HE PHI AMMA E LTA
Transcription
HE PHI AMMA E LTA
HE PHI AMMA E LTA 111 Second Lieutenant Richard E. Miller, D.F.C. In This Issue: How He Bombed Tokyo OCTOBER 1942 THE PH1 GAMMA DELTA (Registered U. S. Patent Office ) A MAGAZINE PUBLISHED CONTIN UOUSLY SINCE 1879 B1' THE FRATERNITY OF PHI GAMM A DELTA L. 65 OCTOBER. 1942 No. 1 TABLE OF CONTENTS War Story — Continued }. 1 We Bomb's] the City of Tok yo in Same Bomber Shot Down Correspondents Tell Stories Per Cent of Who's Who Ours • wary Degree s for the Brethren Snug, Little Nook by the Fireside Fratres Qui Fuerunt Sed Nunc Ad Astra ( .‘ms of White Star Dust - Here, There and Everywhere ks on Phi Gamma Delta's Shelf S outh Sea cannibals are far-famed for their sin gular hospitality. New York cannibals , though not so un compromising, ky claim to the same distinction. With Amer ica at war, the Fiji Club has become more than ever an arsenal of warm friendship, gathering place for me a n from every corner of the Allied Earth. Here doubts are dis pelled. (There's always someone around who has a new slant on what's cooking.) Here visit arniy and navy men, marines and coast guardsmen — hai lin g not from America alone, but from En gland, Canada, Australia , New Zealand, Tasmania and Free France as well. Since Pearl Harbor, savory stories of nineteen fighting services have si mmered beneath this roof. THE PHI GAMMA DELTA CLUB 106 West 56th Str eet, New York City Prices for sip ping, supping and sleeping are roc k-bottom low for ese rv Fiji; sleeping is 10'; lower if you wea r a uniform. • As Press Sees Them :, Issue as the Editor Sees 3 71 23 16 31 41 46 49 55 58 66 69 It 73' Entered as second-class matter at the postoffice at Cedar Rapids, Iowa, September 22, under the Act of March 3, 1879. Acceptance for mailing at special rate of postage provided for in Section 1103. Act of ),tuber 3, 1917. authorized August 21, 1918. Printed by The Torch Press at Ced ar Rapids, Iowa, and issued seven times a year, the seven numbers in each vol ume appearing in October, November, December, February, March, April, May. Subscription pric e, $2.00 per year in advance; single copies, 30 cents. .iie subscription, $25.00. Adve rtising rates on application. Matter intended for publication in THE PHI GAM MA DELTA should be in the hands of he Editor at least one month prec edilg month of publication. - CECIL J. WILKINSON (Ohio Wesleyan '17) Editor and Manager Rust Building, 1001 15th St.. N.W., Washington. D. C. 41SICAlictic KILLED IN ACTION *aralb Jrnstn 4:thriataphrr (Northwestern '41) 111triparbUlan' bartmatt birl'arb Null (Richmond '39) (Georgia Tech '391 billlfaitt Calla! book. Jr. illrebrrirk New: Illalsh (Pennsylvania '42) (Knox '37r liant b. Jahns. Jr. ibtantrg Allen Douglas. Jr. (Washington '42) (Washington and Lee '39) MISSING IN ACTION ariuw EngrneImson (British Columbia '37) (Brown '37) William Immix At'Uri' Carl Ilatnit Ilriffrr (British Columbia '43) N.,rth Carolina '38) U. S. ARMY DISTINGUISHED SERVICE CROSS JACK WILLARD HALL (William Jewell '38) U. S. ARMY DISTINGUISHED FLYING CROSS CF.CIL EDWARD COMBS RICHARD EWING MILLER (Chicago '33) (Indiana '40) U. S. NAVY DISTINGUISHED SERVICE CROSS HARALD JENSEN CHRISTOPHER (Northwestern '41) U. S. NAVY DISTINGUISHED FLYING CROSS RICHARD BULL (Georgia Tech. '39) . V , THE PHI GAMMA DELTA (Rutgers '39) Oltpuits Nam,!gator Eric Sault. liftman' OCTOBER. 1942 * * * Our War Story—Continued Fijis Lose Lives in Coral Sea, Midway and Alaska Engagements and on Patrol in the Atlantic By CECIL J. WILKINSON (Ohio Wesleyan '17) Editor of THE PHI GAMMA DELTA HE unfolding panorama of the Millerd (British Columbia '43), who world at war continues to reveal has not returned from air operations the noble part which the loyal sons of over the coast of Holland where he was Delta are playing in the mightiest con- laying mines. Ensign Carl David Peiffer (North fl' • of all time. '38), unreported since the Carolina of reports to backdrop sombre ci• .t:ons won for gallantry in ensan- Battle of Midway on June 4. On the brighter side is the award of gultied arenas of battle, the inevitable Distinguished Flying Cross by the the fatality roll grows longer. States Army to Second LieuUnited Since the last issue of this journal, the following Fijis have been reported tenant Richard Ewing Miller (Indiana as having made the supreme sacrifice '40), who was one of the bombardiers who attacked Tokyo, and the bein action against the enemy: of a Silver Star upon Brigadierstowal William Cahill Hook, Jr. (PennsylNT; 'a '42), lost in May in Atlantic General Charles A. Willoughby (Gettysburg '14) for gallantry in Bataan. waters on the U.S. S. Cythera. own story of his Ensign Paul H. Johns, Jr. (Wash- Lieutenant Miller's city is told elseJapanese the to visit ington '42), killed in action on May 8 issue. this in where aboard the U.S.S. Lexington. * * * Ensign Frederick Weber Walsh Death came with dramatic swiftness (Knox '37), killed in the Midway Island engagement on June 4, when the to Bill Hook, who was not called into He bomber he was piloting was shot down. the naval service until last spring, at player basketball varsity Sergeant Stanley Allen Douglas, Jr. was a naval the in enlisted and Pennsylvania in (Washing-ton and Lee '39), killed continued action on June 11 "somewhere in Alas- reserve in August, 1941. He he went when March in college until ka." yacht, converted a Scythia, the Two other Fijis are reported by their aboard the in patrol submarine on was which re,pective countries as missing in acAtlantic. tion. They are: On June 3, Bill's parents received Flight Sergeant William Francis T 4 THE PI-II (;.\MNIA DELTA notice from the Navy Department that the vessel was "presumed lost." Bill, a towering lad of 6 feet 3 inches, was born on April 24, 1920, at Columbia, Pa. One of his contemporaries in Beta Chapter has described him as "an all-around good fraternity man." He was given his degree of bachelor of science in absentia by the university last commencement. * Every Man a Scribe THE Pit! GAMM.4 DELTA He set about to rem,1 94 after completing a special course (as my guess would them from a safe. . f training at Northwestern Univer- Aboard the Lexington he served The ship's surge,.. sity. as''tommunications officer. story: The Tacoma Lumberman's Club has I first saw him [I presented the sum of $2,000 to the Unisign Johns] on the Washington to be used as versity of of the battle about o'clock. This was an It prizes to be presented at the end of and a half after the , spring quarter to the outstanding jungagement and about • ior and the outstanding senior in the same time after his college of forestry. These awards will jury. He was lying in • Jr., captain's cabin on a tr be hnown as the Paul H. Johns, tress in an unconsci. Memorial Awards. conceives it to he its duty to record, month by month, the story of the deeds of the "knights so bold" as they engage in combat on the far-flung battleline in the greatest struggle in the history of mankind. The help of our readers is solicited in gathering information. Men who hare seen action or are preparing for action in camps overseas are invited to write