






HE flame of the candle is the spirit of brotherhood, and the passage of the flame from hand to hand is the dissemination of fellowship and friendship throughout the world. The spirit of the House is a flame, and it shines with increasing strength and throws the softness of its light upon the far places of the world.
To the man who dreamed the flame and gave it life — who built this House to shelter it —- who watched over it and had no thought but for its growing brightness—and who is now to place its trust in other hands—we offer this book as a fitting tribute.
It is in recognition of the work he has done in furthering international understanding and with sincere gratitude for the world home he has here established and maintained that we dedicate this book to Mr. Harry Edmonds, founder and director of the House.
l
“Yet I doubt not thro’ the ages one increasing purpose runs,
And the thoughts of men are widen'd with the process of the suns.”,—TENNYSON.
T is unfortunate that as soon as an idea assumes a material form the idea itself becomes unimportant. In a world where only tangible things count for very much, we are too inclined to evaluate thought and action in terms of tangible results. Sculpture is criticized in its final form rather than in the light of its original inspiration and idea. Art, it seems, is not art until it has been given material expression, and until its first conceptions have been interpreted in stone or oil and displayed before a critical world. Success in art or success in life is measured by the directness with which we give form to ideas and material meaning to ideals. If we consider International House as the final expression of an idea and as the result of aman’s creative efforts to give purpose and meaning to that idea; if we evaluate it as we would any work of creative art, then we permit ourselves to see more clearly the true greatness of its intent and the vital significance of its being.
The House is not merely a house; it is not a shelter or a retreat; it is not a social organization; it is not an architectural heap of steel and stone; it is not a residence for students. It is a material mechanism built to serve the broad and unselfish purpose of promoting international good will and developing a spirit of brotherhood among all races, all nationalities, all creeds. It is the visible and real expression of an idea. It is ablazed tree on the path of agrowing purpose.
The House now stands in a sense a completed work, and those of us who missed the opportunity of following the steps of its planning and development are inclined to look at it in the light of what it is rather than ofwhat itrepresents. We seethe sculpture, but give littlethought tothe creative work and genius that went into its modeling, and little thought tothebasicconcepts thatareitslife.
Those concepts were formulated twenty-five years ago. We know the story of how Mr. and Mrs. Edmonds, realizing the need that students from other lands felt for friendly associations in this country, granted numbers of them the hospitality of their home. From this beginning there grew the larger and more inclusive conception of a world home, a
place where all might live together on a sound basis of international friendliness and drawn together by thebonds ofcommon interestsand aspirations. With Mr. Edmonds the idea became a purpose, and to it he devoted work and energy beyond measure so that he might give to it the final quality of a tangible existence. Under his guidance and direction the House progressed from the realm of thought to the realm of reality; it became not merely an abstract conjecture, but a vital and a real thing. It became, as all art must, the interpretation of a dream and the visible form of an inspiration. With itsgrowth the underlying purpose of International House assumed an increasing importance in the mind of its builder. The first work was done and it was found to be good. This House was completed in 1924. Six years later a similar center was opened in Berkeley, California, and in 1932 another International House began its program in Chicago.
The purpose still grows, and now Mr. Edmonds has increased the scope of his plans to include still more American and foreign cities in his project.
“Other Houses will spring up in other great cities and in other countries, I hope, to join in this high purpose, to share in one another’s enthusiasm and to profit by one another’s experience. We must integrate these enterprises into our professions and into our countries until they literally encompass the world, not sentimentally but by every practical means which
we can bring about to further international understanding and international co-operation.”
To carry out his plans for widening still further the circle of brotherhood and international understanding, Mr. Edmonds is this year giving up the active directorship of his first International House. This much is done, but he feels that there is still more to be done in other directions before he has entirely completed and fulfilled his misston—a purpose which grew from an idea to a plan, from a plan to a House, from a House to an even greater plan for international brotherhood which may in time, in his own words, ‘encompass the world.”
We who have lived for the past year in this home of all nations feel that we should give proper recognition to the values which Mr. Edmonds has here established for us, and that we should add to the gratitude of those who have in other years known the benefits of the House our own gratitude for what it has done for us. Whatever his new enterprises may be, we wish him success in them even greater than that which the prospering of this House already signifies. And we hope that in his newer citadels there will dwell the same spirit that from the beginning has made his first International House not only a home of nations, but a home of friendliness and brotherhood.
XCEPT in general and in the nature of an outline, it would be difficult to summarize the activities of the past year. Impressions are much too personal and much to individual to be treated collectively. Out of the progressive series of events which has occupied the past year each of us has retained for himself specificmemories and definite impressions which arehistohave, and, we hope, his to hold. Activittes—with which word we cover a multitude of suppers, dances, lectures, teas,musicales, and similarelements ofearnest and entertained living—constitute a general and pleasant background for our individual actions. The things that really happen are not those that happen to the House, but to ourselves. A lecture is important not because it is delivered, but because there are people to listen to it; a picture is good not because it was painted, but because there are people to enjoy it. Each of us has his own selective memories, and each likes to dwell on them in his own way.
What we present here, then, is not a summary of events, but rather a descriptive list of settings. We dothis inthehope thatitwillguide you inrecalling the pleasant and enjoyable hours you have spent—at suppers, at dances, at teas and at all other activities— duringtheyear.
Sunday Supper is still, as it was in the beginning, the fount and source of all House activities. This year’s program was more varied than usual, including as itdid everything from talks on Russia, Roosevelt and Ghandi toHopi Indian snakedances and African music. Speakers during the first semester included Dr. Harry Emerson Fosdick, Dr. Julius Hecker, Mr. Harry Edmonds, Miss Madeline Slade, Mr. Bruce Curry, Hon. Nelson T. Johnson and M. Pierre de Lanux. Besides their talks on interesting international problems we remember with delight the readings ofEdwin Markham and the dances ofRuth St. Denis. Since January we have had asguest speakers at Sunday Suppers such personages as Chancellor Harry W. Chase, Mr. Stanley High, Senator Thomas, President Bayard Dodge, Mr. Alfred Adler and Charles Hodges. An illustrated lecture on Italypresented byM. Eugene Croizat and aprogram ofmusic by the Middlebury College Glee Club completed the Supper program for the year.
The aim of Sunday Supper is to promote international understanding and to strengthen the bonds
of fellowship among members of the House, but there are other gatherings which serve this same purpose. Tuesday Teas, Friday Teas, dances and special activitiesofvarious kinds allhave astheirbasic intentthe convening of nationalities on friendly and sociable terms. Special activities in which smaller groups participated were the excursion to West Point, visits to the New York Times, the Stock Exchange, and the National Broadcasting Company, Saturday hikes, swimming parties and the Easter trip to Washington.
Notable among the year’s dances were the Hallowe’en Carnival, the Thanksgiving Day Dance, the New Year’s Eve Ball and the Valentine Dance. The Carnival and the New Year's Eve dance were perhaps the most colorful and delightful of all because of their variety of entertainment, the elaborate care that was given to decoration, and the spirit of genial festivitythatreigned atboth.
Much of the year’s entertainment was provided by the various national groups of the House, who, besides co-operating to make dances and teas successful and interesting, contributed their efforts to the planning of International Night and to the presentation of special group programs. Congratulations should be extended to the Japanese Group for its evening of national folk songs and dances, to the Spanish for its colorful fiesta, to the British for its amusing Eisteddfod, and to the American for its Washington’s Birthday Party. [13]
For the enjoyment of members who indicated an interest in recreational activities, the gymnasium afforded its full quota of basketball, badminton, and volley ball games. For those who were interested in studying the problems of the world, there were group discussions sponsored by the Cultures and Public Affairs Groups. For those interested in music, there were musicales, concerts, recitals and the recurrent pleasure oftheSunday Supper musical programs.
We might go on indefinitely listing sequences of events, extolling their delights, and giving praise to their sponsors, but our work would be endless, and would have too much the appearance of a catalog or an inventory. As we said inthe beginning, their importance is individual; their value lies not in their occurrence, but in their significance to those of us who derived benefit from them.
All that we hope is that the activities which were planned and carried out during the year fulfilled, in a small measure at least, their purpose of establishing firmly among themembers oftheHousea feelingof mutual understanding and good will. We hope that in future years we may all remember, no matter how widely divergent our paths may have become and
however separated we are from the associations we have built and maintained, that there are bonds of friendliness and brotherhood which bind us still.
We pray that ultimately there may come a time when there will be neither East nor West, when the pettydifferences existingnow among racesand creeds will be forgotten, when all men, living together in tolerance and trust, will hold firmly to high standards of equality and brotherhood. If this past year has contributed even slightly to the establishment and dissemination of those standards; if living here together in this home of nations has broadened and clarified our views on the world of men and the world of affairs, then we feel that our efforts here havenotbeenentirelyunsuccessful.
Ithas been agood year! No doubt we shall all take with us many pleasant recollections and shall look back at the past year as a worthwhile experience in our lives. But more than that, let us remember not merely moments and events, but the one foundation upon which this House is built and which is summarized in stone above its Brotherhood May Prevail. entrance—That
A HEN storms come howling up English valleys and rain comes pelting against English windows I shall be reminded of my windy American home—trees bent in our International House garden, and gusts hammering at our International House windows, hammering, hammering like a hostile world on the fragile structures of peace. And when I am nearer the dissonance of European clamors I shall remember in lamplight the Home Room where French and Germans are friends and all races mingle. This will be my predominant impression.
This will outlast all the annoyances, the trifles that at the time seemed large and afterwards were forgotten. Then perhaps I shall regret not having made more of my opportunities, and have uneasy glimpses of a world of faces questioning, and I with no time to answer, no time to grow friendships in this garden, save one or two. And afterwards when I come to places where a Filipino is as rare as caviar, I shall think— “Oh, for one good Filipino now—just one!” And I shall wish myself back at the Tuesday tea or the Sunday night supper, wish myself back with macaroni, cheese and an apple.
But then I shall say to myself—‘‘Cheer up. After all you’re in a quiet place now. Nobody tapdances along the corridor at dead of night. Nobody opens wide her doors to shout and sing. Funny place, the House, with so many public rooms in which to be social and not a single room to be quiet in, not even the Home Room, nor the Duncan Pfyfe as a day-time refuge, not even the library. And yet the House was for students!” I shall think about all that and congratulate myself on my quiet fortune. And then perhaps imperceptibly I shall find myself in the gym among the war cries of the Indians enjoying a game of Badminton. And I shall wish that someone would come tap-dancing by my door.
It’s queer how one can get testy even with the most beloved of institutions, brood over telephone calls lost and messages not received. And yet these things are not the most important. They are the material
things against which counter moves are possible. For instance, one can broadcast warnings to one’s friends, or better still imagine oneself in a country without a telephone and then whatever telephonic crumbs of comfort one receives, and however late, will fall as manna from heaven.
It’s the spiritual things that matter. And when I am home I shall begin to wonder if I have done all I could have done to feed the flame that is International House. Did I cut people out? Was I unkind? Did I as a hostess dance when others had no partners and perhaps—even international home—were lonely? Did I form my own clique and stick to it? And now that I am out in the world what spirit is it that I take with me?
in our
Then will come the terrifying answer. “You have taken away only what you were able to give. But what you put into the House is yours forever.”
Is it then upon so fragile a foundation as my goodwill and yours that the temple of brotherhood shall arise ?
