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 蟻 BuILDINGS FOR THE ScHOOL OF THEOLOGY I」OCATED ON THE CENTRAL QuADRANGLE AN。 CoMMONWEALTH AvENUE MY love for this School has deepened as the years have come and gone, and now in this year when it seems to be necessary to spend billions of dollars for p匂′∫ical defense I trust someone will see the wisdom of giving two million dollars to house.and endow this SchooI of Theology now absolutely essential toやirit〃al defense・ BISHOP G. BROMLEY OXNAM, S.T.B∴15, HON. Litt.D. ’30 At Jbe Am〃al Dhmer Mee訪客少z4e Aんm′クi少/be Sc.hool少Tbeo佃gy BOSTON工A The Boston Universlty Alumni Magazine Subscription $l.00 per year Single copies 15 cents VOLUME XIV o NUMBER 2 Whcre shall the scholar live? In solitude or in society? In thc green stillness of the country, Where he can hear the heart of Nature beat, Or in the dark gray city, Where he can feel and hear the throbbing heart of man〕 I make answer for him, and say, In the dark gray city.-Z,OngfeIlbw 重N THIS ISSUE O NOVEMBER, 1940 Cover: Left fo rIght, Ralph Salvati, Jim SulliVan, John Connearney and Jim Cassidy over the Coaching Staff, JeIt fo rIght, Walter Holmer, Pat Hanley and AI Kawal. TABLE OF CONTENTS Pa筈e ThePresident’sAnnual Report… … … …. 3 The Treasurer’s Annual Report… … … …. 1 VerSityTrustees‥ ‥ ‥‥‥.‥.‥‥‥‥ 1 AmericanUniversities‥ ‥ ‥. ‥. ‥ ‥ ‥ ‥ ‥. 1 Boston University SchooI of Social Work. ‥ ‥ ′ 0 7 1 8 Annual Meeting and Dinner ofthe Boston Uni- 14 The First Year in the Charles Hayden Memorial Building, Everett W. Lord‥ ‥ ‥ ‥ The First Three Football Games of 1940, M標でraYKra劇er‥‥‥‥‥‥‥.‥‥ Conference on Preaching and Annual Meeting Of the School of TheoIogy Alumni Association‥‥.‥.‥‥‥‥‥.‥‥‥.‥‥ ComingEvents‥ ‥ ‥ ‥. In Memoriam: Dean Alexander Swanson Begg… … … 27 JudgeHavenG.Hill……,………‥ 28. BostonUniversityNotes… … … … … … 29 ROBINSON CHAPEL AND富ADMINISTRATION E髄to重 EXECU冒IVE ALUMNI SECRETARY TOWER Associate Editor MURIEL VIOLA NOYES Located in the center of the Charles River Campus the Buildings for the SchooI of TheoIogy will be at Published monthly from October to July indusive by the Bos富ON UNIⅤERSITY ALUENI AssocIA富ION Editorial O債ce, 20 Beacon Street, Boston, Massachusetts. E暮1しered as second class matter, at the Post O鯖ce, Boston, Massachusetts, under the Act of March 3, 1879. Title registered in U. S. Patent O鯖ce. Copyright, November, 1940, by the Boston University Alumni Association. the left of the Chapel. The Immortals of Boston University “Founders and Associate Founders of Boston University have their names carried in the O鯖cial catalogues’and their names are always read at the Founders’Day CoIγOCatlOn While the audience stands at attentlOn. There is no finer way to be remembered than to be known as the benefact・Or Of a great universlty. When financial, COmmerCial and industrial enterprlSeS Shall have crumbled into dust, When the names they bore shall have been forgo七ten, and lizards crawI where those names were. writ, - eVen then the Universlty Will be servmg in the names of those who glVe to it,-nameS Which i七will perpetuate in honor.’’- DANIEL L. MARSH FγOm the P?・e$ide海,8 4n′m”l Repo塙 Ociobeγ 」0, 」9与0 THE FOUNDERS LEE CLAFLIN ISAAC RICH JACOB SLEEPER A§iOC漢ATE FOUNDER§ ALDEN SPEARE CHESTER CORBIN EDWARD H. DUNN AUGUSTA E. CORBIN ROSWELL R. ROBINSON CHARLES HÅYDEN 〃Ⅲ HIS Repoγ高s rea妙所apes牢y of Zights “nd shado博s WOγen by the脇γead of the yeaγ’s work. We haVe Seen the sh妨Ze moγうng Z7aCたa研oγ卵eaγi隼he thread now visiue and no博jmis硯e, b初eveγ博eaγタng均On脇e 亡apes牢y the pic擁e of DemocγaCy・’’- P珊SIDENT MARSH The President,s A皿肌al Report To the朴u$おe$ OJ Bo8加肋U毒のeク訪gr the雛teenth time I have been privileged to ⊥詰e講謹告謹書諜)豊霊三豊 T工葦 Within the period covered by this Report-tO be exact, on september 26, 1939-the Charles Hayden Memorial Building was dedicated as the home of our College of Business Administration. The exercises have been recorded not only for the infomation of the present avoid a sameness by taking each year a di鯖erent theme generation but for preservation against the future in as the motif of the Report. Let the central and controlling idea this year be Democ7.aCU, rePeated with varia- Bo8to毒の, rhe Bo$to7D U毒のeγ8旬Alu伽毒Mαgα訪ae, issue tions throughout the Repor七. slgnificance of the erection of that magnificent building Democracy lS, in America, the watchword of the hour. It is a challenglng WatChword. It is a proper watchword・ of October, 1939. No lふnguage can overstate the vast as the first unit on the new campus. As I said in my brief dedicaもory address, this building is the head of the The popular Negro spiritual says that “Everybody that nail that fastens down this campus. The comfortable, talks about Heaven ain’t goin’there.’’ Likewise, nOt convenient, COmmOdious building has mean七much to the everybody who talks' about Democracy either knows What it is or practices it. Democracy, aS it is understood morale of the College of Business Administration, and in America, reStS uPOn the philosophy tha=he individua】 is endowed by his Creator with certain inalienable rights, including “life, liberty and the pursui七of happmeSS,’’ has been a symboI of our hope for the future housmg of the University as a whole. The improved facilities a鮮orded by the new building have made possible greatly improved service in the and that govemment derives its just powers from the various fields of ins七ruction. Let me suggest thaもyou COnSent Of the govemed. Hence it means “govemment read the Report of Dean Lord to the Presiden七, aS Sub- Of the people, by the people, for the people.’’ It is a mitted herewi七h, Particularly noting what he says about SPirit, a Way Of life. It is a practical or social equa量ity the department of Joumalism, the Prin七ing Laboratory, as opposed to aristocracy. and the Bureau of Bus音iness Research. Boston University is democratic in spirit and personnel, Encouraged by the facilities made available in the new in support and in service. To be sure, its Founders and building, SeVeral organizations of a professional nature Associate Founders were all men of wea量th and of social have been developed, including the PsychoIogical Center, Standing, and at least one of them had nobility in his under the auspICeS Of the department of PsychoIogy;血e ancestra=ine, but a11 of them personalized the spirit of Export Round Table, directed by the instruc七or in Forelgn Democracy. All through its history, many PerSOnS and Organizations have made Boston University their prlmary interest. We include the Founders and Associate Found- Trade; the Commercial Education Club, under the aus- PICeS Of the Division of Commercial Education; the Sales Executives Club, PrOmOted by the department of Manage- ers, the Trustees, the members of the Faculties, the stu- ment; the New England Interscholastic Press Association, dent body, the alumni, and certain benefactors. and the Professional Council for Joumalism, both under the aeglS Of the department of Joumalism. Treasurer, Ray Speare, and have that once YOU have just E. heard the report of noted our e鐙cient Chase by Boston University of the Evans Memorial Building from the Massachusetts Memorial Hospitals. The Evans Memorial is a relatively new building, Stand- An important achievemen七of the year was the pur- again Boston University has paid its way・ The margln Of safety was not very great. To have a balance of $2,Q90 in a budget of more than $2,000,000 is its own witness to the care with which we have to administer 重ng adjacent to our SchooI of Medicine and on ground the budget. meets the immediate and urgent need for additional that was originally owned by Boston University. It Pαge Tんγee SPaee, and fumishes opportunity for expansion in a way that wi11 enhance the service of Boston University SchooI PrOmOtion of the cooperative plan at Boston University. We are greatly indebted to Miss Harriet E. Richards for Of Medicine. This does not give us all we need in the her subs七antial support of this cooperative enterprise from Way Of physical equ重Pment, but it is a, defini七e step for- the beginnmg. Ward. Our School of Medicine and the Massachusetts Memorial Hospitals have, from the beginnmg, intimately COOPerated. Wiもh the purchase above described, a neW COmPaCt WaS entered into between the two instiもutions Which guarantees a larger and better measure of cooperation in the future than in the past・ It is a slgned, Sealed and delivered pledge of recIPrOCal service whose value Will reach far beyond the two institutions concemed. In speaking of o紐-the置CamPuS improvements which have enhanced the campus itself, mention should be made Of the new boat house, built by permission of the Metropolitan District Commission on the Charles River Embankment in front of the wes七em end of our campus. The inspiration for the new boat house came from a friend Of rowmg at Boston Universi七y who accompanied his recommendation for such a building with a substantial During the year the Universi七y has received gifts and bequests in excess of $503,000. This addition of more gif=oward its cons七ruction. institution of their love・ The University was also glVen The Boston American League Baseball Company Showed its helpful interest in Boston Universlty by donating to us, 4,096 seats for Nickerson Field. The 七he vacant lot of ground on the corner of Bay State Road damage done to the Field, firs七by the hurricane of two and Granby Street, diagonal量y across the street from the years ago, and then by the water main that was laid across than a half mi11ion dollars represents the glVmg Of many hundreds of persons in amounts large and small to this President’s House and directly across from the new cam- PuS・ The University purchased the adjoining lot,-Which, 七ogether with the lo七donated, PrOVides us with a strategic the Field by the Metropolitan Distric七Commission, has now been completely remedied, and our athletic field is in fine condition. addition to our new campus・ Likewise, the University When we speak of persons having a prlmary in七erest in acquired during the year the former Hollander mansion On Bay State Road near the new campus. This mansion Boston University, We hasten to include the alumni. The is to be used as a dormitory for gir量s on the cooperative Mr. George A・ Dunn’has made his annual Repor七to the e鯖cien七Executive Secretary of the A]umni Associaもion, Plan・ Dr. Lucy Jenkins Franklin, Dean of Women, de- President so brief and yet so full of important things SerⅤeS Our thanks for finding this house, aS Well as for the that I am sure you will read it in full and with profit. GuESTS GATI珊RING NEAR THE ENTRANCE冒O THE CHARLES HAY。EN AuDITORIUM Pαge Fouγ TRUSTEES AND THEIR WIVES AT THE ANNUAL DINNER MEETING S紡”g !eJ“o r5g椋- MRS. BREWER’MRS. PRINCE’JuDGE ScHOFIELD, MRS. FISK, MR. Cox, PRESIDEN冒MARSH, MRS. MARSH, MR. SpEARE, MRS. RICH, MR. RICH, MR. SLEEPER, MR. ADAMS. Sto”di柳g Je串o海事:-MR. B珊WER・ MR. FRIEND・ MRS. DuNN’MR. PRINCE, MR. LoRING, MRS. LoRING, MRS. FRIEN。, MRS. WHITING, MR. WHIT工NG’MRS. RoME’MR. RoME, MRS. RoGERS’MR. RoGERS, MRS. CLARKE, MR. JEWEIJL, MR. CLARRE, MR. DuNN, MRS. THAYER, MRS. HA恥4AN, MR. GuIIJD・ DR. BRIGGS, MR. BROWN’MR. CARTER, MR. HADLOCK, MRS. RoNALD CAR冒ER, DR. HA最冒MAN. AMONGWhich the have manyatpersons, Ieast a secondary grOuPS and interest organizations in Boston and from seventeen forelgn COuntries. These sもudents University are various leamed societies and professional represented every stratum of social standing and economic and educational associations; the standardizing agencies to which the University belongs and by which it is apPrOVed; many Of the Foundations which from time to time have made grants to the University,一the CharIes Hayden Foundation most of all’-and the colleges and States’and from Porto Rico, the Canal Zone and Hawall, ability. There were no lines of race’COIor or religious faith drawn in the admission of students at Boston Uni_ VerSity. Upon graduation, an OVerWhelming number of them go ou=o serve society in church and state, in eduCation and social work’in JurlSPrudence, in medicine, universities of the land which cooperate with Boston and in business. University in various ways of institutional fellowchip and recognition. Special mention should be made of Harvard COmPOSition and so unselfish in its service that it has won It is because this University is so democratic in its University and Massachuse七ts Institute of TechnoIogy, the confidence and cooperation of so many outside agen- both of which give numerous and frequent evidences of Cies. Educational Boards and Societies in the Methodist, neighborly and recIPrOCal he量pfulnesIS. The Boston Pub- Presbyterian’Congregational, and Baptist Churches aided ]ic Library and the many specia=ibraries of this City Students here last year. Altogether’Boston University enhance the University,s opportunities for service by Students were aided by thirty-eight student aid funds making available t,O its.students their rich resources. Which are not under the control of Boston University. The Commonweal七h and the City help the University The greatest of these’Of course’is the Hayden Foundation. by exempting from taxation its educational plant. The Federal Govemment helps many s七udents in Boston Uni- VerSity through the National Youth Administration (commonly ca量Ied the NYA). Last year, 706 students eamed a total of $8%96.67.皿s repr誓ntS a Sub- Stantial increase in eamlngS OVer the prevIOuS year, due to an extra aIユo七men七asslgned to the Universi七y by NYA authorities. 工t is meet and proper that City, State and Federal Govemments should, at ]east indirectly, aSSist students to receive an education in Bos七on University. If ever an institution was democra七ic in its student personnel, it is this one・ Last year our total student enro量lment WaS 13,285’COm量ng tO uS from every Staもe in the United T昔慧語意諾. in露盤措蒜書誌 SIgnificant in proportion as it has great or mediocre faculty members. I heard an intemationally famous educator’Who has had no relationship to Boston UniverSity’in an address at a meeting m a midwestem city, Say unequlVOCaIIy:バBoston University has maintained from the beginnmg a highly respectable inte寒lectual tradition.・, Tha=radition was started by the grea七faculty with which the first President wasl able to surround himself, and has never been less than grea七,-greater tOday than ever before in its history. Pαg` Fわe During the past year, 84 di鱒erent members of the Staff of Instruction at Boston University have writ七en a total Association of SchooIs of Social Work and was admitted to membership in that standardizing agency・ of 263 books and other publications・ Some飾teen years The School has not a七any time in its existence been ago, I began to issue a supplemen=o my Annual Re- able to arrive at self-SuPPOrt. Sometime ago the Ex討u- port in which I have listed year by year w正ings by tive Committee of the Trustees requested the President members of our faculty to the exten=ha=hose publica- to make a new study of the SchooI with a view to amend- tions have been presented for inclusion in the specia1 1ng its form so as to provide better for the training of 1ibrary m my O鯖ce. Tha七library lS nOW quite sizeable, socia=eadership in the bewildering day m Which we are and every book in it is from the pen of some Boston living, and for the anxious days ahead・ I therefore ap- Universi七y faculty member. pointed a commi七tee consisting of Dean Meyer of the During the year covered by this Repor七there have been 44 new appointments' tO Our faculty’24 promotions’ 4 sabbatical leaves, and 7 retiremen七s, and the followlng School of Religious and Social Work, Dean Marlatt of the SchooI of Theology, Dean LeSourd of the Graduate School, and Dean Jesse B. Davis of the School of Edu- Divine promotions by dea七h: On September 6’ 1939’ cation. Thaもcommi七tee, tOgether with the President of Charles T. Howard, Professor Emeri七us in the School of the University, Studied the problem for months, and Medicine; On February 15, 1940, Donald Cameron, Pro- finally recommended to the Trus七ees that the School be fessor in the College of Liberal Arts; On June l, 1940, Gui11ermo Hall, Professor Hmeritus in the College of Business Administration; On June 19, 1940, Edwin P. reorganized in such way as to let it devote itself ex- Ruggles, Professor Emeritus in the SchooI of Medicine. In addi七ion to these, tWO have died since the close of the to the SchooI of Education; that graduate work in re1igious education be transferred to the SchooI of Theology, fiscal year on June 30. In strict accuracy’their names and that the name of the School be changed to the clusively to training for leadership m SOCial work; that undergraduate work in religious education be transferred would not be included in this Report, but I am constrained SchooI of Social Work. When I reported to the Execu- to read their names here while we stand at attention: tive Committee of the Trustees the above recommendations of the special committee, the Executive Committee On July 4, 1940, Thomas Chalmers, Professor in the Coト “authorized, emPOWered and directed the President to 1ege of Practical Arts and Letters’and on September 26, 1940, Dr. Alexander S. Begg, Dean of our SchooI of carry into full force and effec七the changes above recom- Medicine. Appropriate memoirs will be found in the mended or such changes as sleem tO be meet and proper records of faculty meetings, the Bo$to伸助r訪ersdy Ne砂$, in ful糾ment of the above recommenda七ions, it being and Bo$tOn,わ. understood that the reorganization is to be made with a view to increasmg the e鮮ectiveness of the University I counsel you to read the annual Reports to the President made by the Deans and other Departmental heads. Not until you read these Reports can you be intelligently acquainted with the enomous service which is being rendered by these important Departments and functions mg annOunCement Of the change, I included, With the of the institution. enhanced and the o鯖erings in religious education are in training for leadership in the social order.’’ In mak- approval of Dean Meyer, the followmg SentenCe: “As a result of this reorganization, training m SOCial work is augmented throughout the University.’’ M鑑。 