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JEWELRYNATCHES, RINGS, EOES, ENBLEN
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WITH NQNOGRALLS IN COLOR, LNVLTATLQNS
OE ALL RLNDS, DIPLONAS, NEDALS AND DIES
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PURCHASES CAN BE NADE OE TIFFANYX: CO.
EITHER IN PERSON OR BY NAIL
Elm-L AVENUE SL 3731 STREET
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IND friends, dip in. The editors have read this through several times, and find that it
iv , ff? improves on acquaintance. In presenting it to the Class, we bring to conclusion the
fifty-ninth of the OLIOS with a feelinglof regret that the fuller knowledge and experience
gained within the past year cannot be turned to the 'advantage of those in whose hands
the volume now rests. Our aim has been to make the book a clear, individual, and complete
presentation of the events of the past 'twelve months. In particular our policy has been to
increase its significance to the Class. In working out our plans, obstacles have arisen, largely
of a financial nature, which have prevented us from doing all that we would wish. Yet the Board
presents its work in no spirit of apology, trusting that it has in a measure vindicated the con-
fidence reposed in it by the Class a year ago this May. E
We count ourselves fortunate in the year that has fallen to us to chronicle. The third
year of President lVleiklejohn's administration marks the close of that period set aside by
him in which to "become acquainted," and already the college is beginning to feel the results.
The splendid work of the Alumni Council and the Student Council are but indications of a
general spirit of renaissance that augurs well indeed for a Greater Amherst. There has been
a stronger attitude toward scholarship, a stronger spirit of interfraternity co-operation, a general
tendency to improve or do away with old systems and to carry on the routine of old
institutions with fuller achievement. Those who read the forewords, heading the various
departments of this year's OLIO, cannot fail to notice that in every branch of activity there
has been something progressive instituted, something worth while accomplished. To some it
has seemed as if the year 1914-1915 was the first of a new era in the history of the college.
Moreover it has been our junior year, and so in many ways the best. It is the last before
the finalities and responsibilities of the final year of the four. Once again we sincerely invite
you to dip in, hoping that you will find in our record of the year that which we have tried to put
there.
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The fear Qmung the jfacultp
Qjwj HE big change in the Faculty has been the loss of Professor Emeritus Edwin Augustus
Grosvenor. His resignation was accepted with infinite regret and his inestimable
services to the college mark him as one of Amherst's truest friends and most loyal
as well as distinguished ' alumni. Professor Frederick L. Thompson has been away
on his sabbatical year, his place being taken by Professor Anson E. Morse, '02, Professor
Hamilton has been away this past semester, his courses being given by Professor Ralph W.
Morris. Mr. TroXell's place as assistant in geology has been filled by Mr. Ralph W. Whipple,
'14, and Mr. Phillips F. Greene, '15, has taken Mr. Plough's place in biology.
Mr. Perkins resigned his position as assistant to the Registrar and Mr. Bussom
as lecturer in French. Professor
on account of the War. Pro-
the winter months in California.
batical year for 1915-1916. Pro-
Houghton, Parker, and Westhafer
respective departments instead of
One of the most significant
been the feeling, not only among
generally but throughout the East,
that Amherst is " a very live' little
marked by a keen interest on the
the "Amherst Idea" and the
l
QEhb.1in Q. Grnshznut
Todd returned late from Russia
fessor Emerson spent several of
Professor Baxter threatens a sab-
fessors Andrews, Cobb, Goodale,
are all associate professors in their
assistant professors.
developments of the past year has
undergraduates and Amherst men
especially in the field of education,
place indeed." The year has been
part of men outside Amherst in
" New Curriculum."
The "Amherst Idea" means to us the guarantee of a broad and liberal training, Ht for
the demands of life. It insists on retaining the advantages of the small college with close
intimacy in the "enterprise of learning" between faculty and student. It includes strong
emphasis on intramural and informal athletics, sane and vigorous principles of right living,
and a broad training in intellectual problems and appreciation. To assure this scholastic
training, the "New Curriculum" provides that no one shall be graduated Without some
study in all three groups of studies offered by a liberal college: literature and art, science,
22
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ALEXANDER MEIKLEJOHN, 9 A X, fb B K, E E, President and Professor of Logic
and M etaphystos.
B.A., Brown, '93, M.A., Brown, '95, Ph.D., Cornell, '97, LL.D., VVilliams, '12, LL.D.,
Mt. Holyoke, '12, M.A., Amherst, '12, LL.D., Brown,.'13.
Prexy does so much for Amherst by virtue of his office that it is practically impossible
to add anything. We think of him as our classmate on the Faculty and incidentally as a
tower of strength for the Faculty tennis, squash, and ball-tossing aggregations.
Born at Rochdale, England, February 3, 1872. Prepared for college at Pawtucket High School, Pawtucket, R. I. ' Grad-
uated from Brown University, 1893. Pursued graduate work at Brown, 1893-95, at Cornell, 1895-97. Instructor of
Philosophy at Brown University, 1897-99, Assistant Professor, 1899-1903, Associate Professor of Philosophy, 1903-06, Pro-
fessor of Logic and Metaphysics, 1906-12, Dean of Brown University, 1901-12. Called to the presidency of Amherst College
in 1912. Member of the American Philosophical Association, American Psychological Association.
GEORGE DANIEL OLDS, A A LID, fb B K, Walker Professor of Mathematics and Dean of
the Faculty.
B.A., University of Rochester, '73, M.A., University of Rochester, '76, LL.D.,
University of Rochester, '07, M.A., Amherst, '12.
Freshman year Georgie was introduced at the Sophomore Smoker as "the squarest
man on the Faculty." We can say little more.
Born at Middleport, New York, 1853. Prepared for college at Brockport CNew Yorkj Normal School. Graduated
from the University of Rochester, 1873. Taught in Albany Academy, 1873-79. Studied Mathematics in the Universities
of Heidelberg and Berlin, 1879-83. Professor of Mathematics, University of Rochester, 1884-91, Professor of Mathematics
at Amherst since 1891, Dean of the Faculty since 1910. Member of the American Association for the Advancement of Science,
and the American Mathematical Society.
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DAVID TODD, 111 B K, Sidney Dillon Professor of Astronomy and Navigation, and
Director of the Observatory.
B.A., Amherst, '753 M.A., Amherst, '783 Ph.D., Washington and Jefferson, '88,
Even the War could not keep, Professor Todd long in eclipseg by October he was back
ready for his thirty-fourth year with us. It is whispered that a yachting trip on the Sound
is one of the accessories to Astronomy,-certainly Davy's contribution to the joy of life
is no small one.
Born at Lake Ridge, New York, March 19, 1855. Student at Columbia, 1870-72.
Graduated from Amherst College, 1875. Appointed Assistant to the United States Transit
of Venus Commission, 1875. Sent by the Government to Dallas, Texas, to observe the
' solar eclipse, 1878. Chief Assistant in the office of the American Ephemeris and Nautical
I Almanac, 1878-81. Appointed Director of the Amherst Observatory, 1881. Professor of
Astronomy and Higher Mathematics, Smith College, 1882-87. Conducted observations of
the transit of Venus at the Lick Observatory, Mount Hamilton, California, 1882. Took charge of the National Academy
Eclipse Expedition to Japan, 1887. Appointed Chief of the Government Eclipse Expedition to VVest Africa, 1889-90. Director
of Amherst Eclipse Expeditions to japan, 1896, to Tripoli, Barbary, 19001 to the Dutch East Indies, 19013 to Tripoli, 19053
to Russia, 19143 and Mars Expedition to the Andes, 1907. Member of the Aero Club of America, the Astronomical Society
of America, and the Washington Philosophical Society3 member of the Astronomische Gesellschaft of Germany, and corresponding
member of the Societe Nationale des Sciences Naturelles et Mathematiques de Cherbourg, Franceg and Sociedad Geografica de
Lima, Peru. Founder and editor of the "Columbian Knowledge Series," 1893-97. Author of "American Telescopes," in the
Encyclopedia Britannica, 1888, also of the following books: "A New Astronomy," 1897, "Stars and Telescopes," 18995
"Nepszeru Csillagazatf' published at Budapest, Hungary, 19013 "Lessons in Astronomy," 1902, "Optical Resolution of the
Ring of Saturn," 19112 "Three Centuries of Total Eclipses in Mexico," 1910, and the same for Brazil, 1912. Designed and
erected the new observatory at Amherst, 1906.
JOHN FRANKLIN GENUNG, A T, fir B K, Professor of Literary and Biblical Interpre-
tation.
B.A., Union, '703 M.A. and Ph.D., Leipsic, '813 D.D., Yale, '053 M.A., Amherst, '12g
L.H.D., Union, '13.
Amherst owes Professor Genung above all the Memory Song, but also an unbroken
record of interesting "Symposia," half the pep of the early Mitre meetings, and many quiet
little services to the Student Council. Assuredly we are all with him in spirit.
Born january 27, 1850, in Tioga County, New York. Prepared for college at Owego
CNew Yorkj Academy. Wlas graduated at Union College, 1870. Taught school at
Mechanicsville, New York, 1870-72, then entered Rochester Theological Seminary, where
he was graduated in 1875. Pastor of Baptist Church, Baldwinsyille, New York, 1875-78.
I Studied at the University of Leipsic, 1878-81. Associate Professor and Professor of Rhetoric,
Amherst College, 1882-19062 Professor of Literary and Biblical Interpretation, 1906. Member
of the Authors' Club, Society of Biblical Literature and Exegesis, and Harvard Biblical Club. Author of "Study of Tennyson's
'In Memoriamf " 18833 "Practical Elements of Rhetoric," 18863 "Rhetorical Analysis," 1888, "Study of Rhetoric in the
College Course," 1888, "The Epic of the Inner Life," 18901 "Outlines of Rhetoric," 1893, "VVhat a Carpenter Did with his
Bible," -1898, "The Passing of Self," 18991 "Working Principles of Rhetoric," 19013 "Steyenson's Attitude to Life," 1901:
"Ecclesiastes and Omar Khayyamf' 19015 "VVords of Kohelethf' 19033 "A Study of and a Commentary on the Bookof
Ecclesiastes," 19043 "The Hebrew Literature of VVisdom," 1906, "The Idylls and the Ages," 19071 "The Man with the Pitcher
and his Story," 1912. Editor of Select Essays of Elia, with Introduction and Notes, 1909. Editor-in-chief of the Amherst
Graduates' Quarterly, 1911.
26
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WILLIAM LYMAN COWLES, A K E, dv B K, Professor of Latin.
B.A., Amherst, '78g M.A., Amherst, '81. '
Latin Three and Four certainly must be included in the list of courses a man would
be foolish to miss out on, for Billy is popularly reputed to be "the man who put the 'class'
in classics."
Born at Belchertown, Massachusetts, April 11, 1856. Prepared for college at Monson Academy and Williston Seminary.
Entered Amherst College in 1874. Taught Latin, French, and English in Roxbury Latin School, 1879-80. Instructor in
Latin in Amherst, 1880-83. Spent one year at Berlin University, Gottingen, and Leipsic, and in travel in Italy. Associate
Professor of Latin in Amherst, 1886-94. Lecturer on Latin Literature at Smith College, 1886-95. Traveled for study of places
connected with Latin Literature, 1891. Professor of Latin in Amherst College, 1894. Traveled in Europe and studied at
Rome in 1898. Taught Latin in Smith College, 1900. Member of American Philological Society, New England Association
of Colleges and Preparatory Schools, and the Managing Committee of the American School at Rome. Member of the Board
of Trustees of Monson Academy. Has published "Abstract of Lectures on Topics Connected with the Latin Language",
"Adelphoe of Terence," 18963 "Selections from Poems of Catullus," 19003 "Selections from Catullus and other Latin Poets,"
1909, and articles for magazines and periodicals.
ARTHUR LALANNE KIMBALL, fb B K, Professor of Physics.
B.A., Princeton, '81, M.A., Princeton, '84, Ph.D., johns Hopkins, '86g M.A.,
Amherst, '12.
Professor Kimball is one of the best known physicists in the country and the author
of a large healthy volume on the subject. But that which we all remember is a department
whose system and fairness make of an Himpassable subject" a very possible and attractive
proposition.
Born at Succasunna, New Jersey, October 16, 1856. Prepared for college at Plainfield CNew Ierseyj High School. Gradu-
ated from Princeton, 1881. Pursued graduate studies at Princeton, 1882, and at Johns Hopkins, 1882-84. Associate in
Physics at johns Hopkins, 1884-87. Associate Professor of Physics at Johns Hopkins, 1887-91. Professor of Physics,
Amherst College, 1891. Member of the American Association for the Advancement of Science: the American Physical Society,
and the Societe Francaise de Physique. Has published "The Physical Properties of Gases" and "A College Text-book of
Physics," and has also written papers on Electrical Units and the Electro-Magnetic Theory of Light. Investigation of the
Ohm for the United States Government, 1884.
27
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HARRY DEFOREST SMITH, A K E, fb B K, John C. Newton Professor of Greek.
B.A., Bowdoin, '91, M.A., Bowdoin, '94, M.A., Harvard, '96, M.A., Amherst, '12.
In the upper regions of Williston, Mike conducts some of the best courses in college
on Art, Literature, Philosophy, and, incidentally, Greek. VVherefore We forgive him an
occasional cut on days when the air is fine and the roads are dry and easy on the tires.
Born at Gardiner, Maine, 1869. Teacher at Rockland, Maine, 1891-95. Student at Harvard, 1895-96, University of
Berlin, 1896-97. Instructor in Greek, University of Pennsylvania, 1897-98. Instructor in Ancient Languages, 1898-99, and
Assistant Professor of Greek, 1899-1901, at Bowdoin College. Appointed Associate Professor of Greek, Amherst College, 1901,
Professor of Greek, 1903.
GEORGE BOSWORTH CHURCHILL, X 112, fb B K, Professor of English Literature.
B.A., Amherst, '89, M.A., Amherst, '92, Ph.D., University of Berlin, '97.
The great thing about Professor Churchill is not the fact that he is a recognized authority
I on Shakespeare, undergraduate Amherst appreciates even more a hearty backing of Dramat-
ics and Varsity Debating.
Born at Worcester, Massachusetts, October 24, 1866. Prepared for college at the lYorcester High School. Graduated
from Amherst College, 1889. Instructor in the VVorcester High School, 1889-92. Master of Oral and XYritten Expression,
VVilliam Penn Charter School, Philadelphia, 1892-94. Took post-graduate courses in English at the University of Pennsylvania..
Studied at the University of Strassburg, 1894-95, and at the University of Berlin, 1895-97. Assistant Editor of the Cosmopolitan
Magazine, 1895-98. Associate Professor of English and Public Speaking at Amherst College, 1898-1903: Associate Professor
of English Literature, 1903-05, Professor of English Literature, 1905. Member of the Berlin Society for the Study of Modem
Languages, German Shakespeare Society, Malone Society, Modern Language Association, Boston Authors' Club. Author
of "Richard III up to Shakespeare," 1900, an edition of "Richard III," 1912, "Plays of lYycherlev," 1913: and joint author
of "The Latin University Dramas of the Time of Queen Elizabeth," 1898. American representative of the Hjahrbuch der
deutschen Shakespeare Gesellschaft," 1903.
28
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11 Eel if --J 'W 5illi'.lll1'llf'5ssy fl" 7. UiM:'i . W? 'ix .414 1 '? Pj
32.5.5.1-i.f' is aw! fa' his V Q-sarylawr P 'sf' . v tl' X '--W 56 2- fl 1 .I fm. 1' , . --
- l vl -sims-" 21, -.4.ws.-f .1 S - fl' - - ef ,.- is 1.4--. -Z: ' f 4
mm - , f Q. " S-- . nv - - Q-i'-rg: - ' a---- f A ' '-
ARTHUR JOHN HOPKINS, 9 A X, Professor of Chemistry.
B.A., Amherst, '85g Ph.D., johns Hopkins, '93.
Far more consistent than the Four Leaf Clover ever thought of being, Hoppy continues
each year to make life more cheerful by applying the Ladies' Home Journal to the intricacies
of Chemistry. Nor can a 1916 book fail to mention the house at the foot of the hill,-or
we lose the subscriptions of Ames, Rider, and Al VVashburn.
Born at Bridgewater, Massachusetts, September 20, 1864. Prepared for college at Bridgewater High School. Graduated
from Amherst, 1885. Taught in Cotuit, Massachusetts, and at Peekskill Military Academy, New York, 1885-90. johns
Hopkins University Fellow, 1892. Taught in Westminster College, New Wilmington, Pennsylvania, 1893-94, in Amherst
College since 1894, Professor of Chemistry, 1907. Member of the American Association for the Advancement of Science:
the American Chemical Society, and the johns Hopkins Chemical Society.
JAMES WALTER CROOK, Professor of Economics.
B.A., Oberlin, '91, Ph.D., Columbia, '98, M.A., Amherst, '12.
Amherst's double debating victory this past December was in considerable measure
due to able coaching, in which Professor Crook had no small share. Polycon is also a " mighty
man with the mashie" on the Doma links, and those fortunate enough to be in his seminars
aver that the "feeds" alone are sufficient recommendation for taking Economics.
Born at Ontario, Canada, December 21, 1859. Prepared for college at Oberlin Academy. Graduated from Oberlin,
1891. Instructor in History at Oberlin, 1891-92. Took post-graduate course at the University of Wisconsin, 1892-93. Studied
at the University of Berlin, 1893-94. Post-graduate student at Columbia University, 1894-95. Lecturer on Taxation at
Columbia University, 1895. Called to the chair of Political Economy in Amherst College, 1895. Member of the American
'Economic Association. Author of "History of German VV age Theories," 1898. Lecturer on Economic, Social. and Educational
opics.
30
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""' - ' .r-c- rx-G -1911 '
PAUL CHRYSOSTOM PHILLIPS, 9 A X, Professor of Hygiene and Physical Education.
B.A., Amherst, '88, M.D., Columbia, '95,
Although we all remember carefully that joyous occasion on Pratt Field when Dr.
Phillips, examining the broken collarbone of the prostrate half-back, straightened up
anxiously with the famous shout: "Is there a doctor in the crowd?" we also remember
that Little Doc is carrying on successfully the splendid work of Old Doc, and go to him
with all our troubles, from pink eye to normal feet.
Born at Ayer Junction, Massachusetts, December 20, 1865. Prepared for college at Phillips Andover Academy. Gradu-
ated from Amherst College, 1888. Physical Director Y. M. C. A., Kansas City, 1888-913 in Y. M. C. A., Louisville, Kentucky,
1891-925 in Young Men's Institute, New York, 1892-95. Medical and Athletic Director of the General Board of the Y. M.
C. A. of Chicago, 1895. Assistant Professor of Hygiene and Physical Education in Amherst College, 1896, Associate Professor,
18993 Professor, 1908. Member of the American Physical Education Association, the American Association for the Advance-
ment of Science, the Athletic Records Committee of the Athletic League of North America. President of the Society of
College Gymnasium Directors, 1902, Secretary since 1907. Instructor of the Summer Session of the Y. M. C. A. Training
School, Lake Geneva, Wisconsin, 1891-99. Instructor Y. M. C. A. Institute, Silver Bay, New York, since 1904.
FREDERICK BREVVSTER LOOMIS, 112 A 9, fb B K, Professor of Comparative Anatomy.
B.A., Amherst, '96g Ph.D., University of Munich, '99.
VV e think of Professor Loomis as personified pep, whether it be spent for his fraternity
in the matter of building a new house, for the college in a recent trip to Patagonia, or for
the government in summer research work. Few courses are as up-to-date in presentation
as Comparative Anatomy.
, l F
Born at Brooklyn, New York, November 22, 1873. Prepared for college at Rochester Free Academy. Graduated from
Amherst College, 1896. Assistant in Biological Laboratory, 1897. Studied at the University of Munich, 1897-99. Instructor
in Biology at Amherst College, 1899, Associate Professor in Biology, 19049 Professor of Comparative Anatomy, 1908. Director
of Patagonian Expedition, 1911-12. Author of "Hunting Extinct Animals in the Patagonian Pampas," 1913, "The Deseado
Formation of Patagonia," 1914.
31 '
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WILLIAM JESSE NEWLIN, XII T, fl? B K, Professor of Philosophy.
B.A., Amherst, '99g B.S., M.E., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, '01g MA.,
Amherst, '03, M.A., Harvard, '06,
We have said considerable when we say that Professor Newlin has carried on the work
of Professor Garman. Moreover an hour with Dutch seems but from three to four minutes,
for which statement we have Mrs. Robison's table as authority.
w
Born at Port Carbon, Pennsylvania, August 28, 1878. Prepared for college at Pottsville QPennsylvaniaj High School.
Graduated from Amherst, 1899. Graduated from Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1901. Engaged in Mechanical
Engineering, 1901-02. Walker Instructor in Mathematics in Amherst College, 1902-05. Shattuck Scholar in Mathematics
at Harvard University, 1905-06. Appointed Associate Professor of Mathematics and Philosophy at Amherst College, 19063
Associate Professor of Philosophy, 19073 Professor of Philosophy, 1909. Studied at Oxford University, 1912-13. Member
of the American Philosophical Association.
CLARENCE WILLIS EASTMAN, Professor of German Language and Literature.
B.S., Worcester Polytechnic Institute, '94, A.M., Ph.D., Leipsic, '98g BIA., Amherst,
'12
One turns to the courses in "Faust" and the German drama for an idea of what the
undergraduate owes most to Professor Eastman. Moreover Kodak is one of the best little
pioneers on the Faculty, being the first inhabitant to produce both the racquets racket and
the initial pair of knickerbockers.
Born at Concord, N. H., January 3, 1873. Prepared for college at the public schools of Concord, N. H., and VVorcester,
Mass. Graduated' from Worcester Polytechnic Institute, 1894. Student at Harvard Summer School, 1894. Assistant in
Modern-Languages. at Worcester Polytechnic Institute, 1894-95. Student at the University of Gottingen, as holder of the
Aaron and Lucretia Bancroft Fellowship " for the city of Vlforcester, 1895-96. Student at the University of Leipsic. 1896-98.
Instructor in German, University of Iowa, 1898-19013 Assistant Professor of German, ibid., 1901-07. Instructor in German,
University of Ch1cago,.Summer Quarter, 1902. In charge of the workin German, Summer School of the University of Missouri,
1903 and 1905. Appointed Associate Professor of German Literature at Amherst College, 1907, Professor of German Language
and Literature, 1909. Member of the Modern Language Association of America, New England Association of Colleges and
Preparatory Schools. Author of " Die Syntax des Dativs bei Notker," 1899, and articles in modern language journals. Edit!!
of I-I1llern's " Hoher als die Kirche," 19063 Arnold's "Fritz auf Ferien, " 1914.
32
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HOWARD WATERS DOUGHTY, CD 1' A, 'Iv B K, 2 E, fb A T, Professor of Chemistry.
Ph.D., johns Hopkins, '04.
Professor Doughty has made Advanced Chemistry. one of our strongest departments.
Furthermore he is the man who vies with Professor Thompson in keeping the Mark of
the Aristocrat constantly in front of the Physics Lab,-and a new model at that.
X
Born at Baltimore, Md., August 13, 1871. Prepared for college, Friends' Elementary and High Schools, Baltimore.
Proficient in Electrical Engineering, Johns Hopkins University, 18933 Commercial VVork, 1893-1900, Graduate Student in
Chemistry, Physical Chemistry, and Physics, Johns Hopkins University, 1900-043 University Scholar, 1902-035 Fellow,
1903-04. Fellow by courtesy, johns Hopkins University, 1904-05. Carnegie Research Assistant, Bureau of Standards,
Washington, D. C., 1904-05. Instructor in Chemistry, University of Missouri, 1905-06. Instructor in Chemistry, University
of Wisconsin, 1906-07. Instructor in Chemistry, Amherst College, 19073 Assistant Professor, 19085 Associate Professor,
19095 Professor, 1913.
LEVI HENRY ELWELL, X11 T, fir B K, Associate Professor of Greek and Instructor in
Sanskrit.
B.A., Amherst, '75, M.A., Amherst, '78.
Professor Elwell ushered in 1916 to its first chapel and has hardly missed a service
before or since, proving to us that some ideals are attainable after all. The Amherst Chapter
of Phi Beta Kappa bears witness to a large interest and service.
Born at Northampton, Massachusetts, March 22, 1854. Prepared for college at Northampton High School. Graduated
from Amherst in 1875. Taught in Poughkeepsie Military Institute, 1875-76. Advanced study at Yale with Professor Vlfhitney,
1876-77. Instructor in Greek and Latin at Amherst College, 1877-78, Instructor in Sanskrit since 1881: Instmctor in Greek,
1878-903 Assistant Professor in Greek, 1890-93, Associate Professor since 1893. Traveled and studied in Greece and Egypt,
1891-92, in Greece and Italy, 1901. Member of the American Oriental Society, American Philological Association. Pali
Text Society of London, Hellenic Society of London, American Folk Lore Society, Archaeological Institute of America, National
Geographical Society, New England Classical Association, Advisory Council of Simplified Spelling Board, The Modem Historic
Records Association, New England Historic-Genealogical Society. Editor of "Nine jatakas"g "The First Catalog of the
Massachusetts Beta of Phi Beta Kappaf' "The Gravestone Records of Shaftsbury, Vermontf' "The Grayestone Inscription
of Rupert, Vermont." Author of various pamphlets and articles on philology, botany, and genealogy.
34
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ARTHUR HEIX RY BAXTER A A fb Assoczate Professor of Romance Languages.
B A johns Hopkms 94 Ph D Johns Hopkms 98
B1lly IS not only the best l1ttle globe trotter IH the B1g League--from which thoeelrho
take Art and the Romance Languages dern e all the benefit but 1 also the father of Squad
1n Amherst the donor of the Baxter cup and champ1on of the facultv-arxd-undergraduate
body
Born at Florence Italy December 12 1871 Studled at Malvern College England 1881 88 at Tfxbingen, Germany,
1889 Passed entrance exam1nat1on for the Royal Mllltafy College Sandhurst England December 1891. Graduated from
johns Hopkms Un1vers1ty 1894 Instructor 1n Itahan Johns Hopkms 1891 Nlaster of French and German at the Country
School for Boys Baltlmore Maryland 1898 1900 Appo1nted Instructor of Romance Languages at Amherst College, IND:
Ass1stant Professor 1906 ASSOCIHIC Professor 1908
JOHN CORSA if T Assocfzate Professor of Publ1c Speakmg
B.A Amherst 99 M A., Amherst 06
Amherst s debt to Professor Corsa 15 usuallx calculated 111 terms of debating victories-
1n which connection ue all remember the Ides of last December. But greater than that
clean sweep aforement1oned 15 the present course 1n F11 e and S1.x certainlv another of he
that one ought not to m1ss
Born at Milford Delaware November 30 1874 Prepared for college at XX 1ll1ston Serrunarx . Pnncipal of the Ca
Preparatory School 1899 1902. Member of the New England Oral Enghsh -Xs.oc1at1on' Pres1der1t New England Ora.l
and Publ1c Speaking Assoc1at1on 1915. Appointed Instructor 1n PUDIIC Speaking. -Xmherst College 1903: Assistant Pnilk
1907 Assoclate Professor 1908.
06
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WILLIAM AVERILL STOWELL 111 B K Associate Professor of Romance Languages
B A Pr1nceton 04 Ph D johns Hopkins 08
The announcement of an exam for December by Professor Stovxell gives us a month s
warnmg before we beg1n to prepare in january Yet 1n sp1te of this and a regulation size
P1erce Professor Stowell g1ves us some remarkably good courses notably French Seven and
E1ght
Born at Appleton WISCOHSIH March 29 1882 Prepared for college at Parls France Graduated from Princeton 1904.
Graduate study at johns I-Iopk1ns UUIVCTSIYY 1904-06 at La Sorbonne 1n Par1s 1906-07 Lnn ersitv Fellow and Instructor
1n Johns I-Iopkms 1907 08 Professor of Romance Languages at the Randolph Macon College Lx nchburg Virginia 1908-09.
Appo1nted Ass1stant Professor of Romance Languages at Amherst College 1909 Assoc1ate Professor 1910 iluthor of Titles
of Respect 1n D1rect Address 1n Old French and Personal RCl3t1OHSh1pS 1n Medieval France
JOHN MAURICE CLARK, A K E, if B K, Assoczate Professor of Economics.
B A , Amherst, '05, M A , Columbla, '06, Ph D , Columbla, '10
Although we have not forgotten the occas1on v1 hereon Professor Clark was carelessly
m1staken for an undergraduate, nor the rumor that when 1n college he vsas captain of the
gym team, we thmk of him ma1nly as no mean authority on the matter of trust control, and
as one of the plllars of the Mt Doma Bache1or's Club
Born at Northampton, Massachusetts, November 30, 1884 Prepared for college at the Horace Mann High School, New
York C1ty Stud1ed 1n Columbla Un1vers1ty Graduate School, 1905-08 Honorary Unn ersltx Fellovs ln Economics, 1907-43.
Instructor 1n Economlcs, Colorado College, 1908 10 Appolnted ASSOC1atC Professor in Econonucs at Amherst College, 1910.
Fiaurtxhor of "Standards of Reasonableness in Local Frelght D1scr1m1nat1ons " Collaborated in a second edition of "The Cofntml
o rusts "
38
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PERCY ROBERT CARPENTER, 2 A E, Associate Professor in Hygiene and Piyxkd
Education.
B.A., Harvard, '07.
Amherst sets down as credit items in the account with Professor Carpenter a remarkably
successful gymnastic team and a growing interest in soccer. But Amherst sets down an
the debit side of the ledger a long list of excuses from gym, of which Percy callously rm-:fuss
to recognize the vital seriousness.
Born at Meriden, Connecticut, June 4, 1882. Prepared for college at Phillips Exeter Academy. Graduated from Harvard
in 1907. Appointed Hitchcock Fellow, 19065 Hitchcock Fellow and Assistant to the Dean, 1907, Instructor in Phydml
Education, 1908, Assistant Professor of Hygiene and Physical Education, and Assistant Dean, 19105 Associate Professor d
Hygiene and Physical Education, 1911, Member of American Society of Physical Education, The Society of Directors of
Physical Education in Colleges. Editor of Spalding's "Handbook of Intercollegiate Gymnastics." ,
CHARLES HANSON TOLL, XII T, fb B K, Associate Professor of Philosophy.
B.A., Hamilton, '04, M.A., Harvard, '05, Ph.D., Freiburg, '09.
Professor Toll exemplifies to us, above all, the value of an open and truth-s
attitude. Knowledge of this neutrality and impartiality, however, rather worried sid
us who heard his chapel appeal for Belgian babes and chanced to be supporters of the Kai.
Born at Denver,.Colo.,'May 21, 1882. Prepared for college at the Denver Manual Training School, at Phillips
and a private school in Paris. Graduated from Hamilton College in 1904. Graduate work in Harvard Un
John Harvard Fellow, 1906-08L Traveled around the world in 1906-07. Studied in the University of Berlin and the
of Freiburg, 1907-09. Appointed Assistant Professor of Philosophy, Amherst College, 1909, Associate Professor, 1912.
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ALFRED SHEPARD GOODALE, 112 B K, Associate Professor of Botany and Registrar.
B.A., Amherst, '98.
To Professor Goodale we owe a catalogue system which has already been copied by
several other colleges. Shorty is also wielder of the official alpen-stock in the ventures
sojournings of the Mountain Club.
l
Born at Amherst, Massachusetts, May 8, 1876. Prepared for college at the Amherst High School. Graduated Emu
Amherst College, 1898. Appointed Acting Registrar, 1901g Registrar, 19023 Instructor in Botany, 19043 Assistant Profemer
of Botany, 19113 Associate Professor and Registrar, 1914.
CHARLES XYIGGINS COBB, G A X, E E, Associate Professor of Mathematics.
B.A., Amherst, '97g MA., Amherst, '01g Ph.D., University of Michigan, '12.
Professor Cobb won his "F " as a plunger on the Faculty Swimming Team and, on ik
principle that "one should do unto others as one has been done by," has since then genemi
arranged that others may receive the same reward. Yet time has been found
to help out the Musical Clubs and give The Mitre a royal welcome.
' Born at Plymouth, Massachusetts, 1875. Prepared for college at Newton High School. Graduated from Arnhem. Il.
Taught .at Albany Academy, Pltchburg High School, New York High School of Commerce, Vforcester Academy.
'Columbia and Newt York University, 1904-05, at Clark University, 1907-08: at the University of Michigan. 1910-11.
pointed Instructor in Mathematics, Amherst College, 19085 Assistant Professor. 1911: Associate Professor, 1914. P :I
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CHARLES ERNEST BENNETT, fb I' A, fb B K, Associate Professor in Latin.
B.A., Amherst, '05, Ph.D., Cornell, '11.
- A freshman who draws Professor Bennett that third Thursday in September is always
heartily congratulated. Of late we have been congratulating the Professor himself. Not
over his classes, though, nor even in regard to the favorable comment from the "Vassar
Miscellany" and unsuspecting Doma on those Odes of Horace in the .Monthly
Born at Ludlow, Massachusetts, December 31, 1882. Prepared for college at Ludlow High School. Assistant Principal
and Instructor of Latin and German in Nanticoke CPennsylvaniaj High School, 1905-06. Sub-Master Vfashington School for
Boys, 1906-07. Instructor Volkmann School, Boston, and graduate student at Harvard, 1907-08. Graduate student at
Cornell, 1908-09. Fellow and Instructor of Latin, Cornell, 1911. Appointed Instructor of Latin at Amherst College, 1911g
Assistant Professor, 19133 Associate Professor, 1914. Member of the American Philological Association.
.......,.. , V
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ROBERT STILLMAN FLETCHER, X XII, Otis Librarian.
B.A., Amherst, '97,
Mr. Fletcher well fills his father's place at the library, which is saying a good deal.
Even more, for he formed one of the famous infield when Prezqds Pastiming Pedagogues
defeated the 1913 Scarab one hot June afternoon, and has captained the Faculty Tennis in
many a hard fought battle.
Born at Hartford, Connecticut, September 12, 1874. Prepared for college at Amherst High School and at Vlfilliston
Seminary. Graduated from Amherst College, 1897. Connected with the following libraries since graduation: Buffalo Public
Library, Carnegie Library, Bradford, Pa., Brooklyn Public Library, and the Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh. Appointed
Assistant Librarian, Amherst College, 1908g Otis Librarian, 1911.
44
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JOHN BROWN ZINN A T Q 1' A dv B K Instructor fm Chemzstry
B S Pennsylvama College 09 Ph D Johns HOpk1HS 13
Professor Zmn entered w1th the class of 1917 and so got away to a poor start Even
w1th th1s hand1cap he has made hrmself felt m Chem1stry and 1S a frequent vrsntor at the
Gym
Born at Gettysburg Pa August 20 1888 Prepared for college at Gettysburg H1gh School Graduated from Penn
sylvama College 1909 Un1vers1ty Scholar at johns Hopkms 1911 12 UH1VCfS1ty Fellow 1912 13 Appointed Instructor
1n Chemrstry Amherst College 1913
RAYMOND GARFIELD GETTELL Q B K Lecturer rn Soczal and Eco-nomzc
stztuttons
BA UFSIHUS College 03 M A Un1vers1ty of Pennsylx an1a 06
Amherst already owes a great deal to Professor Gettell He has made the expenment
1n S and E a successful and v1tal part of freshman 3 ear has been a x en xaluable 2,dd1UOI1
to the football coach1ng staff and has taken an actne lnterest 1n the Monthlx the Forum
and debatmg We suspect from th1s record that he entered Vx 1th a Sabrma class
1898 Graduated from Urs1nus College summa cum laude 1903 Stud1ed at Umx ers1tX of Pennsxlxama 1904-06.
Ass1stantPr1nc1palH1gh School Duncannon Pa 1898 99 Instructor1nH1stor3 State Normal School 1899-1900 Professor
of H1story and Econom1cs Bates College 1906-07 Northam Professor of H1StOfX and Pol1t1cal Sclence 1901 14 Professor
of Pol1t1cal Sclence ln the summer SCSSIOH of Un1vers1ty of Mame 1910 Un1xers1t3 of Ill1no1s 1913 Ln1xers1tx of Tera 1914
Member of Amer1can Pol1t1cal Scxence ASSOC1at1OH Amer1can H1StOF1CHl Assocxatron Connecucut Hlstorlcal -X anon
Author of Introductlon to Pol1t1cal Sclence 1910 Readmgs rn Pol1t1cal Sclence 1911 Problems 1n Pol1t1cal Evolu
tlon 1914 Numerous art1cles and book FGVICVSS m xarrous per1od1cals
D i , y . . . In-
Born at Shippensburg, Pa., March 4, 1881. Graduated from Shippensburg.High School, 18955 from State Normal School,
46
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ANSON ELY MORSE, A K E, Lecturer in History.
BA., Amherst, '02, MA., Amherst, '03, Ph.D., Princeton University, '07.
Professor Morse sets an excellent precedent by a seminar course for sophomores. He
calls it ia lNeutral1ty organization Qanother innovation in seminarsj, having learned of this
neutrality proposition back in the football days of 1902.
Born at Lyme, Connecticut, july 31, 1879. Prepared for college at the Amherst High School and Princeton Preparatory
School. Graduated from Amherst College, 1902. Graduate work at Princeton University, 1902-035 University of XN7isconsin,
1903-05. Student at La Sorbonne, 1905-06. Student at Princeton University, 1906-08, and Fellow at Princeton University,
1906-07. Associate Professor of History at Marietta College, 1907-09, Professor of History and Political Science, 1909-14.
Lecturer in History at Amherst College, 1914-15. Member of the American Historical Association, American Political Science
Association, American Sociological Association, and the Academy of Political Science. Author of "The Federalist Party in
Massachusetts to 1800." Associate editor of "XVritings on American History," 1902.
RALPH VVALDO MORRIS, dw A 9, Lecturer in English.
BA., Harvard, '02, 1
Professor Morris, constituting with Norton '18 the second installment for the year
1914-1915, has taken hold of English Six in fine style in addition to which he keeps the Phi
Delta Theta brethren well fed o'nights-Can encomium inserted at the special request of
our business managerj.
Born in Richmond, Indiana, 1879. Prepared for college in the Richmond High School. Studied in Indiana University,
1898-993 in Harvard University, 1899-1901, 1902-03. Private tutor in Harvard, 1903-05. Lecturer in English in the DAI
ICH1 KO TO GAKKO Clmperial japanese Governments First Higher Schooll, Tokyo, 1905-07, also in KEIO GIIUKU CUniversityD,
Tokyo, 1906-07. Assistant Professor of English in Kentucky State University and in VX'hitman College. Instructor in
English in Dartmouth College. Lecturer in English at Amherst College, 1914-15.
47
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RALPH WHEATON WHIPPLE, Z A P, Assistant in Geology.
B.S., Amherst, '14.
Whip's great feat this year, far outdoing his very active work in cataloguing spfximens,
consisted in implicitly following out Emmy's instructions to flunk no one. VK'hence our
undying gratitude.
Born at Philadelphia, Pa., October 5, 1890. Prepared for college at Dean Academy. Graduated from Amherst College,
1914. Appointed Assistant in Geology, Amherst College, 1914.
PHILLIPS FOSTER GREENE, A T, LID B K, Assistant in Biology.
B.A., Amherst, '15,
They enrolled Phil in Faculty ranks this year so that he might sit with proper dignity
amongst the haughty citizens of the choir. But some, who have heard him warbling blithely
about the Biology Lab, suspect the trustees of other motives.
Born at Van, Turkey in Asia, May 30, 1892. Prepared for college at Montclair High School, Montclair, New jersey,
Holder of the Woods Hole Marine Biological Laboratory Scholarship, 1914. Appointed Assistant in Biology, Amherst College.
1914.
48
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3Bnn:iKesiiJent lecturers
PROFESSOR JOHN NIATTHEVVS MANLEY, Head of the English Department, Chicago University, Clyde Fitch Foundation Lecturer.
' January 20-Religious Unrest and Aspiration in Victorian Poetry.
January 27-Browning.
January 28-Clough and Arnold.
January 29-The Lesser Choir.
PROFESSOR ALVIN SAUNDERS JOHNSON, Professor of Political Economy, Cornell University, Henry Ward Beecher Lecturer.
February 15-Industrialism and the Social Policy.
February 16-The Minimum Wage.
March
March
1-The Old Age Pension.
2-Economic Principles and Social Legislation.
PROFESSOR GEORGE WASHINGTON KIRCHWEY, LL.D., Former Dean
Clark Memorial Lecturer.
March
March
March
March
11-The Law of Nature and the Law of Man.
12-Law as the Perfection of Reason.
17-Law and Public Opinion.
18-Modern Tendencies in Law and Legislation.
glfellutns
GEORGE BRUNER PARKS, B.A., 1911, Kellogg University Fellow .
FRANK CHRISTOPHER BROUGH, B.S., 1914, Edward Hitchcock Fellow
JOHN CUTHBERT LONG, B.A., 1914, South End House Fellow . .
of the Columbia University Law School, William Brewster
. Columbia University, New York, N. Y.
. ..... Amherst, Mass.
. Boston, Mass.
Qbrahuate Stuhents
THEODORE AINSWORTH GREENE, B.A., 1913, Middletown, Conn. . . 409 Morris Pratt Memorial Dormitory
FRANK PRENTICE RAND, B.A., Williams, 1912, Worcester, Mass. . ...... M. A. C. Club
FRANKLIN WARD RENEREW, B.S., 1914, Brooklyn, N. Y. . fir A 9 House
49
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Qmberst Cinllege, 1821-1915
Q W5 MHERST COLLEGE was founded in 1821 as the successor of Amherst Academy, one of
Z Q Q the leading secondary schools of New England. The purpose of its founders was to
i9 563 establish an institution which should be a training school for the Christian ministry.
'9 "2 President Moore of Williams became its first head. During his administration a
vigorous effort was made to secure a charter. This effort was not successful until 1825 when
President Moore, who died in 1823, had been succeeded by Rev. Heman Humphrey. The next
ten years.saw a decided growth so that in 1836 the enrollment of the college was two hundred and
fifty-nine, ranking second only to Yale. There followed a period of decline and in 1845 the
college was apparently on the verge of ruin because of lack of funds. A complete collapse was
averted only by the heroism and self-sacrifice of the faculty who volunteered to take over the
college and manage it under the leadership of President Hitchcock. So well did they succeed
that when President Hitchcock gave place in 1854 to President Stearns, the college was not only
on a sound financial basis but was the possessor of new buildings, of new endowed professorships,
and of valuable geological collections.
