massachusetts and located in the City of Boston in said state, .dollars, tO COnStitute an endowment fund to be known as the Fund’SuCh fund to be kept invested by the Trustees of Boston University and the annual income thereof to be used for the benefit of the University in such manner as i青s Trustees may direct. m埼ec拓c f坊やOSeS I give and bequeath to the Trustees of Boston University, a COrPOration existing under the laws of the State of Massachusetts and located in the City of Boston in said state, .‥‥‥‥‥・‥‥・‥‥‥‥‥‥‥‥‥‥・‥・‥‥‥‥‥・‥‥dolla購, endowmentfundtobeknown as the.. tO COnStitute an ‥・・‥‥‥‥‥…・・‥…‥‥.…………‥ Fund・ the income theref富om to be expended by the Trustees of Boston University for the followlng PurPOSeS : Current Expenses of the University current Expenses of any Department Profess For the maintenance of a orship Fellowsh i p scholarship for the purchase of books, the cost and maintenancc of a bui-ding or for any purpose the glVer may designate. 細O耽M細OⅢ. G量田富S BOSTON UNIVERSITY GIFTS FOR DEVELOPMENT ON THE CHARLES RIVER CAMPUS The President and Trustees of Boston University have undertaken to obtain subscriptions and contributions for the development of its new campuB On the Charles River. In consideration of the educational service of Boston University and because of the need of such service in training young people in American ideals and in the American way of life) I promi8e tO Pay tO the Trustees of Bo8tOn University the sum of.‥....... Do量lar8 ($…………….) 0Ve重a Period of… … … … yearS in semi-annual installments. I desire my subsoription to be applied to (please check) : 1・ General Development of the University 2. College of Liberal Arts 3. SchooI of TheoIogy 4. School of Medicine 7. SchooI of Education 8. Co皿ege of Practical Arts and Letterさ 9. Sargent Co皿ege of Phydeal Education lO. School of Social Work 5. School of Law 11. Couege of Mu髄c 6. College of Busine8S Administration 12. Graduate School 勧め8〇・め∽ Mα碑A血かe88 Pαge Tu,e加ひ-Se亀)∽ University Notes In Memoriam Engagements MARTIN E. REID, Jr., Bus〆ness Admin寂γa訪on ,37, SOn Of Martin E. Reid of Cambridge and the late Mrs. Reid, tO Virginia M. Lyons, daughter of David W. Lyons of Lynn. Mr. Reid is now_ a紺iated with the JOHN P. CUSHING, ’82 THOMAS F. MAHAN, M.E∴25, Of Chestnut Hill, Dr. John P. Cushing, L油eγOI Aγ!s, former prinoipal of the New Haven, Connecticut, High School and Head- master of Hamden Hal], a Private school in Hamden, Comecticut, died Apri1 6 in Cambridge, New York. He founded Hamden Ha11 in 1912. SOnOf the late Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Mahan, tO Pauline Y. Long, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank J. Long of Wollaston. LAWRENCE E. STILES, Bus寂es‘S Adminisiγα寂m ’28, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Stiles, tO Arlene Lowe, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. O. E. Lowe, both of Boston. CHARLES W. GAREY, ’89 Dr. Charles W. Garey, M.D., died November 27 at the age of seventy-four years. Miss Lowe is∴an aneSthetist at the Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston. Mr. Stiles is manager of the Retailers Commercial Agency, a Subsidiary of the Retai】 Credit Company in Boston. MRS. CLARIBEL MOULTON WATERMAN, '93 Mrs. Claribel Moulton Waterman, Li∂eγαl Aγ細, died January 3 in Boston. Mrs. Waterman was an.author and ohuroh worker of note in Chicago, IllinoIS, and Newburyport. PHILIP E. COHEN,LL.B. ,z9, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. Max Cohen of Roxbury, tO Evelyn H. Weene, daughter Of Dr. and Mrs. Frederic I. Weene of Jamaica Plain. MANUEL BARRISH, B.S.寂B.A. ,31, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. Wi]liam Barrish, tO Helen Newhoff, daughter LEON E. BALDW量N, ’97 Leon E. Baldwin, A.B., died at his home, 120 HanCOck Street, Dorchester, Apri1 6. Mr. Baldwin served as leader of Community Singing in the city of Boston and as Musical Director of the Boston SchooI Centers for twenty-Six years. Alu皿I]i of the College of Liberal Arts will reca11 the many occasions when he has been One Of the singers at reunlOnS Of Epsilon Chapter. Of Mrs. I」. Newho鯖of Dorchester. LOUISE NEAL, A.B. ’33, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank J. Neal of Lynn, tO Henry J. Boudreau, SOn Of Mrs. Peter Boudreau of the same city. Mr. Boudreau is empIoyed at the Watertown Arsenal. LAWRENCE J. SULLIVAN, B.S. 6nB.A. ,33, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. John L. Sullivan of Lowell, tO Eleanor D. Waters’daughter of Dr. pnd Mrs. James E・ Waters of Gardner. Mr・ Su】livan lS emPloyed by Dun & Brad- GILBERT M. MASON, ’98 Dr. Gilbert M. Mason, M.D., a member of the SohooI Of Medicine faculty from 1901 to 1910, died Maroh 17 at his home in Dorchester at the age of sixty-eight. He had practiced medicine in that city for the past forty-three years. Dr. Mason was prominent in the WOrk of the Odd Fe]lows and the Masons. He has SerVed on the staffs of Carney and Forest Hills hospitals EUGENE M. BRINDIS, Business Admin寂γαきion '34, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Brindis of Haverhill, tO Evelyn Y. Rosen, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Rosen of Laconia, New Hampshire. Mr. Brindis is PreSident of the Laconia Shoe Company. LEOPOLD O. GENEST, S.B. ’34, M.D. ’37, SOn Of the late Mr. and Mrs. Honore Genest of Indian Orchard, 嘉豊島缶轟諾t, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. FLORENCE M. OPDYKE. ’98 Dr. FIorence M. Opdyke, A.B., Well known osteopath, died Apri1 8 in Augusta, Maine, at SeVenty. Dr. HERBERT A. STEVENS, 4.B. ’34, S.T.B. ’37, SOn Of Mrs. Henry B. Stevens of Norridgewock, tO Mary J. Reese, daughter of Mrs. Jay S. Reese of Scranton, Pennsylvania. Mr. Stevens is pastor of the Federated ohurch of Norridgewock, Maine. FRANK W. WETHERBEE, B.S. ;n B.A. ceγ海caJe ’37, SOn Of Mrs. Frank W. Wetherbee of Newtonv肌e, tO Ethelyn R. Leverich, daughter of Mr. Richardson Leverich of New Orleans, Louisiana. BARBARA WHITCOMB, Libeγαl Aγis ’37, daugh- ter of Rev. and Mrs. Howard C. Whitcomb of Somer_ Ville, tO Fordyoe M. Brown, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. Paul M. Brown of Madison, Wisconsin. Miss Whitcomb is employed in the o臆ce of the technioal editor Of the research laboratories of the Eastman Kodak Company, Rochester, New York, Where Mr. Brown is a research physicist. MARGARETE J. BECKER, Bu嶋iness Adln寂is/γαiion ’38, daughter of Mrs. Emma C. Becker of Jamaica Plain, tO Everett O. Alldredge, SOn Of Dr. and Mrs. I. W. Reagin of Christopher, Illinois. Mr. Alldredge is On the sta鱈of the National Archives in Washington, D.C. HOPE HARVEY, B.S.