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Alum ni C h ild ren Enter Swarthm ore
s
warthniore College Bulletin p | |¡
m
B U L L E T I N BOARD
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News of Swarthmore Clubs and
Special Events
OCTOBER, 1955
The Bulletin, of which this publication is
Volume L III, No. 2 is published monthly,
except July and August, by Swarthmore
College, Swarthmore, Pa.
Entered at the post office at Swarthmore,
Pa., as second-class matter, in accordance
with provisions of the A ct of Congress of
August 24, 1912.
EDITORS
Joseph B. Shane ’25, vice-president; Kathryn
Bassett ’35, director of alumni and fund
offices; W . Park W oodrow ’52, director of
news office.
ALUMNI ADVISERS
Robert H. Wilson ’31 and Isabel Logan
Lyon ’42.
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OFFICERS
John H. Lippincott, Jr. ’27, president; W il
liam B. Plate ’26, vice-president for men ;
Ellen Fernon Reisner ’31, vice-president
for women; Janet McCombs Baldwin ’45,
secretary.
ALUMNI MANAGERS
Anne Philips Blake ’28, Catharine Wright
Donnelly ’ 18, Virginia Brown Greer ’26,
Charles P. Larkin, Jr. ’21, William F. Lee
’33, Caroline Biddle Malin ’28, Jack B.
Thompson ’27, Norman H. Winde ’27.
New York
Swarthmore Luncheon Club will meet on the second Monday
of each month at 12:30 P.M. at 207 East 54th Street (at
Third Avenue). Dates for the next few months are: Oct.
10, Nov. 14, and Dec. 12. All welcome.
Philadelphia
Tuesday, October 18— Luncheon meeting, John Wanamaker’s
12:15 P.M.
W ednesday, November 16— Joint luncheon with Haverford
College, John W anamaker’s 12:30 P.M.
Philadelphia Swarthmore Alumnae Club
W ednesday, November 16— Card Party and Tea at the home
of President and Mrs. Courtney Smith, 324 Cedar Lane,
Swarthmore. Cards— 2:00 P.M. (Please bring your own
cards). Tea— 4:00 P.M. Contribution $1.00. Prizes. Make
up your table now and attend. For reservations call either
Mrs. Mace Gowing— S W 6-2489 or Mrs. Stanley W inde—
W ilm ington 5-3531. Alumnae Club dues are payable now
($1.00) to Mrs. Mace Gowing, 635 Parrish Road, Swarth
more. Election of officers will be held at the Card Party
and Tea. This is the only notice of this event that you will
receive. Please mark the date on your calendar now and
plan to attend.
HAVERFORD vs. SWARTHMORE DAY
CO V ER
The cover picture this month features
children of alumni admitted to the college
for the first time this year. You may locate
children of your friends as follow s: First
row, left to righ t: Richard, son of Charles
J. Darlington ’ 15; Margaret, daughter of
Morris M. Lee, Jr. ’29; Mitchell, son of
Mary Palmer Lichtenberg ’31; Portia,
daughter of Virginia Stratton ’30 and Julien
Cornell ’30; Robert, son of Albert E. Baker
’23; Elizabeth, daughter of Adelaide Beasten
’26 and Davis W . Shoemaker ’24 (both de
ceased) ; and Robert, son of Clifford E.
Fix ’26. Second r o w : Mary, daughter of
Mary Scott Spiller ’28, a transfer from
W ellesley; Miriam, daughter of Edward M.
Repp ’26; William, Jr., son of Louise Hiller
’33 and William Poole ’30; Raymer, son of
Wesley Matson ’ 15; Margot, daughter of C.
Singleton Mears ’21; and on ledge, Carl,
son of Ralph W . Yoder ’30. Third r o w :
Beverly, daughter of Caroline Robison ’29
and Ellis G. Bishop ’28, a transfer from
Ohio W esleyan; James, son of Eleanor
Paxson ’21 and Walter B. Keighton ’23;
Susan, daughter of Clarence Howard Yoder
20, and Frederick, son of Helen Bessemer
Stollnitz ’30. Other alumni children not able
to make the appointment for this picture are
David, son of Elizabeth Carver ’34 and
G. Davies Preston ’34 (deceased) ; Linda,
dauehter of Anne Mode ’33 and Edward H.
Walton ’33; and Richard, son of Elizabeth
Colket Wilson ’26.
November 19# 1955
This year a new schedule of events will be in effect so that
all fall varsity athletic contests with Haverford College will be
held on the same day. A Luncheon for alumni and friends of both
colleges will be served at the host college. All Haverford students
are invited to make reservations for luncheon in the Swarthmore
dining room. The following schedule of events has been planned:
10:30 A.M .
11:30-12:45
12:30 P.M.
Soccer Game— Clothier Field
Luncheon for all students
Luncheon for all Haverford and Swarthmore
Alumni and their friends. Somerville Recreation
Center— $1.25 per person. Caterer— The Ingleneuk
2:00 P.M. Football Game— Alumni Field
2:45 P.M. Cross Country Meet— Alumni Field
Those who desire tickets for the football game only should
address their requests to Mr. W illis J. Stetson together with a
check made payable to Swarthmore College for the number of
tickets requested at $2.00 each. Requests must be received before
November 12. Those who wish tickets mailed should enclose a selfaddressed stamped envelope.
Combined reservations for both the luncheon and the football
game should be addressed to Miss Kathryn Bassett together with
a check made payable to Swarthmore College— $2.00 for each foot
ball ticket and $1.25 for each luncheon reservation. Please indicate
clearly the number of each desired. All reservations are requested
by Novembr 12th. Tickets which have been reserved may be secured
either at the luncheon or at the Alumni Office. If a self addressed,
stamped envelope accompanies the request they will be mailed
The Caroline Robinson House, a
bequest of the late Louis N. Robin
son, opened its doors to incoming
students on Thursday, September
15th. This lovely old home has been
completely redecorated and in some
cases actual structural changes made
to turn it into a dormitory for
women students. Maralyn Orbison
’49, new assistant dean of women,
will serve as head resident of the
dormitory. The house will be open
for inspection on H om ecom ing Day,
Oct. 22nd.
Lecturer in Political Science this
year will be Henry J. Abraham who
is also associated with the Univer
sity of Pennsylvania.
Added to the Department of Psy
chology and Education is Allen Parducci who will serve as Assistant
Professor in this field.
On Leave
In addition to those mentioned
above the follow ing members of the
faculty will be absent on leave
during the fall sem ester: Solomon E.
Appointments
Asch, L. R. Shero, Dennison Ban
William C. Denison who holds croft, Philip D. Curtin (part-time),
A.B. and A.M . degrees from Oberlin Merton J. W illis, and W illis D.
College, will serve as Instructor in W eatherford. Peter van de Kamp
Biology during the absence of Neal
has returned from his duties in
A. W eber who is on leave during
W ashington with the National
1955-56.
Science Foundation. Helen North re
Lee F. Gerlach, Ph.D. from the
turns from teaching at Barnard College
University o f Michigan, will serve as
Instructor in English during the and will serve as Chairman of the
absence of Stephen E. W hicher who Classics Department in the absence of
is traveling to Sweden to teach at L. R. Shero. Joseph D. Conrad is back
the University of Upsala during this from Princeton where he has been en
gaged in teaching and research.
academic year.
Franz H. Mautner has been ap Filled with memories of the Art and
pointed as Associate Professor of Architecture of Italy, Hedley Rhys
German to fill the vacancy left by returns to the Art Department to
the retirement of Miss Lydia Baer. share his discoveries with the less
Dr. Mautner comes to Swarthmore fortunate. In the History Depart
from Sarah Lawrence and Queens ment James Field will resume his
Colleges in New York.
interesting lectures after a year’s
Assistant Professor of Music and absence in Newport, Rhode Island
Director of the Chorus will be Peter where he was teaching at the Naval
Gram Swing. The Music Depart W ar College.
ment has expanded its chorus offer
Another familiar face that has
ings for this year and Mr. Swing been missed on the campus is that
will be assisting Dr. Swan and
of Gerard Mangone in the Dept, of
William H. Reese in presenting
Political Science. Dr. Mangone has
these new fields.
been doing research in Europe for
Jerome A. Shaffer, Instructor in
the past year. T w o well known mem
Philosophy, will present a course in
bers of the P sychology Dept, take
Ancient Philosophy and together
up
their teaching responsibilities
with Monroe Beardsley will teach
again
this semester— Hans W allach,
P h i l o s o p h i c a l Classics. For the
Honors students in this field Mr. returning from a year in Princeton,
Shaffer will offer the seminar on and Peter Madison who has spent
the past year in Oregon.
Plato.
October. 1955
The C lass of 1959
118 men and 112 women have been
admitted to the College as the Class
of 1959. Early glimpses of this group
reveal them to be a rather impres
sive lot made up of numerous sec
ondary school class presidents, news
paper editors, musicians, and ora
tors. All have passed the first intelli
gence test offered by the College—
opening the combination locks on
the new mail boxes in the College
post office. As usual the various
upper classmen responsible for
extra-curricular activities have de
scended upon the group en masse to
attract prospective members to their
respective activities. Interest in the
orchestra and chorus seems to be
running a close second to the Little
Theatre Club and W S R N .
Improvements
In addition to the new dormitory
for women substantial changes have
been wrought in W harton Hall. New
tile floors in many sections, two
newly furnished and decorated social
rooms in “ C” and “ D ” basements,
plus painting in all areas greeted the
men as they returned for another
semester.
The Ruff Herndon rooms in the
Lamb-Miller Field House are near
ing completion as is the grading £nd
resurfacing of the Clothier Fields.
Reconstruction in the basement of
Hall Gymnasium has been finished
preparatory to turning this area over
to W om en’s Athletics.
W om en residents of Parrish Hall
were greeted by new metal ward
robes in the upper halls to replace
the old garment bags that have de
tracted from the generally pleasant
atmosphere of the dormitory.
All in all, the various crews of the
superintendent’s and house director’s
offices have done a remarkable job
in preparing for a new year at
Swarthmore College.
1
a
Why I Chose Swarthmore
by Stephan Robert Cavior
M y generation has witnessed only
a few primitive attempts to civilize
the atom, though the peaceful poten
tials of this energy source are infi
nitely promising. A s an automation
engineer I want to design the ma
chinery which will put foundations
under this promise. Because a firstclass engineer today must be not
only a capable technician but a
creative thinker and an understand
ing human being, I have chosen
Swarthmore in order to learn best
about myself and my society while
I learn about the natural world.
Beyond professional knowledge I
want to acquire a greater openmindedness and cooperative attitude
to fulfill effectively my role as family
leader and community member. I
want to supplement my technical
training with humanistic study, in
order to perceive man’s dual char
acter as object and master of physical
forces, as inheritor, conservator, and
imaginative architect of his own
civilization.
I believe Swarthmore is conducive
to discovering these important, vig
orous truths because it is a com
munity of learning with a hard intel
lectual core. Freshmen candidates in
engineering benefit from the quali
fied instruction by learning how to
formulate primary concepts. W hen
I visited Swarthmore in the spring
of my senior year in high school, I
saw many classes continue infor
mally with a few interested students
long after the periods had officially
run their course. The professors
were neither proud nor preoccupied.
This is inconceivable at a mammoth
campus,, where close, supervision and
encouragement of this nature is
truly a fossil, too.
I hope to develop emotionally as
well as intellectually in the friendly
tradition of Swarthmore. The lessons
and experiences of college do not
dissipate there in a spiritual vacuum
but are applied toward achieving a
well-inform ed conscience.
2
M ost exciting prospect of all, that
enriching of personality called social
growth, demands a measure of selfdiscovery. I anticipate this at
Swarthmore because its relatively
intimate character will enable me to
find students who share my inter
ests and to appreciate the different
views of others. H ow I react to the
personalities and situations I en
counter will determine experimen
tally what my preferences actually
are. The Swarthmore community of
850 persons appears one of unaf
fected enthusiasm. In school projects
I want to have the responsibilities
of an active participant, not the un
earned prestige of an indifferent
supporter. Also, in a natural com
munity of both men and women one
learns to make the wise appraisals
of character and situation which the
social w orld demands.
T o make my final decision, I
measured the actual representatives
against the ideal model of Swarth
more graduates as I had imagined
the various features of the college
would produce. Alumni I met im
pressed me as intelligent, purposeful,
and affable, as well-grounded in
books and sports as in politics and
theater. In evaluating the college,
they enthusiastically confirmed my
week end’s observation that a pro
gram of exacting curriculum and
well-organized activity educates the
human being purposefully. I chose
Swarthmore precisely to qualify for
that education.
* Stephan Robert Cavior of Brookline,
Mass., is a contest winner. In the summer
of 1954 he made a 20 900 mile voyage. to
Africa as a prize winner in a contest spon
sored by the Propellers Club on the subject
of “ The American Merchant Marine . . .
Lifeline of Industry.” This year Steve
entered an essay contest sponsored by the
Speed Products Co. of Long Island City,
N. Y. H is essay on “ W hy I Want to Go to
College” won him a $3,000 scholarship to
Swarthmore.
Traditionally it is spring that is the
season of hope and promise, but at a
college it is fall. Indeed, spring sees
the fruition of many a promise solemnly
made in September. Every year the
freshman plans to juggle work, fun,
and sleep in proper portions. The re
turning upperclassmen review past
mistakes and vow to change whatever
seemed wrong in their way of life. The
senior swears not to panic at comprehensives or honors exams, and then
sneaks frightened glances at the reading
lists before him. In short, the first few
days of school bear little resemblance
to the realities of life in the semesters
ahead.
In the spring many students think
wistfully what a lovely country club
Swarthmore would make— without the
work, of course. The opening days of
freshman orientation come the nearest
to that ideal, and it must be for that
reason that upperclassmen, whose con
nection with freshman placement is at
best tenuous, try to come back long
before the official notice invites them.
The weather is delightful; not Indian
summer but the tail end of summer
itself. The grass, after the drought and
the flood, is green, and relatively un
marred by the trampled paths soon to
appear. The dormitories, though smell
ing of hot months with closed doors,
are clean. The unsettling clean-ups
during vacations can’t equal the job
done over the summer, and he who
would enjoy shiny floors and spotless
corners must come early. Too, the
dining room does its best to impress
the new students, though they could
never be accused of ostentation along
these lines. But even routine college
food smells good to the upperclassmen
trying to convince the dining room
bouncers that they have a valid reason
for an early return. Diligently compar
ing faces against lists, the official greet
ers turn away some who obviously
can’t account for their presence, though
somehow the number of people at any
one meal seems much greater than the
number of names on the approved list.
Alumni Issue
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Food Package to Friendship
( Continued from page 2)
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For the freshman the first few days
bear equally little resemblance to what
lies in store. Never again will he be
so tea-ed, lectured, and examined, not
even at graduation. Perhaps one func
tion of the freshman program is to keep
the new student from thinking about
what the future may bring, for he has
little enough time for new impressions
to sink in and digest until classes
actually start. No amount of warning
and advice can make really clear to the
freshman what life at college will be
like, and when as a sophomore he tries
to help the next crop of newcomers he
will be equally unable to pass on what
he has learned. Alternating between
encouragement and intimidation the
faculty, administration, and other stu
dents'discuss the essentials of Swarthmore life as the freshmen listen.
The burning questions are: “ How
much time should I spend studying?”
“ How many extra-curriculars can I
join and still pass five courses?” “ How
important are fraternities?” “ What David H. Scull ’36 and family of Annandale, Virginia, greeting R olf Greenrose and family
kind of social life can I expect?” It on their arrival from Finland.
takes four years to answer them thor
W ith R olf Gronroos came his wife
One Sunday last May five very
oughly, and at graduation there will be
and their three children, Pauli, 11;
nervous
and
excited
former
residents
as many different answers as there are
of Helsinki, Finland arrived in his brother, Pentti, IQ, and their 7
diplomas.
Annandale,
Virginia. Their arrival in year old sister, Pirkko.
Some features of the fall season are
The ages of the Finnish children
shared by all students. Everyone shares this country was the climax of an
correspond closely with tw o of the
eight
year
friendship
with
the
David
summer experiences, and finds that the
four young Sculls, David, 11; Pris
grass was greener on everyone else’s Scull ( ’36) family who sponsored cilla, 9 ; Barbara, 4 ; and Jonathan
their
immigration.
side of the fence. For many this means
Initial contact between the two who will be 1 year old on October
comparing itineraries in Europe and
families
was established in 1947 10th.
debating the merits of one hostel or
The Sculls arranged for a house
when
the
Sculls received a thank you
nightclub over another, while those who
for the new visitors in their own
note
from
Finland
for
a
C
A
R
E
food
stayed home listen in envious silence.
Annandale and the children will go.
Workers tell of fat bank rolls to see package that had been sent to help
to the Burgundy Country Day
the
needy
in
war-stricken
Europe.
them through the long winter ahead
School in Alexandria, which the
The
package
was
given
to
Rolf
and then those long days on the beach
Sculls attend.
Gronroos
to.
help
his
family
of
five
seem less and less attractive.
A m e r i c a n i z a t i o n has a l r e a d y
through
the
winter.
Perhaps the rumors and fascinating
started since the rather difficult
The
Sculls
replied
and
the
corre
tidbits about professorial comings and
Gronroos will probably be changed
goings mean less to the freshman than spondence grew quickly into an ex
to Greenrose and little Pauli’s name
to the other three classes, but they do change o f letters almost weekly.
shortened to Paul.
serve to make his first few sessions
David Scull had for a number of
more eagerly awaited. All four classes
years
been associated with the U.S.
Getting up for 8 o’clocks, tradition
endure physical exams, and while shiv
Department of State but in 1953 re
ally
a
freshman
prerogative,
becomes
a
ering in lines try to decipher the hiero
turned to Annandale to take over his
glyphics in which their lives and for widespread habit, since it seems inap
father’s printing business. Mrs; Scull
propriate
to
cut
the
first
meeting.
And
tunes are recorded.
is the former Laurel DeMeritt. In
Since classes start on Tuesday, the so, with the beginning of classes and
speaking of their first personal con
seminars
the
year
really
begins.
interminable question of a program for
tact with the Finnish family she said
the fall is answered at registration on Chances are it won’t turn out as ex
that it was amazing how well they
pected.
Whether
better
or
worse
it
will
Monday, and even after that there are
all got along with tw o dictionaries
people scurrying madly about to make be different, and next June it will be
the Gronrooses brought with them
interesting
to
compare
the
last
letters
last-minute changes. Monday night
and the “ universal sign language
finds all students enjoying the last home with the first.
that everybody can understand.”
Franny
King
’56
moments of freedom.
October, 1955
3
BURM A —1955
A report by John Seabury Thomson ’43 who spent last
year in the Far East on a Ford Foundation Fellowship.
This “ letter from Burma,” written
in Madison, W isconsin grow s out of
a Ford Fellowship I have been hold
ing this past year for research into
Burmese foreign policy. In late 1953
when I was applying fo,r a grant to
the Far East, Burma appealed espe
cially as it seemed in its first few
years of independence to be doing
the finest job among the countries
of Southeast Asia of overcom ing its
internal problems and meeting the
threat of Communism. Justice D ou g
las’s book “ North from Malaya”
gave an intriguing glimpse of what
might be found in Burma and I was
impressed with the dignity with
which this small neutral country had
cancelled Am erica’s economic aid
even while showing her real appre
ciation for it. Burma continued to
employ the American advisors and
in September, 1953 made the unique
gesture of presenting the United
States with $10,000 for tornado relief.
M y ticket was for a round-theworld air coach flight with stopover
privileges. (It was pleasant to dis
cover that this was an econom y
measure — it is cheaper to go ’round
the world than Madison to Rangoon
and return.) The only drawback to
such a trip is that none of the stop
overs can be long enough and that
44 pounds of baggage even with
modern-age tissue paper suits doesn’t
go far for a year.
I began with three sun-filled days
in Hawaii with Bob and Betsy Cole
man ’43 at their Lanikai home and
12 days in Japan with my parents
at the Japanese International Chris
tian University in the suburbs of
T ok yo. During my week in H ong
Kong, between cable car rides to the
peak to enjoy the magnificent view
of the city and its harbor and neces
sary trips to the tailor for Britishstyle tropical wear suited to the
dhobi wash, I tried to see as much of
the Chinese refugee community as
possible. W ith the communist vic
4
tory on the mainland, H ong K on g ’s
population has jumped from 750,000
to nearly 2,500,000. The three groups
I talked to were refugee students
from the mainland — a real workout
for my rusty Chinese. All claimed
to be “ Third Force” supporters, look
ing for a new China neither commu
nist nor Nationalist. T hey left me
sympathetic and sad. They had the
great weakness of most refugee
groups — no unity, no common plan
or leader— and each group separately
warned me that the others were
either Nationalists or Communists
under cover.
Bangkok I visited twice, once in
September on my way to Rangoon
and again in April en route to Singa
pore. (A Swarthmore visit again
with Terry Haviland Farrior, ’42,
and her husband John of the U. S.
Embassy.) As a political scientist I
was impressed with the apparent
weakness of our only Southeast
Asian mainland ally in terms of poli
tical convictions. There seemed to be
almost no popular concern with the
government or its policies. As a
tourist I was delighted with the
colorful and boom ing city, its tem
ples, handcrafts and on my second
visit after beefless Burma, steaks.
Arriving in Rangoon is quite dif
ferent from arriving in Bangkok
where I had seen the full moon re
flected in endless miles of flooded
rice fields. In the low rolling land
approaching Rangoon the golden
spire o f the Shwedagon Pagoda rises
high above the city, a landmark for
the traveler by air or sea. For nearly
two thousand years the Shwedagon
surrounded by myriads of smaller
shrines has been the center of Ran
g oon ’s religious and festival life. Its
four entrances, up flights of steps
from the north, south, east and west,
are lined with stalls selling every
thing from images of Buddha to
charcoal-burning irons, books, shoes,
musical instruments, flowers and
The Shwedagon Pagoda
and
\thr
up
: Na;
food. Everyone visits the Shwedagon
(I was drawn there again and again) vjsj
and everyone goes barefoot on its tj ■
sanctified grounds. During the No- £ oi
vember festival of the lights (full pap
m oon) I joined the holiday crowds rep
at the pagoda to watch the finals of kro
the weaving contest. Five Burmese nes
women raced to complete a saffron i sen
Buddhist monk’s robe before day- jn
light. It was like a fair with cheer- par
ing claques, official time-outs to jmr
check the work and refreshment
booths set up among the shrines. It amj
was somewhat surprising to see a ten
table of food for the Nats (pre- ; 0f j
buddhistic spirits) decorated with a the
familiar flying red horse, the offer- a n c j
ing of Stanvac employees.
1
^
Cosmopolitan as Rangoon is, there
•
is surprisingly little W estern dress, j
Everywhere women wear their color- : ^
ful longyis and sheer nylon aingyis. \ ^ ^
Men wear similar longyis, collar-less
shirts and round silk gombuns — the
skull caps in pale shades of pink, ove
blue and yellow.
