Massachusetts Institute of Technology - Technique Yearbook (Cambridge, MA)

 - Class of 1910

Page 1 of 496

 

Massachusetts Institute of Technology - Technique Yearbook (Cambridge, MA) online collection, 1910 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 496 of the 1910 volume:

■ ' ' ••iu ' %. i i-SlV ' rM ' . S 5VV • ' ■,•• :r- V. ■■ • ■- J,- ' A . - v:: : - ■ ' ■ ' i - - i-i.i.- ::-. ' - ' ,..--i5. '  -■• ' .:MMk: k i Co Bitljarti Cocfeburn aclaurtn PRESIDENT-ELECT OF THE INSTITUTE, AN UNTIRING SCIENTIST AND AN EMINENT EDUCATOR, AS AN EARNEST OF OUR LOYALTY AND REGARD WE RESPECTFULLY DEDICATE THIS BOOK VOLUME XXIV TECHNIQUE THE YEAR-BOOK OF THE MASSACHU SETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY PUBLISHED BY THE JUNIOR CLASS © OARD of Publication for the Class of 1910: DOUGLAS CRAWFORD McMURTRIE, Editor-in-Chief; CHARLES EATON CREECY, Business Manager; FRANK FREDERICK BELL, Treasurer; CLIFFORD CHASE HIELD, HAROLD LOCKETT, PHILIP DUNBAR TERRY, Associate Editors; JOHN HAMILTON RUCKMAN, Art Editor; HENRY NORRIS HARRISON, Society Editor; ELMER JACOBS, Athletic Editor; MERRILL WILLIAM TILDEN, JAMES STUART SNEDDON, Statisticians; PHILLIP THOMAS HARRIS, PHILIP WEEKS BURNHAM, Assistant Art Editors; NATHANIEL STEVENS SEELEY, WILLIAM RATCLIFFE WALDO, EDWARD STUART, Assistant Business Managers Published in April, 1909, at Boston, Massachusetts Page Corporation 7 Administration Officers 8 Officers of Instruction 9 Richard Cockburn Maclaurin 42 The Classes 45 Fraternities 83 Local Societies 155 The New Union 164 Athletics 169 Field Day 224 Professional Societies 243 Clubs 257 Publications 275 Musical Clubs 285 Miscellaneous 293 Junior Week 303 Tech Show 307 Association of Alumni 317 Senior Week 323 Chemical Summer School 327 The Institute 329 Grinds 343 Statistics 373 Concerning the Colleges 384 Charles Milton Spofford 382 General Directory 390 Acknowledgments 418 Index 419 Buyers ' Guide 1 COFlPOR riONI Acting President ARTHUR A. NOTES WILLIAM ENDICOTT HOWARD A. CARSON CHARLES J. PAINE CHARLES FAIRCHILD DAVID R. WHITNEY FRANCIS H. WILLIAMS JAMES P. TOLMAN HOWARD STOCKTON NATHANIEL THAYER CHARLES F. CHOATE HIRAM F. MILLS PERCIVAL LOWELL CHARLES C. JACKSON SAMUEL M. FELTON DESMOND FITZGERALD FRANCIS BLAKE CHARLES W. HUBBARD THOMAS L. LIVERMORE Term expires March, 1910 FREDERICK P. COPELAND JOSEPH P. GRAY FRANK L. LOCKE Term expires March, 1912 GEORGE W. KITTREDG FRANK G. STANTIAL GEORGE E. HALE Secretary JAMES P. MUNROE Treasurer FRANCIS R. HART A. LAWRENCE ROTCH GEORGE WIGGLESWORTH JOHN R. FREEMAN WILLIAM H. LINCOLN J. B. SEWALL A. LAWRENCE LOWELL JAMES P. MUNROE WILLIAM L. PUTNAM EBEN S. DRAPER ROBERT S. PEABODY ELIHU THOMSON ELLIOT C. LEE JAMES P. STEARNS LUCIUS TUTTLE FREDERICK P. FISH FRANCIS L. HIGGINSON CHARLES A. STONE W. MURRAY CRANE Ccrm iHcmbcrs Term expires March, 1911 T. COLEMAN DU PONT CHARLES T. MAIN FREDERICK W. WOOD Term expires March, 1913 JAMES W. ROLLINS, Jr. EVERETT M0RS3 ARTHUR T. BRADLEE On tl)c part of the Commontucaltl) His Excellency EBEN S. DRAPER, Governor Hon. MARCUS P. KNOWLTON, Chief Justice of the Supreme Court Hon. GEORGE H. MARTIN, Secretary of the Board of Education 7 OFFICERS OF ADMINISTRATION Officers of tl)c institute President (Acting) ARTHUR A. NOYES Secretary of the Corporation JAMES P. MUNROE Treasurer FRANCIS R. HART Bursar FRANK H. RAND Librarian ROBERT P. BIGELOW President ' s Assistant HARRY A. RAPELYE Officers of tftc ipacuitp Chairman ARTHUR A. NOYES Dean ALFRED E. BURTON Secretary ALLYNE L. MERRILL Registrar WALTER HUMPHREYS Recorder OBADIAH F. WELLS 8 OFFICERS OF INSTRUCTION CHARLES L. ADAMS, Associate Professor of Drawing and Descriptive Geometry. — Massachusetts Normal Art School, 1879. 23 Burr Street, Jamaica Plain C. FRANK ALLEN, S.B., M. Am. Soc. C.E., Professor of Railroad Engineering. — M.I.T., 1872, L 88 Montview Street, West Roxbury FREDERICK H. BAILEY, A.B., A.M., Professor of Mathematics. — Harvard University, 1887 , $ B K; A.M., Harvard University, 1889. 73 Wendell Street, Cambridge 10 19 10 PROFESSORS 11 FRED L. BARDWELL, S.B., Assistant Professor of Inorganic Chemistry. — University of Minnesota, 1881; M.I.T., 1884, V. 1 1 Chamblet Street, Dorchester DANA P. BARTLETT, S.B., Professor of Mathematics. M.I.T., 1886, VI. 486 Columbus Avenue ARLO BATES, S.B., A.B., A.M., Litt.D., Professor ' of EngHsh; in charge of the Department. — Bowdoin, 1876, A A , ct B K. 4 Otis Place CHARLES W. BERRY, S.B., Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineering. —M.I.T., 1895, VI. 306 School Street, Watertown JOHN BIGELOW, Jr., Major U.S. Army, retired. Pro- fessor of French ; in charge of the Department of Modern Languages. — U.S. Military Academy, 1877. 44 Brimmer Street 12 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV ARTHUR A. BLANC HARD, S.B., Ph.D., Assistant Pro- fessor of Inorganic Chemistry. — M.I.T., 1898, V; Ph.D., Leipzig, 1902. 66 Oxford Road, Newton Center HARRY C. BRADLEY, S.B., Assistant Professor of Drawing and Descriptive Geometry. — M.I.T., 1891. 67 Moreland Street, Roxbury CHARLES B. BREED, S.B., Assoc. Mem. Am. Soc. C.E., Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering. — M.LT., 1897, L 5 George Street, West Lynn EDWARD E. BUGBEE, S.B., Assistant Professor of Mining Engineering and Metallurgy. — M.LT., 1900, III; University of Washington, :S H. 683 Washington Street, Brookline ALFRED E. BURTON, S.B., Am. Soc. C.E., Dean; Professor of Topographical Engineering ; in charge of the Department of Drawing. — Bowdoin, 1878, A K E. 17 Newcastle Road, Faneuil 19 10 PROFESSORS 13 FRANCIS W. CHANDLER, H.M., Am. Inst. Arch., Professor of Architecture; in charge of the Department. 195 Marlborough Street HARRY E. CLIFFORD, S.B., Professor of Theoretical Electricity. M.I.T., 1886, VI, (-) S. 20 Crystal Street, Newton Center CHARLES R. CROSS, S.B., Thayer Professor of Physics; in charge of the Department; Director of the Rogers Laboratory. M.I.T., 1870, Sci. and Lit. 100 Upland Road, Brookline CHARLES F. A. CURRIER, A.B., A.M., Professor of History and Political Science ; in charge of the De- partment. — Harvard University, 1887, A.B., i ' B K; A.M., Harvard University, 1888 ; Fellow of Harvard University studying at Berlin and Paris, 1889-91. 1 Webster Street, Winchester REGINALD ADLWORTH DALY, A.B., A.M., Ph.D., Professor of Physical Geology. — A.B., Victoria College, Toronto, 1891 ; A.M., Harvard University, 1892; Ph.D., Harvard University, 1896. 23 Hawthorn Street, Cambridge 14 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV LOUIS DERR, B.A., M.A., S.B., Associate Professor of Physics. — B. A., Amherst, 1889, A Y, I B K; M.A., ' Amherst, 1892; S.B., M.I.T., 1892, VI. 83 Center Street, Brookline D. DESPRADELLE, Architect, D.P.L.G., Rotch Pro- fessor of Architectural Design. 382 Commonwealth Avenue DAVIS R. DEWEY, A.B., Ph.D., Professor of Econom- ics and Statistics ; in charge of the Department. — University of Vermont, A.B., 1879, A , $ B K; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins University, 1886. 27 Everett Street, Cambridge CARROLL W. DOTEN, Ph.B., A.M., Assistant Professor of Economics. — University of Vermont, Ph.B., 1895 ; A.M., 1899; Harvard University, A.M., 1902,$ A®, 4 B K. 58 Garfield Street, North Cambridge WILLIAM J. DRISKO, S.B., Assistant Professor of Physics. — M.I.T., 1895, VIIL 28 Lloyd Street, Winchester 10 10 PROFESSORS 15 HENRY FAY, A.B., Ph.D., Professor of Analytical Chemistry. A.B., Lafayette College, 1889 ; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins University, 1895. 409 Marlborough Street CHARLES E. FULLER, S.B., Associate Professor of Me chanical Engineering. — M.LT., 1892, II. Wellesley HARRY W. GARDNER, S.B., Assistant Professor of Architecture. — M.I.T., 1894, IV. 1375 Commonwealth Avenue, Allston NATHAN RICHARD GEORGE, Jr., A.B., A.M., As- sistant Professor of Mathematics. — A.B., Harvard University, 1890; A.M., Harvard University, 1891, A X. 112 Newbury Street AUGUSTUS H. GILL, S.B., Ph.D., Associate Professor of Technical Analysis. — M.LT., 1884, V; Ph.D., Leipzig, 1890. Canton Corner 16 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV HARRY M. GOODWIN, S.B., Ph.D., Professor of Phys- ics and Electro-chemistry. — M.I. T., 1890, VIII; Ph.D., Leipzig, 1893. 322 Toppan Street, Brookline GEORGE BARTHOLOMEW HAVEN, S.B., Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineering. — M.I.T., 1894, 11. Webster Street, Needham HARRISON W. HAYWARD, S.B., Assistant Professor of Applied Mechanics. — M.I.T., 1896, X; Am. Soc. for Testing Materials, Int. Soc. for Testing Materials, Assoc. Am. Soc. of C.E., Soc. for the Promotion of Engineering Education. 6 Foster Street, Brookline HEINRICH 0. HOFMAN, E.M., Met.E., Ph.D., Pro- fessor of Metallurgy. — E.M., Met.E., Prussian School of Mines, Clausthal, 1877; Ph.D., Ohio Uni- versity, 1889. 88 Robinwood Avenue, Jamaica Plain GEORGE L. HOSMER, Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering. — M.LT., 1897, L 21 Seaver Street, Wellesley Hills 19 10 PROFESSORS 17 WILLIAM HOVGAARD, Captain in Danish Navy, Professor of Naval Design. Naval Academy, Copenhagen, 1879; Royal Naval College, Green- wich, 1886. 73 Perkins Street, West Newton DUGALD C. JACKSON, S.B., C.E., Professor of Elec- trical Engineering; in charge of the Department of Electrical Engineering. Pennsylvania State College, 1885, 51 Upland Road, Brookline THOMAS AUGUSTUS JAGGAR, Jr., A.B., A.M., Ph.D., Professor of Geology; in charge of the Department of Geology. — Harvard University, A.B., 1893, A.M., 1894, Ph.D., 1897. University Club, Beacon Street WILLIAM A. JOHNSTON, S.B., Mem. Am. Soc. M.E., Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering. — M.I.T., 1892, II. Hillside Terrace, Belmont ERVIN KENISON, S.B., Assistant Professor of Drawing and Descriptive Geometry. — M.I.T., 1893. 71 Wyoming Avenue, Melrose 18 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV GAETANO LANZA, C.E., Professor of Theoretical and Applied Mechanics; in charge of the Depart- ments of Mechanical Engineering and Applied Mechanics. 22 West Cedar Street RALPH R. LAWRENCE, S.B., Associate Professor of Electrical Engineering. M.LT., 1895, VL 34 Summer Street, Dorchester WILLIAM H. LAWRENCE, S.B., Associate Professor of Architecture. — M.LT., 1891, IV. 34 Summer Street, Dorchester FRANK A. LAWS, S.B., Associate Professor of Elec- trical Testing. —M.LT., 1880, VL 124 j 2 Federal Street, Salem WALTER S. LELAND, S.B., Assistant Professor of Naval Architecture. — M.LT., 1896, XIII. Saxonville 19 10 PROFESSORS 19 GILBERT N. LEWIS, A.B., A.M., Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Physico-Chemical Research. A.B., Harvard University, 1896; A.M., Harvard Uni- versity, 1898; Ph.D., Harvard University, 1899. 38 St. Botolph Street CHARLES E. LOCKE, S.B., Assistant Professor of Mining Engineering and Metallurgy. — M.I.T., 1896, III. 93 Kilsyth Road, Brookline ALLYNE L. MERRILL, S.B., Am. Soc. M.E., Professor of Mechanism ; Secretary of the Faculty. — M.I.T. 1885, IL Payson Park, Belmont EDWARD F. MILLER, S.B., Mem. Am. Soc. M.E., Mem. Am. Soc. C.E., Professor of Steam Engi- neering. -M.LT., 1886, n. 538 Ward Street, Newton Center F. JEWETT MOORE, B.A., Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Organic Chemistry. — B.A., Amherst, 1889; X ; Ph.D., Heidelberg, 1893. 220 Marlborough Street 20 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV LEWIS EUGENE MOORE, B.S., C.E., Assistant Pro- fessor of Civil Engineering. — B.S., University of Wisconsin, 1900; C.E., University of Wisconsin, 1906, TBn. 85 Washington Park, Newtonville WILLIAM E. MOTT, S.B., Assoc. Mem. Am. Soc. C.E., Mem. Franklin Institute, Associate Professor of Hydraulic Engineering. — M.I.T., 1889, 1, 2 H, H. 174 Harvard Street, Brookline SAMUEL P. MULLIKEN, S.B., Ph.D., Assistant Pro- fessor of Organic Chemical Research. — M.I.T., 1887, V; Ph.D., Leipzig, 1890. 6 Harris Street, Newburyport WILLIAM H. NILES, S.B., Ph.B., A.M., LL.D., Pro- fessor of Geology and Geography Emeritus. — S.B., Harvard L.S., 1866; Ph.B., Yale S.S., 1867; Berzelius Society; A.M., Wesleyan, 1869; LL.D., Temple, 1903. Hotel Vendome CHARLES L. NORTON, S.B., Associate Professor of Heat Measurements. — M.I.T., 1893, VI. 12 Union Street, Manchester 19 10 PROFESSORS 21 ARTHUR A. NOYES, S.M., Ph.D., Acting President; Professor of Theoretical Chemistry; Director of the Research Laboratory of Physical Chemistry. M.I.T., 1886, V; S.M., M.I.T., 1887; Ph.D., Leip- zig, 1890. 78 Westland Avenue GEORGE A. OSBORNE, S.B., Walker Professor of Mathematics. — Harvard S.S., 1860. 249 Berkeley Street CHARLES F. PARK, S.B., Associate Professor of Me- chanical Engineering, Director of the Lowell In- stitute School for Industrial Foremen, — M.I.T., 1892, II. 21 Prospect Street, Taunton LEONARD M. PASSANO, A.B., Assistant Professor of Mathematics. — Johns Hopkins University, 1889. 20 Bacon Street, Winchester CECIL H. PEABODY, S.B., Professor of Naval Archi- tecture and Marine Engineering; in charge of the Department. — M.LT., 1877, IL 259 Beacon Street 22 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV HENRY G. PEARSON, A.B., Associate Professor of English. — Harvard University, 1893, H, 4 B K. Dudley Street, Newton Center EARLE B. PHELPS, S.B., Assistant Professor of Re- search in Chemical Biology. — M.I.T., 1899, V. 14 Orris Street, Melrose Highlands THOMAS E. POPE, A.M., Professor of Inorganic Chemistry. — Harvard University, 1869. 2 Gem Avenue, Brighton DWIGHT PORTER, Ph.B., Mem. Am. Soc. C.E., Pro- fessor of HydrauUc Engineering. — Yale S.S., 1880; Berzelius Society. 149 Hawthorne Street, Maiden k ' T SAMUEL C. PRESCOTT, S.B., Assistant Professor of Industrial Biology. — M.I.T., 1894, V. 36 High Street, Brookline 19 10 PROFESSORS 23 ROBERT H. RICHARDS, S.B., LL.D., Professor of Mining Engineering and Metallurgy; in charge of the Department. M.I.T., 1868, III; LL.D., University of Missouri, 1908. 32 Elliot Street, Jamaica Plain JOSEPH C. RILEY, S.B., Assistant Professor of Me- chanical Engineering. M.I.T., 1898, II. 77 Rockview Street, Jamaica Plain ARTHUR G. ROBBINS, S.B., Associate Professor of Topographical Engineering. — M.I.T., 1886, I. 42 Oak Street, Belmont ARCHER T. ROBINSON, A.B., Assistant Professor of English. — Harvard University, 1896. Woodcliffe Road, Nev ton Highlands GEORGE E. RUSSELL, S.B., Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering. — M.I.T., 1900, I. 20 March Avenue, West Roxbury 24 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV PETER SCHWAMB, S.B., Professor of Machine De- sign ; Director of the Mechanical Laboratories. — M.I.T., 1878, II. 33 Academy Street, Arlington HENRY L. SEAVER, A.B., Assistant Professor of English. — Harvard University, 1900, $ B K. 83 Van Winkle Street, Ashmont WILLIAM T. SEDGWICK, Ph.B., Ph.D., Professor of Biology; in charge of the Department; Director of the Sanitary Research Laboratory and Sewage Experiment Station. — Ph.B., Yale S.S., 1877; Berzelius Society; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins, 1881, 20 Edge Hill Road, Brookline GEORGE C. SHAAD, S.B., E.E., Associate Professor of Electrical Engineering. — S.B., Pennsylvania State College, 1900, P K i TBH; E.E., Pennsylvania State College, 1905. 2 Newbury Terrace, Newton Center MILES S. SHERRILL, S.B., Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Theoretical Chemistry. — M.LT., 1899, V; Ph.D., Breslau, 1903. 83 Longwood Avenue, Brookline 19 10 PROFESSORS 25 HERVEY W. SHIMER, A.B., A.M., Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Paleontology. A.B., Lafayette Col- lege, 1899; A.M., 1901; Ph.D., Columbia Uni- versity, 1904, :i H. 5 Albemarle Chambers k. HARRISON W. SMITH, A.B., S.B., Associate Professor of Electrical Engineering. A.B., Harvard Uni- versity, 1895, A Y; M.I.T., 1897, II. 188 Woodland Road, Auburndale JOHN 0. SUMNER, A.B., Professor of History. — Har- vard University, 1887. 225 Marlborough Street GEORGE F. SWAIN, S.B., LL.D., Am. Soc. C.E., Hay- v ard Professor of Civil Engineering; in charge of the Department of Civil and Sanitary Engineer- ing.— M.I.T., 1877,1; LL.D., University of New York, 1908. 435 Marlborough Street HENRY P. TALBOT, S.B., Ph.D., Professor of In- organic and Analytical Chemistry; in charge of the Departments of Chemistry and Chemical Engi- neering. M.I.T., 1885, V, r A; Ph.D., Uni- versity of Leipzig, 1890. 273 Otis Street, West Newton 26 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV MAURICE DeKAY THOMPSON, Ph.D., Assistant Pro- fessor of Electro-chemistry. — M.I.T., 1898, VIII, A K E. 5 Fairmount Street, BrookUne FRANK H. THORP, S.B., Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Industrial Chemistry.— M.I.T. , 1889, V; Ph.D., University of Heidelberg, 1893. 200 Mt. Vernon Street, West Roxbury HARRY W. TYLER, S.B., Ph.D., Professor of Mathe- matics; in charge of the Department. — M.I.T., 1884, V; Ph.D., Erlangen, 1889. 39 Gray Cliff Road, Newton Center FRANK VOGEL, A.B., A.M., Professor of Modern Languages. — Harvard University, 1887, A Y. 95 Robinwood Avenue, Jamaica Plain WILLIAM H. WALKER, S.B., Ph.D., Professor of In- dustrial Chemistry ; Director of the Research Labo- ratory of AppHed Chemistry. — S.B., Pennsylvania State College, 1890; 4 K 2; Ph.D., Gottingen, 1892. 613 Walnut Street, Newtonville 19 10 PROFESSORS 27 CHARLES H. WARREN, Ph.B., Ph.D., Assistant Pro- fessor of Mineralogy. Ph.B., Yale, 1896; Ph.D., Yale, 1899, i H. 239 Woodland Road, Auburndale WEBSTER WELLS, S.B., Professor of Mathematics. M.LT., 1873, I. (On leave of absence.) FRED WHEELER, Major U.S. Army, retired. Pro- fessor of Military Science. — U.S. Military Academy, 1878. 15 Arlington Street uiiinui EDWIN B. WILSON, A.B., Ph.D., Associate Professor of Mathematics. — Harvard University, 1899, 4 BK; Ph.D., Yale University, 1901. 16 Lee Street, Cambridge CHARLES-EDWARD AMORY WINSLOW, S.B., S.M., Assistant Professor of Sanitary Biology; Biologist in charge of the Sanitary Research Laboratory and Sewage Experiment Station. — S.B., M.I.T., 1898, VII; S.M., M.LT., 1899. 157 Walnut Street, Brookline 28 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV S. HOMER WOODBRIDGE, A.M., Associate Professor of Heating and Ventilation. — Williams College, 1873. 281 Otis Street, West Newton ALPHEUS G. WOODMAN, S.B., Assistant Professor of Food Analysis. --M.I.T., 1897, V; Assoc. Official Agricultural Chem. ; Am. Chem. Soc. ; Am. Assoc, for Advancement of Science. 299 School Street, Watertown FREDERICK S. WOODS, A.B., A.M., Ph.D., Professor of Mathematics. — Wesleyan University, A. B., 1885; A.M., 1888; Y, OBK; Ph.D., Gottingen, 1894. 123 Sumner Street, Newton Center WILLIAM 0. CROSBY, S.B., Professor of Geology. — Retired under the Carnegie Foundation. PERCIVAL LOWELL, A.B., LL.D., Non-resident Professor of Astronomy; Director of the Lowell Observatory. ELIHU THOMPSON, Non-resident Professor of Applied Electricity. WILLIS R. WHITNEY, Ph.D., Non-resident Professor of Chemical Research. C :. rw GEORGE A. OSBORNE ROBERT H. RICHARDS WILLIAM H. NILES fHARLES R. CROSS GAETANO LANZA GEORGE F. SWAIN FRANCIS W. CHANDLER WILLIAM T. SEDGWICK DAVIS R. DEWEY WEBSTER WELLS CECIL H. PEABODY HARRY W. TYLER ARLO BATES DESIRE DESPRADELLE PETER SCHWAMB C. FRANK ALLEN ALFRED E. BURTON, Dean DWIGHT PORTER HEINRICH 0. HOFMAN HENRY P. TALBOT ARTHUR A. NOYES, Chairman THOMAS E. POPE CHARLES F. A. CURRIER WILLIAM HOVGAARD FRED WHEELER THOMAS A. JAGGAR HARRY E. CLIFFORD JOHN BIGELOW, Jr. WILLIAM E. MOTT AUGUSTUS H. GILL ARTHUR G. ROBBINS FRANK A. LAWS CHARLES E. FULLER WILLIAM A. JOHNSTON CHARLES F. PARK HENRY G. PEARSON RALPH R. LAWRENCE HARRISON W. SMITH GEORGE C. SHAAD EDWIN B. WILSON GILBERT N. LEWIS FRED L. BARDWELL FRANK H. THORP F. JEWETT MOORE HARRY W. GARDNER SAMUEL C. PRESCOTT CHARLES H. WARREN SAMUEL P. MULLIKEN GEORGE B. HAVEN WALTER S. LELAND WILLIAM J. DRISKO C.-E. A. WINSLOW CARROLL W. DOTEN NATHAN R. GEORGE, Jr. ARCHER T. ROBINSON CHARLES E. LOCKE 29 30 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV FRANK VOGEL DANA P. BARTLETT ALLYNE L. MERRILL, Secretary EDWARD F. MILLER WILLIAM H. WALKER WILLIAM 0. CROSBY FREDERICK S. WOODS HARRY M. GOODWIN DUGALD C. JACKSON JOHN O. SUMNER FREDERICK H. BAILEY HENRY FAY REGINALD A. DALY S. HOMER WOODBRIDGE WILLIAM H. LAWRENCE LOUIS DERR CHARLES L. ADAMS CHARLES L. NORTON LEONARD M. PASSANO GEORGE L. HOSMER CHARLES B. BREED MAURICE DE K. THOMPSON HENRY L. SEAVER MILES S. SHERRILL GEORGE E. RUSSELL EARLE B. PHELPS EDWARD E. BUGBEE LEWIS E. MOORE ERVIN KENISON HARRY C. BRADLEY ALPHEUS G. WOODMAN JOSEPH C. RILEY CHARLES W. BERRY HARRISON W. HAYWARD ARTHUR A. BLANCHARD HERVEY W. SHIMER CHAUNCY C. BATCHELOR, A.B. Instructor in English ROBERT P. BIGELOW, S.B., Ph.D. Instructor in Biology; Librarian JOSEPH BLACHSTEIN Instructor in Modern Languages ROYALL D. BRADBURY, S.B. Instructor in Civil Engineering STEPHEN A. BREED, S.B. Instructor in Mechanical Drawing and Descriptive Geometry 11 Traill St., Cambridge 3 Spruce St. 691 Parker St., Roxbury Technology Chambers 75 Chandler St. W. FELTON BROWN Instructor in Freehand Drawing ROY G. BURNHAM, S.B. Instructor in Mechanical Engineering PETER S. BURNS, Ph.D. Instructor in Inorganic Chemistry HENRY K. BURRISON, S.B. Instructor in Mechanical Drawing and Descriptive BENJAMIN E. CARTER, Jr., A.M. Instructor in Mathematics 35 Glenwood St., Roxbury Essex Milton 26 Lincoln Park, West Newton Geometry 142 St. Botolph St. 31 32 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV CHARLES H. CLAPP, S.B. Instructor in Geology CLINTON H. COLLESTER, A.M. Instructor in English DANIEL F. COMSTOCK, Ph.D. Instructor in Theoretical Physics IRVING H. COWDREY, S.B. Instructor in Mechanical Engineering HAROLD G. CRANE, S.B. Instructor in Electrical Engineering FRANCIS H. DIKE, A.B. Instructor in Modern Languages MYRON W. DOLE, S.B. Instructor in Mechanical Engineering JUSTUS ERHARD, A.B. Instructor in Modern Languages HAROLD A. EVERETT, S.B. Instructor in Marine Engineering CHARLES FIELD, 3d, S.B. Instructor in Organic Chemistry EUGENE D. FORBES, S.B. Instructor in Physics SAMUEL E. GIDEON Instructor in Mechanical Drawing and Descriptive Geometry ARTHUR L. GOODRICH, S.B. Instructor in Mechanical Drawing and Descriptive Geometry SIDNEY GUNN, A.M. Instructor in English WILLIAM T. HALL, S.B. Instructor in Analytical Chemistry CARLE R. HAYWARD, S.B. Instructor in Mining Engineering and Metallurgy 18 Atlantic St., South Boston 100 Charles St. 1471 Beacon St., Brookline 214 Columbus Ave. 60 Greenough St., Brookline 4 Brimmer St. 25 Cumberland St. 431 Marlborough St. Linden St., Wellesley Hills 57 Waban Hill Road, Chestnut Hill 96 Franklin St., South Framingham 92 Marlborough St. 114 St. Botolph St. 9 Pond St., Jamaica Plain 37 Pomfret St., West Roxbury 233 Goffe St., Quincy 19 10 INSTRUCTORS 33 ROYAL R. HEUTER, S.B. Instructor in Mechanical Engineering ADDISON F. HOLMES, S.B. Instructor in Mechanical Engineering JOHN W. HOWARD, S.B. Instructor in Civil Engineering WALTER HUMPHREYS, S.B. Instructor in Mechanism ; Registrar HERMAN R. HUNT, S.B. Instructor in Naval Architecture WALTER H. JAMES, S.B. Instructor in Mechanical Engineering HERBERT T. KALMUS, Ph.D. Instructor in Physics FREDERICK R. KNEELAND, S.B. Instructor in Analytical Chemistry 17 Washburn Ave., Auburndale 41 Ruggles St. 465 Washington St., Brookline 343 Clinton Road, Brookline 27 Marathon St., Arlington Portsmouth, N.H. 1200 Commonwealth Ave., Allston 92 Marlborough St. HERMAN R. KURRELME YER, Ph.D. Instructor of Modern Languages 19 Burr St., Jamaica Plain JOSEPH LIPKE, B.S., A.M. Instructor in Mathematics GERALD F. LOUGHLIN, Ph.D. Instructor in Geology WALDO V. LYON, S.B. Instructor in Electrical Engineering MALCOLM C. MACKENZIE Instructor in Mechanical Engineering GEORGE R. B. MEISTER Instructor in Modern Languages JOHN MILLS, A.M. Instructor in Mechanical Drawing and CLARENCE L. E. MOORE, Ph.D. Instructor in Mathematics 115 Gainsborough St. 45 Hosmer St., Everett 225 Newbury St. 44 Irwin St., Winthrop Beach 100 Charles St. 1069 Beacon St., Brookline Descriptive Geometry 19 St. James Ave, 34 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV NEWELL C. PAGE, S.B. Instructor in Physics JOSEPH W. PHELAN, S.B. Instructor in Inorganic Chemistry HENRY B. PHILLIPS, Ph.D. Instructor in Mathematics CHARLES H. PORTER, A.B., S.B. Instructor in Electrical Engineering RUFUS C. REED, S.B. Instructor in Mining Engineering and Metallurgy ELLEN H. RICHARDS, A.M., S.B. (Mrs. R. H. Richards) Instructor in Sanitary Chemistry GEORGE W. ROLFE, A.M. Instructor in Sugar Analysis LAWRENCE S. SMITH, S.B. Instructor in Mechanical Engineering ELLWOOD B. SPEAR, B.A., Ph.D. Instructor in Inorganic Chemistry PERCY G. STILES, Ph.D. Instructor in Physiology and Personal Hygiene CLIFFORD M. SWAN, A.M., S.B. Instructor in Physics GEORGE W. SWETT, S.B. Instructor in Mechanical Engineering THEODORE H. TAFT, S.B. Instructor in Mechanical Engineering RICHARD C. TOLMAN, S.B. Instructor in Theoretical Chemistry ROBERT S. WILLIAMS, Ph.D. Instructor in Analytical Chemistry 28 Maxwell Road, Winchester 60 Brooks St., West Medford 28 John St., Brookline 46 Hereford St. 63 St. Botolph St. 32 EHot St., Jamaica Plain 344 Brookline St., Cambridge 64 Andover St., Peabody 22 Rutland Square 19 Proctor St., Newtonville 6 Randolph Hall, Cambridge 17 Gray St., Cambridge 1 Avon Place, Cambridge 84 Highland St., West Newton 355 Massachusetts Ave. 19 10 INSTRUCTORS 35 3lnotiuctoifi anti .Scfiicstante m tl)r iflrrbanir .3rto 23 Irving St., South Framingham GEORGE E. BRADLEY Assistant in Machine-Tool Work FRANK A. BROWN Assistant in Forging ERNEST CURLEY Assistant in Machine-Tool Work ALFRED R. HUNTER Assistant in Chipping and Filing JAMES R. LAMBIRTH Instructor in Forging CHARLES E. LITTLEFIELD Assistant in Chipping and Filing THEODORE B. MERRICK Instructor in Woodwork and Foundry Work ALBERT L. MOULTON Assistant in Woodwork and Foundry Work. ROBERT H. SMITH Instructor in Machine-Tool Work. 49 Conant St., Beverly 51 Massachusetts Ave. 563 Summer St., Abington 46 Wheatland Ave., Dorchester North Wilmington 99 Claremont Ave., Arlington Heights 12 Chestnut St., Beverly Hotel St. Cloud, Tremont St. ijnstrttctors in (Spmnastirs WINFIELD C. TOWNE, A.B. Instructor in Gymnastics HAROLD A. BRUCE Assistant in Physical Training 137 Newbury St. 388 Harvard St., Cambridge ;fHcDtcal Snutcifr; Lecturer on personal bpsient FRANKLIN W. WHITE, S.B., M.D. 416 Marlborough St. JOHN A. ALLAN, B.A., M.Sc. Assistant in Geology CHARLES E. ALLEN, S.B. Assistant in Civil Engineering HENRY B. ALVORD, S.B. Assistant in Civil Engineering ALFRED B. BABCOCK, S.B. Assistant in Theoretical Chemistry JAMES M. BARKER, S.B. Assistant in Civil Engineering LOWRY D. W. BENDER Assistant in Mining Engineering and Metallurgy HARRY S. CHANDLER, S.B. Assistant in Organic Chemistry CLARENCE W. CLARK, S.B. Assistant in Industrial Chemistry RAYMOND F. CONRON, S.B. Assistant in Civil Engineering CHESNEY H. CRISWELL, S.B. Assistant in Analytical Chemistry ALLAN R. CULLIMORE, S.B. Assistant in Civil Engineering LEON A. DICKINSON, S.B. Assistant in Mining Engineering and Metallurgy 36 572 Massachusetts Ave. 37 St. Botolph St. South Weymouth 719 Boylston St. Technology Chambers 133 Highland Ave. 45 Jaques St., Somerville 485 Blue Hill Ave., Roxbury 60 Batavia St. 78 Huntington Ave. 77 Montview St., West Roxbury 9 Richdale Ave., Somerville 19 10 ASSISTANTS 37 HERBERT S. EAMES, S.B. Assistant in Physics EVIE J. EDWARDS, B.S. Assistant in Electrical Engineering HAROLD C. FAXON, S.B. Assistant in Physics PAUL S. FISKE, A.B. Assistant in Inorganic Chemistry ROBERT S. GARDNER, S.B. Assistant in Mechanical Engineering J. ERNEST GARRATT, S.B. Assistant in Civil Engineering CHARLES A. GIBBONS, Jr. Assistant in Mining Engineering and Metallurgy CHARLES W. GREEN, B.S. Assistant in Electrical Engineering SAMUEL F. HATCH, S.B. Assistant in Mechanical Engineering ARTHUR T. HINCKLEY, S.B. Assistant in Inorganic Chemistry RALPH G. HUDSON, S.B. Assistant in Electrical Engineering ARTHUR H. JASSON, S.B. Assistant in Naval Architecture CLARENCE C. KNIPMEYER, B.S. Assistant in Electrical Engineering CHARLES E. LEAVITT, S.B. Assistant in Mechanical Engineering JOHN H. LOCKE, S.B. Assistant in Physics and Electro-Chemistry HOWARD B. LUTHER, S.B. Assistant in Civil Engineering Lincoln St., South Framingham 23 Alaska St., Roxbury 28 Main St., Randolph 122 Brooks St., West Medford 290 Highland Ave., Wollaston 135 Oxford St., North Cambridge 264 Newbury St. 22 Peterborough St. 16 Claremont Park 16 Sherwood St., Roslindale 356 Arborway, Jamaica Plain Mt. Pleasant Ave., Maiden 23 Alaska St., Roxbury 30 Broad St., Weymouth 12 Abbotsford Road, Brookline 217 Newbury St. 38 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV KENNETH MOLLER, A.B., S.B. Assistant in Mechanical Engineering CARLTON B. NICKERSON, A.M. Assistant in Inorganic Chemistry OCTAVUS L. PEABODY, S.B. Assistant in Technical Analysis EDGAR P. SLACK, S.B. Assistant in Physics EDMUND H. SQUIRE, S.B. Assistant in Heat Measurements 40 Oakland Road, Brookline 37 St. Botolph St. Technology Chambers North Abington 16 Washburn Ave., Auburndale LOYD H. SUTTON, S.B. Assistant in Mechanical Engineering ARMEN H. TASHJIAN, A.B., S.M. Assistant in Heat Measurements 569 Massachusetts Ave. 54 The Fenway ELLIOT W. TAYLOR, B.S. Assistant in Mechanical Engineering 101 Beach St., Wollaston ROBERT E. THAYER, S.B. Assistant in Mechanical Engineering GEORGE B. THOMAS, E.E. Assistant in Electrical Engineering JOHN J. THOMAS, S.B. Assistant in Mechanical Engineering WILLIAM H. TOPPAN, S.B. Assistant in Theoretical Chemistry RUDOLPH B. WEILER, S.B. Assistant in Mechanical Engineering MASON T. WHITING, A.B., S.B. Assistant in Civil Engineering RUFUS W. G. WINT, S.B. Assistant in Analytical Chemistry HAROLD S. WONSON, S.B. Assistant in Naval Architecture 110 Spring St., Medford Technology Chambers 114 Taylor St., Waltham 120 High St., Newburyport 26 Brooks St., Brighton 145 Essex St., Longwood 78 Huntington Ave. 149 E. Main St., Gloucester SPECIAL LECTUHERS HOMER ALBERS. LL.B Business Law JOHN ALDEN, S.B Textile Printing TRUMAN H. BARTLETT Modelling ALLEN H. COX Architectural Design DAVID A. GREGG Pen-and-ink Drawing ELEAZER B. HOMER, S.B Architectural History JOHN GEORGE JACK Landscape Horticulture CHARLES D. JENKINS, S.B Illuminating Gas and Pottery ARTHUR D. LITTLE Paper JAMES W. LOVELAND, S.B The Manufacture of Soaps GUY LOWELL, A.B., S.B Landscape Architecture SAMUEL W. MEAD Architectural Design WALTER E. PIPER, S.B., Rubber EURT R. RICKARDS, S.B Public Health Laboratory Practice ODIN B. ROBERTS, LL.B The Nature and Function of Patents for Inventions TIMOTHY W. SPRAGUE, S.B Electricity in Mining ROSS TURNER Water Color W. LYMAN UNDERWOOD Biology C. HOWARD WALKER History of Ornament S. W. WILDER, Jr., S.B Alumina and Alumina Compounds FREDERICK A. WOODS, M.D Theoretical Biology Hccturcrfi for tlic OTurrnit J}car W. S. BURKE Heating and Ventilation ROBERT S. HALE The Price of Electricity WALDEMAR LINDGREN Economic Geology ALPHEUS A. PACKARD, S.B Yacht Designing THOMAS G. RICHARDS, S.B Shop Economy WILLIAM G. SNOW, S.B Heating and Ventilation HENRY E. WARREN, S.B The Governing of Turbines M. C. WHITAKER, S.M Factory Organization and Management C. J. H. WOODBURY, A.M., Sc.D Telephone Engineering 39 H RESEARCH taff of tl)c Ecficarcl) lafaoratorp of |3I)p6ical Cbcmistrp ARTHUR A. NOYES, Ph.D., LL.D. Professor of Theoretical Chemistry 78 Westland Ave. GILBERT N. LEWIS, Ph.D. 38 St. Botolph_St. Associate Professor of Physico-Chemical Research; Acting Director ARTHUR C. MELCHER, S.B. Research Associate in Physical Chemistry ROY D. MAILEY, S.B. Research Associate in Physical Chemistry WILLIAM C. BRAY, Ph.D. Research Associate in Physical Chemistry CHARLES A. KRAUS, Ph.D. Research Associate in Physical Chemistry ROGER D. GALE, S.B. Research Assistant in Physical Chemistry 58 Bowen St., Newton Centre 20 Howard St., Lynn 38 St. Botolph] St. 77 Lakewood Road, Newton Highlands 94 St. Botolph St. §taff of tl)c Krcfcarcb Laboratorp of 9lpplirt Cbcmistrp 613 Walnut St., Newtonville WILLIAM H. WALKER, Ph.D. Professor of Industrial Chemistry; Director HENRY P. TALBOT, Ph.D. Professor of Inorganic and Analytical Chemistry WILLIS R. WHITNEY, Ph.D. Non-resident Professor of Chemical Research AUGUSTUS H. GILL, Ph.D. Associate Professor of Technical Analysis FRANK H. THORP, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Industrial Chemistry 40 273 Otis St., West Newton Schenectady, N.Y. Canton Corner 200 Mt. Vernon St., West Roxbury 19 10 RESEARCH 41 PETER S. BURNS, Ph.D. Research Associate in AppUed Chemistry WARREN K. LEWIS, Ph.D. Research Associate in Applied Chemistry WILLIAM GUERTLER, Ph.D. Research Associate in AppHed Chemistry Milton 11 Hollis St., Newton 20 Adelaide St., Jamaica Plain § tafF of tbr cinttaip Breirnrcl) Laboiatorp anU :§ ru)ag;r (Srprnmcnt § tation WILLIAM T. SEDGWICK, Ph.D. Professor of Biology; Director CHARLES-EDWARD A. WINSLOW, S.M. Assistant Professor of Sanitary Biology ; Biologist in Charge EARLE B. PHELPS, S.B. Assistant Professor of Research in Chemical Biology 20 Edge Hill Road, Brookline 157 Walnut St., Brookline 14 Orris St., Melrose Highlands H idjarti Cod I)uin i laclauiiu jA SCOTCHMAN by birth, an Englishman by education, a L cosmopolitan by environment, and an American by adop- tion, Richard Cockburn Maclaurin comes to the position L as president of the Institute with a training which is - ■ varied indeed. Born in Edinburgh, Scotland, in 1870, he spent the early part of his life in New Zealand. He soon returned, however, from that part of the world to complete his education in the English schools, and in 1892 entered the University of Cambridge. He held there a foundation scholarship in St. John ' s College. While at Cambridge he took two degrees, that of Bachelor of Arts in 1895, and that of Master of Arts in 1896. In his work for the latter degree he took the highest rank in the most advanced examination in mathe- matics, and received a special prize for the excellence of his thesis in the same subject. Upon his graduation he was elected a Fellow of his college. After leaving Cambridge he spent ten months in the United States and Canada, visiting and studying different educational in- stitutions. Those he devoted especial attention to were McGill and Toronto Universities in Canada and Leland Stanford, Jr. University in our own country. At the end of this trip he entered Cambridge University for the second time, taking up the study of law in order to add another branch of learning to his education. He was awarded the McMahon law studentship, a much-coveted prize, and became later a member of the Honorable Society of Lincoln ' s Inn, London. During his course he spent six months on leave of absence, studying in Germany, taking up German law and jurisprudence. In 1898 he was awarded the Yorke prize by the University of Cambridge for a thesis on The Title to Realty. This work was published in several languages, and called forth the highest commendation from eminent legal authorities. During the course of the same year Richard Maclaurin was appointed professor of mathematics at the University of New Zealand, and soon took up his residence in Wellington. Shortly after he was made a trustee of the institution, and in this capacity did much 42 1910 RICHARD COCKBURN MACLAURIN 43 toward the organization of technological education in the island colony. Five years after his advent to the University he was made dean of the College of Law. In the fall of 1907 he was called to the chair of mathematical physics at Columbia University, a position formerly held by Dr. Robert S. Woodward, now president of the Carnegie Institution at Washington. A year later he was placed in full charge of the de- partment of physics at the New York University. Twice has Dr. Maclaurin been honored by his Alma Mater, the University of Cambridge. In 1904 he received the degree of Doctor of Laws in recognition of his achievements in the law, and the value of his final thesis in that subject. Last summer he received the much-coveted degree of Doctor of Science for his attainments in mathematics and physics. In February, 19C8, Dr. Maclaurin published the first volume of a profound treatise on ' ' Physical Optics. This work has made a distinct contribution to the field, and has merited the most favorable comment by scientific men. On the 11th of November, 19G8, Dr. Maclaurin was elected by the Corporation of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology to fill the position of president of that institution left vacant by the resignation of Dr. Henry Smith Pritchett, and filled temporarily only by Dr. Arthur Amos Noyes. This call he has accepted, and will take up his duties as head of the Institute some time during the spring. With regard to Dr. Maclaurin ' s ideas and policy George V. Wendell, former professor at the Institute, and a man intimately acquainted with him, says: Dr. Maclaurin is in hearty sympathy with the Institute ' s insistence upon an intermingling of the humanistic with the scientific and technical subjects. He is entirely opposed to the overcrowding of the curriculum with a mass of technical subjects that would better be acquired in the school of practice and experience. The sacrifice in the undergraduate courses of the fundamental scientific structure of engineering for the teaching of engineering practice does not meet with his approval. He believes in a training that will stimulate the mental and human faculties in a way to develop the power to meet and solve the new problems as they arise in the world of affairs. 44 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV In regard to athletics, Dr. Maclaurin takes the sane and moderate view held by most men trained in England. He believes in the im- portance of a sufficient amount of physical exercise to keep the body in the condition necessary for the most efficient service, and he may be relied upon to foster the rational system of athletics that has been developed within recent years at the Institute. Di- Maclaurin has a personality that draws men to him. His simple and unassuming manner carries with it an assurance of sincerity, and his keen sense of humor and the richness and variety of his experience and information lend an unusual charm to his conversation. He makes frieijds quickly; and, as the acquaintance advances, the largeness of the man becomes more apparent. This power to attract men to him insures cordial and sympathetic re- lations between the President and the student body, and will in time, without doubt, win for him the affectionate regard of the alumni. Class of i ineteen l imtirrti anti 0im President JAMES HAMILTON CRITCHETT Vice-President JAMES IRVING FINNIE Secretary WILLIAM CRAIG FERGUSON Treasurer Clerk ARTHUR LASSELL SHAW MONTAGUE FLAGG lJrcfutibc aTomnnttcc JOHN JACOB ELBERT WILLIAM JAMES KELL ' f TnBtitutc Committee CHARLES JOSIAH BELDEN MAURICE ROOS SCHARFF thkttf dissociation itcprcscntatitjcs FRANK DEXTER APPLIN RIDSDALE ELLIS FRANK JOHN LANGE JOSEPH NEWELL STEPHENSON HARRY EMERSON WHITAKER 46 1000 Class U istorp A NARRATIVE I arrived in Boston today with my mamma, and gracious, what a big town it is ! We went right around to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and I never shall forget the first impression my future Alma Mater made on me. She crouched there beside the busy thoroughfare, calm, silent as the Sphinx, utterly oblivious to the rush and bustle on her front porch, thinking, dreaming of her many sons who were carving their way to fame and fortune, shouting aloud their battle cry of Technology. For her were not the puny things of life; massive as an ancient Greek temple and grand and majestic as an Egyptian pyramid, she stood like a hive full of bees which swarmed and buzzed on her front steps, greeting one another and always moving, moving. We made our way through the throng and at last I found myself within those halls of learning for which I had strived and toiled so long and so dutifully. My mother took me in to see the Dean, Mister Burton, and he calmed and quieted me with encouraging words. He is a calm, dignified, impressive man, and impressed me most impressively. My mamma left soon after this, and left me all alone in a big city. How often have I said those words, and laughed as I said them! Alone in a big city. But now I know what it mxcans. and it is no laughing matter. So many of the fellows pass me here with a cynical, superior smile. I imagine they are sophomores, and know that they are my enemies, but I cannot help respecting them because they have already passed through a year of the glorious work here. And the seniors! How easy it is to recognize them, as they hurry around, preoccupied, thinking out grand and good schemes of the future and planning movements which shall revolutionize the country! How I honor and respect them ! And to think that some day I shall be a senior ! For I shall ! Yes, I intend to work hard, doing each day ' s work as it comes, even if I have to stay up all night to do it, for I have heard that this is a common custom at Technology. I do hope my eyesight holds out against the terrific strain, for I know that every year a great number of poor fellows have to leave Technology because their eyesight fails. I was captured by a band of sophomores the other evening. 47 48 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV They took me out of my room in my pajamas and marched me down Boyiston Street. Never in my life shall I forget the humiliation of it. The yelling, the circle of leering faces, the laughing bystanders, the girls who passed and smiled, are all photographed on my brain. There were five of us captives, and we clung to one another and did as our captors told us. We prayed, we danced, we sang, we cheered for 1908, and we bought soda water at Huyler ' s. Finally when they let us go I was SD humiliated that I ran to my room and could not sleep all night. A man named Mr. Maclachlan keeps a store just opposite Rogers, the main Technology building, and sells books and drawing instru- ments and all other supplies. He told me that he only sold the very best stuff. I guess that is why his prices are so high. He seemed to be a very benevolent gentleman, and told me that he was in entire sympathy with Tech fellows as he was a Tech man himself and made hardly any profit at all on the things he sold. In fact, he is the co- operative society. We, the class of 1909, were called to a meeting to elect officers. A senior spoke to us, and really his address was not at all like I thought it would be. He spoke very wildly and swore a little and tried to incite us against the sophomores. We nominated officers, and as the men were nominated they went up and stood on the platform so we could see them. They appeared unconcerned and quite at ease. I should have been so horribly humiliated and embarrassed if I had had to stand up there that I should not have known what to do. We elected a Mr. Scharff temporary chairman. We also elected managers of the tug-of-war, football and relay teams. I have the funniest French teacher. He is Mr. Blachstein, and he makes jokes on the fellows ' names all the time. He must be a marvelous man or he would not be teaching here at Technology. We had a Field Day with the sophomores, and they beat us. We won the tug-of-war easily. They won the relay race easily, and the football game was a tie. After the meet we rushed the sopho- mores in the middle of the field and I, remembering the insults that had been heaped upon me the night that I was captured, rushed at them, like a demon. V hen they dug me out of the mud I hurried home and got ready to go to the Show. All the fellows were there and they certainly did raise a rough house, at least so it seemed to me. The 1910 1909CLASSHISTORY 49 papers the next day said the fellows behaved like gentlemen. Gracious, they must be terrible when they get started in earnest. Things moved along slowly past Christmas vacation, mid-year examinations and mid-year vacation. Then volunteers for the Show were called out and I chipped in with the rest of the bunch. The Freshman certainly was a great show. How could it help being with about two-thirds of its cast 1909 fellows? The spring exams hit some of us pretty hard, but the crowd scattered over the country pretty well satisfied with themselves. A good part of the old bunch showed up at the beginning of sophomore year, and the very first thing we decided to do was to hand it to the freshmen good and plenty. After this resolution we looked around. The old coop looked natural enough. Everybody was walking around with one hand out for money, and Mac, the old skate, had about twenty lines out for suckers. The calm, placid way some of these freshmen produce the zinc gets on my nerves. They seem to be a weak-kneed sort of a bunch, although they have a bunch of huskies. I saw one little geezer standing off looking at Rogers as if he thought it would bite him. Finally he got up enough nerve to enter and walk straight forward. I doped out a dandy program. I had it fixed so I could cut about eight hours a week and not get caught. I don ' t mind the getting caught part of it. What I object to is the awful shock you get every time Hump sends you one of his comic valentines. They are just like sausages. You can never tell what ' s inside. Joke. A few of us tried to bust up the freshman class meeting, but they fell on us like a wall, and after a few chairs and such details had been violently disturbed we left Huntington Hall making what dear old Freddie Wheeler would call an orderly retreat. This showed us that the fresh had stuff in them all right, but we set out to get their goat and succeeded, inasmuch as we won Field Day. Gee, I can feel my back hair rise now as I think how close it was ! We elected Jack Moses to be the kind shepherd and lead the fiock for the year, but I rather ee-magine it was no flock of sheep, that is, not white sheep. There is one grand institution here, the Park Square Skating Rink. I often wonder how I never happened to find it out last year. 50 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV The first time I went there I noticed a whole bunch of ornamental skirts all over the floor and thought it was Simmons on an outing. I found out later that they were fixtures at the rink, to give lessons in skating. I had to plug like a fool to get through mid-year ' s, and then only managed it by the skin of my teeth. But what ' s the difference as long as you get through somehow? Nothing much doing in the spring, except the Show, William, Willie and Bill, which had some class. The finals gave me another scare, but I got through all right (with the help of Summer School) . Great institution. Summer School ! Charles River, Revere Beach, Norumbega Park, Franklin Park. Great institution! After draping ourselves around all summer we hit the back trail and joined the old guard as juniors. What a terrible fuss the sophs and fresh made about their little scrap ! We hired a sight-seeing machine, and superintended the job of course. And maybe we didn ' t have the happy little noise fest. Maybe. On the way back a gang of sophs and some other bums tried to take a fall out of our E.M.F. wagon by heaving rocks, etc. We stood it till they threw the hooks into one of our banners and then we filled them full of mud and regrets. Carl Gram was elected president, amid howls of applause. Blachie still cracks the same old gags I ' m told and Mac is still actively engaged in co-oping with a co-op that don ' t co-op. I saw him explaining to a freshie that he had an active feeling for all Tech men. About the only feeling I ' ve noticed is a feeling for your star- board jeans pocket. Just after we paid tuition this year Frankie Rand appeared with a new suit, and Miss Eaton began to smile. She cer- tainly has a pretty smile. I am now carrying about fifteen hours a week, and am so busy that I can ' t find time to prepare my next day ' s work ; but what ' s the use as long as you get it done some time? We certainly are a great class. And although we have not yet won a field meet, we control pretty nearly everything. Our junior prom was about the best, and best managed since 1910 1909 CLASS HISTORY 51 Hector was a pup. It was a strenuous afifair. So strenuous, in fact, that our husky athlete, E. Q. Adams, went to sleep in an alcove, and when he was finally discovered by an usher had missed out on four dances. Think of having the responsibility of four smashed hearts on one ' s hands. Our Technique, which came out about this time, was also about the best ever. One hundred pages more than the biggest Technique ever before published. I guess 1909 is pretty much all right. Well, this is senior year, and the bunch is still hanging on; that is, about forty per cent. Why they let me stay is more than I can see. Jim Critchett was elected president. The freshmen defeated our proteges, 1911, in the annual meet and so we all went to see the Soul Kiss at the Colonial afterwards to raise our spirits. It should have been called the Swill Kiss. Every time two of the participants fought to a clinch large pieces of tracing cloth torn by fellows in the audience made the scene much more realistic. It was not a show for studious-minded Tech men to see. Well, I sure have been kept busy. This is the forty-second nocturnal interim I have remained excluded from my couch ; arrang- ing and rearranging physical and metaphysical phenomena so as to obtain one of many correct solutions of problems such as, How long is a piece of string? etc. It really exceeds the uttermost limits of my comprehension how in the name of all that is sane we can be expected to commit to our cerebral protoplasmic organs some of the excruciatingly elusive arrangements of numerical, algebraical and trigonometrical functions which are inflicted upon us. I have not shaved for two weeks, and the other day I arrested myself in the midst of an incoherent muttering as I progressed along the street and noticed a youth of extremely juvenile appearance regarding me with a mixture of awe and reverence. This lucid period lasted for only a second and I snapped back to my mutterings. The assignment for tomorrow is Lanza, page 530 ( e ) . Bauschinger says that by overstraining, the stretch limit is always raised up to the load with which the stretching was done, but in the time of rest following the unloading the stretch limit rises farther, so that it becomes greater than the maximum load with which the piece was stretched, and this rising continues for days and months 52 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV and years, but on the other hand — on the other hand — on — the — other — hand — on the other hand — on — the — other — whee- e-e-e-e!!! If a hen and a half can lay an egg and a half in a day and a half, how long will it take a baldheaded rooster to lay a batch of buckwheat cakes? Whee-e-e! Blachie! Whee! Eenie, meenie, minie, mo ! Whee ! ! Freddie Wheeler ! Whee ! ! ! Frankie ! Whee- e-e-e-e ! ! Dana P. Whee-e-e-e-e-e ! ! ! Whee-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e ! ! ! ! 1 A ■ ■•■•.■• ' •■. ' ' ,.i; ; v;: ■T ' -.- ' r.-:: ' - s Class of JBtineteen Hunlireli anli Cm President FRANK DOUGLAS STEWART Vice-President PHILIP DUNBAR TERRY Secretary WILLIAM HOWARD DUFFIELD Treasurer ALLEN ADAMS GOULD o vcfutibc €ommittcc RICHARD FREDERIC GOODWIN, Jr. RALPH MARTIN TORREY Snstitutc Conmuttcc JOHN MOXCEY FITZWATER HAROLD CROSBY MANSON Sltliicttc Association ficprcsnitatitocs JOHN AVERY, Jr. GEORGE BRADLEY CUMINGS FRANK FREDERICK BELL FREDERICK ALOYSIUS HURLEY EDWARD STUART 54 ast ©ffiffvs of 1910 President TOM WYNNE SAUL Vice-President HAROLD LOCKETT Secretary Treasurer CURTIS CHRISTOPHER WEBB WILLIAM HOWARD DUFFIELD mtitutt Committee BERGEN REYNOLDS PHILIP DUNBAR TERRY (!Bx ccutibc Committee CARL CHESTER DUDLEY RALPH MARTIN TORREY jfrc ljmau I? car President JOHN MOXCEY FITZWATER Vice-President FORRESTER BARSTOW AVERY Secretary Treasurer ARTHUR FRANKLYN GLASIER ARTHUR ROSENGARTEN NAGLE 3 nsitttutc Committee BERGEN REYNOLDS TOM WYNNE SAUL verutitje Committee FOREST KENT FOSTER FREDERICK ALOYSIUS HURLEY 55 t? 