During the term of President Stearns, Walker Hall, the College Church, and Barrett Gym-
nasium were added to the equipment. The erection of this last building, the first of its kind in
the country, and the establishment of a Physical Education Department under the direction of
Dr. Edward Hitchcock of the class of 1849 marked a new development in American collegiate
instruction.
In 1876 Professor Julius H. Seelye was chosen to succeed President Stearns. At his sugges-
tion the system of student government still in force was adopted. During his administration
and that of President Gates from 1890 to 1899 the endowment was increased, new buildings
were erected, and a large addition was made to the number of the faculty. Under President
Harris the endowment was raised to two million five hundred thousand dollars and several
changes in administration were inaugurated, among them the adoption of the Honor System
in examinations. '
President Meiklejohn came to Amherst in 1912. Largely through Mr. Frederick S. Allis,
the alumni have been organized and brought into closer touch with the college. An efiicient
alumni council has been created. g The first steps have already been taken toward the gradual
building up of a new curriculum with increased emphasis on philosophy, history, and sociology.
It is not an exaggeration to say that his leadership has been the means of arousing an intellectual
interest which promises well for Amherst's future.
50
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1
Arthur H. Baxter
Walter R. Agard
Fenimore Cady
James VV. Craig
Thomas W. Ashley
William G. Avirett
Julius S. Bixler
Charles H. Brown
David R. Craig, jr.
Walter P. Fraker
Norman R. Lemcke
Raymond G. Bemis
Gorham L. Cross
Ralph E. Ellinwood
J. Baxter Evans
Qmijerst Qibaptet
Zllpba ZBeIta IBM
Established 1837
jfratres in Jfanultate
Benjamin K. Emerson
jftatres in Qnahemia
CLASS OF NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIFTEEN
J. Theodore Cross
David S. Cutler R.
John M. Gaus
Richardson Pratt
CLAss OF NINETEEN HUNDRED AND SIXTEEN
Lewis W. Douglas
Robert S. Gillett
G. Homer Lane
Humphrey F. Redfield
CLAss OF NINETEEN HUNDRED AND SEVENTEEN
Cyril B. Lewis
Thomas H. Nelligan
CLAss OF NINETEEN HUNDRED AND EIGHTEEN
Henry A. Ladd
J. Stuart Meiklejohn
Andrew R. Morehouse
Edward VV. Morehouse
VVilliam G. Rogers
S2
George D. Olds
Arthur E. Ralston
Alexander Robinson, 3d
Leslie T. Webster
Stuart W. Rider
XYilliam H. Tow
Charles F. VYeeden, Jr.
Lambert F. XYhetstone
Hilmar Rauschenbusch
Herbert XY. Schmid
XYhitney XY. Stark
Allan F. Saunders
Clarence H. Traver
james C. XYarren
Clifford J. Young
john Corsa
Levi H. Elwell
john J. Atwater
James E. Bronk
Frederick L. Chapman, Jr
Merrill H. Boynton
William C. Esty, 2d
William Gates, Jr.
Kenneth deF. Carpenter
Augustus W. Bennet
Dwight B. Billings
David D. Bixler
T. Bradford Boardman
Frank E. Bogart, Ir.
I .
gi. np, A
,K '15 5
1
W "
2-, wi . 4 '
E. C, El'
.11 Ill, ,
"I f f?
CLASS OF
CLASS OF
Gamma Chapter
OF
si Tlipsilnn
Established 1841
jfratres in Jfacultate
Thomas C. Esty
Herbert N. Houghton
William J. Newlin
Jfratres in Qnahemia
NINETEEN HUNDRED AND
Hezekiah N. Conant
Clarence P. Curry
George H. Hubner
james N. Smith
NINETEEN HUNDRED AND
Harold L. Gillies
Percy M. Hughes, jr.
Douglas D. Milne
Francis R. Otte
FIFTEEN
SIXTEEN
CLASS 'oF NINETEEN HUNDRED AND SEVENTEEN
Benjamin S. D'Ooge
Hayden D. Robinson
CLASS OF NINETEEN HUNDRED AND EIGHTEEN
Roger A. Brackett
James E. Campbell
J. Worden Elwood
Waldo E. Pratt, Jr.
54
Charles H. Toll
john M. Tyler
Lowell R. Smith
William G. Thayer, Ir.
Paul D. Weathers
C. Baldwin Peck, Jr.
John L'. Reber
Harold E. Sawyer
Robert Mum'oe
Leonard M. Prince
Lucius Ellsworth Thayu'
Sigoumey Thayer
Morris H. XKi1lhns
Charles S. Vfrkht
M.,
fl
,
, K f,
X 1 '
f 1 J. Maurice Clark I
William L. Cowles
Richard H. Bacon
Kenneth W. Banta
Hazen A. Chandler
Henry H. Banta
'Charles H. Bartholomew
.Frank L. Buckley
'Robert I. Brinkerhoff
James T. Fredericks
.Francis W. Getty
CLASS or
CLASS OF
bigma fdlbapter
OF
Eelta kappa QEpsilun
Established 1846 '
jfratres in Jfacultgte
Herbert P. Gallinger
Anson E. Morse
Jfrattes in Qcahemia
NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIFTEEN
Raymond B. Cooper
Arthur P. Goodwin
William C. Hunneman, Ir.
NINETEEN HUNDRED AND SIXTEEN
Wallace M. Leonard, Ir.
CLASS OF NINETEEN HUNDRED AND SEVENTEEN
CLASS or
George Hinman
Frederick B. Marks
NINETEEN HUNDRED AND EIGHTEEN
Arthur R. Holt
Dexter R. Hunneman
W. Duncan MacFarlane
Burton Orrell
56
Clarence E. Sherman
Frederick L. Thompson
Newton M. Kimball
Hollis VV. Plimpton
Homans Robinson
Gardiner H. Rome
Raymond T. Ross
Rufus S. VVoodward, Jr.
T. Homans Parsons
VVilliam L. Thompson
VVilliam C. VVaShbum
Qmberst Chapter
John F. Genung
George C. Bratt, Jr.
G. Douglas Clapperton
Phillips F. Greene
Edward D. Andrews
Scott M. 'Buchanan
Frederick D. Bell
Ralph D. Bristol
Charles Bratt
R. Kenneth Godwin
Edward B. Greene
CLASS OF
CLASS OF
Brita Qkipsnlnn
Establi
jfratres in jfacultate
jfratres in Qcahzmia
NINETEEN HUNDRED AN
Edwin H. Konold
Francis C. Newton
Stuart E. Price
shed 1847
D FIFTEEN
NINETEEN HUNDRED AND SIXTEES
Theodore R. Dayton
Lewis M. Knapp
Radcliffe D. Noyes
CLASS OF NINETEEN HUNDRED AND
CLASS OF NINETEEN HUNDRED AN
Theodore Ivimey
Bradford F. Kimball
Theodore M. Greene
Frederic Mathews
58
SEVENTEEN
D EIGHTEEN
Lawrence H. Parker
Edward A. Yan Yalkenburgh
Arthur H. Washburn
Philip F. XYhitten
Winthrop H. Smith
Alfred H. XYashbum
Cyril F. Norton
Paul H. Plough
XYalter R. Peabody
Owen S. Yxhite
Philip Youtz
Everett W. Fuller
Randolph M. Fuller
Charles B. Ames
Thomas B. Munro
Ralph'B. Ball
Craig P. Cochrane
Herbert R. De Bevoise
Samuel A. Howard
Augustus E. Babcock, jr.
William H. Beach
Qlpha Glbi
ff? HZ 'Z
. ,U or
G 2,
1 '-i. f f
avg A QEIJI QBSI
'A
Established 1864
jfrater in facultate
Robert S. Fletcher
jfratres in Qnahemia
CLASS OF NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIFTEEN
Gordon R. Hall
CLASS OF NINETEEN HUNDRED AND SIXTEEN
Robert M. Proctor
CLASS OF NINETEEN HUNDRED AND
Brooks E. johnson
Carroll B. Low
Edward S. Marples
Alfred D. Mason
Lawrence M. McCague
CLASS OF NINETEEN HUNDRED AND
John B. Brainerd, jr.
Charles H. Durham, jr.
Merwin P. Hall
60
SEVENTREN
EIGHTEEN
Robert A. McCague
james K. Smith
Douglas C. Stearns
Burbank C. Young
Herbert H. Melcher
Lee K. Richardson
Frank K. Sanders, Jr.
Robert XY. XYadhams
Alfred C. Haven, Jr.
Harold F. Johnson
William P. Bigelow
F. Wesley Blair
Harry W. Cole
J. Gerald Cole
Donald E. Hardy
Earle F. Blair
David C. Hale
Raymond P. Bentley
Roy R. Blair
Philip M. Breed
Franklin C. Butler
1Bhi Gfjaptet
J F
, . as O
'W .fn f
49,1 4 f
' f 4 D 1 f
ji ' ,fl rg fn QQ ,- G V '
2,1 a jj .44 l I
it '
Established 1873
fratres in jfacultate
jfrattes in Qnahemia
CLASS OF NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIFTEEN
Louis F. Eaton -
Gerald Keith
Henry S.. Kingman
CLASS OF NINETEEN HUNDRED AND SIXTEEN
CLASS OF NINETEEN HUNDRED AND SEVENTEEN
Charles B. McGowan
CLASS OF NINETEEN HUNDRED AND EIGHTEEN
Paul A. Chase
Jacob P. Estey
Robert P. Kelsey
Owen H. Kenyon
62
George B. Churchill
Robert R. McGowan
Robert S. Moulton
XYebster H. VK'arren
George XY. Washburn
Robert A. Middleton
Walcott E. Sibley
Robert F. Patton
Rudolf W. Schmidt
Philip H. See
VK'illiam W. Yerrall
Warren A. Breckenridge
M. Scott Bulger
Theodore C. Edwards
J. Maxey Jenkins
G. Irving Baily
Carlton L. Bell
Ernest P. Downer
Sheldon B. Goodrich
Richard T. Hobart
Carter L. Goodrich
Etta Zlnta
- , I OF
Esta illibnzta 391
Established 1883
jfratres in Qcahemia
CLASS OF NINETEEN HUNDRED AND F11-'TEEN
john W. Campbell
Gardner P. Eastman
CLASS OF NINETEEN HUNDRED AND SIXTEEN
W. Clark Knowlton
John S. McCloy
CLASS OF NINETEEN HUNDRED AND SEVENTEEN
Paul A. jenkins
John C. McGarrahan
Jay J. M . Scandrett
Frank M. Sleeper
CLASS OF NINETEEN HUNDRED AND EIGHTEEN
Francis C. McGarrahan
Murray S. Moore
64
Dana F. Rollins
William Whiting, 2d
Robert H. Park
Robert M. Smith
Ining S. Spear
Donald E. Thomas
John E. XK'hitcomb
VVadSworth Xfilbar
Palmer C. VVilliams
Edward C. Whiting
Charles W. Cobb
Arthur J. Hopkins
William M. Cfiuy, Jr.
Walton C. Baker
John D. Clark
Franklin P. Hawkes
Harry J. Kohout
Arthur T. Atkinson
Albert W. Bailey
Richard 1. Herbert
Mu Bauman Charge
OF
fi filffllii A '
get at mljktd ZBBUZH Qfljl
,V-.Lai
L W Established 1885
jfratres in jfazultate
Harry VV. Kidder
Jfratres in Qcahemia
CLASS OF ANINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIFTEEN
J. Clifford Hayner
Richard L. Masten
CLASS OF NINETEEN HUNDRED AND SIXTEEN
Henry VV. Barnes, Jr.
Franklin S. Clark
CLASS OF NINETEEN HUNDRED AND
CLASS OF NINETEEN HUNDRED AN
Edward F. Loomis
VVilliam F. Loomis
VVilliam M. Miller
Augustus S. Houghton
Robert E. Hughes
Elmer G. Smith
William R. Taber
66
SEVENIEEN
D EIGHTEEN
Alexander Meiklejohn
Paul C. Phillips
Homer M. Smith
George N. Keeney
Francis L. Moginot
XYilliam H. Tehan
Marmaduke R. Yawger
XY. Clyde Tooker
Arthur F. Tylee
Rawdon M. Van Dyck
wif
WJ, J
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massachusetts Beta
bi !lBeIta Zlllbzta
Frederick B. Loomis
Richard Bancroft
William G. Chapman
Henry F. Anthony
Osborn W. Brown
Philip R. Arnold
Charles W. Chapman, Jr.
' Established 1888
Jfratres in jfacultate
Jfratres in Qcahemia
CLASS OF NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIFTEEN
VV. Gerald Barnes
Kingsley B. Colton
CLASS OF NINETEEN HUNDRED AND S11-:TEEN
Eralsey C. Ferguson
CLASS OF NINETEEN HUNDRED AND SEVENTEEN
Charles J. Jessup
Keith L. Maurer
CLASS OF NINETEEN HUNDRED AND EIGHT!-:EN
W. Carlisle Hobensack
Ralph VV. Myers
68
Ralph W. Mari
james C. Lott
Howard F. R5
J. Freeman Sum
Henry YN. Wi
Clifford E. Piqua'
Daniel G. Redaad
Charles E. Bennett
Arthur H. Elliot
Coleman P. Herrschaft
Joseph N. Lincoln
Ralph L. Mansfield
Theodore E. Brown
Edward W. Morse
George W. Cornell, Jr.
john S. Gillies
Qlpba fbi
CLASS OF
iBbi Gamma Betta
Established 1893
jfratres in Jfacultatz
jfratres in Qcahemia
NINETEEN HUNDRED AND
Arthur J. Manville
Everett F. McTernan
FIFTEEN
CLASS OF NINETEEN HUNDRED AND SIXTEEN
Elton H. Seamans
CLASS OF NINETEEN HUNDRED AND SEVENTEEN
Edward R. Proctor, jr.
Herbert G. Vaughn
Joseph F. V ielbig
CLASS OF NINETEEN HUNDRED AND EIGHTEEN
Charles S. Matthews
70
Howard XV. Douiy
john Mqliias
George K. Riley
Horatio Walm, jx.
Malcolm 0. Yoi
Theodore L. Wiring'
William R. Witley
Thomas M. Ni
Chester G. Sensi
Richard S. Banfield
M. Walker jones
Henry T. Langspecht
Dean Blanchard
Edwin H. Goodridge
Charles H. Hitchcock
Lloyd M. Clark
Robert M. Fisher
Kenneth W. Barber
Roger Bednarski
Hlassarbusetts Qlpba
. f OF
Pb' 33. '
nf. 1 appa sn
4 ? m f
Established 189
jfrater in Jfacultatc
Herbert F. Hamilton
jfrattzs in Qcabemia
CLASS OF NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIFTEEN
Harold A. Lyon joseph L. Snider
Maurice L. McNair Henry C. Swasey
jay B. Tomlinson
CLASS OF NINETEEN HUNDRED AND SIXTEEN
Donald E. Marshall Eugene Stimun
Vliayne P. Stiles Lester C. Ver Nwy
Lee B. Waad
CLASS OF NINETEEN HUNDRED QD SEVENTEEN
John G. Gazley Alfred S. Roi'
Charles E. Maynard Donald E. Temple
Roger C. Perkins
CLASS OF NINETEEN HUNDRED AND EIGHTEEN
Gardner jackson Joseph E. Partenheii
Don H. Kessler
72
Harry F. when
Wilson Macdonald
Charles D. Martin
Herbert G. Johnson
Myers E. Baker
Harmon S. Boyd
Wallace T. Christie
kappa Qlibeta jfratermtp
OF
Qmbetst Qllnllege
Founded in 1909
Jfratres in Zlcahemia
CLASS OF NINET1-:EN HUNDRED AND FIFTEEN
Sidney R. Packard
CLASS OF NINETEEN HUNDRED AND SIXTEEN
CLASS OF N1
CLASS or N
Edwin H. Lutkins
Edmund E. Sawyer
NETEEN HUNDRED AND S1-:VENTEI-:N
Arthur M. Clarke
Chandler T. Jones
INETEEN HUNDRED AND EIGHTEEN
Alvin E. Harris
VYilliam H. Michener
7-L
Raymond S. Perm!
George D. Whitman
Arthur P.Wi
Robert D. Metal
HaroldA.Sdti
Frank T. Olmsti
4
5
,nf
r
39
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George L. Cutton
Stuart F. Heinritz
Robert J. Anderson
George E. Baril
James A. Hawkins
Gaetano R. Aiello
bigma Reita Rho
jfratzrnitp
Qmberst Glnllege
Founded in 1909
Jfrater in jfacultatz
Ralph W. Whipple
Jfratres in Qcabemia
CLASS OF NINETEEN HUNDRED AND F11-TEEN
John E. Lind
CLASS OF NINETEEN HUNDRED AND SIXTEEN
james T. Gilligan
Howard J. Heavens
CLASS OF NINETEEN HUNDRED AND SEVENTEEX
Theodore Kambour
Edward -I. Maloney
CLASS OF NINETEEN HUNDRED AND EIGHTEEN
William H. Mandrey
Conrad Shumway
Laurence H. Young
E. Merrill Root
Eric Shumway
john H. Qxill
" i-..
' -wx
.A 1
, L
W .
'A -qi
Prof. john M. Tyler, '73
Mr. Frank L. Babbott, '78
Prof. Levi H. Elwell, '75
Sidney R. Packard .
Walter R. Agard
Stuart F. Heinritz .
Hollis W. Plimpton .
F
Walter Raymond Agard
Frederick Crosby Allen
IRST DRAWING
SECOND DRAWING
Kenneth Whittemore Banta
Gardiner Pettee Eastman
Everett Webb Fuller
Phillips Foster Greene
FIRST DRAWING
William Goodwin Avirett
Massachusetts Esta
OF
bi Esta Ztiappa
Established 1853
Gfficers
Tllinhergrahuate Qbffiters
FROM NINETEEN HUNDRED
George Leon Cutton
Louis Franklin Eaton
Stuart Franklin Heinritz
FROM NINETEEN HUNDRED
Charles Hamilton Houston
Robert Andrew McCague
George Keyes Ripley
Homer Morgan Smith
. . President
. . . Vice-President
Corresponding Secretary
. . Chairman
. Vice- Chairman
. Recording Secretary
. . Treasurer
AND FIFTEEN
Sidney Raymond Packard
Hollis VVinslow Plimpton
AND FIFTEEN
James Kellum Smith
Joseph Lyons Snider
Edward Alfred Van Vall-:enburgh
George Deming VVhitmore
FROM NINETEEN HUNDRED AND SIXTEEN
Humphrey Fuller Redfield
78
Eugene Stinson
Qmberst Qtbapter ' -' it jf? "11, ,
OF b,hl
X 4 I 1 'L
iff' .
?7BeIta bigma Rho " f-1.i51t522 i
Established 1913 'Q
Gfficers
Walter R. Agard, '15 . . . President
jason Noble Pierce, '02 . . .Vice-President
Craig P. Cochrane, '17 . Secretary-Treasurer
members
CLASS OF NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIFTEEN
Walter Raymond Agard Joseph Lyons Snider
CLASS or NINETEEN HUNDRED AND SIXTEEN
Julius Seelye Bixler Robert Williams Smith
CLASS OF NINETEEN HUNDRED AND SEVENTEEN
Craig Parsons Cochrane
79
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The Beat in fraternities
Ofafj
GD ROBABLY the most prominent feature
Q Kg of the fraternity year is thenestablish-
1ng of the lnterfraternity Con-
K Q ference upon a permanent basis.
During the college year of 1913-14 the Chair-
men of the Rushing Committees decided
upon reorganizing into a more stable body,
composed of a junior and a Senior from each
fraternity, with power over the rushing rules,
the trials for infractions of those rules, and
the general relationships between fraternities.
Largely because of the increased prestige of
this body the success and value of its first
year have been generally recognized. Belts iKaPPa GPSUUU
The year has seen a stronger fraternity attitude toward scholarship. With Psi Upsilon
taking the initiative, several fraternities now initiate no man unless he is passing
in his work. A scholarship chart for each fraternity, showing its general average and
number of "A's," "B's," etc.,- as compared with that of the college, is another
development of the year. Following out the tendency to place intramural athletics on an
interfraternity basis, an lnterfraternity Relay
and an lnterfraternity Spring Track meet
have been inaugurated.
There are two new houses being erected.
both in modifications of the Colonial style
well suited for Amherst buildings. Beta
Theta Pi and Delta Kappa Epsilon are both
building upon their former sites. and both
have erected buildings which are a pride to
Amherst men. Photographs of the old houses
are inserted, following out the OLIO motto:
"Lest we forget." Another familiar bit of
T landscape has vanished with the destruction
of the old :ia A 9 house.
Beta Qliheta Ri
so
bapter oils
X XKKEiEE5B
HAMILTON
COLUMBIA
BRUNONIAN
YALE
AMHERST
HUDSON
BOWDOIN
DARTMOUTH
PENINSULAR
ROCHESTER
WILLIAMS
MIDDLETOWN
KENYON
UNION
CORNELL
PHI KAPPA
JOHNS HOPKINS
MINNESOTA
TORONTO
CHICAGO
MCCILL
WISCONSIN
CALIFORNIA
ILLINOIS
4-4-
Qlpba ?JBeIta bi
Founded at Hamilton College 1832
SKUII of Qtbapters
Hamilton College .
Columbia University .
Brown University .
Yale University . .
Amherst College .
Western Reserve University . .
Bowdoin College .
Dartmouth College .
University of Michigan
University of Rochester
Williams College .
Wesleyan University .
Kenyon College . .
Union College . .
Cornell University .
Trinity College . .
johns Hopkins University
University of Minnesota
University of Toronto
University of Chicago
McGill University .
University of Wisconsin
University of California
University of Illinois .
81
1832
1836
1836
1837
1837
1841
1841
1846
1846
1851
1851
1856
1858
1859
1869
1877
1889
1891
1893
1896
1897
1902
1908
1912
4 I
P. f, '
,Q " - .1 J' ll ,
f 1 S il'
5.1 1, H i.
N" 04: a'9 . 5
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51 Tllipsulnn
THETA
DELTA
BETA
SIGMA
GAMMA
ZETA
LAMBDA
KAPPA
PSI
UPSILON
IOTA
PHI
PI
CHI
B ETA B ETA
ETA
TAU
MU
RHO
OMEGA
EPSILON
OMICRON
DELTA DELTA
PHI
THETA
XI
Founded at Union College 1833
Bull of Qlbapters
Union College ....
New York University .
Yale University . .
Brown University .
Amherst College .
Dartmouth College .
Columbia University .
Bowdoin College .
Hamilton College .
University of Rochester .
Kenyon College . . .
University of Michigan .
Syracuse University . .
Cornell University .
Trinity College . . .
Lehigh University . .
University of Pennsylvania .
University of Minnesota .
University of Vl'isconsin .
University of Chicago .
University of California .
University of Illinois . .
Williams College .....
ZlBeIta kappa Qlipsilnn
Founded at Yale University 1844
Bull nf Qlbapters
Yale University ....
Bowdoin College
Colby College . .
82
IIB
1131
183
ill
IMI
1842
1812
1813
1813
1858
15
IX
1875
1876
ISU
1884
181
181
11
197
IE
1910
1913
ll!
Ili!
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SIGMA
GAMMA
PSI
UPSILON
BETA
ETA
.KAPPA
LAMBDA
PI
IOTA
ALPHA ALPHA
oMICRoN
EPSILON
RHO
TAU
MU
NU
BETA PHI
PHI CHI
PSI PHI
GAMMA PHI
PSI OMEGA
BETA CHI
DELTA CHI
DELTA DELTA
PHI GAMMA
GAMMA BETA
, THETA ZETA
ALPHA CHI
PHI EPSILON
SIGMA TAU
TAU LAMBDA
ALPHA PHI
DELTA KAPPA
TAU ALPHA
SIGMA RHO
DELTA PI
Reita kappa Epsilon-tnntinueh
Amherst College .
Vanderbilt University
University of Alabama
Brown University .
University of North Car
University of Virginia
Miami University .
Kenyon College . .
Dartmouth College .
olina .
Central University of Kentucky
Middlebury College .
University of Michigan
Williams College .
Lafayette College
Hamilton College .
Colgate University .
College of the City of N
University of Rochester
Rutgers College . .
De Pauw University .
Wesleyan University .
Rensselaer Polytechnic
Adelbert College .
Cornell University .
Chicago University .
Syracuse University .
Columbia University .
University of California
Trinity College . .
University of Minnesota
ewv York
Massachusetts Institute of Technology . .
Tulane University .
University of Toronto
University of Pennsylvania .
McGill University .
Leland Stanford, jr., University
University of Illinois .
83
1846
1847
1847
1850
1851
1852
1852
1852
1853
1854
1854
1855
1855
1855
1856
1856
1856
1856
1861
1866
1867
1867
1868
1870
1870
1871
1874
1876
1879
1889
1890
1898
1898
1899
1900
1902
1904
r
R,
-7' "-if To It
8 f l 5 I ll
'3 PL X if 'Ill
39: I-"Q I 1'
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Eelta ikappa Gpsilon-continual:
RHO DELTA University of Wisconsin .... . IK
KAPPA EPSILON University of VVashington . . 1911
OMEGA CHI University of Texas . 1912
Reita Mpsnlnn
Founded at Williams College 1834
Boll of Chapters
WILLIAMS COLLEGE VVilliamstown, Mass. 1834
UNION COLLEGE Schenectady, N. Y. 1838
AMHERST COLLEGE Amherst, Mass. . 1847
HAMILTON COLLEGE Clinton, N. Y. . 1847
ADELBERT COLLEGE Cleveland, Ohio . 1847
COLBY UNIVERSITY XYaterville, Me. . 1850
UNIVERSITY OF ROCHESTER Rochester, N. Y. . 1852
MIDDLEBURY COLLEGE Middlebury. Vt. . 1856
BOWDOIN COLLEGE Brunswick, Me. . 1857
RUTGERS COLLEGE New Brunswick, N. . . 1858
BROWN UNIVERSITY Providence, R. I. . 1861
COLGATE UNIVERSITY Hamilton, N. Y. . 1865
NEW YORK UNIVERSITY New York City . 1865
MIAMI UNIVERSITY Oxford, Ohio . . 1869
CORNELL UNIVERSITY Ithaca, N. Y.. 1869
MARIETTA COLLEGE Marietta, Ohio . 1870
SYRACUSE UNIVERSITY Syracuse, N. Y. . 1873
UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN Ann Arbor, Mich. . 1876
NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY Evanston, Ill. . 1881
HARVARD UNIVERSITY Cambridge, Mass. . 13
WISCONSIN UNIVERSITY Madison, XYis. . 1885
LAFAYETTE COLLEGE Easton, Pa. . . 1885
COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY New York City . 1885
LEHIGH UNIVERSITY South Bethlehem, Pa. 1885
TUFTS COLLEGE Medford, Mass. . 1886
84
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-C . f1Ag 'IW Y
DEPAUW UNIVERSITY
UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA
UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA
MASS. INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA
LELAND STANFORD, JR., UNIVERSITY
MCGILL UNIVERSITY
UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA
, UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO
UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO
OHIO STATE COLLEGE
UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS
UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON
PENNSYLVANIA STATE COLLEGE
IOWA STATE COLLEGE
PI
THETA
MU
ALPHA
PHI
EPSILON
CHI
PSI
NU
IOTA
RHO
XI
Belts: ilripsilnn-nuntinueh
Palo Alto, Cal.
Montreal, Canada
Lincoln, Neb.
Toronto, Canada .
Chicago, Ill. . .
Columbus, Ohio
Urbana, Ill. .
Seattle, Wash.
State College, Pa.
Ames, Iowa .
C!EiJi 195i
Founded at Union College 1841
Qlpbas
Union College . .
Williams College .
Middlebury College .
Wesleyan University .
Hamilton College .
University of Michigan .
Amherst College .
Cornell University .
University of Minnesota .
University of Wisconsin . .
Rutgers College ....
Stevens Institute of Technology .
85
Greencastle, Ind. .
Philadelphia, Pa. .
Minneapolis, Minn.
Boston, Mass. .
Swarthmore, Pa. .
Berkeley, Cal. .
1887
1888
1890
1891
1894
1895
1895
1898
1898
1899
1901
1905
1906
1910
1911
1913
1841
1842
1843
1844
1845
1846
1864
1869
1874
1878
1879
1883
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r..,1:-1. --ff-d- - - - " -'- - - ' - , , H., D
ALPHA DELTA
BETA DELTA
GAMMA DELTA
DELTA DELTA
EPSILON DELTA
ALPHA ZETA DELTA
ZETA
ALPHA
DELTA
EPSILON
ETA
XI
GAMMA
PSI
PHI
RHO
LAMBDA
OMICRON
THETA
IOTA
MU
BETA
NU
CHI
OMEGA
ALPHA CHI
SIGMA
fllibi 195i-cuntinueb
University of Georgia . .
Lehigh University . . .
Leland Stanford, jr., University .
University of California . .
University of Chicago .
University of Illinois . .
Cllbi bi
Founded at Princeton 1824
Boll of Chapters
Franklin and Marshall . .
University of Virginia .
Rutgers College . . .
Hampden-Sydney College
University of Georgia .
Cornell University .
Emory College . .
Lehigh University .
Amherst College .
Lafayette College . .
University of California . .
Yale University ....
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute .
Ohio State University . . .
Stevens Institute of Technology .
Massachusetts Institute of Technolo
University of Texas ....
Dartmouth College ....
Georgia Institute of Technology .
Ohio VVesleyan ....
University of Illinois . . .
86
gy
18W
1894
1895
1895
1898
1912
1855
1859
1867
1867
1867
1868
1869
1872
1873
1874
1875
1877
1878
1883
1883
IK
1892
1112
1934
1911
1912
i ti l, -f a i 2 iss ? -
2-14 1-fkgff K . 1'
fi le? I If kJ7 f Wil-'-. I I RX ri '21, EEI ,
HSL. JW We ' Ewa P Q f."-Q! kg I KN 'it' I-itlkb. XL' ! xii"-' -vi if ffrsf ' 40'
Esta Ulbeta 1
Founded at Miami University 1839
Bull of Ghapters
ALPHA Miami University . . . , 1839
BETA NU University of Cincinnati . , 1841
BETA KAPPA Ohio University .... , 1841
BETA Western Reserve University . . , 1841
GAMMA VVashington and jefferson College . , 1842
DELTA DePauw University .... , 1845
PI Indiana State University . . , 1845
LAMBDA University of Michigan . , 1845
TAU Wabash College . . , 1845
EPSILON Center College . . . , 1847
KAPPA Brown University . . . , 1847
ETA BETA University of North Carolina . , 1852
THETA Ohio Wesleyan University . , 1853
IOTA Hanover College . . , 1853
ALPHA XI Knox College . . . , 1855
OMICRON University of Virginia . 1 1855
PHI ALPHA Davidson College . , 1858
CHI Beloit College . , 1860
PSI Bethany College , 1861
ALPHA BETA University of Iowa . , 1866
ALPHA GAMMA Wittenberg College . . , 1867
ALPHA DELTA Westminster College . . 1867
ALPHA EPSILON Iowa Wesleyan University . , 1868
ALPHA ETA Denison University . . , 1868
LAMBDA IOTA Washington University . l 1869
ALPHA LAMBDA University of Wooster . , 1872
ALPHA NU University of Kansas . I 1872
ALPHA PI University of Wisconsin . , 1873
RHO Northwestern University . , 1873
ALPHA SIGMA Dickinson College . . , 1874
UPSILON Boston University . . A 1876
ALPHA CHI Johns Hopkins University . , 1878
87
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e
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BETA ALPHA
BETA GAMMA
BETA DELTA
SIGMA
BETA ZETA
BETA ETA
PHI
BETA THETA
NU
ALPHA ALPHA
BETA IOTA
BETA LAMBDA
THETA DELTA
BETA OMICRON
ALPHA TAU
ALPHA UPSILON
ALPHA ZETA
ALPHA OMEGA
BETA EPSILON
MU EPSILON
BETA PI
ZETA PHI
BETA CHI
PHI CHI
LAMBDA SIGMA
LAMBDA RHO
BETA SIGMA
BETA PSI
BETA TAU
BETA OMEGA
SIGMA RHO
BETA MU
LAMBDA KAPPA
TAU SIGMA
THETA ZETA
GAMMA PHI
Beta Uliheta i9i-continual:
University of California . . .
Kenyon College . .
Rutgers College ..,.
Cornell University . . .
Stevens Institute of Technology .
St. Lawrence University . .
University of Maine . . .
University of Pennsylvania .
Colgate University . .
Union College . . .
Columbia University . .
Amherst College .
Vanderbilt University
Ohio State University
University of Texas . .
University of Nebraska . .
Pennsylvania State College .
University of Denver .
Dartmouth College .
Syracuse University .
VVesleyar1 University .
University of Minnesota .
University of Missouri
Lehigh University . .
Yale University .....
Leland Stanford, jr., University .
University of Chicago . .
Bowdoin College . .
West Virginia University .
Colorado University . . .
Washington State University .
University of Illinois . . .
Purdue University . . .
Case School of Applied Science .
Iowa State College . . .
University of Toronto .
University of Oklahoma .
SS
1879
1879
1879
1879
1879
1879
1879
13
1881
1881
1881
1883
1884
1885
1885
1888
IX
1888
1889
13
ISN!
193
189
1891
182
194
194
IH
IK
IND
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1112
193
115
1135
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BETA
BETA
BETA
BETA
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XI
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KAPP
NU
XI
PHI
CHI
PSI
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OMICRON DEUTERON
BETA
PI DEUTERON
RHO DEUTERON
NU DEUTERON
MU DEUTERON
GAMMA DEUTERON
THETA DEUTERON
IOTA DEUTERON
TAU DEUTERON
SIGMA DEUTERON
CHI DEUTERON
DELTA DEUTERON
ZETA DEUTERON
Esta Qlibeta Ri-nmtinueh
Colorado School of Mines . . .
Tulane University .... .
University of Oregon . . .
Massachusetts Institute of Technology . .
University of Utah ....
Zllibeta Brita QEbi
Founded at Union College 1848
Boll of Chapters
William and Mary College .
Brown University . . .
Bowdoin College . . .
Harvard University . .
Tufts College . . .
University of Virginia
Hobart College . . .
Lafayette College .
University of Rochester
Hamilton College .
Dartmouth College .
Cornell University .
College of the City of New York . .
Columbia University .
Lehigh University . .
Amherst College .
University of Michigan
Massachusetts Institute of Technology . .
Williams College ..... .
University of Minnesota . . . .
University of Wisconsin . . .
George Washington University .
University of California . . .
McGill University . .
89
1908
1908
1909
1913
1913
1853
1853
1854
1856
1856
1857
1857
1867
1867
1868
1869
1870
1881
1883
1884
1885
1889
1890
1891
1892
1895
1896
1900
1901
C lif "' ? - " Q +1
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: ' ' -J-I- 11 all ' ' L " ' -c M-o 1911
ETA DEUTERON
KAPPA DEUTERON
LAMBDA DEUTERON
XI DEUTERON
OHIO ALPHA
INDIANA ALPHA
INDIANA BETA
WISCONSIN ALPHA
ILLINOIS ALPHA
INDIANA GAMMA
OHIO BETA
INDIANA DELTA
MICHIGAN ALPHA
ILLINOIS BETA
OHIO GAMMA
INDIANA EPSILON
INDIANA ZETA
MISSOURI ALPHA
ILLINOIS DELTA
IOWA ALPHA
GEORGIA ALPHA
GEORGIA BETA
GEORGIA GAMMA
NEW YORK ALPHA
PENNSYLVANIA AL PHA
CALIFORNIA ALPHA
VIRGINIA BETA
VIRGINIA GAMMA
NEBRASKA ALPHA
PENNSYLVANIA BETA
Gbeta ZJBeIta Qllbi-wntinueh
Leland Stanford, jr., University , .
University of Illinois .
University of Toronto
University of XYashington
bi Reita Theta
Founded at Miami University 1848
33aII of Qllbapters
Miami University .
Indiana University .
Wabash College . .
University of Wisconsin
Northwestern University
Butler College . .
Ohio Wesleyan University
Franklin College .
University of Michigan
University of Chicago
Ohio University . .
Hanover College
DePauw University .
Missouri University .
Knox College . .
Iowa Wesleyan University
University of Georgia
Emory College . .
Mercer University
Cornell University .
Lafayette College .
University of California
University of Virginia
Randolph-Macon College
University of Nebraska
Pennsylvania College
90
1913
IN!
1912
1913
1848
184
1850
1857
1859
1859
1860
1860
1864
1865
1868
1868
1868
1870
1871
1871
1871
1871
1872
1872
1873
1873
1873
1874
1875
1875
I 'Nr' f 'S' If T? pail- 'iff
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PENNSYLVANIA GAMMA
TENNESSEE ALPHA
ALABAMA ALPHA
ILLINOIS ZETA
ALABAMA BETA
PENNSYLVANIA DELTA
VERMONT ALPHA
PENNSYLVANIA EPSILON
MISSOURI BETA
MINNESOTA ALPHA
IOWA BETA
KANSAS ALPHA
TENNESSEE BETA
OHIO ZETA
TEXAS BETA
PENNSYLVANIA ZETA
NEW YORK BETA
MAINE ALPHA
NEW YORK DELTA
NEW HAMPSHIRE ALPHA
NORTH CAROLINA BETA
KENTUCKY ALPHA DELTA
MASSACHUSETTS ALPHA
TEXAS GAMMA
NEW YORK EPSILON
VIRGINIA ZETA
PENNSYLVANIA ETA
MASSACHUSETTS BETA
RHODE ISLAND ALPHA
LOUISIANA ALPHA
MISSOURI GAMMA
CALIFORNIA BETA
INDIANA THETA
ILLINOIS ETA
OHIO ETA
OHIO THETA
WASHINGTON ALPHA
3913i Belta Theta-tuntinueh
Wfashington and Jefferson College . .
Vanderbilt University . .
University of Alabama . .
Lombard University . . .
Alabama Polytechnic Institute
Allegheny College . . .
University of Vermont .
Dickinson College .
VVestminster College . .
University of Minnesota .
Iowa State University
University of Kansas .
University of the South A .
Ohio State University .
University of Texas . . .
University of Pennsylvania .
Union College . . .
Colby College . .
Columbia University . .
Dartmouth College . . .
University of North Carolina .
Central University V . . .
Williams College . .
Southwestern University . .
Syracuse University . . .
Washington and Lee University
Lehigh University . . .
Amherst College . .
Brown University .
Tulane University . . .
Washington University . .
Leland Stanford, jr., University
Purdue University . . .
University of Illinois . . .
Case School of Applied Science
University of Cincinnati . .
University of Washington .
91
1875
1876
1877
1878
1879
1879
1879
1880
1880
1881
1882
1882
1883
1883
1883
1883
1883
1884
1884
1884
1885
1885
1886
1886
1887
1887
1887
1888
1889
1889
1891
1891
1893
1893
1896
11898
1900
If
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KENTUCKY EPSILON
COLORADO ALPHA
QUEBEC ALPHA
1BIJi Zi'BeIta 1ZCbeta-cnntinuzb
Kentucky State College .
University of Colorado .
McGill University . .
GEORGIA DELTA Georgia School of Technology . .
PENNSYLVANIA THETA Pennsylvania State College
ONTARIO ALPHA
KANSAS BETA
OREGON ALPHA
COLORADO BETA
University of Toronto .
Washburn College .
University of Oregon .
Colorado College . .
NORTH DAKOTA ALPHA University of North Dakota
IOWA GAMMA
ALPHA
THETA
LAMBDA
NU
XI
OMICRON
PI
TAU
OMEGA
ALPHA DEUTERON
BETA DEUTERON
PSI
GAMMA DEUTERON
ZETA DEUTERON
THETA DEUTERON
ZETA
NU DEUTERON
OMICRON DEUTERON
BETA
Iowa State College . .
bn Gamma Brita
Founded at VVashingtOn and jefferson College 1848
Roll of Chapters
Washington and Jefferson College
University of Alabama . .
DePauw University .
Bethel College . .
Pennsylvania College .
University of Virginia .
Allegheny College .
Hanover College . .
Columbia University . . .
Illinois VVesleyan University .
Roanoke College . .
VVabash College ....
Knox College ....
Washington and Lee University
Ohio VVesleyan University .
Indiana State University .
Yale University . . .
Ohio State University .
University of Pennsylvania .
92
191
IND
192
192
lil
Ill
1910
1912
1913
1913
1913
1848
1855
1856
1856
1858
189
IH
151
IX
11
IK
11
If
11
If
1871
1875
1878
1881
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SIGMA DEUTERON
SIGMA
LAMBDA DEUTERON
BETA CHI
ZETA PHI
THETA PSI
KAPPA NU
GAMMA PHI
IOTA MU
RHO CHI
MU SIGMA
KAPPA TAU
BETA MU
PI IOTA
NU EPSILON
TAU ALPHA
MU
CHI
ALPHA CHI
CHI IOTA
LAMBDA NU
OMEGA NU
CHI MU
SIGMA TAU
DELTA NU
SIGMA NU
TAU DEUTERON
CHI DEUTERON
PI RHO
CHI EPSILON
LAMBDA IOTA
ALPHA ALPHA
LAMBDA SIGMA
e
iBbi gamma Eelta-rnntinueh
University of Kansas . . .
Bucknell University .
Wooster University . .
University of California .
Lafayette College .
Wittenberg College .
Denison University .
Lehigh University .
William Jewel College .
Colgate University .
Cornell University ....
Pennsylvania State College . .
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Richmond College .... A
University of Minnesota . . .
University of Tennessee .
johns Hopkins University .
Worcester Polytechnic Institute .
University of New York
Trinity College . . .
University of Wisconsin .
Union University .
Amherst College .
University of Illinois . .
University of Nebraska .
University of Maine . .
University of Missouri .
University of Washington
Dartmouth College . .
University of Syracuse .
University of Texas .
Adelbert College .
Brown University .
University of Chicago .
Purdue University .
University of Michigan
Leland Stanford, Jr., University .
' 93
.
.
.
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1
1882
1882
1882
1882
1883
1884
1885
1886
1886
1887
1888
1888
1889
1890
1890
1890
1890
1891
1892
1893
1893
1893
1893
1897
1898
1899
1899
1900
1901
1901
1901
1902
1902
1902
1902
1902
1903
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ALPHA IOTA
XI ZETA
EPSILON OMICRON
IOTA
PENNSYLVANIA
ibbi gamma Bzlta-cuntinueh
University of Iowa ....
Colorado College .
University of Oregon .
Williams College . . .