> en
W hile I was still in Japan the g er
Swiss theologian, Emil Brunner, de- pscribed Burma’s Prime Minister to p re
me as “ the unique combination of ; pro
statesman and Buddhist Saint,” and i tiad
everything I saw and heard of U Nu
during my stay impressed me that me,
this was true. Burmese friends rightly cre’
add that U Nu is also an astute ¿|||
( Continued on next page)
Alumni Issue
ffoc
Ocl
( Continued from page 4)
politician. U Nil’s deep religious con
viction permeates all his activities
and his sincerity, warmth, tolerance
and essential goodness make him
the one man in Burma who is uni
versally admired and respected.
Abroad, and especially in Asia, the
quality of his leadership has given
Burmese proposals a significance
far out of proportion to the coun
try’s material power. The Burmese
Government has the reputation for
the least corruption in Asia — and
the credit rests squarely with U Nu
and the example he sets.
Rangoon life was full and inter
esting. Most of my time was spent
between the University, where I
lived in one of the instructors’ hostels
and taught a course in Far Eastern
History, the Ford Office downtown,
and the newspaper offices going
through back files and trying to keep
up on current developments. Nehru,
Nasser, Tito, Chou En-lai, Dulles,
^on
Eden and the K ing of Cambodia all
in) visited Rangoon during the year.
its U Nu’s trip to China, the Bangkok
JbConference and Bandung filled the
u ll
papers and the settlement of the
rds reparations question with Japan
of brought in a grow ing flood o f Japa
sse nese government and business repre
•on sentatives. City elections were held
m in which the A F P F L (government
er- party) won all but two seats — and
to immediately investigated to find
;nt why it had lost two. Interspersed
It among news articles of local and in
a ternational concern were accounts
re- of insurgent activity and attacks on
i a the main railways — bridges blown
er and trains delayed.
Tito’s visit was probably the high
ne point of Burma’s social calendar,
ss. outshining Nehru, Chou En-lai and
ir- Nasser. Crowds lined the streets for
lis. hours waving flags (and there was
;ss no built-in Yugoslav colony to man
the claque). Festival arches raised
ik, over the main streets for Independ
ence Day bore signs in Burmese,
he Serbo-Croatian and E nglish:-“ Long
le- Live President T ito! L ong Live
to President U Ba U !” Newspapers
of promoted a myth that Yugoslav aid
id had saved Burma from its insurgents.
Ju
(Actually, at other times the Bur
at mese have always given Britain the
iy
credit.) T ito was given an honorary
te degree from the University of Ran
goon with all the customary pomp
ue
October, 1955
A Burmese girl weaves material to be
used in making a “ Shan” bag.
and pageantry— and one special addi
tion. W hile Tito addressed the Spe
cial Convocation in Serbo-Croatian
and U !N*u in Burmese, the audience
read both speeches in English.
The University itself is quite re
markable. Prior to the war it was
considered the best in Southeast
Asia, but the war has destroyed its
library, independence has taken away
the British members of its faculty
and the need for trained leadership
has pushed its enrollment up from
800 to nearly 9,000. One thing has
not changed: student radicals. Anti
government “ Progressives” control
the student body as they did in the
1930’s. (Ex-student radical leader
U Nu went out of his way during
his visit to England this year to
apologize to the former Principal of
University College, Rangoon, for the
strikes he had led.) O f course, in this
period of chaotic change the stand
ards have slipped and it was most
reassuring this June to see that the
faculty is tightening up again. As
always, the best students of Burma
are equal to the best of the world.
Rangoon, however, is not Burma
and to get a better idea of the coun
try I decided to travel north to
Myitkyina. The reports of insurgent
trouble are correct. Travel seemed
remarkably peaceful and regular, but
the Mandalay Mail on which I started
out ran only by day and was pre
ceded by an armed guard train. The
trip to Mandalay took three days,
instead of two. A land mine was
sighted on the tracks so we pulled
back to the nearest station, second
class passengers rented cots from
the Station Master and we all settled
down for the night while the mine
was removed.
The country is still war torn. But
riding through it I thought the farms
and peasants looked prosperous. O x
carts creaked peacefully through the
dusty heat and only the occasional
wreckage along the tracks reminded
one of the troubled conditions. From
Mandalay to Myitkyina I traveled
by jeep with an elaborate escort
which the Commissioner in Manda
lay insisted I accept. Ten armed
police in two jeeps bracketed me,
racing through the magnificent scen
ery of Upper Burma. The net result:
lots of dust, two extra vehicles to
boil over and repair and generally a
much more conspicuous target had
any bandits been interested. Fortu
nately this unwanted honor left me
when I reached Namhkam and Dr.
Seagrave’s hospital on the China
border. This visit to the “ Burma
Surgeon” was the high point of my
trip north.
One of the real pleasures of the
trip was the warmth and enthusiasm
of my welcome at each town. The
people seemed delighted that an
American should be interested in
visiting their portion of Burma. Offi
cials were extremely cooperative at
all times. In Lashio, where I needed
a special permit to allow me to travel
further north through a “ war zone,”
I had to see the Special Commis
sioner for the area — and found him
watching the Shan States tennis
finals in the cool of a Sunday eve
ning. The Baptist missionaries,^the
American G.I. of W orld W ar II and
the United States Information Serv
ice have built up a reservoir of good
will for the United States and in
Burma it is flattering indeed to be
taken as a representative of the
American government.
Myitkyina and Bhamo, which fig
ured prominently in the Burma
Campaign of W orld W ar II, are
both new towns, built on the ruins
of the violent fighting. But here, as
everywhere else in Burma, I was im
pressed by the independent selfsufficiency, apparent good humor and
sturdy optimism of the country
people.
I left my jeep at Bhamo and
traveled back to Mandalay by stern
wheeler down the Irrawaddy. W e
passed through wild undeveloped
country (where Yugoslav scientists
are helping with mineral explora
tion), stopped at towns and small
( Continued on next page)
5
( Continued from page 5)
villages where crowds gathered at
the landings to meet the boat, which
is almost their only tie with the out
side world, and loaded cargoes of
rice, pottery, dried fish and pas
sengers. (U p river the cargo is kero
sene. and manufactured goods.)
Again the atmosphere was one of
peace and tranquility despite the
boiler plate armor around the bridge
and first class cabins. (W e did, how
ever, pass one large brilliantly lit
town at night without stopping —
“ insurgent-held,” the captain ex
plained.)
Oxen-drawn carts wait to unload a
boat on the Irrawaddy.
M y trips in Burma gave me an
idea of her domestic problems and
the trips to surrounding countries
gave me a basis for comparison. (O n
m y way home I spent three weeks
in India visiting Calcutta, Delhi,
Jaipur and Kashmir. Mere mention
of Kashmir makes me reach for my
colored slides, but that is another
story.) For all her many problems,
the active public interest in govern
ment policies is building for a
stronger and more stable democracy
than can be found in Thailand, she
is far more likely to succeed in put
ting down her insurgents than are
the British in Malaya because she is
fighting them as an independent
country and, for all India’s far greater
econom ic development, Burma has
a far more rational and realistic
evaluation of problems of foreign
policy.
W hen I told Burmese friends in
Rangoon that I was there to study
their foreign policy, most of them
hoped that I would understand their
neutralism. Neutralism for Burma is
her best choice. She can not compete
with her larger neighbors militarily,
she can not spare any of her eco
nomic resources for foreign com m it
ments and psychologically, having
6
recently been a battlefield, she wants
no part of war. Though Burma is
oriented politically toward the W est
ern-type democracies, she can not
afford to antagonize China by align
ment with the W est — the tremen
dous size of China and the long un
defined Sino-Burmese border put this
out of the question. U Nu said to
our Congress “ both of our nations
adopted in their early years an in
dependent foreign policy, designed
to maintain the friendship of all na
tions and to avoid big-power alli
ances. Y ou are aware that this policy
of ours is not without its critics. Nor,
for that matter, was yours.”
But Burma is more than passively
neutral. Her leaders have consist
ently urged universal membership in
the United Nations and Burma was
one of the sponsors of the A froAsian Conference at Bandung. She
has sent students abroad and w el
comed students to Burma. Through
these actions Burma has walked the
tightrope between the w orld’s two
blocs and, more than that, has tried
to convert the tightrope into a bridge
of understanding. The Burmese con
cept of neutralism is paying divi
dends for the world already. Tied to
one of the power blocs Burmese in
fluence would be lost in the larger
mass. However, standing alone, but
not aloof, under the leadership of
men like U Nu, Burma is emerging
as a significant moral force in world
affairs.
Industrial Scholarship
Winners
Announced
Dean Everett L. Hunt has an
nounced the winners of several of the
Industrial Scholarships granted to
upper classmen. Chosen to hold the
scholarship presented annually by the
American Cyanamid Company was
Carl vonFrankenberg of Swarthmore,
Pa. The award received from the
American Viscose Corporation has
been presented to Charles Odenweller
of Princeton, N.J. The Radio Cor
poration of America scholarship will
go to Robert Potthoff of Urbana,
Illinois. Recipient of the Westinghouse scholarship this year is Roger
Levien of Brooklyn, N.Y.
Each of these companies has or
ganized an extensive program of as
sistance to educational institutions on
a national basis. Selection of the re
cipient is entirely in the hands of the
Committee on Scholarships of the
College.
Carl vonFrankenberg is reading for
Honors in Chemistry and plans to go
on to graduate school following re
ceipt of his Bachelor’s degree in 1956.
Odenweller will enter upon a program
leading to Honors in Electrical Engi
neering next year. He is a sophomore.
Both Potthoff and Levien are juniors
majoring in Mechanical Engineering
and will probably seek employment in
this field upon graduating in 1956.
Dean Hunt also announced that
Thomas K. Glennan, Jr. of Cleveland,
Ohio would be the recipient of the
Scott Award for this year. This grant,
presented annually to a Sophomore
student who plans to enter business
after graduation, is given by Scott
Paper Company Foundation in honor
of Arthur Hoyt Scott, former presi
dent of Scott Paper Company and an
1895 graduate of Swarthmore College.
The Scott Award was established in
1953 as an experiment “ to determine
if the company and the college can
benefit mutually through corporate
support of private institutions of
higher learning.” The experiment is
to run for five years at which time the
success o f the program will be ex
amined by both the company and the
college.
Glennan is the son of the President
of Case Institute of Tech, of Cleve
land, Ohio. He will major in Electrical
Engineering beginning next year and
has been interested in Physics and
Engineering for some time; particu
larly as these sciences are related to
business. Tom is a member of the
athletic managers’
association
at
Swarthmore, plays Lacrosse and at the
present time is busy as chairman of a
committee to survey the history of
student government of the College. He
is a member of Phi Delta Theta Fra
ternity, is a member of the yearbook
staff, and next year will be Manager
for the Varsity Soccer Team.
The first recipient of the Scott
Award was Henry J. Bode, Jr. of
Rumford, R.I. who will begin his
career with Scott Paper Company this
summer. J. Lawrence Shane was the
winner last year and is continuing his
work in Mechanical Engineering at
Swarthmore.
Alumni Issue
on
re
ihe
the
Brown Again Honored
ALUMNI IN THE NEWS
for
g0
re'56. i
am
igiire.
ors
ing
in
hat
nd |
the I
Smith Promoted
- Promotion of F. Gordon Smith ’40
to Director of Sales Prom otion was
announced recently by International
Business Machines Corporation,
Mr. Smith became associated with
the IBM organization as an Assistant Sales Representative in Phila
delphia in 1940. Since that time he
bas held positions o f increasing re
sponsibility in W est Virginia, Pennsylvania, and Illinois.
Idaho after graduation. H e was
president of the Idaho W o o l Growers
Association from 1947 to 1949 and
served as vice-president for two
years previously. H e has been a fre
quent visitor to W ashington to dis
cuss problems of the sheep industry.
On September 14, 1955 Kenneth
R. Brown ’ 18 was presented with the
honor award of the American Chemi
cal Society’s Division of Carbo
hydrate Chemistry. This is the sec
ond important award won by Mr.
Brown this year. Last March he re
ceived the 1955 H onor Award of the
Commercial Chemical Development
Association.
In addition to his work with the
above organizations, John Brecken
ridge takes an active part in civic
affairs. He is a leading member of
the Citizens School Planning Com
mittee and was recently appointed
to the board of the M agic Valley
Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. Breckenridge will be remem
bered as Miriam Booth ’38. They have
four daughters 15, 12, 10, and 7
respectively.
Hospital Association Elects Hay
The Hospital Association of Penn
sylvania at its annual meeting in
Atlantic City in May, elected George
A . H ay ’28 as president for this year.
F . Gordon Smith ’40
ye_
cal
,nd
nd
:uto
the
at
:he
i a
of
Gordon Smith’s new responsibility
will be in the Chicago area where he
has worked since 1952.
Married to the former Alice E.
Robinson ’41, the Smiths now reside at
761 Foxdale, Winnetka, Illinois,
They have three children, Fred, Jr.,
Alice and Sarah.
ffl
Wool Grower Chosen
ra-
ok
>er
Qtt
of
iis
iis
he
iis
at
ue
John H. Breckenridge ’38 is the
youngest officer ever to be elected as
President of the National ^Vool
Growers Association. Selected last
April, John will preside over the annual meeting of the association at
Fort W orth, Texas next December,
Although a m ajor in Chemistry at
Swarthmore, “ L on g John” has been
interested in the sheep raising busi
ness since he returned to T w in Falls,
October. 1955
Since 1941 George Hay has been
in charge of the business and finan
cial administration of the W om an’s
Medical College and Hospital.
During his thirteen years in the
hospital field, Hay has made a dis
tinguished record in the field of hos
pital administration. He was one of
the original group of seven members
of the Philadelphia Hospital Associa
tion who developed the basis for and
established the provisional organiza
tion of the Hospital Council of Phila
delphia. H e has also served as vicechairm'an of the Committee on A c
counting and Statistics of the H ospi
tal C ouncil; member of the Council
on Policies and Administrative Prac
tice of the Hospital Association of
Pennsylvania; member of the Com
mittee on Public Relations of the
Hospital Association o f Pennsyl
vania ; and alternate to the House of
Delegates of the American Hospital
Association. H e is also author of
numerous papers in the field of hos
pital administration and purchasing.
Kenneth R. Brown T8
The ACS Carbohydrate Division
award, presented annually for out
standing achievement in the field of
Carbohydrate chemistry, was given
to Kenneth Brown for his pioneering
work in the development of sorbitol
and related carbohydrate products,
(see Alumni magazine, March, 1955)
The Atlas Powder Company vicepresident is the ninth chemist to re
ceive the Carbohydrate D ivision’s
honor scroll. A t the dinner honoring
Mr. Brown a message from Dr. H.
Jermain Creighton was read. Dr.
Creighton, a former professor of
Brow n’s at Swarthmore, conducted
the initial experiments that led to the
Atlas Powder Company’s entry into
the hexitol field.
In his address accepting the award,
Kenneth Brown stressed the need for
inspirational thinking in chemical re
search, as a balance to the purely ob
jective approach. He said, “ the sorbitol
story, is the story of many individuals
bending their interests, abilities and
energies toward a common, exciting
goal.”
Ward To Head Alumni Fund
DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM REPORT —
Alumni Fund Sets Mark
Congratulations on a j ob well done!
The $425,328 contributed to the Col
lege this year marks the largest amount
since 1950. These gifts will permit the
leaders of Swarthmore to continue to
face the future with confidence and
trust that the Alumni and friends of
the College are behind them in their
endeavors to provide a first class educa
tion for the students under their
guidance.
-Alumni Fund
If 3,862 Alumni can contribute $127,-379 think of what we can do when all
-9,000 Alumni realize the importance of
this Fund. Each year it is the hope of
the Alumni Fund Committee that we
will really take a big jump in percent
age of participation. This year, much to
the disappointment of all, this figure
actually dropped a few points. The
thrilling factor that made an increase in
total giving possible was the jump from
$25.77 to $32.98 as the amount of the
average gift. A great many people
recognized the needs of the College and
responded accordingly.
In the listings of all gifts on the fol
lowing pages there is one entry that
bears further comment. At the end of
a number of class rolls you will find
the name “ General Electric” or “ Scott
Paper Company.” This indicates that
some member of that class has made a
contribution which was matched by one
of these companies in accordance with
their corporate alumnus programs. In
the first six months of this year, Gen
eral Electric has matched over two
thousand gifts of their employees to
more than two hundred colleges and
universities. Both companies are to be
congratulated on this fine reaction to
the problems facing institutions of
higher learning.
Alumni Gifts for Special Purposes
_ W e sometimes forget that this par
ticular category of the Development
Program comes only from Alumni and
that most of the persons who contribute
under this heading also make gifts to
the Alumni Fund. Many individually
endowed scholarships, special building
projects, and other programs are sup
ported from this source. The announce
ment of the 1955-56 Fund will point
3
out how these gifts have strengthened
the College in areas where the need
has been severe.
Parents’ Fund for Scholarships
Despite the fact that many of them
were still supporting children in col
lege, 235 parents found it possible to
contribute $13,652 to this fund. Mr.
Darwin Hand, Chairman of the Com
mittee, is to be thanked for his efforts
in behalf of this program. In a number
of cases the Parents’ Fund meant the
difference in deciding whether or not a
student could come to Swarthmore or
would have to forego a college educa
tion.
Other Friends of Swarthmore
The individuals and organizations
included under this heading have some
special tie with the College and have
taken this opportunity of expressing
their concern for its support. This year
$58,783 was contributed by this group,
many of whom are faculty or board
members or related to employees of the
College. These funds are used for
scholarships and the general expenses
of the institution.
The Future
As we come to the end of this report
we would like to quote from an an
nouncement appearing in the alumni
magazine of another college:
" Our unrestricted capital funds, the risk
money for any institution, have been re
stored to a not quite comfortable amount
by a large bequest of $659,104 . . . “ Our
endowment funds for general purposes,
which are the basic asset of any college,
have been increased most substantially by
gifts and bequests totalling $852,586 . . .”
Altogether this particular college re
ceived over a million, eight hundred
thousand dollars in gifts last year. W e
point to this fact not to impress you
with the amount but rather to indicate
that most of this money was contrib
uted by one or two individuals. The
purpose of the Swarthmore College
Development Program has been to
appeal to as many of the College’s
Alumni and friends as possible and to
involve them in the annual giving pro
gram. W e therefore hope that next
year we will be able to include your
name in the listing of those who have
seen the need and responded to the call
for assistance.
William H. Ward T5, Director, Vice
President, and member of the Execu
tive Committee of the E. I. duPont de
Nemours & Company, has accepted the
post of Chairman of the Alumni Fund
Drive for 1955-56. As has been pointed
out a number of times, it is hoped that
this Fund will reach a goal of $200,000
in annual giving by 1957.
William H. Ward T5
A loyal supporter of the college, Mr.
Ward has already served a term on the
Board of Managers, is a permanent
officer of his class, and was active in
the organization of the 1915 Scholar
ship Fund.
After graduation from Swarthmore,
he joined the duPont Company as a
chemist in the Explosives Department.
After eight years, he transferred to
sales management activities and entered
general management in 1935. He be
came General Manager of the Explo
sives Department in 1944. In 1947 he
was elected Vice President and a mem
ber of the Board of Directors.
Mr. Ward is a director of the
Remington Arms Company, Inc., the
Norfolk & Western Railway Company,
and the Manufacturing Chemists’ Asso
ciation.
He has been a resident of Swarth
more, Pa. since 1928 and has been
active in the civic affairs of the com
munity. He is a member of the
Swarthmore Presbyterian Church and
a former member of its Board of
Trustees. He is married and has one
daughter, Mrs. Robert F. Cox.
Alumni Issue
SENIOR ALUMNI
1882 to and including 1894
Class Representative:
Dora Anne Gilbert '93
Number of Donors
€1
Participation
59.22%
Alumni Fund
$5,112.00
Total Gifts
$15,642.00
Helen M. Bleakly ’82
Charles Palmer ’ 82
Elizabeth Haliowell
Hoadley ’83
Jane P. Rushmore ’83
Abigail Evans ’85
Emma Bones Stone ’86
Josephine Hannah Tilton ’86
Viola Laughead Jackson '87
Linda Belle Palmer
Jones ’ 87 ,
Frederick K. Lane ’ 87
■(Harriett Cox McDowell ’ 87
Emma Forman Tyson ’ 87
Hetty Lippincott Miller
’88 (Deceased)
Maud P. Mills ’88
Alice Hall Paxson
’88 (Deceased)
Elizabeth Clothier
Sailer ’88
Carroll H. Sudler ’88
♦♦fJoyeuse Fullerton
Sweet ’ 88
Ralph Stone ’ 89
Mary White Bartram
’90 (Deceased)
** Martha Mcllvain Biddle ’ 90
Mary Wilkinson Coles ’90
Edward Darlington ’90
Mary Cadwallader
Donnally ’ 90
Helen Willets Dutcher ’90
Eloise Mayham Hulley ’ 90
Phebe Post Willis ’90
Emily Atkinson ’91
Elizabeth Holmes
Bennett ’91
Samuel Steer Bond ’91
James Sutton Coale ’91
Rachel De Cou Herr ’91
Hannah Clothier Hull ’91
Emma Magruder ’91
Evangeline Vail Snyder ’91
Margaret Freeman
Stickney ’ 91
Mary Elizabeth Thomas *91
Frances M. White ’ 91
Ellen Pyle Groff ’ 92
Rosamond Baker Haines ’92
♦Caroline Jackson Hicks ’ 92
Edward A . Jenkins ’ 92
Ellen Atkinson Jenkins ’ 92
Anne Hillborn Philips ’ 92
Margaret Moore Bancroft ’ 93
Dora A. Gilbert ’ 93
Charles Shreve Haliowell ’93
Clarence William Smith ’93
tEliza K. Willets ’ 93
Altha Titsworth Coons ’94
Esther Lamb Cox ’ 94
Mary Hayes Gawthrop ’ 94
Helen Lamb Hull ’ 94
M. Elizabeth Lamb ’ 94
Caroline Biddle
Lippincott ’ 94
Caroline Sargent
Silloway ’ 94
Mary Underhill ’ 94
Elizabeth Conrow
Valentine ’ 94
Allen Kirby White ’ 94
Emma Chambers White ’ 94
John M. Willis ’94
Alberta Wilson ’94
CLASS OF 1895
Class Representative:
Samuel C. Palmer
Number of Donors
21
Participation
70.0.0%
Alumni Fund
$643.00
♦Class of 1895
Frank Colson Andrews
Benjamin Barnum
Clara D. Beardsley
October, 1955
CLASS OF 1903
ALUMNI CONTRIBUTORS
To Swarthmore College
1954-1955
Class Representative:
J. Horace Ervlen
Unless specifically designated, alumni in the following lists have given to the Alumni
Fund.
♦— Alumni who have given for special purposes only.
[
•(— Alumni who have given for special purposes as well as to the Alumni Fund.
*♦— Alumni who have made “ In Memoriam” gifts.
