Hamilton College - Hamiltonian Yearbook (Clinton, NY)

 - Class of 1930

Page 1 of 218

 

Hamilton College - Hamiltonian Yearbook (Clinton, NY) online collection, 1930 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1930 Edition, Hamilton College - Hamiltonian Yearbook (Clinton, NY) online collectionPage 7, 1930 Edition, Hamilton College - Hamiltonian Yearbook (Clinton, NY) online collection
Pages 6 - 7

Page 10, 1930 Edition, Hamilton College - Hamiltonian Yearbook (Clinton, NY) online collectionPage 11, 1930 Edition, Hamilton College - Hamiltonian Yearbook (Clinton, NY) online collection
Pages 10 - 11

Page 14, 1930 Edition, Hamilton College - Hamiltonian Yearbook (Clinton, NY) online collectionPage 15, 1930 Edition, Hamilton College - Hamiltonian Yearbook (Clinton, NY) online collection
Pages 14 - 15

Page 8, 1930 Edition, Hamilton College - Hamiltonian Yearbook (Clinton, NY) online collectionPage 9, 1930 Edition, Hamilton College - Hamiltonian Yearbook (Clinton, NY) online collection
Pages 8 - 9
Page 12, 1930 Edition, Hamilton College - Hamiltonian Yearbook (Clinton, NY) online collectionPage 13, 1930 Edition, Hamilton College - Hamiltonian Yearbook (Clinton, NY) online collection
Pages 12 - 13
Page 16, 1930 Edition, Hamilton College - Hamiltonian Yearbook (Clinton, NY) online collectionPage 17, 1930 Edition, Hamilton College - Hamiltonian Yearbook (Clinton, NY) online collection
Pages 16 - 17

Text from Pages 1 - 218 of the 1930 volume:

COPYRIGHT 1929 BY VERNON A. IVES Editor CLARENCE FRASER Bus. Mgr. AMILTO OF THE YEAR NINETEEN HUNDRED THIRTY PUBLISHED BY THE JUNIOR CLASS OF HAMILTON COLLEGE CLINTON, N. Y. MCMXXIX JAMES HARVEY CAMPBELL CLASS OF 1930 HJ FOR JIMMY Scholar Athlete Gentleman E51 Foffewom' That her sons may ne'er for- get the college on the hill top is the purpose of the 1930 HAMILTONIAN E61 Commit Views . . Administration Classes . Fruterriities Athletics Activities . Features 7 A 'r 2 4 ,M P Q 'I 5 r Q Y , .1 f - . mf' 1' ' 'AA H-K HK ESI 9 10 71 ,,.f--'- -x -1 1 , 1 x , XX -YN H HM X- I Mx X ' --2, N S P s ,. ,X 1 fl LK NQXX X J, i ,fy f l ,I Q. , gl N I A f, ,fi 3 Yprgg: .li Qiw, -I-n 465 fjfi. ' j 'ff f' X N gk- . t -. , , ' r 7 ' an 1 ' mg- 2 '- :JL ' I ww . 7 F, - 5 , fl: 11 VT , if mv 1, 4, , I Q l ' '- Q, ' lf! QE, . A 2 -' ,Ia ' 3. 11 - 1 , f 4- ' ,, T.. ,ll , ,gin Q , ,, rr -Q ., , ,yi r' bi -, id . f - m f rv ,- - 1 I', .' LQ -.- ,V Ugg' J I I mf- JJ, ,, , , A , x. H' ' E ,-'gfg if-..i1J15Ii---I4 1 r f 1 51-3-. : .'T1,c, , . F 'Y-1-N ,f xg-Hi ' P .. 1 I -fm? 4 1. vvzgrx- - fini, ,: 1 jf'-f , E4 I ,,-V n. - qi. 54- 'nl fi I1- Y-Eff 2-1, , 55,7 - 'lmm-vfilfif J F 1 'iw-f fi: +5 r f',.ag 91452: -- .Jw 'L E. . :-.- F . f 1 f.,:.g1PC7':1..f I:1,1 '-i 'g.'fx . .Lv F' ,s - Z 4A. .,v' 111'-,-1 -gf U' f ' ,X 1, 'Q , q,+f:'ia . vw 2. .Q -1:1-51151 n 'H - L A Y 'ny 5 L: -B, ' ... F. Vi .5 5- L -, 'ry il.-:T ' 75,-g',n-, '4 ' f, , 7 f Af, , J -- X- , A g1,2-1'1i..r13 5.-r-1 51 SHT, H -' 4 M X 1 . -,1 ,zrfxxiif-Jlff --' '-v-jf-', ': : -173 I ' gawk .!' , .H - L, v'J',, ' 1 ,1 F . F, .4 ,K ',.4, '71 'L ,fI'1f,,-L 9 gn-Q fan.-ig--gg Q., ef I ff -N -A v x gf - - '-H, , -V , ..- ,. Y' r J ' A-11f:..,, yn Q.Ffff,f,rf. .5l ' , J ii' ,f',l..l1A5 n I-M1 5 . - , 1. - -- 3 -,.5:::1 X -I v ,c -lirf :,.,Df' . I, T? , ! E11 12 .-.. ., 1 -K , .. we' .F 1 V. E131 ,... E141 f !'1 -c ,ff E. FV . . I ,I . My , fi., ,xl x X .X- , .XV H x ' X X , I X . -Vx Q, '.-,QV y ,. . W 1 1 A . I A L f A X A I, 'EH Y N Y. t., , . Qin! 4 1 .1',. , . , , 1, -Q X Y '., 'jf' ,P , , T, ku Q H 1,-. ' L -if nn' Q' ,,., -in. F251 2?.,? asf, PMT A if V , wi-, -- 1 . W ,J fl -'L 1-fr 37155 1 - -- H 1-+.f7...mf E151 ALEXANDER HAMILTON FIRST TRUSTEE E151 17 i ,g '?1ii',1 - r, , - V , sf. .pm 7,7733 '-,, ,Ml i '23 f . N wwf. ! 55' 1' ffffz 1 U1 . : ' ,. .- . -. .519 an f f ,, , H I L ,,. 4, , 4 f VIFZT, '1if11af5i ,1' 'L ,.1',.'5Q::,.f' ixffjhfga-QQ! .. 55 'lm-Q f A f 'fpzfff ADMINISTRATION Tlre Trasteef HON. ELIHU ROOT, D.C.L., LL.D. ALEXANDER C. SOPER, LL.D. . HENRY' H. BENEDICT, LL.D. CHARLES B. ROGERS, LL.D. . BENJAMIN W. ARNOLD, A.M. SAIVIUEL F. F.NGS, A.B. . . . REV. ROBERT G. MCGREGOR, D.D. REUBEN LESLIE MAYNARD, A.M. . JOSEPH RUDD, Ph.B. . . NAIILLIAM M. BRISTOL, A.B. . DANIEL BURKE, A.M. .... . PRES. FREDERICK C. FERRY, Ph.D., SOD., LL.D. ROBERT D. FRASER, A.B ..... JAMES H. GLASS, M.D ...... HARRY G. IQIMBALL, A.M. . REV. DARWIN F. PICKARD, D.D. . CHARLES A. MILLER, A.B. . JOHN L. STRICKLAND, A.B. . ELIHU ROOT, JR., A.M. . . C. VVILLARD RICE, A.B. . . VVILLIAM A. FERGUSON,m A.B. ERNEST O. HEYL,all A.B. . . CLARK H. MINOR, Ph.B. . NEILE F. TOWNER, A.B. . REV. ANTHONY H. EVANSF D.D. . STUART B. BLAKELYF NLD. . FREDERIC P. WARFIELD, A.B. llllilected by the Alumni of the College. U81 - -'-2-I . Clinton Lakewood, N. f. . New York . Clinton . Albany . New York New Rochelle . New York . Clinton . New York . New York . Clinton New Hartford Trenton Falls . New York Watertown . Barnevelcl . Carthage . New York . Geneva . New York . New York . New York . Albany . New York Binghamton . New York The Fdfilffjf FREDERICK CARLOS FERRY, A.M., PH.D., Sc.D., LL.D. President C191'7Q of the College and Professor of lVIath ematics. A.B.,WVilliams, 1891. Theta Delta Chig Phi Beta Kappa A1.1zRo IJAVID MORRII,I., M.S., Sc.D. Stone Professor 118912 of Biology, Emeritus. B.S., Dartmouth, 1876. Phi Zeta lllug Phi Beta Kappa. 1 VVILLIAM HARDER SQUIRES, A,M., PH.D. John Stewart Kennedy Professor H8915 of Philosophy A.B., Hamilton, 1888. Delta Upsilong Phi Beta Kappa SAMUEL I. SAUNDIERS, A.M., D.Sc. Professorf l892Dof Physics and Instructor in Astronomy upon the Litchfield Foundationg Registrar f1906J. A.B., Toronto, 1888. Sigma Xig Phi Beta Kappa. E191 -Aan Ui ,. . i -n -X ly , V. . . : . -- W- A-- A . ...--. ., - - . - , , , . ., it G ' i b- i L V' 1g 1'iw ' B ff ,Ai ..-a.,-..g..ti, ...Y . ...J.g , , . VVILLIAM PIERCE SI-IEPARD, A.M., PH.D. Burgess Professor fl895j of the Romance Languages and Literature. A.B., Hamilton, 1892. Delta Upsilong Phi Beta Kappa. AR'1'I1UR PERCY SAUNDERS, P1-LD. Childs Professor H9001 of Agriculture and of General Chemistry. A.B., Toronto, 1890. Sigma Phig Phi Beta Kappa. EDWARD FITCH, PH.D. Edward North Professor 418895 of Greekg Dean of the College Ql926j. A.B., Hamilton, l886. Emerson Literary Societyg Phi Beta Kappa. JOSEPH DARLING IBBOTSON, A.M. Librariang Instructor in Hebrew. A.B., Hamilton, 1890. Chi Psig Phi Beta Kappa. E201 3 V . , 3 A l 'Pl 5 r 3 .. - -. -.. -,L if , e, p V . . - Q ,X , .- 4. fl 'I iii ,.,?.-,-,,K,iX5y3g.: ny - - ' ' ' W - --I ' - jg: ff. .411 ,'. .,f , f . 'A 17 'N ' ' f i f W ' ' -- ' .- -:.5 'n1. Z . - -A l .. i Lu I1W 'E - ' 1 ' f .mn - '- arf' ,414 ,- -.' -1 ' -:M ah, ' L rg - .. ' -. .' .,.-. 21. L- -' 1 J- 'fl ll ' ' 1' 1- -1,'.1.i r ' freer-.riff 1 ' . i ,r .fl if r i lwwiigll 355-j.iz.41,:.'.llllifmeqgiji, fa H FRANK I-Iovr VVoo1J, A.M., PH.D. James S. Sherman lVIemorial Professor H9021 of Politi- cal Science. A.B., Syracuse, 1891. Psi Upsilon g Phi Beta Kappa. Kappa. C1.lzvm.ANu KING CHASE, A.M., LIT'r.D. Benjamin-Bates Professor 119115 of Latin. A.B., Oberlin, 1891. Phi Beta Kappa. CALVIN LESLIE LEVVIS, A.M. Upson Professor 119081 of Rhetoriciand Oratory. A.B., Hamilton, 1890. Delta Kappa Epsilong Phi Beta FRANK HUMP1-uuzy RISTINE, A.M., PH.D. , Hamilton B. Tompkins Professor Q19l2D of the English Language and Literature. A.B., Wabash, 1905. Beta Theta Pig Phi Beta Kappa. E211 l V. -0 - .. AI.BlERT IRA PRETTYMAN, B.P.E. Director H9171 of Physical Education. International Y.lVI.C.A. College, Springfield, 1906. VVILLIAM M Assay CARRUTH, A.M. Pratt Professor 119071 of Mathematics. A.B., Cornell University, 1901. Beta Theta Pig Sigma Xi, Phi Beta Kappa. ., MII,LEDGE Louis BONHAM, JR., B.L1'rT., A.M., Pn.D. Publius V. Rogers Professor 119191 of History. B. Litt., Furman University, 1900. Lambda Chi Alpha Phi Beta Kappa. HORACE SEELY BROWN, M.S. Professor 119085 of Mathematics, Clerk of the Faculty B.S., Lafayette, 1899. Phi Beta Kappa. E221 NlEl,SfJN CLARKE DALE, A.M., PH.D. Professor C191-lj of Geology. B.S., Middlelnixry, 1903. Delta Upsilong Sigma Xig Phi Beta Kappa. ROBERT BARNES RUDD, A.M. Professor 119222 of the English Language and Litera- tUI'C. A.B., Hamilton, 1909. Kappa. - . gr 1 . ,-QM-A.-Q NV f V V v 1 I . , .L 3 A ri- ll fd' il 1' 1 1 iihff :., r if: EDWARD FRANKLIN HAUCH, A.M., PH.D. Munson Professor 11921, of the German Language and Literature. A.B., Toronto, 1907. Alpha Delta Phig Phi Beta' DONALD BLYTHE DURHAM, A.M., PH.D. Professor 119231 of Latin and Greek. A.B., Princeton, 1905. Phi Beta Kappa. U31 L PAUL ADEE FANCHER, A.M. Professor C1924-I of English. A.B., Amherst, 1910. Psi Upsilong Phi Beta Kappa. BERRIAN RANKIN SH UTE. Professor C1926J of lVIusical Appreciation. Institute of Musical Art, New York City, 1910-1916. FRANCIS LESTER PATTON, A.M., PH.D. Professor H9235 of Economics. A.B., Ohio State, 1913. Delta Sigma Rhog Phi Beta Kappa. JOHN HOW'.4RD HowsoN, A.M., B.D. Walcott Professor Q1926j of Ethics and Christian Evi- dences. A.B., Toronto, 1916. B.D.', Union Theological Semi- nary, 1923. 1241 JEAN MARIIIS GliI,AS. Director H9211 of Physical Education. Ecole Normale 1VIi1it:xire d'Escrime et de Gymnastique, Joinville-le-Pont, France, 1898-1902. H AIl'l'liUR RALPH WIN'1'liRS. Director 119273 of Physical Education. A.B., Oberlin, 1923. Wu.1.ARD Bosrwlcrc 1VIARSI-I, A.M. Professor f1927j of English Composition and Public Speaking. AB., Hamilton, 1912. Chi Psi, Phi Beta Kappa. WA1.frER NORTON Hess, A.M., PH.D. Stone Professor H9281 of Biology. A.B., Oberlin, 1913. ' l25J GEORGE ELLAS WISEWELL, A.M., P1-LD. l C D Associate Professor 1922 of the Romance Languages. Ph.B., Hamilton, 1904. Theta Delta Chi. XVALTER HERNTAN CARL LAVES, PH.D. Associate Professor C1927j of Political Science. Ph.B., Chicago, 1923 -2 I- VF RALPH CLEWELI. SUPER. Associate Professor Cl913j of lVIodern Languages. A.B., Ohio University, 1895. Phi Delta Thetag Phi Beta Kappa. JOHN DAY, PH.D. Associate Professor 119275 of Greek and Latin. A.B., Ohio State, 1921. E261 4 1 r r BOYD CRUMRINE PATTERSON, Pi-LD. Associate Professor 619277 of 1VIathematics. A.B., Washington and Jefferson, 1923. EDGAR BALDWIN GR.AVES, A.M. Associate Professor 119271 of History. X A.B., Haverford, 1919. ASA EMANUEL MCKINNEY, A.M., PH.D. Associate Professor H9285 of Chemistry. A.B., Indiana University, 1914. 1-4: F-I Mox ARTHUR 'VVEBER Associate Director 119273 of Physical Education A.B., Oberlin, 1925. 1271 CHARLES DOUGLAS CHRETIEN, M.A. Instructor Cl926j in English Composition. A.B., Hamilton, 1926. Emerson Literary Societyg Delta Sigma Rhog Phi Beta Kappa. CLIFFORD MORTIRIER CRIST. Instructor 119275 in French. AB., Hamilton, 1927. Phi Beta Kappa. F EARL ORLO BUTCHER, A.M., PH.D. Assistant Professor 119282 of Biology. A.B., DePauw University, 1925. Delta Upsilong Phi Beta Kappa. PETER BENTLEY IDAYZVIONT, JR. lnstructor Cl926j in Public Speaking. A.B., Hamilton, 1926. Emerson Literary Society, Phi Beta Kappa. . E231 1 1 .- 1 Qi PAUL Bmw IIARDT HAIST. Instructor H9273 in German. A.B., North Central, 1926. Vmolr. GEORGE SLE1GI-rr, M.S. Instructor 119271 in Geology. B.S., Northwestern, 1925. Cfxssrus W1LD CURTIS. Instructor 119281 in Physics. A.B., VVilliams, 1928. Delta Upsilong Phi Beta Kappa EDWARD WALES Roo'r, A.M. Lecturer on Art. A.B., Hamilton, 1905. Sigma Phig Phi Beta Kappa. Q 11591 O ters qfuildniinzstration FREDERICK CARLOS FERRY, Ph.D., SC.D., LL.D. . . President CHARLES BUTLER ROGERS, A.M., LL.D. . . Treasurer EDWARD FITCH, Ph.D. . . . . JOSEPH DARLING IBBOTSON, A.M. HORACE SEELY BROWN, M.S. . SAMUEL J. SAUNDERS, D.SC. . EDWARD IVIICHAEL COUGHLIN . . ELLIOT CRIM BURTON, B.S. Superintendent MOLLIE HARRIET ROBERTS, A.B. . . WALLACE BRADLEY JOHNSON, Ph.B. . RACHEL SWAN ROBERTS, A.B. . MRS. ROY BICKNELL DUDLEY, A.B. . HELEN RUTH LOOMIS . . . LOLITA GILBERT . . . . Dean . . . Librarian . Clerk of the Faculty . . . Registrar . . . Bursar of Buildings and Grounds Secretary to the President Secretary of Admissions First Library Assistant . Library Assistant . Library Assistant . Library Assistant RUTH BENTON SWARTWOUT . . Stenographer ADELAIDE NIARY TIMIAN . . S tenographer LUCY CECELIA HICKOX . . Stenograplier SARAH ORISSA JEWETT . ..... Stenographer ADELBERT JOHN DANFORD .... Zblanager of Commons VVILLIAM WALLACE . . Assistant Superintendent of Grounds INF IRMARY STAFF VARNEY BERNARD HAMLIN, M.D. . . . College Physician KATHERINE GERTRUDE WELCH, R.N. . I 30 J . Resident Nurse 31 A f , , Y gl, NI E! X -V I If 737 , V M ! 5 f ij! 1 X' N25 mf xii. , V MA . X A ' 'A 4- 1 C L A S S E S r-1 ua N lil ASS OF 1929 1 g, ,. in ' .Y I w f ' i 9 Air..-ISZQ-WE. ' ' - 1929 Clam Ojicem Joins Roiufm' Noimima President l'lARl,AN FORD CALKINS . Ifire-presiflenz FRANK PALMIZR CU'r'rlzR . Svrrvmry-Trmszzrw- PRESIDENT NORMILE 2570191 QF like has 0f19 9 Experience is an unfailing token of greatness, and can anyone question our experience? We have tasted all sides of life, the bitter and the sweet, the alcoholic and the Fitehian. We are the last class of NIEN-big, burly he-men, not pseu- do-intellectuals like our successors. So fond have we been of our Alma lVIater and so fearful of the assaults of oncoming generations, that the President CHamil- ton's Presidentj, the Dean, and sundry other propagators of the light-of-learning, 33 have easily persuaded us to leave many of our numbers to guide the next yearis leaders. YVe have gone through a banquet sea- son, and were the last class to uphold this age-old tradition against the onslaught of fresh troops. We were the last to profit by Hamilton's school of oratory, and were the happiest to see its demise. We have been great, but a greatness born of inher- ent superiority need not be boasted of. Senior mmf all PHILIP ROADES ADAMS, AKE Manager of Football, 4, Quadrangle, Interclass Soccer, 4. Rorrhcsler WEST HIGH SCHOOL LI.oYD VINCENT ALMIRALL, XXI' CPBK, AEP, Debate, 2, 3, 4, Hamiltonian, 3, Hamilton Literary Magazine, 4, Soccer, 1, 2, Fencing, 1, 2, 3, Interfraternity Council, 4, Root Mathematical Prize Scholarship, 2. NEWARK, ARIZONA . . . . . . . . . . Brooklyn RICHARD ANNESLEY ATKINS, AKE ........... fluburrz Charlatans, 3, 4, Duncan Saunders Prize, 3, Editor Hamilton Literary Magazine, 3. CENTRAL HIGH Scnoor., Dr5TRoI'r, MICH. STUART BAKER, JR., AT ............ Oxsining Hockey, 1, 2, 3, 4, Cross Country, 1, 2, 3, Track, 1, 2, 3,5 History Club. MORRISTOWN ACADEMY RICHARD TURNER BARNS, WT .,....... Ncfw York City Manager of Fencing, 4, Charlatans, 2, 3, President, 4, Interclass Fencing, 3, 4, Interclass Hockey, 4. EVERETI' WARD BIsHoI-, JR., SAX ...... LcRoy Interfraternity Golf, History Club, Political Science Club. , LI2RoY HIGH SCIIooI, FLOYD PAUL BREMER, AKE .....,.. IIAE, Manager of Basketball, 4, Hamilton Life, 1, 2, Business Manager of Hamiltonian, 3, . !lflaplcfwood,N..l. Golf. I-IORACE SEELY BROVVN, JR., WT . . Clinton Hockey, 1, 2, 3, 4. HoosAC HOWARD PURINGTON BURT, AXA ....... . Caledonia Interclass Soccer, 4, Interclass Football, 4, Interclass Golf, 3. MANI,IUs HARLAN FORD CALKINS, XPT ....... . Rorherler Choir, 1, 2, 3, 4, Baseball, 3, 4, Charlatans, 3, Honor Court, 1, Quadrangle, D. T., Class Vice-President, 4, Interfraternity Council, President, 4, Discipline Committee, Glee Club, 1 2. i WORCESTER ACADEMY CHXRDENER ALOYSIUS CALLANEN, XPT ........ Wilmaitc, Ill. Charlatans, 3, Electrical Manager of Charlatans, 4, Hamiltonian, 3, Interclass Hockey, 3, Interclass Soccer, 3. NIANITOWOC HIGH SCHOOL E 341 YNILLIAM Toon CAMPBELI., Jn., AEE . . . . . . . . . Brooklyn ILXE, Hamiltonian, Handbook, Press Board, German Club, Fencing Squad, 1, 2. ERASMUS I-IICH SCHOOL PANO Smako CIIACONA, DECAGON ......... Syracuse Choir, l, 2, 3, 4, Assistant Cheerleader, 3, Cheerleader, 4, Quartet, 4, Glee Club, 2, Ger- man Clulx, Freslunan Baseball. I SYRACUSI5 CENTRAL HICII SCHOOL CHARLES Connor: CIIAMHERLAIN, AXA ..... Nc-w York City Freshman Baseball, Interclass Baseball, 3, History Club. I-I A MILTON INSTITUTE l'llN CIIEUNC CHAN, ARE . . . . Hong Kong, China Soccer, 1, Z, 3, Captain, 4. Aunovmz ACADEMY join-J I'l:'lSKl5l.I. CHAPIN, E112 . . . . . . . . . . Niagara Falls Interfraternitv Council, 4' lntercolle iat D b , , , g e e ate, 4, McKinney Prize Debate, 4, McKin- ney Declamation Speaker, 3, Royal Gaboon, 3, 4, Hamiltonian, 3, Interclass Golf, 3, Inter- fraternity Golf, 2, 3, 4, Varsity Golf, 3, Latin Play, Z. NIAGARA FALLS HIGH SCHOOL SI-mnwooo CLARKE CI-IATP'llEl.D, Ed, ........ Washington, D. C. Pentagon, VVas Los, D. T., President, Quadrangle, Executive Council, 4, Honor Court, 3, 4, Uppcrclassman Council, 4, Upperclassman Discipline Committee, 4, Class President, 1 , Choir, 2, 3, 4, Football, 1, 2, 3, Captain, 4, Baseball, 1, 2, 3, 4, Interfraternity Basketball, 1, 2, 3, 4, lnterfraternity I--lockey, 2, 3, 4, Class Basketball, 1, 2, 3, 4. ST. ALBA NS ScHooI. Gaokcn CLARK, Ju., ELS .......... Boantan, N. J. Hamilton Life, 1, 2, 3, Managing Editor, 4, Press Board, 1, 2, 3, Chairman, 4, Pi Delta Epsilon, 2, 3, 4, Cross Country, 1, 2, 3, 4, Track, 2, 3, 4, Class Hockey, 3, 4, Newman Club. BOONTON I-IICII Scnoor. PAUL VAUTRIN Comns, APT . . . . . . . . . . Watfrtofwn Pentagon, QIIBK, IIAE, Hamilton Life, 1, 2, 3, Editor-in-Chief, 4, Erlitor-in-Chief of 1929 Hamiltonian, Honor Court, 3, 4, Chairman, 4, Press Board, 1, 2, Class President, 3, Upper- classman Council, 3, 4, Kellogg Essay Prize, 1, Public Speaking Committee, 3, Chairman, 4. VVATERTOXVN PIIGH SCI-Iooi. 'FHEODORIE STAI,I,IcNuCII'r Couwm, ARE ........ Orange, N. J. IIAE, Hamilton Life, 1, Business Manager of Hamilton Life, 4, Interclass Hockey, 2, 3. SOUTH OIIANCIA I'l1GH ScIIooL Auousr RIn'No1,ns CRANE, AEE ......... Wundhafven Cross Country, 1, 2, 3, Captain, 4, Track, 3, 4, Royal Gaboon, 2, 3, 4, Charlatans, 3, Freshman Baseball, Interclass Hockey, 2, 3, 4, Interfraternity Hockey, 1, 2, 3, 4, Golf, 1, 2, 3, 4. Bovs I-IICII SCHOOL l 35 I LEONARD JAMES CRANE, AEE ........ . . . Clinton Interclass Hockey, Interfraternity Hockey, Interfraternity Golf, German Club, Newman Club. CLINTON HIGH SCHOOL WILLIAM JOHNSTON CRANSTON, JR., GAX ..... Kingston Class Basketball, 1, 3, Varsity Squad, 2, Class Baseball, 1. KINGSTON HIGH SCHOOL FRANK PALMER CU'1'rER, AAG, ........... Utica Pentagon, VVas Los, D. T., Quadrangle, Track, 1, 2, 3, Captain, 4, Hockey, 2, 3, 4, Cross Country, 1, Charlatans, 1, 2, VicefPresident, 3, Executive Council, 4, McKinney Prize Speaker, 2, Secretary of Class, 4, lnterfraternity Council, 4, Upperclassman Council, 3, -L UTICA FREE ACADEMY MAITLAND CHARLES DESORMO, APT ......... Malone Track, 1, 2, 3, Captain, 4, Football, 3, 4, Basketball, 4, College Record in Javelin, N. Y. S. I. A. C. Javelin Record, Interfraternity Golf, Interfraternity Basketball. FRANKLIN ACADEMY EDWIN CHURCH DOUGLAS, AEE ......... Richmond Hill AEP, Root Fellowship, Oren Root Prize, Intercollegiate Debate, 3, 4, McKinney Prize Debate, 4, Cross Country, 1, 2, 3, 4, Track, 1, 2, 3, 4, Tompkins Prize, Interfraternity Council, 4. BOYS' HIGH SCHOOL FREDERICK DANIEL EODY, AT ......... Saratoga Springr SDBK, Hamilton Life, 1, Z, 3, Delaware University Student, 3, Choir, 1, 2, 4, Quartet, 4, History Club, Political Science Club, Public Speaking Committee, 4. SARATOGA HIGH SCHOOL CHAMBERLAIN FERRY, SAX ........... Clinton Soccer, 2, 3, 4, Fencing Squad, 1, 2, 3, 4, Interfraternity Golf, lnterfraternity Hockey, Interclass Hockey. WILLIAM JEREMIAH FULEY, X132 ......... Old Forge Manager of Baseball, 4, Newman Club, 1, 2, 3, 4, President, 4, Freshman Basketball, Interclass Basketball, 3, Advertising Manager of Hamiltonian, 3, Handbook, 4, Inter- fraternity Basketball, 1, 2, 3, 4, History Club, Cap and Gown Committee, 4. ROBERT DOUGLAS GAGE, ELS .......... Binghamton IME, Press Board, 2, 3, 4, Hamiltonian, 3, Handbook, 4, Musical Clubs, 1, 2, Choir, 1. BINGHAMTON CENI'RA1. HIGH SCHOOL MARK ALBERT GRANT . . .... Franklin Spring.: CLINTON HIGH SCHOOL U63 . :',,.', . I .war JASPER NEWELI, PIAND, SAX ...... ..... L am-em D. T., Quadrangle, Freshman Baseball, Baseball, 2, 4, Interfraternity Council, 3, 4, Interclass Baseball, 23 Choir, 1, Glee Club, 1, 2. LAURENS HIGH SCHOOL IERWIN WILLIAM I-'IoI.I.ANO'r, DECAGON ....... . . Ilion lnterclass Tennis, 2, 3, 4, Freshman Tennis, Interelass Basketball, 3, German Club. ILION HIGH SCHOOL LESTER COLE I-luiasrnn, AT ........ . IIAE, Gaboon, 1, 2, 3, Business Manager, 4, Freshman Tennis. SCHENECTAOY HIGH SCHOOL Davin Iinwaun I-IUN N, 'PT ...... Choir, 1, 3, 4, Manager of Hockey, 4. TROY HIGH SCHOOL JOSEPH SIILWYN IBBOTTSON, X-If . . . . Soccer, 1, 2, lnterclass Soccer, 3, 4, Fencing, 1. EXNDOVER ACADEMY TIIEOIIORE I'IUN'l' INGIxI,I,s, AND . . ....... Pentagon, Was Los, Soccer, 3, 4, Hockey, 2, 3, 4, Golf, 3, 4, Royal Gaboon, 1, Glen Falls Troy Clinton Utica 2, 3, Busi- ness Manager, 2, Editor, 4, Hamiltonian, 3, Hamilton Literary Magazine, 3, Editor Carpe Diem, 4, Charlatans, 3, Business Manager, 4. NEW I-IARTITORO HIGH SCHOOL MAURICE JAMES Isaac, DECAGON ..... Utica Track, 1, 2, 3, 4. UTICA FREE ACADEMY JOHN MICHAEL JosEI'H, DECAGON ...... Binghamton German ClIIb, Biology Club, Newman Club, Freshman Track. BINGHAMTON CENTRAL HIGH SCHOOL HAROLD NELSON KEI,I,AM, AXA .... Endicott Football, 1, Track, 3, Interclass Football, 4. UNION-ENDICOTI' HIGH SCHOOL JOHN SCOTT KERR, DECAGON ..... Cincinnatu: lnterclass Football, 4, Interclass Soccer, 4. CORTLANO HIGH SCHOOL Wlufriak ELLIOT KNOX, GMX ......... Ne-w York Cily fblili, Was Los, D. T., Executive Council, 4, Upperclassrnan Discipline Committee, 4, Baseball, l, 2, 3, Captain, 4, Class President, 2, Chairman, Senior Ball Committee, Public Speaking Committee, 3, 4, Hawley Prize in Greek and Latin, Winchell Prize in Greek. WJ ' VVILLIAM J. KRUM, JR., DECAGON ......... Fort Plain Football Squad, 2, 3, 4-g Class Secretary-Treasurer, 3, Interclass Soccer, 4. FORT PLAIN HIGH SCHOOL ROBERT MCADAM LAKE, DECAGON . . . Rome Football Squad, lg Hamiltonian, 3. ROME FREE ACADEMY DONALD ci0DFREY MfXCKENZIE, ELS ......... Auburn Football, 1, 2, Basketball, 1, 2: Quadrangle, Chairman Senior Cap and Gown Committee. AUBURN ACADEMIC HIGH SCHOOL ZEBULUN LASH MACMILLIXN, NPT .......... Aurora UAE, Royal Gaboon, 3, 43 Hamilton Literary Magazine, 3, 4g Football Squad, 1, Hand- book, 4, Hamiltonian, 3, Charlatans. ROBERT CAMPBELL MACPI-IAIL, DECAGON ........ Auburn Choir, 1, 2, 3, lnterfraternity Basketball, 3, 4, Interclass Football, 3, 4, lnteI'frateI'nity Hockey, 3, 4, History Club. IVIERCERSBURG ACADEMY ALDEN CHESTER MERRICK, SAX .... Albany Track Squad, 2, 3, lnterfrzlternity Hockey, 4. ALBANY AC:kDEMY' FRANCIS EDWARD MINEKA, ELS ..... .... B inghamlon HAEQ AEP, Hamilton Life, 2, 3, 4, Managing Editor of Hamiltonian, 3g Press Board, 2, 3, 4, Editor-in-Chief of Handbook, 43 Editor-in-Chief of Hamilton Literary Magazine, 43 Intercollegiate Debate, 1, 2, 3, Captain, 43 McKinney Declamation Speaker, 33 Kellogg Essay Prize, 2, Cobb Essay Prize, 3, McKinney Prize Debate, 45 History Club, 3, 4, Inter- fraternity Council, 4. BINGIIAMTON CENTRAL HIGH SCI-IOOI, ROBERT LIPSEY MONTGOMERY, AND .......... Buffalo Soccer, 1, Z, 3, 43 Hockey, 1, 2, 3, 4g Baseball, 1, Choir, 1, 2, 3, 4, Glee Club, I, 2, Quad- rangle, Stage Manager of Charlatans, 4. NICHOLS SCHOOL LAWRENCE LEE MULCAHY, IR., AND ......... Batafvia Assistant Manager of Glee Club, 33 Undergraduate Manager of Choir, 4, Glee Club, 2, Royal Gaboon, lg Circulation Manager, Z, 3, 4, Handbook, 45 Golf, 3, 4, Cross Country, lg Interfraternity Golf, 3, 4, Interclass Golf, 3, 4. BAT.-XVIA HIGH SCHOOL E331 ,N I. ,,,., JOHN ROBERT NORMILE, AKE .......... Binghamton Pentagon, Was Los, D. T., Basketball, 1, 2, 3, Captain, 4, Soccer, 2, 3, 4, Secretary of Executive Council, 4, Quadrangle, Class President, 4, Interfraternity Council, 4. BINGHAMTON CENTRAL HIGH SCHOOL NORMAN CHRISTOPI-IIER 0IfI.HI2IM, AXA .... Buffalo Track, 1, Choir, 3, 4. I'1UTCl-IINSON HIGH SCHOOL Al.l,l'5N Rovs Os'rRANDIaR, AT .......... Syracuse Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, 1, 2, 3, 4, Manager of Track and Cross Country, 4, History Club. MADIsoN l'iIGH SCHOOL, MADISON, WIS. VV1I,I.IxRO E1.vu. OwI5Ns, DECAGON ......... Cortland Choir, 1, 2, 3, 4, Glee Club, 2, Instrumental Club, 1, 2, Freshman Soccer, College Sym- phony, 2. CORTLAND HIGH SCHOOL FREDERICK JOHN PARKER, JR., KBS ........ Montfluir, N. J. Football, 2, Hockey, 2, Track, 2, 3, Interclass Hockey, Z, 3, Interfraternity Hockey, 2, 3, 4, luterfraternity Basketball, 2, 3, 4. NEYVARK ACADEMY ROI' SMITH PENNER, KDE ........ Sher-burne Charlatans, 3, 4, I-listory Club, 3, 4, Interfraternity Hockey, 3. SHERDURNI2, New YORK NICHOLAS IJONALD PETERS, DECAGON .... Utim Newman Club, History Club, Biology Club. , UTICA FRIEIQ ACADEMY JOHN SI-uw RIEARICK, XII' ....... Summit, N. J. Fencing Squad, l, 2, 3, Varsity, 4. PINGRY SCHOOL, ELIZABETH, NJ. RICHARD ALVIN RISINECKE, AXA . . ........ Union D. T., Quadrangle, D. T., Football, 1, 2, 3, 4, lnterfraterllity Council, Chairman Senior Invitation Committee. UNION-ENDICOTT PIIGH SCHOOL REED WOODRUFF ROWl.EX', AMI .......... Rochester D. T., Basketball, 1, 2, 3, Captain, 4, Soccer, 3, 4, Interclass Soccer, l, 2, Interclass Foot- ball, 4, luterclass Baseball, 3, 4, Sophomore Banquet Committee. WEST HIGH SCHOOL E391 VVILLIAM MERCfIAN'f ROZELL, DECAGON ...... Crolon-on-Hudson Baseball, 1, 2, 3, 45 Interfraternity Council, Interclass Football, 4, Interclass Soccer, 4. C'ROroNfoN-HUDSON HIGH SCHOOL NELSON GORIIAM RUSSELL, JR., AKE ......... Buffalo IME, Circulation Manager of Hamiltonian, 3, Press Board, Biology Club. NICHOLS SCHOOL GEORGE COLLINS SAMPLE, DECAGON ........ Binghamion Intercollegiate Debate, 1,2,3,-+5 History Club, lnterclass Football, +5 Interclass Basketball, 4. BINCHAMTON CENTRAL I-IIGH SCHOOL PAUL MARTIN SCHNEIDER, ELS ........... Ilion Football, 1, 2, 3, 4, Hockey, 1, 2, 3, Captain, 4, Track, 2, 3, Interclass Hockey, +5 Interclass Track, 33 Tennis, 1. ll.lON HIGH SCHOOL RUSSELL ROBERTS SHERMAN, AKE , ...... New York Instrumental Club, 1, 2, Leader, 3, Glee Club, 1, Z, Baseball, 1. FINUWVNSEND I-IRRRIS HALL INGVALD ARTHUIK SOLBERG, AEE ....... Clifford, N. D. BRUIfI.A'r IXC.-XDEMY, PORTLAND, N. D. MORTEZ9. IJREXEL SPRAGUE, DECAGON .... Washinylon,D. C. Interclass Basketball, 4, Interfraternity Basketball, 4. DUNDIIR HIGH SCHOOL, VVASHINGTON, D. C. VVILLIAM CULLEN STEVENS, XBE ........ . . Oneonta Hamilton Life, 1, 2, 3, 4g Hamiltonian, 3, Business Manager of I-lantlbook, +5 Freshman Baseball, Baseball, 2, 3, 4, Intercollegiate Debate, 3, 4, McKinney Prize Debate, 4, McKin- ney Declamation Speaker, 1, Interfraternity Hockey, 1, 3, Interfraternity Basketball, Z, 3, 4, Latin Club, 2, 3. RONYE FREE ACADEMY JOSEPH FOSTER STUDHOLME, AXA ....... Oleazz Track, 1, 2, 3, 4, Interclass Football, 4, Freshman Cross Country. OLEAN HIGH SCHOOL BERNHARD ULMER ...... . Sm-aunt' Lake German Club, Latin Clubg Charlatans, 2, 4. SARIINAC LAKE HIGH SCHOOL PIAROLD SPOOR VANSCHAIICR, DECAGON ...... Coxsnrkiz- Interfraternity Hockey, 2, 3. 4, Interclass Hockey, -lg History Club. COXSACRIE HIGH SCHOOL E401 Ifllamvziw I..r.Ewm,l,YN VAUGHAN, AEE ......... Verona Football Squarl, 1, 2, Freshman Basketball, Freshman Baseball, Inrerclass Football, 4. VIQRONA HIGH SCHOOL Emma BANKER Vrakmtmux, X83 .......... Troy Track Squad, I, 2, Soccer, 3, 4, Football, 2, Interfraternity Council, 4, Glee Club, 2, Fencing, 1, 2, 3, -L NEW YORK lVlII.lTARY ACMJEMY llamn' PECK VVHSTON, OAK ........... Gerzefvf Quadrangle, Freshman Basketball, Freshman Baseball, Choir, 1, 2, 3, 4, Glee Club, 1, 2, Baseball, 2, 3, Basketball, 2, 3, lnterclass Basketball, 2, 3, 4, Interclass Baseball, 2, Com- mencement XVeck Commi1tee,4. GENEVA I'llGH SCHOOL IEMERSON Emv,-um YVIIITIE, XBE .......... Ithnra Cross Country, 1, 2, 3, 4, Track, I, 2, 3, 4, lnterclass I-lockey, 1, 3, 4, Varsity Squad, 2, lirlwarcl I-lumington lvlathematical Scholarship, 4, Tompkins Mathematical Prize, 3, Ger- man Club. I1'ufxC.x Hxcn SCHOOL I-Iiuun' BAUCOCK Wlr.1,mMs, AT ..,....... Ufira History Club, Political Science Club, Charlatans, 1, 2, 3, Freshman Basketball, Interfra- ternity Basketball. UTICA FREE ACfXDEMY I-Imam Gaumza WOOLF, AEE .... . . . Elmira M. M. Club, 1, 2, 3, President, 4, Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, 2, 4. ST.'xR1clcY SEMINARY WUI! lfzfl 1, 1 -' Y f ' ' 'Z-V--V A R ' , - ' ' If , f L x sf ' N 4-. - ' g. V , Y' -.'..' ,f - ' ' Jap., ' 1 4' ,. W. , A ,, .,-, .,--4.',Isg.,.,.,.... ' .Q . 4--nu, 1?-fu -- if 5 - 2 H - 1. D J - - p f v - , , V , -L-, ,YA . . 1.-- , .1-,. --ALS' CLASS OF 1930 -J 11 l. g A4--4? tl r I l II , V! . i vii. 'zu l it llHl '.l' ew it if' it fu ' r 4 ' -- '--,- T...-..,, - 3' . 1930 Clam Ojicm ,,, - . ,, .. lr r. ' Mr- Ilmuw l.4AMBlER'l' VV.1x1.'rs . President FRANK GI5R.A1.D Viinaiikrs, JR. . Vice-Presidenf 'lilllEODORlE GILMAN LAW . Sl'Cl'E'fIlI'jl-TI'KllJllfPf PRESIDENT WALTS mary qf the Clam qf193O Especially are we great, for we breathe the spirit of a new age. VVC are true pio- neers, carrying ever forward the standard of Progress. This was our estimate of ourselves when we were innocent, am- bition-lired freshmen, new to the task that lay before us. We viewed the upper classes as the last doddering remnants of an age that is past and scorned the soph- omores as untried rusties who were hesi- tating between the medievalism of their forebears and the progressive modernism of their successors. We look back at those days with aweg never before had a freshman class so bold- L23 ly declared itself g never before had a class undertaken such a devastating program. VVe began with the abolition of traditions -old traditions, stupid traditions. The first to fall was Banquet Seasong we hurled into the eternal hereafter the age- long superstition that certain percent- age must leave us in Januaryg and by our constant insistence and yellow jour- nalism Senior Oration is no longer the looming spectre that leers from behind the Chapel rostrum. Tradition breakers and tradition makers-that is the class of 1930. 1 11 i ,- .. Q. '.a:ry.fii.' , I XAIILLIAIVI HENRY ADERHOLD, JR., XBE. Watervliet Bill America's gift to the cause of world peace. Freshman year a phrenologist told him he had a philosophical mind-has been acting queer ever since, particularly under Bill Squires' cross-examinations. VVears a cab- man's hat but is a poor conductor-not positive enough. Original instigator of the Purity Leagueg doesn't smoke, chew, or neck. Reads poetry for diver- Sion and the Orange Peel for excitement. lVIight make a great runner if it didn't take him so long to untangle himself. lVIAYNARD CROSBY AGENS, ELS Lowville dgen.r fsoft gj Professors pronounce his name so many different ways he thinks he's several men. He is-six of the Seven Sleepers. lblost moral man in college-on the Hill. Oh boy, you should see the good-looking Lowville fthe o is shortj women. Thinks the North Country is Paradise, and pines away for his dog team and snowshoes. Roomed with I. J. Bald freshman year, and inherited a passion for study. Also caught sleep- ing sickness, and has been trying to reconcile the two ever since. The result is that most of the brothers don't know him by sight yet. WARDELI Kms AIRD AYRAUL1, A Y Jamestown, R. I. PV11d r'KilZlIHif!1,J The perfect aristocrat-until you know him. YVith such a hirsute apex and the profile that goes with it, this young man should go a long way-we hope he does. Reputed to be a bachelor, but just a mention of Elmira and a rosy blush appears. Knows more than he should about Fords and Chevrolets, and still more about the road between New York and Clinton. Don't think that lordly swagger is the result of royal blood-he has a stiff neck. milf 24413 L-ii Oi 'i i l ., ' '15 . Q SJ.. ,al ' . U.. , .9 1'-' Y ' -T 1' -.' '. '.- i M it ,. . 4. an.: 'I li Q15 - -A--I S I! l tsl!