訪Ed. ,38, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William R. Harvey of Newport, Rhode Island, Street. and during the World War was∴a OaPtain with the Amerioan army medical coIPS. Bethlehem Steel Company. HENRY JOSEPH ROCK, Medicine ,35, SOn Of the late S. J. Rock of Winthrop, to Patricia Ryan, daughter Of Mr. and Mrs. Patrick H. Ryan of Springfield. Miss Ryan is employed in the Winthrop o鉦ce of the to James E. Meikle, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. James M. Meikle of the same city. Mr. Meikle is a member of the Aquidneck National Bank staff in Newport. MILTON S. ÅLTSHULER, B.S. GnB.A. ,39, SOn Of Mr.1 and Mrs. Louis I. Altshuler of Brookline, tO Estelle L. Ginsberg, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Isadore Gins_ berg of the same place. Mr. Altshuler is an associate Of the Altshuler GenealogicaI Service. Miss Ginsberg is a cosmetician employed by Bai!ey Drug, Inc. JACK L. CHITEL● B.S・ ;n B.A∴39, SOn Of Philip Chitel of Brookline and Winchester and the late Mrs. Chitel' tO Charlotte T. Alman, daughter of Mr. amd Mrs. Samuel Alman of Allston. Opdyke was∴a member of the National Osteopathio New England Telephone and Telegraph Company. ‘Society and the Maine Osteopathic Association. She is Mr. Rock is employed by the John Hanoock Mutual Mrs. Harry M. Dobles of Springfield, tO Olive G. Jack- SurVived by three brothers. Life Insuranoe Company in Boston. SOn, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. David Jackson of Mon_ TERENCE O’REILLY, ’98 Terence O’Reilly, LL.B., PrOminent Providence, Rhode Island, attOrney, died Apri1 4 at the Rhode Island Hospital. Mr. O’Reilly was born in Providence, 阜eVenty-SeVen yearS∴agO. Since his∴admission to the Rhode Island Bar in 1896 he has been a praoticing attomey in that oity. CATHER量NE G. FOLEY, ’19 Miss Catherine G. Foley, B.E., A.M. ,20, died March 22 at the Carney Hospital in South Boston. Miss Foley retired as a・ SuPervisor of Boston prlmary SchooIs in 1939. She taught for many years in the Harvard school district in Char]estown and the Dear_ bom district in Roxbury. MRS. ALICE WONG CH重N. ’21 Mrs. Alice WoI]g Chin, S.B., died at Minehead, Somerset, England, On March 8, 1941. Mrs. Chin was for a number of years active in the A.A.U.W. and in Church and mission sohooI work in Peking, Tientsin, 誤認諾意霊課叢議鷲 her husband, Mr. Chen Peng Chin, and two daughters, Helen and Constance. MRS. MARTHA ABBOTT SIMONIAN, ,25 Mrs. Martha Abbott Simonian, A.M., formerly an English te盆.cher at Malden High Sohool died March 23 MIRIAM R. ABRAMS, PγaC!ical Aγ/S 。nd Le〃eγS SOn. Miss Jackson is a teacher at the MacDu臆e School ’36, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Abrams of LowelI, in Springfield. Mr. Dobles is a member of the faculty to Albert L. Chosiad, SOn Of Mr.. and Mrs. William at the American International College. He is∴also Chosiad of Allentown, Pennsylvanla. Mr. Chosiad is assistant manager of the Lowell o臆ce of the Social Security Board. FRANCIS X. DAY,B.B.A. ’36, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. James Day of Boston, tO Mildred Rice, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Rice of Roslindale. Mr. Day is an instructor at NichoIs Junior College in Dudley. JOHN M. GLEN, Jr., B.S. Gn B.A. ceγ頗cのきe ,36, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. John M. Glen of North Providence, Rhode Island, tO Margaret H. Prendergast, daughter of Mrs. Myrtle N. Prendergast of Brookline. Mr. Glen is now stationed with the oavalry unit at Fort Bragg, North Carolina. BARBARA YOUNG, A.B. ’36, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred J. Young of Boston, tO Gilbert B. Cutler, 3d, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert B. Cutler, Jr., Of Melrose. LOUIS Y. CHART暮ER, LL.B. ,37, SOn Of Mr. and Mr8. A. J. Chartier of Holyoke, tO Pierrette E. Lavoie, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Lavoie of the same city. Miss Lavoie is empIoyed by the Sinclair FIorists in Holyoke. Mr. Chartier is a member of the Holyoke Bar Association: Where he is a praoticing attomey. WILLIÅM A. DURBIN, B.S.寂B.A, Ceγ頻coie ,37, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Durbin of Waban, tO Jane Arend, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. F. Spencer Arend Of Newtonville. DOROTHY PIERCE, B.S. ;n Phγ.Ed. ’37, daughter at the Malden Hospital. Mrs. Simonian had coached Of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph E. Pierce of Worcester, tO the high schoo】 drama∴Clubs∴and founded the Audi_ Stanley Ricker of the same city. Mr. Ricker is con- torium Players. She was also a director of the Malden Y.M.C.A. JOSEPH W. BARTOLOMEO, ’29 nected with the Screen Plate Company, Fitchburg. Miss Pierce is in charge of the physical education PrOgram for girls in the schooIs of Augusta, Maine. JOHN R. ELIA, JR., ’30 John R. Elia’Jr., Z3.B・A.1 Of Manchester, New Hamp- MRS・ GRACE M. ALLEN, ’35 Mrs. Grace n生Allen’B.S・ ;n Ed・, formerly a teacher Of the third grade in the Hancock School, Everett, died December 20 following an operation. Pαge T倣)e7功-Eig加 JOHN W. HUTCHINSON, A.M. ’39, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. William Hutchinson of Methuen, tO Eleanor Crockett, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred E. Crockett Of Hopedale. Mr. Hutchinson is attending the o鐙cers, training schooI of t,he Marine Reserve Corps at Quantico, Virginia. DOROTHY H. MILLER, B.S. ;〃 Phγ.Ed. '39, daughter of Mr. and M冒s. Charles J. Miller of Brook_ line, tO