CLASS OF 1898
Helen Smith Brinton
George Earl Cook
Thomas S. Donohugh
Mary Hollingshead Hancock
Jane Shaw Hepburn
May Gifford Hubbell
Callender Irvine Leiper
Mary Montgomery Marsh
Herbert C. Mode
■(Charles S. Moore
Joel Nelson Morris
Elizabeth Miller Nevin
Samuel C. Palmer
Bertha Lippincott Parrish
Lydia M. Parry
Edwin L. Stickney
Charles Doughty White
Albert T. Yarnall
Class Representative:
Ida Palmer Stabler
Number of Donors
12
Participation
44.44%
Alumni Fund
$402.00
Total Gifts
$402.00
S. Edna Pownall Buffington
Lydia Rakestraw Bushong
Mabel Harris Codwise
Lilia Hart Merritt
Marion Nicholl Rawson
Edna H. Richards
Ely J. Smith
Ida Palmer Stabler
Frederic L. Thomas
Alice Brown Hume
Edith Wilson Jackson
Alice M. Lukens
Lydia Clothier Maxwell
William H . Thatcher
(Deceased)
CLASS OF 1901
Class Representative:
Arthur II. Jenkins
Number of Donors
15
Participation
42.86%
Alumni Fund
$910.00
Total Gifts
$910.00
Anonymous
Harry Newton Benkert
TOP FIVE FOR FIFTY-FIVE
By Percent of Participation
Class
Rank
1907
1906
1895
1899
1903
1
2
3
4
5
CLASS OF 1896
Class Representative:
Albert L. Buffington
Number of Donors
9
Participation
40.91%
Alumni Fund
$2,328.00
Total Gifts
$31,418.00
Mary Story Bartram
■(Clement M. Biddle
Albert L . Buffington
Isaac Haliowell Clothier, Jr.
Frances Darlington
Lauretta Smedley Dutton
Aida Evans Highley
Mary Stone McDowell
Maude Gridley Peterson
♦Edith Wilder Scott
CLASS OF 1897
Class Representative:
Thomas Cahall
Number of Donors
11
Participation
47.83%
Alumni Fund
$325.00
Total Gifts
,
$325.00
Edith Kenderdine Andrews
R. Grant Bennett
(Deceased)
Grace Brosius Biddle
Thomas Cahall
Grace Stevenson Chapman
Laura Miller Curry
Marietta Hicks
Frederic S. Larison
Jessie Ellis Peirce
Miriam Sener
May Young Smith
Class Representative:
Maurice Griest
J. Sherwood Knight
Arthur W . Broomell
Samuel C. Palmer
Richard J. Bond
J. Horace Ervien
CLASS OF 1899
Class Representative:
Richard J. Bond
Number of Donors
13
Participation
65.00%
Alumni Fund
$403.00
Total Gifts
$403.00
Mary C. Bell
Richard J. Bond
John P. Broomell
Edith Flitcraft Dastas
Emily Carter Gillette
Gilbert L. Hall
Eleanor Cass Holmes
Georgians W . Jackson
Lillian McDowell Rochester
Emily R. Underhill
Emma B. Wallace
Mary Morrison Webster
Abraham U . Whitson
CLASS OF 1900
Class Representative:
Caroline Farren Harris
Number of Donors
U
Participation
47.83%
Alumni Fund
$371.00
Total Gifts
$371.00
Anna Lippincott Biddle
Roger B. Farquhar, Jr.
Edna May Miller Fleming
Anna Gillingham
John Krause Harper
Caroline Farren Harris
Walker McClun Bond
William J. Clothie^
Arthur Markley Dewees
Hallie Hulburt Douglas
J. Horace Ervien
Howard S. Evans
Margaret Gleim
William Evans Hannum
Fannie Kilgore Hoadley
♦♦Mabel E. Hollinshead
Elizabeth Booth Lamb
Robert E. Lamb
Anna E. Nichols
Lulu Von Ramdohr
Palmenberg
Norman S. Passmore
Elizabeth Sutton Percy
Mabel Haines Redrow
William Ely Roberts
Mabel Pryor Rothermel
Maud Rice Stuckert
William J. Latta Walker
Asa P. W ay
•(Nora Stabler Worth
Anna Hutchinson Wurts
CLASS OF 1904
Agent
Georgians Titus
Virginia Gillespie Viskniskki
Abner P. Way
Number of Donors
24
Participation
61.54%
Alumni Fund
$1,069.50
Total Gifts
$1,082.00
Percival Morris Fogg
Walter Gilkyson
Elizabeth L. Gillingham
Mary Lippincott Griscom
Arthur H . Jenkins
Sara Baylis Johnson
Martha W . Moore
Anna Howard Price
Ethel Griest Snyder
Deborah Ferrier Strattan
Mary Richards Webster
Evelyn Nivin Whiteman
Sarah Wescott Woodward
Number of Donors
18
Participation ^58.06%
Alumni Fund
$300.39
Total Gifts
$300.39
Class of 1904
Anna Smedley Bartram
Thomas Christy Bell
Blanche Estelle Brown
Louise Bartlett Coale
Anna Louise Curtis
Emily Janney De Armond
Dorothy F. Green
Maurice Griest
Elma Lewis Harper
Halliday R. Jackson
Sarah Wood Passmore
Louise Fahnestock^ Poole
Agnes Haliowell Sibbald
C. Marshall Taylor
Edith West Terry
William W est Wilson
Elva Ash Yearsley
(Deceased)
CLASS OF 1905
CLASS OF 1902
Class Representative:
Raymond Mowers
Number of Donors
19
Participation
42.22%
Alumni Fund
$2,033.00
Total Gifts
$2,045.50
Ida Wright Bowman
Sarah Tracy Cahill
Edith S. Coale
Helen Rogers Evans
Helen Eastwick Harper
Edson S. Harris
Emma G. Holloway
Margaretta W . Lamb
Alice R. Linvill
Thomas Stockton Matthews
Raymond Mowers
Anna Waters Palmer
Edith Verlenden Paschall
Frances Preston
Elliott Richardson
Helen W . Speakman
Alice Post Tabor
William W . Turner
tGeorge S. Worth
Class Representative:
Edmund G. Robinson
Number of Donors
20
Participation
50.00%
Alumni Fund
$1,655.00
Total Gifts
$4,820.00
tEdith Powell Borden-Smith
tEthel Close Broomell
Lucile Abrams Cubbison
Edith Myers Dudman
tF . Bramwell Geddes
■(Agnes Smedley Giesecke
•(Hamilton H . Gilkyson, Jr.
Helen Heed
■(Philip Marshall Hicks
tElsie Phebe Hoyt
Helen Miller Jackson
tRalph G. Jackson
♦Margaret D. Leiper
Lynne Lionel Merritt
■(Elsa von Ramdohr
Palmenberg
Ruden Wheeler Post
(Deceased)
9
tFrederic Newlin Price
t Edmund G. Robinson
Lydia Foulke Taylor
tHerbert S. Thatcher
fHelen Carre Turner
CLASS OF 1906
Class Representative:
Arthur W illiams Broomell
Number of Donors
42
Participation
72.41%
Alumni Fund
$1,382.00
Total Gifts
$1,382.00
Alice Maris Baird
J. Kennard Bosee
Hazel Dillistin Bradley
Anna Dripps Bramble
Mary Gertrude Bricker
Arthur Williams Broomell
Grace G. Broomell
G. Lupton Broomell
William B. Cocks
Laura Strode Coleman
Mary Janney Coxe
William Diebold
Richard Downing, Jr.
Grace Mickle Durnall
A . Edna Hamilton
(Deceased)
Jane R. Harper
Grace Schwenk Hay
Emilie Hill
Sarah Hunt Hull
Rachel Robinson Jones
Homer Simmons Kent
Philip Edward Lamb
Alice Keim Leinau
Roberts Leinau, Jr.
Emilia Schoenemann Le Roy
Ellen B. Lewis
Mary Washburn Lippincott
S. Blair Luckie, Jr.
Emily C. McKee
Rosalie Faltermayer
Murtagh
George S. Nobles
Esther Eisenhower Palmer
John Walter Passmore
Elizabeth Johnson Pyle
Alfred Lawrence Rhoads
Lydia Lewis Rickman
Emma Jane W . Shoemaker
Lillian Rosenbluth Solomon
Richard C. Thatcher
Caroline Washburn Wells
Barclay White
Edith Lewis White
CLASS OF 1907
Class Representative:
J. Sherwood K night
Number of Donors
41
Participation
77.36%
Alumni Fund
$3,157.72
Total Gifts
$23,157.72
Martha Lippincott Andrews
Lillian Pike Appleton
Ralph Jackson Baker
Newlin T. Booth (Deceased)
Anna Pettit Broomell
Mary North Chenoweth
Jeannette Curtis Cons
Helen Ridgway Cooley
Louise Hornor Cottrell
Soencer L. Coxe
W . Seth Daniels
Isaac Garrett Darlington
♦♦Francis W . D’Olier
Mabel Sullivan D’Olier
Edith Manson Douglass
Pauline M. Durnall
Elizabeth Allen Gemberling
Clementine Hulburt Gibson
Frank Kelso Hyatt
Edwin P. Jones
Joseph Walter Keller
Beniamin S, Kline
J. Sherwood Knight
Mar.iory Matthews Lamb
Elizabeth R. Lippincott
Edith Spencer Malott
Phoebe Stradling Matthews
John Edmund McCauley
Eunice Darnell Mitchell
(Deceased)
John Carle Parry, Jr.
tAmos J. Peaslee
10
Jean Scott Peoples
Helen Price
Edith Gibbs Reeder
James N . Richardson
Elizabeth Verlenden Rockey
Harvey T. Satterthwaite
Beatrice Victory Sautter
Florence Travilla
Mary Verlenden
Katharine Green Vincent
CL ASS OF 1908
Class Representative:
Katharine Griest
Number of Donors
26
Participation
60.47%
Alumni Fund
$678.00
Total Gifts
$678.00
Leonard C. Ashton
Fisher Longstreth Boyd
John Stokes Clement
Ida Virginia Craythorn
Helen Baker Eastwood
Alice Worth Geddes
Katharine Griest
Jacob Kenneth Hoffman
Simeon Van Trump Jester
Eleanor Janney Johns
Mary Yarnall Kent
Florence Stapler Lippincott
Sherman C. Lloyd
Mary D. Satterthwaite
McVaugh
Henry Tyson Moore
Elisabeth James Norton
Edith Mather Page
Susanna Haines Parry
Herman Pritchard
Frances Richardson
Georgia Zavitzz Stover
Clifford H . Vernon
Elizabeth Gordon Wilgus
Helen Wintringham Williams
Mildred Bentley Wilson
Katharine Wolff
CLASS OF 1909
Class Representative:
Emily Bird Knapp
Number of Donors
50
Participation
60.24%
Alumni Fund
$1,572.50
Total Gifts
$1,572.50
Anonymous 3
Caroline Atkinson Alford
Newell G. Alford
Esther Elizabeth Baldwin
Ethel Brown Butler
Edward Houser Cavin
Lee Elbert Coble
Louis Fussell Coffin
Edith Roberts Cook
Edith Barde Eachus
Arthur Moses Eastbum
Herbert H . Evans
(Deceased)
Anna Fell Fell
♦♦Emma Hartpence Garrison
Edna Sterner Hammond
Marian Leedom Hoskins
Robert D. Hoyt
Ruth Chaffey Irons
Alice Byers Johnson
Helen Dillistin Johnson
M. Louis Johnson
E. Regina Kleefeld
Emily Bird Knapp
Walter W right Krider
Emily Poley Longstreth
E. Carleton MacDowell
William Wilson Moore
Edith Taylor Muir
Anne Wallace Parker
Beulah Haines Parry
Hannah Steele Pettit
Anna Armstrong Pike
Elizabeth Ann Burton
Ramsey
Frank B. Ridgway
Jean Williamson Roberts
Harold Earl Roy
Thomas D. Smedley
William G. Shemeley, Jr.
Edith Taylor Smith
Thomas Jay Sproul
Edith Janes Steel
Helen Stelwagon
Frank Brinton Strode
Walter Cyrus Strunk
Mary Alice Taylor
Mary T ”uman Welsh
Mabel Hancock Wilkinson
Hannah B. Wilson
CLASS OF 1910
Class Representative:
John A. W hite
Number of Donors
35
Participation
52.24%
Alumni Fund
$2,255.50
Total Gifts
$2,255.50
Ellie Simons Bassett
**H . Lawrence Beecher
Frederick J. Blatz
Christopher Bockius
(Deceased)
Riley Anton Bressler
George Oadwallader Corson
Alma Daniels
Adelaide McGinnis Davis
Anna Griscom Elkinton
Edward W . Fell
Walter Sherman Garrison
(Deceased)
Beulah Reece Green
Priscilla Goodwyn Griffin
William L. Jenkins
Marion Thornton Justice
Virginia D. Keeney
James G. Lamb
Grace Frances Lee
Bertha Hepworth Mortimer
John Norman Ogden
Ethel Mary Albertson Post
Anna Campbell Rittman
Marie Sellers
Philip Triest Sharpies
Esther Barnes Shepherd
Annie Pollitt Smith
James Austin Stone
Arthur P. Tanberg
Miriam Hines Thatcher
Sara Kirk Turner
Irvana Wood Tyson
John A . White
Margery Cornell Wintringer
Pauline Fay Wright
I. N . Earl Wynn
CLASS OF 1911
Class Representative:
Arthur S. Robinson
Number of Donors
36
Participation
47.37%
Alumni Fund
$1,111.54
Total Gifts
$1,111.54
Marion Watters Babcock
Anna Gilkyson Baker
♦♦Therese Spackman
Barclay
Laura Boram Bloom
Adele Hammond Bowers
Edna Carpenter
Mabelle Whitehead Carpenter
Emma Marshall Clausen
Raymond K. Denworth
Gwendolen Evans
Gladys Coker Fort
Margaret Broomell Gatchell
Helen Herr Hartle
Anna Heydt
Jeannette Mather Lord
Edna Passmore Lukens
Sara T . Marshall
Gertrude Hoopes McCarthy
Elizabeth White McCarthy
Glen Earle Miller
Harry L. Miller
Elizabeth Richards Moriarty
Edward C. Nehls
Susannah Gregg Oblinger
Alice Stover Parry
Jane Hoag Pierce
Ruth Verlenden Poley
Arthur S. Robinson
Elizabeth Price Robinson
Annabelle Boyle Sproul
Angeline Power Thatcher
Florence Smedley Vernon
James A . Watson
Joseph H. Willits
Ruth Sharp Willits
Elizabeth Oadwallader Wood
CLASS OF 1912
Class Representatives:
Amy Baker Ferguson
and
Charles A. Smith
Number of Donors
42
Participation
56.00%
Alumni Fund
$1,007.00
Total Gifts
$1,607.00
Elisabeth Hallo well Bartlett
Mary Ramsey Bassett
Vernon Waddell Bassett
(Deceased)
Alice Masten Beecher
(Deceased)
Alice Bolton Biggerstaff
Edith C. Bunting
J. Augustus Oadwallader
Caroline Smedley Colburn
Charles Aaron Collins
Helen Marr Cook
Sallie McSparran Durkee
Charles A . Eberla
Milford Garrett Farley
(Deceased)
tAm y Baker Ferguson
John Ernest Hartman
William K. Hoyt
Horace C. Jenkins
Helen Blanton Levy
Cornelia L . Lounsbury
Phebe Lukens Miller
Lydia Green Mitchell
Helen Pressey
Anne Haslett Price
Mary Sickels Pusey
Walter Arnold Reinhard
Dorothy Strode Richardson
Ruth Ayers Rinek
Eleanor A . Rittenhouse
Byron T. Roberts
Harold S. Roberts
Preston T. Roberts
Benjamin Satterthwaite, Jr.
Austin A. Scott
Laurence Price Sharpies
Charles Alfred Smitn
Yensie Vibbert Stayton
Mary Osgood Taylor
Thomas R. Taylor
Charles G. Thatcher
Edith F. Tracey
Evalynn H. Walker
Lena Garey Winslow
CLASS OF 1913
Class Representative:
Elizabeth B. Oliver
Number of Donors
47
Participation
44.34%
Alumni Fund
$2,189.00
Total Gifts
$2,189.00
Albert Brewer Baker
Marion Beadenkopf
W . Mark Bittle
Martha Williams Bittle
Mary F. Blackburn
Philip Jackson Carpenter
Mary A. Cordingley
Roswitha Kudlich Davis
Juanita May Downes
David Tully Dunning
Anna Oppenlander Eberle
Kenneth Vernon Farmer
Blanche H. Gibson
William Henry Gillam, Jr.
Iva Appleby Goehring
F.
Rudolph Goehring
Marguerite Hallo well
Mary Welsh Hartman
William Vernon Kerns
Louise Marie Lawton
Florence Meredith
Ethel Bates Mitchell
James Monaghan
Grace Greene Musser
Earl A . Oakley
Elizabeth Biggins Oliver
Josephine Foster Pastorino
Emma Hawthorne Paxson
Earle Stanton Philips
Mary E. Pidgeon
Benjamin H . Pollock
Dorothy Phillips Robinson
Alexandra B. Rogers
Helen McConaghy Rogers
Anna Y . Satterthwaite
James Jacob Schock
Elizabeth Jackson Shaffner
Esther Midler Simberg
J. Russell Snyder
Newton Edward Tarble
Harry Coleman Tily, II
Elizabeth Phillips Turner
James Stephens Van Syckel
Letitia McHose Wolvertcn
Anna Worrell
Katharine L. Wray
Fred Garfield Young
CLASS OF 1914
Class Representative:
W illiam O. Soyars
Number of Donors
46
Participation
44.23%
Alumni Fund
$12,728.30
Total Gifts
$50,228.20
Beulah Elliott Atkinson
Anna Spackman Ayers
Marion E. Baker
Constance L. Ball
May Haines Bell
Edith Sharpless Blackburn
Gibson Bradfield
Harper Vaughan Bressler
Howard M. Buckman
Raymond T. Bye
Laura Parry Oadwallader
Louise K. Clement
John Joseph Coogan, Jr.
Katharine M. Denworth
Elizabeth Morton Dunning
Walter H . Eagan
John Horace Githens
Elizabeth M. Hause
Anna Dana Hendry
Katharine F. Herrmann
Frederick George Higham
Bessie Collins Horner
Harold A. Jackson
Margaret Kerr
Eleanore A . Lewis
James B. McGovern
Edwin Randall Murch
Edna Postlethwaite
Marion A . Praed
Nellie Farley Radley
John W . Raymond, Jr.
Marguerite Reeves Raymond
♦Jacob T. Schless
Mary Emma Schmidt
Claude C. Smith
Sara Webster Smith
William Oglesby Soyars
Anna P. K. Stapler
Amelia Werner Swayne
Alice Bucher Tanberg
♦♦Gertrude Wood Thatcher
Florence Miller Tinney
Ruth Marshall Trimble
Marjorie Caldwell Underwood
Caroline Shoemaker Waters
Edith Williams W ay
William A . Worth
CLASS OF 1915
Class Representative:
Auguste J. Knaur
Number of Donors
54
Participation
54.55%
Alumni Fund
$15,278.00
Total Gifts
$68,958.76
♦Class of 1915
Anonymous
Jessica Granville-Smith Abt
Sarah Sheppard Beckett
William Martz Beury
Gilson Grant Blake, Jr.
Jane Henry Boedker
-Aram Boyajian
Marian Simons Brown
Ethel Harvey Buckman
John Stokes Carswell
Charles Joseph Darlington
Sara Darlington
Carolyn Blackstone Day
Bertha Elizabeth Delaplaine
Lilian Pile Dressier
Walter S. Farley
Lillie Elizabeth Flinn
Dorothy Fahnestock Ford
James Robert Frorer
Isabel Pugh Fussell
Ethel Shoemaker Green
Dorothy Powell Greer
Margaret Milne Gunner
Ethel Burnett Hastings
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Jean Yerkes Henry
fReba Camp Hodge
Hyland L. Hodgson
John W . Howell
Earl A. Hunter
«»Sara Appleby Hutchins
Esther M. Jenkins
Auguste Jellinghaus Knaur
Margaret McIntosh Linton
Mary Swisher Loucks
John Mason, Jr.
William W . Matson
fThomas B. McCabe
Elma Jefferis McDonald
Elinor Robinson Murch
Charles Hodgson Osmond
Martha L. Pancoast
Elizabeth M. Roberts
Clarence Josiah Robinson
John Allyn Rogers
Vera Walton Schrader
Rena Rothner Seidel
Anna Miller Smith
Helen Bernshouse Smith
John Goodwin Taylor
Carleton Meloney Thomas
Lewis Herbert Tily
Alexander V . Tisdale
Howard E. Twining
L. Eloise Vest
«Ruth Short Wall
William H. Ward
Josephine E. Wilson
Scott Paper Company
Hilda Lang Denworth
Ruth Craighead Gawthrop
Paul F. Gemmill
Louis Maurice Glick
Marion Frances Jackson
Marian Keene Kennedy
Jones
Florence Tice Knauss
Adolph Korn
Walter Berlinger Lang
Rebecca Conrow Lippincott
Rhoda A . Lippincott
James C. Lukens
Hester Levis Mackey
John Tenney Mason
Margaret Clemens McDowell
(Deceased)
Edwin Tasso Morgan
Margaret Allen Morgan
Julia Young Murray
Clarence G. Myers .