changes in the educational se七up have been in leadership, WaS time made not at our Collegebut of ANOTHER change, this in Sargent organization during the year in the interest of a larger Physical Education. Again, a WOrd concemlng the his- measure of service to the democratic way of life. Two torical background will no七 be out of place. When of these changes merit being men七ioned in this Report・ Boston University adopted Sargent Co量lege, the gift of The firsもwas the reorganization of the SchooI of Religious the late Mr. and Mrs. Ledyard W. Sargent, the College and Social Work. This SchooI was established in 1919 WaS made a division of the Boston University SchooI of as a SchooI of Religious Education and Social Service・ Education. Dr. Arthur H. Wilde was at that time Dean. It’s roo七s reached back into the Morgan Memorial, the Mr. Ems七Hermam, Who had been comected with the Deaconess Hospi七al, and the Board of Home Missions S七a鮮of Instruc七ion prlOr tO the adoption of the College and Church Ex七ension of the Methodis七Church. During by Boston University, WaS音PrOmOted to the rank of Pro- i七s firs七decade it was largely an undergraduate college. fessor and was made Director of the Co11ege・ La七er, The model of the SchooI was changed in 1929 into a senior college and graduate school. Prior to 1929, re- Sargent College was separated from the SchooI of Educa- 1igious education was glVen the ma]Or emPhasis, but after fessor Hermam was appointed Dean. tion and made a Depar七ment of the University, and Pro- that date, training for leadership in social work was glVen A rule of the Trus七ees requlreS the Presidenもto nomi- equal emphasis with training for leadership m religious nate no one for a deanship after he reaches seventy years educa七ion. In 1935 the name of the Departmen七was Of age, “SaVe under excep七ional circumstances.,, Dean changed to the SchooI of Religious and Social Wo血. Hermam attained his three score years and ten in March, The change in name indicated the shifting emphasis. In 1939・ I invoked the毎exceptional circumstances,, pro- course of time, Richard K. Conan七was appointed Director Vision of the Trus七ees’rule to continue Dean Hermann of the Division of Social Work, While Henry H. Meyer in service a year beyond the allot七ed time’thus a1lowlng continued as Dean of the School. Two years ago, the him to become Dean Emeritus at the end of the last Division of Social Work was approved by the National academic year, June 30, 1940. Pαge Sあ N田もSON S. WÅLK圏 J鯖SSE FEIRING WILL重AMS In appointing Dean Hermann’s successor, I was natur- Ar七s is alive and is keepmg SteP With the most advanced ally desirous of continumg aもSargent College the very academic thought of the day. The general aim’SayS best possible academic administra七ion. Therefore, Dean Dean TayIor in his Repor七to the President,買has been Jesse B. Davis was appointed Acting Dean. Dr. Davis has been Dean of our SchooI of Education since the retirement of Dean Wilde in 1935. Under Ac七ing Dean Davis, We have appointed Nelson S. Walke Director of Sargent College. Dr. Walke is a product of the best that education has to o揮er in the S七ates of Ohio and New York. He holds his Ph.D. degree in Physical Education from Columbia University, and has had experience in the administration of physical education, COmmg tO uS from Oklahoma State A. and M. Co11ege, Where he was head of the Department of Physical Education. Dr. Walke also becomes the Director of Physical Education for men in Boston Unive音rSity as a whole. As consultant, We have appoin七ed the very distinguished Physical educator, Jesse Feiring Williams, reCently retired from his responsible position on the Columbia Universi七y faculty. He has writ七en vo量uminously, and is recognized as one of the foremost authorities on physical education in the world today. He stands in an advisory relaもion to the President of the University and to the Ac七ing Dean and the Direc七or of Sargent College. Former Dean Hermam now becomes Dean Emeri七us, COuChed in an expression currently used by the facul七y in their reference to the newly defined fields, namely’ `organically integrated programs of study・, You will note in Dean Jesse B. Davis’s Repor=o the President that五ne progress is being made in our SchooI Of Education. I call your at七ention particularly to what he says abou=he new Division of Commercial Education and the Two-Year Experimental Curriculum. Into this Two-Year Experimen七al Curriculum have been admitted Only s七udents who failed to meet the traditional entrance requ重rementS Of our College of Liberal Arts, but who Showed by the modem testing processes inte11igence of SuPerior ability. The distinctive feature of this experiment is what we ca11 the ‘“core’’curriculum, known as バAmerican Civilization.,, Much time has been glVen tO the students in wha七is called Guidance, helping them to make personali七y adjustmen七s and to use e鱈ecもively their natural abilities. Everything that is taught ties into American Civilization or radiates out from it, like spokes of a wheel from the hub of American civiliza七ion. The second year of the program in Nursmg Education has now been comple七ed at our SchooI of Education. and, at leas七for the present, Will bear a relationship to The rapid growth of the Division is evidence of its need. the physical maintenance and operation of Sargen七Camp. One hundred and ninety-Six s七uden七s have completed the formal ma七ricuIation for degrees. The Division of Nursmg Hduca七ion is declared to meet the needs of that Where there life, Which means everywhere NO Department of is Boston University is that staもic. Every- PrOfession. 七here is growth’Which is the same thing as saymg that Our School of Law, under the skilIful guidance of Dean everywhere there is change. For insもance, degree re- Johnson, has been climbing s七eadily upward, elevating its qulrementS in the CoIユege of Liberal Arts have been re- Vised. The work was done first by a special committee, then under the critical study of the Faculty as a whole, and finally adopted by the Faculty. This revision of degree requlremen七S indica七es tha=he College of Liberal Standards’enriching its offerings, and refining the process by which i七se量ec七s its students. Last April, the Alumni Association of the School of Law, at i七s amual dimer, gave special recogni七ion to six dis七inguished members of the faculty’eaCh of whom has glVen tWenty-five years Page Seで)en or more to and through the School. Those so honore〔l were Homer Albers, Harold M. Bowman, John E. Hannigan, Frank L・ Simpson, Orvil W. Smith, and Oscar Store∴ permanence in tenure of the top-nOtCh men than anything else that has been done or that could be done. The University administrative o鯖cers are glVlng Careful study to the question of a possible retirement plan for T紫 Retirement Pens音ion Plan for our professors is ⊥ now in its third year of operation. Since the Plan members of the University who are not covered by the Plan above described. We are not ye七prepared to an- was adopted, thirty-nine new members have been added; nounce any definite arrangement. I七is posISible, Of course, fifty-One members have received salary mCreaSeS in ad- that the Federal Social Security Ac七may be amended dition to the increase glVen by the adoption of the Plan SO aS tO include certain members of the personnel othel・ itself, and membership of twelve persons has been ter- than the teaching sta鱈,-What a pending bill would de- minated. The net e紐ect of all these changes means a SCribe as “ordinary empIoyees.’’ total increase of $76,512 in salaries covered by the Plan. A number of persons already retired and those who will mitment made by the University, Which is an informal IINCLUDE this Report a reference the Community in Fund Campalgn Of 1940 as sourceto material for the future historian. Each year there is put on in Boston pension plan promising $900 per year. But beginning Wha七is known as the Community Fund Campalgn, Which retire during the next year are on a past service com- with September l, 1942, retirement allowances will be de- raises millions of dollars for various charitable and socia] termined and provided for by the Plan. We estimate agencies of the community. One of our beloved and most that, the pensions to be received by those who retire be- distinguished Trustees, Mr. Charles Francis Adams, is tween 1942 and 1946 will be about $900 a year, guaran- President of the organization. The Camp孔lgn is or- teed under the Plan, With exceptions above.or below $900 as provided for by the Plan itself. Beginnlng With 1946, ganized so as to canvass almost everybody in the com置 munity・ Its organization brings together certain groups and salaries paid. When the Plan functions normally, in what are called Divisions. One of the main Divisions is known as Institutions. The President of Boston Uni_ VerSity was made the head of the_Institutions Division a professor retiring from service in Boston University for the 1940 Campa量gn. The amount raised by the In- Will receive a pension which will be 2 per cent of his Stitutions Division was $107,844,-Which passed the es- however, there will be a gradual increase in the pensions to be received, reSulting from increased length of service average salary multiplied by the number of yearsi in pro- tablished goal,-and the total amount raised for the Fund fessoria.l rank. To illustrate: If a man is a professor or WaS $4,680,935. Each institu七ion in the Division was or- an assistant or associate professor at Boston University for, Say, thirty-five years, With an average salary during ganized, Boston University among the others. I designated John S. Perkins as head of the Boston University that period of $4,000, his pension upon retirement will be Organization. Mr. Perkins did yeoman service and re- 2 per cent of $4,000 (which is $80) multiplied by 35 Ceived the hearty support of the entire Boston University (number of years serving) , Or an annual pension of $e,800 for the rest of his life. family・ He has submitted to me a report of Boston University’s part in the Campalgn, Which shows that 690 I regard the adoption of this Pension PIan as the best contributions were received from sta雛 members and thing that has been done at Boston Universi七y during the near賞y 3’000 contributions from students, tOtaling fifteen years that I have been reporting to you upon the $4,951.33. The amount pledged was three and a ha量f University’s progress. I believe that it means more for times greater than the $l,387.37 p量edged by Boston Uni- the morale of the faculty, for the peace of mind and sense VerSity personnel in the 1939 Campalgn and five and a Of security o=he members of the teaching staff, for the half times greater.than the $891.75 pledged in the 1938 HoMER A重BE購 Pαge E5g庇 HAROLD M. BowMAN 恩○田Ⅳ田.臨ANN重GAN Campa量gn. Ninety-Six per cent of Boston University,s which also I am apprehended of Christ Jesus. Brethren, full-time empIoyees pledged to the Campalgn. Forty- I count not myself to have apprehended: but this one eight per cent of 307 part-time empIoyees pledged・ Thus, thing I do, forgetting those things which are behind, and 79 per cent of a11 those connected with Boston Univer- reaching forth unto those things which are before, I press Sity, fu11-time and parトtime, made contributions to the toward the mark for the prize’’(Philippians 3: 12-14). Campalgn through the University. The a量umni of the School and a11 who believa in the e鯖cient proc量amation of the unsearchable riches of the Gos- pel of Christ are challenged to help the School reach its AN important historical event within the fiscal year goa重. herein reported was the celebration of the one hun置 The Trustees, during the past year, enlarged the con- dredth anniversary of the founding of our SchooI of CePtion of the campalgnS Which have been conducted on TheoIogy. What is now the Boston University SchooI behalf of the SchooIs of TheoIogy and Medicine. With- Of TheoIogy was founded on Apri1 24, 1839. On October 18, 1939, an all-University Convocation was held in Out dropplng these two campalgnS, bu七adding to them the plan and puxpose for the ultimate development of Trinity Church in celebration of the School’s centennia寒. the entire new campus, the inclusive name glVen tO the I refer you to Bo8to演u for November and December, forward movement is “The Boston University Develop- 1939, and to Dean Marlatt’s Report to the President, ment Fund.’’ Two slgnificant presentations of this p量an Submitted herewith, for detailed accoun七s of the program have been made during the past year. One was the and for the names of the eighteen distinguished persons Who received the University,s honorary degrees. These publishing of a master book of the campalgn entitled “Not Only Greater Than Any of its Parts, But Greater PerSOnS Were the adminis七rative heads of the ou七s七andingly Even Than the Sum of Them.’’ Its appeal is to al賞who great theoIogica量schooIs of America. These leaders had are sensitive to the beautiful, the true, and the good. COme tOgether to reJO重Ce With Boston University in its The second presentation was the architects’ scale attainment of one hundred years of consp賞CuOuS SerVice model of the ideal development of the new campus. It is cons,truCted on the scale of one-Sixteenth of an inch in the training of men for leadership in the church of God. It is doubtful whether there has ever been assembled 七o On this continent another gathering so representative of in the Algonquin Club on the even重ng Of Founders’Day, theoIogical educationa=eadership as was assembled for 1ast March. The dinner was attended by a group of men Our Centennial celebration. distinguished for leadership in the City and the CommonWealth. Former Govemor Allen, Chairman of the Trus- The SchooI of TheoIogy IS nOW Off on its?eCOnd century. Our announced goal for the Century of Service a foot. Its premiere showmg WaS at a dinner glVen tees, PreSided; addresses were made by Govemor Sa量ton- Celebration’namely’tWO million do11ars-aPPrOXimately Stall, Mayor Tobin, and other prominent citizens. All One million for new buildings and equ賞Pment and one Who spoke were unequlVOCal in their endorsement of milIion for additional endowment-has not yet been at- Boston University’s new campus program. The scale tained. If self-COnSCiousness cou量d be bestowed on our model has been exhibited many places since. It cannot SchooI of Theo量ogy, and it were endowed with voice, it be viewed without arouslng in the observer a sense of might appropriate the words which Saint Paul once wr。te: 買But I follow after, if that I may apprehend that for Civic pride, and creating in him a mood of service to youth through this grea七democratic University. FRANK L. SIMPS〔聡尋 ㊥硯ⅤⅡ. W.朋珂圃 OscAR S嘗O戴ER Pαge N読e G讐 u may feel asI John Evans once felt. John Evans was grant that somebody viewmg this scale model of those who glVe tO it,-nameS Which it wi11 perpetuate in honor. one of the great figures of the Civil War period. He was a doctor, and in岨uential in promoting the advance of medical science in both Indiana and I11inois. He deserves THIS Report is really a tapestry of lights and shadows more credit than any other one person for the founding seen the shuttle movlng back and forth’leavmg the thread Of Northwestem University. He was a successful phy- now visible and now invisible, bu七ever weavlng uPOn the Sician, a tranSCOntinental railroad builder, a City builder tapestry the picture of Democracy. woven by the thread of the year’s work. We have in both Chicago and Denver, a distinguished religious Every ins-titution comes in time to have certain dis- leader in the Methodist Church, a POlitica=eader, and as tinguishing characteristics. I have already quoted one SuCh, the friend and counselor of Abraham Lincoln, and appointed by Lincoln as Govemor of the CoIorado Territory. This great and successful man, ln a memOrable address delivered before the Denver Board of Trade, able in七ellectual tradition.’’ It is frequently described as declared, aS his maturest judgment, that: friendly University.’’ It has more than once been famed “A well-founded university lives as long as the country m characteristic of Boston University, namely, “a reSPeCt- a pIOneenng institution, and it deserves the reputation. Those who live intimately with it like to call it “the for i七s cIosenes/S tO life, tO reality. It has always been Which it is founded lives. It lives for ages. Its influence runs charac七erized by a certain ease of adaptabili七y, Of ad- through all time …. Why, there is nothing m all a man’s JuStment, Of appropria七ion. It was founded by men of lifetime that he can do that will be so permanent in its bene- strong religious convictions whose announced purpose in ficial results as founding an institution of leammg that will founding it was to promote leammg in the liberal and live on, and work, year after year, age after age, after he is laid in the grave.’’ useful arts and sciences, and to promo七e virtue and piety, 一and i七has never been ashamed of its moral, ethical and Desire for recognition and longmg tO be remembered religious inheritance, reCOgn重Zmg that what the wor]d are as natural as breathing to noI.mal human beings. needs But recognition that does. not rest upon service to others motivating belief in the spiritual conception of life. is vain and emp七y・ The finest recognition is that which inheres in being a friend of an institution like Boston University. I honor our Trustees and friendsl, and thank them on behalf of all those whom the University serⅤes,- and will serve through the unbom Future,-for whaL Lhey have done and are doing「and for what they will yetdo! Founders and Associate Founders of Boston University more than anything else is an honest, aC七ive, All of these descriptions are accurate. But I am perSuaded that if there is any one distinguishing characteris- tic of Boston University, Standing out in bold relief above all others, it is the philosophy of Personalism Which permeates the whole life of the institution. A Part Of its “respectable intellectual tradition’’was started by Borden Parker Bowne, Whom many competent critics in Europe have pronounced America’s first great philo- have their names carried in the o鯖cial catalogues, and SOPher. The name which Bowne finally gave to his sys- their names are always read at the Founders’Day Con- tem of philosophy was “Personalism.’’ The things he VOCation while the audience stands at attention. There Set forth were not altogether new with him. Consciously is no finer way to be remembered than to be known as COmmerCial and industrial enterprlSeS Shall have crumbled Or unCOnSCiously, he leamed them of Jesus and of New Testament writings and Old Testament prophecies. Lotze, the German philosopher, helped him to formulate into dust, When the names they bore shall have been his system. NeverthelesIS, it was Bowne of Bos七on Uni- the benefactor of a great university. When financial, forgotten’and lizards crawI where those names were writ, -eVen then the University will be servmg in the names Pαgc賃的" VerSIty Who gave Personalism its first and fullest exposition. It teaches that all values are personal, and only PerSOnS Can Value. Personalism views the whole univel'Se as a society of persons. Its soverelgn teSt Of every ex- Perience is, What kind of person will this make? It estimates all things in tems of their e鱈ects upon persons. It shows that the invisible power back of the visible Phenomena, Of the universe is not an impersonal force but a self-COnSCious Person who knows Himself and knows What He is about・ The name that we glVe tO this Person is God・ A11 our work on this view obtains a cosmic meanlng・ It leads us to a belief in a friendly unlVerSe. According to this philosophy’any七hing that bligh七s, and blasts・ and poISOnS’and dwarfs human personali七y is WrOng・ That is why drunkemess is wrong: it poISOnS and twists human personality・ That is why war is the greatest collective social sin in the world: it sins agamSt PerSOnality. Bowne,s successors a七Boston University-Professors Brightman, Knudson, DeWolf and the rest of them-are not the idle slaves of even a買respecもable intellectua獲 tradition.,, They are or重glnal and independen七thinkers, distilling m the alembic of their own minds the personaIistic philosophy’and giving i七meaningful potency for the ills of this crassly materialistic age of ours. Thus does Boston Universlty render a peculiar service to the preSerVation of Democracy・ The importance of the indivi- dual, the sacred worth of the person, the essential equaIity Of individual human rights-thesle are the things that are Central to any genuine Democracy・ Edwin Markham, in his l皿e poem on買Man Making,, expresses we量l our thought: “We are all blind until we see That in the human plan, Nothing lS WOrth the making, if It does not make the man. ``Why build these cities glorious If man unbuilded goes? T IS popuIar now to believe tha七big armies, big navies, I BoRDEN and big air forces willPARKER guarantee BowNE the preservation of Democracy. O, blind and perverse generation, do you not know that Russia had an army? Do you not know In valn, We bui]d the world unless 七ha七it was Mussolini,s marching ltalian amies that The builder also grows:, robbed Italy of such Democracy as she had? Do you not know that Germany was safe in her republican fom of We are all blind, SayS Markham, until we see that the unfolding of personali七y, the making of the individual, govemment until Hitler,s fanatical army aided him to Substitute dictaもorship for Democracy? No, the safe- is the impor七ant thing・ That is what true education is: the leading out of the individual into a complete and rightly integrated personality, at home with himself and at home in the universe. Thjs inte11ectdal blindness to Which Markham refers may come from hysteria and fear as much as the physical blindness of tha七man whose CaSe the Associated Press reported two or three rionths ago’-a man Who lived in Missouri and who had regained his sight suddenly af七er four years of blindnesIS. Then after he had had his sight for some six months’a bright 量ight flashed in his eyes one night, and startled, he cried Out, and “then everything went black,,, he said. Since guarding of Democracy lS nOt Pr量marily m amies and navies and airplanes・ It is in enlightened men and women Who believe with all their hearts in Democracy. Boston University is doing its part in promotmg real Democracy. The study of prob量ems relating to govem- ment and citizenship has been glVen a neW Place of imPOr七anCe a七Boston University. Nearly every Departmen七has courses, either in history or sociology, if not directly under the name of govemment and.citizenship, lhat direct the at七ention o=he students to the develop- ment of American Democracy and the slgnificance of United States citizenship. The School of Law, in the then, he has been as blind as he was after the accident Very nature Of the case’has many courses that should that made him bIind four years ago. His physician ex- Sharpen the s七udent,s interest in and elevate his Ioyalty P]ains his a珊ction as photophobia-“fear of light.,, “He to our American form of govemment・ In the College of will see agam’,, the doctor says’バwhen his fear of light is broken by a firm convic七ion that he can see.,, In the distressmg COndition a触cting the world today, t,here is so much fear that I am persuaded some persons fear the light・ Some persons have been so blinded by the crue量flashes of war that they can no Ionger see straight・ Liberal Arts and in the Gradua七e School, COurSeS in Govemment and in United States Ci七izenship have been estab量ished as a separa七e department, thus e鮮ecting a COmPletely reorganized curriculum in this field. Let me SuggeSt that you read the o鱈erings as set forth in the Catalogues for both the CoIIege of Liberal Arts and the Pαge Ele亀)ela Graduate School, and note not only the comprehensive SurVey COurSe in American Govemment and Politics, but also courses dealing with political thought in America, American Constitutional Govemment, United States CitiZenShip, Political Parties, History of Political Theory, State and Municipal Govemment, Public Administration, Relationship between Govemment and Business, European Govemments, and Intemational Relations. Professor Gaspar G. Bacon has been appointed Chaiman Of the newly organized department of Govemment and United States Citizenship. The list of professors whose COurSeS are O鱒ered in the department is a most Our American republican form of govemment is the crownmg eVOlution of the ages; that in it are a萱l of the achieve- ments from Marathon to Runnymede, and from Runnymede to the Constitutional Convention of 1787,-I say if each succeeding generation is glVen a Clear and intelli- gent understanding of the basis of American Democracy, then our youth will give i=heir allegiance withou七grudg- mg Or dudgeon. We do not need to resort to false propaganda: A11 we need to do is to Iet our youth know the facts. It is the groundwork of these facts that I have tried to set forth in “Tんe A伽e壷cα71 0α 0?