-iliwlrfi--jiiil-lpn A -ii V ALARIC ROSENCRANTZ BAILEY, AKE Jamestown HAZ., HROWU Say, who is that big, funny-looking bird over there? So that's Bailey, the Deke, eh. Fencer, isn't he? VVell, that's what I meant. Thinks he is capable of making one of the wo1'ld's great lovers. We hope he does-out in the Sahara. Freshman year he dedicated his life to a wonderful girlg sophomore year his affec- tions were alienated by a mangy leopard skin g now he is a devout worshipper at the shrine of a jointed, wooden cat named Felix. De gustibus .... M-ERWIN Bfxvms BARR13'rT, AEE Huntington flfr'rt Hr1rry ' No, that isn't the photographer's fault. Mert just grew that way. He is one of the few men in college who did not have to leave for a semester to get a fur coat. Roomed in North Annex freshman year but couldn't stand the Emersonians, so joined the Lambda Xi's. Now he is known as the fire-eater, for reasons best known to himself. VVith Dillenbeck and Camp- bell, he enthusiastically supports all Elmira-at-Ham- ilton projects. Quite a mathematician and Dutch- man. Oh yeah. Davin HAROLD BEETLE, DECAGON Utica Dafoe Bug This Beetle is of the hard-shelled variety. He has to be, with all the stuff he inflicts on the public via the Utica Press. This boy is a living example of the power of the press-has blackmailed all his profes- sors into giving him High Honor. Dave has been a journalist C ?J for three years, and still thinks Hamil- ion Life is a comic weekly-look over his spelling sometime. Knows everything of interest on the Hill weeks before it happens, and occasionally has the right dope. E451 JOHN MCLOUGHLIN Buren, GDAX Utica J0lmnie The man of few words-he roomed with Hart for three years. The only time he talks volubly is in his sleep. Also has a habit of never asking for anything- except in his sleep-then he makes requests for three cornered bats. Once saw a girl for ten hours and wrote to her for two years. Now that he has secured his degree at Holyoke, he is taking post-graduate work at Rochester. Keeps the Theta Delt juniors supplied with cars as fast as they wreck them. PATERSON BOND, AKE Brooklyn ffpatff rrpegv Originator of the famous Bottled in Bond phrase. Believe it or not, that lightsome hue of his fluffy locks is natural. Delta Kappa Epsilon's contribution to the collegiate World. CThe widoW's mitej. VVorked so hard as an ass-manager sophomore year that he feels the college owes him a vacation. fMay- be he'll get itj. Aside from a few classes, Pat's only worry is his women-he can't seem to remember one from another. That is easily explained. ALBERT LANEY BONNER, AXA lVIcGraw HAI., One of the most innately upright lads in college. Al took a yearls vacation to work on a farm. He says that only the great outdoors, the contact with the soil, and the godly life can make a man out of one. His natural bent seems to be that of a salesman. He even manages to get rid of New Process cleaning tickets. Al makes frequent trips to Clinton to visit a fluffy parcel of modern femininity. He has the family cook- ing for him now, so seems to be making out pretty well. U61 il 1, , PAUL E1.Lswom'H BROWN, SAX VVatertown PabIo ' Feb A man can't write a scurf about this lad. He must be leading a double life along with Guyton and Sen- ior, but no one can seem to get the low-down on him. Sneaks oi? to lVIt. Holyoke and New Hartford occa- sionally, so must have a weakness somewhere. His dissipated appearance, Packard car, cynical CU atti- tude, and general inscrutability are quite incompatible with the fact that he spends his off night in his Car- negie sanctuary, surrounded by books-so he says. Pnu.r.n's Bizooiis CARi,1s1,rz, SAX New Haven, Conn. l?rooks Phil 1'z'r'bee ' Came to college with great scholastic ambitions, but roomed with Lyon, so turned to women of the red- headed, marriageahlc variety. Worked so well at this that the Dean of Elmira now chaperones his parties. His vanishing acts at House-Party time aroused the admiration C H of all the brethren. Star- red in interfraternity hockey until somebody dis- covered he didn't have any skates. That cheerleading of his comes from pole-vaulting freshman year. Romana' PUTNAM CARPENTER, YPY Cortland Bob Plum Lord Plushbottom early began to run around with normal school girls, and hasn't been quite right in that direction since. Bob is one of these one-girl men -one in Oneonta, Syracuse, Utica, Northampton, Binghamton, Cortland, Rochester, Canton, Boon- ville, etc., etc. Freshman year he carried a violin, and to date its influence on the faculty has shown no signs of waning. With the boys he's a mixer, and is some- times known to absorb his own drinks. U71 Y I ,., 1 4 x i 1 L ly, J ' fr' L 'l'11 1'1 W-it il' lla lg . .fg,. W-.i !,'r,.,4 deux, -, DONALD lh'IACKI5NZlE CARSON, ECP Williamsport, Pa. Dong rtMIIL', The big man from Berkshire. He thought college life was very hard until he entered Hamilton-now he knows it is. As a result he is seldom seen, except in classes. He must study, but where, nobody knows. Don is proud of his record for being in love Cseven months, eighteen rlaysj. Despite all, he must have been a precocious child-he still has the symptoms. I-Ie asks more fool questions to the cubic inch of MILTON AMSLER CARVALHO, XB2 Newark, N. J. A 1VIilt Give a look, folks, at this dark-eyed lad from the marshes. Thinks he's a combination of Don Juan, a cat surgeon, and a Ford mechanic. Hard to tell whether his desk is a picture gallery or a place to sleep. Likes his own jokes best of all-a regular Royal Baboon. The best thing about him is his opin- ion of himself. Declares this picture is terrible and doesn't do him justice Qwe'll say it doesn't!j. Diverts himself by jumping from balconies in the middle of the night. breadth than any man on earth. FREDERICK THOMAS Coruw, ELS VVest Orange, N. J. Fred B1zrp ' Sir Trib-1rBelt'lz Why girls leave YVest Orange, Hartford, Utica, and Wells. Probably gone farther on his CPrep Schoolj reputation than any man in college. YVas Freshman Row Leader Cin the Fall, so they discontinued Spring rowsl. Fred planned to leave college his junior year and go to medical school, but the brothers were dis- appointed. xVCHI'S a derby so he can get High Honor in Philosophy. Herb, where the hell is your razorg l'm going on a date with a Utiker woman. This is the second of the house of Corby, and we are pleased to state there is but one more. tm i . .. ,. wwahx VJ, Ii -. I M ,Y '. ,,1..1,t4.t:-,' ,' .- EDWARD PAUL Cos'1'13LLo Geneseo rrEd1.v rl Costien One of those big, strong, silent men from the West- came here from St. Bonnie. A man of mystery. It has been hinted that he is wanted in seven states, but no one seems to want him enough to come and get him. The only crime that can be pinned on him here is that he signed in at Commons. Rumor has it that he is a triple threat man, but personally we don't think he can sing very well. He has the annoying habit of taking his work too seriously, but he will soon FRANKLIN limzxim Cnovslzv, DECAGON Albion RMI Hl'i!'llllkH lntroducing Franklin Cropscy, the Red Grangefrj from Albion, where the fellow that graduates from high school gets the state scholarship. Very gullible. At one time hc believed Dean Fitch had resigned to take up an executive position with the New York Telephone Company. Some maintain that he still believes in Santa Claus. He talks so much of his course in Asian history under Professor Graves that we seriously doubt whether any other professor ever taught him anything. They also doubt this. 3 become used to the place. LAWRENCE STAMPER IDARKEN, AXA Ridgewood, N. Larry Stamp You see in his eyes, gentlemen, the soul of the scien- tist, the thinker. CWitli what?D His researches are profound. He spends long hours in the laboratories, evolving systems for sending steam up in Sl1C1'IIlZlI1,S room, and controlling the lights of Carnegie without touching the fuse box. Larry is one of the chief causes for the Lambda Chi's phenomenal rise in scholarship. Hut where does this Einstein find outlet for his youth- ful exhuberance, natural to one of tender years? That is the darkest of Darken's dark secrets. l49fl 1 ' 'et Fmznemc Nun. Davis, DECAGON Buffalo Dania Prox.vy Captain Davis of the good ship I7 Carnegie is a truly great man-ask him. He will tell you all about him- self and his zzjffzizm' d'amour except during study hours-drop in any time. Day Line Dessie is not only a man of the world but a would-be litterateur. Prossy can read and write Ca littlej and the story goes that he once cracked a book f over VVebster's head. Has a failing for peanuts and the Buffalo pa- pers-a combination hard to beat. He may not look like an actor, but see him do the Highland Fling or his famous representation of Tarzan, and you will be convinced. XVILLIAM HENRY DENNE, JR., XIIY New York NS. T. D. Sau.mgzf Hey, fellows, did you ever hear that one about the travelling salesman- and yet he reads poetry, claims to enjoy literature, and writes innumerable love letters. Freshman year he and Becker formed a combination-Becker left college. The faculty actually eat fsoupj from this manis hands. But he has not escaped entirely, for he of the painfully articulate larynx rudely ejected him from under- classman chapel this fall when his snores rose above the feeble voices of the slimers. NIARSDEN VANWIE DlI.l,l Nm ek X X Johnstown Dilly Dill Now if youse guys did as much studying rs l do comes from Nlawsden, who holds the standing record for sleeping at his desk. Nlawsden, late of Elmira, Albany, and Utica, is one of those big, husky Cvoicedj men who work all summer on a line gang Qyou should hear the linej, and spends the rest of the year resting up. Goes out for innumerable sports and generally manages to show up for at least one practice during the season. Plays a wicked game of football, when he has not sprained his ankle, wrist, etc., etc. l50l ,b t I U, ' i . ' -.lr 'Y' .x i, ,J Ml, Q I 1 . . .,i,. - . . .X V. .- ----as 1'-yy V -. f .M l -4- .. , ln: V i my .ii l,,gl T.'.1i,f.4,..1'-1, A ' 1 - .. ... ,N-. ,...,,',-1. EDWARD SACKETT DIXON, SAX Hall Ed Drink Dickie A brief sketch of Donk's life would run something like this: capacious appetiteg the choice way that coffee fumes were wafted up to warm his noseg the expression evoked by his appearance at Mead, Mount Holyoke, at the witching hourg that is Dixon to his brethren. He is Gelas' prodigal prodigy, boon of pennyless cigarette smokers, charmer of a particu- lar feminine heart because of wavy hair and Stryker- ian drawl-the King of Cabages. RAYMOND Havnnock DUTCH ian, ELS Sherrill Ray Dutch Oh, so you've never heard of Sherrill, eh? Now let me tell you, we have the nicest women- The boys are still watching for their appearance. Waltzed with his eyes closed until last House Party, when he lost his watch while dancing with Sherman's blind date. Came to college to be a heller, but got religion from Padre Bill llflorris, and even observes all train- ing rules. Has a girl, home, and car within the twelve-mile limit, but Dutch just can't seem to go down. ROBERT HUNT EMPSALL, SPY lVIalone Roby PlufuiuJ Although this gentleman hails from the frozen north, his heart is all in the sunny south. A constant and unremitting patron of the U. S. Air lVlail. The path of true love, however, never runs smoothly. Asked her if he could have a girl to House Party, but got in trouble anyway. Sowed his wild oats at St. Step- hens, and is now waiting for the harvest to roll in. He's a cold man from out the- north, but a southern belle has peeled him. i51li MH. ,, . ' ' L -J-r , lik ii Y 'lx 3 V.--' A .rr y- it f l F Ah -,kilfbfi M WL-n 1 1 1 .. W. fiance. 'I . flag? 6.11 I xi Q can J I X tl A -X 5 F , ,-lifaiaafll.sl.:..',.aaa 1. fi' , - i i g uv '. e M IRVING HARLOW FANNING AEE Hampton Bays Irv Josh Hull 7 Here we have the bleached blond from Hampton Bays, where the fish grow large and the stories larger. Girls! Here's your opportunity to become a dashing blond-for further particulars see Dr. Fanning. Irv's favorite sport is swapping jokes with the per- sonnel of the science department-personal jokes, you understand. In order to know Brownie better, he is majoring in Math 2. Sophomore year he had his appendix out and liked the nurses so well he has been JOSEPH BROST FANNING, ELS Southampton Dada Dodie Blf1l1bermoutlz Yeah, she may be nice, but ya oughta see the girls we got down in Souhampn. We had a pahty down theah, 'n' I sez to her,- ad infinitum. Dodo came to college to work, so he took the bull by the horns, and has been throwing it around ever since. His credo is: Souhampn is paradise, because they all fall for my line there. He went out for football and basketball as a slimer, but quit when he found he could make money on Ham Life Cthat's his reasonj. He thought he rated with Hauch, but fell in his own soup. trying to grow another ever since. JOSEPH JOHN Faato, XBE . Rome 4110811 How-de-do! This is smiling Joe, the lightning sales- man. The one-time soda jerker has turned pro and is now mixing-with the boys. Peaches! Prefers blondes but says brunettes will do him. CThey do, regularlyj. Thinks Swampy ought to be president, which would leave Joe Swampy's job. Still has faith in his ability as a whiskey tenor. Used to sing My VVild lrish Rose -now he gargles Sonny Boy. Although he has been here three years, still maintains Rome fN.Y.Q the greatest city of all times. E523 i i I 1 ,L-T....,,., :wg l I ,Ji, l i i- 1--H 1 1 H1 l..,li1l.l ni 1 i i 1111 L iii :--it is '-gffftfi. Y Q-el fhip-1, 1..'Q - f,gf-et' 53 E ,y s- X JOHN FREDERICK FOLLEY, CDAX Syracuse Fred Fab Freddie Here is our modern materialist, our coming dentist of Syracuse. Vibberts' satellite Cdon't ask us, we can't see anything in him eitherj. Has great social ambitions, and believes colleges should be one great big party. Believes that clothes fparticularly some- one else'sj make the man-also the woman. Doesnlt know who Shaw and Wells are yet, but doesn't like the latter on general principles. Fred has great suc- cess with the women and admits it-asked only nine to fall House Party junior year. HENRY R UTGERS FORD, JR., XXI' Bufialo Hank '1eI-Reliable The fastest man in college since Durkee. He is get- ting well on to a joke which joe started five years ago. Has a plan whereby he and Miller' are going to syndi- cate sermons for the entire country. Also intends to make synthetic champagne and get started on his fortune. Constant re-election as Crown Prince dis- turhs his loquacity. Aspires to swear in Chinese. Hank has had great success dealing in old paintings, and is an ardent lover of antiques. He and Lathrop are writing a book. CLARENCE BRUCE FRASER, XB2 Ferndale Hslloriyu And on this side, ladies and gentlemen, we have the Sullivan County Terror-famous motorcycle demon, and Tom Quick's only rival. Used to make many fast breaks for liberty and seemed to be enjoying them until he met up with a dark, curly-haired rival. Chased him clear back to Africa. Thought demi-tasse was an opera singer. Roomed with Foley two years and still maintains his hair is prettier. Says he might be a doctor if he has time. Ought to be a good one- he's pretty slick with cuts. - - -f .,.. - i . WW, , 1.-,,..a gk.a.1.i.:.. i531 , 5,1 1 . . T 1 , ! I 1 ' 'i' 'VW' f ii ., ,, iv g,,, 1' I CHARLES OSBORN FRAZEE, ELS East Hampton Charlie Frr1zzIe ' Clzully Here is Hamilton's member of the All-American Football Funsters. Helps the cheer-leaders along by talking to those boys, and then wonders why he distracts people from watching the game. He thought Long Island was the center of the universe, and was a bit chagrined to find it only a terminal moraine. He still retains the accent, however, and hasn't been known to sound an UR. Spends a good share of his time trying to think up questions that will trap Bill Squires. LLOYD LIVINGSTON GEORGE, AACI1 Englewood, N. r'Li11'uy George Premier YVho doesn't know Lloyd George? He's one of the celebrities of the class, along with Henry Ford and Tom Moore. George's reknown is world-wide. One of England's premiers was named after him. There's no doubt of his greatness-England's premier, that is. Lloyd looks intellectual, but don't be deceived-those bushy eyebrows don't mean a thing. That superior smile is supposed to show a great knowledge of world- ly things-things far and above German and angry professors. ALLAN STUART GRAHAM, AY Mount Vernon fl I Stu GrnmeJ' Unworthy imitator andeulogizer of Hank Jones, the boy who ran the musical clubs-on the rocks. Claims to have business ability, but can find no means of dis- playing it at this tight institution. Brownie thinks that Al shows character in his handwriting, and has examined it every semester since freshman year. Has not yet been disillusioned and thinks that Syracuse girls don't neck. Thought to be a bit abnormal by his fraternity brothers because he doesn't seem to mind rooming with Ellison. gferg Gm' , li, N -.-.- --15 'M lvl' . 'l, , .,', r , J' . ca A. , ,. -.il ,, i ,U l- i 5 A,,, 'THOMAS CHRISTMAN GRUBB, DECAGON 4 Brooklyn Tommy Blo1zdy Tommy comes from Brooklyn and so is a big inter- national problem. New York City wanted to remove the bridge when it saw the new peril. To see our Tommy wielding a lacrosse stick, one would say his father was a deerslayer or an Indian or something. But the blond boy from Brooklyn does not confine himself to lacrosse-that is too mild a game for him. He is handicapped by his speed-so fast that the coaches simply can't see him at all. - Howfxizn FIENLEY HART, QAX VVatertown Ho-zoiz ' Howdy How Another VVatcrtown lad, will they never stop? Prodigy of Bill Squires, and as such a never ending source of arguments-irrefutable. How has even discarded his senator's hat for a derby and cane. The confirmed bachelor-since one of Fuess' blind dates freshman year. Follows Gigi's exactness with but one exception, the little black notebook. Deplored the irksome sameness of conventional cursing, so in- vented such choice molx as Dear Doctor and You Old Buzzard. Claims he is a twin but there can't possibly be another like him. HENRY HENDRICKS Hmzwoon, AKE Rye !'HHI7d l High Horror W'oody lfVhoopee! Ta-da-de-a-da! Introducing Triple H Harwood, the best little song and dance man off Broadway-ask him. Plans to go on the stage-if he doesn't, some other profession will have an awful handicap. Wells' only rival in the sartorial game- smooth as glass, and three times as slippery. Played the fool in the Christmas Play-that was no miracle. The name of his home town suggests something, but we are trying to be delicate. E551 -r A , l i r', -fi 'J l 'z 'lk l'i 1 ry .. I LOUIS NEVILLE I-Ifwiss, AXA Sherrill Lou fWong Nev The art of sleeping is only one of lVIong's accomplish- ments. He practises this art discriminately, however, and manages to avoid delinquencies-in scholarship, at least. He divides his time between New York Mills and Rochester. Has been threatening to leave college for three years, and the brothers thought he had done it once-hope springs eternal. Hockey games are Lou's favorite diversion. He and Holroyd and Kitendaugh form a secondary cheering section all their own, and then play the game all over again afterwards. DONALD CLINTON HILER, AAKD Brockport D 0117111 Frosty Clint Frosty doesnit know what to do with himself since Holley left. There's no one for him to play with any more. Has to suppress his infantile desires. Last year he was disappointed in love-several of them, in fact. just ask him about Sally and Sibyl and some others. I-le's not the same since. As a matter of fact, he wasn't before. He's naturally light-headed, hence 'fFrosty Top. ROBERT ALLISON l'lIl.L, ELS Albany HBOIIU Bob took the vows of Kirkland lkionastery by se- cluding himself in the Annex for freshman year. He roomed with Jones for three semesters and is still conservative, which proves him to be a man of great determination. As a sophomore he came out of his shell long enough to make the I'l1unilloniru1 and the Charlatans, only to turn turtle again. Hill's favorite sport is piling his desk with ponderous tomes-he seems to like the covers. E561 5 . I 1 ll ' '4. .E-. L ,,- 5 , I W-. 1- 11 -is i ..-.. ' 1'.:,4.i - m 1 4, H r M' M i H tug 1 i GEORGE DUMONT HIXSON, XXII Fulton nfficlryu George Help! Help! lfVho'll save my child F Hicky swam to our midst from Fulton. He was voted the most original member of the class. Our Hicky soon showed a liking for Bugs, and delights in festooning unmen- tionables from the lab about the room. Thrives on Bill Squires' Philosophy courses. As a result his desk is full of past romances Che keeps it locked, by the wayj . He can talk anybody under .the table if given the chance. Open the window, Hicky, it's too hot. L1Nco1.N l'lOI..ROYD, JR., AXA Utica Lilzk ' This long-faced lad can talk as long as you Want him to, on any subject. He is modest about it, though, and won't admit it. lt took him three weeks to select a topic for discussion because he had such a variety to pick from. lf l even passed that quiz, l'm luckyf, said Link. He got High Honor. No one is immune from Link's magnetic personality. He claims women mean nothing to him, but let him beware. His kind fall hard. FREDERICK MANC. HOMRIGPIOUSE, JR. Utica Fred FritzU This is as fine a specimen of the decayed gentleman as you will find on the Hill. Fritz has all the instincts of a gentleman, but he has been unfortunate in his roommates, and has had some of his polish rubbed off by contact with hard, cold life. Now that contact is made, he is borne along on the current, usually in the direction of Utica's great white C H way. Debon- air doesn't half describe this witty Don Juan, but it's the only word of all we had that we can print. l57li iwi Y H i L5 MY H l SAMUEL ANTFION Ives, DECAGON Brooklyn Sanz Sam has never really given the faculty a chance. He knows more Latin and Greek than the whole depart- ment singly or in a group, has investigated schools of philosophy Bill Squires never heard of, and composes oratorios in his lighter moments for the music classes to study. However, he doesn't like science-it is not abstruse enough for him, so he dropped physics, just to encourage the administration. Sam's only failing is a weakness for old books and manuscripts, which he inherited from Pratt. VERNON ARTHUR Ives, ELS lrVatertown n17?l'1lU MII. 14.1, King Jasper of Taurus, Land of the Bull. Flunlcecl freshman math, so maintains Phi Beta Kappa is the bunk. Learned to be cynical from lVIarquardt, and thinks he's a misogynist-on the Hill. As a great embryonic author, V. A. does his best to help Cal run Comp 5-6, but isn't appreciated. What's the use of being tired? You fellows are always kicking. ls really quite harmless. Little bridge, felloes? My, what a nice room to bull in. Wu..i,mM ARMIS1I:AD ,IARRE1 1, MII Shepherdstown, VV. Va. Bill The mystery man. Half of the Hixson-Jarrett Bi- ology-Chemistry Company. Has more girls in Utica than Stink has peonies, but no one has ever seen them. As a youngster, Bill was a terror. I-le knifed the man in the moon, and escaped to the west. For years he worked on a ranch, until the pursuit died down. Then he came to Hamilton, no one knows why. He has fought against heredity and natural ability to keep himself from becoming intelligent, but in spite of all he could do, hasn't quite succeeded. E581 I f r i..i,--r , ,ll by Y l 1 I MAURICE LAMOTTE JENKS,,JR., ANI: White Plains !lloose IWox.v links Kewpie Has he got sex appeals! But he doesn't know how to use them. His innocence is due, no doubt. to having roomed with Miller. However, Livvy is doing his best to enlighten lVIoose. And do you mean to tell us Jenks is the boy who didn't swear before he came to college? Who said college is a waste of time? This is the boy who forgot to wear his pledge button when he gave a declamation freshman year. And it seemed to be difficult for him to remember to get up mornings. He doesn't fully appreciate the name Kewpie. T1-iizonoicn ALANSON PAGE JoHNsoN Englewood, N. J. Ted J. l'.'i' And here we have T. A. P. Johnson, the big three- letter man from Englewood, Oswego, and London. He has been rooming with Pratt for so long that everyone forgets that he is really almost normal. His past is a big, dark secret, as is the way he spends his summers. He says he goes abroad, but won't tell us all about it, like Cal Lewis, so we know he doesn't. Ted isn't such a bad sort, after you once get used to his roommates. lf,it weren't for him, No. l Carnegie would be a padded cell. Louis CLARK JONES, EL Albany Look Jones, 'JU Look at it closely, ladies and gentlemen. Notice the beetling brows, the rabid glare, the underslung jaw- it is Lurid Looie, local radical and lightning change artist. From Khaki Shirt to Coonskin Coat, or the Story of an Election. Sturdy exponent of anything new, Jones believes in Norman Thomas, Soviet Russia, Paul Combs, and other radical institutions. Talks too much about anything, especially himself, in the wee small hours, while in the arms of lVIor' pheus. E591 , , , p ' l l f Ml3I,ETIOS KAVAKOS, DECAGON Brooklyn Hillel 'IKllZ'7'i?JJ Krzz'yk0ss The Gorgious Greek, pride of Brooklyn, who came to this country at an early age. Used to pun on all occasions until he was told that punning was enjoyed only by children and morons-and that he was no child. A trip to Buffalo convinced him that redheads were not as dangerous as he had been told. Has been trying to find out definitely for the past year. He believed himself the perfect man-balanced in mind and body, but Math 5 convinced him that he might l be half wrong. MII.TON PETERSON KINSEY, AEE Ridgewood Joe Josie Peaclzes This is straight from the wilds of Ridgewood, the hair apparent to the House of David, the acme of tonsorial perfection. The folks at home will be shocked to hear that on occasion Milton has been known to stay up as late as 10:30. Lately we have been bearing disquieting rumors in Utica about Josie and a girl named Ethylene Chloride. Joe has the College's interests at heart because he patronizes the college store and denounces the suicidal policy of economizing on the paths up the Hill. GIEORGIE HENR1 KI'1'ENDAUGI-I., JR., AXA Oneida riKilu His indolence is surprising. Nobody ever sees him doing anything, yet he seems to get things done. Kit delights in keeping Little Greek in suspense, man- aging to go half a cut over his alloted number every semester. In spite of the purple passages and packed lines in Paradise Lost, he claims that he'd rather read the S,,f,,r,1,,y Evening Port. Never speaks of his feminine conquests, but we suspect that deep within Kit is the memory or the hope for the ideal woman. Used to hop freights and now expresses a wish to become a Lawrence or a brakeman. , Shim. no W L 1 ' t. V4 V .1 L- , .i l, ers 1 'L. .1 . . ' l-1 mms.. L A -1 ., 1 .A f. . - 'if 'lk' 4 ullflliln uf- .i up W. ,A L' I . ,V.-W' .I Qty: Y i . 'i fi?-gc: I rgiiflii13.113553-v,5la1,lengt ug -gglylrllgl ig . gf JOHN SUTER KNUTTY, XBE Utica lawn Sutter Modesty sublime! Quiet, sober and unassuming, jawn came to us a man of the world, ambitious tr learn. Takes his college course seriously. Says Ham- Y ilton would be O.K. if it weren t for the public speak- ing department. Likes the element of mysticism -so he took philosophy. Look at that intellectual fore- headl. . .Thinks Squires and VVundt are the greatest men that ever lived. Also a musician. Develops his wind blowing the slide-trombone. Admits he once played in an orchestra. His greatest ambition is to ADD1soN SARGENT L.fx'ri-mov, XXII Brooklyn L11tl1y Allin The lad from Polygamy prep. Our little Madame Addison, with his boyish face, still thinks there is a Santa Claus. And believe it or not, he's quite a parlor snake. His was the face that launched a thousand kisses. Ad regularly sneaks into his room at two in the morning. CStill he maintains he is unlucky in love.J Our Ad is majoring in Poli Sci l-2, preparatory to taking up domestic science. He thinks the modern generation is going to the dogs, and suggests morality as the cause. become a malt grower. . THEODORE GILM.4N LAW Wh Briarcliff Manor Tw! The best all-round man in College-has been every where. Captained Hamilton's first freshman foot- ball team, and has been living on his reputation since. Prefers composing to athletics, however, since he has discovered he has an aesthetic soul. Ted also writes verses, but charity forbids comment. Caddied for Wells on all rocks trips, and hopes to break into society soon. If he does, the bum's club will lose one of its best members. Of late Ted's interests seem to be leading him down the Hill fallegorically speakingj. E611 JAMES FREDERICK LAw'roN, AY lVilmette, lll. .fiu1n1ie ' Grimm This young Apollo from the west is purity personi- fied. He does not drink, smoke, neck, or play quarter machines. As for drinking, he took the pledge when very young: the brothers are through as far as cigar- ettes gog he is as much in love as he was in freshman yearg he never has any change for the quarter machines. Grimm's only failing is a lingering high school disease known as punning. If he- ever lets his suppressed desires get out of control Jimmie will he a remarkable man, but his will-power is very strong. EVERETT DAVID LUTHER, DECAGON ' Clinton nRedu Here's the reason Why girls for miles around Utica leave home, and Hock to those K. of C. dances every Saturday night. Admits he is the most popular man in Clinton--where women are concerned. Red is such a nautical boy. Has a girl in every port between Clinton and New Hartford. He says he is as yet undecided as to his future. Besides being the leading social light of Clinton, Red is also the proprietor of the first morning chapel bus CGeneral Burton's ex- ceptedj in the history of Ham Col. JAMES CAMPBELL, lVlAClNTYRIZ, GJAX Johnstown Jim film S111111 ' Child prodigy of Theta Delta Chi from VVay Down East -Johnstown. Almost sent the house steward into bankruptcy by gormandizing in his freshman year. When kidded once about his boyish appearance, he said: You fellows are all jealous of my eye- brows. Can you beat that? Fell asleep early in the evening at his first House Partyg Hart came to the rescue and took care of the girl, Once known to have paid a dollar and a quarter for a toaster that cost Shorty Lyon five soap coupons. Y E621 WILLIAM DELAMATER MANCAN, AKE Binghamton Billy Wee W'illie A man of discriminating taste and aesthetic nature, Bill reads poetry out loud, and as successor to his brother Spider he specializes in brilliant modernistic suspendcrs and vivid socks. Bill is planning to enter the diplomatic corps, which may account for his in- evitable answer to a question concerning femininity: 'WVell, I think she's really a rather quite awfully nice girl. Don't judge him too harshlyg a man with a middle name like Bill's deserves a lot of considera- tion. ANTI-tony Lawaiiuclz MCDONALD, ELS Ogdensburg nfldllfu T011.j ' HI1lllIfSllfllllU And what have we here, my good friends? Mac wears a 754i hat and a beautiful pair of corduroy knickers. XfVlJl'Sllll3S two fetishes: his hair and Sarah Bernhardt. Spends the morning chatting with Car- negie Kate, the afternoons in combing his hair, and the evenings in reading biography. VVhen he eats even Lawrence turns green with envy. Saturday after- noon finds him reading Tudor Court Scandals to the boys in chapel. Once explained to Gigi how French 5-6 ought to be run. Later apologized. Mac sum- mers in an insane asylum, which may explain many things. Famous on the campus as Fancher's Scottish Nightingale. DONALD SOUTI--IWORTH MCNEIL, DECAGON Utica g Don Mack Ulim boy 'wins flIlIIEiD0l1Illd S. McNeil, South College folzrzzalirt flII.S'lll'.V form in Hrzzlziltofz literary parabolns. VVent through college regretting that none of the professors committed suicide, that Elihu Roofs house did not burn down, and that the football team did not play Notre Dame. Never lets business interfere with pleasure. lnstead of writing up the Amherst game, he hurried on to Wellesley last fall. He has not been the same since. lllac has a journal- istic style that even Beetle can't touch. E633 'nh' . -' ti. ,i .,,l, , 1 lil l iii' 3-ie-fi if llff ' '- -' il .I M--U 1 ., ,Ney W I '-- ' ' - ' ' 'LL ' FRANKLIN BUUSI-I RIEAD, JR., Efb Fort Yvayne, Ind. Hflfflllku Easily Ever since a freshman beat him in the golf tourna- Bushy has worn a determined look of revenge. But since his victory this fall, he has been very satisfied with life. Busby drives a car very well, in addition to his other abilities, and doesn't care whether the car is headed forward or backward. ln that way, at least, he is most ambidextrous. We feel that when llfleady is once away from the influence of the Bumfs Club. he will stop playing golf at five in the morning. RALPH EATON MILIiER, Ju., 2119 Bloomsburg, Pa. Bud Bud thought at one time that he was champion at shovelboard, hut he was quickly disillusioned. At golf he has won many laurels, especially in the match at Rome. He is a remarkable fencerg so remarkable that he feels practice once a week is sufficient. But at bowling-ah, here he shines. He is President of the Bum's Club and well qualified for the position. His election to that office was the result of a rumor that it took him three hours to get dressed for Senior Ball his freshman year. ' JAMES XV EsTco1 r Mooke, Amir Fort Plain lilliggyll Differs from his famous brother Buzz in that where Dud used to say he lived for the women .liggs says the women live for him. He's planning on get- ting several hundred prints of his picture because he wants to be able to supply the demand when the inevitable clamor arises. Take a squint at the picture and then join the clamor. How those plastic sur- geons will fight for a chance at him! VVatertown this week-end ? Calling VVatertown tonight? lfVritten your letter tonight yet ? Does she still love you ? l-low's Pat? lfVho will be the lucky Q ?j girl next year? l64l .iz , X pi.. Q, A .. . g. Win. . V- , .