Ethel Whittier Pohlig
William T. Pohlig
Norman G. Shidle
Lester Burton Shoemaker
Mary Gawthrop Shoemaker
Clementine Smith Smith
Walter Eugene Smith
Sarah Lucretia Strong
Anna Elizabeth Sulliva.n
William W . Tomlinson
Harriet Keen Turner
CLASS OF 1916
Class Representative:
George F. Corse
Number of Donors
38
Participation
37.62%
Alumni Fund
$1,414.00
Total Gifts
$1,414.00
Thomas Lees Bartleson
♦♦Isabel Jenkins Booth
S. Jervis Brinton
Mary Harvey Burn
Ruth Stephenson Clegg
Hyman Harry Cohen
George Fox Corse
George A. Craig
Helen C. Culin
Ellsworth F. Curtin
Alice Bryan Dorsey
Elizabeth Shoemaker Fawcett
Harold J. Gawthrop
Sewell W . Hodge
Alice Van Horn Hunter
Sarah Rose Hutchison
Lilian Kerns Johnston
Mary H . McGahey
Anna M. Michener
Agnes Trowbridge Nesbit
John Ewing Orchard
Isabel Waters Paine
Elizabeth Strode Passmore
Horace Mitchell Perry
John S. Riffert
P. Carl Shrode
Katherine W . Simons
Evelyn Miller Slifer
Ruth Lacey Tandy
Lewis Leland Tanguy
Edith Satterthwaite Thorn
Edwin A. Tomlinson
Eliza Ulrich Ullman
Dorothy Develin Walnut
D. Herbert Way
Marie S. Weeks
Harriet E. Worrell
CLASS OF 1917
Class Representative:
Julia Y oung Murray
Number of Donors
47
Participation
43.52%
Alumni Fund
$4,078.50
Total Gifts
$4,078.50
Frances Maxwell Atkinson
Boyd T. Barnard
Helen Ickes Bartleson
Minnie Gould Beury
Helen Daniels Bloomsburg
C. Granniss Bonner
Virginia Higgins Bye
William Anderson Clarke
Isaac Clyde Cornog
Florence Kennedy Corse
Helen Inglis Cramp
Esther Helen Culver
Clark W . Davis
October, 1955
D. John Stickney
Elizabeth Stotsenburg
Elinor Stout Sundt
Dorothy Thomas Talbot
Helen Carlotta Toerring
Esther Newcomer Vogdes
Marian Ware Walkling
Josephine Griffiths Weber
Margaret Wilson Wheelock
Charles H. Yardley
General Electric
Dorothy Johnson Orchard
Emily Gail Benjamin
Painter
Mary E. Powers
Helen Gaskill Rathje
William J. Reilly
Elizabeth Miller Ritschard
Ethelwyn Bower Shidle
Virginia- Postlethwaite
Stickney
Roland Pancoast Stratton
William Simpson, Taylor
Emily Lois Van Loon
Helen Gawthrop Worth
Ralph McC. Wright
CLASS OF 1920
Class Representative:
Jesse G. Johnson
CLASS OF 1919
Number of Donors
48
Participation
44.04%
Alumni Fund
$753.50
Total Gifts
$753.50
Class Representative:
Helen Robey Glenn
Number of Donors
51
Participation
44.74%
Alumni Fund
$1,257.00
Total Gifts
$1,257.00
Norris C. Barnard
Ruth Cross Barnard
Helen Miller Beck
Catharine R. Belville
Frances Williams Browin
Janet McPherson Brown
John Gilbert Albertson
Letitia McNeel Arant
Elizabeth Jones Barnard
Stephen C. Bunting
Edwin Monroe Bush
Ida Meigs Bush
Alfred James Chalmers
George Conahey, Jr.
Marvin H. Coombs
TOP FIVE FOR FIFTY-FIVE
By Amount Subscribed
Class
Rank
Agent
1915
1
Auguste J. Knaur
1914
2
William O. Soyars
Sr. Alumni
3
Dora A. Gilbert
1917
4
Julia Y. Murray
1929
5
Mary R. Calhoun
Frances Baker Walton
Edward E. White
Katharine Grau Williams
Helen Coles Wood
CLASS OF 1918
Class Representative:
Allen I. Myers
Number of Donors
38
Participation
35.19%
Alumni Fund
$1,658.00
Total Gifts
$1,663.00
Frances Laura Baird
tRobert S. Blau
David Monroe Bodine, Jr.
Frances Smith' Britton
Eleanor Stabler Clarke
Geraldine M. Coy
Margaretta Cope Curtin
Catharine Wright Donnelly
Emily Buckman Dowdell
Blanche King Dreizler
Mary Thatcher Fitts
Virginia Avalon Glenn
Esther Nichols Hall
Jess Halsted
Edith Mendenhall Hayes
George Passmore Hayes
Helen Rebmann Ingersoll
Herbert W . Jackson
Elizabeth Andrews Jenks
Esther Holmes Jones
Mary Virginia Kingsbury
Mary Lyndell Lukens
Allen I. Myers
Esther Snyder Nay
Katherine Price Olin
Dorothy Herrmann
Colafemina
Dorothea Darlington Cope
Allison Griscom Cornog
William Lindsay Cornog
(Deceased)
Beulah Kerns Criswell
Mary Ingraham Crosley
Marcus P. Dowdell
Edith Young Farley
John P. Ferris
Elizabeth Watson Gardy
Jane Brown Gemmill
Helen Robey Glenn
Virginia Adams Goehring
Russell Conwell Gourley
Madeleine Krauskopf
Hillman
Charles Manley Howell
Jessie Louise Lewis
C. Raymond Michener
Katherine Fahnestock Miller
Isabel Briggs Myers
Jacob Nevyas
Harry A . Olin
Esther Taylor O’Neill
Nora Wain Osland-Hill
Mary Griest Paul
Drew Pearson
Allin H. Pierce
fHelen Biddle Porter
Esther Hayes Reed
Eleanor Runk Reppert
William Lincoln Ridpath, Jr.
Mary Elizabeth Wilson
Ridpath
tPhebe Underhill Seaman
Phyllis Komori Sellers
Andrew Simpson
Dorothy Paxson Curtiss
Lena Clark Eagan
Thomas Leggett Eagan
David B. Fell
Doris Hays Fenton
Frank W . Fetter
Mildred Williard Fry
Sara Jane Mayhew Gayner
Edna May Davies Gibson
Clifford R. Gillam
Cornelia Stabler Gillam
Charlotte Bunting Green
David Davis Griscom
C. Waldo Haldeman, Jr.
Ervin L Hall
Gertude McCabe Harvey
William Waldo Hayes
Paul Mitchell Hess
Marion L. Hoag
Elizabeth Jones Holden
James Minshall Holden
Beatrice Whiteside Hood
Jesse G. Johnson
Helen V . Macartney
Charlotte Goette McCurdy
Leon M. Pearson
Gladys Seaman Pell
Mary Tyler Powell
Ellen Swartz Pratt
Hope Richardson Roberts
Charlotte Moore Sitterly
Ethel Means Skelly
Gladys Hammond Stein
Mary Donovan Stuart
Marguerite Drew Vedeler
Harriet Renshaw Widing
Ralph Erdman Wilson
Ruth Rodenboh Wright
Clarence Howard Yoder
CLASS OF 1921
Class Representative:
May Frescoln Sangree
Number of Donors
55
Participation
31.07%
Alumni Fund
$966.50
Total Gifts
$966.50
Claire Strawn Albertson
Edwin R. Albertson
Margaret Embery Allen
Elizabeth F. Barth
Edward Evans Bartleson
Grant E. Benjamin
George L. Burnett
Paul W . Chandler
Virginia L. Coleman
Charles B. Coles
Charlesanna B. Coles
Leon H. Collins
Emilie White Dearborn
David Mathias Dennison
Miriam Jenkins Elsbree
Way land Hoyt Elsbree
Lee Weiss Frank
Miriam Baily Gilpin
Henrietta Stewart Gonzalez
Mary Dotterer Harbison
William Minton Harvey
Eleanore Butler Holzknecht
Ella R. Hoyt
George Bement Jackson
Elizabeth Atherholt Kemp
William P. Kemp
John William Klopp
Ruth Woodward Klopp
Elizabeth Knabe
Charles Plummer Larkin, Jr.
Marjorie Kistler Larkin
Emily Hallauer Lower
Charles Wildey Lukens
Albert C. Mammel
C. Rogers McCullough
Harriette Greiner McLean
Grace Wilson Miller
Grace Edna Moore
Donald S. Morgan
Carlisle Morse
Dorothy Kinsley Moylan
Paula Pagelow
Caroline Philips
Roberta Gilmore Poland
George A. Powell
Helen E. Samuel
May Frescoln Sangree
Frances Miller Scott
Marion Deputy Tuft
Helen Knight Warren
George Malcolm West
Gladys Newton West
Edith Evans Wiese
J. Frederic Wiese
Hannah Eavenson Wood
CLASS OF 1922
Class Representative:
W illiam B. Broslus
Number of Donors
43
Participation
24.71%
Margaret Culin Adams
A. Laurence Baxter
Ernest Mason Bliss
Bernice Gordon Bonner
Dorothy Anderson Bowler
William B. Brosius
Edward Lambert Campbell
Lavinia Weihenmayer
Campbell
Marian Satterthwaite
Carnovsky
Charlotte Stevens Chrisman
William R. Cisney
Allen Gray Clark
Walton Canby Ferris
(Deceased)
Elizabeth Walter Furnas
Carl J. Geiges
Helen Thorne Griscom
Benjamin E. Groff
Avery Draper Harrington
John Maddox Hilgert
Henrietta Keller Howell
Frank H. Jackson
Jeannette Dell Jones
F. Norton Landon
Frank H. Lemke
Anne Gault Lewis
William Sproul Lewis
11
Dorothy Josephine Little
Robin Breuninger Lukens
Dorothy Varian McGeorge
Mary Baumgartner Miller
Augustine F. S. Musante
Jean Knowles Reymond
Katherine Crosby Robinson
Harry McKinley Sellers
Eleanor Anna Shinn
Richard William Slocum
Sarah Stabler Stabler
John Leech Stainton
Dorothy Haines Stephenson
Carolyn Braun worth Stout
Elsie Smith Thompson
Florence Wildman Trullinger
Katherine Briegel Vanderbilt
William Pettit Ware
CLASS OF 1923
Class Representative:
Samuel B. Gaumer
Number of Donors
60
Participation
41.67%
Alumni Fund
$2,208.16
Total Gifts
$2,208.16
Joseph Garner Anthony
Lester Asplundh
W . Hamilton Aulenbach
Albert Edmund Baker
Anna Roberts Brosius
Howard Bertram Brunner
T. Frederic Chestnut
Cornelia Coy Clark
J. Edward Clyde
James Alexander Cochrane
Anna Bancroft Coles
Margaret Verna Doty
Frances Gillespie Drake
Katharine Hayes Durand
Louis Robert Enslin
Isabelle Fussell Ewing
John C. Fretz
Samuel B. Gaumer
Alfred B. Gundlack
Ned Sherry Hankins
Ralf Lee Hartwell
Eleanore Boyd Holcombe
Susan Mason Kendall
Lawrence Bosler Lewis
William A . Limberger
Wallace Ross Linton
John C. Longstreth
Alice Hoagland MacNair
Gertrude Malz
Elizabeth Lanning Massie
Howard D. Merion
Tacy Walton Merion
Lillian Perkins Metcalf
Ann Johnson Moore
Ferdinand L. Nofer
Margaret Hayes Oppenlander
Elizabeth C. Palmer
William H . Paxson
Kathryn Pflaum
C. Gayton Postlethwaite
Albert W . Preston
Walter Carroll Pusey, Jr.
Arthur J. Rawson
Margaret Bryd Rawson
Henry D. Rentschler
Sara Bitler Reynolds
Andrew Bickley Ritter
Elsie Brown Roberts
Helen Parrott Roberts
Alban E. Rogers
Walter Scott Rumble
Edward J. Rutter
Walter Andrew Schulz
Kathryn Cleckner Skinkle
Herbert B. Spackman
C. Norman Stabler
Louise Firmin Thomas
H. Chandlee Turner, Jr.
Roselynd Atherholt Wood
CLASS OF 1924
Class Representative:
Margaret Levering Pnhl
Number of Donors
66
Participation
34.15%
Alumni Fund
$1,747.00
Total Gifts
$1,797.00
Dorothy McClaren Anthony
Lewis S. Ayars, Jr.
C. Clifford Barnes
Alice Schrack Batteiger
Ruth Eleanor Bonner
Florence Green Broomall
12
Riddell Young Brown
Nella Arnold Bu?kman
Clarence Howard Carr
Herbert Eyres Cliff
Samuel L. Cornish
Guy W . Davis
Annette Engell Davison
Esther Fisher Duryee
Margaret Driscoll Duryee
Esther Hicks Emory
Raymond F. Farringer
Mary Melvin Frodi
Eleanor Carmichael
Gallagher
Edward Atkinson Green
Edward Hicks Green, II
Allan K. Grim
Janet Krall Groff
Lois Vanderkleed Haws
Elizabeth Hamilton Heazlett
Robert C. Hubbs
(Deceased)
Margaret Jessen
La telle McKee LaFollette, Jr.
Luther Lloyd Linderman
Kenneth Payne Martin
Mary Moore Miller
H . Merle Mulloy
Louise Davis Mulloy
Robert Logan Myers
Margaret Levering Puhl
Franz Linck Ralston
Roger S. Russell
Adele Weiler Sargent
Charles Jacob Seltzer, Jr.
Dorothy Evans Seltzer
Mary Elizabeth Shinn
Nellie Henderson Stadler
Esther Briegel Stehle
Mary Swartzlander
Thomas Thomson Taylor
C. Margaret Kennedy
Thompson
J. Howard Thompson, Jr.
James Charles Tily
Gladys Cisney Trismen
Donald Leslie Velde
Albert James Williams, Jr.
Holland Williamson
Mildred Fawcett Wilson
Elizabeth Bean Wood
tE . Lawrence Worstall
Gertude W . Yarnall
General Electric
CLASS OF 1925
Class Representative:
Lloyd Goman
Number of Donors
64
Participation
45.71%
Alumni Fund
$2,806.00
Total Gifts
$2,816.00
Elizabeth Biddle Ayars
Margaret Pitkin Bainbridge
Alan James Blau
Jean Marsh Brownfield
Benjamin R. Burdsall
Robert H. Burdsall
Anna T. Burr
Alice Reddie Callaghan
Louise Campion
S. Robinson Coale
William B. Cudlip
Howard Langworthy
Davis, Jr.
Margaret Hopkins deVeer
Elizabeth Lukens Elliott
Charles M. Fairbanks
Agnes Gowing Ferrell
Elizabeth Pollard Fetter
Helen Kressley Flinn
Elizabeth Murray Gaffney
Catherine Cudlip Garvey
Lloyd Goman
George William Grenhart
Samuel Linton Hayes, Jr.
David K. Hemmerly
W . Carlton Henderson
Lydia T. Hicks
Helen Yarnall Jackson
Spencer R. Keare
Virginia Griffiths Keen
Dorothy Burt Kistler
Lester S. Knapp
Jean C. Lawrence
Marjorie Lapham Lewis
Charles H . Limberger
William F . Livermore
Beatrice Clugston Moore
Helen G. Moore
Dorothy Liberton Nash
Harry E. Oppenlander
Mary Virginia Parkhurst
Helen Lippincott Parrish
May E. Parry
Mary Lees Paschall
Margaret W ay Pickett
t George Plowman
Anna Powell Poole
Margaret Koegel Robart
Alice Martha Rogers
Hilda Grace Ruch
Inez Coulter Russell
Joseph Brooks Shane
May Josephine Smith
Katherine Cornell Stainton
Alfred K. Stidham
Muriel Thomas Stromberg
Anna Engle Taylor
Eleanor Bonner Webb
Miriam Locke Wilbur
Margaret Pusey Williams
Helen M. Williamson
Elizabeth Golket Wilson
Walter K. Woolman, Jr.
Marjorie Voelker Worstall
C. Alfred Zinn
General Electric
CLASS OF 1926
Class Representative:
Mary Passmore Plowman
Number of Donors
60
Participation
32.68%
Alumni Fund
$1,384.00
Total Gifts
$3,384.00
Audrey Bond Alciatore
Florence Kennedy Bagley
Edith Nicely Bodine
Elizabeth Bartleson Booth
Carol Paxson Brainerd
George Ball Clothier
William C. Coles, Jr.
Wilmer Dayton Coles
Frances Pace Crosby
Lydia Roberts Dunham
Harold Hathaway Dunham
Emilie Spear Dutton
Marjorie Macadam Ellis
Jenny Parks Forwood
Mary Althouse Goman
Virginia Brown Greer
Dorothy Merrill Gulick
Leonard M. Hanan
Hanson Haines Hodge
Arnold T. Hutcheson
Estelle Liggett-Hickey
Jarden
Louise Merritt Kennedy
Marretta Powell King
Beatrice A. Lamb
Clara Eleanore Leech
Elizabeth Burton Levering
Harry Lewis Lundy
Mabel Engle McMurtrie
tHarold E. Mertz
Orrick Metcalfe
Bertha White Nason
William Frederick Ogden
Rogers Palmer
E. Dillwyn Parrish
Katharine Turner Parsons
Cornelia Chapman Pittenger
William B. Plate
Frances Spence Plate
Mary Passmore Plowman
Elizabeth Sharpies Pusey
Milton D. Reinhardsen
G. Raymond Rettew
Eunice Jones Russell
Ruth Ennis Sawyer
Fletcher Seymour, Jr.
Frank Maxwell Shuster
Marjorie Mode Tily
Frederick S. Townley
Katharine Carl Whitney
Neil H. Wilson
General Electric
CLASS OF 1927
Class Representative:
John H. Lippincott, Jr.
Number of Donors
79
Participation
45.93%
Alumni Fund
$2,405.00
Total Gifts
$2,455.00
♦♦Esther Howard Allen
Rebecca Marsh Baker
William H. Barcus
Elizabeth Winchester
Barnhardt
LeRoy G. Baum
George M. Booth
Louise Merritt Brandt
Sarah Pratt Brock
W . Turner Clack
Robert B. Clothier
Ruth McCauley Clyde
Marcia Perry Cook
Eugene M. Cooley
Margaret Brann Cooper
Ruth E. Cornell
Elizabeth Brooks Corrigan
Dorothea Kern Devereux
Johanna Zuydhoek Dickie
Marion Palmenberg Frank
Jessie Hoffman Gilmore
S. Warren Hall, IH
Mary J. Hornaday
Harold R. Hutcheson
Edward C. Jenkins
A . Sidney Johnson, Jr.
Margaret Witsil Johnson
Robert E. L. Johnson
Nolan L. Kaltreider
Louise Parkhurst Krug
Robert W . Lafore
Edward F. Lang
Robert F. Lee
Edith Hull Leeds
P. Burdette Lewis
Thomas Lightfoot
Robert L. Lindahl
John H . Lippincott, Jr.
Harris H. Little
May Brown Lloyd
Elizabeth Huey MacNutt
Helen Woodward Manges
Howard T. McCone
Richard H. McFeely
George W . McKeag
Anna R. Meloney
Anna Williams Metcalfe
Alberta Sauter Moock
Edwin L. Palmer, Jr.
Samuel C. Palmer, Jr.
J. Roland Pennock
William C. Pickett
Samuel R. M. Reynolds
Charles E. Rickards
Alice Jenkinson Ripley
Watson B. Rulon
William J. Rust
Katharine Snyder Sasse
James H. Sellers
William H . Sill
Sarah Percy Simms
Walter O. Simon
Ruth Service Stidham
Erma Goldsmith Strauss
Walter S. Studdiford
Theodore K. Suckow
Laurence J. Test
Elizabeth McCabe Thieme
Jack B. Thompson
Lois Thompson Thompson
William P. Tollinger
Mary Meyer Tolman
Virginia Melick Turner
Catharine Cocks Vail
T . George Van Hart
Carolyn Hearne Williams
Elmer D. W ilt, Jr.
tNorman H . Winde
Amelia Miller Woolford
Ruth Longacre Wright
CLASS OF 1928
Class Representative:
James H. Colket
Number of Donors
63
Participation
40.13%
Alumni Fund
$1,802.00
Total Gifts
$1,802.00
Arthur Gorham Baker
Olive Deane Baker
Harold Silver Berry
Elizabeth Vaughan Berry
Anne Philips Blake
Avery F. Blake
William Tlfomas Branen
Marian Pratt Burdick
Vincent Gilpin Bush
Elizabeth Van Brakle Coffin
James H. Colket
John J. Coughlin
Walter F. Denkhaus
Martha Gibbons Doubman
John Dutton
Emma Peaslee Engle
Caroline Lippincott Forman
Thomas H. L. Foster
Gertrude Sanders Friedman
Elizabeth Moifitt Gates
Julie Chapman Hunt
Everett U. Irish
Margaret DeLaney Johnston
Ruth E. Kern
Gertrude Gilmore Lafore
Richard Lippincott
Katherine Rittenhouse
Long
Marguerite Lukens
Holbrook Mann MacNeille
Esther Shallcross Magee
Caroline Biddle Malin
Edna Shoemaker Mallen
Esther Felter Mallonee
Margaret Somerville
Mclnerney
Ruey Sieger Messenger
Isabelle Bennett Monroe
Thomas Moore, Jr.
Theodore E. Nickles, Jr.
Douglass W . Orr
Mary Sullivan Patterson
Elisabeth Follwell Pratt
Anne Kennedy Rapport
Winifred Rumble Reynolds
Dorothy Brown Rickards
Hilah Rounds
Robert L. Silber
Frances Dowdy Simon
Newlin R. Smith
Theodore Smithers
Nell Rubins Thompson
Charles E. Tilton
Raymond A . Townley
Selden Y . Trimble, IV
Ann Thompson Wainwright
Ora Lewis Wheatley
Robert K. Whitten
Esther Wilson Widing
Theodore Widing
Gertrude Jolls Winde
Mary Miller Livezey
Wolferth
Alice Jemison Wood
Frances Ramsey Worth
Charlotte Salmon Wright
General Electric
CLASS OF 1929
Class Representative:
Mary Roberts Calhoun
Number of Donors
69
Participation
45.70%
Alumni Fund
$3,705.00
Total Gifts
$3,705.00
Bradley C. Algeo, Jr.
Milton J. Atkinson
Alice Hutchinson Ayres
Howard Alison Baker
Caroline Robison Bishop
Alice Entrekin Brown
Joseph Calhoun
Mary Roberts Calhoun
Eleanor Powell Case
Rebecca Kirk Blackburn
Chesnut
Marion Harris Churchill
Philip E. Coleman, 3rd
Walter B. Coleman
Oliver Hammond Coles
Margaret Worth Crowther
Horace F. Darlington
Robert Gates Dawes
Howard M. Drake
Alice Stout Edwards
James Downey Egleson
Constance Sarah Gaskill
H . Thomas Hallowell, Jr.
Donald Myers Hamilton
Julia Kehew Hamilton
Anne Lefever Hodge
Paul M. James
Margaret Walton Jensen
George Hay Kain, Jr.
Isabel Morgan Lauder
Morris M. Lee, Jr.
Arthur F. Magill
Eleanor Burch Martin
Frank H . Martin, Jr.
Mary Magruder Mayer
Catharine Emhardt McCook
Dorothy Shoemaker
McDiarmid
Wilbur M. McFeely
Horace B. McGuire
Elizabeth Ogden McLain
Alumni Issue
Witt McLain, III
James A . Michener
Walter A. Muir
Elinor Brecht Neumann
Bertha Hull Paxson
Fred J. Powell
Cora Palmenberg Pugh
Gertrude Paxson Seibert
Walter R. Seibert
Thomas P. Sharpies
Herbert I. Slifer
Daniel F. Smith
Grace Heritage Smith
Marion Bonner Smith
Marion Collins Smith
Harold Edward Snyder
Harold Elam Snyder
Donovan B. Spangler
Martha J. Stauffer
Shaler Stidham
Elizabeth Thompson
Van Hart
Louise V . Eaton Walker
James Pearce Wantz, Jr.
Carolyn Forstner Wardle
Roberta Boak Wasser
Frederick G. Weigand
Fisher White
William B. Wickersham
Elizabeth Reynolds Wilbur
Howard J. Wood
General Electric
CLASS OF 1930
Class Representatives:
Ruth Cleaver Carter
and
Harold F. Carter
Number of Donors
66
Participation
46.48%
Alumni Fund
$1,295.00
Total Gifts
$3,872.00
Francis C. Alden
Jean Fahringer Biddle
Dorothy W olf Bikle
Robert F. Bishop
Mary McKenzie Bliss
Ruth Jackson Boone
William A . Boone
Robert Lippincott Booth
Louis S. Bringhurst
Mary Trimble Byars
Harold Frederick Carter
Ruth Cleaver Carter
Henry B. Coles, Jr.