1913i kappa 395i
e 1852
Founded at Washington and jefferson Colleg
ALPHA
VIRGINIA ALPHA
VIRGINIA BETA
PENNSYLVANIA
PENNSYLVANIA
PENNSYLVANIA
PENNSYLVANIA
PENNSYLVANIA
OHIO ALPHA
ILLINOIS ALPHA
INDIANA ALPHA
ILLINOIS BETA
OHIO BETA
IOWA ALPHA
BETA
GAM MA
EPSILON
ZETA
ETA
NEW YORK ALPHA
PENNSYLVANIA
INDIANA BETA
TH ETA
NEW YORK GAMMA
MICHIGAN ALPHA
KANSAS ALPHA
PENNSYLVANIA
IOTA
MARYLAND ALPHA
OHIO DELTA
WISCONSIN GAMMA
NEW YORK BETA
NEW YORK EPSILON
MINNESOTA BETA
PENNSYLVANIA
KAPPA
WEST VIRGINIA ALPHA
3KnII uf Glhapters
Washington and jeliferson College .
University of Virginia . . .
Washington and Lee University .
Allegheny College . . .
Bucknell University . . .
Pennsylvania College .
Dickinson College . . .
Franklin and Marshall College
Ohio Wesleyan University
Northwestern University .
DePauw University . .
University of Chicago .
Wittenberg College .
University of Iowa .
Cornell University . .
Lafayette College . .
Indiana State University .
Columbia University . .
University of Michigan .
University of Kansas .
University of Pennsylvania .
Johns Hopkins University
Ohio State University .
Beloit College . .
Syracuse University .
Colgate University . .
University of Minnesota .
Swarthmore College . .
University of VVest Virginia .
94
1907
1913
1911
1913
1852
1853
1855
1855
1855
1855
1859
1860
1861
1864
1865
1865
1866
1867
1869
159
IE
1872
1876
1876
1877
1879
LH
1181
13
IW
11
I1
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CALIFORNIA BETA
NEBRASKA ALPHA
MASSACHUSETTS ALPHA
NEW HAMPSHIRE ALPHA
NVISCONSIN ALPHA
CALIFORNIA GAMMA
INDIANA DELTA
TENNESSEE DELTA
RHODE ISLAND ALPHA
TEXAS ALPHA
ILLINOIS GAMMA
OHIO EPSILON
MISSOURI ALPHA
PENNSYLVANIA LAMBDA
iBIJi iliappa Rst-cuntinueh
Leland Stanford, Ir., University .
University of Nebraska . . .
Amherst College . . .
Dartmouth College . .
University of Wisconsin .
University of California .
Purdue University . .
Vanderbilt University .
Brown University .
Texas University . . .
University of Illinois . . .
Case School of Applied Science
Missouri University . . .
Pennsylvania State College .
Iowa State College . . .
bi Esta ikappa
Founded at William and Mary College 17
IOWA BETA
ALPHA VIRGINIA
ALPHA CONNECTICUT
ALPHA MASSACHUSETTS
ALPHA NEW HAMPSHIRE
ALPHA NEW YORK
ALPHA MAINE
ALPHA RHODE ISLAND
BETA OF CONNECTICUT
GAMMA OF CONNECTICUT
ALPHA OF OHIO
ALPHA OF VERMONT
ALPHA OF ALABAMA
BETA OF MASSACHUSETTS
BETA OF NEW YORK
BETA OF OHIO
GAMMA OF OHIO
GAMMA OF MASSACHUSETTS
QBffiniaI Bull uf Qlibaptets
William and Mary .
Yale University .
Harvard University .
Dartmouth . .
Union . . .
Bowdoin . . .
Brown University .
Trinity ....
Wesleyan University . .
Western Reserve University
University of Vermont .
University of Alabama
Amherst ....
New York University .
Kenyon . K . . .
Marietta
Williams .
95
1892
1895
1895
1896
1897
1899
1901
1901
1902
1904
1904
1907
1908
1912
1913
1776
1780
1781
1787
1817
1825
1830
1845
1845
1847
1848
1851
1853
1858
1858
1860
1864
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iiBiJi Beta iliappa-:untinueh
BETA OF VERMONT
GAMMA OF NEW YORK
DELTA OF NEW YORK
ALPHA OF NEW JERSEY
EPSILON OF NEW YORK
ZETA OF NEW YORK
ETA OF NEW YORK
THETA OF NEW YORK
ALPHA OF PENNSYLVANIA
BETA OF PENNSYLVANIA
IOTA OF NEW YORK
ALPHA OF INDIANA
ALPHA OF KANSAS
GAMMA OF PENNSYLVANIA
ALPHA OF ILLINOIS
ALPHA OF MINNESOTA
DELTA OF PENNSYLVANIA
DELTA OF MASSACHUSETTS
BETA OF MAINE
ALPHA OF IOWA
ALPHA OF MARYLAND
ALPHA OF NEBRASKA
EPSILON OF PENNSYLVANIA
KAPPA OF NEW YORK
EPSILON OF MASSACHUSETTS
ALPHA OF CALIFORNIA
BETA OF ILLINOIS
DELTA OF OHIO
ZETA OF PENNSYLVANIA
BETA OF NEW JERSEY
LAMBDA OF NEW YORK
MU OF NEW YORK
BETA OF INDIANA
ALPHA OF WISCONSIN
ETA OF PENNSYLVANIA
ALPHA OF MISSOURI
ALPHA OF TENNESSEE
ZETA OF MASSACHUSETTS
Middlebury . . .
College of the City of New York .
Columbia University .
Rutgers ....
Hamilton . .
Hobart . . .
Colgate University .
Cornell University .
Dickinson . .
Lehigh University .
University of Rochester
DePauw University .
University of Kansas .
Lafayette . . .
Northwestern University
University of Minnesota
University of Pennsylvania
Tufts ....
Colby ....
State University of Iowa
Johns Hopkins University
University of Nebraska
Swarthmore . . .
Syracuse University .
Boston University .
University of California
University of Chicago .
University of Cincinnati
Haverford . . .
Princeton University .
St. Lawrence University
Vassar ....
Wabash ....
University of Wisconsin
Allegheny . . .
University of Missouri
Vanderbilt University .
Smith ....
96
1867
1867
1869
1869
1870
1871
1878
1883
1887
1887
1887
1889
1889
1889
1889
1892
1892
1892
1895
1895
1895
1895
1895
1895
1898
1898
1898
1898
1898
1898
1898
1898
1898
1898
1901
1111
191
1904
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iBbi Beta kappa-:untinueh
ETA OF MASSACHUSETTS Wellesley ....
THETA OF MASSACHUSETTS
BETA OF CALIFORNIA
ALPHA OF NORTH CAROLINA
ALPHA OF TEXAS
BETA OF COLORADO
EPSILON OF OHIO
BETA OF MARYLAND
ZETA OF OHIO
ETA OF OHIO
ALPHA OF MICHIGAN
GAMMA OF ILLINOIS
THETA OF PENNSYLVANIA
BETA OF IOWA
BETA OF VIRGINIA
ALPHA OF LOUISIANA
ALPHA OF WEST VIRGINIA
THETA OF OHIO
GAMMA OF INDIANA
GAMMA OF VIRGINIA
IOTA OF OHIO
BETA OF WISCONSIN
GAMMA OF WISCONSIN
BETA OF MINNESOTA
GAMMA OF CALIFORNIA
ALPHA OF GEORGIA
BETA OF MISSOURI
ALPHA OF WASHINGTON
IOTA OF MASSACHUSETTS
Mount Holyoke . . .
Leland Stanford, Ir., University
University of North Carolina
University of Texas . .
Colorado . . .
Ohio State University .
Goucher ....
Oberlin .....
Ohio Wesleyan University .
University of Michigan .
University of Illinois . .
Franklin and Marshall
Iowa ....
University of Virginia . .
Tulane University . .
University of West Virginia
Denison University . .
Indiana University . .
Washington and Lee University
Miami University . . .
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Carleton . ,. .
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University of Georgia .
Washington University .
University of Washington .
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ALPHA OF NORTH DAKOTA University of North Dakota . .
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ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY . . .
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NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY .
WISCONSIN STATE UNIVERSITY .
OHIO WESLEYAN UNIVERSITY . .
YALE UNIVERSITY .....
GEORGE WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY .
INDIANA UNIVERSITY ....
VIRGINIA UNIVERSITY .
'BELOIT UNIVERSITY .
BROWN UNIVERSITY .
HARVARD UNIVERSITY . .
IOWA STATE COLLEGE . .
MISSOURI STATE UNIVERSITY .
PENNSYLVANIA UNIVERSITY .
TEXAS STATE UNIVERSITY .
SYRACUSE UNIVERSITY .
COLORADO UNIVERSITY .
COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY . . .
DARTMOUTH COLLEGE ....
KANSAS STATE UNIVERSITY ....
NORTH DAKOTA STATE UNIVERSITY .
OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY . . .
WESLEYAN UNIVERSITY .
PRINCETON UNIVERSITY .
STANFORD UNIVERSITY .
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE .
WILLIAMS COLLEGE . .
ALBION COLLEGE . .
CARLETON COLLEGE . .
CORNELL UNIVERSITY . . .
KNOX COLLEGE .....
WESTERN RESERVE UNIVERSITY .
ALLEGHENY COLLEGE . . .
AMHERST COLLEGE .....
COLGATE UNIVERSITY ....
IOWA STATE TEACHERS COLLEGE .
UNIVERSITY OF OKLAHOMA ....
WASHINGTON AND LEE UNIVERSITY . .
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1115132 fear in "9tatistics"
HE feature of the year in this department is easily the work of the Alumni Council ad
the Alumni Secretary, Mr. Frederick S. Allis, '93. Fairly convincing evidence of lk
SAMQ results already achieved was furnished by the joint dinner of the New York Alumi
and the Council on the 24th of February, at which over eight hundred alumni, unda-
graduates, and friends of the college were present. Of equal significance in bringing the alumni
into closer touch with the college was the April trip of Mr. Allis and the President to the variom
western associations. Two attractive booklets have been prepared to aid the alumni in interes-
ing preparatory school men in the college. Altogether the year has seen marked progress and
perfecting of system along the lines of action laid down by Mr. Allis last year.
With the entrance of the Class of 1918, the B. S. degree departed this life. Incidentally, tim
science requirements for B. A. are as great or greater than those of the majority of liberal collqes.
Although not much above a hundred numerically, 1918 is one of the strongest classes in some
time. The midyear examinations caused comparatively little havoc in February. As we go to
press there comes the news of the untimely death in an automobile accident of Clarence Leon
Stanton, 1918. His loss is deeply mourned by his Class, his Fraternity, and his College.
The remarkable list of Sunday evening speakers under the auspices of the Christian Associa-
tion has been a feature of the year. The Board of Public Exhibitions has inaugurated the
practice of bonding the managers of the Musical Clubs and Dramatics, a business method wi
it is hoped will be taken up by other managerships. The Honor System Committee, partly in
response to the general desire for the extension of the scope of the Honor System, has had Hula'
consideration a revision of the constitution of that body. A new scholarship, named after Hal.
Addison Brown, '52, amounting to two hundred dollars and given to that senior Calready on the
scholarship listj who has the highest standing in his class has been awarded for the first tim.
A handsome statue of Henry Ward Beecher of the class of 1834 has been set up near the 0c 5
a remarkable representation of the faith of Noah Webster had previously been erected at k
end of the Avenue of Maples, through the generosity of Richard Billings. '97. Commencemmt
was marked by the speech of Hon. William H. Taft, guest of honor at the Alumni Dinner, am
an unusually brilliant lawn fete.
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MORRIS HOLLIDAY WILLIAMS
RAWDON MYERS VAN DYCK
WILLIAM WOOD YERRALL .
LEONARD MORTON PRINCE .
JAMES CAREY WARREN .
GAETANO RUDOLPH AIELLO, 2 A P
PHILIP RHODES ARNOLD, qw A 6
ARTHUR THOMAS ATKINSON, 9 A X
AUGUSTUS EMERSON BABCOCK, JR., X
ALBERT WARE BAILEY, 9 A X
KENNETH WARHAM BARBER, fi- K XII
WILLIAM HOWARD BEACH, X II'
ROGER EDWARD BEDNARSKI, fb K if
RAYMOND GUILFORD BEMIS, A A fb
AUGUSTUS WITSCHIEF BENNET, if T
GEORGE BENNEYAN
RAYMOND PALM BENTLEY, X qv
DWIGHT BRINKERHOFF BILLINGS, 'Il T
DAVID DANIEL BIXLER, III T
ROY RICHARDSON BLAIR, X 1-Ia
THOMAS BRADFORD BOARDMAN, III T
A
Gffirers
jllllemhers
Hoboken, N. J.
Providence, R. I.
Mt. Holly, N. J.
Rochester, N. Y.
Worcester, Mass.
Windsor, Conn.
Rochester, N. Y.
South Deerfield, Mass.
Brookline, Mass.
New York, N. Y.
White Plains, N. Y.
Brookline, Mass.
Amherst, Mass.
Hanover, Pa.
Amherst, Mass.
Hartford, Conn.
103
. ' President
. Vice-President
. Secretary
Treasurer
Choregus
104 Morris Pratt Memorial Dormitory
21 South College
5 South College
22 South College
11 South College
32 North College
5 North College
A North College
110 Morris Pratt Memorial Dormitory
304 Morris Pratt Memorial Dormitory
15 North College
11 North College
A South College
6 North College
12 Northampton Road
15 Amity Street
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FRANK E. BOGART, JR., XII T
ROGER ARNOLD BRACKETT, III T
JOHN BLISS BRAINERD, JR., X 'Il
CHARLES HENRY BRATT, A T
PHILIP MUNRO BREED, X fb
ROBERT JORIS BRINKERHOFF, A K E
FRANKLIN COIT BUTLER, X CI:
JAMES ELLSWORTH CAMPBELL, XII T
CHARLES CHANIN
CHARLES WESLEY CHAPMAN, JR., dv A 6
PAUL ADDISON CHASE, X :Iv
WALLACE THURSTON CHRISTIE, K 9
VAHAN ATDASHES CHURUKIAN
GEORGE WASHINGTON CORNELL, JR., qv 1' A
GORHAM LAMONT CROSS, A A 11:
CHARLES HENRY DURHAM, JR., X wif
RALPH EVERETT ELLINWOOD, A A fb
JOHN WORDEN ELWOOD, XI' T
JACOB POOR ESTEY, X fb
JAMES BAXTER EVANS, A A fb
JAMES TORREY FREDERICKS, A K E
JOHN B. GARRETT
FRANCIS WILLIAM GETTY, A K E
JOHN SINCLAIR GILLIES, o 1' A
RICHARD KENNETH GODWIN, A T
CARTER LYMAN GOODRICH, B 9 II
EDWARD BARROWS GREENE, A T
THEODORE MEYER GREENE, A T
MERWIN PORTER HALL, X III
ALVIN EMERSON HARRIS, K 9
ALFRED COLES HAVEN, JR., X III
RICHARD JOHN HERBERT, 9 A X
WILKINS CARLISLE HOBENSACK, :Iv A 9
ARTHUR RATCLIFFE HOLT, A K E
AUGUSTUS SHERRILL HOUGHTON, 9 A X
ROBERT EMMETT HUGHES, 9 A X
DEXTER RICHARDS HUNNEMAN, A K E
GARDNER JACKSON, fb K III
Detroit, Mich.
Brattleboro, Vt.
Brookline, Mass.
Grand Rapids, Mich.
Lynn, Mass.
West Springfield, Mass.
Providence, R. I.
Indiana, Pa.
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Waterloo, Ia.
Brattleboro, Vt.
Paterson, N. J.
Paterson, N. J.
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Utica, N. Y.
Schenectady, N. Y.
Bisbee, Ariz.
Rochester, N. Y.
Brattleboro, Vt.
Columbus, Ohio
Bradford, Pa.
St. Laurens, S. C.
Winchester, Mass.
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Amherst, Mass.
Plainfield, N. J.
Upper Montclair, N. J.
Oberlin, Ohio
Brookline, Mass.
Shelburne Falls, Mass.
Lake Forest, Ill.
Auburn, N. Y.
Ivyland, Pa.
Newton Center, Mass.
Tarrytown-on-Hudson,
Montclair, N. J.
Brookline, Mass.
Colorado Springs, Colo
104
26 South College
103 Morris Pratt Memorial Dormitory
29 South College
31 South College
207 Morris Pratt Memorial Dormitory
27 South Collqe
26 South College
12 North College
19 Main Street
13 South College
101 Morris Pratt Memorial Dormitory
1 Vlbodside Avenue
31 Amity Street
23 North College
205 Morris Pratt Memorial Dormitory
30 South College
A A 4: House
5 North College
101 Morris Pratt Memorial Dormitory
27 North College
12 North College
1 North College
112 Morris Pratt Memorial Dormitory
23 North College
23 Lincoln Avenue
311 Morris Pratt Memorial Dormitory
23 South College
23 South Coll?
X if Lodge
183 South Pleasant Street
22 South Coll?
17 South Collqe
2 South College
21 South College
8 South COIQ
17 South Colley
15 Amity Street
21 North Collqe
1' ,N l WR'
1 1 A
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91
WILLIAM RUSSELL TABER, 6 A X
LUCIUS ELLSWORTH THAYER, XII 'I'
SIGOURNEY THAYER, X11 T
WILLIAM LADD THOMPSON, A K E
WINFRED CLYDE TOOKER, 9 A X
CLARENCE HOFFMAN TRAVER, A A 111
ARTHUR FRANCIS TYLEE, 9 A X
RAWDON MYERS VAN DYCK, 9 A X
JAMES CAREY WARREN, A A fb
WILLIAM CROCKER WASHBURN, A K E
HAROLD PALMER WRTJEN
HARRY FAIRCHILD WHEELER, if K if
OWEN SHEPPARD WHITE, A 'I'
EDWARD CHAPIN WHITING, B 9 II
MORRIS HOLLIDAY WILLIAMS, if T
CHARLES SILLIMAN WRIGHT, XII T
WILLIAM WOOD YERRALL, X fb
CLIFFORD JOHN YOUNG, A A :Iv
PHILIP NEWELL YOUTZ, A T
ROBERT LESLIE HUNTER, fb A 9
ALLEN JAMES MCDONALD, Z if
Auburn, N. Y.
Portsmouth, N. H.
Southboro, Mass.
Lawrenceville, N. J.
Riverhead, N. Y.
Red Hook, N. Y.
Worcester, Mass.
Newark, N. J.
New Haven, Conn.
Salem, Mass.
Pawtucket, R. I.
Ocean Grove, N. J.
New York, N. Y.
Holyoke, Mass.
17 South CHQ
312 Morris Pratt Memorial
312 Morris Pratt Memorial
Snel Sl
305 Morris Pratt Memorial
309 Morris Pratt Memorial Doriy
402 Morris Pratt Memorial Doriy
C South Cl
102 Morris Pratt Memorial
14 North Cdg
108 Morris Pratt Memorial
27 South Cl
104 Morris Pratt Memorial Dal
3 Northampton li
Columbus, Ohio . 27 North Cl
Ceredo, W. Va. 7 Saud Cl
Springfield, Mass. 25 South Cl
Elmira, N. Y. 205 Morris Pratt Memorbl
Auburn, N. Y. D North fu
jfnrmer Members
MARSHALL ELBERT ROBERTS, A 'r ROLLH uI'ILLIAl Rai
lin Memoriam
Bleh Qptll 6 1915
Rouzrr Wunl i
Qlllarence Elena Qtantnn, if T
106
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J'-C - P110 'l9l1
THEODORE LEWIS WIDMAYER
MORTIMER EISNER . . .
ROBERT MUNROE . . .
FRANK LANVRENCE BUCKLEY
CARROLL BLAKELY LOW .
HENRY FRANKLIN ANTHONY, fb A 9
BERNARD LOUIS BAER
GEORGE IRVING BAILY, B 9 H
MYERS ELLIOTT BAKER, K 9
RALPH BLACKMARR BALL, X KI'
HENRY HYDE BANTA, A K E
GEORGE EVERETT BARIL, E A P
CHARLES HENRY BARTHOLOMEW, A K E
CARLTON LEROY BELL, B 9 II
FREDERICK DRAKE BELL, A T
EARLE FRANKLIN BLAIR, X 11:
HARMON SHOVE BOYD, K 9
RALPH BUFFUM BRISTOL, A T
QBffirm:5
Members
Providence, R. I.
New York, N.-Y.
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Great Neck, N. Y.
Corning, 'NQ Y.
Syracuse, N. Y.
Holyoke, Mass.
Binghamton, N. Y.
Attleboro, Mass.
New York, N. Y.
Amherst, Mass.
Woodbury, Conn.
Glen Ridge, N. J.
109
. Presideni
. Vice-President
. ' Secretary
Treasurer
Choregus
Q A 9 House
201 Morris Pratt Memorial Dormitory.
209 Morris Pratt Memorial Dormitory
K 9 House
Physics Laboratory
,- A K E House
E A P House
A K E House
211 Morris Pratt Memorial Dormitory
A T House
12 Northampton Road
K 6 House
A T House
I ,AN
XX
THEODORE EVERETT BROWN, fb I' A
FRANK LAWRENCE BUCKLEY, A K E
KENNETH DEFOREST CARPENTER, III T
JOHN DODGE CLARK, 9 A X
LLOYD MONTGOMERY CLARK, fb K if
ARTHUR MERRIAM CLARKE, K 9
CRAIG PARSONS COCHRANE, X III
MORRIS ALBERT COPELAND
DAVID RANKIN CRAIG, JR., A A 11:
HERBERT RAPELYEA DEBEVOISE, X if
BENJAMIN STANTON D'OOGE, X11 T
ERNEST PAGE DOWNER, B 9 II
MORTIMER EISNER
HENRY INGERTON FILLMAN
ROBERT MILLER FISHER, fb K III
WALTER POTTER FRAKER, A A Q
JOHN GEROW GAZLEY, fi: K if
JAMES EVERETT GLANN
ELBRIDGE ALVAH GOODHUE
SHELDON BAKER GOODRICH, B 9 II
DAVID CLENDON HALE, X cb
FRANKLIN POWERS HAWKES, 9 A X
JAMES ALEXANDER HAWKINS, 2 A P
GEORGE HINMAN, A K E
RICHARD TOWNLEY HOBART, B 9 II
SAMUEL ANTON HOWARD, JR., X 'If
THEODORE IVIMEY, A T
PAUL ALEXANDER JENKINS, B 9 H
CHARLES JAMES JESSUP, 4: A 9
BROOKS ELMO JOHNSON, X 'If
CHANDLER TRACY JONES, K 9
THEODORE KAMBOUR, E A P
BRADFORD FISHER KIMBALL, A T
HARRY JOSEPH KOHOUT, 9 A X
NORMAN RHODE LEMCKE, A A fb
CYRIL BLACKMORE LEWIS, A A fb
EDWARD FRANCIS LOOMIS, 9 A X
WILLIAM FITCH LOOMIS, 9 A X
Worcester, Mass.
Holyoke, Mass.
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Boston, Mass.
Wellesley, Mass.
Rochester, N. Y.
Rochester, N. Y.
Boston, Mass.
Newark, N. J.
Ypsilanti, Mich.
Montrose, Pa.
Newark, N. J.
New York, N. Y.
Indiana, Pa.
Duluth, Minn.
White Plains, N. Y.
Cortland, N. Y.
Haydenville, Mass.
Taunton, Mass.
Cambridge, Mass.
North Attleboro, Mass.
Springfield, Mass.
St. Johnsbury, Vt.
Upper Montclair, N. J.
Rutland, Vt.
New York, N. Y.
Chicago, Ill.
Brooklyn, N. Y.
New Rochelle, N. Y.
Orleans, Mass.
Plymouth, N. H.
Amherst, Mass.
Amherst, Mass.
New York, N. Y.
Ypsilanti, Mich.
Haydenville, Mass.
Bedford, Mass.
110
1 1 1 Morris
308 Morris
306 Morris
201 Morris
204 Morris
407 Morris
405 Morris
409 Morris
206 Morris
307 Morris
Ol'AHolz
6Northamptoali
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9AXHl
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Pratt Memorial Dorling
Pratt Memorial Dormkcry
8SpringSt:reet
AAQM
Pratt Memorial Dordmry
lftliome
NashBlock
Pratt Memorial Dorminry
Pratt Memorial Dormitcry
Oli!-lone
AAiHoae
OK!!-lose
Pratt Memorial Dormimry
19 Ma.inStreet
Pratt Memorial Dormitory
XQAna
1SAmityStnet
ZAIHOQ
AKIHOQ
Pratt Memorial Dormituy
Pratt Memorial Dania:-y
Atlimi
3 Northampmaki
Mount Dam
Pratt Memorial Doriy
KBHOQ
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25 VVoodside Avi
3ParsomSu'm
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CARROLL BLAKELY LOW, X X11
LANVRENCE MINOT MCCAGUE, X III
JOHN COOLEY lWCGARRAHAN, B 9 H
CHARLES BATCHELOR MCGOWAN, X Q
ROYAL EDMUND MCGOWAN
EDWARD JAMES MALONEY, 2 A P
ERIC HENRY MARKS
FREDERIC BLISS MARKS, A K E
EDWARD STUART MARPLES, X II'
ALFRED DEWITT MASON, X RI'
KEITH LANDON MAURER, Q A 9
CHARLES EDGAR MAYNARD, Q K III
HERBERT HENRY MELCHER, X XII
ROBERT DRAYTON METCALF, K 9
ROBERT AVERY MIDDLETON, X Q
WILLIAM MELBOURNE MILLER, 9 A X
FRANCIS LOUIS MOGINOT, 9 A X
EDWARD WILSON MORSE, Q I' A
ROBERT MUNROE, if T
THOMAS HAYES NELLIGAN, A A Q
CYRIL FRANCIS NORTON, A T
ROGER CONANT PERKINS, Q K if
PAUL HOWARD PLOUGH, A T
EDWARD ROSS PROCTOR, JR., Q 1' A
HILMAR RAUSCHENBUSCH, A A Q
LEE KING RICHARDSON, X X11
HAYDEN DUTTON ROBINSON, II' T
GARDINER HASBROUCK ROME, A K E
ALFRED SHERWOOD ROMER, Q K if
EDWARD MERRILL ROOT, 2 A P
RAYMOND THOMAS ROSS, A K E
FRANK KNIGHT SANDERS, JR., X XII
JAY JOHNSON MORROW SCANDRETT, B 9 II
HERBERT WILLIAM SCHMID, A A Q
ERIC SHUMWAY, E A P
WALCOTT ELLIS SIBLEY, X Q
FRANK MACDONALD SLEEPER, B 9 II
HAROLD ADDISON SMITH, K 9
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Omaha, Neb.
Cohoes, N. Y.
Steubenville, Ohio
Youngstown, N. Y.
Amherst, Mass.
New York, N. Y.
Newtonville, Mass.
Evanston, Ill.
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Northampton, Mass.
Northampton, Mass.
Mt. Vernon, N. Y.
Norwood, Mass.
Utica, N. Y.
Croton-on-Hudson, N. Y.
St. Louis, Mo.
Worcester, Mass.
Oakmont, Pa.
Amherst, Mass.
Northampton, Mass.
Manchester, Vt.
New York, N. Y.
Ridgefield Park, N. J.
Rochester, N. Y.
Alpena, Mich.
Brownsville, Pa.
Brooklyn, N. Y.
White Plains, N. Y.
Somerville, Mass.
Crawfordsville, Ind.
New York, N. Y.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Providence, R. I.
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Wellesley Hills, Mass.
Wellesley, Mass.
Springfield, Mass.
111
X if Lodge
306 Morris Pratt Memorial Dormitory
202 Morris Pratt Memorial Dormitory
X Q Annex
407 Morris Pratt Memorial Dormitory
12 South Prospect Street
301 Morris Pratt Memorial Dormitory
A K E House
206 Morris Pratt Memorial Dormitory
X XII Lodge
Q A 9 House
307 Morris Pratt Memorial Dormitory
K 9 House
X Q House
9 A X House
6 A X House
Q I' A House
'Il T House
11 Sunset Avenue
A T House
Q K XI' House
409 Morris Pratt Memorial Dormitory
Q 1' A House
A A Q House
408 Morris Pratt Memorial Dormitory
II' T House
A K E House
Q K N11 House
2 A P House
A K E House
X XII Lodge
15 Amity Street
307 Morris Pratt Memorial Dormitory
E A P House
X Q Annex
3 Northampton Road
K 9 House
V
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WHITNEY WILLIAMS STARK, A A fin
JESSE FREEMAN SWETT, fi: A 9
WILLIAM HENRY TEHAN, O A X
DONALD EDWARD TEMPLE, fb K XII
DONALD EUGENE THOMAS, B O II
HERBERT GETTY VAUGHN, fi: F A
JOSEPH FREDERICK VIELBIG, fb I' A
ROBERT WILTSIE WADHAMS, X N11
HENRY WILLIS WELLS, QI: A O
JOHN LEONARD WHITCOMB, B O II
THEODORE LEWIS WIDMAYER, cb I'
WADSWORTH WILBAR, B 9 II
PALMER CHAMPNEY WILLIAMS, B 9
WILLIAM REILLY YVITNEY, :IJ 1' A
A
II
RUEUS STANLEY YVOODWARD, JR., A K E
MARMADUKE ROGERS YAWGER, O A X
Amherst, Mass.
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Brookline, Mass.
Auburn, N. Y.
Greenfield, Mass.
Attleboro, Mass.
Fort Ann, N. Y.
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Pittsford, N. Y.
New York, N. Y
Brockton, Mass.
New York, N. Y
Taunton, Mass.
Taunton, Mass.
Brockport, N. Y
Worcester, Mass
Brooklyn, N. Y.
204 Morris
308 Morris
209 Morris
405 Morris
Jfurmer
WALDO BOYNTON AMES, A T
THEODORE FRANKLIN APPLEBY, X
CHARLES HOWARD BAKER, A K E
OSBORN WHITNEY BROXVN, fb A 9
GEORGE RICHARD BRUNJES, N11 T
RALPH ELLISON DE CASTRO, X cb
KARL MARX ELISH
HENRY HARRISON FULLER, K 9
EDGAR LEWIS GODFREY, 9 A X
JOHN WILLIAM HEASLIP, JR., -In K
DEXTER MERRIAM KEEZER, fb A 9
WILLIAM EDWARD LANYON, XII T
CID
'I'
embers
PAUL CRANDALL LESTRADE, A A Q
XYILLIAM :ATYVOOD LEYVIS, A K E
TOBIAS JOHN BICLAUGHLIN, 9 A X
HENRY XYILSOX 3lOORE. if T
ROBERT FRANCIS BIOORE. if T
JOSEPH JOHN BIURRAY, Q 1' A
RICHARD ATLEE O.BRIEN, A K E
HERBERT BACHELLOR PETTEE. A A Q
BARTON FISKE PLIMRTON, Q A 6
LUKE DANIEL STAPLETON, A K E
8DickinsonStreet
AAOHouaz
QA6Home
1SAmitySt.rx
QKvlfHoune
Pratt Memorial Drxmitory
Q I' A Home
Mount Donn
Pratt Memorial Dormitory
QABI-louse
5 Northampton Road
15 Amity Street
Pratt Memorial Dormitory
Pratt Memorial Dormitory
QI'AHouse
AKEI-lame
GAXHOE
RAYMOND ECCLESTON SERVEIRA XYILLIAISON, Q I Q
BARNARD XYILLIS, X dw
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STUART WILLIAMS RIDER
DAVID STEVENSON
DOUGLAS DUNCAN MILNE
ERALSEY CLARK FERGUSON
JULIUS SEELYE BIXLER
CHARLES BURTON AMES, X XII
ROBERT JEFFREY ANDERSON, 2 A P
EDWARD DEMING ANDREWS, A T
THOMAS WILLIAM ASHLEY, A A :Ib
WILLIAM GOODWIN AVIRETT, A A dv
WALTON CHAMBERLAIN BAKER, 9 A X
HENRY WALTER BARNES, JR., 6 A X
TONY BARONE
JULIUS SEELYE BIXLER, A A fb
DEAN BLANCHARD, fb K if
MERRILL HOLMES BOYNTON, NI' T
CHARLES HENRY BROWN, A A fl:
SCOTT MILROSS BUCHANAN, A T
HAZEN ATHERTON CHANDLER, A K E
Qbffmzrs
Members
West Newton, Mass.
Clinton, Mass.
Pittsfield, Mass.
Deerfield, Mass.
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Springfield, Mass.
Plymouth, Mass.
North Collins, N. Y.
New London, Conn.
Winchester, Mass.
Bristol, R. I.
Chicago, Ill.
Pittsfield, Mass.
Montpelier, Vt.
115
Preszden t
Vzce President
Secretary
Treasurer
Choregus
X 'Il Lodge
2 A P House
A T House
A A' 'Iv House
A A Q House
6 A X House
6 A X House
8 Spring Street
A A in House
Q K XII House
XII T House
310 Morris Pratt Memorial Dormitory
A T House
A K E House
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FRANKLIN STETSON CLARK, 9 A X
THEODORE READ DAYTON, A T
FRANCIS MORSE DENT
LEWIS WILLIAMS DOUGLAS, A A cb
THEODORE CALDWELL EDWARDS, B 9 II
WILLIAM COLE ESTY, 2D, XII T
ERALSEY CLARK FERGUSON, -Iv A 9
WILLIAM GATES, JR., XII T
ROBERT SWIFT GILLETT, A A fb
HAROLD LUSK GILLIES, XII T
JAMES TIERNEY GILLIGAN, E A P
EDWIN HARRISON GOODRIDGE, fb K SI'
DONALD EGBERT HARDY, X fb
HOWARD JOSEPH HEAVENS, 2 A P
PERCY MEREDITH HUGHES, JR., XII T
JOHN MAXEY JENKINS, B 9 H
HERBERT GALE JOHNSON, K 9
RICHARD KATZ, Jr.
GEORGE NELSON KEENEY, 9 A X
LEWIS MANSFIELD KNAPP, A T
WILBUR CLARK KNOWLTON, B 9 H
GEORGE HOMER LANE, A A fb
WALLACE MINOT LEONARD, JR., A K E
EDWIN HENRY LUTKINS, K 9
JOHN SNADER MCCLOY, B 9 II
RALPH LESLIE MANSFIELD, fb I' A
ALAN DAVID MARKS
DONALD EARLE MARSHALL, dv K XII
DOUGLAS DUNCAN MILNE, if T
THOMAS BOSTON MUNRO, X XII
GEOFFREY COOKE NEILEY, XII T
RADCLIFFE DANA NOYES, A T
FRANCIS ROBERT OTTE, All T
ROBERT HODGES PARK, B 9 II
CHARLES BALDWIN PECK, JR., XII T
ROBERT MATTHEWS PROCTOR, X XII
JOHN UHRICH REBER, if T
Russell, Pa. 9 5 9 Home
North Amherst, Mass. 9 A X Home
Georgetown, Conn. A T H012
Washington, D. C. 4 S0115 CON?
Douglas, Ariz. A A 9 H012
Brooklyn, N. Y. 211 Morris Pratt Memorial Dormitory
Bethlehem, Pa. 'I' T Home
Brookline, Mass. 0 A 6 Home
Pittsburgh, Pa. 1' T HDI!!
Hartford, Conn. A A 0 Home
Nyack, N. Y. 'I' T H002
Holyoke, Mass.
Fitchburg, Mass. 6 K if Hou:
Amherst, Mass. 15 Lincoln Avemx
Plymouth, Mass. I A P Hors
Syracuse, N. Y. if 1' Hou:
Montrose, Pa. Nash Bind
Amherst, Mass. K 6 Hill
New York, N. Y. 15 Amity Street
New London, Conn. 6 A X Home
Groton, Mass. A T Home
Kirkwood, MO. 302 Morris Pratt Memorial Dormitory
XYest Hartford, Conn. A A 6 Hoi
Newton Highlands, Mass. A K I Hmm
Hackensack, N. J. K 6 Hoi
Philadelphia, Pa. 3 Northampton Rid
Brooklyn, N. Y. Q I' A Hon
New York, N. Y.
Amherst, Mass.
Scarsdale, N. Y.
Allendale, N. J.
XYincheSter, Mass.
Montclair, N. J.
Grand Rapids, Mich.
Taunton, Mass.
Rochester, N. Y.
Corning, N. Y.
Reading, Pa.
116
301 Morris Pratt Memorial Dormiury
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HOXYARD FINLAY REED, Q A 9
STUART WILLIAMS RIDER, A A Q
HOMANS ROBINSON, A K E
EDMUND ELLIS SAXVYER, K 9
HAROLD EDMUND SAXVYER, YP T
ELTON HENRY SEAMANS, Q I' A
LEO NELSON SHAXV, 9 A X
ROBERT WILLIAMS SMITH, B 9 II
Washington, D. C.
Roxbury, Ohio
Springfield, Mass.
Hackensack, N. J.
Pawtucket, R. I.
Springfield, Mass.
Auburn, N. Y.
Lakeside, Ohio
A A Q House
A Q A 9 House
Auburndale, Mass. A A Q House
212 Morris Pratt Memorial Dormitory
K 9 House
III T House
Q I' A House
9 A X House
19 Main Street
WINTHROP HIRANI SMITH, A T South Hadley Falls, Mass. 212 Morris Pratt Memorial Dormitory
DOUGLAS CLARK STEARNS, X X11 Norfolk, Conn. X Q Lodge
fi DAVID STEVENSON Gilmanton, N. H. 71 South Pleasant Street
WAYNE PFEFFERS STILES, Q K X11 Amherst, Mass. R. F. D. No. 1
EUGENE STINSON, Q K Q Evansville, Ind. Q K XII House
' WILLIAM HOWARD Tow, A A Q New York, N. Y. Gymnasium
LESTER CARLTON VER NOOY, Q K X11 Cortland, N. Y. Q K X11 House
T IXLFRED HAMLIN WASHBURN, A T Boston, Mass. P A T House
'Q GEORGE VVINSLOW WASHBURN, X Q Brockton, Mass. X Q Annex
CHARLES FOSTER VVEEDEN, JR., A A Q Dorchester, Mass. A A Q House
LAMBERT FRYE WHETSTONE, A A Q Germantown, Pa. A A Q House
ARTHUR PLATT WHITE, K 9 Corning, N. Y. K 9 House
LEE BLAIR WOOD, Q K Q Corry, Pa. Q K III House
BURBANK CHASE YOUNG, X Q Rochester, N. Y. X III Lodge
LAURENCE HENRY YOUNG, E A P Bloomington, Ill. Z A P House
MALCOLM OAKMAN YOUNG, Q I' A North Hanover, Mass. 210 Morris Pratt Memorial Dormitory
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JOHN JACOB ATWATER . President
GORDON FRANCIS O'CONNOR .Vice-President
JOSEPH LYONS SNIDER . Secretary
GERALD KEITH . . . Treasurer
GEORGE HARTMANN HUBNER Class Orator
WALTER RAYMOND AGARD Class Poet
FENIMORE CADY . . Ivy Orator
WALTER RAYMOND AGARD Ivy Poet
HAROLD ALPHEUS LYON . Grove Oratof
ROBERT REED MCGOWAN Grove Poet
JAMES KELLUM SMITH . Historian
RICHARD ALEXANDER ROBINSON, 3D . . . Toastmaster
JOSEPH GERALD COLE . Prophet
WILLIAM GREENOUGH THAYER Prophet-on-Prophet
WEBSTER HAMLIN WARREN . . . Marshal
HAROLD ALPHEUS LYON . Choregus
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WALTER RAYMOND AGARD, A A dv, dv B K, A E P Austin, Tex. A A Q Hall
Class Debating Director C11, C215 Class Debating Team C11, C215 Debating Team C21, C31, C415 Kellogg Fifteen C215 Altering
College Orator C315 President Forum C415 President A 23 P C415 President New England Intercollegiate Public
League C415 Latin Prize C115 Billings Latin Prize C215 Hutchins Greek Prize C315 Vice-President dv B K C31, C415 Adi
Brown Scholar C415 Armstrong Prize C115 The Mitre C31, C415 Vice-President C415 Amherst Monthly Board C21, C31, C435
Editor-in-Chief C415 Class Swimming Team C415 Bond Fifteen C415 Hardy Sixteen C415 Ixy Poet C415 Class Poet CQ5
Class Gift Committee C415 President Christian Association C415 Senior Advisory Board C415 Student Council C415 Chaiii
Elections Committee C415 Scarab C41.
JOHN JACOB ATWATER, X11 T Westhampton Beach, N. Y. if T Home
Class Swimming Team C115 Class Football C11, C215 Class Baseball Team C215 Varsity Football Squad C21, C315 Freshmal
Football Coach C415 Champion Interclass Hockey Team C21, C31, C415 Class President C21, C31, C415 Honor System Co!-
mittee C21, C31, C415 Glee Club C31, C415 Cotillion C31, C415 Interfraternity Conference C31, C415 Interfraternity Conference
President C415 Hardy Sixteen C415 Student Council C31, C415 Student Council President C415 Christian
Cabinet C415 Scarab C415 Class Reunion Committee C41.
RICHARD HAMLIN BACON, A K E Newton Upper Falls, Mass. A K E Hom:
Class Hockey Team C11, C21, C31, C415 Class Hockey Director C21, C31, C415 Varsity Hockey Team C21, C315 Business Manny
Student C415 Cotillion Club C31, C415 Board of Public Exhibitions C415 Sophomore Smoker Committee C215 Junior Banqatt
Committee C315 Senior Hop Committee C415 Senior Banquet Committee C41.
RICHARD BANCROFT, fb A 6 Wellesley, Mass. Q A 6 Home
Varsity Football Squad C21, C31.
RICHARD .STERLING BANFIELD, -Iv K X11 Austin, Minn. if K if Home
Track Squad C21, C315 Business Manager Otto C315 Committee on Committees C415 Senior Advisory Board C415 Sphinx C413
Class Finance Committee C415 Hardy Sixteen C41.
KENNETH WHITTEMORE BANTA, A K E, :Iv B K Syracuse, N. Y. A K g H93
Class Swimming Team C11, C21, C31, C415 Class Basketball Team C11, C21, C315 Class Relay C11, C215 Class Track C11, C85
Track Team C11, C215 Student Board C11, C21, C31, C415 Editor-in-Chief Otto C31.
WILLIAM-GERALD BARNES, fb A 9 Brooklyn, N. Y. Q A 9 Hog
Cross'Cou-ntry Team C415 Glee Club C415 College Choir C41.
FRANCIS WESLEY BLAIR, X 4' AmhCfSt, MBISS- 12 Northampton Ri
Class' Track Team C11, C215 Varsity Track Team C21, C31, C415 Varsity Relay Team C21, C31, C41.
GEORGE CLEVELAND BRATT, JR., A T Grand Rapids, Mich. A -1- fi
Entered from University of Michigan C21.