- 1 lf., ,lff QQ -f.'.-.ri P51 wi. 'li-:ig fl F' THOMAS FRANCIS Mooruz, JR., DECAGON Moliayvk nf . U I om Tom Moore, himself, not a moving picture. This is the last of the Moliiczins. Thinks that New York City is a SllbUl'lJ of Mohaysfk and doesnlt forget to think out loud. Even rooming with Paul Brown failed to calm him down. He tossed up between Hamilton and Colgate when choosing a proper site for a four year sicsta. Hamilton lost. Has been an ardent exponent of Colgate ever since. 'vVhen Ham- ilton wins and Colgate loses he is gloomy for weeks. Spends most of his time criticizing the College. Wn.l.1AM C1-mmaas Momus, ELS Utica Hill Last of a famous line. and what a break for Hamil- ton! Bill is the local anti-vice campaigner and Neme- ment, Bushy has worn a determined look of revenge. sis of Bleecker Street. Likewise serves as battering ram for XVinter's boys, Warbler for Fancher, and erstwhile booster for Gigi. Found the continual But since his victory this fall, he has been very satis- round of classes irksome for one of his temperament, and left college between semesters. He may be back next year as Professor of Welsh, if he finds time to read one of his dictionaries through. l COLEMAR FRENCH NICHOLS, AlxE Cortland CeefeeU Cole Nick Here, gentle reader, we have the benign face of the Sir Galahad of the Deke House Ckindly note the virginal blush on his downy cheeksj . Nick is so dumb that he only got 102 in his German final last year. Despite his rooming with Bailey and Bond sopho- more year, he claims to be still pure. He started to smoke freshman year but gave up the habit after smoking one cigar. Each summer he roams the great open spaces as a seed salesman, using Rochester as a base of operation. E651 JOHN HARRY NIENlEYlZR, Xxlf Scranton, Pa. lark NiFlIli8,, A When the call Went out for volunteers to carry the mail from Bloody Gulch to Scranton, Tear Devil Niemeyer was the first to step forward. lVIounting his trusty steed, he sped away. ln some unknown way he lost his bearings and ended up at the Sigma Phi Arms in Schenectady. He paused here to rest himself and his horse. Instead of departing by the steps, Tear Devil gracefully dove from the brink of the porch to the lawn four feet below. Probably our hero's eyes were tired from the long journey. Although he struggles to emulate Almirall, Jack was not able to write his own scurf--so he says. ALLAN Kvso OHASHI, 'PY Islip O Chastity All This man began a respectable life freshman year, but has gone from bad to worse. llflaybe he was disap- pointed in love or something. He loathes girls that fall for YVest Point men and the week-end boys from Yale. Having fallen under the Bennett influence, he now wears green-striped flannels and has severed relations with the Department of Rhetoric and Ora- tory. Al claims he doesn't like to dance, but simply adores talking to girls, and that's the reason he's never seen after ten olclock at House' Party time. HARRIS HILI.N1.LXN PALM ER, AY Auburn Hi Own '0omiz ' The fellow who took the Wells out of lfVellesley. Famous authority on short but sweet tours to all girls' colleges within three hundred miles of Clinton. Fav- orite song used to be My One and Onlyng now changed to A Rainbow of Girls. Posscssor of the most perfect profile in Hamilton College-but all the girls boastfully claim that they seldom see his profile. He came here pure and innocent-he is still pure. Saw two beautiful nurses one day, and now intends to become a doctor. Doesn't know whether he likes pineapples or girls the better. E661 :ill 1. ROBERT WILLIAM PARKS, AKE Newport Bobby I'PfepJ' Hr1lf-pi2It Now I ask you, fellows, isn't he the picture of perfect innocence? Huh? fStop laughing, Bondlj Well, as 1 was saying, did you ever see anything more angelic and guileless than that half-smile of his? But be- ware, gentlemen-and ladies! He's a bold, bad man. Lord Byron had nothing on this Romeo. Bobby says he lives in Newport, but for a man of the backwoods he has an amazing knowledge of Utica. He never loses his temper and is frequently just bubbling over with good UQ spirits. 'FI-IURE W'AI.'rER PERSSON, AY Roslyn lVaIt This is VValt Persson-here today and gone tomor- row. He may stay around long enough this time to graduate, however, now that Cowdre has gone. Rooms with Tuthill, and claims Sted does enough studying for them both, so he doesn't do any. Walt is not dumb, by any manner of means. He' will doubt- less amount to something, as he handles figures well. Like all great writers, he is temperamental, and must not be pushed too far. Next to Webster, he is the most indolcnt-appearing man in college, and proud of it. CHARLIIS SPENCER PI-IILLIPS, GJAX Utica 'iiiGI1i1lSii Spell Gay A firm believer that cane and spats preserve one's outward reserve, our efficient Theta Delt mentor con- ceals all mental agitation by well-founded phrases and a bass voice, a la Marsli. Phillips, an eminent but secretive authority on Utica and environs even as far as Canastota, firmly maintains that meat-packing houses and retail stores are his only diversions aside from a political or social campaign here and there. l:67?I VY -it K I l L, ,i ri-Q i' 1 .:. r vi Wu.L1s WxNsLow PRA'1 r Albion lViIl Prairie W'illy Well, welll If it isn't Will of the mezzo voice, the leading lady of the lVliracle Play. The miracle was why any one came to see it. He also starred in the Yellow Jaflref and his Hmincing steps would be grace- ful motions with a fan were appreciated by the young ladies at Wells. In his freshman year, this dashing mbnllfro attracted the attention of every one by absconding from college just before mid-years. Since then he has seen the error of his ways and has settled down as a hard working student majoring in Math 2. ROBERT JEROME PRENTISS, AKE Iowa City, la. Bob Doc .flfcGz1ire From down where the tall corn grows-with the aid of special fertilizer-Bob was early imbued with the publicity craze. Though tone-deaf, he insists on en- lightening the brothers about his home state with old folk songs. Finding that his efforts were not sufficiently appreciated, he proceeded to grow a beard, which was not appreciated either. Removing this by urgent request he next acquired a ten-gallon hat which he now wears diligently, rain or shine. SAN! UEL XAVI ER ROCKINO Utica Sanz Hamilton's merchant prince, and present holder of the apple butter and milk shake monopoly. Has all the freshmen in North working for him-but not for long. A lone wolf in the business world. Rumor has it he went native this year, but since he returned to college with smoked glasses there is a reasonable doubt about the matter. A snappy dresser of the best collegiate type. However, he says that this is not the reason for his phenomenal success among Utica's high society. He seems to have set out to out-Kutz Kutz. 'tm - . M -' l Ls. :fi s I . ' A, : fx v'I,.f !f I I ' I -f 'I , . 1, Q, . 'li--.3 I I K ,H I II 'lf' l5'I1ifIiI'IIll 5'lI fII51'l,fIl - l .Il wr?-r . . .L ,, A --, Y ,.4. HENRY Al.LEN Ropcmzs, ELS- Albany HIlffjl,, nfollyu Hallie Behold a versatile man! Student, Pugilist, Musician, Lover, and Good Sport. The man who always got HH with a negative amount of work. Sophomore year he became famous overnight by his prowess in the square circle and his challenge to take on all comers fwith one hand tied behind themj . He played a sax once fonly oncej. The mediocrity of Utica women and junior Public Speaking made up his mind to spend his junior year in France. Said Hank, l'm no Apollo, either. Always ready to lend a helping hand to anyone, anytime, and anywhere. PHILIP VIRGILIUS Rooms, EQD ' Clinton Phil Phil has the habit of remaining in the woods for a month or two after the opening of college in the fall. He said he was up there to explore. From the re- marks he makes in his sleep we have begun to believe it was .mum exploring. Phil stays at his desk so much he gives one who docs not see his outgoing mail the impression he is studying. There are several dis- tracting influences which must be overcome, then he will be a man of the world. So many distractions will be hard to overcome, however. HARVEY JULIAN SARLES, X111 Liberty Harrie Blush, ye maidens. Blush, ye darkening pines. Trem- ble for the fair name of Harvey Julian. Oh Milton, too soon, too soong oh Keats, too soon to sing of our hero's fall, to tell of his terrible fall from the high, virtuous kingdom of Liberty to the fell depths of Buffalo. Here for nights and days be lay on the fiery slag with naught to quench his thirst but the hellish waters. Oh Satan, oh Henry Rutgers, relentl Oh Harvey Julian, repent! Oh lVIilton, too soon! l69J RICHARD IRWIN SAVAGE, SAX Churchville ' Dick S11w1ge'J Presenting the ONE and ONLY, Brother Savage, Theta Delt humorist and comedian fhe is good for a laugh anywherej. The management takes pleasure in making the following acknowledgments: smfoir faire by William G. Mulligail, vocabulary by the navy, cigarettes by request, and women by mere chance. Dick swears off smoking every spring to train for baseball, but between seasons he has intro- duced and popularized the homely little phrase, Got FRANCIS OSCAR SCHUE, DECAGON Rome I ra11'J HSCIIIITFU The hermit of North. Has roomed consistently in good company, which is appreciated by the rest of North. Believes himself a chess player, and he may be right. Fran knows his languages, and succeeds in surprising Supe regularly. Coming from the Copper City, he seems to believe in Caesar's old adage of Better be first in a little room in North than be sec- ond in Rome. He is a thinker and dwells apart from men. His life, ambitions, and aflinities will be re- vealed as soon as any one can find them out. Only weakness is to read the Rome newspapers. a cigarette on ya ? ROBERT HIBRARD SEAVER, E112 Pittsfield, lVlass. IfB0b!l Bob is the man with the Bugs bean. He talks, sleeps, eats, and thinks in terms of biology. He may be bluf- fing us, but he says he knows all about it. There are hobbies and hobbies, but some of them impose on the wo1'ld's good nature. Bob dotes on the bones Cnot the -rolling kindj. For a quiet evening, with a vietrola and set of drums he stands idly by, keeping time with an old pair of hickory clappers. He'll be sorry for it some day, but not half so sorry as we are now. E701 '?'4 'r , w if A V. .- ,- . l i 'liI1'i 'i' - - .. v , Y. . .1 .- - - - ' 1- - -,-,-,. .. .Lg Y-- '---is,- ...K 144.-M., , 7 LATIMER BAYARD SENIOR, QJAX Utica Lad Rant The little Warrior! Never gives in. Has convinced more students that to argue is the best aid to diges- tion, next to reading letters from the girl in Mt. Holyoke. Knows more about public speaking than any other man in the houseg he admits it. Lad is out to put the profession of law on a standing of the highest quality. Go to it, youngster, more power Qyou'll need itj to youl RonER'r GlI.CIiRlS'l' SEYVELL, DECAGON Cortland Bob Scalia Smile Robert the Roue has implanted himself firmly in the hearts of his followers by his remarkable interpreta- tion of the character of Count Luckner, the Sea Devil. lt took time and money but when he got started it was a wow. Soolie prides himself on his subtleness -to use his own word. When Bob says, I am going to Utica, you can infer a number of things but you will never be able to find out what he really means. He is Il great believer in H. L. and his well known publication. Soolie might be classed as an unappreci- ated genius, but, not wishing him to have an inflated ego, we will sum up his character as just plain subtle. GEORGE FREDERICK SHEPHERD, NPY Clinton lrskippyxx ndpwredu The personal answer to every maiden's prayer-of the Syracuse type. His weakness is girls. He has had one to every House Party and hasn't succeeded yet. Still hope springs eternal, and he acts as ambassador and taxi driver to Syracuse. Fred is confident and personal adviser to Nelson R. fllocksj Dale, Geol- ogy being second only to girls in his interests. Always thinks of some interesting geological outcrop nearby just as a rocks trip is drawing to a close. If you need instruction in plain and fancy suping, just see Shep- herd. i71iJ' ' i i ' il l r L 1 l ., WAIJNER BONNEY Sr-IERMAN, ELS Auburn USIIETIIIIU Bonney W7111l Nice? eh what? and what a line! This smooth blind- dater hails from Auburn, Smith, Wells, lVIount Hol- yoke, and other prison cities. Came to college because he wanted to be a fullback and drive a roadster. Writes a letter every night before retiring and yet brings a different blind-date to every House Party. He's got to win once Claw of averagesj. Associated Hotels Corporation furnishes his room. Even the rugs. Uses his study desk as a support for a l-I- x 18 picture and a place to keep his checkbook. Started to get a B.S. but changed and is now suffering thru Latin 1'. Expects to pass one of Bull's quizzes. lVIay- be, if Bull teaches in summer school. Hell, Dutcher, it stands to reason. All right, lVlacKenzie, you little runt. CROSBY TRACY SMELZER, JR., AAQD Cranford, N. HSCIIIIIIIHZU Tray Tight? Say! A baby-ring couldn't be any tighter on an elephant's ankle. One of his favorite tricks is splitting a match in two so it can be used twice and then as toothpicks afterward. Schmaltz never drinks -unless someone else buys. And then he won't drink much because he's afraid he might get so tight he'cl loosen up. Tracy is very deeply in love. ln fact, it hurts him to give so much. But his big consolation is that she more than reciprocates. No one knows just why. Osooon REUIEL Smrrn, WY Skaneateles N Ozzie Oh, Smitlf' Author of the famous words, Come on, fellows, we're all in the same delegation. Ships are his affin- ity, and so he sought the face that launched a thousand of them, the which was found in Troy. From there Ozzie returned with a gleam in his eye, but, belong- ing to that category of strong, silent men Cwith hair on their chestsj, he has never divulged anything con- cerning the spark that kindled the gleam. This man actually enjoys rocks trips, and has been apprehended flitting through Root's Glen for exercise. T721 ' --34 1.4 .l'll i ANGELO STAGLIANO Utica udngieu Staggie His chief claim to fame is that he was a charter member of the Poli Sei Club. A local lad who is gaining fame and fortune at this here institution. Has enough local pride to brag of the wonders and alleged beauties of Utica. Especially adept at lec- turing on Utica's wild life through the eyes of a cynic. Hopes to be Rockino's successor in the field of Big Business. Has been practicing on peanut butter in conjunction with bread. Some claim he leaves the milk shakes out in the rain. EDWARD Lnnxosrow Simms, WY Delhi Silent Stew lid This great big, bouncing, baby boy came to college to play football and read College Humor. One look at lVlacmillan was enough to frighten him from both g as a result he carried off the Greek prize and wampus. Ed brought the original flaming youth to Spring Party sophomore year, and hasn't made an attempt since. The unwholesome influence of Becker is unmistakableg he talked so much that Silent Steve simply became used to listening. O. Smith should cure him. FREDERICK PORTER TUCKFR, 1I1Y New Bedford, Mass. Tu cle U Rosie Frea'1l1e Tuck began making history Fall Party of freshman year, by stealing Don Hynes' girl. He regrets it. Later on, in the alumni room, he laid the plastic foun- dation and Ohashi followed, leaving footprints on the sands C lj of time. Unfortunately for all concerned, Fred still thinks Bahston', is the hub of the uni- verse, and that Heaven is only a synonym for Haav- aadf' He never has quite forgotten his first love, though, and suffered a relapse only this fall. UH. t X l N V . . i ., 3 , STEDMAN DAVIS TUTHILL, AY Camden rrstedzf n Yvutn nDaAZ'e.u Is not a moron-so he says. Has distinguished him- self as the hero of many brawls. Lost his girl House Party of freshman year and bellowed Wliere's the guy what done it? l'll bash his face in! This is a convincing proof of his masculinity. Claims to have an occasional original thought, but tacitly admits that Prex isn't old enough to understand his advanced theory on the propagation of the species Moron. Although coming from a great canning town Sted has not Vet cultivated a taste for Utica's tin-rimmed juniper juice. ARDEN DAVID V.ANLO0N Bath IIVHUJJ Bath is where the shy little violets flike Vanj grow. If it hadnlt been for Smut's Dramatic Interpretation course no one would have suspected the genius so successfully concealed in this reserved lad-that is, except the boys in South, who know better. Van has lots of good qualities, but they are all overbal- anced by his love for the radio. That Cinsertnameofj machine of his is the curse of the dormitory, except on fight nights, when his popularity must be deserved. FRANK GERAI.D VIBBER1 s, JR OAK New Britain, Conn. T11bby Vil1 ' Veeberis ln spite of his blood ties with the administration, Frank never can seem to get the opening dates of college straight. He is a hockey player par excellence, except when he uses his skates for dancing pumps. One of the big men of the junior class. He should be, for rumor has it that he has eaten the Folleys out of house and home, and will soon be in a condition where he will need a freshman to tie his shoes. Vib claims that he sails at the Vineyard, but we doubt that. They don't build boats that way. - f74fIi my h 6 i D ---H 1 74, La., - Y, QW' 'i ' 'ffafff liJl'1flllll . 'il HARRY LAMBERT XVALTS, AXA Fort Plain ff-ggie Hdrryf' The last and greatest of the Fort Plain triumvirate of Fineour, Farley, and VValts. The girls all know him, but just find one admitting it! Little Eggie in his now famous rise from ex-kitchen dishwasher and first mate of the meat grinder at the late Mr. llfIerz's applesauce dispensary to the lofty eminence of a campus celebrity has gained marked distinction in two lines of endeavor-sleeping and keeping awake. I-lis prowess in the second particular has been dis- played in Utica and its environs more often than on the Hill. XVfKl.C0'1 l' VVfx'rsoN, E41 Bronxville l'Vnit.v ' Here is Phi Beta Kappa's most deserving aspirant. He slaves over ponderous tomes of early Greek, Sans- krit, and Latin for hours on end fthe ends of the hours before classcsj . This is Nlacaulay's only 'living rival. He can read a book in ten minutes and know Cat least he convinces the professors he knowsj the entire contents. But his main virtue is his steward- ship. He has such a campus-wide reputation that even the faculty clamours to be invited to dinner- elsewhere. EMERY DOUGl.AS WEBSTER, JR ELS Brockport Doug Sunny Boy This, oh gentle reader, is the eternal lover. Doug makes a point of falling in love with every House Party girl he gets-and some he doesnlt get. The tall, dark type is preferable, but not absolutely re- quired. Just to keep in practice between House Parties there is an Angeline, or Isabel, or somebody, in Utica. Doug knows all the scores, players, high points, low points, faults, and foibles of every athletic team east of the Pacific and north of the Gulf of Mexico. Can think of excuses faster than he needs them. I got an awful rocking. F751 UL.f.' 5 ,, I i . ri ' 1 . i ' W. i e Tl i . t f 1.-'rf H A w ROBERT LINDSLEY XVEBSTER, AY Ithaca Bob W'ebbie Robbie Brought to party the most popular girl that ever came to Hamilton. Ask his roommate. Has since become cynical. The kind of man that would have Hourished on the Nlississippi some fifty years ago. junior mem- ber and promotion manager of the firm of Davis 85 lfVebster, Financiers. A firm follower of the immor- tal Barnum traditions. Has been laboring under the impression that he is a humorist and childls poet. Hopes to be set up to a garret when he is graduated Qif everj. CHARLES HOLMAN lfVEs'rizRnERG, JR., XXII VVestfield, N. lVe.vty T11ngIefoot Now speaking about' toothpaste reminds me of a football game I once played in when .... and so on for several hours. Westy is one of those unsung col- lege heroes who is awakened every night by his retiring roommates. Smokes a pipe of such strong character that his roommates say they haven't seen a moth in the place since football season. They do object, however. to the number of rats that succumb beneath the Hoor. VVesty is a man of noble propor- tions, but they weren't put together right. H FRANK CURTIS Wu i mms Xwlf Syracuse Frank Well, it ought to be good, it only lfrank i enrolled in l-lam Coll, but that is about all that can be said. lt is a question whether he spends more time in Frank's in Syracuse, Frank's in Clinton, or in between. He is kept busy solving the conHict between science and religion, sitting by the hour listening to Hancock play the harp. He longs to join a circus some day, which might not be a bad idea. At present he practises lassoing old posts, etc. He has even been known to tie people in bed. Let's get out of here. HEMI , e , i-.ll if K 1 l . 7.4 . N. ' ' i 'f 1. '1 .P in i ii I1 'i 'ln i i . i.,i. ,2g,, A .me- XVi1.i,1AM Davin VVn.1.mMs, XBF. Utica Bill Dolly M m.viN ARN'IAND WILLIAMS, ALBA C Iota, Syracusej Baltimore, Md. fljllelll Voir-i! The man who never lost an argument-ao cording to himself. Full of sound and fury Csignify- ing nothingj. One of life's little mysteries. No one knows how he got that Way. QOr why he persists in staying that way.J Swears he is smooth with the women and can produce a snapshot to prove it. Drove all former roommates crazy-till tamed by Sample and Sprague. They aren't quite the same, either. lsn't he nice? Never was in an argument in his life, because he never says anything. Showed his discrimi-- nation by coming to Hamilton College, Clinton, instead of Hamilton College, Kentucky. Thinks Hoibie Hoover is a god on wheels. Came to House Party once and misses every week-end now. Most notorious for his associations with Penner. The pair are often called The Strolling Cherubs of The 'l'wins.', Enjoys English Literature in such an un- gentlemanly fashion that he spends his spare time reading poetry. GRANT SwANco'r'r YOUNG, DECAGON Utica Grant ' lt's too bad, isn't it, but what can you do about it? We don't suppose Grant can help himself, though. Freshman year no one could tell him from Grubb. Together they constituted that blond freshman. When they broke up partnership, Grubb took all the bad qualities, and there wasn't much left, except a commanding, persuasive manner of speech. Grant has been living with Chacona, which ought to bring some results. CWe hate to think of them.j U71 K-1 Nl OO I4 LASS OF 1931 ' e ES' 1931 Clam' 0516675 FlmNe1sjERoMia Crzownev . . l re.vidrnr Romani'L12'rc1nv0R'1'11 VVILSON . Vice-Presirlfut Hanoupjizxvlsei,CoNolaR . Secretary-Trmsurer PRESIDENT CROVVLEY ZKZLOVQI of the lam 0f1931 And now we are sophomores. A year more experienced, no longer can we laugh in the carefree ignorance of our freshman days. XVC have taken our part in the responsibilities of college life. We have had our share in making banquet season a thing of the past. YVC are proud of our common sense in doing this, though we secretly mourn the passing of an oppor- tunity for another binge. We have- 79 but why enumerate? We have proven our versatility, and compared to deeds, how vain are words. However, there is one great problem that we have not yet been able to solve. We sense it when we watch the hockey games. ' XVe realize it when we listen to the Choir. lt is always with us, haunt- ing us--this one great problem. VVhat will the college do when we are gone? Claw qf1951 ADAMS, JOHN MYRON, JR., ARE ALLEN, WILLIAM HENRY, AAG' .ANDERSON, RIENHOLD SEARLE . ANDREWV, RUSSELL HERRERT . . BAILEY, PIENRI LEWIS, DECAGON . BALDVVIN, WILLIS LAVERNE, AXA . BANNERMAN, CJRAEME CAMPBELL, AXA BATES, ARTHUR SEYMOUR, AXA . BOEVE, LUCAS, JR., X111 . . BOURNE, ALFRED SEVERIN, JR., XXI' . BRESEE, VVILMER EDGAR, XBZI . BRITTEN, GEORGE, AKE . . BUCHIIINDER, BENJAMIN, JR., AT CZARBERRY, KENNETH SLATER, ELS . CARMER, DELAND, AIIT . . CHRISTIANA, WILLIAM FRANCIS . CONCER, HAROLD JEWELI., AACIH COOKE, GEORGE BRADFORD, AKE CORWIN, JOHN FREDERICK, AKE . COXON, VVILLIAM FRANCIS, JR., AXA CRADE, ISADORE EEERON . . . CRANE, THOMAS ROIIERT, AEE . CROWLEY, FRANCIS JEROME, XXI' CRU:-ER, ROBERT VVOODSIDE, ELS DAY, 'IKHEODORE C., ELS . , DEANER, FRANKLIN JOSEPH, AXA DENHAM, 'TILEON SHERMAN, BAX DRUMMOND, BURKE WILLS, AKE EDMVARDS, GEORGE VAIL, JR. . ECCLESTON, LESLIE EVER ETT, AXA FAIRCHILDR DAVID PAGE, APT . FISCHER, GORDON, QAX . . FONDA, DOUW HENRY, JR., AKE FORDHAM, HENRY HALSEY, AT . FRIEDLANDER, PAUL JOSEF . FRIEDLANDER, SIDNEY . . FRISBIZE, JAY GRAHAM, AXA . GASKILL, RECINALD DEWITT, XXI' CPUYTON, JOHN PUTNAM, HAX . . HANCOCK, ALFRED VANNVAGENEN, XXI' HUGHES, JAMES RORB, JR., AA1b . . HUNTER, EDWARD KINSLEY, ELS I-IUTCHINSON, JAMES WOODS, AKE JAYNE, LLOYD SMITH, AEE . . JONES, JOI-IN HAYDN, AA41 KERR, CHARLES DAWSON . . KERR, ROBERT HENRY, DECAGON . 80 . B1IllinInr7',1Wd. llinsdnlr, Ill. . . SyI'lll'Il.H! . . Masxfzm W1lJhilIfff01l, D. C. . . . LeRoy Wrzxllirzylorl, D. C. . . Corllnml . Killg.Y1lIIl tlllfjllifil, Cn. Omronfa . Cortland . Nefw Yorlz Nefwarlz, N. J. . Fairporl . llmlxorz . Utim . Jllnfzfiwllo Orzmgf, N. J. . Ulirrl . Uflra . . Clfnlon PVHHIIIIIJIUFLAJII,1'W1IJ'5. . . Cnnleliu . Livonia Rofllcsfrr' SyrrIfu.r1r .4 ll I1 ll rn . IVEFLU York . Grcnnc . Plzrttsbllry Bronlelyu . Plandomz' Sflllffltllllflfflll . . Ulifa , Bill-0!llllflf0Il . . Iflmlcs . . llion EfuzIr1.vlD71,Il1. . Syrnru Ie . Ulim . . N1'fwYnl'lc Maplmuood, N. J. . . Batafvia . Ulfrn . Ci11z'ir11111l11.v . Ci71t'i7II1lI1ll5 1 ' w 'l I Klavxas, Umvlm jmxwszm . . KNOX, Illikmam' ALAN, jk., OAX . KOI,SCH, Iinwm Gkrzrzrmv, DECAUGN LAWRENCE, Ielovv.-Um AUUREY, ELS . Llili, AI.lllER'l' R.lxNn,x1.l,, ju., E41 . MJXRVIN, Llawls Ivlmn, ELS . . . Mrcfmnnk, .Inari-'1sksnN Fluanraluclc, AKE Mmuus, LARU1: Gnxuzrm, AKE . . Mmuu,0N, Romarw' 'I'YI,l5Il, AEE . Mosman, Wu.1.mM Eursnmg, jan AT . Musx.-xx., R0:xrelc'r, DECAGUN . NQRMILE. josrsvn Gammon, AKE Osfzoon, Runxarrr NVINJIIP, AT . Pxknlzu, CURTIS Rosmmoox, AXA . Pommanu, VV,u.mmN Mosman . . Poufnfmus, Wm:-'mum Lras'r1aR, ju., DAX Pomf, jm-:N I,,1zs1.ua. Iflr . . . . R:xY'r0N, Wn.1.ls NIACNAIR, ILLS Rrsnmown, Al.maRT C:uzRm.r,, AKIC RICH.-XRIJS, jour-J Luwnu., AK E . Ruaxzo, jo:rN EIWVARD, XBE . Ronnmz. jorm Axcr-x1n.u,u, ELS . Rugs, Wu.x.mM Fnmmrsmc, AT . Row1,,xNn, jrarumun, DECAGON . Rumnmz, linmurw 'I',n'x.ox. ju., XB! SAwTm.l.rs, M.