1940 International House Resident Directory and Addendum

Page 1

INTERNATIONAL HOUSE

7 £ A
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This book is dedicated to Professor Roy Mitchell and The Consort

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The famous revolving doors ofInternational House have beenturningnowformorethansixteenyears. Duringthistime, overfifteenthousand studentsfromeverypartoftheworldhavemade theHousetheirhome. Yet,International House didnot growup,likeamushroom, overnight. Itwasbuiltinresponsetoaneed,theneedofhundredsofforeignstudentsaloneinNew York City,with littleopportunity tomeet American students andseethebestthatNew Yorkhastooffer. Furthermore, many American students were missing thefriendships and rich experience ofstudents from farafield.

Before the first World War, the Intercollegiate Cosmopolitan Club of Columbia University was formed to bring American and foreign students into hospitable collaboration. From the programs, meetings, Sunday Suppers of this club sprang the initiative which enlisted Mr. Rockefeller’s interest in the House idea. Today, from the New York House other centers in Chicago, Berkeley, California, and Paris, have sprung up. Students from all corners of the earth find in them a welcome, and a life which is non-partisan, cordial and educative in the widest sense.

Ree KBOr ee

Do International House discussions

Lead to foreign repercussions?

And does the pseudo-intellectual Have any influence effectual?

And do the Tuesdav evening teas Find out the basic verities?

Do those in the Home Room have the patience

To smooth outnational relations?

Around the globe our thoughts are felt—

In desert, mountain and the veldt. Ideas found in the downstairs lobby May be some future statesman’s hobby.

Shun not the men with unkempt hair— They're future Sullys and Colberts. Bear in mind these simple facts And strengthen weakened foreign pacts.

Oh, praise the Chinese and theSerb, The Lett and Latin, too.

And don’t forget the “Nordic type” Or Sari-clad Hindu.

Oh, praise the Tuesday evening tea. The Sunday supper, hail!

All our littlerendezvous Make Brotherhood Prevail. nina .

Infew places can thelively soul findasmuch to attracthim asatInternational House. The variety of experience and professional interests, the national backgrounds ofthemembers, all,combine tocreatea rich and ever unexpected pattern oftalk and discussion, which goes on at all hours, from the shower rooms tothecafeteria, and far into thenight inthe WaffleWing. Whether ornotverydefiniteconclusions arearrivedat,onecannot say. Butfrom thestimulus ofdaily contact and friendship insuch agroup, intelligences aresharpened andviews broadened.

Inthemass ofcasual acquaintance and conversation,thereareafew groups which come together for more specialized discussion. In International Affairs an effort ismade to combine general discussion of currentworld problems withinformation supplied by experts, who are guests of the group. The tragic developments of a world at war have been observed, week after week, in this meeting. An interlude of lighter vein was an evening when Derso and Kelen, thewell-known team ofpolitical cartoonists, spoke of

p ‘SUNDAY SUPPER ‘not bread alone”

their work with statesmen and scoundrels, discussed the art of satire and gave an exhibition of lightning sketching and portrait work.

The Pan-American Table has stimulated interest in the Latin-American Continent and in the Spanish language, by lively musical, dance and discussion programs.

Those interested in problems nearer home have 1ound in the Domestic Affairs group an opportunity for the discussion of pressing economic matters such as the gold problem, investment and industry, public opinion, and trade unionism.

Those whose search is for the unexpected in the realm of thought attend the Religion and Philosophy Group where one is liable to run into anything from deep psychology and anthropological talk, to folk- tales translated from strange dialects. Unexpected is surely the word for this group!

The Literature and General Interest Group has brought to the House a wide variety of guests inter- ested in creative writing and the arts. One index of the popularity of the group has been the lengthy ses- sions in the Waffle Wing which have kept the speakers for hours after the end of the meetings.

There has been scope for the unprofessionally musical in the delightful evenings with Professor Roy Mitchell and The Consort. Here, one can enjoy, with the help of seven trained musicians, native songs of all kinds and cultures. The repertoire of The Consort includes songs in thirty-five languages. But more im- portant than this is the rollicking informality with which they impart their knowledge.

House musicians, vocal and instrumental, have made their usual delightful contributions to Sunday Supper programs and in bi-monthly musicales in the {ome Room. Photographers have labored to make the Year Book “photogenic.” Writers and artists have worked on contributions for the International Quarterly, submitted work to magazines and publishers. labored in competitions, shown in exhibits, illustrated books, played in concerts and on the radio, written in newspapers. In fact, the list of accomplishments, attempts, prospects and work in progress by House members is enormous. If we only had space... THE NATIONS TALK

PAN-AMERICA FOLK SINGING

MARIONETTES

THE DANCE

INTERIOR

INTERIOR DESIGN

PAINTING

SILVER CRAFT SCULPTURE

> F © RR Fe

LifeinNew York isadismal prospect forthe amateur athlete accustomed to before breakfast wood-chopping, morning tennis, or afternoon hike. At International House, however, each season brings opportunity for informal recreation—touch football in the autumn; softball in the spring; tennis at both times; badminton, basketball, skating, bowlinginthewinter; hiking and excursions whenever themood prevails.

Wintersportshavebeenmore livelyandvaried atInternational House thanformany ayear. The badminton fans have organized two expert teams which have competed in the Metropolitan Badminton Association championships. Basketballers, too,have played avaried schedule and blossomed forth in special uniforms. Ping pong has been more cosmopolitan in appeal for indoor sport enthusiasts. Outdoors, the winter has been unkind to motorists,butgaveskiersandskatersarunfortheir money. The House rink came of age; and clear eveningsfoundmany would-bewaltzersgliding,we hope, tothe melodies of Strauss. Then, very late one Sunday night, a band of ruddy snow-fiends returned from North Creek withtalltalesofspills and snow, guitars and song, on therollicking bus trip.

IntheSpring, rackets were restrung; andsoftball players picked up teams for weekend games in the neighborhood. But more pressing matters held folks to their books, and thoughts strayed ahead to that “two weeks in August” back home, on the farm, in the mountains ..

The newly decorated Waffle Wing has quickly come into its own. The bright colored leatherwork livens the panelled walls,and theshaded lighting lends apleasant secludedness.

Everyone hasmemories ofhours spent there; ofthe companionship of friends, of long talks about something orabout notvery much atall. For, asMr. Marquandt hassaid, “Akissortwomeans nothingtoyou.”Foreigners have gaineda little understanding ofAmerica’s infinitevariety,whileAmericans havecaught aglimpse of Europe thatDodsworth sighedfor,wheretherearefewer automobiles and more cafés, to sit and talk.

But all of us, of whatever race, remember the Waffle Wingasoneplaceinthisworldofwarandstrikes,where noonequarreled,wherethepleasantdaysofpeace lived on, and where we, each in our own small way, could, like Goethe in Weimar, seek our own culture, our own friends, alittleshelteredfrom therude shocks oftoday.

No cut and dried list of speakers can give the true picture of the weekly Sunday Supper. The crowded wait before the doors are opened; the candles and flowers on tables; the Blessing; the search to the kitchen for the extra pot of coffee; the dash for seats in the balcony; the tap on the glass for silence; the music; the hush while the speaker of the evening is announced.

Among the notable speakers and artists at Sunday Suppers during the year were the following:

Mr. Frederick Osborn, Trustee of International House, and authority on Population.

Mr. Edward C. Carter, Secretary-General, Institute of Pacific Relations.

Dr. John R. Mott, Chairman, National Missionary Council.

Dr. Karl Menninger, Psychiatrist.

Dr. Emil Lengyel, Author, authority on Central Europe.

Professor A. Torres-Rioseco, authority on Latin America.

Mr. Norman Thomas, leading American Socialist.

Dr. Oliver St. John Gogarty, noted Irish author and poet.

Professor Gunnar Myrdal, Economist, University of Stockholm, Sweden.

Dr. Krishnalal Shridharani, Author, “War Without Violence.”

Dr. Arthur Upham Pope, Director, Institute for Iranian Art and Archeology.

Father Martin D’Arcy, S. J., Master, Campion Hall, Oxford.

Mr. Lu Yu-wan, Secretary, China Council, Institute of Pacific Relations.

Mme. Germaine Leroux, Pianist.

Mr. W. L. Holland, Research Secretary, Institute of Pacific Relations.

Mr. Lewis Mumford, Historian, Philosopher, authority on Housing, City Planning.

Mr. Everett Case, Assistant Dean, Harvard School of Business Administration.

Professor Bronislaw Malinowski, Anthropologist, visiting Professor at Yale University.

Mr. Russell Davenport, Managing Editor, Fortune Magazine.

seSe ea ee Se ee ae

HALLOWE’EN

Social

If the casual visitor comes into the Main Hall of International House, say, at ten o’clock of a winter’s morning, he would think the place was pretty quiet: only a stray newspaper reader and a person or two hurrying off to class. But after hours, it’s a different story. From five o'clock on, things liven up; by seven, the cafeteria begins to hum, and the Waffle Wing and lobby are crowded. And just in case you cannot find a friend or someone to talk to, wander upstairs of a Tuesday evening to the weekly tea-fight and dance. Or if quieter conversation is desired, come in of a Thursday afternoon to the Home Room, where the samovar hums, candles are on the table, and a wood fire burning.

Cosy, you say; yes. But lively too! In the Fall, soon after the start of things, there is a rumble of portentious happenings; preparations for the Hallowe’en Fair! Each group searches itself for talent; ideas are a dime a dozen; gradually they take shape in fantastic booths, costumes, dance routines, and surprises!

This year, the British outdid themselves in an Imperial Review, which contained a spicy quota of lyrics, music, comedians, choruses from all corners of the Empire. The Chinese showed their historical talent in a colorful performance of an ancient and modern wedding ceremony. The Indians also treated the exotic, in the Dance of Shiva. The Latin Americans tangoed and rhumbaed. The Central Europeans set their café somewhere between the Swiss and Transylvanian Alps and waltzed gaily. The famous dancer, Tahiko Mizunoe, from Japan, gave amemorable exhibition. The Filipinos made fiesta. The Hawaiians hulaed more modernistically than usual. A troupe of Italian children sang grand opera miraculously. The Americans managed with much colored paper, outlandish “props,” and a quantity of false whiskers to transform the auditorium into the Gay Nineties. And finally, to fill in the background, the practical Dutch and Scandinavians fed the crowd with cheese, sandwiches, and an inexhaustible supply of Danish beer.

Other parties too. A country outing on Election Day to the Cleveland Dodge’s estate at Riverdale; a Christmas party at Mrs. Andrew Carnegie’s. Then Christmas at the House, with a remarkable round of gaiety: carols in the park, Christmas eve dinner, family style, breakfast together

on Christmas morning and songs to make the welkin ring; and, on Christmas afternoon, a delightful party given by Mr. and Mrs. Mott. If this was not sufficient for the lonely New York vacationist, there was a lively round of trips and expeditions to the theatre.