M. SCHROEDER.
[15]
=.|HE word “culture” is one which most Americans try to avoid in ordinary usage. Wearenotquitesurewhatitis,butwehavebeenbroughtuptounderstand thatwhateveritis,wedon’thaveit.
foreign. It has to do with the sun’s never setting on the British Empire, the ArtoftheItalianRenaissance,theNapoleonicWars,theGlorythatwas GreeceandtheGrandeurthatwasRome. Europe, something that evolved with the history of the Continent and is closely Culture, to us, is something vaguely
It is something that belongs to
allied to the Traditions of the West. Since we have no single legend upon which to base our history and since we are, comparatively, upstarts in a world of sedate nations, it follows that there is no one culture that we can definitely call our own. Consequently, although we arestillnotexactlysurewhatcultureis,wegoabroadtoseekitlikesomanyJasonsgoingafter so much Golden Fleece. This naturally leads us to wonderwhystudentsfromdistantlandscometothis barbarousandbarrenplacetolearnthingswhich,to ourwayofthinking,mightbetterbelearnedabroad. Anditleadsustosuspectthatperhapswe'vebeen mistaken and that somehow, without our knowing it, the Great American Culture has been blossoming here as quietly and unobtrusively as a thistle in the wilderness.
Sowesetabouttoaskwayfaringstudentsfrom other countries whether they thought the Americans had culture or not. Dionisio K. Yorro, of the PhilippineIslands,said,“Certainly,yes.ButIamsorry to commit myself by saying that no pure American culture can be found in New York City. The historic old Boston, the ‘Hub’ of the New England States, is the city in the Continental United States where pure American culture resides. This, to my mind, isthe very reason why Boston isinternationally knownasthe‘EducationalandCulturalcenterofthe AmericanRepublic.’”
We were just on the verge of packing away to Boston when William Scott McLeish, of Scotland, gaveussomethingelsetothinkabout.“Itfollows almost from necessity that the true American culture must exist in the Middle West, which geographically is the heart of the country, and actually the most fertile soil. Unswayed appreciably by foreign influence, the best traditions of America will find their true expression in the Middle West. An appreciation of
the resultant Art, Literature, Architecture, and Music distinctlyAmericanwillandshouldbethecultural heritageoffuturegenerations. Perhapssuchan American culture already exists and is the one thing not advertised in this glorious country, and the one thing a strong people might be sensitive about.”’
Miss Nina Vecchi, of Rome, said there isn’t any, or at least, not completely. ‘‘Culture, as far as I see it, islimited thus far to literature.” M. Saeed Ansari, of India, was cryptic and non-committal. ‘“‘It is,” he stated, “developing.’’ Miss Lotte Zielesch, of Germany,expressedherselfasbelievingthat,“Nodoubt thereis,expressedinnoblethoughtsandnobleminded personalities.”
Toourwayofthinking,culturecannotbeclassified according to nation or race. It is as international as humanity itself. World culture, like world brotherhood,isatypeofwisdomthatresultsfromtheinterassociationofnationalitiesandtheinter-exchangeof ideasandideals.Experienceandunderstandingmay intimeraisenationalpatriotismtothelevelofworld patriotism,establishfraternityamongallpeoples,and combinethesectionalculturesoftheEastandWest intoacultureoftheworld.Itwasprobablywith somethingofthisideainmindthatMr.Lajtha,of Hungary,said,‘“Tomethemostvaluableserviceof theHouseisthatitteachesAmericanstudentsthe height of other races. They come in contact with menofcultureandcivilizationsolderthantheirown.
There is a respect for foreign culture here that is lacking elsewhere.”’
And it is, we believe, a matter of give and take. Eachcontributestotheothersomethingintheway of understanding and appreciation and respect for cultures foreign to his own, so that in the end we may speak not of American culture, nor of European culture, but of Culture as a unified expression of world enlightenment.
House for a different reason. Miss Leon’s ambition at present is to iron out the charming Spanish lilt in her accent.
“Andlivinghereisjustliketakingauniversity course without work,” she said. ‘The foreigners who come here to learn English have a wonderful chance to talk with educated Americans.” Then she added, with atwinkle in her large black eyes, “But there is a danger of trying to learn English from another foreigner. Then you have your own mistakes and his I remember, when I first came here, an Americangirlsayingthatthecoatshehadjustbought ‘wasn’tsohot.’Andaforeigngirlansweredthat she thought the coat was quite warm enough. I didn’trealizeforsometimethattheAmericangirl had been using slang.” also.
Each nationality has its own peculiar reaction to International House and to the atmosphere created here.Somefindgreatdelightinthesociallife—the teas, the dances, and the suppers. Others like the more serious discussions and lectures and rather disdainfully say that they have no time for frivolous moments.
Out of a number of foreign students who were asked to give their impressions of the House, no two answered in the same way. Perhaps this may be becauseofthedifferingmodesofexpressionamong the various races, or perhaps itisbecause of the varied charmsoftheHouseitself,broadenoughinoutlook andintereststodrawstudentsofalltypesandall nations.
Mr. Shridharani, astudent in sociology from India, says that his first impression of the members of the House was their eagerness to learn.
“TheyaskedmesomanyquestionsaboutIndia— Ghandi, home rule, the caste system. That iswhat I like about the House: you can go beyond mere nationalisticpropagandaandgetatfirstsourcesof informationoninternationalaffairs.”
But Miss Dalila Leon, of Puerto Rico, likes the [18]
Whenaskedtosummarizehisimpressionofthe House,Mr.CyrilHumphreys,ofEngland,gavethe questionseriousthoughtandthenanswered,“Toa foreigner whose means of sojourning invarious places foralengthoftimearelimited,theHouseisideal because it enables him to get a deeper insight into thethoughtsandviewpointsoftheAmericanpeople thanhewouldfindinanyotherspot.”
Lawrence Nicodemus, an American Indian from the Coeur d’Alene Tribe in Idaho, was also asked to give his impressions of the House. Mr. Nicodemus
spends his time in New York studying the English languageandmakingphonographrecordingsofthe languageofhistribe.
“TI find that living in the House not only gives me contact with people from other lands,” he said, “but it helps me to form my own ideas through listening tothe conversations of other Americans.”’
Mr.HaigG.Assatourian,ofPersia,astudentof
RIVERSIDE DRIVEEconomics, remarked that he found the House an interesting place in which to live chiefly because of thepsychologicaldifferencesamongthestudents.
“Throughknowingstudentsfromothernations andthroughstudyingtheirpsychologyand_philosophy,oneisabletoformulateopinionsconcerning thesocialandeconomicproblemsoftheirrespective nations,’ Mr. Assatourian said.
Miss Constance Han-Tsung Lam, who is studying social work, and who comes to the House from Canton, China, added, “The House is an experiment whichisthepracticalworkingoutoftheLeagueof Nationsonafriendlybasis,inwhichtheLeaguehas failed. It is an example in contrast to the Tower of Babel, which worked for dissension among the races of the earth; the House works for understanding and agreement.”
In many of the responses we got, there was expressed an appreciation for the broadening influence of the House. “It has been a most decisive factor for me,” said Miss Zielesch, “because I felt almost at
homefromthemomentIbecameitsresident.Besides,InternationalHouseoffersthemostinteresting experiences with regard to the likenesses and unlikenesses of races, nationalities, mentalities and temperaments, thus contributing to the widening of one’s horizonandone’sknowledgeofhumannature.”
Acabie Caraman, of Armenia, was prompted to state that, ‘Now more than ever, through my stay at the House, Ihave come to believe that race prejudice is due to indifference toward other races or lack of knowledge of the cultures of those races. For the closer I have known the members of other nationalities and races, the better I have liked them and appreciated their personal merits.”’
In general and in brief, we might summarize the attitudesofmanyofthemembersoftheHousein There can be neither wisdom nor culture without tolerance; there can be no tolerance without understanding;understandingcomesfromfellowship; fellowship is the spirit of the House—and therebyhangsthemoralofourtale. this way:
THE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE OF THE STUDENT COUNCIL [20]
Seated: JANE HAWKES, Art Editor; GABRIEL ONDECK, Editor-in-Chief; JEAN WyNpHAM, Standing: FRANCIS SCAFURO, JOSE MARTINEZ, HERBERT DARLING, Business Manager; GEORGE ANTON, Sales Manager; GEORGE Kao.
K. P. DAMLAMIAN, MIRIAM E. MACDONALD, LUCINDA Lor», JOHN P. HODGcKIN.
The following pages contain the photographs of students who have been members of the House during the Winter and Spring Session of 1934-1935. The name of the student, the university previously attended, the country of origin and the permanent address are also given.
1 PEDRO E. ABELARDE, Universit;1 of California
2 SALLY ABERNETHY, Agnes Scott College
3 MA UEL A. ADEVA, National University
4. GOTO B. AHLGRE , Swedish Institute of Physiotherapy
5 FREDERICK C. AHRE S, University of Western Ontari
6 ALFRED S. AKAMATSU, Emory University
7.EMANUEL ALEXANDRE, New York Unit•ersity
8 R. MATILDE ALFARO, Teachers College
9. AHMAD ALI-ABADI, Teachers College of Teheran
10 MILLA ALIHA , University of British Columbia
11 A. VERGEL ALMAZAR, Grand Central School of Fine Arts
12.THELMA W. A DREWS, University of Michigan
13. AEED A SARI, ational Muslim University
14.GEORGE F. A TO , Georgia School of Tech11ology
15.HAIDER M. A WAR, Habibia College
16.HRA D A. APAMIAN, Robert College
17.JESU ARA GO, Columbia University
18.MA UEL ARGYRIADES, Burdett College
19.ELEA OR F. ARMSTRO G, Skidmore Colleae
20 SETTE M. ARSENIA , Teachers College
21.A A A. ASGAARD, University of Chicago
22.F. WI !FRED ASHPLA T, Western Unitersity, London, Canada
23 HAIG G. ASSADOURIA , College of Emporia
24 THELMA M. ATKI O , University of Alberta
25.JOH B AYER, University of Wisconsin
26.YEZ IQUE C. AZ AKIA , Columbia Unitiersit;
27.VICTORA.BABITS, University of Technical Sciences, Budapest
28 BER ARD ]. BACHEM, University of Bonn
29 KATHLEEN P. BAIRD, Univet"Sity of British Columbia
PHILIPPI TE ISLAND FLORIDA, U. S. A.
PHILIPPINE ISLA D
SWEDE CA ADA
JAPAN
NEW YORK, U. S. A. NICARAGUA IRA CA ADA
PHILIPPINE ISLA D
MICHIGA , U. A.
INDIA
GREECE
AFGHA ISTA
ARME IA COLOMBIA GREECE
EW ]ER EY, U. A. ARME IA
MICHIGA , U. S. A. WI CO CA ADA IRA CA ADA , U A.
ARME IA HU GARY
GERMA Y CA ADA
30 HE RY H. BAKER, JR., Dartmouth College PE (23} H 0 u
YLVA IA, U A. s E
31. PAUL E. BAKER, Columbia University
32.ESTELLE V. BARA CO, Fisk University
33 M. ELOISE BARCLAY, Northwestern University
34.J. MURRAY BARTELS, JR , University of Koenigsberg
35 FRA KLIN M. BAUM, De Pauw University
36.MARIO BAY, American Conservatory of Music
37.ED A M. BELGUM, MacPhail Music School
38 RUTH S.BELKNAP, Mount Holyoke College
39.S. WINSLOW BELL, Harvard UniveHity
40.WILLIAM BERGMANN, Columbia University
41.ERZSI BERKOVITS, Columbia University
42.BLANCA BERMUDO
43.THERESE B.BERRY, Sorbonne
44.PRAV. G. BHAGWAT, Princeton University
45.L. FRA CES BIEBER, Oberlin, Conservatory of Music
(24)
TEXAS, U.S.A.