Marvin R. Coles
Marian Lillian Colson
Julien Davies Cornell
Virginia Stratton Cornell
Pauline Calhoun Darlington
Franklin Carnell Eden
Edgar I. Emerson
Eleanor Flexner
Warner W . Gardner
Dorothy Ditter Gondos
Lisle Gould
Margaret Gurney
Bertram Hammell ■
Eldredge Milton Hiller
Ray Perkins Hunt
Ada Fuller Keefer
Marian Reynolds Kirk
Frances Eaton Kraaymes
Helen Headley Krist
Cecilia Garrigues Kuehner
Helen Hadley Larson
Malcolm R. Longshore
Alexander J. McCloskey, Jr.
Mildred Underwood McHenry
Mary Temple Newman
Marian Hamming Nicely
Thomas S. Nicely _
Dorothy Ackart Nichols
Henry L. Parrish
Edward M. Passmore
Nancy Deane Passmore
William Poole
Robert B. Redman
Martha Bantom Samuel
Frederick C. Schreiber
Theodora Abbott Schreiber
Anna Rickards Sensenig
Marion Staley Sharpies
Helen Cecile Bessemer
Stollnitz
Paul T . Strong
Joseph T. Sullivan
Henry G. Swain
Dwight I. Thompson
Ferris Thomsen
October, 1955
Ralph W . Tipping
Haines Turner
Sarah Brecht Wert
Elizabeth Harbold Westkott
Stanley I. Winde
John Sharpless Worth
Merida Grey Worth
Jay Yong Yang
Ralph Yoder
CLASS OF 1931
Class Representatives:
Jane Michener Spangler
and
Louise Fisher Cleaver
Number of Donors
83
Participation
47.16%
Alumni Fund
$2,667.00
Total Gifts
$2,672.00
Anonymous
Kathryn Kerlin Albertson
Joseph Atkinson
Clifford C. Baker
William Ingram Battin, Jr.
Marguerite Emma Baur
Clement M. Biddle, Jr.
William Blum, Jr.
Jean Harvey Bodman
Richard C. Bond
Elizabeth Reeves Bossart
John Morgan Brecht
Janet Walton Burke
Irwin G. Burton
Frank Sharp Christian, Jr.
Martha Wood Christian
Louise Fisher Cleaver
Ralph L. Connor
John M. Cookenbach
John D. Corbit, Jr.
William James Cresson, Jr.
Margaret Orr Curtis
Carl K. Dellmuth
Hyman J. Diamond
Helen Lafore Forstall
Margaret Dewees Foster
Alice Wardell Grafflin
William Newman Gray, 3rd
Betty De Long Greulich
Jerome T. W . Ha
Mary Alma Hull Hoy
Esther Seaman Jackson
Lawrence E. Jewett
Thomas S. Keefer, Jr.
Robert E. Kintner
Clara Sigman Kirsch
Anna Ridgway Lang
tBarbara Pearson Lange
Thomas Willets Lapham
Mary Palmer Lichtenberg
J. Gordon Linpincott
Janet Evans Lyon
Beatrice Beach MacLeod
Ruth Davis Mahaffey
Donald K. McGarrah
Ruth Stauffer McKee
EHsabeth Hiebel Metzl
Elizabeth Maxfield Miller
♦»Florence V . Miller
Margaret Zabriskie Nichols
Edward Lee Noyes
Margaret Davis Palmer
Rutherford T. Phillips
Jean Hodge Pitcher
David Lukens Price
Kathryn Sonneborn Read
Eilen Fernon Reisner
Walter H . Robinson
Caroline Jackson Rushmore
Leon A. Rushmore, Jr.
Amelia Emhardt Sands
Roy David Simon
Ruth Calwell Snyder
Jane Michener Spangler
Marjorie M. Starbard
David Walter Stickney
Douglas A. Sunderland
Esther Dudley Swern
Robert Louis Testwuide
Margaret Williams
Thompson
Helen Walter Thomsen
Donald C. Turner
William Robert Tyson
Daulton G. Viskniskki
Josenh H . Walter, Jr.
Merritt S. Webster
Howard Carter Westwood
Frank H . Williams
Raymond H . Wilson, Jr.
Robert H. Wilson
Barbara Briggs Winde
Natalie Harper Wood
Charles Brooke Worth
General Electric
CLASS OF 1932
Class Representative:
Thomas C. Park, Jr.
Number of Donors
57
Participation
38.85%
Alumni Fund
$1,241.38
Total Gifts
$1,266.38
Dorothy Slee Algeo
William R. Allstetter
E. Sidney Baker
Katharine Hunt Bennett
Anne Chapman Booth
Katherine Ravi Booth
Katharine Warren Coles
Joseph E. Colson
Anne Worth Crowther
Dorothy Keller Curll
Winifred Marvin Daniell
Katharine Wilson Davies
Edmund Dawes
Anna J. De Armond
James B. Doak
Winston M. Dudley
William W . Eaton
Helena Salmon Fisher
Frances Reinhold Fussell
Margaret Littlewood Gibbs
Dorothy Ogle Graham
Robert E. Hadeler
Morris L. Hicks
Florence A. Hoadley
Edwards J. Johns
Louise Isfort Jones
tClark Kerr
Max Kohn
Richard W . Leach
Edna Pusey Legg
Davis L. Lewis, Jr.
Edith Bowman Lippincott
Mary Tyler Lippincott
Benjamin Ludlow, Jr.
Edwin Scott Lutton
Virginia Melchior Lutton
Jean Walton Noyes
Helen W est Nutting
Thomas C. Park, Jr.
William H. Perloff
Mary Fisher Plumb
Ray L. Potter
Sarah Sargent Ramberg
Henry C. Rudy
Bertram H . Schaffner
Frederick D. Silber, Jr.
Priscilla Yard Silber
Ruth Hadley- Smith
Wales E. Smith
Harry E. Sprogell
Helen Gates Taylor
Monroe Van Sant
Lewis E. Walton
Louis S. Walton. .Tr
T’riscilla Miller Weed
E-velvn Patterson
Wickersham
Carolyn .Tones Williams
General Electric
CLASS OF 1933
Class Representative:
James L. Crider, Jr.
Number of Donors
73
Participation
41.24%
Alumni Fund
S2.352.75
Total Gifts
$2,352.75
Willis C. Armstrong
H. Bradford Arnold
John M. C. Betts
Barbara Batt Bond
Maradel Geuting Burton
Mary Tupner Cable
Elizabeth Scattergood
Carson
Aldyth Longshore Claiborn
Joseph D. Coppock
Jeannette Marr Corbett
Hunter Corbett
.Tames L. Crider, .Tr.
Margaret Ball Dellmuth
Elizabeth Dickinson
Devecis
Henry F. Donahower
Mark Dresden
Elizabeth Falconer
Bassett Ferguson
Frank E. Fischer
Molly Yard Garrett
Sylvester Garrett
Lewis M. Gill
Yvonne Muser Given
Janet Graves
Walter W . Herrmann
George T. Joyce
William H . Kain
Barbara Crosse Kellogg
Jessie Brown Kimmel
Loretta Mercer LaClair
Marie Brede Laug
William F. Lee
Katherine Rowe Lentz
Eugenie Harshbarger Lewis
Franklin Miller, Jr.
Katharine Morris Mills
Marcia Lamond Moxey
Ralf H . Owen
Frances Passmore Pike
H . Lloyd Pike
Louise Hiller Poole
Franklin Porter
Nina Volkmar Powell
Homer R. Reese
Jane Ashby Rolandelly
Jane Sicher Rosenthal
Robert V . Schembs
Erik L. Sjostrom
Jane Moore Smith
Thomas R. Smith
W . Jerome Smith
Olive Adams Sonen
Babette Schiller Spiegel
H . Parker Stamford
Winifred Scales Stearns
Willis J. Stetson
Paul J. Strayer
Sylvia Rush Thornally
Catherine Pierson Turner
Howard S. Turner
Marjorie Mohan Turville
Daniel S. Volkmar
J. Edward Walker
Edith Jackson Walter
Anne Mode Walton
Edward H . Walton
Elizabeth Stammelbach
Welfling
Weldon W . Welfling
Constance Draper Welsh
Elizabeth Passmore Willis
Richard Brunner Willis
Alla Tomashevsky Wright
Velma Wetzel Zellner
General Electric
CLASS OF 1934
Class Representative:
S. Dean Caldwell, III
Number of Donors
67
Participation
37.02%
Alumni Fund
$1,877.00
Total Gifts
$1,877.00
John Abrams
Frances Allen Archer
Walter T. Baker, Jr.
Elizabeth Geddes Baker
Donald W . Baxter
Nina Bowers Beecham
John S. Brod
Robert M. Browning
Mimi Schafer Buresh
Robert J. Cadigan
**S. Dean Caldwell, III
Helen Mansfield Carroll
Thomas G. Casey
Lucile Montgomery Churchill
John S. Clement, Jr.
Margaret Anderson Crowley
Elizabeth Seaman Dawes
Edwina Embree Devereux
Ruth Kewley Donahower
Dorothy Coleman Engler
Janet Snedden Finch
Kathleen Dillon Fraze
F. Barron Freeman
Howard French
Lucinda Thomas
Hafkensehiel
Raymond M. Immerwahr
Katherine Grier Joyce
James F. Kelly
M. Thomas Kennedy
Calvin T. Klopp
Hilda Gruenberg Krech
Isabella Eustice Leach
Mabel Clement Lee
Martha Tufts Lindley
Jane Parrott Macgill
L. Thomas Macgill, Jr.
Grace Shelly Mader
John K. Mahon
Clifford E. Maser
Anne Bowly Maxfield
Ben Tillman Moore
Marian Hubbell Mowatt
G. William Orr
Elinor Robinson Pennock
James A. Perkins
Frank C. Pierson
Alice Burton Potter
Elizabeth Carver Preston
Charles C. Price, III
Lorraine Marshall Pyle
Renato A. Ricca
Ruth Lippincott Rice
Ellis B. Ridgway, Jr.
Sarah Dunning Schear
Grace Biddle Schembs
Margaret Wolman Schwartz
Helen Packard Smith
Elizabeth Blessing'
vVan Kirk
Walter A . Vela
Katharine Pennypacker
Waterhouse
Charles D. Watland
Esther Pierson Wenaas
Louise Stubbs Williams
Ned B. Williams
Frederick E. Willits
Porter R. Wray
Robert A. Young, Jr.
General Electric
CLASS OF 1935
Class Representative:
Doris S. Lippincott
Number of Donors
79
Participation
53.74%
Alumni Fund
$1,331.57
Total Gifts
$1,331.57
James Reid Alburger
Caroline Hales Bailey
Richard G. Barker
Kathryn Bassett
Elizabeth Lane Beardsley
Clarence D. Bell
Dorothy Koch Bestor
Thomas R. Butler
Rosemary Cowden Cadigan
Mary Schorer Cake
Dorothy Glenn Clement
Elizabeth Blair Cochran
Hazel Morland Conr.ow
W . Roger Cooper
Marcia Hadzsits Crawford
George P. Cuttino
David E. Davis
Shirley Davis
Elizabeth Woodbridge Doak
Galen W . Ewing
Elizabeth Chaney Ferguson
Frances C. Fetter
James M. Funke
Edith Serrill Galloway
Donald L. Glenn
D. Mace Gowing
Gerald S. Greene
Marian Davis Griffith
Paul A . Hadley
Cynthia Wentworth
Hannum
Edson S. Harris, Jr.
Kenneth W . Hechler
David Heilig
Theodore Herman
H . Kimble Hicks
James C. Hill
Barbara Ivins
Emily D. Jarratt
Van Dusen Kennedy
E. Frederick Koster
Robert B. Lewis
Doris Sonneborn Lippincott
Margaret Peters Mathews
Kathleen Burnett McCann
Kate Walker McCrumm
Dino E. P. McCurdy
William J. Mercer
Robert Carl Mitterling
John Moxey
Janet Viskniskki Munson
Elizabeth Hodges Murphy
Caroline Dunham Naylor
John H . Nixon
13
Mary Dobbins Owen
Michael S. Paulson
Marguerite Tamblyn
Pierson
Emma Michael Reynolds
James N . Rice
Margaret Bye Richie
Gilbert W . Roberts
Marcy F. Roderick
Margaret Hardy Sachter
Jean Hammer Schultz
Betty Owens Sheehy
Elizabeth Thomson Shulman
Edward M. Siegel
Watson Snyder, Jr.
David J. Somers
Georgia Heathcote Stallman
Edith Lent Taylor
William C. Thomas
James A . Turner, Jr.
Sue Thomas Turner
Jean Brosius Walton
Elizabeth Reller Warrick
Sylvia L . W ay
Fritz J. Weyl
Stuart Wilder, Jr.
Ethel Coppock Woodbury
CLASS OF 1936
Class Representatives:
Clayton L. Farrady, Jr.
and
Mary Elma W hite Price
Number of Donors
67
Participation
41.61%
Alumni Fund
$1,434.50
Total Gifts
$1,434.50
Elsie Pitman Avila
Winifred Johnson Baker
Helen Price Belser
Richard L. Bigelow, Jr.
William C. Bradbury
Lorraine Patterson Bradbury
Mary McCarty Bye
Carolyn Keyes Cadwallader
T. Sidney Cadwallader, II
Hugh H. Calhoun
Eleanor Gies Coes
Margery McKay Cridland
Philip D. Croll
Philip A . Crowl
Ruth Strattan Cummins
Emily P. Dodge
Lenore Boyer Dunn
J. Earle Edwards, Jr.
Alice Robinson Erb
Clayton L. Farrady, Jr.
James A. Finley, Jr.
Walter S. Garrison, Jr.
Charles R. Gerner
Helen Malone Glass
Florence Lyons Gowing
Mary Laird Graeser
Robert K. Greenfield
Franklin J. Gutchess
Virginia Alleman Hartswick
Joan Keller Hertzberg
Elisabeth Coale Humphrey
Richard A. Humphrey
Elizabeth Emmel Ives
Katherine Lever
Thomas H. Loeb
Ruth Henderson McDowell
Barbara Blackburn Myers
Henry H. Newell
Paul B. Oehmann
Catherine Bays Parrish
Lawrence L. Parrish
Priscilla Johnson Patton
Jean Bredin Perkins
Marlette Plum Petze
Helen Shilcock Post
Richard Post
Jane McCord Potts
Mary Elma White Price
Franklin E. Satterthwaite
Robert S. Schairer
Margaret Barber Scholten
David H. Scull
John W . Seybold
John P. Sinclair
Mary Tonkin Smith
Elizabeth Krider Snowden
Ethel Stover Strider
Christine Robinson Taylor
William D. Taylor
Margaret M. Tilton
Ruth Murray Tobey
14
Robert C. Turner
Yuri Sakami Uyemura
Louise Coates Watkins
William F. Whyte
Elizabeth Smith Winn
Elizabeth Coffin Wright
CLASS OF 1937
Class Representative:
A. Thomas Hallowell
Number of Donors
85
Participation
43.81%
Alumni Fund
$1,859.25
Total Gifts
$1,859.25
Anonymous
Samuel F. Ashelman, Jr.
Anne Muste Baker
»»Walter S. Barclay
John Newlin Beck
Katharine White Beecher
Margaret Parton Britter
Elizabeth Dobson Broomell
G. Lutpon Broomell, Jr.
James E. Buckingham
Leonard J. G. Burski
Barbara Weiss Cartwright
Philip D. Cartwright
Arnold F. Clark
James H . Clarke
Benjamin Cooper
William N . Dailey
Isabel Benkert Daly
William Diebold, Jr.
Holly Ross Draper
Ruth Shoemaker Flaccus
George E. Forsythe
Joan Kelley Fowler
Ward S. Fowler
Margaret L. Germann
Grace Eckman Gilbert
Lyle B. Gill
Wesley R. Goddard
Joseph H . Hafkenschiel, Jr.
Mason Haire
A . Thomas Hallowell
Richard Heavenrich
Alma B. Helbing
Ernest R. Herbster
Kate Meyer Herman
Ruth Lewis Hill
Louise P. Housel
Barbara Lesher Hughes
Frank A. Hutson, Jr.
Samuel I. Kalkstein
Elizabeth Jackson Kamp
Robert Klaber
Wayne L. Lees
Charles W . Loeb
W . Allen Longshore, Jr.
James A. Murphy
William M. Muth
Myrtle Corliss Nash
Hazel Burritt Oehler
T. H . Dudley Perkins, Jr.
Margaret Rhoads Pohe
Olva Faust Quick
Adele Mills Riley
Edwin P. Rome
Barton W . Rope
Elizabeth Rowland
Eugene M. Schaffran
Irving S. Schwartz
Erwin F. Shrader
Anne Brooke Smith
Manning A. Smith
Martha L. Smith
Barbara Brooks Smoyer
C. Arthur Spaulding, Jr.
Thomas F. Spencer
Helen Solis-Cohen Spigel
Patty Morris Stabler
Charles G. Steinway
Richard J. Storr
F. Gordon Straka
Maragret Oupitt Struble
Leonard F. Swift
Josephine Peters Terrell
Isabel Wilde Thomson
Alice Hill Turner
Joseph A . Turner, Jr.
Marjorie Kleine Vela
Barbara Pearson Walker
Ann E. Whitcraft
Sidney L. Wickenhaver
Fred J. Wiest, Jr.
Jean Dithridge Wohl sen
John Henry Wood, Jr.
Muriel Eckes Zacharias
Emily Whitman Zaieny
General Electric
CLASS OF 1938
Class Representative:
John E. Baer
Number of Donors
90
Participation
43.06%
Alumni Fund
$2,058.50
Total Gifts
$2,058.50
Alfred F. Ash
Margaret Peter Ashelman
Jane Klaer Aspinall
John E. Baer
James H. Beardsley
Ellen Schock Bishop
Boris Blai, Jr.
George D. Braden
John H . Breckenridge
Miriam Booth Breckenridge
John H. Brown
Lois Wright Brown
** Charles A . Caldwell
Harriet Dana Carroll
William R. Carroll
David W . Chaney
Faith Barsalow Chaney
Carl C. Colket
Elizabeth Stubbs Cooper
George B. Cooper
Elizabeth Mims Couch
Elise Hagedorn Cristol
Mary E. Dumm
Jane Reuter Duvall
Marjorie Van Deusen
Edwards
Alice Femsler Elbert
Eleanor Ferguson
Jean Tompkins Fort
Ann Lapham Frazer
E. Wayne Frazer
Elizabeth Brosius Garrison
Kermit Gordon
William Thayer Harrison
Robert Heineman
Catharine M. Hitchcock
R. Murray Hoffman, Jr.
Elizabeth W ay Honeyman
Elizabeth Bittle Johns
Charlotte Weaver Jones
Geoffrey Keller
Nathan S. Kline
Janet Vaughn Koch
Mary Jane Miller Koster
Henry E. B. Kurtz
Laurence D. Lafore
Jean Anne Evans Lee
Margaret Bill Lewis
John K. Love, Jr.
Clare Heilman Loventhal
Jane Hamilton MacPhail
James A. Malcolm, Jr.
Rachael Greenawalt
Meisenhelder
Ruth Feely Merrill
Carolyn Stetler Miles
Ernest A. Mitler
Georgette Moyer Most
William L. Nute, Jr.
Margaret Davenport Nutt
Nathalie Irvine O’Connell
Peter Oesper
Elizabeth Henszey Owers
Mary Herrick Porter
Sarah Deardorff Reider
Burton Richards
Clarence H. Rosenbaum
Katharine Scherman Rosin
Anne Tracy Rossmoore
Anne Warren Sensenig
Dorothy Sutton Shaffer
Frederick M. Shaffer
Mary McDermott Shideler
Eric L. Simmons
William F. Smith, II
Jean Weltmer Stetson
Elizabeth Watson Stiles
Eleanor Joyce Stone
Virginia Vawter Storr
Rose E. Street
David Todd
Helene Rank Veltfort
Elizabeth Biggerstaff
Wathen
Gertrude S. Weaver
Virginia Newkirk Weltmer
Katharine Richardson
White
Elizabeth Hay Wiest
Deborah O. W ing
Joseph Winston
Elizabeth Matz Wire
Cyrus F. Wood
Richard B. Wray
General Electric
CLASS OF 1939
Class Representative:
John B. Warrington
Number of Donors
78
Participation
41.71%
Alumni Fund
$1,699.49
Total Gifts
$1,699.49
Anonymous
Carlotte Dean Appleton
Mary James Bell
Joseph C. Bender
James H . Blackman
William E. Boam
Lewis Crowder Bose
Mary C. Bowers
Vincent S. Boyer
Nicholas K. Braun
Edward G. Caruthers
tJanet Hill Coerr
Louis F. Coffin, Jr.
F. Marjorie Cook
Dean B. Cowie
Sally McClelland Cox
Lawrence C. Craig
Rachel Martenet Craig
Edward L. Dobbins
John C. Dutton
Ralph H . Fisher
George R. Fornwalt
Alexandra Illmer Forsythe
Jean Davis Gibb
Katherine Gibson Gilbert
Gretchen Collier Gmelin
Mary Grinnell Gordon
Elizabeth Taylor Goshorn
Robert M. Goshorn
Mark Gross
Mary Hoagland Gruen
Dale Linton Herndon
Frederick S. Holderle
Elizabeth Michael Hopkins
Margaret Cheeseman
Huselton
Edmund Jones
Margaret Chase Judd
Elizabeth Goodrich
Kalkstein
Peter Kaufmann
Mary Solis-Cohen Keller
Walter E. Lamb
Robert G. Leinroth
Edward S. Little
William T. Livingston, II
Doris Herold Lund
Leland S. MacPhail, Jr.
Janet Wilson Malcolm
Anne Stone Mcllvain
David McIntyre
Herbert E. Michener, Jr.
Edward M. Morningstar
James S. Ottenberg
William D. Patterson
Gertrude Maginniss Peelle
Robert B. Peelle
John W . Roberts
Jane Martin Roberts
Ann Douglass Salomon
Gertrude Blood Seybold
Jane Shohl
Keith Simmer
Jean C. Slack
Eleanor Pancoast Smith
Margaret Trimble Smith
Nathan L. Smith, Jr.
Elvin R. Souder
Clio Barnes Stearns
Mary Whitford Streit
Betty Walker Strong
Gordon P. Tapley
John C. Thomas
Alden Todd
Bruce R. Valentine
Paula Swarthe Van
Hyning
John B. Warrington, Jr.
Gordon S. Watts
Gary White
Edward H. Worth, Jr.
James S. Zinner
General Electric
CLASS OF 1940
Class Representatives:
Mary Broomell Eberle
and
Charles A. Eberle, Jr.
Number of Donors
126
Participation
56.50%
Alumni Fund
$2,185.50
Total Gifts
$2,185.50
Anonymous
William C. Adamson
Newell G. Alford, Jr.