As winter closed down, the Saturday night dances were gay interludes to bookish evenings. The Alumni Leap Year Dance proved once again that a good band makes a good party. Many brushed up their steps in between times, at a dancing class; and the less formal donned dirndls and old clothes for folk-dancing evenings.

When at last spring came, the folk-dancers, and everyone for that matter, opened the windows and joined in the annual Spring Festival. Some, like Mr. Smith, had the urge to see the Capitol Dome and spent their Easter vacation in Washington. But the out-doors called, and folk primed themselves for more evenings at the World’s Fair and waited for the water at Jones’ Beach to warm up for a swim.

AT
FOLK DANCING
THANKSGIVING DINNER

EJLER PETERSEN (Denmark), President

ROBERT J. MINER (United States), VicePresident

ELISABETH ANDERSON SAMUEL (Scotland) Secretary

*Hasan Majid Al-Duyjaili

Kenneth Argue

Haig G. Assatourian

Leo Urban Ayers

Rudolf Karl Bernard

BUC Thc Be GAN cessijitenra ae

*Harlan D. Clark United States

Maynard Gertler

Potenciano I[lusorio Philippine Islands

‘Catherme We: Judah ou Cede

Marian Judell United States

Elizabeth J. Koblenzer

Patricia Chuchen Koo

John Kwon

Praecin CL Teele England TUTTO. LMM oieseisciesesiersontticdesenrtgorsSweden

Elvira Llanes Philippine Islands

Jarmila Marie Maranova Czechoslovakia

Charles Regis Michaud

Martha Morimoto

Rodney S. Notomi

David Orozco

Rose Morande O’Ryan

Nelda Irene Ricci

James K. Shinn

*Krishnalal J. Shridharani

Sheroo D. Sidhwa

“Melville A. Smiley

Catherine Irene Steele

Tor Stokke

Joseph Szentkiralyi Hungary

Hadassa Van Vriesland Palestine

Renato Willmann Brazil

Arthur F. Won

Raymond Shang-Dsong Yoh

Huan Yu Yuan

*Member.at-large.

THE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION

The Alumni Association of the New York House, now in its fourth year of existence, flourishes and grows despite handicaps and the sad ways of the world. Through the wide circulation of the International Quar- terly, and a large correspondence to all corners of the earth, the membership has been built up to over two thousand in over sixty-seven countries. At the same time, the International Houses of Chicago and Berkeley have organized Associations and are reaching an _ ever- expanding group of former members.

The purpose of the Association is to keep alive the experience of International House among its former members, and to extend the principles of the House in the world at large. Already over ten groups of Alumni have been formed in centers as widely separated as Oslo, Port-au-Prince and Cape Town, and through them many old friendships have been renewed and contacts with the House re-established.

As in years past, many of these groups met together on November tenth to celebrate International House Day. In New York over three hundred of the Association and their friends, assembled for a banquet and received as guest of honor, Mr. James G. MacDonald, President of the Brooklyn Academy of Arts and Sciences. Throughout the year the New York group has been most active with a series of monthly discussions, two Sunday afternoon Alumni-Student Teas in the Home Room, and a special Alumni-Student Sunday Supper in the Spring.

The International Quarterly, the organ of the New York Association is published in collaboration with the Alumni groups in Chicago and Berkeley. In its pages, present and past members of the Houses find a meeting place for ideas of common interest, news of each other, and some of the life which they knew at International House.

The Year Book is the record and memento of a year at International House. The Quarterly and the Alumni Association are the means of extending this experience through a longer period, in keeping friends in touch with each other, and with the purposes and continuing life of the House.

e OLIVE MARIE AANSTOOS, PhyJical Education PANAMA

ROBERTO VERGARA ABAD PHILIPPINE ISLANDS

EVELYN MARTHA ACOMB, HiJtory .ILLINOIS, U. S. A.

e FLORENCE SOOKCHA AHN, MuJic HAWAII

MARY LOUISE AINSWORTH, Mttsic .ILLINOIS, U. S. A.

GARDIE Y. 0. AKO, Education HAWAII

e SAMUEL ALGRANTI ALAZRAKI, MuJic................................................MEXICO

GREGORIA M. ALBERT, Household ArtJ PHILIPPINE ISLANDS

HASAN MAJID AL-DUJAILI, Education........................................................IRAQ

AHMAD ALI-ABADI, Law .IRAN

MUSTAFA A. J. AL-KADI, Engineering IRAQ

WILLIAM DUNCAN ALLEN, Piano OREGON, U.S.A.

GILBERT ASBEY ALLNUTT, Oil Trade ENGLAND

e RENATO JOSEPH ALMANSI, Medirine - .ITALY

SALOME MALLARI ALONSO, Health Education PHILIPPINE ISLANDS

ELIZABETH MOSSELL ANDERSON, Student PerJonneJ AdminiJtration PENNSYLVANIA, U. S. A.

e ROBERT JULES ANDRf, Radio HAITI

OSMAN H. ANTEPLIGIL, Banking TURKEY

KENNETH F. ARGUE, Education CANADA

e ANASTASIA. ARPADJOGLOU, Science............................. ......................GREECE

KENNETH B. ASHCRAFT, Penonnel............................COLORADO, U. S. A.

RIAD MOHAMAD ASKA,R, Education of Handicapped........................EGYPT

LUCIA ASKEGAARD, Secretarial Work MINNESOTA, U. S. A.

HAIG G. ASSATOURIAN, Economics IRAN

JOYCE MAURINE AYDELOTTE, Music....................................OHIO, U. S. A.

LEO URBAN AYERS, Music Education MARYLAND, V. S. A.

e KURT W. BACK, Psychology GERMANY

MARGARET BURTON BAILEY, Social Work MASSACHUSETTS, U. S. A.

GLORIA BATISTA, English CUBA

EDWIN GEORGE BEAL, JR., Education OHIO, U. S. A.

MARY LOUISE BELL, Education ALABAMA, U. S. A.

ETHEL T. BENDIXON, Commercial Education \X'ASHINGTON, U. S. A.

EDWIN LENNART BENGTSSON, Shipping........................................SWEDEN

e ARTHUR JEROME BENSON, Philosophy......................U. S. A. (CANADA)

JULIE C. I. BERG-HANSEN, Shipping and Tourist 1f7ork NORWAY

CONSTANCE DIXON BERRY, Home Economics NEW JERSEY, U. S. A.

e ROBERT GURNEE BETCHLEY, Business Administration................PANAMA

LILLIAN ILSE BETTLEHEJM AUSTRIA

W. SHERMAN BIRSS, Medicine CALIFORNIA. U. S. A.

e EILEEN GAGE BOND PhysicaEducation............................................CANADA

D ESTHER BOSWORTH Education................................INDIANA U S A

ANNE ELEA OR BOYCE Ho11sehold Arts PENNSYLVANIA U S A

ELIZABETH NICELY BOYD, MathematicsPENNSYLVANIA, U S A

NAOMI CAROLI E BRADY HomeEconomicsOKLAHOMA, U S A

MARY JANE RRAGG Tearhing....................................CALIFORNIA U S A

LISA M BRANDT, Ph;sics ...................................................................GERMANY

e MARJA ANTONIA BRAVO-CAPOTE, MusicCUBA

ALFRED RUSSELL BROOK Journalism ..............NEW YORK, U S. A

BRUNO BROVEDANI Economics................................................................ITALY

ALICE EMERSON BROWN Music.DELAWARE U S A

KARLINE BROWN LibraryServiceOHIO, U S A

MARGARET RUBY BRUSTROM Elementay Education NEW YORK, U S. A

KENNETH WOODWARD BRYAN SocialWorkWASHINGTON US. A

e DORA BRYANT, InteriorDecorating............................NEW YORK, U. S. A.

MAXIMILIAN BULLA, AccountingGERMANY

JOSEPHINE BURLEY, FmeArtsWASHINGTON, U. S. A.

• HELEN BARBARA CAINE, StudentPersonnel Administration MINNESOTA, U. S. A.

ANTHONY P. CAMPANELLA, Education(ITALY) U. S. A.

MARCI.A ELIZABETH CANTY, Household Arts WEST VIRGINIA, U. S. A.

e DONATELLA CARECCIA, Languages(ITALY) U. S. A.

RITA CARRILLO-RECUERO, Edttcation PANAMA

DOLEARRO ROGELIO ALBERTO CASAS, TeachingPUERTO RICO

e ELIZABETH NEWCOMB CASTLE, Education....................ILLINOIS, U. S. A.

ANNA MARGRET CHAMBERS, Pre-SchoolEdt1cationOHIO, U. S. A.

KAI PING CHAN, Education CHINA

e BEATRICE SUN KIU CHANG, HomeEconomic.rHAWAII

IRENE YUK LYNNE CHANG, Education HAWAII

ROSE KUM MEE CHANG, Ed1tcr1tionHAWAI1

SIH-KONG CHEN, EducationAdministrationCHINA

MIRIAM MEW ON CHING, InteriorDeco,-ation HAWAII

GIN-HSING CHIU, Business..........................................................................CHINA

HAZEL N. Y. CHONG, SecondaryEducationHAWAII

e SADIE LI CHONG, Speech HAWAII

CHI YUAN CHOU, Bio-chemistry CHINA

HARLAN D. CLARK, IndustrialArtrNEW YORK, U. S. A.

e EDITH CLEMENT, SocialWnrk OREGON, U. S. A.

FRANCES ANN CLINTON, AdultEducationOREGON,V. S. A.

CECILY JOAN MUDIE COCKS, Education......................................AVSTRALIA

�-.

e SELMA GENE COHEN. French Literature NEW YORK. U. S. A.

DOROTHY REBECCA COLQUHOUN, Numry Education CANADA

CLARENCE C. COOK, JR., Social Studies NEW JERSEY, U. S. A.

e BEULAH ELIZABETH COOPER, Library Service ALABAMA, U. S. A.

GLORIA G. CORRIOLS, Dramatic Art PENNSYLVANIA, U. S. A.

BONNI� COTTERAL, Physical Education TEXAS, U. S. A.

e DONNIE COTTERAL, Physical Education TEXAS, U. S. A.

ELIZABETH GREER CROFTAN, F,-ench Edttcation....CALIFORNIA, U. S. A.

FRANCIS J. CROTHERS, Industrial Engineering CANADA

BETTY JEAN CUBBAGE, Music .IOWA, U. S. A.

ANNE CUPRAK, Fashion Illustration CONNECTICUT, U. S. A.

ROSE IRENE DANIELS, Social Work NEW YORK, U. S. A.

LEWIS CLIFTON DAVIS, JR., Nutrition ALABAMA, U. S. A.

e ARTEMIO L. VERGEL DE DIOS, •Commerce PHILIPPINE ISLANDS

FRANCES DE GRAAFF, Education NETHERLANDS

L. HELEN DeLAPORTE, Education and Psychology CANADA

e HENRY DELSON, Economics NEW YORK, U. S. A.