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From the beginning of the first year when they started out to win Field Day the members of the class have shown that they wanted to do things. First they wished to have the distinction of winning, and after a lot of hard work came very near to realizing this desire. The football team held the sophomores down to a tie, the tug-of-war men won their contest, and the relay team might have done the same but for one man falling down in the race. This was, however, not the first sign of strength. Some will doubtless remember how three sophomores were captured and placed in the Frog Pond during a little squabble after the first class dinner. That was the first notice given to 1909 of what was later to come. That winter it was customary for each class to take charge of a Kommers, so when 1910 came to take a hand it was decided to do something a little different, and the idea materialized into a hook night. This was the first time anything of the kind had been at- tempted. It proved to be a great success and has been remembered ever since as a distinct departure from the ordinary entertainment. During the first year, 1910 was represented in all Institute sports and activities. Some members of the class started right in working for The Tech, and others went in for such things as the Show, the musical clubs or the track team. Among the principals of the Show were four from 1910, Hield, Saul, Jackson and Stein, and in the chorus were several more. Fifteen representatives of the class were on the musical clubs, two on the hockey team, one on the basket- ball team, and three on the track team. There was one thing the class could not understand, and that was the object of military drill. They never grew to like this as they did some other things, and for that reason were delighted when the final prize drill took place. This prize drill was followed by a bonfire, on the sidewalk of Rogers, of all drill gloves and collars, 58 1910 HISTORY OF THE CLASS OF 1910 59 augmented by tar barrels and oil lanterns. After the fire got under way the class marched down Boylston Street, and the policemen arrived, too late, however, to find any one. This drill and march was the last concerted action of the class during the freshman year. The next fall, on returning to the Institute, what was left of 1910 started in to get up class teams which could win from the new class of 1911. When the teams were getting in shape to meet the fresh- men the class held a dinner at the Union. Altogether the dinner was a great success, and the largest ever held at the old Union. The second Field Day of 1910 was one of the most complete victories ever gained by one class over another, in fact, only the second of its kind in the history of Technology. The class won everything after good, hard contests in all the events. The football game was close, the tug-of-war was almost won by 1911, and the relay team had to run in record time in order to win. The victory showed that the same spirit which had characterized the class of 1910 the previous year was still present, and that there was no lack of ability to back it up. The same evening, for Tech Night, 1910 had most of the seats on the floor of the Colonial Theater where the Red Mill was playing. The play was good and of course everybody was in especially good spirits, so that it was thoroughly enjoyed by all. McMurtrie, Maxcy and Glasier, the theater committee, did well with their arrangements in such matters as getting the chorus to wear the class numerals, and securing the introduction of appropriate lines in the show. They even had, to the great delectation of the crowd in the bleachers, induced some members of the cast to come out, during the afternoon, to the field and see the victory for themselves. The second year saw 1910 even better represented in Institute activities than the first. The musical clubs, besides having a large number of men from the class, were managed by Hield. Seven 1910 men had principals ' parts in the Show, Over the Garden Wall, and about fifteen had parts in the chorus. On the hockey team, which did so well on its mid-year trip, there were three men from 1910, O ' Hearn, Gould and Billings. In track work also the class was well up, having two men on a relay team which beat the B.A.A. team early in the winter, Fernstrom on the relay team which ran 60 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV away from Williams at the B.A.A. indoor meet, and about six men in all the dual and intercollegiate meets during the spring. The manager of the track team, McMurtrie, was the first sophomore to ever hold this position. Soon after the second term began it was time to select the Tech- nique electoral board which was to choose the final board of editors. This preliminary board consisted of twenty-five men, picked by open ballot, from the entire class, and after many stormy meetings chose the editorial board. The queer part of this was that while the board thought that it was choosing men with proper regard for their records as students, only part of the editors appeared junior year, and several of these have resigned since. In other literary lines the members of the class were not inactive, and on The Tech Pearl did good work, eventually becoming editor-in-chief. A thing which is sometimes smiled at by those who were present is the fact that several sophomores had to line up the freshmen and start them for Rogers after their prize drill. For some reason these freshmen did not have the desire to follow every other class in burn- ing the drill gloves in front of Rogers, and it remained for several 1910 men, who liked to keep up things like that from year to year, to start them off. It was really funny to see a freshman gathering like that led by a sophomore in its cheering and singing, but they would not do it themselves, so some one had to take a hand. The beginning of junior year found the original class of 1910 pretty well broken up, many of its members had left the Institute, and several had dropped back a year. There were no Field Day preparations to keep the class busy this time, but there were all of the Institute teams and other activities to be managed and Technique to be gotten under way. Never- theless when the day for the interclass games came, the juniors were just as interested spectators as they had been participants, and watched 1912 defeat their old rivals with a great deal of enthusiasm. At the theater that night there were just about as many juniors to help the freshmen celebrate as any one else. When the time for the election of class officers came the Institute Committee put into effect some officeholding restrictions which caused a great deal of comment and trouble. While the 1910 HISTORY OF THE CLASS OF 1910 61 theory of not allowing any one man to hold too many positions is without doubt a good one, it caused a great deal of trouble in the junior class because so few men were really known by the class who had ever held offices, and there were so many positions to fill. Men who could fill the positions were of course found in time, and every- thing lately has run well. The Junior Prom Committee had to be ch osen from the class just before the Christmas holidays. The trouble in regard to ' points came up, and the election necessarily resulted in the choice of men who had nothing else to do, and, therefore, could do better than the committees in previous years, made up as they were for the most part of men holding other positions. Again 1910 did well in athletics in winning both track meets held during the first term, the fall handicap, and the indoor meet. Fern- strom ran on the indoor relay team again this year. Thus during the two years and a half which the class of 1910 has been at Tech- nology there have been few activities, if any, in which it has not had more than its share of representation. Everything which has been undertaken by the class so far has been a success, and it seems only fair to suppose that it will continue in its prosperity during the re- mainder of its life at the Institute. There is a short year and a half left now, and if the class goes on in its regular way it bids fair to leave at the Institute a record that will be difficult indeed to excel. =c Class nf JStneteen Hunlireli auD Cletjen President WILLIAM CONYNE SALISBURY Vice-President THEODORE BISSELL PARKER Secretary HOWARD DAVID WILLIAMS Treasurer Clerk STUART BROWN COPELAND CHARLES FOSTER HOBSON lBvccutibc Committee LLOYD CARTWRIGHT COOLEY HAROLD MARTIN DAVIS institute Committee DONALD READ STEVENS SCOTT PRESCOTT KIMBALL tfjietif dissociation ilepresentatibes GEORGE ALVIN COWEE WELLESLEY JOSEPH SELIGMAN EDWARD DEMMING VAN TASSEL, Jr. PETER DESMOND WHITE HOWARD DAVID WILLIAMS 64 I (A Graft on Collier ' s) By HASHEYE GOTO To Editor Tekneek 1910, which are pubHshed once only by stude nts other grinders of grease at the Mass. Institute of Tecknickle. Honorable Mr. : — With duly digestion of want-ad placed by you in The Teck, Rogers, other places of ridicule, I deliberate the following histories for pay $5., thank you. Hon. Somebody has deliciously accented, Tech is Hell. Rightly diagnosis. Them noble thoughts are in evidence of pain to me from first enjoyment of speech-make by Hon. Prexy to now time-date. But, Mr. Editor, it are not of observe to publik that 1911 are place of highest temperature in all said hell. Mike O ' Hara, Irish tablewait in evening time, is friend to me made at commencement with whom I suffer many charming conversa- tion. Hashy, say Mike, why did you make migration to Tech? I am confused for reply. Same this place, erject Mike with pipe-smoke of maximum shortness, ' ' Hand- shake. Which ceremony made we are cement. First week-time I enjoy following expense. 1. Drill-suit of class 1856, with dehcious pant-rip, thank you. 2. Set No. 2-hand instrument to draw mechanikal salery and breath. 65 66 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV 3. Entrancing volume of name, A Curse in Mathematik. 4. Much abused portfolio of Hand-free plates of Hon. Hand-free Charlie. I am bee- bite here. 5. $15 dol. worth of deposit for which I am to break 30 cents of furniture in smell lab in garret of Walker. (At finish beautiful maidens in Roger ' s box-ofiice extend to me with sweetly-smile yellow acid fruit bill = 3 1-2 $ more. 6. One slice paste boards to class love fest at which are enjoyed ham and beans, and Blachie with beer. 7. Delightfull number of novel with which to make mid-night oil burn. I am now, with deliberate purchase of 1 co-op ticket and lenghtly novel-write of statistic for little Walter to amuse by making encyclo- pedic library, a 1911. Mike also did it. ignoble hour! Same week-time I am obsequiously attentive to following inti- mation, 1911 FIELD-DAY ARE HANDY! TRY FOR FEET-BALL BAND! COME OUT AND STAY OUT! PROP UP YOUR CLASS! Mike, I dubiate soonly, what can be a Field-day? Field-day, interpret Mike with Cross-Charlie expression, are one glorious rude-house. It are great chance of Fresh-people to make smear on Slopmores. It are embodiment of all dear to Institute. Are you sagacious? I am decompose. Why they do it? I next require to know. For brother love of two classes, say Mike. ' Did not Hon. Teddy say. Competition is life of occupation? So here too. You make knock out of Slopmore . ' . = friendship. I make a young brain-storm. Good I am to do it, I next decry. What to do? return Mike. 1910 LETTERS OF A JAPANESE SCHOOLBOY 67 Prop up my class, I narrate. Which bunch will you endeavor? next require Mike to know. To-morrow I am catch it, I quotation like Prof. Buggs. Next day-time after locate of Field by telescope I enjoy a speck- taker of them habit of feet-ball, which are did on grass -turf with Hon. ball which are made from pig-hide with contour of egg. Fol- lowing converse I make with player who are not desire to continue because of loss of atmosphere. Why, I first derange, do Hon. player kick enemy ' s head not Hon. ball? It are in them game so to do if Hon. Ref. not see it, he nudge. But why do Hon. Tackle bite ear of 25-cent-back? I then dib. I am willing to be searched, he decrop. I am exasperate, and stepping over pile of collar-bones I peram- bulate to rope-pull. I am candidate for wagon, I make report to Swede with shoot- gun. Have you pull? rebound Hon. Sweede. I am fled. Next it are feet-run which I try to do with following article — (1.) 1 pr. shoes with rake-on. (2.) 1-2 pr. trousers. (3.) 1 shirt. (4.) Nervousness. After cladding in them uniform I make several bounce on ash- rut. S ' nuff ! mangle Hon. Coacher, ' make a beating. I am beat it. I will be a class-spirit and ornament field on night time before scrap, I compensate to Mike, who are now a feet-ballist and who enjoy loss of two finger and I sight, thank you. You can bet on it, say Mike with D. C. McMurtrie expression. Therefore I am to enjoy following program of fresh-man. 1:00 A. M. Destinate to Struggle-ground. If starry sky say Hello, if rainy say ditto but reversly. 2:00 A. M. Classes coagulate with sweet distemper because war-rag of Slopmores is predeceived. 68 TECHN IQUE Vol. XXIV 2:15 A. M. Onset with majestic hiccoughs of braveness. 2:15-30 sec. A. M. Receive delicious feet-kick in kitchen and sweet bleedy nose. 2:16 A. M. Indisposed to continue. Have desire to caress kitchen and dam nose. 3 : 00 A. M. I Second convulsion. 3:15A.M. .Same like above with result of one eye 3:15-30 sec. A. M. | coloration. 3:16 A. M. J 4 : 00 A. M. ) Third eruption. Hon. Muck-Minded Spec- 4:15 etc. j takers cause extra charming contusions by unresistibility of them sport. 4:16 A. M. Make a departure repugnantly. 6:00 A.M. Retire to sleep. 9:00 A. M. Cut Mil Science, and more sleep. 10:00 A.M. Cut Chemistry. More sleep. 11 :00 A. M. More cut and sleep. 12:00 M. Arose and eat. 2 : 00 P. M. Arrivation at field in elevated spirits. 4:00 P. M. By this time-date we are washed white. 7:00 P. M. Relief at the Epicure, charming hotel for Japanese school boy, with cold bottle and a meal-square to prevent brain- storming. 8:15 P. M. Navigate to ' Crimson Grinder. 11 :00 P. M. More Epicure. 1 :00 A. M. Say, Wait till next year, and retire to sleep. Alas ! All them noble hero are of no utility and we are washed white. Therefore to go to Crimson Grinder in evening time to make pagan noise of gladness other delicious sentiment. Them show were marvelously. Following, Mr. Editor, are a Mother Geesing about them glorious night of Field-day, Muck-men to right of them. Muck-men to left of them Muck-men to front of them Throlv bricks and lumber 1910 LETTERS OF A JAPANESE SCHOOLBOY 69 Hurled at Ivith stones and sticks, Bruised at Ivith blolvs and kicks Charge on them dirty micks Who scattered our number. Hoping Hon. Ed. you do not meet any muck-men I expire, H ASHE YE GOTO. To Editor Tekneek which are a annual of blooming Intelligence. Hon. Mr: I should implore to investigate - Why are a Teck Show and what am them good for? Hon. Mike, who are a self-making Tecknickle student, say this are to delude a Publick of $2 to see a comick operation which don ' t. Why does it not? I examine. Did you always cut Drill? respire Mike. Never, I wink. Did you ever go to Mac ' s 5 and 10 scent store? he defy. Several times. I collapse. Did you ever notice Dana P, Mike persevered. He noticed me, which are worse, I deteriorate. Did you ever purchase them Free Hand Littering Plates, penetrate Mike continuing. Them are not Free, I desist. Them require subscription of $2 1-2 yearly. Sh scorn Mike Charlie has nine children! Lastly did you ever hear Charlie Cross? Always, I demur. Then information me, dib Mike. How can a Tecknickle student be a comick operation? Mike, I am nearest, I deny. He don ' t! What then are these Teck Show good for? Hon. Editor, I ask to understand. When I investigate Mike, he erupt a tobako chew, and renu- merate with a pensiveness, Among other actions, they are good for a free traffick to Northampting. Who are this? I suffocate to understand. 70 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV This are a fairy grove of Peach Blossomings, elucidate Mike heaving. Aha, I transack, you did this once. Yes, tragic Mike. What were her name? I snickle. Agnes Rafferty. Why to sigh? next I suggest. She are eloped with the hero, he infatuate. Why don ' t you done so first? I interpolate. Because I are only a chorus. What are a chorus? I require. ' A chorus, demonstrate Hon. Mike, are a infinitesimal of higher order. Am that a bad disease? I protest. Of surely, degrade Mike. It are only good to be rejected! Japanese school boy will became a hero, I terminate inwardly, lately are present at them Teck show rehearsings. Who are run them show? I ask to know. Hon. Francis, is replied, there are he. I am perceive a elongated gentleman who are hiding behind a cigarette smoke. Hon. Francis, I interupt, I am to be a hero. Of certain, he surrender, Sing sweetly. Mike are not said about sweetly singing. What to sing? I dequest. Ain ' t I said SING? defraud Hon. Francis. What in hell are you think I care what to? This hasty earthquake of Hon. Francis are surprise me to sing quickly. I tremble to warble for fear. But at first sounds are Hon. Francis discouraged. Pause, he threaten, It are sufficed. Make a departure. I do so with ease. It are not nice to be a hero anyhow ! I retire to Mike. Why are you not been a hero so to elope? I inspire. A hero, gossip Mike, are a peculiar invention what are born with blondy hair, lavender neck-tie and a pants-crease. IQIO LETTERS OF A JAPANESE SCHOOLBOY 71 ' Hon. Mike have red hair and are wear no neck-tie besides over- alls, so I pursue not to ask more. Trusting Hon. Editor are a hero, I perspire Yours truly HASHEYE GOTO. To Editor Tekneek 1910, who enjoy delightful time while reading all poetry story writings which he send back to author with smiley excuse, thank you. Dearest Mr. : — Is it, or was it not to be, that is the ?, say Hon. Shakespeare. Ditto say Mike with eye-glance at new Union. Hashy, say Mike soonly, why is it a Union? In union there are strength, I commit with Barlo Ates ex- pression. Strength of what? are next retort from Mike. Strength of smell. Right, also reveal Mike, but why does them Union necessi- tate here? I am willing to be searched, I dib. Therefor, Mr. Editor, are the following argumented by Mike : — (1.) Whereas, all 5-year students muchly need play room to advance with scientific them game of whist-bid, and, (2.) Whereas them illustrious sheets, The Teck, are in necessity of room to determine the destinys of the Institute and play them charming game of draw poker for aunty 1 cent, thank you, and, (3.) Whereas our glory Institute Com. are in want of lounging parlor in which to coagulate and do 0., and, (4.) Whereas them Tech Show muchly necessitate boards for feet-dance, smoke-house for Hon. Francis cigarrette, also place for Hon. Mrs. F. to demoralize. Also charming office for business mngr, to beg from banks green goods for useless want-ad in program, and (5.) Whereas the faculty want to desire to keep the students away from Hon, Charlie Wirths on Friday evenings, space is wanted in which to warble Tech singings, and, (6. ) Whereas the domino team now have no place to get beating in, and, 72 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV (7.) Whereas no course has yet been provided for digestive research in which deposed cooks may regain graft with medical profession and, (8.) Whereas them Hon. perennial Tekneek, to which these histories are dedicated for $5, please, have got to publish somewhere, Be it dessolved, that there are to be it a Union. Why all this resolutioning? I deplore Mike. Because it are popular custom. Who did it to make this popular? I ask to know. Them Hon. Teck, complain Mike with sorrowful expression making a pipe-fill. But who is to pay for them Union? is next from me. That, say Mike with Frankly Rand expression, is to be deter- mine after building it. Hoping you dont get stung for them new Union, Mr. Editor, I expire, yours truly HASHEYE GOTO. To Editor Tekneek 1910, who are as much gentlemen as can be in such places who are enjoyed because we have to. Dear Ed: — It are now time-date of second year and I am, with more novel write, much more charming expense, and with permit of faculty, a Slopmore. Mike did it too. First week-time are started grand preparationing for Field-day No. 2. But I can not be a class spirit again because them night befores are repealed. Therefor I buy sitting in stand-grand for price $1. and act like a ladylike. Mike, I enquire to ask, why are these night befores no longer? For two arguments, degrade Mike. Firstly because them faculty do not like them sports which are too young for them to play, , secondly, because of rude familiarity of them muck-men in abun- dance. It are noble spirit thus to do, I dubiate with American eye-wink. Soonly is day of it come. hurrah and banzai ! More excitable preparation. Nervous tense is enjoyed by all. But wait — 1910 LETTERS OF A JAPANESE SCHOOLBOY 73 Mr. Editor, everybody are make a explanation why we are not to win this time. Following are my elucidation. Hon. Fresh are sniggle with enthusiasm whenever to think of it. This demoralize Japanese school boy to madness. Firstly occur them tug-pull. This I mention in silence because it are not fit to be discussed. To follow these is come those relay-racings. Hon. Editor, I deplore not to make me laugh. It are too bad to obliterate these fresh so far. Truthfully, they are continue to run for 27 minutes after we are com- pleted and are not finish then because they have a blind-staggering and fall down. Hon. Editor, we are almost to make a record here. When I interrogate of Mike why we are not done so he delegate, Because of standing starts. Why did they did so? I implore. It were did thus in time-date 1856, he conciliate, ' and Frankly Briggs are reluctlant to inter a delicious antiquity. I should like to propound, Mr. Editor, that this is a elegant re- marking for Grinding Department. Mike will accept $1. please. Those feet-ball games, Mr. Editor, are almost to cause a nervous breaking up. It are like a study of Fisik with Hon. Dr. Calomel, because at no time are it known what will happen and at finish we are flunked anyway. This similitude are not did by Mike, I, Hasheye Goto are proud to did it. But them feet-ball game it are painful to recollect. Are you ready? inquire Hon. Ref. Are ! response all them heroes. Then play it, suggest them Hon. Ref. with whistle-blow. They play it. More fast and more faster they play it kicking up pebbles and loose fingers in frantic enjoyment. But there are nothing to do. Slopmores carry Hon. Ball to fresh touch line and here hand it to fresh 25 cent back, who gleefully grab it and retreat. More rush and charge, sometimes gaining astonishy distance of 1-4 yd. Once more Hon.Referee make whistle-blow 1-2 is over. But wait ! Soonly after we have wonned them relay racings it are time for second round. Once more them Hon. Referee make them whistle 74 T E C H IT I Q U £ Vol. XXIV blow. Once more they play it, biting off mouthfuls of enemy ' s hair, breaking collar bones, stepping on enemy ' s piazza, and generally having amusements. With superb generalship they keeped them fresh at the door with stupendous bunts of ten yards of length, repulsing them time and also another time. If only them fresh do not score it before it are time-up ! But not so. — ! ! What happens? With .374844776943347 second yet left Hon. fresh 25-cent back kick field goal from 10 inch in front of Slopmore Bar! Following are poem-song-sing made by me to rememberate this waterlouis. It sounds good in Japanese. T ing long, Yukomein ! Hark you to my sing-song. Once there Ivas at Boston Teknickle, A class 1911, Such a goodly class. With atheletics and sportiness 3ut Ivhat utility ? They are so careless And do not Ivant to Ipin A nd then they get No pipes, no pipes, T No pipes, no pipes. J ing Tong Yukomein ! Hoping you get all your pipes, Mr. Editor, including Polly Con, I retire, Yours truly, HASHEYE GOTO. , • • • -zr- i ' - ..;• o - ' i v:j Class of 0mtttn Himtireli anti Ctoel 3e President HENRY DONALD KEMP Vice-President EDMUND BURKE MOORE Secretary SETH HENESS SEELYE Treasurer CHARLES HAMLIN CARPENTER Crccutibc Committee WALTER MORLEY RUBY LINZEE SEWALL HOOPER Tn titiitc Committee ALBERT GARLAND GALE ARTHUR CAMPBELL Sltliletie SlsBoeiation itepresnitati 3es HARVEY SMITH BENSON JOSEPH ALEXANDER BOYER ARCHIBALD EICHER SETH HENESS SEELYE JOSEPH INGRAHAM TAYLOR 76 Cvtrafts from a jrvcsijmau ' s Biarp July 8. How I hated to open that letter. You will be admitted to the first-year class upon passing satisfactorily in September the condition examinations in Algebra B, French and German. I wonder if I really want to be an engineer after all. Perhaps I ' d better be a minister. August 2. Gee ! those exams, are next month. September 24. Took exams today. Thought I ' d faint when I saw the questions. My! but those Profs are grumpy. Probably the one in charge of our room is a bachelor. September 26. Report received: Admitted to the first-year class without conditions. That ' s going some. Guess I ' ll be an engineer after all. Will have to work hard. They say it isn ' t like Harvard or Yale. September 29. Tech opens today. Good place for anybody but a freshman. Everybody seems glad to see everybody else. What a bunch of stuff that fellow at the cage hands you! Sat down on steps to figure out the tabular view. Ought to have a Phila- delphia lawyer to help me. An upper classman (probably a sophomore because he seemed puffed up about something) said they ' d give me a freshman bible inside, but it was only a Y.M.C.A. notebook of misinformation. Hereafter I ' ll never believe anything a sophomore says. Mac ' s ! Gee it costs money to say that. They ' re mighty kind over there anyway — they tell you just what to buy. Went over and got fitted out and wrote home to Dad this evening for more money. Sha ' n ' t go to Mac ' s again this week. The catalogue says expenses for books and supplies should not exceed $25.00, but I guess they got the figures reversed or else the adding machine slipped a cog. September 30. Went to first recitation today. The Prof scared the life out of our bunch, but a sophomore put us wise, and said not to take any stock in what the Profs said. Actually, if you want to 77 78 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV know anything, ask a sophomore and take the opposite advice. Spent an hour in EngHsh trying to tell Why I came to the In- stitute. Am beginning to think, more and more, that I really don ' t know. Had lunch at the new Union. No, you can t call it a real lunch — probably the cook was away. Took some dyspepsia tablets, so avoided any bad effects. Had our first class meeting in that big hall upstairs. A strong, energetic junior managed the business. Am glad it was not a sophomore; they seem to be butting in everywhere. After a good deal of coaxing we managed to elect temporary officers. It looked more like a beauty contest than anything else. October 1. Just learned about Field Day. A 1911 man said it was a special day set aside by the Faculty when the sophomore class wiped the ground with the freshmen. That does sound encourag- ing. As a bunch, we are a pretty sad looking lot, but The Tech says 1912 has plenty of good material, and a newspaper ought to know. Paid my tuition this afternoon. The Bursar ' s wise. He was a boy once himself. ' Tis joy to pay out money under such cir- cumstances. October 3. First class dinner at Union. Some of the live ones of 1911 captured our chairman, FoUett, and gave him free transporta- tion to Wellesley. Gee! wished I ' d been the chairman. Stranded in Wellesley isn ' t half bad. Bully good dinner. The Dean put us wise to a few of our responsibilities, and j ave us a curtain lecture because we showed so little class spirit. The Bursar opened up a rapid fire attack upon the wit of the Dean, and cracked a few jokes that were clipped from the morning daily. The rest of the speakers were great, principally those who kept still. After dinner a stanch junior friend was on hand and handed us a few tips to dole out to those sophomores. We got the lift on 1911 all right. Made a few of them do the Merry Widow Waltz on Rogers steps, dressed the rest up in nightgowns and sent them home. Guess they ' ll find out they ' re not monkeying with a bunch of Mellin ' s Food babies. 1910 EXTRACTS FROM A FRESHMAN ' S DIARY 79 October 15. Stung again! A sophomore sold me a drill suit for $11.50. Said it was new last year. My tailor told me he had worked on the same suit, annually, for the last five years. October 17. Hare and Hounds run to Wellesley. Beats all how Tech men are attracted in that direction. There ' s a rumor afloat that the Stute may unite with Wellesley. Probably some of the students will. October 19. Cut Military Science this morning. Hate to miss those lectures, but had important business. Major Wheeler is such an interesting talker — he ought to use a graphophone. Tried to explain to Walter Humphreys, but got somewhat fussed in doing so. Class meeting at Huntington Hall. Reminded me of a kinder- garten debate. After a five minutes ' continuous flow of elocution from a tall, slim chap, the class constitution was finally accepted. United at last. October 27. Sophomore dinner at Union. Kidnapped 1911 toast- master. We knew he didn ' t want to speak. You can bet we didn ' t take him to Wellesley — nothing as good as that. A lonely, cold house on Marlborough Street for his. Things got pretty exciting. Even the bluecoats came to see us put it over the sophs. When the dinner busted up, the tide of affairs turned. Some of us were soon lecturing, at 1911 command, from Rogers steps. Proposed to all the girls in Huyler ' s. Great bunch of girls. They ought to be used to it by this time. October 28. Drill again. Some of us look about as graceful in our uniforms as a kangaroo in full dress. But who minds being a little soldier when the balcony is filled with a great, gay and glorious bunch of Fluffy Ruffles? October 30. Great Republican Parade. Strange how everybody turns Republican. Walked about steen miles around town, and had my hair singed by some over-excited torchbearer. Tech brought up the rear of the procession — our friends the Harvardites were in the lead. I wonder why? All the cops from miles around were mustered in Copley Square, but there was nothing doing. 80 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV John Harvard took his children straight home, and then pulled the drawbridge on them. November 1. Slept until noon. Went fussing in the evening. One must not neglect his social development. Studied the Woods and Bailey pocket handbook on Math until three in the morning. Took me three hours to figure out In a similar manner. November 2. Wrote Dad for some cash. Guess we ' ll get a pretty close rub. The Sophs say they ' re going to walk all over us. Per- haps they will. November 4. Freshman elections announced. Lot of unfortunate politics, but it came out all right. We will now have somebody to lay the blame on if things don ' t go right. November 6. Sophomores abolished the Night Before. They ' re losing grit already. November 7. Hurrah ! we won Field Day. Guess we freshmen are some. 1911 wasn ' t in it from the start. Too bad. Sorry for them, the poor boys lost their class pipes. Attended the Soul Kiss in evening. Perhaps we didn ' t own the theater. You could hardly find a sophomore. November 26. Thanksgiving. Home and a good square meal. Gee ! but home cooking knocks the spots out of the Union. December 3. The Freshman Enterprise sprung into existence. Began throwing mud the first thing. Reminds one of ' ' The Bingville Bugle. December 15. Maclaurin spoke in Huntington Hall. He ' s small but mighty. If he doesn ' t stiffen the requirements he ' ll be an A No. 1 president. December 17. Talbot cracked a real joke in Chemistry Lecture. Even the co-ed laughed. December 18. New catalogue issued today. Entrance requirements stiffened. Pity the poor guys entering next year. 1910 EXTRACTS FROM A FRESHMAN ' S DIARY 81 December 24. Christmas hol idays ! Welcome, too, if ever they were. December 30. Back to the grindstone again. Called on a co-ed, but she knows too much. January 1 . Happy New Year. Made no resolutions — what ' s the use when you live in Bean-town? Walked down town with a junior. He met a bunch of chorus girls who seemed very friendly toward him. January 4. Exam schedule published. Begin to feel faint already. Must cut out all fussing and burn the midnight oil. January 6. Freshman dinner. The Dean, Bursar and Blachie were all there and poked fun at each other. Class spirit and enthusiasm increasing rapidly. January 8. Only three weeks to vacation. January 25. Mid-year exams upon us. Took our first this after- noon. Some of us probably took our last. January 28. Exams over today. Shall pack my things ready to move home for good. Thought once I might be an engineer, but guess am in the wrong pew. Lost five pounds last week. February 5. Report received, — all P ' s and C ' s. Have decided to be an engineer after all. February 9. Back to the Stute. Seems great to be in town again. Some of the chaps haven ' t showed up. I wonder why? Work starts in great shape. All off for the last lap as freshmen. FPAT EP N ITIESj e: ' ' REEK LETTER FRATERNI TIES AT THE MASSACHU SETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY IN THE ORDER OF THEIR ESTABLISHMENT 84 tgma € )i 1855 Alpha . Miami University Oxford, Ohio 1855 Beta University of Wooster Wooster, Ohio 1855 Gamma Ohio Wesleyan University Delaware, Ohio 1864 Epsilon George Washington University . . . Washington, D.C. 1866 Zeta Washington and Lee University . . . Lexington, Va. 1857 Eta University of Mississippi University, Miss. 1863 Theta Pennsylvania College Gettysburg, Pa. 1864 Kappa Bucknell University Lewisburg, Pa. 1858 Lambda Indiana University Bloomington, Ind. 1868 Mu Denison University Granville, Ohio 1859 Xi De Pauw University Greencastle, Ind. 1859 Omicron Dickinson College Carlisle, Pa. 1866 Rho Butler College Indianapolis, Ind. 1867 Phi Lafayette College Easton, Pa. 1871 Chi Hanover College Hanover, Ind. 1860 Psi University of Virginia Charlottesville, Va. 1869 Omega Northwestern University Evanston, 111. 1892 Alpha Alpha . . Hobart College Geneva, N.Y. 1886 Alpha Beta ... University of California Berkeley, Cal. 1882 Alpha Gamma . . Ohio State University Columbus, Ohio 1883 Alpha Epsilon . . University of Nebraska Lincoln, Neb. 1882 Alpha Zeta .... Beloit College Beloit, Wis. 1882 Alpha Theta . . . Massachusetts Institute of Technology . Boston, Mass. 1883 Alpha Iota .... Illinois Wesleyan University Bloomington, 111. 1884 Alpha Lambda . . University of Wisconsin Madison, Wis. 1884 Alpha Nu .... University of Texas Austin, Tex. 1884 Alpha Xi .... University of Kansas Lawrence, Kan. 1886 Alpha Omicron . . Tulane University New Orleans, La. 1886 Alpha Pi Albion College Albion, Mich. 1893 Alpha Rho ... Lehigh University Bethlehem, Pa. 1888 Alpha Sigma . . . University of Minnesota Minneapolis, Minn. 1889 Alpha Upsilon . . University of South California .... Los Angeles, Cal. 1890 Alpha Phi .... Cornell University Ithaca, N.Y. 1891 Alpha Chi .... Pennsylvania State College State College, Pa. 1891 Alpha Psi ... Vanderbilt University Nashville, Tenn. 1891 Alpha Omega . . . Leland Stanford, Jr., University . . . Stanford University, Cal. 1905 Beta Gamma . . . Colorado College Colorado Springs, Colo. 1907 Beta Delta .... University of Montana Missoula, Mont. 1876 Delta Delta . . . Purdue University LaFayette, Ind. 1876 Zeta Zeta .... Central University Danville, Ky. 1882 Zeta Psi University of Cincinnati Cincinnati, Ohio 1893 Eta Eta Dartmouth College Hanover, N.H. 1897 Theta Theta . . . University of Michigan Ann Arbor, Mich. 1891 Kappa Kappa . . University of Illinois Champaign, 111. 1893 Lambda Lambda . Kentucky State College Lexington, Ky. 1895 Mu Mu West Virginia University Morgantown, W.Va. 1894 Nu Nu Columbia University New York, N.Y. 1896 Xi Xi University of the State of Missouri . . Columbia, Mo. 85 1897 Omicron Omicron 1902 Rho Rho . 1903 Tau Tau . . . 1903 Uspilon Upsilon 1896 Phi Phi 1904 Psi Psi . . . . 1905 Omega Omega . 1908 Beta Epsilon . 1909 Beta Zeta . . University of Chicago Chicago, 111. University of Maine Orono, Me. Washington University St. Louis, Mo. University of Washington Seattle, Wash. University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia, Pa. Syracuse University Syracuse, N.Y. University of Arkansas Fayetteville, Ark. University of Utah Salt Lake City, Utah University of North Dakota Grand Forks, N.D. tgma € )i ALPHA -THEXA OHAPTi ESTABLISHED 1SSS jfratrcjs Alexander Graydon Batsner Lee Scott Border Walter Harwood Byron Allan J. Chantry, Jr. Alva Breaker Court Peter Lawrence Dillon Harrison William Flickinger Ivory Small James Charles Phillips Kerr William Caruthers Kerr Ramon Fidencio Munoz Frederick Warren Osborn Theodore Bissel Parker Phifer Smith John Calvin Sweeney, Jr. Houghton Hamilton Whithed f ratrc in iXtht George McNeil Angler Henry Melville Chase Henry A. Christian John Andrew Curtain William Worcester Cutler Winthrop Dahlgren Charles Wickershaw Elmer Paul H. Fretz William C. Henning John Ashley Highlands Charles Frank Harwood Rhodes Greene Lockwood John Bruse McPherson Leon Gilbert Morrill James Stewart Newton Arthur Sewall Percy Lucius Spalding Tyler Edward Cutter Thompson Edward Payson Whitman Isaac I. Yates 86 ■t ¥ -. - r v T- tRFKA.FHlLA. Cljeta n A Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Troy, N.Y. B Sheffield Scientific School New Haven, Conn. r Stevens Institute of Technology Hoboken, N.J. A Massachusetts Institute of Technology Boston, Mass. E Columbia University New York, N.Y. Z Cornell University Ithaca, N.Y. H Lehigh University South Bethlehem, Pa. 9 Purdue University ... LaFayette, Ind. I Washington University St. Louis, Mo. K Rose Polytechnic Ir stitute Terre Haute, Ind. X Pennsylvania State College State College, Pa. Graduate Club New York City Graduate Club Chicago, 111. 89 Cljeta n DELTA 3HAPTEFt ESTABLISHED 1SSE5 f tatrcjs in jpacultate Harry Elsworth Clifford William Elton Mott Henry Greenleaf Pearson ftratrc? Maurice Phelps Anderson Benjamin Snively Bonebrake Walter Burgess Gushing William Fredric Dolke, Jr. Eldred Birmingham Hawkins Merton White Hopkins William Edward Humphreville, Jr. Rinker Kibbey Theodore Frederick Walter Meyer George Lee Paullis Ral ph Huber Riddell Joseph Henry Shaw Sydnsy Ingalls Snow Arthur Leon Stein Horace Eugene Stump 285 Newbury Street 90 v «r   -,  PHil ' a Belta 3si Cliaptcr iloH A Columbia College New York City A University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia, Pa. £ Trinity College Hartford, Conn, A Williams College Williamstown, Mass. University of Mississippi Oxford, Miss. T University of Virginia Charlottesville, Va. - Sheffield Scientific School New Haven, Conn. T Massachusetts Institute of Technology Boston, Mass. 93 Belta si TAU OHAP-TER Thomas Henry Atherton, Jr. Braxton Bigelow Malcolm Bruce Brownlee, Jr. Franklin Haven Clark, Jr. Arthur Moxham Coleman John Pierrepont Constable Robert Sayre Cox Charles French Doble Henry Walke Dun, Jr. Montague Flagg Luis de Florez Alexander Griswold Herreshoff Aurelius Pointer Hornor Alfred Galpin Kellogg Austin Blake Mason Douglas Crawford McMurtrie Hamilton Merrill Henry Rice Putnam Edward Larned Ryerson,5jr. Nathaniel McLean Sage Channing Turner Charles Sumner Williams, Jr. 6 Louisburg Square 94 ci)t mi Oaptcr tioW A University of Virginia Charlottesville, Va. H Massachusetts Institute of Technology Boston, Mass. r Emory College Oxford, Ga. A Rutgers College New Brunswick, N.J. E Hampden-Sydney College Hampden-Sydney, Va. Franklin and Marshall College . Lancaster, Pa. H University of Georgia Athens, Ga. 6 Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Troy, N.Y. I Ohio State University Columbus, Ohio A University of California Berkeley, Cal. M Stevens Institute of Technology Hoboken, N.J. X University of Texas Austin, Texas Z Cornell University Ithaca, N.Y. Sheffield Scientific School, Yale University New Haven, Conn. P Lafayette College Easton, Pa. Amherst College Amherst, Mass. X Dartmouth College . . Hanover, N.H. Lehigh University South Bethlehem, Pa. 9. Georgia School of Technology Atlanta, Ga. 97 m mi BETA CHAPTER ESTABLISHED 1S90 Charles Almy, Jr. John Robinson Baldwin Egerton Mitford Bettington Samuel Hoag Cornell Charles Eaton Creecy Henry Clarence Davis, Jr. Norman DeForest Bradley Dewey John Jacob Elbert James Orville Gawne Charles Anthony Harrington Herbert Seymour Howard Lester Hazen King Nathaniel Stevens Seeley John Soley Selfridge Stuart Thomson Thomas Atkinson Tillard John Holbrook White Irving White Wilson George Stone Witmer Frederick Brayton Wood 44 The Fenway 98 IhvJca..Phil -. Bclta ivippa Cpstlou vChaprcr iloU Phi Yale University 1844 Theta Bowdoin Col lege 1844 Xi Colby University ... .... 1845 Sigma Amherst College . .... 1846 Gamma Vanderbilt University ... 1847 Psi University of Alabama 1847 Upsilon Brown University 1850 Chi University of Mississippi 1850 Beta University of North Carolina 1851 Eta University of Virginia 1852 Kappa Miami University 1852 Lambda Kenyon College 1852 Pi Dartmouth College 1853 Iota Central University of Kentucky 1854 Alpha Alpha Middlebury College 1854 Omicron University of Michigan 1855 Epsilon Williams College 1855 Rho Lafayette College 1855 Tau Hamilton College 1856 Mu Colgate University 1856 Nu College of the City of New York 1856 Beta Phi University of Rochester 1856 Phi Chi Rutgers College 1861 Psi Phi De Pauw University 1866 Gamma Phi Wesleyan University . . 1867 Psi Omega Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute ... . 1867 Beta Chi Adelbert College 1868 Delta Chi Cornell Universiiy 1870 Delta Delta Chicago University 1870 Phi Gamma Syracuse University 1871 Gamma Beta Columbia College 1874 Theta Zeta University of California ... 1876 Alpha Chi Trinity College 1879 Phi Epsilon University of Minnesota 1889 Sigma Tau Massachusetts Institute of Technology 1890 Tau Lambda Tulane University . 1898 Alpha Phi University of Toronto 1898 Delta Kappa . University of Pennsylvania 1899 Tau Alpha McGill University 1901 Sigma Rho Leland Stanford, Jr., University 1902 Delta Pi . . . University of Illinois 1904 Rho Delta University of Wisconsin 1907 101 Belta B appa Cpstlon SIGMA TA.U CHAPTt ESTABLISHED 1S90 irratrcs in jrncultatc Alfred Edgar Burton Maurice DeKay Thompson, Jr. Frederick William Barker Roger Wolcott Davis Francis Reuel Fuller Bradley Travis Ross Samuel Sprague Stevens Clarence Augustus Stewart Richard Parker Wallis Kenneth Weeks Joseph Cheever Fuller William Conyne Salisbury Philip ftatxcs Hubert Stacy Smith Frank Asahel Wood Harold Lockett Merrill William Tilden Prescott Kingsley Wadsworth Theodore Browning Whittemore Felix Arnold Burton William Stuart Gordon, Jr. John Stewart Pearce Allen Taber Weeks Endicott Young 102 E AWBtQMTMIL l i Mm Cpsilon l_OCA.I_ AT TEC H IMO LOC3 V 105 J)t Mm Cpstlon :s-rABi_iSH ED 1SSO fratrc Bf Raynor Huntington Allen James Burleigh Cheney- Philip White Dalrymple Charles Edwards, Jr. Harwood Young Frost Allen Adams Gould Richard Hartshorn Gould Philip Hart Harry Lucas Havens Henry Gordon Hawes, Jr. Gorton James Gerald Marcy Keith Walter Wellington King Richard Wheatley Lewis Lynn Albert Loomis Malcolm Dana Price Frank Russell Lincoln Rockwell Soule Lewis Switzer Southwick Donald Read Stevens Frank Griffiths Taite Charles ElUott Tilton Van Court Warren Harry Webb Gordon Ball Wilkes Dwight Meade Wyman fratrejS in llvhc Frank Spencer Arend Harry Nelson Atwood Latimer Willis Ballou Stephen Bowen James Salisbury Brown Paul Burdett Paul Ernest Chalifoux John Pickman Davis Richard Baker Derby Nugent Fallon George Isaac Fiske Ralph Stowell Franklin Andrew Daniel Fuller George Arthur Fuller Robert Lesure Fuller George Wellington Hayden William Martin Walter Turner Hoover Sheldon Leavitt Howard Harry George Johnson Clarence Arthur Lord Anthony Paul Mathesius Frank Kollock Mitchell George Owen Albert Manton Read Donald Goodrich Robbins Thomas Pendleton Robinson Walter Frederick Roper Charles Saville Charles Adrian Sawyer, Jr. George Frederick Shepard, Jr. John Gifford Thompson Charles Foster Tillinghast Van Amringe 106 «r: Z t-4-fr.ft, J by yt ZDcIta Upstlon FOUNDED AT WILLIAMS COLLeCBE, 1S3-4- Cljaptcr xloil 1834 Williams Williamstown, Mass. 1838 Union Sc henectady, N.Y. 1847 Hamilton Clinton, N.Y. 1847 Amherst Amherst, Mass. 1847 Adelbert Cleveland, Ohio 1852 Colby Waterville, Me. 1852 Rochester Rochester, N.Y. 1856 Middlebury Middlebury, Vt. 1857 Bowdoin Brunswick, Me. 1858 Rutgers New Brunswick, N.J. 1860 Brown Providence, R.I. 1865 Colgate Hamilton, N.Y. 1865 New York New York City 1868 Miami Oxford, Ohio 1869 Cornell Ithaca, N.Y. 1870 Marietta Marietta, Ohio 1873 Syracuse Syracuse, N.Y. 1876 Michigan Ann Arbor, Mich. 1880 Northwestern Evanston, 111. 1880 Harvard Cambridge, Mass. 1885 Wisconsin Madison, Wis. 1885 Lafayette Easton, Pa. 1885 Columbia New York City 1885 Lehigh South Bethlehem, Pa. 1886 Tufts West Somerville, Mass. 1887 De Pauw Greencastle, Ind. 1888 Pennsylvania Philadelphia, Pa. 18Q0 Minnesota Minneapolis, Minn. 1891 Technology Boston, Mass. 1893 Swarthmore Swarthmore, Pa. 1896 California Berkeley, Cal. 1896 Leland Stanford, Jr Palo Alto, Cal. 1898 Nebraska Lincoln, Neb. 1898 McGill Montreal, Canada 1899 Toronto Toronto, Canada 1901 Chicago Chicago, 111. 1904 Ohio State Columbus, Ohio 1905 Illinois Champaign, 111. 