Richard B. Angell
Henry E. Austin
Robert York Austin
Cornelia Brown Bailey
Anna Flanders Balivet
Ilse Heine Baum
Alden S. Bennett
Eleanor Yearsley Bennett
John L. Bigelow
Edward B. Booher
Myra Williams Booth
Jean Woehling Bosler
Miles Wesley Bowker
Charles Goetzman Braden
Frank Broomell
Katherine Lindsley Camp
William P. Camp
Martha Eastwick Carroll
Miriam W ight Cheeseman
Llewellyn M. Clevenger
Ray Harold Coffman
Ernest David Courant
Alfred D. Cox, Jr.
Marian Edwards Cox
Charles H . Crothers
Hope Griswold Curfman
Ruth Pierce Davis
Barbara Deweese Day
Ralph I. Dunlap, Jr.
Charles A. Eberle, Jr.
Mary Broomell Eberle
Josephine Elias Elverson
Margaret Tebbetts Frantz
Charles A . Gembcrling _
Dorothy Hubbell Gemmill
Claribel Goodwin
Elizabeth K. Graves
Edward F. Green
Robert D. Hall
Laura Knapp Harper
Mary Dunning Harper
Joan Maddy Harris
Arthur C. Hartman, Jr.
Harry H. Haverstick
Marion S. Hayden
Susan Helmick
Edward D. Henderson
Peter Henle
Theda Ostrander Henle
Anne Schechter Hertzberg
Dorothea Nelson Horsfall
Esther Greeley Howes
John R. Huhn, III
George I. Hull
Edward A. Jakle
Jaqueline Parsons James
Donald E. Johnson
Adalyn Purdy Jones
Charles M. Judson
Mary Ellis Kahler
John H . Kaufmann
James G. Kehler, Jr.
Barbara Mandelbaum
Kirchheimer
Virginia Burger Knight
Doris English Kocenski
Helen Zentmyer
Kreykenbohm
Betty Rogers Langdon
Jean Ellen Lashly
Margaret Leeper
Evelyn Spencer Lees
Jean Handler Lempert
Helen Crosby Lewy
Pamela Steffan Lindus
Sherman Coxe Lloyd, Jr.
Margaret Harding Love
Martin L. Low
Dorothy Macy
Thomas A. Mawhinney
Robert M. McCormack
Charles F. R. Mifflin
Peter R. Morrison
Richard P. Moses
Dhan Gopal Mukerji, II
John K. Myers
Carl Sherwood Nielsen
Celia Price Patterson
Alumni Issue
<
Dorie Baar Poole
Robert W . Poole
Otto Ewald Pribram
Joseph Redheffer
John Walling Reid
William H . Reller
Charles Stix Rice
Mary Wood Ricksecker
Jane Adelaide Rittenhouse
Lewis M. Robbins .
Jean Belknap Robertson
Martha McCord Robinson
Albert N. Robson, Jr.
Joseph Albert Roy
George G. Salomon
Jane Kellock Setlow
Eleanor Barbour Smith
Gordon Smith
Arthur F. Snyder
Paul H. H. Snyder
Mary Roelofs Stott
Florence Manbeck Stump
Elizabeth Jean MacDonald
Thomas
Dorothy Cupitt Thompson
Jean Maguire Thompson
Jeanne Cotten Thompson
Rexford Emerson Tompkins
Virginia Mayer Valentine
Marion Rydholm Van Brunt
Dorothy Webster Van
Denburgh
Bryon H. Waksman
Samuel W . Warburton
Louise Watters
Betsy Platt Weiner
Minnie Moore Weiss
Donald K. Weltmer
Margaret Rusk White
Pearce T. Rayner
Dorothy Turner Reed
Fred T. Reed
John D. Reed
J. Mark Robinson
William H . Rogers, Jr.
Alex M. Rosenblum
Jane Blankenhorn Schieve
Gabriele Derenberg Schiff
Walter J. Scott, Jr.
Richard B. Setlow
Frances L. Shero
L. Adrienne Shero
Anne Davis Shullenberger
Marjorie Todd Simonds
Jerome Simson
Alice Robinson Smith
Beatrice Noehren Smith
Richard O. Smith
Robb V . Smith
Margaret Whiteman Snyder
A . David McK. Speers
Herbert S. Steelman, Jr.
F. Walter Steuber, Jr.
Ruth Wilbur Stickney
Edith Melville Taylor
Robert B. Taylor, Jr.
Albert G. Thatcher
Caroline D. Underwood
Ruth Franck Van Collie
E. Joseph Verlie, Jr.
Elizabeth Ear11 Verlie
Robert I. Walter
Isabel Durkee Warner
Frances Brown Watts
Jane Northup White
Barbara Jean Winne
George A . Wright, Jr.
General Electric
CLASS OF 1941
CLASS OF 1942
Class Representative:
F. Preston Buckman
Class Representative:
W alter T. Skallerup, Jr.
Number of Donors
90
Participation
48.91%
Alumni Fund
$1,138.50
Total Gifts
$1,138.50
Number of Donors
71
Participation
41.28%
Alumni Fund
$1,342.00
Total Gifts
$1,342.00
Eugene Ackerman
Vera Starbard Adkins
Claude E. Anderson, Jr.
Frank W . Appleton, Jr.
Barbara Ballou
Barbara Gould Beddall
Benson A . Bowditch
Gail Tappan Bowditch
Ethel W olf Boyer
Josephine Clarke Braden
F. Preston Buckman
Robert J. Cahall
Francis Edward Cavin
E. Ross Clinchy, Jr.
John C. Crowley
Anthony J. Degutis
Elizabeth Turner Dehn
John W . Delaplaine
Frederick S. Donnelly, Jr.
George Richard Eberle
Barbara Morehead Ferguson
John B. Ferguson, Jr.
Helen Howard Fornwalt
Hazel Bazett Froscher
Elaine Gerstley Fuld
Sarah Mills Garbart
Helen Tomlinson Gibson
Marjorie Reid Gross
Clarence S. Gulick
Margaret Johnson Hall
Edward E. Hannum
M. Grant Heilman
Guy Henle
Mary West Hower
Mary Pulverman Judson
S. Peter Karlow
John D. Kuechle
Robert E. Kurtz
Creighton B. Lacy
Stephen G. Lax
Elizabeth Murch Livingston
William Curtis MacPhail
Jane Richardson Mapes
Ruth Whitson Marsh
Elizabeth Martin McCollister
Joanna Hill Mikesell
Ann Driver Miller
Glenn E. Miller, Jr.
Victor M. Mills
Elizabeth Malcolm Murray
Helen Osmun Parker
Samuel M. Raymond
**Arthur K. Adams
Eleanor Green Akina
David E. Alburger
Lucy Rickman Baruch
Constance Kent Barnett
C. Wendell Beck
Aline Wolff Benjamin
Frank G. Beury
George C. Bond
Charlotte Hofmann Bose
Margot Seward Botsford
Margaret Morgan Capron
William M. Capron
Mary Griscom Colegrove
Ann Whitford Comstock
Jane Vogt Cooke
Stanton E. Cope
David S. Cowden
Margaret Shoemaker Dietz
William H. Dietz
Margaret Macomber Douglas
Dorothy J. Ernst
Thomas P. Evans
Mary Weintraub Felsten
Thomas I. Ford
Roger A. Frost
Lester Goodman
John Kennedy Griffin
Virginia Boggs Gunn
Norman Bruce Hannay
Roger K. Harter
Edith G. Henderson
William L. Huganir
William R. Jones
Barbara Bowman
Kirkpatrick
Martha VanKleeck Knoke
Henry B. Leader
Jean Ferriss Leich
John Foster Leich
Albert H. Lewis
S. Blair Luckie, III
Helen Spencer Lynch
Katherine Keeler Mace
Anne Jones Martin
Charles C. Martin
Jennie Bradfield McBean
Mary Sills McBean
Peter C. McBean
Gene Smith McCulloch
Margaret Jean Moyer
Joan Lothrop Mukerji
October, 1955
Gilbert B. Mustin, Jr.
Margaret Davies Ottenberg
Ruth W olf Page
Dorothy W . Peaslee
Donald C. Pelz
Anne H. Pike
Mary Boileau Ramsey
Elizabeth Ramsey Reagan
Carl 0 . Sautter, Jr.
Walter T. Skallerup, Jr.
Rogers J. Smith
Robert W . Spencer
Charles F. Spitzer
Elizabeth Peirce Swift
W . Dean Trautman
F. Warren Van Name, Jr.
Jeanne Curtis Whitesell
Carey R. Williams
Lindsay H . Wolfe
Cynthia Swartley Zimmer
General Electric
CLASS OF 1943
Class Representative:
Thomas O. Taylor
Number of Donors
135
Participation
49.45%
Alumni Fund
$1,629.00
Total Gifts
$1,629.00
Anonymous (3)
Eleanor Rittman Adams
Edward H. Atkinson
DeWitt C. Baldwin, Jr.
Helen Leidesdorf Banks
Edward M. Bassett, Jr.
Marjorie Ann Bassett
Royce E. Beatty
Nicholas A . Beldecos
Ann Wirth Beury
Winifred Cammack Bond
Jane Hand Bonthron
Hugo Eugene Brandstetter
William R. Busing
Joan Collet Butler
Reed L. Colegrove
Elisabeth Thom Coleman
Robert E. Coleman
Charles P. Cryer
David Y . Curtin
James G. Deane
Anna Huntington Deming
Elizabeth Gawthrop Donnelly
Orville W . Donnelly
John L. Dugan
Roderick M. Duncan
Robert S. Dunn
Frances Sears Eliot
Johan W . Eliot
William J. Erdman, II
John B. Felton
John C. Fergus
Constance Spink Fleming
George C. Ford
Margaret McCain Ford
Herbert W . Fraser
Martha Anne Frey
David Gale
Daniel J. Ganister
Margaret Woodruff Glenn
Daniel L. Goldwater
Elizabeth Haines Goldwater
Martha Siefkin Gordon
Ira J. Greenhill
Elinor P. Griest
Ruth Clark Griffin
Wendell A . Haberern
Charles E. Hamer
Wilberta Moody Hardy
Theresa Votaw Harman
Edna Greenfield Harris
Joan White Harrison
Robert C. Hecht
Barbara Valentine Hertz
Virginia Curry Hille
Irene E. Hollingsworth
Suzanne White Hull
Patricia Cotten Isbrandtsen
Olwen M. Jones
Robert P. Jones
Diana Dodge Josselson
Kathleen Kehoe
Margaret Haight Kelly
Joseph W . Kimmel
William Henry Kistler
Ruth Langer Koffsky
Frederica Coerr Kuh
Eleanor Durkee Leach
L. Eldon Lindley, Jr;
Beatrice Brewster Linton
Jean Robinson Loeb
Lois Hosbach Love
Caroline Van Sickle Luckie
Frank L. Lyman, Jr.
Robert V . Maier
William J. Marshall
Richard H . Mayfield
Homer B. McCormick, Jr.
Elizabeth Darbishire McNeill
Jane Morss Meyer
Janet Bartleson Mochel
Peter A . Morris
Virginia Donchian Murray
Philip Myers, III
Donald G. Olesen
Claire Barton Olsen
Vivian Goldstein Olum
Paul S. Ousley
Charles A . Pettit
Jane S. Pike
Laurama Page Pixton
Elizabeth Northup Presley
Jean Cushing Reed
James William Reid
Jean Roberts Reller
Paul Restall
William H . Richards
Joseph T. Riemer
Janet McCloskey Robbins
Peter P. Schauffler
Barbara Whipple Schilling
Felice Klau Shea
James Wesley Shean
William W . Slocum, Jr.
Ellsworth C. Smith
June Corey Smith
Anne Webb Swigert
Charles B. Tachau
Charles R. Tanguy
Thomas O. Taylor
Erika Teutsch
Randal H . Thomas
Dorothy Shor Thompson
John S. Thomson
Margaret Bebie Thomson
Elizabeth Ringo Tobin
Mary Stewart Trageser
Allen R. Trudel
Michele Maréchal Trudel
David U. Ullman
Elizabeth Glenn Webber
Miles G. Wedeman
David C. Whipple
Barclay White, Jr.
Emily Gruen White
Lois Walton White
Joseph S. Whiteford
Lenore Manley Wildsmith
Jean Schuyler Williams
Robert J. Williams, III
William M. Woodward
Robert L. Young
General Electric
CLASS OF 1944
Class Representative:
E. Winslow Councill
Number of Donors
86
Participation
41.95%
Alumni Fund
$1,738.50
Total Gifts
$1,763.50
Anonymous (2)
Frank Akutowicz
Jacqueline Alden
Robert K. Andrews
Marjorie Griffin Apel
Edward F. Babbott
Robert J. Beck
Helen E. Becker
Craig L. Benjamin
Harry C. Boardman, Jr.
Ruth Morgan Boudinot
Margaret Schroder Bowden
Margaret Keeler Bowen
Stephen P. Bredin
Amy Green Brown
Catherine Doane Burkett
William G. Carson
William W . Clendenin
E. Winslow Councill
Arthur M. Dannenberg, Jr.
Esther Ridpath Delaplaine
Shirley Hirst Dierolf
Margaret Dougherty
Donnelly
Ruth Runnels Dundas
Catharine Taylor Eckfeldt
Robert L. Ehrmann
Gertrude Courant Emery
Martha Fuchs Ferger
Barbara Mott Ford
George R. Freifeld
Phyllis Lohr Frost
Virginia Pennoyer Gehringer
Joseph R. Gemberling
John H. Githens, Jr.
Beatrice Stoalabarger
Grubbs
Helen Farnum Henry
Kala Rosenthal Herlands
Louise Zimmerman Hieatt
Louise Williams Hoffman
Gretchen Chase Howe
George T. Inouyo.
William Y . Inouye
Faith Neumann Jansen
Jane Reppert Jenks
Ellen Thompson Jennings
Edward M. Jones
Faye Stewart Jose
Victor R. Jose
Carolyn Roberts Kennett
Suzanne Forwood Kistler
Doris Morrell Leader
Nancy Morgan Leavelle
Marcia Gauger Ledig
Kenneth B. Lewars
Arnold F. Look, Jr.
Edith Graef McGeer
William F. McNagny
John R. Mills
Kathryn Shields Mulhearn
Tomomi Murakami
Frank H . Mustin
H. William Need, Jr.
Phyllis A . Nelson
Frederick H . Ohrenschall
Rachel Wright Platzer
Ruth Shepard Richards
Betty Southgate Rogers
Marvin H . Rowe
Barbara Bair Shull
Ernest K. Smith, Jr.
Ralph R. Sonnenschein
Robert N . Stauffer
William N . Stecher
tElizabeth Hoisington
Stewart
—
Elmer A. Talcott, Jr.
Patricia Lum Taylor
Jane TenBroeck
Ann Pike Ulrey
Jane Cox Vonnegut
Gordon P. Walker
Mary Bradshaw Whaley
Allen K. White, II
Hannah Broomell Wilson
David H. Winne
Gladys Woolford W inter
General Electric
CLASS OF 1945
Class Representative:
Jeptlia J. Carrell
Number of Donors
76
Participation
30.77%
Alumni Fund
$1,269.00
Total Gifts
$1,269.00
Jane Ludemann Andrews
Janet McCombs Baldwin
Christel Duffy Bartleson
Barbara Shaul Beardsley
Harold W . Benditt
Elise Knaur Brigham
Tracy W . Brown
Catharine MacDonald
Burkhart
Richard C. Burrowes
Malcolm Campbell
Jeptha J. Carrell
Alan R. Cartoun
Martha Louise Counts
Barbara Taylor Crawford
Thomas B . Darlington
Miriam Goldforb Dinerman.
John F. A . Earley, Jr.
Henrietta Pyle Ewing
Ellen Williams Färber
Alice Green Fredman
Ann T. Geddes
Prudence Hyde Gibbons
Doris Carr Gilbert
David I. Gilchrist
Mary Jane Gray
Frank S. Greenwald
Dorothy Lucking Hagerty
Katharine Strong Hammond
Joan Anderson Hannay
Margrete Jespersen Hartman
15
Neal E. Heffernan
Margaret Chadwell Howe
Barton L . Jenks Jr.
Verdenal Hoag Johnson
Audrey L. Kemp
Julia Fishback Kessel
Elizabeth Blackburn Kimmel
James H. Krick
Margaret Portis Kuhns
Ann Millis Leavenworth
Frederick A . Lehman
Lisbeth Crowell Lieberman
Patricia Conover Lott
Evelyn Granat Maier
Allen S. Mariner
Margaret E. Marshall
Glover B. Mayfield
Harry E. McCloskey
Polly Penman McClure
Pope B. Mclntire
John B. Mennig
Jessica Ann Merritt
John B. Mochel
Alice Ritchie Navin
Dietrich H. Oberreit
Gilman Ostrander
Janet Locke Page
Elizabeth Oliver Palmer
Winnifred Poland Pierce
Henry L. Price, Jr.
William T. Price, Jr.
Frederick H. Richards
Ann Solis-Cohen Rosenthal
Marion King Schlefer
Thomas R. Scott
Ursula Marsh Scott
Harriet Tutelman Seligson
Bernice Abe Tajima
Warren Uchimoto
Jean Blanchard Umland
Nancy Robinson Waldman
Barbara Johnson Walton
Jane Barus Wehncke
Lois Wells
Margaret Ellis Wood
Nancy Kent Ziebur
CLASS OF 1946
Class Representative:
Sally MacLellan Counclll
Number of Donors
97
Participation
40.59%
Alumni Fund
$1,139.50
Total Gifts
$4,131.50
Anonymous (2)
Mary Keay Adams
Judith Braude Baldersten
Elizabeth Dempf Barnhart
George C. Beebe
John C. Beers
Robert B. Bergner
Jean Thompson Blinn
Marjorie Colwell Boardman
Patricia Montenyohl Bostian
Joan Jessop Brewster
Fredericks Nelson Brooks
Mary E. Brown
Jean Gibson Burrowes
Gale Colton Bushnell
Scot Butler
Evelyn Cameron
Patricia Frank Carey
Alice Mustin Carll
Milan S. Cerstvik
Elinor Jones Clapp
Mary Frohman Cohen
Sally MacLellan Councill
Carroll I. Crawford
Ruth Smith Creech
Ida Curtis Ennenga
John H. Ferger
Doris Bve Ferm
Victor H. Frankel
Yoneji Fukunaga
Isabel Emory Gamble
Marilyn Low Geeslin
Mary Ann Gehres
Joan Seidel Gross
Marie Cooley Haabestad
Barbara Gawthrop Hallowell
Nancy Frick Hammond
Grace Kemp Harris
Susan E. Harwig
Nancy Smith Hayden
Nancy Randall Heckman
Richard L . Heckman
Rosemary Accolp Hewitt
Nancv Garver Hoover
Dorothy Willenbucher
Imlay
'Kathe Solis-Cohen Jacoby
16
Nancy Carol Jones
Martin S. Kapp
Phyllis Kinkead Kelley
Selma Dreller Kerr
Michael Koblanski
Jerome S. Kohlberg, Jr.
Betita Martinez
Königsberger
Paul J. Kopsch
Helen Dean Lee
Albert Lengyel
Louise Yoder Lindley
Samuel M. Loescher
Warner E. Love
Elizabeth Lucas
Ernest W . Luther
Sarah Demond Lutz
Abraham W . Martin
Margot Williams McCann
Noble T. McHugh
Joan Buesching McNagny
Janet Stanley Mustin
Mary Lou Dutton Mustin
Kimi Nagatani
Elsie Kamsler Nelson
Katharine Hill Ostrander
Edward H . Page
John B. Park
John E. Pixton, Jr.
Oscar M. Powell, Jr.
Annette H . Richards
Anna Coombs Rohrer
Nancy Grace Roman
Miriam Douglas Sanner
Walter A . Scheiber
♦James H . Scheuer
Cornelia Clarke Schmidt
Charles E. Seiler, Jr.
Raymond J. Starrels
Carol Dragstedt Stauffer
John B. Stetson
Hildreth H . Strode
Anne Murphy Swann
Lennard T. Swanson
Virginia Cobb Thibodeaux
Elisabeth Kite Ward
Jean Presbrey Whalen
Helen Ogden Willis
Norman J. Winston
Milton A . Wohl
Richard D. Woltman
Lawrence W . Yearke
CLASS OF 1947
Class Representative:
Jackson de Camp W illis
Number of Donors
84
Participation
40.78%
Alumni Fund
$1,274.00
Total Gifts
$1,274.00
Jerome Abrams
Kenneth Allebach
Janet Hotson Baker
Robert G. Bartle
Thomas L. Bartleson, Jr.
Miyoko Inouye Bassett
Joan Lyttle Birman
Leo A. Borah, Jr.
Howard C. Bowman
Theodore E. Braaten
Horace Willard Breece, Jr.
Adelaide D. Brokaw
Kenneth T. Brown
Susanne Bradley Bush
John Cairns, Jr.
Margaret Harrison Canedy
Walton F. Canedy
Demaris Affleck Carrell
William J. Carter
Barbara Norfleet Cohn
Elizabeth Pope Compton
Dorothy Dana Curtin
Anna Torrey Davis
Ann Taylor Debevoise
C. Russell De Burlo, Jr.
Robert L. Decker
Alice Deatherage Denton
Gordon W . Douglas
John W . Douglass
Byron S. Ebersole
Rosalind Lorwin Feierabend
Robert Fleming Gemmill
Clifford R. Gillam, Jr.
Mildred Webb Gillam
Willa Freeman Grunes
Grabam O. Harrison
J. Woodland Hastings
Robert G. Hayden
Victor H. Herbert, Jr.
David L. Hewitt
Herbert R. Hillman, Jr.
James R. Hunter
Eleanor Ward Inouye
William W . Jepson
Donald E. Kelley
William N . Kinnard, Jr.
Sarah Miller Knowles
Elizabeth Schauffler Lyman
Richard W . Lyman
Stefan Machlup
Henry C. Marshall
Dale Shoup Mayer
Mary Jane Gehres
McCormick
Shirley Lyster McHugh
Roy W . Menninger
James H . Nash
Charles E. Newitt
Henry E. Peelle, Jr.
Marjorie Jeanne Potter
Henry R. Richards
Katherine Wood Richardson
Alan Leigh Rossbach
Mary Lowens Rowe
W . Marshall Schmidt
Patricia M. Schneider
William C. Sieck
Donald W . Smith
George J. Strauss
Jane W . Torrey
Gloria Clement Townsend
E. Wolfgang Treuenfels
Elisabeth Chase Trimmer
Ransom H . Turner, Jr.
Elizabeth Crawford Uhlman
Nancy Eberle Valtin
Michael Matthew Wertheimer
Olin K. Wiland
Clyde A. Willis
Jackson deC. Willis
Benjamin F. Wolverton, Jr.