SIMONETTA DE VRIES, Music FRANCE

MARY CATHARINE DICK NEW YORK. U. S. A.

e \\'ADI GEORGE DIDES, Teachrng PALESTINE

MAKARAND DIVATIA, Statistics ............................... ...India

ELlZABETH MAREL DOLLEY, LibratJ Work ........CALIFORNIA, U. S. A.

DOROTHY WYNN DOWNE JournaltSm PENNSYLVANIA, U. S. A.

OLIVE MARGUERITE DOYLE, Mu.ric ......................................CANADA

MARGARET DUNCA Phy.rical Ed11cation ... CALIFORNIA, U. S. A.

HELEN MARJORY DUNN, Mathematic.r ....WASHINGTON, U S. A.

e MAURITS ERNST EDERSHEIM, Bankmg NETHERLANDS

.ERNEST ED\X'IN ELLERT Education MASSACHUSETTS, U S. A 363 Hillsde Avenue, Holyoke Massachusetts

MARY ELIZABETH MADELEINE ELLIOT Music Education CANADA

MINNIE AG1 ES ELMER, Libra y Service .. OREGON, U. S. A. X ASHING TON U. S A

VERA,ELEANORENGEL; RELATEDART

HANS BERNHARD ENGELMANN German U S A (GERMANY)

JEANNETTE ENSER Music ... .. ... CALIFORNIA, U S A

ERVID ERIC ERICSON, LAW USA

SAMPSON, UDO ETUK, EDUCATION NIGERIA

SHIRLEY RICHARDSON EVANS; PHYSICAL EDUCATION USA

ELIZABETH ZIMMERMAN FARROW, EDUCATIONUSA

NORMAN DOUGLAS FARROW, VOICE CANADA

BETTY BYRD FELTER, FASHION WRITING USA

e CORRADO FIORENTINO, Aviation .ITALY

FRANCA FIORENTINO, English and Art .ITALY

ELEANOR JANE FIRKE, Fashion

CONNECTICUT, U. S. A.

JOHN CODMAN FISKE, Languages MASSACHUSETTS, U. S. A.

JOSEPHINE FRANCES FLORY, Ho1mhold Arts............MISSOURI, U. S. A.

LOIS JEAN FLOYD, 0rgan TEXAS, U. S. A.

ANNE MARIE FORTUGNA, Fine Arts NEW JERSEY, U. S. A.

e DAVID LOUIS FOWLER, Commerce............................NEW YORK, U. S. A.

ROBERT THOMAS FOX. JR., Frenrh Education PENNSYLVANIA, U. S. A.

LOUIE ANDRE FOY, Law FRANCE

JANIE PRISCILLA FRANKS NORTH CAROLINA, U. S. A.

JULIAN H. FREEMAN, Transportation NEW YORK, U. S. A.

JOHN OLIVER FRENCH, Music..............................WASHINGTON, U. S. A.

MARIE KATHRYN FREUDENBERG, Education......CALIFORNIA, U. S. A.

ALMA CATHARINE FRITCHOFF, Home Economic.r........OREGON, U. S. A.

ISABEL FUENZALIDA, Social lf/ork ...........................................CHILE

ALBERT Y. P. FUNG, EconomiCJ................................................................CHiNA

EMMA WOOD GARDNER, Nutrition........................NEW JERSEY, U. S. A.

ROSEMARY GAR7'1AN, Fine Art CALIFORNIA, U. S. A. D

MAYNARD GERTLER, Economics............................................................CANADA

e GISELE GEORGETTA GHESQUIERE, lfaltan BELGIUM

JOSEPH GIDYNSKI, Law and S'ociology................................................POLAND

MARY ZELMA GLEASON, Jo11rnalism CONNECTICVT, U. S. A.

e DANCY MARTHA GLDCK, Pre-Medical

JOSE TIANUY GO, Business Administration

NEW YORK, U. S. A.

PHILIPPINE ISLANDS

REGINA MARY GOFF, Education MISSOURI, U. S. A.

e KATHLEEN GORDON-SMITH, DramatiCJ NEW ZEALAND

ROMAN S. GORSKI, Writing and bz1•e.rtments

U. S. S. R.

LILLIAN GRAHN, Ho.rpital Administration MASSACHUSETTS, U. S. A.

MARY ALTCE GRANT, Commerrial Eduration MISSOURI, U. S. A.

ELIZABETH GREGORY, N1✓trition NEW ZEALAND

ELEANOR MAE GRIFFIN, Teaching of History NEW JERSEY, U. S. A.

JSABELU: McKETTH GROSS, Speech Ed11cation W-ISCONSJN, U. S. A.

e HELEN M. GRUNER, Engli.rh EdMation NEW YORK, U. S. A.

GWYDOLYN CLAIRE HALE, Teaching of French TENNESSEE, U. S A.

FLORENCE ALBERTA HAMILTON. Commerial Education

U. S. A.

e JANET ELIZABETH HAMILTON, Library Sert•ice NEW JERSEY, U. S. A.

WILSON CLINTON HANLINE, Bu.rine.r.r PENNSYLVANIA, U. S. A.

MARTHA LOUISE HANSEN, EdMation NEBRASKA, U. S. A.

:;:: :: .... ,., ··'. -� {... : ·,�:.l�i211Ill''"r

e VERA CAROLINE HANSON, Library Sert'lCe NEW YORK, U. S. A.

KATRINA HARTT, Library Work NEW YORK. U. S. A.

MARIAN KEITH HARVIE, Teaching CANADA

e JOSEF HAUSER, Foreign Trade .ITALY

ENID HELLMAN, Voice WISCONSIN, U. S. A.

GRACIELA HERMIDA, Denti.rl1'y ....................................................CUBA

e ELLEN BOULTON HERNDON, Personnel CALIFORNIA, U. S. A.

AH KEWN HEW, Social Work ................................................HAWAII

MARY ANN HEWITT, Physical Editcation .ILLINOIS, U. S. A.

EUNICE HEYWOOD, Adult Education WASHINGTON, U. S. A.

WINIFRED BRANDON HIGHSMITH, Fashion GEORGIA, U. S. A.

ELSA HEMPL HILL, Ocrnpational Therapy NEW HAMPSHIRE, U. S. A.

HASHIM ALI HILU, Psychology and Administration ................................IRAQ

e EVA ELIZABETH HILL, Household Arts..........................ILLINOIS, U. S. A.

WILLABEL HILLYER, Secretarial Work MINNESOTA, U. S. A.

KOTARO HIROTA, Business JAPAN

e MARY HOWARD HIX, Fine Arts.. MISSOURI, U. S. A.

MARYETTA WILSON HOLMAN, Adult Education CALIFORNIA, U. S. A.

EDWARD SWAIN HOPE, Personnel Administration DlSTRlCT OF COLUMBIA, U. S. A.

e MATILDA HELLER HORN, Kindergarten Education TEXAS, U. S. A.

VAN T. HSU, Economics CHINA

I-CHEN HUANG, Architecture CHINA

ENGELINA HUISMAN, Psychology NETHERLANDS

MARGARET ADELE HUSSMAN, Business.. NEVADA, U. S. A.

ISABEL IGLESIAS, Mathematics.. CUBA

SUGANTHY ISAIAH, Home Smnce ......................................................INDIA

e BEULAH BLANCHE JACKS, Library Service .ILLINOIS, U. S. A.

CLIFFORD LEROY JACKSON, Singi11g OKLAHOMA, U. S. A.

KATE HENRIETTA JACOBS, Social Work AUSTRALIA

JALIL JAWAHIRI, Education .IRAQ

MILES M. JEFFERSON, Library Se,Tice............WEST VIRGINIA, U. S. A.

JOYCE E. JENKINS, B11.1mw Administration SOUTH CAROLINA, U. S. A.

ANDERS STURE JOHANSSON, Engineering (SWEDEN) U. S. A.

e IVAN EARL JOHNSON, Art Hutory TEXAS, U. S. A.

PAUL HALLER JONES, Painting ...................ILLINOIS, U. S. A.

LOUISE JEANNE JONOT, R(}mance Languages.. FRANCE

e CATHERINE WINIFRED JUDAH, i\1uS1c CANADA

BENJAMIN HOPE KAG\'<1A, Medicine UGANDA

SYLVIA ROSYLE KAPLON, SoCtal W'ork..........................ILI�INOIS, U. S. A.

e \X'ILBUR KEH-DING KAO, Railroad Transportation CHINA

ELEANOR LOUISE KAZANJIAN, Pumary Education CONNEC!:TICUT, U. S. A.

HAZEL BERNICE KEELER, Nursing Education CANADA

LORETTA ELIZABETH KELLY, Interior Decor(lting .1O\V/A, U. S. A.

CHARLOTTE LOUISE KELSEY, Librar)' Sm·ice NEW YORK, U. S. A.

KLARA KEMPFNER, Business HUNGARY

SARAH HELEN KEYSER, Ph)sicat Education PENNSYLVANIA, U. S. A.

e MOHAMED KAMAL KHALIFA, CfriL Enginee1·ing EGYPT

SANG SOON KIM, Pre-school Educat1on KOREA

HOPE .KIMBROUGH, Ji.urnatism WASHINGTON, U. S. A.

MABEL ELEANOR KIMBROUGH, Nursmg PENNSYLVANIA, U. S. A.

TSUNEO KINOSHITA, Social Work , HAWAII

LOIS THERESA KOBLITZ, DieteticJ OHIO, U. S. A.

ANNA KONO\'X'ITZ. Religio11s Ed11cation U. S. A. (PALESTINE)

e NORMA MARIE KRAMER, Educatio11 .ILLINOIS, U. S. A.

IDA GERARDA KREYMBORG, PsJchiatric Social Work 1-IOLLAND

PIERRE KRON, English .................................................FRANCE

e YU SHAN KUAN, PhJsical EdNcrtt1on......................................................CHINA

PRITHA SHIREEN KUMARAPPA. P.rJchofogy..........................................INDIA

JOHN H. S. K\X'ON, Administration of Schools....................................HAWAII

e EDJTH LACY, Exte1;J1on lf'ork........................................KENTVCKY, V. S. A.

GUY LAMBERT, Literature FRANCE

MARY JEAN LANDGRAF, LibrarJ Serrice .IO\X'A, U. S. A.

e BLUMA LANG, Romance Language CZECHOSLOVAKIA

MERCEDES F. �.ANGLIE, Elementary Ed11cation CALIFORNIA, U. S. A.

CARL LARSEN, Banking DENMARK

e DOROTHY LARSEN, Secre1tll'ial ............................................1O\X'A, U. S. A.

HERA\Y/ATI LATIP, Journalirn1 JAVA

KW'AI-CHEUK LAU, Secondary Education ................................................CHINA

JULIEN SYLVERE LAUTURE, Rural Education HAlTl

MARIA LAVARELLO-RICHARD, Social U',,.ork CHILE

SAMUEL NELSON LE COUNT, Administration CALIFORNIA, U. S. A.