Dr. Samuel Orlov, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. George Orlov of Roxbury. Miss Miller is engaged in physical therapy work at Worcester State Hospital. Dr. Orlov is engaged in the private praotice of medioine in Wareham. RICHARD R. TOWLE, B.S. Gn B.A. ceγ海co!e ’39, Of South PoI.tland, Maine, tO Dorothy L. Kamaly, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Kannaly of Allston. Mr. Towle is now connected with the S. D. Leiderson Company of New York City. W重LLIAM T. ALDRICH, Jr.. LL.B. ’40, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. William T. Aldrioh of Springfield, tO Mary R. Bausman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A.Linton Bausman of the same oity. KENNETH W. DOBBROW, B.S. ;n B.A. ceγ頻cα鯵e ’40, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Dobbrow of Dedham, tO Shirley Robinson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph L. Robinson, also of Dedham. JOSEP霊I R. HEALY, Ed.M. ’40, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph W. Healy of Worcester, tO Mary C. Grealis, daughter of Mrs. Catherine A. Grealis of the same oity. Mr・ Healy is educational adviser at the 199th Company, C. C. C., Camp Lonergan, Voluntown, Connecticut. Of Boston, tO Ruth H. Cotton, daughter of MI.. and Mrs. Kenneth B. Cotton of Watertown. Mr. Kimballis now associated with Sears Roebuck and Company. his wife’Mrs. Harriet Watt BartoIomeo, his father, Shire, died January 13 director of replacement at that institution. DÅVID W. KIMBALL, B.S. ;n B.A. ceγi砺caきe ,40, Joseph W. BartoIomeo, B.B.A., Of Roxbury, died Suddenly March 25. Until his death Mr. BartoIomeo WaS employed as an accountant. Mr. BaI.tOIomeo leaves four brothers and five sisters. ARTHUR J. DOBLES, M.C.S. ’39, SOn Of Mr. and RUSSELLT.HÅTCHCO. DealeISin Furniture&Equipment fbγ Homes,Hotels&Institutions 1WashingtonSt..Boston(atHaymarketSq.) MARGARET E. M賞DDLBTON, B.S.寂B.A. ceγ;i〆cα;e ’40, daughter of Mrs. Clarence J. T. Middleton of Providence, Rhode Island, tO RICHARD BATCHELDER, B.S・ ;n B.A. ceγ頻caie ’40, Of Boston, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Batchelder of Portsmouth, New Hampshire. GERALD B. OUDERKIRK, B.S〇 ㍍ R.E. ,40, SOh Of Mr. and Mrs. Simon J. Ouderkirk of Rome, New York, tO Doris V. Shaver, daughter of Rev. and Mrs. Erwin L. Shaver of Waltham. Mr. Ouderkirk is studying for his master’s degree at the SchooI of Social Work. Mαy粉e Sugge∫吊hal γ鋤夕aきro誘ge o鋤「 αdりer鉢eγS MamageS WILLIAM H. CHAFE・ B紘Sわess Adminislraiion ,26, SOn Of Mrs・ Wi11iam H. Chafe of Cambridge, and EIsie Crabtree, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Crabtree Of the same city were married recently. CHARLES W. CÅLDWELL, Business Adm寂siraiion ’29・ Of Exeter’New Hampshire, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. John W. Caldwell of Whalom, Fitchburg, and Maxine Cates of Hxeter, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. HELENE SPENCER・ B.S・ in P.A・ ,39, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ray S. Spencer of Merrymount, and Warren A. Riley’grandson of Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. 悪業露盤盤h諾。器霊も鑓蕊 P.C.H│CKS S. W量GGLESWORTH, B.S. ;n Ed. ’40, and HELEN HENRY JOHNSON・ B.S・ ;n P・A・ ’40・ Mr. Riley is CateringforAliOccasions empIoyed as a draftsman with the General Eleotric Company. 17MARKETSQUARE,LYNN JOHN H. CALDWELL, S.B. ’40, SOn Of Mrs. Margaret caldwell of Sharon and the Iate Dr. J. Oatley A・ D" Cates of Pittsfield, Maine, Were married March 12. Caldwell・ and MaI.garet L. Cawley, daughter of Rev. Mr. Caldwell is manager of the Exeter and Hampton and Mrs. Norman B・ Cawley of Beverly, Were married しYNN登-まき52 ear!y in ApI`il. 諾鴇乱暴嵩謹in Exeter・ Where he and Mrs. GENEVIEVE M. DOUCETT, Prac!ical Aγls md PHYLLIS CHAMBERLAIN' 4.B-29, M郷ic LeiieγS ,40・ daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond G. 緒鴇霊薬嘉島蕊薄黒孟許諾 Doucett of Wakefield・ and Archie W. Friswell, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. David P. FI.iswell of Needham, Were and Mrs. David P. Sias of Orlando, FIorida, Were married March 29. Mr. Sias is vice-preSident of the married Apri1 5. Mrs. Friswell has been manager of American Machinery Corporation of Orlando. empIoyed in the Boston University maintenance and EDWARD CARP’B.S.寂B.A・ ,32, Of Biddeford, 艶覇罷禁書豊沼訴藍識鑑識 粗雑1S謄豊誤認磐豊詑鴇 the cafeteria∴at the Soden Building. Mr. Friswell is SELMA FELDMAN, PγaCiicα1 4ris.鋤d LeiieγS ’40, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Feldman of Fall River’and Sidney Schenker, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. Max Street, Biddeford. rane of Saugus were married September 3. GLADYS M. BURNS・ B.S・寂Ed・ ’33, daughter of Mr. and Mrs・ William A. Burns of Fall River, and 落盤詰n難詰濃盤書誌管i蒜謙語 Depot, Vermont. Mr. Converse is empIoyed as a m認鵜暁輔轍, 。.S. 。n 。.A.34, daught。r 。f Schenker of Washington, D. C., Were married March 23. 驚露盤器‡認諾h謹書Sent he is connected 藍嵩揺半畳豊管盗‡落籍盈磐癌譜 S. Acker・ daughter of Mrs.Louis M. Acker of Amesbury Were married March 26. Mr. Somers is a practicing attorney in Newburyport. CAROLINE T・ CROSBY, Mus・B・ ’36, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bertram D. Crosby of Harwich, and 君寵霊藍悪書豊能鴇清書藍窪 Moody are living at Pleasant Lake, Cape Cod. 43ChdrIe§Street,Boston KiRkIand59OO ALAN R. LEVINE, B縦iness Adm寂isiγaiion '40, SOn Of Benjamin Levine of Dorchester, and Frances KiI.SChbaum' daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Kirsch_ baum of the same city, Were married March 30. OREN F. McCLURE' S.T・B∴40, Of Pontiac, Michigan’and Marie E. Stead of Kingman, Kansas, Were married December 29. MI'. McC]ure is Associate Church, Pontiac. WILLIAM G. BARRY’B.S・寂B.A・ ,34, SOn Of Mr. 