their experiences. Such accounts should be state, with blood from • in conformity with cessorship re- lungs coming from strictions. mouth. He had been nl It is hoped, too, that we may be comfortable and was ‘k. able to revive the "Coincidences" covered when I saw h:: column which was an interesting At that time his breat during World War I. This ing had ceased and we Vivid descriptions feature was a collection of stories of chance tempted to revive I' of the death of En- meetings of Fiji:, with blood plasma in : unknown to each sign "Pat" Johns are other, in unusual surroundings. vein. He needed no m phine as he suffered contained in letters pain then or at any tiltwhich his father, a The blood plasma, ar Tacoma lumberman. ficial respiration has received from a fellow officer and sponging of his face all failed to revive aIi from the ship's surgeon on the Lexing- and all signs of life ceared within the nt‘ 15 minutes. ton. His death was the result of the tern The former wrote, in part, as follows: blast caused by the enemy bomb hit on t Before the battle began Pat and I played port five-inch gun gallery forward, whi, a game of "acey-deucey" as we followed in turn exploded the ammunition locker the advance of the planes toward us. When the the vicinity of the admiral's cabin and r fireworks started we all hit the deck in a coding room. . . . Death from such bla-• crouch. Gas masks had been tried and testseems to be the result of the sudden cor ed and were on our shoulders. I pression and very quick releasing of ti got up to get my hat and was standing with my left chest, often resulting in the collapse of be side facing the open door. just about lungs and invariably with severe tearing this time I was blinded by a white flash. injury of the lung tissue. This action, alot My face seemed to draw up and pain a great deal. with similar violent action on the brain at I later found out that the left side was abdominal structures, seems to produce str burned to a second-degree extent. At the same violent shock of the entire human mechanist time my chest filled with smoke of such that few survive or recover from the ei density as to allow only a 2-foot visibility. frets. . . I went for m3 gas mask which had blown from my Paul H. Johns was born on Jam; shoulder to the deck. Down on my hands ary 27, 1920, in Tacoma. He starre, and knees looking for it, I saw the three other fellows there with me moving. Pat as a broad jumper while at the Uniwas going to the safe in which the publica- versity of Washington. He received hitions with which he was charged were kept. commission in the navy in September ** THE PHI GAMMA DELTA * * * In the fraternity records the name appears as Frederick Weber Walsh, but in the navy he was known as Frederick T. Weber, the "Walsh" being his adol qed surname. Fred trained for his wings at the naval air station in Pensacola, Fla. Following his graduation and commissioning, he was ordered to duty in San Diego, Calif., assigned to an aircraft carrier and stationed at Pearl Harbor until the start of the war. A few weeks prior to his death he had been hospitalized following a previous brush with the enemy when his plane was shot down at an undisclosed location. It wa.5 learned that his teeth had been knocked out and that 24 stitches were required to close a facial laceration. Ile was pilot of a dive bomber which was shot down in the fatal engagement. A native of Des Moines, Ia., Fred Was born on February 4. 1916. He spent a year at Knox College, where he became a Fiji, and then transferred to Drake University, where, as track manager, he had charge of the famous relays. * * * The first Fiji fatality in the Alaska 5 arena of combat is believed to have been Sergeant Stanley Allen Douglas, Jr. (Washington and Lee '39), who was killed on June 11 while on flight duty with an army bomber. Stanley enlisted in the air force in August, 1941, and trained at Scott Field, Ill., and Morrison Field, Fla. He specialized in radio operations. Last March he was assigned to a B-24 Liberator bomber and engaged in Atlantic anti-submarine patrol duty. He was sent to March Field, Calif., in June and thence to Alaska. LOST IN Tilt.: ATLANTIC When the U.S. S. Scythia, a converted yacht on submarine patrol duty, was sunk without a trace, Second Class Seatnan ham Cahill Hook, Jr. (Pennsyttnnia '42) gave his life for his country. Tall (6 feet, 3 inches) Bill was a varsity basketball forward at Pennsylvania and. in the words of a contemporary. "an all-around fraternity THE PHI GAMMA DELTA THE PHI GAMMA DELTA Pittsburgh, where he was born March 28, 1917. His home was Scarsdale, N. Y. * * * The Royal Canadian Air Force May 26 reported Sergeant Air Gu ner William Francis Millerd (Brit!, Columbia '42) as missing after :. operations overseas. Bill joined the R.C.A.F. in 1940 a: trained in Canada for eight mont1 He had been in England for more tli. a year and was engaged in laying mii:. along the Holland coast when he shot down. His father advises THE Put GA' MA DELTA that one of the airpla. crew has been reported a prisoner war in Germany and that hope is h(' that Bill will turn up later. What ; interesting turn of fate it would be if were to be assigned to the same prisi camp with Pilot Officer Ralph R. Hel KILLED ABOARD "LEXINGTON" derson (British Columbia '37), wl (1. Ensign Paul H. Johns. Jr. (Washington was shot down over France or Ge. : '42i was killed in action aboard the aircraft many a year ago and who recently se:: carrier Lexington, of which he was communications officer. The battle took place in THE PHI GAMMA DELTA greetituz from his place of captivity. the Coral Sea. Bill was born on May 3, 1918, i• Vancouver and while at varsity was : Sergeant Douglas' chaplain has sent member of the light-weight rowis. the following message to his parents: crew and business manager of Tote') Since my assignment to this group last the university annual. year. I have known Stanley rather intimate* * * ly. In all my contacts with him I have found him to be a fine soldier, devoted to From Eugene B. Williams (Norti his duty and to his God. His commanding Carolina '41) comes the following inofficer, who lost his life in the same plane teresting communication concernini: as your son, had chosen him for this last fateful mission because of his great skill Ensign Peiffer: as a radio operator. I chanced upon a story you'll probably I); All the circumstances of the death are as interested in for use in THE PHI GAMM yet unknown. However, I can tell you that DELTA. your son died bravely and unflinchingly, as a true soldier and American. The plane in which he was lost was instrumental in inflicting great damage upon the enemy. Sergeant Douglas was a native of The son-in-law of the Yorktown Navp.: Mine Warfare School's commanding officer has been here for two weeks. Because he a North Carolinian, I decided to ask him if he knew Carl Peiffer, who, you no doub; know, is listed as missing in action. 