109 Belta pstlon TECH IM0 1_0C3 V CHAPTER ESTABLISHED 1S91 Louis Derr jrratrcB in jpttcultatc Harrison W. Smith Frank Vogel fratrc Arthur King Adams James McArthur Beale Grenville Temple Bridgman Milton Stanley Clark George Alvin Cowee James Alexander Cox Stafford Allen Francis Fred Mortimer Green Henry Norris Harrison Paul Helme Lazenby John Francis Malone, Jr. John Mills Arthur Knox Mitchell WiUiam Rowe McCune Scott Bradstreet Putman Earl James Wilson Ragsdale George Henry Reppert Wilbur Taylor Roberts Harold Atherton Robinson Henry Lancey Sherman David Ayars Stoddart Edward Thrasher Williams f ratrc in Uxhc Joshua Atwood, 3d Albert Shirley Black George Phillips Dike Charles Warren Hapgood Cyrus Howard Hapgood Valdemar Frank Holmes John Winslow Horr William Spencer Hutchinson Albert Lincoln Kendall Asa Hall Morrill Walter Elbridge Piper Charles Arthur Record Miles Standish Richmond John Carlton Sherman Clifford Melville Swan Alfred Ball Tenney Maurice Crawford Tompkins Gilbert Sanders Tower Everett Pendleton Turner Howard Chubbuck Turner Harry Warren Upham George Reed Wadsworth 1069 Beacon Street no F 0 UIMDETD IN 1f3E5t3 AT ALABAMA STAT El UN I VERS IT V, TUSCJALOOSA, AI_A. vTliaptcr xloil Maine Alpha University of Maine Orono, Me. Massachusetts Iota Tau . . Massachusetts Institute of Technology . Boston, Mass. Massachusetts Beta Upsilon Boston University Boston, Mass. Massachusetts Gamma .... Harvard University Cambridge, Mass. Massachusetts Delta Worcester Polytechnic Institute . . . Worcester, Mass. New Hampshire Alpha . . Dartmouth College Hanover, N.H. New York Alpha Cornell University Ithaca, N.Y. New York Mu Columbia University New York, N.Y. New York Sigma Phi .... St. Stephens College Annandale, N.Y. Pennsylvania Omega .... Allegheny College Meadville, Pa. Pennsylvania Sigma Phi . . Dickinson College Carlisle, Pa. Pennsylvania Alpha Zeta . . Pennsylvania State College State College, Pa. Pennsylvania Zeta Bucknell University Lewisburg, Pa. Pennsylvania Delta Gettysburg College Gettysburg, Pa. Pennsylvania Theta University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia, Pa. Virginia Omicron University of Virginia Charlottesville, Va. Virginia Sigma Washington and Lee University . . . Lexington, Va. Washington City Rho .... George Washington University .... Washington, D.C. North Carolina Xi University of North Carolina Chapel Hill, N.C. North Carolina Theta .... Davidson College Davidson, N.C. South Carolina Gamma . . . Wofford College Spartansburg, S.C. Georgia Beta University of Georgia Athens, Ga. Georgia Psi Mercer University Macon, Ga. Georgia Epsilon Emory College Oxford, Ga. Georgia Phi Georgia School of Technology .... Atlanta, Ga. Michigan Iota Beta University of Michigan Ann Arbor, Mich. Michigan Alpha Adrian College Adrian, Mich. Ohio Sigma Mount Union College Alliance, Ohio Ohio Delta Ohio Wesleyan University Delaware, Ohio Ohio Epsilon University of Cincinnati Cincinnati, Ohio Ohio Theta Ohio State University Columbus, Ohio Ohio Rho Case School of Applied Science .... Cleveland, Ohio Indiana Alpha Franklin College Columbus, Ind. Indiana Beta Purdue University LaFayette, Ind. Illinois Psi Omega Northwestern University Evanston, 111. Illinois Beta University of Illinois Champaign, 111. Illinois Gamma University of Chicago Chicago, 111. Kentucky Kappa Central University Richmond, Ky. Kentucky Iota Bethel College Russelville, Ky. Kentucky Epsilon Kentucky State College Lexington, Ky. Tennessee Zeta Southwestern Presbyterian University . Clarksville, Tenn. Tennessee Lambda Cumberland University Lebanon, Tenn. Tennessee Mu Vanderbilt University Nashville, Tenn. Tennessee Kappa University of Tennessee Knoxville, Tenn. Tennessee Omega University of the South Sewanee, Tenn. Tennessee Eta Southwestern Baptist University . . . Jackson, Tenn. Alabama Mu University of Alabama Tuscaloosa, Ala. Alabama Iota Southern University Greensboro, Ala. 113 Alabama Alpha Mu Alabama Polytechnic Institute Mississippi Gamma University of Mississippi Missouri Alpha University of Missouri Missouri Beta Washington University Nebraska Lambda Pi .... University of Nebraska Arkansas Alpha Upsilon . . . University of Arkansas Kansas Alpha University of Kansas Iowa Beta Iowa State University . . Texas Rho University of Texas Colorado Chi University of Colorado Colorado Zeta Denver University . . . Colorado Gamma Colorado School of Mines California Alpha Leland Stanford, Jr., University California Beta University of California . Louisiana Tau Upsilon .... Tulane University . . . Louisiana Epsilon Louisiana State University Minnesota Alpha University of Minnesota . . Wisconsin Alpha University of Wisconsin . . . Auburn, Ala. Oxford, Miss. Columbia, Mo. St. Louis, Mo. Lincoln, Neb. Fayetteville, Ark. Lawrence, Kan. Iowa City, la. Austin, Tex. Boulder, Colo. Denver, Colo. Golden, Colo. Palo Alto, Cal. Berkeley, Cal. New Orleans, La. Baton Rouge, La. Minneapolis, Minn. Madison, Wis. igma Ipfja Cpsilon MASSAC H USI S IOTA TAU CHAPTER Joseph George Bach Frank Frederick Bell Arthur Campbell Horace Little Clark Lloyd Cartwright Cooley Edward Brown Coy Thomas Charles Desmond William Howard DufReld Archibald Eicher Frederick Abildgaard Fenger Royce Wheeler Gilbert Philip Thomas Harris Roger Frank Hill Robert Odiorne Edward Kenway Thomas Chalkley Knight Strathy Ridout Mackellar Harold Crosby Manson Lincoln Mayo Edmund Burke Moore Alonzo Lemuel Moses Tom Wynne Saul Wright Shuttleworth John Alexander Urquhart Edward Demming Van Tassel, Jr. Barton Wheelwright Harry Emerson Whitaker Wood 263 Newbury Street 114 I ti f  C , ' J)clta Can Delta :S-rABl_ISH ED AT B ET H A M V COI_l_EC3E, 18B© A 11 BE Be BI Bi TH TI €Iiaptcr CtoW SOUTHERN DIVISION Vanderbilt University University of Mississippi Washington and Lee University Emory College University of the South University of Virginia Tulane University George Washington University University of Texas Br BH BK BII BP BT BT Bft TA TB re TK TM WESTERN DIVISION University of Iowa University of Wisconsin University of Minnesota University of Colorado Northwestern University Leland Stanford, Jr., University University of Nebraska University of Illinois University of California University of Chicago Armour Institute of Technology Baker University University of Missouri University of Washington B A E Z K 31 X BA BB BZ B4 B ' J ' TA TA NORTHERN DIVISION Ohio University University of Michigan Albion College Adelbert College Hillsdale College Ohio Wesleyan University Kenyon College Indiana University De Pauw University University of Indianapolis Ohio State Uni versity Wabash College West Virginia University Purdue University 117 EASTERN DIVISION A Allegheny College r Washington and Jefferson College X Lafayette College P Stevens Institute of Technology T Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute a University of Pennsylvania BA Lehigh University BM Tufts College BN Massachusetts Institute of Technology BO Cornell University BX Brown University rr Dartmouth College TE Columbia University rz Wesleyan University FN University of Maine Belta €au Belta :ta im u chapti ESTABLISHED 1SS9 Kester Barr John Lincoln Barry, 3d Charles Josiah Belden David Frye Benbow Herbert Squires Cleverdon Marcus Johnson Cole Stuart Brown Copeland George Barr Curwen Louis Osborne French Keyes Christopher Gaynor Carl William Gram Merle jfratrcs Kenneth Greenleaf Harold Greenleaf Charles Foster Hobson Beardsley Lawrence John Stephens Martin Edward Montgomery Edward Ardery Nash James Buchanan Pierce Chester Henry Pope Arthur Lasell Shaw Russell Diemer Wells Gilbert Woodward Albert F. Bancroft Raymond J. Barber Harry Bythe H. J. Botchford Frank S. ElHot Rufus C. Folsom Robert M. Folsom fratrcsi in Clrbc Horace S. Hinds Frank S. MacGregor John Miller Nathan N. Prentiss H. S. Sheperd Oscar Storer H. J. H. Waters 234 Newbury Street 118 M)i 0amma X)clta ESTABl_I =i M ED 18-4-8 vCliaprcv iloH Alpha . . Lambda Nu . . . Omicron Xi . . Pi . Tau . . Psi . . . Omega . Alpha Deuteron Gamma Deuteron Zeta Deuteron . Theta Deuteron Zeta Nu Deuteron. . Omicron Deuteron Beta . . . Pi Deuteron Delta . . . Lambda Deuteron Rho Deuteron . Sigma Deuteron Sigma Zeta Phi Delta Xi Theta Psi Delta Chi Gamma Phi Iota Mu Kappa Nu Mu Sigma Rho Chi Beta Mu Kappa Tau Pi Iota . Nu Epsilon Alpha Chi Tau Alpha Chi ... Mu . . . Chi Iota. . Lambda Nu Chi Mu . . Washington and Jefferson College . . . Washington, Pa, De Pauw University Greencastle, Ind. Bethel College Russelville, Ky. University of Virginia Charlottesville, Va. Pennsylvania College Gettysburg, Pa. Allegheny College Meadville, Pa. Hanover College Hanover, Ind. Wabash College Crawfordsville, Ind. Columbia University New York, N.Y. Illinois Wesleyan University Bloomington, 111. Knox College Galesburg, HI. Washington and Lee College Lexington, Va. Ohio Wesleyan University Delaware, Ohio Indiana State University Bloomington, Ind. Yale University New Haven, Conn. Ohio State University Columbus, Ohio University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia, Pa. University of Kansas Lawrence, Kan. Bucknell College Lewisburg, Pa. Denison University Granville, O hio Wooster University Wooster, Ohio Lafayette College Easton, Pa. Wittenburg College Springfield, Ohio William Jewell Liberty, Mo. University of California Berkeley, Cal. Colgate University Hamilton, N.Y. Lehigh University Bethlehem, Pa. Pennsylvania State College State College, Pa. Massachusetts Institute of Technology . Boston, Mass. Cornell University Ithaca, N.Y. University of Minnesota Minneapolis, Minn. Richmond College Richmond, Va. Johns Hopkins Baltimore, Md. University of Tennessee Knoxville, Tenn. Worcester Polytechnic Institute .... Worcester, Mass. New York University University Heights, N. Amherst College Amherst, Mass. Trinity College Hartford, Conn. Union College . Schenectady, N.Y. University of Wisconsin Madison, Wis. University of Illinois Champaign, 111. University of Nebraska Lincoln, Neb. University of Missouri Columbia, Mo. 121 Omega Mu University of Maine Orono, Me. Sigma Tau University of Washington Seattle, Wash, Delta Nu Dartmouth College Hanover, N.H. Sigma Nu University of Syracuse Syracuse, N.Y. Theta University of Alabama Tuscaloosa, Ala. Tau Deuteron University of Texas Austin, Tex. Xi Deuteron Adelbert College Cleveland, Ohio Lambda Iota Purdue University LaFayette, Ind. Pi Rho Brown University Providence, R.I. Chi Upsilon Chicago University Chicago, 111. Alpha Phi University of Michigan Ann Arbor, Mich. Lambda Sigma .... Leland Stanford, Jr., University . . . Palo Alto, Cal. Alpha Iota Iowa State College Ames, Iowa Chi Sigma Colorado College Colorado Springs, CoL I)i (S amma Bella IOTA MU CHAPTt ESTABLIS I :d ISSQ JFratcr in jpacultatc Henry Paul Talbot Harold Shelton Arnold John Avery, Jr. Donald Earl Bent Harold Dexter Billings Gurdon Irving Edgerton Russell Hastings Clifford Chase Hield Albert Kimball Huckins Louis Jacoby fratrc? Harold Eric Kebbon Norman Nelson Revere Burnham Pulsifer Charles Weston Radford Donald Haff Radford Franz Schneider, Jr. Osborne Harris Shenstone Frederick Johnson Shepard, Jr. James Stuart Sneddon George Smyth Watson 12 Newbury Street 122 Vr ' -tt ' t J ' t,i ,i ESTABLISHED 18 73 Chapter iloll Alpha Massachusetts Agricultural College .... Amherst, Mass. Beta Union University Albany, N.Y. Gamma Cornell University Ithaca, N.Y. Delta West Virginia University Morgantow n, W.Va. Epsilon Yale University New Haven, Conn. Zeta College of the City of New York New York City Eta University of Maryland Baltimore, Md. Theta Columbia University New York City Iota Stevens Institute of Technology Hoboken, N.J. Kappa Pennsylvania State College State College, Pa. Lambda George Washington University Washington, D.C. Mu University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia, Pa. Nu Lehigh University South Bethlehem, Pa, Xi St. Lawrence University Canton, N.Y. Omicron Massachusetts Institute of Technology . . Boston, Mass. Pi Franklin and Marshall College Lancaster, Pa. Rho Queen ' s College Kingston, Ontario Sigma St. John ' s College Annapolis, Md. . Tau Dartmouth College Hanover, N.H. Upsilon Brown University Providence, R.I. Phi Swarthmore College Swarthmore, Pa. Chi Williams College Williamstown, Mass. Psi University of Virginia Charlottesville, Va. Omega University of California Berkeley, Cal. 125 f)t tgma Ivappa OMICROIM CHAPXER ESTABLISHED 190S jfratrcs William Clark Arkell Louis Gilbert Beers Roger Talbot Boyden Herbert Howard Calvin John Anderson Christie Marshall Ernest Comstock Charles Barrows Fletcher Matthews Fletcher Manuel Font Leslie Gordon Glazier Guy Nichols Harcourt Ralph Warren Home Frederic Carr Jewett Irving Patterson Kane Emery Liebschutz Lasier Harry Lester Manley William Geyer Rhoades Rudolf William Riefkohl Walter W. Scofield, Jr. Robert Parker Sherman Warren James Simonds Karl Donald Stellwagen Herbert Dyer Swift Joseph Ingraham Taylor Paul Ellis Thompson Edward Mayo Tolman Edwin Osgood Upham Melville Kaiser Weill 5Fratrc in Uthe Charles Everett Allen Harold Gilliland Crane Eugen e Banfield John Brayton Harlow Edmund Hincks Squire 282 Dartmouth Street 126 ® Ci)eta € )i ROUMDED AT NORWICH UNIVERSITY, 1SSS vTliaptcr iloll Alpha Norwich University Northfield, Vt. Beta Massachusetts Institute of Technology .... Boston, Mass. Gamma . . University of Maine Orono, Me. Delta Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Troy, N.Y. Epsilon Worcester Polytechnic Institute Worcester, Mass. 129 CI)eta € )i BETA CHAPTI ESTABLISHED 1902 Robert Field Burnett Frederic Karl Castelhun Mitchell Joseph Daly William Noel Drew Frederick James King John Harold Locke John Winslow Nickerson fratrc Ralph Omer Reed Foster Russell Robert Lewis Smith Clarence Hale Sutherland Harold Edwin True John Culleton Tuttle Rodney Wheeler Joseph Henry White jfratrc in Uvhc Arthur G. Baker Harry K. Briggs Norman Call William E. Carlton George H. Chapin, Jr. E. Wesson Clark Leo B. Clogston William E. Clogston William B. Cutter Ray S. Dow Heman A. Gillette Joseph J. Hackett Ralph C. Heath J. Albert Holmes George L. Huntoon Charles M. Hutchins Edward R. Hyde Charles E. Johnson James W. Kidder Leroy E. Knight Henry D. Loring Herman W. Mahr George F. Mitchell Roland E, Page Alden M, Parker Charles W, Pierce Guy G. Russell Percy R. Seamon Paul B. Webber Charles H. Wood 130 1856 f Hff. i f ' fo . ROUMDED AT UNIVERSITY OR P E IM IM S Y l_V A l J I A IM -|8BO Alpha Chapter Delta Chapter Epsilon Chapter Zeta Chapter Eta Chapter . Iota Chapter Mu Chapter . Rho Chapter Tau Chapter Upsilon Chapter Phi Chapter . Psi Chapter Alpha Alpha Chapter Alpha Gamma Chapter Alpha Delta Chapter Alpha Epsilon Chapter Alpha Zeta Chapter Alpha Theta Chapter Alpha Iota Chapter . Alpha Kappa Chapter Alpha Lambda Chapter Alpha Mu Chapter Alpha Nu Chapter Alpha Xi Chapter Alpha Omicron Chapter Alpha Pi Chapter . . OTliaptcr ttoll University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia, Pa. Washington and Jefferson College . . . Washington, Pa. Dickinson College Carlisle, Pa. Franklin and Marshall College Lancaster, Pa. University of Virginia Charlottesville, Va. Columbia University New York City Tulane University New Orleans, La. University of Illinois Champaign, 111. Randolph Macon College Ashland, Va. Northwestern University Evanston, 111. Richmond College Richmond, Va. Pennsylvania State College State College, Pa. Washington and Lee University .... Lexington, Va. West Virginia University Morgantown, W.Va. University of Maine Orono, Me. Armour Institvite of Technology .... Chicago, 111. University of Maryland Baltimore, Md. University of Wisconsin Madison, Wis. Vanderbilt University Nashville, Tenn. University of Alabama Tuscaloosa, Ala. University of California Berkeley, Cal. Massachusetts Institute of Technology Boston, Mass. Georgia Institute of Technology .... Atlanta, Ga. Purdue University LaFayette, Ind. University of Michigan Ann Arbor, Mich. University of Chicago Chicago, 111. ixt) l of 3llumiu €f)apter Philadelphia Alumni Richmond Alumni Chicago Alumni New Orleans Alumni New York Alumni Pittsburg Alumni Baltimore Alumni Southern California Alumni 133 |)t 3 appa tgma ALPMA M U CHAPTER ESTABLISHED 1903 Dugald C. Jackson fratrc in facilitate William H. Walker fratrc Frank Adams Baker Olin Vivian Chamberlin William Haskins Coburn Minot Savage Dennett Benjamin Warren Dow George Irving Emerson Harold Phillips Farrington Kenneth Winslow Faunce William Dewey Foster William Charles Alfred Hague Laurence Todd Hemmenway Edwin Kenyon Jenckes James Bowen Noble Alfred Ingersoll Phillips, Jr. Herman Carsten Schriefer Robert Remington Stanley Charles Mullen Steese Franklin Thompson Towle West ifratre in ilrlic Herbert L. Adams William A. Adams William C. Adams Charles E. Abbott Bertrand L. Chapman George G. Crocker Wesley C. Elliott Abbot H. Thompson 422 Newbury St. 134 Alexander Ellis, Jr. Robert E. Farrington Percy L. Handy Frederick F. Hyde Henry F. King David H. Walker Clay MacCauley Br ka. PJtiio. Iplja Can mcga FOUMDED AX VIRCBINIA rvlIl_|-rARV I (N( ST IX UT E IM 1886 Alpha Epsilon Beta Beta Beta Delta Alpha Omega Alpha Beta Alpha Theta . Alpha Zeta Beta Iota . . Beta Epsilon Gamma Eta . Gamma Zeta Gamma Xi . . Gamma Gamma Gamma Omicron Alpha Mu Beta Kappa . Beta Lambda Beta Omicron Gamma Tau Gamma Iota . . Gamma Lambda Beta Alpha . . Gamma Upsilon Gamma Mu . . Gamma Nu . . Gamma Rho Gamma Theta Gamma Pi . . Beta Upsilon . Gamma Alpha Beta Gamma Gamma Beta Gamma Sigma Gamma Delta Beta Zeta . . Alpha Lambda Alpha Omicron Beta Theta Alpha Iota Alpha Pi . . Alpha Rho Alpha Upsilon Tau .... PROVINCE I Alabama Polytechnic Institute Auburn, Ala. Southern University Greensboro, Ala. University of Alabama Tuskaloosa, Ala. University of Florida Gainesville, Fla. University of Georgia Athens, Ga. Emory College Oxford, Ga. Mercer University Macon, Ga. Georgia School of Technology Atlanta, Ga. Tulane University New Orleans, La. University of Texas Austin, Tex. PROVINCE II University of Illinois Champaign, 111. University of Chicago Chicago, 111. Rose Polytechnic Institute Terra Haute, Ind. Purdue University LaFayette, Ind. Adrian College Adrian, Mich. Hillsdale College Hillsdale, Mich. University of Michigan Ann Arbor, Mich. Albion College Albion, Mich. University of Wisconsin Madison, Wis. PROVINCE III University of California Berkeley, Col. University of Colorado Boulder, Colo. Simpson College Indianola, la. Iowa State College Ames, la. University of Kansas Lawrence, Kan. University of Minnesota Minneapolis, Minn. University of Missouri Columbia, Mo. University of Nebraska Lincoln, Neb. University of Washington Seattle, Wash. PROVINCE IV University of Maine Orono, Me. Colby College Waterville, Me. Massachusetts Institute of Technology Boston, Mass. Tufts College Tufts College, Mass. Worcester Polytechnic Institute .... Worcester, Mass. Brown University Providence, R.I, University of Vermont Burlington, Vt. PROVINCE V Columbia University New York City St. Lawrence University Canton, N.Y. Cornell University Ithaca, N.Y. Muhlenberg College Allentown, Pa. Washington and Jefferson College . . . Washington, Pa. Lehigh University South Bethlehem, Pa. Pennsylvania College Gettysburg, Pa. University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia, Pa. 137 PROVINCE VI Alpha Delta .... University of North Carolina Chapel Hill, N.C. Xi Trinity College Durham, N.C. Beta Xi College of Charleston Charleston, S.C. Beta ........ Washington and Lee University .... Lexington, Va. Delta University of Virginia Charlottesville, Va. PROVINCE VII Alpha Nu Mt. Union College Alliance, Ohio Alpha Psi Wittenberg College Springfield, Ohio Beta Eta Ohio Wesleyan University Delaware, Ohio Beta Mu Wooster University Wooster, Ohio Beta Omega Ohio State University Columbus, Ohio Gamma Kappa . . . Western Reserve University Cleveland, Ohio PROVINCE VIII Alpha Tau Southw estern Presbyterian University Clarksville, Tenn. Beta Pi Vanderbilt University Nashville, Tenn. Beta Tau Union University Jackson, Tenn. Omega University of the South Sewanee, Tenn. Pi University of Tennessee Knoxville Tenn. Ipi)a Cau ©mega BETA C3AIV1MA C H A PX I :r Stacy Collins Bates William Case Bird Joseph Alexander Boyer Robert Samuel Breyer Fredrick Henry Dierks Leander Allen Dow William Craig Ferguson David Follett, Jr. Albert Garland Gale Richard Frederic Goodwin, Jr, Curtis Elbert Daniel Greene Victor Carl Griibnau Linzee Sewall Hooper Garnett Alfred Joslin Scott Prescott Kimball Ernest Moore Loring Will Robinson Reilly James Calvin Rogers Willson Young Stamper, Jr. Myron Knight Sweet Christopher Webb Herbert C. Elton Eugene L. Grunsky Alexander Macomber fratrc in Uxht Frank D. Neill Bryant Nichols Charles D. Underbill 26 Newbury Street 138 .r -- .. V, cT- - Cljcta Delta € )i :S rABl_IS M ED 1S4S Beta Cornell University 1870 Gamma Deuteron University of Michigan 1889 Delta Deuteron University of California 1900 Epsilon College of William and Mary 1853 Zeta Brown University 1853 Zeta Deuteron McGill University 1901 Eta Bowdoin University 1854 Eta Deuteron Leland Stanford, Jr., University 1903 Theta Deuteron Massachusetts Institute of Technology 1890 Iota Harvard University 1856 Iota Deuteron Williams College 1891 Kappa Tufts College 1856 Kappa Deuteron University of Illinois 1908 Lambda Boston University 1877 Mu Deuteron Amherst College 1885 Nu Deuteron Lehigh University 1884 Xi Hobart College 1857 Omicron Deuteron Dartmouth College 1869 Pi Deuteron College of the City of New York 1881 Rho Deuteron Columbia University 1883 Sigma Deuteron University of Wisconsin 1895 Tau Deuteron University of Minnesota 1895 Phi Lafayette College 1867 Chi University of Rochester 1867 Chi Deuteron George Washington University 1896 Psi Hamilton College 1863 141 Cl)eta Belta €U ;XA DEUTERON O H A R C3 E ;S-rABl_ISH ED 1SQO Harvey Smith Benson Maurice Scott Chapin James Hamilton Critchett Karl Dickson Fernstrom Paul Reed Fleming Newman Ballard Gregory Clifford Lytton Hufsmih John Maurice Leddy Paul Burton Lord Samuel Norman McCain Henry Franklin Miller, 2d Francis Aldrich Moore f rater in f acultatc Nathan R. George fratrc John Albert Proctor Bergen Reynolds Burr Arthur Robinson Salvador Rodriguez, Jr. Walter Morley Ruby Erwin Haskell Schell Seth Heness Seelye Ralph Martin Torrey Arthur William Underbill, Jr. Charles William Wallower John Eddy Whittlesey Howard David Williams Roy Pease Williams 262 Newbury Street 142 Dreha.Phiia. a ambtia )i LOCAL AT -TECHMOLOCBY 145 a ambtja l)t ESTABLISHED 190e Myron Mathews Davis Frederick Archibald Dewey Ridsdale ElUs George Edwards Freethy Cyrus Thurston Johnston Wilham James Kelly John Lavelle McAllen Charles Hudson Sayre Merrill Peter Desmond White Edgar Irving Williams Alexander Woodward Yereance 258 Newbury Street 146 J n9ka, hi74L B.appa Cijeta LOCAL- AT -r E C H IVJ O L_ O C3|y 149 B.appa Cljeta ESTABLISHED 190S jfratrrc Edward Taber Almy, Jr. Homer Charles Bender John Arthur Bigelow Philip Lord Caldwell James Kenneth Campbell Charles Hamlin Carpenter Harry Hardin Catching Orville Boardman Denison Charles Ernest Dodge Leslie Burton Duke Harold Maurice Hallett Richard Clark Jacobs, Jr. Raymond Weiss Jacoby Laurence Gleason Odell William John O ' Hearn Paul Henry Pearson Harold Sharp Herbert Joseph Stiebel Edward Stuart James Gregory Tripp William Ratcliffe Waldo William Weatherby Warner Richard Parker Watson Aber Stowe Wiester f ratre in Uthc Albert Alden Blodgett Clifford Hall Boylston Walter Matthews Butts Allan Reginald CuUimore John Thayer Ellsworth Hobert Ward French Charles Alphonsus Gibbons, Jr. Newton LeRoy Hammond Royal Robbins Heuter Herbert Buttrick Hosmer Harry Chester Lord Harry Caleb Merriam Benjamin Karl Sharp Stewart Swan Southgate Arthur Kellam Tylee Robert Kendrick Wright 264 Newbury Street 150 Itrftcit . f Jii ft . ALPHA DELTA PHI BETA THETA PI DELTA KAPPA EPSILON DELTA TAU DELTA DELTA UPSILON PHI DELTA THETA PHI KAPPA ALPHA PHI KAPPA PSI PI KAPPA XI SIGMATALPHA EPSILON SIGMA XI ZETA PSI Claude T. Wilson Harold E. Akerly William E, Dugan, Jr. Chester J. Briggs Kenneth J. Campbell Norman Duffett Rock L. Comstock Lester W, Perrin Joseph W. Northrop, Jr. Angus E. Burt George R. Lord Harold H, Stephens Ballard Y. Burgher Leslie E. Geary Joseph G. Reid Lewis L. Baxter Howard W. Congdon Bancroft Hill French P. Sargeant Lockwood J, Towne Arthur R. Knipp Frank M. Dunnington Horace Van S. Taylor Carleton W. Hubbard Edward F. Merrill Willard B. Van Inwegen 153 Amherst College University of Rochester University of Rochester Yale University Dennison University University of Rochester Colgate University Yale University Wesleyan University Middlebury College Marietta College Middlebury College University of Texas University of Washington Southwestern University Vanderbilt University Brown University Johns Hopkins University Dartmouth College De Pauw University Johns Hopkins University University of Virginia Yale University Williams College Cornell University Williams College ' SS « Sigma Chi 16 Theta Xi 15 Delta Psi 22 Chi Phi 21 Delta Kappa Epsilon 21 Phi Beta Epsilon 26 Delta Upsilon 22 Sigma Alpha Epsilon 27 Delta Tau Delta 23 Phi Gamma Delta 19 Phi Sigma Kappa 28 Theta Chi 15 Phi Kappa Sigma 19 Alpha Tau Omega 21 Theta Delta Chi 25 Lambda Phi 12 Kappa Theta 24 356 J crcnitagc of j-ratcrnitji jHcn at CctJjnologp Year 1885-86 1886-87 1887-88 1888-89 1889-90 1890-91 1891-92 1892-93 1893-94 1894-95 1895-96 1896-97 Number Per Cent Year 52 8.5 1897-98 42 8.9 1898-99 42 6.1 1899-00 45 5.4 1900-01 93 10.8 1901-02 158 16.0 1902-03 184 17.1 1903-04 207 18.8 1904-05 191 16.5 1905-06 201 16.9 1906-07 192 16.2 1907-08 189 15.8 1908-09 Number Per Cent 1903-04 265 173 14.4 189 16.1 216 18.4 213 17.9 245 17.1 274 16.9 265 17.3 340 21.7 335 22.4 363 25.9 349 24.7 356 24.4 154 emiier Eugene Stewart Anderson Rafael Adolph Beckmann Richard Stuart Bicknell Robert Samuel Breyer Walter Harwood Byron James Hamilton Critchett Thornwell Fay, Jr. Ralph Edwin Gegenheimer Seymour Ashley Guthrie William James Kelly William Caruthers Kerr Ramon Fidencio Muiioz Theodorus Polhemus Chester Henry Pope Maurice Roos Scharff Bert Samuel Wohlgemuth jer otiate jHember Alfred B. Babcock Arthur A. Blanchard Raymond E. Drake Arthur A. Noyes Miles S. Sherrill Rufus W. G. Wint Robert S. Williams i onotarp 0itmhct0 John Alden Fred L. Bardwell Charles R. Cross Henry Fay Augustus H. Gill Heinrich 0. Hofman Frederick R. Kneeland Charles E. Locke G. Russell Lincoln Arthur D. Little F, Jewett Moore Richard H. Lodge Samuel P. MuUiken James F. Norris Arthur A. Noyes Thomas E. Pope Samuel C. Prescott Henry S. Pritchett Robert H. Richards William T. Sedgwick Henry P. Talbot Frank H. Thorp William H. Walker Charles H. Warren Willis R. Whitney 156 On-Jrjz, Mlt ' a siris Henry Smith Pritchett Alfred Edgar Burton James Phinney Munroe Isaac White Litchfield Frank Henry Rand Arthur Amos Noyes Francis Russell Hart Raynor Huntington Allen Charles Josiah Belden James Hamilton Critchett Alton Leslie Dickerman, Jr. Ridsdale Ellis James Irving Finney Montague Flagg Carl William Gram Garnett Alfred Joslin William James Kelly Lynn Albert Loomis Chester Henry Pope Maurice Roos Scharflf Channing Turner 159 Bounti Cable King Arthur LUIS DE FLOREZ Queen Guinever NATHANIEL McLEAN SAGE Merlin JAMES BURLEIGH CHENEY Knights Sir Launcelot, STUART BROWN COPELAND Sir Galahad, DONALD CAMPBELL BAKEWELL Sir Gawain, NORMAN DE FOREST 1911 Donald Campbell Bakewell Malcolm Bruce Brownlee, Jr. James Burleigh Cheney Stuart Brown Copeland George Barr Curwen Luis de Florez Norman De Forest William Conyne Salisbury Hubert Stacy Smith Charles Sumner Williams, Jr. 1912 Frederick William Baker, Jr. Herbert Howard Calvin Franklin Haven Clark, Jr. Linzee Sewall Hooper Harold Eric Kebbon John Stevens Martin Bradley Travis Ross Nathaniel McLean Saee John Holbrook White 160 prrk4t. I ' Ml . ammer President JOHN JACOB ELBERT Secretary JOHN CALVIN SWEENEY, Jr. Treasurer JAMES ORVILLE GAWNE ;iHfml}crs Maurice Phelps Anderson Lee Scott Border Grenville Temple Bridgman Allan J. Chantry, Jr. Milton Stanley Clark Alva Breaker Court Richard Frederic Goodwin, Jr. Charles Anthony Harrington Philip Hart Herbert Seymour Howard Irving Patterson Kane Alfred Galpin Kellogg Arthur Knox Mitchell Ramon Fidencio Mufioz Earl James Wilson Ragsdale George Henry Reppert Phifer Smith David Ayars Stoddart Channing Turner 163 Cjje %u ) Union Long sought and worked for, the new Tech Union is at last a reahty. Hundreds of students are unconsciously helping to the development of the Institute ' s social life by daily use of the living- room with its books, magazines and piano, the writing and study room, and the card-room ; nine hundred are fed daily in the ample dining-room; professional societies and social societies are taking every advantage of the increased facilities for frequent lectures and dinners; in fact, the present Union has become so naturally a part of the undergraduates ' world that to most its long and weary evolu- tion is entirely forgotten. President Walker, in the last part of his administration, through the expression of his views and his actions, laid the foundation for a future general meeting place for the students. Though he did not live to see the fulfillment of his project, the idea was carried on and developed by the alumni, who financed to the extent of nearly a hundred thousand dollars a plan for a Walker Memorial Gymnasium. Operations on the building ceased upon the agitations over a new site and the Harvard merger, and the Walker Memorial originally planned is yet to be realized. To temporarily provide for the social needs of the student body some friends of the Institute gave the next year funds to support a plan of President Pritchett ' s for renovating and furnishing two rooms in the Mechanical Laboratory Building on Garrison Street. The first Tech Union was thus established. That it accomplished much is evident, but its inadequacy as a meeting place for so large a student body was soon felt, and became strongly apparent as the institution grew in popularity. In his report to the Corporation in December, 1907, Acting- President Noyes said: The Tech Union, great as are the benefits which it has brought to our student life, is, however, miserably in- adequate as the social gathering place of our fourteen hundred students. Three weeks later The Tech brought before the undergraduates and alumni extensive plans for the utilization as a temporary Walker Memorial of Copley Hall on Clarendon Street. This building was owned by the Institute. The movement was pushed with unparalleled energy and enthusiasm throughout the 164 1910 THETECHUNION 165 remainder of the college year, and at graduation time it was rumored that some slight obligations of the Institute to the Copley Society had been discharged, and that Copley Hall would be ready as a second Tech Union at the beginning of this school year. The Corporation had, however, go ne further in its consideration of the students ' needs. A recently appointed Committee on Student Welfare, first suggested by Dr. Noyes in his initial annual report, had approved and furthered plans for the establishment of an entirely new structure, a social center for the students at the very doors of their lecture rooms and laboratories. This idea met with the approval of the Corporation, and plans were soon prepared for a new Union. This building was made possible in great part by the alumni and friends of the Institute, who subscribed a total amount of $8,689, the highest single subscription being one of four thousand dollars from an anonymous giver. It was recommended by the Executive Committee of the Corporation that appropriation be made from the Alumni Income Fund for the remainder of the cost of de- signing and construction. This was done. The final cost of planning, constructing and fitting up the Union was $19,460.37. The gradu- ating class, 1908, helped along the cause materially by its gift of mission furniture for the study and social rooms, and since the com- pletion of the building further gifts of value have been made by friends. It is expected that in the future the running expenses will be entirely covered by the profits from the dining-room. The new Union was opened to the students on September 30, 1908. It is a two and one-half story structure occupying the entire space between Pierce Building and Engineering C. The lunch-room, seating about three hundred, is located on the ground floor, the kitchen being in the basement of the Pierce Building. The spacious dining-room has served a second purpose as a stage for the rehearsals of the Tech show, and almost daily practice of That Pill Grimm has been held here during the past term. On the floor above is provided the social room with its large fireplace, upholstered easy- chairs and window seats, a piano, former Tech show pictures and posters, class banners, periodicals and books, including the Frank H. Cilley Library, containing books devoted to physical culture. On the street side of the second floor is the library or study room, o O o o ■a: a o ( 1910 THETECHUNION 167 and a special dining-room which during the day has been utiHzed for cards and chess. To provide office room for the various student activities three small rooms were constructed on a mezzanine floor above. One of these is now occupied by the Institute Committee and the Track Team management, another by the Tech Show, and the third by Technique. A somewhat larger office in the hall of Engineering C is occupied by The Tech. The Union has proved as convenient and comfortable as the clubhouse of any modern organization, and has been thrown open to the use of all with no fees and few restrictions. In giving the Union the Corporation recognized the importance of placing the responsibility, so far as possible, on the students them- selves, and a governing committee of five undergraduates was accord- ingly appointed. The original committee consisted of Maurice R. Scharff, 1909, James H. Critchett, 1909, William J. Kelley, 1909, John M. Fitzwater, 1910, and Alexander W. Yereance, 1911. This committee has been assisted by Dean Burton, Bursar Rand, Isaac W. Litchfield, 1885, and Harry A. Rapelye, 1908, assistant to Dr. Noyes. These older members have assisted merely in the organization; the entire responsibility for the success of the plan has rested on the student members. Sub-committees have been appointed to care for the various phases of the Union ' s usefulness. A Dining-room Committee of nine members, with James I. Finnie, 1909, as chairman, has kept in touch with the management of the dining-room, holds weekly meetings at which all aspects of their department, from finance to fiavor, are discussed, and has made every effort to bring the dining facilities to their highest degree of perfection. A second committee, known as the House Committee, with John M. Fitzwater, 1910, as chairman, assumes all responsibility for the success of the upper fioors, has in charge the assignment of office room to the various organizations, and of the special dining- room for meetings and dinners of the professional and social societies, cares for the magazines and libraries, and has assigned to each of its members a certain day in the week upon which he is to personally see that the privileges of the social rooms are used and not abused. 168 TECHI IQUE Vol. XXIV The Entertainment Committee, with Montague Flagg, 1909, at its head, has carried out every detail of the Friday- evening enter- tainments, which have so increased in popularity as to tax the utmost capacity of the social room. This method of committee government has assured the Union being rim not only for the students, but also by the students, and has afforded a most excellent opportunity for the development of the executive training so much needed by the technical graduate. To one who has watched the growth of Technology even for but a short time, the great change wrought by the new Tech Union in the social condition of its students is evident to a marked degree. It is gratifying indeed to note with what completeness have been satisfied the needs of Technology ' s social life as originally stated by the student committee on the Copley Hall movement. This com- mittee recorded as the reason for the need of a new Union, the advisability of trying out in some way the schemes for the arrange- ment of the permanent Walker Memorial Building, the desirability of making the Walker Memorial a live issue, the pressing need of a greater social life at the Institute, the value of an opportunity to practise the general principles of business under favorable circum- stances in the various student enterprises, and the urgent necessity of nourishing and propagating a loyalty and spirit to and for Tech- nology among the undergraduates in order to have that same loyalty among the future alumni. The Tech Union has fulfilled its mission to a remarkable degree. It has paved the way for that more perfect, perhaps ideal, social life which will be realized by the Walker Memorial in that new Tech- nology upon a new site, and for which General Walker, Dr. Pritchett and Dr. Noyes have so ably and generously worked. ATHLLTICS tl)Icttc ummari) XN those branches of intercollegiate sport which are allowable under the exactions of the Institute curriculum, Technology ' s prestige is too well known to require comment. The past season has rather added to than detracted from this excellent standing ; for though there have been cases where we might well have wished for a better showing, there have also been exhibitions of unusual brightness. Undoubtedly of first importance is the work of the track and field men. The excellent results of Coach Kanaly ' s careful direction in track athletics is strikingly apparent, particularly in those branches where he has had the benefit of a year ' s experience with the peculiar conditions under which the athletic training of the Institute is developed. That the coming year ' s general showing in track will equal that of the special departments of relay and cross country is the opinion of those thoroughly conversant with Institute athletics. To return to the past season and the experience on which Coach Kanaly is developing this year ' s material, we may properly start with the dual meet with the University of Maine in May, 1908. That five men won the right to wear the T in this meet is evidence of Maine ' s weakness rather than Technology ' s excellence. Technology won, but more cannot be said. Rather brighter, indeed very much more gratifying was the vic- tory over Brown in the second dual meet of the season. Here was a real contest and the team showed to far better advantage. The final test came with the annual meet of the N.E.I.A.A., held at Technology Field in Brookline. On the strength of previous show- ing, Dartmouth was regarded as hav- ing complete title to first place, the real fight centering in the struggle BLACKBURN AND SALISBURY TAKING FIRST TWO PLACES FROM BROWN IN THE 440 170 TT ' V l ; ,-. ' . « . .««r..wi« r.7a. At ru. .,t m BLACKBURN WINNING HIS HEAT IN THE 440 172 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV SELIGMAN COMING SECOND IN THE 220. for second honors. The preliminaries showed the truth of this, the Han- overians having decidedly the largest number of men in the finals. In what was undoubtedly the most successful meet ever held by the New England colleges, Tech- nology tied Wes- leyan for third place, with Dartmouth and Bowdoin in firsthand second positions. The holding of the meet at Brookline was a powerful stimulus to Institute athletes, it being run by the Technology management. Meanwhile the mile relay team had been smashing records rather promiscuously, and the trip to the Pennsylvania relay games was undertaken with, perhaps, a slight degree of over-confidence. Tech- nology awoke to the facts a little late, and they lost to Wesleyan only by a matter of inches in a terrific finish. The team this year is the same with a single exception, and to date the showing has been truly of championship calibre, the team having already clipped three-fifths of a second from the intercollegiate record and missed by a bare two-fifth second a new world ' s mark. All eyes will be upon the four crack quarter-milers in the Pennsylvania games a little later. Turning to cross country. Technology has been represented this year by a team of the highest quality. After the rather dis- couraging showing of last season, Coach Kanaly set to work tirelessly and turned out a team which decisively defeated Harvard in the deciding race of a series of five, where all previous records went by the board. The team then went to Princeton, where it placed Tech- nology in second position among American colleges in cross country 19 10 ATHLETIC SUMMARY 173 competition, only the wearers of the big red C of Cornell showing the way to the cardinal and gray. Cross country saw in 1908 the most successful season since its inception at the Institute. Turning from track to another branch of intercollegiate sport in which the Institute enters, we see the basket-ball team starting with a rush. Dartmouth was neatly laid away. Tufts and Harvard shared the same fate, and the Institute saw another of its teams displaying sterling ability. Then came the rather demoralizing strain of mid- year exams, and, in the trip to New York which followed, the team plainly showed the strain, losing three of the four games played to the crack metropolitan aggregations. In one victory, that over Man- hattan, the team showed flashes of its old form. Since the return from this trip the work improved exceedingly and the season resulted very satisfactorily to Technology. With nearly the same men as last year, the hockey team opened its season by defeating the powerful Dartmouth seven, in emula- tion of the example set by the basket-ball team. This excellent begin- ning was followed by a brilliant season where every game played resulted either in a victory or a fight, where defeat detracted nothing from the prestige of the team. The trip to New York was abandoned, but the interest in hockey was not sensibly diminished and the season, as a whole, may be placed among Technology ' s brightest in the winter sport. The fencing team showed up to advantage in the preliminary contests for the intercollegiate finals in New York, and won its right to try con- clusions with the teams of the Army, the Navy and old Eli. Here, however, the supporters of the team were given a disappointment, only a single bout going to Technology ' s credit. The team has been considerably strengthened this year, and has already made a name for itself. Columbia and Pennsylvania have been defeated in no uncertain manner. On paper the team should redeem itself in this year ' s intercollegiates and justify its place in the Fencing Association. CAPTAIN GRUBNAU FENCING TEAM 174 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV In tennis Technology defeated Brown in a dual meet early in the season, but failed to show up well in the New England meet. It is too early to make any predictions as to this year ' s success on the courts. Class baseball enjoyed a very successful season last spring, the 1910 team finally coming out the champions. Both teams played good schedules. Thus, with one or two exceptions, the season just past has been one of great brightness in certain directions, of great promise for the future in others. Athletics at Technology are undergoing a period of expansion and increasing strength ; the engineer is measuring more fully up to the standards of fitness set by the best American college athlete. ' ..i- A ' i ' - ' . •- ■ii-SUv ' S- L ' AC: ' -.. , ' ,. . TiC StrFSSMJ CAPTAIN McLaughlin, i9ii ATHLETIC ADVISORY COUNCIL Chairman FRANK H. BRIGGS, 1881 Secretary and Treasurer RALPH S. FRANKLIN, 1903 iicprcscntatiyjcs from tf c Sllumni SlBsofiation JOHN L. BATCHELDER, Jr., 1890 J. ARNOLD ROCKWELL, 1896 iicprcscntattVics from tiyc 3lt()lctK . lssofiation HARRY E. WHITAKER, 1909 RIDSDALE ELLIS, 1909 JOHN AVERY, Jr., 1910 175 Ctdjuolosp 9lti)lrtic Sssoriation n President, CARL WILLIAM GRAM, 1909 Vice-President, WILLIAM JOHN O ' HEARN, 1910 Secretary and Treasurer, PETER DESMOND _; WHITE, 1911 1909 Frank Dexter Applin Ridsdale Ellis Frank John Lange Joseph Newell Stephenson Harry Emerson Whitaker 1911 Wellesley Joseph Seligman George Alvin Cowee Peter Desmond White Edward Demming Van Tassel, Jr. Howard David Williams jHcmtJcri 1910 John Avery, Jr. George Bradley Cumings Frank Frederick Bell Frederick Aloysius Hurley Edward Stuart 1912 Seth Heness Seelye Harvey Smith Benson Joseph Ingraham Taylor Joseph Alexander Boyer Archibald Eicher Track Team Carl William Gram, 1909 Karl Dickson Fernstrom, 1910 Cross Country Team Ridsdale ElUs, 1909 Karl Dickson Fernstrom, 1910 Fencing Team Victor Carl Griibnau, 1909 Maurice Scott Chapin, 1910 Tennis Team Jerome Scheuer, 1910 Philip Montgomery Wentworth, 1909 Basket Ball Team Philip Montgomery Wentworth, 1909 William Burton Hargraves, 1910 Hockey Team William James Kelly, 1909 William John O ' Hearn, 1910 Golf Team Thomas Atkinson Tillard, 1909 177 President HARRY E. HALL, Columbia Vice-Presidents WILFRED W. PORTER, Jr., Syracuse GEORGE T. BURNS, Dartmouth Secretary M. J. H. McGRATH, New York University Treasurer • ' HUGH K. GILMOUR, Princeton iHcmbcr Amherst Fordham Stevens Institute of Technology Bowdoin Harvard Syracuse Brown Michigan Massachusetts Institute of Technology Columbia Pennsylvania University of Virginia Cornell Princeton Yale Dartmouth 178 JBteto Cuslauli S ntcvcoUtgatc Sldjlctic association Officers President GEORGE T. BURNS, Dartmouth Vice-President CARL F. AHLSTROM, WilUams Secretary ARTHUR J. YOUNG, Brown Treasurer KARL D. FERNSTROM, Technology oSrcfutibc Committee George T. Burns, Dartmouth WilUam H. Hoch, WilHams Karl D. Fernstrom, Technology Warren E. Robinson, Bowdoin Cyril B, Judge, Trinity Paul G. Dennis, Wesleyan ;fHemtJcrs Amherst Holy Cross Tufts Bowdoin Maine Vermont Brown Technology Wesleyan Dartmouth Trinity €f)ampion0l)ips Williams Dartmouth, 9 Williams, 2 Technology, 1 Amherst, 8 Bowdoin, 1 Brown } . , . . , I tied, 1 Amherst ) 179 Hf WHO 5HUN5 THf DU5T ANP hKAT AR CNA SHALL NOT CNJOY TH COOL 5HAP€ Of T K oLivc BRANCH or y]CTo?Cf.y y8 yey TRACK TEAM Captain THOMAS WHITLEY ORR, 1908 Manager DOUGLAS CRAWFORD McMURTRIE, 1910 CAPTAIN ORR cam Raynor Huntington Allen, 1909 Walter Defriez Allen, 1911 Henr}- Washington Blackburn, 1908 Karl Dickson Fernstrom, 1910 Basil Lovibond Gimson, 1908 Carl William Gram, 1909 Harold Howard Howland, 1909 Leonard Ogden Mills, 1910 Charles Waldo Morrison, 1909 Lewis Dexter Nisbet, 1909 Thomas Whitley Orr, 1908 William Conyne Salisbury, 1911 George Schobinger, 1908 Wellesley Joseph Seligman, 1911 Edward Stuart, 1909 Coach FRANK MAURICE KANALY 183 TRACK SQUAD Captain THOMAS WHITLEY ORR, 1908 Manager DOUGLAS CRAWFORD McMURTRIE, 1910 W. C. SALISBURY :2 quati Maurice Everett Allen, 1908 Raynor Huntington Allen, 1909 Walter Defriez Allen, 1911 Frank Frederick Bell, 1910 Henry Washington Blackburn, 1908 George Bradley Cumings, 1910 Calvin Powell Eldred, 1911 Montague Flagg, 1909 Basil Lovibond Gimson, 1908 Carl William Gram, 1909 Harold Howard Howland, 1909 Harold Lockett, 1910 Lynn Albert Loomis, 1909 John David MacKenzie, 1911 John Francis McCarthy, 1909 Leonard Ogden Mills, 1910 Charles Waldo Morrison, 1909 Lewis Dexter Nisbet, 1909 Thomas Whitley Orr, 1908 Harry Andrew Rapelye, 1908 John Hamilton Ruckman, 1910 William Conyne Salisbury, 1911 Maurice Roos Scharff, 1909 George Schobinger, 1908 Wellesley Joseph Seligman, 1911 Albert Fletcher Stevenson, 1909 Edward Stuart, 1910 Peter Desmond White, 1911 185 TECHNOLOGY FIELD Event lOO-Yard Dash Places C. W. Gram, 1909 H. W. Blackburn, 1908 W. J. Seligman, 1911 W. C. Salisbury, 1911 April 11, 1908 Time, Height or Distance 10 4-5 sees. 220-Yard Dash C. W. Gram, 1909 K. D. Fernstrom, 1910 H. Lockett, 1910 A. A. Gould, 1910 24 1-5 sees. 440-Yard Dash W. C. Salisbury, 1911 H. W. Blackburn, 1908 G. B, Cumings, 1910 H. Lockett, 1910 56 sees. 880-Yard Run P. D. White, 1911 B. L. Gimson, 1908 H. H. Rowland, 1908 C. L. Batchelder, 1909 2 mins. 11 sees. One-Mile Run L. O. Mills, 1910 J. F. McCarthy, 1909 C. P. Eldred, 1911 W. T. MacCreadie, 1911 4 mins. 53 3-5 sees. Two-Mile Run H. H. Rowland, 1909 J. D. MacKenzie, 1911 J. N. Stephenson, 1909 R. Ellis, 1909 11 mins. 8 sees. 120-Yard Righ Hurdles K. D. Fernstrom, 1910 F. F. Bell, 1910 G. B. Cumings, 1910 J. B. Walcott, 1911 186 17 3-5 sees. 1910 ANNUAL SPRING MEET 187 Event 220-Yard Low Hurdles Places K. D. Fernstrom, 1910 G. B. Cumings, 1910 R. H. Gould, 1911 C. P. Kerr, 1911 Time, Height or Distance 29 3-5 sees. High Jump R. H. Allen, 1909 H. A. Rapelye, 1908 E. Stuart, 1910 F. Moore, 1909 F. D. Stewart, 1910 A. R. Nagle, 1910 5 ft. 9 ins, 5 ft. 8 ins. 5 ft. 7 ins. tied at 5 ft. 4 ins Discus Throw L. D. Nisbet, 1909 M. E. Allen, 1908 R. H. Nichols, 1909 C. W, Morrison, 1909 103 ft. 6 ins. 93 ft. 3 ins. 91 ft. 90 ft. 9 ins. Broad Jump G. Schobinger, 1908 J. A. Christie, 1909 T. W. Orr, 1908 C. W. Morrison, 1909 21 ft. 9 3-4 ins. 19 ft. 9 1-2 ins. 19 ft. 7 ins. 19 ft. 2 1-2 ins. Pole Vault G. Schobinger, 1908 T. W. Orr, 1908 W. D. Allen, 1911 10 ft. 6 ins, 10 ft. 4 ins. 10 ft. Shot Put F. Moore, 1909 F. J. Friedman, 1908 C. W. Morrison, 1909 J. H. Ruckman, 1910 34 ft. 11 1-4 ins 33 ft. 2 3-4 ins. 32 ft. 10 1-2 ins. 32 ft. Hammer Throw M. Flagg, 1909 F. A. Burton, 1910 M. R. Scharff, 1909 C. W. Morrison, 1909 99 ft. 9 ins. 91 ft. 6 1-2 ins. 87 ft. 5 ins. 85 ft. 1 1 ins. SUMMARY OF POINTS 1908 45 1909 44 1-3 1910 38 2-3 1911 25 H ni TECHNOLOGY FIELD Event 100-Yard Dash Places R. B. Pond Maine, 1911 C. W. Gram Technology, 1909 W. J. SeUgman Technology, 1911 May 2, 1908 Time, Height or Distance 10 2-5 sees. 220-Yard Dash C. W. Gram W. C. Salisbury R. B. Pond Technology, 1909 Technology, 1911 Maine, 1911 23 4-5 sees. 440-Yard Dash H. W. Blackburn W. C. Salisbury E. T. Walker Technology, 1908 Technology, 1911 Maine, 1910 53 sees. 880-Yard Run B. L. Gimson F. E. Fortier C. H. Bean Technology, 1908 Maine, 1910 Maine, 1908 2 min. 3 3-5 sees. One-Mile Run L. O. Mills W. M. Hicks W. T. MacCreadie Technology, 1910 Maine, 1909 Technology, 1911 4 min. 45 3-5 sees. Two-Mile Run H. H. Howland J. F. McCarthy C. P. Eldred Technology, 1908 Technology, 1909 Technology, 1911 10 min. 32 4-5 sees. 120-Yard Hurdles F. D. Knight N. E. Smith K. D. Fernstrom Maine, 1909 Maine, 1911 Technology, 1910 16 4-5 sees. 220-Yard Hurdles F. D. Knight N. E. Smith G. B. Cumings Maine, 1909 Maine, 1911 Technology, 1910 188 27 2-5 sees. 1910 MAINE MEET 189 Event High Jump Places R. H. Allen H. A. Rapelye E. Stuart C. P. Meserve Technology, 1Q09 Technology, 1908 Technology, 1910 Maine, 1908 j Time, Height or Distance 5 ft. 7 1-4 ins. 5 ft. 6 ins. tied at 5 ft. 5 ins. Broad Jump G. Schobinger C. F. Smith J. A. Christie Technology, 1908 Maine, 1911 Technology, 1909 20 ft. 9 1-2 ins. 19 ft. 3 ins. 18 ft. 9 1-2 ins. Pole Vault Shot Put Forfeited to Technology F. Moore C. W. Morrison H. L. Farwell Technology, 1909 Technology, 1909 Maine, 1909 38 ft. 36 ft. 9 1-4 ins. 35 ft. 1 1-2 ins. Hammer Throw C. W. Morrison F. Moore W. M. Black Technology, 1909 Technology, 1909 Maine, 1910 101 ft. 8 ins. 99 ft. 11 ins. 95 ft. 7 1-2 ins. Discus Throw L. D. Nisbet H. G. Walden C. W. Morrison Technology, 1909 Maine, 1908 Technology, 1909 106 ft. 11 ins. 100 ft. 11 ins. 97 ft. 10 ins. SUMMARY OF POINTS _, Places Points 12 3 Technology Maine 100-Yard Dash MT T 4 5 220-Yard Dash TTM 8 1 440-Yard Dash TTM 8 1 880-Yard Run TMM 5 4 One-Mile Run TMT 6 3 Two-Mile Run TTT 9 120-Yard Hurdles MMT 1 8 220-Yard Hurdles MMT 1 8 High Jump T T 8 1-2 1-2 Broad Jump TMT 6 3 Pole Vault TTT 9 Shot Put TTM 8 1 Hammer Throw TTM 8 1 Discus Throw TMT 6 3 Totals 87 1-2 38 1-2 Technology, Maine, SUMMARY OF PLACES 11 firsts, 3 firsts, 8 seconds, 6 seconds, 8 1-2 thirds 5 1-2 thirds Maine and Technology tied. TECHNOLOGY FIELD Event 100-Yard Dash J. P. Hartigan C. W. Gram J. W. Mayhew May 9, 1908 Places Time, Height or Distance Brown, 1910 10 3-5 sees. Technology, 1909 Brown, 1909 220-Yard Dash J. P. Hartigan C. W. Gram H. W. Blackburn Brown, 1910 Technology, 1909 Technology, 1908 23 1-5 sees. 440-Yard Dash W. C. SaHsbury H. W. Blackburn L. A. Loomis Technology, 1911 Technology, 1908 Technology, 1908 53 1-5 sees. 880-Yard Run B. L. Gimson P. D. White M. B. Hunt Technology, 1908 Technology, 1911 Brown, 1908 2 min. 7 3-5 sees. One-Mile Run W. W. Greene L. O. Mills J, D. MacKenzie Brown, 1910 Technology, 1910 Technology, 1911 4 min. 45 sees. Two-Mile Run H. H. Howland J. F. McCarthy W. W. Greene Technology, 1908 Technology, 1909 Brown, 1910 10 min. 21 4-5 sees. 120- Yard Hurdles J, W. Mayhew F. V. Young F. F. Bell Brown, 1909 Brown, 1910 Technology, 1910 16 4-5 sees. 220-Yard Hurdles J. W. Mayhew G. B. Cumings F. V. Young Brown, 1909 Technology, 1910 Brown, 1910 190 25 4-5 sees. 1910 BROWN MEET 191 Event Places Time, Height or Distance High Jump E. Stuart H. A. Rapelye J. R. McKay Technology, Technology, Brown, 1910 1908 1911 5 ft. 8 ins. 5 ft. 7 ins. 5 ft. 6 ins. Broad Jump J. W. Mayhew G. Schobinger T. W. Orr Brown, Technology, Technology, 1909 1908 1908 21 ft. 5 1-2 ins. 21 ft. 3 1-4 ins. 19 ft. 5 3-4 ins. Pole Vault T. W. Orr G. Schobinger G. T. Huxford W. D. Allen Technology, Technology, Brown Technology, 1908 1908 1909 1911 i 11 ft. 10 ft. 6 ins. tied at 10 ft. Shot Put F. Moore C. H. Walcott C. W. Morrison Technology, Brown, Technology, 1909 1910 1909 37 ft. 3 3-4 ins. 36 ft. 1 in. 35 ft. 10 ins. Hammer Throw A. J. Kir ley J. 0. Hazard C. R. Raquet Brown, Brown, Brown, 1909 1908 1910 109 ft. 4 1-2 ins. 105 ft. 6 ins. 103 ft. 6 ins. Discus Throw L. D. Nisbet A. J. Kirley V. B. Seidler Technology, Brown, Brown, 1908 1909 1910 114 ft. 10 1-2 ins. 114 ft. 3 1-2 ins. 97 ft. 8 ins. SUMMARY OF POINTS Places Points 12 3 Technology Brown 100-Yard Dash B T B 3 6 220-Yard Dash B T T 4 5 440-Yard Dash T T T 9 880- Yard Run T T B 8 1 One-Mile Run B T T 4 5 Two-Mile Run T T B 8 1 120-Yard Hurdles B B T 1 8 220-Yard Hurdles B T B 3 6 High Jump T T B 8 1 Broad Jump B T T 4 5 Pole Vault T T 8 1-2 1-2 Shot Put T B T 6 3 Hammer Throw B B B 9 Discus Throw T B B 5 4 Totals 71 1-2 54 1-2 SUMMARY OF PLACES Technology, Brown, 7 firsts, 7 firsts, 10 seconds, 4 seconds. j Brown and Technology tied. 6 1-2 thirds 7 1-2 thirds n TECHNOLOGY FIELD Event 100-Yard Dash 220-Yard Dash 440-Yard Dash 880-Yard Run One-Mile Run Two-Mile Run 120- Yard Hurdles 220-Yard Hurdles 3 October 24, 1908 Places Handicaps Time, Height or Distance P. D. White, 1911 W. J. Seligman, 1911 M. A. Oettinger, 1912 N. N. Prentiss, 1911 4 yards Scratch 7 yards 5 1-2 yards 10 3-5 sees. P. Hart, 1910 M. A. Oettinger, 1912 W. J. Seligman, 1911 D. R. Stevens, 1911 13 yards 13 yards Scratch 14 yards 22 3-5 sees. G. B. Cumings, 1910 E. M. Potter, 1910 P. Hart, 1910 A. H. Means, 1912 8 yards 8 yards 13 yards 15 yards 53 4-5 sees. P. D. White, 1911 H. Y. Frost, 1909 W. S. Davis, 1910 C. L. Tuller, 1912 Scratch 25 yards 30 yards 35 yards 2 min. 6 2-5 sees. L. C. Cooley, 1911 R. A. D. Preston, 1910 J. G. Tripp, 1910 G. H. Magee, 1910 40 yards 40 yards 40 yards 60 yards 4 min. 58 3-5 sees. C. S. Robinson, 1909 H. S. Benson, 1912 C. L. Batchelder, 1909 E. E. Ferry, 1912 110 yards 125 yards 100 yards 115 yards 10 min. 28 4-5 sees. F. F. Bell, 1910 W. J. Pead, 1910 G. B. Cumings, 1910 Scratch Scratch Scratch 18 2-5 sees. G. B. Cumings, 1910 J. S. Grant, 1912 J. C. Sweeney, Jr., 1909 A. G. Thompson, 1912 Scratch 10 yards 5 yards 5 yards 29 sees. ,, 192 19 10 ANNUAL FALL MEET 193 Event High Jump Broad Jump Pole Vault Shot Put Hammer Throw Discus Throw Places P. W. Dalrymple, 1912 J. A. Boyer, 1912 R. H. Allen, 1909 F. F. Bell, 1910 J. Baker, 1912 H. S. Gott, 1910 W. J. Pond, 1910 J. G. Tripp, 1910 W. D. Allen, 1911 E. Mangan, 1912 J. L. Bray, 1912 O. V. Chamberlin, 1910 H. S. Gott, 1910 L. D. Nisbet, 1909 L. D. Nisbet, 1909 M. R. Scharff, 1909 J. L. Bray, 1912 0. V. Chamberlin, 1910 D. V. Williamson, 1910 E. Stuart, 1910 L. D. Nisbet, 1909 Handicaps Time, Height or Distance 3 inches 5 ft. 8 ins. 4 inches 5 ft. 7 ins. Scratch 5 ft. 6 ins. 4 inches 5 ft. 4 ins. 8 inches 20 ft. 1 1-2 ins. 4 inches 18 ft. 11 ins. 6 inches 18 ft. 3 1-2 ins. 10 inches 17 ft. 6 ins. Scratch 11 ft. 1 ins. 7 inches 9 ft. 8 ins. 8 inches 34 ft. 10 ins. 8 inches 34 ft. 9 ins. Scratch 34 ft. 6 ins. 8 inches 31 ft. 10 ins. 25 feet 117 ft. 15 feet 103 ft. 6 ins. 20 feet 93 ft. 3 ins. 15 feet 117 ft. 8 ins. 20 feet 105 ft. 7 ins. 15 feet 102 ft. 6 ins. Scratch 98 ft. 7 ins. SUMMARY OF POINTS 1910 60 1912 40 1911 27 1909 22 New record. rn Wi LJI m TECHNOLOGY GYMNASIUM Events 35-Yard Dash 440-Yard Dash 880-Yard Run One Mile Run 40-Yard Hurdles Running High Jump Places Class C. W. Gram 1909 J. Becker, Jr. 1912 W. C. Salisbury 1911 K. D. Fernstrom 1910 C. W. Gram 1909 A. L, Moses 1909 K. D. Fernstrom 1910 W. C. Salisbury 1911 P. D. White 1911 S. I. Murray 1912 F. J. Shepard 1912 C. L. Tuller 1912 L. 0. Mills 1910 H. H. Howland 1909 H. S. Benson 1912 J. W. Stephenson 1909 A. B. Mason 1910 W. J. Pead 1910 G. B. Cummings 1910 F. F. Bell 1910 E. Stuart 1910 P. W. Dalrymple 1912 L. S. Hooper 1912 R. H. Allen 1909 January 8, 1909 Time, Height or Distance 4 1-5 sees. 58 sees. 2 mins. 13 1-5 sees. 4 mins. 52 1-5 sees. 5 4-5 sees. 5 ft. 6 1-2 ins. 5 ft. 6 ins. i Tied at 5 ft. 5 1-2 ins. 194 1910 INDOORMEET 195 Events Places Class Time, Height or Distance Pole Vault W. D. Allen 1911 10 ft. 6 ins. W. C. Salisbury 1911 10 ft. 3 ins. H. Greenleaf 1912 9 ft. G. B. Cummings 1910 7 ft. 6 ins. Shot Put H. S. Gott 1910 34 ft. 8 ins. J. S. Bray 1912 33 ft. 10 ins. 0. V. Chamberlain 1912 32 ft. 8 ins. L. G. Metcalf 1911 32 ft. 7 ins. SUMMARY OF POINTS 1910 33 1909 .... . ' . 17 1-2 1912 20 1-2 1911 .... 17 New Records I A CtDcntp:;.