計器聾等藍豊誌器禁書藍豊霊 轟音詳盈聖霊詑藍鴇羅譜聖霊 Luncheon§OrDinne営§ PATRICIA HART’A・M・ ,40, and Gordon S. Coch- Pastor∴and Minister of Music at Central Methodist Mrs. Nellie S. Hanlon of Waterbury’Connecticut, and Buffels,-Receptions engineering department. Isaacson of Auburn・ Maine’Were married March 30. Fay M. Converse of Springfield, Vermont, SOn Of the Wilbur’sCoIonialCaしerers Births 圏園圏 To L. HAROLD DEWOLF, S.T・B・ ,26, Ph・D. ,35, and Mrs. L. Harold DeWolf (MADELBINE MARSH, A・B・ ’34, A.M・ ’35)・ a SOn, Daniel Lotan, born Apri1 10. Dr. DeWolf is Associate Professor of Philosophy and Psychology at the College of Practical Arts and Letters. The matemal grandfather is DANIEL L. MARSH, S・T・B・ ,08, President of the University. To EMORY S. BUCKE, S"T・B・ ’88, and Mrs. Bucke (BARBARA BURNS, Ed・M・ '88), a∴SOn, Charles Wesley Bucke’March 2. The maternal grandmother is Mrs. Charles Wesley Burns, Wife of the late CHARLES WESLEY BURNS, S.T.B. '99. 諜認諾。害悪龍詣聖霊譜荘蕊Of FairBEULAH MARY INGALLS・ B.S・ ;nEd∴36, daugh- TILE§TON& HOLLINGSWORⅢCO. M止e地軸dDi観ributo調Of FineBookPapers MILL▲NDOFFICBS BOSTON Persona萱s ter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Inga11s of Bradford, Maine, and EDGAR L. De FOREST’B・S・寂Ed∴40, SOn Of 1881 Mr. and Mrs・ Edgar L. De Forest of Los Angeles, California, Were married November 21. Mr. De Forest received the deg誓e of M・E・ from the University of Southern Califomla in January. DAV賞D N. ROACH’B.S. ;n B.A. ceγ砺coie ,33, LL・B∴37, SOn Of Mrs・ David H. Roach of Lynn, and WILLIAM I. WARD, rheolog3,, and Mrs. Ward will Celebrate the sixtieth anniversary of their mamage On University Board of Trustees slnce 1908. Rosemary LeClair of Swampscott were married April 工886 13. Mr. Roach is a member of the Lynn SchooI Com- mittee. The coup]e are living at 9 Lynn Shore Drive, Ly皿n. CLEMENT A. BRIGGS・ JノL・B・, ,38, SOn Of Judge and Mrs・ Elmer L. Briggs of Plymouth, and Marion E. JOHN C. FERGUSON, A・B・・ Ph・D・ ,02, Honoγaγy LL・D∴39, is stil=iving in Peking, China. He is the author of a book =Survey of Chinese Art・・ of which a second printing was issued in November. Shipley’daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond T. Ship- 1892 ley of the same town’Were married Apri1 9. RUTH N. REICH・ B.S・ ;nB.A. ceγ頻caie ,38, daugh- FRED WINSLOW ADAMS, Libeγal Aγis and School ter of Mr. and Mrs・ Jacob S. Reich of BridgepoI.t, げTheology・ and HAMILTON M. GIFFORD, A.B. ’23, Connecticut・ and Max Glick, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. S.T・B・’31・ are CO-PaStOrS aS a reSult of the merger of the Bemard Glick of New Haven, Connecticut, Were mar- Harvard Street and Epworth Methodist churches in ried Apri1 6. Cambridge recently. NORMAN THOMPSON} Jr., Business 4dminisiγa!ion ,38・ SOn Of Mr・ and Mrs・ Norman Thompson of Wellesley Hills・ and Marjorie H. Foster, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Neal W. Foster of Brandop, Vermont, Were married March 22. Mr. Thompson lS emPIoyed by the Mutual Boiler InsuraIICe Company, Boston. Mr. and Mrs. John W. Henderson of West Roxbury, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs・ A・ Malkin of Newton, and Selma R. Lazarus・ daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Lazarus Of Spring亀eld, Were maI`ried Apri1 6. Mr. Malkin is ter of Mr・ and Mrs. Charles S. Morgan of Claremont, 温隷豊e悪書諾忠霊維霊寵罵 G. Stearns of Claremont, Were.marI.ied April 12. retirement in September. 1897 EDWIN B. WESTON, LL・B・, reCently retiI.ed as SPeCia] justice of the Derry' New Hampshire, munlCIPal court after twen七y-Six years of service. 1902 AMBER A. STARBUCK・ A・B・, M・D・ ’06, the only 認諾豊茶器㌔需;筑豊1叢書盤。粒 丘eld. 1903 HENRI A. BUROUE, J.B., is now Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the State of New Hampshire. 揺親書等諾詣tざaS Chief Justice of the HENRY J. FRANKLIN,.S.B. (Agric初のγe), SPOk。 Mr. Stearns is an instructor in soclal scienoe a七Com- recently at a meeting of the Lower Cape Cranberry Wall-On-the-Hudson High Sohool. GI‘OWeI‘S Association in the Orleans Town Hall. HELEN W. NASON・ B.S. ;n P.A・ ’39, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred R. Smith of Haverhill, and Charles E. Curtis・ SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. Edward P. Curtis of the Same City・ Were married March 22. MI‘. Curtis is empIoyed with the York National Bank in Saco, Maine, Where Mr. and Mrs. Curtis are living on Ferry Road. Teleph0ne Highland● 0207・OZO8 retire this summer' Since he reaches the age limit for an executive of the M. and R. Transportation Company. ALBERTA MORGAN, Summeγ Session ,39, daugh- カタの``宛Iク′ ``S. 122・126 DUDLEYSTREET, BOSTON, MASS. 1896 Lt・ and Mrs. Lacey are茄ing in Alexandria, Virginia. ALBERT MALKIN・ Busi解ss Admini5.‘γaiion ,39タ P短,`肋`砺io持BosIo" U持宛eγS砂 ELISHA H. BREWSTER, LL・B・, SePior judge of the Mr・ and Mrs. Thompson are livlng at 71 Martin Street・, and Lt. Donald O. LaceyI SOn Of MI.. and Mrs. L. D. Lacey of Chicago' IllinoIS, Were married March 22. WAしLPAP書RS Federal District Court in Boston slnCe 1922, may Cambridge. MARTHA B. HENDERSON, A.M∴39, daughter of G。営,事案S晴書職種を○。 May 18. They are now living in North Carver, MassaChusetts. Mr. WaI.d has been p member of the Boston 宣909 Mrs. Herbert T. Hatch (ELIZABETH J. JÅCK_ SON, A"B・), WaSthe speaker a吊he meeting of the Barn_ Stable Parent-Teacher Association March 25. Mrs. Hatch’s general theme was =Adventures in UnderStanding. ’’ May抄e鋤ggeS吊hal γOuクaironi2e Ouγ∴ad。er鉢eγS Pαge Tα)el痢-Nわe Friends of Rev. HENRY O. MEGERT, S.T.B., and 1912 1924 Mrs. Megert surprised them with a party on their WILLIAM R. LESI,IE, S.T.B., PaStOr Of St. Mark’s Methodist Church, Brookline, WaS reelected president of the Boston Area Council of Churches at the annual meeting held on February 18. twentieth wedding anniversary, March 18. Mr. Megert is the pastor at the Methodist Church in South Eliot, Maine. 1922 宣913 FREDERICK B. KNIGHT, A.B., dean of the divi- Historica] Theology at the SchooI of Theology, WaS the Sion of education and applied psychology at Purdue preacher at the union service of the Protestant ohurches Of Norwich, Connect,icut, On Sunday, April. 6 Mrs. Emest H. Card (M. RUTH ESSERY, A.B., A.M∴36), and Mr. Card are now living at Ward Road and West Main Street, Southboro. G. BROMLEY OXNAM, S.T.廓., HonoγaγヅLi祐D. ’30, delivered the Merrick Lectures at Ohio Wesleyan University, Delaware, Ohio, March 9-13. His general Subject was “Contemporary Crucifixion and Crusade.’’ Said to have reoeived the first appointment as police- WOman in the United States. She was appointed to this position in 1912. During the World War she served in the Red Cross Social Service and drove an ambulance. In 1921 she went to Los Angeles to return a woman the country to return a prlSOner. ALICE M. WHITING, B.S. ;n Ed., Of East Winthrop, Maine, reCent]y丘nished her second year of college work at the Graduate School of Teachers’ the五eld of guidance. In 1939 she became Dean of at the library in Fairhaven. Island, New York. IRVING R. HOBBY, B.B.A., has been appointed dean of the day division of Worcester Junior College. 1925 HENRY B. PARKER, Liberal Aγきs, is now living at 230 Huntington Avenue, Boston. Alumni Club of Bridgeport. Connecticut, On March 20・ WÅRREN R. SARGENT, B.S. jn Ed., director of Mrs. Harold A. Cobb (MARIO OROZCO, A.B・), after several years in Mexico City, has returned to this country and is teaching Spanish at Lasell Junior Co11ege in Auburndale. that position to become the director of Howard Semi- ORVILLE L. DAVIS, S.T.B., Principal of Leonard TheoIogical College, Jubbulpore, India, WaS One Of the nary in West Bridgewater. prlnCipal speakers∴at the annual convention of the admissions at Worcester Academy, has resigned from She became a policewoman in Washington, D. C., in 1920 and studied law at George WashingtonUniversity. Prisoner, being the first policewoman to travel across March 18. Mr. Henley’s subject was ``Wanderings In Europe.’’ Women at Friends Academy, Locust Va11ey, Long Mrs. Pearson were hosts to the Boston University 1916 Club at the Union Methodist Church in Fall River, Amesbury, WaS reCently appointed general assistant CHARLES PEÅRSON, B.B.A., J4B.A. ’25, and IRENE McAUL重FFE, SaγgenらLi∂eγal Aγis ’26, is Georgia. KENNETH HENLEY, S.B., S.T.B. '26, minister of the Maple Street CongI.egational Church in Danvers, College, Columbia University. Her work has been in GERTRUDE L. GIBBONS, B.R.E., A.M. ’25, Of 1915 received orders for active duty at Fort Benning, spoke at the monthly supper meeting of the CoIpitts EDWIN P. BOOTH, S.T.B., Ph.D. ’29, PI.Ofessor of University has been invited to be speaker at the commencement of the Teachers Co11ege at New Britain, Connecticut, On June 6. EDGAR B. EMERY, B.B.A., Of West Medford has St. Thomas Syrian Church at Maramon, South India, March 3-10. 1923 CARLTON W. RÅY, B,S. ;nEd., A.M・ '27' PrmCi- LEONARD W. A,HEARN, B.B.A., nOW has an important o伍cial position with the United States Bureau of the Budget. Mr. A’Hearn is now living at 4610 Nor- pal of the Pierce and the Angier SchooIs in Newton, W挙 recently I:eCeived as a member of the Newton KiwanlS Club. wood Drive, Chevy Chase, Maryland. 1920 M. BLIZABETH BEE, B.R.E., S.T.B. ’30, has been 1926 recalled by Center Methodist Church, Saugus, tO SerVe G. ÅLBERT HIGGINS, A.B., S.T.B. ’23, WaS COPaStor With Rev. Ralph L. Rood at the “University of Life’’conducted under the auspices of the Methodist and Baptist churches of Greenfield. Dr. FRANK∴KINGDON, A.B., Of West Orange, New Jersey, recently o伍ciated at the marriage cere- mony of his son, John, tO Doris M. S. Smith, daughter Of Mr. and Mrs. James L. Smith of East Orange. as pastor for the eleventh year. LESTER F. BOYCE, Bus海ess AdmilOis!γa訪on, a member of the o鯖ce sta債of Town Accountant Leon I」. Allen of Brookline, WaS reCently elected a member of the Boston Chapter of the National Association of Cost Accountants. HARRY KARL置N, Libeγal AγtS, Newton reporter for the Waltham NettIS-T′1bo`ne, is now also NewtonWatertown district reporter for the Bosio7’Globe. FRANK L. PIZZUTO, A.B., PaStOr Of St. Paul’s 1921 Italian Methodist Church, East Boston, and formerly RALEIGH W. DRÅKE, B.B.A,, A.M. ’30, aSSOCiate PrOfes9Or Of psychoIogy at Wesleyan College, Macon, Georgla, SPOke at the chaPel exercises at the West Point High SchooI Apri1 2. PERCY M. HICKCOX, S.T.B., A.M∴22, is now instructor of Italian and French at Drew University, Madison, New Jersey言s now assistant professor of Italian and Italian Literature at the Su鯖olk University College of Liberal Arts, Boston. ALLEN A. STOCKDALE, S.T.B., addressed the 】iving at lll Johnson Street, Highland Park, New annua] meeting Jersey. Club March 26. of the Trumbu11 County Foremen’s MILDRED L. ALBERT, Saγge13j, Dean of the Academie Modeme and teacher of posture at the Massachusetts General Hospital, WaS the speaker at the meeting of the Massachusetts Association of SchooI Secretaries on Apri1 5. Mrs. Albert’s∴Subject was ``Poise and Personality.’’ CARRIE B. EGGERS, A.M., has for the past six y9arS been engaged in Lutheran Welfare work as SupervISOr Of the Family Servi撃Of the Inner Mission Society of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvanla. JOHN F. LOCKE, A.M., Of Maurertown, Virginia, conducted evangelistic services at First Brethren Church in Waterloo, Iowa, for two weeks ending Apri1 9. PAULINE SENN, 4.M・, Who left her mission work in Canton, China言ust before bombing started in 1937 , retumed to Boston recently after speaking at meetings of the Christian Endeavor and Parent-Teachers Ass9- ciation in Laconia, New Hampshire. Miss Senn lS working with the Chinese Mission in Boston. 1927 HAROLD C. CASE, S.T.B., PaStOr Of the Elm Park Methodist Church in Scranton, Pennsylvania, WaS gueSt counselor for students of Boston University SchooI of TheoIogy during the week of February 24, under the SIcNS auspices of the Mount Vemon Student Association of the School. 乏フ碑/ Forgotten toys have a new value when you brighten them with Kyanize Lustaquik Enamel. Lustaquik gives everything 。eW lifelike sparkle. Se4在moみ ‘”g- dries in 4 hours-gay COIors. Just the thing for a porch fumiture set. It,s waterproof. Write for dealer’s Pame and加e illustrated folder show- ISAAC S. CORN, Ph,D., head of the Department of Religion at Illinois Wesleyan University, is at present ・・guest preacher,, at the Norma] Methodist Church’ Normal, Illinois. ARTHUR J. MARDER, Libeγal Aγis, has been ap- pointed to a John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Fellow- ship. Dr. Marder is a historian. His project is the preparation of a book on British sea power in the dreadnought era. WALTER A. PILLSBURY, LL.B., has been ap- pointed special justice of the Derry, New Hampshire, Municipal Court, tO SuCCeed EDWIN B・ WESTON・ LL.B. ’97, retired. ENSIO K. F. RONKA, M.D・, a member of the National Guard, has been inducted into service with the United States Army. He is a Major commanding the 3rd Battalion in the lOIst Medical Regiment, 26th Division, U. S. A. mg COIors. Boston Vamish Company' 1928 1 13 Everett Station, Bosto。