工’ im- PreSSive one. Our Co11ege of Business Administration has grouped together well established courses in business and industrial management for the training of industrial and pro- duction executives. Fourteen coordinated courses are designed to meet the needs brought about by the increased WE CANgrowlng hold tohysterical. all that IWehave just now said without can yield una11oyed loyalty to our form of govemment, and una11oyed a11egiance to our組ag without surrendering to war psychosis. ’some PerSOnS-eVen PerSOnS Who ought to know better-are Saymg things today that I believe they wi11 not look back industrial schedule in preparedness production. upon with complete satisfaction or smug complacency. To the above samples of what we are doing at Boston University should be added the service rendered through Of human nature-Or both-Seem tO think that our only the Reserve O鯖cers, Training Corps’in which, during danger of totalitarianism in this counもry is through a Some persons lacking in historical sense or a knowledge the past score of years, We have trained more than six Victory of the Nazi armies abroad. I am firmly con- thousand Vinced that it is better for the world that England Should win and Germany be defeated in the present strug- young men for leadership in the army・ Or- dinarily, 80 per cent of the students in our College of Business Administration elect the Military Science courses. This year, 90 per cent are enrolled in the R.O.T.C. I have appointed an “American Defense Committee,,, COnSisting of the Deans of the several Colleges and Schoo量s. We are organlZlng eleven different sub-divisions of this バDefense Committee’,, and are ready to place a七the gle, but I do not agree with those persons who seem to think that a Nazi victory abroad will be sure to establish totalitarianism in America, and that a defeat of Nazism Will guarantee the pexpetuation of Democracy on this COntinent. Nobody with historica量knowledge and his- torical sense will be guilty of talking that kind of nonsense. SerVice of the Gove皿ment such resources of talent, Skill Totalitarianism was not establi血ed in Russia, Or in and training as we possess. Italy, Or in Germany through the imposition of any OutSide force. A renaissance of democracy resulted from A伽ericαn was here published during the YOU will pardon α肋01予which me if I mention my book, “The end of that War, Russia鮎rted with the democratic ideal, the World War of 1914-18. For a short period near the year covered by this Report. I mention it only because Which, aided by its army言t scrapped for Communism. it is the most deeply-rOOted defense I can make of the Italy had en]Oyed a large measure of democracy since the American Democracy which we prlZe SO highly. The PreCiating all the endorsements glVen it, I wish here to days of Garibaldi, and had allied herself with the great democracies of France, Britian and the United States. The Fascist totalitarian reglme WaS nOt SuPerimposed upon thank the Executive Committee of the Trustees of Bos七on Italy from without, but was developed from within Italy book has been accorded a kindly reception. While ap- o鯖cial itself. Germany established a republican form of govem- record of the mee七ing of November 13, 1939, COntains the ment at the end of the World War. But Germany listened followlng minu七e, reCOrding action which was taken wholly to the voice demanding revenge, and armament, and On the Committee’s own initia七ive:雄Unanimously voted Se量fish national aggrandizement. It was a raucous voice that President Marsh has performed a valuable national SerVice in bringlng Out this book a=his particular time.,, that demanded exclusive love of Germany, all forgetful University for their word of approval. The The thing I have aimed at in “Tんe A脇e壷畑のOα7)0クD,, Of a larger idea of humanity; demanded patriotism that meant the discomfiture of other nationsl, quenChing the is to fumish the foundations of an intelligen七patriotism,- aspirations of other nations. But what was called paもrioト a patriotism that can be bo七h fervent and dynamic because ism tumed out to be only tyramy on a larger scale. Thus it is bom of intelligence. It is more di餓cult to create Germany, foIIow賞ng the voice of one who professed to be an en七husiastic devotion, eVen tO the point of sacrifice, the indispensable man for Germany, lured onward by for an ideal than for∴a PerSOn. Thus tota,litarianism, ambition for alleged national power and e触ciency, Which precisely focuses sacrificial devotion to a person, SCraPPed its democratic fom of govemmen七and adopted has an immediate, albeit shallow, advantage over true Nazism with all the horrors that it has wrought upon American Democracy, Which demands a11egiance to ideals. the wo血d. But if each succeeding nSmg generation is made intelligen七 Whenever a people loses the convic七ion that a demo- COnCemmg the genesis and development of these ideals, if each succeeding generation is made appreciative of Cratic form of govemment-a truly democratic form and SOlid attainments of national character, if each succeeding then the death knell of Democracy has already been generation leams beyond a quibble or peradventure that SOunded. Whenever a people’s devotion to Democracy Pα〆Tu)dのc not merely one in name-is better than any other form, becomes diluted, then Democracy ]S On the way out. The tragedy of it a11 is that a nation maylbe sIowly poISOnlng Democracy by administering opiates to hush its voice of HE only way that subversive propaganda can be ef- fectually that combated is by of an aenlightened Ta patriotism is sprung knowledge bfpatriotismAmerican rebuke against those who are losing their devotion to it. history, and that is nourished with the ideals and loves The peril is that some persons will become so zealous in their defense of their own narrow notion of Demo_ and sacrificial devotions which have entered into the CraCy that they wi量l sacrifice real Democracy itself. Indeed, it has come to such a pass that some persons ac七ually advocate defending our American way of life from the encroachments of totalitarianism by the very devises and methods that totalitarianism uses. I actually making of our goodly heritage of liberty and self-gOVemment’and that has grown strong and hea量thy by exercise in the duties of citizenship. Boston University begets Patriotic children. It rears them in the nurture and ad_ monition of American ideals and pa’triotism. It trains them in the exercise of the duties of citizenship. It aims heard within the recenもpast a, debate in the Senate of to make its children know what American Democracy lS, the United States in which senators advoca七ed conscripting and to develop fervent allegiance to it. the public press under certain contingencies for the dis- Semination of govemment propaganda, and justified it on President Roosevelt spoke a wise word recently when the grounds that that is what Hitler has done. In the he wamed young people that it was a mistake for them to leave College for patriotic work in the shipyard or to name of common sense’if we accept Hitlerism in order to comba七IIitlerism’What is it that we are defending enlist in the amy or navy・ Continulng, he said, “We from Hitlerism? must have well-educated and intelligent citizens. ‥、. One of the great economists and philosophers that Great Britiain produced in the nineteenth century was duty to con七inue the normal course of their education.,, John Stuar七Mill. When he wrote on govemment, he Wrote nOt Only as one of the profoundes=hinkers of all 七ime, but as a man of experience as well, for he was a member of the B正ish Parliament. His “Essay on Represen七ative Govemment,, is still a classIC, and in that es- Slay he said some things that need to be pondered today. Note the followlng ParagraPh: ’’A people may prefer a free govemment; but if, from in. dolence, Or Carelessness’Or COWardice, Or Want Of public spirit, they are unequal to the exertions necessary for preservmg it; Young peop量e should be advised that it is their patriotic And Wendell Wi11kie could have had Bos’七On University in mind when he said:バWithou=he leadership of the independent college or university’Our educational system today would be in danger of accepting preslent POlitical Standards as unquestioning]y as they are now accepted by educational institutions in Gemany.,, Boston University’Which four years ago won the FIDAC Educational Medal as the foremost university in the worId in the promotion of intemationa量understand- if they wⅢ not fight for iもwhen it is directly attacked; if they 1ng and friendship is rendering an equally important Can be deluded by the artifices used to cheat them out of it; SerVice today in the promotion of all that makes American if, by momentary discouragement, Or temPOrary Panic, Or a Democracy worth defending. fit of enthusiasm for an individual’血ey can be induced to lay their liberties at the feet even of a great man, Or trust him Respectfully submitted, With powers which enable him to subvert their institutions_ in all these cases they are more or less unfit for liberty; and DANIEL L. MARSH, though it may be for their good to have had it even for a short time, they are unlikdy long to en〕ey it.,, Pre8競e庇. Editorials B・ U. Keynotes Democracy and women who believe with all their hearts in democraey・ ・ ‥ The only way that subversive Propaganda can be President Daniel L. Marsh has presented to the as- effectually combated is by enlightened patriotism, a SembIed trustees and faculties of Boston Univers壇y the Patriotism that is sprung of a knowledge of American 鮒teenth annua重account of his stewardship as leader of history’and that is nourished with the ideals and loves this largest New England university and one of the best and sacrificial devotionsI Which have entered into the known in the country. making of our goodIy heritage of liberty and self- President Marsh cited physical and educational growth. govemment’and that has grown strong and healthy by These are valuab量e・ More important today and always is “Boston University begets patriotic children …. It exercise in the duties of citizenship. the fact that Boston University trains its students in true democracy・ No demagogue, nO dictator to his faculty, President Marsh Iast night did not lay down didactic rules as a noted New York educationa寒leader presumed to do 量ast week. trains them in the exercise of the duties of citizenship. It aims to make its children know what American democracy lS’and to deveIop fervent a量legiance to it.・, Bravo’Dr・ Marsh! Everlasting life to such a univerSity like yours’keynoting democracy m a city like Boston, Instead’the Boston University president declared: ``The safeguarding of democracy lS nOt Pnmarily ln and sending forth young peopIe across the world, tO Safeguard Americanバ]ife’liberty・ and pursuit of happ量neSS!,・ armies and navies and waxp重anes. It is in enHghtened men -Bo$めのT畑のe軌Ocわbeγ 」」, 」940. 秒丁楊おeれ The B. U. presiden七believes that the highest service any university can do in the present crisis of human D毘. liberties is to pro七ect academic freedom agains=he chal- DAN腔し lenge of hysteria. We hope that Dr. Nicholas Murray 読患剥 Bu七ler of Columbia University is Iis七ening. 一Bo$ねn Trα鵬Cγ乞加, O〇七obeγ 」2, 」940. くINこき1926 Marsh, Teacher Di ∈引D∈N丁OF B 〇三・〇℃ N 早 UNi V∈廉くi丁Y. D Iく「困るU l≦耳∈ D 墓園 ∈ DUこ鋼つ磨, α U廉と耳MA㍗ :二王:享子ニー AU丁場〇度. 出oN〇割引> BY UM>与良くけI∈∈白山巨廉⊂ Boston University under the administration of Presi- dent Daniel L. Marsh has consistently reflected the spirit Of true Americanism. It is now New England,s ]argest educational institution and one of the nation,s go largest universities. Dr・ Marsh has not missed an opportunity to indicate tha七the University means always to keep ムND錐にOAD. "Mo翰へし∈ MAlく巨が alight the lamp of inte量1ectual freedom. A七a time whe教1 AしONこて丁拒千にON丁I N下種∈ 1iberty of idea and action is shackled, Dr・ Marsh rightly ≠ノり度しD lん仏侵. FγOm Bosきon Ne砂∫ Buγea朽 feels that no greater service can be rendered to the nation and humanlty than for Boston University to concem itself with the free and untramme11ed search for truth. Personalistic Philosophy Is there any wonder that Boston University has eamed a unlque Place in the cu量tura1 1ife of New England and the na七ion? Anima七ed by a spirit of broadmindedness, Boston University is proud of what an eminen七scholar OnCe Called its “respectable intellectual tradition.’’ But it is prouder still that i七s professors and instructors are not bound by this or any other tradition, aS SuCh. Dr. Marsh is rearmg an educational structure on the SOund foundation of tolerance and sympathetic underStanding. Dr. Marsh believes tha七democracy lS a Philosophy and Paying tribute to the B. U. facul七y in his annual SCience of life; and that is why the school trains its report Thursday, President Daniel L. Marsh said: “They Students in true democracy. No wonder that Dr. Marsh’s are onglnal and independent thinkers, distilling in reports are listened to with in七erest and respec七by al量 the alembic of their own minds the personalistic philo- those who are concemed with the safeguarding of our SOPhy, and glVlng it meaningful potency for the ills ideals and institutions! As a man of high character and Of this crassly ma七erialiStic age of ours. Thus does Of profound thought, Dr・ Marsh teaches as much by his Boston University render a peculiar service to the pre- life as by his utterances. SerVation of democracy. The importance of the in- What the United States needs today lS mOre men Of the type of Daniel L. Marsh as teachers and exponents dividual, the sacred worth of the person, the essential equality of individual human rights-these are the things Of the best in American traditions. -The Jeα)料h 4dt)OCaわ, Octobeγ J8, J940. that are central to any genuine democracy.” Amual Report of the Treasurer To THE BoARD OF TRUS冒EES OF BosTON UNIVERSITY: Stitute 80.5%亘f our entire income. This figure repres叫S an incrpase of $38,977・74, Or e・3%, OVer the prevIOuS I submi七herewi七h my annual repor七for the fiscal.year ended June 30, 1940: The total income of the University for this period amounted to $e,116,155.01, Which is $37,406.99, Or l.8%, more than was received last year. During this period, eXPenSeS increased $37,295.01, Or academIC year. Of our en七ire income, 51.2% was paid out in academic salaries. For departmental scholarships and students, aid, the amount expended was $40,184.10,-an increase of $4,397.59 0Ver last year. In addition’there were alloted general l.8%. Excess mCOme OVer eXPenSeS in this period and Trustpes, scho′larships’nOt Chargeable to deprt- amounted to ee,290.53. mental operation, amOunting to $37,7忽念.5l,-「a decrease Amuity Funds increased $42潅83.35. Of $1,645.89 from last year. AIso, from the National Youth Administration of the Federal Govemment was Gifts for current pu岬oses amounted to $74,935.35. Of received $8g,596.67, Which was distribu七ed among 706 Endowment Funds increased $5碧,435.5念. this amoun七ee4,759.碧I was included in departmental in- Students during this fiscal year. COme, $4!3,564.84 was credited to expendable funds, and It is gra七ifying to note a distinct improvement in our $6,61l.30 was applied agains七current and deferred items. real estate operations during this period. The income Tuition and student fees totalled $1,704,13Q.50 and con- WaS increased $4,065 with operating expenses showing Pαge Foαγ鹿鋤 an increase of鉾,213. The carrying charges on our new Site, Which fifteen years ago, aVeraged over ee5,000 annually, this year amounted to only $4,369.07,一a SaVing Scholarship and Aid;・ Grants to students of scholarships and aid out of cur一 77,906.61 rent income Direct Dormitory Expense: OVer the year preceding of $4,217. Current bank loans as of June 30, 1940, amOunted to $335,500. Since that date, all of these loans have been discharged in full. Payments have been made during this fiscal year re- Salaries of managerial sta鮭, WageS Of empIoyees, and COSt Of food supplies. The cost of maintenance of buildillgS is not included ‥.‥‥‥‥‥‥‥‥‥‥ 68,800.4努 冒otal ……………………………………… 釣,113,864.48 ducing our fixed indebtedness by $182,500. As of June 30, 1940, the Net Assets of the University amounted to $8,591,831.17, rePreSenting an increase for FINANCIAI, VALUES JuNE 30, 1940. the year of $379,515.73. Detail figures and schedules are incIuded in my printed r9POrt COVerlng the financial operations of the UniverSlty for the fiscal year. Moぐ的αge$ α伽【 Book Vαlαe Noわ$ Pαgαble Land and Buildings: Co量leges and SchooIs ‥ Respec七fully submi七ted : New E. RAY SpEARE, Site $3,730,519.74 ∴ $ 845,250.00骨 1,995,166.75 476,550.00描 .‥‥....‥ Sargent Camp, Peter78,650.00 borough, N. H‥.‥ Tγeα$uγeγ. Nickerson Recreational 181,731.98 Fie萱d .‥‥‥.‥‥. 冒otals .‥‥‥‥.‥‥.. $5,986,068.47 $l,39l,800.00 A CondeれSed Summaγy Of hでeγeS訪1g Facts Endowment invested in 1,592,514.90 land and buildings‥ Compiled by the Treasurer of the Universi七y from his Annual Report for the fiscal year ended June 30, 1940, and presented to the Trustees at their annual meeting held on Oc七ober 10, 1940. 冒otals .‥‥.‥‥..‥‥ $5,986,068.47 $2,914,314.90 $3,07l,753.57 Equipment : Colleges, SChooIs, departments and o伍ces … … …. 355,5鰯.49 Current Assets and Investments and Cash pertaining to INCOME AND ExpENSE, YEAR ENDED JuNE 30, 194!O SouRCES OF UNIVERSITY INCOME FOR CuRRENT OpERATIONS : From Students: Tuition and fees, including health, COnvocation, and special fees ..‥. ‥. Educational Plant - Net: Cash, aCCOuntS reCeivable, investments, etC… … … 186,e38.18 冒ot血 $3,613,514.蝕 I】lVeStmentS Of Endowment Funds 4,魚76,053.33 Investments of Annuity Funds... 702,劣63.60 $1 ,704,13念.50 Room and board in dormitories . ‥.. 16l,761.55 $l,865,894.05 From Donors: Net Assets of the University $8,59l,831.17 牝Indudes Soden Building Notes Gifts to be expended for general and specific purposes ..‥.‥‥‥‥‥‥‥‥‥・‥ 96,546.83 Payable …...‥.‥..‥...