WARREN ALLEN BRECKENRIDGE, B O II Omaha, Neb. 401 Morris Pratt Memorial Donniilq
Williston Hygiene Prize C115 Sphinx Club C315 Junior Prom Committee C315 Class Cup Committee C41: Dramatzics CQ.
MAURICE SCOTT BULGER, B 9 II Uniontown, Pa. 401 Morris Pratt Memorial Danni!!!
122
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FENDQORE CAPY, A A CI' , Kyoto, Japan A A Q House
Ixellogg Fitteen C155 Kellogg Five C155 Athletic Board C255 Freshman-Sophomore Tennis Championship C15, C255 Runner-
up College Tennis Championship C155 College Championship C25, C355 Varsity Tennis Team C25, C35, C455 Captain C35, C455
Runner-up New England Intercollegiate Singles and Doubles C255 Winner New England Intercollegiate Singles C355 Class
Cup Committee C455 Ivy Orator C455 Hardy Sixteen C45.
JOHN 553-RNOCK CAMPBELL, B 9 II Montclair, N. J. 415 Amity Street
FREDERICK LEsLIE CHAPMAN, JR., Q T Lake Geneva, Wis. KP T House
Entered from Beloit C255 Football Squad C355 Track Squad C355 Sphinx C45.
GEORGE DOUGLAS CLAPPERTON, A T Grand Rapids, Mich. A T House
Entered from University of Michigan C255 Amherst Monthly Board C25, C35, C455 The Mitre C35, C455 President French Club
C355 College Choir C35.
HARRY XYING COLE, X Q Saratoga Springs, N. Y. X Q House
Class Banquet Committee C155 Class Track Director C15, C25, C35, C455 Kellogg Five C255 Class Smoker Committee C255
Student Council C35, C455 Treasurer Student Council C455 Chairman Athletic Committee C455 Captain Track Team C455
College Record, 2152 in 220-Yard Dash5 Scarab C455 Sphinx C455 Hardy Sixteen C45. '
JOSEPH GERALD COLE, X Q Brooklyn, N. Y. X Q House
Student Board C15, C25, C35, C455 Secretary Student Board C355 Dramatics C25, C35, C455 Monthly Board C25, C35, C455 Olio
Board C355 Editor-in-Chief Olio C35 Cresigned55 The Mitre C35, C455 President The Mitre C455 President Dramatics C455
Class Prophet C455 Chairman Class Book Committee C45.
KINGSLEY BUEL COLTON, Q A 9 Chicago, Ill. Q A 9 House
Pipe Committee C155 Sophomore Hop Committee C255 Junior Prom Committee C355 Senior Hop Committee C455 Smoker
Committee C455 Cotillion Club C35, C455 Class Basketball C25, C35, C455 Varsity Basketball Squad C455 Musical Club C455
Class Swimming Team C25, C355 Class Track C25. -
HEZEKIAH NELSON CONANT, XI' T Pawtucket, R. I. ' ' E W T House
Glee Club C355 Sphinx C35, C45. A
RAYLIOND BUXTON COOPER, A K E Des Moines, Iowa A K E House
Class Football Team C15, C255 Varsity Football Team C25, C455 Class Hockey Team C35, C455 Musical Clubs C35, C455 Class
Picture Committee C455 Sphinx Club C45.
JAMES WALLACE CRAIG, A A Q A Boston, Mass. -5 . A A Q House
Class Swimming Team C15, C25, C35, C455 Class Swimming Director C35, C455 Class Vice-President C255 Glee Club C45.
JOHN THEODORE CRoss, A A Q .UtiC21, N1 O . ' A A 'I' HOUSE
Kellogg Fifteen C15, C255 Kellogg Five C25 CHonorable Ment1on55 Christian Association Cabinet C45 5 Chairman Class Finance
Committee C455 Senior Hop Committee C455 Cotillion Club C455 Assistant Manager Musical Clubs C355 Manager C45 Cre-
signed55 Board of Public Exhibitions C45 Cresigned55 Track Team C15, C25, C355 Football C35, C455 Class Track Team C15, C25,
C355 Class Swimming Team C25, C35, C455 Class Championship Hockey Team C25, C35, C455 Class Basketball Team C25, C35, C455
Hardy Sixteen C45. . ,
DAVID SANFORD CUTLER, A A Q . NSW York, N- Y- - . A A fl' HOUSE
Class Banquet Committee C25, C355 Chairman C255 Chairman Class Smoker Committee C455 Assistant Manager Baseball
C355 Manager Baseball C455 President Scarab C45. I I '
GEORGE LEON CUTTON, 2 A P, Q B K Wolcott, N. Y- E A P HOUSE!
First Walker Math. Prize C155 Second Walker Math. Prize C255 Class Cross Country Team C25, C35, C455 Varsity Cross
Country Team C455 Treasurer Q B K C455 Assistant Manager Dramatics C355 Manager C45 Cresigned55 Bond Fifteen C45.
123
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GARDNER PETTEE EASTMAN, B 9 H, fb B K Orange, N. J. 412 Morris Pratt Memorial Doriy
Hygiene Prize C155 Kellogg Fifteen C155 Class Track Team C15, C25, C35, C455 Varsity Track Team C35, C455 Clan ll
Team C35, C455 Varsity Relay Team C35, C455 The Mitre C35, C455 President Pratt Dormitory C455 Class Day Coit
C455 Bond Fifteen C45.
LOUIS FRANKLIN EATON, X fir, 11: B K Brockton, Mass. X 6 H11
Second Walker .Math. Prize C155 Porter Astronomy Prize C355 Assistant Football Manager C355 Football Manag' C455
Christian Association Cabinet C455 Chairman Committee on Committees C455 Chairman Finance Committee and Va-
President Student Council C455 The Mitre C35, C455 Senior Advisory Board C455 Secretary Scarab C455 Bond Fiftnel CQ5
Hardy Sixteen C45.
ARTHUR HENRY ELLIOT, fb 1' A Port Jefferson, N. Y. 6 I' A Ho:
Captain Class Basketball C25, C35, C455 College Band C15, C255 Business Manager Monthly C35 Cresigned55 Basketball T
C455 Chairman Cap and Gown Committee C455 Glee Club C45.
EVERETT WEBB FULLER, X W, cb B K Brooklyn, N. Y. X if Lok
Class Baseball Team C15, C255 Bond Fifteen C45.
RANDOLPH MERCEIN FULLER, X III Brooklyn, N. Y. X if Lok
Class Baseball Team C15, C255 Student Board C15, C25, C35, C455 Editor-in-Chief Student C455 Chairman Class Statistics Col-
mittee C455 Scarab C45.
EDWARD CHANDLER GARFIELD York Village, Maine 71 South Pleasant Street
JOHN MERRIMAN GAUS, A A fb Utica, N. Y. A A Q Hose
Dramatics C25, C355 Class Secretary C255 Four Leaf Clover C255 Class Smoker Committee C255 Chairman C355 Class Baie!-
ball Team C455 Student Council C35, C455 Recording Secretary C355 Corresponding Secretary C455 Chairman of the Ri
Committee C455 Secretary and Treasurer English Club C35 Cresigned55 Secretary and Treasurer Forum C355 Senior Adviry
Board C455 Secretary of Interfraternity Conference C355 Cotillion Club C35, C455 Christian Association Cabinet C455 Tk
Mitre C35, C455 Committee on Committees C455 Senior Chapel Committee C455 Scarab C45.
ARTHUR PRENTICE GOODWIN, A K E Pittsfield, Mass. A I I H03
Musical Clubs C25, C35, C455 Leader of Mandolin Club C35, C45.
PHILLIPS FOSTER GREENE, A T, Q B K Upper Montclair, N. J. A 1' li
Kellogg Five C155 Glee Club C25, C35, C455 Mandolin Club C455 College Choir C25, C355 Leader College Choir C455 Clas Sli-
ming Team C355 ,Sawyer Medal C355 Mission Study Committee C155 VVoods Hole Scholarship C355 Assistant in Bblogy CQ:
Bond Fifteen C4 .
PAUL STEVENS GREENE Boston, Mass. 203 Morris Pratt Memorial Doriy
GORDON REXFORD HALL, X 'Il Brookline, Mass. I if Lab
Championship Class Cross Country Team C355 Cotillion Club C35, C455 Senior Hop Committee C455 Musical Clubs C35, CQ.
JOHN CLIFFORD HAYNER, 9 A X Yonkers, N. Y. 9 A 1 Hog
Kellogg Fifteen C15, C255 Class Swimming Team C15, C25, C35, C455 Varsity Swimming Team C25, C355 Monthly Board C25, C35, CQ.
STUART FRANKLIN HEINRITZ, 2 A P, Q B K Holyoke, Mass. 2 A p H41
Class Debating Team C15, C255 Second Armstrong English Prize C155 Four Leaf Clover Board C255 Olio Board C35: llofy
Board C25, C35, C455 Assistant Manager Forum C355 Manager C455 The Mitre C35, C455 Glee Club C35, C455 President H11
Ward Beecher Club C455 Cap and Gown Committee C455 Secretary dv B K C455 Secretary-Treasurer New Englaml ladd-
legiate Public Speaking League C455 Bond Fifteen C45.
124
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COLEMAN PHILIP HERRSCHAFT, Q I' A Brooklyn, N, Y, qu 1' A Hguse
Class Track Team C11, C213 Class Director Basketball C113 Varsity Track Team C11, C21, C31, C413 Gymnastic Team C11, C21,
C31, C413 Manager Gymnastic Team C41.
CHARLES HAMILTON HOUSTON, Q B K Washington, D. C. 404 Morris Pratt Memorial Dormitory
Bond Fifteen C413 Hardy Sixteen C41.
GEORGE HARTMANN HUBNER, if T Brooklyn, N, Y, if T House
Class Baseball Team C11, C213 Kellogg Fifteen C213 Chairman Class Day Committee C413 Class Orator C41.
GEORGE ROLFE HUMPHRIES, E A P ' Palo Alto, Cal.
Class Football Team C113 Latin Prize C113 Sophomore Year Leland Stanford UniverSity3 Varsity Football Team C312 Monthly
Board C313 Junior Latin Prize C313 Class Track Team C31, I
WILLIAM COOPER HUNNEMAN, JR., A K E Brookline, Mass. A K E House
Class Track Team C11, C21, C312 Class Baseball Team C11, C213 Class Hockey Team C11, C21, C313-Class Relay Team C11, C21, C313
Football Squad C413 Relay Squad C21, C31, C413 Sphinx Club C31, C413 Christian Association Cabinet C41. -
LESLIE OBEAR JOHNSON, K 9 Malden, Mass. Chemical Laboratory
Class Football Team C113 Class Vice-President C313 Class Swimming Team C413 Varsity Swimming Team C41.
MARSHALL WALKER JONES, JR.,'Q K Q Winchester, Mass. Q K XII House
Cotillion Club C31, C413 Junior Prom Committee C313 Senior Hop Committee C413 Class Hockey Team C31, C413 Senior
Banquet Committee C41.
GERALD KEITH, X Q Brockton, Mass. I X Q House
Class Smoker Committee C21, C31, C413 Class Treasurer C21, C31, C413 Cotillion C31, C413 Secretary Christian Association C41.
NEWTON MANROSS KIMBALL, A K E Q Orange, Mass. A K E House
Class Football Team C11, C21, Class Swimming Team C11, C21, C31, C413 Varsity Football Team C21, C31, C413 Scarab' C413
Sphinx C41. A
HENRY SELDON KINGMAN, X Q Minneapolis, Minn. X Q House
Class Hockey Team C21, C31, C413 Varsity Hockey Squad C313 Assistant Manager Olio C313 Cotillion C41.
EDWIN HAROLD KONOLD, A T Oak Park, Ill. . A T House
Chairman Class Pipe Committee C113 Class Football Team C11, C212 Class Hockey Team C21, C31, C413 Varsity Football
Team C213 Sophomore Hop Committee C213 Kellogg Fifteen C213 Sphinx Club C31, C413 Rogers Prize C313 Chairman Decora-
tion Committee C413 Assistant in Public Speaking C413 Hardy Sixteen C41.
HENRY THOMAS LANGSPECHT, Q K III I I Brooklyn, N- Y- 'I' K NI' House
Class Track Team C11, C213 Squash Championship C31. 3
JOSEPH NEWHALL LINCOLN, Q I' A u QUiT1CY, Mass- 4' I' A House
Class Cross Country Team C11, C213 Musical Clubs C41. A
JOHN EUGENE LIND, 2 A P Brooklyn, N. Y. E A P House
Walker Math. Prize C113 Class Baseball Team C113 Class Cross Country Team C113 Class Track Team C11, C21, C312 Varsity
Track Team C213 Class Football Team C213 Varsity Football Team C21, C31, C413 Class Basketball Team C21, C413 Chess
Team C11, C21, C31, C413 Captain and Manager C31, C413 College Handball Champion C11, C21, C31. ' '
JAMES CROPSEY LOTT, Q A 9 Brooklyn, N- Y- 4' A 9 HOUSC
Class Day Program Committee C41.
125
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HARRY ALPHEUS LYON, fb K if Brockton, Mass. I i 6 I I' Hi
Class Chairman C155 Chairman Freshman Banquet Committee C155 Hitchcock Memorial Committee C155 Clan
Captain C15, C255 Wearer of the Pratt Sash C25, C355 College Choir C15, C255 Kellogg Fifteen C255 Amherst Stock Ca.
C355 Sophomore Hop Committee C255 Cvlee Club C25, C35, C455 Reader C255 Leader C455 Class Choregus C25, C35, C455 C
Choregus C455 College Cheer Leader C455 Chairman Senior Chapel Committee C455 Class Reunion Committee C455 I
Yell Committee C455 Grove Orator C455 Hardy Sixteen C45.
ROBERT ANDREW MCCAGUE, X XII, fl' B K Omaha, Neb. X if
Varsity Tennis Team C25, C355 Musical Clubs C15, C25, C35, C455 Assistant Manager Track Team C355 Manager Track T C 5
Scarab C455 Bond Fifteen C45.
ROBERT REED MCGOWAN, X dv Steubenville, Ohio I i I 6 H1
Sophomore Hop Committee C255 Chairman Junior Prom Committee C355 Chairman Senior Hop Committee C455 Ck
Club C455 Cotillion Club C35, C455 Grove Poet C455 Hardy Sixteen C45.
MAURICE LLOYD MCNAIR, cb K if Los Angeles, Cal. X Q K 'lr lb
Entered from Leland Stanford C355 Sphinx Club C455 Class Track Team C35, C455 Track Team C45.
EVERETT FRANCIS MCTERNAN, QI: I' A Brooklyn, N. Y. Q I' A H01
Class Baseball Team C15, C255 Class Football Team C15, C255 Football Team C25, C35, C455 Baseball Team C25, C355
Gymnastic Team C35, C45.
WILSON MACDONALD, K 9 , Westfield, N. Y. K 6 H11
Class Numerals CFlag Rush5 C155 Class Debating Team C15, C255 Executive Committee Socialist Club C255 Hagen Prim i
English Literature C355 Executive Committee Henry XYard Beecher Club C45.
WILLIAM HENRY MANDREY, Z A P 5 g Mt. Vernon. N. Y. Z A P H01
Kellogg Fifteen C255 Kellogg Five C255 Secretary-Treasurer Social Study Club C45: College Choir C25. C35, C455 Cb y
. Club A -
ARTHUR JEREMIAH MANVILLE, db I' A New Haven, Conn. Q I' A li
Class Baseball Team C155 Class Hockey Team C35, C45.
HAROLD CHASE MANY Port Jefferson, N. Y. 13 Springfum
RICHARD LEOPOLD MASTEN, 9 A X Camas, Wash. 6 A I Hex
CHARLES DANIEL MARTIN, K 9 Northampton, Mass.
ROBERT SELDEN MOULTON, X fin Poughkeepsie. N. Y. X O Pi
Student Board C25, C35, C455 Managing Editor C45.
FRANCIS CHANDLER NEWTON A T Readin Mass. Afli
I g-
Class Track Team C155 Class Banquet Committee C255 Chairman junior Banquet Committee C35: Asitant All
Varsity Swimming Team C355 Varsity Swimming Squad C355 Manager Varsity Swimming Team C455 Chairman C11 I
Program Committee C455 Hardy Sixteen C45.
'GORDON FRANCIS O'CONNOR Antigo, Wis. 40 Main Sud
Entered from Dartmouth College C355 Dramatics C45.
SIDNEY RAYMOND PACKARD, K 9, fb B K Brockton, Mass. K 9 li
Kellogg Fifteen C15, C255 Class Gymnasium Officer C15, C255 Porter Physics Prize C253 Billings Latin Prize C255 Ck
Orator Six C355 Interfraternity Conference C35, C455 French Club C355 Chairman 41 B K C455 Bond Fifteen C45.
RAYMOND SCOTT PERSON, K 9 Holyoke. Mass. K Bli
Glee Club C25, C45.
126
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JOHN MILTON PHILLIPS, CP 1' A ' . New London, Conn. Q I' A House
Class Football Team C15, C253 Kellogg Fifteen C15,
HOLI1IS XYINSLOXY PLIMPTOH, A K E, Q B K ' Norwood, Mass. A K E House
Second X ear Physics Prize C352 Bond Fifteen C45.
RICHARDSON. PRATT, A A 'P ' Brooklyn, N. Y. it A A Q House
Mandolin Club C15, C25, C353 Sophomore Hop Committee C253 junior Prom Committee C353 Assistant Manager Hockey
Team C353 Cot1ll1on Club C35, C453 Manager Basketball Team C453 Treasurer Christian Association C45. .-
STUART EUGENE PRICE, A T . ' Columbus, Ohio ' A T House
Entered from Ohio State University C253 Class Relay Team C253 Class Cross Country Team C25, C353 Class Statistics Com-
mittee C453 Social Study Committee C45. 4
ARTHUR EDXVARD RALsToN, A A Q ' Plainfield, N. J. . Al A Q House
Kellogg Fifteen C153 Olfio Board C353 Heavy Gym Team C25, C35, C453 Assistant Manager Gym Team C353 Captain Heavy
Gym Team C453 Hardy Sixteen C45. A H I I U,
GEORGE KEYES RIPLEY, Q I' A, Q B Ki Troy, N. H. ' ' V I Q 1' A House
XValker Prize in Mathematics C253 Musical Clubs C25, C35, .C45. : I ,
RICHARD ,ALEXANDER ROBINSON, 3D, A A Q ' Louisville, Ky. ' , A A Q House
Class Track Team'C15, C253 Class Baseball Team C15, C253 Class Football' Team C25'3'C1ass Swimming ,Team C153 Kellogg
Fifteen C253 Class Treasurer C153 Class Basketball Team C25, C453 Varsity Baseball Team C25, C35, C453 Cotillion Club C35,,
C453 President C453 .Glee Club C35, C453 Class Toastmaster C453 Cheer Leader C453 The Mitre C35,1C453 Scarab C453 Hardy
Sixteen A ' V ' 1 A I I I 'fi' i, ,"," in 1 T .3 "Q Q .
DANA FUNK ROLLINS, B 9 H . , , , Bloomington,T1l. C it A 412 Morris Pratt.Memorial Dormitory
Class' President C153 Honor System C153 Class Gift Committee C45. A 1 3 3 f I 1 ' " A ' ' ' ' 2
CONRAD SHUMWAY, E A' P A 1 . I 'Brooklyn,1N. Y. , . . ' p E AP House
I Class Cross Country Team C15, C353 Class Track,Team ,C25, C353 Varsity Track Team C253 Class Football Team CQ5Q Varsity
Football Team C25, C35, C453 Class Swimming Team C453 Varsity Swimming Team C453 Class Basketball Team 'C253 Chess
Team C25. ' '
HOMER MORGAN SMITH, 9 A X, Q BK - C 'E C Redding, Conn. V ' ' A "6 AX House
Porter Admission Prize C153' Heavy Gym Team C35, C453 Bond Fifteen C45. I ' A
,JAMES KELLUM SMITH, X XII, Q B K , I 3 T0W31Td9', Pa- in A S 1 X XI' Lodge
Class Baseball Team C15, C253 Class Hockey Team C25, C453 Varsity Hockey Team C353 Olio Board C353 Musical Clubs
C35, C453 Bertram Latin Prize C353 Junior Latin Prize C353- The, MitreiC35,, C453 Class Historian C453 Bond Fifteen C45.
JAMES NICHOLS SMITH, if T V . O , I I , Hartford, Conn. AFT House
' Class Swimming Team C15, C25, C353 Swimming Squad C259 SPITIUX C35, C45-
LQWELL RIDGEWAY SMITH, xp T Winchester, Mass. XII T House
Class Baseball Team C15, C253 Varsity Hockey Team C353 Interclass Champion Hockey Team C45.
,JOSEPH LYONS SNIDER, Q K III, A E P, Q B K Uniontown, Pa. I . V Q. K XII House
Kellogg Prize C253 Class Basketball Team C25, C35, C453 Class Secretary C35, C453 Oho- Board C353 Vice-President Chris-
tian Association 4 ' Tennis Team C35, C453 Varsity Debating Team C453 Class Book Committee C453 Bond Fifteen C453
C 5,
Hardy Sixteen C45.
1?7
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HENRY CLEVELAND SWASEY, fb K 'Il South Berwick, Maine Q K if Hom
Varsity Baseball Team 111, 121, 131, 141, Captain 141, Varsity Football Team 121, 131, 141, Class Baseball Team 111, CIS
Football Team 111, 121, Class Basketball Team 121, 131, Scarab 141, Class Cup Committee 141.
WILLIAM GREENOUGH THAYER, JR., III T Southboro, Mass. if T Hole
Handbook Committee 121, Olio Board 131, Senior Chapel Committee 141.
JAY BRINKERHOFF TOMLINSON, dw K if Mount Holly, N. J. Q K if Home
Kellogg Fifteen 121, The Mitre 131, Secretary The Mitre 141.
EDWARD ALFRED VAN VALKENBURGH, A T, QI: B K Greene, N. Y. A T Home
Kellogg Fifteen 111, Kellogg Five 111, Kellogg Prize 111, Rogers Prize 131, Bond Fifteen 141.
HORATIO WALES, JR., fb I' A Polo, Ill. Q 1' A Home
College Band 111, 121, College Orchestra 111, 121, Musical Clubs 141.
WEBSTER HAMLIN WARREN, X fl? Falmouth, Mass. X Q House
Class Football Team 111, 121, Class Baseball Team 111, 121, Varsity Football Team '121, 131, 141, Captain Vanity
Football Team 141, Varsity Baseball Squad 131, Class Marshall 141, Scarab 141, Sphinx 141.
ARTHUR Hovr WASHBURN, A T Boston, Mass. A T House
Class Track Team 111, Assistant Manager Tennis Team 131, Manager 141, Christian Association Cabinet 141.
PAUL DYESS WEATHERS, if T Ocala, Fla. if 1' House
Class Banquet Committee 111, Class Constitution Committee 131, Honor System Committee 131, 141, Class Gift Committee
141, Senior Hop Committee 141, Hardy Sixteen 141.
LESLIE TILLOTSON WEBSTER, A A :Iv Mount Vernon, N. Y. A A Q House
College Choir 121, 131, 141, Mandolin Club 121, Quartette 121, Glee Club 121, 131, 141, Quartette 121, 131, 141, Class Swim-
ming Team 111, 121, 131, 141, Swimming Team 141, Reunion Committee 141.
WILLIAM WHITING, 2D, B 9 II Holyoke, Mass. 3 Northampton Road
Kellogg Five 111.
GEORGE DEMING WHITMORE, K 9, fb BK Holyoke, Mass. K 9 Hogg
Porter Admission Prize 111, Class Debating Team 111, Kellogg Five 111, Musical Clubs 131, 141.
PHILIP FRANCIS WHITTEN, A T Holyoke, Mass. 11 South Prospect Street
Class Football Team 111, 121, Class Basketball Team 111, 121, 131, 141, Class Track Team 111, 121, 131, 141, Clas Swiml
Team 111, 121, 131, 141, Varsity Football Team 121, 131, Varsity Football Squad 141, Varsity Track Team 121, 141, Swimmk
Squad 111, 121, 131, 141, Assistant Business Manager Student 131 1resigned1, Dramatics 131, 141, Baseball Squad 141.
JOHN RICHARD WILLIAMS New York, N. Y. C North Cel
Entered from Marietta College 141.
128
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RALPH BURGER BABCOCK, X X11
HAMILTON CRAIG BALLAGH, :IJ 1' A
LEON NIOFFATT BARNES, K 9
CLYDE HUINIPHREY BENEDICT
MAX ANDREW BENGS, fl: I' A
ORA POTTER BENNETT, Q I' A
FREDERICK MAXXVELL BISSINGER, 23 A P
HAMPTON BONNER
CLARENCE KINNE BOUCHER, X if
FRANCIS JOSEPH BURKE, fb A 9
ARNOLD CADY, A A 9
KENNETH FURBER CALDWELL, fb K
STANLEY MIRICK COX, 'If T
HARRY BURROWS COXHEAD, X X11
CHESTER SESSIONS DAY, A A qv
HAROLD CHOMEL FONDA, A K E
GEORGE PHILIPP LANDMANN GAIL, X 'If
HAYWARD HUTCHINSON GATCH, 'If 'I'
LAWRENCE EBERT GOELLER, if A 9
GEORGE SHUFELDT HAMILTON, -If I' A
GEORGE CHURCHILL HARDING, III 'I'
HARLAN BARTLETT HAYS, A K E
LOUIS CHARLES HENIN
JOHN DONALD HIRD, A T
GEORGE ROLFE HUMPHRIES, 2 A P
THORNTON REEVES JARMIN, B 9 II
WALKER WILLIS KAMM, A A QI:
EDWARD HELLING KENNEDY, 9 A X
CHARLES OLIVER MARKLE, O A X
WILLIAM MELLEMA
MALCOLM CLEGG MIDGELY, 9 A X
JOHN HOWARD MILLER, A K E
CHARLES LAWRENCE MUENCH, A K E
JOHN RUTHERFORD NICHOLSON, E X
JOHN EDWARD OSTRANDER, JR., X III
CLARENCE RUNYAN PARKS, B 9 II
WILLIAM RANKIN, :Iv A 9
JAMES NESTOR RAWLEIGH, A K E
KENNETH SAMUEL REED, A A fb
LOUIS THEOPHILE RIVARD
EDWARD WINTHROP ROBINSON
ROBERT NEAL ROCKWELL, X fb
HOWARD DYKEMA ROELOFS
ROBERT PAVVLEY SAMWORTH, K 9
WILLIAM LESLIE SEAMAN, X fb
CHARLES WARNER SEELY, VB 9 II
CLARENCE HOWARD SMITH
HOWARD RAITT STEWART, 9 A X
PHILLIPS TEAD, A A cb
REUBEN DANIEL WARNER, A K E
BRAYTON WITHERELL, X if
LEON HENRY VVROATH, O A X
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Zlibe Qncietp of the Qlumni
Cflnnual Meeting in Commencement Week J
:lfrehzrirk 21. Qllis
Gfiicers
President:
REY. NEHELIIAH BOYNION. '79
1,1166-PfEEfd6?Zff.'
PROFESSOR EDXYIN A. GROSYESOR. '67
COLLIN ARMSTRONG. 'TT
HENRE' P. FIELD. ESQ.. 'SU
JOHN P. CCSHING. '82
GEORGE B. BIALLOX. 'ST
ISAAC PATCH. '97
Sefrctgry and Treasurer:
FREDERICK S. AISLIS. '93, Amherst
zairnzavz Cf C'0n:n::':t6e on --lfzminz' Trustees
REV. JASON N. PIERCE. 'OZ
E.x'e'c:.!:': 6 Liz' '12 rr: filet'
HON. HENRY A. KING, 'TS
PROP. H. XORNIAN IQSAROINER. 'TS
HENRY P. FIELD. 'SU
FRED 31. SNIIIH. 'S4
PROE. JOSEPH O. THOMPSON. '84
DR. JOHN S. HITCHCOCK, 'SO
ARTHUR CURTISS JAMES. '80 ,
HEREERT L. PRATI. '05
HARRY W. KIDDER, '07
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The Qlumni Cllinuntil
QB1:gani5atiun '
The Alumni Council was created by the Society of the Alumni at the 1913 Commencement.
A committee of fifteen alumni was appointed to draft a plan for an Alumni Council and put it
in operation. The Committee consisted of William Orr, '83, Chairman, 'William F. Slocum, '74,
Henry P. Field, '80, Frank H. Parsons, '81, Joseph R. Kingman, '83, William B. Greenough, '88,
Thomas C. Esty, '93, Henry T. Noyes, '94, Dwight W. Morrow, '95, Roberts Walker, '96,
Henry H. Titsworth, '97, Henry P. Kendall, '99, Harold I. Pratt, '00, Frederick K. Kretschmar,
'01, Stanley King, '03, and Ernest M. Whitcomb, '04. '
The plan adopted provided for a Council composed of one representative from every class,
one representative from every Alumni Association, and two representatives if the Association
has one hundred membersfor over, five representatives at large from the Society of the Alumni,
and seven members at large from the Alumni Association. The object of the Council as stated in the
Constitution is "to establish closer relations between Amherst College and its alumni, and to
advance the interests of the College." ' .
The Constitution provides for an annual meeting, for the creation of Standing Committees,
and for the creation of a General Alumni Fund to be administered jointly by the Council and
the Board of Trustees. The members of the first Council were appointed by the Organization
Committee to serve until elections could be held by therespective groups. ,
Q 1914 Meeting g
The first meeting of the Council was held in Springfield, May 20, 1914. Fifty-four repre-
sentatives were present. The morning session was devoted to discussion and in the afternoon
President Meiklejohn addressed the Council. The Council pledged. its bestleffortsg to raise
seventy-five hundred dollars a year for five years for the purpose of increasing the amount of
money paid for instruction purposes.
131
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Gffiters , ,
President Wlllwm F- Sivan. 'H
I Charles E. Kky, 'Q
Vice-Presidents A Edwin C- 0501. 'Q
1, Dwight W. Morrow, 'B
Secretary, Frederick S. Allis, '93 T reasurer, EFNSSI M- luliilfvi, Y
QExetutihe Qllommittee
Grosvenor H. Backus, '94, Chairman E512-fd T- Elry. W
William F. Slocum, '74, Ex Ojicfio HCDFY H- Tii9'0f!i. 'W
George D. Pratt, '93 Robert W. Maynard, '02 Henry P. Kenthl, 'D
Standing Committees were created, covering the following subjects: Athletics, Chairman,
Cornelius J. Sullivan, '92, Publicity, Chairman, Harry E. Taylor, '04, Finance and Alai
Fund, Chairman, Dwight W. Morrow, '95, Secondary Schools, Chairman, William F. Meni,
'99, Publication, Chairman, Harry A. Cushing, '91, Religious VVork, Chairman, Professor
John M. Tyler, '73, Committee on the Revision of the Constitution of the Society of the Alumni,
Chairman, Edward T. Esty, '97, Committee on Commencement, Chairman, Oliver B. Merrill, '91,
The meeting concluded with a dinner in the evening.
1915 Meeting
The second annual meeting. of the Council was held at the Hotel Biltmore, New York, tl
Wednesday, February 24, 1915. Reports of Committees were presented at the moming .
Dean Olds addressed the Council in the afternoon.
Gffiters
P7'6Sid67Ll D, Lgqk '
f XVillia.m R. Mi. 'U
Vice-Presidents - VK'i1liam C. Arima, H
. , 4, John E. Oldnl, 'C
Secretary, Frederick S. Allis, '93 Treasurer, Ernest M. Xlhitmi. Q
Qlixetutihz Qlnmmittee
Grosvenor H. Backus, '94, Chairman George U. hi 'Q
Francis D. Lewis, '69, Ex-Officio Henrv H. Titswui. '
Gliver B. Merrill, '91 Stanley King, '03 P. Ki, Q
The Council joined with the Amherst Association of New York in a dinner in the
at the Hotel Biltmore, at which over seven hundred alumni were present. Five
speeches were given :-by Hon. Robert Lansing, '86, Counsellor of the Department of
Frank J. Goodnow, '79, President of Johns Hopkins, Burges johnson, '99, President M
and Charles S. Whitman, '90, Governor of the State of New York and guest of honor.
'eve' 'P -r .,. J., J,
Inmni ssociatio s l
,,,,,,,,,,,...,.,.,,...... F v
President
Secretary
President
Secretary
President
Secretary
President
Secretary
President
Secretary
President
Secretary
President
Secretary
President
Secretary
President
Secretary
Qliastern Zlssueiatiuns
The Qssueiation of Euston anh Vicinity
. . . . . . . . . . . ROBERT A. WOODS, South End House
. . . . . . . HAROLD C. KEITH, 1224 Main St., Campello, Mass.
The Qssoeiatiun uf Zlutnell
. . . . . . . REv. JOHN M. GREENE, 82 Pinckney St., Boston
. . . . . . . . . . CHARLES W. MOREY, 14 Belmont St., Lowell
The Qssneiation nf Tenttal Massachusetts,
. . . PROF. GEORGE H. HAYNES, Worcester Polytechnic Institute, Worcester
. . . . . . . DR. GORDON BERRY, 28 Trowbridge Road, Worcester
The Tunnectieut Valley Qssueiatiun
. . . . . . . DR. HERBERT C. EMERSON, 177 State St., Springfield
. . . . . . GEORGE R. YERRALL, 88 Maplewood Ave., Springfield
The Qssueiatinn of Tnnneetieut
. . . . . . . . . CHARLES M. STARKWEATHER, Hartford
. . . . . FRED R. GILPATRIC, 129 Black Rock Road, New Britain
The Qssueiation of iihuhe Ztslanh
. . . . . H. EDWARD THURSTON, Mechanics National Bank, Providence
. . . . . I . GERALD N. RICHMOND, 532 Grosvenor St., Providence
The Qssueiatinn of 3Retn Quark
. . . . . . . . . . COLLIN ARMSTRONG, 115 Broadway
. . . . . . . . . JOHN L. VANDERBILT, Englewood, N. J.
The Qssoeiatiun of Brooklyn V
. . . . . . EDWIN G. WARNER, PH.D., 56 Montgomery Place
. . . . . . . C. FRANCIS BEATTY, Pratt Works, Long Island City
The Qssuciatinn of Tentral aliein fork ,
ONAS S VAN DUZER Horseheads
, . .......... J .. ,
. . . . . . . . . . . . HALSEY M. COLLINS, Cortland
133
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' "" - " "' ' E 'Y ' ' ' c rv-51917
President
.Secretary
President
Secretary
President
Secretary
President
Secretary
President
Secretary
President
Secretary
President
Secretary
President
Secretary
President
Secretary
President
Secretary
The Qsentiatinn nt western jaetn fork .
. . . . . REV. EDWIN H. DICKINSON, North Presbyterian Church, Bzdalo
. . . . EDWARDS L. CLEAVELAND, 630 Humboldt Parkway, Budde
The Bnthester Tluh
. . . . . . . ,HERBERT W. GATES, Brick Church Institute
. . . . . . . . . . V . WILLIAM J. BABCOCK, Brighton Station
The Qssnciatinn of iBhiIalJeIphta aut: Vicinity
. . . . . . . . REV. CHARLES E. BRONSON, D.D., 4050Aspen St.
. THEODOREIW. SECKENDORF, 1353 South Lindenwood SI., West Philadelphia
The Qeeueiatiun of washington
' ,...... HON. ASHLEY M. GOULD, 1931 16th St., N. W.
. Q ...... 1 ...... BARRY BULKLEY, Cosmos Club
The Qeeutiatiun nf western Bennsplhanta
.' ....... VVILLIAM D. EVANS, ESQ., Oliver Build., Pittsburgh
. KENNETH R. CUNNINGHAM, ESQ., Suite 501-3, Erick Build., Pittsburgh
Tentral sinh jfar western Qssntiatinns
The Zlssutiatiun uf Tlehelanh ani: Vittnitp
. . . ' .1 ...... CHARLES K. .XRTER, ESQ., Marshall Build-
. . . . . . . . . CHARLES XY. DISBROVl', University Club
The Qmherst Qllluh of Thitagu
. . ' ..... GEORGE H. RICILVAINE, Hubbard Woods, Ill.
. . . . . . . JOHN H. STEVENS, 111 West Monroe St., Chicago
A The Qssntiatinn nt St. Zinuie
. . . . . . . . LUTHER AIQISTRONG. Kirkwood
. . . . . . . . . . EDWARD T. HALL, Purina Mk
Jilithtgan State Qmherst Qssutiatinn
. . . . . . . . CHARLES F. JXDAMS, 34 Selden Ave.,
. . . . . . VVILLIAM A. SLEEPER, 1112 Union Trust Build.,
Qmherst Tlunh of jmrthmestern Q9hiu
. . . . . . ALEXANDER L. SMITH, 51-54 Produce Exchange,
. . . DONALD P. SMITH, 2459 Collingwood Ave
134
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President
Secretary
President
Secretary
President
Secretary
President
Secretary
President
S ecretary
President
Secretary
President
Secretary
President
Secretary
President
Secretary
President
Secretary
The Qotthtnestetn Qssotiation .
. . JOSEPH R. KINGMAN, ESQ., 225 Ridgewood Ave., Minneapolis, Minn.
. . . JOSEPH L. SEYBOLD, Wells and Dickey Co., Minneapolis, Minn.
The Qssotiatton of Res illllotnes
RICHARD R ROLLINS care of "The Sho S"
. . . . . . . . . . , p
. . . . . . .' . . . EDWIN D. HEWITT, 118 Fourth St.
The Qssoeiation of the Svouthbaest ' A
. . . . . DR. GEORGE E. BELLOWS, 429 Rialto Build., Kansas City, Mo.
. . . . ' . EDWARD W. KIDDER, 4131 Mercier St., Kansas City, Mo.
The Qlssociation of iliehraska
. . . . . . REV. FREDERIC T. ROUSE, 412 North 22d St., Omaha
. . . . . . OSGOOD T. EASTMAN, First National Bank, Omaha
The itkotkp jllllountain Qssoeiation P I . -
. . . . . . . . WILLIAM F. SLOCUM, Colorado Springs,'Colo'.
. . . . FRED P. SMITH, ESQ., 206 Tramway Build., Denver, Colo.
The Qssoeiatton of Qrigona , '
. . . . . . . . STUART W. FRENCH, Douglas
. . . . . . . . . . . WILLIAM H. WEBSTER, Douglas
The Qssotiation of bouthetn Talifotnia "
. . . . . . REV. WILLIAM H. DAY, 946 South Union Ave., Los Angeles
. DANIEL BEECHER, ESQ., 500 Washington Build., Third and Spring Sts., Los Angeles
The Zlssoeiation of washington '
. . . . . D. BERTRAND TREFETHEN, ESQ., 614 Coleman Build., Seattle
. '- .... DR. PAUL A. TURNER, 805 American Bank Build., Seattle
The Qssotiatton of jiotthetn Talitornia V' Q
. . PROF. WILLIAM A. MERRILL, PH.D.,, LL.D., 2609 College Ave., Berkeley
. . . . . . . WILLARD P. SMITH, EsQ.,.1700 Call Build., San Francisco
The Silssotiation of the Tolumhta Billkf Basin A
. . . . . . . A. . WILLIAM M. LADD, 243 West Park St., Portland
. CHARLES H. GRITZMACHER, 1378 Haight St., San Francisco'
135
'I
September 24
8
October 4
October 14-16
November 25-27
December 22
January 5
February 2-10
February 11
February 22
February 28
March 24
April 6
May 31
June 12
June 17-25
June 14-19
June 27
June 28
june 28
June 29
June 29
June 29
june 30
june 30
September 16-22
September 23
October
October 13-15
December 21
January 4
D
'Wo-morrnmn mimic-morrow sul to-morrow , A
crmfpg on thid petty pau! from 'aan to Mn.
1914
Beginning of the College Year . . . . . 11.30 A.l. Thllk
Mountain Day, a holiday . . '. ......
Porter Prize Entrance Examinations . ..... Vledrlesday to F rgy
Thanksgiving Recess .... . 12.20 P.M. Wednesday, 2.111 P.l. Ffh
Christmas Recess begins . . . .... 12.20 l'.l. Tai
1915
Christmas Recess ends .
Semester Examinations
Second Half -year begins .
Washington's Birthday, a holiday
Day of Prayer for Colleges .
Spring Recess begins . .
Spring Recess ends
Memorial Day, a holiday .
Preliminary Registration Day
Semester Examinations . . . Thursday thro
Examinations for Admission .
Baccalaureate Sermon . ' .
Hyde Prize Orations . .
Kellogg Prize Declamations .
Class Day . .
President's Reception .
Lawn Ffrte .
Commencement Exercises .
Alumni Dinner
SUMMER VACATION OF TWELVE XYEEKS
Examinations for Admission .
Beginning of the College Year
Mountain Day, a holiday .
Porter Prize Entrance Examinations
Christmas Recess begins .
Christmas Recess ends .
1916
. .
136
. 2 r.u. Tueshy
. Thunhy
. . Monday
12.20 rx. Wednesday
. 2 ml. Tuesday
. . . Monk
ugh the following Friy
. Monday to Satuxk
Monday aiu-.rms
Monday wi
. . Tai
Tuesday afnennm
. Tuesday wi
. Wednesday mari
. Wednesday aitnrlnd
Thursday to We
. 11.13 A.l. Tllk
Wednesday to Fi
. 12.20 nl. Ti
2.111 r.n. Ti
"L-13'
L25
GEORGE ARTHUR PLIMPTON, LL.D. .
President of the Corporation
ALEXANDER MEIKLEJOHN, PH.D., LL.D. .
President of the College
PROF. WILLISTON WALKER, D.D. .
Secretary of the Corporation
GEORGE HENRY WHITCOMB, M.A. . .
REV. WILLIAM HAYES WARD, D.D., LL.D.
CHARLES MILLARD PRATT, M.A. . . .
HON. CHARLES HERBERT ALLEN, LL.D. .
ARTHUR CURTISS JAMES, M.A. . .
JOHN WOODRUFF SIMPSON, LL.D.. . .
REV. CORNELIUS HOWARD PATTON, D.D.
DEAN WILFORD LASH ROBBINS, D.D., LL.D
ARTHUR CHARLES ROUNDS, M.A. . . .
PROF. ARTHUR LINCOLN GILLETT, D.D. .
TALCOTT WILLIAMS, LL.D., LITT.D. .
ROBERT ARCHEY WOODS, M.A. .
REV. JOHN TIMOTHY STONE, D.D.
REV. GEORGE ATWATER HALL
HARRY WELTON KIDDER, B.A.
Treasurer of the Corporation
. New York,
. Amherst,
New Haven,
. Worcester,
. New York,
. Brooklyn
. New York
. New York
. New York
. Boston,
. New York
. New York,
. Hartford,
. New York,
. Boston,
N. Y.
Mass.