-xn'rlN Ilraxrw, BLD . . Smrm, Ammus BASSETT, ELS . SMUH, Dwmmx AKE . . SMITH, Klzxwnwrrn' BliNNE'I I' . . SMITH, lVl0NTGOMliRY CM'l.rsY, jk., APT STEVENS, Mfvmnwsow lluufxcuoxx, GAX STxaw,xR'r. FMNK Y., jk. . . . SYMONDS, Cn:uu,ns S1mlu.15, E112 VAN ORSDELL, IELHER1' Lfxmfxsumf WARnwrsu., JAMES Fl.13'rcmzR, NPT . Wann, Howfxkn Pmmvs . . VVILSON, Romzxrr L1a'rcnvv0RTH, E111 . VVruGn'r, Iinmk BURCHARD, AAKD 81 . St. George . Nefw York College Point . Brooklyn . New York . Brooklyn . Binghamton . Endirot! lWonlgornery Syracuse . Yonkers . . Binglzamton IIa.vlirzg.v-on-Hudson . . Syr11c'u.ve , ,-'Illfany . Woodlmwen . Glenroe, Ill. ROC'fI0.ffL'I' , Nefw York . Oxfwego . Rome lllorzzwia Syrzzense . . Nefw York Hlaplefwood, N. J. '. . Binglmmlon . Nor-with . . Nefw York Woodslofwn, N. J. . . . Hudson . Brooklyn Nefw Rorhelle . Nefw Hartford . . Hudson . Rome . Wkitesboro . . Buffalo Port Chester I-I Z N I-I LASS OF 193 1932 Clam Ofjfcem WAT ERMAN BA l,DwIN . Preyidmn: Ronlsm' Nisl.soN As:-IMIQAD . . Ifiee-Ijmvirlwzf DONALD M umzo CJUNNINGI-IAM Sezrreinry- Treasurer PRESIDENT BALDWIN ivory gf Ike lam 0f1932, Long nights and days of watchful wait- ingg countless moments of anxietyg long years of fruitless searchingsg all these shall be no more. At last fervent prayers have heen answered. The class of '32 is here. The usual looks of sardonic amuse- mentg the derisivc laughs of scorng even that certain percentage of pity fell before the onslaught of the freshmen. Athleti- cally, scholastically, socially brilliant, these extraordinary gentlemen even took l 83 to public speaking-modified for their ben- efit. Doubtless, gentle reader, you smile knowingly, and silently accuse us of being far too optimistic. But consider the facts -the football prospects, the ascending marks-and then look out of the window, where the spring moon shines on the silent campus. Think of the freshmen with three long years ahead-and then forgive our enthusiasm and our conceit. Clow of 1932 ABBOT'1', PAUL RICHARD, JR., AT . ALBERT, JOHN ALFRED, XBE ALLER, NATHAN SHAUL . . ASI-IME.-XD, ROBERT NELSON, APT . AVERY, EUGENE ELLIOTT, AEE . BALDWIN, WATERMAN, AND' . BARLOW, SCOTT . . . BARTRAM, JOHN BOWMAN, AT . BATCHELOR, JACKSON MILTON . BATES, MARION NOBLE, SPT . . BATTEN, DOUOLASS HASBROUCK, AT . BENEDICT, ENOS STAPLES, AKE . BLAKE, VVILLIAM JOHN, JR., AT . BLISS, CHARLES WESLEY . . BORST, RAYMOND RICHARD, ELS . . BRECRENRIDGE, WALTER FERGUSON . BROUGHTON, WILLIAM RAYMOND, AT BROWN, GEORGE VVILLIAM . . . BURNETT, ROBERT DANIEL, AKE . . CAMPBELL, HALLOCK COWLES, QAX . CARPENTER, ROBERT CHARLES, AEE . CASWELL, TXFFAXNY BRAINERD, NPT . CHASE, HERBERT IRVING, XBE . . CLARK, BEAUCHAMP COLEMAN, AXA CLARKE, ROBERT SLOSSON, OAX . . CORBY, PIERBERT EDWARD, ELS . . COWARD, NVILSON LATHROP, AEE . CRANE, HOMER CURTISS, DECAGON CREAGH, JOHN VINCENT, AXA . . CROWELL, WINTHROP SEARS, AKE . CRUTCHLEY, FENTON EDWARD, ELS . CUNNINGHAM, DONALD MONRO, AKE DANELLA, JACK JOHN, DECAGON . DAVIS, ROBERT ARMSTRONG . . . DECKER, GEORGE EMMETT, XBE . DENMAN, ALV.AN BAYARD CHRISTOPHER, DEROSA, RAYMOND LEROY . . . DESORMO, LELAND KENNEDY' . DISNEY, FRANK ALBERT, GAX . DIXON, JOHN SHERMAN, XXI' . EAMES, NORRIS MOREY, EIIA . . . EST.-XBROOK, CHARLES SCOTT, JR., XXI' . FAUVER, ALFRED LESTER, AT . . FISHER, CLARENCE INGALS, ANP . . FISHER, JEROME BONAPARTE, JR., AKE Fox, FREDERICK CLOSE, AT . . . FREDMAN, ODIN, XBE . . . GLAZER, SIDNEY SIMON, DECAGON GAX S4 . Glens Fall: . . Liberty . Phoenix . .Iamaira . Hooxirff Falls . . Wafverly . . Nmu York . flrlington, N. J. . . Ilerleimer . . . Rome . Lyndhurzrt, N. J. . . Brorleport . Cranford, N. J. . Nefw Rochelle . . Auburn . Wzlllon . . Buffalo . . Binghamton South Orange, N. J. . . Brooklyn . Clinton . Rome . Melr'o5e . Narrowusburg . . Glen: Falls West Orange, N. J. . . Wafverly Waterbury, Conn. . . Binghamton . Nefw Yorl: Southampton Lynbrook . Utica . Erie, Pa. . . DeBruro . Cranford, N. J. . . . Utira . . . Malone . Rorlefville Centro Eaxt Orange, N. J. . . . Buffalo . Faycltelville . Lorain, 0. . Lyons Fall: . Jamestofwn . Toledo, 0. Elmhurst Brooklyn GOODFELLOW, JOsEI-I-I WILLIAM . CPOVERN, HUGH, JR. . . GREEN, THEODORE Mll.I.ER . . GROSS, EDWARD VALENTINE, ELS GROSS, KEl.I.:XND FREDERICK, ELS . l'iARRIS, WILLIAM MCCORD, JR. .E HARVEY, ARTHUR OSVVALD, GMX . . HARWOOU, THEODORE HENRY, DECAGON HENDERSON, ALLEN ROBERT, AXA . . HEUSTON, HAROLD ZELI., SAX . . PIOBART, HENRY BENTLEY, 3D, GAX . I'IOI.LENEEcK, SEIIERT EARL . . . HOLLEY, HORACE KING, JR. . HOLT, SAMUEL JAMES, AEE HOVVARD, JOHN WADE . . HOWARD, 'I'IMO1'I-IY JOSEPH . HOYER, DAVID GRAHAM . . IIUDEARD, RODER'I' JAMES, E41 . . HUIIDEL, HAROLD GRAI-IAM, JR., XXII . HUMESTON, EDWARD JUDSON, JR., AAKP . HUMMER, JACK WILLIAM, AACIJ . . JAMIESON, FRANK BERKELEY, XXI' . JENKS, RICHARD ASKlEY', AAKII . JOHNSON, FRANCIS MUNGER . JONES, JENKIN LTAYNARD, ANP . JONEs, THOMAS GRAY .... KANE, JOHN JOSEI-H, DECAGON . KELSEY, WESTON MAYNARD, JR., AAID KRUEOER, HARRY GORDON, XBE . . LAROs, CSEORGE ALVIN . . . . LEAVENWORTH, 'YHOMAS VVARN ER, AAQI-I . LESTER, JOHN VVIIEELER, AKE . . LEVIEN, GARDNER .... LEWIS, CLIFFORD ACER, X132 . . MAIJOREN, HENRY TLIORVALD, AKE . MANOAN, JOHN HENRY, JR., AKE . MERRIAM, EDMUND ARNOLD, JR., AND MOE, MARTIN LORIMER . . . MONACELLI, W7ILl.IAM ANTHONY, ELS . MOORE, FREDERICK JEssuI-, APT . . MOORE, JOHN 'IiURNER, JR. . MORROW, WILLIAM VVI-IEELOCK MOZEYKO, EDWARD MICHAEL . MUNSON, DONALD LEAVENWORTH . NORTON, MORTIMER HERIIERT, AEE . OHMANN, ROBERT CARMER, APT . . . OVER, JAMES WATSON .... , PALEWVSKI, STANLIZY BENIEDICT, DECAGON PALMER, HAMII.TON SLADE, HAX . . PAYNE, CHARLES SELOCK, XXI' . PAYNE, JOHN HOBART JAY, XII' . PHELI's, ROIIERT fi!-ZORGE, GMX . I N Il' I 853 . Brooklyn . Nefw Rochelle . . Albany . Brooklyn . . Brooklyn Ri-verdale-on-Hudson . . Yonkers . Dorset, Vt. . Tarrytofwn . New York . Boonfoille . Bainbridge . LaCro.r.ve, Wir. . . Utica Bradford, Pa. . . Utica . . Buffalo . Cazenofvia . Tarrytown . Huntington . . Binghamton Rockaway Beach . Nefw York . Utica . Utica J . Utica Poughkeejuie . Palmerton, Pa. . Brooklyn . Easton, Pa. . filmsterdam . Hamburg . Beacon . Troy . . Rochester . . Binghamton Wallingford, Conn. . . Jamestown . . Albion . Yonkers Reading, Pa. . M'ount Morrii . . . Beacon Bridgeport, Conn. . . . Utica . . Lyon: . Pittsburgh, Pa. . . Utica W afuerly . Liberty . . . Liberty Rockville Centre PIERCE, THOMAS PIERONNET, JR., APT . PIPPITT, RICHARD BRANCH, AKE . PORTER, H.ARRY VVILLKAM, FJAX . POUSER, BENJAMIN BERNARD . PRESCOTT, EDWARD WATSON, GAX . PRITCHARD, VVALTER HERBERT, AKE . RANVEON, FREDERICK PIOLBROOK, JR., ZIP READY, JOHN OVERTON, JR., AXA . ROBINSON, ROBERT WILLIAMS . ROGERS, RALPH, 2341 . . . Ross, HERBERT HARRIQON, AKE . ROTH, THOMAS JEFFERSON . SANFORD, JOHN XAVALLACE . . SCAGEL, KENNETH MCCLELLAN . SCHOEIJFLIN, NIERLE CHARLES, ELS . SCOTT, HENRY WILCOK, OAX . . SECHRIET, RICHARD GRANT . . . SKINNER, ANDREYW' ELWYN, DECAGON SKINNER, ARDEN LIONEL, APT . . SLINGLUFF, JOHN KERNAXN . . SLOANE, 'WILLIAM JOHN, JR., ELS . SMITH, AI.FRED HOLEROOK . . SMITH, CARL BENTON, JR., APT . SMITH, FRANK MURNEY, JR., AXA . SMITH, ROY LACEY . . STEIN, ARTHUR I-IAROLD . . . STEYVART, EDGAR EDINGTON, JR., GAX STONE, BENJAMIN JOHNSON, E111 . . STRONG, EDWARD CLARK, JR., Elb . SVVEELY, JAMES STEWART, DECAGON TQORGE, GEORGE RussELI ,... '1xUTHILL, CLAUDE NATHANIEL, XBE . VIQUTHILI., RICHARD INIARSDEN, AKE . VALACHOVIC, ANTHONY AUGUSTUS . VANDEVENTER, JOHN FRANCIS, EPT . VOSBURGH, RALPH VVILLIAM . WAGENBLASS, JOHN ILIENRY . . VVALSH, JOHN JOSEPH, DECAGON . VV.-RTT, ROBERT SPEER . . . WELLS, ALBERT' EDYVARD WEST, JOHN RICHARD . . . . W7ETTLAUFER, CRAWFORD DALE, Efb . WHITE, ALBERT KIRK, 'PT . . WHITE, NEWTON EDGAR, BAK . WILL, FRANK EDWARD, AXA . WII.SON, JAMES vVARD . . . VVILSON, MERRlI.I. KI.INE, AEE . . VVOODCOCK, VVILLIAM ALEXANDER, APT ZALEWSKI, JOHN BOLESLAUS . . ZUCKERMAN, LEO ARVERNE . 86 . Fairport . Port Jerfvf: . Mount Morrix . . Endicott Wes! Roxbury, llflasx. . . Binghamton Chivagu, Ill. Brooklyn . Itllafa . . . Clinton . Westjfeld, N. J. . C'llIl'ill7ll1fi, 0. . Rorlzexter . Clinton Warsaw . Deposit . . Elmira . Worfester . . Syraruse . Baltimore, Ilfld. . Brooklyn . Brooklyn . Syraruxe Johnson City . Vernon Brooklyn . . Great Nada Washington, D. C. , . Buffalo Williamsport, Pa. . . . Bujfalo llliller Plarz' . Rorllestfr . Johnxtofwn . Pasxair, N. J. . . A mm Warsafw . . Utlra . Pittsburgh, Pa. . Uriskany Fall: . . Elmira . Bufalo . Troy Syraruse Batavia Endfwell . Johnstofwn Syravzue . . . Ulira Saratoga Spring: 87 waxyigqf 5 'Q JS ' if! SW ,al - 1.1 PM 44 Wk- xi? K U1-M' f'M: 11 r1,N, - A : P 'Q 55 ' V' L f ' ,fl--57 L J, :ff ' FRATERNITIES Fil DQ O0 I-1 TA OF SIGMA P l I l,, . , V T if-,vga --fva Ty'..,' J , 3. 'li wwf, H + af-gw.w.fi Sigma hz Founded at Union, 1827 Ten Chapters BETA CHAPTER Established at Hamilton? 1831 V Ifrdter in vfarzzltzrtei Arthur Percy Saunders, Ph.D. Q 1 ratresi1z'Ur!1e N Charles B. Rogers, '87 Sherrill Sherman, 'O-lp I 1'ifi1'I?e.v in U h'i'ivg2'fi'i11lte C 1.929 John Haskell Chapin Sherwood Clarke Chatfield 1930 Donald lVIacKenzie Carson Ralph Eaton lldiller, Jr. Frederick Peter Spence Chase Philip Virgilius Rogers Theodore Gilman Law Robert Hibbard Seaver Franklin Bush lVIead, Jr. Walcott Watscmn John VValter VVells, 2d 1931 Albert Randell Lee, Jr. Martili Henry Sawtelle John Leslie Pope Charles Searle Symonds Robert Letchworth lfVilson 1932 Norris hlorey Eames Ralph Rogers Robert blames Hubbard Benjamin Johnson Stone Frederick Holbrook Rawson, Jr. Edward Clark Strong, Ir. Crawford Dale VVettlaufer ...f , ...,..-V. N., - - --Y r..-........,.,.., ,,- ., E891 I-1 C Q l1I 1 HAMILTON CHAPTER OF ALPHA DELTA PHI Ti j'g,i1igf'y, ,, 31 V- WI. .,, N, 11-1 H .- . , - l Je ., UYQDM elm hi Founded at Hamilton, 1832 Twenty-six Chapters HAMILTON CHAPTER Frater in Faczzltate Robert Barnes Rudd, '09 Henry Livingston Heyl, '28 Frrzetrex in Urbe Edward S. North, '72 Joseph Rudd, '9U H. Platt Osborne, '91 Thomas Rudd, '21 David G. Kilbourne, '22 Fmtres in Ullii7Fl'.Yifl1f8 1929 Frank Palmer Cutter Robert Lipsey llflontgomery Theodore Hunt Ingalls Lawrence Lee Mulcahy, Jr. Recd VVoodruff Rowley 1930 Lloyd Livingston George Rumsey lkliller lVIcGregor Donald Clinton Hiler James Westcott Moore Maurice Lamotte Jenks, Jr. Crosby Tracy Smelzer 1931 VVilliam Henry Allen James Robb Hughes, Jr. Harold Jewell Conger John Haydn Jones Edgar Burchard VVright 1932 ' VVaterman Baldwin Richard Askey Jenks Clarence Ingals Fisher Jenkin Nlaynard Jones Edward Judson Humeston, Jr. Weston llflaynard Kelsey, Jr. Jack lVilliam Hummer Thomas WZITIICF Leavenworth Edmund Arnold Merriam, Jr. E911 IT NO IQ I-I I OF PSI UPSILON v. ,-, 3, Jr,-. .' fm' ...c fi Q5 51 Ulwzlon Founded at Union, 1833 Twenty-seven Chapters PSI CHAPTER Established at Hamilton,g1843 Frntresk ,itz Faculmie Frank Hoyt VVood, Ph.D. ' P:,uili,Adee Fancher, A.M. l9'mtre,v igLgUrbg I Rev. George Fletcher Shepherd i Wal1'ace Bradley Johnson, '15 Fratres in Unififersitate 1929 Richard Turner Barns -Charles lVIaitland DeSormo Horace Seely Brown, Jr. Jeremiah Plunkett Edwards Harlan Ford Calkins David Edward Hunn Gardner Aloysius Callanen, Jr. Zebulun Lash Macmillan Paul Vautrin Combs Robert Putnam Carpenter 1fVilliam Henry Denne, Jr Robert Hunt Empsall Alan Kyso Ohashi DeLand Carmer David Page Fairchild lblarion Noble Hates Tiffany Brainerd Caswell Frederick Jessup lVIoore Robert CHTIDCI' Uhmann 1Villia Robert Nelson Ashmead m Ale James Henry McTighe 1930 George Frederick Shepherd Osgood Reuel Smith Edward Livingston Stevens, ,lr Frederick Porter Tucker 1931 Montgomery' Cayley Smith, Jr. James Fletcher Wardrvell 1932 Thomas Piernnet Pierce, Ir. Arden Lionel Skinner Carl Benton Smith, Jr. John Francis VanDeventer Albert Kirk White xander VVoodcock E931 I-1 N9 -P L.: ALPHA PHI OF CHI PSI r. .'f.i ,-- rv . rl . ,I Y,..r..v I 'rt 'pc V-I . . 1.3 ,Ili .v M 4 it rl, L. , Chi Pri Founded at Union, 184-1 Twenty-four Alphas ALPHA PHI 1 Established, 18-I-5 E Frrltres in Fdffillfldlf' Joseph Darling lbbotsong,,ALlVL Willard Bostwick M31'Sl1, A.lVI 1Fratrqes in' e Harry John Douglas Allen 'Henry Wilford Harding Robert Owen Sinclair Conway Alonzo Frost, M.D. Fratres in Ulzizfersitrzte 1929 Lloyd Vincent Almirall Joseph Selwyn lbbotson Richard Aaron Best Henry Rutgers Ford Fred Bittinger Hartman George DulVIont Hixson VVilliam Armistead Jarrett Lucas Boeve, Jr. Alfred Severin Bourne Francis Jerome Crowley John Sherman Dixon Charles Scott Estabrook, J Harold Graham Hubbel, J Frank Berkeley Jamieson 1. Thomas Leighton lVIcCready, John Shaw Rearick 1930 A Addison Sargent Lathrop John Harry Niemeyer Harvey Julian Sarles Charles Holman Westerberg Frank Curtis VVilliams . 1931 Reginald DeVVitt Gaskill Alfred Van Wagenen Hancock Robert Clermonte Tennant 1932 Charles Selock Payne John Hobart Jay Payne r. John Wallace Sanford Alfred Holbrook Smith E951 J P E963 'HAIWILTON CHAPTER OF DELTA UPSILON L' I I i I ,. ,, .1 L i L - in ' ' . ' ' i 5119 Q 1 , ' .' . i L-1 i ir 7-5 i. 'ipx ,- , ' Q3 , 2 ,..l,t,, ' .2-gi n.. W f A ' '.f,1l:..- , Ve' Tc-,-,., V -I ,, r 1,1 I3 I: ' wi V-12121-2515 - -- f - 4 A' i1.,' ': '-Q inf , .1-gn -M A, ' We - J L L..3-fiisfist elm Qlzvzlon Founded at-Williams, 1834 Fifty-two Chapters' HAMILTON CHAPTER Established 1847.1 4 i Fmtrex in yfrzculffzri' William Harder Squires, Ph.D. VVilliam Pierce Shepard, Ph.D. Earl Orlo Butcher, Ph.DL Cassilis XVild Curtis Fratres in U niifersifgte 1 4 ' 1929 E 9 V Stuart Baker, Jr. Lester Cole Huested Frederick Daniel Eddy Allen Roys Ostrander Daniel Green Harry Babcock YVi1liams 1930 Frederick Spiers Ellison Harris Hillman Palmer Allen Stuart Graham Thure Walter Persson James Frederick Lawton Stedman Davis Tuthill Robert Lindsley Webster 1931 Jackson Milton Batchelor john Turner Moore, Jr. Benjamin Buchbinder, Jr. William Eugene Mosher, Jr. Henry Halsey Fordham Robert Winship Osgood William Frederick Ross 1932 . Paul Richard Abbott, Jr. VV'illiam Raymond Broughton John Bowman Bartram Alvan Bayard Christopher Denman Douglass Hasbrouck Batten Alfred Lester Fauver VVilliam John Blake, Jr. Frederick Close Fox E971 lil YD O0 L.l TAU OF DELTA KAPPA EPSILON l 'i .,., A.-1 elm rapper Eprifon Founded at Yale, 1856 Forty-five Chapters TAU CHAPTER Established at Hamilton, 1856 lfrrzfer in lfaezzltrzte Calvin Leslie Lewis, A.M. l'lratre.r in Urbe ' Robert U. Hayes, '05 Robert G. A. Burns, '10 O. Gregory Burns, '14 F. Stanley Griffin, '18 Francis Burns, '22 .l'l7Y1f7'l?S in Unizverritafe A 1929 Philip Roades Adams Richard Annesley Atkins Lloyd Paul Brenner Hin Cheung Chan Alaric Rosencrantz Bailey Paterson Bond Theodore Stallknecht Corwin John Robert Normile Nelson Gorham Russell Russell Roberts Sherman 1930 VVilliam DeLamater lliangan Colmar French Nichols Henry Harman Hendricks Harwood Robert VVilliam Parks Robert Jerome Prentiss John Myron Adams, Jr. George Britten George Bradford Cooke John Frederick Corwin Burke Wills Drummond Douw Henry Fonda, Jr. 1931 James Wood Hutchinson Jefferson Frederick lVIeagher LaRue Gordon Morris Joseph George Normile Albert Carroll Redmond John Lowell Richards Dwight Smith Enos Staples Benedict Robert Daniel Burnett XVinthrop Sears Crowell Donald lllonro Cunningham Jerome Bonaparte Fisher, Jr. John VVheeler Lester 1932 Henry Thorvald Maijgren John Henry lVIangan, Jr. Richard Branch Pippitt Wzllter Herbert Pritchard Herbert Harrison Ross Richard Marsden Tuthill 991 A I'-1 0-1 O O L-I CHARGE OF THETA DELTA. CHI .til . ,l 'rx I . ',.' h,:-ly ,jf .jlly-'MA R I It V5 I iwr ..i:..l.x.l I -, f'.- hem elm hz Founded at Union College 1847 Thirty Charges PSI CHARGE - 'w', fllstalilished at Hamilton 13685 fi lfrrltres fn Faculmte- 1 Frederick Carlos Ferry, A,lVl., Ph.D1Q LL.D. George Elias Wisewell,A.lVl., ' Fraircs in Uuirversiikzte ' ' 1929 V Everett Wfard Bishop, Jr. Jasper Newell Hand VVilliam Johnston, Jr. Waxlter Elliott Knox Chamberlain Ferry . Alden. Chester illflerrick Harry Peck VVeston Q John lVlcLoughlin Birch Paul Ellsworth Brown Phillips Brooks Carlisle Edward Sackett Dixon John Frederick Folley 1930 Howard Fenley Hart James Campbell Maclntyre Charles Spencer Phillips Richard Irwin Savage Latimer Bayard Senior I Frank Gerald Vibberts, Jr. Tilson Sherman Denham Gordon Fischer 1931 Herbert Allan Knox, Jr. Hamilton Slade Palmer John Putnam Guyton VVinford Lester Polhemus, J Henry Bentley Hobart, 3d Henry VVilcox Scott lVIathewson Delacroix Stevens 1932 Hallock Cowles Campbell Robert Slosson Clarke Frank Albert Disney Arthur Oswald Harvey Harold Zell Houston Robert George Phelps Harry William Porter Edward VVatson Prescott Edgar Edington Stewart, Jr. Newton Edgar White 51011 l'l 1-4 G N l-I EMERSON LITERARY SOCIETY ,A -' . .-K. ' .r 'L ' ' - l' - J-1. , 1 ,A 1, K, - freeway. .. 1 any Q' f 3 Ml xg- llil . fy' avi'-1 lu 4.14. 5 A WWA gin 1 K A E dhgmlxff rx -94515, r- 1- sn- w Q Air rf - A L - M Xe A rfiamsgla- -1 to ,A .. 1 fha lv: ff,f. r,f ,r:isH:Qsig'-,et -'S-f V. , '- ks--2 'Lai' -L -C. v-A4 ' q irir' '-TT '- f A 'F' sl-' 'j . V -i K.4?5!ZQ Y 1. -' - 1 rig: ,A ' .V beer.. r, JI,-Q ., ,ll , g i 5 no li' 3112, -Q ,iv Y .3-J,.fQj :sg - A , ,----Z, '- ,gf 'g'.'E' T gf, - ., ,. f -. A it 2 1-'H 5.-5 1 H 1 r f fix 2 f '- fe 1 1154351 f .191 'i-ff trays rr if r- . ' ' Aa jg, ', - 441 -. '..,,:,1,'A:- . .Qlr..,4,4-QQ ' ,. ,f ' fT'?q - - A A ' . Q mmm Literary Soeiezjf Established, 1878 Local at Hamilton Fmires in .Fncultate Edward Fitch, Ph.D. Charles Douglas Chretien, A.M. Peter Bentley Daymont, Jr. Fratfes ,Urbe Richard D. Casey, '13 Aurelian Post, '91 Clarence Bede Post, '04 Frzztres in Urzirrgrxitrzfe 192911 1 George Clark, Jr. Francis Edward Mineka Robert Douglas Gage Donald Godfrey MacKenzie Paul 'Martin Schneider 1930 lklaynard Crosby Agens Vernon Arthur Ives Frederick Thomas Corby Louis Clark Jones Raymond Havelock Dutcher Anthony Lawrence McDonald Joseph lirost Fanning William Charles Morris Charles Osborn Frazee . Henry Allen Rodgers Robert Allison Hill lvalter Bonney Sherman Emery Douglas Webster, Jr. 1931 Kenneth Slater Carberry Lewis Mead lVIarvin Robert 1fVoodside Cruser 'W'illis lVIacNair Rayton Theodore Clauswitz Day ' John Archibald Rodger Howard Aubrey Lawrence Andrus Bassett Smith 1932 Raymond Richard Borst Kelland Frederick Gross Herbert Edward Corby lVilliam Anthony lVIonacelli Fenton Edward Crutchley llflerle Charles Schoepflin Edward Valentine Gross VVilliam John Sloane, Jr. riosj J H01 GAMMA ETA ZETA OF LAMBDA CHI ALPHA fl .,, Q , A A . J I r r 'hh' X-Liz.. L t an ,-,j ', .Mi .I g F gif, 1 4 Y , . .ef-Lf ,Z ,Gzmabdzz AQZMJ Founded nr Boston University, 1909 Seventy-six Zetas GAMMA Founded at Hamilton, l92-l Fl'i1ter u Univ qfritate Milledge L. B.jLitt7, A.M., Ph.D. 'fwEhraiEWbe A Elbert B'. Maftoon' i Q 11'rfltrre.v in Hllhifzfersitgtei 1929' r Howard Purington Burt ' l Harold Nelson Kellam Charles Corydon Chamberlain Norman Christopher Oelheim Richard Alvin Reinecke 1930 Albert Laney Bonner Louis Neville Hayes Louis Clifford Bush Lincoln Holroyd, Jr. James Harvey Campbell George Henri Kitendaugh, Jr Lawrence Stamper Darken Harry Lambert Walts 1931 Willis LaVcrne Baldwin Franklin Joseph Deaner Graeme Campbell Bannerman Leslie Everett Eggleston Arthur Seymour Bates Jay Graham Frisbee YVilliam Francis Coxon, Jr. Curtis Rosebrook Pardee 1932 Beauchamp Coleman Clark john Overton Ready, Jr. John Vincent Creagh Frank Murney Smith, Ir. Allen Robert Henderson Frank Edward Will frosj 111 P-A Q ON L..1 LAMBDA XI SIGMA ,el I l Lv M 1 '-'V r-1 I I Ely A K . ,Qzmbdaz Xi Sigma Established, 1923 Local at Hamilton Pll'IlffP5 in UlliT'L'fJ'if!lil' 1929 William Tod Campbell, Jr. Edwin Church Douglas August Reynolds Crane Ingvald Arthur Solberg Leonard James Crane Herman Llewellyn Vaughan Hiram Gruber VVoolf 1930 Wardell Kinnaird Ayrault Marsden VanWie Dillenbeck Nlerwin Baylis Barrett Irving Harlow' Fanning llflilton Peterson Kinsey 1931 Thomas Robert Crane Robert Tyler Morrison Lloyd Smith Jayne Mortimer Herbert Norton 1932 Eugene Elliott Avery VVilson Lathrop Coward Robert Charles Carpenter Samuel James Holt Merrill Kline lfvilson f107J CHI BETA SIGMA 0 ' A 5 'lm 1.4 , aria' , .- 1 ,.i i H -.. -. 11, i,v-..., -w,,,.A , Chi Bam Szgnm Established, 1923 Local at Hamilton lffllffl' in Urbe Ervin Fletcher Frntres in U11 ilversitate 1929 William Jeremiah Foley William Cullen Stevens Frederick John Parker, Jr. Edgar Banker Vermilya Roy Smith Penner Emerson Edward Wliite 1930 Williain Henry Aderhold, Jr. Clarence Bruce Fraser lVIilton Amsler Carvalho John Suter Knutty Joseph John Ferlo Philip Eward Tracy VVilliam David Williams 1931 VVilmer Edgar Bresee Edmund Taylor Rumble John Edward Rienzo 1932 Odin Fredman john Alfred Albert Clifford Ager Lewis George Emmet Decker Herbert Irving Chase Harry Gordon Kruegar Claude Nathaniel Tuthill L 109 J 111 r- b-A O 11K THE DECAGON SOCIETY B The 'jD6C.6Zg07fZ Sociezjf Founded, 1928 Local at Hamilton 1'll'Ilfff'.1' in lfavzzltrzte NVilliam Harder Squires, Ph.D. Clifford hdortimer Crist Ifraires in U1iit'e1'.vifr1le Pano Spero Chacona Frederick Earl Clise A lfrwin NVilIiam Hollandt Frederick Prevost Holmes John Scott Kerr VVilliam J. Krum, Jr. David Harold Beetle Franklin Barker Cropsey Frederic Neil Davis 'l'homas Christman Grubb Samuel Anthon Ives . 1929 1930 Robert Mclidam Lake Robert Campbell MacPhail YVillard Elvil Owens Nicholas Donald Peters lVilliam Nlarchant Rozell ,Harold Spoor VanSchaack hfleletios Kavakos -Donald Southworth lVIcNeil Thomas Francis lVIoore, Jr. Francis Oscar Schue Robert Gilchrist Sewell I Grant Swancott Young 1931, Henri Lewis Bailey Edwin Gregory Kolsch Robert Henry Kerr Robert lVIusial Jerrold Rowland 1932 Homer Curtiss Crane john joseph Kane Jack John Danella Stanley Benedict Palewski Sidney Simon Glazer Andrew Elwyn Skinner Theodore Henry Harwood james Stewart Sweely john Joseph Walsh A flllfl PROF. I hi Bam Kappa Founded al William and Mary Collrgf 1776 EIASILON CHAPTER OF NEW YORK ESTABLISHED AT I'IAMII.'l'0N COLLEGE 1870 OFFICERS 1928-29 President DONALD BLYTHE DURHAM I'ic'a-Presideni CLEVELAND KING CHASE Secretary VVILLARD BOSTWICK MARSH Treasurer SAMUEL J. SAUNDERS M1lI'Jhll1 CLIFFORD MORTILIER CRIST Frntrex in Urbz' MILLEDGE L. BONHAM, JR. PROF. HORACE S. BROWVN PRUF. EARL O. BUTGHER WILLIAM M. CARRUTH CLEVELAND K. CHASE PROF. PROPHJOBISPH D. IIIIIOTSON PROI-'. CALVIN L. LEWIS WILLARD B. MARSH PROE. PROF. ALIIRO D. MORRILL PROF. FRANCIS L. PATTON AURELIAN POST PROF. FRANK H. RISTINE EDWARD W. ROOT PROF. PROF. C. DOUGLAS CHRETIEN CLIFFORD M. CRIST CASSIUS VV. CURTIS PROF. NELSON C. DALE PROFHJOHN DAY PETER B. DAYMONT FREDERICK M. DAVENPORT HON. PROE. DONALD B. DURHAM PAUL A. FANCHER EDVVARD FITCH FREDERICK C. FERRY PROF. PROI-'. PRES. HENRY L. HEYL .Members Elected From I FREDERICK ARMSTRONG BALLARD CHARLES KEVORK BOGOSHIAN FREDERICK DAN HUNTINGTON GILBERT PIENRY LIVINGSTON PIEYL JOSEPH HENRY JENKINS, JR. JULIUS ANSON KUCK, 3RD ' HON. ELIHU ROOT CHARLES B. ROGERS PKOF. ROBERT B. RUDD ARTHUR P. SAUNDERS PROP. PROP. SAMUEL J. SAUNDERS PROF. VVILLIAM P. SHEIIARD PROE. WII.LIAM H. SQUIRES RALPH C. SUPER PROP. PROP. FRANK H. WOOD hz' Clan of 1928 VITO SEIIASTIAN LEE REGINALD VVOODXVORTH LYON LELAND BERNARD NORTON RAYMOND HENRY OSTRANDER SEYMOUR MIXITLAND PITCHER ARCHIEAI.D KEND:XI.l.. ROBERTS STEPHEN LEON VV.-XSZKIEWICZ Ilflembers Elecfcd From Ihr Class of1929 LLOYD VINCENT ALMIRALL PAUL V.-XUTRIN COMES XVALTER ELLIOTT KNOX 51121 , J - ly! a nd - ' 7 E A x A X I ,gg .. ,rbi X XX K NJ ,A K I -71 :J 3 ATHLETICS H111 Winters Baker Dutcher Carson Lathrop Frazee Walker Ford Clark DeSormo Cutter Crane Puglisi l 1 Q lm., . r..-. 1. A. . 'C . in r. ' ni w 'I w l ull-'-ra il MANAGER OSTRANDER MANAGER-ELECT FRASER 1928 F. Palmer Cutter Philip G. Corhy . Tmae . . . Cllfifllill . . . fllamlger . 1929 llvlaitland C. DeSormo . Allen R. Qstrander Arthur R. VVinters . . Conch LETTER MEN Aderhold Crane Frazee Baker Cutter Lathrop Carson DeSormo Puglisi Clark Dutcher Walker Ford RECORD OF MEETS, 1923 May 5 R. P. l. at Troy .... R. P. I. 79Mg Hamilton SIM lVIay 19 Rochester at Clinton .... Rochester 475 Hamilton 84 lVIay 26 Conference lVIect of the New Yorl: State Intercollegiate Athletic Association SCORE: Alfred 71 : St. Lawrence 56M Hamilton 52H,g Rochester 2826 fnsj he mee Samoa---1928 Improvement is the key-word which sums up the 1928 track season. Despite a short season of only three meets, despite the loss of a brilliant field-event athlete, despite the lack of material from preced- ing years, Coach Winte1's placed a team on the held which was an improvement over teams of former years and which always performed creditably if not victor- iously. ln some respects, however, the latter adverb applies, since the team broke even in two dual meets, dropping the first to R. P. I. and winning the second by a decisive score at the expense of Roches- ter. It was barely nosed out of second place in the Conference Meet by a strong St. Lawrence field team. Brilliant individual work was the order of the day, with Cutter and Ford contend- ing with almost equal success for scoring honors. Their efforts were brilliantly seconded by DeSormo who broke his own record in the javelin throw, 179' 9M , and by a relay team which easily defeated Rochester, tied R. P. I., and broke the conference record. In the opener against R. P. I. at Troy, the Hill tracksters bettered their 1927 appearance by more than 20 points. Due largely to the brilliant efforts of Cutter and Ford the Buff and Blue enjoyed a 38-34 lead in the track events. Their opponents, however, rallied in the field events and captured all save the javelin which was annexed by DeSormo with a record-breaking throw. The mile relay, probably the most spectacular event of the entire season, ended in a draw. Continuing their season at home on May l9 the Hamiltonians secured ample revenge for an eight point defeat in 1927 by nearly doubling the score on a bewil- dered Rochester team that found itself out-pointed in nearly every event. The Hamilton tracksters, again led by Ford with 15 points and Cutter with l4-, piled up ten firsts, eight seconds, one tie for sec- ond, and eight thirds. The victory on the track was so decisive that save for ten points gained on firsts in the 880 and mile the visitors were unable to score more than 13 tallies. ln the New York State Intercollegiate Athletic Association meet, Hamilton, while far superior to Rochester, was un- able to compete with Alfred in the dis- tance events or with St. Lawrence in the held tournays. Ford tied the conference record of 10 flat in the century, captured the 220 and took second in the low hur- dles. Cutter, his usual high-point col- league, annexed both hurdles, third in the broad jump and a tie for fourth in the high jump. Frazee, Baker, Aderhold and Walker pooled their efforts to give Hamilton the Conference record in the relay, and Puglisi, with a surprising re- versal of form added a first place in the broad jump. Desormo, who had been conceded the javelin throw, failed on ac- count of a wrenched arm. The showing of the team as a whole was encouraging and augurs well for next year, especially since few seniors participated. Mainy of the athletes showed considerable improve- ment from last year, particularly Captain Cutter who in winning the high hurdles at the Conference lVIeet set a new record of 16 seconds Hat. 51161 , . i'i.,:l 7 wt. l ff, , -aw.-. .,..,,1 MANAGER FOLEY meh!! 1928 Wfilliam B. Church . . . Captain Arthur F. Pierson . . . Mzzzizzger April May M ay May May May llflay May Miljf May 21 2 5 8 12 15 19 25 26 27 Mox A. XVeber LETTER MEN Calkins Hassard Campbell Knox Chatfield Lawton Church MA NAGER-ELECT GRAHAM RECORD OF GAMES, 1928 R. P. I. at Clinton . Colgate at Hamilton Rochester at Rochester . St. Lawrence at Clinton . Rochester at Clinton . Syracuse at Syracuse . Amherst at Clinton . N. Y. S. Teachers at Albany Trinity at Hartford . N. Y. S. Teachers at Clinton f117fI 1929 Walter E. Knox . XVilliam Foley Coach Morris Pierce Warren Worboys HAMILTON OPPONENTS . 7 4- . 5 20 4 13 2 8 4 3 1 9 . CRain, No Gamej 6 4- . CRain, No Gamej . CRain, No Gamej 5 Ei H8111 4, f X Ns Y-4 Lx 5 , gv ,-1pL4,, - V .,,.-Q . 'l . -av' - F I , .Qu . A j A Il X Jr L Q A f 51 's N, X N-.,. l- -if Pierson Morris Lawton Weber Campbell Chatfield Calking Knox Worboys Pierce Church War1'en Hassard 'i I iff The mean!! Smrorz---1928 Rain toyed with the baseball team in 1928. Not satisfied with preventing out- door practice until late April, it returned to haunt the team in the latter part of May, preventing it from atoning for earlier mistakes. As a result the Buff and lilue emerged victorious on only three occasions out of seven. Hypothetical vic- tories over Trinity and the State Teach- ers and possibly over Amherst were pre- vented by bad weather. The most that the team could boast about was a home season of two victories against one defeat and a thrilling -l-3 comeback at the ex- pense of Rochester on l-louse Party week- end. The three victories were annexed at the expense of R. P. I., Rochester, and New York State Teachers. The encoun- ter with the lingineers which opened the season on the home field was nipvand-tuck until a sixth inning rally gave the home team a three run lead. Calkins, pitching one of his first major contests for the Buff and Blue, got into a tight place in the ninth with one out and the bases filled. He refused to blow up, however, and sent the next two men to the bench on three strikes. The Rochester game at Clinton which came closely on the heels of a disastrous Hamilton defeat at Rochester was quite a different story. Expert pitching by lVIorris who struck out 11 and a timely homer by Xvorboys in the fifth gave Ham- ilton a -l-3 lead and its House Party f119J guests some good diamond entertainment. The final Hamilton victory, which in the light of the subsequent cancellation of two other contests, proved to be the final ap- pearance of the team, was against the New York State Teachers at Albany. Both teams bagged eight hits and five errors, but Hamilton, with a more con- centrated attack, gained a fairly easy victory over the Teachers' strongest team in years. The most decisive and disappointing of the defeats was received on Whitnall Field before a large number of rooters for both institutions. Over-confident be- cause of a 2-1 victory over the Maroon in 1927, the Hill forces received a substan- tial set-back, 20-5, and a big surprise, after nine innings of errors, muffs, and misplays to which the home team had been a contributor as well as the visitors. The Colgate aggregation, however, was obviously more powerful than its prede- cessor of a year ago and scored in nearly every inning. At Rochester the following week the up-Staters knicked Calkins for 17 safe blows and took advantage of nine Ham- ilton errors to gain a decisive win, 13--f-. A few days later at Clinton, St. Lawrence took advantage of a tempting combina- tion of fielding errors and mediocre pitch- ing to hand the Buff and Blue its third straight defeat, 8-2. It remained for Syr- acuse to add a final blow, which it did on lVIay 15 to the tune of 9-1. Edwards VVarfield Fitzgerald Moore Best Sarles Reed Ballard he 67Q7fZf5 Seaton---19 8 Buff and Blue racquetteers met with unexpected success in 1928. Beaten only by Union they emerged victorious from one-sided contests with their remaining opponents, Alfred, the New York State Teachers, College, and St. Lawrence. The team was off to a good start in the first three engagements, piling up 17 matches to its opponents' one. In the opening encounter, Herney, an extremely clever New York State Teachers, player, defeated Ballard in the singles for the only match that the visitors were able to capture. The second contest against Al- fred was even more decisive with Ham- ilton winning 6-O and only one match, a doubles affair, going the full three' sets. The season continued with an Eastern trip to Albany and Schenectady which from the Hamilton standpoint ended in a lfl20l draw. Dropping only two sets, the Ham- iltonians smashed their way through to a 6-0 victory at the Capital City only to have the tables turned on them the fol- lowing afternoon by a speedy team of Garnet representatives. Ballard and Best in the doubles put up the stiffest opposi- tion at Schenectady by holding their oppo- nents to a 3-6, 7-5, 7-5 score. With the Springfield contest at Clin- ton cancelled on account of wet courts, Union and St. Lawrence remained as the only two opponents . Playing on its home court the Hamilton team bettered its pre- vious record against the Garnet by cap- turing a lone match from its speedy op- ponents. A few days later the season closed with Hamilton earning its third perfect day of the season, this time at the expense of St. Lawrence. 