7 Captain Frederick L. Berry (Stanhis is the story he told me: rother Peiffer reported to the same air- ford '37) is believed by his parents to carrier to which the narrator was at- be a prisoner of war. (1 just before the battle at Midway. Robert K. Roberts (Missouri '39), Ihe few days Carl was aboard before the recwas and popular infantry officer, was in Bataan just quite became an ttic he n;zed for his steadiness and cool-headed- before the surrender. s• The affinity of one Tar Heel for anMajor George B. Hart (Wittenberg Other resulted in the narrator's (a squadron is reported "missing in action." '33) put be leaf!, r) asking that Ensign Peiffer his squadron and made one of his wingNo word has been received since n, so that he could keep his eye on him March from First Lieutenant Henry and give him what help he could. Rancke, Jr. (North Carolina lu the Battle of Midway, Brother Peiffer, Charles with the rest of the squadron, went out to '35), air corps. He was then in Cebu. att:“..k the Japanese fleet and successfully Major Charles W. Miller (Oklahoma came out of his dive in which he loosed his '27) is likely in the hands of the Japaentire load of bombs on an enemy carrier. was a member of the 19th The squadron then split into two groups to nese. He Group. Bombardment retlIrn to their carrier. A group of Zero planes soon attacked the Americans, but Major James Curtis Rinaman (Ohio our men came out unscathed. The tragedy of the day was that several of the. American planes ran out of gas on their re:::rn. Such was the fate of Ensign Peiffer. He was seen to land perfectly on the ocean and get Eafely into his rubber life raft. That was the last that has been heard of him. t Ensign Peiffer's mother, Mrs. Frank W. Peiffer of Wilmington, N. C., writes to THE PHI GAMMA DELTA: Carl was trained at Miami and Jacksonville, Fla., and was commissioned in September, 1941. He was stationed in Norfolk until he left for the Pacific in February. He loved his fraternity; it meant so much V, him. I am so glad for you to use his picture in the magazine. The news of my precious boy's being lost is a terrible blow to me. I find it almost impossible to accept and I keep on hoping that t he will be found and safely returned * * * News of other Fiji soldiers captured by the Japanese in the Philippines continues to reach this magazine. The Japanese have declared their intention to conform to the provisions of the Geneva Convention and to furnish a roster of prisoners, but this has not yet been done. 4 C' KILLED IN MIDWAY BATTLE Ensign Frederick Weber Walsh (Knox his name '37), pilot of a dive bomber, wrote He Midway. of Battle the at in history engagement. crashed to his death in the THE PHI GAMMA DELTA THE PHI GAMMA DELTA account of the hazardous speed-4. voyage of Colonel Charles A. W loughby (Gettysburg '14) from 1 leaguered Corregidor to Austra], where he is serving as assistant cL of staff to General MacArthur. Now comes word that Colonel N.N loughby has received the United Sta.. Army's Silver Star decoration for g:, lantry in action. The accompanyn citation reads as follows: Colonel Charles Willoughby, G.S.C., the vicinity of Agloloma Bay, Bataan, P. on January 24, 1942, who while on a sonal reconnais:ance of the area, voluntat assisted in ree-stablishing the firing line a• taking charge of the left section ther, with utter disregard for his personal sal,: In the face of heavy enemy fire, by sett: a personal example by encouraging the n in his vicinity, he moved the line by fire movement to within 35 yards of the enen In a recent letter to the Editor. Col nel [now Brigadier-General] Willoug: by said: A CASUALTY IN .cergeont Stanley Allen I Jr. (Washington and Lee '39) was killed by the Japanese while serving as a radio operator on a 13-24 Liberator off Alaska. Wesleyan '28), medical corps, is presumed to be a captive. Lieutenant-Colonel James V. Collier (Oklahoma '21), whose picture appeared in Life as a member of General MacArthur's staff, was in Bataan when it fell. Captain E. Richards Carle (Massachusetts Tech. '33) was one of the heroic defenders of the Philippines. His name had not appeared on any casualty list up to May 6, the day before the surrender. * * * It will be recalled that this magazine has previously reported the thrilling I have just received the April issue THE PHI GAMMA DELTA and found a rk erence to my activities in your very int,esting column, "Our War Story." I wa• to thank you for your fraternal interest. V are certainly living in tense days. I am oft, reminded of the other World War (I w: a captain in the 16th United States Infant: of the First Division) to find myself, aft, 30 years service, in the midst of another. : is a privilege to serve on the staff of distinguished soldier. In the face of ti heaviest odds MacArthur has maintain, the tradition of the American arms. * * * Another chapter has been added t the saga of Colonel Cecil E. Comh (Chicago '33). the gallant West Point er who has been strafing the Japs Iron the air and who was one of the firAmericans to win the Distinguishe,. Flying Cross. In June, a monsoon storm caught nel Combs and a party of officers whom he was flying in a fourred bomber from India to China. The group was attempting a non-stop flight from Calcutta to Kunming, an air-line distance of 950 miles over some ofitihe worst terrain in the world, when it an into a storm which forced the officers to seek a landing field. They found one inside Chinese territory, but it Ir‘iis so obscured by rain they could not be certain whether it was in Chinese or Japanese hands, although they flew as low as 10 feet trying to read the markings on plane wings. They then decided to fly back to India. When they landed, they had only 40 gallons of gasoline in the tanks, enough for 10 minutes' flight. * * * Writing to THE PHI GAMMA DELTA, Brigadier-General Leroy P. Collins (Union '05), a former Section Chief of the fraternity, commanding the Northern Ireland Base Command, tells of life in the Emerald Isle, as follows: Tids is a beautiful country in which to fight a war and the Irish are the most hospitahle people you can imagine. They like the American soldier, who usually does win a place in the hearts of any people he lives among in very short order, and some of our men have found relatives here. At one place farther north, where we served for a while, the leading citizens gave usas.incleere ftIy affectionate farewell party when we Next month I am to make the graduation speech at Campbell College for boys, which had to move out of Belfast when its buildtflg hover by the military to use as a 9 J. deLanauze, 25 Cours Pieere Puget, Marseilles, France. Arthur had represented several large American concerns in Paris. * * * Samuel H. Rickard, Jr. (Bucknell '21), who was dean of Judson College, Rangoon, Burma, and professor of English at the University of Rangoon, has returned, with his family, to the United States. His 17,000-mile trip included an 11day walk through the mountains to Assam. * * James R. Young (Johns Hopkins MISSING IN ACTION * * * Sergeant Air Gunner William Francis It has been learned that Arthur I. Columbia '42) is reported Donahue (Dartmouth '15) is in a con- Millerd (British by the Royal Canadian Air Force as missing centration camp. probably somewhere in action after air operations over the Holin occupied France. "Jiggs" can be land coast where he was laying mines. Hope reached by air mail letter in care of M. is held that he may have been taken prisoner. THE PHI GAMMA DELTA ro I mi.