Conn.
Mass.
N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.
Mass.
N. Y.
N. Y.
Conn.
N. Y.
Mass.
. . Chicago, Ill.
. Brookline, Mass.
. Amherst, Mass.
X
Co
TU
U l 'l'l.
Be a n
Nl
September
October
October
October
October
November
November
November
November
November
December
December
December
January I
January
January
January
February
February
February
February
March
March
March
April
April
April
May
M ay
M ay
May
May
June
June
June
June
27
4
11
18
25
1
8
15
22
29
6
13
20
10
17
24
31
7
14
21
28
7
14
21
11
18
25
2
9
16
23
30
6
13
20
27
1914-15
PROFESSOR T ALCOTT WILLIAMS, LL.D., LITT.D.
REVEREND LEXVIS T. REED . . .
REVEREND JOHN XNINTHROP PLATNER
REVEREND JAY T. STOCKING, D.D. . .
REVEREND FREDERICK BERG
J. , D.D. .
REVEREND FRANK J. GOODWIN, D.D. .
DEAN XNILFORD L. ROBBINS, D.D., LL.D.
REVEREND ALEXANDER H. ABBOTT . .
REVEREND EDWIN H. VAN ETTEN . .
PRESIDENT ALBERT P. FITCH, D.D. .
REVEREND JASON NOBLE PIERCE . .
REVEREND AUGUSTUS M. LORD, D.D. .
DEAN CHARLES R. BROWN, D.D., . .
DEAN EDMUND S. ROUSMANIERE, D.D. . .
PRESIDENT MARION L. BURTON, D.D., LL.D.
RIGHT REVEREND JAMES DEWOLE PERRY, JR.
REVEREND EDWARD R. EVANS ....
REVEREND J. V. MOLDENHAWER .
PROFESSOR WALTER RAUSCHENBUSCH,
D.D. f
REVEREND JAMES A. RICHARDS . . .
PROFESSOR EUGENE W. LYMAN, D.D.
PRESIDENT KENYON L. BUTTERFIELD,
LLiD. .
PRESIDENT ALBERT P. FITCH, D.D. . . .
PRESIDENT ALBERT P. FITCH, D.D. . . .
PRESIDENT WILLIAM H. P. FAUNCE, D.D., LL.D.
REVEREND NEHEMIAH BOYNTON, D.D. . .
REVEREND GEORGE A. GoRDoN,.D.D., LL.D.
PRESIDENT EMERITUS GEORGE HARRIS, D.D., L.H.D. .
REVEREND HENRY P. DEWEY, D.D. . . .
REVEREND JOHN TIMOTHY STONE, D.D. . .
REVEREND J. DOUGLAS ADAM, D.D.
REVEREND S. J. MCPHERSON, D.D.
REVEREND EDWARD F. SANDERSON
REVEREND S. PARKES CADMAN, D.D.
PROFESSOR JOHN F. GENUNG, D.D., L.H.D. .
PRESIDENT ALEXANDER MEIKLEJOHN, PH.D., LL.D. ,
138
. New York, N. Y.
. Brooklyn, N. Y.
. Cambridge, Mass.
Vllashington, D. C.
New Brunswick, N. J.
. VYest1ield, N. J.
. New York, N. Y.
. Albany, N. Y.
. New York, N. Y.
. Cambridge, Ma.ss.
. . Boston, Mass.
. Providence, R. I.
N ew Haven, Conn.
. - Boston, Mass.
Northampton, Mass.
. Providence, R. I.
. Pawtucket, R. I.
. Albany, N. Y.
. Rochester, N. Y.
. Boston, Mas.
. Oberlin, O.
Amherst, Mas.
Cambridge, Mas.
. Cambridge, Mass.
. Providence, R. I.
. Brooklyn, N. Y.
Boston, Mass.
. New York, N. Y.
Minneapolis, Minn.
. . Chicago, Ill.
. Hartford, Conn.
Lawrenceville, N.
. Brooklyn, N. Y.
Brooklyn, Y.
Amherst, Mas.
Amherst, Mass.
XI
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September
October
October
October
November
November
November
November
November
December
December
December
january
january
january
February
February
February
February
March
March
M arch
April
April
April
M ay
M ay
27,
4.
ll,
18,
1.
3.
15,
22,
29,
6,
13,
20,
17,
27,
31,
14,
17,
24,
28,
7.
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21,
11,
18
25
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1914
1914
1914
1914
1914
1914
1914
1914
1914
1914
1914
1914
1915
1915
1915
1915
1915
1915
1915
1915
1915
1915
1915
1915
1915
1915
1915
Qmberst Qiullege Christian Zlsfnriatiun
Svpeakets
DEAN GEORGE D. OLDS . . . ...... "The Honor System."
PROF. R. J. SPRAGUE, M.A.C. . "The Place of War in the Progress of Evolution."
REV. W. N. DEBERRY, Springfield . .... "The Chance for Which the Negro Pleads."
ROBERT A. WOODS, '86, Boston . . . 1 , .... "The Story Of South End House."
DEAN HARLAN F. STONE, '94, Columbia Law School . . . "Law as a Profession."
PRESIDENT KENYON L. BUTTERFIELD, M.A.C. ...... "Community Building."
REV. D. N. FURNAJIEFF, Sophia, Bulgaria . "The Present War in the Light of the Balkan War."
PRESIDENT WILLIAM F. SLOCUM, '74, Colorado College . . . "The Colorado Strike."
PRESIDENT ALBERT P. FITCH, D.D., Andover Theological Seminary '
" The Relation of the War to Christianity."
REV. TRVING MAURER, Northampton ........ Communion Service.
VVILLIAM F.. WALLING, New York ....... ' . "PrOgreSsiviSm and After."
DEAN CHARLES R. BROWN, D.D., Yale School of Religion . . "The Ministry as a Profession."
ROBERT A. WOODS, '86, Boston . . . "Opportunities for Young Men in Social Service."
REV. BREWER EDDY, Boston ....... "Backgrounds Of the War in Turkey."
DR. HOWARD A. BRIDGMAN, '83, Boston ..... "Editoria1'Work as a Profession."
PROF. WALTER RAUSCHENBUSCH, Rochester Theological Seminary
, "The Challenge of Social Problems to College Men."
REV. WILLIAM E. STRONG, D.D., Boston . . "A Winter Tour in the Interior of China."
REV. ENOCH F. BELL, Boston ....... "japan and American Christianity."
DEAN GEORGE D. OLDSQ DR. ALFRED E. STEARNS, '94, Phillips Andover Academy, GEORGE D.
PRATT, '93, New York, LAURENS H. SEELYE, '11, New York, GEORGE A. PLIMPTON, '76, New
York .
The Day of Prayer for Colleges: "The Place and Value of Religion in Personal Life."
GERALD STANLEY LEE, Northampton ...... "Taking the War Personally."
PRESIDENT ALBERT P. FITCH, D.D., Andover Theological Seminary . . Communion Service.
PRESIDENT ALBERT P. FITCH, D.D., Andover Theological Seminary . . Communion Service.
HON. MARCUS M. MARKS, New York . . " Public Service as Illustrated by Municipal Markets."
PRESIDENT ALEXANDER MEIKLEJOHN . . . . "The Policy of a New England College."
MR. FREDERICK S. ALLIS, '93 .... ...., ' 'The Western Trip."
REV. GEORGE A. GORDON, D.D., Boston
CHARLES D. HURREY, New York ........ "Latin America."
REV. JOHN DOUGLAS ADAM, D.D., Hartford Theological Seminary
139
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NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIFTEEN
john Jacob Atwater Paul Dyess Weathers
NINETEEN HUNDRED AND SIXTEEN
Lewis Williams Douglas Stuart Williams Rider
QB!
NINETEEN HUNDRED AND SEVENTEEN
Theodore Lewis Widmayer
KH
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NINETEEN HUNDRED AND EIGHTEEN
Morris Holliday Williams
140
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Organized 1910
Professor Howard W. Doughty
Professor Frederick B. Loomis
Richard H. Bacon . .
Professor john Corsa
Mr. Arthur H. Dakin, '84
Professor Howard W. Doughty
Richard H. Bacon, '15
Gfficzts
Erahuatz Members
Rev. Edwin B. Robinson, '96
Jfazultp members
Professor John Corsa
Qkinhztgtahuate members
Hazen A. Chandler, '16
. President
Vice-President 4
. .Secretary 1
. 1 Treasurer
1
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Mr. Ernest M. Whitcomb, '04 1
Professor Frederick B. Loomis
Francis R. Otte, '16
141
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The Hutchins Prize .
The Bertram Prizes .
The junior Prizes .
The Billings Prizes . .
The Freshman Prizes .
The Walker Sophomore Prize .
The Walker Freshman Prizes .
The Hagen Prize .
The Kent Prize .
The Folger Prize .
The Armstrong Prizes . .
The
Harold E. Jewett,
Kellogg Prizes .
Hardy Prizes . .
Hyde Prize ...,
Bond Prize ....
Class of 1884 Prize in Oratory
Rogers Prize ....
Newton M. Kimball, Edw
The
The
The
The
The
The
Mitre Prizes
'14, F.
alle ee
Q O '
Qreek
. . . . Walter R. Agard, '15
latin
, . . Frank H. Ferris, '14, james K. Smith, '15
. . George R. Humphries, '14, James K. Smith, '15
. . . William G. Avirett, '16, Robert M. Proctor, '16
. . . . Everett M. Root, '17, Harold A. Smith, '17
Mathematics
. . . . . . . . . Scott M. Buchanan, '16
. . Elbridge A. Goodhue, '17, Morris A. Copeland, '17
literature
'15
'14
1
. . . , . VVilson Macdonald,
. . . . . . . . . . J. Cuthbert Long,
Frank H. Ferris,
. . . . ' Henry W. Wells, '17, Paul Jenkins, '17, Morris A. Copeland, '17
Everett Glass, '14, Cameron Whiteford, '14, Eugene Stinson, '16, Thomas B. Munro, '16
Buhlit Svpeaking
. . . . . . William C. Esty, Zd, '16, Mortimer Eisner, '17
. john W. Strahan, '14, Charles P. Rugg, '14
. . ...... john VV. Strahan, '14
. ......... .... lN laurice F. Childs, '14
. Frank H. Ferris, '14
g Fenimore Cady, Harry Cole, Raymond'B. Cooper, J. Theodore Cross
in H. Konold, Arthur E. Ralston, Edward A. Van Valkenburgh of the Class of 1915.
14
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The
The
The
The
The
The
The
The
The
The
The
Science
A. C. James Prize . .
Porter Astronomy Prize .
Porter Physics Prize . .
Second Year Physics Prize .
7
- - . Frank C. Finch,
. . Louis F. Eaton, '
. William G. Avirett, '
14
15
16
N , . Hollis W. Plimpton, '15
Sawyer Prize .... 15
14
15
7
. Phillips F. Greene,
Wendell P. Shattuck, '
. . . . . Phillips F. Greene, '
Shepard Mineralogical Prize .
Phi Delta Theta Prize . .
. Miscellaneous
Woods Prize CGeneral Improvementb , . . . .
Class of 1884 Prize Clnterclass Singj ' .
Porter Admission Prize . . .
A. Lyman XYilliston Hygiene Prizes
. . . . Sydney D. Chamberlain, '14
. . . . . . . The Class of 1916
. ..... Carter L. Goodrich, '18
. .... Richard T. Hobart, '17, Frank M. Sleeper, '17
n
Ziannnrahle illllentiun c
AsTRoNoMY.
1915.
Hollis Winslow Plimpton, Norwood.
George Keyes Ripley, Troy, N. H.
CHEMISTRY.
1915.
Francis Wesley Blair, Amherst.
Everett Webb Fuller, Brooklyn, N. Y.
1917.
Harold Addison Smith, West Springfield.
ECONOMICS.
1914.
james Richard Kimball, Orange.
ENGLISH.
1914.
Fred Everett Glass, Bangor, Me.
Harold Ernest jewett, Howard, R. I.
john Cuthbert Long, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Philip West Payne, Omaha, Neb.
1913-1914
143
1915. I
Walter Raymond Agard, Austin, Tex.
Stuart -Franklin Heinritz, Holyoke.
FRENCH. '
1914.
Cameron Whiteford, Detroit, Mich.
1915.
Sidney Raymond Packard, Brockton.
1916. . I i
Wilbur Clark Knowlton, Kirkwood, Mo
GERMAN.
1914.
Guy Harry Gundaker, Oak Park, Ill.
Cameron Whiteford, Detroit, Mich.
3
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"The South and Her Problems"
"An Address at Gettysburg" .
'AA Vision of XYar" . .
"A Plea for Cuba" . .
"Anarchy in Idaho"
" Cut Off from the People"
"The Man without a Country
4' Roosevelt's Rough Riders "
"The Nomination of Wilson"
"The Plea for Dreyfus" .
1916-William Cole Esty, 2d
Charles Burton Ames
William Goodwin Avirett
Julius Seelye Bixler
William Cole Esty, 2d
Eralsey Clark Ferguson
Ralph Blackmarr Ball
Henry Hyde Banta
George Everett Baril
Charles Henry Bartholomew
Frank Lawrence Buckley
Kellogg ibrige Qbcbihitinn
COLLEGE HALL, Monday, June 22, 1914
The Glass of iliineteen ibunhteb ant Snixteen
. . . . . . . . s . . .
'dlbe Qlilass of nineteen ibunhreh anh behenteen
1Bri5es
ikellngg Qppuintments
Qlibe Glass uf jliineteen Zbunhreh ant Sixteen
William Gates, jr.
Lewis Mansfield Knapp
Thomas Boston Munro
Francis Robert Otte
Humphrey Fuller Redfield
'dibellilasss of jaineteen Zbunhreh ants behenteen
Morris Albert Copeland
Mortimer Eisner
Ernest Page Downer
Henry Ingerton Fillman
john Gerow Gazely
145
Arthur P. White
Humphrey F. Rediield
Eugene Stinson
Lester C. Ver Nooy
William C. Esty, 2d
. Charles H. Bartholomew
I. Freeman Swett
Henry H. Banta
Mortimer Eisner
Henry I. Fillman
1917-M ortimer Eisner
Eugene Stinson
Lester Carlton Ver Nooy
Arthur Platt White
Lee Blair Wood
Laurence Henry Young
Franklin Powers Hawkes
William Edward Lanyon
Carroll Blakely Low
Hilmar Rauschenbusch
jesse Freeman Swett
n,
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The Cutlass of jaineteen iiaunhteh anh Jfnurteen
COLLEGE HALL, Friday, June 12, 1914
Question: Resolved, that the suffrage should be granted to women on equal terms with men. '
Frank Halliday Ferris
John Cuthbert Long
Charles Morris Mills S
john XYindrum Strahan, Jr.
Emil Henry Beyer
Maurice Frederick Childs
Royal Firman
Charles Parks Rugg
Ha
Julius Seelye Bixler, 1916
Sidney Raymond Packard,
George Deming Whitmore,
John Uhrich Reber, 1916
Humphrey Fuller Redfield,
Jay Brinkerhoff Tomlinson,
' Qffirmatihe
jhegatihe
' 1
Ridgefield Park, N. J.
' Brooklyn, N. Y.
St. Louis, Mo.
Newark, N. J.
South Hadley Falls, Mass.
. Heath, Mass.
Chicago, Ill.
Worcester, Mass.
rdy Prize of Thirty Dollars-John Windrum Strahan, Jr.
Hardy Prize of Twenty Dollars-Charles Parks Rugg.
Qllnllege QBratu1f
Jfnr' the fear nineteen jfifteen
JOHNSON CHABEL, Tuesday, April 13, 1915 r
" Question- of' Efficiency."
1915
" Day Dreams."
1915 , ., , .
"The Necessary Confiictf'
"A Defense of the Boy Scout Movement."
1916
"The Ethics of Journalism."
1915
" Moral Equivalent for War." .
New London, Conn.
Campello, Mass.
Holyoke, Mass.
Reading, Pa
Washington, D. C.
Mount Holly, N. J
Class of 1884 Prize of Twenty-five, Dollars-Awarded to John Uhrich Reber, '16.
Honorable Mention-4Humphrey Fuller Redfield, '16.
147
2 'N
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?2
Zlllbz Glass uf aaineteen ilaunhreh anh jfuurtzzn
Q GENERAL PROGRAM
Reunion Bay
Saturday, june 20
Annual Parade of the Reunion Classes The Camill-
Baccalaureate
Sunday, June 21
Baccalaureate Sermon by President Meiklejohn College Chllfdh
Annual Concert of the Oratorio Chorus and Crchestra College Hal.
Qlumni Rap
w Monday, June 22
Final Concert of the Combined MusicaldC1ubs College Hal.
Hyde Prize Exhibition College Hal,
Baseball, Amherst vs. Dartmouth Pratt FEB. LQ
Kellogg Prize' Exhibition and Award of Prizes for the Collegiate Year 1913-1914 College Hd,
Final Performance of Dramatics: "Everyman" College Hal,
Qlilass Bay
Tuesday, June 23
Ivy, Class Day, Grove and Senior Night Exercises C35-gg
Annual Meeting of the Trustees Xfalkg- Hg,
Reception by President and Mrs. Meiklejohn Presidenfs Hi,
Qlinmmentcment Rap
. Wednesday, june 24
Annual Meeting of the Massachusetts Beta of Phi Beta Kappa dv B K Rooms, Morris Pratt Memorial Dordtry,
Meeting of the Alumni Athletic Association Johmon C-land.
Ninety-third Commencement Cones' Hd'
Bond Prize Exhibitiong Conferring of Degreesg Presentation of Portraits: Benediction
Annual Dinner of the Alumni Pratt Gvmn-Q-.
, , , Speakers:- '
William F. Slocum, 74, Toastmaster President Alexander Meiklejohn Professor Edwin A, G.-gl
Hon. William Howard Taft
Sw X
X x Q V '
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Planting of the
Ivy Gration
Ivy Poem
Class Oration
Class Poem
Grove Oration
Grove Poem
Tuesday, June 23, 1914
Ehp Exercises
COLLEGE CHURCH, 9.30 A.M.
Class Ivy by the Class President
Glass Bay QExereises
COLLEGE HALL, 10.30 A.M.
Grohe Qlixereises
COLLEGE GROVE, 2.00 P.M.
Qeninr jaigbt
COLLEGE GROVE, 7.15 P.M.
Lawn Fete, Reception in the President's Tent, Concert
Sydney' Dakin Chamberlain
john Cuthbert Long
Fred Everett Glass
Charles Parks Rugg
Fred Everett Glass
Austin Herman Hersh
Maurice Frederick Childs
College Sing, Passing of the Senior Chalice by the Class of Nineteen Fourteen
Presentation of Loving Cup to Dr. Edwin A. Grosvenor, '67, Hon. '14, by the Class of Nineteen Fourteen
March of the Classes, Singing of "The Fairest College"
Dancing in the Gymnasium
149
C GMMENCENIENI
Doctor of Laws
HENRY CLAY HALL
WILLIAM HOWARD TAFT
Mervin Washington Bliss
Percival Floyd Bliss
Sydney Dakin Chamberlain
Maurice Frederick Childs
Frank Halliday Ferris
Frank Clifford Finch
Frank Ambrose Bernero
Emil Henry Beyer
Donald Howlett Brown
Kenneth Buffington
Edward Sprague Cobb
Jeremiah joseph Donohue
Royal Firman
Merrill Stanton Gaunt
Walter Farrar Greene
Frederick Henry Bedford, Jr.
Frank Christopher Brough
Percy Jay Burdick
Earle Dudley Butler
Allen john deCastro
X5
Regrets Qliunferreh
june
24, 1914
Zlaunnrarp
Doctor of Divinity
EUGENE WILLIAM LYMAN
iganhelur of Quits
Magna
john Tilney Carpenter
Cum Laude
Ralph Alphonso Lawrence
Cum Laude
Charles Glann
Fred Everett Glass
Guy Harry Gundaker
Leslie Matheson Hickson
George Rolfe Humphries
Robert Clinton Hanford
Paul Wallace Hardy
Austin Herman Hersh
John Kenneth Hough
Silas Graves Hubbard
Theodore Horace Hubbard
Allen Birdsall Hull
james Richard Kimball
Arthur John Lewis
Harold Ernest Jewett
john Cuthbert Long
Hallock Luce, Jr.
Alfred Edward Mallon
Charles Morris Mills
Rite
John Houston Mitchell
Charles Henry Moulton
Robert John Murphy
Clinton Whitman Richmond
Clarence DeWitt Rugg
Charles Parks Rugg
Wendell Phillips Shattuck
Harold Eden Shaw
Kenneth Oldham Shrewsbury
ZGa:beIut uf Snience
john Randall Child
Solomon Frederick Cushman, J
Charles Henry Fallass
Louis Huthsteiner
Richard Montague Kimball
Colin Livingstone
Rite
Walter Howard McGay
r. Tilford Wentworth Miller
William Otway Morrow
john Ogden Outwater
Franklin Ward Renfrew
Marlor Boardman Seymour
150
'Doctor of Letters
EDWIN AUGUSTUS GRosVENoR
HENRY CLAY ,FOLGER
Cameron Whiteford
George Verdi Morse
Philip West Payne
Lowell Shumway
George Benedict Tramontana
Daniel Stevenson Smart
Walton Kimball Smith
Fred William Stafford
Frederick Dorflinger Suydam
Howard Scattergood Taylor
john James Tierney
Richard Storrs Van Ingen
George Harold Wiltsie
Roswell Philip Young
Hugh Charles Sicard
John Windrum Strahan, Jr.
George Edward Washburn
Ralph Wheaton Whipple
Ernest Arthur VVhittemore
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Zguarhs aah Qlluumils Eating the feat
HE various activities under this division have had on the whole a most' successful year,
' ' 'd ' to a osition of honor and
ar y
influence in undergraduate circles has been a marked achievement. The aim of the
QA' Board has been to make the magazine primarily one of opinion rather than literature,
presenting in forceful essays and editorials the various phases of the "undergraduate situation."
Feature articles have been Dr. Manthey-Zorn's remarkable discussion of the VVar, and the
"Senior Series" by representative men. With the reorganization of the business staff, the cir-
" ' df1fld.Iaddi-
culation of former years has been quadrupled and the advertising increase ve o n
tion, the magazine is now sent to some seventy of the preparatory schools of the country. To
the efficiency and able leadership of Ag ' ' '
cessful year is largely due. 'HoWever, the present Board, with Munro, '16, as chairman, is
perhaps the strongest board in several years
From the standpoint of the Christian Association, the big accomplishment of the year has
been the successful completion of the project fora permanent general secretary and religious
d l' f the
work director for the college. Another big improvement is the complete remo e ing o
Association rooms through the generosity of Rev. George Atwater Hall, '82, of Brookline. There
has been a most noticeable increase in the attendance and interest of the Bible Study groups
'throughout the college. Under the auspices of the Social Study committee four interesting,
illustrated, one-hour-only lectures have been given. The Deputation committee has extended
schools. The election of Bixler, '16, to the presidency of Inter-
fafwj
2' P ticularl is this true of the Monthly, Whose rapi rise p
X .
Q Zio
ard, '15, as editor-in-chief, the credit for this most suc-
its Work among preparatory
collegiate Council of Christian Associations of New England deserves comment.
The second year of the Student Council has been marked by a conservative policy which has
firmly established the prestige of that body in Amherst. The two main problems have been
to formulate some just financial system for the support of activities, and to draft a complete
:set of athletic rulings to take the place of the old rules of the Athletic Board adopted in toto pro
.tem at the outset of the Council's career. The custom of posters has been abolished and a Press
'Club reinstituted, the action probably resulting from discussion originating at the regular meet-
ings of Scarab. The Student, once basketball was re-established, battled conservatively with
typographical errors.- The OLIO'came out. S
152
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Walter Raymond Agard Harry Wing Cole Louis Franklin Eaton
john jacob Atwater 101111 Meffiman Gaus
Qllass nf jiineteen Ztaunhreh ant: Sixteen
Charles Burton Ames Stuart Williams Rider George Winslow Washburn
illilass nf jaineteen ibunhreh anh Sehenteen
Richard Townley Hobart
153
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154
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VV alter R. Agard
joseph L. Snider
1914-1915 '
. . . . . . President Richardson Pratt . . . . . . . Treasurer
. . . . . Vice-President Gerald Keith . . . . . Recording Secretary
Theodore A. Greene ........ General Secretary
Qihairmen of Qhmmmittees
joseph L, Snider Bible Study Gerald Keith . . . . Handbook
J. Theodore Cross Social Study John J. Atwater . . . Reading Room
Richardson Pratt ...... Finance john M. Gaus ...... Deputation
Louis F. Eaton ..... Membership Arthur H. Washburn . . . Immigrant Education
William C. Hunneman ......... Boys' Work
1915-1916
Julius S, Bixler , . . President Burbank C. Young . . -. Treasnrer
Eralsey C. Ferguson . . Vice-President Alfred H. Washburn . . Recording Secretary
155
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1914-1915 mb? Qmberst btuhent VOLUME XLV11
Randolph M. Fuller, '15 .
Robert S. Moulton, '15 .
Kenneth W. Banta, '15
J. Gerald Cole, '15
VVallace M. Leonard, Jr., '16
Richard H. Bacon, '15 .
Lester C. Ver Nooy, '16 .
Herbert G. Vaughn, '17 .
. . . . . . . . Editor-in-Chief
. . . .Managing Editor
Qssuniate Qiihitnrs
John U. Reber, '16 John D. Clark, '17
Howard F. Reed, '16 David R. Craig, Jr., '17
Alfred S. Romer, '17
Business Staff
. . . . . . . Business Manager
. . . . . . Assistant Business Manager
. . . . . . Second Assistant Business Manager
john U. Reber, '16 . .
Wallace M. Leonard, '16 .
Howard F. Reed, '16
john D. Clark, '17
1915-1916
. . . . . . Editor-in- Chief
. . . . . . Managing Editor
Qssuciate Qihiturs
David R. Craig, jr., '17 Henry I. Fillman, '17
Alfred S. Romer, '17
156
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1914-1915 EDB gmbkfgt ,'1lHUl1tljlP VOLUME XXIX
Walter R. Agard, '15
John C. Hayner, '15 .
VVhitney W. Stark, '17 .
George D. Clapperton, '15
J. Gerald Cole, '15
Stuart F. Heinritz, '15
Qssnciate Qlihitnrs
George R. Humphries, '15
Franklin S. Clark, '16
. Edit0r-in- Chief
. Managing Editor
Business Manager
Lewis M. Knapp, '16
Thomas B. Munro, '16
Eugene Stinson, '16
Thomas B. Munro, '16 .
Lewis M. Knapp, '16
J. Seelye Bixler, '16
Franklin S. Clark, '16
Burbank C. Young, '16 .
Mortimer Eisner, '17 .
Charles H. Brown, '16 .
19154916
Qssnriate Guitars
C. Baldwin Peck, '16
Eugene Stinson, '16
. Editor-in-Chief
. Managing Editor
john D. Clark, '17
Hilmar Rauschenbusch, '17
. Business Manager
A ssistant Business Manager
. Advertising Manager
157
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Qibe Qmberst Qbliu
PUBLISHED ANNUALLY BY THE JUNIOR CLASS
VOLUME LIX
William G. Avirett .
Humphrey F. Redfield
Lewis M. Knapp
Wallace M. Leonard, jr.
William G. Chapman
Lester C. Ver Nooy .
Robert H. Park
Zlssuciatz Qlihiturs
Edwin H. Lutkins
. . Editor-iw Chief
Assistant Editor-iw Chief
Thomas B. Munro
John U. Reber
. Business Manager
. Advertising Manager
. Circulation Manager
158
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T 45111135 anh Qssmziatiuns Eating the fear
HE proposition that "Amherst is waking up" is only borne out in part by the work of the
various associations in the past twelvemonth. Dramatics in particular has had a most
8,269 peculiar year. As has been well said: " If ever men strove in the interests of art against
all manner of handicaps, they have done so who believed that Amherst College should
so far defend the classic as to produce 'Everyman' another year." The financial difficulties,
such as securing of dates for performances, have been largely due to indifference and lack of sup-
port on the part of the college as a whole, for the cast's presentation of the play itself has been
exceptionally well done, and has met with most favorable criticism. The work of Reber, '16,
as Everyman has been of unusually high quality. The year has therefore definitely raised the
question: Discontinuance of Shakespeare and Morality Plays or a change in undergraduate
sentiment and interest. '
We bemoan the untimely demise of the Stock Company as an irreparable loss suffered this
past year. After a " Farewell Performance," staged in connection with the Musical Clubs
a year ago, most of the original ,company became involved in the annoying details incident to
graduation and this year's plans fell through for somewhat similar reasons. Although by no
means chief mourner, the OLIO feels exceeding sad at heart over the Unfortunate Bereavement,
for the Company has in the past been an able and loyal supporter of the business manager-
" Le roi est mort, lave him rest in pace."
Perhaps the greatest achievement of the associations has been the double victory in debat-
ing. This has been partly due to a general increase in interest on the part of the college, as
evidenced in the high standard set by the Interclass Debate. Other phases of this same interest
have been the large attendance at the discussion meetings of the Forum, and the founding of the
Socialist Study Club. Three other old organizations have been successfully revived, the Moun-
tain Club, the Henry Ward Beecher Club, and the Press Club. The resuscitation of the last
named, with its aim of wider and more authentic publicity, comes as a realization of a big Amherst
need. The Mitre, although it has done nothing startling with the exception of a playlet presented
in collaboration with Mount Holyoke, has met informally in receptions to lecturers and authors.
The usual dances of the year have been exceptionally successful. Several alumni have re-
turned for them. A feature has been the playing of Wittstein's Orchestra of New Haven.
A 160
HE musical clubs this year were a decided success. The season was featured by two trips,
one at Thanksgiving to New Rochelle and White Plains and the other during the spring
QQSQD vacation centering about Boston. The welcome given the clubs was everywhere of
the most cordial and hearty nature. A
The program used on the spring trip opened with "Lord Jeffery Amherst" and "High
Upon her Living Throne" by the combined clubs. During the course of the concert the glee
club rendered several numbers including "Rockin' in the Win'," "Dixie Kid," "Gipsy John,"
"Hunting Song," and the "Mulligan Musketeers." The last-named, an old song, was excep-
tionally well rendered this year and was everywhere enthusiastically applauded. The selections
of the mandolin club included "The Bubble" from "High links," "Cecile" waltz, a march
"Thoroughbred," and three popular medleys. The medleys in particular were very well re-
ceived and in more than one instance a second encore was called for., Among the specialnumbers
the glee club quartet, consisting of Webster, McGowan, Gillies, and Lyon, rendered a number
of selections that were always enjoyed by the audience. Banjo solos, also, were given by Brinker-
hoff, '18, while Bixler and Marks, '16, performed a " Harmony Duo" on the cello. Special mention
should be made of the readings by Lyon and baritone solos given by Stinson. The last number
on the program was "Cheer for Old Amherst" given by the combined clubs, while in a number
of instances "To the Fairest College" was sung by the clubs augmented by "all the Amherst
men in the audience."
Guncerts
November 26 Mayflower Ave. School New Rochelle, N. Y. March 26 High School Hall Brockton, Mass.
November 27 High School White Plains, N. Y. March 27 Town Hall Winchester, Mass.
December 19 People's Institute Northampton, Mass. March 30 Hotel Plaza New York, N. Y.
january 20 Central High School Springfield, Mass. April 16 Women's'Club Building Worcester, Mass.
February 26 Congregational Church Florence, MHSS- May 7 Masonic Hall Amherst
March 24 Auditorium Brattleboro, Vt. May 21 College Hall Prom Concert
March 25 High School Hall Newton, Mass. June 28 College Hall Commencement Concert
161
4351115381 4511155
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Glen Qliluh
Harold A. Lyon, '15, Leader
jfirzt Uiennrs
Arthur H. Elliott, '15
Gordon R. Hall, '15
Raymond S. Person,'15
Leslie T. VVebster, '15
Robert J. Anderson, '16
jfirst Bassas
Phillips F. Greene, '15
Harold L. Gillies, '16
Eugene Stinson, '16
Carroll B. Low, '17
Quartet
Harold A. Lyon, '15
Robert R. McGowan, '15
Leslie T. Webster, '15
Harold L. Gillies, '16 '
'Qrrnmpanist - D
Julius S. Bixler, '16
' Qrrnnh Genera
e William G. Barnes, '15
Robert R. McGowan, '15
Merrill H. Boynton, '16
Charles E. Maynard, '17
bernnh Bassas'
james W. Craig, -'15
Stuart F. Heinritz, "15
Harold A. Lyon, '15
Arthur P. White, '16
iHlI'a11iJuIin Qiltth'
Arthur P. Goodwin, '15, Leader
jfirst imlanhnlins
Raymond B. Cooper, '15
Robert A. McCague, '15
james K. Smith '15
Robert S. Gillett, '16
Alfred H. Washburn, '16
Morris A. Copeland, '17
Robert Munroe, '17
Robert J. Brinkerhoff, '18
wraps
Robert H. Park, '16
berunh jwlanhulins
joseph N. Lincoln, '15
Edward R. Proctor, '17
Banjos
Horatio Wales, '15
Richard T. Hobart, '17
Qllellus
Julius S. Bixler, '16
Allan D. Marks, '16
A jfirst Viulin
Arthur P. Goodwin, '15
brrunh Violin
George K. Ripley, '15
Guitars
Phillips F. Greene, 15
George D. Whitmore 15
18
18
7
7
7
7
Albert W. Bailey,
Don H. Kessler, '
163
Eramatins Qssuciatiun
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Qmberst Cnlnllzge Eramatins Qssuniatiun
1914-1915 I
J. Gerald Cole, '15 . . . President
Francis R. Otte, '16 . . . Manager
Charles H. Brown, '16 . . . . . Secretary
Percy M. Hughes, jr., '16 W . . Assistant Manager
Frederick D. Bell, '17 . -. . . . Stage'Manager
Professor George B. Churchill . . Faculty Adviser
" QEhetpman" 1,
2JBtamatis4 ibersunaz
DR MATICSV-'l
U
. Q John U. Reber
Everyman
God . . . Philip.F. Whitten
Death , . John D. Clark
Dgctor , George W. Washburn
Fellowship Charles H. Bartholomew
C0u5in , . Charles H. Brown
Kindred . Warren A. Breckenridge
Goods . Alfred C. Haven, jr.
Good-Deeds . Francis R. Otte
Strength . . . J. Gerald Cole
Discfetion Benjamin S. D'Ooge
FiVQ-Wit5 . .l B.
Beauty , Winthrop H. Smith
Knowled e Francis G. O'Connor
. g
Confession
. Philip F. Whitten
!
1
!
3.
I-,
. WW?
" QEh erpman "
Mille. Zaga
Qlas. Qlaek. woe.
lin Memoriam
Qmberst Stuck Qllumpanp
Rasseh out Quietly in the Bear 1914
Qfter Seheral Jfarehmell iberfntmanees
The Zlate Ziamentehs
Qliriamgulal: Behating Uleam
ly'
nf'
s
.
55
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AMHERST-WESLEYAN-WILLIAMS
Friday, December 11, 1914
Question
Resolved, That the United States should own and operate the telegraph.
AMHERST-VVILLIAMS ANIHERST-WESLEYAN
Won by Amherst at Amherst Won by Amherst at Middletown
Uleam Team
Julius Seelye Bixler, '16
Craig Parsons Cochrane, '17
VV alter Raymond Agard, '15
joseph Lyons Snider, '15
Hilmar Rauschenbusch, '17 1 Mortimer Eisner, '17
Stuart Franklin Heinritz, '15 . . Manager
George Homer Lane, '16
. . . . . . . Assistant M anager
VVESLEYAN'-VVILLIAMS
VVon by Wesleyan at Williamstown
'iintertlass Rebate
1917-1918
Friday, March 19, 1915
, Qauestiun .
Resolved, That the pending treaty with Colombia should be ratified.
ZBecisiun
To the Class of Nineteen Eighteen -
CLASS OF NINETEEN HUNDRED AND SEVENTEEN
AFFIRMATIVE
Craig Parsons Cochrane Hilmar R21llSCl16I1bUSCl1
Robert Miller Fisher Alfred Sherwood Romer, Alternate
CLASS OF NINETEEN HUNDRED AND EIGHTEEN
NEGATIVE l .
Lucius Ellsworth Thayer FFHHCIS William Getty'
Theodore Meyer Greene Charles Chanin, Alternate
169
5 9898
X X
X CQ ,4
jllluuntam Qllluh
Professor Arthur J. Hopkins . ....... Pf6Sid611ff
Professor Alfred S. Goodale . . . . . . . Secretary
illirips
October 8 .
October 10 .
October 17 .
October 24 .
October 31 . .
. . . . . . . . Sunderland and Mt. Toby
. . Holyoke Range, from the Notch to Mt. Holyoke
Mount Lincoln
i .New trail from Notch to Belchertown
. . . . Williamsburg and Petticoat Hill
November 7 . .......... Sugar Loaf
November 21 . . Holyoke Range, from the Notch to Belchertown Line
March 13 . ......... ..... S underland Sugar Camps
1 Ciba iiaenrp Timaru Jmerber QEIuh
'Stuart F. Heinritz ........... . President
Edward D. Andrews ....... . Secretary
Meetings
February 10, 1915 ........... Q B K Rooms
"The Minister as a Citizen"
Rev. Lucius H. Thayer, '82, Portsmouth, N. H.
Faculty Club
lMarch 10, 1915 .
.April 14, 1915
May 15, 1915
June 2, 1915 .
i" Henry 'Ward Beecher"-P.ssays on Life and Works D
" Personal Reminiscences"
Professor John F. Genung
i D i ".The'Minister.as ai Pastor" l 1 i
Rev. Frederick W. Greene, '82, Middletown, Conn.
D l n "The Minister as a Preacher'l D D i
Rev. John Douglas Adam, Hartford Theological Seminary
i I ."Christianizii1g the Social Order" l i i
Essays and Discussion
l 170
Williston Hall
Williston Hall
Williston Hall
Yi
4 N.. ,.
1
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ILT-,EVE
VValter R. Agard, '15 . , , President
Stuart F. Heinritz, '15 . , , Manager
G. Homer Lane, '16 . . A . . . Assistant Manager
lectures
"Socialism and the War" "The Place of the Forum in College Life"
Harry W. Laidler of New York Professor Raymond G. Gettell
Q9pen Meetings
The Proposed Curriculum President Wilson's Mexican Policy A Graduate Manager for Activities
The Qurialist btuhp Cliluh
Organized as a branch of the Forum and affiliated with the Intercollegiate Socialist Society
Julius S. Bixler, '16 ................. President
William H. Mandrey, '15 . . . . Secretary
lectures
On the general subject of "Socialism"
Professor R. J. Sprague of M. A. C. Mr. Spencer Miller, jr., of New York
Mr. Ordway Tead of Boston Mr. H. S. Carruth of Amherst
ress Qiluh
William H. Tow, '16 . ..... . President
Alfred S. Romer, '17 . . . Secretary
Randolph M. Fuller, '15 . . . . Treasurer
171 '
J. Gerald Cole, '15 .
Walter R. Agard, '15
Jay B. Tomlinson, '15
Walton C. Baker, '16
President Meiklejohn
Professor Andrews
Professor Baxter
Professor Bigelow
Professor Churchill
Professor Cobb
VV alter R. Agard
G. Douglas Clapperton
J. Gerald Cole
Gardner P. Eastman
William G. Avirett
VValton C. Baker
Julius S. Bixler
Eralsey C. Ferguson
john D. Clark
l- 'ef
Jfanultp Members
Professor Esty
Professor Fletcher
Professor Genung
Professor Gettell
Professor Hamilton
Professor Lancaster
Professor Newlin
Glass nf jaineteen Zlaunhreh ants :Fifteen
Louis F. Eaton
John lVl. Gaus
Stuart F. Heinritz
Glass uf jliineteen Zbpunhreh anh Sixteen
Edwin H. Goodridge
John S. McCloy ,
Thomas B. Munro
Stuart W. Rider
Glass nf ,aaineteen Zbunhreh ante Qehenteen
A Francis L. Moginot
172
. . President
. Vice-President
. Secretary
. Steward
Professor Olds
Mr. Sherman
Professor Smith
Professor Stowell
Professor F. L. Thompson
Professor Utter
R. Alexander Robinson
James K. Smith
Joseph L. Snider
Jay B. Tomlinson
Robert W1 Smith
Winthrop H. Smith
Eugene Stinson
George W. Washburn
Hilmar Rauschenbusch
The Bananas
Ziuniur iiarumenahe Qtummittee
" P .- 1.u,"'L,
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Ulibe Hinetzen Qixteen Eiuniur Brnmenahz
Charles Burton Ames
William Gilger Chapman
Mrs. Alexander Meiklejohn
Mrs. Marion L. Burton
Miss Mary E. Woolley
Mrs. Helen M. Burrell
Mrs. Lewis T. Chapman
House Parties Open
Baseball, Amherst vs. Williams
Interclass Sing
Dramatics: " Everyman "
Informal Receptions
Annual OLIO Rush
Musical Clubs Concert
Prom Concert, Wittstein's Orchestra
junior Promenade
Morning Chapel
Baseball, Amherst vs. Wesleyan
House Parties Close
Qtummittee
Harold Lusk Gillies, Chairman
Lewis Williams Douglas
Donald Egbert Hardy
ibatrnnesses
Mrs. George B. Churchill
Mrs, john Corsa
Mrs. William L. Cowles
Mrs. James W. Crook ,
Mrs. KateiM. Eells
Rrugram
Qihurshap, Map ilitnentietb
Jfribap. Map Zlltnentpafitst
Saturhdp, :map Gitnentpasecunh
175
2.00 P.M.
4.00 P.M.
6.45 P.M.
8.15 P.M.
10.15 P.M.
8.30 A.M
4.00 P.M.
8.30 P.M.
9.00 P.M.
8.15 A.M.
2.30 P.M
6.00 P.M
Homans Robinson
Winthrop Hiram Smith
Mrs. Emma D. Fish
Mrs. Audubon L. Hardy
Mrs. George D. Olds
Mrs. Edwin C. Robinson
V Mrs. David Todd
Fraternity .Houses
Pratt Field
College Fence
College Hall
- Fraternity Houses .