Mary Ellen Yardley
Merle A . Yockey
Lada Hulka Young
Elizabeth Weisz Zall
General Electric
CLASS OF 1948
Class Representative:
Rolf Valtin
Number of Donors
121
Participation
46.90%
Alumni Fund
$1,279.94
Total Gifts
$8,309.94
Anonymous (2)
John F. Adamson
John M. Austin
Mary Westergaard Barnes
Susan Corson Beebe
Lucy Hoisington Bentley
Helen E. Blankenagel
Richard R. Blough
James P. Bowditch
Carroll G. Bowen
John M. Brumbaugh
Clifford M. Bryant
Betty Hummell Bullen
Joseph A. Bullen, Jr.
Berel Caesar
Helen Hill Caughey
Janet MacLellan Clark
Joan Gallmeyer Clark
William J. Clark
Margaret VanB. Cole
Joanna Meyer Cooper
Richard E. Cordray
Virginia Butts Cryer
Philip D. Curtin
Irving E. Dayton
Sue McEldowney Dean
Henry Dekker
Jesse C. Denton
Ann Meckes Detwiler
Ruth Vogt Devlin
Iris Miroy Dibner
Patricia Plank Dickinson
Barbara Babcock Dolliver
Philip K. Evans
Mary Louise Faflla
Barbara Betsch Fath
Bradley Fisk. Jr.
William H. Frederick, Jr.
Edward L. Frost
Lois Ledwitb Frost
Edward L. GaPigan
Isabel Brown Galligan
Miobel A. Glucksman
Henry A. Gorianc
Simon P. Goudsmit
Riebard M. Greenstein
Erling H . Haabestad, Jr.
David F. Hawke
Barbara Darrow Hays
Samuel P. Hays
John C. Henchel
Warren P. Higgins
Elizabeth Horton
John E. Houtman
J. Allan Hovey, Jr.
Nancy Twitchell Hunter
Richard M. Hurd
Catharine B. Jones
Grisella Hall Kerr
Thomas Killip, III
Robert G. Kuller
George R. Lederer
Esther H. Leeds
Marian Newlin Little
Dorothy Seiler Longaker
Phebe Martenet Look
Abraham A . Lurie
Elaine Kite Lynah
Mary Burnside Mangelsdorf
Carolien Powers Maynard
Jeanne Cummins Mellinger
Edward B. Mifflin
Ann Thompson Miller
Betty Bassett Miller
Ruth Monk Myers
Jane Blair Nash
Francis T. Nicholson
Arthur North
Elizabeth Clemens North
Susan Stoll Noss
G. Bruce Overton, III
Donald G. Oyler
John G. Parrish, Jr.
Burdette C. Poland
William M. Pye, Jr.
Amy Roosevelt
Edward L. Ruhe
Sue Williams Saul
Mark L. Scheiber
♦Walter Scheuer
Marjory Clough Schwertner
Richard W . Schwertner
James Sheedy
Jane Jones Smith
Malcolm H . Smith
Gavin P. Spofford
Peter D. Sternlight
Martha Ann Steward
Roland P. Stratton, Jr.
Beth Ash Strode
John H . Sutherland
Dorothy L. Swerdlove
Harriet Inglesby Thomas
May Logan Thomson
Laura Johnson Townes
John M. Trimmer
Melvin B. Troy
Betty Mack Twarog
Eloise Schlichting Twombly
Richard C. Unger
Rolf Valtin
Robert H . Vernon
Joseph Waldauer
Eleanor Wickes Waldrop
Dorothy Gotwald Wehrle
Andrew Warren Weil
John C. Wentz
Robert V . Whitman
Carolyn Bryan Wilson
George B. Yntema
Paul M. Zall
General Electric
CLASS OF 1949
Class Representative:
Laura Reppert Unger
Number of Donors
150
Participation
42.98%
Alumni Fund
$1,719.25
Total Gifts
$1,719.25
Anne McLaren Abbate
Gerald E. Achtermann
Murray G. Albertson
Rolf O. Amann
David E. Armington
Winston S. Bailey
Norman W . Baker
Elizabeth Urey Baranger
Robert B. Benham
Sarah Wood Besson
Robert K. Bissell
Robert C. Bleke
Brigitte Frankel Bowman
John W . Brace
Theodore R. Bromwell
Virginia Stern Brown
Edwin M. Bush, Jr.
Walter Leo Car el
George W . Carow
Jane Morfoot Chapman
John H . Chapman
Edward M. Clark
Alice B. Clifford
Margaret Thomson Colgan
Forrest S. Compton
Charles M. Conver
Arden Fish Cordray
William L. Cornog, Jr.
Janet Crum Cornsweet
Jane Gross Corson
Lloyd R. Craighill, Jr.
Richard Cryer
Samuel H. Day, Jr.
Edwin W . Dennison
Daniel P. Detwiler
Walter S. R. Dickinson
James M. Dolliver
Selma Jane Eble
William B. Eldredge
Michael J. Fabrikant
Joyce Favorite
' John W . Fiske
Robert Forster
Herbert H . Frost
Rex I. Gary, Jr.
Alice Heyroth Gifford
Howard S. Gilliams
Morton J. Gollub
Donald J. Gordon
Mary Guckes Harrell
Eric G. Heinemann
Shirley Heckheimer
Heinemann
Charles A. Herndon, Jr.
Mary Lee Schell Herndon
Charles J. Hesner
Robert W . Hillegass
William J. Hirsch
William N . Hunter, Jr.
Alfred C. Hunting
William B. Jameson
Wilmer A . Jenkins, II
Herbert Kaiser
John I. Kennedy
Richard W . Kirschner
Roy F. Knudsen
John B. Koelle
Eleanor M. Lacy
John Ladd
Betty White Lang
Barbara E. Lea
Frederick W . Lehman
Walter H . Leser
Grace Leslie
Betty Larsh Lewis
Lloyd W . Lewis
Susan Lurie Lichten
William L. Lichten
Ruth Friedenthal
Lonberg-Holm
Richard P. Longaker
Frank J. Ludemann
Margaret L. MacLaren
Ruth Wilcox Mahler
Paul C. Mangelsdorf, Jr.
William H . Matchett
Thomas B. McCabe, Jr.
Sara-Page Merritt
Marjorie L. Merwin
Ellen H . Meyer
Lynne Davis Mifflin
Arthur P. Miller
Susan Reinoehl Miller
Stephen Mucha
Carl G. Mueller
Barbara H. Muller
John L. Need
Thomas G. Nichols
Jean Michener Nicholson
M. Cushing Niles
Robert Z. Norman
Margaret Gwynn
Oppenlander
Maralyn R. Orbison
Barbara Beebe Parrish
Christian H. Pedersen
Edward B. Perkins
Jean Ashmead Perkins
Kathleen Scott Pilla
Eugene R. Pinto
Nancy Aubrey Poland
Colgate S. Prentice
Andrea W olf Rabinowitz
David C. Redding
Fremont G. Redfield
Alan L. Reinstein
Edward Rivlin
Robert J. Rossheim
Gordon H . Rowe, Jr.
Alumni Issue
in
ue
William M. Selden
E. Burns Shaw, Jr.
Joel L. Siner
Catherine Underhill Smith
Margaret Comfort Smith
Judith Wolfson Solomon
Joann Broadhurst Sparks
Lois Kelly Stabler
Daniel C. Stark, Jr.
Chalmers C. Stroup, Jr.
Kuth Struik
Joyce Conover Sutherland
Edith Williams Swallow
Charles E. Taylor, Jr.
Jackson Taylor
R. Hugh Taylor, Jr.
Henry E. Temple
Joan Ellwood Thomas
George F. Townes
Paul B. Trescott
Ruth Pretzat Trescott
Charlotte Garceau Treuenfels
Laura Reppert Unger
Heinz Valtin
Richard Walkling
Kathleen Blau Weisman
Barbara Nelson Wells
Lisbeth R. Wertheimer
Joan LeVino Wilde
William H. Will
Julia M. W olf
Theodore P. Wright, Jr.
Doddridge Young
Kay Ropp Zimmerman
General Electric
Marjorie Bertoletti Giles
Hope Sieck Gilliams
Jean Abbott Goertner
John F . Goertner
William H . Gooding
Myra Pfau Gordon
Dona Carrington Goudsmit
Robert G. Greenawalt
Elinor Grobert
Paul S. Guinn, Jr.
Patience Sutton H ajj
John M. Harker
Robert E. Harris
James S. Hayes
Rudolf E. Hirsch
Dorothy Morrow Kennedy
William Kerr
Iris Costikyan Kinnard
Thomas L. Kinney
G. Adrian Kuyper, Jr.
John K. Lawrence
James P. Lewis
Aase Arnold Loescher
F. Pelzer Lynah, Jr.
Janet Dunn MacKenzie
Edward Mahler
Elizabeth Hoag Mangelsdorf
Robert G. McBride
Yvonne Motley McCabe
Thomas E. McCarthy
Elsa Ebeling Simes
CLASS OF 1950
TOP FIVE FOR FIFTY-FIVE
By Number of Donors
Number of Donors
153
Participation
40.91%
Alumni Fund
$1,937.50
Total Gifts
$1,982.50
October, 1955
♦Richard Frost
Toshiyuki Fukushima
Richard L. Fussell
William B. Fussell
Harriet P. Gallagher
Stokes Gentry
R. Setha Goodyear
Bruce B. Graves
Samuel T. Griscom
Ursula Hahn
Anne Ritschard Hall
Anna Beran Hankins
Ripley Schemm Hansen
Elizabeth Lewis Harker
Jean Sartorius Harsch
Hanna Machlup Hastings
Anne Mount Hay
Alan Reeve Hunt
David M. Hunt
H. Karl Ihrig, Jr.
Franz C. Jahoda
Christine Meyers Jameson
Elisabeth R. Jenks
Mary L. Johnson
William T. Kane
Joyce M. Kimball
Robin Cooley Krivanek
Walter L . M. Lorch
Arthur P. Mattuck
Louise Eshleman Matzinger
Robert M. McCarthy
Elizabeth Robertson Smith
Ralph L . Smith
Asa E. Snyder
John S. Spaulding
Steven S. Spencer
William T. Spock
Edward P. Stabler
Lois Oblender Stoner
Mary Helen Sutton
Woodlief Thomas, Jr.
John W . Tomlinson
David L. Trout
Nancy Heffernan Valtin
Johanna J. L . van den Berg
William W . Van Stone
Anne Smith Weatherford
Nancy E. Weber
June Miller Weisberger
David C. Wesson
Anita Dabrohua W'esson
Andrea C. Wilcox
Wendell S. Williams
Dudley H. Woodbridge
Dorothy R. Wynne
John A . Yntema
Barbara Thompson Young
Betty Hershberger Zisk
General Electric
CLASS OF 1952
Class Representatives:
Beverly Miller Lloyd-Jones
and
Evans H. Burn
Class Representative:
Diane Evans Vernon
Anonymous (3)
Edwin J. Alexander
Margaret Patricia Allen
John W . Anderson
E. Boyd Asplundh
Elizabeth M. Ayer
Arpine Levonian Baghdoyan
Samuel Richard Barol
Joseph H . Battin
Mary Teale Battin
William T. Battin
Frank A. Beldecos
Margaret Weber Berger
Esther Jones Bissell
Richard C. Bray
Philip W . Brickner
Robert S. Brightman
Robert B. Brown
Donald P. Burch
James G. Carson
Dorothy Brodie Clarke
Richard C. Conlin
Donald W . Cooper
Maryly Nute Craighill
Richard R. Curtin
Lucille Handwerk Cusano
Martha Burton Darlington
Jane Totah Davis
Richard C. Davis
Edith Thatcher DeBurlo
Laura Buck Dennison
John A. deVeer
Priscilla Peirce deVeer
Roy M. Dickinson
W . Haines Dickinson, Jr.
David H. Doehlert
Janet Hostetter Doehlert
W . Bruce Douglas
Margery Robie Downey
William W . Downey, Jr.
A. Ross Eckler, Jr.
Alice Hay Enders
Allen C. Enders
E. Edward Faccioli
Frank P. Felton, III
Irving I. Finger
Consuelo Verrei
Fitzpatrick
Andrew G. Frank
Priscilla Deane Freund
♦♦Christopher Fried
John W . Frommer, Jr.
Bernard A. Fusaro
Robert L . Ganter
Hanna Bach Genaux
William W . Gifford
John L. Giles
Marcia Olds Singley
Charles D. Smith
Richard N . Smith
Frank Solomon
Dirk J. Spruyt
Griffin M. Stabler
L. Janney Stabler
Carol H . Stein
William F. Strauss
R. Wood Tate
William M. Taylor
Georgeann C. Thomas
G. Dale Thompson
George H . Thompson, Jr.
Mary Jane Hooper
Thompson
Margaret Hench Underwood
E. Allan Van Deusen
Diane Evans Vernon
Alice Phair Walkling
Richard S. Washington, Jr.
James W . Weston
Patricia Edwards Weston
Charles F. Weymuller
Dorothy W att Williams
Anthony Lee Wolfe
Marianne Leas Wolfe
Stephen A . Zellerbach
H . Paul Zimmerman
General Electric
Ursula E. Freund
Agent
Class
Rank
1950
1
Diane E. Vernon
1949
2
Laura R. Unger
1943
3
Thomas O. Taylor
1940
4
Mary & Chas. Eberle, Jr.
1948
5
Rolf Valtin
Thomas F . McHenry
Glenna Bovee McKnight
James T. McKnight
John H. McLagan
Orrick Metcalfe, Jr.
Gordon C. Mochel
Patricia Lackey Mochel
J. Thomas Montgomery
Frederick R. Morey
Shirley Bryan Mucha
Peter B. Murray
Elizabeth Clum Myers
George T . Myrick
Katashi Oita
Sylvia Turlington O’Neill
Gerard K . O’ Neill
George C. Oppenlander
Herbert B. Pahl
David A. Peele
Robert K. Platt
Anne Matthews Rawson
Kenneth Rawson
Mary Ann Boyer Restall
Carol Amster RivHn
Gertrude Joch Robinson
T. Thacher Robinson
Willard D. Roth
Ralph L. Roy
Joseph D. Rutledge
Jerome A . Sader
George T. Scanlon
J. Buckley Shane
Katherine Zander Sheldon
Georgianna Burch Shepard
tStephen M. Sickle^
Barbara Tipping Sieck
CLASS OF 1951
Class Representatives
Patricia Das Elliott
and
Franklin M. Elliott
Number of Donors
119
Participation
43.27%
Alumni Fund
$1,278.50
Total Gifts
$1,283.50
Anonymous (2)
Dabney M. Altaffer
Anne Ashbaugh Anderson
Winifred H . Armstrong
Edwin D. Arsht
Patricia Meyer Battin
Jean Leek Bauman
Sue Rose Birge
Donald S. Blough
Jeanne Bohn Burch
Gwynne Denton Burkhardt
Roberta Grower Carey
Theodore R. Conant
John F. Cromwell
Marguerite Handy Deacon
Jean Dinwoodey
Faith Woodward Eckler
Robert P. Eisinger
Franklin M. Elliott
Patricia Das Elliott
Wolfgang Epstein
Robert C. Forrey
D. Graham Foster
John C. McIntyre
Walter N . Miller
Benton G. Moeller, Jr.
Anne Thomas Moore
Oscar M. Moreno
William W . Murray, Jr.
Robert L . Myers, Jr.
Barbara Manthei Myrick
Robert J. Osborn
Laura McClellan Pahl
Clarkson T . Palmer
Ellen Ash Peters
Robert H . Peters, Jr.
Gerald A . Pollack
Nancy Robinson Posel
Harold A . Prusa
Charles H . Randall
Ruth Hochheimer Randall
Richard L. Raymond
Lewis A . Rivlin
Janet Merrill Roeder
Margery Davis Romberger
John A. Romberger
Gerald A. Rosen
Anne Megonigal Rosenthal
Jonas O. Rosenthal
Barbara Bruce Rutledge
Robert D. Schick
Gerald G. Schulsinger
James F. Schwartz
Joan Seaver
Sally Shields Shane
Francine Hochhauser
Shapiro
Elizabeth Fullager Shipley
Daniel M. Singer
Emily Dayton Slowinski
Carter T. Smith
Number of Donors
113
Participation
45.20%
Alumni Fund
$900.38
Total Gifts
$900.38
Barbara J. Alley
Katherine Worth Altaffer
Toni Avery
Horace Crookham Ayres, Jr.
Frances Commins Bennett
Nancy J. Boden
Beverly Bond
Helen Phillips Brightman
William B. Brosius, Jr.
Henry W . Burgess
Evans H. Bum
Elizabeth Cuddy Burn
Peter Calingaert
Barbara Smith Carnarius
Stephen M. Clark
Danila B. Cole
James F. W . Cox
Anne C. Davis
Marie J. deKiewiet
Sandra L. Detwiler
Christine Rosenblatt
Downing
Marian Ellenbogen
Marielle Schwantes
Fenstermacher
Albert Fernandez
E. Jay Finkel
Jane Fletcher Fiske
F. Harlan Flint
Joyce Powell Gernert
Robert E. Gernert
Nell G. Goldstein
Norman W . Green
Sarah Temple Grinnell
Evelyn Popky Grinspoon
Robert W . Hamilton
Charles G. Hankins, III
David A. Hansen
Avery R. Harrington
George A. Hay, Jr.
Amy Blatchford Hecht
John Conrad Henefer
Dorothy Nehrling Higgins
Priscilla Ames Hildum
Edwin A. Hoey, Jr.
George C. Hoffmann
Paul A. Hummer
Frederic M. Jenkins
S. G. Whittle Johnston
Ronald Winthrop Jones
Mary Ann Kidder
Louis A . Ki«lik
Robert B. Kyle, Jr.
James A. Lande
Jennifer Lee
David H . Lemke
Arthur R. Lewis
Lois Smith Lewis
Beverly Miller Lloyd-Jones
Donald J. Lloyd-Jones
17
Julane Lyman
Linda Gump Marshall
Eleanor Neville McDowell
Caroline M. Morrel
Arthur S. Obermayer
Christine Parker
Edward Paxson
Leonora Mooers Paxson
Donald E. Pearson
Anne E. Pingon
Sylvia Hand Pott
David D. Potter
Mary Crawford Potter
Elspeth Monro Reagan
Robert Blake Reeves
Thomas A . Reiner
Marguerite C. Ridge
Laura Maurer Roth
Susan Goodwillie Rowe
Henry M. Rueger
Harry B. Scheirer
Rosemary Foulger
Schellenberg
Walter D. Schmitz
Laurie E. W . Seaman
Priscilla Washburn Shaw
Maxine Frank Singer
Raymond Fulton Smith, Jr.
John R. Smucker, III
Anne Buel Snipes
Elizabeth Daugherty Spock
Sarah Hyslop Spofford
Suzanne Slaugh Stabler
Sarah R. Stacy
Mary Alzina Stone
William W . Stover
Robert L. Sumner, Jr.
Lucia Langthorn Sutton
William R. Sutton
Harold J. Swartout
Ruth Shepherd Tallmadge
Judith Demond Taylor
Robert F. Taylor, II
R. Robb Taylor
Barbara Woodson Tucker
Nancy Parks Valelly
Robert W . Wacha
Richard Waddington
William Waterfield, Jr.
William J. Weston
Cornelia R. Wheeler
Wanda Tyler Will
Louis M. Winer
Barbara C. Wolff
Marcia Taylor Yntema
Colleen Mahoney Zimmerman
CLASS OF 1953
Class Representatives:
Mary Bartlett Caskey
and
Donald S. Tayer
Number of Donors
119
Participation
44.24%
Alumni Fund
$1,350.43
Total Gifts
$1,360.43
Anonymous
George G. Abel, III
Daniel K. Y . Ai
Philip M. Allen
John R. Ambruster, Jr.
Carol Holbrook Baldi
Ethan F. Ball, Jr.
Elsa L. Bennett
Anne Christine Benson
Avery F. Blake, Jr.
Wilbur T. Breckenridge, Jr.
David Wellington Brown
William W . Buckley
John J. Burks
Mary Bartlett Caskey
Marguerite Morey Cook
Helen Jane Copeland
Dominic A . Cusano
Doris Cooperson DaRosa
Carol Lange Davis
David Deacon
H. Clark Dean
Mary Lois Eckler Dennison
George B. Doane, III
Dorothy B. Dodson
Frances Farrell
Nina Felber
Charles A . Fenstermacher
Robert P. Fetter
David A . Fisk
J. Garrett Forsythe, Jr.
Alison Owen Foster
Ivan H . Gabel
Mary Jane Winde Gentry
Nancy Louise Gibbons
Jane Graham
John W . Gray
Juliet Popper Gray
Robert A . Griest, Jr.
Robert George Grossman
Peggy Woford Groves
Richard W . Hall
Dagmar Strandberg
Hamilton
Janet Helen Hand
Brice Harris, Jr.
Ludwig H. Hartmann
Susan M. Harvey
Priscilla Hayward
Barbara Jackson Hazard
Geoffrey C. Hazard, Jr.
Helga L. Hearst
Maryhelen Hintz
Donald E. Holcroft
Werner K. Honig
Jeanne McKee Jacobson
Thomas D. Jones, Jr.
Joy Sundgaard Kaiser
C. Frederick Kellers
Irving G. Kennedy, Jr.
Sheila Cohn Kislik
Helen M. Lawler
Margery McCloskey Laws
Michael B. Laws
Joseph Levine
William P. Livant
Gail B. Macmahon
Clark P. Mangelsdorf
R. A . A . Supadmirin
Martadirdja
Shirley L. McFarland
Barbara Smalley Meyer
Nicholas D. Meyer
Stanley Mills
David F. Morgan
Robert B. Morin
Anne C. Mott
Edward F. Myers
Anne K. Newbegin
Theodore K. Osgood
Lawrence B. Owen
Michael R. Paine
Bertha O. Palanky
John B. Paterson
Carol Brunner Pearson
Jeanne E. Wolfram Perry
Elizabeth Harlow Phillips
Constance Gayl Pious
Richard F. Potthoff
Emily Rawlings Price
Hedi Schmid Randall
Ellin N . Ratcliffe
Carl W . Rettenmeyer
Richard B. Roeder
tA . Ellison Rumsey, Jr.
Lewis Sasse, Jr.
Deane Bellow Schneider
Ann MacMillan Seaman
Minda Rae Sensibar
John D. Simon
Phoebe Burnett Snetsinger
J. Thomas Soyars
Joan Price Spencer
Lucy C. Steinbach
Robert O. Stewart
Alice Jean Stover
Donald W . Sutherland, Jr.
Barbara C. Swartout
Richard C. Taeuber
Donald S. Tayer
Merrillan Murray Thomas
Rosyln Thomas
Sean F. Thompson
James Morris Vander Veen
Robert A . Walkling
Charles B. Warden, Jr.
David C. Weidemann
Robert C. Wentworth
Nina Williams
Ellen Winkelstein
John Mathew Worlock
General Electric
Scott Paper Company
CLASS OF 1954
Class Representatives:
Sally Andrews
and
Peter Van Pelt
Number of Donors
101
Participation
38.55%
Alumni Fund
$1,215.52
Total Gifts
$1,215.52
Sally E. Andrews
Udemezue O, Atuanya
Lucy Bunzl Augustine
W . Robert Augustine
Charles Arthur Baker
Caroline M. Barrera
Thomas Jefferson
Beatson, Jr.