-ht as well have walked with my eyes closed The half dozen men could have "got" me 1 times before I could have found them. Tli- • business of camouflage is one of the most Important arts of the bushmasters. To begin with, they wear special mottled green SOMEWHERE IN PANAMA — The jur coveralls and matching helmets. Then, in a was still as I crouched on the nar: thick inat over and around them, they weave vines, grass, and small tree branches, all animal trail. Then, suddenly, a matted straightened up and jabbed a submacl laced with fishline. Crouched in the jungle, gun into my back. From the jungle step: they :,re invisible from 20 feet. Most of the bushmasters are armed with clumps of sawtooth grass carrying mad subma,•hine guns and several hundred rounds guns and hand grenades. Here were the bushmasters in act: of ammunition. Other men carry carbines Panama's bushmasters — a bewildering or artomatic rifles. If the need arises, the sortment of Indians from the southwest bushmasters have 60 mm. [21 inch] mortars. states, Dodger fans from Brooklyn, ..1sL These, with the dozen or so hand grenades cans from the border towns, strap' carried by every man, give the jungle units youngsters from middle western farms. great tire power. Inead of the regular infantry rations, welded by months of hard training int, the blishmasters have special oiled silk sacks crack jungle combat unit. If enemy forces should attempt a I. contai:Iing rice, dried fruits and vegetables, thrust at the Panama canal, the bushmast milk is"wder, peanuts and chocolate. By using ,,nly lightweight dehydrated foods and will meet them first. At hidden outpoAs in the jungle the (- chlorine they can carry enough supplies to my will find them waiting with a bag full stay in the jungle 60 days. lethal tricks. It will be these hand pick Among Colonel Herndon's jungle units and schooled young men who, as silent Ire several hundred Indians from the southdeadly as the terrible jungle snake for wh western reservations who have taken to junthey are named, will ambush advance un • gle warfare like ducks to water. They, with hardened Mexicans, form the nucleus harry flanks with machine guns and e "order nades, honeycomb the jungle with explco "f the bushmasters. * * * traps, and bog down the hostile force tY the main land defenses of the canal atta Soldier life "down under" is deThe leader of the bushmasters is as col ;critic(' in received by THE PHI a letter organized ful as the unit which he trained. Two years ago Colonel J. Pry JAM MA DELTA from Captain Meredith Herndon was the dignified, sedate contro! VI'. I Iuggins (Oregon State '38. Minof the University of Arizona at Tucson. 1 ikesc us,:raai' ja 3,1: ), on duty "somewhere in day he is a hard-bitten officer. Colonel Herndon selected the name Thu masters" for his jungle troops, explain:: We had a nice trip over there— that is, "I want them to be as fast, as silent. f you call a long journey on a crowded or a ltr7ras, however, quite a thrill nice.be as deadly as the bushmaster — the n1 rna land lubber. feared snake of the tropics. Like their nay sake, they should be able to kill quicl, We are now getting some intensive trainng, N,.) that when the time comes we can and efficiently if the need arises." It was while I was Colonel Herndo: ock the Jap back on his heels and make guest at a "practice session" in the jun" an Nt slt he had never left his island hole. is a semi-tropical country with much yesterday that I had my experience with ! bushmasters. Colonel Herndon told me tannin! vegetation and thousands of gorwalk down the animal trail, told me tl eons birds. The magpie, a big black-andhalf a dozen of his men were hidden sow ?hite fellow, is quite interesting. He makes where along it, and asked me to try to St,•bout as much noise as a battery of guitars nd sounds quite similar to one. There are them before they "got" me. Studying the underbrush, I started o: officer is Colonel J. Prugh Hero. (Arizona '19), who has attended s, eral Ekklesiai. The dispatch: MISSING OFF MIDWAY ISLAND (. When the bomber in which he struck at the Japs ran out of gasoline as he was returning to an aircraft carrier, Ensign Carl David Peiffer (North Carolina '38) took to his rubber boat, but he has not been heard of since. '25), who several years ago spent some 61 days in a Japanese hoose-gow as "national guest" because of his unfriendly wi-itings as correspondent in Tokyo for the International News Service, is on a two-month tour of United States Army air fields to lecture on Japanese aviation, military targets and psychology as a part of the army's orientation course. * * * A vivid description of the life of American soldiers, led by a gallant Fiji officer, in a tropical jungle was sent to the Chicago Tribune by one of its war correspondents in Panama. The Fiji THE PHI GAMMA DELTA II also many pretty woods, especially the jarrah and the many types of gum trees. It is rather strange to be dealing in shillings and pounds, rather than cents and dollars. All of their bills are of different sizes and of different colors. A lot look like tobacco store coupons. The Australians are surely putting every bit of their energy behind the war effort and their hospitality toward the Yanks is exceeded only by their generosity. Lieutenant Raymond K. Hirsch (Chicago '37) is a member of our tank destroyer battalion. Lieutenant Maelin H. Frierson (Alabama '36) is a member of my regiment. While sitting in our mess shack one night, with my feet cocked on the stove and thumbing through THE PHI GAMMA DELTA, someone tapped me on the shoulder and said, "Are you a Fiji?" BELIEVED PRISONER IN P. I. C. Lieutenant-Colonel James V. Collier (Oklahoma '21) was a member of General MacArthur's staff in the Philippine Islands. His Fiji friends are hoping that he has survived the campaign and that, tough luck as it would be, he ii is prisoner of the Japs. 12 THE PHI GAMMA DELTA PRESUMABLY IN JAP HANDS C. Major Charles IF. Miller (Oklahoma '27) was a member of the 19th Bombardment Group in Bataan. The Japanese have not ye! adhered to the Geneva Convention and released the names of prisoners of war. "Sure 'nough," I replied. It was a Princeton man. He was not a Fiji, but his father and his grandfather were — Edgar H. Johnson (Ohio State '05) and Henry Webb Johnson (Hanover '72) [chairman of the 1902, 1903 and 1904 Ekklesiai and vice-chairman of the 1909 and 1910 Ekklesiai]. * * * Canadian service notes, with an invitation to the lads of the Maple Leaf and their friends to make their names and their branches known: Two Fijis are stationed at the air observers' school at Edmonton, Alta. They are Percy Williams (British Columbia '28), famed Olympics sprinter, who is a captain, and Frank N. Buckley (British Colt: '33), who is a co-pilot. Their function is give student observers in the R.C.A.F. tual aerial practice after they have finii their ground courses. .. .Captain Wilson Salter (Toronto '37) is overseas with Fifth Canadian Armored Division. . Lieutenant Franklin D. Handley (Tor '40) is with the 48th Highlanders, Can. Holding Unit, New Martinique Barr. Bordon, Eng. . . . Ian MacTavish (To. '42) is in the officers' training scho. Brockville, Ont. His unit is the Irish I ment of Canada. . . . Dr. Harry E. R. son (Toronto '36) is an officer in the 1: Canadian Medical Corps. . . . Flight I tenant John E. Macdonald (British Ci bia '30) is overseas. . . . Genial Join McGillivray (Toronto '28), onetime Secretary of the fraternity, has been meted to a majority. He writes to the tor: "Please send my magazine to the dress above [No. 2 Detachment, R.C., Canadian Army, England]. I am born the copies from one of my sergeantGrant Stirrett (Toronto '24). 