1 MANAGER EDVVARDS MANAGER-ELECT OHASHI Tennis 1928 1929 Robert L. Reed . . Captain . Harvey Sarles Dudley L. Moore . . Mazinger . . Jeremiah P. Edwards LETTER MEN Ballard Fitzgerald H Reed Best Sarles Warfield May May May May May May May 9 ll 16 17 19 26 28 RECORD OF MATCHES, 1928 N. Y. S. Teachers at Clinton Alfred at Clinton . . N. Y. S. Teachers at Albany Union at Schenectady . Springfield at Clinton . Union at Clinton . . St. Lawrence at Clinton . 51211 HAZN1ILTON OPPONENTS 5 1 6 O 6 O ' 0 6 CRain, cancelledj 1 I 5 6 0 24 12 lzzli Sherman Carpenter Carson Reinecke Bush Jarrett Adams Schneider Alien VVilson 'Westerberg Rodger Winters Folley Crawley Conger Chatfield Morris Campbell Jenks 1 I -M. 1, Ill! ,ll b. MANAGER ADAMS Football 1928 Sherwood C. Chatlicld . . . Captain Philip 'I'. Adams . . . Illnnagzfr Arthur R. VVinters . LETTER IVIEN Allen Conger Bush Crowley Campbell Folley Carpenter Jarrett Carson Jenks Chatfield lVIorris, L. G. Sept Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct. Nov. Nov Nov Nlorris, W. C. MANAGER-ELECT SMELZER 1929 . Robert P. Carpenter . Crosby T. Smelzer, Jr. RECORD OF GAMES, 1928 Alfred University at Clinton Clarkson Tech. at Potsdam Rochester at Rochester . Amherst at Amherst . Trinity at Clinton . 1VIicldlebury at 1VIicldlebury Haverford at Clinton . Union at Schenectady . 51231 Coach Reinecke Rodger Schneider Sherman VVesterberg Wilson HAMILTON OPPONENTS . 1+ 0 14 0 13 13 0 19 -16 0 0 8 13 O 8 6 108 46 be Football! Serum---19 8 ln a final drive which gave Hamilton its first victory over Union on Alexander Field in twenty-three years, the 1928 football team brought to a close the best gridiron season for the Buff and Blue in more than a decade. Piling up 108 points to their opponents' 4-6, and earning five victories and one tie out of eight starts, the members of the 1928 squad displayed a brilliant brand of football which com- manded the support of the entire student body from the first whistle until the last. More than ever before in recent years it seemed that Hamilton was actually send- ing a team on the field and not eleven men. Haverford, with a seasonls record that boasted of decisive victories over such teams as Amherst and Johns Hopkins, found its best eleven in years powerless before the Buff and Blue. For the first time in the five year history of gridiron relations between the two institutions the Friends bowed in submission to a Hamil- ton eleven and after playing defensively for all four periods accepted the one-sided score of 13-0. Rochester with a plunging backfield that tore through nearly every opposing line for huge scores and gave that college its first victory over Hobart in several seasons, left Steuben Field with a 13-13 tie, the result of its best efforts. Hamil- ton's dazzling aerial tactics completely matched the visitor's plunging attack. Alfred and Clarkson bowed by the common score of 14-O. Trinity, the usual victim of the Buff and Blue by three touchdowns, found itself no match for the 1928 team and left Hill followers and their House Party guests exulting over a -16-O victory. ln that one game Hamilton had piled up enough points to match the combined scores of all its oppo- nents. Even the second team which had been sent in en masse had good reason to exeult. The Hamilton understudies had piled up two touchdowns on their oppo- nent, whereas, as later developments showed, the Amherst second team had found itself unable to hold back its Hart- ford rival. Although clearly outplaying its oppo- nents and running up twice as many first downs, the Hamilton team lost a disheart- ening game to Amherst, 19-0. Luck never once smiled on the Buff and Blue, despite the fact that on two occasions it had ad- vanced the ball to within the five-yard zone. lVIeanwhilc two costly fumbles and a last minute frantic effort at passing en- abled the Purple to make 19-0 out of a game that might otherwise have ended a scoreless tie, or even a Hamilton vic- tory. Only at Nliddlebury were the Hamiltonians clearly outplayed. ln that game, with both Chatfield and Carpenter out with injuries for the greater part of the contest, and on a Wet field, far dif- ferent from its accustomed footing, the Hamilton team concentrated on defen- sive tactics only to lose 8-0. 1fVith the 1927 situation completely reversed, the Hamilton team entered the Union' game a distinct favorite. Over- conndence and a traditional jinx alone remained to he conquered. However, as is frequently the case under such condi- tions, the weaker team rallied to play its best ball of the season. This was not enough. Despite the keenness of the en- gagement, the Hamiltonians outplayed their opponents in all but the third period and left the field with a well-deserved 8-6 victory. IIZ4-I Edwards Dutcher Montgomery Miller VVebster Hartman OhaQh1 Kinsey Lawton Ingalls Chan Kavakos Normile Ferry Soccer 1928 Hin Cheung Chan . . . Captain . . limes F Lawton Jeremiah P. Edwards . . . Mazzngez- . . . Allen K Ohabhl Jean M. Gelas . . .Conch LETTER MEN Chan Ingalls llliller Dutcher Kavalcos Montgomery Ferry Kinsey Normile Hartman Lawton Webster - RECORD OF GANIES, l928 HABIILTOIN O1 PONIIINTS Oct. 6 Cornell at Ithaca ...... -l Oct. 4l3 Clarks Mills at Clinton . 2 Oct. 20 lVilliams at Willizimstox-x'n 1 Oct. 27 R. P. I. at Clinton . -lf Nov. 3 Cortland Normal at Clinton . 0 Nov. 10 Syracuse at Clinton . 0 ll Ij125J The Sorter 56415011---1928 A summary of the 1928 soccer season would lead one to believe that the soccer team had a touch of over-confidence as a result of the first game which remained with it until the season's end. However that may be, the fact is that the soccer team in an early-season flash of brilliancy downed Cornell at Ithaca -l-3 in the initial encounter. ln a game which was nip-and-tuck from start to finish the Hamiltonians seemed to hold a slight edge over their red-clad opponents. Prospects of a highly successful soccer season were soon dimmed, for only once during the remainder of the season did the Buff and Blue display winning form. That was in the R. P. l. encounter, when the team emerged a victor by a -l-l score. Inasmuch as R. P. l. was a former rival in soccer which had not been encountered since l926 the victory was especially wel- come. i In the other encounters Hamilton bowed to Clarks Mills, Williams, Cort- land Normal, and Syracuse. The latter defeat,which ended the season, was partic- ularly unexpected since the Cornell team had previously buried the Orange beneath an avalanche of scores. Both that game. and the one with Cortland Normal which preceded it, were fairly close, since on both occasions the score was 2-U. Clarks Mills sent a team of highly-experienced players which were considerably above the class of the Hamiltonians, defeating them 5-2. The lfVilliams game which ended 6-1 was even more decisive. ' CHEER LEADERS ' Carlisle VVeston VViIliams Chacona 51263 fi I ,- 1 gn ,li , 1 ri gif, ,. T: I ', I if-f-'I tw .- -'lift' We 1- ,-1,1 ,, V, ,.,.t,.. 1,--rn, , 4 , .-if.. -: --E -.--B., 3, 1,144E-,,,-, ,NY . .- Y- ' Winters Fraser Isaac Clark Crane i Douglas XVhite 1928 1929 August R. Crane . . . Captain . Allen R. Ostrander . . . zlflmmgm' . Clarence B. Fraser Arthur R. I'Vinters . . Coach LETTER MEN Clark Douglas Isaac Crane VVhite RECORD OF IVIEETS, 1928 HAM11.'roN OPPONENTS Oct. I3 St. Stephens at Clinton ..... 22 15 Oct. 20 Willizixlls at Clinton . . 38 17 Oct. 27 Hohart at Clinton ..... 2-l 31 Nov 3 Rochester at Rochester ..... 28 27 Nov. 9 New York State Intercollegiate Athletic Association Score: Alfred, 19g Hamilton, 59g Hobart, 625 Rochester, 70. 51273 he Crm Country ewan---19 8 The 1928 cross country team practical- ly summed up its own season this year when it captured second place in the New York State Intercollegiate Athletic Asso- ciation meet. The season opened with St. Stephens, the result of a last minute arrangement made when the New York State Teach- ers, College at Albany cancelled its en- gagement. The scarlet-clad runners from the Hudson, entirely new opponents in that sport, had little trouble in winning a 15-21 victory. Crane led the Hamilton runners, capturing second place. The Williams meet which followed favored the New Englanders by a 17-38 score. A fourth place by Captain Crane prevented the visitors from having a per- fect day. On the week following the Buff and Blue had its first taste of victory at the expense of its usual victim, Hobart. The meet which ended 241--31 provided a thrilling finish with a Hobart runner nosing out the Hamilton captain for first place by a scant foot. Douglas, White, Clark, and Isaac tied for fourth place to insure a victory. Un the Saturday before the Conference Meet in which they were fated to beat Rochester by 11 points, the Hamiltonians bowed to that institution, 27-28. Crane and Clark captured third and fourth place respectively, after running a close race with Kraii and Brown, two Rochester harriers of exceptional ability. In the final meet of the year, the Con- ference engagement, the 1928 team made good on a late-season attempt to better the 1927 record, which up to that time it had equalled. 1fVhereas the harriers of a year ago can claim Hobart as their lone victim, the runners of 1928 can boast of under-pointing both Hobart and Roches- tC1'. 51221 -- V ' ' '- ' . , ,': - , - 1' 1 1 ' A -.lah-'-.-1 YF. ffl-L11 'g .'.i11'-1'-'ai 1' l L, 1' if -1-3.4 1, IGI- ' 'if , MANAGER HUNN MANAGER-ELECT IVES 006631 1928-29 1929-30 Paul M. Schneider . . . Captain . . No C'1pt'1m David Hunn .... lllanayer . . VernonA Ives Albert I. Prettyman . . Coach LETTER MEN Baker Harmon Redmond Brown Ingalls Smith Corwin Montgomery Stevens Cutter Vibberts RECORD OF GAMES, 1928-29 HAINTILTON OPPONENYTS Dec. 15 Middlebury .... Cancelled Dec. 19 Nichols Club CBul:faloj . . 2 Jan. 7 Victoria . . . 0 Jan. 1-l Mzlsszicliusetts Aggies . 3 jan. 21 St. Stephens . 2 Jan. 28 Union . . . -l Feb. -l- St. Lawrence . . 2 Feb. 11 Nichols Club fClintonj . 0 Feb. 18 Amherst . . . 1 Feb. 25 R. P. I .... 7 Mar. 3 Colgate O 21 9'fTezun will elect honorary captain at conclusion of 1929-30 season. 51291 lost! Ives Corwin Smirh Harrnon Vibberts Stevens Hunn Redmond Baker Ingalls Schnelder Brown Montgomery Cutter tfdfinf be oreey Seaman---1928-29 The Hamilton hockey record for 1928- 29 was unimpressive. Save fora brilliant bit of stickhandling to defeat an unusual- ly clever Union team -l-2 in a second overtime period, the Buff and Blue skaters failed to come up to the standard of for- mer years. A defeat by Colgate in the final game of the season, l-0, added a ben- ediction which was a death knell to those who still hoped for better things. Union, llflassachusetts Aggies, St. Step- hens, and R. P. I., were the only colleges defeated by the Buff and Blue. The Aggies provided their usual game, with Hamilton enjoying its customary one point margin of superiority. St. Stephens failed to put up much opposition, but soft ice prevented the I-lamiltonians from ac- counting for more than two scores, both made early in the first period. R. P. I., after giving the Hill skaters a severe scare by tallying the first point, gave way rapid- ly in the succeeding periods. The final score favored I'lamilton 7-l, the game being the only exhibition comparable to the old-time field days. The defeats, while generally close, were slightly more numerous. Hamilton bowed twice to the Nichols Club and once each to Victoria, Amherst. Colgate, and St. Lawrence. The Nichols Club contest at Buffalo, which, with the Nliddlebury engagement cancelled, opened the season under rather favorable auspices, was a surprisingly close defeat. Clever lift shots by Brown had a telling effect on the Buffalo goaltender, such that the winners emerged from a tie score only a few min- utes before the end. The Victoria game 51511 which ended 5-0 was more disappointing -especially so since the Canadian college bowed to Hamilton a year ago. The Buff and Blue was completely outplayed. Three straight victories intervened be- fore the third disaster, the Prom 'vVeek game with St. Lawrence. Hamilton was clearly off form, a thing for which it paid dearly with a 5-2 defeat. The second Nichols Club game which was dropped 3-0 failed to lift the team out of its leth- argy, although improvement over the pre- vious week's performance was noticeable. The chief Nemesis of the Buff and Blue was an-almost inpenetrable goaltender. The Amherst game was played under an unlucky star. Three tallies, two of them comparatively easy shots, gave the Lord jeffs a lead in the first period which a fighting Hamilton team failed to over- come. The best the Buff and Blue could do was a single tally poked in by Vibberts in the third period, although previous to that time the Hamiltonians generally held a slight edge on the visitors. The two feature games of the year were with Union and Colgate. Both required overtime periods. The Union game was nip-and-tuck for three full periods, with Hamilton earning the right to play off a tie by Brown's timely shot a few minutes before the scheduled end of the game. Brown and Smith both scored in the sec- ond overtime period to establish complete supremacy for the Buff and Blue. The Colgate game was one of many bad breaks for both teams, but especially for Ham- ilton which generally held a bit of an edge on its hlaroon-clad opponents. Ezsll Bremer Sherman Crowley Bond I. G. Normile Carpenter J. R. Normile Hiler Morris 1-. . ., ' iff' .. ,.-,vt -5 1 it o QL.-'--Gilt-F 'Ji l'- ll? .Q MANAGER BREMER NIANA GER-ELECT BON D azfkeibfzll 1928-29 1929-30 John R. Normile . . . Captain . . Robert P. Carpenter Lloyd P. Bremer . . . fllannger . . . Paterson Bond Nlox A. 1Veber . . Conch LETTER IVIEN Carpenter Hiler Normile, I. R. Crowley Mcmrris Sherman Normile, G. TEAIVI RECORD HAMILTON OI'PONENTS Dec. 7 Clarkson at Potsdam . . 35 17 Dec. 8 St. Lawrence at Canton . . 18 22 Dec. 12 Toronto at Clinton 26 36 Inn. 9 Alfred at Clinton . 33 29 Jan. 11 Buffalo at Clinton . 37 31 Jan. 16 Union at Schenectady . 18 20 Feb. 5 Clarkson nt Clinton 27 22 Feb. 12 Hobart at Clinton . 28 35 Feb. 16 Rochester at Clinton . 24 37 Feb. 21 Trinity at Hartford . . 23 33 Feb. 22 Clark University at Worcester . 19 25 Feb. 23 R. P. l. at Troy . . 28 29 316 336 I:13i3l he Bmfeefbazll Smroffz---1928-29 Improvement marked the 1928-29 bas- ketball season. Although winning only four victories out of 12 starts the Hamil- ton College basketball team ended its sea- son only 20 points behind the aggregate amassed by its opponents. Last year the court squad won a similar number of in- tercollegiate contests, but failed to reach its opponents' total score by a 7-1 point margin. lmprovement was noticeable in every phase of the game. The team-work was more effective, the individual guarding was more air-tight-in short the ability of the team to provide nearly every OPPO- nent with a keen contest was more marked this year than ever before in recent sea- sons. Of the eight defeats only one was by a margin of more than ten points, while two were neck-and-neck affairs with a single basket favoring the opponent. After an auspicious start at Potsdam early in December in which the Buff and Blue triumphed, 35-17, the team bowed on the next night to St. Lawrence, 22-18, in a foul-shooting contest. Toronto, the first home opponent, displayed some start- ling team-work to defeat the Hill players by ten points, a slump from which they recovered in the next game at the expense of Alfred. Only once in a home contest was the Buff and Blue aggregation at its best. On January 11, in one of the speediest court games seen here in years, Hamilton bat- tled stubbornly to nose out a powerful Buffalo quintet, 37-31. The score see- 51341 sawed until within ten minutes of the end when Hamilton slowly forged ahead. The 'Hill squad apparently preserved some of its form for the following road engagement at Schenectady, when despite a floor larger and more slippery than that to which it had been accustomed, it nearly accomplished the alleged impossibility of heating the Garnet on its own floor. The game ended 20-18 in favor of the home team, after Hamilton had led for the greater part of the game. Clarkson was again trimmed in the first post-examination game. Play was closer than had been anticipated and the Buff and Blue claimed victory by a small mar- gin. There ended the victories. ln the last live games on the schedule the quintet went down to defeat. The Hobart center went wild and nearly beat Hamilton single-handed in a contest that was supposed to be an even match. Rochester did the expected and won by a ten point margin although the game was a matter of doubt until well near the end. 111 ultitudinous fouls slowed up the contest such that there was scarcely any actual playing in the second half. In the final road trip the Hamiltonians found themselves lost on big lloorsg a thing which they did not become accus- tomed to until after consecutive defeats by Trinity and Clark University. ln the closing encounter at Troy of a three day trip, the Hill players for the first time during the season played with facility on a big floor. Their efforts fell short of victory by a single point. I . 1 1 I MANAGER BARNS Fencing MANAGER-ELECT DENNE 1929 1930 John H. Niemeyer . . . Captain . John H. NiemeyerCReelectedD Richard T. Barns . . . . flflannger . YVi1liam H. Denne, Jr. Jean NI. Gelas . . .Coach LETTER MEN Bailey Hancock Niemeyer Frnzee Hartman Sarles Jarrett RECORD OF MEETS, 1929 HAN'IILTON OPPONENTS Feb. 9 Buffalo Fencing Club at Clinton . 17 10 Feb. 16 Columbia at Clinton . . . -l 13 Feb. 23 Cornell and Yale at Ithaca fYale, 215 Cornell, 205 and Hamilton, 105 Marcli 2 Princeton at Clinton . . . 7 10 Marcli 9 University of Pennsylvania . . 11 6 Ma1'ch 16 Semi-finals at 1Vest Point: Army . . . 3 14 Cornell . . 6 11 N. Y. U. . 7 10 Ohio State 8 9 63 83 51351 J E951 Barns Best Gilbert Bannerman Roberts Sal-leg Redmond Niemeyer Merritt 1 ,V Lg. N 57 7' 'E' lfitai i he Fencing Smrorz---19 9 The University of Pennsylvania was the lone intercollegiate rival defeated by the 1929 fencing team. Otherwise the Buff and Blue consistently went down to defeat, usually by a rather decisive mar- gin. The match with Ohio State in the semi-finals at XVest Point was the only other intercollegiate contest that offered Hamilton an even break for victory. This was dropped 9-8 by a single touch. The H amiltonians opened their season against the Buffalo Fencing Club under a lucky star which gave them a 7-2 lead in the epee and 5--1 victories in foils and sabres. 'llwelve men represented the Buff and Blue, most of whom had never before participated in varsity meets. The epee once again proved the forte of the Hill swordsmen in the Columbia matches, although even in this weapon the best they could do was break even. Niemeyer and Sarles in the foils captured the only other points for the losers. lVIatched with two of the best fencing teams in the Iiast in its next matches, the Buff and Blue fencing team continued its slump the following week-end and bowed decisively to Cornell and Yale at Ithaca. Niemeyer turned in the most creditable performance. ln the Princeton meet Hamilton won 5--l- in the foils and tied in the epee only to lose by close decisions in the sabre, despite the fact that both Jarrett and Frazee appeared to be out- fencing their men. It seemed that the team had at last come into its own hflarch 9, when it hung up a brilliant ll-6 victory over a strong University of Pennsylvania team, which had previously been defeated only by an undefeated N. Y. U. aggregation. VVith 51371 its usual strength in the epee bouts, the Buff and Blue duelers completely shut out their opponents in this weapon. Foils were won 5-4 and sabres, as on previous occasions, Hamilton's chief weakness, tied. Hartman had a perfect day in the foils, while Niemeyer seconded his col- leagues' efforts with two out of three bouts. Aside from a closely matched 9-8 defeat at the hands of Ohio State, the Buff and Blue failed completely in the semi-finals and lost to Army, 14-33 N. Y., 10-7g and Cornell, 11-6. Niemeyer, a foilsman, and Hancock, an epeeman, were the only Hamiltonians who earned the right to compete in New York City for the indi- vidual Hnals. Hartman missed qualifica- tion by a single bout and Bailey lost sim- ilar honors in the epee when he dropped the final bout of the day. He had the distinction however of being the only epeeman to defeat Sands of West Point, the 1927 intercollegiate champion. Ham- ilton's sabre team provided little opposi- tion and failed to capture more than two bouts. VVhile the season was extremely disap- pointing there were many factors which contributed to the downfall. During the influenza epidemic the fencing room in the iniirmary was given over to health officials and the swordsmen compelled to practice in North. As the season was reaching its height Sarles was injured and had to with- draw from competition. As he was one of Hamilton's few experienced men his loss was difficult to overcome. Finally. illness in Coach Gelas' family prevented him from attending the semi-finals and considerably interfered with his coaching. , u H I 1 l , ' l ,luv 1- ,i Jones DeSurmo Dixon Lewis Will Ashmead Bnrtram Skinner Creagh Baldwin Fisher Jamieson Ready Eames Kelsey Holley Estnbrook Vefbmpm ooibazll INTERCLASS STANDINGS Freshmen ..... 8 Sopliomores 6 Juniors . 4- Seniors 2 I 138 1 Jenks Freclmnn Phelps Henderson Disney Sloane Schocpflin VVest Payne Lester Porter Albert Ohashi Payne Roth Cunningham Smith Gross mbmam Soccer INTERCLASS STAN DINGS Sophomorcs . .... 4 i Juniors . 3 Seniors 2 Freshmen 1 51391 Campbell Tuthill Voshurgh Gross Pritchard Broughton Fmhmme V055 ozmzvfy INTERCLASS STANDINGS Freshmen ....... 4 Juniors . 3 Sophomores . 0 Seniors . O f140J I Ashmead Fauver Estabrook Strong Woodcock Ives Eames Ready VVcttIaufer Scagel Lester Dixon Clark 7f'65Z7777.6Z7fZ Hoekey INTERCLASS STANDINGS Juniors ...... 7 F rcshmen . 6 Sophomores 5 Seniors . 2 L141j Sanford Fisher Creagh Bond Eames Pritchard Lewis Wfhmam azfkeiba!! INTERCLASS STAN DI NGS Freshmen . . . . . . . Juniors .... . . . Seniors . . Sophomores . 51423 51431 , Qgi' I1 If If 'Q f' . .,,...:,-'1. ' '- , .qw 1 ., 1 AATIAX-gi. yi: 5,5 Q, if J 5 3 ,fly .X Fi ff3EM f I 2 faEl,i5Qal51z Q .v x iijiggif . fi: .1 I ' 1 , ' 1,94 , 1 54x y,' ,1 51:5 Zf fl fi af H-wr fr. wif 1 2 mf auzpw z Y 21, .fxaaff-I 'X .15 32,5-i5 'W ,.?ff1'1-1-,f,'7'51kg f 211. if A .1 Ai' Qi f y iff' ' ff -,f 1 li ,A w F fs iwPw1..L Puff A m,: ', ffjf, ' f 'll -w'f.Vi 1'L I' ,p 'P V x ACTIVITIE Normile Cutter Ingalls Combs Chatlield 67QlL.6Zg07Q Election to this senior honorary society is considered the greatest honor a student may receive at Hamilton. The welfare and best interests of the college are its chief concern and they have ever been well provided for by this group. Its works are many but all its business is done secret- H1441 ly so that many events take place on the campus which may not be directly trace- able and yet are due to Pentagon. lt elects its own successors every spring, basing its choice on character, leadership, and service to the college. ii' Knox Normile Chatfield xecafiw Comm! The Executive Council of the General Association of Undergraduate Activities represents the college in its cxtra-curricu- lar activities and especially along the line of athletics. lts duties have to do with the schedules for all athletic teams, elec- tions oi team captains, qualifications for and awarding of letters, etc. Its most re- cent achievement was the revision of the 51451 rules pertaining to the cheerleaders and establishment of suitable awards for the cheerleaders. Each year the undergradu- ate members are elected by the college as a whole. The college meets three times a year to hear the report of the Council and to attend to such matters as have arisen for attention since the previous session. .xii i i ' W.. T X I -- ' 'Lili-N gi ,gf ,- ,- , . . ., ...I Q . U... w.'3fi: yi 'ti' 'Q :.'.'11, - 1 N 4. -A .I I, mimi, Lajijj '1.Ll,,4gVll.gL.L,!.g' g 'iw- Maclntyre Palmer Baldwin Marvin Combs Chatlield 07Q01f' Com! VVith the power to expel or suspend from college, the Honor Court is one of the most powerful and least conspicuous organizations on the Hill. Its duties are to see that the Honor System is upheld to the letter, and on it the success of this principle depends. Examinations, themes, and the rules governing the use of College Library are subject to its jurisdiction. This body elects its own members, six in numberg two juniors are elected each year to serve two years, one sophomore is chosen for one year, and each fall a member of the incoming class is picked. The labors of this group have consisted of but two cases during the last year, a fact which goes far to prove the success of the Honor System here. 51461 Calkins Knox Combs Walts Law Ingalls Cutter Normile Chatfield Upper Clammam ameri! This organization is the active govern- ing body of the undergraduate group. All matters of discipline not covered by the Honor Court, such as freshman rules, rows, banquets, and underclassman activ- ities, are under the jurisdiction of the Council. lt is composed of the five mem- 51471 bers of Pentagon, the presidents of the two upper classes. and two seniors and one junior elected at large by their respective classes. Its duties are not always pleasant, but its decisions are never questioned by the undergraduate body which it repre- sents. ,W ,' l is . i. Rozell Vermilya Reinecke Cutter Ellison Douglas Chapin Mineka Calkins Hand Almirall nievffrazieweizjf Comm! The Interfraternity Council is prob- ably the most representative undergrad- uate body on the campus. Acting as a clearing house for all interfraternity matters, this organization serves to co-or- dinate all the efforts and activities of the fraternities. The council consists of one representative from each of the national and local fraternities, including the re- cently formed Decagon Society. The rules concerning rushing, now in effect, were originally formulated by this Coun- cil, while all preparation for Fall and Spring House Parties are decided upon at its meetings. The outstanding work of the Council during the past year has been its arrangement for Alumni Day. Previously the various fraternities on the Hill initiated at different times during the year. The new plan sets aside a defi- nite week-end for the occasion, enabling the alumni who return for the ceremonies to meet old classmates and renew old friendships. 51481 l ,l r Q ww' VI? I A N ' 'li l.r. l' T Carpenter Carson Hiler Sarles Ford Law Wm 05 This is THE junior society, composed of poets, athletes, and men of letters fbig and small H'sJ. lts members possess dis- tinctive caps, triangular charms, and a horseshoe which they pass around among themselves at odd moments. The deriv- ation of this most unusual name for an honorary organization is reputed to be German, but it is often whispered abroad that each letter has its own special signifi- cance, namely: life ,ill Sponge, Let Others Spend. N493 Nlembers of VVas Los have traditional- ly taken it upon themselves to uphold and preserve Hamilton's traditions, but since these have been on the wane for the last few years, the best that this merry sextet can do is to provide post-Chapel amuse- ment for a full week each spring by their solemn initiation rites. These take the form of having the new men jumped on and chanted over while they lie clutching at rose-tinted Clinton shale. Lee Fordham Normile Wilson Boeve Bannerrnan Denham Morris Crowley Pope Hughes Stevens Jones .T lub lf, when spring comes reluctantly to Clinton, you see thirteen baby-capped freshmen, each proudly wearing a cham- pagne cork, desperately climbing the trees of the campus in determined pursuit of little Wagons, you will know that the thir- teen new members of D. T., the sopho- more honorary society, have been chosen. f1S0:I The function of the club is to estab- lish good fellowship on the Hill. Their various activities include ushering at games, initiating, a banquet now and then, and displaying striped blazers, not to mention impressing the freshman with the importance of the sophomore class. L - . 1, L 1 :Q fglh fav In 1 A Y W -- L,-1 K. -.LA ,V fl, , Y . ' 3, A I V V b .-.-.'4...i 1 f.3',1pv :M a 'Q --px it 'IX yur..-.f if 1 :H1f':,4 Z., 1 '71, Y I nr. ,. l 46 -H y e aft e f -- 'Q e . - 1 ut e fi wif fi r 'Ile' 'f fi-. 4' fvffgg-Q . , lm- 5 .. AH 1.5 'Jim' - YH. v .,f. i l ?- - .