,臆Mass. 第を毒 しUSTÅQUIK格NAMEし EDGAR H. S. CHANDLER, B.R.E., WaS the prlnCipal speaker at an open meeting at the Second Congregational Church・ Holyoke' On March 31. Mr. Chandler lS retuming from an eight weeks, stay in England, aS the personal representative of the American section of the World Council of Churches and of the Church Peace JOHN DUNSTAN, ReligiousEducα訪o7∂, Of the Maine Conference, Who is now living in Honolulu, is doing some Pa謹話宰聾鴇灘寵登薄井・・3。, Ph.D. ’37, minister of the First Baptist Church in Arlington, has been elected president of the Boston University Graduate SchooI Alumni Association. KATHAR重NE C. McDONNELL, B.S.海Ed., has recenもly been appointed assistant superintendent of schooIs in the city of Boston. Miss McDonnell is the fourth woman to receive this appointment. MARY E. WALKER, B.R.E., reCeived the degree of Bachelor of Science from Ohio State University, March 21. Page T巌γ切 May t4'e Sugge∫吊hai you 4aironize ou′ OdリeγiiseγS 1929 Business Directory HARRY S. BROUDY, A.B., Of North Adams TeaChers college discussed =The State Youth Survey,, at 寵謹書抹悪難語悪霊豊富怨諾意 and the graduate department at the college. MURIEL M. COX, Ed・M., aSSistant director in the Chamberlain SchooI of Boston was the speaker at the 謹詩経誓露語語e韮e譲葉薄豊 CuSSion was =Good Grooming and Wardrobe Building On a Budget.,, AMOS W. FLEM量NG} B.B.4., is now stationed at Camp walters, Fort Worth, Texas. ETTA MARY GIFFORD, B.R・E・, A.M∴31, PaStOr 欝器謹護蒜詰謹話蒜護 Methodist Conference. RAYMOND G. LAFORCE, B.B.A., instructor in 誌議誌譲葉誌誌誤叢 ]ieutenant in the Quartermaster’s Reserve Corps. SIDNEY LEWIS・ LL・B・, is one of the operators of t/1}e National Direct Mail Advertising Company, Hartford, Connecticut. Mrs. William A. Rich (DOROTHY HOAR, B.S.寂 Ed・)・ is now teaching two days a week at Hawth。me Institute Business School in Salem. She is president Of the Marblehead Woman,s Club. Her husband WILLIÅM A. RICH・ B.S・ ;nEd∴33・ 4.M. ,40, is act- 叢荒盤霊託霊豊詣嘉島票gh School and is 1930 PRISCILLA CONANT,B・S・ ;n P.A.L., COaChed the One-aCt Play given by the South Portland High School 羅詰琶譜語法誓鵡謹言露盤鵠詰 Apri1 25-26. VINCENT P. COYNE, LL・B・, Z‘L・M. ’35, Comman- der of Fort Revere- recently gave an address over the radio on “Army Life.,, 1931 HYMAN GOODWIN・ Z‘L・B・, Worcester lawyer and PreSident of the Original Young Demof)ratS,VO-unteeI.ed recently under the draft law for servICe in the United States Army. RUBEN H. KLAINER, LL・B・,LL・M. '35, OfChelsea has been made chairman of the dimer and reception in honor of Rabbi Joshua Loth Liebman of Temple Israe] SARGEN丁 SuMMER CAMPS OwnedbyBostonUniversity PET聞BOROUGH,N置H・ 〇 ・ 〇 On May 18. Mr. Klainer is practioing law in Boston. At this outstanding camp for girls experienced counselors, trained by the well-known Sargent Co11ege of Physical Education of Boston 1932 University, direct and instruct in al=and and water sports, gameS, Mfs. Lochhead (MARY C・ BROWNE, 4.B.), Of the riding, and camp-Craft・ 500 acres on large private lake. The camp Packard School・ New York’lectured at the meeting is unusually well-equipped, and girls enjoy a balanced recreational Of the annual convention of the Eastern Commercial Teachers, Assooiation Apri1 11・ Mrs. Lochhead・s sub- PrOgram. Resident physician. Separate age divisions: Seniors’ ject was ``Selling the Product of the SchooI with Dress 14-19; Int6rmediates, 9-15; and Juniors, 5-8. Counselor training and Style.’’ GEORGE C・ WHITNEY, B・S・ ,n Ed., is now con- COurSe. Riding in fee. For catalog address ERNST HERMANN’ nected with the Greenfield Recoγdeγ-Gozeiie. He is living at 48 Newel] Pond Road, Greenfield. Director’12A Everett St・, Cambridge, Mass. 1933 富d巾0調は器器籍 ZELMÅ LARSSON, Mus・B・, WaS the subject of a Sketch entitled買Our Gracious Ladies,,, a feature of the Bosタon Trac’e‘eγ, On Apri1 3. MARY PEABODYI B.S. ;n Ed・, a Critic teaoher at Gorham Nomal School for six years, Will be a member Of the Washington State Nomal SchooI summer session facu〇七y. NORRIS W. POTTER, Jr.) A・M・, aCting head of the department of history and government at North_ eastern University, has been called into service by the Naval Reserve. THE GRACE M. ABBOTT Symphony TEACHERS, AGENCY FLOWER SHOP 叩ioto`r章あか肋r`一同c「c諏訪`ん` H`γc録ツ耽り・・ Gγαce M・ Abbo均Mα棚ge′ 糾O肌回lin章(oI. ▲▼●nu● Bo書I●Il, Ma●│ 120 Boylston Street SAMUEL YOUNG, A.M・, former superintendent of New England District of the Church of the Nazarene, WaS the speaker at the Lenten series Apri1 1 to 6 at the Church of the Nazarene in Manchester, Connecticut. Mr. Young is now teaching at Eastern Nazarene col- 1ege in Wollaston. 月めのe購読Dゐ書九〇的e Ar耽れgc競en書● Boston ● F・ T. CURLEY, INC. UNIVERSITY CI,UB BUILDING 1934 力Ie伽beγ Nαあの毒A●●0ふ弱00 428 Stuart St., Bo8tOn Telephone T`αcん`万Aクのあ KBNmore 6256 JOSEPH C. HAYESI B.S.わB.A., reCently I.eCeived a two month deferment from the draft in order that he may become sergeant in the o範ce of the Bridgeport, C競露盤寵対審討謹翌討e訃h。 au,h。r Of a book of poetry・信Falling Petals・・ recently published COMMたNC管MENTWE by the Kaleidograph Press of Dallas, Texas. Miss Langdon is now principal of an elementary school in Longmeadow. 」un たK_ 害ND e7-AIumniDay Juれe 8-Baccalaurea[ 1935 ELMORE D. LUNDGREN, S.B・一Of St. Johnsbury, June 9-Com ¥ ermont' has been made head of the mathematics Maタ,殺e JuggeJl !hai yo e meh ce軸e n冒OPops 4airo巌e ouγ adueγ妨e′S Pαge T妨切-On′e WILLÅRD J. RAND, A.M・, S.T・B∴39, PreaChe〔t BOSTON UNIⅤERSITY ALUMNI ASSOC工ATION his first sermon at, the Cape Elizabeth Methodist Church, Portland, Maine’On Apri1 13. Since January, Mr. Rand has been serving the Congress Street Method- 80 BEACON S富RE即, BosTON, MAssACHUSE叩S ist Church in Portland. WALTER WYNN, Theologγ, and Mrs・ Wynn have been appointed career missionaries to serve among the rekyho"∂ COMmonwealth 6070 Ovimbundus in Galangue, Angola, West Afrioa. Mr. and Mrs. Wynn are studying at the Hartford・ Connecticut. seminary before 】eavin筈for Africa. CHAF胸A. ROME・ ’26・ P′.