LOUISIANA, U. S. A. ILLINOIS, U.S.A. GERMANY ILLINOIS, U.S.A.
ILLI OIS, U. S.A. MI NESOTA, U.S.A. MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A. OHIO, U.S.A. U.S.S.R.
HUNGARY
SPAIN FRANCE I DIA
PEN SYLVA IA, U.S. A.
46. SHIRLEY BILLINGS, Smith College
47 MAURICE F. BILTON, Edinburgh College of Art
48 MARGARET F. BIXBY, College of Wooster
49 RUTH E. BIXLER, Colorado University
NEW HAMPSHIRE, U. S. A. SCOTLAND
CONNECTICUT, U. S. A.
COLORADO, U. S. A.
50. JOHAN A. BJORKSTEN, University of Stockhol FI LAND
51 JEAN F. BLACKWELL, University of Michigan
52 PAUL K. BORGENVIK, King Fredericks Univmity
53 JACINTO C. BORJA, Columbia University
54 SMARANDA BOTEZ, Lyceum Bucarest
55 ADA-MARIE BOWERS, University of California, Los Angeles
56 ADELINE BOWIE, University of Tennessee
57 JOSEPH F. BOYLAN, Manhattan College
58 FRANCES BREED, Institute of Musical Art
59 KENNETH W. BREEZE, Denison University
60 ETHEL G. BROOKS, Teachers College
MARYLAND, U. S. A. NORWAY
PHILIPPINE ISLANDS ROUMANIA
CALIFORNIA, U. S. A.
GEORGIA, U. S. A.
NEW YORK, U. S. A.
NEW YORK, U. S. A. OHIO, U. S. A.
WEST VIRGINIA, U. S. A. (25)
61. CLARA M BROW , University of Georgia
62. WILLIAM F. BROW , JR., Cornell University
63 MARGARET BROWNSON, University of Southern California
64 MYRTLE H. BRUCE, George Washington Unfrersity
65. ER EST E. BRUDERER, American lnstitttte of B:tnking
66. SIG E BRUN STROM, New York Universit;
67. LOUIS P. BRUSO, University of Illinois
68. ESTHER H. BUCKEYE, Wayne University
69 DOROTHY E. BUCKLEY, Elmira College
70. KYPKE BURCHARD!, Teachers College
71. MARGARET C. BURD, Teachers College
72. LOUISE R BURGE, Howard University
73. KATHLEEN BURNETT, Swarthmore College
74. PHILIP M. BUR ETT, Yale University
75 SOTERO U CACANINDI , Columbia Universit;
76. MICHAEL J. CADE , Rockwell College
77. GERMAI E CALLETT, Universit) of L;on
78. REUBE T. CALUZZA, Hampton Institute
79 JENNIE CAMPBELL, Brigham Young Uniz-ersity
80. THEODORE CAMPOS Y ESTACIO, R. C. A Institute
81. MARGARET H. CA FIELD, University of Minnesota
82. ACABIE CARAMA , Northfield Seminary
83. HENRY A. CAREY, University of California
84. LOIS CARLETON, University of Minnesota
85. A A B CARR, Smith College
86 ELSIE C CARROLL, Stanford Universit;
87. FRANCISCO S CESPEDES, Teachers College
88. YIP SHUEN CHA , Columbia University
89. WILLIAM G. CHESTER, Yale University
90. FLEDA JU -CHIH CHI , Yenching Universit;
GEORGIA, U. S. A.
EW YORK, U. S. A.
OREGON, U. S. A.
VIRGINIA, U. A.
WITZERLA D
SWEDE
ILLI OIS, U. S. A.
MICHIGAN, U. S. A.
EW JERSEY, U. A.
GERMA Y
EW JERSEY, U. S. A.
TE ESSEE, U. A.
MA ACHU ETTS, U. A.
MA ACHUSETTS, U. A.
PHILIPPINE ISLAND
IRELA D
FRA CE ATAl
UTAH, U A.
PHILIPPI E ISLAND
MI TE OTA, U. S. A. ARME IA
CALIFOR IA, U. S. A.
MIN ESOTA, U A.
MA ACHUSETTS, U A.
UTAH, U. S. A.
PA AMA
CHI A
WA HI GTO , U. . A.
CHI A
91. MARJORIE CHOATE, Syracuse Unfrersity
92. ARAH CHOKLA, Southern Methodist University
MA ACHU ETTS, U. A. TEXAS, U.S.A.
93.WILLIAM E. CHRISMA , University of Nebraska IOWA, U.S. A. DENMARK
94. HILBERT CHRISTIANSE , Copenhagen School of Commercial Science
95.EDITH WE -HWA CHU, University of Shanghai CHI A
96. E CHU, ational University of Peking
97.EDITH P. CHURCH, Purdue University
98. HAROLD A. CHURCH, Columbia College
100.MARY CLAPP, Columbia University
101.ELLA E. CLARK, Northwestern University
99. L LOUI E CLANCY, University of California CHI A CALIFOR IA, U.S.A. BRAZIL CALIFOR IA, U.S. A. EW YORK, U.S.A. WA HI GTON, U.S.A.
102.KATIE H B.CLARK, University of Toronto CANADA FLORIDA, U.S.A.
103.HELEN CLARKE, Columbia University
104. M ELIZABETH CLEME T, Willamette University OREGO , U.S. A.
105. A. KATHRY CLOSE, Sweet Briar College PE YLVA IA, U.S. A.
106.ER EGE ECOLE, orthwestern Uni11ersity
107 DOROTHYCOLLIER, Wellesley College
108 FRA CE W.COMLY, Dickinson College
109.LAVO CON ELLY, Bowling Green State College
110 MARYP.CORCORA , College of St. Elizabeth
111 JU E F.COR ELL, 7ew York School of Fine and Applied Arts
112.MARIA L.COTTE, Polytechnic Institute
PE
ILLI OJ A.
OREGO ' U A.
YLVANIA, U A.
OHIO, U A.
EWYORK, U A.
EWYORK, U A. PUERTORICA
113.RO ARIO R. COUSI1EAU, Uni11ersity of Montreal CA ADA
114 EDWARD C. CREED, Pace Institute
11S.DOROTHY A. CRE Y, Simmons College
MA ACHU ETT , U A.
EWHAMP HIRE, U A.
116.MAYKIRKPATRICK-CROCKETT, London Ro;al School of Economicr E GLA D
117.BONTER.CROMPTO , Columbia University
118 BARBARAJ.CRO , fttilliard School of Music
119 AVA NAHL. CRO , University of 1\1ichigan
IEWYORK, A.
TEXA , U. .A.
TEXA , U A.
120 CECIL CURRIE, McGill Unitersit; EWFO DLA D
121 ALBERTA M. CURT! , Grinnell College
122 ]EA V. DA CO TA, Uninrsit; of Penns;lvania
123 HERBERT B. DARLI G, Columbia University
124 MARY DARLI GTO , Unit1ersit; of Fcrmont
125.MAURICE DARTIGUE, Columbia University
126.MARCAR D. DAVIDIA , Lenins Commercial College, India
PE
PE
H 0 u
IOWA,U A. YLVA IA, A.
IRELA D
YLVA TIA, U. A. HAITI
ARME IA
127.TIMOTHY DAVID O , Penns;lvani.1, State Teachers College PE
128.ARAH ]. DAVIE , Columbia University
129.BERTHA M. DAVI , Teachers College
130.REBECCA E. DAVI , Western Reserve Unitersity
131.DEXTER DAVI O , Middleburv College
132.RO ALDC. DAY, Unit1ersit; of London
133.DOROTHY C. DE LA Y, Cornell University
13-LVI CE ZO DE MARCHI, Col11mbia University
135.AXEL C. F. DE AU, Unii•ersity of Copenhagen
136.CARLO A. DETLEF E , Universit; of Chile
137.VIOLA J. DO , Mount Holyoke College
138. TA LEYW. DOR EY, Unit·ersit; of Idaho
139.KIMO A. DOUKA , Columbia University
140.A DREW DRAPER, University of Illinois
141 LAURA W. DRUMMO D, Uni11ersit; of Penns;frania
142.IB DUZAI E-HA E , Greenwood School
143 CLARA P. DYER, Columbia University
144.ELIZABETHB. EATO , Acadia University
145.PARKECKLES, Colorado College
PE
YLVA TIA,U. A. OKLAHOMA, A.
YLVA IA,U A.
MI O RI, A.
VIRGI IA, U. . A. E GLA D
EW YORK, U. A. ITALY DE MARK BOLIVIA
MA ACHU ETT , U. A.
WA HI GTO , U. A. GREECE ILLI OI , U. A.
PE YLVA 1IA,U A. DE MARK
RHODE I LA D, U. A. CA ADA KA A,U. .A.
146.FREDERICKD.EDDY, Hamilton College TEWYORK, A.
148.DAVID EFRO , University of Buenos Aires
149.ULRICA EGGER , Th. Langs Skole
147.KARL EDELMA , Universit; of Munich GERMA Y ARGE TI E DE MARK
150. HAKERA. ELA Y, National Agricultural School of Griguon, France YRIA
1 1. TT I TE 11il!i.11I ·h•'JJ of :\fusi<" .A. 1-1: t fadi:on, \\'i•.
1--· RCTH f. I.If ~ Tl 1111.1,· 'Jlltgr.. fl HIGA1T' l;. A. W'.l)
1-:.D VID 1. p, Hir.1m oil :! \,'ALE 600 �tr t, 1Te" York 1T.Y.
15--1. fARY EV 1~.1.1.ur 7/1 � 1 E\,' JER EY, A. RiY rto J.
1--.HELE r G.F TR I, Hunt r oil� \X'EDE T 10 \\\)odland• AYenue, hurch End, 1\H"th Fin hley, London 1T ", England.
1-6.HC fPHREY A.FAIRLA fB. ,l11mbi.1 " ni:osit1 4-l E.Tw nty-fourth tr et, h ·ter, P.1. 1-�. L IRE H.FA\ REAU. T .1Chers oil !! 6 .1k �quare A,enue, Brighton, Ma· 1-.BA� f . FEARhTG. Cnir uil) of K.ws.1s _oo W'.Twenty-fir-t �tr et, ·Topeka. K.rn.
1-9.D R THY L FIELD, Tr'// sl 1 r;/1 a Phillip·, faine. ,.
160.J TLIA.1. T FILFC�. Co/11mbi.1 C1111 rSII) :o w·. Tw nty-fir-t �tr t, l T w Yor ·, ... -.Y.
161.E Tz V.FI ARDI, B rg.1m fo.lmlri.tl Ins1it11I Vial "\ ittario Emanual -l--l, Bergamo. Italy.
16_.BEATR FI1Tir. Cni1t1rit_1 of i\Iinn sol.1 ·-fourth AY nue, finneapoli·, finn.
16 "' .J H • BA H, 11thu· st m Cnir rsll) r treet, faryville. Tenn.
16--1. PHI '". W II c!tJ C')/1 g Cre:cent. incinnati. hio.
16-.J E �... T u Y r " nir rsit1 Ti.. . cuador.
PE T TYL A TIA, l;. A.
IA �ACHC ETT U. .A. KAN A, V. A. fAI TE, V. A.
TEW' y RK, "C". A.
MI ITALY A.
TE '"1TE EE, V. A. OHIO, A. ECUADOR
166 THOMAS J. FRA CIS, Knox College
ILLINOI , U. A.
167.JOH A. FRA K, Harvard University EW YORK, U. S. A.
168 ED A L. FRA TZ, T11ltme Uni11ersity
169 ELIZABETH FRE CH, Smith College
LOUI IA A, U. A. EW YORK, U. A.