Campus
College Hall
Gymnasium
Gymnasium
X
Johnson Chapel
Pratt Field
Fraternity Houses
The nineteen glfifteen Qeniur Z!-pup
i
Zllihe nineteen Svehenteen buphnmute iiaop
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fiummittee
william Qfhhnath Eianpun, Qllljairman
A Zllbenhnre QEherett Z8ruinn
Brooks. GEImu Bluhnsnu
Qarhiner iepashruuelz Rome
ilaerhert' william Qebmih
wahslnurtlj wilhar
Zwtnarh Willis
Remember Qlimelftb
3Rineteen Ziaunhreh anh Jfnurteeu
,,,,11:j5Wl.llll' L Ili 1
Cinmmittee
Bnhert 3Kee7J illilebotnan, fihairman
ikiebarh Ziaamlin Baron
Kingsley ZBueI Qllnlton
Enbn Qlibenhure Qllrnss
Gnrhnn ilkexfurh Zfaall
Marshall walker Zane
1BauI Epess weatbers
5,
Jfehruarp Thirteenth
jaineteen ilaunhreh ante jfifteen
Q-4
R. Alexander Robinson
Richard H. Bacon .
Winthrop H. Smith
John J. Atwater
Richard H. Bacon
Kingsley B. Colton
J. Theodore Cross
Charles B. Ames
Lewis W. Douglas
Eralsey C. Ferguson
QEPffiters
Qllass uf Bineteen Ziaunhteh anh fifteen
John M. Gaus
Gordon R. Hall
George H. Hubner
M. Walker Jones
Gerald Keith
Qlllass of nineteen ilaunhreh ant Sixteen
Harold L. Gillies
Douglas D. Milne
Humphrey F. Redfield
. President
. Vice-President
. Secretary
, Henry S. Kingman
Robert R. McGowan
Richardson Pratt
R. Alexander Robinson
Stuart VV. Rider
Vlfinthrop H. Smith
George VV. Vllashbum
img
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Vlfilliam C. Hunneman, Ir
Warren A. Breckenridge -
james N. Smith . .
Richard S. Banfield
VVarren A. Breckenridge
james E. Bronk
Frederick L. Chapman
Dean Blanchard
William Gates, Ir.
Edwin H. Goodridge
Gffieers
. President
. Vice-President
. Secretary
Glass of gaineteen Zlaunhreh ante jfifteen
Edwin H. Konold
Maurice L. McNair
Harry W. Cole
H. Nelson Conant
Stanley Heald
William C. Hunneman, jr.
Newton M. Kimball
james N. Smith
Webster H. Warren
Qillass nf nineteen ibunbreh aah bixteen
Geoffrey C. Neiley
Robert H. Park
Donald E. Hardy
W. Clark Knowlton
john S. McCloy Lambert F. Whetstone
181
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OCTOBER SEVENTEENTH
Alpha Delta Phi
Delta Kappa Epsilon
Delta Upsilon
Chi Phi
Phi Delta Theta
JANUARY SIXTEENTH
Theta Delta Chi
Phi Delta Theta
Pratt Dormitory
JANUARY TWENTY-THIRD
Delta Kappa Epsilon
Phi Gamma Delta
JANUARY THIRTIETH
Psi Upsilon
FEBRUARY TWELFTH
Phi Delta Theta CSubscriptiOnJ
FEBRUARY TWENTIETH
Delta Upsilon
Chi Psi
FEBRUARY TWENTY-SECOND
Psi Upsilon CSubscriptiOnJ
Sinfurmal A ann25
Burmg HJR fear 32111212211 Jfnurt22n
OCTOBER TENTH
Chi Psi CSubsCriptiOnJ
OCTOBER THIRTY-FIRST
NOVEMBER EIGHTEENTH
Psi Upsilon Cotillion Club at Psi Upsilon
Chi Psi
Beta Theta Pi
Theta Delta Chi
Phi Kappa Psi
DECEMBER ELEVENTH
Psi Upsilon CSubscriptionJ
Eating the Emir 3Rin2t22n jfift22n
FEBRUARY TWENTY-SEVENTH
Chi Phi .
MARCH SIXTH
Alpha Delta Phi
Theta Delta Chi
MARCH TENTH
Cotillion Club at Alpha Delta Phi
MARCH THIRTEENTH
Beta Theta Pi
Phi Kappa Psi
APRIL TENTH
Cotillion Club at Phi Delta Theta
Sphinx Club at Psi Upsilon
APRIL SEVENTEENTH
Phi Delta Theta
Phi Gamma Delta
182
APRIL TWENTY-EIGHTH
Phi Kappa Psi
A MAY FIRST
Psi Upsilon
Chi Psi P
Theta Delta Chi
M AY EIGHTH
Alpha Delta Phi
Delta Upsilon
Chi Phi
Phi Gamma Delta
ll'lAY FIFTEENTH
Sigma Delta Rho
NIAY TVVENTIETH
Junior Promenade Receptions
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The fear in Qthletics A
' ITH the record of all three major sports ending in a series of defeats and with all fourd'
9 .
9 5 9 the other varsity sports enjoying successful seasons, the athletic year from April lg
9 ii -4 . . . . . .
April presents an unusual situation. Aside from this, three other developments hav!
marked the year. There has been a marked tendency to increase competition
interest and to bring out new and unknown athletic material by placing former lnterclass con-
tests on an interfraternity basis as well. This has been done successfully in track the past year..
' ' Mari
Secondly, the Student Council finally voted against summer baseball, supplementing on
18, 1915, their action of june 21, 1914. The ruling does not affect the classes of 1915 or 1
Thirdly, basketball was re-established as a varsity sport in place of hockey.
The football season was marked by the introduction of the western style of play
Coach Riley, and marred by a 1-4-6 defeat in the Williams game when it seemed to some as H
Amherst played the better game. The baseball season was disastrous, due mainly to an erratiii
infield and the mid-season illness of Robinson. In track, Williams administered an overwhelmim
defeat on Pratt Field. Basketball proved conclusively in the two final home games,
Wesleyan and Williams, that it had returned to Amherst to stay. With an extended ten game
:schedule and the same team, next winter's season should be worth watching. The-s
team was the best that has ever represented the college, judging from the fact that every college
record but two went by the board. In tennis, two Amherst men faced each other in the finals
-of the New 'England Intercollegiates and thereby strengthened an already comfortable lead on
the Eight Point Cup. With a most creditable showing in the intercollegiates, outranking
other smaller colleges and all but three of the competing universities, the gymnastic team coh-
cluded its most successful year. In interclass athletics the palm goes to 1917.
defeated in baseball and the Cider Meet, the football game was theirs, together with champi0nshipS1
in basketball and swimming. There has been increasing interest in soccer and in golf.
Amherst has been fortunate in the coaches added to its ranks the past year. Thomas
Riley has shown himself an excellent sportsman and a thorough gentleman, as well as an
coach. Coach Mann trained a team which re-established basketball, and Francis J
greatly aided the diving staff of the swimming team. Coach Bevaffs urork was best Seen in
Longwood showing of Shumway, '14,
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QC Football-End on the 1914 team.
ikicbath Qlexanher Robinson, 333
gg Baseball-Mainstay of the pitching staff for three years.
X
E Qtunrah Qhumtnap
Football-For three years guard on the team.
Ziaenrp fllilehelanh btnasep
Baseball and Football-For four years outfielder on the Baseball Team.
For two years end on the Football Team. Captain of the Baseball Team.
Webster ibamlin Zllilliarreu
Football-For three years half-back on the team. Captain of the Football Team.
Jfacultp
Dr. Paul C. Phillips, '88, Football and Baseball Professor Robert S. Fletcher, '97, Baseball and Track
Professor Frederick L. Thompson, '92, Football Manager Professor Anson E. Morse, '02, Football '
Mr. Frank C. Brough, '14, Baseball
Qlllass of jaineteen Ziaunhreh anim Sixteen
Thomas William Ashley, Football A Wilbur Clark Knowlton, Football
Eralsey Clark Ferguson, Assistant Football Manager Stuart Williams Rider, Football
Edwin Harrison Goodridge, Baseball and Football William Howard Tow, Football
QC Howard 1056911 Heavens, Track George Winslow VVashburn, Baseball and Football
Qllass nf Baineteen Ilaunhreh anim Szhznteen
Tl16OdOr6 Everett BFOWH, Football Gardiner Hasbrouck Rome, Baseball
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Season nf 1914
johnW Strahan 14 ............ I
Harold E Shaw 14
David S. Cutler 15
illibe Zlieam
Frank C. Brough 14 Pitcher
J. Richard Kimball 14 Left Field
VValter H. McGay 14 Pitcher
GeorgeV Morse 14 Infield
Hugh C Slcard 14 Shortstop
john W Strahan 14 Catcher
R Alexander Robinson 15 P1tcher
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Henry C Swasey 15 Center Fleld
Thomas W. Ashley 16 Rlght Field
Harry L. Balmos 16 Right Field
Edwin H Goodridge 16 First Base
Elton H Seamans 16 P1tcher
George W Washburn 16 Second Base
Gardlner H Rome 17 Third Base
Donald E Temple 17 First Base
Seasnn uf 1915
Henry C Swasey 15 Captafm
David S Cutler 15 Manager
W1nthrop H Smith 16 Assistant Manager
Gihe Southern Zllimp
EverettF McTernan 15 Right Field
R Alexander Robinson 15 Pitcher
Henry C Swasey 15 Center Field
ThomasW Ashley 16 Right Field
Edwin H Goodridge 16 First Base
Elton H Seamans 16 Pitcher
189
Theodore E Brown 17 Shortstop
Sheldon B Goodrich 17 Third Base
Robert Munroe 17 Second Base
Theodore L Widmayer 17 Pitcher
Chester G Seamans 18 Left Fxeld
Philip H See 18 Catcher
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Behuem uf the 1914 beasun
D HE baseball season of 1914 was one of the greatest disappointments in the history of
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Amherst athletics. With seven veterans to form a nucleus, and with a wealth of new
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team in the early spring gave promise of developing into an exceptionally fast comblna-
tion. However, the new material failed to come up to expectations, and even some of the vete-
rans fell far below their usual standard, with a disheartening effect on the remainder of the team.
In addition to this, Robinson, the mainstay of the pitching staff, was taken sick in mid-season,
leaving the team in a weakened condition in the midst of the hardest part of the schedule. The
chief reason for the poor showing was an inability to bat. The hitting, always light and incon-
sistent, became especially so when hits were needed to produce runs. This fault, however, was
not alone responsible for the number of defeats, for the sterling pitching of Robinson usually
kept the opposing batsmen's hits to a total as small as that of our own. Ragged and unsteady
fielding sent many unearned runs across the plate. With better support, particularly in the
inheld, the season's record would undoubtedly have been more praiseworthy than is actually the
case.
The season commenced auspiciously with an even break on the Southern trip, four victories,
four defeats, and a tie game. Beginning with a well-earned victory over Virginia, the team
continued to play a fast brand of ball, and with the exception of two games, the second with
North Carolina A. 81 M. and with the Navy, in which the pitching was wild and the fielding
loose, the work in every department was of creditable order. The batting was still weak, the
game with Georgetown being the only one in which the Amherst batsmen hit with any con-
sistency. A hair-raising victory over Columbia concluded a successful spring campaign.
Returning to the North, the team continued the winning streak by disposing of Spring-
field, Wesleyan, and Tufts, by good pitching, steady fielding, and opportune if not heavy hitting.
The next game, with Andover, was the turning point of the season, Amherst being outplayed
by the prep school and saved from defeat by a technical tie. It was at this juncture that Robin-
son was incapacitated, and demoralizing defeats at the hands of Harvard, M. A. C., and Brown
followed, due principally to the poor fielding of the Amherst nine. They took a brace if
190
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the pitcher returned for the Williams game, displaying the usual fighting spirit against the old
rivals that earned for them a decisive victory. It was, however, the last Amherst victory of
the season. Beginning with a heartbreaking 2 to 1 defeat at the hands of Brown, the team met
with seven successive setbacks, until the season closed and ended a row of defeats that threatened
to become indefinite.
A bright feature of an otherwise gloomy season was the pitching of Robinson, whose work
in the box was of high caliber. Although given disheartening support, he continued game after
game at the same pace, even when the score was hopelessly against Amherst and his own physical
condition made it unwise for him to take his place on the mound. He was particularly effective
in the pinches, as in the ninth inning of the Columbia game. His work against Georgetown,
Tufts, and Brown was worth remembering. Although far from being as effective as Robinson,
the remainder of the pitching staff worked fairly well, lVlcCfay striking out thirteen men in the
Wesleyan game, Seamans working well against North Carolina, and Brough against Dartmouth.
Behind the bat, Captain Strahan made up the remainder of the battery, and suffered the responsi-
b1l1t1es of his position to affect his steadiness and dash of former years
Goodridge at first base fielded his position brilliantly at times but suffered his batting to
drop off considerably Washburn at second played a careful game on the bases but became
involved in the slump which caught the whole infield in mid season Sicard at short led the
team in batting although inconsistent and erratic even here Rome supplanted DeCastro at
third showed some heady base running and needed mainly experience Kimball in left deserved
especial mention for steady fielding and consistent reliable work throughout batting well, par
ticularly when called upon in an emergency Captain elect Swasey also played the outfield well,
his throwing being exceptionally strong Balmos in right made up the third of an outfield that
played almost errorless ball but batted far less strongly than the other two
Altogether the regular season with but four victories out of fifteen games played, was a
severe comedown from the year before when eight victories out of thirteen had been registered,
including a 12 to 2 defeat for Williams, and shutouts for Dartmouth Princeton, and Williams
However, the showing of the Spring trip and against Williams Wesleyan, and Brown, was cer
tainly creditable and must be remembered in a Judgment of the season
191
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L' A .1
March 27
March 28
March 30
March 31
April 1
April 2
April 3
April 4
April 6
April 18
April 25
May 2
May 6
May 9
May 13
May 16
May 21
May 23
May 30
June 3
june 10
June 13
june 22
June 23
At Charlottesville, Va
At Raleigh, N. C.. . ..
At Raleigh, N. C.. . ..
At Chapel Hill, N. C.
At Chapel Hill, N. C.
At Washington, D. C
At Washington, D. C
At Annapolis, Md ....
At New York City. . .
Total .....
At Amherst ,.....
At Middletown ....
At Amherst .....
At Amherst ....
At Cambridge. . .
At Amherst .....
At Providence .....
At Amherst .....
At Amherst .......
At Williamstown ....
At New Haven ....
At Princeton ....
At Amherst. . .
At Amherst ....
At Hanover ....
Season's Total .- .... .
bcbehule-beasnn uf 1914
Qntezbeasun bchebule
Amherst
. . . . .Amherst
. . . . .Amherst
. . . . .Amherst
. . . . .Amherst
. . . . .Amherst
. . . . .Amherst
. . .Amherst
. . .Amherst
5
4
0
4
0
8
0
1
2
...............Amherst
Regular bnbehule
...............Amherst
. . .Amherst
. . .Amherst
. . .Amherst
. . .Amherst
. . .Amherst
. . . .Amherst
. . . .Amherst
. . . .Amherst
. . . .Amherst
. . . .Amherst
. . . .Amherst
. . . .Amherst
. . . .Amherst
. . . .Amherst
...............................Amherst
24
4
3
4
1
1
1
4
8
1
4
1
2
0
0
3
61
University of Virginia
North Carolina A. and M. College
North Carolina A. and M. College
University of North Carolina
University of North Carolina
Georgetown University
Catholic University
U. S. Naval Academy
Columbia University
Opponents
Springfield
VVesleyan University
Tufts
Phillips Andover Academy
Harvard
M. A. C.
Brown
VVilliams
Brown
Williams
Yale
Princeton
M. A. C.
Dartmouth
Dartmouth
Opponents
Total games played: Southern Trip, 95 games won, 4g games lost, 43 games tied, 1.
Total games played: Regular Season, 153 games won, 45 games lost, 10, games tied, 1.
Total games played: Season 1914, 245 games won, 8, games lost, 14g games tied, 2.
192
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March 26
March 27
March 29
March 30
March 31
April
Aprll 3
April 5
April
Apr1l
May
May
May
May
May
May
May
june 2
June 5
June 9
12
19
26
28
june
june
June
June
At Charlottesville
At Charlottesville
At Rale1gh N C
At Durham N
At Chapel H1ll N
At Chapel H111 N
At Annapolis Md
At New York N Y
Total
At Amherst
At Amherst
At Cambridge
At Amherst
At Amherst
At Prov1dence
At Amherst
At Amherst
At W1ll1amstown
At New Haven
At Hanover
At Princeton
At Amherst
At Amherst
At Sprmgheld
At Amherst
Season's Total
Qcbehule beasnn nf 1915
Qnte Season bnhehule
Amherst
Amherst
Amherst
Amherst
Amherst
Amherst
Amherst
Amherst
Un1vers1ty of Virginia
University of V1rg1n1a
North Carolma A and M College
Trinity
University of North Carolma
University of North Carolma
U S Naval Academy
Columbia Un1vers1ty
Amherst Opponents
Regular Stbehule
Amherst
Amherst
Amherst
Amherst
Amherst
Amherst
Amherst
Amherst
Amherst
Amherst
Amherst
Amherst
Amherst
Amherst
Amherst
Amherst
Holy Cross
Springfield
Harvard
Brown
M A C
Brown
Wlll1amS
Wesleyan
Williams
Yale
Dartmouth
Princeton
M A. C.
Dartmouth
Williams Ctiej
Chinese University
Amherst Opponents
Total games played: Southern Trip, 6, games won, 1, games lost, 5.
Total games played. Regular Season, 155 games won, 3 games lost, .
Total games played. Season of 1915, 21, games won, , games lost, .
193
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Zlnterelass Zgasehall
SERIES WON BY 1918
FIRST GAME-Saturday, October 3: 1917-3, 1918-13.
Batteries-Carpenter, Norton, Rome, and Moginot, Quill, Taber, and See.
SECOND GAME-Wednesday, October 7: 1917-2, 1918-16.
Batteries-McGowan, Kambour, and Moginot, F. Matthews, Taber, and See.
Zlnterfrateenitp Baseball
Qllbampiuns 3 ' - ikunnerszialp
Beta Theta Pi Phi Gamma Delta
111HnrIh'5 Qeries
FIRST GAME-Tuesday, June 9: Beta, Theta Pi--2, Phi Gamma Delta-8.
Batteries: Hickson, '14, and Hobart, '17, Widmayer, '17, and Brown, '17.
SECOND GAME-Wednesday, June 10: Beta Theta Pi-6, Phi Gamma Delta-5.
Batteries: Goodrich, '17, and Hobart, '17, Brown, '17, and Elliott, '15.
CRUCIAL GAME-Tuesday, June 16: Beta Theta Pi-8, Phi Gamma Delta-7 CTwelve Inningsj.
Batteries: Hickson, '14, and Hobart, '17, Widmayer, '17, and Brown, '17.
FIRST DIVISION
Phi Gamma Delta 6
Kappa Theta 4
Psi Upsilon 3
Theta Delta Chi 3
Delta Kappa Epsilon 2
Phi Delta Theta 1
Non-Fraternity 0
1000
667
600
500
400
200
000
league btanhing
194
SECOND DIVISION
Beta Theta Pi 5
Chi Phi 3 2
Alpha Delta Phi 3 3
Delta Upsilon 2 2
Chi Psi 2 3
Sigma Delta Rho 2 3
Phi Kappa Psi 1 3
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Season nf 1914
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Qeasnn nf 1914
Webster H. Warren . ....... . Captain
Louis F. Eaton . . . . Manager
Eralsey C. Ferguson .
Raymond B. Cooper, '15, Quarter Back
J. Theodore Cross, '15, Right Guard
Newton M. Kimball, '15, Center
john E. Lind, '15, Left Guard
Everett F. McTernan, '15, Left End
Conrad Shumway, '15, Left Guard
Henry C. Swasey, '15, Left End
Webster H. Warren, '15, Right Half Back
Thomas W. Ashley, '16, Full Back
. Assistant M anager
The Qieam
Edwin H. Goodridge, '16, Left Tackle
W. Clark Knowlton, '16, Right Tackle
Stuart W. Rider, '16, Left Half Back
William H. Tow, '16, Quarter Back
George W. Washburn, '16, Quarter Back
Theodore E. Brown, '17, Right End
E. Page Downer, '17, Guard
Sheldon B. Goodrich, '17, Left Half Back
Richard T. Hobart, '17, Tackle
Theodore L. Widmayer, '17, Center s
Stuart W. Rider, '16 .
Eralsey C. Ferguson, '16 .
Morris A. Copeland, '17 .
Qzasnn uf 1915
. . Captain
. . . Manager
. . . Assistant Manager .
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Bantam uf the 1914 Season
APTAIN WARREN headed an eleven of which the college might well feel proud despite
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an unsuccessful season. With the possible exception of the Springfield contest, the team
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f DQS played a strong aggressive game throughout and showed a fighting sp1r1t against WIIIIRIHS
that marked them as one of the best aggregations in recent years. To Coach Riley be-
longs a large share of the credit for the work of the team, and for the possibilities of future successful
seasons. Although eight "A" men, veterans of preceding years, were at his disposal, it was
practically a new team that he constructed in that he introduced a new style of football. It Was
a severe schedule through which to develop a new system, yet an efficient defense was built up
that successfully coped with the plays attempted by the opposition. The main difficulty seemed
to lie in the back field. Amherst gained more ground than its opponents in the majority of the
games, yet seemed unable to carry its attack through for a score. In particular, the position of
quarter back was not held by one man throughout the season, so that Tow, who finally proved
first choice for the position, played his first full game in the final contest of the year.
The first game, against Bowdoin, was typical of the entire season. Until within a few
minutes of the final whistle, the teams had played without score. Bowdoin then intercepted a
pass and carried the ball sixty yards for the winning touchdown. Middlebury was plainly
outclassed, Amherst using only straight football and winning easily by a score of 17 to 0. Against
Brown, the team for the first time showed its real caliber. The Brunonians failed to come
within 28 yards of Amherst's goal, while the lighter team reached as far as their opponent's
15-yard line. The game with Trinity proved to be another scoreless affair. The playing was
about even in this contest, Amherst doing their best work in the second half. Against Wes-
leyan they showed line aggressive play that scored a total of sixteen points, outrushing the
Red and Black 65 yards to 17 in the second half. Dartmouth proved too great a proposition,
but their scoring came only in the second half after superior reserve strength had worn down the
lighter Amherst defense. Springf1eld's fast and heavy combination, working with remarkable
interference and several good trick plays, was also more than a match for the Amherst team, and
scored a decisive victory by superior ability. With the odds based on showing to date rather
heavily in favor of Williams, Amherst played the best game of the year against the Purple.
198
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September
October
October
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October
November
November
Svnbehuls-Season nf 1 9 1 4
26 At Amherst. . . .....,....... ........ A mherst 0 BOWd0iI1 7
3 At Amherst. . . . . .Amherst 17 Middlebufi' 0
10 At Providence. . . .Amherst 0 BFQVYH 0
17 At Amherst. .4 . . . .Amherst 0 Tr1n1tY 0
24 At Middletown .... . . .Amherst 16 VVCSICYUI 0
31 At Hanover. . . . . .Amherst 0 D3I:tl'l'10Uth 32
7 At Springfield .... . . .Amherst 0 Spflngiield 20
14 At Amherst .... . . .Amherst 6 Williams 14
wmllrams Game-warren through tackle
Snhehule bzasun of 1915
September 25 Middlebury at Amherst October 23 VK esleyan at Amherst
October 2 Bowdoin at Amh6rSt October 30 Dartmouth at Amherst
October 9 Brown at Amherst November 6 Springfield at Springfield
October 16 Trinity at Hartford November 13 VVilliams at XYilliamstown
Zintmlass jfuuthall
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 21 1914
1917 .............. 13, 1918 ................. 0.
Touchdown, Goodrich, field goals, Carpenter CZJ.
Season uf 1914
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Q" 5 HE showing made by Amherst's track team at the New England Intercollegiate Meet is
GI in a sense typical of its work during the entire season In this contest, the team finished
tenth with a score of one third of a point, won by Captain Huthsteiner in a triple
tie for third place in the high jump, and concluded a most unsuccessful season. Out
of three dual meets previously contested, Amherst had won one with M. A. C., and lost to Brown
and Williams, the latter being an overwhelming defeat. The poor record 15 attributed to the
heavy loss of point winners by graduation, and the lack of good new material to fill the places
of the retired veterans.
The first contest was an easy victory over M. A. C. by a score of 85 to 41. Amherst com-
pletely outclassed her rivals, scoring eight first places and winning all the points in four events.
From the result of this meet arose a false hope for a brighter season than had been previously
anticipated, but the opposition was not strong enough to present a fair test. On the following
Saturday the team met Brown at Providence, and after a spectacular struggle was subdued by a
score of 65 to 60. It was an interesting contest, the lead vacillating from one side to the other,
and it was not until the closing weight events that Brown finally established the margin that gave
them the victory. The Williams meet was the most disappointing spectacle of the season. In
this contest Amherst found herself outclassed, the visitors rolling up a total of 90 1-3 points to
35 2-3 for the Purple and White. Clean sweeps in the sprints and the majority of points in the
field events easily gave the victory to Williams. The final disappointment came with the poor
showing of the team in the New England Intercollegiates, in which a fraction of a tally was the
only return for the work of an entire season.
The greatest individual point winner of the season was Cole, '15, who scored a total of
thirty-one points. Although a little below his form of the previous year, he was the most con-
sistent scorer of the team, and could be relied upon to figure strongly in the sprints and quarter-
mile events. Captain Huthsteiner was second for individual honors with a total of twenty-one
points, his specialties being the high and broad jumping events. Ferguson, Heavens, Nelligan,
Ames, and Miller, ranking next in the order named, were the only other members of the team
to score over ten points.
204
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ross uuntrp Team
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Personnel
W. Gerald Barnes, '15 Scott M. Buchanan, '16
George L. Cutton, '15 Howard J. Heavens, '16
Tony Barone, '16 1 J. Everett Glann, '17
NEW ENGLAND INTERCOLLEGIATE Cnoss COUNTRY RUN
Saturday, November 14, 1914
Won by the University of Maine
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PRATT FIELD, October 14, 15, and 20, 1914
wan hp 1918
100-yard Dash-Won by Kenyon, '18, Holt, '18, second, Wadhams, '17, third, Durham, '18, fourth. Time, 10 2-5 seconds.
220-yard Dash-Won by Kenyon, '18, Holt, '18, second, Wadhams, '17, third, Goodrich, '17, fourth. Time, 22 4-5 seconds.
440-yard Dash--Won by Hale, '17, Durham, '18, second, F. D. Bell, '17, third, S. Thayer, '18, fourth. Time, 55 seconds.
880-yard Run-Won by C. H. Baker, '17, Glann, '17, second, Tooker, '18, third. No fourth. Time, 2 minutes, 8 seconds.
Mile Run-Won by C. H. Baker, '17, Wells, '17, second, Chapman, '18, third, E. B. Greene, '18, fourth. Time, 5 minutes,
1 1-4 seconds.
120-yard Hurdles-Won by Hunter, '18, Nelligan, '17, second, Chase, '18, third, Fraker, '17, fourth. Time, 17 seconds.
220-yard Hurdles-Won by Nelligan, '17, Chase, '18, and S. Thayer, '18, tied for second, Hunter, '18, fourth. Time, 28 seconds.
elin Throw-Won by Taber, '18, Blair, '17, second, Hunneman, '18, third, Kohout, '17, fourth. Distance, 123 feet, 7 inches.
jav
Hammer Throw-Won by Hunneman, '18, Taber, '18, second, DeCastro, '17, third, Herbert, '18, fourth. Distance, 67 feet,
5 inches.
Shot Put-Won by DeCastro, '17, Hunneman, '18, second, Carpenter, '17, third, Herbert, '18, fourth. Distance, 34 feet,
7 inches.
Discus Throw-Won by DeCastro, '17, Herbert, '18, second, Hunneman, '18, third, VVidmayer, '17, fourth. Distance, 89
feet, 7 inches.
Pole Vault-Won by Hunter, '18, Loomis, '17, second, jenkins, '17, third, Gillies, '18, fourth. Height, 8 feet, 6 inches.
High jump-Won by Hunter, '18, Gillies, '18, and Bailey, '18, tied for second, Copeland, '17, fourth. Height, 5 feet, 2 1-2
inches.
Broad jump-Won by Roberts, '18, Pratt, '18, and Marples, '17, tied for second, See, '18, fourth. Distance, 19 feet, 5 1-2 inches.
TOTAL SCORE.
1918--110 1-2 1917.185 1-2
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Zlnterelass Belap
TUESDAY, MARCH 16, 1915 .
Won by 19153 Runners-Up-19183 Time: 3 minutes, 18 seconds
Teams
1915 1916 1917 1918
Hunneman Rider Goodrich Matthews
McNair Heavens Johnson Seamans
Eastman Otte Marks Thayer
Blair Robinson Melcher Holt
Zinterfratermtp 3KeIap
T HURSDAY, JANUARY 28, 1915
Won by Chi Psi, Runners-Up-Alpha Delta Phi, Time: 3 minutes, 20 2-5 seconds
Semi-Finals-Delta Kappa Epsilon and Delta Upsilon
Teams
Chi Psi Alpha Delta Phi Delta Kappa Epsilon Delta Upsilon
Wadhams, '17 Robinson, '15 Holt, '18 Bell, '17
Johnson, '17 Traver, '18 Robinson, '16 Roberts, '18
Durham, '18 Weeden, '16 Banta, '15 Buchanan, '16
Melcher, '17
Rider, '16
Hunneman, '15
Zlnterelass Qlitusf Q.Euunt1fp Bun
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1914
VVon by 19173 Runners-Up-1916
209
Clapperton, '15
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Review nf the 1915 beasun
inactivity Since its discontinuance in 1905 at the end of a disastrous season both
gems, athletically and f1nanc1ally interest had gradually reawakened until the mterc
round robin SEFICS was 1nst1tuted the schedule doubled and finally a trial season W1
a short schedule of five games was determined upon. Despite the various handicaps of ineligi-
bility and shortness of time and schedule, the showing has been most satisfactory, especially i
View of the inexperience of the material and the strength of the opposing teams. The spiri
shown at the two final games of the season, which were as close and exciting contests as any
ever seen in Pratt gymnasium, clearly indicated that basketball had returned to Amherst to
stay Next year the team will assume active membership in the Northwestern Intercollegiate
, y y . . be
I
ASKETBALL was reestablished this past winter as a varsity sport after nine years of
6 kb a 0 u Q lloo l ' ,
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n
1
League now composed of Union Colgate Wesleyan and Williams, and the schedule will
lengthened to ten games
Directly after the Christmas recess a large squad reported to Coach Mann. Thomas W.
Ashley, '16, for three years a reliable guard on his class team, was chosen captain, and unde
his leadership the team took the Hoor against the fast Springfield quintet, after about a month ol
vigorous but interrupted practice. As was expected, the visitors won the initial contest in rather
easy fashion, 36 to 21. Amherst was wild and unsteady, but at times showed flashes of speed
that gave evidence of latent possibilities. The second game, at Williamstown, was the one
disappointment of the season. The Williams team, although not rated very high in inter-
collegiate circles, clearly outplayed their opponents, and won by a score of 44 to 16. Poor team
work and Williams' superiority in cagingilong baskets, together with clever use of her guards,
marked the game. This overwhelming defeat proved to be the turning point in the season.
The team took a perceptible brace and held the star Wesleyan five, reputed to be one of the fastest
in the East, to a score of 27 to 18. This surprising reversal of form was followed by a continued
improvement that gave Amherst a remarkable victory over Williams by a score of 23 to 22. The
final game found the team at its best. They played the star Wesleyan five to a standstill, and
the visitors won out by a score of 28 to 27 only after forty minutes of close play.
Captain-elect Widmayer was the individual star of the season, his fast floor work and ac-
212
Sveasun of 1914-1915
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Bantam nf the 191411915 bras:-fun
QWW5 ULFILLING pre-season predictions, the team enjoyed the most successful season that
the college has ever experienced in the history of the sport, and competed against teams
QQ? of far better caliber than they have been accustomed to contend with during the past
few years. Of the five meets contested, Amherst won three in rather easy fashion, and
lost one other by a single point. It looked very much as if the team would be able to Hgure in
the Intercollegiate Meet, but an error on the part of the officials in charge of the affair made it
impossible for Amherst to enter.
To Lemcke and Nelligan belong the chief credit for the excellent showing of the team.
Irrespective of relay races, these two men scored a combined total of sixty-six points, almost half
the number made by the entire team. In addition to this, they were the mainstays of the relay
team, saving several races by final spurts. Captain Washburn's- work in the diving contests
was of high order. He won three of the five events held, placing a close second in the other
two. Ames, his running mate on the spring board, swam well in the back stroke also.
johnson's time in the breast stroke was exceptionally fast throughout the season. The plunge
was the only department in which the team was weak.
The first meet, held with C. C. N. Y. in the latter's pool, was won, 39 to 30. The Purple
and White set a new record for the metropolitan tank by winning the 800-foot relay race in the
fast time of 243? Lemcke was the principal star of the evening, with victories in the 50 and
100 yard swims, besides coming from behind in the relay. Cornell was defeated 38 to 15 in a
one-sided meet at Pratt Natatorium, the visitors being able to gain but one first place, that in
the plunge for distance. Wesleyan's new team was met and defeated by a score of 40 to 22,
Turner of the Andrus combination being mainly responsible for the Red and Black score. At
Andover, the team met its first defeat, the fast prep school team winning out by one point,
largely through superior work on the turns. The last contest resulted in a 49 to 22 defeat at
the hands of U. of P., runner-up in the intercollegiates. All the events were close and fast..
Washburn continued his fine work of the season by winning the diving contest. From
'indications the team next year will be even stronger than this season's combination. With
losses other than the plungers, it will be practically the same team, and, allowing for a
improvement, it should prove a formidable opponent on the water.
Swann uf 1914
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iliehietn nf the 1914 beasnn
9 Y producing the winner and runner up of the singles at the New England Intercollqiate
i '
matches, and thereby establishing a comfortable lead in the race for the trophy, ia:
3 1 -9 which eleven New England colleges are now competing, the Amherst Tennis Team
CQ, 0
Q of 1914 enjoyed a successful season. The record of the dual matches was not as brilliant,
two victories, 'three defeats, and a tie being the result. Captain Cady was the individual star,
with Shumway, '14, a close second. It was in this order that the Amherst men carried away
the Longwood honors, and it was this combination that proved so valuable in the other matchm.
To Coach Bevan is attributed the general improvement of the men, and it was his able instruction
that helped Shumway to fill the place of Johnston,'13.
The opening contest of the season resulted in an easy 6 to 0 victory over Brown. Wesleyan
then won a closely contested match, inability to score in the singles being responsible for Am.herst's
defeat. The following week, Amherst was shut out by Yale, 6 to 0. Although the
indicate an easy victory for the Blue, every set was closely contested. The most
triumph came at Longwood, when Amherst "made the singles a purely Amherst affair in
accordance with most excellent precedent."
A 3 to 3 tie match with Trinity followed the Intercollegiates, a high Wind greaiiy
handicapping the work of the men. Leland Stanford was represented by Lindley Murray,
whose tournament record has caused him to be ranked fourth in the country, and H. L. Hah
in a 3 to 0 match. Dartmouth proved easy victims, the only Amherst loss arising from a
defaulted in order to catch a train. The closing match went to Williams, 4 to 2. f
Seaman of 1915
Fenimore Cady, '15 . . r .... . ,
Arthur H. Washburn, '15 . , ,
Alfred H. Washburn, '16 . .... , Agjl
Ma 1 H d t C b 'd btbehule
y arvar a am ri ge M 17-21 I rwuegia at
May 8 Cornell at Amherst MZ? 26 xrvetzleyan am!
May 11 Dartmouth at Amherst May 29 Will- at
May 15 Yale at New Haven June 5 Trinity at AH
220
Season uf 1915
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Bantam uf the 1915 Sveasnn
ITH a revious record of one victory one defeat and two tie matches, Amherst's gymnastic
Cffflffg p , ,
9 P S Q team closed a successful season by finishing fourth in the annual intercollegiatemeet
Q if C- fx .
Cahead of Harvard, Columbia, N. Y. U., Haverford, Rutgers, and Brownj with seven
oints won by Captain Ralston and McTernan. The result of the season was especially
P y
gratifying, since ante-season predictions 'had been gloomy owing to the graduatlon of experi-
enced men on the flying rings and horizontal bar. Leonard was the greatest point Winner with
. . . . . . . . . h h . tal
a total of twenty-six. His ability 1n club swinging and his rapid development on t e orlzon
bar helped considerably. Herrschaft was second highest with twenty-two, due to excellent
form on the parallel bars. Captain Ralston, although third in total points scored, was in reality
the star of the team, he won his event, the side horse, in every dual meet and tied for first honors
in the intercollegiates. lVlcTernan in the tumbles captured all but one first place in the dual
. . . . 7. he
competitions, and placed second in the intercollegiates. Smith worked consistently with t
clubs and Kohout developed general all-around form.
The opening meet ,resulted in a tie with Dartmouth, Amherst taking four first places,
Ralston, McTernan, Leonard, and Herrschaft each carrying off his favorite event. A clean
sweep in the club swinging aided materially' in offsetting the Green's advantage on the rings.
Columbia was then defeated 28 to 26, Ralston and lVlcTernan as usual winning their events,
while Leonard and Smith tied for first in the clubs. The following day Ralston and Leonard
took first places against N. Y. U., McTernan slipped on the mat and so dropped to a third
place. The metropolitan team totaled 33 to 21, counting heavily in the departments in which
Amherst was weak. The last meet with Harvard had been predicted a Crimson victory, but
four first places were again added to the total of the Purple and VVhite. In addition Smith and
Kohout picked up points enough to make the contest a tie. The last achievement was the
success of the team in the intercollegiate meet. As was expected, Yale won the contest wid
Princeton and Pennsylvania following close behind. Ralston, who took third place last year,
bettered his position to a tie for first on the side horse, while McTernan, also third last yw,
finished a close second in the tumbling.
On Friday, March 19, Coleman P. Herrschaft, '15, won the competition for Coke
Gymnast, with Harry J. Kohout, '17, runner-up.
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Behizm
With hockey a purely interclass sport, a twelve-game round-robin series was arranged and
an unusual amount of good hockey material was represented on the rink. Poor ice however
caused repeated postponements, so that the schedule was but half completed when the season
terminated. The seniors were then leading the league with a record of two victories and no
defeats.
Qantas'
Monday, January 22, 1915 . 1915-1: 1916-0
Wednesday, january 27, 1915 . . 1917-33 1918-1
Thursday, February 18, 1915 . . 1915-6g 1917-1
Friday, February 19, 1915 . . 1918-43 1916-2
Teams
1915 1916 1917 1918 f
Kingman, g. Boynton, g. Witney, g. Thompson, g.
Atwater, p. W. H. Smith, p. Schmid, p. Hunneman, p.
Konold, c. p. Whetstone, c. p. Maloney, c. p. Billings, c. p.
L. R. Smith, r. Hardy, r. Lewis, r. See, r.
Bacon, c. Goodridge, Neiley, c. Blair, c. Boardman, c.
Cooper, Jones, r. w. Blanchard, r. w. Melcher, r. w. Warren,'Hughes, r. w.
J. K. Smith, l. w. Gillett, 1. W. Munroe, l. w. Washburn, 1. w.
225
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Varsity Qllaptains
Ralston, Gpmnastins Qshlep, ZBaslaetball wasbburn, Swimming
Qllahp, Qliennis btnasep, Baseball warren, Jfootball Cole. Grub
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321' 1892
21 1892
7 1893
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12 1894
9 1894
6 1894
11 1895
5 1895
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3 1895
7 1896
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12 1897
6 1897
6 1897
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as the first intercollegiate game-time of game, 4 hours.
228
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1884 Amherst
1885 Amherst
1885 Amherst
1886 Amherst
1886 Amherst
1887 Amherst
1888 Amherst
1889 Amherst
1890 Amherst
1891 Amherst
1892 Amherst
1893 Amherst
1894 Amherst
1895 Amherst
1896 Amherst
1897 Amherst
25-yard Dash
50-yard Dash
100-yard Dash
220-yard Swim
440-yard Swim
One-mile Swim
Plunge for Distance
50-yard Breast Stroke
50-yard Back Stroke
200-yard Relay
Williams
Williams
Williams
Williams
Williams
Williams
Williams
Williams
Williams
Williams
Williams
Williams
Williams
Williams
Williams
Williams
jfnnthall
Qmberst hs. williams
15
57
18
4
30
54
53
10
6
0
0
30
34
4
4
6
Won 10, lost 17, tied 4.
1898
1899
1900
1901
1904
1905
1906
1907
1908
1909
1910
1911
1912
1913
1914
btnimming Remarks
11 4-5 seconds
25 seconds .
1 minute 2-5 seconds
2 minutes 42 3-5 seconds
6 minutes 28 2-5 seconds
28 minutes 37 3-5 seconds
62 feet
37 2-5 seconds Cunofiicialj
33 seconds Cunofhcialj
1 minute 49 2-5 seconds
230
Amherst
Amherst
Amherst
Amherst
Amherst
Amherst
Amherst
Amherst
Amherst
Amherst
Amherst
Amherst
Amherst
Amherst
Amherst
Williams
Williams
Williams
Williams
Williams
Williams
Williams
Williams
Williams
Williams
Williams
Williams
Williams
Williams
H. Nelligan, '17
R. Lemcke, '17
R. Lemcke, '17
H. Nelligau, '17
H. Nelligan, '17
H. Nelligan, '17
S. Collins, '13
E. johnson, '17
R. Lemckve, '17
J. Jessup, '17
Huthsteiner, '14
C. Brough, '14
H. Nelligan, '17
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FRANKLIN STETSON CLARK
F . kl' ame to Amherst clean from North Amherst and left things looking rightgspryto hum.
rfm in c
Freshman year his greatest afflictions were arms and legs, which same he handled with difficulty.
f
This is however true of our tonsorial hero no longer,-nowadays his nether garments show but ew
' ll ll
' f 'ust above the ankles where he used to lose track of both feet and have his Stetsons
SIQDS O XYCHTJ v . .
catch as they went by. There are many things Stets does and does well-hockey, for instance,-
but he is hopelessly in wrong with the OL1o ever since he beat Gig Chapman to that speech " Con-
cessionary Capital and the XYar," and thereby plumbed Gilgers chances for the Rogers Prize.