諏 恐籠鵠韓需霊:`霊。r, 1939 滋齢鵠・輪講弗龍露∴.8。, B融,. 。肪S∽.`。,, MORTON BÅCKER, B.S. ;n B.A., Of Brighton言s now married and is living a七Hotel Raleigh HalI, 121 West 72nd Street, New York City. He is doing Coll〇年e Ot Llberal ▲rte 慈認諾萬讃温ま艶轟9 MRS. GARDNER S. MOODY. ’23 c盤孟霊詫調 accounting work. ROBERT T. COLLINS, Ed・M・, Of Hartford・ SchooI o重Educadon S種重さe重書籍書紀3㌘hy●書館1 Connecticut. has been appointed assistant to the plant manager言n JAMES T. GEARON. ’26 田ELEN LOU重SE NASS. ’33 MARGUERITE L. GOURVILLE.’29 JOSEPHINE A. BOLGER, ’24 STANLEY W. PARKER言24 MA京Y E. JOHNSON. ’24 MRS. LESLIE A. PIK闘, ’24 CARLA PAASKE, ’35 Colle$e of Mudc JAMES CARMODY, ’34 ZELMA K. LARSSON, ’33 MRS. EUGENE H. FLOYD, ’39 Labor Relations at the New CHARLES E. VARNEY, ’28 FRANKLIN C. CROSBY, Ed。M・, head teacher of history at Stoughton High School and basketball coach } was a guest of honor with his team at a victor}′ party On HAROLD H. CRAMER, ’26 GEORGE A. BUTTERS. ’29 WILLIAM R. LESLIE. ’12 調雪蕊諾I A重t3 of ticut. School o書Tbeoloまy GEORGE F. GRANDI, ’27 LESTER O. GATCHEI,L, ’26 charge Departure division of General Motors, Bristol’Connec- CECILIA A. MACHUGH, ’34 March 2l. School of Soclal Work GEORGE W. DINW重DDIE, S.T.B., has been ap- ERNEST W. KUEBLER. ’26 FRANK GREBE. ’26 Sc血○○l o重しaw pointed to serve as chaplain at Westover air丘eld neaI- Chicoロee. ESTHER PHELPS-JONES, ’25 GEORGE C. P. OLSSON, ’26 J. ROBERT AYERS, ’36 JOHN J. DOHERTY, B Siness Adminisiγaiion, SOn of Mr. and Mrs. John Doherty of Charlestown’1eft rec9ntly for San DlegO▼ Califomia! Where he has been ELWOOD H. HETTRICK. ’38 asslgned to the U.S.S. Enleγかvise, alrPlane carrier of the Graduate SchooI United States Navy. Ensign Doherty received his SchooI oI Medlclne EDWARD S. CALDERWOOD:04 瓦LIZABETH WEST PIGEON,’27 DAVID L. B瓦LDING, ’13 MILO C. GREEN, ’15 ELMER E. HASKINS, ’38 JAMES己.冒RYON. ’10 gold wings when he graduated from the advanced course at pensacola, │ lorida, last month. NORMAN F. EGGER. S.B., A.M. ’40, SOn Of MI‘. and Mrs. Francis Egger of Taunton’recently assumed a position with the Pennsylvania-Central Airlines’Inc. , in Detroi七, Michigan. HOMER L. FOOTE, S.B., Writes that he has been ● DEPARTMENTAL ALUMNI ASSOCIATIONS EpsIしON CIIAPT耽. CoI.LEG田 OP L霊BER▲L ARでS. Pγ`S;de競`. Albert Morris; Sccγc畑γy. M鳩・ Kemeth R. P種重8onS. CoLl.なG種 OF Bus重聞SS AD蘭的ISTR▲TION Al.Ⅷ肌 CLUB. Pγ`S;dc初, Ralph Palladino; S`CγC`aγγ・ Mary Joyce CoLLEG章OP PR▲C↑重CAL ARTS AND LなTT臓S AしUMNAR AssocI▲TION. Pγ`§諦`桝. Mrs. Melville Prior; S‘Cγe・ lo′γ, Ml的M. Jean Rogers. CoI.L露Gな0富MusIC ALU劃関AssocIAT重ON. P′諦dc”I' 監.Camody; S``γG‘aγγ・ Mr.. Helen Krnger ALU望N▲R Assoc重▲富重ON O' S▲RG種耽 CoLしなGな Or pロYSIC▲L EDUCATION. PγeSide所 Theresa J. Lammers: SeGγ細γγ, Ellen McSweeney. inducted into the army and is stationed with the 67th AしUMN重 Assoc重AT重ON OF∴TH田 GRADUATE ScHOOL. PγCSidc部. Grady Feagan; SccγC細γツ・ Alice P. Blanchard. ALU魅N重AssocI▲T重ON OすI Tロ露ScHOOL OすTHなOLOGY・ Pγ`Side加, Charles T. A11en: SccγC‘αγγ, H寄rold H. C章寄皿e章. BosでON UNIVmS重でYし▲W Sc甘OOしALUHN重Assocl▲TION. P′C$jd`房. George C. P. OIsson; Scc′CIαγγ・ Wilfred J. Paquet. Regiment of the Coast Artillery at Fort Bragg・ North Carolina. Mr. Foote would like to hear from other members of his class who have been called into s?ryice. Mrs. ANNA GIÅMBARRESI, S,T.B., City mlSS10Il- ary in Boston for more than twenty years, SPOke at a Lenten service sponsored by thewomen of the Methodist Church in Wakefield, March 19. Her subiect WaS ``Light for St. Peter’s Children・’’ STANLEY MARTIN, A.M., S.T・B・, has resi宮ned as minister of the Central Vi11age Friends Meeting in Al.UⅢN重Assoc重▲で重ON OF TI]寄ScHOOL OF MED軍CI耽・ PγeSidc海 Milo C. Green, Sccrcla′’. FrankE・ Barton. ScHOOL OF EDUCA丁重ON AしUENI AssocIA榊O乱 PγCof・ 艶。窪諾。評nCis; Scc融γγ ̄T′`α$“′C,’. Mabel Westport. Mr. Martin will spend the summer working for the American Friends Service Committee in New York City. MELVILLB OSBORNE, A.B., A.M∴40, has been awarded a teaching fellowship at Syracuse University for the year 1941-42. Mr. Osborne is studying for his doctorate in the Maxwell Graduate SchooI of CitizenShip. K▲PP▲ C甘▲P重職. ScHOOI. OF R鵬LIG重OUS AND SocIAL Wo賊 EDWÅRD M. ROBINSON, B.S. ;n B.A. ceγ海COte, p′C調`妬Mrs. Edgar R. Walker; Sccγ細γγ・ Mrs. Ma’rgaret Scott Weide血old son of John Robinson of Dorchester- has enlisted in the military service and was assigned to training at Camp Edwards. Since graduation, Mr. Robinson has been advertising manager of the GIobe FurnituI.e Company’ MRS. NELLIE E. FRIEND, B.S.わR.五・, WaS On department at Williams Memorial Institute・ New London, Connecticut・ Until his appointment, Mr・ Lund- gren had been head of the mathematics department of the St. Johnsbury schooIs. R重CHARD O,KANEI Laα,一WaS recently named sales representative in the Convention Department Of the 冨樫詩語書証悪終盤磐藍B呈詳説蕊 in Boston, MARIE E. WÅLCH, A.B・, LL・B∴37・ Of Lawrence was recently admitted to practice in the Federal Courts. of which his father is proprietor. 艶ぷ諾龍器悪霊甜諾諾竃認諾捲 w詳豊E霊誓謹話S監護霊露盤謹言 United States Marine Corps Rese亨Ve On February 20. on March l and2. RAYMOND J. PETTINE, LL・B・, LL・M・ ,40・ Of He is stationed at Quantico, Virginla. Providence, Rhode Island, is stationed at Camp Wheeler, Macon, Georgia, With the United States 1940 A富my. HENRY H. PLÅTT, B.S. 6n Ed・, Ed・M∴38・ is News of the Class of 1940 will Director of the American Institute Science Laborat′Ory at 310 Fifth Avenue, New York City - a peSearCh cen- appear in the June issue ter for high schooI students gifted in the sclenCeS・ HAROLD SHAPIRO, LL.B・, former city solicitor 宣936 MAURICE M. KORESKY, Business Adm寂sきγa- for Aubum, Maine, Who is now stationed at Fort w皿ams in Portland, WaS the speaker on the army program to explain army ]ife to Bost,On・ March 27" Mr. Koresky was president of the National Uniform Cq誌講説龍欝芯v L巌γ。I Aris, S。n 。