170.FREDA FRETTER, Hometon College E GLAND
171. DANIEL K. FREUDE THAL, Unfrersity of Ccilijomitt, BerkeleJ
172. MASATAMI M. FUKAMIZU, Cornell College
173. ELIZABETH FURCRON, fttilliard School of Mtt.ric
174.LIBA A N. FURTADO, University of Hawaii
CALIFORNIA, U A. ]APA VIRGI IA, U. A. HAWAII
175 0. HORACIO GAMI DE, Miller Academ; MEXICO
176. ELI W. GARRI O , Furmmi Uninrsit; FLORIDA, U. . A.
178 PAUL J. D. GAUTIER, Copenhagen School of Commerci,t! Sciencu
179 MARTHA GERTSCH, Ohio Werle;cm Unirenit;
177.HA NEW ]ER EY, U A. AH T. GAU T, Columbia Uniz1mity DE MARK WITZERLAND
180 THEODORE I. GESHKOFF, Columbia Unirerrit; BULGARIA [33}
181.MILTO L. GI SBERG, University of California, Los Angeles
182.CHARLE GIRARD, Santiago Catholic Uni11ersity
183.HELE B. GOETSCH, Marquette University
184. A A GOLDFEDER, University of Prague
185.MARTHA G. GOOGOOIAN, Fresno State College
186.CHRISTI A A. GOORLEY, UniversityofToledo
187.MARGARETEGOSKER, Presbyterian School of t-ming
188.HA S P. GOSSMA , University of Berlin
189.MARJORIE S GRANT, University of New Hampshire
190.MAYBELLE J. GREENE, Morgan College
191.HARRIET A. GRIFFITH, Institute of Musical Art
192.ROSALI D GROSBERG, Smith College
193.ELSIE D. GRUEBER, Mount Holyoke College
194.R TH F. GUSTAFSO , Teachers College
195.WALTER G. GUSTAF O , Union College
196.EDWARD W. HAGEMEYER, Columbia Uniz·ersit;
197.RUTH V. HALL, Mount Hol;oke College
198.AHMET HAMIT, Istanbul Unit-ersit;
199 FRA CE HANKI O , Cornell Unit-ersit;
200 LUCIE M. HA K , University of lVisconrin
201.CALLIE M. HARRIS, Freedmen's Hospital
202.JOH E. HARRIS, Cambridge Uniz.ersit;
CALIFOR TIA, U. A. CHILE
WISCO SI , U. S. A. POLA D
CALIFORNIA, U. S. A.
OHIO,U.S. A.
GERMA Y
GERMANY r EWHAMP HIRE, U A.
MAI E, U. S. A.
NEW JER EY, U. A.
EWYORK, U. A.
WISCO ' u A. CA ADA
SWEDE
EW YORK, U. A. EW YORK, U. A.
TURKEY
TEWYORK, U.. A.
WI CO I , U A.
DI TRICT OF COL MBIA, U. A. E GLA D
203.LOTTIE B. HARTT, Teachers College CA ADA
204.KARL H. HAUMA , Reformrealgymnarium GERMA Y
205.JA E H. HAWKE , Smith College EW JER EY, A.
206.ARTH R P HAYE , Columbia Uniz•ersit;
207.PAULI E M. HAY E , Skidmore College
208.EDYTHE C.HEATOr , Mar; Hitchcock Memorial Hospital.
209.HE RIETTA M. HEIMBERGER, University of Califomi,z
210 COR ELI van HEI I GE , Columbia Uniz-ersit; [35]
TEWYORK, A. EWYORK, A.
VIRGI TIA, A. CALIFOR TIA, U. A. HOLLA 1D
211.ADA D HE....TRY, Unit JJilJ of Illinois
12.GEORGE HERRI rGTO T , JR. Torlh 1nIlli11011
.21 ,, KIR TE HIEL f. &th.wJ Colh<ct
.21LIDA A. HOGG, n•r rt m Tnitenil), London. Ont, 21'5.CATHERI TE HOG HIRE, Jr',nhingtotJ sw� oll 0t
216.AlJ TI....T C.HOLDE....1, • u York Tnit rsit;. 21 LE I HOLLA DER, H11ntt:r Coll g
21 K TUT \Xr HOL f, chool of Commoc
219.FRIEDRICH HOLZER, r u Yuk l:nizenit}
220.JF''IE \X'. HO KA f, l:nnu,,t) of R.;cht,t ,
221.BLAI'E HO PODAR, l.:nizt:rsitJ of Minn rol.t
222.CHI H A T HO , PJtrd11� T.:nitersit;
223.T. P. HOU, Col11mbi.1 ·nittnitl |
224.YUA r E T H IAO, u--�f/(:/1 Rt I(:} z l..:niz nit;
.225.BFH TA G H C, l.:niz nit; of h.m::h.ri
ILLhTOI', L. A.
i'\OR\X'AY
A TADA OREG l', '. A.
.Tf\\ YORK, . . A. GER IA ry \X'EDE
GER fA 1Y
. F\X' \ORK, U. A.
ZECHOTOVAKIA
CHI TA
CHI TA
CHINA
CHLTA
226. WKAN-YU HSU, Yenching Unit1ersity
CHINA
227. GRACE B. HUGHES, Virginia Union UnitmitJ VIRGINIA, U. S. A.
228. CYRIL G. HUMPHRYES, Coventry Technical College
229. ]. NORMA HU TER, Auckland University
E GLAND
EW ZEALAND
230. DELIA P HUSSEY, Wayne University MICHIGAN, U. S. A.
231. ELSIE M. HUTCHEON, Western Reserve Uni11nity
232. RUTH E. HUTCHINS, Syracuse University
233. JESSIE C. HUTCH! SO , Sydney University
234. ROBERT V. INGRAM, Oberlin College
235. FUMIO ISOMURA, Doshisha Unit•ersity
236. DORA ITKIN, National Academy of Design
OHIO, U. S. A.
EW YORK, U. A.
AUSTRALIA
YLVA IA, U. S. A. ]APA DENMARK
237. MEHDI K. JALALI, Teachers College of Teheren IRA KE TUCKY, U. S. A.
238. GLADY V JAMESO , Chicago Musical College
239. BERTHA M. JENKI S, Smith Collge
MA SACHU ETT , U. A.
210. NINA JE SE -BRYDEGAARD, Columbia Unit1ersit; DENMARK [37]
241. HA JE SSE , Univenity of Oslo
2•i2 ADA M JOHNSO , Simmons College.
243. EUGENE A. JOLIAT, McGill University
244. GRACE B. JONES, Institute of Musical Art
245. RICHARD C. JO ES, Juilliard School of Mmic
2,16. BARBARA E. JUDKIN , Smith College
247. LOUISE M. KABLE, Unit'ersity of 1J est Virgini,t
248. MA HA KALVARISKY, Sorbonne
249. ALBERT E. KANE, Columbia University Y.
250. ALI KAN!, Teachers College of Teheran
251. GEORGE K. Y. KAO, Yenching UnfrerrilJ
252. ALEXANDER F. KARAKOZOFF, Aslcrnoff Voc,d Studio
253. YRJO 1. KARLSSON, Duke Unfrersit)
254. MARY G. KEE EY, Va.rsar College
255. KLASINA KEESSEN, Columbia University
256. JOHANNA KELLER, Von L,ban School
257. E. CHENAULT KELLY, Uni11er.1ity of Kentuck;
258 ELIZABETH A. KEMPTO , Universit; of Wi.1con.1in
ORWAY CANADA CANADA
ALABAMA, U. S. A.
EW YORK, U. A.
MAINE, U. A.
WEST VIRGINIA, U. A. PALE TINE
EW YORK, U. S. A. IRAN CHINA RUSSIA WEDE
EW JERSEY, U. S. A. HOLLAND
GERMANY ILL! OI , U. S. A.
WlSCONSl , U. A.
259. EDITH M KENT, Sydney Kindergarten Training College AUSTRALIA
260. HELEN KEPLER, Institute for Child Guidance MASSACHU ETTS, U. A.
261 MARIE E. KILIA , H1111ter College
262 GEORGE C KING, New York Unit1ersity
263. FLORENCE 1 KING, Colmnbi" University
264. ERIKA J KIRSTEN, Leipzig Conservatory oj i\fasic
265. WOLFGANG W. KLEMPERER, University of Berlin
266. ELVIRA KLING, Columbia Unit-enity
267. ROBERT KLUGMAN, Syr,,mse U11i11mity
268. REIMER P. KOCH-WESER, Berlin Unirersih
269. JOHN M. KOKKIN, Columbia College
270. GLADY KOTTER, Brigham Yotmg Unit•ersit; [39)
GERMA Y
GERMA Y
EW YORK, U. S. A.
GERMANY
GERMA Y
Ml NESOTA, S. A.
1 EW YORK, U. S. A.
GERMA Y
GREECE
UTAH, U. A.
271. fARY J. KRIKORIA T, St. P,wl'r VnizerrilJ ARME IA
272. P. GOPALA KRI H TAYYA, Madr,ts Unizenit; I DIA
273. YI TG GI KWOK, Songring Bminess College CHI A r L JOHA C. LAGERCRA TZ, Stockhobii'College of Economics WEDE
2...5. HERBERT E. LAG A, Bmokl;n Lau School 'EW YORK, U. A.
T6. CON TA TCE LA f, TeU' York School of Social lf'o1k r,. WILLIAM K. LARMOR
rs. FLORE CE V. LAR E , Michael Reese Hospital School of Tursing
279. HELEi C. LATHAM, Columbia Unize1sit; CHI A IREL D YLVANIA, A. fICHIGAN, U. A.
280. PRE COTT L. LAC DRIE, B1oun l.:nitersit; RHODE I LA TD, U A.
281. LAMl\fY -. LAWEE, Columbi,1 Unit mil} IRAQ
2, 2. GERALD \X1 LA\X'LOR, U1111enitJ of 01(:;-rm OREGO_ , U A.
284. GRACE LEE, Welle.rleJ College
2l 5. MA1 T Hlir LEE, Lingn.m L'niz uitJ
283. KUA T_J LEA, Yenching l.:nitersit; CHI A MA ACH ETT , U. A. CHiirA
286.ARTHUR LEI , Universit) of Wisconsin
287 FRITZ V. LE EL, University of Heidelberg
.
288 DALILA LEO , ational Catholic School of Social Smice
289 DAI Y L. Y. LEW, Lingnan University
290.HELE E. LEWI , Wells Colleg
291 LUCYL. LEWI , University of California, Los .1.ngeles
292 CHI G CHAO LIA G, Tsing Hua Unitersity
293 EDWARD LI DGRE , Union Theological Seminar;
294 EDITHE. LIP KY Alfred University
295. HELE L. LITTLE, Boston School of Physical Edttcation
296.WE LOHLIU, Shanghai Commercial College
297 HAN I. LIUM, St. Olaf College
298 RICHARDC.LO G, CarnegieInstitute of Technolog;
299 ROBERT LORE Z, Universit; of Breslatt
300 CHRI T Z. LOUKA , University of Oregon [41]
GERMA Y
GERMA Y P ERTORICO
CHI A
EWYORK, .. A.
CALIFOR IA, .A.
CHI TA
ILL! OI A.
ILL! OI . A.
RHODEI LA D, A.
PE MI T YLVA IA,
CHI A .A .A.