‥ 描Includes Fl,Om Funds: Hayden Memorial Building Notes Payable. ‥ ‥ $1 77,000.00 77,000.00 Income from investments of endowment and annuity Endowment Funds: funds for the support of professorships, PrlZeS, Organized projects, and general purposes … … ・ ‥ ‥ 164,369.96 Fl'Om Sundry Sources: Scholarship Library supporting enterprlSeS, and income from other mis- 富otal .‥.‥‥‥‥‥ funds....‥..…....... For designated purposes or departments Income from ren七als, ath量etics, net income from self- cellaneous sources Professorship and Lectureship funds ‥ 59,鈍4.17 Funds ………‥...…‥. Loan Funds General purposes $ 604,963.14 586,145.09 幾5,863.50 70,639.急5 69,970.39 2,719,17l.96 $色1 16,155.01. $4,276,053.33 Invesもment of Endowment Funds: ExpENDED AND AppROPRIA冒ED : Expenses of Instruction and Administration: Salaries of faculty and sta紐, eXPenSe Of libraries and laboratories, departmental supplies, and salaries and expenses of general administrative o鯖ces. ‥ ‥ ・ ‥ ・ $1 ,310,990.05 Maintenance and operation of about 50 buildings comprising the University Plant: Cost of superintendence, Wa′geS, Of janitors, heat, light, repalrS, 1nSuranCe, and other maintenance expenses.. Bonds $1 ,O10,423.35 Stocks 950タ7 77.99 Real Estate (equity) ....‥.‥‥. 515,307.35 Investments controlled by donors.. 114,000.00 Accounts and Mortgages Receivable 75,600.00 Sav血gs Ba皿ks ...........‥‥‥. 15,Q95.70 Educational Plant .‥.‥...‥.... 1 ,599,514.90 Cash not invested ‥‥..‥..‥..‥ 貧,134.74 31l,200.14 Expenses for General Purposes: Toしal ……………………………………… $4,思76,053.33 Expenses of maintaining various University activities, payments for annuity and group life insurance premiums and other miscellaneous expenses. ‥... ‥ ‥ 218,346.10 Fxpenses of Student Varsity Activities: Fxpense of maintaining student health service, muSical organizations, debating clubs, athletics, etC‥ … ‥ E. RAY SpEARE, Tγeα$鋤形γ. 1Q6,69l.16 Pαge F殖e飢 Amual Meeting and Dinner of the Boston University Trustees The Trustees of the Universiもy gathered for their an- University family, having a well-informed and sym葛 nual meeting in Dean Lord’s o鯖ce at the Charles Hayden Pathetic attitude in connection with the work of each Memorial, Thursday aftemoon, October lO, at four o’clock. One. Mr. Speare modestly claimed that the e鯖cien七work Honorable Frank G. Allen, Chairman of the Trustees, Of his o鯖ce was due to the members of his sta鱈; and in PreSided. Particular he acknowledged his indebtedness to Comp- The followlng Trustees whose terms had expired were re-elected for a five-year term: Frank G. Allen, Alfred H・ Avery’Howard D・ Brewer’J・ Emmons Briggs, George A. Dunn, Emest G. Howes, and Patrick A. O’Conne11. Francis C. Gray, a Public-SPirited Bostonian connec七ed troller Ralph E. Brown, for twen七y-nine years associated With the Treasurer,s O鯖ce of the University・ Followmg the report of the Treasurer, Professor James R・ Hough七on sangバHail, Bos七on University,,, the audience ]Ommg in the chorus. With many financia,l institutions and General Chairman President Marsh was warmly greeもed, the audience Of the Communi七y Fund of Bos七on in 1940, WaS elected a Standing and applauding a=he openmg and at the c量ose member of the board of Trus七ees for the term explrmg Of his address. There were many expressions of heart- in 1945. felt appreciation of his leadership. The o鯖cers of the Board and the members of the Executive Committee were re-elected as follows: Francis C. Gray Elected Trustee Frank G. Allen, Chairman of the Trustees; Guy W. Francis C. Gray, a Public spirited Bostonian with a Cox, Vice-Chaiman; Merton L Brown, Secreもary; E. Ray distinguished record of accomplishment, WaS elected a ‘ Speare, Treasurer. member of the Board of Trustees of the Universlty at Executive Committee: Emest G. Howes, Chairman. George A. Dum, Secretary, Charles Francis Adams. Alfred H・ Avery’Horace A. Carter’Wi11iam E. Chenery, Guy W. Cox, Pliny Jewell, William F. Rogers, Howard W. Selby, Stephen W. Sleeper, Graydon Stetson, the Chairman of the Corporation; the Treasurer of the CorPOration’and the Presiden七of the Univers-ity. The Boa音rd gave careful consideration to i七ems of im- POrtanCe brough=o their attention by President Marsh and Treasurer Speare. It was voted that the annual reports of these two O鯖cers should be presented to the Trustees at the dinner meeting follow重ng. A=he amual meeting of the Trus七ees followmg the election of Dr. Marsh as President, the Trustees of the University gave a reception to the members of the UniVerSity Senate and their wives; and at the dinner meet1ng follow量ng, the President and Treasurer read to the Trustees and the members of the Senate their annual reports. That custom has been followed in all the years The auditorium of the Charles Hayden Memorial makes a beautiful setting for these gatherings・ The rec印tion began promptly at six o’cIock and con- tinued beyond the scheduled time in order that all guests might meet the Trustees. Seated at the head table were: Mr. Charles FTancis Adams, Mr. Merton L. Brown, Mr. Guy W. Cox, Mr. Pliny Jewell, President and Mrs. O. Hartman o鱈ered the invocation. Wam-hearted applause greeted the Treasurer of the University as he rose to glVe his annuaI report. UniverSity service of great value has been rendered by Edward Ray Speare since his election as a member of the board in 1903’at Which time he succeeded his father, Alden Speare’One Of the Associate Founders of the University. Mr. Speare is deservedly popular with all members of the Pαge S窮めe乃 After graduating from the Harvard SchooI of Law, Mr. Gray worked in the o鯖ce of Ropes, Gray, Boyden & Perkins for seven years except for the better. part of two years when he served as First Lieutenant of the 303rd Field Artillery and was overseas for nearly a year. Mr. Gray was for awhile Iaw partner with Henry L. Shattuck; later was President of the Lee HiggmSOn Trust Company’and is now Vice President of the Fiduciary Tmst Company of Boston. He is Secretary and Trustee of the Massachusetts Genera量Hospital, Secretary and Trustee of the Provident Institution for Savings and a member of its Board of Investment. 1 (Co州c海ded oID Pαge ru,e7坤y-Fあe) l 、 In the absence of Govemor A]1en, Guy W. Cox, VicePresident of the Trustees, PreSided; and Rev. Dr. Lewis five-year term becommg a member of the Class of 1945. 〇 〇 〇 〇 〇 i Marsh’Bishop and Mrs. Oxnam, Dr. E. Ray Speare and Mrs. Lucius E. Thayer・ the Amual Meeting a=he Charles Hayden Memorial on Thursday, October lOth. Mr. Gray was elected for a American Universities Boston University FOmetimes seems overshadowed by the great institutions of leamlng With which it is surrounded. The followmg list, Pub量ished in the Ne砂yOr厄的鵬, glVmg the enrollment in the twenty-five largest American universiもies includes Boston University and Harvard University in New England. These enrollment figures do not cover part-time students or those registered in evenmg Classes. Alumni of Boston University may with proper modesty take pride in the rank of their A重ma Mater in this list・ Only eleven inStitutions in the country have a larger enro11ment’and eight of these are sta七e institutions having the advantage Of large appropriations from public funds. In the list of the nation’s institutions of higher leammg Boston University takes its p賞ace as number twelve, and among the privately endowed institutions of leammg it takes its place as number four, New York University, the University of Pennsylvania and Columbia University being the only privately endowed institutions with larger enroIlment. COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES IN THE UNITED STATES 青嶋細腰iり∴い晴晴山i置 Tkeめe庇g〇秒e Zeαdわg co振ge$ Oγ “7めeγ訪e$: bα$ed o仰鋤・0脇e庇のre α可oZZo郷‥ 」940 2. University of Califomia (Berkeley) 15,139 3. University of Pennsylvania 1 0,048 l]. University of Texas 重 重 1 1 1 1 重 1 o 9,800 量2. University of Southem Califomia 9,402 13・ University of Pittsburgh University of Pittsburch 9,包84 14. University of Southem Califomia Westem Reserve University 9,073 15・ University of California (Los Angeles) College of City of New Yok (Los 8,508 喜6・ Angeles) 8,421 17. Boston University College of City of New York Westem Reserve University ○ ○ o ○ 7,990 18・ Louisiana State University 7,585 19・ Harvard University Pennsylvania State University 7,200 袋0. Fordham University Purdue University 7,052 g重. Pennsylvania State University University of Oklahoma 6,8鰯 2Q. Comell University Comell University 6,783 象3, Purdue University Syracuse University 6,641 鎚. Michigan State University 6,636 忠5・ George Washington University 9 ○ ○ 4 0 - o ∴ ︼ 7 Harvard University Fordham University 7,6。棚的6・8。叩6・68 ○ ∴ き 轟 4 6 6 7 8 9 0 宣 2 3 4 5 Boston University l lO. University of Washington l 10,662 University of Texas l University of Washington l 9・ University of.Michigan 持 持 場 ∴ ∴ 嶋 10,978 l 8. University of Wisconsin University of Michigan l ⊥ 1l,171 Michigan State University ○ ﹁ 7. Columbia University University of Wisconsin Califomia ○ 6. University車f IIIinois 13,0鰯 of 1 7 8 9 0 1 の 13,442 Ohio State University University 1 6. University of I11inois 廿∴∴♯∴∴嶋 5. University of Minnesota 4. Ohio State University 13,506 1 13,883 5・ Columbia University 4. University of Minnesota 16,199 3. University of Pennsylvania 1" New York University 1 g. University of Califomia (Bel.keley) 3 30,9 72 蒜等器等請書詩誌壷蒜・蒜梯 1989 1・ New York University ー " 患 動 1 1 1 *-IncomPlete figures. “ Mαγ秒e糊ggeS吊hαiツ0録加i′0綴e oα′ αめeγわe職 Pαge Seのe庇ee柑 Boston University SchooI of Social Work With the new Universiもy Year a new schooI was estab1ished in Boston Universi七y, the SchooI of Social Work, an outgrowth of the Division of Social Work of the fomer School of Religious and Social Work. The growmg lmportance of social work as a profession was recognized by Dean Henry H. Meyer, Who organized a division for it in the earlier school and selected Richard K. Conant, fomerly Massachuset七s Commissioner of Public Welfare’ to develop it・ In establishing a separa七e School of Social W。rk the University under七akes a project which is slgnificant in presen七〇day developments and one which will, in l,he opln10n Of Dean Conan七, increase the University’s con七ribution to community welfare in Massachusetts and in New England. In the United States there are forty-One graduate schooIs of social work which are accredi七ed as members of the American Associaもion of SchooIs of Social Work and Dean Conant gained the accrediting of Boston University in January’1939’about one year after he became Director of the Division of Social Work. He had realized for some years as Commissioner of Public Welfare that RICHAR。 K. CoNANT t,he need for traihed men in public and private social work was no七being met in New England and fel=he importance of more trammg facilities for both men and w。men. There even was some sentimen七in the State Legislature tha=he Sta七e establish a school of its own 七o meet the need. Many of the state universities’eSpecially in the Wes七, have estab]ished schooIs to train men and women for the rapidly increaslng number of positions in public welfare and social security services. All the schooIs of social work have waiting lists and their capacities for full time s七uden七s are limited by the number of field work placements of good standards which can be secured in the social service agencies as oppor七unities for practice tralnmg for the students while they are in school. The present capacity of the Boston Uni一 versity SchooI of Social Work for full time s七uden七s was reached a七the openmg Of the school and the places were asslgned to those applicants who seemed to the admission FAM重Lて commit七ee likely to become successful social workers. An increase of twenty full time s七udents, from thirty-SeVen las七year to雛ty-SeVen this year’a卸y percen七increasle, was as much as could be undertaken. The bes七opmlOn Of the profession, Dean Conant says’ is tha七training for public welfare administration should be glVen in a school of social work. The administrator should have a thorough grounding ln SOCial work in order to be a leader‘in its development and administration. Too early specialization in adminis七ration or in any one field of social work does not ge=he desired result. The bes七educational plan is to devote the first graduate year to a broad training ln CaSe WOrk dealing with individual problems and with family problems, tO training ln WOrk with groups of boys and girls or adul七s for their con- s七ruc七ive development and to training in community welfare work. During the second year of the two year graduate course’mOre SPeCialization can be undertaken in administration, reSearCh, COmmunity organization, psychiatric or medical social work・ Children,s work or work with delinquents. HEA重富H. Pαge Eig庇eeれ Practice is of equal importance with classroom instruc- tion throughou=he course. For two days a week the fiI.St year and for four days a week the second year the Student is placed in one of Boston,s social agencies of high standards to work with and to be trained by a visi七or under the supervision of a member of the faculty of the School・ Boston is an ideal training center for social work because of the broad scope of its pubIic and prlVate Weト fare work and the high sltandards of its agencies. Practical also is the instruction at the SchooL All members of the facul七y are now practising or, if full time members’have recently been engaged in the practice of SO.Cial work. The contact of the SchooI with actuaI PraCtice is kept fresh. Educa七ion and practice together help the faculty, the agencies and the students to main置 tain growth in the developlng Ski量ls and new systems o書 SOCial service, Public and private. As lecturers in the new courses onバSocial Work Re_ SOurCeS’’and “The Objec七ives of Social Work,,, many eXecu七ives of social service agencies and specialists from those agencies are brought to the School, Cementing the con- tact between the University and the community. At the opemng meeting of the coursle On “Objectives of HARRY M. CAREY Social Work,,, an aSSembly course, President Marsh emPhasized the importance of charac七er and eamestness of PuI.POSe in the student who intends to become a social WOrker. Harry M・ Carey, the new Director of the Greater Boston Community Fund, POinted ou=hat social WOrk is today facing the greatest challenge of its hisltOry・ He said, “The most importan七factor in a war reglme is morale. Wha七group knows more about morale than SOCial workers? What profession knows more about handling groups in mass’abou七preventlng Sickness, about heIping families to adjus七themselves to presen七day con- di七ions’about leisure time activities’abou七arousmg a COmmunity to its responsibilities? Our techniques in all the fields’the rehabilitation and maintenance of family ]ife’the safeguarding of the interests of children, the pro- tection of health’Character-education’COmmunity or- CHILDREN ganization’are tOO Valuable no=o be used by the entire COmmunity … ・ We are gomg tO have more governmental SOCial work・ mOre WOrk for the handicapped, a greater development of the mental hygiene processes, a further development in the health protec七ion field and increased use of leisure time group activities・ There wi11 be a grow七h in the character-buiIding agencies and a better under- Standing of human behavior. I think there will be an increased unders七anding of socia賞work, and tha七social WOrk can be the most po七ential force for good, if iでwill take up the grea七challenge of these critical times.,, Exemplifying the contact between the school and the COmmunity, Dean Conan七is active in social service as President of the MasISaChusetts Child Council, Secretary Of the Massachuset七s Conference of Social Work, Which ▼ eaCh year holds ten district conferences throughout the State and a large annual conference, a member of the SPeCial commission appoin七ed by Govemor Saltonstall to COnSider the oId age assistance laws, and a member of the budget committee of the Greater Bos七on Community Fund・ He graduated from Harvard in 1905, Harvard 工aw SchooI in 1908’PraCtised law for a few years in (Conduded oのPαge Tα,en切-Sゆ EDUCATION Pαge N窃eあe露 The First Year in the Charles Hayden Memorial Building EvERE叩W. LoRD For twenty-three years the College of Business Administration occupied a renovated building owned by and hope tha七the accepted quality of our product might OVerShadow the failings of our plant. another educational institution-all that building, and Indeed, the old building did not make a favorable im- parts of others in the neighborhood, CrOWding itself into pression on visitors. Students were lost to us because they, Or their parents, COuld not reconcile the manifest inadequate and unsuitable quarters, but carry量ng On and progressmg m SPite of such evident handicaps. The in- antiquity of the structure with the expectation of a adequacy had been recognized for years’and from time modem college training. Still more students) Were lost to time, there were suggestions’Or Petitions, Or Pleas’ because we could not provide facilities for new courses for relief-for a home of its own, WOrthy of the Co11ege; and new classes. And in spite of their industry, faculty for opportunity, nOt SO muCh to expand, aS tO maintain members were unable to render their best service when its vital energy, tO Perform its essential functions. But crowded into cubby holes which allowed no space for 七he appeals brought no relief and we had almost recon- conferences and insu鯖cient room for their own reference ciled ourselves to continulng for all time, “CramPed, b○○ks. cabinned and confined’, at old 525 Boylston Street. In these circumstances the amnouncement that the the old home: On the contrary, faculty and students property had been sold and must be vacated within a year was not altogether unwelcome. It made our alike, and loyal graduates even more, felt rea萱・ a鯖ection problem one no Ionger of desire but of necessity・ The It was not that we had no senもimental attachment to for the dingy rooms and the rugged wa11s of brick. College of Business Administration could not be aban- That was assured by long and happy association. But, doned. It must have a home: and that immediately just as a鮮ection for a friend cannot entirely blind one raised a question. Should Boston University follow the to his shorトcommgS, SO We COuld not fail to recognlZe custom of years past, Seek out some discarded building the pitiful inadequacy of our college home-SO We COuld and spend thousands in an effor=o remodel and reshape no七do otherwise than shrink a bit from bringmg Visitors it for our use? Or should we make a supreme e鮮ort and within our walls, though we might pu七on a brave front erect a new building adapted to our needs and inaugurat- Pαge T砂e庇g mg a new era in Boston University housmg? Happily, the Board of Trustees, after serious consideration of the question, made the momentous decision in favor of new COnStruCtion and backed a campa重gn for a million dollars for a worthy home for the College of Business Administration. Now tha=hat home has been occupied for a year, it may be interesting to consider how it has affected the PSyChoIogical problems to face. For them we have es置 tab量ished a Psychological Center which, at meetings held during the year’has presented the results of psychoIogical research in important and intensely practical ways. Because we now have halls in which they can meet We have organized and maintained this past year an Export Round Table at which business men have, in large numbers, PreSented and considered their problems COIlege and the entire Univers重ty. Of fore量gn trade; a Sales Executive Club, devoted to the First of all’it is certainly true tha=he long and interests of the men who direct selling forces; a Com- VlgOrOuS CamPa重gn for the necessary million did much to create a unified university spirit, aS graduates, faculty, and students of every Department gave the campalgn their sincere support・ So the interest in the Charles Hayden Memorial Building lS nOt COnfined to the College Of Business Administration’but is spread throughout Boston University. It emphasizes the fac=ha=his is a Bos七on University building’m Which all may take equaPride. Probably’also’the erection of this first building On the new campus has brought new courage and new hope to every Department of the University and made mOre real the vision of a great university center on the banks of the Charles where all the university family may 量ive and wock together. The first effect of these new surroundings that is