DAI-KEONG LEE, MuJI( ............................................................................HAWAII

e JOSEPH CHIANG LEE, Cr.Jmm11nication Engineering CANADA

B. EVELYN LEIGH, EdMation .ILLINOIS, U. S. A.

ELLEN LEINONEN, Ph;·1i�al Ed11at1on MASSACHUSETTS, U. S. A.

e SOFIE LENTSCHNER, Anthropolog)' (GERMANY) V. S. A.

JOHN WHEELER LESTER, Lau• NEW YORK, U. S. A.

AUGUSTINE HSIN-WU LI, Library ......................�'········.............................CHINA

e GEORGIAFRANCES LIGHTFOOT, PJychology............MICHIGAN. U. S. A.

BORJE LINDBERG, AdvertiJing SWEDEN

DOROTHY JOSEPHINE LITTLE, Educati0n NEW YORK, U. S. A.

e BANGNEE ALFRED LIU, Education Adminrstration CHINA

PAUL LIZAIRE, Secretariat Worle ..................................................................HAITI

ELVIRALLANES, Education of Handicapped PHILIPPINE ISLANDS

e WALTER HERMAN LOHANS OrthopediCJ NEW YORK U S A

M DOROTHY LONG Education and English............OKLAHOMA U S A

ALEX LOVERDOS Banking GREECE

PARDEE LOWE Soc1oiogy and Education ................CALIFORNIA U S A

WILLIAM LU Chemistry .............................................CHINA

HELEN SCHWEITER LUTTGEN, Nursery Schoo Education KANSAS U S A

LOIS AILEEN LUTZ Hom Economic ExtenJion............OREGON U S A

e MARJORIE ETHEL MACKY, Nutrition NEW ZEALAND

VICTORIA KATHARINE MacMILLAN Engiish .........CANADA

ODEl fE MAJORELLE Educatwn Psychology ..FRANCE 55 Ru Pau Barruel Pans Franc

e HARRIET G MANTEL Nuwng Education NEW YORK U S A

J.ARMILA MARIE MARANOVA Education CZECHOSLOVAKIA

LOUIS PRICE MARS Psychiat,- HAlTl

e CHARLES REGIS MICHAUD, french CONNECTICVT, U. S. A.

AYAKO MIHARA, Social Service HAWAII

MARY FRANCES MILLER, Speech and Radio MICHIGAN, V. S. A.

ROBERT J. MINER, Education .ILLINOIS, U. S. A.

SIMEON MIRZAYANTZ, English FRANCE

ELORA MONSANTO, Speech and Dramatics VIRGIN ISLANDS

PASQUALE MONTANARO, Economics ......: .ITALY

e ERNESTO GUILLERMO MONTENEGRO, Education CHILE

LOUIS BELISARIO MONTENEGRO, Education ....................................CHILE

MARION ELIZABETH MOODY, Art Education CALIFORNIA, U. S.

JOSEFITA MOORE DE MENDONA, English COLOMBIA

VIRGINIA MARY MOORE, Art Education CANADA

VELMA LUCILE MORELL, Student Personmd...........CALIFORNIA, V. S. A.

MARTHA FUMIKO MORIMOTO, Social Service HAWAII

• JAMES LORD MORRISON, Law........................CONNECTICUT, U. S. A.

FREDERICA MARY MORSE, Stud_ent Pmonnel MICHIGAN, V. S. A.

JENS GRAN MOWINCKEL ENGLISH NORWAY

• EVEYN Mi\RIE MUDGETT, Brokerage Law VERMONT, U. S. A.

HELEN VICTORIA MURDOCK, Psychiatry........................ILLINOIS, U. S. A.

JANET STEELE MURRAY ; FRENCH- ENGLISHUSA

:1\_ ,...:.
,· . �.-.

e RICHARD H. NAGEL, Chemistry MASSACHUSETTS, U. S. A.

GILDA NAVARRO-MENDIA, Education_ PUERTO RICO

ELLEN HULL NEFF, Secretarial Work

e CHARLES D. NEIS\,1 ENDER, Voirc

VIRGINIA, U. S. A.

MISSOURI, U. S. A.

LOIS CURRIER NELMS. Fashion Illu.rtration VIRGINIA, U. S. A.

HELEN ARVTLLAR NELSON. E11glish....................................UT AH, U. S. A.

e PHILIP CHARLES NE\X'MAN, Teaching....................NE\X' JERSEY, U. S. A.

FLORENCE EMMA NICHOLS. LibrttrJ Sert'ice NE\X' YORK, U. S. A.

MARJE-ANGE NICHOLS. Ps)'Chology......................................................CANADA

CAMI-LlE LUCIE NICKERSON, Piano DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA, U.S. A.

JUAN NOBLE, Banking and Fi1wffe PHILIPPINE ISLANDS

AGNES NOHRNBERG, S1"drn1 Personnel Administration

CALIFORNIA, U. S A.

ERBA OLESEN, Ed11cr1tio11 \,'ASHINGTON, U. S. A.

e EVA OLMOS, Social Serr·,ce CHILE

MARIE ELLEN OUvfSTEAD. LilmrrJ Serrict-1...........................OHIO, U. S. A.

BESS ED\\'INA OLSON, LihrflrJ Se, ,.ict'. \'X'ASHINGTON, V. S. A.

e DAVID MORAN OROZCO, Hotel Admi11is1ratio11................................MEXICO

ROSE MORAND£ O'RYAN, Socictl St1rt'ice CHILE

HELEN ELIZABETH OSBURN, Comm1:rcial Ed11c,1tion OREGON, U. S. A.

e HELEN BAUMES OTIS, LibraryService........................NEW YORK, U. S. A.

AMPARO E. PABLO, ·social Stud,e1 PHILIPPINE ISLANDS

EDNA FAGE, 1\/11tr.t1011 UTAH, U. S. A.

e LEO PAP, OrientalLanguages SWITZERLAND

HELEN 'MOFFAT PAUL. Education AUSTRALIA

OPHELIA WILHELMINA PEARSON, HomeEconomic.rALABAMA, U.S.A.

e THOMAS BENTON PEGG, SpeechEducation..........................OHIO, U. S. A.

JULES HENRI PELLETIER, Business CANADA

KATHERINE PERRING, Economic1 ........................................IOWA, U. S. A.

EJLER BERNHARD PETERSEN, Shipping DENMARK

VIOLA MAE LOUISE PETTI, Phy1icalEducation CONNECTICUT, U. S. A.

MAURICE HENRI PIRENNE, Biophy1ic1..............................................BELGIUM

RICHARD GUNTER POHL, Engineering ..........................................GERMANY

e HELEN POHLMANN, Educahon ..............................................................HAWAII

PERCIVAL FREDERICK ALBERT PRANCE, Bu1iness................."ENGtAND

HELEN METCALFE PRICE, Voice:..PENNSYLVANIA, U. S. A.

e CAMILO QUINTERO, Accounting PANAMA

OMAR TAHIR RADI, Business .IRAQ

FREDERICK RAGER, LaborRelations AUSTRIA

e ARNE WILLIAM RANDALL, Education WASHINGTON U S A X ANNE RATUSHNY Publi Health Nursing CONNECTICUT U S A X

LEONARD RAUM, Law ............ MASSACHUSETTS, U S A

ALICE BLOSSOM REDMAN Interio Decoration NEW JERSEY, U S A

ELEANOR FLORENCE REES, Art PENNSYL VANIA U S. A l

SUZANNE KATE REICHARD, Psychology ........ AUSTRALIA

EVELYN ROSE REZEK, English ....... .ILLINOIS U S A

e ANNE ELANE RICHARDS Physical Education .ILLINOIS, V S A

ELEANOR LOUISE RICHIE Social Research COLORADO, V S A

LORNA HADDEN RIGGS, Education MASSACHUSETTS, U S A

HANS RIS Natural Sciences ......... ..... ............SWTZERLAND i

MARY EVELYN ROBERTSON, Nutrition CANADA

LOUIS A ROSELAAR, Business NETHERLANDS

RAGNAR GUSTAF EDVIN ROTHLIND Expor Shipments. SWEDEN

e MARGUERITE ROY, Physical Education.. ...............................................HAITI

MARY CECILIA RUSSELL, Library Sm·ire PENNSYLVANIA, U. S. A.

GERHART HANS SAENGER, Social Psychology GERMANY e ELISABETH ANDERSON SAMUEL, Psychology ..... SCOTLAND

JACQUES SANSTIRAN, Radio PERU

WILLIS D. SAVADGE, Bruiness NEW JERSEY, U. S. A.

e SIGRID SAXEVIK, CoJmotologJ..............................................................NORWAY

BEVERLEY A. A. SCHAEFER, Science WISCONSIN, U. S. A.

PATRIGA LEE SCHARF, Guidance Personnel

NEW YORK, U. S. A.

WILLIAM HURD SCHEIDE, Music......................PENNSYLVANIA, U. S. A.

S. ELIZABETH SCHILTZ, Edttcation OHIO, U. S. A.

MAXINE HELEN SCHLANBUSH, Music .IOWA, U. S. A.

ALICE SCHLESINGER, Kindergarten Teaching NETHERLANDS

e EVA SCHOCKEN, Nursery School Education....................................PALESTINE

HOWARD BERNARD SCHOR, Advertising NEW JERSEY, U. S. A.

MARGARET GRAHAM SCHURMAN, Library Service CANADA

ROBERT RUSSELL SCIDMORE, Education

HENRIETTE SHAPIRO, Psychology

NEW YORK, U. S. A.

NEW YORK, U. S. A.

KRISHNALAL J. SHRIDHARANI, Writing, Sociology .INDIA

SHEROO D. SIDHWA, Sculpture .INDIA

e HELEN A. SIEGEL, Primary Eduration WASHINGTON, V. S. A.

THELMA EDITH SINGER. P1;chiatric Social Work........OREGON, V. S. A.

CHARLOTTE SMALE, Piano....................... ....................MINNESOTA, U. S. A.

e MELVTLLE ALEXANDER SMILEY, Education COLORADO, U. S. A.

RUTH CHARLOTTE SMITH, Student Personnel INDIANA, U. S. A.

VIRGINIA MOORE SMITH, Singing NORTH CAROLINA, U. S. A.

e VASILIA SMOLICH, Radio Engineering POLAND

EDNA E. SOMMERFELD, Education VERMONT, U. S. A.

MARY VIRGINIA SPENCE, English Literatu,-e MISSOVRI, U. S. A.

e CATHERINE ELLEN SPOONER, Student Personnel .IOWA, U. S. A.

CLARA VERNELL SPURLOCH, Home Economics WEST VIRGINIA, U. S. A.

RACHEL NANCE STAUFFER, Librarianship............................OHIO, U. S. A.

e CATHERINE IRENE STEELE, Sociology................................................CANADA

REA JESS STEELE, Library Service MARYLAND, U. S. A.

RORERT STEELE, JR., Jrmrnaiism NEW YORK, U. S. A.