-f cconti Slnnual Cracft JUcct TECHNOLOGY FIELD Event 100-Yard Dash Places N. A. Sherman W. E. Robson W. T. West H. Keith May 22 and 21, 1908 College Class Time, Height or Distance Dartmouth, 1910 10 1-5 sees. Wesleyan, 1911 Amherst, 1910 Amherst, 1908 220-Yard Dash N. A, Sherman W. E. Robson H. W. Faraday W. J. SeHgman Dartmouth, 1910 Wesleyan, 1911 Wesleyan, 1911 Technology, 1911 22 1-5 sees. 440-Yard Dash A. M. Stearns H. W, Faraday H. W. Blackburn G. E. Shipley Amherst, 1908 Wesleyan, 1911 Technology, 1908 Dartmouth, 1908 51 1-5 sees. 880-Yard Run E. B. Gray B. L. Gimson F. E. Fortier R. L. Cams Wesl eyan, 1908 Technology, 1908 Maine, 1910 Dartmouth, 1908 2 mins. 2-5 sees. One-Mile ' Run H. E. White H. J. Colbath J, W. Noyes P. T. Merrihew Amherst, 1908 Bowdoin, 1910 Dartmouth, 1911 Vermont, 1909 196 4 mins. 37 4-5 sees. 19 10 NEW ENGLAND MEET 197 Event Places College Class Time, Height or Distance Two-Mile Run H. W. Slocum Bowdoin, 1910 9 mins. 57 4-5 sees. H. H. Howland Technology, 1909 W. W. Greene Brown, 1910 DeW. C. Pond Trinity, 1909 120-Yard High Hurdles A. B. Shaw Dartmouth, 1908 15 1-5 sees. G. Horrax Williams, 1909 H. B. Olmsted Trinity, 1908 J. W. Mayhew Brown, 1909 220-Yard Low Hurdles A. B. Shaw Dartmouth, 1908 24 4-5 sees. S. Edwards Bowdoin, 1910 N. E. Smith Maine, 1911 J. W. Mayhew Brown, 1909 High Jump G. Horrax Williams, 1909 ) 1910 ' tiedat5ft. 11 3-4 ins. E. R. Palmer Dartmouth, B. Stevens Williams, 1911 5 ft. 8 7-8 ins. J. Zeller Tufts, 1908 5 ft, 8 ins. Broad Jump N. A. Sherman Dartmouth, 1910 21 ft. 9 1-4 ins. J. W. Mayhew Brown, 1909 21 ft. 6 3-4 ins. S. E. Kent Wesleyan, 1909 21 ft. 9 1-2 ins. G. Schobinger Technology, 1908 21 ft. 1 in. Pole Vault G. Horrax Williams, 1909 11 ft. 2 ins. T. W. Orr Technology, 1908 11 ft. W. C. Salisbury Technology, 1911 1 W. D. Allen Technology, 1911 tied at 10 ft. 10 ins. C. D. Deming Bowdoin, 1910 Hammer Throw F. G. Johnson Dartmouth, 1911 129 ft. 8 1-2 ins. C. K. Pevear Dartmouth, 1910 128 ft. 4 ins. H. E. Warren Bowdoin, 1910 127 ft. 6 ins. H. 0. Smith Amherst, 1909 108 ft. 8 1-4 ins. Shot Put B. C. Morrill Bowdoin, 1910 41 ft, 3-4 in. C. K. Pevear Dartmouth, 1910 40 ft, 9 ins. F. Moore Technology, 1909 38 fr. 10 3-4 in. W. W. Kilbourn Amherst, 1909 38 ft. 4 1-2 in. Discus Throw C. K. Pevear Dartmouth, 1910 123 ft. 8 1-2 ins. A. K. Ku-ley Brown, 1909 114 ft. 3 1-4 ins. H. H. Lament Williams, 1908 109 ft. 3 1-4 ins. L. D. Nisbet Technology, 1909 108 ft. 8 1-4 ins. New records. 198 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV SUMMARY OF POINTS Events 100- Yard Dash 200-Yard Dash 440-Yard Dash 880-Yard Run One-Mile Run . Two-Mile Run . High Hurdles Low Hurdles . . Shot Put . . . Hammer Throw Discus Throw . High Jump . . Broad Jump . . Pole Vault . . . ■♦-1 3 O B a ' o •a o n ti 3 a S3 u D H a a . (t In CO B .5 1 U B a o m n 3 H •4- a 5 3 3 5 1 5 1 2 3 5 1 3 5 2 2 3 5 1 5 3 2 1 5 3 1 2 5 3 1 2 3 5 2 1 8 2 1 5 1 2 3 4 6 1 5 1 2 3 1 5 5 Totals 49 19 18 18 16 15 10 4 3 1 1 SUMMARY OF PLACES Dartmouth Bowdoin . Technology Wesleyan . Williams Amherst Brown . . Maine . . Trinity . . Tufts . . . Vermont 7 1-2 firsts 2 1 -2 seconds 1 thirds 2 f ovu-ths 2 2 1-3 1 -3 3 2 2-3 3 2 -3 1 3 2 lTl-2 1 1 -2 2 2 1 3 2 1 2 2 1 1 1 1 HECOIEE) FL E C O R D S I.C.A.A.A.A. 9 4-5 sees. B. J. WEFERS, Georgetown M.I.T.A.A. 100- Yard Dash 10 1-5 sees. R. S. FRANKLIN N.E.I.A.A. 10 sees. A. E. CURTENIUS, Amherst G. L. SWASEY, Dartmouth H. H. CLOUDMAN, Bowdoin 21 1-5 sees. B. J. WEFERS, Georgetown 220-Yard Dash 22 sees. C. W. GRAM 22 sees. C. W. GRAM, Teehnology 48 4-5 sees. J, B. TAYLOR, Pennsylvania 440-Yard Dash 51 1-5 sees. J. A. ROCKWELL 50 1-5 sees. G. B. SHATTUCK, Amherst 15 1-5 sees. A, B, SHAW, Dartmouth 120- Yard High Hurdles 16 2-5 sees. 15 1-5 sees. E. L, OVINGTON A. B. SHAW, Dartmouth 23 3-5 sees, A. C. KRAENZLEIN, Penn. 220-Yard Low Hurdles 24 4-5 sees. 25 4-5 sees. G. P. BURCH J. H. HUBBARD, Amherst 1 min. 56 sees. E. B. PARSONS, Yale 880- Yard Run 1 min. 59 sees. H. S. BAKER H. 1 min. 59 sees. S. BAKER, Teehnology 4 mins, 20 3-5 sees. G. HASKINS, Penn. One-Mile Run 4 mins. 30 3-5 sees. H. S. BAKER 200 4 mins. 24 3-5 sees. A. L. WRIGHT, Brown 1910 RECORDS 201 I.e. A. A. A. A. 9 mins. 34 4-5 sees. F. A. ROWE, Michigan M.I.T.A.A Two-Mile Run 9 mins. 52 4-5 sees. S. M. UDALE N.E.I.A.A. 9 mins. 52 4-5 sees. S. M. UDALE, Technology 6 ft. 3 1-4 ins. T. MOFFIT, Pennsylvania Running High Jump 6 ft. 1-2 in. C. D. HEYWOOD 5 ft. 11 3-4 ins. G. HORRAX, Williams E. R. PALMER, Dartmouth 24 ft. 4 1-2 ins. A. C. KRAENZLEIN, Penn. Running Broad Jump 22 ft. 1 1-2 ins. 23 ft. 2 3-4 ins. A. W. GROSVENOR W. P. HUBBARD, Amherst 12 ft. W. R. DRAY, Yale E. T. COOK, Cornell A. C. GILBERT, Yale NELSON, Yale Pole Vault 1 1 ft. 1 in. W. D. ALLEN 11 ft. 6 1-2 ins. J. L. HURLBURT, Wesleyan 46 ft. 5 1-2 ins, W. KRUEGER, Swarthmore Putting 16-Pound Shot 40 ft. 1-4 in. 43 ft. 10 1-2 ins. H. P. MacDONALD R. E. ROLLINS, Amherst 164 ft. 10 ins. J. R. DeWITT, Princeton Throwing 16-Pound Hammer 126 ft. 7 ins. 144 ft. 1-2 in. W. J. KNAPP A. E. DINNING, Bowdoin Throwing the Discus no ft. 2 1-2 ins. L. G. MORRILL 120 ft. 11 1-2 ins. C. K. PEVEAR, Dartmouth mi ' m RELAY TEAMS ttc ik ndap Ccam, 1908 HENRY W. BLACKBURN, 1908 BASIL L. GIMSON, 1908 CARL W. GRAM, 1909 WILLIAM C. SALISBURY, 1911 April 25, 1908 Pennsylvania Relay Games at Philadelphia Won by Wesleyan Technology, second Ohio State, third Time: 3 mins. 30 sees. 0nc jmilc ficla Ccam, 1909 ;fftcmfacr6 CAPTAIN GRAM KARL D. FERNSTROM, 1910 CARL W. GRAM, 1909 ALONZO L. MOSES, 1909 WILLIAM C. SALISBURY, 1911 February 8, 1909 B.A.A. Indoor Meet at Boston Technology vs. Syracuse (1,560 yards) Won by Technology Time: 3 mins. 10 sees. February 13, 1909 Madison Square Garden, New York Won by Harvard Columbia, second. Technology, third Johns Hopkins, fourth Time: 3 mins. 32 4-5 sees. February 22, 1909 Technology vs. Wesleyan Won by Technology Time : 3 mins. 28 2-5 sees. Troy, N.Y. Z X)o 0[i c tidap OTcam, 1909 HARVEY S. BENSON, 1912 CHARLES L. CAMPBELL, 1909 February 13, 1909 Technology vs. Tufts CALVIN P. ELDRED, 1911 HAROLD H. HOWLAND, 1909 Lawrence Light Guards Meet, Medford Won by Technology New Intercollegiate Record Time: 8 mins. 57 2-5 sees. 203 iv= CROSS COlTRir Captain RIDSDALE ELLIS, 1909 Manager KARL DICKSON FERNSTROM, 1910 CAPTAIN ELLIS Coach FRANK MAURICE KANALY CALVIN POWELL ELDRED, 1911 RIDSDALE ELLIS, 1909 HAROLD HOWARD HOWL AND, 1909 ELMER JACOBS, 1910 WILLIAM THOMAS MacCREADIE, 1911 JOHN FRANCIS McCARTHY, 1909 JOHN DAVID MacKENZIE, 1911 LEONARD OGDEN MILLS, 1910 CLARK SHOVE ROBINSON, 1909 JOSEPH NEWELL STEPHENSON, 1909 205 206 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV Cccljnoiogp l arbarli €to Coimtrp Matt November 6, 1908 Won by Technology Score 36 to 45 Course from Highland Station to Technology Field Distance, 4 1-4 miles First six men to finish for each team scored 1. H. JAQUES, Harvard, 1911 2. H. H. HOWLAND, Technology, 1909 3. R. E. DOLE, Harvard, 1910 4. L. O. MILLS, Technology, 1910 5. J. F. McCarthy, Technology, 1909 6. E. JACOBS, Technology, 1910 7. M. H. WHITNEY, Harvard, 1910 8. C. P. ELDRED, Technology, 1911 9. H. N. HARDING, Harvard, 1911 10. J. N. STEPHENSON, Technology, 1909 11. R. ELLIS, Technology, 1909 12. H. Y. MASTEN, Harvard, 1909 13. J. D. MACKENZIE, Technology, 1911 14. N. P. ROGERS, Harvard, 1911 15. G. MURPHY, Harvard, 1910 16. C. P. HOWARD, Harvard, 1909 17. E. PARSONS, Harvard, 1911 18. C. S. ROBINSON, Technology, 1909 19. W. T. MacCREADIE, Technology, 1911 20. W. C. HEALD, Harvard, 1910 Time, 23 mins. 2-5 sees. New record Annual S utcrcoUcgtatc €to Countrp J acc UNDER THE AUSPICES OF THE I.C.A.A.A.A. Princeton, N.J, Course, 6 miles, 300 yards Summary of Points w ith Technology scoring Cornell 30 Yale 103 Technology 99 Michigan 124 November 21, 1908 S5rracuse 101 Harvard 101 Pennsylvania . . . .156 Columbia 217 Order of finish and times of Technology Team 8. H. H. HOWLAND, 1909, 35 mins. 19 sees. 24. E. JACOBS, 1910, 36 mins. 26 sees. 19. L. O. MILLS, 1910, 35 mins. 54 sees. 26. C. P. ELDRED, 1911, 36 mins. 30 sees. 22. J.N.STEPHENSON, 1909, 36 mins. 20 sees. 31. J. F. McCARTHY, 1909, 38 mins. 3 sees. 42. R, ELLIS, 1909, 38 mins. 3 sees. Race won by P. C. YOUNG, Cornell, 1910. Time, 34 mins. 14 sees. New record. G. A. DULL, Michigan, 1909, second. Time, 34 mins. 16 3-5 sees. H. JAQUES, Harvard, 1911, third. Time, 34 mins. 20 sees. 1910 CROSS COUNTRY 207 Technology Course muial . opliomorr f rcfiliman €vobs €ountn.i Hare April 25, 1908 Distance 4} Miles €cam0 1910 LEONARD O. MILLS, Captain WALTER S. DAVIS BERTHOLD C. HUBER ELMER JACOBS HOLMAN I. PEARL RALPH A. D. PRESTON 1911 JOHN D. MACKENZIE, Captain ERNEST W. DE WITT CALVIN P. ELDRED WILLIAM T. MacCREADIE SEYMOUR M. NILES FRANK G. SMITH Order of Finishing W. T. MacCREADIE, 1911 L. 0. MILLS, 1910 C. P. ELDRED, 1911 S. M. NILES, 1911 J. D. MACKENZIE, 1911 7 B. C. HUBER, 1910 8 W. S. DAVIS, 1910 9 E. W. DE WITT, 1911 10 H. I. PEA RL, 1910 11 F. G. SMITH, 1911 12 R. A. D. PRESTON, 1910 E. JACOBS, 1910 Won by 1911 Score, 1911, 33; 1910, 45 Time, 24 minutes, 54 2-5 seconds umuil ntcx €om$c Cross Coimtrji nacc Technology Course April 4, 1908 Distance 4 1-4 Miles Place 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Name and Class H. H. HOWLAND, 1909 . J. D. MACKENZIE, 1911 . J. F. McCarthy, 1909 J. N. STEPHENSON, 1909 . C. P. ELDRED, 1911 . . . C. L. BATCHELDER, 1909 R. ELLIS, 1909 L. O. MILLS, 1910 . . . . B. C. HUBER, 1910 . . . Course I XII I X VI I VIII VI III Place 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 Name and Class Won by Course I Course H. I. PEARL, 1910 I E. S. RUSSELL, 1910 II H. G. A. BLACK, 1910 VI C. E. DE WITT, 1911 II C. L. JONES, 1910 II G. H. MAGEE, 1910 II A. R. KNIPP, 1909 VI J. A. BIGELOW, 1911 IV H. F. FOSTER, 1909 XI Time, 5 minutes, 23 seconds 1 |Q£ 1 1 MIIW .flWAJ 36CMm HA]P HOII)(DS President RIDSDALE ELLIS, 190Q Chase Captain JOSEPH NEWELL STEPHENSON, 1909 Assistant Chase Captain CALVIN POWELL ELDRED, 1911 J. N. STEPHENSON Volant V. Ballard, 1912 Harvey S. Benson, 1912 Frederick H. Busby, 1912 Charles L. Campbell, 1909 Walter S. Davis, 1910 Calvin P. Eldred, 1911 Ridsdale Ellis, 1909 Rudolph Emmel, 1912 Earl E. Ferry, 1912 William C. West, Ralph M. Ferry, 1912 William T. MacCreadie, 1911 Nathaniel G. Herreshoff, 1912 John D. MacKenzie, 1911 Mayo D. Hersey, 1909 Walter H. Hildebrand, 1911 Harold H. Howland, 1909 Berthold C. Huber, 1910 Ralph E. Hyde, 1912 Arthur R. Knipp, 1909 John H. Lenaerts, 1912 Douglas C. McMurtrie, 1910 George H. Magee, 1910 Harry L. Manley, 1911 John Schaaf, 1909 J. Newell Stephenson, 1909 Tames G. Tripp, 1910 Charles L. Tuller, 1912 1910 P. Desmond White, 1911 West Roxbury Course Annual Dantiirap €xo$ Country tiatc Distance Eight Miles December 5, 1908 Order of Finishing 1. H. H. HOWLAND, 1909 2. F. H. BUSBY, 1912 3. R. M. FERRY. 1912 4. E. E. FERRY. 1912 5. H. S. BENSON. 1912 6. B. C. HUBER. 1910 7. J. N. STEPHENSON. 1909 8. J. LENAERTS. 1912 9. G. H. MAGEE. 1910 10. J. G. TRIPP, 1910 11. V. V. BALLARD. 1912 12. C. L. TULLER, 1912 13. N. G. HERRESHOFF. 1912 14. R. E. HYDE. 1912 15. M D. HERSEY. 1909 16. R. EMMEL. 1911 Handicap Scratch 5 minutes 5 minutes 3 ' 2 minutes 1 ' 2 minutes 1 ' i minutes Scratch 7 minutes 5 ' 2 minutes 3 ' 2 minutes 2 ' 2 minutes 4 minutes 4 ' 2 minutes 6 ' 2 minutes 5 minutes 5 ' 2 minutes Elapsed Time 53 mins. 23 sees. 53 mins. 33 sees. 53 mins. 45 sees. 54 mins. 42 sees. 55 mins. 1 sec. 56 mins. 2 sees. 56 mins. 6 sees. 57 mins. 12 sees. 57 mins. 40 sees. 57 mins. 45 sees. 58 mins. 15 sees. 59 mins. 12 sees. 59 mins. 25 sees. 61 mins. 35 sees. 61 mins. 41 sees. 63 mins. 2 sees. Actual 46 mins. 51 mins. 51 mins. 51 mins. 49 mins. 51 mins. 49 mins. 57 mins. 56 mins. 54 mins. 53 mins. 56 mins. 56 mins. 61 mins. 59 mins. 61 mins. Time 23 sees. 33 sees. 45 sees. 12 sees. 31 sees. 32 sees. 6 sees. 12 sees. 10 sees. 15 sees. 45 sees. 12 sees. 55 sees. 5 sees. 41 sees. 31 sees. Best Actual Time. H. H. Howland, 46 minutes, 23 seconds, new record 209 BASKET BALL Captain PHILIP MONTGOMERY WENTWORTH, 1909 Manager WILLIAM BURTON HARGRAVES, 1910 Ccam Georg2 R. Lord, 1910 Left forward William B. Hargraves, 1910 Right forward Theodor; B. Parker, 1911 Center Philip M. Wentworth, 1909 Right guard Arthur T. Bennis, 1912 Left guards Frank G. Taite, 1909 ) Alfred F. Kenrick, 1912 Substitute CAPTAIN WENTWORTH Date December January January January January February February February February February February February February February March March cljclJulc of oBaitie Opponents 12, Dartmouth 7, Tufts 9, Williams 12, Harvard 15, Lowell Textile 3, Wesleyan 4, Manhattan College 5, College of the City of New York 6, New York University 10, Brown 13, Tufts 16, Holy Cross 19, Dartmouth 17, Rhode Island State College 4, Lowell Textile 6, New Hampshire State College Points for the Season: Technology, 356; Opponents, 339 211 Score T. 26 28 30 19 43 20 14 13 13 18 16 9 19 20 47 21 o. 22 15 25 12 14 33 4 33 43 14 13 7 28 38 8 30 HOCKEY TEAM Captain WILLIAM JAMES KELLY, 1909 Manager WILLIAM JOHN O ' HEARN, 1910 CAPTAIN KELLY Ccam William J. O ' Hearn, 1910 Right Wing Vernon G. Sloan, 1912 Right Center Harold W. Paine, 1909 Left Center William J. Kelly, 1909 Left Wing Allen A. Gould, 1910 Cover Point Harold D. Billings, 1910 Point John F. Davis, 1909 ) , Donald C. Bakewell, 1911 f Philip W. Taylor, 1910 I Substitutes Richard H. Gould, 1911 suDSiiimes oBamcB 3f lapeti Date Opponents T. O. December 31, Dartmouth 2 1 January 6, Harvard 1 January 9, Crescent Hockey Club 1 2 January 16, Andover 3 February 3, Brown 3 February 4, Williams 1 3 February 5, Massachusetts Agricultural College 1 February 6, Amherst 1 1 Games won, 4; lost 3; tied, 1 Points for the Season: Technology, 12; Opponents, 8 213 Cec|)nolo5P Cennisi 9lssortatton President THEODORE BISSELL PARKER, 1911 Vice-President MALCOLM DANA PRICE, 1910 Treasurer JEROME SCHEUER, 1910 Manager PHILIP MONTGOMERY WENTWORTH, 1909 Slunual fall Couruamnit Results of the Final Rounds Jerome Scheuer, 1910, defeated Harold Phillips Farrington, 1907 6-3, 3-6, 6-1, 6-2 Not finished 214 £1 cLi d D=n F President LAWRENCE RICHMOND, Brown Vice-President WILLIAM W. PETER, Vermont Secretary and Treasurer SHELDON B. SMITH, Dartmouth ;|Hcmljcr0 Amherst Bates Colby Dartmouth Tufts Vermont Wesleyan Technology Brown Trinity Williams Ccchnologp ncprcscutati 3cs THEODORE BISSELL PARKER, 1911 PAUL REVERE FANNING, 1908 215 1 J : r -HP ■ ' Mm M wL ■l iJ « -J : ! ■ . i H 1 - 1 Captain VICTOR CARL GRUBNAU, 1909 Manager MAURICE SCOTT CHAPIN, 1910 Coach LUCIEN FOURNON Ccam Victor Carl Griibnau, 1909 Harry Gard Knox, 1910 Ernest Moore Loring, 1909 Substitutes Pelayo Kirkpatrick Chinchilla, 1909 Conor Coppinger, 1910 Countamcnts Score Date Opponents T. O. December 5, Boston Y.M.C.A 8 1 December 12, Fenway Fencing Club 7 2 January 13, Springfield Training School 9 February 24, Columbia 7 2 February 27, Pennsylvania 6 3 joints for tlic :f cason Technology, 37 Opponents, 8 217 Officer President DONALD ARMSTRONG, Columbia Secretary-Treasurer CHESTER P. MILLS, West Point Annapolis Columbia Cornell jiflmibcrs Harvard Princeton Pennsylvania Technology Yale 218 President THOMAS ATKINSON TILLARD, 1909 Secretary PHILIP ENDICOTT YOUNG, 1909 l onorarp ; cmbcrs Professor Frederick H, Bailey Professor Harry E. Clifford Professor Davis R. Dewey 0imibcx Raynor H. Allen, 1909 Donald C. Bakewell, 1911 Percy M. Bramhall, 1910 Howard CoUingham, 1910 Roger M. Davis, 1912 John J. Elbert, 1909 William J. Kelly, 1909 Walter W. King, 1909 Douglas C. McMurtrie, 1910 Bertholf M. Pettit, 1910 Revere B. Pulsifer, 1911 William C. Salisbury, 1911 Thomas A. Tillard, 1909 Channing Turner, 1909 Emmons J. Whitcomb, 1910 PhiHp E. Young, 1909 vtram Captain JOHN JACOB ELBERT, 1909 Manager PHILIP ENDICOTT YOUNG, 1909 Donald C. Bakewell, 1911 William C. Salisbury, 1911 John J. Elbert, 1909 Thomas A, Tillard, 1909 Philip E. Young, 1909 219 — Il mmm team Captain HERBERT SIDNEY GOTT, 1910 Manager CHESTER WORCESTER WILSON, 1910 CAPTAIN GOTT €cam Walter D. Allen, 1911 Richard L. Cary, 1909 Herbert S. Gott, 1910 Arthur E. Hartwell, 1909 Richard C. Jacobs, 1910 Herbert 0. Maxwell, 1912 Seth H. Seelye, 1912 Hubert S. Smith, 1911 Russell M. White, 1912 Chester W. Wilson, 1910 221 FRANK M. KANALY Track Team Coach LUCIEN FOURNON Fencing Team Coach WINFIELD C. TOWNE Instructor in Physical Training MAURICE S. CHAPIN Manager of the Fencing Team WILLIAM B. HARGRAVES Manager of the Basket Ball Team KARL D. FERNSTROM Manager-elect of the Track Team WILLIAM J. O ' HEARN Manager of the Hockey Team DOUGLAS C. McMURTRIE Manager of the Track Team HE SECOND FIELD DAY ON WHICH A FRESHMAN CLASS WAS VICTORIOUS 224 jFicIti Bap 1908 225 €tg|)tl; Annual fitla Bap NOVEMBER 6, 1908 OR the second time in the history of the event Field Day this year was won by the freshmen class, it being the first time that a sophomore class with a year ' s experience behind it had ever been de- feated. The only other entering class to win the contest did so on the occa- sion of the initial Field Day, when both classes were new at the game. By winning from 1911 the freshman class of 1912 has won a unique distinction. It was not an easy victory, although the score of 6-3 might lead one to think so, the result of the day being decided only when, in the last three seconds of play in the football game, Eicher, the fresh- man quarter-back, made a fair catch and drop ' kicked a goal. The ' enthu- siasm before the contest began was intense and never abated until the finish. Both classes were confident of victory, and, with the exception of the 226 19 10 EIGHTH ANNUAL FIELD DAY 227 few seconds looked as though either team might win. Soon, however, the better team work of the freshmen showed, and resulted in winning the first trial. Then followed the first half of the football game. In the early part of the half the sopho- mores started out with a rush that car- ried the freshmen off their feet, and sent the ball to the one-yard line on a first down. Twice the freshmen held, but on the final effort the ball was carried over the line. Here chance favored the fresh- men, and a fum- ble was made, Eicher securing the ball, and mak- ing twelve yards before he was stopped. During the rest of the half the f re shmen relay race, the results of the contest were hard to predict. 1912 drew first blood when their team out- pulled the sophomores in the first heat of the tug- of-war. It was an excit- ing pull, and for the first played hard, and with the assistance of several costly fumbles on the part of their opponents 228 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV prevented the sophomores from getting within striking distance of their goal line. Between the halves the relay race and second tug-of-war trial came off. In the track event the sophomores had no trouble in beat- ing the 1912 team, and only missed the record mark by four- fifths of a second. The race was a brilliant exhibition of relay work. The second tug-of-war trial went to 1912, who pulled 1911 across the line easily, thus winning the event. In the second half of the football game the freshmen rather out- played the sophomores. They were often within striking distance of 191 1 ' s goal, but fumbles and lack of team work on third downs prevented them from scoring. In the last five minutes of play the sophomores were never out of danger. Attempts at trick plays, forward passes and old- fashioned line bucking did not help the freshmen, and it looked as if 1911 was going to make good its claim ot suprem- acy. When the sopho- mores got the ball on downs with but one minute to play, the out- look for 1912 seemed hopeless. Up to this time the outcome of the con- test had been in doubt, but then it seemed almost certainly a sophomore victory. On the third 19 10 EIGHTH ANNUAL FIELD DAY 229 down, however, with but three seconds to play, the sophomore full- back punted, and Eicher made a fair catch for 1912. Then without any hesitation he drop-kicked the ball squarely between the sopho- more goal posts. This score won both the football game and the contest of the day. Captain Manager EDWARD DEMMING VAN TASSEL, Jr. HOWARD DAVID WILLIAMS Ccani Howard D. Williams Right end Edward D, Van Tassel, Jr Right tackle Otis Hutchins Right guard Edwin R. Hall Center Scott P. Kimball Left guard Arthur K. Adams Left tackle Hubert S. Smith Left end Ruffert E. Shatz Quarter-back Thomas 0. Metcalf Right half-back Lawrence G. Odell Left half-back Francis M. O ' Neill Full-back Substitutes Malcolm B. Brownlee, Jr Left half-back Frederick J. Evans Left end Merton W. Hopkins Quarter-back Donald C. Bakewell Right tackle Charles H. S. Merrill Right end SdicDulc of 43nmcs Score Date Opponents 1911 0. October 17, Waltham High School 4 October 24, Lowell Textile School 18 October 28, Somerville High School 11 November 6, Technology, 1912 4 IDoints for the Reason Technology, 1911, 18 Opponents, 19 231 Captain Manager ARCHIBALD EICHER ALBERT GARLAND GALE Zccim Bates Torrey, Jr Right end William E. Barnes, Jr Right tackle Harold E. Kebbon Right guard Linzee S. Hooper Center Stewart R. Robertson Left guard John E. Whittelsey Left tackle Ralph H. Riddell Left end Archibald Eicher Quarter-back F. Haven Clark, Jr Right half-back John W. Raymond, Jr Left half-back James M. Beale Full-back Substitutes Edward C. Mayers Left half-back Francis R. Fuller Right end Raycroft Walsh Left end Wright Shuttleworth Left guard James H. Ward Full-back ft)ctiulc of a3amcB Score Date Opponents 1912 O. October 24, Bridgewater Normal 23 6 October 28, Dean Academy 6 October 31, Lowell Textile 18 November 6, Technology, 1911 4 points for the cason Technology, 1912, 45 Opponents, 12 233 Mill m 1911 Captain WILLIAM C. SALISBURY Manager LLOYD C. COOLEY 1912 Captain STALKER E. REED Manager HARVEY S. BENSON Team Nathan N. Prentiss Richard H. Gould John L. McAllen Frank C. Dolke Robert 0. Wood Ibrahim F. Morrison John A. Bigelow Harold L. Robinson George E. Hodge Peter D. White William C. Salisbury Wellesley J. Seligman Team Lawrence B. Walker John S. Grant Alan H. Means Harvey S. Benson Edward Mangan Vincent W. Allen Joseph I. Taylor Mark A. Oettinger Frederick J. Shepard, Jr. Alvin G, Thompson Nathaniel G. Herreshoff Stalker E. Reed j ub titutcii Charles P. Kerr Cleon R, Johnson Charles L. TuUer Harold A. Robinson EIGHTH ANNUAL FIELD DAY November 6, 1908 Distance 1 1-2 miles Technology Field Won by 1911 Time 5 minutes, 4-5 second 235 1911 Captain STUART B. COPELAND Manager BEARDSLEY LAWRENCE Team BEARDSLEY LAWRENCE WALTER C. WILSON CEDRIC S. ANDERSON HAROLD E. BABBITT KESTER BARR WILLIAM H. COBURN MITCHELL COFFIN ARTHUR M. COLEMAN MARSHALL E. COMSTOCK SAMUEL H. CORNELL IRVING C. CREIGHTON HENRY F. DOLLIVER JAMES F. DUFFY KENNETH W. FAUNCE MARCUS A. GROSSMANN THOMAS H. HAINES HAROLD G. JENKS ABRAHAM H. E. KAUFMAN EDWARD A. WASH CLARENCE L. OFENSTEIN THEODORE B. PARKER JAMES B. PIERCE FRANK RUSSELL, Jr. GORDON B. WILKES 1912 Captain CORNELIUS A. DUYSER Manager MERLE G. WOODWARD Team WALTER O. BLAISDELL FREDERICK H. BUSBY ARTHUR T. BENNIS JOHN L. BARRY, 3d MARTIN S. CHERRY LESLIE B. DUKE ROBERT T. GALLAGHER JOSEPH W. FARWELL, Jr. ALFRED V. GUILLOU ALEXANDER G. HERRESHOFF AURELIUS P. HORNOR HERBERT W. HALL MERRILL J. KIMBALL ARCHIBALD W. LAURIE FRANK E. STARR KARL C. McKENNEY HAMILTON MERRILL JOHN S. MARTIN GEORGE W. RICHARDS GEORGE S. SAWYER SETH H. SEELYE JOHN S. SELFRIDGE SAMUEL W. SELFRIDGE HERBERT L. WOEHLING Cug of yar November 6, 1908 Technology Field First trial won by 1912 Second trial won by 1912 EIGHTH ANNUAL FIELD DAY Three-Minute Pulls Won by 1912 Time, 1 minute, 23 2-5 seconds Time, 53 2-5 seconds 237 Captain Manager WILLIAM JOHN O ' HEARN HAROLD DEXTER BILLINGS Ralph W. Home Pitcher Frederick A. Hurley Pitcher William J. O ' Hearn Catcher Charles E. Green First Ba se Frederick S. Osborn Second Base Peter L. Dillon Third Base Harold D. Billings Short Stop Clarence L. Jones Center Field Robert P. Waller Right Field Raymond L. Jones Left Field William D. Everett Third Base H. Norris Harrison Right Field Date Opponents 1910 O. April 4, Technology, 1908 10 5 April 9, Maiden High School 10 9 April 14, Rindge Manual Training High School 14 10 April 18, Lowell Textile School 3 2 April 22, Stone School 12 7 April 25, Thayer Academy 8 9 April 28, Brookline High School 4 7 April 29, Roxbury High School 2 6 May 2, Bridgewater Normal School 5 6 May 4, Tufts, 1910 9 11 May 9, Highland Military Academy 22 14 May 11, Technology, 1911 7 6 May 18, Technology, 1911 9 13 May 25, Technology, 1911 8 4 Games won, 8; lost, 6 JpotnlB for tl}t ca mi Technology, 1910, 118 Opponents, 109 239 Captain THOMAS FRANCIS McLAUGHLIN, Jr. Manager ROGER MINER SPENCER Ccani George A. Cowee Pitcher Howard D. Williams Catcher Lawrence G. Odell First Base Francis M, O ' Neill Second Base Cleon R. Johnson Third Base Theodore B. Parker Short Stop Ruppert E. Schatz Right Field Thomas F. McLaughlin Center Field Luis de Florez Left Field Merton W. Hopkins Center Field George C. Kenney Left Field Score Date Opponents 1911 O. April 1, Noble and Greenough School 9 4 April 9, Volkman School 6 10 April 10, La Salle High School 7 10 April 29, Stone School 17 13 May 2, Arlington High School 11 6 May 11, Technology, 1910 6 7 May 15, Allen School 4 3 May 18, Technology, 1910 13 9 May 25, Technology, 1910 4 8 Games won, 5 ; lost, 4 points for tUc Reason Technology, 1911, 77 Opponents, 70 240 Basket BaH e ' - s 1911 RUPPERT ERICSON SCHATZ Captamsf 1912 ROGER BARTON STONE ;iHanagcrs WALTER HERBERT HILDEBRAND MARTIN CHARLES CHERRY ;fHmilicrs George E. Livingston Roy G. MacPherson Lester G. Metcalf Ruppert E, Schatz Harold D. Williams Chester H. Albee Martin C. Cherry- Joseph W, Farwell John S. Selfridge Roger B. Stone J Utl35titUtCS Charles H. Harrington Robert A. Chandler Donald R. Stevens Edward Kennedy 5ntcr:;€ia0!S €l)ampionBi)ip f cncs January 14, 1909 1911 vs. 1912 Score, 1911, 26; 1912, 15 February 19, 1909 1911 vs. 1912 Score, 1911, 28; 1912, 4 241 Won by 1911 Won by 1911 PROFESSIONAL SOCIETIES JX %% c Offircrs President CLARENCE JAY BROWN Vice-President MONTAGUE FLAGG Treasurer FELIX ARNOLD BURTON Secretary THOMAS HENRY ATHERTON, Jr. ! rcfutitic Committee John Carlisle Bollenbacher Harold Metcalf Glazier Harold E. Akerly John F. Alter Samuel H. Allen Herbert A. Angel John T. Arms, Jr. Thomas H. Atherton, Jr. Cecil F. Baker John E. Barnard Ralph J. Batchelder John A. Bigelow J. Carlisle Bollenbacher Harold D. Bounetheau Clarence J. Brown Philip W. Burnham Felix A. Burton Kenneth E. Carpenter H. Deland Chandler Orliff H. Chase Charles C. Clark Herbert S. Cleverdon Walter S. Davis Sidney L. Day 244 1 W. Fredric Dolke, Jr. Leander A. Dow William D. Foster Herbert E. Fowler Montague Flagg Stafford A. Francis Donald A. French Heath S. Gerity Harold M. Glazie r Frederick A. Godley Phillip T. Harris William E. Haugaard Milton E. Hayman Benjamin S. Hirschfeld Reginald D. Johnson John E. Kelley Rinker Kibbey Burton R. Kimberley Lester H. King Mark C. Kinney Thomas G. Machen William H. March Alvin F. Menke Joseph T. Mohn Henry E. Myers James B. Noble Joseph W. Northrop Bertholf M. Pettit D. Winston Phelps John H. Scarff Edmund A. Schwarz Victor E. Seibert Guy F. Shaffer Frank W. Sharman Roland S. Simonds William L. Smith Donald W. Southgate Walter T. Spalding Theodore F. Stark Louis Svarz William R. Walker George S. Watson Louis L. Wetmore J. Theodore Whitney Edgar I. Williams mm 245 ■ S, ' «.. .-s! pm ENONEEEING SOCEr President LEWIS DEXTER NESBET, 1909 Vice-President SAMUEL NORMAN McCAIN, 1909 Secretary JOHN MOXCEY FITZWATER, 1910 Treasurer ROBERT PETTIT WALLER, 1910 (( rcrutibc Committee Frederick Richardson Faulkner, 1909 Lockwood James Towne, 1909 J rogram Committee Austin Brown Henderson, 1909 John Nixon Brooks, 1909 Richard Lucius Gary, 1909 Arthur Bradford Merrill, 1909 Stanley P. Finch Harold F. Ballard Bion A. Bowman John N. Brooks Ballard Y. Burgher James K. Campbell Richard L. Gary Leland Glapper Walter W. Clifford Howard W. Gongdon Ghauncey H. Crawford Joseph G. Dort Herbert G. Elton Frederick R. Faulkner JHmibersf (9raliuatf 1909 Charles Freed Bernard R. Fuller Royce W. Gilbert William D. Green Calvin N. Harrub Harry L. Havens Thomas F. Hickerson Frank S. Lovewell Samuel N. McCain Kevork Madenigian Joseph Matte Edward D. Merrill Arthur K. Mitchell Holman Isaac Pearl, 1910 Arthur Lassell Shaw, 1909 Claude Thomas Wilson, 1909 Harold S. Osborne Arthur B. Morrill Lewis D. Nisbet Joseph W. Parker Benjamin W. Pepper Charles W. Radford Morse W. Rew Maurice R. Scharff Arthur L. Shaw Leo S. Stone Lockwood J. Towne Ernest A. Ware Waldo C. York 246 19 10 CIVIL ENGINEERING SOCIETY 247 Abbott Allen Albert W. Andrews William C. Arkell Kenneth P. Armstrong John Avery, Jr. John B. Babcock, 3d Stanley E. Bates Carroll R. Benton Harold D. Billings Walter K. Brownell Manuel A. Cadenas Eldon S. Clark Samson K. Cohen Michael A. Coplan Charles E. Creecy Harold N. Cummings Allen Curtis 1910 John C. Diehl Herbert S. Dornberger John M. Fitzwater Arthur J. Foote Ridgway M. Gillis Achilles Hadji Savva Guy N. Harcourt Ralph W. Home Elmer Jacobs Gorton James Charles F. Joy, Jr. Philip G. Lawson Carl H. Lovejoy George F. Maglott Austin B. Mason George L. Mylchreest John H. O ' Neill William J. Orchard Harold F. Parsons Earl W. Pilling Floyd J. Pitcher Lawrence G. Rice Tom W. Saul Henry Schreiber Ralph A. Smead Otis S. Smith Isaac H. Stauffer Philip W. Taylor Philip D. Terry William R. Waldo Robert P. Waller Richard P. Watson Cyrus N. White Theodore B. Whittemore William J. Buckley Paul E. Burnham Philip L. Caldwell Harold M. Davis Henry F. Dolliver Gardner C. George Richard H. Gould Charles H. Harrington Joseph F. Harrington Roy L. Hay ward 1911 Bancroft Hill John R. Hugelmann Howard P. Ireland George C. Kenney Harry E. Lake Arthur F. Leary Nathan Levy Harry L. Manley Edward A. Nash Theodore B. Parker Theodorus Polhemus Percy A. Rideout Harold L. Robinson James E. Rush Warren J. Rush Warren J. Simonds John A. Urquhart Edwin C. Vose Alexander W. Yereance Vincent L. Ahem Johannes Ahlers Van Zandt Beall Robert J. Boltz George W. Bowers Roger T. Boyden Conor W. B. Coppinger Arthur H. Curtis Carl W. Dwight George I. Emerson Frederick J. Evans Raymond H. Fellows Leroy G. Fitzherbert Paul R. Fleming Willis R. France Keyes C. Gaynor James A. Given Leslie G. Glazier William W. Goodhue Special Leslie W. Greely Frederick C. Harrington Isaac Hausman Austin B. Henderson Walter H. Hildebrand Merton W. Hopkins John J. Hynes, Jr. Irving P. Kane William J. Keefe Edward Kenway Thomas Larkin Beardsley Lawrence John Lodge Charles A. Maguire Clarence D. Maynard Murray H. Mellish Waldo B. Miller Aaron L. Myers Manuel A. Navarro Russel H. Nichols Thomas B. O ' Hearn Holman I. Pearl Oliver D. Powell Roger C. Rice Wallace D. Richardson Louis G. Rowe Harold Sharp Henry L. Sherman Clarence H. Sutherland Frank G. Taite Thomas A. Tillard James G. Tripp Guy W. True Roy D. Van Alstine William W. Warner Barton Wheelwright Sumner C. Willis Claude T. Wilson Vahan P. Yacoubyan Tf f itrr t ' V ' ' ■ v w _vj [t  w - ' T t ' • J ' ' ' -r . President JOHN MILLS, A.B., A.M., 1909 Vice-President HARRY EMERSON WHITAKER, 1909 Secretary DELOS GARRIOTT HAYNES, 1909 Treasurer REGINALD LAMONT JONES, 1909 Harold Smith Osborne, S.B. ■ : program Committee 1908, Chairman Francis Martin Loud, A.E. CHfion Carroll Carter, U.S.A., 1909 1910 JH embers (Sr.iUuatf Harold S. Osborne, S.B. Joseph G. Reid, A.B. Percival L. Adams, B.S. Salvador Altamirano Frank D. Applin John R. Baldwin, A.B., B.S. Edwin C. Ball Albert J. Barnes, B.Sc. Louis Barnett Egerton M. Bettington Stephen L. Burgher Horace W. Calder Clifton C. Carter, U.S.A. Philip H. Chase, A.B. James H. Critchett Myron M. Davis Chester L. Dawes Robert E. Doane, B.S. Francis H. Dunnington, B.A. Ridsdale Ellis Wilbur Everett James I. Finnie Walter S. Rodman, B.S., Herbert H. Sutton, E.E. M.S. 1909 Robert C. Clancy Arthur S. Gibbs George H. Gray Fred M. Green William F. Grimes, Jr. Earl R. Hamilton Russell Hastings Joseph W. Hathaway Delos G. Haynes Mayo D. Hersey, A.B. Louis Jacoby, A.B. Lewis H. Johnson Reginald L. Jones Robert C. Kerr, A.B. Arthur R. Knipp, A.B. Frank J. Lange Francis M. Loud, A.B. Franklin B. Lyons, B.S. Andrew L. Matte Kenneth S. May John Mills, A.B., A.M. 248 Alfred Miillhaupt, Jr. Haylett O ' Neill. A.B. Harvey S. Pardee Frederick G. Perry Herbert R. Petzold Matthew Porosky William C. Read George H. Reppert, B.S. Arthur M. Rosenblatt Jacob H. Schakne, B.A. Phifer Smith, B.A. George T. Southgate Thomas Spooner, A.B. Harold 0. Stewart, B.S. Allan F. Thbde Philip M. Wentworth Harry E. Whitaker Laurence S.Winchester Herbert B. Winterstein, B.S. George S. Witmer 1910 ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING SOCIETY 249 Grant W. Arnold T. D. Barnes David E. Bartlett Hermann Behr William T. Biedler, B.S. Thomas D. Bond Benjamin S. Bonebrake Ralph H. Bowers Percy M. Bramhall Reuben W. Brush Frederic K. Castelhun Laurance D. Chapman Frank L. Cobb John F. Cole Howard Collingham George C. Conner Hardy M. Cook Frederick T. Crossley George B. Cumings Arnold C. Davies Peter L. Dillon Robert L. Dodge Loren N. Downes, Jr. Warren L. Dubois, B.S. Livingston P. Ferris, A.B. Clifford W. Gammons Karl D. Godfrey 1910 Herbert S. Gott Allen A. Gould Elbert D. Greene William F. Grimes, Jr, Arthur L. Harding Laurence T. Hemenway Stewart L. Henderson Frank E. Hodges John A. Holbrook William H. Horton, Jr. Albert K. Huckins Robert I. Hulsizer George S. Humphrey, Ph.B. Charles F. Humphrey Edmund B. Kiely Gilberto Lasnier, A.B. Robert H. Lombard Roger P. Loud Fred R. Lufkin Harold E. McPhee George W. McRae Joseph P. Maxfield Leonard O. Mills Alonzo L. Moses John B. Myrick William R. Nichols, B.S. William J. Pead, Jr. Ralph W. Perkins Lester D. Poore Erford M. Potter Leonard W. Pritchett, A.B. Edwin Pugsley, B.A. James C. Rogers, B.S. Albert De Ro.nana Hermann C. Schmidt Edward O. Scriven, B.S. Carroll H. Shaw George W. Sheldon, B.S. Francis B. Silsbee Carl J. Sittinger Charles M. Smith, B.A. Lewis S. Southwick Arthur L. Stein Carroll A. Sutherland, B.S. Horace V. Taylor, B.A. Maurice R. Thompson Howard M. Trueblood, B.S. Charles W. Wallower Harvey P. Wasserboehr, Jr. Russell D. Wells Barton Wheelwright Harold R. Wilbur Walter S. Woods PHEMICAI President CHESTER HENRY POPE, 1909 Vice-President WILLIAM JAMES KELLY, 1909 CIETY Secretary CLARK SHOVE ROBINSON, 1909 Treasurer GEORGE PERKINS LUNT, 1910 i . A. - ;« JHcmbcr 6):rcuttUc Committee LEON JAMES DYSON HEALY, 1909 ;ftT:rmbcrfi from tljr 3fnstvucting: §taff Henry P. Talbot William H. Walker Charles Field, 3d Alfred B. Babcock Harry S. Chandler William H. Toppan Rufus W. G. Wint Elliot Q. Adams Louis G. Beers Rea E. Blankenbuehler Walter H. Byron Charles L. Campbell Eugene L. Connolly John A. Christie James H. Critchett Bradley Dewey John J. Elbert 1909 Ridsdale Ellis Laurence R. Forrest Carl W. Gram Leon J. D. Healy William J. Kelly William C. Kerr Walter W. King Harold L. Lang William M. Pettingell Chester H. Pope 250 William C. Read Clark S. Robinson Lawrence C. Shaw Allen E. Shippee Walter C. Slade Joseph N. Stephenson Burton H. St. John Edward E. Wells Paul M. Wiswall 19 10 CHEMICAL SOCIETY 251 Richard S. Bicknell Dudley Clapp Walter B. Gushing Bernard F. Courtney Luther Davis William N. Drew Chester D. Dunlap Richard 0. Fernandez IQIO Everett M. Follansbee George M. Gadsby Ralph E. Gegenheimer Raymond W. Jacoby Edwin K. Jenckes Richard W. Lewis George P. Lunt Charles E. Meulendyke Charles P. Monto Chester J. Randall Ludwig Rosenstein Walter Spaans Horace E. Stump Richard R. Taylor Paul E. Thompson Lewis W. Waters George A. Brown Stanford H. Hartshorn Robert T. Haslam James B. Pierce 1911 Harold B. Pushee Lewis Schwartz Edwin F. Stimpson Ewazo Suzuki Ernest M. Symmes Emmons J. Whitcomb Walter C. Wilson Robert O. Wood UECflAWM, President CARLETON WATERBURY HUBBARD, 1909 Vice-President JOHN WINSLOW NICKERSON, 1909 C SOCIEIY. Secretary HENRY HERBERT MARSHALL, 1909 Treasurer BENJAMIN WARREN DOW, 1909 oErccutibc Committee Reginald William Millard, 1909 Allen Taber Weeks, 1909 Henry Appleton Hale, Jr., 1910 program Comm ittee Prof. Gaetano Lanza Robert Inglee, 1909 Harold Gushing Faxon, 1908 Robert Lewis Smith, 1909 Henry Kendall Spencer, 1909 j embers Roy H. Abbe Leon M. Adler Raynor H. Allen Richard S. Ayres Frank A. Baker Donald C. Bakewell George E. Batcheller Alexander G. Batsner Daniel Belcher Charles J. Belden Frank F. Bell Eldred E. Besse Wallace E. Boardman Leroy E. Briggs Dallas Brown, Jr. Harold C. Brown 252 Maurice L. Bullard William S. Burleigh Nicholas M. Cartagena Olin V. Chamberlain Dudley Clapp Herbert C. Cloudman Marcus J. Cole Orrin J. Crommett 1910 MECHANICAL ENGINEERING SOCIETY 253 Walter B. Gushing John F. Davis Kingsley W. Dennett Bradley Dewey Frederick A. Dewey Robert E. Dillon Benjamin W. Dow Walter R. Dray Sterling B. Dyer Andrew L. Fabens W. Craig Ferguson Wilhelm G. Fick Howard C. Fisher Charles B. Fletcher Louis 0. French Harwood Y. Frost Karl W. Gasche Charles E. Green Alfred Hague Henry A. Hale, Jr. J. Kearsley M. Harrison Philip Hart Derick S. Hartshorn Arthur E. Hartwell Frederick M. Heidelberg Mayo D. Hersey Clifford C. Hield Roger F. Hill Carleton W. Hubbard Robert Inglee Carleton D. Jacobs Alexander F. Jackson Bradley Jones William H. Jones Austin D. Keables Edward F. Kelley Clinton W. Kyle Frederick J. King Robert C. Latimer George H. Magee Charles R. Main Harold C. Manson H. Herbert Marshall Thorndike DeV. Martin Lincoln Mayo Frank S. McClintock Otto C. F. Meisel Ralph P. Melendy Reginald W. Millard Henry F. Miller, 2d Charles P. Monto John W. Nickerson At wood C. Page Dean Peabody, Jr. Albert S. Peet Henry C. Perley Lester W. Perrin Alfred I. Phillips, Jr. Ralph A. D. Preston Malcolm D. Price Archibald B. Purdom Nathan Ransohoff Ernest A. Redman Clarence Reeds Bergen Reynolds Herbert G. Reynolds Rudolph W. Riefkohl Clark S. Robinson K enneth C. Robinson Walter J. Rountree John H. Ruckman Earl S. Russell Edgar C. Savage Luke E. Sawyer Nathaniel S. Seeley Max C. Sherman Roy Simm Robert L. Smith Harold A. Smith J. Stuart Sneddon Henry K. Spencer Karl D. Stellwagen Raymond B. Temple Albert E. Thornley Franklin T. Towle Merrill W. Tilden Goro Tomonaga Arthur P. Truette Myrton J. Turnbull John C. Tuttle George E. Wallis Allen T. Weeks Melville K. Weill William H. Wengert William R. Wheeler John A. Willard Donald V. Williamson Chester W. Wilson Philip E. Young Robert V. L. Zahner | pG: yim mv [GsocDEry 1 ar ffircr0 ' President LYNN ALBERT LOOMIS, 1909 Edward T. Almy, Jr. Grenville T. Bridgman Denison K. Bullens Angus E. Burt Edward P. Chapman Thomas G. Chapman Louis S. Gordon Roy M. Anderson Harold S. Arnold Ralph L. Beales Rafael A. Beckman Braxton Bigelow Chester T. Briggs Robert S. Breyer Irving V. Crichton William D. Everett George E. Goodspeed, Jr. Richard F. Goodwin, Jr. Malcolm B. Brownlee, Jr. Arthur W. Carney George A. Cowee Norman de Forest John J. Devlin Donald M. Giles Vice-President and Treasurer CLIFTON HACKETT WHITE, 1909 Secretary ROBERT SAMUEL BREYER, 1910 1909 Newman B. Gregory Victor C. Griibnau Edward J. Hooper Garnett A. Joslin Lynn A. Loomis Paul B. Lord Ernest M. Loring Thurston C. Merriman 1910 Seymour A. Guthrie William B. Hargraves John J. Higgins Paul S. Hopkins Frederick A. Hurley Raymond L. Jones Archie J. Orem Frederick W. Osborn Harold R. Perry Carlton F. Piper Thomas A. Roper 1911 Marcus A. Grossman James B. Little John D. MacKenzie John L. McAllen August C. Metz Franklin Osborn 254 George Miller Raymond F. Munoz John S. Pearce Burr A. Robinson Harold Schaffer Francis H. Sonderstrom Clifton H. White Jerome Scheuer Henry M. Schleicher William McN. Schofield Frank D. Stewart Charles E. Tilton Prescott K. Wadsworth Van Court Warren Christopher C. Webb Noyes Weltmer Frederic B. Wood Clyde R. Perry Nathan N. Prentiss Frank P. Ryder Wellesley J. Seligman Wallace A. Van Syckel Allison H. Whorf pi m MciJiTEcruRAL soqig; President XANTHUS RUSSELL SMITH Vice-President HEENAN TINCHING SHEN Secretary GORDON GODSHALL HOLBROOK Treasurer LESLIE EDWARD GEARY Cecil H. Peabody William Hovgaard Walter S. Leland Harold A. Everett Harold S. Wonson Frederick H. Adams Walter D. Allen Maurice P. Anderson Arthur C. Besselievre Van Tuyl H. Bien Kenneth T. Blood Maurice S, Chapin Lawrence B. Chapman John P, Constable Samuel H. Cornell Francis G, Cooke Alfred V. de Forest Charles Edwards Frederick A. Fenger Karl D. Fernstrom Leslie E. Geary Gordon G. Holbrook Daniel F. Harriman Algernon S. DeW. Herreshoff David P. Marvin 255 John F. Malone, Jr. Earl J. W. Ragsdale Frank H. Remick French P. Sargent Christopher A. Schellens Heenan T. Shen Xanthus R, Smith George S. Thomas Ralph M. Torrey I IC SOOO Y aSvccuttbc ommittec First Term President ROBERT NELSON HOYT €vecutibc Committee Second Term President ARTHUR BRADFORD MORRILL Secretary GEORGE TRUMAN PALMER Secretary ELMO ARNOLD ROBINSON MAURICE ROOS ' SCHARFF HUBERT OLIVER JENKINS J tcmbcr (SraUuatc Eueene ' C. Howe VII 1909 Eugene L. Connolly V George I. Emerson XI Royce W. Gilbert XI Calvin N. Harrub XI Harry L. Havens XI Robert N. Hoyt VII Sydney A. Malcom XI Arthur B. Morrill XI George T. Palmer VII Elmo A. Robinson VII Maurice R. Scharff XI Franz Schneider, Jr VII Alfred F. Stevenson VII Ernest L. Treuthardt V Ernest A. Ware XI 1910 Harold D. Billings . XI Cecil K. Blanchard VII Perley K. Brown XI Ralph W. Home XI George F. Maglott XI 1911 Howard P. Ireland XI John H. O ' Neill XI William J. Orchard XI Lawrence G. Rice XI Frederick H. Stover VII John P. Wentworth XI Samuel M. Schmidt VII Special James S. Groff VII Hubert O. Jenkins VII Herman W. Havnes ....... V Mac H. McCradv XI Russell H. Nichols XI Wallace D. Richardson XI Herbert F. Salmonde VII Rufus H. Savery VII 256 WALKER CLUB }i fS -l- Zy}- ' ' 1 . s;5 .k 3fe. .ffl .? ' t; - WMk) ; I t iOw ' l , C ' U f rr i. n i;i r (?sa)fesj£yr; tsg= ' l J I ( liji M A,. President BRADLEY DEWEY, 1909 Secretary-Treasurer VAN COURT WARREN, 1910 1 Henry R. Putnam Channing Turner ;f¥lcmticrs 1908 L Harry Webb George S. Witmer 1909 Raynor H. Allen Charles J. Belden Bradley Dewey John J. Elbert Montague Flagg Lawrence R. Forrest Walter W. King 1910 Maurice R. Scharff Phifer Smith Thomas A. Tillard Charles Almy, Jr. FeHx A. Burton Charles E. Creecy Walter R. Dray Frederick A. Godley Gorton James Edwin Pugsley Bergen Reynolds 1911 George M. Roads Nathaniel S. Seeley Lewis S, Southwick Van Court Warren Malcolm B. Brownlee, J. Burleigh Cheney Henry C. Davis, Jr. Jr. Lester W. Perrin Frank Russell Donald R. Stevens facultp Charles S. Williams, Jr. Irving W. Wilson Arlo Bates Alfred E. Burton Charles R. Cross Charles F. A. Currier Davis R. Dewey Carroll W. Doten Allyne L. Merrill William H. Niles Arthur A. Noyes Henry G. Pearson William T. Sedgwick John 0. Sumner 258 Harry W, Tyler Frank Vogel Archer T. Robinson Henry L. Seaver Joseph Blachstein i mini ASSOCIATION Chairman THOMAS ATKINSON TILLARD, 1909 Vice-Chairman EGERTON MITFORD BETTINGTON, 1909 Secretary-Treasurer FREDERICK RICHARDSON FAULKNER, 1909 o rccutibc Commtttcc RIDSDALE ELLIS, 1909 JOHN DAVID MacKENZIE, 1911 PROF. REGINALD A. DALY JOHN A. ALLAN, Canada OBADIAH F. WELLS, England cnibcx$ Albert J. Barnes, 1909, Canada Egerton M. Bettington, 1909, South Africa Charles Camsell, 1908, Canada George C. Conner, 1910, Canada William H. Duffield, 1910, Canada Ridsdale Ellis, 1909, England Frederick R. Faulkner, 1909, Canada Harold R. L. Fox, 1912, Jamaica 259 Herbert S. Gott, 1910, England Manson A. Lyons, 1910, Canada John D. MacKenzie, 1911, Canada Alonzo L. Moses, 1909, Canada Albert S. Peet, 1909, South America Harold Schaffer, 1909, South Africa Thomas A. Tillard, 1909, England Joseph D, Trueman, 1908, Canada Officers President MABEL KEYES BABCOCK Vice-President HELEN McGRAW LONGYEAR Secretary REBECCA HULL THOMPSON Treasurer ELIZABETH BREWER BABCOCK Adelaide May Abell Sarah Randolph Anderson Elizabeth Brewer Babcock Mabel Keyes Babcock Gladys May Elizabeth Blake Helen Lillian Fales Margaret Alexina Fulton i miners Cora Burt Gross Flora Augusta Johnson Helen McGraw Longyear Florence Hope Luscomb Lahvesia Paxton Caruthers Packwood Ruth Ogden Pierson Lila Hathaway Swift Rebecca Hull Thompson 260 James Francis Philip Edward Hinckley Roswell Davis Raynor Huntington Allen Charles Josiah Belden Alvah Breaker Court George Barr Curwen James Irving Finnic Richard Frederic Goodwin, Jr. Kenneth Greenleaf Carleton Waterbury Hubbard Richard Clark Jacobs Rinker Kibbey Garnett Alfred Joslin Sydney Arnold Malcom Edgar Irving Williams 261 = President HAROLD RAYMOND WILBUR, 1910 Vice-President CARLTON DUPEE JACOBS, 1909 Secretary Treasurer MARTIN STANBAUGH TOD, 1910 MAURICE RAYMOND THOMPSON, 1910 Executive Officer PAUL ELLIS THOMPSON, 1910 Frank D. Applin, 1909 Harold E. Babbitt, 1911 George W. Bakeman, 1912 Stephen L. Burgher, 1909 William N. Drew, 1910 Stafford A. Francis, 1911 Russell D. Francis, 1911 Paul G. Frazer, 1912 George E. Goodspeed, 1910 L, Gordon Glazier, 1911 jHcmticrs Fred M. Green, 1909 Merton W. Hopkins, 1911 Henry D. Kemp, 1912 David P. Marvin, 1910 Thurston C. Merriman, 1909 Frederick G. Perry, 1909 Rudolph W. Riefkohl, 1908 Frank P. Ryder, 1911 Ernest M. Symmes, 1911 Emmons J. Whitcomb, 1911 Van Court Warren, 1910 262 m HE:5 ' 4 President SAMUEL MYER SCHMIDT, 1911 Vice-President CHARLES FREED, 1909 Secretary HARRY JAMES BAKER, 1911 LVBJ Joseph A. Aaron, 1911 Harry J. Baker, 1911 Stanley E. Bates, 1911 Austin W. Brooks, 1910 Robert F. Burnett, 1910 Maurice S. Chapin, 1910 Louis P. d ' Autremont, 1911 Harold M. Davis, 1911 Wilbur Everett, 1909 Charles Freed, 1909 Bernard R. Fuller, 1909 Harold W. Greeley, 1910 Ambrose D. Gring, Jr., 1912 Delos G. Haynes, 1909 Walter H. Hildebrand, 1911 Harold G. Jenks, 1910 Milton Kahn, 1912 j Abraham H. E. Kaufman, 1911 Hamilton Merrill, 1912 Arthur B. Morrill, 1909 Manuel Muriel, 1910 Aaron L. Myers, 1912 George L. Mylchreest, 1910 Manuel A. Navarro, 1910 Sidney C. Neff, 1912 Theodore B. Parker, 1911 Clyde R. Perry, 1911 Henry M. Priest, 1912 Ludwig Rosenstein, 1910 Samuel M. Schmidt, 1911 Solomon Schneider, 1912 Lewis Schwartz, 1911 Arthur L. Stein, 1910 Elijah C. Van Syckel, 1911 263 3 :(il lPj| — C ® SOUTHERN CLXJB President RICHARD SAMUEL AYRES, 1909 Vice-President ROBERT SAMUEL BREYER, 1910 Secretary-Treasurer MAURICE ROOS SCHARFF, 1909 l ominating Committee HAROLD DU PRE BOUNETHEAU, 1909 BALLARD YOUNG BURGHER, 1910 PHIFER SMITH, 1909 O ntertainmeut Committee HARRY HARDIN CATCHING, 1911 KARL DICKSON FERNSTROM, 1910 GEORGE STONE WITMER, 1909 264 19 10 SOUTHERN CLUB 265 Leon M. Adier, 1910 Richard S. Ayres, 1909 William T. Beedler, 1910 Harold D. Bounetheau, 1909 Robert S. Breyer, 1910 Ballard Y. Burgher, 1910 Frank W. Caldwell, 1912 James K. Campbell, 1911 Harry H. Catching, 1911 Arthur M. Coleman, 1911 C. Eaton Creecy, 1910 Walter S. Davis, 1910 Fredrick H. Dierks, 1912 Karl D. Fernstrom, 1910 Livingston P. Ferris, 1909 Thomas F. Hickerson, 1909 Bancroft Hill, 1910 W. Edward Humphreville, Jr., 1910 Charles P. Kerr, 1911 William C. Kerr, 1909 Thomas G. Machen, 1909 Joseph G. Reid, 1909 James C. Rogers, 1910 John D. Scarff, 1909 Maurice R. Scharff, 1909 Hermann C. Schmidt, 1910 Phifer Smith, 1909 Aubray H. Straus, 1910 Herbert H. Sutton, 1908 George S. Watson, 1911 George S. Witmer, 1909 ■R Irn ATE CL President PHILIP DUNBAR TERRY, 1910 Vice-President HENRY WALKE DUN, Jr., 1909 Secretary Treasurer WILLIAM DUNCAN GREEN, 1909 HERBERT SQUIRES CLEVERDON, 1910 oSrrcuttbc Committee CHARLES JOSIAH BELDEN, 1909 FREDERICK ARCHIBALD DEWEY, 1909 0lc ribcxs Johannes Ahlers, 1912, Brooklyn John M. Fitzwater, 1910, Penn Yan Harold E. Akerly, 1910, Rochester Herbert E. Fowler, 1910, Rochester Kester Barr, 1911, Buffalo Bernard R. Fuller, 1909, New York George E. Batcheller, 1910, Mt, Vernon Donald M. Giles, 1911, Amsterdam Charles J. Belden, 1909, New York Harvey S. Benson, 1912, Syracuse Orliff H. Chase, 1911, Catskill Herbert S. Cleverdon, 1910, New York Mitchell Coffin, 1911, Brooklyn Samuel H. Cornell, 1911, New York Harold B. Davis, 1912, Lancaster Alfred V. deForest, 1911, New York Frederick A. Dewey, 1909, New York Robert E. Doane, 1909, Elmira Norman Duffett, 1910, Rochester W. Duncan Green, 1909, Brooklyn Morris W. Hedden, 1912, Brooklyn Edward C. Mayers, 1912, New York Douglas C. McMurtrie, 1910, New York Ernest Nicholson, 1911, Schenectady George T. Palmer, 1909, Rochester Elmo A. Robinson, 1909, Canandaigua Jerome Scheuer, 1910, New York Nathaniel S. Seeley, 1910, Flushing Harold 0. Stewart, 1912, Rochester PhiUp D. Terry, 1910, Waterville William E. Dugan, Jr., 1912, Rochester James G. Tripp, 1910, New York Henry W. Dun, Jr., 1909, Albany Claude T. Wilson, 1910, Waterville 266 NNSYLVANIA TATE.,.. CLUB Q President SAMUEL NORMAN McCAIN, 1909 Vice-President JOHN STEWART PEARCE, 1909 Secretary ARTHUR LEON STEIN, 1910 Treasurer RAYMOND WEISS JACOBY, 1910 Harry S. Alexander, 1912 David F. Baker, 1912 Robert J. Boltz, 1910 Olin V. Chamberlin, 1910 Thomas C. Desmond, 1909 Joseph H. Dunlap, 1910 Archibald Eicher, 1912 Victor C. Griibnau, 1909 H. Norris Harrison, 1910 Kearsley M. Harrison, 1910 Eldred B. Hawkins, 1912 Raymond W. Jacoby, 1910 Jesse E. James, 1910 John Lodge, 1910 Fred W. Lyle, 1908 Samuel N. McCain, 1909 Wilbur A. Meanor, 1910 Walter S. Alfred Mull Kaupt, Jr. John S. Pearce, 1909 Alfred I. Phillips, 1910 George M. Roads, 1910 Jacob H. Schakne, 1909 Walter H. Schmitt, 1912 Harold Sharp, 1909 Xanthus R. Smith, 1909 Charles M. Steese, 1908 Arthur L. Stein, 1910 John B. Tenney, 1912 Arthur H. Turner, 1908 Robert P. Waller, 1910 Charles W. Wallower, 1910 William W. Warner, 1911 Russell D. Wells, 1910 William H. Wengert, 1910 Woods, 1909 267 President HORACE LITTLE CLARK, 1909 Vice-President RUSSELL HASTINGS, 1909 Secretary and Treasurer HAROLD SHELTON ARNOLD, 1910 Keeper of Dead MELVILLE KAISER WEILL, 1909 jHmiticrsi 1909 Horace L. Clark Russell Hastings Maurice R. Scharff Henry L. Sherman Melville K. Weill 1911 Henry C. Davis, Jr. Ralph N. Doble Carleton W. Eaton George H. Estes Stafford A. Francis Louis J. Harrigan Otis Hutchins 1910 Harold S. Arnold Charles F. Doble French P. Sargeant Philip R. Wells Houghton H. Whithed 1912 Volant V. Ballard WilHam C. Bird Herbert H. Calvin Harold W, Danser David Follett, Jr. Donald H. Radford Daniel Ricker 268 iniiivUlnl President SYDNEY ARNOLD MALCOM, 1939 Vice-President HAROLD LOCKE LANG, 1909 Secretary-Treasurer CARL JOSEPH SITTINGER, 1910 aJjL ccuti 3C Committee THE VICE-PRESIDENT THE SECRETARY-TREASURER JOHN JOSEPH DEVLIN, 1911 HENRY DONALD KEMP, 1912 THE PRESIDENT William H. Baxter, 1912 Samson K. Cohen, 1910 Hardy M. Cook, 1909 Michael R. Coplan, 1910 John J. Devlin, 1911 Loren N. Downs, 1910 Herbert C. Elton, 1909 Kenneth W. Faunce, 1911 Earl R. Hamilton, 1909 James C. Hammond, 1909 Hugo H. Hanson, 1912 Lawrence T. Hemmenway, Bradley Jones, 1910 Henry D. Kemp, 1911 Harold L. Lang, 1909 Walter W. Lang, 1912 Robert R. Langer, 1912 Arthur J. Lennon, 1912 j lcmDcrs Sydney A. Malcom, 1909 Harold C. Manson, 1910 William J. McAuUffe, 1909 David J. McGrath, 1912 Michael C. O ' Neil, 1912 Joseph Oppenheim, 1912 Frederick E. Poor, 1912 Frederick A. Robinson, 1912 Harold Sharp, 1909 Henry M. Schleicher, 1910 Abraham Shohan, 1911 1910 Carl J. Sittinger, 1910 Sydney I. Snow, 1910 Leo S. Stone, 1909 Edward Stuart, 1910 Ernest L. P. Treuthardt, 1909 Charles L. TuUer, 1912 Wallace A. Van Syckel, 1911 Louis S. Walsh, 1912 269 President HENRY KENDALL SPENCER, 1909 Vice-President HARVEY PAUL WASSERBOEHR, Jr., 1910 Secretary-Treasurer HAROLD MARTIN DAVIS, 1911 !Erccutii)e Committee Rudolph Boynton Weiler, 1908 The President Hubert Oulton Maxwell, 1912 The Vice-President The Secretary-Treasurer Clarence W. Clark, S.B. Everett 0. Hiller, S.B. Arthur T. Hinckley, S.B. Addison F. Holmes, S.B. J ember From the Instructing Staff John W. Howard, S.B. Alfred R. Hunter John H. Locke, S.B. Rudolph B. Weiler, S.B. Rinker Kibbey Graduate Harold S. Osborne Louis Barnett Paul H. Block Bion A. Bowman Stephen L. Burgher 1909 270 Thomas G. Chapman Benjamin W. Dow Charles A. Dunkel Wilhelm G. Fick 1910 M.A.H.S. CLUB 271 Chester C. Ford Carleton D. Jacobs William J. Kelly Thorndike DeV. Martin John W. Nickerson Roger C. Rice John B. Babcock, 3d Frank A. Baker Roger T. Boyden Frank L. Cobb J, Foster Cole James A. Cox Charles F. Doble W. Noel Drew W. Dexter Everett Charles E. Green Arthur L, Harding William B. Hargraves Frank E. Hodges John A. Holbrook Oberlin S. Clark Paul A. Cushman Harold M. Davis James F. Duffy Thomas H. Haines Harold M. Hallett Nathan Levy John L. Bray Martin C. Cherry Robert L. Devine Leslie B. Duke Paul G. Eraser Robert T. Gallagher John S. Grant A. Francis Gregory Lloyd A. Hechinger Francis T. McAvoy Hubert 0. Maxwell 1910 1911 1912 Robert L. Smith Francis H. Soderstrom Henry K. Spencer Albert F. Stevenson Herbert J. Stiebel Franklin T. Towle Albert K. Huckins William J. Keefe Carl H. Lovejoy David P. Marvin John D. McNamara Holman L Pearl Otto R. Rietschlin Kenneth C. Robinson Luke E. Sawyer Henry Schreiber, Jr. Walter Spaans W. Ratcliffe Waldo Harvey P. Wasserboehr, Jr. Richard P.Watson Victor P. Klapacs Lawrence G. Odell Daniel J. Smith Guy W. True Harry W. Waterfall William J, Wilson Frank A. Wood Joseph L Murray Mark A. Oettinger Horace S. Payson Joseph H. Quinn Stewart R. Robertson George A. Robinson George S. Sawyer Solomon Schneider Edward L. Sullivan Raycroft Walsh Earle B. Watson jSrooUIittc mijji; c|)ooI Club (( €] c imittcn President MALCOLM DANA PRICE Secretary-Treasurer DONALD VOORHIS WILLIAMSON ititcrnrp €ommittcc LESLIE GORDON GLAZIER, Chairman WALT ER KEITH BROWNELL GEORGE CHURCHILL KENNEY DONALD READ STEVENS, Yarn Spinner LLOYD CARTWRIGHT COOLEY, Wool Gatherer ALFRED FRANKLIN KENRICK, Wool Gatherer Walter Keith Brownell Percy Falkenburg William John O ' Hearn Lloyd Cartwright Cooley Leslie Gordon Glazier George Churchill Kenney Carl Augustus Funk 1910 Malcolm Dana Price Charles Frederick Robinson Arthur Pierce Truette Donald Voorhis Williamson 1911 1912 272 Dennis Francis Mahoney Wellesley Joseph Seligman Donald Read Stevens Alfred Franklin Kenrick fe7 i J MVJ K«- €atl)olic € i h of tl)c jViajgjJaclm cttjg njsititutc of €ccl)nol05 Officers President FREDERICK MARTIN HEIDELBERG, 1909 Vice-President JOHN FRANCIS McCARTHY, 1909 Secretary-Treasurer PETER DESMOND WHITE, 1911 Spiritual Director Reverend Father JAMES J. McCARTHY ria0B nrprcscntatitjcs on aJrmiti jc - oarli JOHN EDWARD LENOX, 1909 JOHN JOSEPH DEVLIN, 1911 WILLIAM JOSEPH KEEFE, 1910 RAYCROFT WALSH, 1912 273 UU mi J-E-B CLUB President CHANNING TURNER, 1909 Vice-President DOUGLAS CRAWFORD McMURTRIE, 1910 Secretary -Treasurer GRENVILLE TEMPLE BRIDGEMAN, 1909 €rcfutibc Committee Carl William Gram, 1909 Tom Wynne Saul, 1910 Lawrence Gleason Odell, 1911 Nathaniel McLean Sage, 1912 274 THE TECH Vol. XXVIII. No. 41 liOSTON, M. .SS.. FRIDAY, JANUARY . I ' JO ' J Ikili. Tiirke Cents etJitorial taff HOLMAN ISAAC PEARL, 1910 Editor-in-Chief RICHARD ROWLAND RANGER, 1911 Managing Editor WILLIAM DUNCAN GREEN, 1909 Associate Editors HAROLD MARTIN DAVIS, 1911 WALTER HERBERT HILDEBRAND, 1911 ALFRED VICTOR GUILLOU, 1912 GEORGE CHURCHILL KENNEY, 1911 JOSEPH NEWELL STEPHENSON, 1909 GEORGE BASHFORD FORRISTALL, 1911 Business Manager MERTON WHITE HOPKINS, 1911 ] y Assistant Business Managers NORMAN DeFOREST, 1911 J WILLIAM ORR WHITNEY, 1911 DONALD NICHOLS FRAZIER, 1911 SIDNEY CARLISLE NEFF, 1912 DONALD READ STEVENS, 1911 CHARLES EDWARD GREEN, 1910 ORVILLE BOARDMAN DENISON, 1911 WELLESLEY JOSEPH SELIGMAN, 1911 CHARLES LAWTON TULLER, 1912 JOSEPH IGNATIUS MURRAY, 1912 EDMUND BURKE MOORE, 1912 277 Editor-in-Chief DOUGLAS CRAWFORD McMURTRIE HAROLD LOCKETT Associate Editors CLIFFORD CHASE HIELD PHILIP DUNBAR TERRY Business Manager CHARLES EATON CREECY Treasurer FRANK FREDERICK BELL Art Editor JOHN HAMILTON RUCKMAN Assistant Art Editors PHILIP WEEKS BURNHAM MERRILL WILLIAM TILDEN Athletic Editor ELMER JACOBS Statisticians PHILLIP THOMAS HARRIS JAMES STUART SNEDDON Society Editor HENRY NORRIS HARRISON Assistant Business Managers NATHANIEL STEVENS SEELEY EDWARD STUART WILLIAM RATCLIFFE WALDO 279 History of % )t Ceci) HE TECH has been the official organ of the student body for twenty-six m years. When it was first pubHshed, in 1881, it was a biweekly. It was changed in the fall of 1893 to a weekly, and in the fall of 1904 to a triweekly. The Tech Board of Editors is chosen from the student body by com- petition. At present the average sale is nine hundred copies. Editors-in-Chief and Business Managers of The Tech 1881-1882 A. W. WALKER, Editor-in-Chief S. M. ULMER, General Adv. Agent 1882-1883 H. S. CHASE, Editor-in-Chief C. W. WILDER, General Adv. Agent 1883-1884 A. D. LITTLE, Editor-in-Chief I. W. LITCHFIELD, General Adv. Agent 1884-1885 T. W. FRY, Editor-in-Chief T. STEBBINS, Adv. Agent 1885-1886 W. R. INGALLS, Editor-in-Chief T. STEBBINS, Adv. Agent 1886-1887 S. WARREN, Editor-in-Chief H. C. SPAULDING, Adv. Agent 1887-1888 S. WARREN, Editor-in-Chief R. ROBB, Adv. Agent 1888-1889 G. T. GREEL EY, Editor-in-Chief J. L. MAURAN, Adv. Agent 1889-1890 J. L. BATCHELDER, Editor-in-Chief H. N. WILLIAMS, Business Manager 1890-1891 THEO. SPENCER, Editor-in-Chief H. N. WILLIAMS, Business Manager 1891-1892 F. H. HOWLAND, Editor-in-Chief H. N. WILLIAMS, Business Manager 1892-1893 H. L. RICE, Editor-in-Chief C. R. KNAPP, Business Manager 1893-1894 R. B. PRICE, Editor-in-Chief C. R. KNAPP, Business Manager 1894-1895 A. D. FULLER, Editor-in-Chief H. P. CODDINGTON, Acting Manager 1895-1896 C. G. HYDE, Editor-in-Chief W. R. STRICKLAND, Business Manager 1896-1897 C.