noticeable to all isl the great improvement in studen」 and faculty-mOrale. No one can pass through the beautiful portals and walk across the marble floor of the SPaCious Iobby-the買Main deck,,, in the Co11ege of Busi- ness Administration idiom-Without an uplift of soul Which e鯖ects his whole character and bearlng・ Students are more careful about combing their hair and keepmg their shoes shined: they are more eager to show them- Selves to be gentlemen, at home in these luxurious surroundings・ And faculty members take pride in bring重ng here friends from other colleges’Whose admiring and a11 but envious comments add to the pride of those who Can Call the building home. This is a very real galn, for it was precisely m the rather low morale that we suf_ fered of old. The Charles Hayden Memorial Building lS arChitecturalIy beautiful and administratively e鯖cient・ It proVides generous o鯖ce space for the administration and the various departments of the College’making possible individual and collective activities that were out of the question at寝525.,, It has laboratories which have added mercia量Education Club’bringmg tOgether students and graduates engaged as commercial teachers; a New England InterschoIastic Press Association’COmPOSed of representa- tives of hundreds of high school newspapers and publica- tions; and a Professional Council of Joumalism, Which links some of the leaders of the newspaper world with Our department of Joumalism. We have not made use of our beautifully.equipped Radio Studio’bu=he room itse贈and its equ重Pment is available for extensive use as a University adjunct. On the topmost組oor is our spacious reading room and library. No Ionger do our students have to respr=o nearby hote=obbies and drug-StOreS tO find a place for Study. We are hoping that Friends of the Library, Organized this past year, Will soon make much needed additions to our library’Which is not now, aS it was in the old home, CroWded for room. For socia=ife the men have made much use of the two large rooms asslgned to them for study, and of the バForcas,le,,・ a Su鯖ciently masculine apartment where they may smoke at ease; and the young women have made good use of the complete kitchen, COnneCted with their ``Blue Room,,・ They have held several teas and Small receptions in their pleasant quarters and are unanimous in their approval of the new facilities. These are only a few of the ways in which the Charles Hayden Memorial has added new life to the College, but they indicate something of its value・ The greatest and most lasting value is that of which I have already SPOken-七he marvelous in租uence on students and visitors. Our Vocational Department reports that empIoyers, Who in the old b-uilding were openly sk印tical abou=he quality of students trained in such an atmosphere, here Clearly expec七to find men of the highest grade: and, With Our neW faci皿es, that department has been able to ex_ tend its highly successful guidance program’formerly immeasurably to the value and in七erest of our courses,. Iimited to Juniors and Seniors’tO eVery Student of every For example’there is the printing laboratory一事Omething long desired, but impossible before・ In this room, adjoining the Joumalism suite on the ground岨oor, We have a small printing o範e’With specimens and exhibits in great number. There our students in Joumalism and in Advertis-ing may study type and type usages’and may WOrk on special projects assIgned by their instru。t。rS. Printers and stationers have made generous contributions Of equ]Pment Which enabIe us to g重Ve PraCtical instruction in the technical subjec七s connected with 。ur 。。urS。S. A psycho重ogica=aboratory has' enabled our department Of psychoIogy not only to provide advanced work for quaIified students’and to conduct many highIy s重gnificant research proJeCtS’bu=o open the doors as well to busi_ ness men and industrialists who have so many distinctly dass. The Charles Hayden Memorial Building makes Boston Universlty College of Business Administration one of the OutStanding schooIs of the country. It makes it incumbent upon us to maintain a scholastic standing worthy Of our new home. Recognition of that fact permeates Our Organization and results in more and better work. The負Mark Hopkins on a log,, ideal is a pleasmg One: but for practical purposes a commodious and beautiful buildmg With ample facilities for every feature of student life is infinitely better--and血at is the ideal to which Our College of Business Administration has had the happy fortune to attain・ That it may be only the precursor of Similar good fortune for all our sister coIIeges and schooIs in Boston University is our cherished expectation. 耽ge Tα〉e加g-0?じe Boston Universlty Fans Invade New York (Bg α t’eおrαn O声んe O椛c硯Boo癌to7.e rOuγ8) の1初仇新年を Students, facul七y, alumni and friends by the hundreds took advantagle Of the holiday week-end to joumey to New York. Supplemen七ing the usual attractions of the famous metropolis were the Bos七on University-Manhat- tan college Football Game a=he Polo Grounds on Friday N制動情は night, October llth and, O鯖cially designa七ed “Boston Universl七y Day a七the World,s Fair,,, Saturday, Oc七ober 12th. Many joined the tours o鮮ered by the Bos七on University Bookstores and traveled in groups via the Eas七em Steamship and Colonial Steamship Lines. These tours Ieft Boston Thursday evenlng. Rallies were held under a beautiful full moon on the open deck of the steamers. Fellow travelers were well aware that Bos七on Universi七y was on its way to α七ake over,, New York・ Short cheer for MacDonald! Short cheer for Hanley! Skyrocke-t! Rah Locomotive! in七erspersed with familiar University songs provided the happy, Carefree background which characterized the entire weekend. The game was well attended and our cheermg SeCtion, augmented by hundreds of New York alumni’WaS Very much in evidence. Our band in brilliant scarlet and whi七e uniform, Performmg ln Creditable manner’held the spot- 1ight between the halves. In spite of the facもthat Saturday,s attendance a=he The Shelton ha§ been New York Head・ Fair se七a new high record for the year, Boston Universit)y folk were present in such numbers that this observer quarter§ for college men and women for year§. ‥ and there’s a reason. The experienced the feeling of being毎quite at home,,・ Our band, under the capable direction of Fred Harris, (Senior, Shelton provide§ Club facilities, With・ College of Music) was given a prominent place on the out dues. You can relax in the solarium PrOgram Of the day. or the library, WOrk-Out in the gym, use the game room, and take a dip in the famous Shelton pool, a11 the§e fねture§ Without any charge other than that Sunday was made for sightseers and sightseers were made Sunday. Practically to a man, eVery tOurist tumed sightseer. Seaもs on the upper deck of Fifth Avenue busses were at a premium. The sun smiled brightly from a cIoudless sky and provided just enough wamth to make one que.stion that this was really mid Oc七ober. The for your pleasant room. The Shelton’§ Hudson River, George Washington Bridge’Soldiers’and unique location-On the edge of the Sailors’Monument, Grant’s Tomb, Cathedral Church of Grand Central Zone_makes it a con- St. John the Divine, S七. Patrick’s Cathedral, Dr. Harry venient point for all of New York’s Emerson Fosdick’s church, Bamard College, M七. Sinai Hospital, Central Park, Frick Museum’Radio Center, mo§t interesting place§. A well known Washington Square, Fifth Avenue,s shoppmg CenterS and orche§tra Plays nightly in the Shelton skyscrapers held the a七tention of those who were ou=o ``see the town atop a `rubbemeck’bus’’. Corner for dinner and supper dancing. Aboard the s七eamersl again late Sunday aftemoon’New "ヽ.7 ▲ 暮 ▲ ’ ● ○ ○ DOU帆電照OOM§ $4.50 門回書[いい S賞関L電照OOM§ $2.25 York,s skyline was seen to the bes七advantage. The reflections of a setting sun fomed the backdrop for a city of towermg buildings with their millions of lighted windows. A city in which we, nOW SeaSOned travelers, had been a part, a dweller, a COntributor to i七s welfare, 棚細聞朋量醐皿 LEXINeTON AV各Nu各01 49Ih STRE剛. N各W YORK even tho’just for the week-end. Again a full moon and agam COllege SOngS∴and good cheer as we sail nearer and nearer toward home. We nked New York and were glad to have experienced i七s atmosphere and attractions but weわのe Bos七on and its peaceful suburbs, its slower tempo’its solidarity and u購de′ l(NO↑▼ M●調9eれOh- A.農.WAし▼Y, Moh09e, Sincerity. Hope there’s a New York game next year! Pagc如0のき汁加的 Mαγ秒e拙ggeS書初al γ0αクαiγ0"あe ou′のめeγ鉢e鳩 The First Three Football Games of 1940 MロR鼠A7正論ME最 It is the unforseen things that generally make or break a footbal=eam・ A few Iong passes, a Sudden develop- ment of a sophomore, a fumble, a SuCCeSSful conversion, mjuries-any One Of these fac七ors can glVe a CO賞lege eleven an outstanding season from a standpoint of victories or Can tum an anticipated winnmg SeaSOn into one of great disappointment. Take the case of our Bos七on University varsity football team. Just Iast month in Bo$わ納れI wrote an ar七icle On the ou七Iook for the season sta七ing that we couId posSibly win six games and lose two・ As a mat七er of fact, the coaching staff fe]t tha=hey had the best team potentially since the 1937 out飢which defea七ed Boston Col一 ]ege. Inwardly, Coach Pat Hanley was of the op賞nlOn tha七with any sort of luck, a SeVen tO One reCOrd was not impossible’Which would be the best season any footba11 team had ever enJOyed in the history of the University. But the elements’unfortunately, Went tO WOrk. Instead Of being favored by Dame Fortune, Old Man Jinx struck With the fury of the 1938 hurricane and after the wreck_ age was cleared, it now appears that Boston University,s 工940 football machine will be lucky to break even for the year. Never before in the memory of this writer, Who has Seen mOre Boston University footba量l than anybody con- nected with the University in the last fourteen years, did any Terrier team ever undergo the misfortune of this PreSent e量even. Injuries are part of the game. There CAPTAIN JIM McDoNALD are always bruises and aches and occasionally a casual七y that may sideline a boy for a period of time; but when a team loses six boys for the season, all of them veterans Wi七h varsity ranking, it is a blow that cannot be repaired. In the very first scrimmage of the year, Joe Lanata, Pantano has a broken nose, Charlie Cremens has a bad hand, John Conneamey has an aggravating knee lnJury, Ralph Sa量vati has a pu量led tendon and we could go on and on’but this should be enough to glVe yOu a fair Senior end who was slated to start the season as a regular idea of what has happened to the Bos七on University On the right wmg, had hisl leg broken. In that very foo七ball squad this year. Same SCrimmage’Ed Rooney, e20-POund tack重e who was There has never been a season like it for m]uries and heavily counted upon this season’tOre a Cartilage in his there may never beI anOther one to come anywhere near knee which necessiもated an operation’Pu七ting him out of i七, bu七we are concemed with the preslen七and these COmmission for the season also. As though tha七were not bad enough’in a scrimmage between the first and second CaSual七ies have JuSt about wrecked the team. It is well known that here at Boston University, football p量ayers games’little Jim Sullivan, 140-POund halfback who shared are no七hjred nor are they bough七・ When a college has duties with AI Clark, Suffered a broken coIIar bone. He an amateur football team, it will never be deep m reSerVeS. SOOn had company when AI C量ark received the very same Injuries to key men raise havoc wi七h the plans of any mJury Ken COaCh・ The absence of these men generally result in the Skoropowski, Who is considered the best guard in New los'S Of games that could possibly have been won wi七h England by Coach Pa七Hanley’WaS aCCidentally kicked the team at full strength. in the Manha七tan game ten days later. in the base of t,he sp重ne in the Upsala game and was The ScarIet and White opened their season against kept in the hospitaI for a week under observation. There Norwich on September 28 in impressive fashion after is a chance that Ken may be back before the end of the SeaSOn’but his Ioss has certainly been felt in the Man- hattan and Cincinnati games. Sid Michaels’the only Veteran Center On the squad・ Suffered a severe leg mJury in the Manhattan game and he may aIso be lost for the rest of the year. Those are the maJOr CaSualties. Delving deeper into the injury JmX, We find that Captain Jim McDonald has a chronic bad knee which may go at any time・ George getting away to a bad three-minute star七・ A pass inter- CePtion by Domina of Norwich who ran i七back 90 yards Pu七the visitors ahead of the Terriers, 7 to O, before the game was three minutes old・ But the team settled down, took complete control and went on to defeat the best team Norwich has had fn th正y years by the sco重:e Of 38to 7. The fo]lowmg Saturday, Upsala came to Weston with (Co第clαded on Page T砂掘り-Sめ れ印加のe鵬g-Tんγee Conference on Preaching and Amual Meeting of the SchooI of TheoIogy Alunni Association The Thirteenth Annual Conference On Preaching, ar- 1ectures that are arranged from year to year, but it is a ranged by the Boston University Schoo萱of TheoIogy, grea=oy to keep my connection with the students of WaS held at Copley Church, Boston, October 14, 15 and the SchooI of TheoIogy. I would like to say a few rather 16. Dean Earl Bowman Marlatt was in charge of all ar- serious words about the value of worship. I graduated rangements. Distinguished ministers of various denomi- from the SchooI of TheoIogy雛ty-One yearS agO last June・ nations took part in the program and clergymen in large At the School they taught me a great many things and numbers were in attendance, SOme Of them comlng from among the grea=hings they taught me the beauty and far-aWay Cities. the meanlng Of worship. The Annual Meeting of the Alumni Association of the SchooI of TheoIogy was held on Tuesday evenlng, October 15th. Rev. Dr. Charles W. Je師as, President of I can remember how Dr. Townsend read the Bible. There was one autumn that followed a troublesome summer, Widespread railroad strikes, the country was in a the Association, WaS tOaStmaSter. Addresses were made very restless state. The last of September he was asked by Alumni of the School as follows: to lead chapel and that day he重cad to us the Forty-Sixth Rev. Dr. James C. Baker, Methodist Bishop for the Califomia Area. Dr. Earl Bowman Marlatt, Dean of the School. Rev. Dr. G. Bromley Oxnam, Methodist Bishop Of the New England Area. Dr. Daniel L. Marsh, President of the University. Rev. Dr. Charles R. Brown, Dean Emeritus of the Yale Divinity School. BISHOP BAKER: I never come to Boston without a Psalm. I wish he might come back and read it to us now in these very d瓶cult times. バGod is our refuge and strength, a Very PreSent help in trouble. 質Therefore will no七we fear, though the earth be re- moved, and though the mountains be carried into the midst of the sea; ``Though the waters thereof roar and be troubled, though the mountains shake with the swelling thereof. Selah. “There is a river, the streams whereof shall make glad great thrill. I wonder sometimes if anybody ever came to Boston for the first time with greater anticipation than I did when I came from Illinois to enter the Boston University SchooI of TheoIogy.一I bring to you not Only my own greetings but the greetings of Boston University men in Califomia and in Arizona. We have the city of God, the holy place of the tabemacles of the Most High. バGod is in the midst of her; She sha11 not be moved: God shall help her, and that right early. “The heathen raged, the kingdoms were moved: he a splendid group of them. They are glVlng a fine acCOunt Of themselves. They show the spirit of Boston uttered his voice, the earth melted. University in the way m Which they do their wock. We refuge. Selah. are sending you men from Califomia. I have located SOme in this group this evenlng. Some of our best men COme tO yOur SchooI of TheoIogy and we are taking some Of your best men from you. We of Califomia salute you. BISHOP OxNAM: My love for this School has deepened 質The Lord of hosts is with us; the God of Jacob is ouI “Come, behold the works of the Lord, What desolations he hath made in the earth. “He maketh wars to cease unto the end of the earth; he breaketh the bow, and cutteth the spear in sunder; he bumeth the chariot in the fire. “Be s七i11, and know that I am God: I will be exalted as the years have come and gone, and now in this y助r When it seems to be necessary to spend biIlions of dollars among the heathen, I wi11 be exalted in the ear七h. “The Lord of hosts is with us; the God of Jacob is our for pんぴ伽Z defense I trust someone will see the.wisdom Of giving two mi11ion dollars to house and endow this Schoo賞of TheoIogy now absolutely essential to 8p轟きuaZ defense. PRESIDEN冒MARSH: If you read Bo$to毒のyOu Will note in the October number the accoun七of work being done in this war tom world of ours by graduates of the Boston University SchooI of TheoIogy in the service of the Prince of Peace. All around the world you will find graduates of the Boston University SchooI of TheoIogy, guiding posts, aS it w.ere, tO help us find our way through the thick darkness that covers the world. DEAN BROWN: I always enJOy COmlng tO these Conferences on Preaching not only because of the splendid Pαge Tα)e庇ひ-Foαγ refuge. Selah.’’ I cannot read it as Dr. Townsend read it, but I always think of him when I read that psalm to myself and of the Way his reading of it fell on our hearts and minds. At the Amual Meeting the follow重ng O臆cers were elec七ed: Rev. Charles T. Allen of Newton, Mass., Pre8ide7帝Rev. John K. Montgomery of Atlantic, Mass., Sec7.eめ砂; Rev. Harvey K. Mousley of New Bedford, Mass.,拘eα鋤re号Rev. Gilbert W. Wieting of Newportク N. H., Aud訪o7T and the followmg na七ional vice presi- dents: Rev. Wi11iam H. Stewart of Rockville Center, N. Y.; Rev. Thomas S. Kepler of Appleton, Wis.; Rev. Richard C. Raines of Minneapolis, Minn.; Rev. Paul Secres七of Youngstown, Ohio; Rev. Jesse L. Corley of South Pasadena, Calif. Com量ng Events November 8 Fred Waring will broadcast over the BLACKER & §HEPARD COMPANY 工UMBER National hook-uP the song he composed ]ast year for Boston Univers音ity - Chester- fieId Pleasure Time - 7:00 p.M. 9 HOMECOMING DAY - Football game `.EリeD′掘れg舟〇億を調○○あo仙細心ogα吋,, 409 Å]bany Streetl BOSTON, MÅSS. T●l●ph〇億● HANc血9730 BnnchYard; Squan血n St.' No蘭書Dom' - Boston College - Fenway Park - foト lowed by the Coffee Hour in the Charles Hayden Auditorium. American Association of University Women - A11 College Luncheon = Ho七el Somerset - 1: 00 p.M;- Speaker: President Herbert J・ Davis of Smith College - $l・50 per Plate - Mail checks glⅤlng address and College to Miss Carol Smith, 1男00 Massa- Coal““ Coke.。Oil Metropolitan Coa工Co. Chusetts Avenue’Cambridge. 20 Excha皿ge PIace 16 Footba量l game - Springfield - Nickerson BOSTON, MASS. Field. SchooI of Education Alumni Ass。