DOUGLAS M. STEENSLAND, l\fasic \X'ISCONSIN, U. S. A.

EVELYN MARIE STEINKE, Dress Designing .1O\X'A, U. S. A. 1

THFRESE KATHERINE STENGEL, Pe,-somzel COLORADO, U. S. A,

CAROLINE THORNALL STEPHENS, Teaching NEW JERSEY, U. S. A.

e LILLIAN GERTRUDE STIMPSON, Piano NORTH CAROLINA, U. S. A.

TOR STOKKE, Ba11king NORWAY

ERWIN JOAEFFIM STRAUSS, Voice NETHERLANDS

e BERNARDINE ELIZARETH STRIEGEL, N1mi11g .IOWA, U. S. A.

DOYLE LEONARD SUMNER, Rural Ed11cation ,........ SIERRA LEONE

MRINALINI SWAMINADHAN, Drama...................... .INDIA

e M. CHRISTINA SWINIARSKI, Gmnan MASSACHUSETTS. U. S. A.

GIORGIO TAGLIACOZZO, EconomJCs ITALY

ICHIRO J. TAKAHA HI, Aeron,w11c,ti Engmeering JAPAN

e SAKAE TAKANU, Physical Education HAWAil

SARAH ALLISON TAMS, French Se,retariai WEST VIRGINIA, U. S. A.

PETRUS JOHANNES THERON, Education of Handicapped UNION OF SOUTH AFRICA

e ELEANOR THOMAS, Stude11t Personnel AdmmiJtration .IOWA, U..S. A.

JAMES WILLIAM THOMSON, Businm Adminisll"ation CANADA

HARRIET FOBES TILTON, Secretarial MASSACHUSETTS, U. S. A.

BEATRICE EVELYN TITCOMB, Personnel Guidance..........MAINE, U. S. A.

UE 1·EH.E A TRAVIS, N,ming Education TEXAS, U. S. A.

PORTIA, LEE TRENHOLM, Music Education ALABAMA, U. S. A.

GERTRUDE WILSON TUCKER, Home Economics NEW YORK, U. S. A.

e PAULINE VIOLET TURNER, ocial Sm1ice OREGON, U. S. A.

LYDIA UGARTE, Social lVork.................. CHlLE

MARY VA� DER LUGT, P.rychology NETHERL.{\NDS

e GEORGE VAN HECKE, Economics BELGIUM

JAN JACOB VAN SCHAIK, Business UNION OF SOUTH AFRICA

HADASSA VAN VRIESLAND, Social Work PALESTINE

e ABRAHAM JOHANNES VAN ZYL, Mathematic1 UNION OF SOUTH AFRICA

ANDREE VEEN, Dreu and Textile De1igning FRANCE

NORMA CLAIRE VELLINE , AfttJJC................................VIRGINIA, U. S. A.

DOROTEO VILORIA VITE, Diplomacy PHILIPPINE ISLANDS

IRENE MARY VOIGT, Fine Art1 KANSAS, U. S. A.

JEAN D. WALLINE, Munc NEW YORK, U. S. A.

HELEN ELIZABETH WAL H, Home Economics....CALIFORNIA, V. S. A.

e MOREY JACK ON WANTMAN, Educatio,i MASSACHUSETTS, U. S. A.

MARGARET WATROU , Library Service MARYLAND, U. S. A.

DOLORE DE CASTRO WEAST, Business....................................PUERTO RICO

PAULINE VIVIAN WEI S, Guidance COLORADO, U. S. A.

DOROTHY LLOYD WELBOURN, PJychology CALIFORNIA, U. S. A.

HANS HEINRI H WENDEL, Social Re1earch................................GERMANY

JOHN TREVANION WE TLAKE, 1/lustration CONNECTICVT, V. S. A.

e JOAN WITHINGTON WHEATLEY, Sorioiogy NEW MEXICO, U. S. A.

LUIS ANDRE WHEATLEY, Pim10 DOMINICAN REPUBLIC

ORA LUCY WHEELER, Scient1fic Editorial Work .IOWA, U. S. A-.

e BET Y BOWIE WHITE, P1ychoiogy TEXAS, U. S. ·A.

NELLIE JO EPHINE \X/HITEFIE.LD, Elementary Education ILLINOIS, U. S. A.

A. GERALDINE WHITING, Lib,-ary Service....................lLLINOIS, U. S. A.

MARIAN PAULINE \X'HITING, Theatl'e MICHIGAN, U. S. A.

CLARABEL WILLIAMS, Religioiu Education..................VIRGINIA, U. S. A.

RENATO \X'lLLMA TN, Political Science BRAZIL

ANDREW MARSHALL WINBERG, Public Relations WASHINGTON, U. S. A.

CHARLOTTE ALINE \'X'OLLAEGER, Speech WISCONSIN, U. S. A.

VALESKA \'('OLLAEGER, Teaching WISCONSIN, U. S. A.

SHEILA GAIL wooD, Fine Arts NEWFOUNDLAND

MARTHA FRANCES \X'OODS, Spanish TEXAS, U. S. A.

ELIZABETH DILWORTH WOODWARD, Social Work PENNSYLVANIA, U. S. A.

ANN ELENORA WORTHINGHAM, Art Education CALIFORNIA, U.S. A.

ESTHER ANNE WRIGHT, Fashion J01m1alism MASSACHUSETTS U.S. A.

SOPHIA SPAULDING WRIGHT, Interior Decoration MASSACHUSETTS, U. S. A.

�(ARGARET CHRISTINA WYLIE, Ed1,cation CANADA

.MINNIE YASGUR, Art U. S. A. (RUSSIA)

.MOHAMMED HUSSAIN YASIN; Education .IRAQ

JENNIE K. C. YEE, Dress Designing.... HAWAII

IDABELLE YEISER, Education PENNSYLVANIA, U. S. A.

RAYMOND SHANG-DSONG YOH, Accounting CHINA

RUBY JANE YOUNG, Student Peuonnel Administration PENNSYLVANIA, U. S. A.

HUAN YU YUAN, Economics......................................................................CHINA

EUGENIA MARTHA ZIEMER, Physical Education MINNESOTA, U. S. A.

BARBARA VENN ZOPH, .Music CALIFORNIA, U. S. A.

ABDUL-MAJID ABBASS IRAQ

MARGUERITE CLIFFORD ADAMS, Orchestra Work SOUTH CAROLINA, U.S.A.

VIRGINIA HOLTON ADMIRAL Art .lNDIANA U.S.A.

l\llLDRED ALMEDIA AKINS, Physical Education TEXAS, U.S.A.

ESTERA ALBIN, English PoLAND

GERTRUDE ALEXANDERSON, Nutrition NEW YORK, U.S.A.

ERIC ALLEN, Philosophy VERMONT, U.S.A.

ARNOLD ALEXANDER ALLISON, Education

GERTRUDE ALLYN, Nursing Education ........................ CANADA

PATRICK McCALLISTER ANDERSON, Journalism ENGLAND

R. NORMAN ANDERSON, Illustration NEW YORK, U.S.A.

ALFRED JAMES ANDREWS, Fine Arts KENTUCKY, U.S.A.

JULIO FERNANDEZ DE LA ARENA, Citology CuBA

BERYL DE LEON ARENSBERG, Education .JAMAICA

MAX ARENSBERG, Accounting......... .. .... GERMANY

GEORGE ASAKAWA, Chemical Engineering U.S.A. (JAPAN)

NANCY ATHERTON, Theology MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A.

RICHARD MARTIN AUER, Mathematics NEW JERSEY' u.S.A.

JEAN AUSTIN, Zoology .........................................................lowA, U.S.A.

BKENAN YUSUF BAL Mathematics TURKEY

LUCY CLAY BARRO'W Household Arts VIRGINIA U S A

CORNILUS JOHN LIGHTHALL BATES Ministry CANAnA

JEAN WELFORD BATES Teaching U.S.A. ( CANADA)

STEPHEN RATHO, Engineering HtJNGARY

OSCAR BATOR! Engineering HUNGARY

PAUL FREDERIC BENNYHOFF, Music PENNSYLVANIA, U.S A

RUDOLF KARL BERNARD, French Education NEW YORK, U.S A

GLENN EVERETT BETSHER, Music KANSAS U.S.A.

INGI BJARNASUN; Engineering .lCELAND

BO HELGE BJORKMAN, Budgeting SWEDEN

ELLEN WHITING BLAKE, English and Guidance VIRGINIA, U.S.A.

MARGARET BLANKENSHIP, Sociology CALIFORNIA, U.S.A.

MARGIT BLOCHOVA, Physical Education CZECHOSLOVAKIA

MAURINE ELEANOR BLUM, Dancing .lLLINOIS, U.S.A.

ELSBET BODENHEIMER, Organist GERMANY

PAULO ANDRADE BOTELHO, Engineering BRAZIL

GEORGE E. BOTERO, Banking COLOMBIA

HELEN BOYD, Guidance MICHIGAN, U.S.A.

JUNE HAMILTON BRADSHAW, Music NEW YORK, U.S.A.

A

FRANCES BREED, Music and Medicine

NEW YoRK, l.J.S.A.

ALFRED K. RUSSELL BROOKS, English NEW YORK, N. Y.

EBEN BARNARD BROWN, Animal Husbandry VERMONT, U.S.A.

HELEN LORRAINE BROWN, Art and lf/riting Nt£w YORK, U.S.A.

OLIVE DUNBAR BROWN, Education and Drama Nt:w JERStY, U.S.A.

ROBERT LINDALE BROWN, History NEW JERSEY, U.S.A.

ETHEL BRUMBERGER, English NEw YoRK, U.S.A.

ALAN BURNHAM, Architecture PENNSYLVANIA, U.S.A

LELAND HOWARD BURT, Chemistry NEw YoaK, U.S.A.

JOSEPH BUSHEKIN, Piano CANADA

CFRANCES GRACE CAMPBELL, Kindergarten MINNESOTA, U.S.A.

JEAN CURRIE CAMPBELL, Flute VERMONT, U.S.A.

CARL ERIC CARLSON, Journalism SWEDEN

BEATRICE GERTRUDE CARMEN, Social Science MASSACHUSETTS, u.S.A.

RUTH MOORE CARPENTER, Education NEw YoRK, U.S.A.

WILLIAM WILZ CARROLL, Journalism MASSACHUSETTS, u.S.A.

JEAN MARGARET CARSON, Interior Decorating CANADA

JORDY CASALS-ARIET, Medicine SPAIN

OSCAR H. CATOIRE, Voice CALIFORNIA, U.S.A.

CONCEPCION SANTOS CEPEDA, Health Education PHILIPPINE ISLANDS

HUGH C. G. CHASE, Education MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A

HSIN MIN CH'EN, Public Health................................................CHINA

.MARGARET GAN Y. CHEW, Banking U.S.A. (CHINA)

CLARA CHENG, Organ CHINA

CHI CHIANG, Foreign Trade CHINA

JACQUES CHIMCHILACHVILI, Advertising EGYPT

KEE CHING CHIONG, Political Science CHINA

RADEGONDA CHOW, Social Work. HAWAII

MARY LOUISE CLEMENT, Piano CALIFORNIA, U.S.A.