f D.. A.。hibald H. Martin of Lynn, WaS reCently commissioned a seoond lieutenant in the coast artillery. Lieutenant Martin is now serving with the 212th Coast Artillery at Fort Stewart, Georgia. DÅVID C. SHAW, LL.B・, Of Biddeford, Maine) has 悪霊藍藻諸悪q薯e鼠霊常磐0誌ニ ticing ]aw in Biddeford since 1936. MARY R. STACKNIS, B.S. 6n且d・, for the past year teacher of art in the Aubum, Maine, Public schooIs, has been added to the sta鯖of the Bates Co11ege Summer School and wi11 give a oourse in painting・ 1938 WENDELL F. HAWKINS, B.S. ;n Ed., Of Boston, sang the soIos during the concert of the Glastonbury Women,s Chorus concert on ApI.i1 22. JOSEPH K. LANGDELL, B.S.寂B.A. ceri砺Caie, son of Mr. and Mrs. Luther M, Langde11 of Wilton, New Hampshire, has received his commission as Ensign in the Naval Reserves. SOTIR L. MILLER, Bus海eSS Admin寂γaiiole, Of Hudson, reOently completed the advanced flight training course at the Naval Air Station, Pensacola, FIorida, where he received his commission as an Ensign in the been awarded the recent1y admitted to practice in the Federal court’S. of Rockland, WaS reCently e】eぐted president of the Cashiers’Association of Boston. Mr. O’Brien is also Her subject was =The Modem剛ementary SohooI v!ce president of the Wall Stree七Bond Association. WALDO B. DUNN, S.T.B., Of Falmouth, has been Page T巌γ切-Tu)0 Lynn. JAMES B. GLOVER, LL.B., has become associated with the ]aw firm of Perkins, Weeks, and Hutchins, Waterville, Maine. MORRIS N. GOULD, LL.B., Who is practicing law at 4O High Street, Clinton’WaS elected Town Solicitor on Mareh 3. attended the College of Business Administration and who is now studying at the Evening College of Com- has th e Norwood Parent-Teacher Associations on March 25. appointed to the Quarry Street Churoh, Fall River・ RUTH W. CRAWFORD, Diz)loma in Aか)lied M%Sic, is teaching piano pTivately in Reading・ In addi- tion she is organist of St・ Luke,s Methodist Church in EDWARD J. NÅNTOSKI, LL.B., Of Lawrence, WaS and mentary Education was the speaker a吊he meeting of GARDNER DEAN, B.S.初J., WaS reCently named SchooIs, Apri1 25-26, in South Portland, Maine’High RICHARD H. GRIFFIN, B.S.訪1B.A. ceγi擁aie, Of Waban, With his tWin brother’Robert H. Gr瓶n・ Who ReserⅤe RICHARD F. 0,BR量EN, B従Siness Admi毒sきraiio称 public relations o鐙cer at Westover Field・ Holyoke. FRANCIS B. CONNOR, B.S.わGEd., WaS a judge at the Drama Festival of the New Hngland Secondary coveted Naval ALICE B. BEAL, Ed.M・, State Supervisor of Ele- Program. ’’ STANLBY B. BERENSON, LL・B・, SOn Of Mr. and for immediate service in the Army. Sch○○l. GARDNER A. JOHNSON, A.B., is now Curate at the Church of the Ascension, Mount Vemon, New York. Navy Wings of Gold. 1937 Plainfield, Comect,icut, High School. Mrs. Louis P. Berenson of Lawrence, has volunteered ho妙, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. I. E. Koresky of Brockton・ left recently to serve in the United States Army. ROSR BARO, B.S. ;?GEd., Of BaI.re’I.eCently assumed teaching duties in the commercial department of the RAYMOND PINKHAM, Jr., Business 4dmi海sきγa- merce, have been accepted by the Army as flyin箆 cadets. EARL J. HÅGGERTY, Ed.M・, Of Rockland, has been appointed principal of the Center School in West Medway, iion, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond S. Pinkham of East Holden, Maine, has been commissioned a second Mrs. DANIEL L. MARSH, College ond E諦ension, wife of Presldent DANIEL L. MARSH, S.T・B・ ’08, ]ieutenant. Lt. Pinkham is stationed at Camp Hulen, Texas. Gracious Ladies,,, a feature of the BosioIO rγ0諦eγ・ was recently the subjeot of a sketch entitled “Our 閏 舗 亜事 経5 SYMPHONY PLAYERS A恥町ⅢU耽F量圏DL圏耽9 Conductor PROGRAM PoLONAISE MILI冒AIRE Ohop読 SEVENTH SLAVONIC DANCE工N C MAJOR . Dooγαk VALSE TRIS冒E. .朗bel定u8 O廿vERTURE SoLENN臆ELLE,当812,, Tch a楊008砂 THE RIDE OF THE VALKYRIES . Wagneγ BoLERO . RαOel Bos冒ON UNIVERSI冒Y SoNGS: 〃 Clarissima, , . B・ O. Pα線7.80n, ’ll “Hail Bos七on UIliverslty, , R鮎8. M. H. Gule8定αn 〃Bos七on University Hymn,, Dγ. Joh7乙P. Mαr訪all TALES OF THE VIENNA WooDS, Walt「zes . S紡αu88 PAVANE FROM冒HE “AMERICAN・ SYMPHONETTE,,. Gou ld STARS AND STRIPES FoREVER, March BOSTON UNIVERSITY ALUMNI ASSOCIATION 20 BEACON STREET, BosTON, MASSACHUSETTS Sou8a Tickets for Sunse七Supper on Char]es River CaLmPuS’Sa七urday, June 7, aもSix o,cIock, $l・50 each. Tickets wi]l be collected at七he Endosed is remit七ance for the followmg : 七ables・ $ Ticke七s for Pop Concer七, Symphony Hall, Tickets for Baccalaureate Service. Boston Arena, Sunday aftemoon, Monday evemng, June 9’at eigh七一触een 0’dock. $. No charge June 8, a七four o’dock。 (0砂先uγ妨keあまo one peγ$On) Main floor seats aもtables $1.碧5 each First Balcony, firs七three rows Tickeもs for Sixty-Eigh七h AmuaI Commencement a七 the Arena, Monday momlng, June 9, a七ten-thir七y o’cIock. (0偽称bγ tickeま8わone peγ80γ乙) No charge l.00 eaeh Firs七Balcony, balance . .75 eaeh Seeo重ld BaIcony . .50 eaeh Boston (Pleaぶe Cγ0$$ O初江tem8呪O油)a初。d) ToTAL ENCLOSED $..……… 畠〇〇〇満 筋融m鋤n読卑c勅mni ⑦γ SATURDAY, JUNE 7 旦些少Ass坦 0れ品eれ鋤) Chaγ夢es Rj∪eγ Ca肌pus Spend the Sixty-eighth Commencement Week-end with your University Friends and Professors. Come Back to Alma Mater to Renew the Ideals of University Days and Retum Home Better Adjusted for the Making of the New World. C LASS REUNIONS from noon until four o,cIock - General Assembly of the Alumhi, Charles River Campus-4‥00 P.M.-President’s Levee一 4:00 P.M. -Alumni Procession - 5:30 P.M. -Sunset Supper- 6:00 P.M. Alumni Dance, Charles Hayden Memorial - 9‥00 P・M. to midnight・ O品eγ Commencemeれ亡Eueれts B鵠R‡諾慧詳霊許諾豊苦清書y謹話悪書 Boston Arena, Monday m町ing, June 9 at lO:30 A.M・ Boston University Night at the Pops, Monday evenmg, June 9, at 8:15 P・M. A呈器f豊嵩‡諾嵩豊富豊nSE;s謹書露盤 Missouri; Candidate for nomination for Vice-President at the Republican National Convention in 1940; One Of the most brilliant debaters in Congress today. While Mr・ Short,s campalgn for the Vice-Presidency was being advo- 諾読書謹書書誌嘉蕊豊請監言霊書芸葦 Reu壷oれClasses 軸‖漢書発‖‖ 0ノ ∩フ 0 フ 0 っ J 4 亀 J 3 ま J ∠ U 7 8 191919寒 l ∠ U 1 O ノ 0 ノ 0 ノ 聞田園国出題器‖田 2 2 2 J
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