' f 1' " " ' f th b nd makes even Toll's '
big had had Great Hopes. Yes, Stud furnishes amusement or e oys a
psychology almost interesting. lf he blunders along, he is usually headed in the right direction,
and last year fooled lots of folks by stumbling into a chair on the Monthly board.
l
WILLIAM GILGER CHAPMAN RUSBCIL P2-'
N G' 1 oks like a good boy and since he will get a good chance to expurgate this epitagi
he wfljfvprogabljy always be known as such. There be these facts, however. In the first place
' ' ' ' 'bl th better half, the
Chappie hopes next year to be half the Phi Doodle Senior delegation Cpossi y e
' n to ar umentj and so does valorous work for the Reds agin the Blues. There i
matter is ope g . . , ,
also that tendency to slip in to all the dances minus the little desposit with the doorkeeper-Gig
' ' ' k ' 1 bo h
just dotes on Prom committees and such. Clncidentally folks are still s eptica a ut t e assets
d l' b'l' ' f that concern which scheduled a dance the night before the Senior Hopj Then
an ia iities o
Gig took a chance on the Track competition Sophomore year,-but as.Duke Seibert used to say,
"Life it is too short." There are some things on which we would like to quote William-hs
' ' f Calculus and of the Electric City Engraving Company, for instance. In which con-
opimon o
nection Gilger's main object in life now is to cause this marvelous magazine to come out ahead
financially. He may do it yet.
l
North Amherst, Mass. R
THEODORE READ DAYTON Georgetovsm, Conn.
Ted is one of our striking looking men, the originator of the "Tidal VVave" in things tonsorial
and the envy of Brother Radcliffe Noyes in things of complexion. Dayton roomed off campus
Freshman year in order to punish the prehistoric pamphlets and as a, result has acquired One
stupendous stand-in with the German department in general and the neutral portion in particular-
We have never yet beheld Ted under arrest, but he ought to have been long ago,-any H1811 who
would eat with the rest of us impoverished mortals in Thurber's and then sail past us an hour late'
in the town's lone and luscious limousine ought to be shot at 8.15 A. M., or forced to take Gym
Senior year. Theodore has athletic aspirations of a humble sortg tradition has it that he formed
one .of N6ll1g3HYS illustrious twenty in that mad attempt to get by with a Silver VVand Drill ffl'
Junior Gym, and it is certain that he formed one of the rough crew who made up those all-stil'
after-gym basketball aggregations. VVater him and watch him grow.
238
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ROBERT SWIFT GILLETT Hartford, Conn.
Bob probably started life by knocking a golf ball around the nursery with a mandolin case.
Almost any day he leads an enthusiastic squad of turf-diggers down to Doma for a little exhilarat-
ing exercise around the linksg almost any evening the mandolin gets picked on, to the unbounded
delight of the studiously inclined in Chi Psi, Psi U, Alpha Delt and the Baptist Church. Strangely
enough, the tune most often heard after Bob's western sojourn was f'California and You." fHart-
ford papers will be sued if they copy.j Bob is an affectionate soul Clisten to his prolific line when
addressing Lanej and has a fondness for hash and visits home to see the family Cplus Eddie VVitt-
steinj. In which connection, Robert is easily one of our leading artists on the waxed boards. VVith
Don Hardy and Dick Bacon, Bob acted as chief mourner when hockey was abolished after the
departure of the lamented P. Kimball, yet neither baseball nor swimming nor hockey nor the fox
trot can compare wi' th' guid auld game o' gowf. So keep your telescopes on Robert in the Spring
and Summer Tournaments.
HAROLD Lusk GILLIES Nyack, N. Y.
Pike is perhaps our best example of the lengths to which some people will go for no apparent
reason. Gillies makes one of the best little prayer-meeting umpires on the circuit, partly because
of his sunny disposition CPike is the man who put the goldfish in the pool to-nightj, and partly
because there be few men in college who can manipulate mere words into come-backs as artistically,
or generally turn out as polished, gilt-edged. bound-in-morocco a line. He pulls it once in a while
for the benefit of the faculty, explaining to their mystified intellects how a man going down a
thousand foot ladder is better off than the same man if the thousand foot ladder wasn't there.
Usually every man on a Glee Club quartet can give three good reasons why the said quartet is
rotten, but the Captain never crabs his friends. One of the best cards he has up that long sleeve
is the way he steps about to the dreamy strains: in which connection Pike is due to lead the pro-
cession in the big party to-night. Look for him along the upper levels and you can't miss him.
JAMES TIERNEY GILLIGAN Holyoke,' Mass.
Tierney comes from happy hustling Holyoke, which accounts for those dreamy lamps of his
and also-if we remember the easy, smooth-running lack-of-jolt-and-jar in the Notch trolley-for
that remarkable mode of locomotion peculiar to jim and the Australian kangaroo. James even
prefers to dwell down in the Mill City, a thing which we find hard to reconcile with his many good
points. Still, Holyoke has been due for a big boom these many weeksg perhaps our hero is more
farsighted than the rest of the boys. Despite the aforementioned romance in Gilligan's tungstens,
he has a beautiful eye for the corner pocket and can push the bread-balls over the green cloth with
a master hand. One other line of his is worthy of immortality, a public speaking facility which
hwer-shares with-eh-er-one of the-er-Economics-er-Faculty. When not hobnobbing
with friend William Baxter, Jim can usually be found either in or nearing one of those new
Morris chairs in the Y. M. C. A. rooms, and it would be worth your while to seek him out up
there, if only to help us classify his bumps and idiosyncrasies.
241
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WILLIAM COLE ESTY, Zd. Bethlehem, Pa.
Th tter and unimaginable inadequacy of our impoverished verbiage, when confronted with
e u
the Herculean and appalling prospect of daguerreotyplng this grandlloquent coagulation of super-
imposed metaphors and prodigious scintillating excrescencies transcends the hitherto unconquer
b'l't' situate within the enormous confines of our cerebral fastnesses. In the first place,
capa I I ies . . .
Bill has a theory This together with the above-mentioned flow, makes him an excellent man in
a Morris chair. .Secondly, he has a talent, he picks pockets. This, together with the above-
' d flow enabled him to extract fifty seeds from the vest-pocket of Harry Kidder Sophomore
mentione ,
year-a most commendable act. Verily, the career of Wild Will has been checkered, from the
time when he sallied forth to gun for unsuspecting Freshmen with a noiseless bean-shooter, to his
latest attempt at running down an innocent Ford without losing more than a leg. It is no wonder
they gave him his ancestral key.
l'iR.-XLSEY CLARK FERGUSON Brookline, Mass.
Now Ferg is a pretty smooth proposition, taking it all in all, so watch him carefully. He
debates, and tracks, and orates at banquets, and does yeoman service on the OLIO committee, and
' ' ' T ' - ll h . For
Cotillions, and cleputates Cask Amesj, and holds forth In the Forum above a e manages
instance, he manages football. Then he manages lots of little side trips, such as that unexpected
tour to Hartford after the Senior Hop twe have our own opinion of a man who can't come back to
earth after a dance in time to tell a New York express from a Hamp localj. But ordinarily Ferg
is a man of foresight and prophetic vision, leastways he joined the Y. M. C. A. in time to be duly
elected l3ix's vice Cjust in timel and rumor has it that he dropped that Student Competition in
time to make Phi Beta Kappa Calmost in timej. About that vice-presidency, now, hasn't it become
sort of contagious, Ferg? Don't ask him too many questions, though, 1t,S bad policy unless you ve
paid your class tax.
r
VVILLIAM GATES, JR. Pittsburgh, Pa.
Old Happy has never been the same since General Lee left him, back in the first days of Pratt
Dorm: even the joys of the Old Guard and the society of the Woodland Felines have never quite
made up for the loss. Feeling pretty low, Gates most abandoned us for Harvard, but frantic
rernonstrancesnfrom t-he Economics and Philosophy departments kept him with us. You see.
VK illiam and his atomic theory are often the very boulder of salvation for bewildered profs. One
other department would have lost a loyal and laconic supporter, too-the Physical Education
Department. To get Hap at his best, drop around some evening and hear him warble the forty-
mne copyrighted spasms, all beginning with death-dealing rhymes like "There was an Old Man
from Bulgaria," of that old and beloved epic "Oh, won't you come up, come up, come up." And
when Yhe Old Guard, filling its windpipe full of wind, tears off the chorus, breathes therel
man with soul so dead that he wouldn't come up, be the way as difficult as Walker Hall steps on an
Icy morning?
240
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PERCY NTEREDITH HUGHES, JR. Syracuse, N. Y.
Percy-or rather Gov, for we can but respect the delicacy which caused him to conceal his first
name from us those first few months of college-used to hail from Vlfashington, but Hump moved
down and Gov moved out. Nowadays he signs himself from Syracuse and keeps the postal
authorities there pretty busy. You certainly have to hand it to his fond parents when it comes to
deciphering those long daily letters home, though, even Brother Toll couldn't stand that legible
fist long, and asked him to please use a typewriter. The Governor used to be our class genius for
evading all kinds of unnecessary laborg exertion still annoys him, but he grins and bears it heroic-
ally. In fact Gov's grin was only known to fail him once, that was in Dramatics:-leastways
Gov was the Voice of God and an Angel last year, and this year he's only a scene shifter. Incidentally
he possesses one of the best grins in the class, and when of a spring evening he polishes it up, uncoils
his long legs, and sallies forth to help out the " Room " at the Paradise Prom, Hamp hasn't a chance.
Don't judge him by this picture, it's a libel.
JOHN lVlAXEY JENKINS Montrose, Pa.
Sure, you know silent John. Rumor says that Beta gave Max orders to keep silent and think
it over, on our Initiation day in November back in the verdant year, and then forgot to tell him
to open up again. Perhaps that accounts for it, anyhow Max didn't get the Mexican habit again
until just recently when he pulled some clever dope over on the rest of us by taking Oral exams.
And yet he has an elegant deep bass voice that hits off the notes around low Z to the queen's taste,
and gets Johnny Corsa all wrought up with tales of suffering Belgium. Max is running neck and
neck with Charlie Brown and way ahead of the rest of us in the race to tie the record of that guy
Methuselah. Besides which he is Grand Official Satrap and Royal Dofunny of the Nineteen
Sixteen Masonic Lodge, or was until Gordy Hall in behalf of Chi Psi objected strongly to the
existence of a rival lodge in college. Even after this objection Max resigned only to become one
of the leading spirits in the hard-work club, in which capacity he's a hummer.
HERBERT GALE JOHNSON Amherst, Mass.
This, gentle peruser, is our Hebe, cup-bearer to the gods and Amherst goddesses and right-hand
man of Dean Burns on the Manual Training Faculty of the Home School College. Herb suffered
cheerfully and fatalistically with the rest of us in that awful limbo of Sophomore math, and came
in second in a heartbreaking competition with Doc Chandler for office-boy on the Musical Clubs,
so we hail him as a regular fellow and one of the gang. But his great boon to humanity takes the
form of notes, we are all "with him in spirit" in this most excellent enterprise. They tell two
other stories about Hebe. One has to do with the time he sallied forth to rob Aggie of its precious
grapes. He got the grapes all right, but evidently ran across a Mephitis lllephitica Clook it up
in the dictionary under "SUD, for he kept Bill busy for a week supplying violet perfume in quart
bottles and has since then shied at every cat that comes near him. The other legend credits him
with swiping the High School steps for the Wlilliams bonfire+an idea which grew brighter and
brighter as we carried them back to the High School again. That same hunch, occurring later
to one of the ironheads of the 1917 crew, cost that prosperous class 330.
243
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JOHN SNADER McCLoY Philadelphia, Pa.
jack is primarily one of Fen Cady's hopefuls, and is, as Ed Lutkins would say, "a stellar per-
former." He is a quiet member of society otherwise, and keeps even that roughneck crew at his
table in more or less order, although their clamors for seconds got him into the habit of serving
doubles, which is, they say, a bad "fault" in a tennis expert. Mac plays other things, too. He
formed one of the snappy infield of the Worldfs Champions, and he is the man who stepped on
Hal Lyon's eye in the Phi Kap game, a little item which canned Hal from the Sophomore Hop.
Speaking of Hops, Mac holds the class fussing record-that is, he holds one end and Lew Douglas
the other. For there is just one thing that Jack is afraid of-he would rather face one of his beloved
high-power death-dealers than be caught defenseless by a fair damsel. He even took up the rifle
game as a protection against the dear things, after reading about "arms and the man." Ah, john,
spring is here, and you know that old wheeze about "the young man's fancy." Have a care. 1
EDNVIN HENRY LUTKINS H21CkC11S3Ck, N' I-
This curly headed bunch of sunshine registers from Hackensack, which is a horrible millstone
to hang around anybody's neck. flt was almost too much for Hebe Johnson this Eastenj . Ed
mana es to survive however and can write gems on baseball'by the yard in choicest New -IOISSY,
classigs which bring tears to the eyes of Jimmy Daly. Speaking of the only game, Edwin used to
cavort around in left garden when "Sixteen's clever pastimers tossed the globule around m the
old lot" and has been putting in his best efforts since trying to tame Ed Sawyerisnwildl and woolly
whip. He made one awful bull, though, which put him on the college activities lsg:k-list,-lac
elected Sophomore Math. But although this keeps him from handing out the rea ope in, t e
columns of the Student, he has a fat batting average with the OLIO and we love him as a reliable
man" and a cheerful Indian.
RALPH LESLIE MANSFIELD Fishkill, N. Y.
Viewing this picture from all possible angles, and considering every conceivable flaw, still we
ask you as man to man if Dick isn't a pretty smooth proposition. C'Dick" is another one of
those logical nicknames which some poor boob long since forgotten evolved out of " Ralph Leslie."l
He didn't start quite even with the rest of us, and every once in a while we don't see him for a spell,
and conclude that he has returned for a rest to the Big Borough of the big city, but all in all he
stays with us pretty consistently and is usually on hand when you want something done. In par-
ticular he is one of Phi Gam's leaguers and took a lusty crack at 1915 and 1917 along with the rest
of our ball-tossers, so we have hopes that some day he may get back his eye and tear up the grass
in.the varsity outfield. Great things, hopes. Mansfield used to suffer under one awful handicap,
aside from his being a prep school fraternity brother of Walt Bryan, and that was rooming in the
Gym. Dick used to study between trunks, as it were, and later, after the big innovation, between
towels. All this is figuratively speaking, of course.
246
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CEOFFREY Cooke NEILEY
The college almost lost this smiling peace of optimism but you can't keep a good man down.
Jeff showed up again after a short vacation and has returned never to wander more. Although
not crazy about overstudy like Red Boynton, jeff won his key Sophomore year after a high G in
Greek, said to be the best mark Levi ever gave, even including Biddy Richmond's famous F. Still,
I.ord Godfrey keeps well ahead of the eternal game of Prof vs Stude, and says he hopes some day
to be a junior. QSee word nine of this eulogyj. If you can't find him at the house, try his home
address, G. Neiley, Paradise, or ask Chapman about him-not Gig, the other one,-with whom
jeff used to pull the Damon and Pythias act. Don't get 'the idea from this that jeff doesn't do .
things, though, for he is a moderate enthusiast of Terpsichore and puts up a whirlwind game for
the class down at the rink.
,fi
THOMAS BOSTON MUNRO Allendale, N- .l-
This is Tommy his map Now we ask you, fellows, if it isn't the one profile in the class labeled
' ll t T m is liditor in Chief of the Monthly formerly the Sprite, the oldest college magazine
inte ec . o - - ,
in America 'The Bean has the true dope on the values in collegeg he reads Ibsen and Seorgg lpde
and all theibig boys and knows Grand Opera backwards from Trovatore to Good ye, lr s.k
XV d d ce from this that Munro is quite a Superior Person, but Tommy says that's a lot of bun
e e u
and in proof chased news all over the lot for Johnny Reber's scurrilous sheet Sophornoregfear.
In probing Tommy's past, ask him sometime about that boa constrictor that encircled his b one
' h ' th Old Dorms The say that when Tom first woke up and saw the eyes of that
mg t up in e . 1 y i '
defunct reptile glaring down at him from a foot above his curly head, he just natuiallyhmtgfated
through sheets, mattresses and springs, and came out palplltatmg two floors below.. n Ia serious-
ness however, Tom is due to head Amherst's magazine in what promises to be its biggest year
and the OLIO wants to get into line now and wish him luck.
Winchester, Mass.
RADCLIFFE DANA Novas Montclair, N. J.
We have not yet decided whether Rad belongs here or at our-a-dime-please-for-three-minutes
institution seven miles due west. He makes the sweetest little lady you ever saw, and got by beau-
tifully in the "Great White Eye of Buddha" until he oped his rosebud mouth. Speaking of Bud-
dha, Radcliffe's chief delight is in tearing off melodrama reeking with love and gore, in which he
is usually the beautiful goil abducted by the hissing villain on page nineteen and only restored to
the arms of the hero on page a hundred and ten. With this and the tango, and an occasional
tea-party to Prof. Andrews, Gaby keeps pretty busy, but when all else fails and the world looks
pretty black he Hirts a bit with the text-books, just for an avocation, or counts the pickets on the
Pratt field fence for Lee Shaw. The secret of tRad's artistic temperament is in an hour-and-a-half
complexion eked out with wholesale talcum and locks the hue of new rope,-but then we're down
on Rad because he was unable to stage one of his scenarios to help out the business manager.
Perhaps he'll do it yet. .
248
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-, . ROBERT MATTHEWS PROCTOR Corning, N. Y.
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The man with the big pencil, brothers,-this is R. P., the cartoonist. Bob can make that
fellow Goldberg and Tad and the rest of them feel like the light in front of the library after a
scathing Student editorial. Other aesthetic tendencies used to be found in that French horn of
Robert'sg Freshman year you could always tell whether Proc was high or low according as he
produced a wild blast or a low wail on the fool instrument. That was the year of the " Nestle's"
craze and Bob kept pretty busy unloading milk chocolate on the populace,-in fact he is the man
who made the almond bar famous. And that was also the year Bob and a broken-down bed
inhabited a whole suite up in South South, a Spartan tendency that savors of the heroic. VVhen
it comes to a test, Bob qualifies for all kinds of things, artist, musician, laundryman, hash house
director, swimmer, tutor and successor to Cap'n Dan'l Smart. And when you stop to think
things over, he qualifies as one of the big men in the class as well.
JOHN UHRICH REBER Reading, Pa.
Big jack of the sonorous voice excels in all lines where the handling of words helps, we know
him as College Orator, official spreader of smooth lines of language on the Student, and as the king
pin in Everyman. " Me and Bos," says John in the Hohenzollern vernacular. He started it all
at our first Commencement by surrounding fifty of the Kellogg fortune. That same year we
first discovered john's long legs and suspected him of being a track athlete,--it's a suspicious
world. Then the Boy Scout took to moralizing for the flower of the audiences in West Pelham and
Chicopee Falls,-unkind friends point to the fact that since then they've discontinued the Spring
trip of Dramatics. When Johnny Atwater resigned as King of Smith, Reber easily filled the vacant
Number Elevens and kept the lovely ladies pretty busy for a while. But it's sort of arduous, all
in all, so he settled down again to the life of a law-abiding molder of college opinion. Go to it,
john, we're hot on to be molded.
l'lUMPHREY FULLER REDFIELD Washington D C
The better half of the ancient Cabinet Chamber of South South, the sole survivor since the
decease of the lamented Bryan! Hump hails from haughty circles down in VVashington but lived
it all down Sophomore year excavating holes for goal posts in the football competition. Since then
he has shown himself considerable student, has public spoken and debated, has Olio'd, doped out
schedules and such managerial stunts, and still found time to scintillate on the waxed boards,
which is about enough for one man to do all at once. But Hump is pretty vulnerable despite the
massive intellect which made him a ruling spirit in the Society of the Golden Key. Get him some
time when his desk is piled high and the Hamp telephone is ringing wildly for little Humphrey,
and then begin a monologue on the beauties of sitting at the wheel of a big machine, or just whisper
"How ah yo' all?" But when things are all done, you can just see through the dust a cherubic
figure disappearing rapidly over the horizon, glistening like a new yacht and whistling sadly "So
long, boys, I'm through."
250
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EDMUND ELLIS SAWYER Hackensack, N- .l-
For nearly three years now Ed has been wandering around in our midst with a look of anguish
on his handsome face. Wfrestling with the curriculum is a hard job, we know, but when a man
might be doing great deeds for basketball and track, you can't blame him for a pained expression
when they mention sundry of the Faculty. Well, it's a short life, and a gay one, Ed, and neither
Hammy nor the Kodak will-stand a chance between you and St. Peter. Ed has given the class
a taste of what he might do if working at full-blown capacity. He is our lone three-numeral man,
and is a terror to the opposing center. CAlso to his catcher-Lut makes signs from behind the
bat, and Ed gets all mixed up, until Chink's hair begins to curI.j When not on the warpath or
coaching the Amherst Senate, Ed puts in his time in washing.Bake's dog in Sloan's liniment and
thinking of next year. It will be a big year, Ed. Here's hoping.
HAROLD EDMUND SAWYER Pawtucket, R. I.
If his father had not been an Amherst man, the Ferret would now be risking the delicate con-
tours of his chin on the banked bowl of the Brighton Beach Motordrome. His pet hobby is
motorcycles and he is downright happy when astride of some superannuated devil-wagon which
threatens, like the famous "Sadie" sacred to fb A 9, to collapse from sheer exhaustion. They say
Thompson has hired him to chauffeur his two-cylinder Maxwell. Ferret aspired to be agymnast
back in the remote ages before he and Shorty Goodale got into an altercation. He was headed in
the right direction, and you could locate him most any day on the ground floor of the Gammy
mansion, swinging on the chandeliers or walking in the entrance on his hands. Since then he has
lived a life of retirement, rarely rising to the surface except to blow an occasional bubble, like that
99 in Physics. Still, he eats down at Simmons' with the rest of " the class" Ctake that either wayj.
ELTON HENRY SEAMANS ' Springfield, Mass.
Bantam Al is another of our featherweights who disproves the ancient adage that beef is the
only commodity on the market. In fact, Elton is considerable of a mound artist and will probably
be one of our regular twirlers this season, second only to the mighty Alec. Freshman year he
roomed with that dog of a heathen Walt Baker, since when he has been showing marked pecul-
iarities. For instance, he exhibits singular preference for the food dispensary of one Cosby.
Still, Seamans was one of the Gamma Delt brethren who first succumbed and then did that which
T. E. Powers claimed couldn't be done, coming back strongly when the class hit some such thing
as integral calculus. Alone of all our minister's sons, Al treads the straight and narrow, never
so much as deviating in the direction of a Fatima. Sophomore year he spent his Easter vacation
in the Sunny Southland, and liked it so well that this year he took along the family. Vlfhich
bespeaks an unselfish and obliging disposition.
252
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DOUGLAS CLARK STEARNS I Norfolk, Conn.
Doug didn't enter with our illustrious class, but sort of wandered into it after we had been
h f ar. The re ort savs that he had been here before to look over the ground and then
ere a ye p 1
journeyed down to Wesleyan after the Old Dorms almost burned down, but it all sounds rather
far-fetched. Still we couldn't exactly blame a man for packing up and clearing out when he saw
1915 heave in sight over the horizon. Father Knickerbocker-by which we mean Doug and
not the big white way-has two fads, bridge and gowf. He is coming right along in the latter,
putting well and yelling " fore" in good voice, and so lived to line up against Williams just recently,
with the legions of Gillett and Sibley, Inc. Stearns is all right when he is with us, but we have to
frown on these wild dashes for Springfield in the dead of night. For details look up the story
in the back of the book under the caption, "Three jolly Studes A-Motoring Go." Who was it
XYAYNE PEFFERS Sriuzs
went your bail, Doug?
DAVID STEvENsoN Gilmanton, N. H.
The most noticeable thing about old Steve, the man of mysterious habits, is his all-encompassing
and irrepressible smile. XYhen he laughs he sounds like a Hawaiian volcano in eruption, and
nothing ever seems to get on his nerves. Even Freshmen year when he carromed that piece of
l A ff j ck Murra f's dome, Steve didn't let it worry him long,-at least he had forgotten all
manlslcr O a y
about it bv the time jack had come to and was looking for the assassin. David hvens up lots of
. . .d
thin YS likeithat for us. He gets Charlie Toll all excited when he begins to apply potassium cyani e
is
to philosophy, and alwavs has some deadly question ready as to how many angels you can crowd
fh is reall
on to a pin-point. It's'certainly great after assiduous delving to come upon a man vi o y
in eager pursuit of knowledge and we are glad to let a philosopher rule us from the vice-president s
' b f d " Dave." So come
chair, Stevenson says his friends call him "Steve" and his est rien s
at-ross with a nice affectionate "Davy" and get a big drag, then mayhap he'll take you down
some day into the "cage" in the library.
W haven't a whole lot of redolent past to cast in VVayne's teeth, because he knew the Amherst
e
winters from experience long before the rest of us ever heard of zero Qin the sense of temperature,
' ' . A' lt
not the scholasticj and so he wisely passed. up the frozen radiators of the Old Dorms i s a resu
XYayne's constitution hasn't been undermined like those consumptive things the rest of us own:
' ' " " " ' d Nth stron est
consequently he raises the hair on Percy Carpenter s head by a 95 grip an e g
' ll " He ets a rise out of the rest of us when he begins to risk his neck for Percv's
back in co ege. g 'P . ' 1 1
suicide club, but Cap'n Leonard says he's coming right along so we guess it's all right. Like Scotty
B h nan, VVa ne is a rabid Greek fan and can tell the Iliad from the Parthenon frieze in a way
uc a y
to make Levi quote lipictetus. Possibly it was from Homer that he first heard about a sylph,
" - A' ' ' ' 'h 'l h-l'k f over
no reference to Homer Lane, he s no sylph anyway Vl ay ne gets avi ay wit a sy p 1 e orm
the high jump that delights the two auricles and two ventricles of Prof. Nelligan.
254
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LAMBERT FRYE WHETSTONE Germantown, Pa.
Buddy elected to start college at the rate of one mile and three eighths per minute, winning
by a nose from Cutler, '15, in the pursuit-across-the-common, that distant day when the terror-
stricken Sophomore mob were striving to kidnap various gentlemen of Nineteen Sixteen and so
win the Flay Rush. He has been moving rapidly ever since, or possibly we should say "movied
regularly." Lambert has an innate ability to keep things in the home lot, wherefore he formed
one of our Freshman infield, kept the interclass puck away from goal-keeper Boynton in the hockey
series, and strove mightily with the refractory and lamented Balmos. Bud's chief claim to fame,
however, is as umpire at various sessions, in which capacity he keeps open house when not out
of town on business. just last month Whetstone produced a handsome Hupmobile:-Bud, old
scout, you certainly are a prince. Why, yes, we like motoring.
ARTHUR PLATT WHITE Corning, N. Y.
Arthur's dad has a clothing emporium, so they say, and uses Art as an advertising medium like
those walking signboards in the large town, at least we often see him wandering around loose
on the campus in a galaxy of color that would make old joseph of the rainbow coat wish it were
a cloudy day. VV e have to admit that the above ain't so, though, or Art will call down the anath-
emas of the church on us heathen, for he is a full-fledged minister at the Methodist Church out in
Pelham. He also heads the local Epworth League, naturally the Christian Association had to
enlarge the Cabinet to find a place for him. But though Art casts aloft his eyes in horror when
Lutkins or Reber cut loose with some of their wild ideas about the soul in the psychology kinder-
garten, he's a loyal brother and a high-power noise-maker for the Clubs when you work the right
combination. Then, too, Jimmie Craig likes him, and for once elevates the thumbs. So unhand
him, officer.
LEE BLAIR Woop Corry, Pa.
Mike has evolved one of the prize solutions for the scholastic problem of getting by, and keeps
his head well above water by virtue of an Attitude of Interest and a Wrinkled Brow. When he
was wounded in the Beta game this fall, we lost the basketball championship and Mother Perry
missed her leading dish-artist. So it goes. Mike has aspired to that position on the varsity now
held by the Red Sea, but is handicapped by one of those elbow-to-shoulder wings and takes it out
in aspiration. In fact, Lee has all sorts of aspirations, more or less modestly concealed: he takes
a correspondence course in prestidigitation from Freddy Stafford, he cheerfully chased the Track
competition all last year, and he presides over our Masonic Club. He even cherishes fond hopes
of being a journalist, get him to tell you some time about editorial days on the "Corry Blatter."
We take oi? our hat to you, though, old optimism.
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ALFRED HAMLIN WASHBURN Boston, Mass.
This is the third and last of the ten cent beers. Leaving his two lengthy predecessors out of the
argument from now on, Al runs a close race for class skyscraper, and would never miss it if you
lopped a foot or two off, and spliced it on to some less favored mortal like Tommy Munro. When
he ended Freshman year with both hands on the Walker prize, Alfred pulled a crime inexcusable in
this class of Math enthusiasts. VVhereupon he bought a mandolin and picked his way on to the
Clubs, which were then in need of some "nice pickingsf' Al has been responsible for other notable
achievements, he has never missed a meeting of the Pilgrim's Chorus, and is now ofhcial secretary,
so that he keeps tabs on the minutes and minutest deeds of the Association. In addition to which
he cornered the family inheritance in managerships and does doughty deeds on the courts. And
yet there will never come again those halcyon evenings in South South when Al and Stu Rider
ruled the second floor, and they both pondered over the big problem: " Where is the fair daughter?"
Them was the happy days.
GEORGE XYINSLOW XYASHBURN BfOCkt0H. MESS-
Put up your hammer, men, this ain't no anvil. One can't knock Georgeg just to catalogue the
things that he has done around here would require an extra OLIO as an annex. The Duke Cso
titled since the abdication of Seibertj sailed the Ship of State for us in masterly fashion Sophomore
year, and is the only man in college who has won his " A" in three different sports. Let it be enough
to sax' that he does a lot of things well and several more pretty welll Baseball, football, track,
swimining, basketball, dramatics-by a process of elimination he doesn't play cricket and he
dot-sn't cheer lead. He doesn't play cricket because there isn't any team, and he'll find time to
lead cheers yet. George's only break was a social one, the time he joined the fashionable summer
colony at Columbia. When George and a silk bathing suit get out on the end of a teetering board,
we don't see where the deuce Annette Figures, and even when not engaged in such divers pursuits,
there is still that matchless map and those cat-in-the-dark orbs. And when he smiles,-well, he's
our own handsome little wonder-worker, and we like him a lot.
CHARLES FOSTER WEEDEN, JR. Dorchester, Mass.
Chuck was riz right in the Beantown atmosphere of culture. The logical connection being from
"bean to cup," Charles started in as a track athlete,-but cups weren't especially plentiful and
besides the sport was sort of mild, so Chuck took up basketball and public speaking. Chuck enjoys
basketball, but only in small doses, five minutes at a time. Yet Charles Foster is at heart of a
most peaceable disposition. He put in all Sophomore year in the interests of peace. Vlfhen not
resting up, -he strove to train Harry Balmos in the way he should go and has since bent every effort
to keep the Bull-rushing Bixler from hopping about too zealously. What more can one do in the
interests of peace and quiet? Moreover, he has been a dauntless adherent of Mount Holyoke
these many years, and even hopes some day to reform that hardened sinner Ashley. VV ell, it's
a good cause.
256
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.A HAROLD GEORGE BREWTON Gloucester, Mass.
Percy Carpenter lost a man who risked his life daily upside down I
on the rings, and Bill'S trade in Fatima's fell off about thirty per cent V
when the Brute decided to pass up Lord Jeffery's outfit in favor of
an art course at Columbia. We miss a familiar figure on the way to 5
chapel UD and hate to think of him studying hard in the Big City.
WALTER CHARLES BRYAN Brooklyn, N. Y.
lndade, now, an' it's Bryan! The class has lost its logical
Grove Orator and Hamp one who knew all the points Of interest
and then some. When last seen Walter was running for Governor
of North Dakota and says he hopes to stop in on us again next Fall.
CHARLES NOBLE CHURCH Millbury, Mass.
We lose to University of Vermont Medical one who helped bolster up the line right well for us the day Ed Goodridge " missed "
by an eighth Of an inch in the annual interclass tea-party Sophomore year. Noble of the Rocky Mountain countenance was only
with us a year.
JOHN FRANCIS CREAMER, JR. Fall River, Mass.
This handsome addition also arrived Sophomore year and tarried only until June. While with us he had a course book
that looked about as simple as an Englishman's sense of humor, and had the Dean continually hopping from one foot to the other
trying to dope out whether John was a Sub-freshman or a special student majoring in Portuguese.
CHARLES JOSEPH FAIRHURST Paterson, N. J.
According to Doc Phillips, Fairy had a tobacco heart and so only three months to live. But he seemed perfectly healthy
when he ambled up this fall to have his picture taken,-that is, aside from being in love. He may have reformed since then-we
haven't heard from him since Billy Sunday struck Paterson.
259
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l,.xU1u3NcE HENRY YOUNG
This is the second of the trio of "young" gentlemen to which our class has fallen heir. Brig-
ham is one extreme, Oakie is midway, and Laurence Henry draws up his scant inches as high private
in the rear rank. Laurence, old man, don't fall in love, for if you ever got cold feet your brain
wouldn't know about it until too late. VVe never suspected Larry of athletic bent until, happening
into his domicile one day, we saw his mantelpiece all littered up with miscellaneous tinware,
proclaiming gently that Laurence is a famous golfer. Young claims it's great dope to journey
down to Iboma and swing away at a little ball until it finally rolls off thffwait a minute, we've
got to get this correct-off the tea. VVe guess he's rightg yes, it looks very much like the life.
Now that we have a team of those, however, he no longer blushes unseen, so we pass on to more
minor matters, such as those pillowcases full of apples on dark fall evenings.
-. il!
1 .
BURBANK CHASE YOUNG Rochester, N- Y-
Brigham is an industrious soul, punishing the curriculum pretty steadily and holding down the
presidential chair of the Rochester Club. On top of this mania for work, Burr up- and gracefully
seizes the business managership of our highbrow sheet, the Monthly, which makes things convenient
for Tom. Burbank's fourth activity is the Christian Association-certainly a safe and sane
fourth. Still, we don't know about that :-raking in the shekels, even for what Corsa calls the HY.
M. C. A. and other laudable charities," is a hazardous business. As we hinted before, Youngnhas
another claim to Parnassus as roommate to T. Munro and it is probably his mercenary suggestions
which help Tom dash off a triolet or two and swell his coffers with the Mitre prizes. VVhat with
Young, " B. C.," and Marks, UA. D., "the class doesn't let many dates get by them, and the same
is true of Burbank-for when he gets all smoothed out in his war-paint they say he IS mighty wel-
come on the john M. Greene campus.
Bloomington, Ill.
i
lNlALCOLM OAKMAN YOUNG North Hanover, Mass.
"Scum of the earth, are you without!" Oakie, in low awed whisper:-"Without what, noble
brothers-to-be?" Noble brothers-to-be, in chorus:-"Without a suspicion, you . . . !"
Oakie:-"Mercy mel" Malcolm- got his rough ways from associating with Tom Ashley all
Freshman year and had to put in the following twelvemonth away from the boys in order to
become a perfect gentlemen again. Now that that's all thrashed out, he keeps pretty busy helping
out the brothers and slaughtering those of the Faculty who are prone to err. Brother Don took
care of enough athletics for the family, but it is probably in the blood, for Young wiggled his silver
wand with the rest of the eternal twenty at the annual exhibition. When we hear him holding
forth in accents meek and mild we occasionally have a desire to see him roll around on the ground
and lose a tooth, but we get over it. fFor we like M. O. and many of us would be lost if he should
discontinue his course-passing associationsj Besides, he furnishes the always needed reminder
that " he laughs best who shuts up and tends primarily to his own occupations''-Shakespeare.
258
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Being the Uinuffieial 3Keeurh uf Smnhrp Ziaappenings tu the Qtlass of gaineteen Sixteen
N preface, our idea is solely to jot down one or two items which the class naturally associates with one or
two dates. Otherwise they will pass into the abyss of oblivion in ten more years. That would be
D heartrending.
We began to happen along about Sunday on the Fifteenth day of September in the year Nineteen
Twelve. Mark well that date, Epictetus. That's when we started. Not officially, just an informal gathering
of the natives and those who had been spread out-possibly fiattened out-over the preceding week's entrance
exams. We will pass over the next three days quietly, brethreng we fell for the little buttons right and left, and
came to the conclusion we were a bunch of princes.
Larry Sturdivant furnished the little headpieces, with their cool restful color, in time for the Grand Opening.
As a preliminary we staged, under the auspices of Levi Elwell, a most enjoyable little argument on the side steps
of the chapel. Then we foregathered in the gallery and took our first pike at the college minus its joyous raiment.
In our midst we noticed a wee babe, all perspiration. We gathered that he had been exerting. When he got
his breath he said he came from Deerfield.
Then at about 12 A.M. we began officially. For the first time we listened to our Classmate on the Faculty,
" Men of Amherst," said Prexy, and we knew we were a Class. The watches caught us at 105 at the start. Since
then we've gained weight to the number of 113, making with Brother Meiklejohn a total of 114, of whom 78 are
still healthy and flourishing. That gives a mortality of 36, about 32 per cent. It's a hard life .... Some
of us even now remember Prexy's first speech, with its tribute to the Amherst fair-play,'courtesy, and splendid
loyalty, all of us remember the gentle bicker which followed. They say several shipments of hymn books were
deposited on the heads of those in " the place beneath." More than that, we gave our first "All Hail," and kept
it up lock step most of the way to College Hall.
Friday we took a first crack at the curriculum. Doc Merrill, Sam Cobb, Bart Connolly, Bashful-Venus
Glen and others fed us with a smooth line and some pie-a-la-mode at the party in College Hall, and the dope
went round that no one had ever been killed in the fiag rush, at least as far as was known. ' So next day we padded
the pole blithely, those of us not asked out to supper and generally called to other fields of endeavor at the urgent
invitation of 1915. We heard that Herrschaft, '15, had been calling on Ashley and M . O. Young, and had been
9
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ALFRED DELROY FETTERMAN Berwick, Pa. l
Fett left us at the close of Freshman year because as Max
k jenkins put it, "he was getting along in years." He used to room
by , , up there in the etherial regions of South Pratt, with Al Dugan, but
' he covered his tracks pretty well and left us as a keepsake only the
s A down f couch now amon the assets of Alan Marks.
5 3 S
, .
I
CHARLES HANCHETT HITCHCOCK Chittenango, N. Y.
tinson
Had Charlie stuck around awhile longer, he and Gene S
would probably have worked the same frame-up which landed
-' f Ch l batted for
Hump Redfield and spouse on the key ring, or ar es
. . . . . h.
ax era e which was a thing of the imagination rather than of t is
an f g
world. But the checkers' master had too great a preference for the
. . h. .
lovely ladies, concerning whom he often carefully stated is views.
Califon, J.
Axizi FISHER HOFFMAN
Zi used to do all kinds of things for us, from boosting the Illonthly to raffling off watch-fobs. Besides being very business-
man, he and Gus Edwards were Little and Big Smudge respectively, according to their notes for the Physical Ed. department.
Now he's selling Saxon's way down to Califon,-it seems too bad to let a good man go like that.
l.JoUcs1.,xs S'rU.xR'r MCCRUM Oneonta, Y.
The wild man is out with Larry Meredith in the University of Colorado, only he's taking civil engineering and Larry's taking
medicine Cand taking it like a manj. Mac used to be a useful member of society, keeping Theta Delt's goat room fumigated
and kidding along the swimming team.
lnxwimxciz Conxnuus BIEREDITH Jamestown, N, Y.
I 'iwrence used to star in elocution, leastways his family taught it and Merry was prize pupil. Besides dramatics, Lawrence
h d ' 't' led vests and his name on a rubber stamp, so we knew him
used to go in for Heavy Gym, mostly the Heavy. But he a ini 1a ,
as a regular fellow.
260
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hospitably received. Then along about 7.00 P.M. we assembled again in the Chapel, various squads of valiants
unearthed Gallup and Rider, and George Washburn settled the big question as to the identity of the C ass alr-
l ' d b t the exact nature of the coming ten minutes We
man with a good little spiel. Pop Curry exp aine a ou .
acquired all kinds of pep and sallied forth, Duke Seibert humming " Die Wacht am Rhein." Then-well, Pop
' A d ' - nfortunate. We remember indistinctly the
had had the right dope, it was ten minutes of war. n war IS u
t h lk of Ashle on the horizon while McTernan discarding his vest, gently explored the Deerfield map.
vas u y , ,
Then some one got careless and a gun went off, Andy and Maxey jenkins passed out, and they buried the Duke
' P tt Cotta e So ended the first week' three days shalt thou be rushed, and three days shalt thou rush,
in ra g . .
and on the seventh repair to thy first church service, where friend Talcalott Williams told of "my son John.
XV ith gestures.
VVith that week of " Firsts" thrashed out, We settled down to life in the Dorms. Johnny Reber, Jack Murray,
Al Washburn and Zi Hoffman got their names in the Student as entry presidents. Several windows began to
wear a paned expression at the sound "lights out." Water began to have other uses than to quench fire, thirst
and dirt. We ascertained that we were the tallest proposition that ever came to Amherst, 5-feet-8 in height,
. . f ,, h.f . ,,
Wei hin 136, and 19 years old. September ended with our first shot at a varsity Long Amherst, Tu ts s 1 ting
8 8
around on Pratt Field until it stood 20 or so their Way.
October 2 was a milestone 3-out on Blake Field 1916 connected with Robinson's delivery for two lonesome
hits in the first ball game. Clnasmuch as misguided Seniors chose to elect class officers on the same date, We
adjourned across the river in surprisingly large numbers that evening, leaving Walt Bryan to read them se ections
from Epictetusj Ed Sawyer helped us to the big baseball comeback that Saturday, slanting some weird curves
over for 1915 to marvel at, and thereby evening up the series. Wisely deciding to prolong the excitement until
me on the 9th, and then on October 18, 1912, came from
after 1915's class elections, we fed them an uphill tie ga
behind on a 5 to 4 standing, poled out four runs and filed a request for more opposition next time. Class meeting
in the Dorms that evening to discuss what Professor Crook would call the "Problem of Distribution. The
big poster scheme, involving no signs of life until 8.14 next morning, was unfolded and the posters themselves
handed out. The following day Eph Gallup and Phil Kamm fought the Battle of Cosby's Porch.
Meanwhile on Wednesday, October 16, Alexander Meiklejohn was inaugurated eighth President of Amherst
College. The boys all came across with bowlers at the tail of the gowned procession, and figured out, after hs-
tening to part of Prexy's masterly address, that we had the right hunch in faculty as well as undergraduate class-
membership: not quantity, quality every time.
N Cl elections came October 23, and Stuart W. Rider took the chair, with John S. Murray first assistant,
ass
Winthrop H. Smith, secretary, Lewis W. Douglas, keeper of the sacred shekels, and Seelye Bixler, choregus.