RALPH H. COCKROFT, Accounting RH.ODE ISLAND, U.S.A

HAROLD REEVES COLLINS, Teaching NEW JERSEY, U.S.A.

ARRIGO COLOMBO, Law .lTALY

WILHELM COLZE, Medicine GERMANY

MILDRED R. CONRAD, Education CALIFORNIA, U.S.A.

MARION CAROLYN CONDIT, Education CALIFORNIA, u.S.A.

JOHN CHARLES CONDLIFFE, Business Administration NEW ZEALAND

PHILIP HALFORD COOK, Psychulogy AusTRALIA

CHARLES L. COPENHAVER, Ministry Ott·ro, U.S.A.

VERA CORLETT, School Administration COLORADO, U.S.A.

MARIAN VIRGINIA COSTELLO, Librarian PENNSYLVANIA, U.S.A.

JEAN J. N. DA COSTA, Education PENNSYLVANIA, U.S.A.

AILLEEN DALLWIG, Writing CALIFORNIA, U.S.A.

GERALDINE V. COSUMANO, Social Work NEW YORK, U.S.A

PEARL PARVIN COULTER, Nursing. COLORADO, U.S.A.

MARGARET P. COVENEY, ChildWelfare w ASHINt;TON, U.S.A.

MIRABEL HELEN CRAY, Nursin.gE�lucation NEW JERSEY, U.S.A.

J. CHRISTIAN CHRISTENSEN, Transportation NoRWAY

WINIFRED JOAN CULIK� LibraryService MICHIGAN, U.S.A.

T. DAVIS CUNNINGHAM, Voice PENNSYLVANIA, U.S.A.

D

EDWARD CURTIS DAHL, Mim:.�try CONNECTICUT, U.S.A.

MARY URSALA DATE, InteriorDesigning WASHINGTON, U.S.A.

MARGARET DAVIS, Education MAINE, U.S.A.

EDWARD FOON DEA, RadioEngineering ........................CHINA

CECILIO A. DE GUZMAN, Banking PHILIPPINES

MARY MARGARETHA DE JONG, SocialService NETHERLANOS

CHESTER DEVENOW, Law MICHIGAN, U.S.A.

EVEJ ,, YN ANN DIGGS, R1tralEd1tcation .LIBERIA

JOSEPH DOBSON, Education NEW YoRK, U.S.A.

.MARTHA W. DUDLEY, ElementaryEducation DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA, U.S.A.

CONSTANCE DURAND, Education (of Mentally Handicapped) NEW JERSEY, U.S.A.

E

EVELYN LEE EADDY, Music .Lou1sIANA, U.S.A.

FREDERICK EBY, SocialResearch .TEXAS, U.S.A.

MAURlCE MILLETT EDWARDS, English MASSACHUSETTS, u .S.A.

HERBERT A. EGGIE, Law NEw YoRK, U.S.A.

OLIVIA FOSTER ELDER, Education ALABAMA, U.S.A.

MARGARET YOUNG ELAM, Music VIRGINIA, U.S.A.

HEBECCA ELLMAN, English N.:w YoRK, U.S.A.

RUTH WHITNEY ELLS, Sculpture CONNECTICVT, U.S.A.

MARY HADDIX EMBERTON, NursingEducation COLORADO, u .S.A.

ANTONIO GALA F:NRIQUEZ, A�counting PHILIPPINE ISLANDS

JAMES ERBSTEIN, Law NEW YoRK, U�S.A.

FLOIS S. FAHS, PhysicalEducation NEw YORK, U.S.A.

SIN-KAO FANG, IndustrialAdminiMration: CHINA

JOHN S. FARRINGTON, ForeignService OREGON, U.S.A.

MARTA LUCY FAYER, Psychology HUNGARY

ERNESTINE FITZMAURICE, SocialService PENNSYLVANIA, U.S.A.

RICHARD FLOWERS, Education..............................TExAs, U.S.A.

YOLANDA A. FOTI, Social w·o,k. HUNGARY

ROSE PAOLINA FRANZETTI, Psychology.....................Cm1.E

ARLINE SYLVIA FREDSALL, PhysicalEducation MINNESOTA, U.S.A.

ROBERT EDWARD FREEMAN, Secretarial,Spanish MASSACHUSETTS, u .S.A.

DORIS LAVINIA FRENCH, Education NEWFOUNDLAND

MAXINE FRENCH, Education OH10, U.S.A.

DANIEL KOPPEL FREUNDENTHAL, Sociology CALIFORNIA, u .S.A.

ELIZABETH CHARLOTTE FUCHS Physiotherapy GERMAN

FREDERICK COWING FRICK Psychology U.S.A

WOLFGANG WALTER GUENTHER Law GERMANY

CAROLYN LUCY GWIN Physica Education LOUISIANA U S A

DMURIEL FANNYE HAAS Librar Schoo LOUISIANA U S A

ERHARDT GABEL Biology NEW YORK U.S.A

RUTHELEN JO GARVIN Nursing WASHINGTON U.S.A

BERNARD HARRY GASS Voice MASSACHUSETTS U.S.A

ROSA GASSER Voice .TEXAS U S.A

\VERNER LUDWIG GEBAUER Violin GERMANY

MARGARET GERIG Household Arts FLORIDA U.S.A

JAMES BROCK GIDNEY Education French NEW JERSEY U.S.A

JOHN GLANVILLE GILL Philosophy and Religion PENNSYLVANIA U.S.A

LUIS Z GONZALES, Medicine PHILIPPINE ISLANDS

MARY ALICE GRATTON, Law NEw YORK U.S.A

GEORGE HAROLD GRIFFITHS Education Omo U S A

MacARTHUR GYNN, Speech CANADA

MARY FRANCES GILL, English MAlNE U.SA

KARNA ELISABETH GIP, Home Economics SWEDEN

HELEN EMILY GIPSON, Music MINNESOTA, U.S A

THOMAS FAVILL GLADWIN, Anthropology CALIFORNIA, u .S A

THELMA WYATT GODFREY, Fine Arts WASHINGTON, U.S A

AUDREY EDNA '7REEN, Busr'nPss Education NEW YORK, U.S.A.

MARY ALICE GREENE, Dietetics NEw YORK, U.S A.

1'ORBJORN HAFSTEN Ai -conditioning NORWAY

FARICITA HALL Speech Education CALIFORNIA U S A

FLORA MAE HALL Banking CALIFORNIA U S A

FRANCIS B HALL Ministry COLORADO U S A

CHARLES PENROSE HARBOTTLE Education Omo U S A

ESTHER BARBARA HART Public Health Nursing U S A

KHALID MAHMOOD HASHIM! Education .IRAQ

ALICE EDNA HAYNES NEW JERSEY U S A

MARY HEITSCH, Household Arts MICHIGAN U S A

EMILIE LOUISE HELD, Commercial Art Omo U S A

DOROTHY MARY HELM I'h-rsical Therapy MINNESOTA, U S A

GUSTAV HENRIKSEN, Finance NORWAY

BARBARA HICKAM Musicology INDIANA U S A

BETSEY ANNE HIGGINS, Religious Education MAINE U S A

WYNELLE HODGES Piano .TEXAS, U S A

ROLF HOFFMAN, .Sociology U S A (GERMANY)

TRUDI MOOS HOLBROOKE, Business ARGENTINA

MARJORY HOLTBY, Physiothe rapy NEw YoRK, U S A

IRENE HOPKINS, English WASHl GTON, D C., U S A

NAOMI HOWELLS, T eaching OREGON, U S A

G

MAYING HSI, Music

YU-TSUNG ANN HSI, 'Art

CHENG HSIANG HU, Patlwlogy

CHINA

C:HINA

f:HINA

KKENG TONG KAN STRAIT SETTLEMENTS

SARA KAPLAN, Education, English PALF.STTNE Palestine

TSU LIEN HSU, Banking CHINA Shanghai, China

ROOS HUISMAN NETHERLANDS

LINCOLN BROOK HUNT, Voice MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A.

I

FRANK IEZZI, Voice CoNNF:f.Tif.lJT, U.S.A.

TSUTAYO ICHIOKA, Medicine CALIFORNIA, U.S.A.

POTENCIANO ILLUSORIO, Law and Banking PHILIPPINES

C:HARLES ITKIN, Business DENMARK

KUNIO IZUMI, Economics .JAPAN

J

ROBERT SHEPPARD JAQUES, French CANADA

ORA ALPHA JARVIS, Accounting Wf,ST VIRGINIA, U.S.A.

LAURA MEI-LING JEE, Economics U.S.A.

EINAR HANS BAGGESEN JENSEN, Business DENMARK

GEORGE JOBBERNS, Science NEw ZEALAND

GRACE ELIZARETH JONES, Fine Arts MINNESOTA, u.S.A.

LOIS ELIZABETH JONES, Music Education OKLAHOMA, U.S.A.

AXEL v.· JORGENSEN, Finance NEW YORK, U.S.A.

JEAN JOSLYN, Music......................................................lLLINOIS, U.S.A.

MARIAN JUDELL, French M1ssoua1, U.S.A.

WJI,IJAM ROBERT KAPP, lrzteh,ational Relations NEW YORK, U.S.A.

THOMAS H. KARRAMESINES, Law NEw YoRK, U.S.A.

ADOLPH EDWARD KATRA, Mathematics ILLINOTS, U.S.A.

JEAN ROSS KATRA, Literature WASHINGTON, U.S.A.

ADOLF EDMUND KATZENELLENBOGEN, Art, History GERMANY

JOHN C. KEPLINGER, Photography Omo, U.S.A.

LOIS F. KIDDER, Elementary Education MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A.

MARGUERITE SALOME KLAR, Voice MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A.

ELEANOR M. KNOBLOCH, Education MICHIGAN, U.S.A.

ELIZABETH JOHANNA KOBLENZER, Spanish, Fashion Writing GERMANY

HENDRIK SALOMON KONIJN, Social Science HoLLAND

X-Ray Technique and Physics CHINA

PIERRE KRAM, English FRA NCE

GIORGIO KRAUSZ, Bacteriology...................................................lTALY

JAMES HENRY KRIEGER, Law NEw YORK, U.S.A.

LOIS BOYLAN KRIEGER. NEW YORK, U.S.A.

ANTHONY J KRZYZANOWSKI, Education NEW JERSEY, U.S.A.

TOJIKO KUBO, Social Legislation JAPAN

HUSEYIN KULAKSIZ, Minin.g TURKEY

CHO S. KWAN, Aeronautics CHINA

LERIC GUSTAF LAGERCRANTZ, Banking SwEDEN

CHRISTINA F. LAM, Social Researclz HAWAll

THOMAS ANGELO LANESE O1110, U.S.A.