John H . Bennett
Eugene A . Bentley, Jr.
Beverly Anne Bopp
Ann A. Bradley
Dolores R. Brock
Elizabeth Rash Brown
Ralph Sawyer Brown, Jr.
Herbert G. Bruch
Anne E. Buenger
Grace L. Bunker
Shirley McGonagle Burks
Walter B. Christmas
Dolores Webster Clark
Walter H . Clark, Jr.
Kenneth Conrow
Harriet Donow Cornell
Henry R. Cowell
Milton C. Cummings, Jr.
Dena Jacobson Dannenberg
John J. Davis. Jr.
David S. Dennison
Elizabeth A . Dun
Herbert H . Fanning
Jonathan E. Fine
Patrick Forrest
Clarence C. Franck, Jr.
Eric Gillett
Bruce Jay Gould
Charles A . Heisterkamp, III
Barbara D. Hill
William W . Holloway
Cornelia Fuller Hopfield
John J. Hopfield, Jr.
Melissa Ellis Howell
Ann Harris Ihrig
Frank S. Irish
John H . Jacobson
Judith Ann Kahlenberg
Paul A . Kantrowitz
Christopher M. Kennedy
Verna Slinghoff Kerr
Marjorie E. Kolb
Elena Sogan Kyle
Frederick W . Kyle
Kay Eagle Kyle
David J. Lang
Richmond J. Laux
Frances E. Leland
Michael S. Lenrow
Naomi J. Lichtman
Marcia A . Loomis
Charles L. Loucks
Corinne Lyman
Norman M. McAvoy
Albert W . Metcalfe
Sara Lee Moltz
Victor Saul Navasky
J. William Newitt
Elizabeth Ann Nichol
Joyce M. Nugen
Ann E. Passoth
John R. Purnell
Phyllis Hall Raymond
Ann C. Reeves
Penelope Rhoads
Marcel K. Richter
Sheila Mills Richter
Winston Riley, III
Kenneth D. Roberts
B. David Rubinstein
Bruce R. Scott
Peter F. Sielman
Carl Silver
Alice R. Smith
Russell D. Snyder, Jr.
Elizabeth O. Soyars
Sybil D. Speier
Lisa A . Steiner
Barbara Yost Stewart
Louise Stoltze
John S. Strauss
George W . Struble
Clarence H . Thom
Hannah B. Thomas
Clifford F. Thompson
Mary Chandlee Turner
Ellen T. Uviller
Christa Eisenhauer
Vanderbilt
H . Patricia Bryson Van Pelt
Peter Van Pelt
Edward E. Wallach
Michael A . Wallach
Louis C. Wislocki
Mary E. Wren
CLASS OF 1955
Nancy Rossmann Goodrich
Sherril White Griffith
Jane Walker Kennedy
Frank H . Martin
Donald S. Ornstein
Rosemary G. Parker
Steven J. Phillips
Lydia L . Ratcliff
Weston S. Robinson, Jr.
Betty Max Shapiro
Priscilla A . Ward
NAVY
Paul E. Barnhart
William E. Howe
Howard Stoertz, Jr.
Charles C. Timm
Charles Van Benschoten
PREP
Laura Beardsley
SPECIAL
John A . Fath
Kirstel Fuchs Heineman
Julia Maldonado Loebel
Franklin W . Smith
Eleanor Goddard Worthen
BEQUESTS
Estate of Henry
McAllister ’ 92
Estate of Robert Pyle ’97
Thomas H. and Mary
Williams Shoemaker Fund
IN MEMORIAM
Vernon Waddell Bassett ’ 12
Alice Masten Beecher ’ 12
Newlin T. Booth ’07
William L. Cornog ’ 19
Howard N . Eavenson '92
Herbert H. Evans ’09
Milford G. Farley ’ 12
John Feigl ’49
W . Sherman Garrison ’ 10
Walter Gledhill
Charles C. Miller ’ 86
Hetty Lippincott Miller ’88
Eunice Darnell Mitchell ’07
Edward P. Palmer ’ 06
Osborne R. Quayle ’ 19
Hazel Caldwell Rowlands ’07
William H. Thatcher ’00
T. Harry Thompson
Robert Zipfel ’42
A D D IT IO N A L C O N T R IB U T O R S T O T H E S W A R T H M O R E C O L L E G E
D E V EL O P M EN T PROGRAM
Friends of Swarthmore
Alumnae Discussion Group
♦♦Elizabeth U . Anderson
Anonymous (2)
Ruth Potter Ashton
Frank Aydelotte
Samuel G. Baker
Benjamin West Society
Mrs. Harold W . Benditt
♦♦Mrs. Albert B. Bernstein
♦♦Helen E. Biddle
Brand Blanshard
Janet G. Bourne
Ethel Stilz Burbanck
Chamber of Commerce of
Greater Philadelphia
18
♦♦Elizabeth McMichael Clark
♦♦Mrs. William L. Cornog
Edward K. Cratsley
♦♦Marjorie Marcy Crowell
Harriet Welsh Dawes
Eleanor Jarratt Dennett
♦♦Ada J. Eavenson
Robert K. Enders
♦♦Mrs. Milford G. Farley
Lillian W . Frescoln
Mr. Nelson B. Hammond
Elizabeth R. Hirst
♦♦Helen R. Hollerith
♦♦Emily Miller Barclay
Jackson
Nicholas Kelley
Olga Lamkert
♦♦Grace Forbes Lynch
Mr. and Mrs. Harold E.
Mertz
♦♦Marvin S. Mitchell
Doris S. Musgrave
John W . Nason
Hadassah Moore Leeds
Parrott
Pennsylvania University
Press
Providence Garden Club
of Pennsylvania
Wayne Radcliffe
♦♦Clarence W . Rodman
Edmund A. Rosenthal
Henry Sangree
Harold C. Schott
Mildred A. Scott
Courtney Smith
Harold Stein
Swarthmore Rifle and Pistol
Club
♦♦Elizabeth Barclay Wales
Robert M. Walker
Alumni Issue
NON-ALUMNI PARENTS
Mrs. Ivan R. Adams
Dr. William A . Adamson
Mr. Louis Adler
Mrs. Rose S. Allen
Mr. and Mrs. John R. Ambruster
Mr! Harlan E. Andrews
Mr. and Mrs. Everett Antrim
Mr. and Mrs. Frederic A. Ashbaugh
Mr', and Mrs. Marcel D. Aubry
Mr. and Mrs. Ethan F. Ball
Mr. and Mrs. Edmund B. Beaumont
Dr. Jules Bebie
Mr. and Mrs. George J. Becker
Mrs. Helen C. Bender
Mrs. Stanley T. Bennett
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley E. Benson
Dr. Marianne Beran
Mr. Raoul Berger
Mr. and Mrs. Angelo Bertoletti
Mr. and Mrs. William C. Betsch
Dr. Oscar Bodansky
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest A . Bodkin
Dr. and Mrs. Wallace Bond
Mr. and Mrs. George H . Braniff
Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph Braunstein
Mr. and Mrs. F. C. Breckenridge
Dr. Walter Briehl
Mrs. Edgar S. Brightman
Mrs. Leo Burnett
Mr. Cole O. Burt
Mr. and Mrs. Bernard D. Cahn
Mr. and Mrs. George Calingaert
Mr. and Mrs. Francis F. Campbell
Mrs. James R. Chase
Dr. and Mrs. Harry Conning
Mrs. Bruce S. Cook
Mr. George R. Cooley
Mr. James W . Corey
Mr. and Mrs. Warren W . Coxe
The Rev. and Mrs. Lloyd R. Craighill
Mr. and Mrs. Howard T. Criswell
Miss Catherine Curtis
Mr. and Mrs. E. Lewis B. Curtis
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur R. Dana
Mr. and Mrs. Matthew L. Dann
Dr. and Mrs. Arthur M. Dannenberg
Mr. and Mrs. David Davidson
Mrs. Herman Davis
Dr. W . C. Davison
Dr. Violet de Laszlo
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Dietrich
The Hon. and Mrs. Paul H. Douglas
Mr. James T. Eames
Mr. Harry B. Ebersole
Mr. Herbert B. Ehrmann
Mrs. J. S. Eisinger
Mr. and Mrs. L. Ethan Ellis
Dr and Mrs Stephan Epstein
Mr. and Mrs. Raphael Esmerian
Mr. Richard C. Evarts
Dr. and Mrs. Otto A . Faust
fiL tJsJ.Ji OTI' 1 1 II I
i ■■I - K
Abbotts Dairies, Incorporated
American Cyanamid Company
American Viscose Corporation
Beinecke Foundation
Philadelphia Evening Bulletin
Contributorship
Mr. Walter Ferris
Dr. Jacob Fine
Mr. and Mrs. Bradley Fisk
Dr. and Mrs. Nathan Flax
The Hon. Ralph E. Flanders
Mr. and Mrs. William H . Frank
Dr. Charles N . Frey
Mr. Maurice A . Fried
**Mrs. Antoinette Fried
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Friedman
Mr. and Mrs. William Friedman
Mrs. Greta Gaiser
Mr. Walton D. Gates
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd F. Gehres
Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Gelardin
Mr. Cyrus S. Gentry
Dr. Harry Ginsberg
Mr. and Mrs. Frederick E. Glucksman
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Gollub
Dr. James Gottesman
Mr. Oliver G. Grace
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Greaves
Mr. Norvin H . Green
Mr. Robert A . Griest
Dr. and Mrs. Luther Gulick
Mr. Harleston Hall
Mr. Darwin C. Hand
Mr. and Mrs. Brice Harris
Mr. and Mrs. Julian E. Harris
Mr. and Mrs. Paul E. Harris
Dr. Benjamin Haskell
Mr. and Mrs. Ateheson L. Hench
Mr. and Mrs. George C. Hoffmann
Dr. Evelyn Holt
Mr. Clifford R. Hope
Mr. and Mrs. Louis B. Howard
Mr. D. E. Hudgins
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Hughes, Jr.
Mr. John M. Hughlett
Mrs. Paul M. Hummer
Mr. and Mrs. Dee A. Hurst
Col. and Mrs. Frank DeK. Huyler, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Saburo Inouye
Mr. Edward Jahoda
Mr. and Mrs. Gardner Jencks
Mr. and Mrs. Johnson
Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Johnston
Mr. and Mrs. Harold F. Jones
The Rev. Robert D. Jones
Mr. Thomas D. Jones
Mr. and Mrs. William G. Kafes
Dr. and Mrs. Sanford Kaminester
Mr. Meyer Kaplan
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Karlin
Dr. Robert A. Kehoe
Mr. and Mrs. Richard C. Kelley
Mr. and Mrs. Irving G. Kennedy
Mr. Clarence B. Kenney
Mr. and Mrs. Willys P. Kent
Dr. and Mrs. Homer D. Kesten
Mr. Leonhard A. Keyes
¡ ¡ j
Mr. Howard L. King
Dr. and Mrs. Lester S. King
Dr. Harold A. Kipp
Mr. Louis K. Kisiik
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Klaber
Dr. and Mrs. Joseph Krimsky
Mr. and Mrs. Reinout P. Kroon
Mr. B. E. Kueehle
Mr. Robert B. Kyle
Mrs. I. Weston LaBarre
Mr. and Mrs. Carl E. Lamb
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Lang
Mrs. Charles E. Lanning
Mr. and Mrs. Willard H . Larsh
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Lawrence
Mr. and Mrs. Morris M. Lee
Mrs. Abram Levy
Mr. John D. Lipsett
Mr. and Mrs. Abraham J. Livant
Mr. Louis Livant
Dr. Hans W . Loewald
Dr. and Mrs. Edwin P. Longaker
Dr. Harry J. Lowen
Mr. and Mrs. Bruno Luzzatto
Mr. and Mrs. S. Herbert Lyons
Mr. Harold J. Manson
Dr. and Mrs. George Matula
Mr. and Mrs. F. Guy McGrady
Mr. Robert W . McNulty
Mr. and Mrs. Sidney R. Merar
Mr. and Mrs. E. A . Meyer
Mr. Adolph Millman
Mrs. Lawrence Mills
Mr. and Mrs. Morris Monsky
Mr. Frank R. Mo^ey
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur H. Motley
Mr. Vitalis Nachmias
Rear Adm. and Mrs. H . W . Need
Mr. Lowell C. Noyes
Dr. and Mrs. Harold Nugen
Dr. and Mrs. Kyuro Okazaki
Dr. Rudolf Osgood
Mr. and Mrs. Aram Oski
Mr. and Mrs. James H. Ottaway
Mr. William H. Pahl
Mr. and Mrs. Roland D. Parks
Mr. and Mrs. Harold C. Pedersen
Mrs. Margaret H. Peele
The Hon. Adrian Pelt
Mr. and Mrs. Paul L. Penfield
Mrs. James L . Pennock
Dr. and Mrs. Dryden L. Phelps
Dr. and Mrs. Fred W . Phillips
Mr. and Mrs. Barton Plimpton
Mr. Abraham L. Popper
Mr. and Mrs. Donald J. Porter
Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Porter
Mr. Edward F. Potthoff
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Mason Powell
Mr. and Mrs. William Reynolds
Mrs. Hugh F. Ringo
Dr. and Mrs. Donald E. Robinson
Dr. and Mrs. Armand M. Rose
Mr. Edgar F. Rosenblatt
Mr. Emil Rosenthal
Dr. and Mrs. A . Louis Rosi
Dr. Charles Ross
Mr. and Mrs. Laurence B. Rossbach
Mr. Hymen Rubin
Mrs. Beryl Rubinstein
Mr. Moe Sarachek
Mrs. Maurice D. Sarbey
Mr. Otto Schairer
Mr. and Mrs. Edgar C. Schenck
Mr. and Mrs. Isidor Schlanger
Mr. and Mrs. Walter A . Schmidt
Mr. Samuel Schmir
Dr. and Mrs. Abraham B. Schwartz
Dr. and Mrs. Louis A . Schwartz
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Shagan
Dr. and Mrs. A . Maxwell Sharpe
Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Sicherman
Mr. William W . Slocum
Dr. Carl H. Smith
Mr. and Mrs. D. Richard Smith
Mr. and Mrs. Russell D. Snyder
Mr. A. 0 . Speers
Mr. Siegfried Stern
Mr. William N . Sternberg
Mr. and Mrs. John R. Stoltze
Mr. and Mrs. Hosmer W . Stone
Mrs. Joseph J. Strachan
Mr. and Mrs. Oliver G. Swan
Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Tate
Mr. and Mrs. John Thies
Dr. Kenneth V . Thimann
Dr. and Mrs. Eugene L. Thomas
Mr. Victor Thomas
Mrs. Frances G. Thompson
Mr. John W . Todd
Mrs. W . D. Trautman
Mr. Rexford S. Tucker
Mr. and Mrs. Edgar A . VanDeusen
Mrs. Charles Viedt
Mrs. David Waddington
Mr. and Mrs. William Waddington
Mr. and Mrs. David A. Wallach
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Weil
Mrs. George R. Weintraub
Dr. and Mrs. Jacob J. Weksler
Mr. Hermann Weyl
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard R. Wheeler, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Hugo Wimmer
Mrs. H. L . Winer
Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Winkler
Mr. and Mrs. Harry A . Winne
Mrs. George B. Wislocki
Mr. Frederick J. Woodbridge
Mr. and Mrs. Theodore P. Wright
Mr. William K. Wright
Mr. Theodore O. Yntema
Dr. Robert B. Zatz
FOUNDATIONS AND CORPORATIONS
Frederick Gardener Cottrell Grant
Creth and Sullivan, Incorporated
E. I. duPont de Nemours, Incorporated
Ford Motor Company Fund
Fund for the Advancement of
Education
Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner and
Beane Foundation, Inc.
Metropolitan Convoy Corporation
National Science Foundation
Radio Corporation of America
Scott Paper Company
Standard Oil Company of New Jersey
United States Steel Corporation
Wagner Free Institute of Science
Westinghouse Educational Foundation
Somerville Sponsors Playing Card Sale
In order to help redecorate Parrish
Hall and maintain the Lucretia Mott
and Martha E. Tyson Scholarships,
the Somerville Society is sponsoring
the sale of playing cards (see picture).
The cards are garnet and white,
plastic coated and have gilt edges.
Please specify in your order whether
or not they will be used as Canasta or
Bridge decks. Canasta decks will both
be garnet, bridge decks one garnet
and one white.
The price is $2.00 per set.
October, 1955
ORDER BLANK
Please sen d .................. sets of Swarthmore Playing
Cards.
Please check:
Bridge □
Enclose check payable to
Mail c /o Alumni Office.
Canasta □
Swarthmore College.
Name ...............................................................................
Address ...........................................................................
.....................................Class...................
19
•
o
o
Saturday, October 22, 1955
2-10 P
Mm H
M
HI G
am
e1
Swarthmore vs- Ursinus —
^ross
- Swarthmore vs. Delaware '
Soccer Game
Swarthmore vs. Stevens —
Before and after the games everyone is invited to inspect the
M
the C a m p u s - t h e new Caroline Robinson H
l l
m
’
Alumni Field
Alumni Field
Clothier Field
work done this
M
W
i
th?L am b01Mnierthp ^
W
M
r° ° mS IV Wharton, the Ruff Herndon Rooms in
e Lamb-M iller Field House and the newly graded Clothier Fields.
6.30 P.M.
Alumni Dinner, Somerville Recreation Center— $2.25 per plate
Greetings: President Courtney Smith
Speaker: Dean Everett L. Hunt
1 hirty Years at Swarthmore’
All October times are Eastern Daylight Saving
CALENDAR
Oct.
1
5
7
8
12
13
15
20
21
22
Football— Dickinson, Alumni Field, 1 :30 p.m.
Soccer— Princeton, Princeton, 3 :30 p.m.
*Hockey— Ursinus, Collegeville
Football— Susquehanna, Selinsgrove, 2 :00 p.m.
Soccer— Pennsylvania, Clothier Field, 3 :30 p.m.
*Hockey— Beaver, Cunningham Field
Cross Country— Lafayette, Easton, 4 :30 p.m.
Football—Hamilton, Alumni Field, 1:30 p.m.
Soccer— Rutgers, New Brunswick, 2:00 p.m.'
Cooper Foundation, Elizabeth Bowen,
Meeting House, 8:15 p.m.
*Hockey— Temple, Cunningham Field
Homecoming Day
Football— Ursinus, Alumni Field, 1 :30 p.m.
Cross Country— Delaware, Alumni Field, 2 :30 p.m.
Soccer— Stevens, Clothier Field, 3:45 p.m.
Alumni Dinner, Somerville Recreation Center 6:30
p.m.
OF
Nov.
Annual Chrysanthemum Show, Lamb-Miller Field House
2:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m.
5
Annual Chrysanthemum Show, Lamb-Miller Field House
10:00 a.m. to 9 :00 p.m.
Football— Johns Hopkins, Baltimore, 2 :00 p.m.
Cross Country— Johns Hopkins, Baltimore, 2:00 p.m.
Soccer— Lehigh, Clothier Field, 2 :30 p.m.
LTCL ,Pi:oduction- “ The Lady ’s Not for Burning,”
Clothier, 8:15 p.m.
6
9
11
12
13
17
18
27 *Hockey— Rosemont, Cunningham Field
29 Football— Wesleyan, Middletown, 2:00 p.m.
Soccer— Ursinus, Collegeville, 2:00 p.m.
Cross Country— West Chester, West Chester, 2:30 p.m.
Nov. 1 Executive Committee of the Board of Managers
*Hockey— Pennsylvania, Philadelphia
2 Cross Country— P.M.C., Alumni Field, 3:30 p.m.
3 Cooper Foundation presents a lecture by
Katherine Anne Porter
4
EVENTS
19
Annual Chrysanthemum Show, Lamb-Miller Field House
12 noon to 5 :00 p.m.
*Hockey— Bryn Mawr, Bryn Mawr
Cross Country— M A S C T F A Allentown
Soccer— Navy, Annapolis, 3 :00 p.m.
Football—Juniata, Huntington, 2:00 p.m.
New Y ork University Glee Club, Clothier, 8:15 p.m.
Concert : Herbert Albin and W olfgang Hottenbach
violin and Piano, Clothier, 8:15 p.m.
Cooper Foundation presents a lecture by Wright Morris
Hamburg Show
Soccer— Haverford, Clothier Field, 10:30 a.m.
Luncheon for Swarthmore and Haverford Alumni, 12:30
p.m., Somerville Recreation Center
Football— Haverford, Alumni Field, 2:00 p.m.
19
Dec.
LT C Production— “ The Lady’s Not for Burning,”
Clothier, 8:15 p.m.
6
8
9
17
Cross Country— Haverford, Alumni Field, 2:45 p.m.
Hamburg Show
Annual Meeting of the Board of Managers
Formation Swimming, Hall Gymnasium Pool
Formation Swimming, Hall Gymnasium Pool
Christmas Recess Begins
*
* Women’s Sports Events
DATES TO REMEMBER
H A V E R F O R D G AM ES — November 19, 1955
Soccer — 10:30 a.m.
Luncheon
Football — 2 :00 p.m.
H A M B U R G S H O W — November 18 and 19, 1955
S W A R T H M O R E CLUB B A N Q U E T — Jan. 14, 1956
34
F O L K F E S T IV A L — April 13 and 14, 1956
S O M E R V IL L E D A Y — April 21, 1956
P A R E N T S D A Y — April 28, 1956
M A Y D A Y — April 28, 1956
A L U M N I D A Y — June 2, 1956
B A C C A L A U R E A T E — June 3, 1956
C O M M E N C E M E N T — June 4, 1956
Alumni Issue
Swarthmore College Alumni Bulletin 1955-10-01
The Swarthmore College Bulletin is the official alumni magazine of the college. It evolved from the Garnet Letter, a newsletter published by the Alumni Association beginning in 1935. After World War II, college staff assumed responsibility for the periodical, and in 1952 it was renamed the Swarthmore College Bulletin. (The renaming apparently had more to do with postal regulations than an editorial decision. Since 1902, the College had been calling all of its mailed periodicals the Swarthmore College Bulletin, with each volume spanning an academic year and typically including a course catalog issue and an annual report issue, with a varying number of other special issues.)
The first editor of the Swarthmore College Bulletin alumni issue was Kathryn “Kay” Bassett ’35. After a few years, Maralyn Orbison Gillespie ’49 was appointed editor and held the position for 36 years, during which she reshaped the mission of the magazine from focusing narrowly on Swarthmore College to reporting broadly on the college's impact on the world at large. Gillespie currently appears on the masthead as Editor Emerita.
Today, the quarterly Swarthmore College Bulletin is an award-winning alumni magazine sent to all alumni, parents, faculty, staff, friends of the College, and members of the senior class. This searchable collection spans every issue from 1935 to the present.
Swarthmore College
1955-10-01
22 pages
reformatted digital
The class notes section of The Bulletin has been extracted in this collection to protect the privacy of alumni. To view the complete version of The Bulletin, contact Friends Historical Library.