-E. A. WINSLOW, Editor-in-Chief W. R. STRICKLAND, Business Manager 1897-1898 C.-E. A. WINSLOW, Editor-in-Chief W. R. STRICKLAND, Business Manager 1898-1899 M. BARNEY Editor-in-Chief S. G. H. FITCH, Editor-in-Chief E. B. COOKE, Business Manager 1899-1900 I. R. ADAMS, Editor-in-Chief T. W. BRIGHAM, Business Manager 1900-1901 H. H. SAYLOR, Editor-in-Chief A. S. MORE, Business Manager 1901-1902 R. C. TOLMAN, Editor-in-Chief P. M. SMITH, Business Manager 1902-1903 R. B. PENDERGAST, Editor-in-Chief W. TURNER, Business Manager 1903-1904 L. T. BUSHNELL, Editor-in-Chief M. AHUMADA, Jr., Business Manager 1904-1905 C. T. BARTLETT, Editor-in-Chief D. G. ROBBINS, Business Manager 1905-1906 E. F. WHITNEY, Editor-in-Chief J. C. BROOKS, Business Manager 1906-1907 M. E. DENNY, Editor-in-Chief R. W. PARLIN, Business Manager 1907-1908 H. W. HOOLE, Editor-in-Chief C. TURNER, Editor-in-Chief R. S. BICKNELL, Business Manager 1908-1909 H. I. PEARL, Editor-in-Chief G. B. FORRISTALL, Business Manager 280 History of Ccfljuique ECHNIQUE first made its appearance at the Institute in 1885. It was - called Technique 1885, and was published by the Class of 1887. Although it was but a pamphlet, it showed that there was a demand for such a publication. Technique 1889 was the first to depart from the pamphlet form. Technique has developed with remarkable rapidity. It is now named after the class that publishes it. The Board of Editors is from the Junior Class and is chosen by an Electoral Committee of twenty-five at the end of the Sopho- more year. Editors-in-Chief and Business Managers of Technique 1885 F. P. GULLIVER, Editor-in-Chief H. C. SPAULDING, Manager 1886 G. E. CLAFLIN, Editor-in-Chief L. A. FERGUSON, Manager 1887 J. L. MAURAN, Editor-in-Chief R. L. RUSSELL, Manager 1889 H. E. HATHAWAY, Editor-in-Chief F. C. BLANCHARD, Manager 1890 F. METCALFE, Editor-in-Chief H. M. WAITE, Manager 1892 R. WATERMAN, Jr., Editor-in-Chief A. L. GOETZMANN, Manager 1893 L. B. DIXON. Editor-in-Chief A. L. KENDALL, Manager 1894 R. K. SHEPPARD, Editor-in-Chief A. M. ROBESON, Manager 1895 A. D. FULLER, Editor-in-Chief A. L. CANFIELD, Manager 1896 BENJ. KURD, Jr., Editor-in-Chief A. D. MACLACHLAN, Manager 1897 W. BANCROFT. Editor-in-Chief T. WASHBURN, Manager 1898 R. S. WILLIS, Editor-in-Chief H. I. LORD, Manager 1899 C. RENSHAW, Editor-in-Chief A. L. HAMILTON, Manager 1900 L. STEWART, Editor-in-Chief G. H. BELKNAP. Manager 1901 J. T. SCULLY, Jr., Editor-in-Chief P. H. PARROCK, Manager 1902 C. A. SAWYER, Jr., Editor-in-Chief A. E. LOMBARD, Manager 1903 H. S. MORSE, Editor-in-Chief J. T. CHENEY, Manager 1904 G. E. ATKINS, Editor-in-Chief W. E. HADLEY, Manager 1905 G. B. PERKINS, Editor-in-Chief W. TURNER, Manager 1906 M. A. COE, Editor-in-Chief C. F. W. WETTERER, Manager 1907 A. H. DONNEWALD, Editor-in-Chief G. A. GRIFFIN, Manager 1908 H. A. RAPELYE, Editor-in-Chief W. B. GIVEN, Jr., Manager 1909 R. H. ALLEN, Editor-in-Chief M. R. SCHARFF, Manager 1910 D. C. McMURTRIE, Editor-in-Chief C. E. CREECY, Manager 281 U-m3fl« XX«Ai  S« M ' TTF TECHNOLOGY REVIEW is published quarterly by the Alumni ■ J Associations. Its object is to promote the welfare and advancement of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology by keeping its graduates and others interested in its progress in touch with it. In its articles are discussed the growth and expansion of the Institute, the general problems of education that pertain to it, and the important achievements, both in engineering and science, of its past students. It also reports in an informal way the actions taken by the Corporation and Faculty, the meetings of the Alumni Associations, and the news relating to the Technology Club, to student organizations, and to the social life of the Institute in general. It presents also the personal informa- tion obtained by the Class Secretaries in regard to the occupations and activities of former students. It has already a large circulation, and is an important factor in extending the knowledge of the work that the Institute is doing. Committee on publication JAMES PHINNEY MUNROE, 1882 ARTHUR AMOS NO YES, 1886 WALTER BRADLEE SNOW, 1882 ISAAC WHITE LITCHFIELD, 1887 WALTER HUMPHREYS, 1897 282 KhCUK €l)c €ccl)nologr 3ircl)itcctuval Hccovti PUBLISHED QUARTERLY BY THE M.I.T. ARCHITECTURAL SOCIETY O ' EVOTED to the study of architecture and to the welfare of the department of architecture of the Massachu- setts Institute of Technology. £f putjiiration Committee LESTER H. KING, 1909, Chairman HARRY W. GARDNER, Manager W. FREDRIC DOLKE, Jr., 1908 JOHN H. SCARFF, 1910 283 HARRY EMERSON WHITAKER, Chairman CALVIN NELSON HARRUB WILLIAM JAMES KELLY JOHN WINSLOW NICKERSON ARTHUR LASSELL SHAW 284 ? Leader CLINTON WALKER KYLE, 1909 Manager PHILIP LORD CALDWELL, 1911 j irst (TrnorEi J. Edward Crowley, 1910 Marshall E. Comstock, 1911 Martin F. Tiernan, 1909 George F. Maglott, 1910 George P. Humphrey, 1911 George L. Mylchreest, 1910 fconlj (Tenors Guy F. Shaffer, 1910 Lawrence G. Odell, 1911 Philip L. Caldwell, 1911 Harry P. Trevithick, 1909 George R. Lord, 1910 f tret nsBfS William B. Jenkins, 1909 Russell D. Francis, 1911 Roy E. Coram, 1912 Kenneth W. Faunce, 1911 Charles P. Kerr, 1911 Joseph L. Champagne, 1912 §fronD afifiCB Clinton W. Kyle, 1909 Clarence Stewart, 1912 Reuben W. Brush, 1910 Erving M. Young, 1911 Wilham S. Gordon, Jr., 1909 Charles L. Tuller, 1912 287 Leader HAROLD SHARP, 1909 Manager HAROLD LOCKETT, 1910 anicaurinrE! Harold Sharp, 1909 Frank W. Sharman, 1909 Wallace D. Richardson, 1910 first JSanJo Ralph J. Batchelder, 1909 i ftan ola William H. Wengert, 1910 rcoal] banjos Harold Lockett, 1910 Frank D. Stewart, 1910 Frank S. Lovewell, 1910 Dwight M. Wyman, 1912 289 Leader HERBERT JOSEPH STIEBEL, 1909 Manager WILLIAM HARRY WENGERT, 1910 first fHanUoUns Herbert J. Stiebel, 1939 Wallace D. Richardson, 1910 William W. Warner, 1911 John F. Davis, 1909 Albert J. Barnes, 1909 Lewis L. Baxter, 1910 Joseph W. Northrop, Jr., 1910 Cello Laurence C. Shaw, 1909 flute Henry H. Partridge, 1912 :§ eronti iflanUolinei Horace V. S. Taylor, 1910 T. Charles Desmond, 1909 Richard P. Watson, 1910 Jerome A. Appelquest, 1912 Harry P. Trevithick, 1909 ;i[fianIiola William H. Wengert, 1910 Hiolin Harold W. Danser, 1912 piano John S. Martin, 1912 291 ComJjtneti iflttstcal Clubs President CLIFFORD CHASE HIELD, 1910 Vice-President WILLIAM BENJAMIN JENKINS, 1909 Secretary FRANK WELLER SHARMAN, 1909 General Manager WALLACE DUNSTER RICHARDSON, 1910 Assistant General Manager WILLIAM WEATHERBY WARNER, 1911 292 THE, INSTITUTE! 1909 1910 COMniTTLE. 1911 191a President, JAMES HAMILTON CRITCHETT, 1909 Vice-President, FRANK DOUGLAS STEWART, 1910 Secretary-Treasurer, WILLIAM CONYNE SALISBURY, 1911 Class cprc0 ltatibc 1909 JAMES HAMILTON CRITCHETT MAURICE ROSS SCHARFF CHARLES JOSIAH BELDEN 1910 FRANK DOUGLAS STEWART JOHN MOXCEY FITZWATER HAROLD CROSBY MANSON 1911 WILLIAM CONYNE SALISBURY DONALD READ STEVENS SCOTT PRESCOTT KIMBALL HENRY DONALD KEMP 1912 ALBERT GARLAND GALE ARTHUR CAMPBELL 5profcs! ional c ocietp ftcpresnitatibe Civil Engineering Society LEWIS DEXTER NISBET, 1909 Mechanical Engineering Society CARLETON WATERBURY HUBBARD, 1909 Architectural Society CLARENCE JAY BROWN, 1909 Mining Engineering Society LYNN ALBERT LOOMIS, 1909 Electrical Engineering Society JOHN MILLS, 1909 Biological Society ARTHUR BRADFORD MORRILL, 1909 Chemical Society CHESTER HENRY POPE, 1909 Naval Architectural Society XANTHUS RUSSELL SMITH, 1909 Technology Christian Association THOMAS HENRY ATHERTON, Jr., 1909 Athletic Association CARL WILLIAM GRAM, 1909 General Manager, Tech Show GARNETT ALFRED JOSLIN, 1909 General Manager, Musical Clubs WALLACE DUNSTER RICHARDSON, 1910 Editor-in-Chief, The Tech HOLMAN ISAAC PEARL, 1910 Editor-in-Chief, Technique DOUGLAS CRAWFORD McMURTRIE, 1910 OBrcfutibc Committee RAYNOR HUNTINGTON ALLEN, 1909 DELOS GARRIOTT HAYNES, 1909 295 ' ' % IWIOfi €l c 5 nion Committee Dean Alfred Edgar Burton Bursar Frank Henry Rand Isaac White Litchfield Harry Andrew Rapelye Montague Flagg, 1909 William James Kelly, 1909 James Irving Finnie, 1909 John Moxcey Fitzwater, 1910 Harold Martin Davis, 1911 i oii e Committee William James Kelly, 1909 John Moxcey Fitzwater, 1910 Elmer Jacobs, 1910 Harold Gould Jenks, 1911 Scott Prescott Kimball, 1911 George Edward Livingston, 1911 oSntertainment Committee Montague Flagg, 1909, Chairman Harry Webb, 1909 Curtis Christopher Webb, 1910 Harry Andrew Rapelye 2Dimng:;iI!oom Committee James Irving Finnie, 1909, Chairman Chester Henry Pope, 1909 Donald Nichols Frazier, 1911, Secretary John Brazer Babcock, 3d, 1910 Clyde Raymond Perry, 1911 Harold Hopkinson Griffin, 1912 Henry Donald Kemp, 1912 Charles Lawton Tuller, 1912 296 ■ -i V V Chairman JOHN MOXCEY FITZWATER Secretary WILLIAM HOWARD DUFFIELD Forrester Barstow Avery John Avery, Jr. Frank Frederick Bell Harold Dexter Billings Charles Eaton Creecy Henry Reed Elwell George Stone Emerson Karl Dickson Fernstrom Richard Frederic Goodwin, Jr, Allen Adams Gould Clifford Chase Hield Curtis Frederick Aloysius Hurley Harold Lockett Harold Crosby Manson Douglas Crawford McMurtrie Arthur Rosengarten Nagle William John O ' Hearn Bergen Reynolds John Hamilton Ruckman Tom Wynne Saul Frank Douglas Stewart Philip Dunbar Terry Christopher Webb 297 President THOMAS HENRY ATHERTON, Jr., 1909 Vice-President MYRON MATHEWS DAVIS, 1909 Secretary ROBERT EDWARD DOANE, 1909 Treasurer JOHN CUMMINGS BROOKS, 1909 Director for Sunday Evening Meetings JOSEPH OILMAN REID, 1909 Director for Bible Study ARTHUR RUSSELL KNIPP, 1909 298 President ARTHUR AMOS NOYES Secretary WALTER SWIFT LELAND iCrccutibc Committee EDMUND H. HEWINS CHARLES J. H. WOODBURY WILLIAM S. JOHNSON WALTER S. LELAND WILLIAM H. WALKER ISAAC W. LITCHFIELD 299 U D U a U □ CD President WILLIAM CRAIG FERGUSON, 1909 Secretary JOHN STEWART PEARCE, 1909 Treasurer ANDREW DUGALD MACLACHLAN, 1896 The President of the Institute William Craig Ferguson, 1909 John Stewart Pearce, 1909 2Dtrcftorsf Robert Samuel Breyer, 1910 Ralph Martin Torrey, 1910 Andrew Dugald Maclachlan, 1896 300 Major LOUIS GRIFFIN ROWE, 1910 Adjutant JOHN ALBERT HERLIHY, 1911 Sergeant-Major Drum-Major HENRY STANLEY TIRRELL, 1912 EDWARD HIGLEY GUILFORD, 1912 Chief Musician JOHN L. BARRY Company CEDRIC S. ANDERSON, Captain ALBION R. DAVIS, 2d Lieut. LOUIS R. GOLDEN, 1st Lieut. HENRY D. KEMP, 1st Sergt. Sergeants PHILIP W. DALRYMPLE WALTER W. LANG JOHN S. SELFRIDGE JOSEPH A. BOYER Corporals HAROLD I. JOHNSON ROGER B. STONE BENJAMIN SILVERMAN HENRY W. CODDING THEODORE R. PROUTY Company B HAROLD R. WILBUR, Captain HENRY SCHREIBER, Jr., 2d Lieut. RICHARD H. RANGER, 1st Lieut. RANDALL CREMER, 1st Sergt. 301 302 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV Sergeants CHARLES W. WEBBER DAVID J. McGRATH KENNETH N. WILDES HENRY M. FOLEY RALPH E. HYDE Corporals JEROME A. APPELQUEST FREDERICK H. BUSBY WILLIAM E. RICHARDSON WILLIAM A. CANADAY MICHAEL J. MURRAY Company C DONALD N. FRAZIER, Captain HENRY C. DAVIS, Jr., 1st Lieut. WILBUR T. ROBERTS LEROY W. CHANDLER PAUL G. ERASER FREDERICK BAKER PAUL M. TYLER HUGH E. SOULIS, 2d Lieut. RAYMOND E. WILSON, 1st Sergt. Sergeants Corporals ALAN H. MEANS ELLIOT W. TARR ARCHIBALD W. LAURIE HAROLD GREENLEAF ERNEST W. DAVIS Company JB CLYDE R. PERRY, Captain JOHN J. DEVLIN, 1st Lieut. FRED L. MOWRY Sergeants DONALD E. BENT, 2d Lieut. EDMUND G. BROWN, 1st Sergt. RICHARD H. SCANLON HAROLD E. KIBBON Corporals EDWIN C. HOLBROOK MICHAEL C. O ' NEIL WILLIAM C. LYNCH OLIVER C. LOMBARD NATHANIEL McL. SAGE (junior week Mrs. Eben S. Draper Mrs. Curtis Guild, Jr. i trons Mrs. Richard C. Maclaurin Mrs, Samuel J. Mixter Mrs. John L. Batchelder Mrs. Alfred E. Burton Mrs. Harry E. Clifford Mrs. Desire Despradelle Mrs. Davis R. Dewey | atroncsscj5 Mrs. Dugald C. Jackson Mrs. Frank H. Rand Mrs. William T. Sedgwick Mrs. George F. Swain Mrs. Henry P. Talbot John Avery, Jr. Allen Adams Gould Committee Philip Hart Bergen Reynolds Frank Douglas Stewart 305 4Bcncrai J¥lanagcr GARNETT ALFRED JOSLIN, 1909 CARL JOSEPH SITTINGER, 1910 0sisiants Irving White Wilson, 1911 William Henry Baxter, 1912 John Henry Lenaerts, 1912 RICHARD FREDERIC GOODWIN, Jr., 1910 Sfiiistant Kenneth Greenleaf, 1911 Erwin Haskell Schell, 1912 DUDLEY CLAPP, 1910 Assistants Henry Clarence Davis, Jr., 1911 Herbert Louis Woehling, 1912 309 h-1 l-l Q O a O en I— t a 0)at pui Onmm ' S - HE Eleventh Annual Tech Show is the production of one of t the members of the cast, Sydney Arnold Malcom, 1909. The production is somewhat different from recent shows in that it has considerable historical interest. The story is intimately connected with the wanderings of the Pilgrims, although no attempt has been made to hold strictly to historical fact. It may add a little to one ' s credence of the various ridiculous situations if one imagines the Pilgrims, with all their characteristically constrained customs, landing in America in its present twentieth-century condition. The scene opens in Leyden with Grimm, a mysterious money- maker, supervising the embarkation of the Pilgrims. He enlists the financial aid of his former partner, Von Hardwick, a somewhat avaricious and eccentric bookmaker. The Burgomaster of Leyden, hoping to retain the Pilgrims as valuable citizens, tries to win the affections of Elfrida, Von Hardwick ' s wealthy cousin, a dashing young widow, with the intention of using her influence with Von Hardwick to accomplish his purpose. At this critical time, Grimm defeats the Burgomaster ' s design, persuading Beatrice, the ward of Von Hardwick, to go and see the wonders of America. The Pilgrims at last sail under exciting condi- tions in which Grimm slips from the grasp of the Burgomaster, and Von Hardwick finds himself in jail, a victim of circumstances. Olga, the winsome ward of Elfrida, becomes involved in the love affairs of Beatrice, whose hand is sought by Raymond Fletcher, Grimm ' s nephew, and by Styles Mandish, the Pilgrim captain. Through Grimm ' s assistance, Olga finally wins her adorable Styles. By a rather ingenious method, Grimm extricates Von Hardwick from jail and follows him to America. Here, disguised as an Indian soothsayer, Grimm raises havoc with the Pilgrims and eventually discovers that Raymond is none other than John Alden. John then speaks for himself, and takes Beatrice for his wife after she is identi- fied as Priscilla Molines. 311 a M O o w H Ki W O to a! o « (Clrtjcutlj jamuial Ccdj Ijolu. 1000 • ' l)at pill (Brimm By SYDNEY ARNOLD MALCOM, 1909 sr uB tc bp Orville Boardman Denison, 1911 William Duncan Green, 1909 Carleton Waterbury Hubbard, 1909 Joseph Leslie Champagne, 1912 Albert James McDonald, 1912 Henry Appleton Hale, Jr. Joseph Cheever Fuller, 1911 Edward Demming Van Tassel, Jr., 1911 Charles Lawton Tuller, 1912 Jtprics h}} Sydney Arnold Malcom, 1909 Dudley Clapp, 1910 Edwin Crawford Vose, 1911 ElUot Quincy Adams, 1909 Charles Bowen Busey, 1912 David Fry Benbow, 1912 Dietrich von Hardwick James Irving Finnic, 1909 George Washington Grimm Sydney Arnold Malcom, 1909 Coffee Flotsam Raynor Huntington Allen, 1909 Jan Oilers, The Burgomaster Clyde Raymond Perry, 1911 John Bilhngton Chfton Hackett White, 1909 Styles Mandish Kenneth Winslow Faunce, 1911 Count A. Counter Walter Morley Ruby, 1912 Phillip Harry Lucas Havens, 1909 Raymond Fletcher Joseph Leslie Champagne, 1912 Elder Brewster Edward Irving Williams, 1908 Mrs. John Billington John Joseph Higgins, 1910 Long Boy Linzee Sewall Hooper, 1912 Elfrida Charles Josiah Belden, 1909 Beatrice Richard Clark Jacobs, Jr., 1910 Mrs. White Carleton Waterbury Hubbard, 1909 Olga Arthur Campbell, 1912 William Bradford Harry Harding Catching, 1911 John Billington, Jr George Barr Curwen, 1911 Massasoit Harold Eric Kebbon, 1912 313 DANCING GIRLS, OVER THE GARDEN WALL FEMALE CHORUS, OVER THE GARDEN WALL 19 10 TECH SHOW, 1909 315 Stacy C. Bates, 1911 William C. Bird, 1912 Leslie B. Duke, 1912 Andrew L. Fabens, 1910 Harold G. Jenks, 1911 Willson Y. Stamper, Jr., 1911 Edwin 0. Upham, 1912 John E. Whittlesey, 1912 Chorus Donald E. Bent, 1912 Charles H. Carpenter, 1912 Chester D. Dunlap, 1910 William S. Gordon, Jr., 1909 Francis A. Moore, 1911 Clarence A. Stewart, 1912 George S. Watson, 1910 Edward D. Van Tassel, Jr., 1911 (0irl6 John E. Barnard, 1910 John A. Bigelow, 1911 Randall Cremer, 1912 Frederick H. Dierks, 1912 Rudolph H. Fox, 1912 Marcus A. Grossmann, 1911 Harold H. Griffin, 1912 John A. Holbrook, 1910 John M. Hargrave, 1912 Albert J. McDonald, 1912 Ralph A. D. Preston, 1910 Walter P. Welch, 1911 Kester Barr, 1911 Herbert S. Cleverdon, 1910 Orville B. Denison, 1911 David Follet, Jr., 1912 Leroy G. Fitzherbert, 1911 Seymour A. Guthrie, 1910 Louis R. Golden, 1911 Arthur L. Harding, 1910 Charles P. Kerr, 1911 Edward A. Nash, 1911 Raycroft Walsh, 1912 George E. Hodge, 1911 Edmund G. Brown, 1912 Edwin K. Jenckes, 1910 William C. West, 1911 U anctng: 0iv[s Joseph C. Fuller, 1911 Thurston C. Merriman, 1909 Roy P. Williams, 1911 is, H Q oi o (I)  H PS O en -i ■«! a, u p u : H |I4 Ccclinolog); € nh of fic }} f orh Citji CHARLES R. RICHARDS, 1885, President WILLIAM H. KING, 1894, Secretary JAMES E. BARLOW, 1905, Treasurer Cccljnologji Club of vCoimccticut Dallcp Executive Committee EDMUND P. MARSH, 1889, Chairman CLARENCE WHITNEY, 1891 S. ELLSWORTH HORTON, 1890 Ccclinoiogji Cluti of hilaDciplna JERE R. DANIELL, 1897, President FRANK B. KEISKER, 1897, Vice-President PERCY E. TILLSON, 1906, Secretary-Treasurer Cccl)noiog)i Cluti of pttt burg LUTHER K. YODER, 1895, President SUMNER B, ELY, 1892, Vice-President WALDSO TURNER, 1905, Secretary-Treasurer Ccclinologji Club of asbuigton, S .C MARSHALL 0. LEIGHTON, 1896, Pres. FREDERICK W. SWANTON, 1890, Vice-Pres. ARTHUR C. WILLARD, 1904, Secretary FRANCIS F. LONGLEY, 1904, Treasurer Ccfbnologn Club of Cincinnati RUDOLPH TIETIZ, 1898, President STEPHEN H. WILDER, 1874, Vice-President HENRY C. SCHAEFER, 1905, Secretary WILLIAM E. BROTHERTON, 1873, Treasurer 317 318 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV Cccf)noiogp € uh of ;f¥lcrrimac Ballcp RICHARD A. HALE, 1877, President EDWARD B. CARNEY, 1893, Vice-President JOHN A. COLLINS, Jr., 1897, Secretary WILLIAM O. HILDRETH, 1887, Treasurer Ccd nologp Club of -Buffalo HENRY A. BOYD, 1879, Secretary-Treasurer Executive Committee The SECRETARY-TREASURER MAURICE B. PATCH, 1872 LORING DANFORTH, 1910 GEORGE A. RICKER, 1886 WARREN W. SANDERS, 1900 OTccljnoiogp € uh of iliftotic -J lanti FREDERICK H. HOWLAND, 1893, President KENNETH F. WOOD, 1894, Vice-President JOHN O. AMES, 1893, Secretary-Treasurer Executive Committee The PRESIDENT VICE-PRESIDENT SECRETARY-TREASURER JAMES G. WOOLWORTH, 1878 ELEAZER B. HOMER, 1885 OTcdjn ologp € uh of | cUj 23ctiforti EDGAR B. HAMMOND, 1874, President CHARLES F. WING, 1898, Secretary-Treasurer Executive Committee The PRESIDENT SECRETARY-TREASURER CHAUNCEY G. WHITON, 1895 Ccc noJogp €lut) of t crmont CHARLES P. MOAT, 1896, President ERNEST C. BRYANT, 1893, Vice-President ELBRIDGE C. JACOBS, 1897, Secretary-Treasurer Executive Committee The PRESIDENT VICE-PRESIDENT SECRETARY-TREASURER H. W. CLEMENT, 1890 €ccl)nologp € nh of l artforti CLARENCE E. WHITNEY, 1891, President CHARLES R. NASON, 1890, Vice-President GEORGE W. BAKER, 1892, Secretary-Treasurer Board of Governors The PRESIDENT VICE-PRESIDENT SECRETARY-TREASURER HOWARD H. BURDICK, 1897 EDMUND P. MARSH, 1889 €ccl)noiogp Club of J imtcBota HARRY W. JONES, 1882, President HENRY YOERG, 1895, Vice-President JACOB STONE, Jr., 1899, Secretary JESSE SHUMAN, 1897, Treasurer 1910 ALUMNI ASSOCIATIONS 319 Zfdinologn Club of rif )clanD FRANKLIN B. RICHARDS, 1884, President ROBERT B. WALLACE, 1899, Vice-President SIDNEY Y. BALL, 1903, Secretary portlitucBtcrn 3llumm .Association Vl. -3. Z. JOHN L. SHORTALL, 1888, Preside nt RICHARD E. SCHMIDT, 1887, Vice-President ERNEST WOODYATT, 1897, Secretary-Treasurer Executive Committee The PRESIDENT VICE-PRESIDENT SECRETARY F. K. COPELAND, 1879 SAMUEL D. FLOOD, 1890 EDWARD M. HAGAR, 1893 MORTIMER FRANK, 1897 Cftinologp €inh of the tioch]} i lountains FRANK E. SHEPARD, 1887, President THEODORE E. SCHWARZ, 1876, Vice-President MAURICE B, BISCOE, 1893, Secretary JOSEPH Y. PARCE, Jr., 1893, Treasurer •Tcchnologp Ciub of portftcrn California CHARLES G. HYDE, 1896, President HOWARD C. BLAKE, 1906, Secretary-Treasurer Executive Committee The PRESIDENT SECRETARY-TREASURER WILLIAM E. LELAND, 1891 EARNEST A. HERSAM, 1891 OSCAR C. MERRILL, 1905 €ccljnolo0p €iu y of Central j cUj Ifork WALTER E. HOPTON, 1891, President Cccl)nologp Club of tUc :f outlj ALLISON OWEN, 1894, President WALTER G. ZIMMERMAN, 1898, Vice-President FRANK W. CROSBY, 1892, Secretary-Treasurer iTcfljnologn Club of 3lnnapolis CHARLES H. STRATTON, 1900, Secretary Ccclinologp Club of :5 outl)crn California WILLIS T. KNOWLTON, 1893, President JAMES W. JOHNSON, 1882, Vice President ARTHUR B. WHITE, 1900, Secretary-Treasurer 5nlanD 6mpirc SBoriation of JH. 5 ♦ 2r. JAMES E. GRIFFIN, 1906, Secretary Vice-President FRANK H. RAND President JAMES F. NORRIS Secretary ROBERT S. WILLIAMS Treasurer AUGUSTUS H. GILL Librarian HENRY D. JACKSON €rccutitac Committee JAMES F. NORRIS FRANK H. RAND AUGUSTUS H. GILL ROBERT S. WILLIAMS ALLYNE L. MERRILL FREDERICK S. WOODS HOWARD L. COBURN FREDERICK R. KNEELAND l ou0C Committee HOWARD L. COBURN, Chairman FREDERICK R. KNEELAND CHARLES-EDWARD A. WINSLOW ;|Hemtjersl3ip Committee FREDERICK S. WOODS, Chairman ALLYNE L. MERRILL ARTHUR T. BRADLEE Comicii (Elected to serve three years) Elected in 1906 HOWARD L. COBURN ANDREW D. FULLER WILLIAM E. MOTT WALTER E. PIPER Elected in 1907 HENRY A. MORSS WILLIAM W. CROSBY JOHN O. DeWOLF FRANK G. STANTIAL ROBERT S. WESTON HARRY W. TYLER HENRY FAY Elected in 1908 SETH K. HUMPHREY FREDERICK R. KNEELAND JOSEPH H. KNIGHT 320 ALUMNIB. ASSOCIATION r ymii( OfficcrjS JOHN 0. President EDWIN S. WEBSTER, 1888 (term expires in 1909) Vice-Presidents ALBERT F. BEMIS, 1893 (term expires in 1909) FRANK E. SHEPARD, 1887 (term expires in 1910) Secretary WALTER HUMPHREYS, 1897 (term expires in 19091 c rccuti jc Commtttcc The PRESIDENT, VICE-PRESIDENT, and SECRETARY HOWARD L. COBURN, 1887 (term expires in 1909) W. SPENCER HUTCHINSON, 1892 (term expires in 1909) WILLIAM S. JOHNSON, 1889 (term expires in 1910) CHARLES F. PARK, 1892 ( term expires in 1910) |!)ominating aTommittcc CHARLES T. MAIN, 1876 (term expires in 1909) ALLYNE L. MERRILL, 1885 (term expires in 1909) ANDREW D. FULLER, 1895 (term expires in 1909) HARRY W. TYLER, 1884 term expires in 1910) EDWARD H. HUXLEY, 1895 (term expires in 1910) FREDERICK H. HUNTER, 1902 (term expires in 1910) Alumni Committee on .$ fIiool DeWOLFE, 1890 term expires in 1909) HENRY SOUTHER, 1887 (term expires in 1910) LINWOOD O. TOWNE, 1878 (term expires in 1911) 321 322 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV Crustcc of 3llumni jfunD and of tiyc itifc ;fttcmbcr.s1)t)3 j-unti FRANK L. FULLER, 1871 (term expires in 1910) EDWIN C. MILLER, 1879 (term expires in 1912) JAMES P. MUNROE, 1882 (term expires in 1914) Dijisorp Council on tl)lctics JOHN L. BATCHELDER, Jr., 1890 (term expires in 1909) J. ARNOLD ROCKWELL, 1896 (term expires in 1910) FRANK H. BRIGGS, 1881 (term expires in 1911) trustee of tiyc William •;23arton ilogcrs :f cl)olars1jip j-iuiD ROBERT H. RICHARDS, 1868 Walktv j¥lcmortal aTommittcc HARRY W. TYLER, 1884, Chairman CHARLES M. BAKER, 1878, Treasurer CHARLES-EDWARD A. WINSLOW, 1898, Secretary ROBERT H. RICHARDS, 1868 THOMAS HIBBARD, 1875 EVERETT MORSS, 1885 WILLIAM B. THURBER, 1889 JOHN L. BATCHELDER, Jr., 1890 ALBERT F. BEMIS, 1893 €tm m hcx$ of the Corporation Term expires March, 1910 FREDERICK K. COPELAND JOSEPH P. GRAY FRANK L. LOCKE Term expires March, 1911 T. COLEMAN DUPONT CHARLES T. MAIN FREDERICK W. WOOD Term expires March, 1912 GEORGE W. KITTREDGE FRANK G. STANTIAL GEORGE E. HALE Term expires March, 1913 JAMES W. ROLLINS, Jr. EVERETT MORSS ARTHUR T. BRADLEE Nominated for the term that expires March, 1914 WALTER B. SNOW CHARLES R. RICHARDS THEODORE W. ROBINSON HOLLIS FRENCH GEORGE C. WHIPPLE ClasjS SDap program President ' s Address and Unveiling of Frieze HARRY ANDREW RAPELYE First Marshal ' s Address HERBERT THURSTON GERRISH Statistics and History KURT VONNEGUT Class Prophecy BASIL LOVIBOND GIMSON Presentation Oration FRANCIS HARRINGTON McGUIGAN Oration JOSEPH OILMAN REID Presentation of Class Gift GEORGE THUMMEL GLOVER Ciasje SDap vOfficcr? President HARRY ANDREW RAPELYE First Marshal HERBERT THURSTON GERRISH Second Marshal CLIFFORD HALL BOYLSTON Third Marshal FRANCIS HARRINGTON McGUIGAN HORACE ETHAN ALLEN BERNARD SHEPARD LESLIE MAURICE EVERETT ALLEN THOMAS WHITLEY ORR HENRY WASHINGTON BLACKBURN HAROLD SMITH OSBORNE LANGDON COFFIN WILLIAM JOSEPH PIERCE SAMUEL HARRIES DADDOW JOSEPH POPE RAYMOND EDWARD DRAKE JOSEPH OILMAN REID LESLIE BURTON ELLIS LEAVITT WEARE THURLOW WINTHROP DREW FORD JOHN THEODORE TOBIN CHARLES ALPHONSUS GIBBONS, Jr. KURT VONNEGUT GEORGE THUMMEL GLOVER HARRY WEBB LAFAYETTE BOYD HEDGE EDGAR IRVING WILLIAMS 325 RFIDUflTIONWCeK JE.B J: :r r..,:,r r . . . 7:..-.. ..-„-Tr?r-.r7:7r..r - . . r - ' .. , ; IV . ' J. I ..•■.■■ rr r ' r- T ■. ■-,v.. TT 7-rn rart .- Tr ....a . .. ■ T T:--r - V i { Thursday, June 4 SENIOR CLASS DINNER American House, 6.30 p.m. Saturday, June 8 CONCERT TO SENIOR CLASS BY THE MUSICAL CLUBS Huntington Hall, 8 p.m. Sunday, June 7 BACCALAUREATE SERMON BY REV. GEORGE HODGES Trinity Church, 4 p.m. Monday, June 8 INFORMAL RECEPTION OF SENIORS BY FACULTY Individual Offices, 10 a.m. CLASS DAY EXERCISES CLASS SPREAD SENIOR DANCE Huntington Hall, 2 p.m. On the Lawn, 4 p.m. Copley Hall, 8.30 p.m. Tuesday, June 9 GRADUATION EXERCISES AND CONFERRING OF DEGREES Huntington Hall, 2 p.m. PRESIDENT ' S RECEPTION TO GRADUATING CLASS General Library, 4 p.m. TECH NIGHT AT THE POPS ' 326 Symphony Hall, 8 p.m. Cljr Rummer djool of Jlntiustnal C|)cmt6tii) On June 10, 1908, a party of twenty-one men, composing the Summer School of Industrial Chemistry, left Boston for Fall River en route to New York. Dr. Talbot and Dr. Thorp acted as guides and conducted the conferences which were held every evening for the two and a half weeks. The party arrived in New York the morning of June 11, and pro- ceeded directly to Passaic, N.J., to visit the Manhattan Rubber Manu- facturing Company. The various processes in the manufacture of rubber were here demonstrated in detail. The afternoon was em- ployed by making an interesting trip through the Colgate Company ' s plant, studying the manufacture of soap. The next morning was spent in the refinery of the Tidewater Oil Company, inspecting the entire process of oil refining as it is practised by the Standard Oil Company. The Murphy Varnish Works at Newark were visited in the afternoon, and also a sulphuric acid plant and a copper refinery. Both were very interesting and in- structive. Tuesday, June 16, saw the party in Phillipsburg, N.J., for a visit to the J. T. Baker Company, where C.P. chemicals are made. In the afternoon a large steel works was visited, and here was witnessed the magnificent spectacle produced by the pouring of one of the 327 328 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV big blast furnaces, from whence came fifty tons of molten iron. Later they followed the manufac- ture of several thirteen-inch guns for the United States Navy. The night was spent at AUentown. The party left AUentown June 18, and after a day ' s journey arrived at Kane, Pa. Here they visited several glass establishments, and saw a machine making milk bottles of all shapes and sizes. Plate and window glass were also made by a very interesting process. Saturday, June 20, was spent at Bradford, Pa., in an oxalic acid plant. The next stop was at Franklin, Pa., where the time was spent at an oil refinery and at a window glass plant, where the glass was made by machinery rather than human lung power. Monday evening the party arrived in Pittsburg. Heinz ' s Pickle Works was the first place visited here. Later several of the big steel works were inspected and also the plant of the Macbeth-Evans Glass Company, where the ' Macbeth Non-breakable lamp chimneys are made. The party disbanded in Pitts- burg on Saturday, June 27, after the most delightful and instructive trip ever undertaken by the Indus- trial Chemical Summer School. T r r The Presidents ' ■- = « I .T ■ - - TdSJfc , . ,■ ' : .T I, Rogers Building Walker BuUding Bust of William Rogers President ' s Office Rogers Corridor Registrar ' s Office Huntington Hall JO □ li ' General Library Engineering Library Architectural Library Industrial Library Mathematics Library Physics Library Economics Library Mining Library Third Year Mechanical Engineering Drawing A Class in Architecture Second Year Mechanical Engineering Drawing A Free Hand Drawing Room An Architectural Drawing Room Corner of Architectural Studio Architectural Lecture Room An Architectural Modeling Room Physics Laboratory, looking North Dark Room, Physics Department Physics Laboratory Apparatus General Heat Laboratory Physics Laboratory, looking South Optical Apparatus, Physics Department Spectrometers, Physics Department Laboratory of Physical Chemistry Blast Furnace, Mining Laboratory Instruments, Naval Architectural Department Model Shop, Naval Architectural Department Marine Engineering Drawing Room Arc Light Photometer, Electrical Laboratory Marble Top Drawing Tables A Drawing Room, Naval Architectural Department Stability Experiments, Marine Engineering Mineralogical Laboratory, Geology Laboratory of Textile Coloring Laboratory of Inorganic Chemistry Model Indigo Plantation, Chemistry Department Cotton Carder, Mechanical Engineering Labcratory of Industrial Chemistry Electro Chemical Laboratory Repair Shop of Research Laboratory W4 M, . .- Otto Gas Engine, Mechanical Engineering Dynamo Room, Physics Department Balance Room, Physics Department Westinghouse Engine and Countershafting Twenty Three Walker Alternating Current Analyzer Railroad Motors, Electrical Department Electrical Testing Laboratory Induction Motors, Electrical Engineering Lecture Room, 6 Lowell Electrical Engineering Laboratory Railroad Signal Apparatus Electrical Engineering Laboratory Russel Cross Compound, and Generator A ' Switchboard, Electrical Laboratory Furnaces and Boilers in Power Plant Electrical Furnaces, Mining Laboratory Whiffle Table, Mining Laboratory Judsen Muffle Furnaces, Mining Laboratory Ore Samples, Assaying Department Concentrator, Mining Laboratory Stamp Battery and Frue Vanner, Mining Crucible Furnaces, Mining Laboratory Cyanide-Zinc Precipitation Apparatus, Mining Mechanical Engineering Laboratory Governors, Mechanical Engineering Laboratory Olson Testing Machines, Applied Mechanics A Corner of the Hydraulic Laboratory Cotton Machinery, Mechanical Engineering AUis Engine, Mechanical Engineering Laboratory 100,000 Pound Testing Machine, Applied Mechanics 300,000 Pound Emery Testing Machine, Applied Mechanics ■ iriif. ■% CfS ' 1 : YES INDEED In 11 English B, Molly Pearson is laboriously instilling the merits of Hamlet, Prince of Denmark, into an unreceptive class. The door is cautiously opened, and an exceedingly nondescript specimen of an expressman glances anxiously in, looks up at the ceiling, then carefully around the four walls. Finally his eye settles on Molly, and he explosively demands, Say, have you got a trunk and a gas tank in here? OH, YOU KID Mr. Blackstein (at Show dinner, to Dick Jacobs dressed as a girli exquisitely perfumed this evening, Mr. Jacobs. Jacobs, 1910: Very alluring, no? Blachie: Fortunately I am an old married gentleman. You are WOOOOF Miller (in steam lecture) : Well, we certainly had a hard time saving the engine: she got away from us, and we only had a wrench to shut off steam with. In the shuffle, however, it got lost. Ruckman, 1910: Gee whiz! why didn ' t you grab hold of the governor? Prof. Talbot: Under what combination is gold released most quickly? Freshman: Marriage. G ' WAN Pearl, 1910: Once I got a dollar a word. Freshman: Quit your kidding. Pearl: Fact, for talking back to a judge. ABSENT MINDED Millard, 1909: Why weren ' t you over to recitations today, Marc? Marc Cole, 1909: There, I knew I ' d forgotten some- thing. LONESOME? Friend: When they take the co-eds away from the Institute, what will follow? Huckins, 1910: I will. 344 Kyle, ig09 giving instructions to Glee Club) : Stand up straight, throw your weight on the balls of your feet and be ready for anything that comes up. NOT IN THE GAME AT ALL They say that when Getty wrote his Applied Mechanics only he and the Lord knew what he was driving at, but when he started his Notes on the Theory of Elasticity the Lord dropped out. OUR DEMOSTHENES Prof. Mott: Mr. X, won ' t you prove that proposi- sition for us? Mr. X : Can ' t do it. Ball, 1909 (to man next to him): Huh, that guy ' s a dub. If Mott had called on me, I ' d have walked all over it. Prof. Mott: Mr. Ball, won ' t you try it? Ball: Er-er, not prepared. E lit. ' a m p=o X ' Prof. Cross: You might consult Prof. Norton in regard to this, although I have no reason to suppose that Prof. Norton knows anything. A G?£SU?[pr TECI-IHicAl 3TSVDZ T5 BORN THAT WAY Seeley, 1910: Say, Sneddon, why don ' t you talk so you won ' t break a fellow ' s ear-drums? Sneddon, 1910: Well, what d ' ye think? I ' m Scotch, and besides I was born in a boiler-shop! 345 FV ' 6 r v, ' stm m STILL YET Carl Gram, 1909 (waking up in Harrison Smith ' s D.E.M. lecture) : Good Lord! is he talking yet? Scheuer, 1910 (holding forth at the Union): Variety is the spice of life. I have been smoking three weeks, and have thirty pipes and 500 cigarettes. Too bad for the tobacco trust that he doesn ' t chew also. Barkeep : Wot ' ll yeh have? Stoodent Bunny Harrison: Got any cham- pagne on ice? Barkeep: Sure! S. B. H. : Gimme a nickle ' s worth of ice. ONE ON TALBOT Henry P. (at Chemical dinner): Such an analysis would not be worth a d anything. (Giggles from the Acid Jugglers.) Well, hereafter I ' ll know where to go for a word when I get stuck. t Allen, 1909 (to the star-gazer on the Common) : Say, old man, is Venus naked to the visible eye? Prof. Tyler: Mr. Avery, what is a radius vector? Avery, 1910: It is the force which pulls the velocity around a curve. Jim Francis made a call for Long Boy, the town crier, in That Pill Grimm. H. E. Kebbon, one of the wonders of 1912, who is 6 feet 3 inches in height, applied. Welcome to our city, it ' s a long drink for a nickel, said Jim. Just at this moment Lengthy Steve Hooper appeared upon the horizon. Lengthy for height puts Harold Eric in the tall timber by at least 3 inches. Jim was resuscitated after strenuous effort by the stage man- agement. SOME OF HIS OWN MEDICINE Mr. Gideon, he of the St. Vitus dance proclivities, dropped into the Military Science exam, last midyear ' s about a half hour after it had started. The Proctor sized him up a moment, then said, Well, you ' re pretty late, but here ' s a paper: now get to work. 346 U OSiallM TIGHT Professor Schwamb in Machine Design: Gentlemen, you should always see to it that the workmen do not get the bolts too tight. GRAVITATIVE Dr. Kalmus i in physics recitation after de Florez falls out of his chair the day after a Round Table banquet ) : What ' s the cause of this disturbance, Mr. de Florez? de Florez (now quite awake): Oh, nothing. The force of gravity just overcame me, that ' s all. TOO FAR BACK Heinie Hofman: Mr. Arnold, what is an alloy? Arnold, 1910: That subject is discussed in Chemistry, sir. Maxfield, 1910: ' If a man hires a horse and carriage and has a breakdown on the road, is he held responsible for the damage? Prof. Albers: It depends on whether he was tending to the horse or to some- thing else. Prof. Winslow: bottle, Mr. Salmon. O e. of t ie rieW SHURE, AND AIN ' T THIM THE FOINE NAMES Harrington, 1911 (telling a story in German colloquium): Zwe ' Irlander, Hans und Fritz — Prof. Breed (in a R.R. recitation): Now Schmythe, which curve would you rather walk over? Schmythe points to longer curve. Prof. Breed: Of course I mean when you are all alone, Schmythe. NAUGHTY, NAUGHTY GEORGE Ask Mr. Swett what kind of a tine he had in Paris, France, last summer Everybody ' s loved by some ons Please pass the 347 c ' - Through the failure of a well-known publishing house we have on our hands the entire unsold editions of some very desirable works. A list of those we especially recommend is given below. THE MECHANICAL GRAFTSMAN Issued in new form and now being completed in its 1913th edition. The object of this exquisite volume is to further the social and political conditions of the Editor. It deals with such important questions as the remedy for a broken pencil, what to do in case a thumb tack doesn ' t thumb, etc. Address, C. Adams, care of A. D. Maclachlan POEMS OF PASSION AND LOVELY LYRICS By Sister Pearson Address, Boylston Street THE LIGHTED LAMP An unusual and significant piece of fiction. By H. G. Reynolds Address, Library THE SIMPLE LIFE, or HOW TO LIVE ON ONE MOXIE A DAY A dramatic story of intense interest to all W.C.T.U. enthusiasts. By Wineand Whisky King ALL THE REAL HEROES OF LATE YEARS Being an account of the has-been Politicians. Here they seem actually to live again and play their parts in the drama of demoralization. Gotten up in dainty little volumes, a separate volume for each and every Hero. Order by number. 1 Harold Lockett 3 Hells Afire Rapelye 5 Alonzo Lemuel Moses 2 Julius Caesar 4 George Alvin Cowee 6 Carl William Gram 7 Louis Griffin Rowe HOW I BECAME A GRAFTER, or POLITICS IS HELL An expose of the inner workings of the most famous system the country has ever known. By Fine Dope Stewart Address, Care of Huntington Hall THE LIGHT THAT FAILED, or FLUNKED BY FATE A pathetic story of a Wayward Son ' s return, volumes on sale. By Red Hot Allen 348 Only a limited number of . r ' S K CORRUPT AND CONTENTED A Tale of the Class of 1909 For sale everywhere, and on news stands. A TALE OF THE TAGS I WEAR, or WHAT HONORS MEAN TO A SOLDIER Touching little thing. Published by Wheeler, Rowe Co. THE MAN WITH THE MAIDEN BEARD, or FIVE THOUSAND YEARS WITHOUT A SHAVE A life history by one who knows. Drisko Co., Publishers HOW IT FEELS TO BE A GERM A most sanitary little book that ought to be on every washstand. Published by Sedgwick Co. ■■i . ' u : LETTERS OF A SELF-MADE CO-ED TO HER CHUM Comment unnecessary. CHESTNUTS I HAVE KNOWN, or WHY DO THEY PICK ON CHARLEY? A complete compilation of all the warmed-over, hashed-brown, moth- eaten, bewhiskered bits of jocundity that have appeared regularly in Technique. One thousand, two hundred and thirty-eight pages of ;finely printed matter. Very interesting. For sale by the Bursar f HOW TO SPEAK IN PUBLIC, or A MOUTHFUL OF MUSH By C. Turner, our prize orator from the country. PINCHED BY FATE, or UP AGAINST THE JUNK A novelette of the adventures of an innocent and unwary one. By R. Hastings I STOOD ON THE BRIDGE AT MIDNIGHT, or STALLED ON THE WAY HOME FROM CHARLEY ' S By Marcus Colus We have a large assortment of other pleasing works, among which may be mentioned : THE PRIDE OF HIS PREP. SCHOOL By Jerome Scheuer WHY I AM A SOCIAL LION By B. Jones ME AND TECH By Jimmy Critchett put). 349 In this case, gentlemen, you will notice that the maxi- mum bending moment comes at the waist line, the shear- ing force being equal to zero at this point. The slope here varies considerably, changing at times from a negative quantity to zero and then to a maximum of 90 degrees. The deflection is very great, as equilibrium is main- tained with difficulty owing to the unstable nature of the material used. Although the sectional modulus here is not great, the radius of gyration becomes nearly infinity under the peculiar conditions of the problem. I would suggest, gentlemen, that you visit the Dreyfus building where many excellent illustrations of this problem may be observed. jjI± !:Lirf:l . z j LlL ccf-e. - x ' - ' .ir ' ' Abused Soph.: What do you know about this? I ' m supposed to prove that three times this bunch of Greek is equal to two times this other bunch of Greek. A PRAYER Myself, when young, did eagerly frequent Applied and Heat, and heard great argument About the stuff, but e ' en Came out less wise than when therein I went. thou, who didst with plane and polygon Beset th ' exam. I was to ponder on, O do not score with crosses all about My paper, when it hence to thee has gone. THE RIGHT IDEA Fitzwater, 1910 (to Terry, studying for a Pol Econ exam.) : What do you know, Terry? Terry, 1910: Trying to find out. INTELLIGENCE de- Human Scream Pardee, 1909 : friction slide the span off the piers? 350 Prof. Hayward : This bridge is signed to withstand a wind pressure — Human Scream Pardee, 1909: Yes, and when the wind dies down — Prof. Hayward : There is enough friction between this bridge span and the piers to take care of any wind pressures that may be present. Yes, but when the wind dies down, won ' t the ' srVi Dike (to Freshman I : Translate ' Occident. ' Freshman: East. Dike: Are you Oriental or Occidental? Voice in rear of room : Neither, he ' s acci- dental. ON APPROVAL Freshman Bent goes to Passano ' s Math class, not belonging there. Passano: What are you doing here? Bent: I just wanted to see what kind of a professor you were. EVIDENT Prof. Doten (calling roll) : I am stuck on this last name. Vahan Pilibbos Yacoubyan, 1910: Here. Prof. Norton : I don ' t know how you arrived at your results in these problems, gentlemen, but believe me it was the most inspired work I ' ve seen for some time. 7i« - ' ' ■P H QUIT YOUR KIDDING Ball, 1909 I describing the three stage air compressor ) : The three stage air compressor has three stages of com- pression which the air passes through on the way through. Hot Wire (in D.E.M.): I short circuited the current. My fingers must have been wet. Stephenson, 1909: He is dry enough otherwise. Bat Nelson in Chemistry exam. : ... for further detailed description and sketch of blast furnace, see Remsen, page 622. DEWEY DOES KNOW Prof. Dewey i speaking on price ) : All articles have customary prices. My experience has been that, for instance, beer is five cents per. rL.-C h. i--,oES-ONE CE: T BRYAN SAYS ' ' Profr Tyler Has Sold H ead Declare He Got $10,000 He Smiles and Re- fuses to Talk •-? 351 fr ' ' % WK V ' -Ariif! ■ .« Board n. — There are many kinds of Boards, Y.M.C.A. Boards, Athletic Boards, Tech Boards, Faculty Boards and Technique Boards. It is most unpleasant to be a Board. Boards are made to be walked over. When one is part of a Board, one is likely to be wholly bored. We wish Boardom could be abolished. Bootlick n. — To favor, to slop over, — for some, to act natural. Bursar n. — A sort of wringer patented by the corporation of the Massachu- setts Institute of Technology, and used by them with marked results. Anything that is round and smooth on top. Chemistry n. — A science that entitles one to be scolded an hour three times a week. Dub n. — One akin to a prune, — - a dead one, one who is lonesome. Flunk, v.t. — To bust, to break, to dissolve or terminate, to divide with violence. Freshman n. — From fresh, meaning in the raw state, and man, meaning one. One in the raw state. Grind n. — A joke, anything which causes the emission of a chuckle. Greasy Grind n. — A joke, anything which causes the emission of a chuckle. Pipe n. — Something easy, i.e. Bennie Carter. Professor n. — From prof, meaning bug, and essor, meaning to sting. Hence, a bug that stings. Prune n. — A person having the inherent qualities of that fruit. Queen n. — A peach, member of the weaker sex, seen frequently on Boylston Street. Report n. — A loud noise having a frequency of six times annually. A rumor, hence fame, reputation. Slum n. — Food, commonly found at the Union. Tight a. — An adjective applied to frequenters of emporiums for the distribution of fire-water. Union n. — A joint; also a place for the dispensation of eatables and tobacco Hence the expression, In Union there is strength. Wooden a. — Applied to those whose seat of intellect is made of wood. Many of thi s type may be found in Course VI. 352 Amummm DISCOVERED Swett ( on his return from Gay Paree i : Yes, everything was perfectly good over there every- thing except the prisons. They were fierce not any- thing like the places to which I was accustomed. It takes more than a dentist to kill some people ' s nerve. Prof. Wilson (in 22 Rogers): I don ' t know whether you gentlemen prefer cold air or bad air. It doesn ' t make much difference. (Closes window.) (We ' ll have a little bad air for a change. Ruckman had been doing some free-hand sketch- ing of machine parts in the engineering laboratory, and had incidentally transferred considerable grease to his paper. Cowdrey: Do you call those sketches, Mr. Ruckman ? Ruckman, 1910: No, sir. I have the sketch- ing all done — these are oil paintings. About Time to C ?AnqG t re Course. I hear a hollow sound, who rapped yon E. Q. ' s skull? 353 Altamirano, 1909: I say, damn rheostat, it is no good. Mr. Thomas: The rheostat is all right if you know how to use it. Prof. Sedgwick (in general Biology lecture): If a chemist gets a substance to analyze, — and if he has had Prof. Winslow ' s course in Microscopy, — the first thing he does is to go to pieces. Prof. Riley (in Thermo): When the piston is down there is nothing under it, and when it is up there is a vacuum under it. MAC ON THE JOB D. C. McMurtrie (hurriedly assigning work to the candidates for the assistant managership of the Track Team): Oh, are you out for the managership? Mere Freshman: Yes, lam. D. C. McMurtrie: Well, then, lend me a pencil, and be damn quick about it too. Give me a sleek, fat-headed man, methinks yon F. Archibald Dewey will fill the bill. 354 MOLLY PEARSON (BEFORE AND AFTER) BEFORE ( MOLL TO HIS FUTURE ) Meet me, dear, on Saturday, A little after two. We ' ll go out on the river in A little cute canoe; Or else we ' ll go and loop the loop Or walk the avenue. I ' ll go wherever you want to go, On Saturday, after two. AFTER (WIFEY TO MOLL ) Meet me, dear, on Saturday, A little after two. Johnny ' s needing some trousers, and The baby wants a shoe ; We ' ve got to have some flour and coal, A gingham dress for Sue. I won ' t do a thing to your salary, Moll, On Saturday, after two. Mr. Thomas, this ' PEABO, AS HE LOOKS TO A COURSE n MAN Art. Lunn and Billy Schofield, alias A. Bunn and Bill Schooner, were at the Draper Hotel, Northampton, the night of the Show ' s performance there last spring. A. Bunn called up a Smith girl friend, and the following conversation took place: Smith girl: Why, how do you do? Can ' t you come and see me tomorrow? By the way, where are you now? A. Bunn (a trifle fussed) : Oh, I ' m at the Dreyfus. Burrie: Mr. Hooper, where are your thumb tacks? Hooper, 1912 t blushingi: I ' m using them for garters, sir. THE SIMPLE LIFE PERSONIFIED Our dear Bursar turns milkmaid. (In passing we might observe that the above-mentioned gentleman seems to be still holding down his title as the Main Squeeze for Extraction.) VARIETY IS THE WORD Friend: Do you have much variety at the Union dining-room? Tech Stoode : Well, we have three different names for the meals. 