GERMA Y GREECE
301 VIRGIL E. LOWDER, Yale University
302 HANS A. LUTOLF, Columbia University
303 HAZEL MACCALLUM, Teachers College
304 GEORGIA MAESER, Brigham Young University
305 JEAN B. MALICK, University of Pennsylvania
306 RUTH C. MANCHESTER, Bryn Mawr College
307 SAMUEL H. MANIAN, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
308. JOHN H. MANLEY, University of Michigan
309 MARTHA J. MARINE, Theodora Irvine Studio
310. ALFREDO P. MARTIN, de Paul University
311 MILTON L. MARTI , North Texas State Teachers College
312 JOSE L. MARTINEZ, Tampico Business College, Guatemala
MARYLAND, U. S. A. SWITZERLA D CA ADA
UTAH, U. S. A. IRAN
CONNECTICUT, U. S. A. ARMENIA
ILLINOIS, U. S. A.
PEN SYLVANIA, U. S. A.
PHILIPPINE ISLANDS
TEXAS, U. S. A.
313. ELEANOR F. MARVIN, Wellesley College WISCO SI , U. S. A. I DIA
314 RAMESHWAR D. MATHUR, St. Stephens College, Delhi
315. FRANK R. MATSUDA, Waseda University JAPAN
316 MARJORIE MAUTZ, University of lVashington
317 CASPER S. McCLELLAND, George lVashington University
318. KATHRYN M. McCRACKEN, New York School of Social Work
OREGON, U. S. A.
PEN SYLVANIA, U. S. A.
LOUISIA A, U. S. A.
319 JEAN H. McFARLAND, Pomona College CALIFORNIA, U. S. A.
320 PHYLLIS McGILL, Teachers College MA ACHUSETTS, U. S. A.
321. JAMES A. McLAREN, University of Edinburgh
322 WILLIAM S. McLEISH, Cleveland College
323 EDITH I. McMILLAN, Mt. Allison University
324 MARGARET A. McRAE, Dalhousie University
325. E ROANE MELTON, University of Maryland
326. THEODORE MEMMOTT, New York University
327 OSCAR A. MENDELSOHN, University of Melbourne
328. THOMAS S. MENDENHALL, Marietta College
329 GERTRUDE MENZEL, Columbia University
330 E. KHAN MERAT, The American College of Teheran [43]
NEW YORK, U. S. A. SCOTLAND CANADA
EWFOUNDLA D VIRGINIA, U. S. A.
NEW YORK, U. S. A. AUSTRALIA
OHIO, U. S. A. WITZERLAND
IRAN
331.LUCILE M. MERCADO, Columbia University
332.MO !QUE L MERCAT, Sorbonne
333.TRE A J. MEYER, HuronCollege
334. HELE R. MEYERS, UniversityofToledo
335.ISABEL MILL , VassarCollege ursing
336. ADA MIURA, St.Luke'sCollegeof t.
337. TAKEO MIYAKAWA, Senshu University
338. SHIZUE MIYA A, St.Luke's CollegeofNursing
339. YUZO MIYASAKI, DenisonUniversity
340. RE E A MIYAZAKI, KyotoCollege
341. WALi MOHAMMAD, UniversityofWashington
342. AYZAGARI RAMA MOHA , Madras University
PUERTO RICO FRA CE
SOUTH DAKOTA, U. S. A. OHIO, U. S. A. EW YORK, U s: A.
AFGHA !STA INDIA
343. SARA F. MOLITOR, University of Chicago WI CO ' U S. A.
344. FA Y MO EFELDT, Unit1ersityofPuerto Rico PUERTO RICO
345. FLORE CE R. MOO EY, Macdonald College CA ADA
346. FER A DO MOORE, University of California
347. B. REBECCA MORE, Mount Holyoke College
348. ALICE M. MORRIS EY, University of Rochester
349. BEATRICE A. MUCKJIA , Constantinople Women's College .
350. ATYA MUKERJI, Hiram College
351 MARGARET E. MULAC, Cleveland College
352. ELFRIEDE M MULLER, College of the City of ew York
353. WALTER H. MU K, Columbia University
354. ELEA OR D. MU O , Columbia University
PE
COLOMBIA
YLVA IA, U A.
EW YORK, U. A. ARME IA I DIA
OHIO, U A. GERMA Y AUSTRIA
CO ECTICUT, U. A.
355. LORELLE H. MURRAY, Howard University DI TRICT OF COLUMBIA, U. A.
356. IMO E A. AGI E, St. Vincent de Paul Uniziersity
357. AMY E. NAKASHIMA, Traphagen School of Fashion
358. MUHAMMAD A IR, American University of Beirut
359. BE JAMI K. EE, St. John's University
360. A E E. EKRA OFF, Teachers College
EGYPT ]APA
IRAQ
CHI A
EW YORK, U. A.
361.PETER J. EKRASOFF, Pomona College RU SIA
362.HAZEL E. ELSON, Wisconsin Conseri-atory of Music
363. MARJORIE T. EL ON, Columbia University
364.DORIS E. ICHOLSON, University of Wisconsin
366. FREDERIC G. NOLL TADT, American Institute of Banking
WISCO SIN, U. S. A.
FLORIDA, U. S. A.
WI CON I , U. A.
365. PAULI E J. OFFSI GER, Sorbonne DI TRICT OF COLUMBIA,-U. A. GERMA Y ITALY
367.AMI A NORDIO, Florence University
368.A DERS F. A. NORE , Stockholm University of Commerce SWEDE
369. ELIZABETH K. OTTI GHAM, Cambridge University E GLA D
370. TOMIO OGATA, University of Chicago Medical School ]APA T
371. WILLIAM OKRE T, Pern State Teachers College
372. GABRIEL M. 0 DECK, Lehigh University
373. OLGA F. ONDECK, Art Students League
374. LAWRE CE E. OPEDAL, University of Oregon
375.JEA E OSSENT, Hohere Tochterschule, Zurich
376.TERUE OTSUKI, Willamette University
377.BEATRICE PALLISTER, Adelphi College
378 JAGDISH P. PANDYA, Allah University
379 DOROTHY L. PARKER, New York University
380. CLAUDE A. PATTERSO , Harvard University
381.WINIFRED H. PATTERSO , Mar; Baldwin College
382 GERTRUDE D. PEABODY, University of Maine
383.RUTH G. PEARL, New York School of Social Work
384. M. DOROTHY PEEL, University of Texas
385. PRESENTACIO PEREZ, Philippine lF7omen's UniversitJ
386.HE RY A. PERKI S, JR., Yale University
387. GERTRUDE A. PETERSO , College of Music. U. S. C.
388.HANS PHILLIPS, University of Hamburg
389.RALPH E. PHILLIPS, Drury College
390. WILLIAM PIEHL, Uniz.ersity of Southern California
(47]
IOWA, U.. A.
PE SYLVA IA, U A.
PE YLVA IA, U A. OREGON, U. S. A.
SWITZERLA D
]APA
EW YORK, U. A.
DIA
EW HAMPSHIRE, U. S. A. IOWA, U. S. A.
MARYLA D, U. A.
PE YLVA IA, U A. MASSACHUSETTS, U. S. A.
TEXAS, U. S. A.
PHILIPPI E I LA D
CO ECTICUT, U. S. A.
CALIFOR IA, U. A.
GERMA Y MISSOURI, U. S. A.
CALIFOR IA, U. S. A.
391. LILLIA PO GER, Royal Hungarian University of Budapest
392. ORA K. PUPKE, Juilliard School of Music
.
393. RUTH H PUSEY, Miss Illman's Training School
394. QUIRI O PUZO , New York University
395. ALICE QUARLES, Juilliard School of Musi
396. OLIVE L. QUI N, Columbia University
397. ESTELLE A. RA KI , University of Washington
MISSOURI, U. S. A. GERMANY
DELAWARE, U. S. A.
PHILIPPINE ISLANDS COLORADO, U. S. A.
NEW YORK, U.S. A.
WASHI GTO , U.S. A.
398.ZAREH D RASHDU I, Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute IRAQ CALIFOR IA, U.S.A.
399. MARGARET F.REILLY, University of California, Los Angeles
400. HERMA REI SHOLM, Columbia University DE MARK
401.WILLIAM W. REMAK, University of Southern California
402. MAX RHODIUS, Columbia University
403. CECILE M. RICKARD, Michael Reese School of Nursing
404. ELIZABETH T. RITCHIE, Maryland Art Institute
405. DOROTHY B. RITTE HOUSE, Smith College
(48} GERMANY GERMANY
INDIANA, U. S. A. MARYLA D, U.S. A. MASSACHUSETTS, U. S. A.
406.RU ELL R. ROBERT , Fletchers College
407. ELBY 1. ROBI O , State University of Iowa
408 WE DELL 1.ROBI O , Willamette University
409 RUTH ROBY, Pomona College
410.I ABEL RODRIGUEZ, Madrid University
411. JOAQUIM RODRIGUE , ew York Universit;
412 EFFIE B. ROGER , Columbia University
413 CEFERINO R. ROLA, University of the Philippines
414.E. ERNESTO ROMERO, University of Puerto Rico
415. FRA CES V. RO , Teachers College
416.ALICE K. RUCKER, Michigan University
417 BERTELLA 1.RUSSELL, Berea College
418 ROBERT SACHS, Amherst College
419 DOROTHY H. SAFFORD, LaCrosse Teachers College
420 ELIZABETH D. SALWAY, Fordham University Y. [49] ew York,
MICHIGA , U.S. A.
IOWA, U. A.
OREGO ' U A. CALIFORNIA, U A. PAI
PORTUG E EI DIA TE A.
PHILIPPINE ISLA D
PUERTO RICO
WA HI GTO , U A.
KE TUCKY, U. .A. OHIO, U A.
EW YORK, U. A. Y. WI CO SI , U. . A.
EW YORK, U. .A.
421. JACI TO C. SA JUA , American School of Nat11ropath; 422. GERTRUDE E. SAUER, University of Net•ada
423. ESTHER S. SAYERS, Hartford Seminary Foundation
424. FRA CI X. SCAFURO, New York University
425. THORKEL CHERWI , Oregaard Gymnasium
426. ]EA ] CHREUR , University of Brussels
427. MARY SCHROEDER, Cambridge University
428. HELE G. SCHWARZ, Columbia University
429. VAHE SEKDORIA , State College of Indiana
430. ELLY ELIGMA , Universit; of Cologne
431. EDMU D T. SERGOTT, Lehigh University
432 GEORGE SETH, University of Edinburgh
433. JAMES T. SETTELMEYER, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
PHILIPPI E ISLA D NEVADA, U. A.
INDIA A, U. S. A.
ITALY
DE MARK
BELGIUM
ENGLA D
MI ESOTA, U. S. A.
ARME IA
GERMA Y
PE YLVA IA, U. A.
COTLA D EVADA, U. S. A.
. 434. PETER SHAHDA , Brown Universit;• SYRIA
435. ELEANOR T. SHAMWELL, Howard Uni11ersity DI TRICT OF COLUMBIA, U. S. A.
436. EDWARD L. SHARPE, University College1 Dublin
437. KRI H ALAL J SHRIDHARA I, Vis1•a-Bharati1 Sh,mtiniketan
438. VIRGI IA KEE , Agnes Scott College
EWFOUNDLA D DIA
GEORGIA, U. . A.
439. HERL! WA HI GTO , U. A. 0. LOCOMB, Carleton College
440. EUGE IA SMITH, Hunter College
441. LE A E. SMITH, Teachers College
442. MARGARET RGTH SMITH, Goucher College
443. PAUL E. SMITH, JR., Princeton Unit•ersit;
444. STA LEY F. SMITH, London School of Fine Arts
ORTH CAROLI A, U. S. A.
PE • YLVA IA, U. . A.