- ' Q -, Lmdg 5 A T 4.15 Lf... ihfgwkld tamlgir 31:5 Gross Payne Stewart Bartram Kelsey jones Creagh Ready Burnett Will Wettlaufer Prescott Pritchard Lewis Stone Dixon Eames Ashmeatl Estabrook aadmngle lab The Quadrangle Club was founded by members of the class of 1928 for the pur- pose of promoting good fellowship among the members of the freshman class. lt has been the first freshman honorary society to endure on the Hill. Each succeeding year has served to more firmly establish its position on the campus, and it will soon i i i Miki HI be as traditional an institution as the other class honorary soeietiesg it already is as active and useful. The Quadrangle Club has already progressed so far, We under- stand, as to have inaugurated a club yell fthe merit of which, however, is perhaps somewhat dubiousj : Dingle, Dangle, Quadrangle! Fraser Beetle Fanning Ives Hixson Davis Clark Campbell Barns Bremer Foley Stevens lluestecl Gage Mineka Combs Corwin Ingalls Pi Delia Epfilon To become a member of this august journalistic fraternity is the aim of near- ly every undergraduate interested in any Way in campus publications. Indeed, the list of aspirants for membership has be- come so large that new rules for admis- sion have recently been proposed. Pi Delt decides, in general, the probable prosper- ity of the various publications of the Col- lege, sees to it that the Press Board con- tinues to function, and that the Royal Gaboon is financially sound. It occa- sionally conducts an editorial contest in Hamilton Life, and was responsible for the re-establishment of the Hamilton Lit- erary fllagazine. Altogether, Pi Delta Epsilon is by no means an eifete or obso- lescent organization, and now, with a more exclusive membership of men earn- estly interested in journalism, even more can be expected of it than in the past. LISZJ L , A . .A ' wx ill' , U' i' 'I V ' Q' f . 7 if.. 3 in , 'E - l L 1 'Li ,,,,' ' K f - i i . npr L Z, W ,M -... A H . M .L fl:-gif' , - -. A . he ' 1 l lilfiijifi 'Miac-if illpap. V It -.:, .1', , .,,: '1.--V-Ff--.esfix A' ,,,Y .Y ,- Bourne Beetle VVehster Hixson llill Fraser Ives Davis Frnzee Hazmzlfomam X-Vhat can we say for ourselves? in offering this bool: is to voice the hope Modesty does not permit us to say how that it will prove to be a favorable speak- much we have labored that we might er for its Board. make this year book one to he rernern- In any case, do not judge us too harshly. bered. At this time, all that we can do Vernon A. lves Clarence B. Fraser Robert A. Hill Willizixn I-l. Denne Severin E. Bourne Henry H. H. Hari George D. Hixson David H. Beetle Frederic N. Davis vood ll . l Editor-in-Clzief Business M mzager Circulatiolz fllanager ddvertising Malzager . Photographer . Alrt Editors flthletic Editor Feature Editor 51533 l l . . l - at ': , i if 1 Lf., .1 l Baldwin Crowley Meagher Boeve Marvin Ferlo Carberry Beetle Fanning Mineka Ives Davis Persson Ingalls Corwin Combs Clark Stevens azmilfon 2 e Even we of the HAMILTONIAN board willingly admit that Life is the most im- portant publication on the Hill. Not only does it give, once a week, full ac- counts of what is happening on the cam- pus, but it is the means by which, editor- ially and otherwise, thought-provoking discussions of important questions are pre- sented to the students. Up-to-the-minute news is not all that Paul V. Combs . Theodore S. Corwin George Clark . Joseph B. Fanning . Theodore H. Ingalls l:1S4fl Hamilton Life offers to subscribers. The Carpe Diem column, a sort of a law unto itself, censures and verbally chas- tises those customs and singularly queer individuals that are often found within these halls. And if it weren't for the fact that Life comes out every VVednes- day morning, mid-week underclassmen chapel might soon become unbearable. Editor-in-Clzief . . .81l.S'iIIO.5'.Y flflrmzzger . . jlflllllllgillg lfrlilor fls.vi.vt1u1t Bzzsinerx M rznager . . Eflilor Carpe Diem jones Cruser Ives Smelzer Mineka Macmillan Almirall azmilion ifemafy Magazine For years merely an honored tradition on the Hill, The Hamilton Literary lVIagazine sprang into active life again in the spring of l92S, when Pi Delta Epsilon sanctioned its revival. The im- mediate support of the undergraduate body and many alumni more than justi- fied its re-birth, with the result that at the present time the Hamilton Literary Francis E. lVIineka . Richard T. Barns . Crosby T. Smelzer . rissj Magazine enjoys no less a reputation on the Hill than it once did. The quality of contributions would seem to indicate that the tradition of Alex Woollcott, John V. A. lVeaver, Harry Dounce, and a host of others who made the old Lit what it was, is in no imminent danger of suffering. Editor-in-Chief . . Business Mazzager 14 .kfiifllllf Bllsinesy fllazzager gi' l ,-g ,f,, 1 ILL, i - '- l . .. . .. 1 .. ,, A,-.-,,-,,., ..-, Hartman Crane Sewell Davis Ccmnger Carvalho Bourne Macmillan Webster I-Iixson Moore McC'ready Mulcahy Ingalls Huestell Chapin oyazl Gazbom Royal Gaboon, the humorous publica- tion of Hamilton College, completely re- covered from its brief retirement of a few years ago, has once more settled down and regained its inestimable position on the Hill. Once more it is the medium through which Hill-nourished jokes find their way to points, east, west, south, and north, and' hill-conceived drawings gain Theodore H. Ingalls Milton A. Carvalho . Severin Bourne . George D. Hixson . Harold Conger . the Spangled pages of College Humor. The name Royal Gaboon has held memorable associations for Hamilton men for many years, and now that the Royal Gaboon has become firmly estab- lished as a campus institution, still an- other association is added to the tradition- al name, also memorable. . . Ezlilor-in-Chief . . A Business .7Vlan1zger flssistant Business Mzzrzzzger . . . drt Editor . . Collection MJIILIIQBI' A l'. J , , e 1 I i' ---i-1 it-so emi' -l ,Wy r :.f . :Ji ' -i,f? .. Baldwin Sewell Hutchinson Carvalho Fonda Davis Mineka Clark Gage Beetle 7655 ln past years the Press Board has been the easiest means by which one could get a leg on the privilege of paying twenty- four dollars and becoming a Pi Delter. Recently, however, the latter organiza- tion has decided to be more exclusive, so the undergraduate need for Press Board positions is quickly being dissolved. Although it has never been a particu- larly conspicuous organization on the Campus, it nevertheless plays a rather George Clark . 51573 mm' important part in spreading Hamilton news to the ever-eager and waiting Pub- lic. It is the means by which the good townspeople of Hooshem Kooshem Cor- ners, through the medium of the Hoos- hem Kooshem Dispatch, learns what farmer DuHield's son is doing on the Hill in the way of activities. It also sees that the scores of Hamilton athletic contests are broadcast to the Press throughout the country. Chairman Campbell Foley Mulcahy Macmillan Stevens Mineka Gage reshmam amdboofe The present Freshman Handbook, al- though ot more interest to the entering class than to any others, is a complete compendium of knowledge relating to Hamilton College. lVithin the pages of this little blue book may be found infor- mation relating to the College itself, the faculty, the administration, the honor system, scholarships and prizes, sports, fraternities, publications, honorary socie- Francis E. lifiineka . VVi1liam C. Stevens . ties, and the songs of the College, which make the book of interest and value to all undergraduates and those interested in Hamilton. Formally the Handbook was published by the Y. NI. C. A., but with the demise of that organization, Pi Delta Epsilon took the book under its wing, and it is now an authorized campus publication. Ezlitor-iii-Chief Busimfsx Mzzzzrzger pissj X Stevens Douglas Mineka Almirall elm Szgfvm ho As Pi Delta Epsilon is to journalism, and as Phi Beta Kappa is to the scholastic world, just so is Delta Sigma Rho to the realm of forensics. Select by its very nature, it is composed of men who have distinguished themselves in debate. Mem- bership is open only to those who have appeared in one or more intercollegiate debates and have manifested a continued interest in debating for two years. The Hamilton chapter of this national 51591 society promotes local interest in debate, participates in the choosing of speakers for position on the intercollegiate teams and manages the debating schedule of the year-in short, it serves as a mentor to all forensic activities on the Hill. The schedule of the past year, arranged by the local chapter, has been one of the most successful and extensive the College has ever enjoyed. V .- ' .. 11 S! ' ,.. , .L Q, , yan. .. K A CAPTAIN MINEKA 7QZL61'C0!!6gf.6ZZL6' abate With Delta Sigma Rho as a nucleus, the intercollegiate debate teams have again achieved honors in the field of argu- ment. The wide interest in debate among the undergraduates this year allowed a very ambitious schedule to be carried out with distinction. The season opened in November when Williams appeared on the Hill, followed by the English team from Oxford. Then the local debaters met Amherst, Elmira College, Union, St. Francis E. Mineka . . . Professor Calvin L. Lewis I Professor YVillard B. Marsh f ' Thomas,' and Albany State, securing a goodly share of victories to their credit. The appearance of the girls from El- mira College marked the second time that Hamilton has essayed to contest a case with femininity, the first instance having been with Wells last year. The outstand- ing forensic event of the year was the in- ternational debate with Oxford, largely the result of the popularity which the English debaters enjoy upon the Hill. Captain and Mzzzinger . . C caches H1601 ..- if ?f' -'I The College beer Professor Paul A. Faneher . Charles Douglas Chretien, '26 hV3ll3CC B. Johnson, '15 . ,Lawrence L. llflulezihy, Jr., '29 H. F. Calkins, '29 A. K. 1Vhite, '32 E. S. Benedict, '32 P. S. Chaeonu, '29 H. H. Ross, '32 'l'. G. Law, '30 R. M. lb4:HCGYCg0l', '30 VV. H. Denne, Jr., '30 Conduftor Of-Qlllliif . I3ll.fillBS5' Mazinger . Undergraduate MIIIZHQEV Firxt Tenors P. R. Abbott, Jr., '32 A. R. Bailey, '30 L. Boeve, Jr., '31 N. NI. Eames, '32 F. E. XVi1l, '32 T. H. Harwood, '32 WV. E. Bresee, '31 VV. VV. MOY1'OXN', '32 S emnd Tezmrx S. C. Chatfield, '29 J. F. VanDerventer, '32 E. C. Douglas, '29 R. C. Ohmann, '32 J. H. Jones, '31 R. L. Montgoxnery, '29 R. G. Sechrist, '32 J. G. Frisbee, '31 H. P. 'XVest0n, '30 H. F. Fordham, '31 1V. A. Jarrett, '30 F. E. Vlfilliams, '30 A. S. Bourne, '31 J. B. Bartram, '32 R. G. Phelps, '32 H. L. Heyl, '28 L. NI. Marviil, '31 A. L. McDonald, '30 G. F. Shepard, '30 O. D. Van Loon, '30 l ir.vt Basses W. R. Broughton, '32 E. D. VVebster, '30 R. S. Clarke, '32 E. L. Stevens, Jr., '30 N. C. Oelheim, '29 H. XV. Porter, '32 R. D. Gaskill, '31 S. Bates, '31 ca 75 3 E m 'E 2 Pr m e. B. Buchbinder, Jr., '31 D. F. Hunn, '29 VV. F.. Owens, '29 111. V. Dillenbeek, '30 E. J. Hummeston, '32 J. F. Meagher, '31 E. A. Nlcrrizun, Jr., '32 '1'. C. Day, '31 A. B. Smith, '31 F. G. Eddy, '29 G. VV. Hofstetter, '32 C. D. VVettlaufer, '32 H. P. Webb, '32 B. Stone, '32 1 V ..-... v ,-.- -. A-V ' - V 4 Y--v. --ci. A W , , ' A. -I bw .-.,,: , 1 wx - ,.. -i..,.-f 4, ,, ,, .. f :M -X M--2 - . 1.,,L--:H - M W 3, . -F - 1 . 5 -.fr . Q -5 ' -gtg .-'-y-.J-, ' - ..,--- ' - -Y THE COLLEGE CHOIR, -,N wil PROFESSOR FANCHER Choir s Another year in the history of the Hamilton College Choir has passed by, during which the organization has con- tinued to maintain the high standard of work which it has set for itself under the leadership of Professor Fancher. Unlike the athletic organizations of the college, loss of veterans does not seem to bother the choir. Each year it continues to im- prove upon its past endeavors-a matter of no small accomplishment. Rarely is a group of undergraduates found which sings the celebrated works of Palestrina, Praetorius, and Bach with such distinction that powers in the musi- cal world are moved to praise. Nor have the plaudits of such acknowledged au- thorities as Otto Kahn, Deems Taylor, Morris Gest, Samuel Chotzinoff, Win- throp Ames, and Alexander Woollcott been those of faint praise. The accom- plishment of Professor Fancher in making college men appreciative singers of the finest choral work has been recognized as no small tour de force. The success of the choir has not been due so much to the ex- cellence of the individual voices as to the ability of Professor Fancher to draw from them Il mpella singing that is regarded as among the finest of its kind. The past year saw the prestige of the choir heightened still more. The choir gave its initial performance of the year I'163fI on the Hill just before the Christmas hol- idays. The brilliance of this recital fore- told the eventual success of the whole season. just prior to the Easter recess, the choir sang in Utica according to its annual custom, and added another tri- umph to its credit at the First Presbyter- ian Church. The New York trip was made during'the latter part of April, when the singers made their annual east- ern journey. Visiting Vassar for the first time, the choir sang in joint recital with the Vassar choir. The New York recital this year was held in the Guild Theater. The following evening the choir sang be- fore an enthusiastic audience in Hunting- ton, Long Island, and on April 23 the trip came to a close with a presentation at Princeton. This year the western trip was aban- doned since satisfactory dates could not be arranged for appearance. Numerous short trips were made by the choir, nota- bly to Utica and Syracuse. The season will close when the choir gives its annual concert upon Commencement Day, the last occasion on which many of the under- graduates will sing in its ranks. But de- spite this loss by graduation, Professor Fancher inevitably has his men back into shape again before many weeks of the fall term have slipped by. The .Nimieezl Aw' Sociezjf 0fHe1milfon College OFFICERS Professor Berrizm R. Shute . ' . . President Professor Paul A. Fzmcher Treasurer Professor Arthur P. Saunders .... I . . . Secretary UNDERGRADUATE ADVISORY COIVINIITTEE Lloyd V. Almirall, '29 John H. Niemeyer, '30 Daniel Green, '29 Arden D. VanLoon, '30 51641 y. mimi Ari SOCf6Zfj! eview In spite of the fact that the Miisical Art Society is only in its second year, it has achieved so great a success at Hamil- ton College that the only organization in College at the present time which has a greater membership is the General Asso- ciation for Undergraduate Activities. One year ago the Society made its debut on the Hill with a membership of 2-l-2. which, at that time, was considered to be an exceptionally large number. This year has seen its membership increased to 223 undergraduate members, 27 fac- ulty members, I professional member, 7 sustaining members, and 6 household members. This large number of members is a great tribute to Professor Shute, the pres- ident of the organization. His ceaseless efforts have brought, and we hope will continue to bring, splendid opportunities for the cultivation of music of the high- est type to the music-lovers at Hamilton College. Professor Shute has done all in his power to make this popular Society an outstanding success. The concerts given this season, there were six in all, indicate with what great care they have been selected by the oliicers of this group. The programs are varied, and all of the artists are very capable in 51651 their particular field of music. This successful season began on Octo- ber 22, 1928, when the Musical Art Quartet of New York rendered a most impressive program. This group of artists met with such favor at their appearance on the hill last season, that a promise of their return this season was finally se- cured. For the second meeting of the year, Sandor Vas, a most accomplished pianist, played for the Society at the Psi Upsilon House. This concert Was also enthusiastically received. Unforseen cir- cumstances prevented the Society from holding its third meeting until this spring. At that time, Miss Helen Oelheim, the noted contralto of the American Opera Company, gave a delightful concert at the Theta Delta Chi House. The season concluded with a program devoted to folk dances by members of the Eastman School of Music at Rochester, and the singing of English madrigals by local artists. The notable triumphs scored by the artists, and the enthusiastic reception ac- corded by the members, would seem to insure the continued prosperity of the lVIusical Art Society. These concerts proved to be one of the most valuable and the most enjoyable features of the College year. l99tJ l ' , ' - '. ,Q -,- fx vw ,,'-,-,.-I? -5' .1 - ' Q , U Q , 1, fl. Ml, ,AA-an , A- ,, A l ,Q X '-il 'l Ly g-'bt-ix, W? V. P 71' . ., J., A Mangan Smelzer Ulmer Rayton Brown Hill Montgomery Jarrett VVoodcock Baldwin Jones Ingalls Atkins Barns Macmillan Calkins .'.-Q , 7' 2 15-' V u f.. .' 1' -' .1 ' F xx 2, ff! 1 S Q . . r Z l 1 -K .1 . ' .1 w.1,' . . . . 1 .- - . - , 5 Y .5 i .,,.. 'L' 1 .. ,. 1,.,.Ly.I. - Ivy'-rf Richard T. Barns, '29 VVilliam D. Mangan, '30 . Prof. Paul Adce FIlllCllCI' . Prof. Robert Barnes Rudd Theodore H. Ingalls, '29 . Robert A. Hill, '30 . . Robert L. Mmmntgimnmery, '29 Willis M. Rayton. '31 . John H. Jones, '31 . . Gardner A. Callanen, Jr., '29 k....-4 V W, .. -v . W -- 1. fu - . .,- u - v .rn 'l v M. 'YH i lll 5 lw-ilif'-.'P.'l.l --.al-lg ll, PRESIDENT BARNS Zrmffafaas OFFICERS ll 1671 .-.ah:.-.L4.,--.-., I 2 1,-I.. - -.- 1 -..........l..1v:gH'L1-:I----J . . President Vice-President . . Coach . Faculty Advisor . . Business llffanager flssisranl Business Ilflanager . . Stage Mlll1HgKf Assistant Stage M mzager . . . Custodian Electrician hmflazmn review On February 13, 1929, under the di- rection of Professor Paul A. Fancher, the Charlatans gave their first presentation of the season to a very large, appreciative audience. Three one-act plays, PostMor- tems by Charles Divine, The Killer by Albert Cowles, and Copy by Kendall Banning, were offered. What was most outstanding about the entire performance was the remarkable direction of Professor Fancher. Because of increased duties as director of the Col- lege Choir last year, Professor Fancher was unable to give his services to the Charlatans. However, the organization's great need this season caused him to take upon himself the extra task of coaching the Charlatans. How much is due to his remarkable ability for the success of the season was clearly shown in this yearls productions. As is his custom, Professor Fancher cast undergraduates in the female roles. As a result, a most delightful and charm- ing interpretation of the young Wife in 1J0.Yfjl'IUI'l6'lll.S',,2l bedroom farce,was given by Bernhard Ulmer, 229. Undoubtedly, his performance won the greatest honors of the evening. President Barns gave an excellent por- trayal of the bad man who was a Royal Northwest Mcmunted Policeman in dis- guise in The Killer, a melodrama. Copy, a play of newspaper life, was very favorably received by the audience, although not as well done as the others. Plans for presenting the Octoroon, a Boucicault melodrama, were abandoned in favor of the production of Jourzzeyk End, the English war play which is en- joying such popularity on the American stage. The Charlatans were the first ama- teur organization to apply for the priv- ilege of presenting this play. Lissj L ,L Vol. VII JUNE, 1929 No. 4 THE HAMILTON COLLEGE BULLETIN ix V . ' WL? gf x o X MY QQ' Q U- I 1 I ' 'Y i WWE I 63: fix., IJ Sw: -'WWE Zwrnwsnlexw---' ANNUAL CATALOGUE ONE HUNDRED AND SEVENTEENTH YEAR 1928-1929 CLINTON, N. Y POLISHED BY THE JUNIOR CLASS 1929 M'-hurry . 'I X X f .1 X 1 T--fo g f 3 X f -'W' ML is -4 Haj 1-we X f 1 T1 H Einar f -' A ffm Ii -E1 m , - -' U' M ' ,vnu fam 'BALL wa- n up I f N K Q Arn A U i I f , , , '1 Cdzhvhsn eu.-if A , I I ,I ff H nmu ' K' ' ' -. N ' ' 'ff' 4 QwQ lx 3 'Pr-.vlynui I X fl 'ru-Arr-wh Nh ,I 'Fawunv , . b I I ' X f 1-m1.... J f, ,H I f'-'W ' Q y ' '54-nfl-1 I' 1-In hu' i Q B nrnsi Thr 145,11 E x f my Q 5 'a..,Lr, X , g3.,H:.? A X 1- A N 6 N - n X 1 , f f' ,' I i llll I-urn ,Mn , n1lv f . nu I - , ' GI 'I v , syn can .' f MALL 1 X 1 mc, 1 , N th. 'K 01 CCN . j! ,fm 1 Z num Viv' ' f X X L-'fm' ' V wnm.Mu 'E X 1 '7 3 , Q ' suum. - I-QIQTB. . f- Haw: 4' . A Q 3 W v g-, X X - ST::7lloM Y.. Z NIAh9vAN7I . , f ' : 'gt' Y Lmmy E 1, Aux! G. Q Q r-.,.Ln JGI....:.4J A ' f 3. K 4 Ns . X N X X 5 H Q ,.,...... , ,,,, - X !-- K ,I XX X' S f 'Pldfflbllllh Q 9 ' 1.51.1 mvlell? U Ann! : -. 2 TF m r if Q ou mn .' 'I X f 64 so ' N 4 W - ctnzff.. , ,,4 'rf,.n...f' f ..j ' 'Mud 'funn 1 J ' I shun X ' x x ' In-xr 5 - ANP' X X f 9 X IHHIIE NAU..-u-rf -p.,4 ,,.i , k nn' W tw- 4- '- ff 1 WF- W' mn so I l L ' -1 'B-,Ll Soruuvs , ll .' H '- N N ,M .1 , 7 j X ' M jX .M J L ...v rm-.no U! 4'-1 HAMILTON COLLEGE 51693 CAMPUS 1928 Sept. 17-19 Sept. 18 Sept. 20 Nov. 28 Dec. 12 Dec. 19 1929 Jan. 21-30 Feb. 1-2 Feb. 4- Feb. 6 March 28 April 13 May 22 May 28 May 30 June 3-12 June 12 June 14- June 15 June 16 June 17 COLLEGE CALENDAR FIRST S mi ESTER, 1928-1929 Entrance examinations and opening of the College Store. New undergraduates meet the Dean, the Dean meets disappointment. Coggfgiagegriacliiiie is off in a cloud of dust. Where the blank do I sit in rape . Thanksgiving Vacation. From Wednesday, 4:30 p. m. until Friday, 1 :30 p. m. Sometimes called the Long Recess. YVith Christmas in the ofhng everyone gets to Chapel before the last bell stops. This is called souping Santa Claus. Christmas Recess. fDouble cuts three days before and after.j From VVed- nesday, 4:30 p. m. to Thursday, january 3, 8 a. m. Voted by the class to be the most interesting and important part of the hrst semester. Semester exams. No classes but plenty Chapel. Nothing to do except play hockey between exams. The Junior Promenade. The only bright spot in a rather dull yVinter season. 1 SECOND S12x11ss'1'i2R lylonday, 8 a. rn. New semester, new cuts, new lease on life. New Chapel seating arrangement. 'vVe miss our post. Beginning of the most valuable part of the second semester. Unless you live in the vicinity of the Coll your last date should be on the night of April 7 or 8, depending on the available train service. School, inciden- tally, reopens on April 9. Saturday before twelve o'clock high noon, all essays, orations, theses, or what have you are due. Minus a reputation competition is not only unnecessary but even asinine. Submission of elective choices. Name your pisen for next year. fF.d. Note. Physical training 9-10 is an interesting and instructive course.j Prize exam in something or other. Competition is not strenuous. Opening of Forest Park. Semester examinations. Nothing but golf and tennis between exams. Final Chapel of the year. Announcement of Honors and prizes for the year. The wise ones are usually absent. Only the wise ones have any cuts left at this late date. Friday, Class Day. Seniors select favorite movie stars. lVIeeting of the Board of Trustees. Commons serves an excellent meal for a change. Saturday, Alumni Day. lVIuch shaking of hands and back slapping. Ques- tions as to occupation, success and marriage are common throughout the day. Baccalaureate Service, 10:30 a. m. Only non-compulsory Sunday Chapel of the year. Graduation. Cut, out, in the cold, cold world. 51701 EARLY HISTORY The really remarkable fact about the early history of Ham Coll is the fact that the fellow that gave the original hunk of land for the college was a Scotchman. Now then, just what was the catch to the whole proposition? VVell, it seemed this Scotchman, Sammy Kirkland was his name, had a hill he didn't know what to do with. You can't raise a damn thing on a hill, and the taxes were keeping right on piling up. And that wasnlt the half of it. He also had a Flock of sheep and the price of mutton was going down until you couldn't have given a sheep away. So Sammy went down the banks of the Oriskany and sat down to think. Being a remarkably smart apple, in about two or three years he had the problem all solved. So he shouted Eureka,' and jumped out ofthe Oriskany and dashed up the Hill like it was 7:59 with Chapel at 8. As the old boy figured it out, the only thing he'd have to do was to start a college. So he wrote letters to all his old buddies and finally got Alex Hamilton to sign on the dotted line as a trustee. VVell, the only ones that would come to the place at lirst were Indians, and things looked pretty discouraging. Then they built a fine new cemetery and business began to get better and better. Sammy got rid of the land, and after three or four graduations the sheep were all gone with a nice prolit for the old Scotch domino. Gzzozfhi Saautonf Purpose The purpose of Hamilton College is to catch about four hundred men, lock them up in a monastery, and expose them all to four years of public speaking in the hopes that they will learn to speak English. Students receive a broad and liberal education in dodging cuts, making flying trips to Utica, throwing water out of the dormitory windows, and golf. Intensive training in criticizing Sunday sermons is also pro- vided in the way of spiritual relaxation. The group system, if., putting four men in a two man room, aims to secure social solidarity and toler- ation of one's fellow man. I:171:I ADMISSION Methods of Admission to the Freshman Class Admission to the Freshman Class of the College in September is to be secured in Various ways described below. The total annual enroll- ment has been limited to four hundred undergraduates, more or less. Since many more candidates seek admission each year than can pos- sibly be received, the College is obliged to make selection among them, choosing some for other colleges. 1. BY BEING SMART AND GRADLT.ATING FROM SOMEWHERE, PREF- ERAELY THE UTICA FREE ACADEMY. 2. BY BEING A SOPI-IOMORE AND FLUNKING NINE HOURs. 3. BY CHOOSING AN ALUMNUS FOR A FATHER. 4. BY GRACE OF GOD. S. BY GRACE OF ELII-IU ROOT. Methods Of Departure from the Freshman Class Departure from the Freshman Class may be secured in Various ways described below. These are the more accepted ways, but special inge- nuity will be suitably rewarded, it discovered. 1. BY GIVING UP GOING TO CLASSES. 2. BY HAVING YOUR SISTER COME TO CALL AFTER 6:00 P. M. 3. BY TOSSING ROCKS rl.-lHROUGH THE WINDOWS OF THE ADMIN- ISTRATION BUILDING. 4. BY DRIVING, OPERATING, LOOKING AT, OR BEING SEEN NEAR AN AUTOMOBILE IN TI-IE 'TOVVNSHIP OF KIRKI,AND. 5. BY MAJORING IN THREE OF IVIORE FIRST SEMESTER FRESHMAN SUBJECTS. Registration A special rate of 525, cash, is put on the head of each undergraduate not later than August 1. This 525 will be credited to your term bill if you are foolish enough to return to Hamilton. 51721 Entrance Prizes and Scholarships Prizes are awarded as they are deserved by the freshmen, as follows : First freshman to appear wearing red-one efiicient and thorough disrobing. First freshman to forget slime cap-one first class set of mural dec- orations interesting only to owner and phrenologists. First freshman on campus--one Psi U. pledge button. CURRICULUM AND GRADUATION The curriculum provides courses leading at graduation to two de- grees. The third degree will probably follow shortly after graduation. The curriculum in either case calls for about six years of work, but it is possible for students of high standing to shorten the time of residence to five, or in rare cases, to even four years. lVlen have been known to have shortened the length of residence to one semester or a fraction thereof. The following statements apply to candidates for both degrees except where otherwise indicated: 1. The requirement for graduation demands the completion, or merely passing, of 138 semester hours. A semester hour represents one hour of classroom work per week and use-your-own-discretion hours of work outside of the classroom. 2. To meet the requirements for graduation, an undergraduate must so arrange his program as to concentrate in two departments of study. These two subjects constitute his majors. A major in any one-half year course is to be regretted and avoided, especially if ex- tended over a period of years. A major can not be begun before fresh- man year nor extended much beyond graduation. 3. At least two hours must be spent abullingn to every hour of regular study to keep things in equilibrium. Any student failing to observe this rule shall be classed a grind- and be socially ostracized. 4. All hours of golf and tennis reported but not actually played must be made up immediately upon graduation. 5. Laboratory work, other than in sociology or Freud, which re- quire frequent trips to Utica, will receive extra credit. 51731 DEPARTMENTS OF INSTRUCTION Group A . GREEK Lrr'ri.E GREEK, BULL, AND Ifooczv Courses in Greek are of great practical value. Students having passed a few courses are able to read fraternity pins at sight, and advanced students are sometimes able to translate the motto of the college. The hrst year is pretty bad, but the rest are Worse. Only forty per cent of the class has flunked the course, but all the returns aren't in yet. LATIN TROT, BULL, AND Foocv Generally taken by those who wish to avoid Greek. The refzriezu of Latin grammar the first year is generally all new work. Supplements to the course, in the way of English translation, are obtainable at Grant's Book Store. CPaid Adj Any of the profs will be glad to make recommendations as to which translations to buy. , GERMAN ' I-IAUCHY AND HfXlR I-IArs'r Open to all men who have a natural aptitude for speaking through their nose. First year German gives one a nasal accent, which higher courses only intensify. The popularity of the course Cat least with I-Iauchj is due to the use of Hauch's German Grammar. Freshmen are advised not to criticize the grammar, at least not in class. ROMANCE LANGUAGES French Riu. SHEP, SUPE, Gioi, J. CRlS'l' Taught by the far-famed Hamilton oral method, Le., the prof gives dictation and students copy the lesson from the one man in the class who understands it. First year it is a pain and in later courses it only grows worse. Recommended to all students who expect to go to Paris upon graduation, which means most of us. Spanish g SUPE Course specializes in the far-famed humor of its teacher. Is not to be taken too seriously or it proves valueless. One of the few courses in college that the spirit of Christmas pervades. The first year is open to juniors, social and otherwise. The second year is open to fun-loving freshmen who studied Spanish in prep school and survivors of the first year. Everything runs pretty smoothly until the final when your respect for the course suddenly increases. Italian Blu. Sum' The object of the course is to give a swearing acquaintance with the Italian lan- guage. Could be perhaps easier obtained from digging ditches in suitable company, but this would not be the Hamilton way. Every course in its most difficult form, is our motto. I-Iebrevv BIBBSY . Taught only in times of great stress, such as a number of men actually petitioning for the course. Extremely selective to begin with, and even more so at examination times. Students who attempt to take Hebrew are generally discouraged as soon as possible. 