Ciation Luncheon - Alumni HaIl - Soden Build. Te量ephone: Capito1 8800 重ng - 1 p.M. - Principal Speaker賀Dr. Allan Stockdale - Tickets $1.00 each. 23 Footba11 game - Westem Maryland - Nickerson Field. December 13 Military Ball - Hotel Statler - SAMUEL HOLMES, INC. Wholesale and Retail 19 CHRISTMAS CONVOCATION-Trinity Church - Alumni are invited to attend. POuLTRY αnd GAME Stall8 17-27 Faneuil Hall Market BOSTON. MASS. The Oldest Graduate, Rev. Samuel M. Bea工e Boston University SchooI of Theolo筈y Class of 1871 The oldest living graduate of Boston University and Probably the oldest graduate of any American university Celebrated the one hundred and first anniversary of hi・s ¥KIMBALL, GILM^N birth at his home in Sandwich’Massachusetts’Wednesday, October e3rd. & C○○ From the Alumni O鯖ce there went to him紺ty white Camations’and卸y scarlet carnations, ln aPPreCiation Of the first century of his life. There was also one red rose to start him pleasantly upon his second century of service. One year ago Mr. Beale wrote as follows: “I血ank God tha=he University continues to send forth young people inspired to serve’and I pray that the University may long continue its wonderful service. Francis C・ Gray INSURANCE OF ALL KINDS (00,)cluded jro肋Pαge S巌eeの He served for six years as member of the Boston Schoo] Committee and was Chairman of that Committee for 137 Milk Street two- yearS. He is Trustee of King’s Chapel, the Massachusetもs ROSTON Humane Society言s a Director in the United States Smelting’Refining & Mining Company, and the MassaChusetts Fire & Marine Insurance Company・ Mr. Gray married Helen Rotch Bullard in 1916 and they have three sons. In 1940 Mr. Gray was Chairman of the very successful Greater Boston Community Fund Campalgn. In that Campalgn President Marsh acted as- Chairman of HARRY W. GILMAN WALTER R. J. SM重TH STANLEY O. M│CMULLEN the Division of Institutions. Mαγ椛3御調αり0時書棚` ○柳αめ鋤的∽ 耽ge Tooe噂一Fiのe SchooI of Social Wok F. LEROY FOX, INC. Bu調脇g α融γu訪0" (00伽海ded fγO肋Pαge N窃eわeの Judge Franklin T・ Hammond’s o鯖ce’a=he same time 101 M基LK STREET, BOSTON. MASS. TELEPHONE HUBBARD 3470 developmg the Massachusetts Child Labor Committee which has now become the Massachusetts Child Council. He was selec七ed as Secre七ary of that Committee by Dean Everett W. Lord, Who was aもtha七time Secre七ary of the New England Child Labor Commit七ee・ He carried on 七he work of tha七organiza七ion from 1911 to 192l, SerVlng during the World War as Ist Lieutenan七of the 304七h Infantry・ In 1921 Calvin Coolidge, then Govemor of Massachuse七ts, aPPOinted Mr・ Conan七to head the State Department of Public Welfare・ Reappointed by Governors cox and Allen, he greatly enlarged the S七ate Depar七men七during the depression unti1 1935, adding old age assistance and social securi七y func七ions. He is a member of the American Association of Social Workers and is active in various other social service organizations. His home is in Lincoln. He was appointed Professor of Social Work, by President Marsh’in Boston University ill $outh $ho′箸 February, 1937. Football (Coのc海ded fγO脇Page T%,e庇g-Tんγee) a big, tOugh outfi=hat figured to glVe the Hanleymen plenty of opposi七ion and they did that little thing. In P re∬ fac七the invaders put on the first offensive march of the day in the firs七period and went all the way to the one-foot line before losing the ball. The Terriers settled down at this poin七and took the o紐ensive and went on to wln, 15to 6. With two victories to thcir credit, the injury-riddled Boston University eleven made their firs七New York City appearance in sixteen years meeting Manhat七an. Because of the great number of regulars out’the Terriers were c。nCeded no chance whatsoever of bea七ing Man- hattan. In fact i七was feared by many tha七the game would wind up m a rOut・ Ins七ead’the Scarle七and White put on a magnificen七exhibition as far as courage and fight were concemed and went down to a 20 to 6 defeat・ All three Manhattan touchdowns were scored on passes, which might have been batted down if the Terriers were at full strength and a七their best・ After the Manhattan game, Students and alumni became fearful as to what would happen when the Terriers stacked up agains七Boston College on November 9 at HARBOR BUIID│NO Fenway Park・ The Eagles’With one of the five best 470 ATLANTIC AVENUE teams in the Uni七ed Sta七es today, Will be top-heavy favorites to humble Bos七on University on its Homecommg BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS Day game・ On paper, the University has no chance whatsoever, bu七somehow or other’fac七s and figures do not seem to apply when these two teams meet・ During 田▲Ⅳ. 5417 the pas七six years’Boston College has always been an odds_On Choice to defea=he Terriers and although they have tumed the trick four out of six times, they have been hard-PreSSed in every one of their triumphs. Boston University wi11 be outmanned’OutWeighed and may be ou七played on Homecommg Day, but they will not be outfough七, and a team that refuses to glVe uP may often surprlSe the bes七of football experts. .Pαge Tα)el功一Sあ Mαγ椛捌gge緋妨γ0両a加毒2e Ouγ αれe巌seγS In Memoriam ○○ Dean Alexander Swanson Begg Dr. Alexander S・ Begg, Dean of the Boston University SchooI of Medicine for the last seventeen years, WaS SummOned by the Great Physician on the night of Wednesday’September e5・ On the day of his death he had attended the School’s activities comected with registra七ion; and with President Daniel L. Marsh he was to have addressed the essembly of the SchooI of Medicine eleven months he commanded Base Hospita1 88 in France. He was a member of the Association of Medical Col_ 1eges and served on its executive committee for several yearS and was eIected permanent president of the MassaChusetts Medical Society in 1935. On量y a month ago he was named Massachuse七ts chair_ man of the American Medical Association’s national On Thursday mommg Welcom- COmmittee on medical pre- mg the new sもudents. Dean Begg was bom Paredness. He was a member Of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, the American Association of a七 Council Bluffs, Iowa, May 23, 188l. He was educated at the Co11egiate Institute, Samla, Anatomists, the Associa七ion 。f Ontario’and Drake Universlty, M皿ary Surgeons', the Ameri- Where he received his Doctor Can Medical Association, and Of Medicine degree in 1907. Phi Beta Kappa. After teaching six years at All who realize the slgnifi- Drake Universlty’ Dr. Begg CanCe Of the distinctive ability became a teaching fellow at With which these positions were the Harvard Medical School, ful糾ed as well as the many Where he fina11y became Dean Of the Graduate SchooI of Who were privileged to benefit intimately from his helpful Medicine. In 1921 Dr・ Begg guidance, generOSity, gOOd became professor of anatomy humor, and friendliness feel at the Boston University SchooI of Medicine; and in Sure that Dr. Begg’s Ieadership in medical education will not 1923 he was elected Dean. SOOn be forgot七en. During the years as Dean Dr. Begg leaves three child- Of the SchooI of Medicine, Dr。 ren’ Begg gave himself without reSerVe tO the service of the School and the development of the University. He was a of Hudson, New F. Begg, a graduate of the Coト member of some of the most Iege of Liberal Arts in the important Universlty COmmit- C賞ass of 1935, nOW an in七eme tees and was constructively COnneCted with the develop一 John York; Barbara, a Student at the Boston University CoIIege Of Liberal Arts; and Dr. Charles a=he Rhode Is量and Hospital, DEAN ALEXANDER S. BEGG Providence. 平ent Of the University,s athletic program. He was weIl-quaIified for his position. Medicine en七ered upon The faculty of the School of its records the foIIowmg reSOlu一 Under his v重gOrOuS leadership the School of Medicine has tion: been expanded and developed along modem, PrOgreSSive 工ines; and during the last few years he has been a magnetic and helpfu=eader in the campa重gn Which Boston Univer- Slty has been conducting for the increased endowment and better equIPment Of the School of Medicine. RESOLU冒ION We’the members of the teaching and scientific sta館s of Boston University SchooI of Medicine today gather with deepest sorrow in the loss of a friend and guide. He was truly the Dr. Begg had broad vision. He was an able contributor movmg SPirit of this institution and carried through long and to the advancement of medical education and had a fine hard years with unexcelled energy and sk組l, a burden that he understanding of the historical sequence of its develop- far too often took from the shoulders of those whose freedom he had always at hedrt. We leamed not only dependence and ment・ He was distinguished by his freedom from pre- respect, but equally a love as between old friends and the c。n_ judice and bigotry and by his ideaIs for the advancement fidence bom of such a飾ection. Therefore: Of the School. He se七high value on the quali七y of teach- WHEREAS・ through the death of their beloved Dean, mg and encouraged the eames七aspira七ions of the students. Alexander Swanson Begg’the Faculty of Boston University Dr・ Begg was active in military service during the first SchooI of Medicine wi11 miss greatly the wise counsel and World War. He star七ed as firsl七lieutenan七in the MedicaI Reserve Corps and retired in 1919 as a CoIonel. He was friendly influence o=heir leader experienced during the past SeVenteen yearS, and in active duty a=he o塙ce of the Surgeon General of the WHEREAS’the Faculty recognlZeS and sincerely admires American Expeditionary Forces in 1917 to 1919; and for his numerous and effective contributions to the betterment of medical education, and Page T偽)el痢-Seのeね WHEREAS, his energy and enthusiasm, his military bearing and cordial greeting were an inspiration to all who met him, bei七 RESOLVED, that this brief memorial be entered in the record of this Faculty meeting and ‘that copies be sent to his family as an expression of our appreciation and sympathy. SANFORD B. HOOKER FREDERICK H. PRATT HEⅡMUTH ULRICH For the Faculty September twenty-SeVenth, 1940. The board of directors of the Boston University Alumni Association at its meeting on October 8 passed the follow_ 重ng reSOlution: RESOLUTION We, the O餓cers and Direcもors of Boston University Alumni Association, tOday convene with a deep sense of loss of a friend and guide. He was always helpful with his counsel and had Our a鮮ection through his friendliness。 HAVEN G. HILL WHEREAS, through the death of Dean Alexander Swanson Begg, the Alumni will miss greatly his wise counsel and his friendly influence, and his birth the family moved to Lowell. Judge Hill attended WHEREAS, the Association values his e節ective contributions to the advancement of medical education, and WHEREAS, his energy and enthusiasm, and hearty greeting Were an inspiration to all who met him, be it the local schooIs. In the SchooI of Law he received the LL.B. and LL.M. degrees. Judge Hill has been servlng aS PreSiident of the Bigelow Association Masters of Law and has been intimately conpected with all its activities・ He was especially helpfu重 量n PrOmOting action by the Association which resu量ted RESOLVED, that this brief memorial be entered in the records of the Association and that copleS be sent to his in the establishment of the Melville M. Bigelow Scho量ar- family as an expression of our appreciation and sympathy. Ship in the SchooI of Law. In 1937 Judge Hill established the HAVEN GOODWIN CHARLES A. ROME, P7.e8ide庇 MILO C. GREEN ELWOOD H. HETTRICK October eighth, 1940. HILL LIBRARY FUND for the SchooI of Law, the inCOme Of this fund to be available for the purchase of books for the library. Annually since that time he had added to this fund by a generous gift. For several years Judge Hill was president of the President Marsh has amounced the appointment of an Administrative Committee to serve until a Dean is appointed. The members of the Committee are: Chairman, Dr. J. LeRoy Conel, Professor of Anatomy at the Bos七on Universi七y Club of Lowell; and during his administration that Club became one of the larges七and best Organized of all the alumni clubs. The annual dinner meetings were well a七tended; and the Club annually made SchooI since 1923; Secretary, Dr. Milo C. Green, Registrar a scholarship grant for some ambitious Lowell student and Associate Professor of Surgery and Applied Anatomy, Who has been on the faculty since 1919; and Dr. Howard desiring to enter Boston University. M. Clute, Professor of Surgery who joined the faculty in 1936. Funeral services were held Monday, October 7, at All SouIs’Church in Lowell, Where Judge Hill was a member Of the board of deacons. The church was crowded wi七h relatives and friends. Judge Haven G. Hilユ Among those present at the funeral were Professor John Haven Goodwin Hill, Boston University SchooI of Law E. Ham量gan, Hon. Bert E. Ho量land, Joseph A. Kline, Class of 1905, died in Lowell Friday, October 4, at the Esq・, Marie L・ Reynolds’Esq., Edward L. Schoenberg, age of sixty-three. A=he time of his death Judge Hill Esq., Harry E. Warren, Esq., and Mr. EIwood H. WaS Associate Justice of the Lowell District Court, a Hettrick. POSition to which he was appointed by Govemor Frank G. A11en. Judge Hill was bom in Rye, New Hampshire, the son Of the late Charles H. and Laura G. Hill. Shortly after Pαge Tα)el功-Eig加 Judge Hil=s survived by his wife, Mrs. E11a J. Perham Hill’and a daughter, ALMA G. HILL, College of Practical Arts and Letters Class of 1934, Graduate Schoo量 CIass of 1935. ● Universlty Notes In Memoriam ROSCOE WESLEY SWAN, ’79 讃畿畿欝簿 the son of Eben W. and Caroline Cushing Swa.n. He received bis M・D. in ]882 from Harvard. He studied 議鵜謀隷書書悪罵 ALICE JOSEPH量NE MATHESON} A.B・ .32, daughter of Mrs. John Matheson of GIoucester, tO Merrill Friend, also of Gloucester. s。土器謹鰻誤認終盤葦盛藍藻 HOTEL SheれatOn 裟隷憲謀議蒜畿議叢… OVERLOOK重NG THB CHARLES RⅣER tal at Rochester, New York. Mr. Oakman is.a mem_ be露悪i掠蕊1恕露鴇N, Mus.。. ’35, 悪法富轟認諸言語諾謹爵諾能義 91 Bay State Road, Bo§tOn Permanent and transient accommodations Large and small function faciIities W・ Mather of Cambridge. W. CARVER DAMON’JR.1B.S.わ3B.A. ,36, SOn Of Mr. and MI.S. Wallace C. Damon of Edgartown, tO Gertrude Marie Larson, daughter of Mrs. Charlotte Newton L・ Smithl Generd m側ゆeγ Kenmore 2960 I・arSOn Of Flushing, New York. Mr. Damon is a certi- THOMÅS F. REDDY.?87 Thomas F. Reddy,LL・B・, died October ll athis home fied public accountant and is in the empIoy of the Atlantio Mutua] Insurance Company. A June wedding is planned. in New Salem at the age of seventy-four. He was bom JAMES S. DAV重S, S・B・ '36, M.D. ’3ク, SOn Of Mr. in South Boston, the son of Thomas∴and Catherine and Mrs. Samuel Davis of Chelsea, tO Florence 詑賠譜;龍蕊h轟説経書誌指 thl.ee brothers and a sister. 藷嘉驚畿露盤蒜籠護憲 Boston. FRANC重S WHITTIER HOOPERI M.D. '36, Of WILLIAM P. HÅYES, ,89 蕊謹藷難詰盤討議諜 Cratio National Convention in St. Louis in 1904 and delegate-at-large to the Democratic National Conven- tion in Baltimore in 1912. He was known as one of the Orlglnal Wilson men. 需給控認藍需語法碧鵜島罵諸富 隷謀議藍藷藍籠 conducts his practice at 167 Pond St富eet, Westwood. A November wedding is planned. DOROTHY BURTI Ed・M. ,37, daughter of ProfesSOr F. ALLEN BURT. Ed.M. ’35, and Mrs. Burt of Brookline, tO Lawrenoe Seaver Leland, SOn Of Mrs. Herbert M. Leland, a]so of Brookline. Miss Burt is a 詫霊告訴露盤藍藻監岩盤露語蕊 認諾と謹話警詳説黒字讃諸藩詣蕊 BeImont. at Shanghai. RUTH S. CAINE・ PγαC’ical Aγts鋤d Le妨γS ・37, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Herman Caine of Worcester, SAMUEL L. STEWART. '96 Samuel L. Stewart, S.T.B., PaStOr Of Belmont Meth_ 寺詑課窓N. Go鱈, SOn Of Mr. Robert Goff’also of Odist Church in Youngstown, Ohio, died October l. JOHN H. JUDGE, B.B・A. '37, Ed・M. '38, SOn Of Mrs・ FIorence L. Judge of Milton’tO Barbara Bobst, 評認薄霧業謹言罵葦h詫e器認諾 daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank T. Bobst of Belmont. Mr. Judge is a member of the faculty at the College of 鞘悪罵#嘉,謹。忠恕霊dow・ the former Business Administration. CHARLOTTE M. PEARSON, B.S・高e Ed. ,37, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Albert IJ. Pearson of West Somervi]le, tO Edmund W. Hadley, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. FRANK ALBERT DAV量S. ’98 Frank Albert Davis, M.D., died October 8 in Wash_ 藍豊島千晶詩誌is監薯紫鵠豊 FIorida. D虹Davis practiced medicine in Boston for nineteen years and also lectured at Tufts Col]ege. At One time he conducted an X-ray Clinic at the Boston Norris E. Hadley of West Somerville. HELEN L. BERNSTEIN, PγaC巌αl Aγis mdLe柄ers ’38・ Of Mattapan, tO Joel Wilぬms of Dorchester. ELENA L. MAGONI● PγaC擁al Ar‘s α綿dLei!ers '38, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. L. Magoni of Farmington, Maine, tO G. Flint Taylor, also of Farmington. Miss Magoni is now empIoyed in the Department of the Å萱uⅢ賞niNeT'▼SFIa夢h Totheeditor.Hereisanews itemforBo8番o7‘わ. Attorney General・ State House’Augusta. Mr. Taylor Dispensary. Dr. Davis was a welトknown genealogist, and was author of the Noble Family History. He is SurV-Ved by his widow. 言籠藍轄藷撥豊認諾藍蒜 盤謙語悪erman・ daughter of Mrs. Bertha Sherman ARTHUR T. WH重TNEY. ’27 Arthur T. Whitney, ・D・, Of Houlton, Maine, THEODORE L. RUSSEM, B.S・ ’n B.A. ’38, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Russem of Lawrence, tO drowned when his sailboat capsized in Pleasant Pond, Leona Segal’daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Segal of 龍霊岩塩Ⅱ豊器盤霊諒諸2 3. D缶詰豊謹 鵠豊慧悪霊蕊議書荒塩譜嵩悪霊 at Massachusetts Memorial Hospitals∴and was∴aP- 認諾諾講読謹擬態 dren. ROSALIE S. FENTON, B.S・わ,励・ ’39, Of Edge- WOOd・ Rhode Island, tO James T. W. Cusick. Miss Fenton is now teaching kindergarten in Cranston, Rhode Is】and. GORDON C. PRATT, B・S・ r壷Ed..39, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Pratt of Bryantville, tO Hazel May 監禁散霊ghter of Mr. and Mrs. Elijah Eldridge of ELLEN E nga gements ALICE ELIZABETH FOWLER, Z‘ibeγal Aγ!s ’30, daughter of Mr. Louis O. Fowler of Lynn to D. Ray Williams of Medford. Mr. Williams is empIoyed at the 豊豊離籍詑競藍豊濫寵 daughter of Mrs. Louis G. Maulhardt of Oxnard, California. HERBERT HUNT MORRILL● B.S・ ;のB・A・ ’3j' FRANCES WH重TEHILL, Ed.M. ’39, daughter of Mrs. George w. white皿I of St. Johnsbury, Vermont' tO Ronald Bruce MacDonald, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. Wi11iam MacDonald of Gree腿boro, Vermont. Miss Whitehi11 is teaching at St. Johnsbury Academy, 三悪器豊黙認註講書d by the Strong HardJOHN HILL CALDWELL● S.B. '4O, SOn Of Mrs. John O. Caldwe]l of Sharon, tO Margaret Louise Cawley・ daughter of Rev・ NORMAN B. CAWLEY. 誰紙器s露盤己。浅商議轟鴇。。島 Johnson, Vermont. EVERETT F. LOMBARD● M.D. ’40, SOn Of Mr. 誰。号f盛暑豊島r盤重藍悪罵:諒恕 蒸器・畠葉音端整龍豊悪書離愁ニ Edward W. Haggett of North Pembroke. Milnes of Andover. M. EVELYN FILES. B.S・ ;’3 P.A・L・ ’32, daughter Of Mr. and Mrs. Willis E. Files of Brookline, tO Everett Adams Shek】eton, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Shekleton Of Worcester. STEPHEN P・ TURKE・ JR・・ Co履e Qf Commerce 籠叢輩謹諜轟詳議嵩欝 Clipthisoutandmail BOSTONUNIVERSITYALUNNI ASSOCIATION 20BeaconSt.,Boston empIoyed with the Cambridge Rubber Company. Mα少かe勧請c高書妨ッ餌 の′〇着俄○ ○α′ αdりe′鉢e′書 Pαge Tu)e庇g-Nわ` Winthrop, and Norman E. Roop, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. M amageS Albert Roop of Wyncote, Pennsylvania, Were married Ohester, Were married July 13. Mr. and Mrs. Keller are residing at 22 Adams Street, Winthrop. make their home in the Greenwood Apartments in daughter of Mr. and M料. Frank A. Thurston of Whit- in Wynoote on October 12. Mr. and Mrs. Roop will OSCAR J. V. HURTEAU, L伸一’22, Of Woonsocket, Rhode Island, and Violette Y. Montville, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wi11iam F. Montville, also of Woonsocket, Were married October 5. Mr. Hurteau is a hearing Jenkinstown, Pemsylvania, Where Mrs. Roop’s sister , Mrs. Irving C. Perry, (ERMA McNEIL, B.S.寂P.A.L. ’36), also量ives. LILLIAN M. SMITH, A.B. ’32, daughter of Mr. 認叢書詫寵謹霊諾罵霊隷書藍詣 Mrs" Hurteau are residing at 441 Elm Street, Woon- and Mrs. John K. Smith of Lawrence, and Howard Joseph Hall, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. John P. Hall of S○○ke七. residing at 56 Harvard Street, Lowe11. Lowell, Were married in June. Mr. and Mrs. Hall are LEONARD BLOOM, B.S.わらEd. ’33, A.M. ’34, and Gretchen Noel Cooke, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Karl Where Mr. Ramdlett is an architect, SiDCe graduation, Mrs. Randlett has been secretary to the department of English at Harvard University. JAMES J. CUNNINGHAM, B.B..4. ’27, SOn Of Mrs. Patrick J. Cunningham of Blackstone, and Anna Galligani’daughter of Mrs. Ermelinda Galligani of Cambridge’Were married September 28. Mr. and Mrs. 経平駐器器諜蓋豊t霊柴記譜暑諸悪諾ニ Ohester Brass and Aluminum Company plant in Hyde Park. ASTRID M. NORLING, B.S. ;n Ed. ’27, daughter Of Mr. NichoIs Norling of Amesbury, and Harris Walter Reynolds were married in September. They are Iiving on University Road, Brookline, for the winter. DOROTHY M. LEICHLITER, B.R.E. ’27, and Donald Ray Wilson of Midland, Michigan, Were mar- ried October 5. Mr. and Mrs. Wilson are living at 308 Jerome Street in Midland・ For the past year and a half' Mrs. Wilson has been serving as secretary to the minister of the First Presbyterian Church of Midland and expects to continue in this capacity. JAMES LESLIE GUARDO, M.D∴28, and Anna Kathleen Devaney of Stoneham were married Sep- tember 25. Dr. and Mrs. Guardo are living at 420 Main Street, Stoneham. SAMUEL E. ÅNGOFF, LL.B. ,29, SOn Of Mr. J. J. Angoff of Dorchester, and Janice Gilman, daughter ÅNNE LOUISE CHALFANT, A.B. ’37, daughter Of Mrs. H. M. Chalfant of Dorchester, and Arthur W. Johnston of New York City were mar宣・ied September 14. Mr. and Mrs. Johnston are residing in Orange, New DOROTHY VIETS, B.S.S. ’25, Of Cambridge, and Norman prescott Randlett of Laconia, New Hamp一 藍紐詳言盛宴豊富豊蓋s蕊t,忠豊 FRANCES M. THURSTON, B.S.