WEST VIRGI IA, U. A. NEW YORK, U. A. E GLA D
445. VIRGIL M. SMITH, Chicago Musical College IOWA, U. S. A. Marshalltown, Iowa.
446. RICHARD B S OW, Yale College
447. RALPH H. S YDER, ew York Unfrersit;
448. BRIJ M SOI, R. C. A Institute
449. LILLIA E. SPALLA, Columbia Unit•ersity
CO �ECTICUT, U. A. EW JERSEY, U. S. A. I DIA
IOWA, U. S. A.
450. GERHARD 0. SPA NER, University of Berlin GERMANY
451. CO STA CE E. SPE CER, Columbia University
452 MILDRED G. SPICER, University of Washington
453 MARTHA K. PRI GER, Evanston College of Education
454 ELIZABETH SPRI G TUN, University of Chicago
455 LEO IE W. TACY, Institute of Musical Art
456. MADALE M. STADER, Fordham University
457. MARY H. TARK, Mount Holyoke College
458. ALENE E. TEIN, Connecticut College
459. SUE C. TEVE S, Goucher College
460 IVA J. STEWART, Manitoba University
461. FRANCE W. TOAKLEY, Hollins College
462. HELE F. TRAND KOV, University of Minnesota
463 GUSTAV TRESOW, Columbia University
464. REBA C. TRICKLA D, Brenau College
465 MARYLOU TURM, Boston University
ILLI OIS, U. S. A. EW YORK, U. . A.
YLVA IA, U. A. EW YORK, U. A. OHIO, U. . A.
VIRGI IA, U. A. CA ADA
VIRGI IA, U. A.
MI NESOTA, U. A.
GERMA Y GEORGIA, U. . A.
EW YORK, U. . A.
466. LOTHAR SUEDEKUM, Heidelberg University
467 RUTH G. SUGNET, University of Buffalo
468. LILIAN SUPOVE, Smith College
469. RAFAEL SUSIN, Madrid University
470. SABOUNDJOUOGLOU TALHA, Columbia University
471. FRANK J. TAMBURELLO, New York University
472. ANNA M. TAYLOR, Syracuse University
473. AYODELE TAYLOR, Froebel Educational Institute
474. PAUL B. TAYLOR, Yale University
GERMANY
NEW YORK, U. S. A. CONNECTICUT, U. S. A. SPAIN
TURKEY
NEW JERSEY, U. S. A.
NEW YORK, U. S. A. NIGERIA NEBRASKA, U. S. A.
475. ROBERT A. TAYLOR, JR., Washburn College KANSAS, U. S. A.
476. ANGELOS N THEODORIDES, New York University
477. MILTON HALSEY THOMAS, Columbia University
478. MARGARET W. THOMPSON, Pomona College
479. R. RUTH THOMPSON. Pomona College
GREECE
NEW YORK, U. S. A. CALIFOR IA, U. S. A. CALIFORNIA, U. S. A.
480. THOMAS W. THORBURN, Commercial University of Stockholm SWEDEN
481. ELIZABETH S. THULI , University of Rochester
482. MARGARET THUM, Stanford University
483 GLE N M.TINDALL, Northwestern University
484.AURORA TORRES, Blanche Kellogg Institute
485. LOUI A TREVIS ICK, Santiago Colleg
486 GLADYS 0. TROMA S, Muskingum College
487.JEE-WOO TSANG, New York University
488 DIMITRIS T TSELOS, Princeton University
489.ELIZABETH TURNER, Mount Holyoke College
490.ROBERT E.TURNER, Juilliard School of Music
491.FLORENCE M TWEELINGS, University of Minnesota
492.I. KEITH TYLER, University of Nebraska
493.]IA T ENG UANG, Tsing Hwa University
494 CHARLES F. UHL, Northwestern University
495.MARIANNE UHLMAN, Heidelberg University
496. EVA A. URGISS, Friedrich-Wilhelms University
497. CHARLES A. ULLMA , Columbia University
498.HERMA ULLMA , Columbia University
499. EGBERT H VAN DELDEN, Columbia University
500 CAREL VAN LANSCHOT, Leyden University
501 ARAM J VART, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
EW YORK, U. S. A.
CALIFORNIA, U.S.A.
INDIANA, U.S. A.
PUERTO RICO
CHILE
OHIO, U.S. A.
CHINA
GREECE
ILLI OIS, U. A.
CALIFOR IA, U. A.
MI NESOTA, U. S. A.
CALIFOR IA, U A.
CHI A
ILLINOIS, U. A.
GERMANY
GERMA Y EW YORK, U. . A.
GERMANY
LOUISIA A, U. A. HOLLA D
ARME IA
502.RIFET VEJDI, Columbia University TURKEY
503. PEDRO V.VERGARA, University of California
504. BRIGIDO G VILLALON, University of the Philippines
PHILIPPINE ISLA DS
PHILIPPINE ISLA D
505. MARGARET F.VO MACH, Colttmbia University GERMANY
506. ROLF-PETER VOREMBERG, London School of Economics
507. ELVER 0. WAHLBERG, Juilliard School of .i\fasic .
508 HELMUTH W. WALDORF, Columbia University
509.MARIE E. WALLACE, Teachers College
510. ALICE L. WALTER, Vassar College [55]
GERMA Y MICHIGA , U.S. A.
GERMANY
I DIA A, U. S. A.
PEN SYLVA IA, U.S. A.
511.H I G H IU.c G WAU G-GWOH, Unfrersit; of hanghai
512.GI -PE TG WAU TG, University of Shanghai
513. T IE B. WEI , Vienna Child Guidance Clinic
514.ELE OR L. WELLER, Juilliard School of Music
515.MARY M. WELL , Marshall College
516.PHYLLI B. WEL H, West Virginia Wesle;an College . 517.LAURA D. WE DT, Ohio State Unitersit;
518.ROBERTE. WE GRE , University of Gothenburg
519.ALBERT G. WE TPHAL, Columbia Unitersit;
520. ]A 1E R. WHELPLEY, Columbia Unitersity
521.CATHER! E WHITCOMB, Unitersit; of Washington
522. ARA E. WHITCOMB, Teachers College
523.HERBERT E. WHITLOCK, College of Wooster
52--1.MARY E WIGLEY, Oklahom,.,i A & M. College
525.DOROTHY F. WILLIAM , Wellesley College
CHI A
CHI A GERM Ty
WI CO I , U A.
WE T VIRGI IA, U. . A.
WE T VIRGI IA, A. MA ACHU ETT , U. A.
WEDE T rTEWJER EY, U. A. CA ADA
WA HI TGTO T, U.. A.
PE YLVA IA, U A. I TDIA ALABAMA, U. . A. TEW YORK, U. A.
526.E.HELErWILLIAM, Penns;haniaStateCollege
527.FREDERICWILLIAM, Unive1sit;ofIllinois
52.HARRIETL.WILLIAM, VassarCollege
529.HELEJ.WILLIAM, Uniiersit)of Illinois
PE T T YLVAl TIA, U. A.
ILLI TOI , U. A.
E YORK, . A. ILLI TOI , U. A.
530.HE RIETTAWILLIAM, Hou·ardUniiersit; DI TRICT OF COLCMBIA, L'. A.
531. JACK WILLIAM , JR., Dat,,idson College
532. JOH B.WILLIAM, ColttmbiaUnitersit;
533.MARTHAH.WILLIAM, WellesleyCollege
534.R;DOLPHW.WI MAl\ ColttmbiaUnivemtJ
535. IVOR P. WOLD, Union College
536. JOH E. WOOLARD, "Cnhersit; of Minnerota
537. E THER MAY WRIGHT, William Jewell Unitersit)
538.FOOKZEWU, TorthuesternUniterrit;
539.LEO1TARDT. K.W T'Tsing Htta Unitersity
GEORGIA, . . A. I ;DIA
co Tl TECTICUT, U. . A. WITZERL ;D
TEW YORK, L'. A.
fA ACHC ETT , "C" A. fl OURI, U. . A.
CHh TA
540. JEA1 T WY1;DHAM, Kindergarten & Prepa,ato1; Teacher College. S;dne; AC TRALIA [57}
541. FREDA YAFFE, Unitersit; of Califomia
. MATSUNOSUKE YASUMORI, Kobe University of Commerce JAPAN
3. RICHARD I. YAWATA, Columbia University JAPAN
. DAVID YEE, New York University HAWAII
5. CHEE-CHEU YIP, New York University CHINA
. DIONISIO K. YORRO, Boston University PHILIPPINE ISLANDS
FYVIE H. YOUNG, University of British Columbia CANADA
. MAN KWONG YUNG, Lingnan University CHINA
. MOHAMMAD YUSUF, Habibia College AFGHANISTAN
ABDUL ZAHIR, Habibia College AFGHANISTAN
IRENE ZAROTSCHENZEFF, Alliance Francaise RUSSIA
MARIE-CHARLOTTE ZIELESCH, Columbia Universit) GERMANY
WILHELM A. ZUELZER, Berlin University GERMANY
EUGENIA BERLIN, Ecole des Beaux Arts, Geneva CANADA
c.AL O in the membership of the House for the year 1934-1935 are included the following students. We regret that we do not have photographs of them.
PIERO ACCHIAPATTI, UnitersitJ of Milan
L ·oLLE E. ALLEMN T ' Kan as State College
CHARLOTTE E. ALT TADT, J. Torthue~tern Unfrenit)
ETTA ANCHE TER, Teache1r College
GLADY MTIREW, Orhko h State Teachen College
ELEANOR M�RU , Unfrersit; of Warbington
MARIO r L. ARM TRO 1G, J,,;atlonal College of Education
KIKUO ATARA HI, Tokio Imperial UnitersitJ
HAZEL M. ATWOOD, UniterritJ of .Michigan
DOROTHY H. AVERELL, In tit11te of .Musical Art
FRANCO! BARDE, Uniter itJ of Geneta
N E M. BARLO\X', Vasrar College
BARO IG BARO , Armenian Seminar). Erfran
HAIG M. BARO TI.Air, Anatolia College
MARGARET ]. BEACH, Smith College
iEREDITH BECHTEL, Tulane l.:nitersitJ
CO r T TT A BEZZOLA, Columbia l..,'nrzersit;
LeROY T. BLACK, UnitersitJ of Pitt burgh
\X'ILLIAM C. BLACK, UnitenitJ of Colorado
fARY E. BLA ER, College of Woorter
EDWARD A BLEIER, Columbia Uniter.it)
FRAN! BLOUGH, Fontainebleau Consert'ator;
HERBERT A BOETTGER, Drake Uniter it;
HAZEL C. BO TE Unite,sit; of California. Los Angeles
fARCELLO BO CO, Columbia niteut;
VIVIAN R. BO GHTER, Tr7est V1rgi111a l.Jnizersit; RCTH L. BOYD. State Teacherr College. Edinboro, Pa.
ITALY
KA.1. T A'C A.
IOWA, C A.
ILLI TOI , U. A. WI co - I T' U. A.
OREGO.1.\ C. A.
TEW YORK, C. A. JAPA
ILLI TOI'C A.
WITZERLA ;n
.l. TE\X' ]ER EY, C. A.
AR fE -IA
AR 1E TIA
fAhTE, C. A.
WITZERLAl';D
PE.1. J. YLV� T IA, C A. COLORADO, U. A.
OHIO, U A.
.l. TEW YORK, lI. A.
PE.1. J. - YLVAi·1A, C. A.
J. TORTH DAKOTA, G. A.
CALIFORl TIA, G. A.
ITALY
\X-E T VIRGI TIA, C. A.
PE J. T YLVAl'·1A, - A.
