Homecoming buffet chefs, 1951
Line up of the chefs for the Homecoming buffet in fall 1951.

Line up of the chefs for the Homecoming buffet in fall 1951.
The crowd at Biddle field watches as the ROTC band prepares for a performance during the Homecoming game against Johns Hopkins in November 1951.
View as a crowd eats a meal inside the Alumni Gymnasium during Homecoming weekend in fall 1951.
Kappa Sigma brothers and other students with the President's boat during the Homecoming football game in fall 1951. The caption on the photograph reads "President's boat stolen by Kappa Sigma."
A team spirit display created by the Kappa Sigma fraternity for the Homecoming game against Johns Hopkins on November 10, 1951. The display depicts a man in an academic robe holding the college mace chasing a football player with an "H" on the front of his uniform. The caption for the display reads "We're not standing on ceremony this time."
The Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity creates this team spirit display for the Homecoming game against Johns Hopkins on November 10, 1951. The display depicts the Johns Hopkins mascot, a blue jay, caught in the middle of a maze. The title for the display is "Trapped by Dickinson's Maze!" There is also a story to the left of the title banner which ends with "And her Victory will be won."
Two women stand on either side of a banner welcoming alumni to Homecoming on November 10, 1951.
The banner reads: "Four seasons are past and gone, And Homecoming is here. We welcome back to Dickinson Alums from far and near."
Three actors perform in the Mermaid Players' production of Othello in December 1951.
View of Drayer Hall from Morgan field in June 1952.
This image is #86 of the oversized photograph collection.
View of students in the second floor lounge of Drayer Hall in 1952.
The 1952 football team poses for a group picture.
First row: H. Robert Gasull, Andrew Padjen, George W. Slingland, Joseph T. Kunda, Gordon L. Haney, John C. Smith, Arthur S. Bond, George E. "Ned" Harshaw, Raymond C. Phillips, J.D. Brilliant, Paul C. Tarr
Second row: Howard J. Kline, Donald P. Allegretto, D. Richard Terry, David H. Orbock, Donald P. Bush, John T. Whittemore, Richard E. Johe, Harry F. Packer, Robert L. Jones, John A. Yoder
Third row: Joseph M. Minkevitch, Frank M. Schwartz, Grey F. Rolland, George Padjen, George A. "Chip" Mauro, Richard T. Desvernine, Joseph M. King, Andrew C. Lynch, Craig D. Wyckoff, Donald H. Yost
Fourth row: David C. Tintle, Charles M. Garwood, Lynn Weiser, Harold J. Kissell, Robert E. Mitzell, Gerald Kress, George J. Spengler, Hughey W. Haughney, James L. Nellas, Andrew A. Cominsky
View of Adrian Ban Kwie Lauw-Zecha (far right) with his parents, brothers, and President William Edel. Lauw-Zecha is a member of the Class of 1952.
View of Adrian Ban Kwie Lauw-Zecha (far right) with his parents, brothers, and President William Edel. Lauw-Zecha is a member of the Class of 1952.
Edwin "Ed" John Martin is a member of the Class of 1952.
The Men's Lacrosse team in 1952.
First Row: Head Coach Francis W. Warlow, Walter E. Munns, William B. Suter, Ronald L. McGowan, John C. Smith, Howard L. Robins, Arthur S. Thomas - Manager
Second Row: Earl V. Lynam, John A. Yoder, S. George Rhood, Anthony J. Pileggi Jr., Edward N. Adourian
Third Row: William B. Comly Jr., Robert H. Krischker Jr., Garrison P. Knox Jr., Theodore R. Bonwit, Irwin C. Hollander, John F. Birkmeyer Jr. - Manager
The Reserve Officers' Training Corps (ROTC) on Biddle field in 1952.
A live-action shot of the starting lineup during a 1952 game. The shot is taken near the opponent's 30 yard line.
President William Wilcox Edel stands next to Sir Hugh Stott Taylor (left) as he receives the first ever Joseph Priestley Award on March 20, 1952 for his research and teaching in chemistry.
Professor Whitfield Bell's American Cultural History class in spring 1952. Professor Bell is a member of the Class of 1935.
View of the Drayer Hall dedication ceremony on May 1, 1952.
Students eating in the Drayer Hall dining hall in May 1952.
View of the dining hall in Drayer Hall, which was located on the lower level.
The Follies transport the audience to ancient Egypt in one of their earliest productions, "The Sphinx Winks." Students wrote this original musical comedy, which revolves around the hopeless love triangle of Caesar, Cleopatra, and Mark Anthony.