わPhy.Ed. ’36, man, and George Alexander Porter, SOn Of Mr, and Mrs. George H. Porter, also of Whitman, Were married June 23. Mr. and Mrs. Porter are living at 38 Day Street, Whitman. Wil】iam Cooke of Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio, Were married August 31. Mr. Bloom, Who was∴a member of the faculty of the recent Boston University Summer Ses- Sion, is teaching at Kent State University. Mr. and Mrs. BIoom are living at 3 FraIklin Terrace in Kent, Jersey. M重LTON ALLEN GOI.DBERG, B.S.わe B.A. ●37, and Roslyn Muriel Sterman, daughter of Mh. and Mrs. Robert Sterman of New Haven, Comecticut, Were m町- ried October 13. Mr. and Mrs. Goldberg wil=ive ln New Haven. BERNARD H. HERZ, LL.B. ’37, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Herz of Brookline and Helene Anita Robin- Ohio. JOSEPH A. DiANGELIS, B.S. jn B.A. ’33, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. A. J. DiAngelis of Boston, and Frances I. Rogers, daughter of Mr. and MrS. Manzie I. Rogers of Bangor, Maine. were married October 12. Mr. DiAngelis is∴an auditor in Boston, and Mr. and Mrs. DiAngelis will make their home in Roslindale. CLYDEDANE, B.S. ;nB.A. ’34, SOnOf Mr. and Mrs. George S. Dane of Swampscott, and Rita Mary Murray, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph F. Murray, Of Lynn, SOn, daughter of Mrs. I.eo R(めinson, also of Brookline, were married October 27. CÅRL ALVIN JAGELS, LL.B. ’37, SOn Of Mrs. Fred Jagels of Camden, Maine, and Esther Margaret Cooper, daughter of Mrs. James Cooper of Mystic, Rbode Island, Were married September 28. Mr. and Mrs. Jagels are residing in Natick. Mr. Jagels is associated With the Aetna Casualty Insurance Company of Boston. ANNE MARY KINNIERY, B.S.海Ed. ’37, daughter Of Mrs. Herbert J. Kinniery of Worcester, and John J. Were married August. 24. MARY ELIZABETH DARRAH, Educaきio7e ’34, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John D. Darrah of Quincy, and Raymond Otis Hollis, SOn Of Mr. J. Otis Hollis of Weymouth, Were married June 26. Mr. and Mrs. Hollis are residing at 67 Pleasant Street, South Weymouth. ALICE LOUISE FEARNS, A.B. ’34, daughter of Mrs. Bertha Feams of Maynard, and Leo Mullin, SOn Of Mrs. Catherine Mullin, also of Maynard, Were married July lO. Mr. and Mrs. Mullin are living at 141 Summer Street, Maynard, Where Mr. Mullin is Kavanaugh, also of Worcester, Were married Septe皿- ber 28. Mr. Kavanaugh is associated with the Aetna Life Insurance ComT)any in Worcester. MILDRED LESH暮NSKY, B.S. ;わ P.A.L. ’37, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Abraham Leshinsky of Lowell, and George Parker, SOn Of Mrs. Sarah Parker of South Tewksbury, Were married September 22. Mr. Parker is engaged in the wholesale tobacco and candy business. Mr. and Mrs, Parker are living at 66 Greenleaf Avenue, Medford. FRANCES ELIZABETH LOWELL, A.M. ’37, daughter of Mrs. Marcie J. Lowell of Hartford, Con- Sub-maSter Of the high school. MYER L. FELDMAN, L手.B, ’34, and Ida Evelyn Suher, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Suher of necticut, and Rev. Howard Kipp, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. George W. Kipp of Cincinnati, Ohio, Were married Of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Gilman of Chelsea, Were mar- Holyoke, Were married September 15. Mr. and Mrs. ried September 17. September Feldman are residing on upper Hampshire Street, Boonville, lndiana, Where Mr. Kipp IS minister of the Holyoke, Where Mr. Feldman n】aintains law o債ces. Presbyterian Churoh. NATHAN PASSELL,LL.B. ,29, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. Meyer Passell of New Haven, Comecticut, and Rosa- 1ine Klein, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Klein of St. Louis, Missouri, Were married July 7. MARTHA E. PIKE, Music ’29, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Pike of Brentwood, New Hampshire, and Clarence H. Fall of Wakく姐eld were married Septem- ber 2l. Mrs. Fa11 has been a teacher in the Greenwood School, Wakefield. Mr. and Mrs, Fall are living in Wakefield. MARGUERITA M. BRODERICK, LL.B. '30, daughter of Mrs. James A. Broderick of Manchester, 蓋藍。藷詳I霊。忠盛瀧荘1書評e悪笥琵二 Hurley are living in Manchester. ARTHUR REED HOVERLAND, HOMER S. JENKS, Eぴenileg College Qf CommeγCe ’34, Of the London sta鯖of the United Press, and Beryl ’30, S.T.B. ’30, and Mrs. Leoma Brooks were married September 21. Mrs. Hoverland is chief of the Welfare Division, Central Ohio District of the Works Progress Administration. Mr. and Mrs. Hoverland are resid_ ing in Wilmington, Ohio, Where Mr. Hoverland is empIoyed as executive secretary of the Clinton County Farm Bureau. MARY J. LEAVITT, PγaC巌のl Aγ応鋤d Le!ieγS ,30, also of New Bedford, Were married July 8. Mr. and Mrs. Paquin are residing at 195 Shawmut Avenue, New Bedford. FELIX A. BABEL,B.S.わB.A. ’31, A.M. ’38, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Babel of Norwood, and Emily C. Butkevich, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Butkevich Of Lawrence, Were married June 29. Mr. and Mrs. Babel are residing in Hartford, Connecticut. Mr. Babel is head of the commercial department at the high SChool in Wethersfield, Connecticut. NICHOLAS M. CHRISTIE,劫‘Siness Admわらis/γa毒on ’3I, SOn Of Mrs. Helen Christie of Natick, and Margaret Christie, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Norman Christie of Boston, Were married October 6. Mr. and Mrs. Christie will live on Common Street, Natick. MARY DORIS McELWAIN, B.R.E. ,3I, daughter Of Mrs. Charles P. McEIwain of Dorchester, and James Alden Mills, SOn Of Mrs. Minnie Whitehead of EdgeWOOd, Rhode Island, Were married June 22. Mr. and Mrs. Mills are residing at 29 Williams Avenue, Edgew○○d. PAULINE McLAUGHLIN, B.S.海Ed. ’3I, daughter Of Mrs. Edna G. Hersey of Bangor, Maine, and Frank F. Stewart, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. James A. Stewart of Winn, Maine, Were married June 24. Mr. and Mrs. Stewart are residing in Winn. LUCY H. IACOVELLI, A.B. ’32, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Iacovelli of Milford, and John P. Costello, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. Virgilio Costello of Franklin, Were married July 13. Mr. and Mrs. Costello are residing in Milford. DOROTHY E. McNEIL, B.S. ;n P.A.L. ’32, Ed.M. ’34, daughter of Mr. H. Martyn McNeil of Pαge T巌〆切 are residing in MARY VIRGINIA McKINNEY, PγaChcαZ Aγis αnd Le#eγS ’37, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Stuart J. ARNOLD LUNDGREN, B.S.寂B.A. ’34, SOn Of are living in Swampscott. VIRG重NIA J. PARTRIDGE, B.S.訪P.A∴37, and Mr. and Mrs. John Lundgren of Attleboro, and E]sa Dorothy Johnson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. Birger Swain are living at 36-19 168th Stree七, Flushing, Long Johnson, also of Attleboro, Were married October 12. Island, New York. Mr. Swain is empIoyed at La Mr. and Mrs. Lundgren will reside at 5 Gustin Avenue, A ttleboro. JOHN M. PÅNZICA, B.S.寂B.A∴34, Of Somer- Pasquale Rigione of Boston, Were married September 15. Mr. and Mrs. Panzica∴are reSiding at 379 Robert Swain were married August 2. Mr. and Mrs. Guardia Airport by the Airways Tra臆c Control. 。f詑丁紫盤台露語親患採盤・藍豊富嵩豊 Earle Chetwood Adams of New York were married June 29. Mr. and Mrs. Adams are living in New York. KATHRYN C. ROLLER, B.S.寂Ed. ’37, and W. Broadway, Somerville. Mr. Panzica is associated with D. Meils were married in April. Mr. and Mrs. Meils the liquor department of C. Pappas & Company. are living at 521 East State Street, Ithaca, New York. HAROLD E. BORJESON, B.S. 6n B.A. ’35, SOn Of HILDEGÅRDE BAXTBR, B.S. ;n P.A.L. ’38, Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Borjeson of Cambridge, and Dorothy Howard, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. P. J. A.M. ’39, and Raymond Everett Perkins of Castine, Howard, also of Cambridge, Were married October 13. are residing in Connecticut. MURIEL AL量CE MacOUARRIE, PγOC!icoI Aγis Alameda, Califomla, Were married June 29. Weaver, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Milton T. Weaver, Kipp son of Mr. and Mrs. William G. Fallon, Sr., Of Swampscott, Were married October 5. Mr. and Mrs. Fallon living on Chauncey Street, Cambridge. Mrs. J. Ubalde Paquin of New Bedford, and Olive L. Mrs. WOOds, Selsdon, Surrey, Were married September 21. Before going to London, Mr. Jenks was connected with the United Press bureaus in Boston and New York. and LeきieγS ’35, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert J. ZEPHYR D. PAOU重N, J.L.B∴30, SOn Of Dr. and and McKinney of Swampscott, and Samuel Stuart Fa11on’ daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frederick J. Leavitt of Nahant, and William J. Sullivan of Watertown were married September 28. Mr. and Mrs. Sullivan are Rev・ L. Clinton, daughter of Mrs. Ivy D. Clinton of Nye- Ville, and Nina Claire Rigione, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A.M. 14. MacQuarrie of Milton, and William C. Hllnter Of Detroit・ Michiga重l, SOn Of Mrs. Hazel B. Hunter of Maine, Were married June 20. Mr. and Mrs. Perkins CONSTANCB B. BRODEUR, B.S.わO S.3. ’38, and David L. Leich of Bellmore, New York, Were married September 21. Mr. and Mrs. Leich are now living at 15-36 Parmelee Avenue. Fairlawn, New Jersey. IRVING S. FLE量SCHMANN, B.S. G’O B.A. ’38, MURIEL WH重PPLE, B.S.わEd. ’35, daughter of Mrs. James P. Whipple of Boston, and H. Morgan Hicks, SOn Of Prof. and Mrs. Frederick C. Hicks of SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Fleischmann of Foxboro, and FIora Elizabeth Mott, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. New Haven, Connecticut, Were married October 12. Mr. and Mrs. Hicks will live in New York whereMr. Wesley H. Mott, also of Foxboro, Were married in September. Mr. and Mrs. Fleischmann are residing at 17 Baker Street, Foxboro. Mr. Fleisohmann is em- Hicks is connected with the Equitab]e Life Assurance PIoyed by the Remington Rand Company in Provi- dence, Rhode Island. Society. PAULINE G. DAVIS, PγaC毒cai Aγis ond Lei′eγS ’36, and ARTHUR A. BARTON, M.B.A. ’39, Were married October 14. Mr. and Mrs. Barton are living at 2467 North 4th Street, Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio. SELMA FEINSTONE, PγOCiica1 4ris md Le!ieγS ’36, ZL.B. ’j9: daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Feinstone of Chestnut Hill, and Sidney Liben, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Liben of New York City, Were married June 30. SOLOMON M. FLANDERS, B.B.A. ’36, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. Abraham N. Flanders of Winthrop, and Edythe L. Samuels, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Samuels of Revere, Were married July l. Mr. and Mrs. Flanders are living in Brookline. EDWARD GEREMIA, LL.B. ’38, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. John P. Geremia of Providence, Rhode Island. and Dorothy Townsend Lovell, daughter of Mr. and MI's. Roy Franklin Lovell, also of Providence, Were married September 14. Mr. and Mrs. Geremia∴are residing at 257 Gano Street, Providence. SYLV量A S. GOLDSMITH, Ed.M∴38, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Goldsmith of Springfield, and Marshall D. Silver, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Silver of Worcester, Were married September 15. Mr. Silver is proprietor of the GIobe Parts Company in Ware. BEATRICE THERESA GOULD, B.S.わe P.A.L. ’38, daughter of Mrs. Gertrude E. Gould of Malden, Savage, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John W. Savage of and Maurice George Green, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Green of Worcester, Were married October 13. Mr. and Mrs. Green will make their home in Worce3ter. Mr, Wollaston, Green is a lieutenant in the chemical warfare branch of WILLIAM R. HELFRICH, M.D. ’36, SOn Of Mr. and M購. Alfred C. Helfrich of Quincy, and Alice A. Were married June 29. Dr. and Mrs. Helfrich are residing at 17 Greenleaf Street, Quincy. Dr, Helfrich is assooiated with the Boston City, Waltham, and Quincy hospitals. ELMA DOROTHEA HUTCHINS, B.S. jn Ed. ’36, daughter of Mrs. Anastasia Hutchins of Somerville, and Raleigh I. G]ynn, Jr., SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. R. I. Glynn of Needham, Were married June 27. Mr. and Mrs. Glynn aI.e reSiding at 25C Shaler Lane, Cambridge. the organized reserves. FLETCHER B. JOSL重N, LL.B. ’38, SOn Of Mrs. Lena B. Joslin of Waitsfield, Vermont, and Ruth Theriault, daughter of Mr. William N. Theriault of Montpelier, Vermont, Were married September 2l. Mr. Joslin is engaged in the practice of law in MontPelier. UNA FRANCES PINKHAM, B.B.A. ’38, daughter Mrs. Charles L. Ke11er of Winthrop, and Frances Louise Of Mr. and Mrs. FraIlk A. Pinkham of Auburndale, and Richard Frederic Cleveland, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. Lilley, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Char】es Lilley of Win- Chester Alvin Cleveland, also of Aubumdale, Were RALPH LOU重S KELLER, A.B. ’36, SOn Of Mr. and HELEN LOUISE ROBERTSON・ B・S・海P.A・ '38・ Dr. Harrison has removed his office to 57 Bridge daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter W. Robertson, and Street, Dedham. Wi】1iam Baker. Jr.1 Were married July 5. Mr. and Mrs. Baker are residing at 690 Adams Street, Dorchester. 嘉驚鞘鵠誤読隷叢 Personal s 岩盤喜龍・轄轟監i蒋深盈 1888 討議藷蓋鞭誓∴n ar。 。。W ll,.ng a, 1。。 。.anada A,h。mb.。, Rev. DILLON BRONSON. S曲, S.T.B., and Mrs. Bron_ 本.∵二幸 揺窪排緒盤措iv悪罵g議書and are.i霊推離籍課諸宗霊樹豊s詑 c晴州町議a寄仙寄鵬cO. ‖仙鵬OU6晴丁寄りil脚§肌職肌鵬 ′葛し Cα"αe部あお& S○○競○○S F九〇 Pね○○ Gα着s. 113 HUNTINGTON AVB.. BOSTON Mechanlc3 Bldま. 一Age初S重)γ ●●RαSSαI諦●, Hoγdくりαγ`一 Mr. and Mrs. Harrie P. Hall of Rumford, Mair'e, and Califomia. Ruth Purinton・ daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Purin- 瀞舘謙語書誌蕊悪罵琵蒜規整蕊 1892 Of Sears Roebuck and Company. BIshop EDWIN HOLT HUGHES’S.T.B., is now JOHN E. MURPHY・ B.S.わB.A-39・ SOn Of Mr. 1iving at 1869 Wyoming Avenue, N.W., Washington, and Mrs. John A. Murphy of Framingham, and Char- D. C. 薄ま・龍暗流嵩霊盛蒜誌盤 1895 詳説欝蒸器嵩禁書器.。,ired f.。m ,h。 fa。u量,yDr. 。fRICHARD 。。r.。,, Bibli。a. Ins,i,ut。 in D・ HOLLINGTON, S.T.B., has 縁語諸富謹書盛観毒藍隷書豊語龍盈謹藍読書悪業清聴鴇認諾 蝋器蕊認諾護n,藍and Mrs. Pratt are w豊・恕諸説も語豊艶。蕊詔書盈 露聾二三 RUTH MARGARET RICHTER, B.S. j” P.A.L・ Church in Detroit, Michigan, Dr. Recoord retired in ’3ク・ Of Belmont・ and Roland Stone Bullerwell・ also of June・ 1939. We spent last winter at Virginia Inn, Belmont・ Were married August 28. Mr. and Mrs. Winter Park, FIorida, and the two summers B豊識龍誰等鵜島繕盛‡盤t籍磐繁。f Summer home at Willoughby Lake’Vermont. at our 艶葦端薄韮書籍議書撞蕊。E。R。E M. 。H監.., 。.。., is Pr。f。SS。. TILE§TON& HO」」!討GSWORⅢCO. A瑞藍静鞄AuGHEY, S.T・B・ '40, and Grace Emeritus of English Histo.y at G。。.g。 Washing,。n M止e調mdDi8tributor'Of Gertrude Taylor・ daughter of Mr. Hen重y R. Taylor of University・ and lives on River Road' Bethesda, Mary- FineBookPapers MILL▲N。OFFICES Sherburne Center, Vermont, Were married October 6. land. Mr. McGaughey is taking work for his S.7`.M・ and FREDERICK C. ROBBINSI M・D・, has resigned Plans to enter the active ministry in 1941. They will from the United States Veterans Administration Facil_ make their home on Myrtle Street・ Boston・ ity, Roanoke, Virginia, and will be on the ROSTON sta鱈as WILL賞ÅM C. McK重E・ JR., B.S・ 6” Ed・ ,40・ Of assistant physioian at Brigham Hall, Canandaigua, Greenwood・ and Beatrice Helen Jones, daughter of Mr. New York. and Mrs. Haro】d Iノ・ Jones of Melrose Highlands, Were 詣蕊富豊富豊、盤で盗写譜0詑盤 1898 苗藩親誓書言霊霊誓書路盤能楽網棚害・)・ P.C.H│CKS CateringforA=Occasions 17MARKETSQUÅRE,LYNN 絡器量蕊特発露語S曹註苔譜a謝諒 宣901 WILLIAM C. HARTINGERI Theologγ, is taking up 欝譲護聾護護護惑諜寵鶉難詰 しYNN登_登552 ist Church in Malden. brook・ daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George P. Holbrook・ JOHN J. SEATON’S・T・B・, Ph・D・ ・05,比.D. ・34, WaS also of Needham’Were married June 21. Mr. and Mrs. recently elected president of the Uhivers享ty Semte of 紺罵謙語謹籍r籍鴇器等認識諾叢灘籠韓攫 G〇 〇〇軸事績営農をく○○ Public accountaDtS. 輩誌喜欝器薫嵩露義認灘蕊蕊寵轟譜認諾誌灘 譜謹告認諾霊薬薄志窪盤謹 1902 Seminary in Maryland. GEORGE A. MARTIN, S.T.B., and Mrs. Martin SAMUEL SHUMOFSKY・ B.S・海B"A・ ・4O' SOn Of are now living in Springfield again, at 36 Brown Street. Pleαse肋`研くon Bosめ競U露わeγ〆印 豊謙譲認諾義護欝鵠 1 9 0 3 Of the Bamby Bread Company in Bridgeport. SOLON R. BOYNTON, M.D・, WALLPAPERS 加′ 3♪``んjかわ`S. Of Bellingham, 謹認諾輩義認監護盤器艶誌韓盤蕊註i鶉霊‡ 122-126 DUDLEYSTR髄T, BOSTON, MASS. Te!ephone Highland章O207・0208 Whiting is doing research work in South American history. 1910 JOSEPH E. WARNER, La%', WaS COnfirmed Octo_ B i rt h s k罷盤荒業認諾義認 Massachusetts from June, 1928, tO November, 1932. (艦早手軽輩・霧:2締講読薯霊 1912 d常t群島J#3料。r N. Pas,。r。 (皿重A ,h。.a。y ,。。hni。ian th。 。。nVa.。S。。。, H。m。 f。. EDITH F. in BURNS・ Soγge海' is assistant physical ROURKE・ A.B∴30)・ Of Rochester, Minnesotaりa Crippled Children, Toledo. Ohio. d常緋芸轟豊島譜晋寵‰ITH PYN- tWelve years the 。Xecutiv。 。f M.尺・E. th。 All。gh。ny J. KIRKWOODS。。r。tary CRAIG' S.T・B・l '21, for CHON’B’S言綿Ed・ ’3O)’Of Salem・ Oregon・ a SOn・ g#,害豊島盤豊露盤譜。I#隷忠 Robert Dale, July lO. 謹欝識欝諾輔轟蕊‡聾聾罷罷議註端緒 Houston of Topsfield・ a daughter, Janice, July 28, 1939. COOKE RINEARSON・ B・S・ i7’R・E. ,32)・ Of Chicago, Mim. The church is Iocated near the campus of the Ill前端官話龍揃謹洋語揺軌MY E. agricultural college of the University of Minnesota. 詮議盤・‡諸富監翰豊艶悪W 19宣4 膚立灘霊豊溜…岩盤缶詰宣撫詰重重l紫羅宝器怨霊縞嵩音盤霊寵認 Otis, October l. E晶罰器惹能栽宣寵書誌鵠罵藷認諾誌謀議叢嵩諒 Mann・ October 7. poor and needy children.,・ Maγ 2ue鋤gg諦海lツ0“か擁γ0巌e ouタのd。e′鉢の Pαge T妨切-000e 1916 灘篭欝罵豊講読 as associate to the U. S. Maritime Commissioner. Mr. 。重器慈評語器晋喜怒譜龍i豊鰐 Jersey. Their a,ddress is 24 Maple Avenue. 諾詫言盤上霊議i‡蒜s培謡。蕊Iy known Re▼・ EARLE M. RUGG, S.T・B・, and Mrs. Rugg term of missionary servICe in India. Two of their chil_ 恕認諾n親告簿。豊漁詣諾霊端盤 On October l. 1918 ELEANOR WEBSTER JONES, Saγge祝言s now Mrs. Paul F・ Honeman of 5276 Washington Avenue, St. Louis, Missouri. 1926 WILLIAM BACON. Busimss ∴AdmiタGisきγa訪on, formerly of Pittsburgh, is now director of community relations for the Northeast Neighborhood House, Minneapolis, Minnesota. Mr. Copplestone is tenor so】oist at the Chestnut Street Employment Oflice. Prior to that, for fifteen years, Miss Haney was Associate Editor of ``The Boot and Shoe Recorder’’, a trade paper of Boston. CHÅRLES W. HÅVICB, A.M., S.T.B..27, Ph.D. 藷講読器落盤怨霊薯藍露盤語意謀議 RALPH W. STOODY, S.T.B., Who recently assumed of Greater Boston. his new duties as director of the publicity bureau of the General Conference Commission on Public Information Of the Methodist Church, is now living at 425 West 23rd Street, New York City. HOWARD W. WH重TAKER, B.R.E., has been trans- ferred from First Methodist Church in Lexington, Kentucky, tO the First Methodist Church in Ashland, Kentucky. PreParation two other volumes on the subject of pllblic a ca烏e輸b○○k. Dr. HERBERT L. McCARTHY, B.B.A., has∴aCCePted the ch縛irmanship of the Hyde Park district for the Red Cross Roll Call. Since 1930 Dr. MoCarthy has b∞n director of the New England Foot Clihios, 寵昔話品薄。豊艶i観蕊Pital・ at Long JAMES V. TONER, B.B・A.. has been appointed an adviser and special lecturer in the department of J. LESTER HÅNKINS, S.T.B., S.T.M. ’31, PaStOr Of the Glendale Methodist Church in Everett has been made chairman of International Justice and Goodwill 撥襲籠襲轟轟 Cooke is the former BESSIE EVANGEL王NE INMAN, So〆al †Voγた’21. T. IRWIN LANE, M.D., is now in the service of the Medical Corps, United States Army, and is stationed at Virginia Beach, Virgi皿ia. MAR重AN G. LANTZ● B.S.わらEd・, A.M. ,28, is now A.B.), OOntralto言s touring the UIlited States with 諾諾籍紫悪罵.慈諸悪;;盤音読認窺 graduates at both the Boston and Lynn branches of Burdett Co!lege. In addition he addressed seniors of Regis College in Weston recently. HANSEL H. TOWER, S.T.B., has received an ap- Navy and is stationed at Washington, D. C. Mr. MARGARET C. WAYNB, Mc‘S.B., is teaching 1933 HARRY L. 1BENSON, S.B., M.D. ’36, reCently moved his o鉦ce from 63 Washington Street, Winches- EDWARD A. BLANK, M,D., WaS reCently ap- POinted senior phy尋cian, Norwich State Hospital, Norwiぐh, Connecticut. RUTH E. TAFT, S.B., Who has been in Belfast, Maine, for the past three years doing social welfare WOrk under the ausplCeS Of the State of Maine, has been granted a year’s 】eave of absence to attend the Pennsy]- 1934 POintment to St. John’s Church in Dover, New Hamp- the Hnglish department at the senior high school in Pepperell. shire. 