ARTHUR G. BRATTON, Williams College
ELLEN E BRENNAN, Radcliffe College
B. LUCILE BRIDGES, Acadia Univernty
A. OLOV BROGRE , University of Stockholm
KATE BULLOCK, Pennsylvania School of Social Work
DOROTHY D. BURKHART, Carnegie Institute of TechnologJ
MARGARET R. BURNFORD, London School of Economics
K. ELIZABETH BURT ER, Hood College
ADELE L. CALER, University of California, Los Angeles
ERDINE CATHERS, Syracuse University
ASTRID CHAKURIAN, American School Gedik Pasha .
MARY CHAMBERLAND, University of Vermont
DOUG MU CHAN, New York University
WOODROW CHA , Culver-Stockton College
HOWARD JWI-KA G CHANG, Yenching University
R. N. CHATTERJEE, St. Xaviers College, Calcutta
CHI SHA CHEN, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
LUN KEE CHEW, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
C CHIANG, Fuh Tan University
MARGARET S. CHRISTY, University of Minnesota
MASSACHUSETTS, U. S. A.
OHIO, U. S. A.
CANADA
SWEDEN
SOUTH CAROLI A, U. S. A.
ENGLAND
ENGLA D
PEN SYLVA IA, U. S. A.
EW YORK, U. S. A.
MARYLAND BYR E, Columbia University L H 0 u
CALIFORNIA, U. S. A.
NEW YORK, U. S. A.
ARMENIA
VERMO T, U. S. A.
CHINA
CHINA
CHI A I DIA
CHINA
CHINA
CHI A
MI ESOTA, U. S. A.
DOROTHY CLE AM, University of California, Berkele;• CALIFORNIA, U. S. A.
EUGENE D. COLEMAN, Rollins College
HARRISO F CONDO , JR., Dartmouth College
LOLA COOPERSMITH, Bellevue School of Nursing
THOMAS CORI TH, Columbia University
CARMEN G. CORRIOLS, Duquesne University
GEORGE A CORROO , Columbia UniveHity
ILLINOIS, U. S. A.
ILLI OIS, U. S. A.
NEW YORK, U. S. A.
GERMANY
PE SYLVANIA, U. S. A.
NEW YORK, U. S. A.
A VIL DAS, Tristate College I DIA
HAIG H. DAVIDIA , Columbia University
MARY A. DAVIS, Doane College
LILLIAN R. DAWSO , Teachers College
ETHEL H. deGOMEZ, Cleveland Institttte of Music
MEHMET H. DERVISH, ew York University
IRENE H. DeSARMO, Teachers College
ELIZABETH deSEVERIN deSI GER, University of Vienna
BEVERLY W. DEXTER, University of California, Berkeley
SIAO-SUNG DJANG, University of Michigan
ELLA C. DRESCHER, University of Heidelberg
HELEN EAGLE, Montana State College
GE EVIEVE L. EAKI S, University of Illinois
HARRY EDMONDS, JR., Rollins College
SOCRATES M. ELIOPOULOS, Columbia University
MARGUERITE E OS, University of Wisconsin
ROBERT H. EVA S, University of Richmond
JANET S. EWING, Drexel Institute
ROWENA FERGUSON, Randolph-Macon Woman's College
VIRGI IA R. FERRITER, Boston University
HAROLD E. FEY, Yale University
ERNEST FLESCH, College of the City of New York
ELISABETH FOERSTER, Teachers College .,
SEVERINO S. FORO DA, Maria Agricultural School, P. I.
KIRSTEN C. FREDERIKSE , Univenity of Copenhagen
NEDJIATI FUAD, Robert College
EN-ICHI FUKUZAWA, University of Southern California
ELSIE G. FULBOAM, ew Jersey College for Women
ANCY P. GALLOWAY, Greensboro Women's College
ALBERT R. GIFFORD, Juilliard School of Music
ARMENIA
OKLAHOMA, U. S. A.
ILLI OIS, U. S. A.
OHIO, U. S. A.
TURKEY
NEW YORK, U. S. A.
HU GARY
CALIFOR IA, U. S. A.
CHINA
GERMANY
MO TANA, U. S. A.
MI SOURI, U. S. A.
CO ECTICUT, U. S. A.
GREECE
ILLI OJ , U. S. A.
VIRGI IA, U. S. A.
NEW YORK, U. S. A.
TE ESSEE, U. S. A.
EW JERSEY, U. S. A.
DIA A, U. S. A.
HU GARY
GERMA Y
PHILIPPI E ISLA DS
DE MARK TURKEY
JAPAN
EW JERSEY, U. S. A. .
ORTH CAROLI A, U. S. A.
MASSACHUSETTS, U. S. A.
HYMA H. GOLDSMITH, Columbia University
DIMU L. GORBATENKO, Columbia University
MILTON GOULD, University of Pennsylvania Law School
H.BECK GREE , Teachers College
PEARL GREENBERG, Teachers College
ALEXA DER GREGORIEFF, JR., Columbia University
THOMAS J GRIFFIN, Univetsity of Alabama
NATALIE P GRISWOLD, Cornell Univetsity
SARAH E. GROLLMAN, Connectiettt College for lf/"omen
MARION D. GUTMAN, Goucher College
ADELE HAGLAND, Barnard College
MARY LOU HALL, Wellesley College
MARGARET T HAMPEL, Univetsity of Dent1er
EMIL HA KE, Colgate University
JEAN S HARDY, Teachers College
RUTH L HARVEY, Mt Holyoke College
FRA K L HARVEY, JR., Cornell University
EMERSO R. HATCHER, Berea College
EDNA V. HAUGH, Trinity College
GEORGE C. HAYS, Harvard University
CATHER! E HEMMEO , Mount Allison University
ERNA HE SCHKE, Elmira College
WILHELM L HERZ, University of Basel
FATMA . HILAL, University of Minnesota
MARY T HITCHINGS, Sorbonne
NEHAMA HOCHSTEI , University of Cincinnati
WOLFGANG E. HOEFER, University of Munich
MARY K HOGLE, University of Chicago
HERBERT A HOLSTE! , University of Hamburg
MARY F HOLTER, Sarah Lawrence College [62]
A L H 0 u
EW YORK, U. S. A. RUSSIA
PEN YLVANIA, U. S. A.
CALIFOR IA, U. S. A.
1. EW YORK, U.S. A.
RUSSIA
MASSACHUSETTS, U. S.A.
PE SYLVANIA, U A.
CO ECTICUT, U. S. A.
MARYLAND, U.S. A.
NEW YORK, U. S. A.
CO ECTICUT, U. S. A.
COLORADO, U. S.A.
NEW YORK, U.S. A. CANADA
NEW JERSEY, U. S. A.
PEI SYLVA IA, U. S. A.
KE TUCKY, U. S.A.
NEW YORK, U. S. A.
MISSOURI, U. S. A.
CA ADA
NEW YORK, U. S.A. GERMANY TURKEY
OHIO, U. S. A. PALESTINE GERMANY
UTAH, U. S. A. GERMANY
NEW YORK, U. S.A.
H 0 u
ARTHUR HOPE-JO E , Christ's College, Cambridge
WILLIAM K. HORA, ew York University
BER ITA A. HOWLA D, Iowa State College
INEZ M. HUSTED, Marywood College
BURL IVE , Eastern Illinois Teachers College
RUTH E. JILLARD, Oberlin College
PE
MAURICE E. JOH TO , ew York School of Fine and Applied Arts
LUCY V. JONES, Smith College
FRA CES E. JORDA , Simmons College
CHRI TINE KAABER, Copenhagen County Hospital
ABDUL H. KADHIM, American University of Beirut
E GLA D
CZECHO LOVAKIA
IOWA, U. A.
YLVA IA, U. A.
ILLI OI , U. A.
EW YORK, U. A.
OHIO, U. A.
CO ECTICUT, U. A.
MA ACH ETT , A.
DE MARK IRAQ
ALICE KALOUSDIA , Hunter College ARME IA
IRWI WITZERLA D P. KELE , Oxford University
HENRY KELLER, Georgetown University
EMER ON W. KER , University of California
JAMES D. KI G, George Washington University
PAUL KI G
EDWARD KLEIN, New Yofk University
RICHARD L. KNIGHT, De Pauw University
TADEUSZ E. KUCZMA, University of Poznan
EDGAR LAJTHA, Columbia Uniziersity
CARLARVID LANDEGREN, Univenity of Technologi, Stockholm
DA IEL J. LA KFORD, Johns Hopkins Univetsity
MARIE-LUCE LA SIMO E, Hillside College
ELAI E M. LAUGHLI , Wellesley College
D ARTHUR LEAHY, New York Unit1ersity
WALTHER LEDERER, University of Vienna
BET Y LEE, University of Texas
CHU G-SAU LEE, University of Shanghai
WILLIAM S. LE TER, Columbia UniversitJ
EW YORK, U A.
CALIFOR IA, U. A.
CHI A
ALABAMA, U A.
EW JER EY, A.
I DIA A, U A.
POLA D
HU GARY
WEDE
TEXA , U A.
FRA CE
MI E OTA, U A.
EW YORK, U. A.
AU TRIA
TEXA , U A.
CHI A
MARYLA D, U. A.
VIRGI IA LEWI , Universit; of Minnesota
T AI-YA LI, Soochow University
RAYMOND C LI DQUIST, University of Minnesota
ELEA OR H. LOMBARD, Oberlin College
CARMEL! A LOYOLA, Universit; of Puerto Rico
HI G FUT LUM
ANGU M, MacLEAN, University of orth Carolina
MABEL A MADDE , Howard University
ODETTE MAJORELLE, Univenit; of Pat"is
ALBERT MALVER, Milwaukee State Teache-rs College
FARR! MAN OUR, UnivenitJ of lVest Virginia
KATHERI E C. MARTI , Universit; of Alberta
MA ATO HI MAT UDA, Tokio Universit; of Commerce
MI E OTA, U.S. A.
CHI A
SWEDE
MA ACHU ETT , U. S. A.
PUERTO RICO
CHI A
DI TRICT OF COLUMBIA, U. S. A.
DI TRICT OF COLUMBIA, U. S. A.
FRA CE
WI CO , U.S.A.
WE T VIRGI IA, U. S. A.
CANADA
]APA
ELEANOR M. McCLI TOCK, School of Political Science, Paris
LEWI E. McCULLOUGH, Mount Union Conservatory
ELI TOR M. McLEAVY, Bucknell University
CARRIE E. MEARE , Winthrop College
JO EPH C MEI TER, Harvard Business School
MAJORIE MEYER, The Rice Institute
JOH C. MILLER, Baily Military Academ;
MITCHELL W. MILLER, Universit; of Rochester
MOI E 0. MI A, ational Universit;, Manila
EVA P. MI TLE, Iowa State College
EW YORK, U. S. A.
OHIO, U. S. A.
PE SYLVA IA, U. A.
OUTH CAROLI A, U. S. A.
RHODE I LA D, U. S. A.
TEXAS, U. S. A.
OUTH CAROLI A, U. S. A.
EW YORK, U. S. A.
PHILIPPI E ISLANDS
IOWA, U. S. A.
MARI EWFO DLAND E U MOORE, Chicago Teachers' College
KIYO HI MORIKAWA, Tokio Technical School
ELIZABETH MO. ER, Stanford University
VIRGI IA M. MOSS, B,-own University
ARTHUR H. MO TAI , University of Chicago
FLORE CE MU GRAVE, ew York University
JAPAN
CALIFORNIA, U. S. A.
CO ECTICUT, U. S. A.
EW YORK, U. S. A.
WE T VIRGI IA, U.S. A.