355 r. W%. cS r% i tfiispeririGS 1 a 1 F Prof. Mott: Some engineers are a bit touchy about having their wheels tested. Bradley: Similarly — one inch on the scale represents twelve little feet or sixty little inches on the ground. If there is any one who thinks he understands and does not let him speak. Prof. Johnston : These loads will be 10,000, say, each. The circular seksun will be equal to 500 don ' t you see 3rds. The resultant defieksun is, say, one-tenth inches. The bending moment, is it not, is 2,500. Prof. Allen: Well, now, that ' s good practice, isn ' t it? That ' s right, isn ' t it? Well-er, now-ah, Mr. M , how about a switch? Frankie Laws: This lead is connected directly to one buth ' bar. Bennie Carter: Would — any one — like — to — see — me — work — this out? No? — Yes? Well — I — haven ' t — done — it — but — I — guess — I can — do — it — if — I — try. Prof. Clifford: Some ideas seem as distant as graduation. Prof. Wilson : I cannot understand the inability of some people to do a thing when they ' ve seen the thing done fifty times. Prof. George: Well, as that reads now, it ' s somethin ' awful. Of course nothin ' on the board is right. We don ' t know what ' s equal to somethin ' else — all you do is fill up space. Now as engin — prospective engineers — Getty: For a given stress — I mean for a given strain, no; for a given stress, ain ' t that so? See? Huh? Down here the same way, see? Guess I ' d better hop on that? Huh? But I must get to steel today — ain ' t that it? Lipke : Ver iss Billinks? . . . Veil I can ' t gif you der markings if you only come efery oder day. . . . Diss iss der dia-metre und von half of der dia-metre iss der radius und dere you are. Prof. Schwamb : Gentlemen, on the whole . . . now this is a tentative argument Prof. Despradelle: My dear, what is zis sort of sing? ... I would pass a piece of tracing paper over it und wipe zat out . . . precise a little more ... I woudn ' t do it zat way . . . Brown: Now, gentlemen, the circumscribing sense of line . . . Meade: Seems to be coming along all right . . . just keep on going . . . 356 (v- -- ? The Tech man is often made sore By professors of Math by the score. But the rockiest path For the student in Math Is to take Differentials with Moore. An Ode to Getty : He talked, Lord, how he talked. IN POL ECON MacMURTRIE STUDIES Prof. Doten (class half asleep) : I will now read the Constitution of the Female Garment Workers, and (signs of life in the class ) Shirt Waist Makers ' Union (class returns to its state of torpitudej. Scheuer says his father is a large steePmagnet. Hot Wire Smith: One word about the exam, gentlemen. (Keen attention from class — large expectation of a tip. ) Please write in ink or soft pencil. the Pfifer Smith, 1909 (in gas analysis, a senior subject): Say, Pardee, what deuce is meniscus? POSTED Doten (in Pol Econ): Now, perhaps the workman buys his beer so that he can obtain the free lunch. Ruckman, 1910: Not so! He can obtain the free lunch without purchasing the beer. H. Reynolds, 1910: He can like hell. It ' s a long lane that has no ash-barrel. Mr. Kneeland: Was this substance very soluble in water, Mr. Seligman? Seligman, 1911: Yes, Mr. Kneeland, the substance was very soluble, but it took a lot of water to dissolve it. GUESSED First Tech Stoode (at the Union): The hash isn ' t half bad today. Second Ditto: No, guess they forgot to put any meat in it. Mah name is Briah — Robut Samuel Briah! 357 IHt rR.ES) MAN5 OEMGHT ;i JS . ' 7 ' %. c , K ffi3Ki !iiE;| Cy:W E ?3I ' v--j;-j Cf?w: M ' ass.ooi K VSfi? c5=S ' 1 : f« September 30. October 10. October 20. November 6. November 17. November 25. November 30. December 3. December 11. December 19. December 24. January 6. January 15. January 25. February 10. February 20. March 6. March 10. March 13. March 25. April 1. April 6. April 17. Miss Eaton appears at the Bursar ' s window looking as sweet and irresistible as ever. Drisko appears with a hair cut — not feeling well. Saul didn ' t run for something. Charley Cross doesn ' t crack a joke — something loose somewhere. Pardee says something sensible. Course VI passes away. Mac appears in class without a loud necktie — class fails to recognize him. We, the head of Course II, appears with a crease in his trousers. Ransohoff doesn ' t ask a question for one whole minute in class. Heinie Hofman tells the Class of 1910 about the r-r-r-r-r- ever-r-r-r-ber-r-r-r-ator-r-r-r-y furnace. Sneddon speaks in a whisper. (Bad cold.) The Institute Corporation slips up somewhere and gives us a few days off. Redman doesn ' t have a grouch tied to him. Dike spoke to some one while passing on the street. (Report states that it was a co-ed.) Thode doesn ' t cuss for ten seconds in succession. Schofield wears a collar to class. (Hurray! this do be getting to be a sporty place. ) Pop Swain isn ' t sarcastic in class. Ray Allen takes in a Steam lecture. Doc Robinson cracks a smile right out loud. Hield is nearly pinched at the instigation of attorneys retained by J. Scheuer. He escapes with life, however. The shoe shining machine is in working order. Spring has came. Spin shows up with a new suit and a large roll. Scheuer discovers that he has been kidded again. Technique arrives. 358 AN EXAMPLE OF WHAT THE SHOW MANAGEMENT RUNS UP AGAINST THE SIX WIDOWERS We are six happy merry widowers, With such good luck, Each one loves a pretty girl, With merry widow hat. When we saw such big creation On their pretty head. And asked her what was the matter, This is what she said: Chorus: There was a young widow with the prettiest blush And she wanted to get a hat in great rush, and more just as excellent. PRECISELY Hastings, 1909 i eating breakfast at the Copley lunch I : Can I have some water, please? Waitress ito regions below): Say, down there, send up some water for the tank, Maclachlan Feb. 9, 1909): Prosperity has returned. Student overhearing): That means me. The Hooper- DeF orez Mix (at the. Union. 4. H h i-vor Wendell HomieS aju (Continued on Second Page.) (ed ry at 10 y. •e. lat lad , ' ht. to hen slly as at- phe Vlr- ths ome •een that iken ould n a dlly but s a ' hen Ion. TECH CO •EDS EORIi ECLUB Thirteen in the Organization Post Up Gorgeous Yel- low Placards. A sensation in politics developed at Technology yesterday, when the thir- teen pretty co-eds of the Institute or- ganized a Woman ' s Suffrage Club and placarded the corridors and doorways of the Tech buildings with gorgi ous yellow posters declaiming the present state t tyrannical opposition to women voters, and calling for a new system of apportionment of national representa- tion. The Tech men gathered In laughing groups around the posters, speculating on their authorskip. The suffragist or- ganization Is secret, and although the Tech boys have tried to In ' l out who Its officers were, the names have bewi kept In the dark. TT- ' ' ' Dr P :NT It t. Charl. rick J Bosto ' tion c on by starte after Main . and o serves scrlou The o ' clocl squart: ous. but h police wlrdo P- • TRUE ENOUGH Professor Bates and a second year English section were discussing Gothic architecture in general, and the naves of churches in particular. Turning to Arnold, 1910, who was taking some of his postponed beauty sleep. Professor Bates asked: Mr. Arnold, what do you understand a nave to be? Arnold comes out of it in time to get most of the question: Why, er, a knave is a tricky fellow. 359 iirii MllWHiil A Bostonese : You Tech ' boys have quite frequent recesses, haven ' t you? Sophomore: No, madam, we don ' t. A Bostonese : Why you must, for I have seen the boys at recess on the steps of that building on Boylston Street several times. FEED HOUR AT THE UNION 360 t .f p :r Here we see a Tennis Player. Is It a great Tennis Player? Oh, my! yes. It is a Very Great Tennis Player. What? And have you not Heard? Have you not read about It in the Tech, and in the Daily Papers, and have you not heard It Whispered with Bated Breath by the Lesser Mortals as the Great One passes on the Avenue? We weep from Mortification at such Ignorance. But why has His Highness been so Morose of late? Surely nothing can be Amiss with such a Great Personage. But Stop! It is whispered Abroad that Some one has Mislaid a Priceless Likeness of His Majesty ' s Divine Countenance. Who can have Done this Thing? Out upon him for a Varlet, a Scoundrel and a Mut. In the Words of the Prophet, It takes a Lawyer ' s letter to scare a bunch of Kids, so are we Solicitous of the Fame and Undying Glory of the Head of the Divine Order of Things, and will Spare no Expense to run to Earth this unspeakable Person who has Dared Cross the Path of his Right Royal Wrinklets, the Duke of Technology. 361 fW FROM COURSE VI The prelim, reports in E.E. Lab. All look like fierce bloodshed When Ralph gets through a-reading them, They all come back well red. When in doubt petition. Ransohoff, 1910 (with that knowing smile of his): Say, Don, what ' s the breaking strength of a hole? D. V. Williamson, 1910: Well, that depends. If you mean that part of your head where there ought to be some com- mon sense I don ' t believe that the 150,000- pound testing machine downstairs could faze it. Be a mixer, but don ' t get mixed. Prof. Daly (in Geology lecture) : have traveled over the colossal Rocky Mountains of Montana and British Columbia and studied them with the Prof. Miller (in Steam, keeping class after 1 p.m.): Would you gentlemen mind staying a moment? steal Prof. Swain ' s time. I don ' t want to Altamirano, 1909 (in Standardizing Laboratory, turns to read the galvanometer deflection and finds t hat the scale has dis- appeared): I say Mr. Hudson, come here, will you, I am having a hell of a time. I have lost the scale. Seems to us that some of our dear teachers ought to get a running start when they commence to say anything. TECHNIQUE 1910 GOING TO PRESS 362 Ransohoff, the walking question mark: We needn ' t correct our problem up to the place where we made our mis- take, do we? WISDOM INDEED Burry (on intersection of sol- ids i: Gentlemen, I advise you strongly to confine your at- tention to one face at a time, you are liable to get into difficulty if you don ' t. Hl A •■ ' ? ' ■ ■ ' ' 1 r.M... :: .: ,,r,,.| 1 I .!.J l- .0;. ' . Il«ri-.I- 1 1 lM ;i r;o.r Il4 llnrr.-la | I ,.. r..-..i:iy Qorrrl 1 1 .... 72.651 ll.rr.-l. 1 1 ,... 78,578 n.rrri. | 1 ,..,.. 79,699 n.rr... 1 1 I ' -p 80,083 n..rri. 1 80,625 Barrels 101,469 Barrels 114,182 Barrels 137,415 Barrels 144,390 Barrels i 4 1,083 Barrels 148,206 Barrels 170,674 Barrels 191,763 5,944,653 GALLONS Barrels The freshman, like the lobster, is not so green after he has once been in hot water. According to the Carnegie award there are at least four dozen heroes In the coun- try that we are sure of. W.C.T.U. ' S IDEA OF SOME OF OUR DEAR STUDENTS ' CAPACITY Among those that might be mentioned are Pardee, the Western marvel, first cousin to the Peerless One, also Jerome Scheuer, the handsomest of our rising generation, whose color would put a mere chorus girl to shame. Successive differentiation gives us Monk dePlorez, the human bug, the per- sonification of the St.Vitus ' s dance, and lastly our own beloved Nathan, who is affixed with the surname of Ransohoff, he of the raven locks, the consistent question mark ; the man who holds the record for forcing our dear teachers to quit in exasperation. s .V SJ ' ? Kfeti ' A X ' z? - - vjf 5 - Please Indicate Room.- j «Jc e« « 9-10 10-11 I 11-12 ; 12-1 3-4 ; .j;e| || g Co ) 0 frr 6 i,ffC s - Tfesy- ut s UM. Tr 7 o Tfirx ■ V- p:p-s - Ec2. B C - Enc. B-Rt CVT« W.WiJkef A-Eof- A C P ■ Pler(« I- LowtU o er-c o. Dewey: Now what was the bone of contention here ? Jack Higgins, 1910: The jaw- bone. Prof. Wilson (in Differential Equa- tions ) : I will now show you how to do a practical problem in electricity. I expect that you will be able to do it hereafter. That is, I expect that you will expect to do it if expected to, but I do not expect that my expectations will be realized. FWB. 363 r s Tr:p Prof. Dewey (at 1910 dinner) : Bursar Rand has recently purchased a farm of which he is very proud, and he is prosperous enough to live on it. In talking of it with him, the following conversation took place : Prof. Dewey : ' What live stock do you keep ? ' Bursar Rand: ' Pigs. ' Prof. Dewey: ' What kind do you prefer? ' Bursar Rand: ' Well, mine are one-quarter Berkshire, one-quarter Cheshire, one-quarter Jersey and one-quarter Plymouth Rocks. ' c5=S ' ' T - BILLING5-HOBO. XX.— THROUGH TEST OF FLAME. HE creeks were dry; the air was full of smoke and dust; and. when the wind blew, the dricd-up leaves rustled with a harsh and dreary sound. Gee! grumbled Billings. This ain t no dream of a spot ter gil ditched inter, no sign er chuck nor nothin ' , an ' I ' m so empty if I touches me stummick it scratches me back. All th ' Rubea is burnt up ; there ain ' t a poke out in th ' whole country: an ' th relief c ' mittees ain ' t pa ' isin ' nothin ' out ter bums like when mc. Even ih ' water ' s gone, an me lay d throat ' s like er chunk er leather sole. U .Sitting down by a tree he drew a zv a moldy crust out of his pocket, and after looking it over with an dislike, began to munch - smoke was dense and. into hit • If these woods ev be a time, he ra ain ' t close ter ' ev Getting to h- more, but !• when a li ' and he dowr -I is a kno thin Ch Dick Goodwin, as toastmaster at the 1910 dinner, sprung a very ancient and honorable joke in the course of his ramblings. Voice at the foot of the table: Gee, Dick, that ' s a corker. I haven ' t heard that one for fifteen years, V. SCARCE Barber (to Creecy, 1910): Shave as well, Creecy hesitates.) Well, we ' ll try at any rate. sir •? (As P. Desmond White (over in one corner drawing ellipses on the board for Doc Roever to erase): Sure it ' s wastin ' me time and talent that I am; I can make ellipses that fine I ought to have been a hen. 364 THE CHAMPEEN nc. 7Z. SQUEEZER WEOOINfi 306. First Senior: Say, Went, what did you come to this place for any way? Second Ditto (P. M. Wentworth): ' lis better to have come and loafed than never to have come at all. DEFERENCE TO THE POET Molly Pearson (in English): And now we will come back to the language of the poet, which I have kept away from for fear of injuring it. The average man has more than one un- kicked kick coming to him. Clothes make the Harvard man — the want of them, Salome. ! • ' - ' r ' DEPPY ' ' • % Prof. Talbot (lecturing to the Freshman on calcium chloride as a flux) : All you men as engineers will doubtless sometime in your career meet a bath . The latest: Scheureritis, or The Diary of a Champion. ' 365 . wim W . ' t CfS= ' 1=. Echoes Trom The Union Glee Club: Come on, fellows, spit it out . . . Curses, haven ' t you got any music . . . you dubs in the second bass there . . . Tech Show: Damn you. Jack Dalton . . . . you dare not . . . Right O . . strike him down . . . See what I mean . Try that entrance again . , . ?l Y.M.C.A.: Heaven is our home. 1st Voice: That was a rotten mit, not a face card . . . 2d Voice : Where in the devil is Charlie? 3d Voice: Remember after mid-year exams. . . . Drunk? Tech Office: Damn it, Forristall, get on the job . . . where the devil is that copy , . . Hey, you freshman, chase this stuff down . . . No, this is not an em- ployment bureau, this is The Tech office . . . that the Columbia Theater? Well, got any complimentary tickets . . . Track Office: Rotten form ... I nominate Mr. . . . Damn rotten showing . . . Keep your shirt on . . . Talk sense . . . he ' s a dub . . . Naw . . . Technique Office: Gentlemen, what is your pleasure ... I don ' t think so . . . Rotten . . . what ' s the use . . . Bet you five we ' ll get stuck . . . pretty fine eh ! what? . . . Order . . . Gee, that ' s punk tobacco . . . Come out of it . . . Hey, waiter, . . . gimme some sweet caporals . . . Say, put these biscuits in the rock crusher . . . Cut the raw . . . got any gum? . . . Anybody seen the Ladies ' Home Journal . . . Gimme Back Bay 1436872. That you Attorney? Well this is Jerome Scheuer — under- stand? Now, I am willing to spare no expense . . . Grind department refuses . . . Your move Clarence . . . How much are these five-cent stogies? . . . Get that Applied problem? . . . Hurry up, I ' m hungry as the devil. . . . Yes, Hale is my name. Yes, I wrote all the music for . . . Oh, my, yes, . . . Yes indeed, . . . NO, I didn ' t try to write this year ... Is the committee assembled? ... I move that smoking by students be prohibited . . . Mr. Critchett moves . . . Who stole my hat? . . . Got the makings, Bill . . . . . . Yes, I have decided to leave and accept a fine offer . . . Flunked? OH, MY, NO. . . . Gimme a Tech . . . Beat it. . , . 366 ■.SD V. FEBRIARV 10. HO ' ' ' KNEW HIS OWN CAPACITY Dutch Woh!ge Tiuth, IQIO (after solving capacity of Brookline Reservior and finding it to be 2,000 cubic inches i: Professor, that can ' t be right, why I can drink that much myself. Stay yet another year, thou ignorant knave. A SAD TALE Who stung the freshman? I, said Charles Adams, With my little book, I stung the freshman Who ssLW him stung? I, said the ' Tech, I was right on deck, I saw him stung. Who took his money? I, said Maclachlan, I do it often, I took his money. Student Weds a Pretty Wai tress Romance of Technology Lunchroom Results in a Weddind in Rutland. Vt. Who shed a tear? I, said the freshman, And if I ' m stung again I ' ll sure be a dead one. All who carry hammers are not blacksmiths. POINTED Ransohoff, 1910: Are we expected to know the bending moments and the shearing forces in this problem? Prof. Johnston: No, Mr. Ransohoff, I don ' t expect you to know anything. CORRECT Prof. Jackson: MuUhaupt, what was the author ' s idea in writing this article? Mullhaupt, 190Q: Why, er — he had to write something, and he didn ' t know what else to write, so he wrote this, and er — Prof. Jackson : !—!—!—! 367 Prof. Albers (in Business Law) : Now, gentlemen, the law [is simply common sense, except when the legislature is fooling with it. TOUGH Overheard in Freshman Chem recitation McNamara, 1910, to Mr. Phelan: Is there anything harder than a diamond? Mr. Phelan: Nothing, except teaching a Tech fresh- LOCATED Hield, 1910: Did I tell you the story of the taxicab? ' Kind Friend: ' Is it very long? Hield: No. Kind Friend: Then you didn ' t tell me. Many hands make light work also a good jackpot. ARRIVED Prof. Jackson: My office is so dark that I am getting cat-eyed. I am weary, yea, my memory is tired. « POP 368 C!)c (J reat Street Car Coutrobersp A STORY About this time the Committee on Sitting on Rogers Steps ' began to take notice. This Committee on Rogers Steps had been appointed by the third chairman of the committee of three, which had been estabUshed at a recent meeting of the Institute Com- mittee as a body to act on appointments and called the Committee on Committees. The Committee on Sitting on Rogers Steps was to have entire and absolute supervision of all sitting on Boylston Street between Berkeley and Clarendon, and now, of all things, the Committee on General Rest of the Regular and Special Students now Attending the Massachusetts Institute of Technology had posted a notice (typewritten on blue paper and signed by the chair- man, vice-chairman and communicating secretary of the committee ) that all present male students of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology were earnestly advised when on street cars (all this for the good fame of the said M. I. T. ) to poHtely rise, raising or tipping the hat or cap, and proffer heretofore occupied seat in aforesaid car to possibly entering lady, regardless of age or stylish superficiality. It was here that the Committee on Sitting on Rogers Steps took notice. Outrageous! said the president, clerk and committee of one appointed to look after the privy purse of the president. Out- rageous! said the treasurer and the rest of the committee. (It has not been mentioned that it was composed of but two members.) Outrageous ! cried the officers and ordinary members all together. ' This is distinctly a step to encroach upon our jurisdiction and to belittle us personally. Have we not absolute and entire supervision over all sitting which does or shall take place on Boylston Street, between Berkeley and Clarendon, and do not many street cars run over this very territory ; and may we not be said to have entire control of all sitting done, or to be done, by the student body within such cars? Indeed, yes ! and they reiterated it a good many times among themselves and to others. However, nothing was finally accom- plished until The Tech took a hand in the matter. On Friday morning, December 10, 1909, The Tech published the following statement in broad-faced type, double leaded. 370 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV with news article, editorial, half-tone cuts and faculty comments to match : Whereas certain uneasiness appears manifest in our unaccus- tomed-to-such midst, we do say and repeat it that such oughtn ' t to. Further, we enunciate twice or more, if necessary, that if anybody is going to settle things we do. That is, The lech must do our duty; if we don ' t who will ? and there you are just as bad off as before. Consequently out we come and say with emphatics, Rogers steps is all right, rest is all right, and rest on Rogers steps is all right; but how about the spirit of rest in street cars in front of Rogers steps, not the letter, but the spirit of such rest? Finishing off the statement with a question made the whole thing very forceful, and it silenced everybody for almost six days, and would have been efficacious over a longer period had not the Institute Committee met for some reason or other on the afternoon of the sixth day. After the committee had donned its robes and periwigs, and the meeting had been started in conventional manner with a hymn and piano recital, the second vice-chairman (the chair- man and first vice-chairman were studying for an examination) came to business by remarking that they had got together to do busi- ness, but he didn ' t know of any to be done and so he would ask if anybody else had heard of anything that they might possibly do. Whereupon fell a dead silence until a freshman, — ambassador extraordinary from the class of 1912, and thereby entitled to wear a pink button, — not knowing that every one was extremely anxious to go home, and put a few finishing touches on respective laboratory reports, arose importantly and asked if anything was going to be done about the disgusting conflict between the Committee on Sitting on Rogers Steps and the Committee on General Rest of Regular and Special Students now Attending the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, this same conflict having become intolerable through some underhanded refusals of the Committee on Changing Things. He did not know just what this latter body of men had done, but whatever it was it was intolerable, and he thought the whole matter had better be settled then. With duty so fairly set before them the Institute Committee faltered not one instant. I move that the whole thing be settled 1910 STREET CAR CONTROVERSY 371 right now! cried the most energetic member of the committee. Second the motion! laconically shouted the chairman of the Committee on Seconding Motions. The motion has been made and seconded that this matter be decided now, uttered the second vice-chairman in an ultra-business voice. Who says yes and who says no? No, began the leader presumptive of the opposition; but the chair interrupted him. You are out of order; it is, of course, better to settle this now. The motion is carried. Are there any remarks? The remarks were many and on various subjects, and lasted for fifty-five minutes. Then luckily some one who had been asleep throughout the discussion and could remember what the committee had started to do woke up and asked if anything had been done about sitting in street cars. To break up a spirited discussion on co-edu- cation was something of an undertaking. When the second vice- chairman had done it he asked: Well, now that we have discussed so thoroughly this matter of an altercation between two of our most important committees we can safely go on to the next step of pro- cedure and decide what to do; so what do you think? This was the starting signal for a still more prolonged discussion, and what was finally accomplished can perhaps be best indicated by the fol- lowing notice which appeared in the next morning ' s Tech, and on all the new and magnificent bulletin boards bearing the golden seal of the original committee and countersigned by the Executive and Bill Posting Committees in joint session: It has come to the notice of the Institute Committee that trouble has arisen over a question of jurisdiction of two of its sub- committees. The Institute Committee believes that it has sole power to settle this difficulty between its creatures and passes the following order: All regular or special students of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology who expect to ride upon street cars shall procure at the cage official pink slips of cardboard perforated in a suitable and distinctive design. On these slips they must write their names and addresses and present the same to the conductor with the ordinary fare. We expect to arrange that the conductor will mark on this card whether the student gives up his seat to a lady or not, and that 372 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV these slips will be returned to us by the railway company once a week. They will be immediately turned over to the new Committee on Who is a Gentleman and Who Is Not, ' which will examine them and classify them according to letter of alphabet, age, nationality and what not ; and from this data construct appropriate plots. The conductor will be expected to note upon the card the position of the car when the student gives up his seat. Students who give their seats up on Boylston Street, between Berkeley and Clarendon, will be expected to apologize by letter to the Committee on the General Rest of Regular and Special Students now Attending the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, ' and students who give up their seats anywhere else on Boylston Street or anywhere else at all shall apologize by letter to the ' Committee on Sitting on Rogers Steps. ' We now consider this matter settled. (Signed) THE INSTITUTE COMMITTEE. jstcKt XiS XCje The following is compiled from answers to questions handed in by the class : What is your age? The average age is 20 years and 10 months. The youngest man is 19 years old, and the oldest is 28. What is your height? The average height of the class is 5 feet 8 1-4 inches. What is your weight? This averages at 149.5 pounds. Are you taking all studies with 1910? The class is pretty well divided on this question. Many are doubtful as to what class they really do belong. What is the hardest course in the Institute? Course VI wins, with Course II a close second. Course I also ran. What is the easiest course? Course IV gets this distinction hands down. What year have you found hardest? Most of the class consider the third year the hardest, but several with more experience suggest the sixth. Do you favor having co-eds among us? Some answered, ' ' We haven ' t seen any that we favored. Would you advise a man to work his way through Tech? The general opinion was that there is No use advising; there is no other way to get through. Do you wear glasses? Thirty- five per cent of the class answered in the affirmative. 374 1910 STATISTICS 375 What is your political party? A majority of the class voted for Taft, but the Prohibition party still remains popular. Do you use tobacco? Fifty-four per cent of the class confessed. In what form? Some use it for hypodermic injections and as a gargle. Do you drink? Few admit it. The class seems strong for milk. What time do you turn in at night? A brilliant classmate replied, Some kind neighbor always tells my folks, no job for you ! Have you ever studied all night? Certainly, was the practically unanimous answer. How many times? The members of the class never do this more than seven times a week. How much do you spend a year? Living at home the average is $450.00. The average for entire class is $858.00. How often do you go fussing? Answers varied from every day to never. Are you partial to any one girl? ' Only for the time being, says the class. The general feeling is ' nearest is dearest. Whom in the class do you consider the handsomest? Hield shines here with Cox running right alongside, and Harris claiming third place. Most eccentric? Enter Jerome Infantblush Scheuer (Eva Tanguay ' s understudy), as some one calls him. We think the place is so well filled that a second is impossible. Most popular? The class feels that Fitzwater is first and last. 376 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV Biggest grind? It was a hard guess between Maxfield, Preston and McMurtrie, and the polls closed with the contestants ranked as named. Grouchiest? Hart takes first, Lockett second, and although it might be sur- prising, our little friend Richardson was third. Best dressed? Mac came an easy first in this class, while Goodwin followed second. We regret that there are no others in the class presentable. Sloppiest? There was no question needed here. We all know B. Jones too well. Wilson takes second, and Miss Co-ed is asked to accept third honors. Best athlete? The class chose O ' Hearn first, with Fernstrom next and Gott a strong third. Most conceited? Hale is too bright a light to pass, and the general feeling is that there is no chance for a second. Nerviest? There are too many in the class for distinction, but by very accurate work it was decided that Billings would do. Schofield trails along for second, and the men who asked these questions third. Man with the most class spirit? Creecy at the bat, Saul on deck, and Breyer in the hole. Most useful? Behold ! our Tech editor. Pearl, with Mac looking over his shoulder and Fernstrom next in line. Most apt to succeed? Several in the class did not care for fortune telling, but the rest think Hargraves has the best chance. Fitzwater comes second, and Terry third. Greatest smoker? Guthrie stands at the top of this list, with Harcourt and Everett following close. 1910 STATISTICS 377 What is your favorite college for women? Wellesley is the first stop, and from what the class has seen of the place, Harvard would take a strong second. Windiest? Ruckman and Orchard are in a class by themselves. Least appreciated? Each member of the class pities himself here. Greatest wire-puller with the Faculty? Mac was until he left, and no one can quite take the vacancy now, so great was his triumph. One who has done most for Technology? Again we greet McMurtrie with Tom Saul and Fitzwater in lock step behind. Biggest lady-killer? The faithful memory of the class for the slipper incident in fresh- man drill puts Rowe in first place. Goodwin follows, with Bradley Jones strolling along in the rear. Class crank? Whittemore comes into favor, with Clapp a close second. On the Instructing Staff who is the best teacher? Professor Hayward again takes first, with Professor Bates second. Most popular? Blackie is first in our hearts. Dr. Talbot and Professor Merrill folbw in the order named. Hardest to blufi? Professor Bailey ' s stern look places him first. Professor George is next in line. Easiest? Some one remarked in answer to this that if there was an easy professor he had never met him, but the class puts Professor Currier on the spot and Major Wheeler second. Best lecturer? Dr. Talbot wins. Professor Clifford and Professor Sedgwick were second and third, respectively. Of the total number of 1,462 students, 839 are from Massachusetts, or 57.2 per cent of the whole. The degree of Doctor of Philosophy was first conferred by the Institute in 1907, when it was bestowed upon three candidates. The ratio of instructors to students is 1 to 7.1. The number of new students is 594 as compared with 527 last year. The number of college graduates enrolled is 215. The number in the graduating class of last June was 230. Of these 144 received degrees after attending the Institute for four years, 26 for five years, and 4 for six years. Electrical Engineering is the largest course with 206 enrolled; Mechanical Engineering is next, with 196; and Civil Engineering third, with 195. There are 19 co-eds. Regulars form 65 per cent of the total number of students. The average age on entrance was nineteen years and one month; the average age at graduation last year was twenty-three years. There were twenty-four courses given in Summer School last year. Of the 657 persons who presented themselves in June for examina- tion, a total of 127 were rejected. In September, 321 candidates attended the examinations ; of these 49 were rejected. 378 1910 FACTS 379 The total instructing staff of the Institute numbers 245. Fees from students and scholarship funds amounted last year to $343,180. Salaries paid out to the instructing staff and to the officers of the Institute amounted to $400,080 in 1908. Last year a total of $517,762 was expended by the Institute. The Walker Memorial Fund now amounts to $116,388.40. Hcadp Registration The following table shows the registration of successive years from the foundation of the Institute : Year Number of Students 1865-1866 72 1866-1867 137 1867-1868 167 1868-1869 172 1869-1870 206 1870-1871 224 1871-1872 261 1872-1873 348 1873-1874 276 1874-1875 248 1875-1876 255 1876-1877 215 1877-1878 194 1878-1879 188 1879-1880 203 1880-1881 253 1881-1882 302 1882-1883 368 1883-1884 443 1884-1885 579 1885-1886 609 1886-1887 637 Year Number of Students 1887-1888 720 1888-1889 827 1889-1890 909 1890-1891 937 1891-1892 1,011 1892-1893 1,060 1893-1894 1,157 1894-1895 1,783 1895-1896 1,187 1896-1897 1,198 1897-1898 1,198 1898-1899 1,171 1899-1900 1,178 1900-1901 1,277 1901-1902 1,415 1902-1903 1,608 1903-1904 1,528 1904-1905 1,561 1905-1906 1,466 1906-1907 1,397 1907-1908 1,410 1908-1909 1,462 380 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV (Scoarapbtcal T ictrifaution State Number Alabama 11 Alaska 5 Arizona 15 Arkansas 2 California 89 Canal Zone 9 Colorado 49 Connecticut 79 Delaware 14 District of Columbia 101 Florida 4 Georgia 27 Hawaii • 5 Idaho 9 Illinois 180 Indiana 35 Iowa 13 Kansas 11 Kentucky 14 Louisiana 14 Maine 49 Maryland 27 Massachusetts 1,187 Michigan 50 Minnesota 30 Mississippi 2 Missouri 44 Montana 23 jForctffn Country Number Alberta 1 Argentina 1 Australia 1 Belgium 1 Bolivia . 1 Brazil 5 British Columbia 6 Cape Breton 1 Chile 1 China 2 Costa Rica 1 Cuba 7 England 7 France 6 Germany 7 India 1 Italy 3 Japan 6 Korea 2 Mexico 36 New Brunswick 1 of (0ratiuatts, (aniteU States State Number Nebraska 8 Nevada 1.8 New Hampshire 33 New Jersey 78 New Mexico 5 New York 634 North Carolina 7 North Dakota 5 Ohio 130 Oklahoma 3 Oregon 10 Pennsylvania 250 Philippine Islands 5 Porto Rico 7 Rhode Island 64 South Carolina 4 South Dakota 6 Tennessee 13 Texas 29 Utah 19 Vermont 17 Virginia 28 Washington 27 West Virginia 9 Wisconsin 27 Wyoming 3 Total 3,537 Countrirfi Country Number Nova Scotia 5 Ontario 16 Persia 1 Peru 1 Quebec 22 Russia 1 Scotland 2 Syria 1 Transvaal 2 Yukon 1 Total 149 United States 3,537 Unreported 24 3,710 Deceased 177 Total 3,887 19 10 FACTS 381 0fog;rapl)iral ictrifautton of ttiDrntc, illnitrl] S tatrc State Number Alabama 3 Arkansas 1 California 20 Canal Zone 1 Colorado 5 Connecticut 31 District of Columbia 10 Florida 6 Georgia 3 Hawaii 1 Idaho 1 Illinois 23 Indiana 9 Iowa 14 Kansas 4 Kentucky 4 Louisiana 3 Maine 22 Maryland 17 Massachusetts 839 Michigan 7 Minnesota 8 Mississippi 3 Missouri 6 Montana 2 Nebraska 2 State Number Nevada 1 New Hampshire 24 New Jersey 14 New Mexico 1 New York 99 North Carolina 1 North Dakota 3 Ohio 30 Oklahoma 1 Oregon 4 Pennsylvania 53 Philippine Islands 1 Porto Rico 6 Rhode Island 28 South Dakota 3 Tennessee 8 Texas 16 Utah 5 Vermont 6 Virginia 11 Washington 13 West Virginia 3 Wisconsin 12 Wyoming 1 Total 1,389 jTordsn Cottntrics Country Number Argentina 2 Armenia 2 Brazil 3 British Columbia Cape Breton Cape Colony Central America Chile China 10 Costa Rica 3 Cuba 2 Ecuador 2 Egypt 2 England : 3 Honduras 1 India 2 Ireland 1 Country Italy Jamaica . . . Japan . . . . Mexico . . . . New Brunswick Nova Scotia . . Ontario . . . . Paraguay . . . Peru Quebec . . . . Russia . . . . Transvaal . . . Turkey . . . . Uruguay . . . Number . . 1 . . 1 . . 4 . . 6 . . 1 . . 4 . . 7 . . 1 . . 2 . . 1 . . 2 . . 2 . . 1 . . 1 Total 72 ' f. t L L C!)arlcs i ltlton poffovti Charles Milton Spofford was born at Georgetown, Mass., on the twenty-eighth day of September, 1871. He attended the Putnam School in Newburyport and graduated from that institution in 1889. He entered the Massachusetts Institute of Technology the same year, and received the degree of Bachelor of Science in the Civil Enginee r- ing Course in 1893. During the following summer and fall he was engaged in both field and office work. In February, 1894, he re-entered the Institute, taking up post-graduate work under Prof. George F. Swain. At the end of the year Mr. Spofford took up a position with the Phoenix Bridge Company, remaining with them until the fall of 1896, when he resigned to take up the position of Assistant in Civil Engineering at the Institute. Until 1903, Mr. Spofford was a member in different capacities of the instructing staff at his alma mater. He taught bridge design, structures and foundations. In the year 1905 he was made Professor of Civil Engineering at the Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute, being intrusted with the task of reorganizing the department over which he had charge. At that institution he has taught hydraulics and mechanics of materials, and during the last two years he has taken up public water supply and sewage disposal. From the beginning he has taught a course in foundations, and has had personal charge of the work in structures and bridge design. In connection with his work in Brooklyn, Pro- fessor Spofford is preparing an exhaustive work on structures, which will contain much original matter. At the stated meeting of the Executive Committee of the Tech- nology Corporation on February 26, 1909, it was voted to call Pro- fessor Spofford to the chair of Hayward Professor of Civil Engineering at the Institute. This call he has accepted and will take up his duties next fall. Professor Spofford has had much practical experience in engineer- ing work, and is at present connected with a firm of consulting en- gineers in New York City. He is a member of the American Society of Civil Engineers, a director of the Brooklyn Engineers ' Club, a member of the Society for the Promotion of Engineering Education, and of the Hamilton Club of Brooklyn. 383 Concerning Name Location Founded President Alabama Polytechnic Institute . Auburn, Ala. 1872 Charles C. Thack, A.M., LL.D. 1 Albion Albion, Mich. 1861 Samuel Dickie, A.M., M.S., LL.D. 2 Allegheny College Meadville, Pa. 1815 William H. Crawford, D.D., LL.D. 3 Amherst College Amherst, Mass. 1821 George Harris, D.D., LL.D. 4 Armour Institute Chicago, 111. 1893 Frank W. Gunsaulus, D.D., LL.D. 5 Bates College Lewiston, Me. 1864 George C. Chase, D.D., LL.D. 6 Beloit College Beloit, Wis. 1846 Edward D. Eaton, D.D., LL.D. 7 Boston University Boston, Mass. 1869 W. E. Huntington, Ph.D. 8 Bowdoin College Brunswick, Me. 1794 William D. Hyde, D.D., LL.D. 9 Brown University Providence, R.I. 1764 W. H. P. Faunce, A.M., D.D. 10 Bucknell University Lewisburg, Pa. 1846 John H. Harris, Ph.D., LL.D. 11 Case School of Applied Science. . Cleveland, Ohio 1881 Chas. S. Howe, B.S., Ph.D. 12 Central University Danville, Ky. 1819 Frederick W. Hinitt, Ph. D. 13 Claflin University Orangeburg, S.C. 1872 Lewis M. Dunton, A.M., D.D. 14 Colgate University Hamilton, N.Y. 1819 Wm. H. Crawshaw (Act.) 15 College of the City of New York . New York City 1847 John H. Finlay, D.D., LL.D. 16 College of the Holy Cross .... Worcester, Mass. 1843 Rev. Thos. E. Murphy, S.J. 17 College of William and Mary . . Williamsburg, Va. 1693 Lyon G. Tyler, M.A., LL.D. 18 Colorado College Colorado Springs, Colo. 1874 William F. Slocum, A. B., D.D., LL.D. 19 Colorado School of Mines .... Golden, Colo. 1874 Victor C. Alderson, Sc.D. 20 Columbia University New York City 1754 Nicholas M. Butler, Ph.D. 21 Cornell University Ithaca, N.Y. 1865 Jacob G. Schurman, D.Sc, LL.D., A.M. 22 Cumberland University Lebanon, Tenn. 1879 David E. Mitchell, A.B. 23 Dartmouth College Hanover, N.H. 1769 William J. Tucker, D.D., LL.D. 24 De Pauw University Greencastle, Ind. 1837 Edwin H. Hughes, A.M., D.D. 25 Dickinson College Carlisle, Pa. 1783 George E. Reed, S.T.D., LL.D. 26 Drake University Des Moines, la. 1881 Hill M. Bell, A.M. 27 Fisk University Nashville, Tenn. 1866 Herbert H. Wright, Dean (Act.) 28 Franklin and Marshall Lancaster, Pa. 1853 John S. Stahr, Ph.D., LL.D. 29 Georgetown University .... Washington, D.C. 1789 Rev. Joseph J. Hemmel, S.J. 30 Harvard University Cambridge, Mass. 1636 Augustus Lowell, Ph.D. LL.D. 31 Howard University Washington, D.C. 1867 Wilbur P. Thirkield, LL.D. 32 Indiana University Bloomington, Ind. 1824 William L. Bryan, A.M., A.B., Ph.D. 33 Iowa CoUege Grinnell, la. 1848 J. H. T. Main 34 Johns Hopkins University . . . Baltimore, Md. 1876 Ira Remsen, A.B., LL.D., M.D., Ph.D. 35 Kentucky University Lexington, Ky. 1836 Burris A. Jenkins, A.M., B.D., D.D. 36 Kenyon College Gambler, Ohio 1825 Rev. W. F. Peirce, L.H.D. 37 Lafayette College Easton, Pa. 1832 Rev. E. D. Warfield, D.D., LL.D. 38 Lake Forest University Lake Forest, 111. 1858 J. S. Sholte Nollen, Ph.D. 39 Lehigh University South Bethlehem, Pa. 1866 Henry S. Drinker, E.M., LL.D. 40 Leland Stanford, Jr., University . Stanford University, Cal. 1891 David S. Jordan, LL.D., Ph.D., M.S. 41 Louisiana State University . . . Baton Rouge, La. 1860 Thomas D. Boyd, LL.D. 42 Marietta College Marietta, Ohio 1835 Alfred T. Perry, A.M., D.D. 43 Mass. Institute of Technology . . Boston, Mass. 1865 Arthur A. Noyes, M.S., Ph.D. (Act.) 44 384 tl)c CoIIcsrs Val. Prop ' ty Endow ' t and Co-educa- other Resources Stud ' ts Insfrs College Colors Annual tional Tuition Approx. 1 675 43 Orange and Blue Glomerata Yes None $577,000 2 450 28 Pink and Green The Junior Annual Yes $30 522,000 3 315 17 Blue and Gold Kaldron Yes 45 890,000 4 530 45 Purple and White Olio No 110 2,855,000 5 1805 100 Yellow and Black Integral No 120 2,890,000 6 450 21 Garnet Bulletin No. 1 Yes 50 793,000 7 481 35 Gold Codex Yes 36 1,581,000 8 1459 150 Scarlet and White The Hnb Yes 125 1,853,000 9 428 57 White The Bugle No 75 2,066,000 10 995 92 Brown and White Liber Brunensis Yes 105 5,689,000 11 771 55 Orange and Navy Blue L ' Agenda Yes 50 1,000,000 12 434 37 Brown and White The Annual No 100 866,000 13 751 87 Cardinal and Blue Cardinal and Blue Yes 50 839,000 14 600 42 Orange and Maroon Bulletin Yes 14 237,000 15 482 47 Maroon Salmagundi No 60 2,468.000 16 4383 221 Lavender Register No None 1,969,000 17 415 38 Purple and White The Purple No 60 557,000 18 238 22 Orange and White Colonial Echo No 35 300.000 19 598 50 Gold and Black The Tiger Yes 35 1,453,000 20 262 17 Silver and Blue Bulletin No 100 417.000 21 5655 614 Light Blue and White Columbian Yes 150 30.268,000 22 4465 548 Cornelian and White The Cornellian Yes 125 13,834.000 23 216 21 Green, White and Blue Phoenix Yes 50 630,000 24 1232 85 Dark Green Aegis No 100 4,065.000 25 1001 33 Old Gold The Mirage Yes 45 742.000 26 550 33 Red and White The Microcosm Yes 6 984.000 27 1846 120 Blue and White Quax Yes 50 817.000 28 571 35 Blue and Gold None Yes 14 447,000 29 394 23 Blue and White Oriflamme Yes None 761.000 30 855 149 Blue and Gray Hodge Podge No 100 1.450,000 31 4900 634 Crimson None No 150 24.000.000 32 1000 100 Blue and White University Journal Yes None 1,359,000 33 2051 80 Cream and Crimson Arbutus Yes None 625,000 34 640 55 Scarlet and Black Junior Annual Yes 55 753.000 35 638 175 Black and Old Gold The Hullabaloo Yes 150 6.856.000 36 412 32 Crimson Crimson Yes 30 780.000 37 112 15 Mauve The Reveille No 75 1.289.000 38 442 38 Maroon and White The Melange No 100 1,279,000 39 190 19 Red and Black The Forester Yes 40 2,042,000 40 662 64 Brown and White Epitome No 150 2.820.000 41 1751 138 Cardinal Red Stanford Quad Yes 20 24.103.000 42 370 27 Orange and Purple Gumbo No None 829.000 43 504 41 Navy Blue and White Mariettana Yes 30 432,000 44 1447 156 Cardinal Red and Silver Gray Technique 385 Yes 250 4.000.000 386 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV Name Location New York University New York City- Northwestern University .... Evanston, 111. Oberlin College Oberlin, Ohio Ohio State University Columbus, Ohio Ohio Wesleyan University. . . . Delaware, Ohio Pennsylvania State College . . . State College, Pa. Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn. 2 Brooklyn, N.Y. Princeton University Princeton, N.J. Purdue University LalFayette, Ind. Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute . Troy, N.Y. Richmond College Richmond, Va. Rose Polytechnic Institute . . . TerrelHaute, Ind. Rutgers College NewJBrunswick, N.J. St. Louis University St. Louis, Mo. Shaw University Raleigh, N.C. Southwestern University .... Georgetown, Tex. State University of Iowa .... Iowa City, la. Stevens Institute of Technology . Hoboken, N.J. Swarthmore Swarthmore, Pa. Syracuse University Syracuse, N.Y. Throop Polytechnic Institute . . Pasadena, Cal. Trinity College Hartford, Conn. Tufts College Tufts College, Mass. Tulane University New Orleans, La. Union University Schenectady, N.Y. United States Military Academy . West Point, N.Y. United States Naval Academy . . Annapolis, Md. University of Alabama University, Ala. University of Arizona Tucson, Ariz. University of Arkansas Fayetteville, Ark. University of California .... Berkeley, Cal. University of Chicago Chicago, 111. University of Cincinnati .... Cincinnati, Ohio University of Colorado Boulder, Colo. University of Denver University Park, Colo University of Florida Gainesville, Fla. University of Georgia Athens, Ga. University of Idaho Moscow, Idaho University of Illinois Urbana, 111. University of Kansas Lawrence, Kan. University of Maine Orono, Me. University of Michigan Ann Arbor, Mich. University of Minnesota .... Minneapolis, Minn. University of Missouri Columbia, Mo. University of Montana Missoula, Mont. University of Nebraska Lincoln, Neb. University of Nevada Reno, Nev. University of New Mexico . . . Albuquerque, N.M. University of North Carolina . . Chapel Hill, N.C. University of North Dakota . . Grand Fork, N.D. University of Notre Dame . . . Notre Dame, Ind. Founded President 1832 Henry M. MacCracken, D.D.,!LL.D. 1. 1851 Abram W. Harris 2 1833 Henry C. King, D.D. ' i 3 1873 WiUiam O. Thompson, D.D., LL.D. 4 1844 Rev. Herbert Welch, D.D. 5 1859 Edwin E. Sparks 6 1854 F. W. Atkinson, Ph.D. 7 1746 Woodrow Wilson, Ph.D., Litt.D., ' _LL.D. 8 1874 Winthrop E. Stone, A.M., Ph.D. 9 1824 Palmer C. Ricketts, C.E. 10 1832 F. M. Boatwright, M.A., LL.D. 11 1883 C. Leo Mees, Ph.D. 12 1766 Rev. W. H. S. Demarest, D.D. 13 1829 John P. Frieden 14 1865 Charles S. Neeserve, LL.D. 15 1873 R. S. Hyer, A.M., LL.D. 16 1855 George E. MacLean, M.A., LL.D. 17 1871 Alexander C. Humphreys, M.E., ' Sc.D., LL.D. 18 1869 Joseph Swain, LL.D. 19 1871 James R. Day, S.T.D., LL.D. 20 1891 James A. P. Scherer, Ph.D. 21 1824 Flavel S. Luther, B.A., Ph.D. 22 1855 Frederick W.Hamilton, A. B., A.M., LL.D. 23- 1834 E. B. Craighead, LL.D. 24 1795 Rev. G. Alexander, D.D. 25 1802 Col. H. L. Scott, U.S.A. 26 1845 Capt. C. J. Badger, U.S.N. 27 1831 John W. Abercrombie, LL.D. 28 1891 Kendric C. Babcock, B.L., A.M. 29 1872 John N. TUlman, LL.D. 30 1869 Benjamin Ide Wheeler, Ph.D., LL.D. 31 1892 Harry Pratt Judson, A.M., LL.D. 32 1874 Charles W. Dabney, LL.D. 33 1877 James H. Baker, M.A., LL.D. 34 1864 Henry A. Buchtel, A.M., D.D., LL.D. 35 1884 Andrew Sledd, Ph.D. 36 1800 O. C. Barrow, A.M. 37 1892 James Alexander MacLean, M. A., ' Ph.D. 38 1868 Edmund J. James, LL.D. 39 1866 Frank Strong. Ph.D. 40 1868 George E. Fellows, Ph.D., L.H.D., LL.D. 41 1841 James B. Angell, LL.D. 42 1868 Cyrus Northrup, LL.D. 43 1841 Albert R. Hill 44 1895 Clyde A. Duniway, Ph.D. 45 1869 E. Benjamin Andrews, D.D.,[LL.D. 46 1886 Rev. J. E. Stubbs, LL.D. 47 1892 William G. Tight, Ph.D. 48 1795 Francis P. Venable, Ph.D., LL.D. 49 1884 Webster Merrifield, M.A. 50 1842 Rev. J. Cavanagh, C.Sc. 51 1910 CONCERNING THE COLLEGES 387 Val. Prop ' ty Endow ' t and Co-educa- other Resources Stud ' ts Inst ' rs College Colors Annual tional Tuition Approx. 1 2782 215 Violet The Violet Yes $100 $5,512,000 2 3997 358 Royal Purple The Syllabus Yes 80 7,605,000 3 1848 129 Crimson and Gold Hi-O-Hi Yes 75 2,912,000 4 2277 175 Scarlet and Gray Makio Yes None 4,252,000 5 1286 124 Black and Red Bijou Yes 51 2,735,000 6 1200 120 Blue and White La Vie Yes 100 1,984,000 7 815 38 Blue and Gray The Polywog No 200 556,000 8 1301 163 Orange and Black Bric-a-Brac No 160 Not reported 9 2089 141 Old Gold and Black Debris Yes 25 1,462,000 10 651 42 Cherry and White Transit No 200 533,000 11 321 18 Crimson and Blue The Spider Yes 70 956,000 12 230 21 Old Rose and White The Modulus No 75 980,000 13 310 40 Scarlet Scarlet Letter Yes 75 1,379,000 14 954 180 Blue and White Fleur-de-Lis No 60 1,291,000 15 516 33 Garnet and White None Yes 12 176,000 16 703 58 Lemon and Black Sou ' wester Yes 60 340,000 17 2315 160 Old Gold The Hawkeye Yes 20 2,095,000 18 390 35 Silver Gray and Crimson Link No 225 1,392,000 19 331 36 Garnet Halcyon Yes 150 943,000 20 3300 220 Orange The Onondagan Yes 75 3,632,000 21 407 40 Not reported Polytechnic Yes 75 227,000 22 217 22 Dark Blue and Old Gold Ivy No 100 1,879,000 23 1090 209 Brown and Blue The Brown and Blue Yes 100 2,464,000 24 1782 163 Olive and Blue Jambalaya Yes 85 3,320,000 25 322 31 Garnet The Garnet No 75 1,224,000 26 533 90 Black, Gray and Gold Howitzer No None 7,929,000 27 850 89 Blue and Old Gold The Lucky Bag No None 7,631,000 28 573 44 Crimson and White The Corolla Yes 20 1,487,000 29 237 35 Blue and Red The Burro Yes 20 326,000 30 1800 75 Cardinal Cardinal Yes None 659.000 31 3201 389 Blue and Gold Blue and Gold Yes 20 6,564,000 32 5038 303 Maroon Cap and Gown Yes 120 17,888,000 33 1374 135 Scarlet and Black Cincinnatian Yes 75 2,606,000 34 1150 133 Silver and Gold Coloradoan Yes None 656,000 35 1324 170 Red and Gold Kynewisbok Yes 30 775,000 36 90 16 Navy Blue and Orange None No None 447,000 37 3375 199 Red and Black Pandora No 50 1,150,000 38 400 46 Silver and Gold Gem of the Mountains Yes None 466,000 39 4600 430 Orange and Blue The Illio Yes 105 3,384,000 40 2250 117 Crimson and Dark Blue The Jayhawker Yes 30 1,424,000 41 874 70 Light Blue The Prism Yes 30 721,000 42 5013 360 Maize and Blue Michiganensian Yes 40 4,241,000 43 4600 345 Maroon and Old Gold The Gopher Yes 40 4,106,000 44 2536 202 Gold and Black The Savitor Yes None 3,268,000 45 177 30 Copper, Silver and Gold The Sentinel Yes None 892,000 46 3237 156 Scarlet and Cream The Sombrero Yes None 2,054,000 47 276 30 Royal Blue and Silver The Artemisia Yes None 512,000 48 158 16 Cherry and Silver Mirage Yes 40 102,000 49 790 94 Blue and White Yackety-Yack Yes 60 791,000 50 861 61 Pink and Green The Dacotah Yes None 639,000 51 928 80 Gold and Blue The Dome No 100 Not reported 388 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV Name Location University of Oklahoma .... Norman, Okla. University of Oregon Eugene, Ore. University of Pennsylvania . . . Philadelphia, Pa. University of Rochester .... Rochester, N.Y. University of South Dakota . . Vermilion, S.D. University of Southern California. Los Angeles, Cal. University of the South .... Sewanee, Tenn. University of Tennessee Knoxville, Tenn. University of Texas Austin, Tex. University of Utah Salt Lake City, Utah University of Vermont Burlington, Vt. University of Virginia Charlottesville, Va. University of Washington . . . Seattle, Wash. University of Wisconsin .... Madison, Wis. University of Wyoming .... Laramie, Wyo. Vanderbilt University Nashville, Tenn. Washington and Jefferson College. Washington, Pa. Washington and Lee University . Lexington, Va. Washington University St. Louis, Mo. Wesleyan University Middletown, Conn. Western Reserve University . . . Cleveland, Ohio Williams College Williamstown, Mass. Wittenberg College Springfield, Ohio Wooster University Wooster, Ohio Worcester Polytechnic Institute . Worcester, Mass. Yale University New Haven, Conn. Founded President 1892 Rev. A. G. Evans 1 1876 Prince L. Campbell, A.B. 2 1740 Charles C. Harrison, LL.D. 3 1850 Rush Rhees, D.D., LL.D. 4 1882 Franklin B. Gault, Ph.D. 5 1880 George T. Bovard, D.D. 6 1868 Benjamin L. Wiggins, M.A., LL.D. 7 1794 Brown Ayres, Ph.D. 8 1883 Sidney E. Metes, Ph.D. 9 1850 J. J. Kingsbury, Ph.B., A.M., Ph.D., D.Sc. 10 1800 Matthew H. Bucham, D.D., LL.D. 11 1825 Edwin Anderson Alderman, LL.D. 12 1862 Thomas F. Kane, Ph.D. 13 1850 Charles R. Van Hise, Ph.D. 14 1887 Chas. O. Merica, LL.D. 15 1875 J. H. Kirkland, LL.D., Ph.D., D.C.H. 16 1802 James David Moffat, D.D., LL.D. 17 1749 George H. Denney, M.A., Ph.D., LL.D. 18 1859 David F. Houston (Chan.) 19 1831 William A. Shankhn, D.D. 20 1826 Charles F. Thwing, D.D., LL.D. 21 1793 Harry A. Garfield, LL.D. 22 1845 Rev. Chas. G. Heckert, D.D. 23 1870 Louis Edward Holden, D.D., LL.D. 24 1868 Edmund Arthur Engler, A.M., Ph.D.. LL.D. 25 1701 Arthur T. Hadley, LL.D. 26 Colleges Bryn Mawr Bryn Mawr, Pa. 1885 Mount Holyoke South Hadley, Mass. 1837 Radcliffe Cambridge, Mass. 1879 Smith Northampton, Mass. 1875 Vassar Poughkeepsie, N.Y. 1865 Wellesley Wellesley, Mass. 1875 Wells Aurora, N.Y. 1868 M. Cary Thomas, Ph.D., LL.D. 1 Mary E. Wooley, A.M., L.H.D. 2 Le Baron Briggs, A.M., LL.D. 3 L. Clark Seelye, D.D., LL.D. 4 James M. Taylor, D.D., LL.D. 5 Caroline Hazard, M.A., Litt.D. 6 George M. Ward, B.A., M.A., D.D., LL.D. 7 1910 CONCERNING THE COLLEGES 389 Val. Prop ' ty Endow ' t and Co-educa- other Resources Stud ' ts Inst ' rs College Colors Annual tional Tuition Approx. 