PAUL CAYAYA LAUS, Ministry PHILIPPINES

EDGAR LAYTHA, Writing............................................................HUNGARY

GEORGE MARSHALL LAWSON, Music COLORADO, u S.A.

GILBERT BROOKS LEE, Psychology............OREGON, U.S.A.-

HSIN CHIH LEE, Education CHINA

FRANCIS NOEL LEES, English.............................................ENGLAND

EDUARDO ROMAN LEMAITRE, Law COLOMBIA

OLIVE SARA LEONARD, Creative Writing NEw YoRK, U.S.A.

HERBERT BENEDICT LEVY, Merchandising NEW YORK, U.S.A.

PETER LEVY, Law NEw YoRK, U.S.A.

EVANGELINE LEWIS, Drama CANADA

BENJAMIN LI, Medicine.....................................................................HAWAII

GLADIS SANDRA LIANG, Fashion Design TExA�, U.S.A

MARY POWERLIGHTLE, Social Work CALIFORNIA,U.S.A.

LIN LIN, Economics CHINA

G. IRENE LI�DBERG, Child Welfare Work CALIFORNIA, U.S.A.

YOLANDA RODRIGUEZ LINDENBERG, Nutrition, Nursing BRAZIL

AAGOT LINDSTROM, Nursing Education NoRWAY ELLWOOD CLIFTON LINE, Graphic Arts USA

BESSIE KRUPSAW LITTMAN, Public Health NEW YORK, US.A.

JANE PHILBY LONG, Business and Teaching OKLAHOMA, US.A.

GIM FUNG LOCKE, English WASHINGTON, U.S.A.

FERNANDO LOPEZ-LARA, Medicine EcvAooR

JEAN LUBERGER, Secretarial Omo, U.S.A.

ROBERT EDWARD LUCCOCK, Ministry CONNECTICUT, U.S.A.

ALMA LUCKAU, Political Science GERMANY

GERTRUDE EVELYN LUNT, Education MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A.

GABRIEL HARRY LWOWITCH, Languages FRANCE

MSUZANNE RUST MAcPHERSON, Language FLORIDA, U.S.A.

WARD NAPIER MADISON, Education NEw YoRK, U.S.A.

JULIA LINFIELD MAGID, Dramatics VIRGINIA, U.S.A.

ALBERT MALVER, Music W1scoNSIN, U.S.A.

FEDERICO MANGAHAS, Economics PHILIPPINES

MARIA MANGSET. Education...................................................NORWAY

TANIA THERESA MANOOILOFF, Economics U.S.A. (RussIA)

INDU MARATHE, Education .INDIA

JOSEPH F. MCCLEAN, VOICE

MANETTE �MARBLE Educatio K U S HELEN MARGULI ES P y clwl C ew C HARRIET LOWE LL MASO N G id C A l GUSTA E MATHIE U B k f{ ... F i c Ni F HAR Y GOODRIC H MA Y, F V U Norfo HEL N SELM A MA Y , P hol gy NEw J U d h Or n Ne J HELEN GRIFFITH McARTHUR N i C CAROLINE NORRIS McCAB E Itali N US i MARGARET GRAC E McKIM P y h olo y C Y k JEAN McNE Pubc H lth. C ALBER T ELLIOT McVITTY JR Ed ati N J U MARGARET ELAIN E MEEK I i D i g M US WALTER ERNEST MENKE, Accou nti G 500 Riverside Driv New Y r Y. CELI A IREN MERRILL, Vi lin M U S "Will OWay Bloomfi eld Hill MARI PEREN MESQUITO M dici B B HERMINE HERTA MEYER, S i al W G MABE M MEYER Engli .l US A EDWARD HUGO MICHAELSEN A ti g D grebhev JOHN GILLETTE MILNER, So ci W .l U S 50 Main AvenF lls Id h HIROSH ROGE MITSUI Ae uti l E i in 3 ki Ja J M H E. MOEREL Chemistry� ..... N TH 69 MARIE SCHOBER MOLLESTAD Voi US A BARTHOLOMEW CARDELL MONSERRAT A u g b C ... zil - ky RA N .. 0 ING ID A MA RIA OLLI Nursery chool E EVA O MOS_ AN EN, Soci l Wo g Ch AJI M I HI Aeronautical Eng
New York

HSUEH-CHANG P_ANG, Aeronautical Re.search. CHJNA

RUDOLF PATEK, Medicine AUSTRIA

DOROTHY OLDHAM PEACH, VoiceAR1zo A, U.S.A.

ELAINE PENN, Piano MISSISSIPPI, U.S.A.

WERNER PESE, Economics GERMANY

CARL PFEIFER, Piano PEN 'SYLVANIA, U.S.A.

• VERGNAUD PIERRE-N0t�L, Art IIAITT

PETER IMMANUEL POLLAK. Chemistry SWITZERLAND

DAVID ALAN PYKE, Medicine E GLAND

QANNA BLANCHE QUlNN, NursingEducation KENTUCKY, U.S.A.

RSONIA RAIZISS, lf"riting PENNSYLVANIA, U.S.A.

BEATRIC:E RRASEFIELD RAKESTRAW, LibraryService NEW JERSEY, U.S.A.

ENRIQUE GUILLERMO RAMONEDA, Air Conditioning MEXICO

M. HOWARD RAPP, MedicineNEw YoRK, U.S.A.

MAY AGATHA REGAN, EducationCoNNECTICVT, U.S.A.

OSCAR FRANCIS RESTREPO, CommerceCOLOMBIA

NELDA IRENE RICCI, MalariaResearch U.S.A. (hALY)

JEANNETTE RICHARDSON, VoiceARIZONA, U.S.A.

MARGARET M. RIES, Secretarial............MARYLAND, U.S.A.

MARIA RIEZLER, Voice GERMANY

f.HARLOTTE L0lJISE RILEY, LihraryService NEW JERSEY, U.S.A. 4

JORGE MIRANDA RIVERA. Voir-c Cmu-:

WENDY ISAREL ROBINSON, MusicCA 1 ADA

TOBY EDWARD RODES, BankingandLawCoLOMnIA

ETHEL ROGERS, VocationalGuidanceNEw YORK, U.S.A

HARRIET ROGERS, Pre-SchoolEducation WEST VIRGI IA, U.S.A.

BETTY JANE ROSEN, Piano .lLLINOIS, U.S.A.

LOTS ANN ROSE�, Commercial Art .lLLINOIS, U.S.A.

VIRGINIA MARY ROSS, Photography CONNECTICUT, U.S.A. O

WILLIAM DONALD ROSS, Med;cineC:ANADA

ROGER STEPHAN RYAN, Marketing._.NEw YoRK, U.S.A.

sMANUEL FRANCISCO SAMPER, Architecture COLOMBIA

JAMES REID SANFORD, VoiceCOLORADO, U.S.A.

HONORIO SANTOS, BusinessAdministration._.PHILIPPINES

RUBIN SCHATTEN, Mathematics.............................................PoLAND

THEODORA ELIZABETH SCHMIDT, MusicalTheory U.S.A.

ARNOLD FERDINAND SCHMITZ, Art U.S.A. (GERMANY)

EDWARD FRANZ SCHOTT, MedicineGERMANY

TAGE SCHOU-NIELSEN, FinanceDENMARK

SYLVIA SCHUSSHEIM, SocialService NEW YORK, U.S.A.

MARJORIE LOUISE SCOTT, HouseholdArtsandScience CANADA

JOHAN SELAND, Economics.........................................................NORWAY

p

KEMAL SELi, Engineering_ TVRKEY

JORGE ROBLES SENDON, Geology CHILE

ROBERT H. SHAFFER, Education .lNDIANA, U.S.A.

WILLIAM ANTHONY SHEMET, Natural Science Education CoNNECTICUT, U.S.A.

JACK SHEPARD, International Afjairs AvsTRALIA

JAMES KUN SHINN, Medicine IIAwAll

BURNETT HENRY SHRYOCK, Art .lLLINOIS, U.S.A.

GLEN CRAWFORD SIDDALL, Voice U.S.A. (CANADA)

DOROTHY MARIETTA SILLIMAN, Pysiotherapy CONNECTICUT, U.S.A.

JOSEPHINE LILA SILVER, Voice NEw JERSEY, U.S.A.

LUCY ANN MOON SIMES, History .lDAHo, U.S.A.

ELLEN R. SIMON, Art CANADA

LOUISE SISSMAN, Economics VIRGINIA, U.S.A.

CHRISTINE PERCIVAL SKELTON, Education MASSACHUSETTS, u .S.A.

DONALD DAVID SMITH, English. NEw YoRK, U.S.A. 1

IRVING SYDNEY SMITH, Business Administration CANADA

MARJORIE GLADYS SMITH, Dress Designing ILLLINOIS, U.S.A.

VIRGINIA MAE SMITH, Education CALIFORNIA, U.S.A.

NANCY MILROY SMYTHE, Dramatics .lLLINOIS, U.S.A.

JOSEPH JOHN STAHL, History and Education COLORADO, U.S.A.

MICHAEL A. STAHL, Education CoLORADO, U.S.A.

JOSEPH B. STARKE, Advertising NEW YoRK, U.S.A.

HOUSTON STIFF, lllustration TEXAS, U.S.A.

EILEEN STURGELL, English ALASKA

MARIA S. STURSHENOVA, Literature BUT..GARtA

MARY MARGARET SULLIVAN, I'uhlic Health NEW HAMPSHIRE, U.S.A

MARIA T�:RESA SUSONI, Lung11-a1;•�.c, PUF.RTO Rico

HARRY SWIRSKY, Writing NEw YoRK, U.S.A.

JUJJA JUICHENG SZE, Fordgn Traclc CHI.NA

JOSEPH SZENTKIRALYI, Education HVNGARY

TLYNETTE TAHIR-ALI, Beauty Culture TRINIDAD

BUNLIANG TAMTHAl, Medicine...................................................SIAM

JOSE DE CASTRO TEIXEIRA, Medicine BRAZIL

RUTH FRANCES THAYER, Primary Education NEW YORK, U.S.A.

IRENE HELEN THOMPSON, Education NEW YoRK,· U.S.A.

BERNHARDT TIEDE, Voice U.S.A. (GERMANY)

MAUNG MAUNG TIN, Radio BVRMA

ELSIE EVELYN TODD, Education of Handicapped CANADA

ROZALJA KRYSTYNA TOLCZYNSKA, Journalism POLAND

WALTER B. TOWNSEND, Education Guidance

ROBERT MORISS WIILLIAM TRAVERS, Psychology ENGLAND

ROY TRAVIS, Music TEXAS, U.S.A.

SARAH CATHERINE TRAWICK, Education SOUTH CAROLINA, U.S.A.

MARY ROSE TREML, Music MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A.

ROBERT GORDON TRUE, Playwriting UTAH, U.S.A.