51743 Group B ENGLIsI-I COMPOSITION AND PUBLIC SPEAKING CAL, SMUT, SWAMPY, DOUG, PETE, AND I'lANK Public Speaking in its worse form is required of every student from the time he enters until he graduates. We believe it is a plan of the telephone company to lure students into the habit of telephoning home for money instead of writing. lt takes years of C0l'lStZlIlt practice to work up a good sob story over the phone. English Composition The first year of English Composition is supposed to persuade the freshmen to drop their grandmotherls theology. The second year is to persuade students to drop English Comp. Comp. 5-6 consists mainly in rewriting and lengthening sophomore themes. The last is the most iInportaIIt. Comp. 7-8 gives selected seniors the priv- ilege of criticizing the freshmen and showing them the error of their ways. Comp. 5-6 themes are re-corrected. Public Speaking The first year of public speaking consists of making dinky decks and learning to say ah-oh-ou with variations and changes of tempo. Useful in amusing small children. Declamations are hardly inspiring and are to be generally avoided unless the student lIas a weakness for Bruce Barton or poor puns. Discussions and orations are no improvement. ENGI,IsH LITERATURE CI-IUBDY, Bono, DoUG Probably the most popular courses in college are found in this group, due largely to the professors. These courses are recommended to any one who can read and write English, no others need apply. First year Lit covers a lot of territory. About the only objection is that the hooks are pretty big to lug around. Advanced courses are recom- mended, 3-4 is snappy, 5-6 is instructive, 7-8 is expensive, and Anglo-Saxon is a big help in cross word puzzles. PHILOSOPHY JUST BILL Hamiltonls attempt at an orientation course, presided over by the walking encyclo- pedia of useless information-sees all, knows all-ask him. Hamilton's contribution to the world of bigger and better things. The dumping ground' for the ignorant. So broad-minded he can see one side of every question. Freedom of speech confined to the instructor. Students not allowed to quote authorities, present company excepted. TSTHICS ANID CHRISTIAN EVIDENCE Howie Supplementary to chapel, though not to he confused with it. There is enough con- fusion in the various courses without adding more trouble. Ethics 3--l tells you that what you used to do is all right. A great help in bull sessions. HISTORY Tim CoI.oNEL, EDDIE Under Bonham the courses are largely devoted to the influence of disease on his- tory alternating with the social life of Baton Rouge. VVork in two-color typing forms the basis of the work. Extra credit is given for extra colors. Boy Scouts with map- making merit badges like these courses. The Colonel specializes in teaching funny courses about funny places which funny people take. Eddie is the addition which doubled Hamilton's roll of scholars. l175J. POLITICAL SCIENCE BALDY, H ERME Polly Si 1-2 used to be Sophomore Siesta until I-lerme came along, but now we are forced to admit it's a course. Baldy's courses are pretty near painless. There is not very much to be said about this department since no one ever took the trouble to find out what it was all about. Maybe it is just as well. ECONOMICS .PATTV Better known as just a dull thud. Of great practical value if any one can find any practical applications of what is absorbed from the courses. This is often the only Way some students ever End out what capital or labor is. ,ART LITTLE GREEK, TROT, SIIUT, AND EDWARD OF 'WALES Art 1-2 is about Greek and Roman bath tubs. Appreciation of Art consists chiefly in being moved by beautiful things, such as the Clinton trolley carp 5-6 is a trick name for Choir and is open to any one with a desire for travel and a voice strong enough to fool Fancher. Group C MATII EIvIAT1Cs PREXIE, FLATFOOT, BROWNIE, CRUMMY Mathematics 1-2 is the greatest solver of the rooming problem and the discontented neutral racket. It just eliminates all those the college feels it can spare. The higher the course, the more selective and the more be-fogging. Let it be here noted that higher curves have no sex appeal. BIOLOGY VVALLIE, BIITCI-I The great proving ground. Prove to yourself that Darwin was right. Of great benefit to those students who are bent on collecting gruesome and foully smelling articles to decorate their desks. TlIe cat course seems of special value in this line. Zoology has its fascination for the more morbidly inclined. CHEMISTRY STINK, MAC Playground for the children. Chem 1-2 is not to be taken too seriously since it was IIot intended for that purpose. The higher courses really require work. Had best be avoided by the common run of students. PHYSICS PILLS, CASSIUS All equipment later than 1865 is barred from the laboratory as new and untried. Concentration on one experiment for an entire semester is encouraged in the hopes that the student will get one thing from the course at least. The hope is generally foiled, however. The laboratory is an excellent museum. GEOLOGY ROCKS, VIROIE A course for the learning of six syllable words with no special idea as to what they refer. The trips make more or less pleasant vacations for the more strenuously inclined. The higher the course the longer and the more frequent the trips, consequently the popularity of rocks. 51763 HONORS AND DEGREES Department Honors may be awarded in any but the following subjects: Physical Training, Choir, Dramatic Interpretation and Hebrew. Concerning Hebrew we might say that few take it and fewer pass. As a result the Honors in this course have been neglected. To gain honors in any of the subjects which we have not mentioned the candidate must be smart. By this we mean that he should not neces- sarily have brains but that he should be able to talk convincingly. A few heart- to-heart confabs with the professor bring more departmental honors than most people realize. Essay Prizes There are several essay prizes which are variously named. These are usually won by the people who compete for them. As a rule there is at least one competitor for each prize. However, this does not always hold true. Clf there is no competition there is no prize awardedj The prizes themselves are rarely negotiable, consisting mainly of books which look well next to the family Bible. Some of the prizes come in the coin of the realm but these are usually difficult to win. Degrees Hamilton awards one of two degrees to anyone who has completed four years of work and has avoided a dink up to that time. The de- grees are of the standard variety given at most Arts colleges, AB. and B.S. The former means that you are literary or classical and the latter that you have a scientilic bent. Neither one prepares you for anything that we know of. Anyone who so desires may hang around school for an extra year and get an lNfl.A. as it is laughingly called. It does not mean M3Chil1iStS Assistant but it does mean a great deal of work. You collect notes for a twelvemonth and then write a great many double spaced typewritten pages which theoretically pertain to the material which you have in your notesf This is called a thesis. The subject should be something absurd or obstruse and not easily understandable by the common man. I:l77:I Scholarships Hamilton, as We have often been told, is either the first, second, third or fourth, etc., highest endowed college in the country. For that reason, beside a 75,000 dollar chair of Hebrew, We have a great many scholarships. Nlost of these bear the name of their donor and carry with them the interest on a 1,000 rocks or better. These scholarships are a very fine thing, for they encourage study to an amazing degree at least as far as the recipients are concerned, for you cannot fail a course and still retain a scholarship. They are given regardless of race, color or previous condition of servitude. GENERAL INFGRMATIGN Situation The College is a long Way from any place in particular and nine miles from Utica. It is somewhere near the center of Central New York but that does not make it any more accessible. The air and Water of the region are of a high quality and the Wind blows a lot here although it snows more than it rains. The soil of the area is a beautiful deep red splashed With green. As the campus is often in a state of upheaval this is beautifully set off for visitors, especially at House Party time. . Buildings DORMITORIES. Three dormitories offer exceptional accommoda- tions for about one-half the undergraduates. , Carnegie Hall 118401 and South College H7765 offer rough accommodations for about 140 men. There are many good fires and water fights in South but Carne- gie When once aroused is also interesting. North College is the best fire trap which any small college in the country has to offer. It was built in 1492 and was renovated recently in 1620. The College pro- vides essential furniture for the rooms, excluding anything comfort- able. For further information see Eddie Coughlin, dealer in used and misused furniture. 51781 TIIE LIBRARY. There are a great many books in the library, which deal with all manner of knowledge. Overdue books are charged on a time basis which mounts up rapidly. In the selection of books primary regard is given to the needs of the athletic department, but recommendations by the history department are occasionally consid- ered. Students asking for modern novels are not greeted with a smile. Requests for Boccacio, de Nlaupassant, and other interesting books of the type are dangerous and may lead to the expulsion of persons so doing. y Scientific Collections Hamilton has some of the linest collections of their kind in the country. Here are a lot of bird skins, funny rocks, sea shells, butter- Hys, stuffed birds, iish, animals, etc. At the present time negotiations are under way for the Levinsky Nlatchbox and lyiilk Bottle Top col- lections. As it looks now we should have them before the next war or even the new Gym. In the Library there are some rare books but they are kept locked up as it is rumored that they are not the right sort of reading for growing boys. It is hoped before the year is out that the Library will be enhanced by a group of samplers and antimacazzrs done by the Daughters ofthe Spanish American VVar. Once in awhile, as a special treat, illuminated manuscripts are placed on display on the main Hoof. A Medical Service , An exceptionally high class of medicine and iniirmary board are offered at Hamilton. Dr. V. B. Hamlin is the pill peddler and they have a new nurse practically every year. During epidemics the iniirm- ary is slightly crowded, say thirty men in a building meant for eight. Ordinarily, malingerers are its only occupants. 51791 Religious Instruction The College, while believing in no particular creed as a method of reaching the Land of the Blessed, professes to be distinctly Christian. By this we mean that every morning, rain or shine, some professor reads a Scripture lesson in Chapel which everybody has to listen to or take a cut. Also, on Sundays, preachers of varying quality and creed come and pray for the Trustees, the President, the Faculty and finally the Student Body. Myers Lectures These are very good but Professors always announce quizzes for the day following so we have not been to many. Alexander Woolcott was the best lecturer we ever heard but he told a joke and has never been here since. Undergraduate Organizations GENERAL ASSOCIATION FOR UNDERGRADUATE ACTIVITIES. The fol- lowing undergraduate organizations ars included in the General Asso- ciation for Undergraduate Activities: athletic teams, intramural sports, the dramatic club and intercollegiate debating. The student body, which is the General Association with the exception of a few fac- ulty members, supports all the above by appropriate cheering and the payment of twenty-five dollars a year. By paying the latter tax, an undergraduate is free to walk into any contest, game, play or debate held on the Hill without even glancing at the ticket booth. - DEPARTMENTAL ASSOCIATIONS! Several study clubs help to bring the members of the college community into closer personal relations. These are the German, French, Latin, History, Biology and Geology Clubs. They meet weekly or fortnightly or not at all. Each of these clubs holds a banquet or banquets annually or oftener, depending on the condition of its treasury. The German Club is reputed to have the best banquets due to the fact that Professor Hauch is a toastmaster in the true sense of the word. The Latin Club presents a play every third f180iI year or so which always gains a line or two in all the papers of the coun- try. They are not largely attended because Latin is a very dead lan- guage for the majority of students. Those, however, who claim to understand it, say that it is Very risque and if people only knew they would be shocked. The last play, Dishibus Mazur11a or the Pot of Goldf, was presented both in New York and at the college itself. Critics of the Latin were well pleased with the production and con- curred in calling it the Latin Play of the Season. PUBLICATIONS. The undergraduate publications are numerous and varied. They consist of Hamilton Life, a weekly newspaper chock full of up-to-the-minute news, the Hamiltonian, an annual, the Royal Gaboon, the alleged humorous quarterly, and the Lit, a literary maga- zine. On second thought we remember the Freshman Handbook which the slimers have to buy. The latter sells very well. Expenses Garage in New Hartford ............. . . . 56.00 per month lillevator Service in Dorms .... . .25 per floor Gum-shoe Inspection .......... 1.00 Use of shower in gym ............ 1.69 Use of the book from the library .... .05 per day For Gym excuses ............... 1.50 each For Chapel excuses: Daily .... .25 each Sunday .... .50 each Subscription to College' Humor. . . 4.00 To Jack 81 Charlie, Imperial, etc.. . . . 2.00 per quart Books ....................... .79 ' One pencil . . . . . . .05 One eraser .... .02 Rocks reports .... 5.00 Clinton lWovies ............... .35 per head Poker Chips ................... .59 a hundred Chapel Seat fSpecial to freshnienl . . . 1.25 up Radiator Service ............... .45 up Greek Trots . . . 3.50 51813 The Soper Commons furnishes poor substitutes for meals at the low price of 558.00 a Week for indigestion. Living expenses for under- graduates Who room and board in society houses, fraternities, or else- where may vary somewhat but the meals are bound to be better. Fur- niture and accoutrernents help any room but they are by no means necessary. VVe know one shabby room which contains nothing but a cocktail shaker yet the inmates are always happy. Another room has three desks and a book or two but the occupants are by no means as cheerful as those ofthe room which we just mentioned. Labratory fees in some science courses range from 5 to 25 dollars a year. An under- graduateis additional expenses, such as Wine, women and song, trips to Utica and the surrounding social centers may cost a great deal or practically nothing. It all depends on how much the student has. They all come back broke. 51323 YOU DIDN'T SAY A WORD ALL EVENING! DON'T BE LIKE THAT! Let us show you how to develop your larynx, your speaking personality, and your ability to speak on your feet, sitting down, or standing on your head. For over one hundred and seventeen years we have been turning out satisfied Customers. Everyone taking our courses raves about them. Don't be satis- lied in being a weakling all your life, assert your l manhood! The Chautauquas are looking for men like you. Are you job-satisfied, unlucky in love, or afraid to express your ideas? Let us help you. Read what our customers say about us. UNVIICII I first came to Hamilton, I was tongue-tied and my friends laughed at me. Now my tongue is never tied, and every one laughs at me. IfVlI.LARD BOSTYVICK MARSH, '12 I owe all my success to Hamilton Public Speaking. ELIHU RooT, '64- IfVere it not for Hamilton Public Speaking, where would I be today? CALVIN L. Lewis, '90 Hamilton has justly earned its claim to the title of the 'New Athens'. VVu.1.1AM H. SQUIRES, IS8 Clip the coupon below and receive our new free catalog, gratis, without charge, obligation, or practical value. I'IAMIl.'l'ON C01.l,l5Gl2 INsTV1'U'1'l3 Clinton, N. Y. l ' DIEAIK SIRS: l'm interested in your proposition on how to speak freely. I have checked the courses I am interested in: El Debating lj Discussion lj Deelamation lj Extemporaneous Name . . Address . . IZISSJ K ESTABLISHED 1818 'LX C bf. ffl? f,e. - CEQQ Lotta i Isl Q53 -,Q mm Elnrnt nt 1 ' out 2 is ff is 5, Nnnlsou AVENUE COR.FORTY-FOURTH sms:-:T jf , . f ' New vonn X , , y fd?- I 'l 1 Clothes for Vacation I l at it d .Vg I t fifW1v i,,f he il g41..ZA .1-' JH LL am, lwfl S S --,515 il ll - iffFll'M'iW I U.I'HI'1'1Cf port C iwf Sena' Fr our NEW Illzzsmzted mm:.:.:.. : . 'wai..'mi , . , B OTNE CATALOGUE BOSTON N:-:wnumr conuzn or Bsmczuav Smsn' NEWPORT PALM BEACH HERE IS THE POINT A suit or top coat that has any feature con- spiciously noticeable has not any claim for style. Exacting dressers desire to be distinc- tive, not conspicious---a vast difference. MAHER CLOTHES are distinctive. This is Why so many college men wear them. For clothes that appeal to your sense of good ULSIC COITIC TCO MAHER BROTHERS CLOTHES, HATS, FURNISHINGS THAT COLLEGE MEN LIKE OPPOSITE HOTEL UTICA UTICA, N. Y. IPATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERSZI 'I I 'r ' .. IV I wif I ae' .I. 1, I . ..,. ff? R 'E I .ll - ll . 5 V- lu Iwi If ' I ' L' 'L '-f f V 29 ' fl- I fi I, - Lvl -W - ,h .4 1 , ii' it JA.. Ig, ,QV Alpuqfn 600051 I t gL -I Ed ln . SP E110 . R . - 4: IV . ISTHL 51 fog 'JT Si' -ef I N 002259001 ll ' N kai' 5 '. 1 E.-It glxl Q bgl. M X316 . - 1: 4, . I i- Golf 51,1 M -. 5: Yheekzngbemz 6 Ijtloezk Co. - 11 ,v ial :lit Cquii::Z,S, 1: ESTABLISHED 1821 yall SWL? A if 'W 1' .xx QU! P , I ,ou 1, PIANOS, PLAYER PIANOS, . ff J A4 .Q VICTROLAS, RADIOS fl If 'E qqargnfls i ll A A i . 55-gxagkuie' l 1 l, A Sajl' Plein' to Suliifv Your Mmiml Need: 'r ,l 1l9-121 GENESEE STREET 1: UTICA, N. Y. Ii Amcriczfs Oldest Reiail Piano Store P 'r 'r 1 I, Glffs and PHHY Favors :g HUGHES OPTICAL CO. 1: INC. 'I . . . . THE GIFT SHQP E: DZJllJ67ZJI7Zg Optzezems jewelers I 41 PHONE 4-9243 I 'I Ii ROOM 525 UTICA GAS 8: ELECTRIC BLDG 4 LAFAYETTE STREET :I P UTICA, N. Y. Ig UTICA' N- Y' Ir ASSOCIATED LAUNDRIES Speeiezl Student Lezzmdvfy Service Leave Bundle at COLLEGE STORE, Agent Laundry Collected Tuesday and Friday - :::::.-:::::::: Y-.-:::::::::.-:::,::::::::::.-::: IIPATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERSII ax'-v-.'4,Q4-.4-,-,.', Gefzem! cjwerclwzfedife H6Z7f6f1Ud7f6 and Tlzmzbmg Kodfzflef :md Cfmzem Supplies Electric Lamps and 524111101265 ESTATE OF H. J. ALLEN CLINTON, N. Y. PHONE 145 0, ------Q--A COAL Na COKE M65 QQISZD 1' omazf 2.11 . Vzoleif P Q Shoulder and Wrist Bouquets P CST 759 .5165 Corsages for All Occasions I Flowers by Wire to All Parts 4, of the World lr 1 W- 85 S TE We Specialize in Fancy Roses TELEPHONE 18 ' COLLEGE STREET CLINTON, N. Y. Over to BAKER'S UTICA, N. Y. KPATRONIZL OUR ADVERTISERSII CHARTERED BUSSES DeLuxe Busses of Unusual Beauty and Comfort for All Occasions 'Picnicr Owings Coflegaf ,Lbdgef Clzzby 7D7'j'I!6Zl6' ?d7flj6J' NEW' YORK STATE RAILWAYS TEL. UTICA 2-1151 523-325 MAIN STREET, UTICA, N. Y. 8K Social Stationery and Engraving Correct jewelry for Men Wholesale Dealers FRUITS and PRODUCE t OYSTERS and CLAMS 1, W. B. WILCOX CO. EE 246 G euesee street UTICA, N. Y UTICAT N' Y' if c min Bm ness Since 1802 Q CHARLES E. MEYERS BAGGS HOTEL RESTAURANT Dial 2-9571 MAIN STREET, UT1cA, N. Y. EPATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERSI KP ,,,, - -1q l- , ONE WHO E-'EELS QUITE SYMPATHETIC TOWARD THE TYPE AND CLASS OF GARMENT WORN BY THE STUDENTS OF OXFORD, AND OTHER FAMOUS INSTITUTIONS OF LEARNING, IS SURE- LY APT TO BE IM- PRESSED BY ,- - W .m.,A J? - Irs- I E-Ill 21 184 Q' X I. , h I lad, L: -.I I' N4-,xdifj . I Qlflmrterlloouse CLOTH ES Y Ci! 340 545 S50 AI LEN SCHMIDT 81 CO 156 Genesee Street Road -made DAN MILNE HOMECRAFT A Fun Line of UTICA N Y SERVICE FURNITURE and RUGS H U B M A R K Specxal Prices to Colleges Rubbefs and OVCfSh0CS A SQUARE DEAL , THE COLLEGE STORE C02 Varlck St UTICA N 507 Columbia St. COMMONS DAN J. SULLIVAN Druggist The Slore of Persona! Service 215 Genesee Street Utica, N. Y ATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERSJ 4-,-e.-.,.'.4s,4-.,-..,-.,-,0',4a.,-,,..- 0,00 4-,..-.,.-,-..04.,-.'.' 4-,J-.A -.-r,..,..-,.,',4 4-0.-f',a,,4- .-' To Serve You Better is Our Constant Aim Hardware is Our Business BAUER HARDWARE COMPANY, Inc. 1044 Whitesboro Street Phone 2-7718 -----,,,----- Clothes Cleaned and Pressed Correctly at George Dawes 35 W. Park Row Phone 12-W Clinton, N. Y. DRY AND STEAM CLEANING -: .- :::::-::::::: ::::0f : :: .- .-:- - - ::::.,4'.p:: :::::,-.,::::. Buy Your PIANOS VICTROLAS RADIOS RECORDS From KEMPE BROS. The Old Reliable Music House 86 Genesee Street Utica, N. Y FORD'S MARKET Has the Location, Equipment, Quality and Prices We Aim to Please the Public PHONE 19 FORD BLOCK CLINTON, N. Y. -.-:::::::::: -:::::::::::::::' - - - I - 4-... - --, a .+.-4,4-.+: .r,.f-.-.-- ,.- ,--4-.- Compliments to the Class of 1930 UTICA FLYING SERVICE, Inc. v- ---------:::4.-:::- jjmtra Sv Oiurlrg, Zinn. HEADQUARTERS FOR I GBIU fginglisly max ARTIST MATERIALS PAINTS AND VARNISI-IES PICTURE FRAMING 400 Broadway, Utica, N. Y. l r 1 A i PATRONIZE OUR ADVERT SILRSJ 4-04- JESS WILLIAMS Flo w em THE SILENT TOKENU 1213 Mohawk St. Phone 23016 Utica, N. Y. N ':N::'TT:H:::::H::::::H:::::xxx . I: Athletic Supporters Anklets L 7 3 qblwggzjlt and GWCW Wristlets, Elastic Hosiery, bf Belts and Trusses THE RELIABLE STORE EDWARD A. BOYLE J. W. DELAHUNT Formerly Sec. Howarth-Ballard Drug Co. Il Clarendon Bldg. 219 Genesee St. CLINTON, N- Y' Upstairs Opposite City Hall if C077qJ!f77267Zf.f of HAND 81 GRANEY COMPANY, Inc. Utica, New York GENERAL TIRES :.'::::::::::v-:::'.'::::.-::::.-::: ::::::::: ::::: :-J: Hotel and Restaurant Equipment and Supplies China Glassware Silverware Refrigeration BRAYTON 8: CO. Inc. 207-209 john Street Utica, N. Y. EPATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERSJ ---------vv-vv---, ---Q4-,--,----.,::::f::::.'.'::,::,.,,.,:::: COLLEGE AND SCHOOL The Obezmw Studio A. M. ODELL and F. L. MADIGAN, Photographers 241 Genesee St., Utica, N. Y. WORK A SPECIALTY P :::::::::::::::::: , :-::::::: fe ' :::: Our Glasses .Men Qf H6Z77Zf!f077.' . 4, Rel1eve Headaches 1 . . 4 Are you satisfied with your 1 haircuts? Thousands of people drug them- E If not, try us. selves for headaches, while eye 1 strain is really the trouble. I 4 :I Our examination will disclose the ' trouble, and our glasses will relieve 1 the strain. Have your eyes We have sarislied the gen- eration before you. We can please you. , NO WAITING examined- 1, six BARBERS IN ATTENDANCE ,ag-9, : MANICURING M. E. 8: A. M. KENNEY 1 HOTEL UTICA 252 Genesee Street 1' BARBER SHOP UTICA, N. Y. ' T. 1. BRITCHER COAL, COKE AND WOOD MASON SUPPLIES . Telephone Clinton 101 CLINTON Office and Yard at Taylor Ave EPATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERSJ -,,, .,-,,., , ,--.. :--: ::::----A-------- COMPLIMENTS OF THE JUNIOR CLASS QQ, .1-,,,-0,04 ohn C. Hieber 81 Co., Inc jobbem Dry Goods, Underwear, Hosiery, Notions and Floor Coverings UTICA, N. Y. Clinton Tailor 14 COLLEGE STREET CLINTON, N. Y. SUITS AND COATS Cleaned Pressed Repaired Our Morto SERVICE ,-,',,.,,0-a.Q.'QQ,00::::-- ------v--Y----v------ RESTAURANT DINNERS LUNCHES DAIRYMENS' LEAGUE ICE CREAM oe Karker Clinton, N. Y. 4-: :.- :'.':.-:: 4-.Q ::::::,.,- ::.f:::::::::::: .- :.-:: :::::::,-:::::::::- fPATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS1 :::: :.-:v-.,.,::::::::- 'l l HEADQUARTERS ,315 N for O, Q, 0 Quality Sport Clothes Wil' X ----,,4.'--,--,,---- Work Clothes Riding Equipment Gloves and Mittens Sheeplined Coats Boots and Shoes ' Army and Navy Goods if X61 N, l,ffAM CIIOCK-FU Ll. OF YOUTH UNITS . MANN'S 76 Genesee Street UTICA, N. Y. UTICA DIVISION GENERAL ICE CREAM CO. UTICA, N. Y. OPEN EVENINGS WILLIAM TRIMBEY CQ. Wholesale Grocery 141 HOTEL STREET UTICA, N. Y EPATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERSJ 4.Q.p',.':::Q. :: ::::::::.-:::::::: ::::::.,.,::::::v-,::: ::::, +:::::::.-:::: -::::::::::: .A O,Tooles Motor Renting Service Incorporated PACKARD CARS EXCLUSIVELY Main Olllce and Garage 115-119 WEST 52nd STREET, NEW YORK ' Phones 2600-2610 Circle :fQ.'::::',,,:::: -:::::::::.-- v v - - - - - ..v... v - - v 'r 'r 'r I 5 Schick sEoN GARAGE, Inc. if RCPCWHS :I Razor '5 works like a pump gun HANSEN 8: HAURI r lr li Heavy Silver Plate . 35.00 Open Day and Nlght Heavy Gold Plate . 357.50 P l A compact reload clip con- taihing 20 super-keen 215 East 67th Street 1, Schick blades . . . 5.75 NEW YORK CITY n tr 4 . . . Clalrmont 8: Nichols Co. , A TELEPHONE 9 3352. ' o ticians Rhinclnndcr 29221 , P 'I New York n lr 1 PAUL E. PLATO, Inc. jewelers PARIS: 78 Champs Elysees NEW YORK: 576 Fifth Avenue Tel. New York Tel. Paris Bryant 3757 Elysees 53-68 : :.-: :: ::: .-'::::::: :.- : : ::::::::::: :::.- .- .-:::::::::.- :: ::::, fPA'I'RON1ZIi OUR ADVERTISERSJ - - -'04-::::4-::'.,::,,,, ::::4-4-:::-0-,004-44-4-4-Q, v - D Eb . Cfertqtfed far gntegrity Every watch bearing the Udall 86 Ballou certificate is honorrnade to keep time accurately and consistently and to do fm credit to its sponsors. j jewelers FIFTH AVENUE AT FIFTY'SEVEN'I'H STREET NEW YORK PARIS OFFICE NEWPORT R I 48 RUE LAFAYETTE PALM BEACH, FLA. X l IS PATRONIZE OUR ADVERT ERS1 ,,:::::,-: -,-,-,,,:,' Q f f f Q? '-,....,-f!f ,.:. Y N301 f. .v .x 2, W Y' - ,,,i:f:H . QESSE4'-.4'4. A DALL Sd BALLOU present a superb Spring collection of iewelry-newly createcl to please cosmopolitan tastes. Uballzkcgalluu fezuelerf FIFTH AVENUE AT F1FI'Y'SI':VENTH STREET NEW YORK PARIS oFF1cE NEWPORT. R. 1. 48 RUE LAFAYE'I'I'E PALM BEACH. FLA. EETEEPETFP' , - - ' PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERSQI :.- ::.'-::::::::.r:::Q.-::::::0::::: ::::4-::::- BRIARCLIEE LODGE AN261'fCd!5 Foremoft Remr! Hotel BRIARCLIFF MANOR, N. Y. Dinner Dances Every Night but Sunday Recreational Facilities include Saddle Horses, Tennis, Swimming flndoor and Ourj :A-:::,:.-::: A-::::,::::::::.'.r'.'::.-A :::- 1' Vrana Flowers, Inc. HAYES U 1 I NATIONAL BANK Nm NEW YORK CLINTON, N. Y. if Flowers by Wire to All Parts of the World 'v Phone Circle 2914 -J: A-: ,-,,.,4-:::,.- -:::v-: :.-:: A-:: :: ::'::::'4-':: ::: :.- : A- .- : :::::, QA Store of Qualify mm' Satisfaction Ice Cream - Sodas - Sundaes Confectionery - Smokers' Supplies Magazines HOC-iAN'S STORE CLINTON A A A A A A A A A A - -::: -f: :::::.'-:::.-:..f::.AA-:::::::0:::A-:.-,::::: IIPATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERSJ -.'::: .- 'Q-4-':::::.-.-: 0.'.,:::4-.1-4-:-.-:..,,::: ,Q 1 ...- vi? YL? ? 7 'r Y v 'r T ' v4t.?L2.-'i2:'J2W4'-?i'7-2-7 7 7 7 937 Y ' -Fi? 1 .E'-llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllillllIllIlllqlgi If 1' .............. ......................... ....................... ..........i....................... . ................ li , T E 1, L E5 E :ff A ESTABLISHED 1888 E l Wi f 5 Q ,' E SN .. STEE R 5 if 5 E Z2 j PHOTOGRAPHERS 5 gb N 5 5 E lf ' EQUIPPED Wm-1-1 MANYYEARS EXPERIENCE E FOR MAKING PHOTOGRAPHS OF ALL SORTS E f' DEZSIRABLE FOR ILLUSTRATING COLLEGE E E: A ANNUALS. BEST OBTAINABLE ARTISTS, E j WORKMANSHIR AND THE: CAPACITY FOR E f PROMPT AND UNEQUALLED SERVICE E I' E E T, 220 WEST 4251- STREET, E A NEW YORK. E E :TA L E if ,. gfllllllgg :-n nnE : s flilnlllmlnmmmmlummmumuu nmumn I mnummmuummnuummmmumlri RL- - ' . .t'7':' ? ?e. KPATRONIZIE OUR ADVERTISE Rsj f T Charlton and Company jletneletzf 634 Fifth Avenue New York City E J -W.. S E 5,1 .Sm ' JR IW IIIUIIUIUUIUII . JR X- 0,q,,, EE Q 'Rza . - ' 21 1 ' Q Q A PW 5 I Vo- -1? Q Y Q he QI num IA THE WILLARD PRESS BOGNVILLE, N. Y. Catalog Slzbeciazlzkfiff I Tzzblimriofa ?1fi1efe14f Qmem! Qmmewifz! Printing QUALITY SERVICE PRICE E U T II -::::::::::::::::-0 ::::0::: : 4-::: -::: 04- :::::: : : .- -:: :.f ':::::: .- - IHUDIPUEAID'lUDIF' Nnlpaz-wn'Nn 13s QIXOIH' clream ofa fcricl.m1'1l'1Lzc1!co1'1'1eslrue ' ig lf We place at your disposal our stuff of 300 master '7 ' '4 ' craftsmen ...... men who have given their fifv- ,., life to their art ...... men who have made 71,5 ,Q . , Q BUREAU CRAFT and QUALITY Q lg, synonymous innealrolis : .- ::.-.-::: .- : ::::: : :::::.- : : -:::::::.'::0::::.':::: -:: : : :v- EPATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS1


Suggestions in the Hamilton College - Hamiltonian Yearbook (Clinton, NY) collection:

Hamilton College - Hamiltonian Yearbook (Clinton, NY) online collection, 1908 Edition, Page 1

1908

Hamilton College - Hamiltonian Yearbook (Clinton, NY) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 1

1923

Hamilton College - Hamiltonian Yearbook (Clinton, NY) online collection, 1924 Edition, Page 1

1924

Hamilton College - Hamiltonian Yearbook (Clinton, NY) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 1

1933

Hamilton College - Hamiltonian Yearbook (Clinton, NY) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 1

1935

Hamilton College - Hamiltonian Yearbook (Clinton, NY) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 1

1936


Searching for more yearbooks in New York?
Try looking in the e-Yearbook.com online New York yearbook catalog.



1985 Edition online 1970 Edition online 1972 Edition online 1965 Edition online 1983 Edition online 1983 Edition online
FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES GENEALOGY ARCHIVE REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today! Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly! Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.