'Jo-Jo' : an officer cadet training course and will into the mess on return, but I would like my own copies—not that I find magazine interesting, mind you, but if a geant can read it and live, so can I! I a talk with Major James D. Wilson ronto '12) the other day. I see Huber Keenley-side (Toronto '23) quite a I. Colonel Keenleyside to you! He is din of ordnance services and my boss." THE PHI GAMMA DELTA bat duty. . . . Private Samuel L. (Denison '35) is overseas.. .. First enant Stewart L. Leonard (Yale '39) rseas. * * * S. Navy news. Tid-bits of iniat ion about the cannibalian sailormen. of no value to the enemy, we hopc. except to put the fear of God into hi, heart: William S. Robb (Pennsylvania '34), former Field Secretary of the fraternity, has been promoted to a senior grade lieutenancy. Bill i. reported to have been in the Battle of Midway on an airplane carrier. . . .Third Class Yeoman Kenneth McL. Jones (Denison '3.-0 was aboard the U. S. S. ll'asp, the aircraft carrier which delivered aerial reinforcements to the British island of Malta. ... Lieutenant-Commander John Carl Woelfel (Purdue '28), who was graduated from the 1 nited States Naval Academy in 1928, is chief engineer of the cruiser U. S. S. Phocnis Neville V. Williams (Indiana '25), %%ho once cruised to Bermuda on his honc)intion with the famed Fiji tour of 1932, has joined the navy as a lieutenant. . . . George W. Stokes (Williams '38) is in V-7 at Abbott Hall, Chicago. . . Ensign John Dickey Ligon (Richmond '34) is at the coast guard academy in New London, Conn. . .. Ensign David H. Crosse (Oregon '37, Berkeley '.39) is flying at Guatanama Bay, Cuba. . . . Benjamin F. Stahl, Jr. (Williams '36) is at the training school at Ithaca, N. Y. * * * ... When last heard from, Lieutenant-ComDevil Dog department. News of mander Ray N. Latimer (Washington '28) Fijis who have the situation wel. was at the Naval War College in Newport, R. I.... \V. Webber Young (Amherst '27) is a hand: lieutenant-commander in the medical corps at Merritt B. Curtis (Berkeley '15) has the Norfolk Naval Hospital, Portsmouth, promoted to a full colonelcy and is on Va. . . . Gerald E. Veltman (Texas '32), at the headquarters of the corps in V\ Spark -plug of the Houston Graduate Chapington. . . . Thomas E. Norpell (Den ter, is wearing the stripe-and-a-half of a '41) was commissioned a second lieute: 3. g. . . Ensign Ben F. Railsback (Illinois on his 22nd birthday. He has returne. '36) is on duty at Newport, R. I.. . . Paul A. Mastin (Nebraska '38) is a third class Quantico for further training. . . . colm R. Chandler (Worcester Tech. Petty officer at the naval air base in Corpus is first lieutenant in a unit whose mail I Ensign Lavern Nelson (Pennes through San Francisco. . . . Fran) sal‘z,nia State '41) is at the naval air staGarretson (Washington '40) is a Devil tion in Jacksonville, Fla.. . . Frank X. DeLieutenant Frederic). Lone ( Pennsylvania '42) has joined the air lieutenant. . . , . Ensign Robert H. Cunningham, Scatena, Jr. (Berkeley '39) has been ord con) 13 Jr. (Ohio State '40) is chief engineer officer on the PC-486. . . . Lieutenant Percy Doremus (Gettysburg '35, Pennsylvania '35), dental cbrps, is at the Brooklyn Navy Yard. . . . E. Abbot Woleslagel (Wittenberg '38) has been commissioned an ensign. . . . Joseph C. King (Cornell '39, North Carolina '40) is training in naval ordnance on Staten Island, N. Y. . . . The "rookie of the year" of the Great Lakes Naval Training Station baseball team is Third Baseman Ernest II. Andres (Indiana '39), who was the only serviceman to make two hits off American League pitching in the Service-All Star game in Cleveland in July. He played the entire game. Ernie was formerly with the Louisville Colonels. . . . Lieutenant John Trolan Sill (Colgate '29), medical corps, has closed his physician's office in Hamilton, N. Y., and is off to the wars. . . . Forest Evashevski (Michigan '41), former Wolver- A PHILIPPINE CAPTIVI: 41. The uncertain shadow of "missing in action" hangs over the family of Major George B. Hart (Wittenberg '33), which hopes that he will turn up as a prisoner of war. He was stationed in the Philippine Islands. 14 TIIE Pill GANIMI DELTA me football star who became head backfield coach at Pitt, has been appointed an ensign in the naval reserve. . . . G. Vernon Baker (Occidental '38) has been commissioned an ensign and is in training at naval school at Cornell. . . . J. Percy Gill (Missouri '33), well-known athlete and coach at the Missouri School of Mines, has enlisted in the physical training branch of the air corps. . . . Lieutenant Frederick Woods Hinrichs (Northwestern '36) is awaiting orders to go to sea on a submarine. . . . Lieutenant Eugene L. deKieffer (Northwestern '34), who had been an instructor of discipline and ordnance at Abbott Hall in Chicago, has been transferred to the submarine training center at Miami, Fla.... John M. Plummer (Wabash '32) is a junior grade lieutenant operating out of the Brooklyn Navy Yard. . . . Ensign Malcolm E. Nafe (Pennsylvania '41) and Ensign John R. Ramsey (Pennsylvania '41) are flight inftructors at the air station in Jacksonville. Fla., while Joseph Catherine (Pennsylvania '42) and Thomas Fatkin (Pennsylvania '43) are naval cadets in the same city. . . . Charles P. Hurd (Columbia '41) is an ensign. . . Robert Morris (Stanford '41) is in training at Corpus Christi. . . . Lieutenant Emory H. Anderson (Richmond '29, Virginia '29), medical corps, is at the Naval Hospital, Pearl Harbor, T. H. .. . Ensign Albert E. Baur, Jr. (Wabash '39) is stationed at Balboa, C. Z. . . . Lieutenant Henry Parker Seymour (Ohio State '27) is executive officer in the office of inspector of ordnance at the ordnance plant in Canton, 0. . . . Ensign Paul B. Lanius, Jr. (Dartmouth '42) is awaiting orders to 'ea at Norfolk. . . . Lieutenant (j.g.) Eugene G. Sheasby (Northwestern '39) is a naval aviator with the Pacific fleet. . Ensign James N. Lemon (Purdue '41) is stationed at Norfolk. . . . Ensign George K. Peck (Worcester Tech. '41) and Ensign Joseph W. Whitaker (Worcester Tech. '41) are in the de-ign division at the naval gun factory in Washington. . . . J. Smith Miller (Idaho '29), former Section Chief in southern California and Arizona. has been commissioned a junior grade lieutenant and ordered to report to the naval air station in Quonset Point, R. I., for the well-known indoctrination. . . . Ensign