1929 ED置TH M. ALLEN, PγαCiicαl Aγきs鋤d Le;ieγS, is now Mrs. Fred H. Lovegrove of Redding, Connecticut. su欝‡悪銭も,諒霊署撥豊霊霊 Of a glee club of one hundred members, an OrChestra of forty members, and there are two hundred thirty members in the Frosh Chorus. GEORGE C. FRANC賞S, B.S. mEd., M.Ed. ,31, has BESSIE E. LÅNGDON, B.S. ;nEd., is the author of been elected vice-PreSident, SeCretary, and treasurer of a book of poems, “Falling Petals,’’to be released by the Alumni Association of the SchooI of I]ducation. Mrs. William Lander (LOTTA BRACKETT, ’35, has been transferred to the New Jersey Conference the days∴SPent at Boston University.,, Mr. Lander diea in 1934. Mrs. Lander and her son are now living Kalerdograph Press of Dallas, Texas, November 15. CHARLES HOWARD PIERCE, S.B., a meteOr- OIogist with the United States Weather Bureau has been transferred to Kansas City, Missouri, Where he is living at 6300 Walnut Street. G. ERNEST THOMAS, B.R.E., S.T.B. ’32, Th.D. and has been appointed to St. Luke’s Methodist Church in Long Branch. EWART E: TURNER, S.T.B., Of Dracut recently returned from a, Study trip to Brazil. 1935 HELEN CRONIN, PγaC寂のZ Aγis md Le!!eγS, former Secretary in the Alunni O鯖ce, has resigned her position and accepted one with the federal government at the Army Base, Boston. ELIZABETH F. HALE, Ed.M., is instructor of 1930 JOHNSTON M. ARMITSTEAD, S.B., S.T,B. ’26, S・T・M. ’28, is transferred to the Philadelphia Con- be the pastor of the Methodist Church in Mchanoy 滋誌鵠喜捨よ講霊観誌露悪謹: ELINOR T. CONNOR, A.B., A.M. ’39, is head of baritone, Sings on tour, also: and they were heard in ference from the New Hampshire Conference, and is to 訪o鳩, has been appointed a home o儀ce supervisor for the EUNICE CAMERON, B.S.S., is instruotor in secre- in Jersey City, New Jersey. 1923 1932 ROBERT F. BURNHAM, Busわ絡sS Admi演s毎α- ta盤宝盛栄叢富C糖詩聖苧霊i悪霊 箭護諒統監晋缶詰島詩誌暑薄塩 fleld. Massachusetts, November l. Concord. Vania SchooI of Social Welfare at Philadelphia. Bc!S寂ess A dmi海sJγαiioわ) , Writes : ` `I shall always cherish Their Grst opera performance this season was in Pitts- They will make their home at 19 Chapel Street, 1928 Junior Programs Opera Company for the fourth season, Slnging opera in English for youthful audiences in the United States and Canada. Last season the company joint recital in Town Hall, New York, last February. shire. Mr. Wilson is married and has two children. ter, tO 31 Churぐh Street, Winchester. HAROLD T・ YOUNG, B.B.A., M.B.A., SuPerin- tendent of personnel for the EmpIoyers, Liability As- Rev・ F. MARION SMITH, TheoIogy, has resigned Mrs. Tom Emlyn Williams (MARION SELEE, EDGAR∴BRUCE WILSON, S.T.B., is now pastor Of the First Methodist Church in Concord, New Hamp- music in Patchoguo, Long Island, New York. 15th Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. becoming pastor of the Central Avenue Methodist Churoh in Indianapolis. ing, 311 Main Street, WorぐeSter. She writes “What am I doing? I am senior visitor for associated with the International I関titute, 645 North his presidency at Evansville College in Indiana and is tice of law with o臆ces in the Central Exchange Build- Tower has been pastor of the South Harwich, East Hal'wich and South Chatham churches for several years. (if any).’’ Methodist Churoh' Dover, New Hampshire, On Sep- EDWARD F. O,BR量EN, LL.B., has formed a part- nership with Francis H. Dewey, Jr., Esq., under the firm name of Dewey and O’Brien for the general prac- Mrs. William S. Pickens (LEVARA M. M重LLIKAN, A・M., M.R.E∴28), is living in New Castle, Indiana. 誌蒜認蒜態度認諾課業護 EDWIN T. COOKE, S.T.B., PaStOr Of St. John's Michigan, On October 18. MARGARET I. W. HERMISTON, B.尺.E., adVanCed the date of her sailing for India and is now on her way to her fourth term of missionary service. the Henry County Department of Public Welfare. I 1922 Dr. SAMUEL J. HÅRR事SON, S.T.D., WaS inducted into the office of president of Adl.ian College in Adrian, POintment as Lieutenant-Char)1ain in the United States Business Administration. At present Mr. Toner is Boston Edison Company. WOrk and a hrand置neW apartment.’’ Her address is 40 West Main Street in Canajoharie. Of the Massachusetts Council of Churches. aooounting and 6nance at the Boston Co]lege SchooI of executive vice-President, +reasurer and director of the y。紫紫蕊認諾蕊雷謂嘉盤寵盛謹譜 in Canajoharie, New York. She wTites: ``I’m en]Oylng 1927 GRAY H. CURTIS, Laα,, is now mana答er of the Maine EmpIoyment Service at the Skowhegan o岱ces. 1921 WESLEY COPPLESTONE, A.B., a Weil-known 16 in the Keene, New Hampshire, Teachers College. Congregational Church in Worcester. ferred to the New Hampshire Conference of the Method_ ist Church and is to be pastor of the Main Street Church in Nashua. 詣主語盛霊葦露盤豊慰霊諜籍詐 Air Servioe in the first World War. He has been teaohing in the Reading schooI since 1927. 霊薬謀議㌣悪霊n審寵霊詫譜i寵器 Of the Greater Boston Student Work Council. This JOSBPH G. BRIN, LL.B., is the author of =Personal in the United States Nava] Reserve. Mr. Anderson SerVed eighteen months with the British Royal Naval Ed海αiioIO ’35, Of l18 Union Street, RandoIph, h鶴for 19宣9 EDWARD H. BREWSTER, S.T.B., has been trans_ 黙認岩盤採聾謀蕊’軒常盤常薯 Pr]ncipal of the Walter S. Parker Junior High School in tenor in New England, PreSented a concert on October HELEN M. HANEY● Busimss Adm海istrα訪o称 38, a PrOfessor at Northeastem University, is president 1920 GEORGE DANA ANDERSON. S.B., A.M. ’33, head of the mathematics department and assistant Reading, has received his appointment as lieutenant Conne11an was Maine direotor of the Nationa】 Emer_ Sailed from San Franc車vo on August 14 for another 1931 驚喜蕊認諾enteen yearS' Where he has been a HARRY E. G重FFORD, B.B.4., Writes: ``I’m still With American Airlines, Inc., and looated at present in Rochester, New York, aS Station manager. In keeping sooial science at the Normal School in Castleton, Vermont. SAM HEDRICK, A.M., S.T.B. ’36, Of Valley Falls, Kansas, is president of the Kan鎚s City District With her generation, Our eleven-mOnth-Old daughter, Epworth League Organization. Mr. and Mrs. Hedrick have two ohildren, Tommy, Six, and Nancy Anne, appointed a,Oting district manager, Brockton district, Cynthia, a】ready has better than 3,000 air miles to her three. 藍㌦掌悪霊岩盤言霊害悪よ架詳説 Credit!’’ Of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, a member of the board PÅLMER D. SCAMMELL, B.S.わ上B.A., an em- 量註。t豊。鴇悪性霊孟認renCe. Mr. Dah1 Of manage冒s of the Women’s American Baptist Home PIoyee of the General Electric Company, is an instructor Of English at the Engineenng Institute at Bridgeport, Connec tiout. City, Pennsylvania. LORENZ DAHL, JR., B.B.A., Of Andover has been 1924 CARLETON H. CURRIE, S.T.B., reCeived the de- gree of Master of Arts from Ohio State University on August 30. Missionary Society, WaS the guest speaker at the annual meeting of the Women’s society of the Cumberland United Baptist Association in Scarboro, Maine, re- 1925 、 Of the iurior high sohool in Portsmouth, New Hamp- MARY R. LANE, Mus.B., is supervisor of music in the schooIs of Wethersfield, Connecticut. VIOLA C. SPRECKELMEYER, A.M., director of Cently. Mrs. Killian was formerly dean of wo聖en at religious education of the Congregatioml Larger Parish , Berkeley Divinity School in Berkeley, Californla. Hudson, Michigan, WaS Selected by the Kellogg Foundation of Battle Creek, Michigan, tO attend the Twentieth Annual Conference for Religious Workers, July 29 to MARTHÅ L. WHITE,B.S. ;のEd., A.M. ’3」, is now at 1240 North Highland Street, Tucson, Arizona. RAYMOND I. BEAL, EdαCαiio称has been principal Pαge T脇旬-Tひ0 Mrs. John C. Killian (MARY NORTON, A.M.), School, Boston, aS instruぐtor in salesmanship, adver- August 2 in New York City. The oonference was sponsored by the Committee on Religion and Health, Federal Council of the Churches of Christ in Amerioa. tising, and business correspondence. The purpose of the conference was to analyze psy- WAYNIi O. WH暮TING, B.B.A., has been added to the faculty o! the evening school at Bryant & Stratton I!OSTON UNIVERSITY ALUMNI ASSOCIATION 20 BEACON S冒REE冒, Bos冒ON, MASSACHUSETTS WOOD K. WHETSTONE, S.T・B・, qnd Mrs・ Whetstone haVe been appointed missionarleS Of the Methodist Board of Missions and Church Extension in India. Tekyhone COMmonwealth 6070 1940 JOSEPH J. ARMOUSH, S.B., is now Iocated at lOO5 East 60th St重・eet, Chicago, Illinois. 認諾諜鵜島携。認諾e初 簿‡畿灘監護需‡書芸.′。タダ GEORGE A. DUNN. ’89, E轟きC初旬o A楊柳"i Sccγ′佃γγ MRS. KENNETH S. BALLOU.’09 HELEN LOUISE NASS, ’33 MARGU闘RITE L. GOURVILLE:29 JOSEPHINE A. BOLGER言24 College o重Buslnes8 MRS. GARDNER S. MOODY, '23 Admlnls tra tlon GEORGE F. GRANDT. '27 LEST鴫R O. GATCHELL,.26 STANLEY W. PARKER, ’24 工sland. KATHARINE H. DANIELS, Ed.M., is director of MRS. LESLIE A. PIKE..24 CARLA PAASKE, ’35 WILLIAM R. LESLIE, ’12 SchooI of Law GEORGE C. P. OLSSON, ’26 J. ROBERT AYE恥S. ’36 ELWOOD H. HETTRICK, ’38 ZET,MÅ K. LARSSON. ’33 ` MRS. EUGENE H. FLOYD, ’39 CECILIA A. MACHUGH言34 CHARLES E. VARNEY, ’28 elementlary education in Hartford, Comec宙弧t. Her address is SchooI Administration Building, High Street, Hartford. OLGA G賞ORGI, S.B., has been appointed sta債 Iibrarian of the boys’ and girls’ department at the central branch of the Lynn Public Library. ORVILLE J. HINE, A.M., is now at the New SchooI or Soclal Work ERNEST W. KUEBLER, ’26 FRANK GREBE. ’26 ESTHER PHELPS-JONES. ’25 Brunswick TheoIogica量 Seminary, New Brunswick, New Jersey. ELSIE HOLMES, B.S. ;n Ed., has joined t,he faculty of the high school in Easton, Maine. GEORGE W. HUNT. LL.B., has been admitted to the practice 。f law in Vermont. He is connected with the law firm of Theriault and Hunt of Montpelier, Vermont. Graduate SchooI SchooI of Medlclne Colle色e of Mu8lc JAMES CARMODY, '34 JAMES T. GEARON,.26 SchooI of TheoIogy and Letters MARY E. JOHNSON. ’24 SchooI o重Educatlon HAROLD H. CRAMER, ’26 GEORGE A. BUTTERS, ’29 College o書Practlcal A重tS LOUISE M. COMEY, B.しS.寂Phγ.Ed., is an as- sistantl in the department, Of hygiene and pkysical education at Pembroke Co11ege, Providence, Rhode ● Directors Colle亀e of Llberal Art3 Sar色enl Colle$e Of Physical MRS. HERBERT W. SAUI,..17 Educat]on CLYDE CARTER. S.T.B., is now pastor of the Methodist Church in Burlington, Iowa. EDWARD S. CALDERWOOD.’04 DAVID L. B円LDING..13 ELIZABETH WEST PIGEON,’27 MILO C. GREEN, ’15 ELMER E. HASKINS. ’38 JAMES L. TRYON. ,10 VIRGINIA M. JEWELL, B.S.訪 Phγ.且d., is a member of the faculty of Rndicott College, Pride’s Crossing. STANLEY KAPLAN, B.S. Gn B.A.言s employed as job accountant for Platt Construction Company, United States Naval Base, Newport, Rhode Island・ M. MÅRCUS KILEY, Ed.M., has been appointe:l lr pnnCIPal of the Technical High School, Springfield・ ChoIogical and socioIogical factol.S invoIved in guiding the development of children, yOung PeOPle, and adults. Rev. WILLIAM E. SOULE, Mus..B., is senior master and director of music at St. Edmund’s School, Stockbridge, a neW Episcopal boys’preparatory school. 1936 MADGE MILDRED MAREAN, A.M.言s now Mrs. KENNETH L. MÅTTHEWS. Music, head of the music unit at the Quoddy Vi11age work exp9rience PrOject in h′Iaine, has been appointed supervISOr Of music in the schooIs of Winterport, Prospect and FraI血fort. GUIDO PIÅCENTINI, S.B., A.M∴39, Will be the instructor of a course in Italian Language and Literature to be giv♀n in the Massachusetts Division of Uni- versity ExtensIOn. 1939 LOIS H. NICKERSON, B.S.寂S.S., Who has been in Belfast, Maine, for the past three years doing social Welfare work under the auspices of the State of Maine, Westem Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio. J. FRANCIS ROCHE, LL.B., has been appointed a SPeCial attorney in the Department of Justice and has been assigned to the bureau at Concord, New HampShire. MILDRED HELEN McAFEE, LL,D., PreSident of We11esley College, delivered the convocation address in recognition of scholarship at Wesleyan University On October 2. She was.given the honorary degree Doctor of Laws at the unlVerSity at that time. ÅNN NEWDICK, B.S.寂Ed., is the pub]ic-SPeaking teacher at the high school in Cranston, Rhode Island. JOHN W. NICHOLS, M.S. ;n S.S.言s case worker Ross K. Brown of 1296 Iowa Street, Ashland, Oregon. has been granted a year’s leave of absence to attend EDOUARD LACROIX, S.B., is a member of the faculty of the high school in Farmington, Connecticut. KENNETH B. NEWTON, B.S. ;1匂B.A., Class Agent, Sends us the fo11owing news items: MORTON B. BACKER, B.S.わB.A., Of Brighton, and Lucille Machlin were married recently and are now living in New York City, Where Mr. Backer is em- among the older boys for the Hampden County Children’s- Aid Associa,tion, With headquarters in Sprin宮field. BERT M. NIGHTINGALE, M.B.A., is assistant、 manager of one of the W. T. GI.ant StOreS in Yonkers, New York. ERNEST W. OLSON, B.S. J〃 Ed., is physical edu- PIoyed as an accountant. cation teacher for the schooIs of East Hampton, Con- JOSEPH J. LEVINE, B.S. ;n B.A., has joined the necticut. In addition to this, Mr. OIson is teaching United States Air Corps as a flying cadet. history and social science in the East Hampton Hi営h S9ciated with United Aircraft, Pratt & Whitney DiviSIOn, East Hartford, Connectiout. has left on a one-mOnth training cruise with the Navy. Schooし CHARLES H. PALMER, B.S. ;1∂ B.A., is a, Student MÅRJORIE KEITH STÅCKHOUSE, Ed.M., began her third year of her school of Public Speaking This is part of a special fouトmOnt,h training course for at the Boston University SchooI of Law. COmmisslOn aS enSlgn in the naval reserve. GEORGE L. RUSS, Be4Siness Admi′∂isiγaiion, is as- at 29 Park Drive, Boston, On October 7. Miss Stackhouse will also conduct special children’s classes in Shakespeare Story Telling Clubs. 1937 H書LDA DUKER, B.S. ;〃 Ed., reCeived the degree of Master of Arts in social administration of Ohio State University on August 30. S量DNEY HIGNER, M.D., has entered the University Of PenIISylvania Graduate School to study intemal medicine. Dr. Eigner recently oompleted a one and One-half year appointment as resident doctor at the JaIPeSOn Memorial Hospital of New Castle, Pennsyl- MORTON BACKER, B.S. ;n B.A., Of Dorchester, EDWARD G. CHAP量N, B.S. ;1e B.A., is now em- CLAUDIA W. RENEHAN, Mus.B., is supervisor of music in the public schooIs of Proctor, Vermont・ ROBERT STUART, Ed.M., is teaching TI.igo- PIoyed by Swift and Company, meat PaCkers, and is working in Connecticut. nometry, Solid Geometry, and Algebra in the Warren B.S. ;n B.A. ’40, lost his father during the summer High School, Warren, Rhode Island. EDWARD PETER SUCHECKI, S.B., is enrolled as months. a first year medical student at Kansas University, We regret to hear that ROBERT S. COOMS, DAV量S GOLDBERG, B.S. ;クG B.A., has joined the Canadian Royal Air Force. Mrs. CORA MINER BARRY, B.S. ;n Ed., M.Ed., is director of guidance and dean of women at the high SChool in Newburyport. ELIZÅBETH BRANCH, B.S.寂Ed., is∴SuperVisoI. Of art in the public schooIs of Union, Bolton and Andover, Connecticut. JOHN ALDEN CASWELL, M.D., is now living and Lawrence. Kansas. PÅUL E. SULLIVÅN, B.S言n B.A., Captain of the 1939 Boston University football team, and ERNEST G. GOLDSM量TH, B.S. ;n B.A., are emPIoyed by the Employers’ Liability Assurance Corporation, Ltd・, 110 Milk Street, Boston, and are training for the underwriting and special agency work. DOROTHY W. TRUE, B.S. 6n Phy・Ed・, is teacher of physical education in the Runson prlVate SChool in New Jersey. JOHN J. HURLEY, B.B.A., Of Lowell writes: ``Having passed the C.P.A. ex!amination in 1937, I am practicing medicine in Be】fast, Maine. Dr. Caswell G. CARLO VÅCCA, S.B., Editor-in-Chief of t,he nowconducting my own accounting practice in myhome town while at the same time attending Boston College Law School. Maine General Hospita】 in Bangor. Mrs. Caswell was 1940 Hub, has recently been apnounced as the winner of a fellowship for the ensumg year at the Boston ÅLICE N. JÅMESON, B.S.寂Ed., has been elected PreSident of the Alumni Association of the School of Education. 1938 NORTON L. BEACH, B.B.A., Ed.M. ’40, is head of the economics department at ScI:antOn-Keystone has just completed a year as House Officer in the Eastem formerly a nurse at the same hospital. M. LOUISE CH暮CK, B.S.訪Ed., is teaching voca- tional home economics in the high school at Westbrook, Maine. BENEDICT FITZGERALD, JR., La秒, has been FitZgera]d is now in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Where he is continuing his position with the National I.abor Relations Board. HELEN M. HART, A.B.. A.M. ’40, Of Somerville, has been appointed to the faculty of the high school in Winchendon, LLOYD F. HAYN, A.M,, is a member of the faculty h寄s been chosen director of religious education at the Of the Teachel・S College in Plymouth, New Hampshire. Union Congregational Church in Springfield. Mr. EDWÅRD F. McGEE, JR., B,S. ;n A.E., is teach- Burnham spent a year in travel and observation in Europe and has had valuable experience in work with youth in Y.M.C.A. work. KATHRYN R. CLARK, B.S. ;n S.S., M.S. ;n S.S. ’40, has joined the staff of the Family Service Society Of Hartford, Connecticut, aS CaSe WOrker. DORIS L. CORBETT, B.S.寂Ed., has been ap- pointed teacher in Grade IV at the L. D. Batchelder School, North Reading. Miss Corbett reports the cIosing of Camp Stella Maris, Humarock Beach, after a of Ed.M. SWOrn in as a member of the MassachuSettS Bar. Mr. Junior Co11ege, La Plume, Pennsylvanla. ROGER W. BURNHAM, B.S. ;nB.A., Of Medford, Teachers Co11ege. Mr. Vacca will receive the degI‘ee Fめりリeγs読Disf読cfんc Arrαngemen書s F. T. CURLEY, INC. UNIVERSITY CLUB BU重LDING 428 Stuart臆St., Boston Telephone KENmore 625O ing advanced flying at Kelly Field, Texas. STANLEY H. MARTIN, A.M., S.T.B. ’39, is secretary-treaSurer Of the Greater Boston Student Work Council. ROBERT K. NOON, A.B., has been appointed Telephones曙蓋盤鰐 PaStOr Of the Edwards Congregational Church in Sax○ ○nville. JANE CHANDLER SICKLER, A.M., is connected with the Children’s Center, 74 Garfield Street, Detroit, Sγmphonγ Michigan. Miss Sickler is∴aIso enrolled at the Uni- FLOWER SHOP SuCCeBSful season. Miss Corbet,t is director of the girls’ VerSity of Michigan, Institute of Pub看ic and Social ●†現010ersbgWire-働(αrαれiccd鵬Me「oorひWαが’ camp. Administration. ALBERT J. DORAN, JR.. is assistant princip握,l of the high school at Westboro. HOPE SMITH, B.S.訪P.A., is empIoyed at the A11egheny General Hospital in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Maγ雄′e Sugge〆ihα鯵γ0αクαirの脇あe ouγ α仇Ie′鉢e鳩 240HuntinglonA▼enue Bo8置on,Ma'L 緑緋周口幽割出同国川同調国‖同上=瑚■占用 FORMS FOR BEQUESTS B E謙語某誌譜玉露端豊轟豊島謹告謹i霊藩 as to the proper wo重・ding thereof, there are glVen below forms for the convenience of those ‖ 鵜 地 中 l who plan to remembcr Boston University in their wills・ l 二 一 ′ i ¥ L U九彬s拐cted ………………………………………………‥dollars,tObeusedforthe i ` ・ - . . ∴ ・ ・ ・ ・ , - - I give and bequeath to the Trustees of Boston University, a COrPOration existlng under the laws of the State of Massachuset,tS and located in the City of Boston in said state・ bene飢of Boston University in such manner as the Trustees thereof may direct. hcome U元γeShicied l 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, endowment fund to be known as tO COnStitute an the‥‥‥‥.‥‥.‥‥‥.‥‥.‥‥‥‥‥‥‥‥‥‥ Fund, SuCh fund to be kept invested by the Trustees of Boston University and the annual inco皿e thereof to be used for the benefit of the Univ料sity in such’man粗er aS i十s Trustecs may direct. 〃L秘ec妨c PuγpOSeS 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, endowment fund to be known as tO COnStitute an the‥ ‥‥‥‥‥‥.‥‥‥‥‥.‥‥‥‥‥・‥‥・ Fund, the income therefrom to be expended by the Trustees of Boston University for the followlng PurPOSeS : Current Expenses of the University Current Expenses of any Department For the maintenance of a Professorship Fellowship Scholarship for the purchase of books, the cost and maintenance of a building or for any purpose the glVer may designate. 細く)音はM 細くI職,個量田富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 lneW CamPuS 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 ot lifel I promise to pay to the Trustees of Boston 古口書中‖古事南川。同“可。古口q- 工﹂﹂﹂占営口l工言う1‖書記軍事﹁-くll。冒-′ 〃 Tb Eもtabhsんa Pとmane鵬互もnd, Universitythe sum of…….‥…:…・……・…・…………‥…‥…Dollars ($……………・) overa period of … … … … yearS ln Seml-annual installments. I desire my subscription to be applied to (please check) : 7. SchooI of Education 8. College of Practical Arts and Letters 3. SchooI of TheoIogy 9. Sargent Co11ege of Physical Education 5. Sch○○l of Law lO. SchooI of Religious and Social Work 11. College of Music 6. College of Business Administration 12. Graduate School 4. SchooI of Medicine ¥ $ubsc壷beγ MαふきAddγe$S 自画勾当、毒 ←-il ﹁ liiI - 1. General Development of the University 2. College of Liberal Arts
© Copyright 2024 ExpyDoc