Shortly after this the class hung up their second athletic victory, Ames, Heavens, Sawyer and George Washbum
. . . . . ff b
helping materially to take the plug out of the Cider Barrel. The score was 102 to 80, this victory stu egan
to get monotonous The poster party the next day was rather more successful- than on the previous occasion.
l
There was an exceptionally pleasant argument upfin front of Chapel in which Charlie Mansfield's heavy arti lery
262 h
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E931 no -e12Li LQSEQQQ-2-532S'E39i1fSf:2:2Qi'.!iFf5' 3 1EQl1::.-.:fi-?iS:::':- i-1, -- iii? f I 'Exif-I -'E-:P 'J ' If ' V '-
--Af L- - 1- ' ""'- "r -r-it-'--'5-"'-'Y ""--'-'- A' ' ' " . . Tuff, ' -
up until along about january 13, 1913, when the swimming team, consisting mainly of Washburn and Kimball,
beat 1915 both in relay and point total. Incidentally the team put on a meet with the High School about a
month later and got ingloriously crowned 42to 20. Moral, don't condescend to swim aprep school. The indoor
track team had better success, winning the annual meet decisivelyg in the Spring meet the outdoor team came
' ' ' ' D H d
in second to 1913. The hockey team finlshed second in the interclass series. Speaking of hockey, on ar y
was the first of the Class to come to after exams, caging two of the four goals scored against Rensselaer on Feb-
. . , . . . , ka
ruar 8. There were several pairs of size 16 s on theroof of Pratt Rink, but the pair Just above Don s s tes
Y
was the first ever used by a varsity organization. Three days later another "first offense' for the Class took
. . . . . d
th form of the opening of the Student grind, the Hrst competition open to those of us with nothing better to 0.
e
And then came the large evening when we came of age. February 22d, 1913. Us and Washington, our birthday.
. - . - . . . . . . . . .
From then on, achievements as a class were not great. Reason, there was nothing much to achieve. Except
' ed f
for two excellent victories, which we manipulated with ease and grace. Item one, the debating team vot or
women fluently and successfully on March 143 item two, the basketball team brought to conclusion a whirlwind
. . . . . U I I
season March 24 by trimming the Sophomores in the championship game, Sawyer, Ashley and Tow were arge y
responsible. It might seem to the class coffers as if we passed up the Leland prize on March 22 rather 1n1ud1-
' sl but there has always been a marked sentiment in the class as regards Gym, and it is the principle 0
ciou y,
the thing that counts The remainder of the Spring is summed up by three dates: May 10, our first Williams
bonfire, the Track Team having romped around in a snowstorm for a total of 76 odd points, May 23, our first
college dance, Bob Park, Kamm, Seibert and others succumbing to the separation from the requisite iron men:
M 30 our first trip to Williamstown, concerning a joyous little seance put across by the ball team, 2 to 12.
ay ,
Goodridge and Washburn represented the Class and were the first of us to win their "A's." In June the most
h tunt we ulled occurred at the lawn fete, when Ferg drove his big Packard over Mike Smith's hitching
umorous s p
post and down Hamp road about fifty an hour, with "Sabrina" under a blanket in the tonneau and the 1910
pirates whooping it up with "All Hail " back on the campus. A close second to this episode directly concerned
fi ' d th t evenin at 7.30,
many of the class: On June 20, Walt Smith staged the famous Dorm Dance, rst conceive a g
in full swing at 8.30, abandoned by the chaperones who became sleepy at 10.30, and breaking up "a few minutes
later" at 2.30.
We did one good thing that june. With Bix performing the calisthenics we warbled to second place up by
the College Fence. And we hypnotized those judges twenty-five dollars worth, for the first original song since
"Lord Jeffery." All together, men: "Fling to the breezes-."
A Sophomore year started with a flourish, although the college as a whole felt rather sad when they considered
the Class of 1917. The comedown was painful. Not that 1917 didn't exhibit an occasional sympton. They
exhibited several on the 18th, the day college opened, and it took about an hour of persuasive manipulation to
264
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f.. 1 C X F H 11 " fini-1 -'muffzvflf' lil- X"-wif?-ff.'9'1l.-'alll' lnhkasv ll" fl "':,N'L Ni-'lM.1i f '1'1"5sT-ffwlll Vl' xtaif A R9 55
ak., gf gg' . QQMJF :ug .Q-ig. glrgqg. ,'Wfs2:ff0fl,1l an skid' 1.1-fu-:.i-ytfffVW4g SESsQaf7'DN My ' 'fi' ,jf
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in drew a second, with Heavens and Ferguson the leading point winners, the indoor track team fell
team aga
before 1917 and the hockey team before 1915.
th Ei hteenth of March Of the Sabrina banquet, aside from the program, we have many
Then came e g -
memories. The dope went the rounds after goat the preceding evening, and in twos and threes the brethren
sauntered through the snow to the 11.47 onthe B. 8: M. The Class, as a whole, repaired to Poli's, excepting
' ' ' ' ' h R ll. QThe
f h d batm team which adjourned to the Springfield library to gather dope on t e eca y
or t e e g
were unanimously recalled two days later.j By way of parenthesis, there are by actual count on the street
from the Pittslield station to the Wendell eleven barriers. The banquet itself downstairs in the hunting room
' ' ' ' t h h rms on the boys Sid
was worthy of the Goddess. After Win Smith had bestowed miniature wa c c a ,
' ' h Cl . "Next time we'll have the banquet in Hadley," opined Sid,
Chamberlain presented Sabrlna to t e ass
I
k of tickets." The sacred rites were duly observed and Ot Morrow and the
"and give the odd-classmen a boo
football squad stood by, featuring a vision of Pink Kimball in his shirt sleeves, plus a revolver and an
expression denoting grim death. The Pittsfield Country Club later entertained the Town Clerk.
We made history three times more that spring. On May 16 the Smoker Committee lined the college up on
' ll ' d "movies " b
the platform in College Hall and fed them for the Class. Ames program natura y comprise , y
Butler and Hersh, '14, and Lyon, '15, together with a quartet and a speech from Prexy presenting the inter-
scholastic track medals to the preparatory school men. On the 21st, the Class sang right lustily below the Octa-
gon, and surrounded one hundred hard-shelled greenbacks as a consequence. These be things to be encouraged,
these interclass sings. And on the 13th of June we journeyed over to the wicked metropolis, 1n particular to
Richard Rahar's emporium, since deceased, for an informal supper consisting largely of shortcake and a constitu-
tion. Whoever had the idea originally, deserves the credit for a novel and thoroughly enjoyable party. With
fthe close of that evening Sophomore year requiesced in pace. g -
, ' fi
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,freshman Banquet-Guasts
Toastmaster, Stuart VVilliams Rider
'Our Beginning" . . . Edmund Ellis Sawyer "Over the River or Over the Range" Everitt Groff Smith
"Sabrina" .... VValton Chamberlain Baker "Athletics" .... Howard Joseph Heavens
"Those Sophomores" . . Edwin Harrison Goodridge "Over Night in the Dorms" . VValter Charles Bryan
"Our Classmate on the Facult " Eralse f Clark Fer uson "Here's to Amherst and Sixteen" Ralph Leslie Mansfield
Y 5 g
Sahrma Banquet
Hotel VVendell, Pittsfield, Massachusetts
lVednesday, March Eighteenth, Nineteen Hundred and Fourteen
Qlummittee
William Cole Esty, 2d Edwin Harrison Coodrid e Stuart VVilliams Rider Winthrop Hiram Smith
g
268
57
3
,
x
1
S
,
L
Cllllass Baseball
:Freshman fear
George W Washburn Dzrector
ThomasW Ashley p and c f Edw1n H Goodrldge l b Ralph L Mansfield c f
Walter C Bryan r f Donald E Hardy s s Edmund E Sawyer p
Lowell Cady p G1lman L judkms p Elton H Seamans 3b
Lew1sW Douglas c Edwm H Lutl-:ms l f GeorgeW Washburn 2b
RobertS Glllett s s Lambert F Whetstone s s
bnpbomure fear
Edw1n H Goodrxdge Dzrector
Harry L Balmos c f Edw1n H Goodrldge p and C Ralph L Mansfield 2b
Walter C Bryan 1 f Robert S G1llett s s and 3b Edmund E Sawyer 1b
Edward W Catchpole s s and 3b Donald E Hardy r f
Edwm H Lutkms r f and c
Elton H Seamans 3b and p
Eames
senes 1912 won by 1916 1915 10 1916-3 1915 2 1916-7 1915 5 1916-5 1915 5 1916-8
5er,eS1913 won by 1916 1916-5 1917 2 1916-1 1917-4 1916-12 1917 3
Thomas VV. Ashley, r. h. b.
Wilfred S. Bastine, l. e.
Lowell Cady, r. e.
Clarence VV. Gallup, l. g.
Merrill H. Boynton
VValter C. Bryan, l. h. b.
Charles N. Church, r. t.
Clarence XV. Gallup, l. g.
Edwin H. Goodridge, l. t.
Saturday, November 23, 1912
Saturday, November 21, 1913
611115155 jfoothall
freshman ,Bear
Stuart W. Rider, Director
Edwin H. Goodridge, l. t.
Percy M. Hughes, r. g.
Philip S. Kamm, r. t.
VV. Clark Knowlton, f. b.
Sophomore year
Thomas W. Ashley, Director:
Donald E. Hardy, r. h. b.
Percy M. Hughes, r. g.
W. Clark Knowlton, f. b.
Edwin H. Lutkins, c.
Robert H. Park, r. t.
Eames
272
Edwin H. Lutkins, c.
Stuart VV. Rider, l. h. b.
Leo N. Shaw, f. b. and l. e.
Winthrop H. Smith, q. b.
Robert M. Proctor, r.
Edmund E. Sawyer, r.
VVinthrop H. Smith, l.
David Stevenson, r.
George W. VVashburn, q.
g.
e.
e.
g.
b.
. 1915-133 1916-0
. 1916- 0: 1917
-0
X
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- - k .- , ,
C Burton Ames
W1l11am G Avrrett
Scott M Buchanan
C Burton Ames
W1ll1am G Av1rett
Scott M Buchanan
C. Burton Ames
VV illiam G. Avirett
Scott M. Buchanan
Interclass Meet, January 25, 1913
Interclass Meet, January 21, 1914
Interclass Meet, December 19, 1914
Qllass Svtmmmmg
,freshman ,Spear
W1ll1am Gates Dzrector
THE TEAM
Lew1s W Douglas
Donald F Hardy
H Maxwell Krmball
W Clark Knowlton
bnphnmure gear
George W Washburn, Dzrector
THE TEAM
Lewls W Douglas
Donald E Hardy
W Clark Knowlton
Douglas S McCrum
3Tuniur Bear
C. Burton Ames, Director
THE TEAM
Robert S. Gillett
Donald E. Hardy
W. Clark Knowlton
Meets
Robert M Proctor
Stuart W Rlder
George W Washburn
Robert M Proctor
Stuart W Rrder
Homans Robinson
Robert M. Proctor
Stuart W. Rider
George W. Washburn
. . . . . . Won by 1913-345 1914-295 1916- 95 1915 1
. . . . . . Won by 1917-565 1914-305 1916- 75 1915 6
. . . . . Won by 1917-415 1916-155 1915-125 1918 4
275
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be fl--'iff -314' A-'il' is . JU'
C. Burton Ames, hurdles, jumps
Thomas W. Ashley, hammer throw
Herbert G. Bristol, dashes
Lowell Cady, jumps, pole vault
Eralsey C. Ferguson, hurdles
Roland B. Graham, jumps, shot put
C. Burton Ames, hurdles, jumps
Herbert G. Bristol, dashes
Alfonso G. Dugan, dashes
Eralsey C. Ferguson, hurdles
Cider Meet, October 30, 1912 .
Cider Meet, October 10, 1913 .
jfresbman ,Bear
Herbert G. Bristol
Stuart W. Rider
Homans Robinson
Leo N. Shaw
Qlllass Track
Jfrzsbman Bear
John Reber, Direclor
THE TEAM
Howard J. Heavens, mile, half-mile
John S. Murray, pole vault
Francis R. Otte, mile
Stuart W. Rider, middle distances
Homans Robinson, dashes
Edmund E. Sawyer, broad jump
Leo N. Shaw, middle distances
Smpbomnre .1,Bear
C. Burton Ames, Director
THE TEAM
Roland B. Graham, jumps, javelin
Howard J. Heavens, mile, half-mile
John S. Murray, pole vault 1
Francis R. Otte, mile, half-mile
Blasts"
Qllass Relay
Smpbumnrc year
Alfonso G. Dugan
Howard J. Heavens
Homans Robinson
- Edmund E. Sawyer
Winthrop H. Smith, pole vault
William H. Tow, hurdles
Seth G. Twitchell, hammer, discus
George W. Washburn, hurdles
Charles F. Weeden, mile
Lee B. Wood, discus throw
Homans Robinson, dashes
Edmund E. Sawyer, jumps, quarter
George W. Washbum, hurdles
Lee B. Wood, discus throw
Won by 1916-1023 1915-80
Won by 1917-1235 1916-73
Sluniut Qzat
Howard J. Heavens
Francis R. Otte
Stuart W. Rider.
Homans Robinson
l 274
l
l
1
l
1
I
if ---
-f
Thomas VV. Ashley, r. g.
Edmund E. Sawyer, c.
Thomas W. Ashley, r. g.
Edwin H. Goodridge, r. g.
Thomas W. Ashley, r. g.
Vlfilliam G. Avirett, l. g.
Glass Basketball
freshman ,Beat
Edmund E. Sawyer, Director
CHAMPIONSHIP TEAM
William H. Tow, l. f.
bopbumure ,Spear
Edmund E. Sawyer, Director
CHAMPIONSHIP TEAM
Edmund E. Sawyer, c.
Elton H. Seamans, l. f.
William H. Tow, l. f.
Sluninr Beat
Lee B. Wood, Director
THE TEAM
W. Clark Knowlton, l. g.
Edmund F. Sawyer, c.
' William H. Tow, l. f.
276
G
Charles F. Weeden, r. f.
Lee B. Wood, l. g.
Charles F. Weeden, r. f.
Lee B. Wood, l. g.
Charles F. Weeden, L g.
eorge W. Washburn, r. f.
Ctllass Behatmg
Jfteshman fear
Eralsey C Ferguson, Dzrector
TEAM
Fralsey C Ferguson Francis R. Otte Humphrey F Redfield
Dav1d Stevenson, Alternate
Smpbnmore year
Jullus S. Bixler, Dzrector
TEAM
juhus S Bxxler Scott M. Buchanan Humphrey F Redfield
W1ll1am G. Avirett, alternate
Rebates
lr1day Nlarch 14 1913 College Hall
Questron Resolved That women should have umversal suffrage ln the Umted States
Won by 1916, 2 to 1 dec1s1on
Frxday March 20 1914 Johnson Chapel
uestron Resolved That the Recall be apphed to all elective offices m the State of Massachusetts
Q
Won by 1917, unanimous declslon
1 278
5
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At the Smith Glee Club Concert
Doc-" Is your watch going?"
Dean-" No, it went yesterday."
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ff' jo L5 141 ' P,
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. l , , , As it used tobe
This is all our own-absolutely original Ames-"Have you seen the Bean's wig?"
' News item: Dillon arrests Amherst Junior on charge Young-"No, what's he done to it?"
'of vagrancy, i. e.-having no visible means of support. Ames-"That's just it."
280
31? ,
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Bunting the Rust Bear
LONG about the twentieth of the month, various trains on the Boston and Maine and the Nearly Yuse-
l muy,-N T
gg less, New Haven and Hartless began to collect no end of handsome intellectual young men. Tarrying
Kb not in N orthampton-verily there is no thirst like the thirst for learning-they exhibited considerable
'S i H pep in the direction of the "Hardley to Amherst" car. R. Katz, returning early in order to open
up the college, finds that Prexy and Eaton, '15, have beat him to it, that is to say, have anticipated him in that
respect. As the men disembark at the dear old corner Clooking absent-mindedly for the faithful Gammy ambu-
lancej, the Deke brothers find themselves minus a house, and the demolition of the old Payne hotel causes Beta
to conduct rushing in the ancient Q A 9 ruin. Various wits pass Sunday in talking over the summer:-"Well,
The Qllutner-"Ql1uIIege i!9aII!"
liow'd you leave the Kaiser, old man?" "Pretty well, thanks"- and the Columbia Summer Colony holds its
lirst reunion.
September 21-23, rushing season. General sentiment of "Thank God, brothers, no dinner appointments."
Various fraternities exhibit plans of new houses, and Freshmen pledge coplously. Alpha Delt acquires two More
. . ,, . . ,, . ed t
houses. Elwood, '18, starts in on his career of social uplift. On the whole though rushing seem ame:
one missed the notebook of C. E. Clarke and the cordial spontaneity of Brother Bell.
President Meiklejohn started the year officially on September 24 with a big "but." A little butt of the
d' 1 b
same name sat in the gallery. Speaking ofthe gallery, we asked our artist to sketch the line-up lrect y a ove
the clock. Unfortunately he confused the pledge buttons sadly. After the Sabrina service which always directly
282
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t in ide however' it had turned resignedly. to Junior Gym. Bill, druggist, reflects that there will be no
was no s , ,
training table for hockey this year and lays in an extra supply of Omars. The following day the gentler of the
Junior tables at Mrs. Simmons' learns that alumnus Charles S. Whitman has been nominated for Governor of
P k d Reber
Y k Brothers Brown Weeden and Whetstone announce the fact. Brothers Hughes, ec an
New or . ,
brin up the matter of the New Haven railroad and the tribulations of its directors. There ensues a discussion.
1 g
After it, Otte finally placates Mrs. Simmons and the table is allowed to remain one week longer, on trial.
orld that there were only 78 members of 1916 still intact.
The Student for October 5 broke the news to the w
Another furrow appeared in the brow of Business Manager Chapman of this publication. In the same issue
Qlibapel Bush-SK. jlliltgntnan, '15, in right furegrnunh
there blossomed forth the headline: "Freshmen Refuse to Fight Sophomores in the Flag Rush." Slight rise
' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' hf bl ment
from 1918. Speaking of headlines, the Student specialized 1n them for awhile, winning muc avora e com
the following week with its announcement: "Many Old Men Return to College." The patriarchs in question
were Mansfield, DeCastro, Willis and Yawger. p
Meanwhile other things had happened. The interclass ball series ended with a 16 to 2 display of promising
' material on part of the Freshmen. Manager Cutler of the Baseball Association beamed benevolently on the
. Robison's table to a Fatima. CNote': Later, when the six weeks' marks came
world in general and treated Mrs
out, Manager Cutler insisted with quiet dignity that his Fatima be restoredj About this time the Seniors held
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college sauntered down to Middletown for a pleasant afternoon-featured by a deft field goal inserted between
the legs of the Wesleyan eleven. The Mitre, after a devilish keen meeting, decided to transform Barrett into an
old English inn,-well, those old inns had -their good points. CFrench Five has a vivid mental picture of one
Lancaster toddling in through "ye tavern door agapeflj The Student adds to the list of college honors to be
won with a big announcement: Choir Elections! Speaking of the choir,-the week-day choir, for we can but
' ' ' k t h ith unflinching exactness the
refrain with delicate tact from mention of Sunday-we asked our artlst to s e c w
3
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'Fl'
Morning Qllbapel-Qlilge Qlibnir
Th th' immediately above Dr. Meiklejohn is the top of the organist,
chapel platform on a winter morning. e ing
rear view. Please note that dress suits are not "en regle this season."
Two other events took place before the Williams game. Otte, '16, tore off a Connecticut Valley Inter-
collegiate Missionary Union Conference across the river. Hamp was fearfully congested with Amherst dele-
f P f or N ewlin from his operation was "unusually rapid
gates. And the Student reported that the recovery o ro ess
ll ff tibl and Doc VerNooylrequested that the guilty com
-and satisfactory." Subscriptions again fe- o percep y -
petitor be ejected from the competition.
286
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We publish smilej One other item of that swimming meet is worthy of record. Even though Professor N elligan
discreetly withheld the times, Brown had a hunch and cancelled its dual meet, and Williams gave up its team.
Shortly afterwards they refused to allow Amherst to enter the intercollegiates. Quick, Watson, the inference.
P
K
stanhing hp the glumni Beauty anh the Beast-Rick the brute
There were two other big dates in December. One wasn't so big: On December 10 th.e.Senior Smoker fed
the college cocoa and hot antediluvians in a long session. As preliminaries Bemis, '18, prest1d1g1tated, Brinkerhoff,
'18, played a banjo, and the Stock Company attempted a revival. Then Ray Stannard Baker spoke. He cer-
tainly did speak. In an endurance contest 1915 would back Ray Stannard even against 1916 s best bet, Davy
289
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don n under the stra1n CAtwater Bancroft Pratt Packard and VVh1tten all begm to look nervous Warren
gets mdlgnant and forms the Soc1ety of the Ironheads for purposes of mutual protect1on agamst the currlculum
Boynton 16 IS elected presldentl The lnterfraternlty relays came and Went Chl PS1 connectlng w1th the
bone handled cup ClVlcCague 17 explamed that the fratern1ty was used to handlmg bones but mtended no
allusron to DeBevo1se One IS rem1nded of the aged tale about people 1n glass housesj Asxde from th1s only
one 1nc1dent d1sturbed the even tenor of the calm before the storm On january 10 Mme Vanderx elde qu1etly
and pa1nlessly extracted four hundred and n1nety one dollars from Amherst Mass Th1s unprecedented event
915115 uf Qprmg 39HmPl0U5
so encouraged M1Cky and johnny Dugan that they opened up IH Hamp wlth a cho1ce lme of su1t1ngs and shxrtmgs
Adv D Then came the storm February 2 to 10 Shorty Goodale posts on the bulletln board announcement of
a prrze offered for the best essay on Why Cremat1on has It on Burlal from a A-Esthetlc Sense
After an enjoyable ten days chapel started agam Hall 15 returmng from the vacatlon, learns that
Bacon 15 has located the E 1n Economlcs and ev1nces profound sorrow Cutler 15 returmng from
Green Mounta1ns accounts for all hrs Jewelry wlth one except1on The last event before
vacatlon a full dress dance at one of the fratern1ty houses was dxscussed It seems that Labrovltz and
Epstem sold out completely that evemng and outs1ders attemptmg to steal a stray dance were consequently
a tour of the
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T dd. The following day, however, saw the first big victory since the Wesleyan game, the debating team return-
o
ing two unanimous decisions as their contribution to the relief fund. In celebration, 1917 invited everybody to
the gymnasium for one of the most excellent dances on record. The ancient melody, "Mighty Lak a Rose,"
seemed to find favor. Its effect was pronounced, Eaton and Ferguson leaving Springfield for Hartford on what
they fondly thought was a Hamp local.
Altogether, December was quite a month. In fact, the whole fall was one of most peculiar and unfortunate
happenings. To begin with there was Bill Esty's leg. VVe publish leg. Then there was the hoof and mouth
disease. Then 1917 won the basketball championship: There was also a ravaging epidemic of the pink eye,
"gnu the little nlh Jfurh ramhleh right along" fillers 'Uagrants
especially along about the time Christmas vacation drew near and the young men felt the call of home ties. Most
of the college pulled their freight December 21, a slippery day and one which was, as the poet VVeathers has aptly
expressed it, chillier than one would think. Two days later even Emmy left. CWe insert on the right above
a photograph of two of the chief mourners, leading the cheer.j
Everything started with a flourish in January. The Chess Club was resuiscitated and reinflated and held an
exhilarating tournament. Doc Phillips began to collect normal feet, Reber, '16, going about on crutches until the
healed. Hitchcock, '16, left college, pointing the moral that even colossal intellects eventually break
wound
290
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kept from the public. Some one permitted a famous economist to start the Beecher lectures in chapel without
fair warning.
The last week in February was eventful. A discharged barber began it by taking a healthy slice out of
Eph Cosby. CUnsympathetic voice from Goodridge's table heard to marvel at the blade sharp enough to cut
Cosby's beef.D That same day practice for the ball team started and the college pepped up correspondingly.
The next day eight hundred alumni gathered in New Yorkg Amherst men seldom far away when they say that
word "banquet" CQuotation from Mrs. Perry.j The following day the Council officially ended the scheduling
of games with prep schools. The succeeding day George Washburn decided to journey down to Andover and
the college took a long breath-the suspense had been nerve-wracking. Dramatics took its annual spring trip,
playing to a "large and enthusiastic audience" in South Hadley. On Saturday there came the Andover Meet
Qsee third sentence abovej.
March started badly. The Gym department pulled their annual bone, urging badgered undergraduates to
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forced to go informally. Gillies, '16, smoothed over the
the brothers had to have them to get by.
diiiiculty of dress suits, however, pointing out th.
February recovered quickly from a poor start an witnesse on r1 ay e an
of the year. The team had been practising -regularly and had been strengthened by the accession of sev
d ' d F 'd th 11th the first basketball g
er
ei
strong aggressive players. It gave the college one of the thrills of its existence on February 27 1na23 to 22 argum
with Williamstown. All in all, it brought the mild pastime back again to stay Speaking of minor athletics tl
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A weaken, '16, icing the squat
been useless A scarred gridiron hero acquired the soubriquet Feather bed News reaches Amherst
Coach Riley has been signed up matrimomally as a result of a football romance, Rider and Knowlton 16 lm
Senior Hop was duly celebrated on Lincoln's Birthday. Redfield, Tomlinson and Ames attended and have sm
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worried The Mitre in collaboration with Mount Holyoke gave a play which was considered too good to
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the utmost lengths Ceight, to be exactj and causing considerable alienation of the midday repast around the board
' ' f 'led to get his heart examined before the Hart-
track. About this time Harry Cole was asked to resign, having ai
' ' ' ' d t elaborate for any humorous effect.D St. Patrick s Day
ford Meet. CThem words is verbatim, we didn t nee o
was featured by the Hamp Glee Club concertg four hundred men took "The Fighting Chance." Classes for
a while began to look like a full dress rehearsal of the OLIOQ at the 2.00 P.M. lectures the brethren showed up from
the direction of the gym in everything from full dress to a swimming suit. On March 18 a Scotch sailor appeared
' ' " ' " G dl The man didn't know anythingyhe didn't
on the premises with a rope and the information I m gude. oo
' ' ' d J ffer was crucified or shot at sunrise. That evening,
suspect anything, in fact, he wasn t sure whether Lor e y
according to the Student, Rider, '16, presided at the Freshman-Sophomore Debate. QWe put th1s in the humorous
' ' th wind-up of gym. Our artist was unable to do
column just as it stands.D But the big event in March was e
justice to the wall-scaling or the athletic jubilee. His drawing from life of the Immortal Twenty, wand-wlelders, -
pleases the soul however. There are several claimants for each position: The gentleman in the lower right is
either Al 1Nashburn or T. M unrog the dark cloud next to him is undeniably C. Brown prior to his annual ablutionsg
the athlete eyeing the shoe has Anderson's comely features and the sneaker disappearing through the door might
be either Hughes, Stearns, or most any one. Not Hughes, one notes his cheerful countenance on the extreme
left center, by the youth with the Frank Clark hair-cut, directly above Doc Chandler and below the rigid being
in the upper left corner Cpresumably Smith, L. RJ. The somniferous one, two above the dinge, has the toe marks
of both Redfield and B. Peck, jr.
Easter vacation once over CLutkins escaping this time with no bricks in his suit casej, the ball team returned
from the snow-covered South and started the season right, 5 to 2, the first four men fanning. Gail, '15, came back
from the front to witness a real battle. "Greek letter baseball" started the pennant race one week later and
Sphinx broke into this column by holding a dance. Meanwhile the junior Smoker had startled the
world. Despite the fact that the eats reminded one of the plaintive old lyric "There Ain't No Hole in the Dough-
nut if You Take the Doughnut Away," the movies were of College Hall itself, Davy Todd caught his second
wind easily, and the prizes were priceless. CN. B.-Two of them OLIOSQ
The remainder of April was placid aside from the rumors of a golf team. Accustomed to victories, 1916
copped the spring track meet with a wide margin to spare. Beta ordered a new wing on their house for their cupg
A T cornered the relay trophy for their goat room. 1917 departed for a "banquet" in Springfield in orderly
fashion. But as May 1 drew nigh there were various Symptoms of Unrest. For instance, there was the big
Pajama Parade early in the week, to the accompaniment of "Tipperary" and "Scrub your Neck." The general
' ' d t be "To-night's the night." Those who essayed to attend
sentiment in regard to Friday, April 30, seeme o
' ' d that it had been " the night." Some evening,-leastways, the entire college
' ' l . Th
chapel next morning were convince
' ' d lam ed a whole zoo out in front of Phi Dood e e
saw skeletons on their way to chapel the following A.M. an p
' d nd and disappeared mysteriously. Uneasily the OLIO folded lts
ver hands on the chapel clock dance arou
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tents like an Arab and silently went to press.
294
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In the Fall of 1913.
Q Bunn to ifaumanitp I
Tom Dillon Ccoldlyj: "You don't want the police station. Bounty-office next door."
me unh Tum
As Ashley enters the room, chorus of groans: "Good God!"
Ashley: "Thank you, gentlemen, thank you
CShaw carried out in fainting conditionj
I confess! I've slain Kidder!"
After a glimpse at Junior Gym one is led to reflect that while there may be "three graces" Ci. e., Nelligan, Stevenmn and
Bixlerb, no one ever counted the disgraces.
296
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The Hem :liable of the jfux anh the Q55
CFor which apology is made to Mr. Adel
Here begins the account of the Doings of Bardolph West and Aspinwall Skilton, two young Bloods who
shook the macadam of Greentown, Conn., from their Walk-Overs, and began upon the Initial Session, otherwise
known as the Verdant stage, in a New England College.
Bardolph was a Husky Lad, who had achieved Fame as an all-round Champ, in the Prep School which had
Fostered him. He was as Sound as a Nut, physically, and the Idol. of that class of Devotees who Kowtow to
Athletes. But the heavy Gray Matter was Conspicuous by its Scarcity.
Now let us look at Aspinwall. This Youth, whose fond Progenitors had spent many Evenings mapping
out the Career, was by nature a very Canny Customer, and only he who arose Betimes could hope to put one
Over on this little Brighteyes. But Aspinwall's Frame was very sloppily Built, and his Chest Measure was about
Twenty-Eight, in short, he had a general Contour like that of a Flageolet Bean.
When these two F rosh had carefully Inspected the prospective Alma Mater, and had begun to bow down
t the Demands of the Curriculum, each in his 'turn was confronted with the Department of Physical Education,
o
and the Requirements thereof. Each was Examined by the Physician 1n Charge, who made many Suggestions
' ' h h M S
as to the Line of Exercise that they should Take Up, in order to have a Corpore Sano to go wit t e ens ana.
Now Friend Bardolph, with his Customary Thickness, figured out that this would be a Splendid.Thing, and
so went at the business with Great Hopes. After six months or so of that form of exercise which IS known to
' ' ' ' ' ' ' A hl ' b'lee where he
the Specialists as Calisthenics, he was given a chance to show off his Prowess in an t etlc Ju 1 ,
exhibited to Advantage in Wall-Scaling, Rope-Climbing, and other arts useful to the Second-Story worker. He
was pleased to note at this time that in his next two years he would also become Accompllshed 1n certain of the
' ' ' ' d D . CTh last mentioned
new Dance Steps, such as the Hornplpe, the Highland Fling, and the Scotch Swor ance e
Tickled him to Death, for he'd always Wondered how a Scotch Sword would Dance.J
But this was not all. At the end of the strenuous season, he was asked to pass certain Tests, to show how
much he had Gained from hislndustrious Activity. So he Scurried around the Boards for the Quarter, and
returned in a state of physical Surrender, removed 8 square inches of Cuticle descending the Ropeg and narrowly
missed a W atery Grave in a Titanic Struggle to do 4 Lengths. As a reward for this he was informed that he had
Passed, and that if he had no Overcuts he could look Forward to Two more Seasons with a Clear Conscience.
Did Aspinwall Tumble for this line of Bunk? Not on your Ephemeral Existence. Not at all. By No
Means. Being Naturally Averse to matters in which there was so little Percentage, he started Right In to think
up Some XV ay of Side-stepping the Necessary. As he was passing by the door of the Consulting Room of this
Cripple-Factory, he caught a Glimpse of our friend Bardolph the Husk, who was having his heart Examined so
that he Might play Foot-Ball. He observed that the Thing which was being used for the purpose had become
Disconnected, and yet he distinctly heard a voice say: "All right, Mr. West, I don't see any reason Why you
shouldn't play." , .
This Incident caused the Astute Aspinwall to Wink his Other Eye, and do some reliecting concerning the
Chances. The results of his meditations were quite interesting. A time came when Aspinwall wished very much
to Attend certain Festivities inianother section of the Country, and yet his Cuts were all gone, so what could
he do? This is what he did. He took some Palmolive and washed his Eyes with it, and then repaired to the
Oiiice to pull the Stall Stuff. The Official pronounced it the Worst Case of Pink-Eye on Record, and gave him
the necessary papers to Facilitate the desired Absence. '
Later, when a similar Occasion arose, our Hero overcame the Difficulty by filling his Cheek with Pebble
and using a Volume of Taussig for a Pillow. The resulting Swelling passed. very Nicely for the Mumps, and GE
he went with a Sick Excuse.
298
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Qlnllrgn Erug Starr
FOSS' PREMIER CHOCOLATES
FOSS' QUALITY CHOCOLATES
READ'S MAGNOLIA CHOCOLATES
A FULL LINE OF
WA T ERMAN'S FOUNTAIN PENS
COLLEGE DRUG STORE
W. H. MCGRATH R- J- CURLEY
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D entlemrms rmshing ails.
. BROADWAY c0R.TWENTY-SECOND ST.
NEW YORK. .
Everything for Men's and Boys' Wear in Town
and Country
Clothing, Furnishings, Hats and Shoes
Trunks, Bags and Traveling Kits f
Ready-made Gear for all Sports
Liveries for Menservants
Send for Illustrated Catalogue h
BOSTON BRANCH A NEWPORT BRANCH
149 Tremont Street 220 Bellevue Avenue
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MAIN STUDIOS
1546-48 BROADWAY, NEW YORK
Cin Times Squarej'
BRANCHES
Northampton, Mass.
South Hadley, Mass.
W Brooklyn, N. Y.
Poughkeepsie, N. Y.
West Point, N. Y.
Princeton, N. J.
Cornwall, N. Y.
- - Lawrenceville, N. J.
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FOUNDED IN 1821 TOTAL NUMBER ALUMNI 5216
AMHER T COLLEGE
. 1915-1916
ADMiss1ioN
For admission to the course leading to the degree of Bachelor of Arts, every candidate presents Latin or Greek,
English, Mathematics and Ancient History, and, in addition, studies chosen from ancient language, modern lan-
guages, the sciences, and history. For details of entrance requirements see the annual catalogue.
Regular entrance examinations are held under the management of the College Entrance Examination Board,
june 14-19, and at Amherst, September 16-22, 1915.
Graduates of certain Preparatory Schools are admitted on certificate, without examination. The certificates
and pass cards of the Regents of the University of New York are also accepted in place of examinations.
Porter Admission Prize of 3550 for best examinations on entrance subjects.
For admission to advance standing, full equivalents are accepted.
COURSES OF INSTRUCTION -
Philosophy, History, Economics, Modern Government and International Law, Biblical literature, Greek lan-
guage and literature, Latin language and literature, Romance languages, English, Public Speaking, English literature,
Mathematics, Physics, Astronomy, Chemistry, Mineralogy and Geology, Biology, Botany, Hygiene and Physical
Education, Music, Greek and Italian Art.
V GENERAL INFORMATION
Graded Diploma for the degree of B. A. is awarded at the conclusion of the foregoing courses. Special courses,
not leading to a degree, may be taken.
The academic year is 36 weeks in duration, divided into two semesters. The summer vacation of 12 weeks
begins with the last week in june. Commencement, June 30, 1915.
Tuition fee, S140 yearly. Privileges of the Pratt Gymnasium free to all students.
The annual award of fellowships and prizes exceeds 553,000
The beneficiary funds of the College exceed 35300,000. Students needing assistance may receive it from the
income of these funds. ,
The collections for instruction in Art and the Natural Sciences are unusually good.
Fully equipped laboratories for instruction in Physics, Chemistry and Biology.
The College Library contains about 100,000 volumes, and is freely accessible to all students, without fees.
The Pratt Athletic Field, five minutes' walk from the College campus, is one of the finest college fields in the
country. 4
For further information catalogues and examination papers address
THE REGISTRAR
AMHERST COLLEGE
AMHERST MAS.
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Where Amherst College
men get haberdashery
of that distinctive kind
plus quality and value
9
E 5 The Haberdasher
, NORTHAMPTON
Draper Hotel Building
Stetson Shoes for Men and Young
Men possess the leading footwear
style of the season and give ease
and comfort beyond description
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THE AMHERST FURNITURE AND
CARPET ROOMS I
We are strictly the largest dealers in exclusive Stu-
dents' Furnishings in this section. We have gained
our knowledge of the students' demand by long years
of experience-keeping up with the age in every
particular and at prices way below all competition.
. .M1-XRHET.
F. F. STRICKLAND, Mgr. n
ALWAYS NOVELTIES NOT FOUND ELSEWHERE
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In the line of Gents' Furnishings Established 1904
we carry only the best: H. and P.
Gloves, Suspenders, Belts, Everwear
and S. H. and W. Hosiery, Horn Bros.'
Neckwear- the best.
THIS IS THE YOUNG MAN'S STORE
In confidence--just a word in your
ear. We have selected a limited line
of unusually pronounced patterns for
young men who want life and snap in
their dress. The rolling lapel--the
new cuff-the French back-every
new fad.
I. M. LABROVITZ
Fine Merchant Tailor
and Gents' Furnishings
We will call and deliver clothes
11 Amity Street
Full Dress Suits to Rent, also Caps
and Gowns.
Ladies' Tailoring.
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Dyeing, Altering, Cleaning,Press1ng. Telep one
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M. S. PAIGE
Amherst House Livery, Hack and Feed Stable
When Having a Dance or Promenade, Call 29,
and Let Us Furnish You with a Hack or Barge
THE BEST OF SERVICE GUARANTEED
REAR OF AMHERST HOUSE GARAGE CONNECTED
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CATERING
Dances, Ban uets "Proms" and House Parties
7
are my specialties
The Best of Food and Service Guaranteed
Also waiters and waitresses furnished for all occasions
Tel 511 M 3M Mann St
ALBERT B BIAS AMHERST
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LOOSE LEAF Carpenter 85 Morehouse
Q AND -
BOUND NOTE BOOKS BOOK ANO JOB
ALSO PRI NTE RS
FOUNTAIN PENS
O MOORES AND WATERMWS COLLEGE WORK A SPECIALTY
i OUR' ASSORTMENT OF
B A N N E R S Particular attention given to the publication
5 ls THE BEST IN TOWN of Genealogies and Town Histories-
50c REPRINTS A SPECIALTY ESTIMATES FURNISHED ON APPLICATION
AMHERST BOOK STORE E cook Place S '
c. T. Dyer E AMHERST, MASS.
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A. J, HASTINGS DEOORATOR Fon ALL COLLEGE
2 FUNCTIONS
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3 CEORCE O. SIMONS
3 ALL THE
Daily Papers, Sunday Editions, New Englamys Leading
2 . '
Magazines Decorator
Letter Files' Paper Clips' Push Pins Decorator for Amherst 1916 Junior Prom
Z ' 240 Asylum St.
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A- J- HASTINGS HARTFORD, CONN.
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RAHAR'S INN
H Northampton, Massachusetts
Two Blocks lrom the Depot
HOME 0F MEN The hotel where there is comfort, without extravaganee.
E More popular than ever. '
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Had rnore I Athletlc Teams than ever E Privatflieggzioomxqfcife? lrom2?30to ll P. M.
before
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CLOTHING, FURNISHINGS
MEN'S SHEPARD STORE
HATS, SHOES
Amherst House Block
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COPLEY SQUARE HOTEL
Huntington Avenue, Exeter and Blagden Streets
BOSTON, MASS.'
Headquarters for College and School Athletic
Teams when in Boston
AMOS H. WHIPPLE, Proprietor
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WoodWard's Lunch I
27 Main St., Masonic Building
NORTHAMPTON, - - ' - MASS.
Lunches, Soda, I ce Cream
Closed only from 1 A. M. to 4 A. M. '
F. W. WOODWARD, Prop.
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RICHARD J. RAHAR, Proprietor
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E. M. BOLLES
College Shoes 5
REPAIRING DEPT.
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THE MUTUAL
PLUMBING AND
HEATING COMPANY
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Draper Hotel
Northampton, Mass.
Caters to College Men
WM. M. KIMBALL, Proprietor
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THE ELEcTme Cm ENGRAVING Co.
B UFFALO. N.Y
Wf MADE 7715 ENGRAVINGS FOR 7711.5 BOOK.
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Sanderson 81 Thompson
' Clothiers, Hatters and
Tailors
Amherst
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TO KEEP WARM
Burn Good Coal
I HAVE IT
G. R. ELDER
Amherst Garage Go.
Dealers in 6 ,
Automobile Supplies
Autos to let day or night, at reasonable rates
17 So. Prospect St.
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The American Aluminum Co.
Lemont, Ill. .
The ware that wears
A A good agency for College Men
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THE CHAS. H. ELLIOTI'
COMPANY
The Largest College Engraving House in the World
COMMENCEMENT INVITATIONS
CLASS DAY PROGRAMS
CLASS PINS
Dance Programs and C Fraternity and
Invitations Ellen Inserts
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Cases and 2, and lass
Covers Stationery
Wedding Invitations and Calling Cards
WORKS-17th STREET and LEHIGH AVENUE
Philadelphia, Pa.
I Leo N. Shaw, '16, agent for
GUY M. MILLER
PICTURES and FRAMES
Over Kingsley's Pharmacy
Northampton, Mass.
When in need of Flowers call on
186 Main St., ' Northampton, Mass.
My agent in Amherst
S. W. Rider, '16
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Glllnntrlhuturs
The OLIO wishes in particular to extend to John C. McGarrahan, '17, its sincere appreciation and acknowl-
edgment of the services he has rendered. This is also true of the generous assistance of Kenneth W. Banta, '15,
and of G. Homer Lane and Robert M. Proctor, '16, and David R. Craig, Jr., and Cyril B. Lewis, '17. It is fitting
further that we express our gratitude to the OLIO Committee for its co-operation and good will. VVe wish also
'l h lc W lter R Agard James W Craig David S Cutler, Gordon R. Hall, '15, Julius S. Bixler, Merrill
to hearti y t an a . , . , .
H. Boynton, William C. Esty, Zd, William Gates, Jr., J. Maxey jenkins, C. Baldwin Peck, Jr., Harold E. Sawyer,
Lambert F. Whetstone, '16, and Frederick D. Bell, '17, as well as the Committee of Fourteen who handled the
OLIO circulation.
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