1 790 57 Crimson and Cream News Letter Yes None $159,000 2 512 40 Lemon Yellow Webfoot Yes None 380,000 3 4500 435 Red and Blue The Record Yes 200 8,723,000 4 380 24 Dandelion Yellow The Interpress Yes 96 1,533,000 5 424 45 Vermilion Coyote Yes 12 509,000 6 1470 199 Cardinal and Gold El Rodeo Yes 62 400,000 7 755 106 Orange and White The Volunteer Yes 60 1,157,000 8 2462 85 Orange and White Cactus Yes 10 1,819,000 9 456 34 Royal Purple Cap and Gown No 100 1,341,000 10 755 60 Crimson and Silver Annual Yes None 918,000 11 497 80 Green and Gold The Ariel Yes 60 1,738,000 12 788 72 Orange and Blue Cocks and Curls No 75 2,312,000 13 1703 103 Purple and Gold Tyee Yes None 768,000 14 4500 395 Cardinal The Badger Yes 30 3,532,000 15 230 40 Brown and Yellow None Yes None 425,000 16 902 115 Black and Gold Comet Yes 95 2,620,000 17 442 30 Red and Black Pandora No 60 788,000 18 560 36 Blue and White Calyx No 50 1,435,000 19 2093 269 Myrtle and Maroon The Hatchet Yes 150 7,700,000 20 320 34 Cardinal and Black OUa Podrida Yes 75 2,676,000 21 914 188 Red and White Reserve Yes 85 4,491,000 22 485 57 Royal Purple The Gul No 140 2,234,000 23 525 38 Cardinal and Cream None Yes 50 489,000 24 661 38 Black and Old Gold The Index Yes 45 1,004,000 25 487 45 Crimson and Steel_Gray None No 150 1,320,000 26 3450 400 Blue Yale Banner Yes 155 Not reported for Womtn 1 419 55 Yellov and White The Lantern No 150 $2,926,000 2 760 89 Light Blue Llamarada No 125 1,763,000 3 427 113 Red and White None No 200 641,000 4 1567 117 White None No 100 2,644,000 5 1011 97 Rose and ' Gray Vassarian No 115 3,171,000 6 1273 100 Deep Blue Legenda No 175 3,073,000 7 177 24 Cardinal The Cardinal No 100 522,000 SSNSRAl, i A .1 .Win I K E C Name and Society Class Course Aaron, Joseph Abraham 1911 VI Abbe, Roy Hosford 1910 II Sp. Abell, Adelaide May, B.S 1909 VII Sp. Adams, Arthur King, A T 1911 II Adams, Elliot Quincy 1909 X Adams, Frederic Hillyer 1911 XIII Sp. Adams, Percival Lysander, B.S 1909 VI Adams, Ralph Guy 1911 II Adler, Leon Meyer 1910 II Ahearn, William Howard 1912 I Sp. Ahem, Vincent Leo 1911 XI Sp. Ahlers, John 1910 I Akerly, Harold Edward, B.S 1910 IV Sp. Albee, Albert Clifton 1912 I Albee, Charles Herbert 1912 X Sp. Alden, Frederick Thornton 1912 III Alexander, Hemy Silas, A.B 1911 II Sp. Allan, John; Andrew, A.B., M.Sc. . . . Grad. XII Allen, Abbott 1910 I Allen, David Pillsbury 1911 II Allen, Roy Hutchins, B.S 1909 XII Sp. Allen, Raynor Huntington, B E . . . 1909 II Allen, Samuel Holliday 1909 IV Sp. Allen, Vincent Weaver 1912 II Allen, Walter Defriez 1911 XIII Allison, Harold Burbidge Cheney ... 1911 X Ahny, Charles, Jr., A.B., X 1910 X Almy, Edward Taber, Jr., KG.... 1909 III Sp. Altamirano, Salvador 1909 VI Alter, John Frank 1911 IV Sp. Anderson, Cedric Samuel 1911 VI Anderson, Eugene Stewart 1911 III Anderson, Maurice Phelps, OH. . . . 1910 XIII Sp. Anderson, Robert Emmet, M.E. . . . 1910 IIISp. Andrews, Albert Willard, A.B 1910 I Angell, Herbert A 1911 IV Appelquest, Jerome Anthony .... 1912 VI 390 Home Address 3 Normandy St., Roxbury, Mass. Bethlehem, N.H. 19 Farrington Ave., AUston, Mass. 24 Grove St., Adams, Mass. 36 Emery St., Medford, Mass. 1709 Caton Ave., Brooklyn, N.Y. Hood River, Ore. Needham, Mass. 2147 Highland Ave., Birmingham, Ala. West Hanover, Mass. 40 White St., Lawrence, Mass. 1929 84th St., Brooklyn, N.Y. 13 Amherst St., Rochester, N.Y. 69 Coolidge St., Brookline, Mass. 109 Trenton St., East Boston, Mass. 109 Porter St., Maiden, Mass. 406 E. Maiden St., Washington, Pa. Aubrey, Quebec, Canada 36 Milwood St., Dorchester, Mass. 81 Beacon St., Saxonville, Mass. Lunenbiurg, Mass. 230 Southern Ave., Mt. Auburn, Cincinnati, Ohio 26 Westmoreland PI., St. Louis, Mo. 18 Arch St., Waterbury, Conn. 1 Winter St., Nantucket, Mass. 2279 Mass. Ave., Cambridge, Mass. 147 Brattle St., Cambridge, Mass. 126 WilHs St., New Bedford, Mass. 3A Artes 35, Mexico City, Mex. 70 Newbury St., Lawrence, Mass. 24 Ruskin St., West Roxbury, Mass. 34 Thompson St., Springfield, Mass. Ill Cherry St., Seattle, Wash. 307 Broadway, Cincinnati, Ohio Canandaigua, N.Y. Portland, Ore. Main St., Middletown, Conn. 19 10 GENERAL DIRECTORY 391 Name and Society Class Applin, Frank Dexter 190Q Arkell, William Clark, ' !• K 1910 Arms, John Taylor, Jr 1911 Armstrong, Kenneth Potter 1910 Arnold, Grant William 1910 Arnold, Harold Shelton, ' r A .... 1910 Atherton, Thomas Henry, Jr., A.B., A 4 ' 1909 Atkins, Lew Morton 1910 Avery, John, Jr., 4 T A 1910 Ayres, Richard Samuel, A.B 1909 Babbitt, Harold Eaton 1911 Babcock, Alfred Bennett Grad. Babcock, Elizabeth Brewer 1909 Babcock, John Brazer, 3d 1910 Babcock, Mabel Keyes, A.B., B.S. . . Grad. Bakeman, George Wilbur 1912 Baker, Cecil Franklin, A.B., B.S. . . Grad. Baker, David Franklin 1912 Baker, Eugene Berkeley 1912 Baker, Frank Adams, K : 1910 Baker, Frederick 1912 Baker, Harry James 1911 Baker, John Wigham 1912 Bakewell, Donald Campbell, A.B. . . 1911 Baldwin, John Robinson, B.S., X . . 1910 Ballard, Harold Foote 1909 Ballard, Volant Vashon 1912 Barber, Earl Huntington 1910 Barker, Charles Morse 1911 Barker, Frederick William, Jr., A K E . 1912 Barnard, Jack Merrow 1912 Barnard, John Edwin 1910 Barnes, Albert Johnson, B.Sc 1909 Barnes, Carlton Sloan 1911 Barnes, William Ellsworth, Jr 1912 Barnett, Louis 1909 Barr, Kester, A T A 1911 Barry, John Lincoln, 3d, A T A . . . . 1912 Bartlett, Charles Lawrence 1911 Bartlett, David Elmore 1910 Bartlett, Ralph Lincoln 1910 Barton, Royal Miner 1911 Batchelder, Charles Leland 1909 Batchelder, Ralph Johnson, B.S. . . . Grad. Batcheller, George Ellinwood 1910 Batchellor, Stillman, B.S 1910 Bates, Ralph Dudley 1912 Bates, Stacy Collins, A T 1912 Bates, Stanley Edwards 1910 Batsner, Alexander Graydon, 22 X . . . 1910 Batty, Ernest James 1911 Course VI I IV I VI Sp. III IV XIII A I II XI V V I IV XI IV III IV II Sp. II VI Sp. I Sp. II Sp. VI Sp, I I XI VI X III Sp. IV Sp. VI Sp. VI Sp. 111 VI II VI II Sp. VI Sp. III VI I IV II III Sp. XI II Sp. I II Sp II Home Address 200 Roxbury St., Keene, N.H. Canajoharie, N.Y. 1311 G St., N.W., Washington, D.C. 112 Sycamore St., Somerville, Mass. Fremont, Neb. North Abington, Mass. Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Butte, Mont. 45 Perkins St., West Newton, Mass. Pineville, Ky. 140 St. Botolph St., Boston, Mass. 719 Boylston St., Boston, Mass. 102 Crawford St., Roxbury, Mass. 11 Downer Ave., Dorchester, Mass. Wellesley Hills, Mass. 1022 Chestnut St., Newton Upper Falls, Mass. Champaign, 111. Haverford, Pa. 52 Central St., Auburndale, Mass. 12 Rill St., Dorchester, Mass. 75 Washington St., Lynn, Mass. 2 Church St., Norwich, Conn. 52 Central St., Auburndale, Mass. 5529 5th Ave., Pittsburg, Pa. 24 E. Georgia Ave., Atlanta, Ga. Millington, Mass. Creston, Cal. 17 Maple Ave., Newton, Mass. 25 Newton St., Marlboro, Mass. 215 Park Ave., Syracuse, N.Y. 350 Commercial St.,Weymouth,Mass. 22 Vine St., Winchester, Mass. 19 South Park St., Halifax, N.S. 47 Raymond St., Everett, Mass. 432 Columbia Rd., Dorchester, Mass. 480 Tremont St., Boston, Mass. 84 Hodge Ave., Buffalo, N.Y. 42 Parker St., Nev ton Centre, Mass. 26 Putnam St., Buffalo, N.Y. 523 Fletcher St., Lowell, Mass. Newburyport, Mass. 166 Richard St., Elmwood, R.I. North Reading, Mass. 16 Vincent St., No. Cambridge, Mass. 51 Elm Ave., Mt. Vernon, N.Y. Littleton, N.H. Cohasset, Mass. 65 Sparks St., Cambridge, Mass. 1 Melville Terrace, Newton, Mass. 238 Albany Ave., Avondale, Cincin- nati, Ohio 196 High St., Valley Falls, R.I. 392 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV Name and Society Class Course Baxter, Lewis L., B.E 1910 IV Sp. Baxter, William Henry 1912 III Sp. Beach, Albert John 1910 I Beale, James McArthur, AT 1912 III Beales, Ralph Linwood 1910 III Sp. Beall, Van Zandt, B.S 1910 I Sp. Beason, Lew Wyatt 1912 VI Becker, John, Jr 1912 II Beckmann, Rafael Adolph 1910 III Beebe, Hiram Ernest, B.S 1910 VI Sp. Beers, Louis Gilbert, :S K 1909 X Belcher, Daniel 1909 II Belden, Charles Josiah, ATA .... 1910 II Bell, Frank Frederick, 2 A E 1910 II Bell, John Rice 1911 X Benbow, David Fry, ATA 1912 II Sp. Bender, Homer Charles, KG 1909 I Bennett, Frederick Arthur 1912 II Bennis, Arthur Thomas 1912 VI Benson, Harvey Smith, A X .... 1912 II Bent, Donald Earl, r A 1912 VI Sp. Benton, Carroll Roland 1910 I Berkowitz, Benjamin 1912 I Sp. Bermudez, Ruben, Jr 1912 III Besse, Eldred Edward 1910 II BesseHevre, Arthur Cleborne 1909 XIII Bettington, Egerton Mitford, X 4 ' . . . 1909 VI Bickerdike, Charles Edgar Odin ... 1912 VI Bicknell, Richard Stuart 1910 X Sp. Biedler, WilHam Thomas, B.S. ... 1910 VI Bien, Van Tuyl Hart 1910 XIII Bierer, John Michael, B.S 1910 X Sp. Bigelow, Braxton, A 4 1910 III Sp. Bigelow, John Arthur, K e 1911 IV Sp. Billings, Harold Dexter, l T A . . . . Bird, William Case, A T 12 1912 I Bishop, Frank Day 1911 V Black, Thomas Bass 1909 III Blaisdell, Walter Osgood 1912 III Blanchard, Cecil King, B.S 1910 VII Sp. Blankenbuehler, Rea Edmunds, A.B. . 1909 X Sp. Blodget, William Power, A.B 1909 IV Sp. Blood, Kenneth Thompson 1909 XIII Boardman, Wallace Eugene 1909 II Sp. Bogdasarian, Swren 1911 IV Sp. Bollenbacher, John Carlisle, A.B. . . . 1909 IV Boltz, Robert Joseph 1910 I Sp, Bombrini, Alberto Maria 1911 VIII Sp. Bommer, Fred William 1912 XI Bonebrake, Benjamin Snively, H . . 1910 VI Sp. Bonvouloir, Lionel 1911 VI Sp. Borovoy, Samuel 1912 I Sp. Bounetheau, Harold DuPre 1909 IV Home Address 1710 Belcourt St., Nashville, Tenn. 755 Boylston St., Boston, Mass. 12 Buckingham St., Somerville, Mass. 1437 Beacon St., Brookline, Mass. 36 George St., Rockland, Mass. Fort Worth, Tex. 2656 Jefferson Ave., Ogden, Utah 18 Roxana St., Hyde Park, Mass. Parral Chihuahua, Mexico Ipswich, S.D. 52 Cedar St., Taunton, Mass. Easton, Mass. 5 E. 53d St., New York City Bristol, Pa. 16 Greenleaf St., Maiden, Mass. 530 Elm St., Reading, Pa. 347 Ralston St., Reno, Nev. 120 Allen PI., Hartford, Conn. Punxsutawney, Pa. 1702 So. State St., Syracuse, N.Y. 1321 E. 12th Ave., Denver, Colo. 356 Belmont St., Manchester, N.H. 9 Spring St., Boston, Mass. San Pedro Sula, Honduras, C.A. 10 Cooke St., Fairhaven, Mass. 47 Rutland Sq., Boston, Mass. Santa Clara, Park Town, Johannes- burg, So. Africa 1103 17th St., Bakersfield, Cal. 91 Esmond St., Dorchester, Mass. 2802 No. Calvert St., Baltimore, Md. 1130 Lamont St., N.W., Washington, D.C. Front Royal, Va. 44 Brimmer St., Boston, Mass. 64 Highland St., Marlboro, Mass. 13 Middle St., Rockland, Me. 18 Foster St., Boston, Mass. 2101 Jackson St., Sioux City, la. 67 St. Botolph St., Boston, Mass. 12 Avon Way, Quincy, Mass. Elizabeth, Pa. Chestnut Hill, Mass. 366 Main St., Concord Jet., Mass. 54 Pleasant St., Wakefield, Mass. 37 Hopedale St., Allston, Mass. Bloomington, Ind. 328 Pelham Rd., Germantown, Pa. Genoa, Italy 225 Spencer Ave., Chelsea, Mass. 1508 Eutaw PL, Baltimore, Md. 207 Beech St., Holyoke, Mass. 49 McLean St., Boston, Mass. Jacksonville, Fla. 19 10 GENERAL DIRECTORY 393 Name and Society Class Course Bowers, George Winthrop 1909 I Sp, Bowers, Ralph Henry 1910 VI Bowman, Bion Angelo 1909 I Boyden, Roger Talbot, S K 1910 I Sp, Boyer, Joseph Alexander, A T li . . . 1912 II Brackett, Harold Hasty 1912 VI Bramhall, Percy Maynard 1910 VI Bray, John Leighton 1912 III Sp. Breyer, Robert Samuel, A T li .... 1910 III Briel, Karl Rudolph 1912 III Briggs, Chester Jackson, B 9 II . . . . 1910 III Briggs, Leroy Edmund 1910 II Brooks, Austin Whitney 1911 VI Sp. Brooks, Gordon Glyndon 1911 VIII Sp. Brooks, John Nixon, A.B 1909 I Brown, Clarence Jay 1909 IV Sp. Brown, Dallas, Jr 1910 II Brown, Edmund Guilford 1912 III Brown, George Arthur 1911 X Brown, Harold Chester 1910 II Brown, Karl Hamlin 1912 VIII Brown, Parker Joseph 1912 IV Sp. Brown, Perley Kimball 1910 XI Brownell, Walter Keith 1910 I Brownlee, Malcolm Bruce, Jr., A . . 1911 III Sp. Brownlee, Robert Bruce 1911 II Sp. Brush, Reuben Warner 1910 VI Buckley, William Joseph 1911 I Bullard, Maurice Lucian 1909 II Burgher, Ballard, A.B 1909 I Burgher, Stephen Lawrence 1909 VI Burleigh, William Storer 1910 II Burnett, Robert Field, e X 1910 III Sp. Burnham, Paul Edwin 1911 I Burnham, Philip Weeks 1910 IV Burroughs, Stanley Mainville 1911 II Sp. Burt, Angus Edward 1909 III Sp. Burton, Felix Arnold, A.B., A K E . . . 1909 IV Busby, Frederick Henry 1912 VI Busey, Charles Bowen, A.B 1912 II Byron, Walter Harwood, B.S., 2 X . . 1909 X Home Address 359 Westford St., Lowell, Mass. 832 Columbia Rd., Dorchester,Mass. 263 West Newton St., Boston, Mass. 282 Dartmouth St., Boston, Mass. 296 E. Main St., Gloucester, Mass. 3 Arlington St., S. Framingham, Mass. 84 Tenth St., Lowell, Mass. 355 Columbus Ave., Boston, Mass. 707 Webster Ave., Houston, Tex. 395 Ashmont St., Dorchester, Mass. 567 Watertown St., Newtonville,Mass. 129 Waverly St., Providence, R.I. Wellesley Hills, Mass. Atlanta, 111. 240 W. State St., Trenton, N.J. 2020 2d Ave., S., Minneapolis, Minn. 184 Rockland St., New Bedford, Mass. 120 Spring St., Medford, Mass. 71 Keeley St., Haverhill, Mass. 104 Geneva Ave., Dorchester, Mass. 6 Patten St., Watertown, Mass. 9 True St., Revere, Mass. 290 Myrtle St., Manchester, N.H. 62 Pleasant St., Brookline, Mass, 312 8th Ave., Spokane, Wash. Youngstown, Ohio Cambridge, Vt. 29 Childs St., West Lynn, Mass. Radford, Va. Oak Lawn, Dallas, Tex. 45 Highland Ave., Winthrop, Mass. Natick, Mass. 69 Eleanor St., Chelsea, Mass. 40 Victoria St., Lowell, Mass. 249 Bacon St., Waltham, Mass. 476 Mt. Auburn St., Watertown, Mass. 24 Market St., Newburyport, Mass. 17 Newcastle Rd., Faneuil, Mass. 368 Shawmut Ave., Boston, Mass. Urbana, 111. Williamsport, Md. Cabeen, Charles Franklin 1912 Cabot, Samuel, A.B., A I ' 1910 Caldeira, Renato 1912 Calder, Horace Walter 1909 Caldwell, Frank Walker 1912 Caldwell, Philip Lord, K 9 1911 Calvin, Herbert Howard, :s K . . . . 1912 Campbell, Arthur, 2 A E 1912 Campbell, Charles Lincoln 1909 Campbell, James Kenneth, K 9 . . . . 1911 II Sp. 18 Cabot St., Salem, Mass. V Sp. 109 Commonwealth Ave., Boston, Mass. VI Sp. Santos, Brazil VI Sp. 118 Neponset St., Norwood, Mass. II Lookout Mountain, Tenn. I 101 Gainsboro St., Boston, Mass. VI 2135 Sacramento St., San Francisco, Cal. XI 31 Jaques St., Somerville, Mass. X 228 Beale St., Wollaston, Mass. I Esmont, Va. 394 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV Name and Society Class Campbell, Kenneth James, B.S. . . . 1909 Camsell, Charles Grad. Canaday, William Atkinson 1912 Cardinal, Adolphe Charles 1912 Carey, Charles Donald 1910 Carney, Arthur William 1911 Carpenter, Charles Hamlin, K e . . . . 1912 Carpenter, Kenneth Earle 1909 Cartagena, Nicholas Manrique .... 1910 Carter, Clifton Carroll 1909 Cartwright, Kenneth 1912 Cary, Richard Lucius 1909 Castelhun, Frederic Karl, 8 X . . . . 1910 Catching, Harry Hardin, K e 1911 Chamberlin, Olin Vivian, 4 K S . . . . 1910 Chambers, George James 1912 Champagne, Joseph Leslie 1912 Chandler, Henry Daland, A.B., A 4 ' . . Grad. Chandler, Leroy Wilder 1912 Chantry, Allan J., 2 X 1909 Chapin, Maurice Scott, e A X 1910 Chapman, Edward Prichard 1909 Chapman, Lawrence Boylston .... 1910 Chapman, Laurance Dana ...... 1910 Chapman, Thomas Garfield 1909 Chase, Grliff van Heik, A.B 1910 Chase, Philip Hartley, A.B 1909 Chen, Sidney Ying 1912 Cheney, James Burleigh, B E . . . .1911 Cherry, Martin Charles 1912 Chinchilla, Pelayo Kirkpatrick . . . 1909 Chow, Chushen 1909 Christie, John Anderson, S K . . . . 1909 Christie, Madison Walter 1912 Cilley, Jay Wesley 1910 Clapp, Charles Horace, B.S Grad. Clapp, Dudley 1910 Clapper, Leland, B.C.E 1909 Clark, Charles Cameron 1910 Clark, Eldon Saunders 1910 Clark, Franklin Haven, Jr., A . . . . 1912 Clark, Horace Little, :i A E 1909 Clark, Milton Stanley, A T 1909 Clark, Oberlin Shurtlett 1911 Clavell, Antonio Cepero 1911 Cleverdon, Herbert Squires, A T A . . . 1910 Clifford, Walter Woodbridge 1909 Cloudman, Herbert Cordwell 1909 Clough, Harry Linwood, B.S 1910 Cobb, Frank Lewis 1910 Coburn, William Haskins, K 2 . . . 1911 Codding, Henry White 1912 Coffin, Mitchell 1911 Cohen, Joseph Horace 1912 Sp. Course I XII I I II III II IV Sp. II Sp. VI II I Sp. VI I II I III IV VI XIII III XIII VI Sp. Ill IV Sp. VI XIII Sp. II Sp. II Sp. ISp. X Sp. V I VI XII X I IV Sp. I VI I Sp. Ill Sp. II V IV I II V VI VI VI II III Sp Home Address 204 E. High St., Mt. Vernon, Ohio Ottawa, Canada 283 State St., Albany, N.Y. 319 Park Ave., Paterson, N.J. Stroudsburg, Pa. 30 Saunders St., Lawrence, Mass. 29 Richardson St., Newton, Mass. 287 Pawtucket Ave., Pawtucket, R.I. Mayaguez, Porto Rico Washington, D.C. 24 Park St., Wakefield, Mass. 300 Club Rd., Roland Park, Balti more, Md. 51 High St., Newburyport, Mass. London, Ky. 603 N. Main St., Washington, Pa. 673 Prospect Ave., Buffalo, N.Y. 19 Mellen St., Cambridge, Mass. 195 Marlboro St., Boston, Mass. 48 Nelson St., Leominster, Mass. Malvern, la. 127 School St., Springfield, Mass. 1117 Lake Ave., Pueblo, Colo. Sachem Terrace, Norwich, Conn. Wellesley Farms, Mass. 54 Falmouth St., Boston, Mass. Catskill, N.Y. 38 College St., Hanover, N.H. Shanghai City, Shanghai, China 326 Bull St., Savannah, Ga. 22 Seymour St., Roslindale, Mass. Casilla 1182, Valparaiso, Chile Shanghai, China 34 Arnold PI., North Adams, Mass. 24 Greenville St., Somerville, Mass. South Newbury, N.H. 18 Atlantic St., South Boston, Mass. 52 Hartford St., Dorchester, Mass. Ames, la. 141 Sargeant St., Holyoke, Mass. 1 1 Montague St., Dorchester, Mass. 1019 N. Calvert St., Baltimore, Md. Dunbar Hall, Exeter, N.H. 329 E. 4th St., Jamestown, N.Y. 30 Sydney St., Dorchester, Mass. Ponce, Porto Rico 2207 Andrews Ave., New York City 60 Oak St., Hyde Park, Mass. 792 Main St., Westbrook, Me. 231 Main St., Brockton, Mass. 56 Mt. Everett St., Dorchester, Mass. Jefferson, Me. 415 Pearl St., Brockton, Mass. 30 Remsen St., Brooklyn, N.Y. 113 Leverett St., Boston, Mass. 19 10 GENERAL DIRECTORY 395 Name and Society Class Course Cohen, Samson Kalmon 1910 I Cole, John Foster 1910 VI Cole, Marcus Johnson, ATA 1909 II Colebrook, Maus Winegar 1910 V Sp. Coleman, Arthur Moxham, A . ... 1911 VI Sp. Collingham, Howard 1910 VI Collins, William Leo 1912 XI Colson, Henry Chfford, Jr 1910 Sp. Comins, Albert Knowlton 1909 V Sp. Comstock, Marshall Ernest, I 2 K ... 1911 VI Sp. Comstock, Rock Livingston, A K K . .1912 VI Congdon. Howard Wilbur, A.B., A.M. . 1909 I Conner, George Cartwell 1910 VI Connolly, Eugene Leo 1909 V Connolly, John William 1912 I Constable, John Pierrepont, A . . .1911 XIII Sp. Cook, Hardy Merrill 1910 VI Sp. Cook, James Arthur 1912 VI Cooke, Francis Gray 1911 XIII Cooley, Llovd Cartwright, 2 A E ... 1911 X Cooper, Les ' ter William 1912 VI Copeland, Stuart Brown, A T A .... 1911 II Coplan, Michael Abram 1910 I Cornell, Samuel Hoag, X 1911 XIII Cotton, Evan Bruce 1912 VI Coulson, Herbert 1912 VI Courtney, Bernard Freeman 1910 V Covin, Frederick William 1911 II Sp. Cowee, George Alvin, A T 1911 III Cox, James Alexander, A T 1910 XI Sp. Cox, Robert Sayre, A 4 ' 1912 III Sp. Coy, Edward Brown, 2 A E 1912 I Crawford, Chauncey H., B.S 1909 I Creecy, Charles Eaton, X 1910 I Sp. Creighton, Irving Clement 1912 II Sp. Cremer, Randall 1912 I Crichton, Hiram Neil 1910 III Sp. Critchett, James Hamilton, e A X . . . 1909 VIII Crommett, Orrin James 1910 II Crossley, Frederick Turner 1910 VI Sp. Crost, William Sol 1912 VI Crowley, John Edward 1911 VI Sp. Cumings, George Bradley 1910 VI Cummings, Harold Keff, A.B 1910 I Cummings, Herbert Stanley 1912 II Sp. Cummings, Laurence Theodore . . . 1912 I Curtis, Allen 1910 I Curtis, Arthur Harrison 1910 I Sp. Curtis, Frank Henry 1911 III Curtis, George Lancey 1912 VI Curwen, George Barr, A T A 1911 III Sp. Gushing, Walter Burgess, e i 1910 X Cushman, Paul Allerton 1911 VI Home Address 3 Elbert St., Roxbury, Mass. 456 Broadway, South Boston, Mass. 106 Mt. Vernon St., Lowell, Mass. 45 Lake View Pk., Rochester, N.Y. 6 St. James St., Louisville, Ky. 66 Oxford St., Somerville, Mass. Medway, Mass. Abington, Mass. Wakefield, Mass. 75 Wyman St., West Medford, Mass. Wellsville, N.Y. 272 Dudley St., Providence, R.I. Truro, Nova Scotia Caryville, Mass. 47 7th St., Cambridge, Mass. 8 Cottage PL, Utica, N.Y. 189 Blue Hill Ave., Roxbury, Mass. 29 Warren St., Peabody, Mass. 296 South Ave., Whitman, Mass. 26 Stetson St., Brookline, Mass. 56 Bartlett St., Maiden, Mass. 257 Lyon St., Milwaukee, Wis. 97 Hampden St., Roxbury, Mass. 67 West 83d St., New York City Arundel Apts., Baltimore, Md. 287 Huron Ave., Cambridge, Mass. 32 Dell Ave., Hyde Park, Mass. 61 Mont view St., W. Roxbury, Mass. 41 Edgell St., Gardner, Mass. 32 Hemlock St., Roslindale, Mass. Terre Haute, Ind. Westerly, R.I. Huntington, W.Va. Ilchester, Howard Co., Md. 40 Hamilton Ave., Lynn, Mass. 112 C St., S.E., Washington, D.C. Odebolt, la. 41 Palfrey St., Watertown, Mass. 115 Orange St., Chelsea, Mass. 1412 Broad St., Providence, R.I. 408 Franklin Ave., Hartford, Conn. 15 Forest Ave., Bangor, Me. 6 Elmwood Ave., Winchester, Mass, Auburn, Me. 104 Sharon St., West Medford, Mass. Winchendon, Mass. 132 Centennial Ave., Gloucester, Mass. 72 Centennial Ave., Revere, Mass. 8 East St., East Weymouth, Mass. 384 Newtonville Ave., Newtonville, Mass. 7 Fairfield St., Salem, Mass 108 Walpole St., Norwood, Mass. 136 Newbury St., Boston, Mass. 396 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV Name and Society Class Daley, Mitchell Joseph, 8 X 1909 Dab-ymple, Philip White, B E . . . . 1912 Danser, Harold Wesley 1912 d ' Autremont, Louis P 1910 Davies, Arnold Chaplin 1910 Davis, Albion Richmond 1912 Davis, Ernest Walter 1912 Davis, Harold Benkma 1912 Davis, Harold Martin 1911 Davis, Henry Clarence, Jr., X . . . . 1911 Davis, John Francis 1909 Davis, Luther 1910 Davis, Myron Mathews, A i 1909 Davis, Roger Wolcott, A K E 1912 Davis, Walter Swindell 1910 Dawes, Chester Lawrence 1909 Day, Sidney Logan 1911 Dean, James Somerville, B.S 1909 de Florez, Luis, A 4 ' 1912 de Forest, Alfred Victor 1911 De Forest, Norman, X f 1911 de Landa, Carlos, B.S 1911 Denison, Orville Boardman, K 6 . . . 1911 Dennett, Kingsley Winsor 1910 Dennett, Minot Savage, K S . . . .1911 de Romana, Albert Lopez 1910 Desmond, Thomas Charles, A.B., S A E . 1909 Devine, Robert Lawrence 1912 Devlin, John Joseph 1911 Dewey, Bradley, A.B., X i 1909 Dewey, Frederick Archibald, A l . . . 1910 De Witt, Ernest William 1911 Dexter, Harris Edward 1912 Diehl, John Christopher, B.S 1910 Dierks, Frederick Hemv, A T tt . . . . 1912 Dillon, Peter Lawrence, 2 X 1910 Dillon, Robert Emmett 1910 Doane, Robert Edward, B.S 1909 Doble, Charles French, A 1910 Doble, Ralph Nelson 1912 Dodge, Robert Lincoln 1910 Doherty, Frederick John Aloysious, A.B. 1909 Dolke, Frank Clinton 1911 Dolke, William Frederic, Jr., 9 S . . . Grad. Dolliver, Henry Francis 1911 Dornberger, Herbert Schumann, A.B. . 1910 Dort, Joseph Cummings 1909 Dow, Benjamin Warren, f K S . . . . 1909 Dow, Leander Allen, A T Si 1910 Downing, Lester Locke 1912 Downs, Loren Noxen, Jr 1910 Dows, Chester Lawrence 1911 Drake, Whitford 1910 Dray, Walter Remy, A.B 1910 Course III II VI III VIII II VI I Sp, I VI II V VI Sp, X IV VI Sp. IV IV II XIII Sp. Sp. III IV VI Sp Sp, II II VI I Sp. Sp. XIII III X Sp, Sp. II II VI Sp, Sp, I II VI II Sp Sp VI II II Sp. VI V VI IV Sp, Sp, XI I I II IV VI VI VI XIII A II Home Address 69 Maple St., Marlboro, Mass. 203 Woburn St., West Medford, Mass. 71 West Main St., Freehold, N.J. 1401 East First St., Duluth, Minn. Georgetown, Mass. 9 Butler St., Dorchester, Mass. 19 Raymond St., Everett, Mass. Lancaster, N.Y. 28 Auckland St., Dorchester, Mass. Fort Andrews, Mass. 116 Upland Rd., Cambridge, Mass. 258 Westville St., Dorchester, Mass. 18 Summer St., Augusta, Me. 79 Vernon St., Hartford, Conn. 802 N. Carrollton Ave., Baltimore,Md. 129 Appleton St., Arlington Hts.,Mass. 64 W. 6th Ave., Huntington, W.Va. College Station, Tex. Oyster Bay, L.I. 7 E. 10th St., New York City Sanford, Fla. 6th Liverpool 87, Mexico City, Mex. 26 Pearl St., So. Framingham, Mass. 166 Bellevue St., W. Roxbury, Mass. 27 St. Stephen St., Boston, Mass. Arequipa, Peru, S.A. 3414 Disston St., Tacony, Philadel- phia, Pa. 110 School St., Roxbury, Mass. 35 Parsons St., Brighton, Mass. 27 Everett St., Cambridge, Mass. 1700 Broadway, New York City Osterville, Mass. 1794 Columbia Rd., So. Boston, Mass. New Oxford, Pa. 412 Gladstone Blvd., Kansas City, Mo. 17 Thornley St., Dorchester, Mass. Belchertown, Mass. 404 Hoffman St., Elmira, N.Y. 24 South St., Quincy, Mass. 24 South St., Quincy, Mass. South Hamilton, Mass. 36 Mayfield St., Dorchester, Mass. Garrison Hall, Boston, Mass. 285 Newbury St., Boston, Mass. 33 Clinton St., So. Framingham, Mass. 207 Craig St., Pittsburg, Pa. 161 W. 78th St., New York City 7 Standish St., Dorchester, Mass. Spokane, Wash. 30 Bowdoin St., Cambridge, Mass. 33 Clarendon St., Boston, Mass. 339 Walker St., Lowell, Mass. 212 Bacon St., Waltham, Mass. Hotel Metropole, Chicago, 111. 19 10 GENERAL DIRECTORY 397 Name and Society Class Drew, William Noel, H X 1910 Du Bois, Warren Livingston, B.S. . . . 1910 Duell, Garth Homer 1912 DuflFett, Norman 1911 Duffy, James Francis 1911 Dugan, William Edward, Jr 1912 Duke, Leslie Burton, K e 1912 Dun, Henry Walke, Jr., A 1909 Dunbar, Arthur Richards, A.B. . . .1910 Dunbar, Henry Cape 1912 Dunkel, Charles Alexander 1910 Dunlap, Chester Dwight 1910 Dunlap, Joseph Howard, A.B 1911 Dunnington, Francis Howison, S A E . 1909 Duyser, Cornelius Anthony 1912 Dwight, Carl Wood 1909 Dyer, Brainerd, A.B 1909 Dyer, Sterling Burton 1911 Eaton, Warren Moseley 1909 Edes, Edward Louis 1909 Edge, Alan Francis 1909 Edgerton, Gurdon Irving, r A . . . . 1912 Edwards, Charles, Jr., B E 1911 Egan, Raymond Wesley 1910 Eicher, Archibald, :: A E 1912 Eisenberg, Adolph Martin 1912 Eksergian, Rupen 1912 Elbert, John Jacob, X I 1909 Elder, Gordon Wyman 1911 Eldred, Calvin Powell 1911 Ellis, James Hawes 1912 Ellis, Ridsdale, A ... 1909 Elton, Herbert Charles 1908 Emmel, Rudolph 1911 Estes, George Henry 1911 Evans, Frederick James 1911 Everett, Wilbur 1908 Everett, William Dexter 1910 Fabens, Andrew Lawrie, A.B 1910 Fales, Helen Lillian 1910 Farrington, Harold Phillips, B.S., K Z . Grad. Farwell, Joseph Willard, Jr 1912 Faulkner, Frederick Richardson, A.B. . 1909 Faunce, Kenneth Winslow, t K IS . . . 1911 Fay, Thornwell, Jr., B.S 1909 Ferguson, William Craig, A T ft . . . . 1909 Fernandez, Francisco, A.B 1911 Fernandez, Richard Osborne 1910 Fernstrom, Karl Dickson, WAX . . . 1910 Ferris, Livingston Polk, A.B 1910 Course X VI Sp. UI Sp. X VI I III I Sp. V II Sp. II VSp. II Sp. VI XI I Sp. V II II Sp, I V IV XIII Sp II Sp XI VII I X V VI VIII VIII I III II XI VI III Sp. Sp. Sp, Home Address 201 Magnolia St., Roxbury, Mass. Freehold, N.J. 27 Howe St., Somerville, Mass. 1134 Lake Ave., Rochester, N.Y. 8 Mather St., Derchester, Mass. Culver Rd. and E. Main St., Roches- ter, N.Y. 147 Harrishof St., Roxbury, Mass. 174 Chestnut St., Albany, N.Y. West Bridgewater, Mass. 481 Talbot Ave., Dorchester, Mass. 14 Cohasset St., Roslindale, Mass. 40 Summer St., Everett, Mass. 38 W. Prospect Ave., Washington, Pa. Charlottesville, Va. 102 Wallins St., Winsted, Conn. Burlington, la. 12 Market St., New Bedford, Mass. Cape Elizabeth, Me. 40 Appleton St., Waltham, Mass. Bolton, Mass. 79 Milton St., Readville, Mass. 3 Whittier St., No. Cambridge, Mass. 331 Park Ave., Paterson, N.J. Edgecliff Rd., Cincinnati, Ohio W. Pittsburg St., Greensburg, Pa. 80 Green St., Boston, Mass. 9 Madison St., Somerville, Mass. 1030 21st St., Des Moines, la. 52 Maple St., Maiden, Mass. 105 18th St., Lowell, Mass. 418 Wallace Ave., Covington, Ky. 120 Regent Rd., Leicester, England 105 King St., Dorchester, Mass. 47 Walk Hill St., Jamaica Plain, Mass. 18 Laurel Ave., Auburn, Me. 278 9th St., So. Boston, Mass. Georgetown, Mass. 8 Allston St., Dorchester, Mass. Williamstown, Mass. 5 Beech St., So. Framingham, Mass. 56 Bellevue St., West Roxbury, Mass. Canton, Mass. Summerland, British Columbia 119 Bellevue St., W. Roxbury, Mass. 1507 Rusk Ave., Houston, Tex. Adams, Mass. Asuncion, Paraguay, S.A. 33 Robinson St., Somerville, Mass. II V I XI I VI X II Sp VI Sp. X XIII 315 Raleigh Ave., Norfolk, Va VI Sp. Lamourie, La. 398 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV Name and Society Class Ferry, Earl Emerson 1912 Ferry, Ralph Montague 1912 Fick, Wilhelm Georg 1909 Finberg, Joseph Benjamin 1912 Finch, Stanley Phister, A.B., C.E. . . Grad. Finnie, James Irving 1909 Fish, Joseph Pryor 1912 Fisher, Howard Colburn 1909 Fisher, Richard Bradford 1910 Fisher, Thomas Chatfield 1912 Fitch, Edwin Oberlin, Jr 1909 Fitzherbert, Leroy George ...... 1911 Fitzwater, John Moxcey 1910 Flagg, Montague, A I ' 1909 Fleming, Paul Reed, e A X 1911 Fletcher, Charles Barrows, S K . . . 1910 Fletcher, Matthews, S K 1910 Flett, Louis Ernst 1912 Flickinger, Harrison William, S X . . . 1910 Foley, Henry Michael 1912 FoUansbee, Everett Merrill Hatch . . 1910 Follett, David, Jr., A T S2 1912 Font, Manuel, 2 K 1912 Foote, Arthur John 1910 Ford, Chester Cook Grad. Forrest, Lawrence Raymond 1909 Forrester, George Wylie 1912 Forristall, George Bashford 1911 Foster, Raymond Celden 1912 Foster, William Dewey, ' I ' K 2 . . . .1911 Fowler, Herbert Ernest, B.S 1910 Fox, Harold Robert Leslie 1912 Fox, Rudolph Herzer 1912 France, WiUis R 1910 Francis, Stafford Allen, A T 1911 Franklin, Paul James 1912 Eraser, Paul Gillivray 1912 Frazier, Donald Nichols 1911 Fredriksen, Norman 1912 Freed, Charles 1909 Freedman, Abram James 1912 French, Donald Adams 1910 French, Louis Osborne, ATA .... 1910 Frost, Harwood Young, B E .... 1909 Fryer, Herbert 1911 Fuller, Bernard Roy 1909 Fuller, Joseph Cheever, A K E .... 1911 Fulton, Margaret Alexina 1911 Funk, Carl Augustus 1912 Gadsby, George Madill, Ph.B. .... 1909 Gaillard, David Saint Pierre 1911 Gale, Albert Garland, A T S2 1912 Course Home Address 84 Elizabeth St., Pittsfield, Mass. 84 Elizabeth St., Pittsfield, Mass. 7459 Maple Blvd., St. Louis, Mo. 37 Lowell St., Boston, Mass. Austin, Tex. 240 Chestnut St., Clinton, Mass. 22 Hamilton St., Brockton, Mass, High St., Westwood, Mass. 11 Washington Sq., Gloucester, Mass. Cotuit, Mass. Beach Bluff, Mass. 16 Oxford St., Somerville, Mass. 213 Sheppard St., Penn Yan, N.Y. 90 Washington St., Hartford, Conn. Natick, Mass. 282 Dartmouth St., Boston, Mass. 282 Dartmouth St., Boston, Mass. 154 Youle St., Melrose, Mass. 527 W. 7th St., Erie, Pa. Palmer, Mass. 20 Summit PL, Newburyport, Mass. 234 Columbia St., Adams, Mass. San Juan, Porto Rico 564 Elm St., Pittsfield, Mass. 255 Emerson St., So. Boston, Mass. 90 Henry Ave., Lynn, Mass. 25 Prospect St., Clinton, Mass. 1553 Beacon St., Brookline, Mass. 537 Broadway, Everett, Mass. 310 Orange St., Springfield, Mass. Ridgeway Ave., Rochester, N.Y. Halse Hall, Jamaica, W.I. 54 Oak St., Hartford, Conn. Van West, Ohio 84 Court St., Exeter, N.H. Box 258, Needham, Mass. 19 Minden St., Roxbury, Mass. 29 Greystone Park, Lynn, Mass. 37 Boardman St., Newburyport, Mass. 88 Willow St., Cambridge, Mass. 487 N. Warren Ave., Brockton, Mass. 172 Fairmount Ave., Hyde Park, Mass. 1216 Grand Ave., Milwaukee, Wis. Waltham, Mass. 28 Washington St., Stoneham, Mass. 547 Riverside Ave., New York City 22 Shaw St., West Newton, Mass. 1700 Dela Vina St., Santa Barbara, Cal. IV 31 Station St., Brookline, Mass. V Sp. Marietta, Ohio VI Culebra, Canal Zone X Sp. 6 Franklin Sq., Gloucester, Mass. VI II II I I Sp, VI VI II V II Sp. XIII A I I Sp, IV I II IX Sp, Sp Sp II II VI Sp, Sp. X III Sp, I I IV X X II VII Sp. IV IV I Sp. II I IV IV Sp. Sp, I II X Sp. I XI IV II Sp. II VI Sp, I II IV Sp, 19 10 GENERAL DIRECTORY 399 Name and Society Class Gale, Roger David, B.S Grad. Gallagher, John Patrick, A. B 1911 Gallagher, Robert Townsend 1912 Gammons, Clifford Warren 1910 Gardner, Albert Lester 1911 Garza, Juan 1912 Gasche, Karl Wise, Ph.B 1910 Gaynor, Keyes Christopher, ATA. . . 1909 Gawne, James Orville, X 1909 Geary, Leslie Edward, A O 1910 Gegenheimer, Ralph Edwin 1910 George, Gardner Clifford 1911 George, Ralph Moore, B.S 1910 Gerity, Heath Scott 1910 Gershberg, Joseph 1911 Gibbs, Arthur Sherman 1909 Gilbert, Royce Wheeler, S A E . . . . 1909 Giles, Donald McFarlan 1911 Gilkison, Gordon Mercer 1909 Gillis, Ridgway Mills, A.B 1910 Gilpatrick, Clifton Gray 1909 Given, James Arthur 1910 Glancy, Robert Clifford 1909 Glaze, John Bladwin, B.S 1911 Glazier, Harold Metcalf 1909 Glazier, Leslie Gordon, S K 1911 Glidden, William Roy 1912 Godfrey, Karl Davenport 1910 Godley, Frederick Augustus, A.B. . . 1910 Goicoechea, Luciano 1911 Goldberg, Jacob 1911 Golden, Louis Robert 1911 Gonzalez, Luis Ramon 1912 Goodhue, William Winfred 1911 Goodspeed, George Edward, Jr. ... 1910 Goodwin, Edwin Weeks 1911 Goodwin, Leslie Hall 1912 Goodwin, Richard Frederic, Jr., A T S . 1910 Gordon, Louis Simon 1909 Gordon, William Stuart, Jr., C.E., A K E 1909 Gott, Herbert Sidney 1910 Gould, Allen Adams, H E 1910 Gould, Richard Hartshorn, 4 B E . . . 1911 Gram, Carl William, ATA 1909 Grant, John Seely 1912 Graupner, Marcellus Fernando . . .1912 Gravely, Julian Stuart, A.B 1911 Gray, George Harrison 1909 Greely, Leslie William 1910 Green, Charles Edward 1910 Green, Fred Mortimer, AT 1909 Green, William Duncan 1909 Course V XI III VI Sp. Sp. Sp. II II X Sp. I XIII A XIII V I VI IV VI Sp. VI XI III I I IV I VI Sp, Sp. VIII IV Sp, VII I Sp VI IV Sp, VI VI VI I Sp, Sp, Sp, I III VI Sp, Sp, III III III II Sp, VI VI Sp XI X III III V VI Sp, Sp Sp I II Sp VI I Home Address 6 Franklin Sq., Gloucester, Mass. I Green St., Watertown, Mass. 33 Crawford St., Roxbury, Mass. 1290 Washington St., West Newton, Mass. 4 Pond St., Weymouth, Mass. 100 Monterey, N.L. Mexico Dresden, Ohio Sioux City, la. 69 Hamlet St., Fredonia, N.Y. 1960 W. 9th Ave., Seattle, Wash. 243 Bruce St., Lawrence, Mass. 697 Salem St., So. Groveland, Mass. 146 Kennedy St., Bradford, Pa. 1928 E. 14th Ave., Denver, Colo. Baku, Russia North Middleboro, Mass. 78 Westland Ave., Boston, Mass. 22 Academy St., Amsterdam, N.Y. Oakville, Ontario, Canada Box 386, Walla Walla, Wash. 27 Paisley Park, Dorchester, Mass. Austin, Tex. Waltham, Mass. 321 E. Cedar St., Denver, Colo. 12 Lincoln St., Hudson, Mass. 772 Wash ington St., Brookline, Mass. 8 Electric Ave., W. Somerville, Mass. 46 St. James St., Roxbury, Mass. 101 W. 80th St., New York City Apartado 475, Havana, Cuba 78 Maiden St., Everett, Mass. II Wolcott St., Dorchester, Mass. Santurce, Porto Rico Ipswich, Mass. 27 Conway St., Roslindale, Mass. South Berwick, Me. 3 Barstow St., Allston, Mass. 26 Newbury St., Boston, Mass. 27 Harvard St., Dorchester, Mass. 48 Leonard St., New York City 17 Clarendon Rd., Seacombe, Eng. 1206 Boylston St., Newton Upper Falls, Mass. 1206 Boylston St., Newton Upper Falls, Mass. 20 Kemper St., Wollaston, Mass. 25 Glendale St., Dorchester, Mass. 24 Bigelow St., Cambridge, Mass. Wytheville, Va. 159 Pleasant St., Arlington, Mass. Muncie, Ind. 42 Parkman St., Dorchester, Mass. 488 Watertown St., Newtonville,Mass. 72 Macon St., Brooklyn, N.Y. 400 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV Name and Society Class Greenan, James Owen 1911 Greene, Elbert Daniel, AT U 1910 Greenleaf, Cuthbert Tibbetts .... 1911 Greenleaf, Harold, A T A 1912 Greenleaf, Kenneth, A T A 1911 Gregory, Newman Ballard, 9 A X . . . 1909 Griffin, Harold Hopkinson 1912 Grimes, William Francis, Jr 1910 Groff, James Stephen 1909 Gross, Cora Burt, Ph.D 1911 Grossmann, Marcus Aurelius .... 1911 Grubnau, Victor Carl, A T 12 1909 Grunsky, Eugene Lucius 1909 Guilford, Edward Higley 1912 Guillon, Alfred Victor 1912 Gurney, Harold Peaslee Grad. Guthrie, Seymour Ashley 1910 Hadji Savva, Achilles, A.B 1910 Hague, Alfred, K 2 1910 Haines, Thomas Henry 1911 Hakes, Jesse Franklin 1912 Hale, Henry Appleton, Jr 1910 Haley, Ralph Jandt, A.B 1910 Hall, Edward Russell 1911 Hall, Herbert William 1912 Hall, John 1912 Hall, Norwood Appleton 1912 Hallett, Harold Maurice, K e 1911 Hamilton, Earl Russell 1909 Hammond, Angus Rutland 1912 Hammond, James Clement 1909 Hanna, Elias Samman 1909 Hannaford, Ralph Herman 1910 Hanson, Hugo Henry 1912 Harcourt, Guy Nichols, $ 2 K 1910 Harding, Arthur Leslie 1910 Hargrave, John Morris 1912 Hargraves, William Burton 1910 Harlow, Hamihon 1912 Harrigan, Louis Jeremiah 1911 Harriman, Daniel Francis 1909 Harrington, Charles Anthony, X i . . . Grad. Harrington, Charles Henry 1911 Harrington, Frederick Charles .... 1911 Harrington, Joseph Francis 1911 Harris, Philip Thomas, 2 A E 1910 Harrison, Henry Norris, A T 1911 Harrison, John Kearsley Mitchell . . 1910 Harrub, Calvin Nelson 1909 Hart, Philip, BE 1910 Hartman, Ira Samuel 1910 Hartnett, James Thomas 1912 Hartshorn, Derick Sibley 1909 Course III Sp. VI II ISp. ; VI Sp. Ill II VI VII Sp. VSp. Ill III I VI Sp. VI X III I II Sp. II I II II II VI I VI III Sp. VIII Sp. Ill Sp. III Sp. ISp. IV Sp. I I VI VI III XI XI XIII XIII A I ISp. VI IV VII Sp. II XI II VI II II Sp. Home Address 53 N. Pleasant St., Taunton, Mass. 5 Pitkin PI., Pueblo, Colo. 1 1 South St., Woburn, Mass. Savanna, 111. Savanna, 111. 802 Wall St., Joplin, Mo. 130 Temple St., West Newton, Mass. Belmont, Mass. 18 Meeting St., Newport, R.I. 364 Harvard St., Cambridge, Mass. 236 Custer Ave., Youngstown, Ohio Wyncote, Pa. 146 W. 57th St., New York City 15 Lawson Rd., Winchester, Mass. 150 S. Los Robles Ave., Pasadena, Cal. 196 Trenton St., East Boston, Mass. Riverside, 111. Baffra, Turkey 52 E. 66th St., New York City Peabody Sq., Dorchester, Mass. Westerly, R.I. 24 Winter St., Salem, Mass. 2822 Jackson St., Sioux City, la. 1 Davis St., Wollaston, Mass. Winsted, Conn. Freehold, N.J. 57 Mill St., Revere, Mass. 62 Kenwood St., Dorchester, Mass. 925 South St., Roslindale, Mass. 57 Irving St., Revere, Mass. 3 So. Fairview St., Roslindale, Mass. Tanta, Egypt 15 Rockville Pk., Roxbury, Mass. 1037 Tremont St., Boston, Mass. Wappingers Falls, N.Y. Medfield, Mass. 4124 Floral Ave., Norwood, Ohio 7 Eliot PI., Jamaica Plain, Mass. 20 Langdon St., Cambridge, Mass. 20 Rantoul St., Beverly, Mass. West Medford, Mass. 583 Plymouth Ave., Fall River, Mass. 109 Inman St., Cambridge, Mass. 267 Boylston St., Brookline, Mass. Neponset St., Canton Jet., Mass. 142 South Main St., Orange, Mass. 2028 Locust St., Philadelphia, Pa. 400 Chestnut St., Philadelphia, Pa. Silver Lake, Mass. 444 21st St., Portland, Ore. 823 Palmer PI., Nashville, Tenn. 113 Boston St., Salem, Mass. 30 Howe St., Dorchester, Mass. 19 10 GENERAL DIRECTORY 401 Name and Society Class Hartshorn, Stanford Harding . . . .1911 Hartwell, Arthur Edward 1909 Haslam, Robert Thomas 1911 Hastings, Russell,  • r A 1910 Hathaway, Joseph Wood 1909 Haugaard, William Edward 1910 Hausman, Isaac 1911 Havens, Harry Lucas, 4 ' H K 1909 Hawes, Henry Gordon, Jr., A.B., B E . 1910 Hawkins, Eldred Birmingham, U a . . 1911 Hayman, Milton Earnest 1911 Haynes, Delos Garriott 1909 Haynes, Herman Wallace, B.S. . . .1910 Hayward, Roy Loring 1911 Healy, Leon James Dyson 1909 Hebert, Albert Charles Real, A.B. . . . 1910 Hechinger, Lloyd Arthur 1912 Hedden, Morris Wilbur 1910 Heidelberg, Frederick Martin .... 1909 Hemmenway, Lawrence Todd, K 2 . 1910 Henderson, Austin Brown 1909 Henderson, Stuart Llewellyn 1910 Herlihy, John Albert 1911 Herreshoff, Alexander Griswold, A . . 1912 Herreshoff, Algernon Sidney DeWolf . 1911 Herreshoff, Nathaniel Greene 1912 Hersey, Mayo Dyer, A.B 1909 Hicken, Guy Reynolds 1911 Hickerson, Thomas Felix, Ph.B., A.M. 1909 Hidezi, Matsuo 1912 Hield, Clifford Chase, r A 1910 Higgins, John Joseph 1910 Hildebrand, Walter Herbert 1911 Hildreth, Arthur Griffin 1912 Hill, Bancroft 1911 Hill, Roger Frank, B.S., 2 A E . . . . 1910 Hilliard, Robert Bell 1909 Hilscher, Ralph, B.S 1910 Hinckley, Arthur Thacher, B.S Grad. Hirschfeld, Benjamin Shuman .... 1911 Hobson, Charles Foster, A T A . . . .1911 Hodge, George Edward 1911 Hodges, Frank Ernest 1910 Hodgman, Willis Kennedy, Jr 1911 Holbrook, Edwin Charles 1912 Holbrook, Gordon Godshall 1910 Holbrook, John Alder 1910 Holbrook, Ralph Anthony 1911 Holley, Francis Thomas 1912 Homan, Edmund Lewis 1912 Hooper, Edward Joseph 1909 Hooper, Linzee Sewall, A T n 1912 Hopkins, Paul Stanley 1910 Sp. Sp. Sp, Sp. Sp. Course X H X VI Sp, VI Sp. IV Sp. I Sp. XI Sp. II Sp. Ill Sp. IV VI V I V V III V II VI I VI II XIII Sp. XIII Sp. VI Sp. II I Sp. I VI Sp. II III Sp. I Sp. I Sp. I II Sp. XIII A XI Sp. V IV Sp. X V VI II I XIII VI X IV Sp. Ill III Sp. II Sp. Ill Sp. Sp. Home Address 15 Reservoir St., Gardner, Mass. 1217 Webster Ave., Houston, Tex. 12 Newcomb PI., Taunton, Mass. Walpole, N.H. Middleboro, Mass. Chestnut St., Richmond Hill, L.I. Marysville, Kansas 4501 Holmes St., Kansas City, Mo. Santa Barbara, Cal. 223 Springetsbury Ave., York, Pa. 7 Kilton St., Taunton, Mass. 526 N. 10th St., E. St. Louis, 111. Townsend, Mass. South Easton, Mass. 232 Maple St., New Britain, Conn. Seminaire de Quebec, Quebec, Canada 31 Lambert St., Roxbury, Mass. 285 Quincy St., Brooklyn, N.Y. 1417 Pease Ave., Houston, Tex. 41 Monadnock St., Dorchester, Mass. 65 Dodge St., Beverly, Mass. 28 Jones Ave., Dorchester, Mass. 53 Howard St., Lynn, Mass. Bristol, R.I. 6 Walley St., Bristol, R.I. Bristol, R.I. 170 Kent St., Brookline, Mass. 144 State St., Newburyport, Mass. Ronda, N.C. Gifuken, Japan 1674 Hennepin Ave., Minneapolis, Minn. Melview House, Longford, Ireland 1509 Wolfram St., Chicago, 111. Westford, Mass. Baltimore, Md. Tilton, N.H. 1 1 Elmore St., Newton Centre, Mass. Watseka, 111. 16 Sherwood St., Roslindale, Mass. 1845 Bush St., San Francisco, Cal. 164 Holyrood Ave., Lowell, Mass. 118 Princeton St., East Boston, Mass. 151 Arlington St., Hyde Park, Mass. 19 Cedar St., Taunton, Mass. 19 Mellen St., Montello, Mass. 23 Chamber of Commerce, Minne- apolis, Minn. Westside Rd., Milton, Mass. 63 Harbor View St., Dorchester, Mass. 377 Chestnut St., Lawrence, Mass. 14 State St., Marblehead, Mass. 40 Park St., Stoughton, Mass. 7 Marlboro St., Boston, Mass. Legation St., Peking, China 402 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV Name and Society Class Hopkins, Warren Bernard 1911 Horgan, Patrick Donald 1912 Home, Ralph Warren, S K 1910 Hornor, Aurelius Pointer, A . . . . 1912 Horton, William Henry, Jr 1910 Howard, Herbert Seymour, X l . . . . Grad. Howe, Eugene Clarence, A,B Grad. Howland, Harold Howard 1909 Howland, Julius Lester 1912 Hoyt, Robert Nelson 1909 Hubbard, Carleton 1909 Hubbard, Frances Johnson, A.B. . . . Huber, Berthold Convers 1911 Huckins, Albert Kimball, P T A . . . . 1910 Huddell, Arthur Stanley 1912 Hufsmith, Clifford Lytton, B.S,, 9 AX . 1911 Hugelmann, John Robert 1911 Huggins, Leslie Mansfield 1912 Hulsizer, Robert Inslee 1910 Humphreville, William Edward, Jr., OS 1911 Humphrey, George Selden 1910 Hunt, Franklin Livingston 1909 Hurley, Frederick Aloysius 1910 Hutchins, Otis 1911 Huxley, Roy Desmond 1911 Hyde, Ralph Edwin 1912 Hynes, John J., Jr., A.B 1909 Inglee, Robert 1909 Ireland, Howard Percival 1911 Ives, William Booth 1910 Jackson, Alexander Freeman . . . .1910 Jacobs, Carlton Dupee 1909 Jacobs, Elmer 1910 Jacobs, Richard Clark, Jr., KG. . . . 1910 Jacoby, Louis, A.B., r A 1909 Jacoby, Raymond Weiss, K 9 1910 Jaeger, Frederick 1909 James, Gorton, A.B., B E 1910 James, Ivory Small, S X 1911 James, Jesse Evans 1910 Jeffers, Robert Buck, B.S Jenckes, Edwin Kenyon, i K S . . . . 1910 Jenkins, David John 1911 Jenkins, Hubert OUver, A.B 1909 Jenks, Harold Gould 1911 Jewett, Frederic Cass, l 2 K 1911 Johnson, Cleon Rupert 1911 Johnson, Flora Augusta 1910 Johnson, Harold Ingalls 1912 Johnson, Henry Adams 1912 Home Address Topeka, Kan. Madlen, Mass. Buffalo, N.Y. Brooklyn, N.Y. Course VI 1177 Fillmore St., IV Neche, N.D. XI 209 Salem St., I Helena, Ark. VI Delavan, Wis. XIII A 257 Summer St., VII 87 St. James PI., I Westdale, Mass. VI Hyannis, Mass. VII Wellesley Hills, Mass. II Greenwich, Conn. VII Sp. Houghton, Mich. II 24 White St., Taunton, Mass. VI 6 Wilbur St., Dorchester, Mass. VI 8 Chestnut St., Chelsea, Mass. VI Palestine, Tex. I 1 164 Cambridge St., Cambridge, Mass. II 226 Washington St., Maiden, Mass. VI Sp. 89 Hough Ave., Bridgeport, Conn. VI Sp. 1803 Leeland Ave., Houston, Tex. VI Sp. Belleville, W.Va. VIII 19 Howard St., Waltham, Mass. Ill Sp. Dedham, Mass. VIII 156 Main St., Keene, N.H. VI 22 Maple St., Florence, Mass. X 70 Central St., Stoneham, Mass. I Sp. 838 Auburn Ave., Buffalo, N.Y. II Westdale, Mass. XI 35 Irving St., Newton Centre, Mass. VI Sp. 2353 Ash St., Denver, Colo. II Sp. 22 Congress St., Milford, Mass. II Sp. 28 Maple St., Roxbury, Mass. I Needham, Mass. XI Sp. 215 Auburndale Ave., Auburndale, Mass. VI Cliff and 7th Sts., Dallas, Tex. X 1 78 N. Franklin St., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Ill South Weymouth, Mass. I 33 Buckminster Rd., Brookline, Mass. III Sp. 146 Hemenway St., Boston, Mass. I Sp. Elverson, Chester Co., Pa. I Sp. 91 Franklin Ave., Chelsea, Mass. V 571 Pleasant St., Pawtucket, R.I. II Sp. Stockett, Montana VII Sp. Stanford University, Cal. VI 34 Upland Rd., Melrose Hlds., Mass. VI Sp. 28 Salem St., Andover, Mass. X 17 Pleasant St., Leominster, Mass. IV Sp. 58 Highland Ave., Newtonville, Mass. VI Dana, Mass. II 2 Johnson St., Newburyport, Mass. 19 10 GENERAL DIRECTORY 403 Name and Society Class Johnson, Lewis Howes 1909 Johnson, Reginald Davis, A.B 1910 Johnston, Cecil Chestnut 1912 Johnston, Cyrus Thurston, A ■I ' . . ... 1909 Jones, Barry Hayes 1909 Jones, Bradley 1910 Jones, Raymond Leston . 1910 Jones, Reginald Lamont 1909 Jones, Whitney Blake 1911 Jones, William Henry 1909 Joslin, Garnett Alfred, A T Si 1909 Joy, Charles Frederick, Jr 1910 Joyner, Arthur Edward 1912 Kahn, Milton 1912 Kalbfleisch, Theodore Frederick, Jr. . 1912 Kane, Irving Patterson, B.S., 2 K . . 1910 Kaufman, Abraham Harold Edward. . 1911 Keables, Austin Dow 1909 Kebbon, Harold Eric, T A 1912 Keefe, William Joseph 1910 Keith, Gerald Marcy, B E 1912 Kelley, Edward Francis 1909 Kelley, John Edmund 1911 Kelley, Mark Elbridge 1909 Kellogg, Alfred Galpin, A 1909 Kellogg, Paul 1911 Kelly, William James, A 1909 Kemp, Henry Donald 1912 Kennedy, Edward 1911 Kenrick, Alfred Franklin 1912 Kenway, Edward, - A E 1911 Kerr, Charles Phillips, 2 X 1911 Kerr, Robert Clark, A.B 1909 Kerr, William Caruthers, 2 X .... 1909 Kibbey, Rinker, 9 Z Grad. Kiely, Edmund Bernard 1910 Kilborn, Karl Bray, A.B 1911 Killion, Thomas Stephen 1911 Kimball, Merrill Justin 1912 Kimball, Scott Prescott, A T 12 .... 1911 Kimberley, Burton Russell 1909 King, Frederick James, B X 1909 King, Lester Hazen, X P 1909 King, Walter Wellington, B E ... 1910 Kingsbury, Francis Henry 1912 Kinney, Mark Curtis 1911 Klapacs, Victor Paul 1911 Knight, Thomas Chalkley, 2 A E . . . 1912 Knipp, Arthur Russell, A.B 1909 Sp. Course VI IV Sp. I VI VI II III VI VSp. II III Sp. I III I VI Sp. XI X II IV I I Sp. Sp. II Sp. IV Sp. I IV IX VSp. VI III II ISp. II VI XSp. IV VI II III VI VI IV Sp. II Sp. IV XSp. X IV Sp. VI VI VI Home Address Rockland, Me. 415 Grand Ave., Pasadena, Cal. Fort Fairfield, Me. 2 Crocus Hil l, St. Paul, Minn. 73 Hooker Ave., Poughkeepsie, N.Y. Winthrop, Mass. Barnstable, Mass. Hotel Woodbridge, W. Somerville, Mass. 192 Marlboro St., Boston, Mass. Ashland, Mass. 323 W. 28th St., Los Angeles, Cal. 61 Shurtleff St., Chelsea, Mass. Miami, Fla. 7 Minot St., Boston, Mass. 12 School St., Glens Falls, N.Y. Long Green, Md. 96 Concord St., Lawrence, Mass. 14 Hoyt Ave., Lowell, Mass. Hotel Oxford, Boston, Mass. 132 Devon St., Roxbury, Mass. 303 Westminster Rd., Brooklyn, N.Y. 73 School St., Cambridge, Mass. 2 Winter PI., Maiden, Mass. 15 Beckett St., Peabody, Mass. 51 St. Paul St., Brookline, Mass. 527 Norwood Ave., Buffalo, N.Y. 61 Robinwood Ave., Jamaica Plain, Mass. 108 Mt. Vernon St., West Roxbury, Mass. 169 Beech St., Holyoke, Mass. 26 Bowker St., Brookline, Mass. 85 Lombard St., Newton, Mass. Catonsville, Md. Baltimore, Md. Catonsville, Md. 138 Newbury St., 13 St. Stephen ' s Ct., Lynn, Mass. 204 Brackett St., Portland, Me. 130 Russell St., Maiden, Mass. 22 Humphrey St., Lowell, Mass. 124 6th East St., Salt Lake City, Utah 9725 Dennison Ave., Cleveland, Ohio 277 Centre Ave., Abington, Mass. 13 Arnoldale Rd., Hartford, Conn. 16 Stuyvesant PI., New Brighton, Staten Island, N.Y. Medfield, Mass. Mount Vernon, Ohio 881 Broadway, So. Boston, Mass. 4109 Walnut St., Philadelphia, Pa. 2570 Druid Hill Ave., Baltimore, Md. Boston. Mass. 404 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV Name and Society Class Knox, Harry Gard 1910 Kostiuk, Samuel 1911 Kushlan, Max 1911 Kyle, Clinton Walker 1909 Lake, Harry Eleazer 1911 Lang, Harold Locke 1911 Lang, Walter Warren 1912 Lange, Frank John 1909 Lange, William H 1912 Langer, Robert Roger 1912 Lasier, Emery Liebschutz, 4 S K . . . 1912 Latimer, Robert Cathcart 1909 Laurie, Archibald Walwyn 1912 Laurson, Philip Gustave, B.S 1910 Lawrence, George Leonard, Jr 1909 Lawton, Stanley Herbert 1911 Lazenby, Paul Helme, AT 1909 Leao, Pedro de Souza 1911 Learoyd, Fred Kenneth 1912 Leary, Arthur Francis 1911 Leavitt, George Edward, Jr 1912 Lehmann, Hans Frank 1912 Lenaerts, John Henry 1912 Lennon, Arthur James 1912 Lenox, John Edward 1909 Levine, Max 1912 Levy, Nathan 1911 Lewis, Richard Wheatley, i B E ... 1910 Little, James Bampton 1912 Livingston, George Edward, A $ . . . 1911 Lockett, Harold, A K E 1910 Lodge, John, A.B 1910 Lombard, Oliver Cromwell 1912 Lombard, Pasquale Frederick . . . .1912 Lombard, Robert Hamilton 1910 Long, John Saberton 1911 Long, Thomas Alexander 1909 Longyear, Helen McGraw 1909 Loomis, Lynn Albert, 4 B E 1909 Lord, George Ransom 1910 Lord, Harold Stowell 1911 Lord, Paul Burton, 9 A X 1909 Lord, Raymond Harold 1911 Loring, Ernest Moore, A T ti 1909 Loud, Francis Martin, A.B 1909 Loud, Roger Perkins 1910 Lougee, Norman Arthur 1911 Lovejoy, Carl Howard 1910 Lovell, Joseph Warren 1912 Lovewell, Frank Sherman, A.B. . . . 