Robert A. Haynes (Kansas '41) is aboard the U. S. S. Bagley. . . . Dr. Patti- THE PHI GAMMA DELTA 15 on Fulton (Wisconsin '37) is in the medi Hither-and-yon notes about the Fijis corps in Pacific waters kshley J. I: tie (Georgia Tech. '38), a 1940 graduate in the United States Army, with no the United States Naval Academy. has sequence of mention according to rank promoted to a junior grade lieutenancy. and with no claim to all-inclusiveness is aboard the U. S. S. Mississippi. . .. E (this department never closes): sign Paul W. Conolley (Washington '1 reports that as assistant navigator of the Lieutenant Victor McVey (Colorado ColS. S. New Orleans he "enjoyed a zig-z lege '40) is in a ferrying group. . . . Ennis voyage to Australia and New Caledoni, I). Sandberg (Kansas '34) is a captain in the . . . Charles A. Nicholson (Indiana '42 medical administrative corps in Panama.... stationed at Upham, C. Z. . . . William 1' Lieutenant Herbert H. Newton (Rutgers Roy McLean (North Carolina '38) has '41) and Lieutenant William J. Bolin (Davidcommissioned an ensign. . . . Robert son '41) are in the same company at Camp Tweedle (Wabash '37) is an aviation ca,i Croft, S. C. . . . Major Dale E. Brown at Corpus Christi. . . . Ensign Fred (Illinois '29) is in the Third Armored DiviVance (Illinois '39) is with the Pacific fk: sion at Rice, Calif. . . Harry B. Johanson . . . Dr. J. Harold MacArt (Rutgers '1 (Yale '33) is a captain in the ferry command has closed his office in East Orange, N. in Detroit. . . . Captain Lawrerwe R. St. and reported for duty as a lieutenant (j.g John (DePauw '34) is with the engineer rein the medical corps. . . . Lieutenant \V placement training center at Fort Belvoir, ham B. Sheppard (Washington and Lee '3! Va.... Lieutenant Nicholls W. Bowden, Jr. medical corps, is stationed at the rem:. (Tennessee '39) is with troops in Great ing office in Detroit. . . . George F. RI:Britain.... Erie A. Kightlinger, Jr. (Mich(Mifsouri '40) has graduated from the na, igan '33) is at Keesler Field. Miss.... Lieuair station at Corpus Christi, Tex., and tenant Boyd A. Moore (Idaho '38) is flying been commissioned an ensign. . . . Lieutc overseas. . . . Captain William 0. Waid ant (j.g.) P. Leon Godchaux, II (Yale '3' (Oklahoma '32) reports in: " 'Aloha' from is in the naval ordnance laboratory in Wathe Pacific. Quite a number of the brothers ington.... John W. Rettig, Jr. (Texas '4: are scattered around out here and every once is an ensign. . . . Ensign Albert M. H._ in a while we chase a wild pig out of camp. WINS PRE-WAR MEDAL (Denison '39) and Lieutenant Will:. If we ever find one that does not rattle 47. Although the achievement for which he Thorne Rimes (Denison '31) are at when he runs, well have a real 'puaa was cited dates back before Pearl Harbor. naval air station in Alameda, Calif. . luau'." . . . Lieutenant Robert L. Steenrod (Missouri Ernest Lieu:owns-Colonel Moore Lieutenant John Bernard Honan (DePa (Washington and Jefferson '31) is overseas. '29) hos been awarded the Distinguished Fly'37) is on a Pacific patrol. . . . Lieuten: ing . . Lieutenant Robert C. Fordyce (Los An'f•(j.g.) Edward J. Galway (Brown '38) Part oss for extraordinary heroism while geles '42) is at the reception center in Fort paling in an aerial flight of nine B-17 Dix, N. J. .. . John E. Flemming (Brown a psychologist on the aviation cadet sel, bomir..rs from Honolulu to the Philippine tion board at First Naval District Hr. '33) has been promoted to a captaincy and is Islcw.ls from September 5 to September 12, assistant adjutant general at the Sixth Army quarters in Boston. . . . Weston P. Wil1941 The citation recorded that "Colonel Corps headquarters in Providence, R. I. . . (Lafayette '38) and Alfred B. Cenedc. displaved airmanship skillful and acLieutenant-Colonel Lawrence B. Wyant prim( (Brown '40) have completed their cam,. knowledge of the highly technical de- (Ohio State 16) is stationed at Camp Ruckflight training at Squantum (Mass.) Na. tails involved in the successful execution of er, Ala.... Captain Lawrence Cole (Illinois Air Station. . . . Lieutenant-Commarli- this flight. . . . This outstanding achievement Wesleyan '22) looked over a group of newlyHenry F. Ulrich (Minnesota '23), medi. reflects the highest credit on the military arrived officers at his station in Wichita and corps, is stationed at the Naval Hospital forces of the United States." picked out one to serve as his assistant adPhiladelphia. . .. Ensign John Robert Scl The man selected turned out to be a jutant. ler (Idaho '38) is aboard the V. S. S. . at Fiji—Lieutenant Philip R. French, Jr. Notre tong. . . . Paul Mooney (New York 'I - Brooke Dame. . . . Lieutenant Russell J. Major William R. (Georgia Tech. '32) is aboard the (Dartmouth '27) on leave from his duties as head baskett U. S• S. C. Mills Durand (Washington '26) is stationed at Henry Blakeley. . . . coach at Columbia, is a lieutenant. . (Kt, x '30) is stationed at San Pedro, Calif. Fort Shafter, T. H.... Lieutenant V. Earle Lieutenant (j.g.) Cornelis E. Groenewe.,_ ; Lieutenant (j.g.) Allen V. Davis (Texas Nicklas (Amherst '39) is in Australia. . . (Occidental '28, Stanford '28) has complc; 30) is at the naval air station in Corpus Captain Paul W. Bell (DePauw '23) has Thor Christi, Tex. a course at Quonset Point, R. I. . been stationed in W:shington... . We wonas H. Rugg (Amherst '41) is in train:: * * * der where in the world Major Julian G. THE PHI (',\\l1.\ DELTA Washinghm and Jefferson '26) Hearne could have been when he wrote the following message aboard a U. S. transport: "Major H. Craig Seasholes ( I fenison '22) and I have wanted to see the lceilsoecd] Islands for some time and now it looks like we are going to be located near them for some little while." . . . Major Harry I,. Swicegood (GeOrgia Tech. '261 is ordnance officer of the Newport subsector and harbor defenses of Narragansett Bay. . . . Does LieutenantColonel John Gordon Fowler (Northwestern '78) know that Dow Field. Me., where he has been stationed. was named after a Fiji, the late Lieutenant James F. Dow ( Maine '37), who was killed in an army airplane accident over New York City in 1940? . . . Second Lieutenant Clinton G. Sweazea (Missouri '40) is seeking to change himself from a caterpillar to a butterfly. i.e.. he is taking pilot training and will be transferred from infantry to air force when he completes the course. . 'lyric 0. Springer ( Indiana '24 ) is a captain Stephen T. DeLaMater (Cornell 'OW is a major in the specialist corps in Washington. .. . Frank L. Miller ( Pennsylvania '40). who has volunteered for the air forces, reports that Edward Bechtold (Pennsylvania '40) is in Australia. haying left the Phillipines before the surrender. . . . Lieutenant Albert H. Hoopes ( Yale '37) is stationed at Harding Field. I a Second Lieutenant George A. Ford, Jr. (Williams '33) is on overseas duty with the service of supply. . . . Paul B. Headland (Wisconsin '12. Chicago '14) has been commissioned a major in the medical corps and assigned to the 108th General Hospital. organized by the medical school of Loyola University. . Robert E. Fox (Oklahoma '44 ) is in training at the Enid (Okla.) Flying School. . . Ralph E. Lampman (Ohio State '38) is in a signal regiment at Fort Monmouth, N. J. First Lieutenant Gerard J. \los, Jr. (Missouri '37) is on coast guard duty near Los Angeles. . . . Dr. Robert I.. Thomas (Ohio State '17) has been commissioned a captain in the medical corps Aviation Cadet Kenneth F. Hodson (Ohio State '42) is in training for the air forces at Santa Ana, Calif. He is a son of Colonel Fremont B. /1,4son (Oregon '20) of the regular army. . . . Captain Robert I.. Woods (Los Angeles '33) is to be envied—or is he? He has been recruiting for the WAAC in Los Angeles (Question: Should you whack the WAVES or wave at the WA.