YERANOUHIE E HTERDJI , Columbia Unitersity
MARIAN EWFIELD, Lasell Junior College
EDWI B. EWM , Harvard University
ROBERT B. !CHOL , Cornell University
LAWRE TCE G. ICODEMU , Gonzaga University
LYDIA IL SO
MARIE R. OEGGERATH, Swarthmore College
MARTA B. TORDI , University of Upsala
YVO
EILEE . E .ODDO O'LEARY, Teachers College
CAROL MARIE OLIVER, Columbia Uni-versit;
ETHEL M.ORR, Westminster College
LUCILE OWE , Tulane Unhersity
ELL PAMPLI , Peabody College
IVAN A. PANFE TJEV, Universit; of Moscow
FRANCE M. PAR O T , Unitersit; of California. L. A.
AUDREY H. PARTRIDGE, Wells College
JOH C. PATTER O , JR., rew York [;nhersity
WALTER . PEARMAN, rew Yo,k Unitersit;
MARIA PERTIA
EDWARD V. PETER , Princeton Uniiersit;
HELE R. PETERZELL, Wellesle; College
VIOLA G.PFROMMER, Uni-versit; of Berlin
GEORGE PHALARE , Unitersit; of Chicago
THEODORE C. PIERCE, Institute of .Musical Art
FRANK C. PIER O , Swarthmore College
ANNIE E. PI EO, Oberlin College
A TO IO PO TZADA, Columbia Unitersit;
AN 1E F. POPE, Cornell Uniterrity
H 0 u
ARME TJA
CO 1 ECTICUT, U. A.
KAN A, .A
EW YORK, U. A.
IDAHO, U. A.
WEDE
TEW JER EY, A. WEDE
FRANCE
WA HI TGTO r, U A.
TEW YORK, . A.
PEN T YLVA IA, . A.
ARKAN A, T .A.
ALABAMA, .A. R IA
CALIFORNIA, F A.
l. TEW JER EY, .A.
PE 1 YLVANIA, U. .A
MI 0 RI, U. .A
ROt.; fA1 1IA
Pfa r YLVANIA, U. A.
PE T YLVANIA, U A.
TEW YORK, U. A.
GREECE
fA ACHU ETT , TJ. A.
COLORADO, U. A.
MA ACHU ETT , A. fa s. PAP.AMA
TE TE EE, A.
E
JAMES A. PORTER, Howard University
MIRIAM PRITCHARD, Colorado State Teachers College
CHARLES T. PROUTY, Dartmouth College
A DONALDA PUTNAM, Mount Allison University
SEVERINO 1. RABAGO, University of Nebraska
EUGENE B. RAMEY, JR., Dartmouth College
CONRAD REGENBOGEN
EDITH REICHMAN, Ohio State University
VELMA F. REID, University of California, Los Angeles
MARGARET C. REIMER, Vassar College
ALICE E. RICE, Barnard College
ROBERT E RICH, New York University
ANN RICHARDS, Temple University
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA, U. S. A.
COLORADO, U. S. A.
MASSACHUSETTS, U. S. A. CANADA
PHILIPPINE ISLANDS
INDIANA, U. S. A.
GERMA Y
OHIO, U. S. A.
CALIFORNIA, U. S. A.
NEW YORK, U. S. A.
NEW YORK, U. S. A.
NEW JERSEY, U. S. A.
PENNSYLVANIA, U. S. A.
DEMETRIUS RIGAKOS, University of Athens GREECE
ANNE B RILEY, New York University
ELIZABETH M. ROBERTSON, Radcliffe College
OSCAR M. ROBINSON, University of Nevada
RENALDO ROVERS, Juilliard School of Music
ANGIOLO SALVIDIO, University of Pisa
MIRIAM 1. SANBORN, Wheaton College
EDITH R SAUL, Goucher College
MASSAC�USETTS, U. S. A.
MASSACHUSETTS, U. S. A.
NEVADA, U. S. A.
NiW JERSEY, U. S. A.
ITALY
NEW YORK, U. S. A.
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA, U. S. A.
ARTHUR H. SCHAFFERT, Carnegie Institute of Technology
ALEXANDER von SCHELTING, University of Heidelberg
ELIZABETH SCHIEL, University of Cincinnati
JAMES W SCHOUT, Wooster College
RUDOLF G. SEELIG, College of the City of New York
MARGUERETE SHAMBAUGH, Agnes Scott College
YU SHENG, University of Shanghai
HSUEH HUI SHIH, Shantung Christian Universit; [66]
OHIO, U. S. A.
GERMANY
OHIO, U. S. A.
OHIO, U. S. A.
GERMANY
CALIFORNIA, U. S. A.
CHINA
LOTTIE SIMMONS, Atlantic Christian College
LEWIS B.SIMS, University of California, Berkeley
JAMES SIMSARIAN, University of California, Los Angeles
KARL F SKARBORG, Malmo College of Commerce
ELSE SKONNING, Columbia University
KENNETH M SPANG, Dartmouth College
NICHOLAS P. STATHIS, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
HANS W. STAUDLINGER
CARL J. STERNER, University of Illinois
GRACE M. STOCKWELL, University of California
EDITHA STONE, Boston University
PHILIP W. STRICKLAND, University of Saskaichewan
ANTONI SZAYNA, Columbia University
RAGHBIR C. TALWAR, New York Institute of Photography
NORTH CAROLINA, U. S. A.
CALIFORNIA, U. S. A.
CALIFORNIA, U. S. A.
SWEDEN
DENMARK
OHIO, U. S. A.
MASSACHUSETTS, U. S. A.
GERMANY
ILLINOIS, U.S. A.
CALIFORNIA, U. S. A.
MASSACHUSETTS, U.S. A.
ERWIN STRAUSS, University of Frankfurt GERMA Y CA ADA POLAND INDIA ITALY
FRANCESCO TAMAGNA, University of Pavia
LILY S. TRABULSI, Teachers College SYRIA
MARIAN B. TRYON, Juilliard School of Music
ANDREW T. K TSENG, University of Detroit
LILY LEE TSIANG, Lingnan University
CHUN-LING TUNG, Kwang Htta University
LOH-MING TUNG, Fuh-tan University
NATALIE E. TURCHI, New York State College for Teachers
ISOBEL M.TURNBULL, Teachers College
THEO L. VAUGHAN, Clemson College
MAMIE VAUGHAN, Winthrop College
NINA VECCHI, National Academy of Fine Arts
EDWARD H.VINES, 3rd, New YOt"k State College for Teachers
NEW YORK, U.S.A. CHINA CHINA CHINA CHINA
NEW YORK, U. S. A. CA ADA
SOUTH CAROLINA, U. S. A.
SOUTH CAROLI A, U. S. A. ITALY
EW YORK, U.S. A.
R. DALE VLIET, University of Kansas OKLAHOMA, U. S. A.
BERTHA D. VRANNA, University of California
FRIEDA WEINSTOCK, University of Breslau
ESTHER T. WELLMAN, University of Sottthern California
VIRGI IA WER ER, University of Wisconsin
RUTH M WEXLER, New York University
KATHERINE W. WHALEY, Sweet Briar College
FRANCES W. WHELPLEY, Columbia University
MARY E. WHELPLEY, Nebraska University
F. ARLENE WHITEMAN, University of Colorado
ELIZABETH B. WHITNEY, Oberlin College
EDITHA WILLIAMS, University of Texas
JANE E WILLIAMS, American Academy of Dramatic Art
SARA H. WILSON, Agnes Scott College
JAME S WINN, JR., Williams College
DAVIDA WOERNER, University of California, Berkeley
A NA E. WOLBRETTE, Newcomb College
VI-LIEN WONG, St. Johns University, Shanghai t.
WALTER R WOODWORTH, ]ttilliard School of Music
EDWARD V C. WRIGHT, University of Pennsylvania
SHING NAN WU, University of Wisconsin
YU-CHEN WU, Yenching University
LOWELL C. YEAGER, University of Illinois
CALIFORNIA, U. S. A. GERMANY
PUERTO RICO
MISSOURI, U. S. A.
EW JERSEY, U. S. A. GEORGIA, U. S. A.
NEW YORK, U. S. A.
NEBRASKA, U. S. A. CALIFORNIA, U. S. A.
OHIO, U. S. A. TEXAS, U. S. A. PENNSYLVANIA, U. S. A.
ALABAMA, U. S. A. FLORIDA, U. S. A.
CALIFORNIA, U. S. A. LOUISIANA, U. S. A. CHINA
OHIO, U. S. A. PENNSYLVANIA, U. S. A. CHINA CHINA
WYOMING, U. S. A.
ACHNewYorkCitybranchisacompleteunitbringing toyouthefacilitiesofaworldwideorganization.These smallcommunity‘‘bankswithinabank”linkyouwithbranches locatedintwentyfourforeigncountriesandcorrespondentsin everyimportantcityoftheworld.
72 BRANCHES IN GREATER New YorKForeign Branches and Affiliates in 24 Countries
Argentina Cuba Japan Puerto Rico
Belgium Dominican Republic Manchuria Republic of Panama
Brazil England Mexico Spain
Chile Haiti Peru Straits Settlements
China India Philippine Islands Uruguay
Colombia Italy Venezuela
The National City Bank of New York, France, S. A.
ee Say it with Flowers’
Ss Ee G@orner, near 12 5the st,
PHONE: MONUMENT 2-6141
“Where the Nations Meet’’ International House Cafeteria
Excellent Food Combined with Delightful Surroundings at Moderate Prices
Breakfast 7:30-9:30 8:00-10:00
Luncheon 12:00-1:30 12:30- 2:00
Dinner 5:30-7:30 we
We are well known for our food, the atmosphere of our cafeteria and the pleasant people who are our patrons,
Broadway at 122nd Street
Your Drug Store Requirements well filled
10% Discount to Members of International House upon presentation of Membership Card
TELEPHONE: UNIVERSITY 4-8092
Operated by Williams Storage Warehouse Co., Inc.
Live Storage at reasonable rates—$8.00 up. Dead Storage $5.00 per month. Delivery Service $15.00 per month.
SPECIAL RATES FOR SUMMER STUDENTS—$12.00 FOR SIX WEEKS 637 West 125th Street UN. 4-3220
is proud to offer a complete steamship service throughout the world
Italian Line steamers travel the seven seas and passengers are assured of every comfort and speed and complete satisfaction.
North America, South America, Europe, South Africa, the Near and Far Kast... all these and other countries are serviced regularly by the Italian Line.
Apply to your favorite Agent or write for information to the
Fifth Avenue at 50th Street, New York, N. Y.
Telephone ClIrcre 7-1300
29 MOYLAN PLACE and 538 WEST 125th STREET
In the immediate neighborhood of International House
DAY AND NIGHT SERVICE
Special price for members and guests of International House.
TELEPHONE UNIVERSITY 4-8518
At International House
An unusual selection of interesting art objects from all countries. Suitable for souvenirs and gifts. Also stationery, candies, tobacco and toilet articles. a
POST CARDS AND DEVELOPING COLORED PRINTS
MAGAZINES AND NEWSPAPERS
hosts to nationalities from the world over, with a ‘““Reisensonderdienst’’— a Special Advisory Service—as their ‘Activities Office” for professionals and students regardless of the class in which they travel.
Deutschland Albert Ballin
offer, each Wednesday Midnight, a swift, stabilized 7-day crossing to Europe; special outdoor swimming pools in Third Class during the
Summer months.
Regardingstudyandtravelabroad consultour
EDUCATIONAL SERVICE DEPARTMENT
fhamburg-American Line North German Lloyd
For originality and individuality, our thirty-five years of experience in the Photo Engraving field enablesustogiveyoubetter printingplatesandpersonal supervision with each order.
CreatorsandPrinters of Fine Booklets, Folders, Catalogues and Publications.