KASSIE.BOWRING TURNER, Education NEw ZEALAND

VANNA HERMANNA F. VAN HALL, Textile Designing NETHERLANDS

ANTONIO RUIZ VILAPLANA, Law SPAIN

GITZA STANIMIROVA VLADOVA, Education BULGARIA

WILIFRED H. R. von BOROWSKI, Teaching ARGENTINA

wCONNIE CONNOR WALKER, Fashioning, LOUISIANA, U.S.A

PHYLLIS LEALDA WALKER, Educational English CALIFORNIA, u S.A.

WALLACE CHUN-HSIEN WANG, Church Work. CHINA

FRANCES MARY WARD, Education CALIFORNIA, U.S.A.

f'ANNIE TITSWORTH WARNCKE, Nursing NEW MEXICO, U.S.A.

MARGARET ELIZABETH WEBSTER, Fashions MASSACHUSETTS, U.-::, A.

LLUCILE H. WERNER, Music PENNSYLVANIA, U.S.A.

CORDELLA HUGHES WHARTON, Costume Designing DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA, U.S.A.

LUCIA KELIIPOOHINA WHITE, Education HAWAII

HELEN ADELE WHITING, Rural Education GEORGIA, U.S A.

WILLIAM CUTTING WILBUR, JR., Education SOUTH CAROLINA, U.S.A.

HOWARD WILSON WILHELM, Voice...............OHio; U.S.A.

HELEN WILKIE, Physical Education W1scoNSIN, U.S.A.

MADELINE AURA WILLEMSEN, Radio and Education PUERTO Rico

ELINOR WILLIAMS, Piano.......................................VIRGINIA, U.S.A.

KJ,ARA CECILIA WOLF, Psychology.................................GERMANY

ARTHUR FOOK WON, Vocational Guidance HAWAII

CHARLES SUNG WONG, Government..................................CHINA

JOHN S. L. WOO, English CHINA

NANCY DZOE-TS WOO, Social Work.......................................CHINA

ERSKINE CLARK WRIGHT, Voice M1ssouR1, U.S.A.

CHU KENG WU, Aviation........................................................................CHINA

WILLIAM !EU-LIANG WU, Radio CHINA

ELIZABETH F WYLIE, Education CANADA y

FOHTEH NAI-ZER YAO, Textiles CHINA

CHAPIN CHIA-PING YING, Transportation CHINA

KOKICHI YOKOYAMA, Economics .JAPAN

MOH POW YOONG, Medicine BRITISH MALAYA

SHANG-SHOA YOUNG, Metallurgical Engineering CHINA

J. DERWIN YOUNG, French NEW YORK, U.S.A.

EDUARDO ZABARTE, Commerce PHILIPPINES

BASIA BARBARA ZAMBROWSKI, Psychology U.S.A. (POLAND)

RAMON MEDINA ZAPICO, Accounting CunA

ENRIQUE ZUNIGAR, Medicine HoNDURAS

z

YEARBOOK COMMITTEE

E. CLIFTON LINE

SHEROO SIDHWA

HaApDASSA VAN VRIESLAND

FRANCES BROWN

G. HUNTINGTON DAMON

WRITERS

William D. Carter

Dolores Weast

ARTISTS

Georgia Lightfoot

Seville M. White

Arnold F. Schmitz Anna Matyas

PHOTOGRAPHERS

David L. Fowler

Mohamed Kamal Khalifa

Jarmila M. Maranova

COSTUME PAGE

Julie Berg-Hansen Maying Hsi

Evelyn Rose Rezek

Esther Anne Wright

John T. Westlake

William Ieu-liang Wu

John Kwon

Jarmila Maranova

David Orozco Louis Roselaar Sheroo Sidhwa

Hadassa Van Vriesland

ARTS PAGE

Mrinalini Swaminadhan

Nancy M. Smythe

Interior Decoration..Rosemary Garman

Marionettes..... Hadassa Van Vriesland

Martha Woods

Painting Ann Yu-tsung Hsi

Literature Edgar Laytha

Sculpture Sheroo Sidhwa

Silverware..M. Kikuko Miyakawa

"Frrata" — Photographic Contest Prize Winner - Herbert Levy

This page is contributed by purveyors of provisions and other supplies to International House

Brooklyn Hotel Supply Company...........641-643 Atlantic Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y..........Dairy Products

prowning Brothers, Ine... Park Avenue at 131st Street, New York City.....Hardware

Continental Baking Company (Wonder Bread and Rolls)

Embassy Grocery Corporation..................407-411 Greenwich Street, New York City.....Groceries

Harlem Card and Paper Company........207-211 East 119th Street, New York City.....Paper

Peoria& fee (eee 205 East 24th Street, New York City....................Ice Cream (America’s Favorite Since 1851)

Jetter Dairy Company, Inc. a3 Perry Mtreet, New York City... Dairy Products

Lee Finish Corporation._______._. 250 West 54th Street, New York City...............Paint

Lemkau-Kidd Corporation. ...........W0........674-676 Hudson Street, New York Citv..........Fruits and Vegetables

Lilydale Farms Company.......---cceee-287 Greenwich Street, New York City................Dairy Products

ree! fe 23 Washington Street, New York City.................Textiles

Se eee Oe... 04-62 West 21st Street, New York City.............Household Supplies

C. T. Morison & Company.....c000-- 104 East 41st Street, New York City... Electrical Supplies

Premier Paper Company... 475 Fifth Avenue, New York City....................W00..Paper Goods

U. W. Thomas & Company... 243-245 Pearl Street, New York City...................Coffee and Tea

Wallace, Burton & Davis Company.........376-378 Greenwich Street, New York City.....Croceries

Waterman and Company. .47-49 Harrison Street, New York City.................Fruits and Vegetables

as woos & Ce. tnc.................10th Ave.—-25-26th Street, New York City......Reliable Food Products (Royal Scarlet Food Products)

Compliments of Mr. J. C. Luhrs

Compliments of a Friend

~~

How many people use a bank?

‘Lue ANSWER to that one may surprise you. It even surprised us a little. In his annual Report this year, National City Bank’s Chairman of the Board wrote as follows:

“Allowing for some duplication, I think we can truthfully say that one out of every eight of the adult population of the five boroughs passes through our doors to borrow or save.

Lam proud of the leadership our Bank has established as a bank for the people.”

A bank for the people—that’s a pretty good aim for any bank. And it’s because National City is a bank for the people that it is being used by more and more of those people every year. Until now, in 1940, it reaches a new high by serving one out of every eight New Yorkers.

While you’re in New York, you’ll find afriendly branch ofNational City somewhere near you. Each one is a complete banking unit in itself... at the service ofits customers. Stop in and see ifwe can’t be of service to you.

-THE NATIONAL GHTY BANK OF NEW YORK k/ 195 Sasa xm \¥ 2 HEAD OFFICE: 55 WALL STREET 71 BRANCHES IN GREATER NEW YORK ONE HUNDRED TWENTY-FIFTH STREET BRANCH—125th Street at Old Broadway Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

Dining Abroad in New York

UNiversity 4-5970 AKL DINING ROOM
Our Special Luncheon, 11:30 to — Dinner, 5:30 to 8 Strictly Home Cooking 420 WEST 119th STREET NEW YORK CITY Special Parties — Banquets at Short Notice DUTCH MILL INN I. ANDERSON Real Home Cooking Luncheon 35c Dinner 50c Sunday Dinner from 12 to 3 — 50c and 60c 160 CLAREMONT AVENUE NEW YORK, N. Y. WoOrth 2-8943 Completely Air Conditioned THE CHINESE RATHSKELLER Genuine Cantonese Cuisine and Choice Liquors 45 MOTT STREET NEW YORK Phone LOngacre 5-8237 TOKYO-TEI RESTAURANT Japanese Delicacies 76 WEST 47th STREET CIrcle 7-9274 CHAMPLAICA French Restaurant Lunch 50c Dinner 90c 115 WEST 49th STREET NEW YORK CITY Phone WOrth 2-819] Open Daily, 11 A.M. to 4 A.M. eee @... Oldest Chinese Restaurant in New York in the Heart of Chinatown UNSURPASSED REAL CHINESE COOKING 36 PELL STREET NEW YORK 362 Sth AVENUE Near 34th Street OFFICIAL PHOTOGRAPHERS INTERNATIONAL HOUSE YEARBOOK
Phone
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A Guide for the Epicure

"CATERERS OF REAL CHINESE DISHES" Phone WOrth 2-8266 ims $6 HEE tn YAT BUN SING RESTAURANT jor IN THE HEART OF CHINATOWN ce OPEN DAY AND NIGHT 16 Mott Street New York MOnument 2-2860 Nearest: to the International House THE NEW CHINA CHINESE and AMERICAN RESTAURANT Next to Home This is the Best Place to Eat 3140 BROADWAY NEW YORK CITY ‘ Near LaSalle Street Tel. WOrth 2-8650 @ Se ze NOM WAH TEA PARLOR This Tea Parlor Especially Features Genuine Chinese Tea Luncheon — Tea Cakes Meat Patties and Various Delicious Varieties Our Spacious Dining Room Most Suitable Also for Luncheon Parties Home Made American Pastries and Ice Cream from Our Modern Soda Fountain Service. A Trial Will Convince You indeed. 13 DOYER STREET NEW YORK CITY THE BURDE PHARMACY BROADWAY at 122nd STREET Your Drug Store Requirements Well Filled SODA FOUNTAIN 10% Discount to Members of International House Upon Presentation of Membership Card Telephone: UNiversity 4-8092 “AIR CONDITIONED” Et TEL. WORTH 2-7748 Pca Lichee Wau RESTAURANT OF DISTINCTION 4 OPEN DAY AND NIGHT 2 ne 1 1 MOTT STREET OSCAR HOH # NEW YORK CITY MGR. See Chinatown, eat as the Chinese Ce, 08 « feos Pell Street Inn Air Conditioned Year Round 18 PELL STREET NEW YORK CHINATOWN Phone WOrth 2-8193 Open from 11 A. M. to 3 A. M. And Don’t Forget... THE INTERNATIONAL HOUSE CAFETERIA Excellent Food at Moderate Prices The WAFFLE WING serves light luncheons and refreshments “Say it with Flowers” MANHATTAN FLOWER
3182 BROADWAY, NEW YORK Near 125th Street Telephone: MOnument 2-614]
SHOP

Compliments of CAMPUS CHARTER COACH LINES

045 FIFTH AVENUE * NEW YORK

UNiversity 4-8518

A. B. C. GARAGE

29-41 MOYLAN PLACE 338 WEST 125th STREET

INDIVIDUAL SPACES

SERVING INTERNATIONAL HOUSE CARS DELIVERED AND CALLED FOR

Insured for Property Damage and Liability Under Our Policy

Mr. KoRMANN

It it is your wish to extend your experience of international friendship; if you want the benefits and enjoyments of International House to be yours for keeps; then you are cordially invited to join

Alumni Association of International House

Membership includes subscription to the “INTERNATIONAL QUARTERLY” Present membership is over two thousand in sixty-seven countries

For application and information, please communicate with Secretary, Alumni Association of International House 900 Riverside Drive, New York City

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