\C 5?,. . . . Captain Leonhar -• Schemer ( Bucknell '35) may he ad):. c/o Headquarters. Services of Supply, A 0. 871. New York. N. Y.... Reports tenant Richard Walter (Washington "I drove to my first duty with Lient,John P. Heaney (Colorado College '34 ). into I,ieutenant Cornelius E. Sedges,• ( Bucknell '36) and worked with my staff sergeant for a month before disco\ ing that he. too, is a Fiji." . . . Richard Jordan (Cornell '33) is a first lieuter with the air ferrying command in 1,Vilmi• ton, Del., as a supervisor of instruction. Lieutenant-Colonel Ernest L. Osborne a '12 I is at Fort Sill. Okla. . . Captain V liam Langley Sibley ( Virginia '29), med corps. is stationed at the United States M tary Academy at West Point as assistan) the chief of the surgical service. . . . J, I). Kemp (DePanw '41) has been made •• geant of the permanent staff in the clafication division at Bear Field, Ind...... B. Budd ( DePauw '41) has joined the forces.... First Lieutenant Russell Voori (Knox '31) is stationed at Fort Lev Wash Lieutenant-Colonel Ralph Baghy ( William Jewell '14) is adva) echelon officer of the troop carrier comm; • of the air force in England. . . . Capt Coleman L. Isaacs (Indiana '23) is in c) mand of the 122nd Ordnance Company Camp Perry. 0. . . . Private Robert Dwyer (Chicago '42 I is a personnel te nician at Camp Crowder. Mo. . . Fredel B. Hohenhorst (Iowa '40) is in the offic, candidate school at Fort Belvoir. Va. "It • gine a journalist trying to become an gineer officer," he writes. (We know of , • "journalist," at least, who passed out ph pills as a medical detachment man in Rainbow Division in that other fracas.) Lieutenant Leonard L. Boyer. Jr. (Pei: • ylvania '39) is in New Caledonia with tank battalion. "Only across the way a bL are the Fiji Islands," he reports. In t. same outfit with him is Lieutenant Andre, Labash (New York '41). . . Paul S. 11,, ley (Colorado College '13) is a captain • the engineer corps. . . . Lieutenant-Colw , J. Earle Dunford (Bethel '12, Richmond was the honor guest at a dinner of the F. • Meade Graduate Association of Phi Gam) Delta in June. The affair was a bon age tribute to "Pete" who was to lea soon thereafter for duty in England. THE PHI GANINIA DF.LTA en post adjutant at the fort. . had Harr) J. McDonald (Columbia '361 is in the 4nal corps' officers' training school at Major Edgar Fort Monmouth, N. J A. V. ilkerson (Los Angeles '33) is aide-decamp to the commanding general of the Nor)ern California sector of the Western Debi, e Command. He is stationed at the Major George Morey MilPre.:lio ler ( Idaho '34) is at Fort Dix, N. J. . . . A. _Joplin (Missouri '40) is a second lieutenant in the field artillery at Camp Pickett, Va.... Captain Eugene II. Brownell (Washington '29), who was associate edithe fraternity's catalogue of memtor bersHp in 1930, is in the small arni,. diviMajor Braxsior in Washington, I) C ton Roberts (William Jewell '16) is at Fort Newton A. S•earns Lea‘enworth, Kans (0' 'oil '37) is at the army air base in Sat''.: Ana. Calif. . .. Two stars now gleam fr(ir the shoulders of Ward H. Mans wiri,,m .1.‘PANAZIS TAKE 17 (Kansas '14, Chicago '14). He was promoted to the rank of brigadier-general in June and is in the war plans division of the general staff in Washington. . . First Lieutenant Francis \V. Spearman (Berkeley '29) is a personnel officer on duty at the state headquarters of the selective service in Sacramento, Calif. . . . Ralph T. Holsapple, Jr. ( Virginia '43) is at Camp Roberts. Calif., where Second Lieutenant Richard H. Beech Mc(Oregon State '41) is on duty Gowan Miller (Oregon '33) has resigned as art retoucher for the Associated Press photos in New Yiirk and has joined the air corps as a private. . . First Lieutenant Raymond H. W. Watkins (Illinois Wesleyan '35) is over,ens. . . . Captain Eugene 1,. Fleece (Purdue '.26) is stationed at Ellington Field, Tex. . . . Lieutenant Douglas Stevens (Sewanee '32) is post chemical officer at Camp Bowie. Tex. . . Lieutenant Wo,,dhull Spitler. Jr. (Purdue '37) is with i'l*NISIIMENr IN THIS HELL \\ EU. ifs by a new type of chores Jr their pled address in downtown Bloomington...1 public original goal 701S $500, but ..-itystein aided and abetted the eannibalian victory T•endors. The had been disposed of by securities anti-Japana:i '*heit the drive ended $27,500 worth of the the white star boys. /1/inois Wesleyan introduced The Fijis •-41..,snianig them to sell defense bonds in a booth 1111. THE PHI GAMMA DELTA the procurement division of the air corps at fit. . . . Lieutenant Wichita, Kans. . . . Charles R. Rosewall hard, Sr. (Indiana -Colonel John J. R• (Minnesota '43) is a cadet in the air corps bow Division, is '(6), veteran of the Pa at Santa Ana, Calif.... Lieutenant back in khaki. He d• J. Fred the staff of the Third Gerding (Knox '42) is flying Corps Area in Bal. plants for more. . . . Captain gimnery students at Las Vegas, Wilfred W. Wiggi• Nev. . . . (Berkeley '25) is on a special mission John Sewall Ross (Penrifylvania "son-, '40) is a where in Australia." . . . first lieutenant in the coast artill Cadet Robert ery at Fort Shoemaker (Indiana '43) is dashing alai', Williams, Me. . . . Lieutenant Willi am \V. toward a commi ssion at the United Stati Steele, Jr. (Lehigh '39) is on the staff and Military Academy. . . faculty of the tank destroyer school Louis A. Woltz,in Camp (Wabash '41) is at Camp Wallace, Hood, Tex. . . . Captain Hubert 're G. Heren . . Lieutenant Theodore (Knox '38) is in Australia. . . H. Wats( Robert (Georgia Tech. '41) is flying 13-17s at Treat Lang (Oregon '37) is a priva He: te in dricks Field, Fla. the air corps at State Fair Groun ds, Spring- nell '19), edito . . . Peter Vischer (Con r field, Ill. . . . Lieutenant Rober t W. Mc- Life, has been and publisher of Count' Giffin (Deni on '40) is an engin commissioned a major an, eering and ordered to \Vashington.... technical supply officer at Langley Corporal Jam, Field. Va. W. Eaton (Virginia '35) is an illust . .. Captain Frederick K. Pear ran• man (Wash- with the visua l aid section at Fort Benni ington and Lee '31) is "somewhe ng re in Aus- Ga. . . . Josep h A. Thiel (Western tralia.". . . Roger W. Eisinger Rt: (Indiana serve '41) is in '42) is a second lieutenant in the officers' training scho( the quarter- at Fort Berming, Ga. . . . Aviation Cad master corps and is stationed in Virginia. James R. Ruthe ... Lieutenant-Colonel Paul D. Meek rford, Jr. (Brown '43) l (Ohio in primary pilot State '05), winner of the Belgian training school at Helens Cross of Ark. . . . Capta War in the First World War, in Richard N. Fickett, If is an execu- (Georgia Tech. tive offiter of the officers' train '27) is in the coast artiller ing school, in Hawaii. . . . Captain Thomas H. Fick signal depot, in Lexington, Ky. . . . First ett (Georgia Tech. '32) is in the 50th Ar Lieutenant John Vogler (Nebrask in the engineers in New York a '38) is mored Infantry at Camp Chaffee, Ark. . City. . . . Vincent Sheea n (Chicago '21), the fame Aviation Cadet Egmont Vrooman (Illinois author and war Wesleyan '39) is in training at Sequoia in the air force correspondent, is a captai: . . . . Homer L. Hadley, Jr Field, Vi:alia, Calif. .. . Dr. Isaiah Lukens (Illinois '37) hopes the information that (Nebraska '24) has been commi h, ssioned a is a first lieut enant will "pass the censor.' captain in the medical corps. . . George . . . Lieutenant \V. Parker (Syracuse '19) Louis D. Abney, Jr. (Okla has been pro- homa '40) is at Camp Elliott, Calif. . moted to a majority. He is statio ned in New Captain Donald P. Jenks (New York City. . . . John Marle York '38 y, Jr. (Arizona is overseas with an engineer regiment. . . '38) is in training for the air corps at Santa Varley H. Taylor (Oklahom Ana, Calif. . . . First Lieut a '30) is : enant Herman major with the field artillery in Fort Sil' J. Garretson, Jr. (Washington '40) is in a - Okla.... Lieutenant C. tank destroyer battalion at Fort Lewis, high '36) is in Trini Atwell Moore (1.,( dad, B. W. I., wit( Wath.... Dr. J. Gilbert Bramley (Colorado the air corps. . . . Capta in Eric E. On '35) has given up his medic al practice in lashin (Williams '36) is with an army mis Denver to serve as a first lieutenant in the sion to Russia and the Middle East. . . medical corps. . . . E. Edgar G. Frey (Johns Hopkins Coghlin DeLone '40) is bat (Pennsylvania '39) is in the field artillery talion supply sergeant with the 47th Iii at Camp Pickett, Va. . . . Private Ernest fantry in Fort Bragg, N. C. . . . F. Andrews (Maine '38) Leonhardt B. Scheffler (Bucknell Captait is with a chemical '35), ail battalion at Fort Russell, Tex. . . . It's corps, is stationed in London. . . . Major Lieutenant-Colonel Andrew Rober t B. Taylo r (Oregon State '30) i Barr (Yale Fac.) now. The genial former New England Sec- an infantry officer assigned to the quarter• tion Chief was promoted maste r corps to give basic training in June and is G-2 at Fort of the 3rd Armored Francis E. Warren, Wyo.... Division, Major Dale Captain John E. Brown (Illinois '29) is D. Osmo nd, Jr. (Denison '35) is stationed in the same outat Fort Knox, Ky. . . Joseph C. Robinson THE PHI GAMMA DELTA (Pennsylvania State '39) is an aviation cadet at Scott Field, Ill. . . . Lieutenant William M. Coffey (Pennsylvania '41) is in a quartermaster regiment at Fort Leonard Wood, Mo. . . . Ernest Watson Farley, Jr. (Rh hmond '33) is a lieutenant in the ordflank , corps and is stationed in Washington. ... Handsome Vernon M. Knox (Pennsylvania '19), member of the famed Five Ekklesiai Club, is sparkling in a captain's uniform He is in the ordnance corps across the Potomac from Washington. . . Kenneth Collins (Washington '19) is on leave of absence from the New York advertising agency of Arthur Kudner, Inc., while serving as a major in the army air force. . . . Col-nel Charles E. Rayens (Columbia '14) is in the office of the G-3 at Governor's Island, N. Y. . . . Private Lewis A. Murfey (Cornell '36) is with an evacuation hospital in New Caledonia. . . . Captain Pierre J. Purcell (Cornell '29) is instructing a signal emps unit of the R.O.T.C. at the Univer-ity of Maine. . . . Lieutenant William I). Pryor (Tennessee '39) is in a bombardMt!! squadron at Howard Field, C. Z. . . R, dtrt B. Lyon (Colgate '38) is in a tank de foyer battalion at Fort Benning, Ga. Bruce B. Johnson (William Jewell . . '43 was commisfioned a lieutenant in the air forces at Williams Field, Ariz., in July. . . Carl B. Johnston (Cornell '37) is a .lie•derant with the water supply section at Fort Belvoir, Va. . . . Rush H. LimJr. (Missouri '40) was graduated in the Gulf Coast Air Corps Training ier at Brooks Field. Tex., and commiscd a lieutenant in the air forces. . . • ;tenant Harper B. Miller (Indiana '29) all the way from Johannesburg, South it-a, to Chicago, a distance of 12,000 s, to report for duty as a first lieutenant the air corps. He is stationed at Lowry 1,1, Colo. . . . Private Jack L. Coleman ,- estern Reserve '37) is stationed at Penon Field, Ore. . . . Private Walter V. •rtin, Jr. (Oklahoma '38) is at the finance r acement training center at Fort Harri• . Ind., as is also Private William B. Mc.crudy (Kansas '42). . . . First LieutenDavid P. Griffiths (Oregon '41) is an tructor in the air corps at Roswell, N. • • . Lieutenant-Colonel W. Kenneth 19 McKnight (Pennsylvania '12) is in active service at Camp Pickett, S. C. . . . Laurence B. Tipton (Alabama '32) has been appointed a captain and assigned as aide-decamp to the Secretary of Labor. He will be in charge of safety and health training in the army, navy and war industries. . . . James E. Lamb (Rutgers '32) has been commissioned a second lieutenant in the medical administrative corps and assigned to Percy Jones General Hospital in Battle Creek, Mich.. . . William B. Beeson, Jr. (Washington and Jefferson '32) is a first lieutenant in the air corps in Albuquerque, N. M., while his brother, Henry R. Beeson (Washington and Jefferson '37) is an aviation cadet at Spence Field, Ga. . . . Ralph E. Lidster, Jr. (Denison '36) is a private in the infantry in Iceland. . . . Richard H. Chambers (Arizona '29) has taken in his law shingle at Tucson, Ariz., and is off to the wars as a captain in the army air force. . . . Willard G. Barker (Richmond '23) is on leave from the presidency of the Morris Plan Bank in Washington, D. C., to serve as a captain in the air force. . . . Former Field Secretary James Reese ISIcKeldin (Virginia '25) is a first lieutenant in the air force and is booked for overseas duty. . . . Gene Littler (Nebraska '42), who used to burn up the cinder path in the quarter mile, is an aviation cadet in training on the campus of St. Mary's College in California. . . . Lieutenant-Colonel Elvin S. Ligon (Richmond '31) is on duty with a training command in Tulsa, Okla. . . . First Lieutenant James K. Watts (Oregon '34) is in the military police at Fort Ord, Calif. . . . Henry L. Mace (Williams '35) is a technician at Fort Niagara, N. Y. . . . Richard H. Morgan (Ohio State '40) is a second lieutenant in the quartermaster corps. . . . Major Allan Berne-Allen, Jr. (Columbia '33) is in the chemical warfare service at Huntsville Arsenal, Ala. . . . First Lieutenant John H. Stark (Colorado '30) is on duty in Washington. . . . On leave of ab.:ence from his duties as puidlisher-owner of the North Platte (Nebr.) Daily Bulletin, First Lieutenant Fred W. Speers (Stanford '28) is with the air corps at Columbus, 0. . . . John E. Whelden (Dartmouth '38) is stationed at Fort Benning, Ga.
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