1909 Lowe, Rodney Messenger 1912 Course xni A VSp. VI II Sp. 63 Otis St., Newtonville, Mass Home Address 52 Franklin St., Annapolis, Md. 142 Stanton St., New York City 40 Grove St., Boston, Mass. Sp. Sp. Sp. I VII Sp. X VI Sp. I III I II IV I I V I VI II I VI XIII VI X I VII I VSp. Ill Sp. VI II I VI II VIII X II Sp. IV III VSp. II III VI III VI VI VI I XII I II Topsfield, Mass. 33 Fairview St., Roslindale, Mass. 33 Fairview St., Roslindale, Mass. 105 Bridge St., Springfield, Mass. 160 E. 78th St., New York City 60 Avon St., Somerville, Mass. 1427 Girard St., Washington, D.C. York, Pa. 149 College Ave., Somerville, Mass. Mitchell, S.D. 76 Lake Ave., Melrose, Mass. Presidents ' Hill, Quincy, Mass. 57 Breed St., Lynn, Mass. Manaos, Brazil 367 Maple St., Danvers, Mass. 82 Havre St., East Boston, Mass. 39 Bromfield St., Newburyport, Mass. 54 Union Sq., New York City 342 Moody St., Waltham, Mass. 87 Brook Ave., Boston, Mass. 7 Austin St., Cambridge, Mass. 6 Morton St., Boston, Mass. 1617 Tremont St., Roxbury, Mass. Fort Monroe, Va. 28 York St., Baltimore, Md. 150 Washington St., Gloucester, Mass. 5116 Madison Ave., Chicago, 111. Media, Pa. 21 Walton St., Dorchester, Mass. 156 Salem St., Boston, Mass. Ashburnham, Mass. Tampa, Fla. 133 Eliot Ave., West Newton, Mass. Leicester St., Brookline, Mass. 727 State St., Springfield, Mass. 423 Fifth St., Marietta, Ohio Athol, Mass. 18 So. Munroe Terrace, Dorchester, Mass. 27 Park St., Dorchester, Mass. Spokane, Wash. 1203 No. Tejon St., Colorado Springs, Colo. 87 Commercial St., Weymouth, Mass, 2 Fairfield St., Salem, Mass. 25 Parkman St., Dorchester, Mass. 35 Station St., E. Weymouth, Mass. 6058 Wentworth Ave., Chicago, 111. 9 Holt St., Fitchburg, Mass. 19 10 GENERAL DIRECTORY 405 Name and Society Class Lowenberg, Maurice Joseph 1911 Lufkin, Fred Richards 1910 Lunt, George Perkins 1910 Luscomb, Florence Hope 1909 Lusky, Leonard Maurice 1910 Lynch, William C 1912 Lyons, Franklin Benton, B.S 1910 Lyons, Manson Ainslie 1910 Mabbott, Harold Clarkson 1912 McAllen, John Lavelle, A 4 1911 McAuliffe, William James 1909 McAvoy, Francis Thomas 1912 McCain, Samuel Norman, 9 A X ... 1909 McCarthy, John Francis 1909 McClelland, Corliss Blake 1912 McClintock, Frank Stockton, A.B. . . 1909 McCrady, Mac Harvey, B.S 1909 MacCreadie, William Thomas .... 1911 McCune, William Rowe, A T 1911 McDonald, Albert James 1912 MacDonald, Henry Douglas 1912 MacDonough, John Vincent 1912 McGrath, David James 1912 Machado, Ernesto Laras 1910 Machen, Thomas Gresham, A.B. . . . 1909 Mackellar, Strathy Ridout, i: A E . . . 1912 McKenney, Karl Gushing 1912 MacKenzie, John David 1911 Mackenzie, Morell 1911 McLaughlin, Thomas Francis, Jr. . . 1911 McManus, Charles Aloysius Joseph . . 1911 McMurtrie, Douglas Crawford, A . . 1910 McNamara, John Daniel 1910 McNeil, Nicholas Tallon 1911 McOsker, Paul Harold 1912 MacPherson, Roy Gay 1911 McRae, George Wadsworth 1910 Madenigian, Kevork 1909 Magee, George Hugh 1910 Maglott, George Frederick, B.S. . . . 1910 Maguire, William James 1912 Main, Charles Reed, B.S 1909 Malcolm, Sydney Arnold 1910 Malone, John Francis, Jr., AT.... 1910 Mangan, Edward 1912 Manley, Harry Lester, 2: K 1911 Manning, Harold Grosvenor 1912 Manson, Harold Crosby, i: A E . . . . 1910 Marceau, Eugene Theodore 1912 March, William Henry 1910 Marshall, Henry Herbert 1909 Marston, Nathaniel Sidney 1911 Course Home Address VI 4 Edwin St., Brookline, Mass. VI 12 Linden St., Woodfords, Me. X 58 High St., Danvers, Mass. IV 14 Ashford St., Allston, Mass. VI Sp. Box 112, Nashville, Tenn. II Sp. 75 Marcella St., Roxbury, Mass. VI Sp. Steubenville, Ohio I Sp. Parrsboro, Nova Scotia 1495 Baldwin St., Waterbury, Conn. 328 Hassalo St., Portland, Ore. 4 Melrose St., Boston, Mass. 13 Joseph St., Jamaica Plain, Mass. 2420 Perrysville Ave., Allegheny, Pa. 130 Chandler St., Boston, Mass. 25 Rosalind Ave., E. Cleveland, Ohio 805 Amberson Ave., Pittsburg, Pa. Lancaster, Wis. 9 Central St., Andover, Mass. 17 Battery PI., New York City Elm St., Hingham, Mass. Ludlow, Vt. 25 Franklin St., Watertown, Mass. 6 Henshaw Terrace, West Roxbury, Mass. San Jose de Costa Rica, C.A. 217 W. Monument St., Baltim ore, Md, 20 King St., East, Toronto, Canada 112 Abbott Rd., Wellesley Hills, Mass. Baddeck, Cape Breton, Canada 68 Barnum St., Taunton, Mass. 51 Creighton St., Roxbury, Mass. 2 Winter St., Dorchester, Mass. 480 Park Ave., New York City 21 Oak St., Boston, Mass. 10 Putnam St., Charlestown, Mass. 209 Stackpole St., Lowell, Mass. 30 Pine St., So. Framingham, Mass. 278 Salem St., Maiden, Mass, Aghin, Armenia 698 Salem St., So. Groveland, Mass. Ada, Ohio 79 Andem St., Providence, R.I. 14 Herrick St., Winchester, Mass. 91 Munroe St., Somerville, Mass. 169 College St., Buffalo, N.Y. 207 2d St., Pittsfield, Mass. 188 Atlantic Ave., Providence, R.I. 559 Centre St., Newton, Mass. 45 Hartford St., Dorchester, Mass. Wollaston Ave., WoUaston, Mass. 6 So. Broajd St., Mobile, Ala. Elmwood, Mass. 106 William St., Portland, Me. VI III I I I Sp. Sp. Sp. I VI II Sp. XI II Sp. II IV Sp. III VIII I V IV Sp. VI II Sp. III II I I Sp. VI III I III II VI Sp. Sp. Sp. I II XI IV II Sp. Sp. XI XIII II Sp. I X II X IV II Sp. VI 406 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV Name and Society Class Martin, John Stephens, ATA .... 1912 Martin, Thorndike de Vries 1909 Masjoan, Valerio 1909 Mason, Austin Blake, A.B., A . . . . 1910 Mason, Edward Mansfield 1912 Mason, Max Clark 1912 Mathur, Bala Pershad 1911 Matte, Andrew Lewis 1909 Matte, Joseph 1909 Matthews, Leroy Allen 1912 Maxfield, Joseph Pease 1910 Maxwell, Herbert Ouhon 1912 May, Kenneth Sargeant 1909 Mayer, Paul Hirschl, B.S 1909 Mayers, Edward Charles 1912 Maynard, Clarence Dickinson .... 1909 Mayo, Lincoln, S A E 1909 Meanor, Wilbur Alfeus 1909 Means Alan Hay 1912 Meisel, Otto Carl Francis 1910 Melendy, Ralph Peter 1912 Mellish, Murray Holman 1909 Menke, Alvin Frederick, A.B 1909 Merrill, Charles Hudson Sayre, A 4 . . 1911 Merrill, Edward Dearborn, Ph.B. . . 1909 Merrill, Edward Francis 1910 Merrill, Hamilton, A 1912 Merrill, Leonard Martin 1911 Merriman, Thurston Cables 1909 Merry, Augustus Bradford 1910 Metcalf, Lester George, B.S 1911 Metz, August Carl 1911 Meulendyke, Charles E., B.S 1910 Millard, Reginald William 1909 Miller, George 1909 Miller, Henry Franklin, 2d, A X . . . 1910 Miller, Waldo Benneville 1911 Mills, John, A.B., A.M., AT 1909 Mitchell, Arthur Knox, A T 1909 Mitchell, Harold Dies 1912 Mohn, Joseph Theophile Grad. Monge, Luis Ernest 1912 Montgomery, Edward, ATA 1912 Monto, Charles Philip 1910 Moore, Edmund Burke, 2 A E .... 1912 Moore, Francis Aldrich, B.S., A X . . 1911 Morash, Bernard Hudson 1912 Morey, Chester Totten 1911 Morgan, Alfred Powell 1912 Morrill, Arthur Bradford 1909 Morrill, Carl Henry 1912 Morrison, Ibrahim Follansbee .... 1911 Course X II Sp. XIII I Sp. VI VI VI VI I Sp. Sp. Sp. XI VIII II VI Sp. III I Sp. I II Sp. IV III II II I IV Sp. Sp. Sp. I I Sp. II X V III Sp. I II III X II III Sp. II XI VI Sp. Sp. XI X IV X I X VI VI VI Sp. II II XI Sp. XI I Sp. Sp. Home Address Ross, Cal. 53 Chestnut Hill Ave., Brighton, Mass. Mercedes, Argentine Republic 347 Commonwealth Ave., Boston, Mass. 26 Mt. Pleasant St., Winchester, Mass. 42 Portland St., Keene, N.H. Hyderabad, India North Adams, Mass. North Adams, Mass. 102 Cross St., Maiden, Mass. 120 Stedman St., Brookline, Mass. 11 Holyoke St., Boston, Mass. 73 Fisher Ave., Newton Highlands, Mass. 169 No. Fulton Ave., Mt. Vernon, N.Y. 313 W. 79th St., New York City 73 Central St., Somerville Mass. 11 Robeson St., Jamaica Plain, Mass. Turtle Creek Pa. 32 St. James Ave., Boston, Mass. 10 Upland Ave., Dorchester, Mass. 850 Washington Blvd., Chicago, 111. 67 Clark St., Maiden, Mass. 15 Edgar St., Evansville, Ind. Manchester, Mass. 1310 Pleasant St., Des Moines, la. 70 Main St., New Rochelle, N.Y. Oaksmere, New Rochelle, N.Y. Glendale, Ohio 174 Ashley St., Hartford, Conn. Vineyard Haven, Mass. Claremont, Cal. 260 Cape St., Oshkosh, Wis. 4 Upton Park, Rochester, N.Y. 456 Main St., E., Hamilton, Ont., Can. 42 Storrow St., Lawrence, Mass. 18 Lawrence St., Wakefield, Mass. 547 Columbus Ave., Boston, Mass. 5630 Kembark Ave., Chicago, 111. 1078 Worthington St., Springfield, Mass. 22 Bowers St., Newtonville, Mass. 438 W. 53d St., New York City Ibarra, Ecuador, South America Omaha, Neb. 287 Alexander St., Rochester, N.Y. Springfield, Vt. 503 So. Fannie Ave., Tyler, Tex. Lunenburg, Nova Scotia 74 Pearl St., Cambridge, Mass. 558 Valley Rd., Upper Montclair, N.J. 26 Cedar St., Haverhill, Mass. 2 Lawrence St., Haverhill, Mass. 358 Elm St., Braintree, Mass. 19 10 GENERAL DIRECTORY 407 Name and Society Class Course Morse, Fred Thurlow 1912 I Morse, Harrison Herbert 1912 X Sp. Morse, Robert Emery 1911 VI Moses, Alonzo Lemuel, :S A E 1910 VI Sp. Mowry, Fred Lawrence 1912 XI Munoz, Ramon Fidencio, ::; X .... 1909 III Sp. Murphy, William Henry 1912 X Murray, Joseph Ignatious 1912 VII Sp. Murray, Wallace Jennings 1912 X Myers, Aaron Leon 1911 XI Sp. Myers, Henry Earle 1909 IV Mylchreest, George Lewis, B.S. . . . 1910 I Myrick, John Botume 1910 VI Nagle, Arthur Rosengarten 1911 I Nash, Edward Ardery, ATA 1911 I Nath, Simon 1911 V Navarro, Manuel Adrian 1910 I Nealey, James Barton VII Sp. Neff, Sidney Carlisle 1912 III Nelson, Albert Peter 1912 II Nelson, Norman, r A 1911 VI Sp. Nicholson, Ernest 1911 I Nickerson, John Winslow, ex.... 1909 II Nicol, Norman Carmichael 1909 XI Sp. Nisbet, Lewis Dexter 1909 I Noble, James Bowen, 4 K Z 1910 IV Sp. Northrop, Joseph Walter, Jr., A.B. . . 1910 IV Sp. Noyes, Jonathan Alvan 1912 II O ' Brien, James H., B.S 1910 X O ' Brien, Walter Francis 1912 II O ' Connor, Charles Thomas 1912 II Odell, Lawrence Gleason, K e . . . .1911 VIII Sp. Oettinger, Mark Adolph 1912 XIII Sp. Ofenstein, Clarence Leo 1911 I O ' Hearn, William John, KG 1910 XI Sp. Ohnuki, Riojo 1909 II Sp. Olsen, Walter Jacobs 1912 II Omansky, Morris 1911 V O ' Neill, Francis Michael 1911 I Sp. O ' Neill, Haylett, A.B 1909 VI O ' Neill, John Henry 1910 XI O ' Neill, Michael Cornelius 1912 III Oppenheim, Joseph 1912 X Orem, Archie Joshua 1911 III Sp. Osborn, Frankhn, 2d 1911 III Osborn, Frederick Warren, 2: X .... 1911 III Sp. Osborne, Harold Smith Grad. VI Otterson, John Edward Grad. XIII A Home Address 1021 Van Buren St., Topeka, Ka n. 46 Clayton St., Maiden, Mass. 72 Walnut St., Brookline, Mass. 244 Mass. Ave., Boston, Mass. 23 Abbot PI., Brockton, Mass. 6a Hidalgo No. 6, Saltillo, Mexico 39 Lawrence St., Wakefield, Mass. 8 Cottage St., Everett, Mass. 571 Washington St., Dorchester, Mass. Palestine, Tex. 75 Orange St., Ashland, Ohio Middletown, Conn. 19 Exeter St., West Newton, Mass. 83 Kirkstall Rd., Newtonville, Mass. 323 So. 15th St., St. Joseph, Mo. 21 Parkman St., Boston, Mass. Quito, Ecquador 178 Harlow St., Bangor, Me. 248 Highland St., Dedham, Mass. 11 Nelson St., East Braintree, Mass. Westfield, N.J. 204 Union St., Schenectady, N.Y. 33 Alpine St., Roxbury, Mass. 33 Chapman Ave., Waterbury, Conn. 12 Rhode Island Ave., Providence, R.I. Eau Claire, Wis. 2050 North Ave., Bridgeport, Conn. 124 Adams St., Waltham, Mass. Northfield, Minn. 10 Howland St., Cambridge, Mass. 37 Laurel St., Holyoke, Mass. 11 Wabeno St., Roxbury, Mass. 10 Woodville Pk., Roxbury, Mass. 42 New York Ave., N.W. , Washing- ton, D.C. 191 Davis Ave., Brookline, Mass. 137 Katsuta Tbarakiken, Japan 13 Tremont St., Cambridge, Mass. 34 Auburn St., Boston, Mass. 137 East St., Holyoke, Mass. 1209 5th Ave., Spokane, Wash. 175 Walker St., Lowell, Mass. 119 Franklin St., Allston, Mass. 49 Revere St., Boston, Mass. 306 Auerbach Bldg., Salt Lake City, Utah 40 Holton St., Peabody, Mass. Edgartown, Mass. 81 Oxford St., Cambridge, Mass. 10 Arundel Terrace, Newton, Mass. 408 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV Name and Society Class Pacheco, Ricardo Lara 1912 Packwood, Lahvesia Paxton Caruthers . 1909 Page, Atwood Collins 1910 Paine, Harold William, Ph.B 1909 Palmer, George Truman, B.S 1909 Palmer, Herbert Hammond 1909 Pardee, Harvey Sabin 1909 Park, John Ronald 1912 Parker, Joseph Warren 1909 Parker, Theodore Bissell, 2 X 1911 Parsons, Harold Frank 1910 Partridge, Henry Hinman 1912 Paullis, George Lee, S 1912 Payson, Horace Stanwood 1912 Peabody, Dean, Jr 1910 Pead, William James, Jr 1910 Pearce, John Stewart, A K E 1909 Pearl, Holman Isaac 1910 Pearson, Paul Henry, K e 1911 Pease, Ralph South worth, A.B. . . . 1910 Pedersen, Aksel Marius 1912 Peet, Albert Stanton 1909 Pepper, Benjamin Ward 1909 Pepper, Chester Lawrence 1911 Perkins, Ralph Willis 1910 Perley, Henry Chaplin 1910 Perrin, Lester William, A.B., A K E . . 1911 Perrine, Charles Oscar 1912 Perry, Clyde Raymond 1911 Perry, Frederick Gardiner 1909 Perry, Harold Robert 1910 Pettingell, John Mason 1912 Pettingell, William Moulton 1909 Pettit, Bertholf Marsh, Ph.B 1910 Petzold, Herbert Robert 1909 Phillips, Alfred Ingersoll, Jr., i K 2 . . 1910 Phillips, Walter Irving 1911 Pierce, James Buchanan, Jr., ATA. . 1911 Pierson, Ruth Ogden, A.B 1910 Pilling, Earl Wellington 1910 Piper, Carleton French 1910 Pitcher, Floyd Jacob 1910 Polhemus, Theodorus 1911 Poor, Frederick Edwin 1912 Poore, Lester Deane 1910 Pope, Chester Henry, ATA 1909 Porosky, Matthew 1909 Potter, Erford Merton 1910 Powell, Oliver Davis 1911 Pratt, Jabez Harden 1912 Course VI IV Sp. II Sp. X VII VIII VI Sp. I I I I II VI Sp, I Sp. II VI Sp, III ISp, II Sp, V X II Sp, I II VI II I I III VI III XI X IV VI II VI XSp. VII Sp. I III I XI VI VI Sp. XSp. VI VI Sp. XI Sp. X Sp. Sp. Home Address San Jose, Costa Rica, C.A. 511 West Bay St., Tampa, Fla. Danvers, Mass. Apponaug, R.I. 74 Jackson St., Palmyra, N.Y. Georgetown, Mass. 72 No. Lyndale Ave., Minneapolis, Minn. 2 Maple Rd., Winchester, Mass. 64 Avon St., Somerville, Mass. New Fountain Inn, Marblehead, Mass. 79 Mt. Pleasant Ave., Gloucester, Mass. 185 Canfield Ave., W. Detroit, Mich. 2609 Travis St., Houston, Tex. 26 Everett Ave., Dorchester, Mass. 10 Albion St., Somerville, Mass. 74 Marshall St., North Adams, Mass. Glen Campbell, Pa. 9 Blackwood St., Boston, Mass. 91 Glenwood Rd., Somerville, Mass. 297 Grove St., Fall River, Mass. 45 Wallis St., Beverly, Mass. Callao, Peru, South America 12 Granville St., Dorchester, Mass. 57 County Rd., Chelsea, Mass. Wenham, Mass. Boxford, Mass. 463 Whitney Ave., New Haven, Conn. 513 Jurupa Ave., Riverside, Cal, Stoneham, Mass. 18 Huntington Ave., Boston, Mass. 296 Norfolk St., Dorchester, Mass. 16 Spring St., Newburyport, Mass. 16 Otis PI., Newburyport, Mass. 454 Prairie Ave., Kenosha, Wis. 107 Oxford St., Lawrence, Mass. 1924 Pine St., Philadelphia, Pa. 23 Maple St., Taunton, Mass. Sharpsville, Pa. 294 Washington St., Wellesley Hills, Mass. Danielson, Conn. Randolph, Mass. 28 Preston Rd., Somerville, Mass. 18 Moreland Ave., Newton Centre, Mass. 2 Greenough Ave., Jamaica Plain, Mass. Georgetown, Mass. Cliff House, Winthrop, Mass. 10 Sunderland St., Roxbury, Mass. 18 Webster St., Taunton, Mass. 20 Dudley St., Haverhill, Mass. Bridgewater, Mass. 19 10 GENERAL DIRECTORY 409 Name and Society Class Course Pratt, Joshua Claude 1912 II Sp. Preston, Ralph Albion Drury .... 1910 II Price, Malcolm Dana, H E 1910 II Priest, Henry Malcolm 1912 I Pritchard, Charles Morse 1909 X Pritchett, Leonard Waller, A.B, . . . 1909 VI Sp. Prouty, Theodore Rentrope 1912 IV Pruyn, Kenyon 1912 X Sp. Pugsley, Edwin 1910 VI Sp. Pulsifer, Revere Burnham, r A . . . 1911 XIII Sp. Purdom, Archibald Brantley ... 1910 II Sp. Pushee, Harold Baldwin 1911 X Putnam, Henry Rice, A 1909 III Putnam, Scott Bradstreet, A T .... 1911 XI Quinn, Joseph Henry 1912 Rabinovitz, Louis 1912 VI Radford, Charles Weston, r A . . . 1909 I Radford, Donald Haff, 4 r A 1912 I Ragsdale, Earl James Wilson, A T . . 1910 XIII Randall, Chester Joseph 1910 X Ranger, Richard Rowland 1911 VIII Ransohoff, Nathan 1910 II Ratzkoff, Silas Miram 1911 II Raymond, John William, Jr 1912 III Read, William Carleton 1909 VIII Sp. Reckard, Rufus William, A.B 1910 V Sp. Redfern, Philip Theobald 1912 IV Redfield, Clifford Steele 1910 X Redman, Ernest Albert 1910 II Reed, Ralph Omer, 9 X 1909 III Sp, Reed, Stalker Elijah 1912 III Sp. Reeds, Clarence, A.B 1909 II Reilly, William Robinson, A T il . . 1909 III Reiman, Clarence Kenworthy .... 1912 X Remick, Frank Harley 1910 XIII Sp. Reppert, George Henry, B.S., AT... 1909 VI Rew, Morse Woolley 1909 I Reynolds, Bergen, A X 1910 II Sp. Reynolds, Charles Vaughn 1912 XI Reynolds, Herbert Gardner 1910 II Rhoades, William Geyer, 4 ' S K . ... 1911 VI Rhodes, George Harold 1912 II Rhodes, William Armitage 1912 VI Sp, Rice, Edward Thomson, B.S 1909 V Sp, Rice, Lawrence Grout 1910 XI Rice, Roger Gushing 1909 I Sp. Richard, Rene Alphonse 1912 I Richards, George William 1912 I Richardson, Lawrence Wilson .... 1912 X Home Address 35 Irving St., So. Framingham, Mass. Natick, Mass. 23 Regent Circle, Brookline, Mass. Littleton, Mass. 17 Atwood St., Newburyport, Mass. 22 East 91st St., New York City Box 365, Scituate, Mass. 270 Glen St., Glens Falls, N.Y. 277 Delaware Ave., Buffalo, N.Y. 72 School St., Manchester, Mass. Blackshear, Ga. 237 Winn St., Woburn, Mass. 172 Brookline Ave., Brookline, Mass. 34 Appleton Ave., Beverly, Mass. IV Sp. 71 Peter Parley Rd., Jamaica Plain, Mass. 44 Orange St., Chelsea, Mass. 453 Algoma St., Oshkosh, Wis. 453 Algoma St., Oshkosh, Wis. St. Petersburg, Russia 248 Ash St., Waltham, Mass. 19 W. 10th St., Indianapolis, Ind. Vernon PI., Mt. Auburn, Cincinnati, Ohio 15 Ingleside St., Boston, Mass. 101 Balch St., Beverly, Mass. 55 Elmo St., Dorchester, Mass. Proctorville, Ohio 16 Hillside Ave., Winchester, Mass. 9 Shattuck St., Nashua, N.H. 82 New Park St., Lynn, Mass. 517 Franklin St., Melrose Hlds., Mass. Hudson, N.H. Norman, Okla. 530 3d St., E., Salt Lake City, Utah 32 Ashland St., Newburyport, Mass. 23 High St., Methuen, Mass. 1047 So. Negley Ave., Pittsburg, Pa. 1215 Broad St., Grinnell, la. 142 Highland Ave., Somerville, Mass. Canton, Mass. 577 Highland Ave., Maiden, Mass. 2830 Hillegrass Ave., Berkeley, Cal. 66 Hoyle St., Norwood, Mass. 505 3d Ave., Salt Lake City, Utah Lenox Rd., Schenectady, N.Y. 9 Wilson St., Natick, Mass. 37 Mather St., Dorchester, Mass. 165 Beech St., Holyoke, Mass. Erving, Mass. 13 Landers St., Somerville, Mass. 410 TECHNIQU E Vol. XXIV Name and Society Class Course Richardson, Wallace Dunster .... 1910 XI Sp. Richardson, William Elmer 1912 I Richmond, Carl Gee 1911 I Ricker, Daniel 1912 IV Riddell, Ralph Huber, e S 1912 I Rideout, Percy Adams 1911 I Ridstrom, Eric Herman 1911 II Sp. Riefkohl, Rudolf William, S K . . . 1909 II Sp, Rieser, Charles William 1912 X Rietschlin, Otto Rheinhard 1910 I Riley, Edward John 1909 VI Sp. Robb, Gordon Howard 1912 IV Roberts, Wilbur Taylor, A T 1912 I Robertson, Stewart Ross 1912 III Sp. Robinson, Burr Arthur, 6 A X ... . 1909 III Robinson, Clark Shove 1909 X Robinson, Elmo Arnold 1909 VII Robinson, Frederick Alfred, Jr. ... 1912 X Robinson, George Albert 1912 I Robinson, Harold Atherton, A T . . . 1912 III Sp. Robinson, Harold Long 1911 I Robinson, Kenneth Caleb 1911 II Roche, Raymond Vincent 1911 V Sp. Rodman, Walter Sheldon, B.S., M.S. . Grad. VI Rogers, James Calvin, A T 12 1910 VI Sp. Romero, Antonio 1912 I Rooney, Arthur Hugh 1911 VI Root, Royal Pulsifer 1912 I Sp. Roper, Thomas Avery 1910 III Rosenberg, Julius Matthew 1912 I Rosenblatt, Arthur Morton 1909 VI Rosenstein, Ludwig 1910 X Ross, Bradley Travis, A K E 1912 X Rountree, Walter Jefferson 1909 II Rowe, Louis Griffin 1910 I Sp. Rowley, Charles Bacon 1912 II Ruby, Walter Morley, 6 A X 1912 II Ruckman, John Hamilton 1910 II Runels, Ralph Earle 1911 I Rush, James Edwin 1911 XI Sp. Russell, Earl Simmons 1910 II Russell, Foster, e X 1911 II Russell, Frank, 4 B E 1911 II Ryder, Frank Pittis 1911 III Ryerson, Edward Larned, Jr., Ph.B., A 1910 I Sp. Ryon, Gordon Ames 1912 VI Sage, Nathaniel McLean, A 1912 I Sp. St. Sohn, Burton Harold, A.B 1909 V Sp. Salgada, Agapito 1912 VI Salisbury, William Conyne, A K E . . . 1911 II Home Address 30 Mt. Pleasant St., Cambridge, Mass. 887 Adams St., Dorchester, Mass. 300 Winthrop Ave., Revere, Mass. 44 Pleasant St., Somersworth, N.H. 51 Temple St., Somerville, Mass. Concord Junction, Mass. 4 Dartmouth St., Waltham, Mass. Maunabo, Porto Rico Hamilton, Ohio 190 Lamartine St., Jamaica Plain, Mass. 37 Belmont St., Charlestown, Mass. 44 Walter St., Salem, Mass. 48a Dore St., Albany, N.Y. 11 Olney St., Dorchester, Mass. 311 14th St., Buffalo, N.Y. 41 Bartlett St., Maiden, Mass. Canandaigua, N.Y. 184 Webster St., East Boston, Mass. 222 West Selden St., Mattapan, Mass. 1055 Beacon St., Brookline, Mass. 17 Winthrop St., Winchester, Mass. 250 Belgrade Ave., Roslindale, Mass. Uxbridge, Mass. Kingston, R.I. Starkville, Miss. Fajardo, Porto Rico 71 Brookfield St., Lawrence, Mass. 309 W. 92d St., New York City Brookfield, Mass. 213 Belmont St., Everett, Mass. Oskaloosa, la. 2855 California St., San Francisco, Cal. Rensselaer, Ind. Quitman, Ga. Gloucester, Mass. 602 W. Main St., Jackson, Mich. 194 Main St., Oneida, N.Y. Fort Baker, Sausalito, Cal. 321 Thorndike St., Lowell, Mass. 120 Dorchester St., So. Boston, Mass. West Hanover, Mass. Spokane, Wash. Pittsfield, Mass. Cadiz, Ohio 31 Banks St., Chicago, 111. 85 Riverview Ave., Waltham, Mass. Vancouver Barracks, Vancouver, Wash. 600 No. Topeka Ave., Wichita, Kans. Olancho, Honduras Chicago Beach Hotel, Chicago, 111. 19 10 GENERAL DIRECTORY 411 Name and Society Class Sanburn, Justus Curtis 1912 Sancho, Jimenez Francisco 1910 Sargeant, French Philbrick 1910 Sargent, Hall 1911 Sargent, Stuart Gary 1912 Savage, Edgar Channing 1911 Sawyer, George Summers 1912 Sawyer, Luke Eugene 1910 Scanlon, Richard Harriman 1912 Scarff, John Henry 1910 Schaaf, John 1909 Schaffer, Harold 1909 Schakne, Jacob Herzl 1909 Scharff, Maurice Roos 1909 Schatz, Ruppert Ericson 1911 Schell, Erwin Haskell, B A X 1912 Schellens, Christopher Avery 1910 Scheuer, Jerome 1910 Schleicher, Henry Matthias 1910 Schmidt, Hermann Charles 1910 Schmidt, Samuel Myer 1911 Schmitt, Walter Henry 1912 Schneider, Franz, Jr., t r A 1909 Schneider, Solomon 1912 Schofield, Stuart James, B.S Grad. Schofield, William McNair, r A . . . 1910 Schreiber, Henry, Jr 1910 Schriefer, Herman Carsten, K S . . . 1909 Schwarz, Edmund Arthur 1911 Scofield, Walter W., Jr., A.B 1910 Scoville, John Harris 1911 Scribner, Samuel Harold 1911 Schwartz, Lewis 1911 Scriven, Edward Osborne 1910 Seeley, Nathaniel Stevens, X 4 . . . . 1910 Seelye, Seth Heness, e A X 1912 Seetoo, Fucheng 1912 Seibert, Victor Elmer 1909 Selfridge, John Soley, X 1912 Seligman, Wellesley Joseph 1911 Serra, Julius Herschel 1909 Shaffer, Guy Fiske 1910 Sharman, Frank Weller 1909 Sharp, Harold, KG 1909 Shaw, Arthur Lassell, ATA 1909 Shaw, Carroll Harper 1910 Shaw, Harold Francis 1911 Shaw, Laurence Copeland 1909 Sheldon, George Ware, B.S 1910 Shen, Heenan Tinching 1909 Shenstone, Osborne Harris, r A . . . 1911 Shepard, Frederick Johnson, Jr., T A . 1912 Sherman, Henry Lancey, AT 1909 Course X V Sp xni n Sp. xni II Sp, I II II IV Sp, I Sp, III Sp. VI XI I Sp, II Sp, XIII III Sp. III VI VII VI VII XI XII III I Sp III Sp, IV Sp V Sp IV Sp I V Sp, VI Sp, II Sp, VI XIII IV Sp, VI III I Sp, IV Sp, IV I Sp. I VI II VSp, VI Sp. XIII I Sp VI I Sp Home Address Mittineague, Mass. Cartogo, Costa Rica 741 Chestnut St., Manchester, N.H. Grand Forks, N.D. 71 Sargent Ave., Fitchburg, Mass. 117 Richmond St., Dorchester, Mass. 49 Oak Square Ave., Brighton, Mass. 56 Chestnut Hill Ave., Brighton, Mass. 20 Dartmouth St., Leominster, Mass. 1706 No. Charles St., Baltimore, Md. 547 E. Utica St., Buffalo, N.Y. Rondebosch, Cape Colony, So. Africa 2218 Centre Ave., Pittsburg, Pa. 600 No. Union St., Natchez, Miss. 263 Primrose Ave., Mt. Vernon, N.Y. 1427 Grand Ave., Kalamazoo, Mich. Groton, Conn. 140 W. 120th St., New York City 16 Williams St., Roxbury, Mass. 501 E. Grace St., Richmond, Va. 6 Minot St., Boston, Mass. N.S. Pittsburg, Pa. 36 Summer St., Lawrence, Mass. 1410 Columbus Ave., Roxbury, Mass. 647 Princess St., Kingston, Ontario, Canada 49 Bowers St., Newtonville, Mass. 18 Bishop St., Jamaica Plain, Mass. 422 Newbury St., Boston, Mass. Sioux Falls, S.D. Dalton, Mass. 96 Wethersfiel d Ave., Hartford, Conn. 158 Westford St., Lowell, Mass. 177 Chambers St., Boston, Mass. 623 College Ave., Beloit, Wis. 11 Ash St., Flushing, N.Y. 425 Duval St., Key West, Fla. Kwangtung, China 411 Jefferson St., Walla Walla, Wash. 2615 California St., San Francisco, Cal. 24 Winchester St., Brookline, Mass. 28 Warwick Rd., Melrose Hlds., Mass. 1517 nth Ave., W., Seattle, Wash. 11 Irvington St., Boston, Mass. Nantucket Island, Mass. 271 Chestnut St., Clinton, Mass. 104 North Ave., No. Abington, Mass. 42 Orchard St., Leominster, Mass. 303 Pleasant St., Brockton, Mass. Wakefield, R.I. Foochow, China 40 Wahner Rd., Toronto, Canada East Derry, N.H. 1069 Beacon St., Boston, Mass. 412 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV Name and Society Class Course Sherman, Max Christopher 1910 II Sherman, Robert Barker, ! 2 K . . . . 1912 VI Shippee, Allen Edward 1909 X Sp. Shohan, Abraham 1911 VI Shore, Jacob David 1912 IV Shuttleworth, Wright, S A E 1912 II Sp. Silsbee, Francis Briggs 1910 VI Silverman, Benjamin 1912 II Sp. Simm, Roy 1910 II Sp. Simmons, Frank Ronald 1909 IV Sp. Simonds, Roland Scott 1910 IV Sp. Simonds, Warren James, $ 2 K . . . .1911 I Sircar, Brahma Behary 1912 I Sp. Sittinger, Carl Joseph 1910 VI Slade, Walter Clifton, M.S Grad. V Sloan, Vernon Gregory 1912 I Smead, Ralph Amsden, B.S 1910 I Smith, Charles McLean, A.B 1910 VI Smith, Daniel Joseph 1911 V Sp. Smith, Frank Griswold 1911 III Smith, Harold Alfred 1910 II Sp. Smith, Hubert Stacy, A K E 1911 X Smith, Otis Sanborn 1910 I Smith, Phifer, S X 1909 VI Sp. Smith, Robert Lewis, OX 1909 II Smith, William Leo 1911 IV Sp. Smith, Xanthus Russell 1909 XIII Sneddon, James Stuart, r A .... 1910 II Sp. Snow, Sydney Ingalls, e S 1911 X Sp. Snyder, Henry Rossiter 1911 IV Sodertrom, Francis Harold 1909 III Soule, Lincoln Rockwell, ■I ' B E . . . . 1909 X Sp. Soulis, Hugh Emerson 1912 VI Sp. Southgate, Donald Wright 1911 IV Sp. Southgate, George Thompson .... 1909 VI Sp. Southwick, Lewis Switzer, l B E . . .1910 VI Sp. Spaans, Walter 1910 X Spalding, Walter Talbot 1910 IV Sp. Spencer, Henry Kendall 1909 II Spooner, Thomas, A.B 1909 VI Springall, Cyrus Foss 1912 IV Staiger, Allen Brown 1912 II Sp. Stamper, Willson Young, Jr., A T fl . . 1911 I Sp. Stanley, Robert Remington, K S . . . 1911 II Stark, Theodore Fiske 1909 IV Sp. Starr, Frank Elijah 1912 III Stein, Arthur Leon, 9 H 1910 VI Sp, Steinberg, Solomon 1912 XI Sp. Stellwagen, Karl Donald, :;: K . . . 1910 IX Stephenson, Joseph Newell 1909 X Stevens, Bernard Woodbury 1912 II Sp. Stevens, Donald Read, i ' B E 1911 II Stevens, Herbert Howe 1912 III Home Address 11 Fairview Terrace, West Newton, Mass. Box 434, Manila, P.I. East Greenwich, R.I. 35 Devon St., Roxbury, Mass. 13 Blossom St., Boston, Mass. 303 Guy Park Ave., Amsterdam, N.Y. 9 E. Haverhill St., Lawrence, Mass. 1 13 Beacon St., Chelsea, Mass. 580 Trapelo Rd., Waverley, Mass. 65 Prospect St., Providence, R.I. 42 Salem St., Bradford, Mass. Marlboro, Mass. 2106 Cornwallis St., Calcutta, Hindu- stan 59 Delle Ave., Roxbury, Mass. 76 Comstock Ave., Providence, R.I. 31 Acton St., Arlington Hts., Mass. 8 Church St., Greenfield, Mass. 253 Capitol Ave., Hartford, Conn. 40 No. Beacon St., Allston, Mass. 83 Field St., Torrington, Conn. 67 Woodlawn St., Lynn, Mass. 1112 Center Ave., Bay City, Mich. Laconia, N.H. Livingston, Ala. 14 Cross St., Roslindale, Mass. 16 Crest St., Concord Jet., Mass. Weldon, Pa. 532 No. Broad St., EHzabeth, N.J. Rockland, Me. 302 Chicopee St., Chicopee, Mass. 262 Endicott Ave., Beachmont, Mass. 508 Washington St., Dorchester, Mass. 76 Winslow St., Everett, Mass. 501 Russell St., Nashville, Tenn. 501 Russell St., Nashville, Tenn. 31 Pierrepont St., Brooklyn, N.Y. 108 Chestnut St., Brookline, Mass. 504 W. Highland Drive, Seattle, Wash. 29 Larchmont St., Dorchester, Mass. 2 Union St., Auburn, Me. 18 Spring St., Maiden, Mass. 1522 Pacific Ave., Atlantic City, N.J. 402 Westminster St., Providence, R.I. Plymouth, N.H. 16 Church St., Wakefield, Mass. 97 Cedar St., Fitchburg, Mass. 307 Madison Ave., Scranton, Pa. 76 Waumbeck St., Roxbury, Mass. 265 Putnam Ave., Detroit, Mich. Great Barrington, Mass. 1013 Beacon St., Newton Centre, Mass. 32 Manchester Rd., Brookline, Mass. 32 Pleasant St., Marlboro, Mass. 19 10 GENERAL DIRECTORY 413 Name and Society Class Stevens, Samuel Sprague, A K E . . . . 1912 Stevenson, Albert Fletcher 1909 Stewart, Clarence Augustus, A K K . . 1912 Stewart, Dugald 1911 Stewa rt, Frank Douglas 1910 Stewart, Harold Osborn 1909 Stewart, Joseph Baird, Jr 1910 Stewart, Oswald Wellington 1911 Stibbs, Franklyn Mosher 1911 Stickney, Richard Carlton 1912 Stiebel, Herbert Joseph, K O 1909 Stimpson, Edwin Francis 1911 Stoddard, David Ayars, M.E., AT... 1910 Stone, Leo Solomon 1909 Stone, Roger Barton 1912 Stover, Frederick Haskell 1910 Straus, Aubrey Hamilton, B.S 1910 Stuart, Edward, K e 1910 Stump, Horace Eugene, 6 2! 1910 Sullivan, Edward Lynch 1912 Sullivan, George Paul 1911 Sun, To-Tan 1910 Sutherland, Carroll Arthur, B.S. . . . 1910 Sutherland, Clarence Hale, A.B., e X . 1910 Sutton, Herbert Hill, E.E Grad. Suzuki, Ewazo, B.S 1911 Svarz, Louis • 1909 Sweet, Myron Knight, A T fi 1910 Swift, Herbert Dyer, !• Z K 1912 Swift, Lila Hathaway Grad. Symmes, Ernest Montgomery .... 1911 Symonds, Ralph Frederick 1912 Taite, Frank Griffiths, B E 1909 Tarr, Elliot Whitney 1912 Taylor, Horace Van Sands, A.B. . . . 1910 Taylor, Joseph Ingraham, 2 K . . . 1912 Taylor, Philip Weston 1910 Taylor, Richard Raymond 1910 Temple, Raymond Barrus 1909 Tenney, John Bouve 1912 Terry, Philip Dunbar 1910 Thbde, Allan Fredrick 1909 Thomas, George Smith, B.S 1910 Thompson, Alvin Goodell 1912 Thompson, Maurice Raymond . . . . 1910 Thompson, Paul Ellis, 2 K 1910 Thompson, Rebecca Hull 1909 Thomson, Stuart, X l 1909 Thornley, Albert Edward 1909 Tilden, Merrill William, A K E . . . . 1910 Tillard, Thomas Atkinson, A.B. , X . . 1910 Tilton, Charles Elliott, A.B. , ! B E . . . 1910 Tirrell, Henry Stanley 1912 Tod, Martin Stambaugh 1910 Course I Sp. VII II I Sp. III Sp. VI I Sp. I XI Sp. I III X VI Sp. I I Sp. VII Sp. VII Sp. XI Sp. X VI X Sp. III Sp. VI Sp. I Sp. VI X IV Sp. V Sp. VI Sp. IV Sp. V VI I Sp. VI Sp. VI XI I X II III I VI Sp. XIII Sp. II VIII X Sp. IV V Sp. II II I Sp. III Sp. X I Sp. Home Address 1011 Beacon St., Brookline, Mass. 41 Princeton St., East Boston, Mass. Newtonville, Mass. Middlebury, Vt. Helena, Montana 37 Clinton Ave., S., Rochester, N.Y. 30 Foster St., Newtonville, Mass. 27 Prospect St., Hyde Park, Mass. 31 Westford Ave., Springfield, Mass. 6 Prospect Sq., Gloucester, Mass. 62 Cypress St., Brookline, Mass. 84 Larch St., Providence, R.I. Wilkes-Barre Pa. 59 Fort Ave., Roxbury, Mass. 26 Grovenor Rd., Jamaica Plain, Mass. 20 Olive St., Newburyport, Mass. 1101 West Ave., Richmond, Va. 5 Mt. Vernon PI., Boston, Mass. 5336 Cornell Ave., Chicago, 111. 564 Fifth St., So. Boston, Mass. 57 Charlotte St., Dorchester, Mass. Anhin, China Technology Chambers, Boston, Mass. Brunswick, Me. 112 W. 18th St., Austin, Tex. 4th Sakae Machi, Kobe, Japan 2120 1st Ave., N., Seattle, Wash. Bridgewater, Mass. 760 Jefferson Ave., Detroit, Mich. Wellesley Hills, Mass. 251 Main St., Winchester, Mass. 103 Stetson Ave., Swampscott, Mass. Merion, Pa. 22 Chestnut St., Gloucester, Mass. 23 Lincoln St., Hartford, Conn. Wiscasset, Me. 19 Maple St., Arlington, Mass. Lunenburg, Vt. 35 Temple St., Reading, Mass. Haverford, Pa. Waterville, N.Y. 73 Spring St., Medford, Mass. Carroll, la. 68 Grove St., Lowell, Mass. 7 Locust Ave., E. Lexington, Mass. 45 Powell St., Brookline, Mass. Kamehameha, Honolulu, H.I. 22 Monument Ave., Swampscott, Mass. 7 Belmont St., Pawtucket, R.I. 4747 Woodlawn Ave., Chicago, 111. Petersfield, England Tilton, N.H. 23 Abbott PI., Brockton, Mass. 815 Ohio Ave., Youngstown, Ohio 414 TECHNIQUE Vol XXIV Name and Society Class Tolman, Edward Chace 1910 Tolman, Edward Mayo, l 2 K . . . . 1912 Tomonaga, Goro 1909 Tong, Philip 1912 Torrey, Bales, Jr 1912 Torrey, Ralph Martin, e A X 1910 Towle, Franklin Thompson, K S . . . 1909 Towne, Benjamin Boardman .... 1912 Towne, Lockwood Jones, K ... 1909 Treuthardt, Ernest Leonard Paul . . 1909 Trevithick, Harry Phillips, Ph.B. . . . 1909 Tripp, James Gregory, KG 1910 Troland, Leonard Thompson 1912 True, Guy Winford 1911 Trueblood, Howard Moffitt, B.S. . . . 1910 Truette, Arthur Pierce 1910 Trueman, Joseph Douglas, B.S Grad. Tsai, Yuan Tze 1910 Tse, Tsok Kai, B.S Grad. Tuck, Davis Henry 1911 Tuller, Charles Lawton 1912 Turnbull, Myrton James 1910 Turner, Arthur Huberty 1909 Turner, Channing, A I ' 1909 Tuttle, John CulHton, 9 X 1910 Tyler, Paul Mcintosh 1912 Uman, George Louis . 1912 Underbill, Arthur William, Jr., A X . 1911 Upham, Edwin Osgood, 3 K . . . . 1912 Upton, George Augustus 1912 Urquhart, John Alexander, S A E . . . 1911 Van Alstine, Roy Daniel 1911 Van Hovenberg, Henry Waggoner . . 1911 Van Inwegen, Willard Bull, A.B, . . 1909 Van Syckel, Elijah Carhart 1912 Van Syckel, Wallace Acre 1911 Van Tassel, Edward Demming, Jr., S A E 1911 Vickers, Hayes Bowers 1912 Vining, Ralph Edward 1911 Vogel, Andrew 1911 Vose, Arthur Williams 1912 Vose, Edwin Crawford 1911 Wade, Norman Scruton 1911 Wadsworth, Prescott Kingsley, A K E . 1910 Waite, Horace Stokes 1910 Walcott, John Bigelow 1912 Waldo, William Ratcliffe, KB . . . . 1910 Waldstein, Julius 1911 Sp. Sp. Course vin nsp. II Sp. I III XIII Sp. II Sp. VIII I V V I VII I Sp. VI Sp. II XII III Sp. Ill VI VI II I Sp. Sp. II Sp. Ill I Sp. VIII VIII I Sp. XI Home Address 84 Highland St., West Newton, Mass. 55 Lexington Rd., Concord, Mass. Tokyo, Japan Shanghai, China 12 Tower Ave., So. Weymouth, Mass. 88 Centre St., Brookline, Mass. 87 Sawyer Ave., Dorchester, Mass. Topsfield, Mass. Greencastle, Ind. 16 Otis St., Medford, Mass. 243 College St., Middletown, Conn. 418 Central Park West, N.Y. City 11 Beltran St., Maiden, Mass. Wolcott Sq., Readville. Mass. Earlham, Ind. 130 Dean Rd., Brookline, Mass. 112 Hazen St., St. John, N.B. Wuchow, China Kwangtung, China 109 9th Ave., So., Nashville, Tenn. 15 Farrington Ave., AUston, Mass. 6 Park Terrace, Hartford, Conn. 4418 Pine St., Philadelphia, Pa. Geneva, 111. 21 Flint St., Salem, Mass. 92 Beacon St., Hyde Park, Mass. 1397 Gorham St., Lowell, Mass. 83 Ingersoll Grove, Springfield, Mass. 124 Cross St., Keene, N.H. 115 Federal St., Salem, Mass. 38 Walden St., Concord, Mass. I Sp. Mitchell, S.D. XI 412 Congress St., Eau Clair, Wis. I Sp. 29 Cole St., Port Jervis, N.Y. Ill 11 Blackwood St., Boston, Mass. Ill 11 Blackwood St., Boston, Mass. X 390 Newtonville Ave., Newtonville, Mass. II Sp. Roseboom, N.Y. III 104 Central St., So. Weymouth, Mass. IV Sp. 703 Stanley St., Schenectady, N.Y. I 170 Pleasant St., Milton, Mass. XI 350 Cabot St., Newtonville, Mass. II Sp. Salem, N.H. Ill 8 Shackford St., Eastport, Me. II Hotel Buckminster, Beacon St., Bos- ton, Mass. VI Sp. 88 Gainsboro St., Boston, Mass. I 110 Grover Ave., Winthrop, Mass. I Sp. 54 Billerica St., Boston, Mass. 19 10 GENERAL DIRECTORY 415 Sp. Sp. Sp. Sp. Name and Society Class Course Walker, Lawrence Brewster 1912 II Walker, William Russell 1911 IV Sp. Waller, Robert Pettit, A.B 1910 I Wallis, George Edward 1909 II Wallis, Richard Parker, A K K .... 1912 I Wallower, Charles William, e A X . . . 1910 VI Walsh, Louis Sebastian 1912 X Walsh, Raycroft 1912 III Ward, James Haller 1912 X Ware, Ernest Alonzo 1909 XI Warner, William Weatherby, K O ... 1911 I Warren, Van Court, I? K 1910 III Washburn, George Ellery 1909 VIII Wasserboehr, Harvey Paul, Jr 1910 VI Waterfall, Harry William 1911 II Waters, Lewis William 1910 V Watkins, Harold George 1912 XI Watson, Earle Bradbury 1912 I Sp. Watson, George Smyth, r A 1911 IV Sp. Watson, John Craig 1911 X Sp. Watson, Richard Parker, K e 1910 I Webb, Curtis Christopher, A T «... 1910 III Sp. Webb, Harry, H E 1909 III Sp. Webber, Charles Willis 1912 VI Weeks, Allen Taber, A K E 1909 II Weeks, Kenneth, A K E 1912 IV Sp. Weill, Melville Kaiser, S K 1909 II Weinz, Arthur Gordon, A.B 1910 V Sp. Weisberg, Edward Isador 1911 VI Sp. Welch, Walter Perkins 1911 VI Sp. Wells, Edward Ernest 1909 X Wells, Philip Varnum 1911 VIII Wells, Russell Diemer, ATA 1910 VI Weltmer, Noyes 1910 III Wen, Ching Yu Grad. Ill Wengert, William Harry, B.S 1910 II Wentworth, John Prescott 1910 XI Wentworth, Philip Montgomery . . . 1909 VI Sp. West, William Charles, 4- K Z . . . .1911 II Sp. Wetmore, Louis Leavitt 1911 IV Sp. Wheeler, Rodney, e X 1912 I Sp. Wheelwright, Barton, 2: A E 1910 I Sp. Whipple, Malon Patterson, A.B. . . . 1909 V Whipple, Robert Everett 1912 III Whitaker, Harry Emerson, 2 A E . . . 1909 VI Whitcomb, Emmons Joseph 1911 X White, Clifton Hackett 1909 III White, Cyrus Newell 1910 XI White, John Holbrook, X i 1912 II Sp. White, Joseph Henry, 9 X 1909 XI Sp. White, Peter Desmond, A 1911 II Sp. White, Russell Milton 1912 VIII Whithed, Houghton Hamilton, Z X . . 1910 VI Whitney, James Theodore 1910 IV Whitney, William Orr 1912 III Sp. Home Address 25 Thayer St., Quincy, Mass. 367 Angell St., Providence, R.I. Bloomsburg, Pa. 14 Enon St., Beverly, Mass. I Madison Ave., New York City Harrisburg, Pa. 12 Mayfair St., Roxbury, Mass. 256 Aspinwall Ave., Brookline, Mass. 176 Wyoming Ave., Melrose, Mass. 54 Dartmouth St., Somerville, Mass. 172 No. Perry St., Titusville, Pa. 920 W. 28th St., Los Angeles, Cal. Forest St., Lexington, Mass. 10 Williams Ave., Hyde Park, Mass. 53 Fairbanks St., Brighton, Mass. 195 So. Main St., Orange, Mass. 43 Elm St., Wakefield, Mass. 162 Glenway St., Dorchester, Mass. 135 Sanger Ave., Dallas, Tex. Johannesburg, Transvaal, So. Africa 47 Bainbridge St., Roxbury, Mass. 1648 Mass. Ave., Cambridge, Mass. Springfield, Ohio 50 Orris St., Melrose Hlds., Mass. 59 Chestnut St., Boston, Mass. 59 Chestnut St., Boston, Mass. 3601 Clay St. San Francisco, Cal. 24 Akron St., Roxbury, Mass. 90 Pearl St., Somerville, Mass. 27 Concord St., Maiden, Mass. Toronto, Canada 15 Fairview St., Roslindale, Mass. Spring City, Pa. Santa Fe, N.M. Canton, China 1020 Mifflin St., Lebanon, Pa. 7 Park Ave., Maiden, Mass. I I Park St., Danvers, Mass. 4348 Grand Blvd., Chicago, 111. 46 Fairview St., Roslindale, Mass. Concord, Mass. Hotel Plaza, Minneapolis, Minn. Solon, Me. 12 Arthur St., Beverly, Mass. 118 Hunnewell Ave., Newton, Mass. 358 Broadway, Winter Hill, Mass. 73 Crescent Ave., Newton Centre, Mass. 266 Albion St., Wakefield, Mass. 1034 Prospect Ave., Hartford, Conn. 48 Holly St., Lawrence, Mass. 326 West End Ave., New York City 44 Winthrop St., Taunton, Mass. 147 Reeves Ave., Grand Forks, N.D. 13 Gould St., Wakefield, Mass. 66 East Quincy St., No. Adams, Mass. 416 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV Name and Society Class Whittemore, Theodore Browning, A K E 1910 Whittlesey, John Eddy, 9 A X . . . . 1912 Whorf, Allison Howes 1911 Wiessner, Oscar Karl 1912 Wiester, Aber Stowe, K 9 1909 Wilbur, Harold Raymond 1910 Wildes, Kenneth Neil 1912 Wilkes, Gordon Ball, ! B E 1911 Williams, John Artemas 1903 Williams, Charles Sumner, Jr., A . . 1911 Williams, Edgar Irving, B.S., A 4 . . . Grad. Williams, Edward Thrasher, AT... 1909 Williams, Henry Chester 1912 Williams, Henry Ernest Williams, Howard David, 9 A X . ... 1911 Williams, Roy Pease, 9AX 1912 Williamson, Don ald Voorhis 1910 Williamson, Paul Revere 1912 Willis, Charles Main 1912 Willis, Sumner Chapin 1911 Wilson, Albert Olof 1911 Wilson, Claude Thomas, A.B 1909 Wilson, Chester Worcester 1910 Wilson, Irving White, X ! 1911 Wilson, Raymond Everett 1912 Wilson, Walter Chisholm 1911 Wilson, William James 1912 Winchester, Laurence Somerby . . . 1909 Winterstein, Herbert Brown, B.S. . . 1909 Wiseman, Robert Joseph 1912 Wiswall, Paul McCord 1909 Witmer, George Stone, X 1909 Woehling, Herbert Louis 1912 Wohlgemuth, Bert Samuel 1910 Wood, Frank Asahel, A K E 1911 Wood, Frederick Bray ton, X ... . 1909 Wood, Robert Odiorne, 2: A E 1911 Woodcock, Charles Martin 1912 Woodward, Clarence Richardson . . . 1912 Woodward, Edgar Lucian 1911 Woodward, Merle Gilbert, ATA . . . 1912 Wyman, D wight Mead, B E 1912 Yacoubyan, Vahan Phillibos 1910 Yereance, Alexander Woodward, A i . 1911 York, Waldo Cornell 1909 Young, Erving Mandeville 1911 Young, Philip Endicott, A K E . . . . 1909 Zahner, Robert Van Lier, A.B 1909 Home Address St. Francis Court, Riverside Drive, New York City 10 Regent St., West Newton, Mass. 68 Charles St., Dorchester, Mass. Huntington, Mass. 15 Arklow St., Roxbury, Mass. Kingston, Mass. 85 Richardson Rd., Melrose Hlds,, Mass. 495 Lafayette Ave., Buffalo, N.Y. Wrentham, Mass. House F, Navy Yard, Boston, Mass. 131 Passaic Ave., Rutherford, N.J. Tientsin, China Topsfield, Mass. 14 Barry St., West Quincy, Mass. 83 Magnolia Terrace, Springfield, Mass. 83 Magnolia Terrace, Springfield, Mass. 19 Beals St., Brookline, Mass. Marshfield Centre, Mass. 9 Vincent St., No. Cambridge, Mass. 47 Wheatland Ave., Dorchester, Mass. 302 Columbia St., Cambridge, Mass. Waterville, N.Y. 5 Morse St., Newton, Mass. 7 Auburn Ct., Brookline, Mass. 15 Bayard St., Allston, Mass. 324 Ames St., Lawrence, Mass. 396 Seaver St., Dorchester, Mass. 24 Washington St., Reading, Mass. Belle Plaine, la. 4 Gore St., Cambridge, Mass. 50 Lexington Ave., Providence, R.I. 1 109 16th St., N.W., Washington, D.C. 34 William St., East Orange, N.J. 27 Garlick St., Youngstown, Ohio 7 Florida St., Dorchester, Mass. 5th Ave., Park Heights, Baltimore, Md. Concord, Mass. 411 Broadway, Lawrence, Mass. 93 Rockland Ave., Maiden, Mass. 5 Pacific St., So. Boston, Mass. 19 Red Rock St., Lynn, Mass. 96 Park St., Montclair, N.J. I Sp. Menshye, Cairo, Egypt I 418 Centre St., So. Orange, N.J. I 70 Russell St., New Bedford, Mass. I 1 1 Warren St., Haverhill, Mass. II Guild Road, Dedham, Mass. Course XI II III III Sp. V VI Sp. I Sp. II II V IV Sp. I IV V XI Sp. Sp. Sp. IV Sp. II I IV I I Sp. I II VIII III X II VI VI VI Sp. V VI VI Sp. III II III Sp. Sp. VIII X Sp. III VI III II Sp. II Adams, Mass. In i emortam PAUL HENRY BLOCK, 1909 Died December 4, 1908 EDWARD IGNATIUS CAHILL, 1910 Died April 23, 1908 WALTER LONG DOANE, 1911 Died April 25, 1908 EDWARD KITSON HARVEY, 1910 Died October 27, 1908 GEORGE EDWARD LIVINGSTON, 1911 Died March 7, 1909 ROBERT CLYDE LOUTIT, 1910 Died April 4, 1908 ARTHUR CLINTON RICHMOND, 1908 Died April 6, 1908 417 ACraOWLEiffiMEN y HE Board of Editors of Technique 1910 takes this opportunity ■ J to thank every one who has helped the book in any way, no 1 1 matter how slightly. Especially do they wish to thank those enumerated below who have contributed to the departments indicated. Literary — Channing Turner, 1909; Raynor Huntington Allen, 1909; Holman Isaac Pearl, 1910; Wellesley Joseph Seligman, 1911; Donald Read Stevens, 1911; Walter Herbert Hildebrand, 1911; Edmund Burke Moore, 1912. Artistic —R. J. Herlihy; Edgar Irving Williams, 1908; Rudolph William Riefkohl, 1909; Kenneth Earle Carpenter, 1909; Louis Svarz, 1909; Felix Arnold Burton, 1909; Harold Du Pre Bounetheau, 1909; Montague Flagg, 1909; Guy Fiske Shaffer, 1910; John Edwin Barnard, 1910; Walter Swindel Davis, 1910; Charles Cameron Clark, 1910; Stafford Allen Francis, 1911; William Dewey Foster, 1911; Arthur Campbell, 1912. Photographic — All photographs taken especially for Technique 1910 by the Marceau Studio, 160 Tremont Street. The portraits of Professors Maclaurin and Spofford by Marceau ' s New York Studio. 418 Page Acknowledgments ' . 418 Administrative Officers 8 Alumni Associations 317 Association of Alumni 321 Athletics 169 Advisory Council 175 The Coaches 222 The Managers 223 Athletic Summary 170 I.C.A.A.A 178 M.I.T.A.A 176 N.E.I.A.A 179 Baseball Team, 1910 238 Class Day Exercises 325 Class Histories 1909 45 1910 53 1911 63 1912 75 419 420 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV Page Clubs 257 British Empire Association 259 Brookline High School 272 CathoUc 273 Chess 263 Cleofan 260 English High School 269 Exeter 268 Golf 219 Masque .- 261 Mechanic Arts High School 270 M.I.T. Rifle 262 New York State 266 Pennsylvania 267 Republican 274 Southern 264 Technology 320 Walker 258 Charles Milton Spofford 382 Concerning the Colleges 384 Contents 6 Co-operative Society 300 Corporation 7 Corps of Cadets 301 Dedication 2 Facts 378 Faculty 29 Field Day 224 Football Team, 1011 230 Football Team, 1912 232 Relay Team, 1911 234 Tug-of-War Team, 1912 236 Foreword 5 Fraternities 83 Alpha Tau Omega 137 Chi Phi 97 Delta Kappa Epsilon 101 1910 INDEX 421 Fraternities Continued p Delta Psi 93 Delta Tau Delta 117 Delta Upsilon 109 Fraternity Summary 154 Kappa Theta 149 Lambda Phi 145 Other Fraternities Represented 153 Phi Beta Epsilon 105 Phi Gamma Delta 121 Phi Kappa Sigma 133 Phi Sigma Kappa 125 Sigma Alpha Epsilon 113 Sigma Chi 85 Theta Chi 129 Theta Delta Chi 141 Theta Xi 89 General Directory 390 Graduation Week 326 Grinds 343 In Memoriam 417 Institute, The 329 Institute Committee 294 Junior Week 303 Local Societies 155 Hammer and Tongs 163 K2S 156 Osiris 159 Round Table 160 Meets Brown 190 Fall 192 Indoor 194 Maine 188 N.E.LA.A 196 Spring 186 422 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV Page Musical Clubs 285 Banjo 288 Glee 286 Mandolin 290 Combined 292 Officers of Instruction 9 Assistants 36 Instructors 31 Professors 10 Research 40 Special Lecturers 39 Professional Societies 243 Architectural 244 Biological 256 Chemical 250 Civil Engineering 246 Electrical Engineering 248 Mechanical Engineering 252 Mining Engineering 254 Naval Architectural 255 Publications 275 Senior Portfolio 284 Tech, The 277 Technique 279 Technology Architectural Record, The 283 Technology Review, The 282 Records 199 Basket Ball . 211 Cross Country 205 Fencing 217 Golf ' 219 Gym ' . Team .... 221 Hare and Hounds 209 Hockey 213 I.C.A.A.A.A 178 I.F.A 218 N.E.I.A.A 179 19 10 INDEX 423 Records — Continued Page N.E.I.L.T.A 215 Relay Team 203 Tennis 214 Track Team 182 Richard Cockburn Maclaurin 42 Senior Week 323 Society of Arts 299 Statistics 373 Summer School of Industrial Chemistry 327 Technique Electoral Committee 297 Tech Show 307 Tech Union, The 164 Union Committee 296 Wearers of the T 181 Y.M.C.A 298 BUYER ' S GUIDE .y BUYE GODDE Classiftet Etst of tiberttsers BANKS The National Shawmut Bank; Old Colony Trust Company; State Street Trust Company. BOOKBINDERS Alexander Moore BUILDING MATERIALS Waldo Bros.; Alpha Portland Cement; J. B. King Co. CHEMICALS American Dyewood Co. ; Avery Chemical Co. ; Badische Co. ; Baeder, Adam- son Co. ; Cassella Color Co. ; The B. P. Clapp Ammonia Co. ; Eimer Amend; Roessler Hasslacher CEMENT Alpha Portland Cement; J. B. King Co.; Waldo Bros. CORDAGE Sampson Cordage Co. DRAWING MATERIALS Joseph Dixon Crucible Co.; A. W. Faber; Chas. M. Higgins Co.; A. D. Mac- lachlan; Spaulding Print Paper Co. EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTIONS Chauncy Hall School; Massachusetts Institute of Technology ENGINEERING SPECIALTIES Julian d ' Este Co. ; Lufkin Rule Co. ; Lunkenheimer Co. ; Walworth Mfg. Co. ENGINEERS G. H. Barrus; Eugene Carpenter; Chas. T. Main; Stone Webster ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES Holzer-Cabot Electric Co. ; LeClanche Battery Co. ; Simplex Electrical Co. 2 1910 ADVERTISEMENTS 3 ENGRAVING American Bank Note Co. ; Suffolk Engraving Co. ; E. A. Wright Bank Note Co. EXPRESS Phillips ' Back Bay Express FIRE BRICK Evens Howard Firebrick Co. FLORIST Thos. F. Galvin FOUNTAIN PENS American Fountain Pen Co. HOTELS New American House; Parker House; Hotel Touraine; Young ' s Hotel; Hotel Westminster INDUSTRIAL MACHINERY American Hoist Derrick Co. ; Bradley Pulverizer Co. ; A. S. Cameron Steam Pump Co, ; The Hayward Co. ; Lidgerwood Mfg. Co. ; Saco Pettee Machine Shops; S. A. Woods Machine Co. INSTRUMENTS Christian Becker; C. L. Berger Sons; The Lufkin Rule Co.; Weston Elec- tric Instrument Co. INSURANCE Robt. A. Boit Co.; C. S. Burke; Hartford Steam Boiler Inspection and Insurance Co. IRON AND STEEL The Ames Iron Works; Detroit Seamless Steel Tubes Co.; The Falk Co.; Wm. Jessop Sons, Ltd.; Homer F. Livermore; The Lorain Steel Co.; National Tube Co. ; Roberts Iron Works Co. LUBRICANTS Joseph Dixon Crucible Co. ; Vacuum Oil Co. ; Valvoline Oil Co. TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV MACHINE SHOP EQUIPMENT Armstrong Bros, Tool Co.; The Dodge Mfg. Co.; Hill, Clarke Co., Inc.; Jones Lamson Machine Co. ; Morse Twist Drill and Machine Co. ; B. P. Niles ; Norton Co. ; Walworth Mfg. Co. ; A. J. Wilkinson Co. ; S. A. Woods Machine Co. MARINE BUILDERS Lawley Sons Corp. MEN ' S FURNISHINGS Boston Garter; Brooks Brothers; Gillette Safety Razor; Hall Hancock; Hewins Hollis; Macullar Parker; C. J. S. Rudolf PAPER BOXES The Holland Box Co. PHOTOGRAPHERS Marceau POWER TRANSMISSION The Dodge Mfg. Co. PRINTERS Geo. H. Ellis Co. ; GrifRth-Stillings ; Wm. B. Libby ; T. 0. Metcalf Co. ; Thos. Todd PUBLISHERS The Electrochemical and Metallurgical Industry ; Photo Era ; McGraw Pub- lishing Co.; The Tech; The Technology Review; D. Van Nostrand Co. RAILWAY EQUIPMENT Baldwin Locomotive Works ; Griffin Wheel Co. ; International Register Co. ; The Rail Joint Co. ; The Standard Steel Works Co. RUBBER Manhattan Rubber Goods Mfg. Co. ; The Peerless Rubber Mfg. Co. 1910 ADVERTISEMENTS 5 TABLE SUPPLIES S. S. Pierce Co. ; Pureoxia Co. ; Rhodes Bros. Co. TAILORS Brooks Bros.; Chas. Jacobson; H. M. Levine; Macullar Parker Co.; Prouty Davis; SmuUen Co. TECHNOLOGY EMBLEMS Bent Bush Co. ; A. D. Maclachlan TOWEL AND COAT SUPPLIES New England Towel and Coat Supply Co. TRADE JOURNALS Electric World; Electrochemical and Metallurgical Industry; Engineering Record ; Street Railway Journal TYPEWRITERS Smith Premier Typewriter Co. VALVES The American Balance Valve Co.; The Ashton Valve Co.; Jenkins Bros.; The Lunkenheimer Co. ; Mason Regulator Co. ; Roe Stephens Co. ; Walworth Mfg. Co. WIRE GOODS Buffalo Wire Works Co. COMPLIMENTS OF NEW ENGLAND TOWEL AND COAT SUPPLY COMPANY TELEPHONE. 4458 MAIN 7 SEARS ST., Off 68 INDIA BOSTON. MASSACHUSETTS Sntieie to tibertisement0 Alpha Portland Cement .... 48 American Balance Valve Co. . . 16 American Bank Note Co 46 American Dyewood Co 21 American Fountain Pen Co. ... 37 American Hoist and Derrick Co. . 14 American House 12 Ames Iron Works 28 Armstrong Bros. Tool Co. ... 28 Ashton Valve Co., The 16 Avery Chemical Co 21 Badische Co 22 Baeder, Adamson Co 21 Baldwin Locomotive Works ... 13 Barrus, Geo. H 42 Becker, Christian 30 Bent Bush Co 37 Berger Sons, C. L 48 Boit Co., Robert A 49 Boston Garter 36 Boston Pressing Club 33 Bradley Pulverizer Co 47 Brooks Bros 11 Buffalo Wire Works Co 25 Burke, C. S 49 Cameron Steam Pump Co., A. S. . 31 Carpenter, Eugene 42 Cassella Color Co 20 Chauncy Hall School 46 Clapp Ammonia Co., B. P. . . . 20 d ' Este Co., Julian 51 Detroit Seamless Steel Tubes Co. . 25 Dixon Crucible Co., Joseph ... 48 Dodge Manufacturing Co. ... 43 Eimer Amend 22 Electrochemical and Metallurgical Industry 32 Ellis Co., Geo. H 38 Evens Howard Firebrick Co. . 44 Faber, A. W 34 Falk Co., The 28 Frost Co., Geo 36 Galvin, Thos. F 50 Gillette Safety Razor Co 10 Gray, Arthur F 52 Griffin Wheel Co 24 Griffith-Stillings Press 53 Hagar Kurt 46 Hall Hancock 9 Hartford Steam Boiler Inspection and Insurance Co 49 Hay ward Co., The 14 Hewins Hollis 36 Higgins Co., Chas. M 34 Hill, Clarke Co., Inc 19 Holland Box Co 53 Holtzer-Cabot Electric Co. ... 26 Hotel Westminster 12 1910 ADVERTISEMENTS al orth M anurac tur mg C o . Makers of Tne Genuine Stillson nV rencn NV al orth Gate v alves V alnianco Flanges Flangea Fittings Drums and Pipe Benas Material for liign Pressure Po ver Plants TOOLS FOR STEAM AND WATER FITTERS General Offices 132 Feaeral Street, Boston, U.S.A. New X ork San Francisco Park Row Building Monaanock Building 19 10 ADVERTISEMENTS International Register Co, ... 48 Jacobson, Chas 36 Jenkins Bros 17 Jessop Sons, Wm 28 Jones Lamson Machine Co. 15 King Co., J. B 44 Lawley Sons Corp 52 LeClanche Battery Co 53 Levine, H. M 39 Libby, Wm. B 38 Lidgerwood Mfg. Co 14 Little, Arthur D 52 Livermore, Homer F 24 Lorain Steel Co 23 Lufkin Rule Co., The 30 Lunkenheimer Co., The .... 17 Maclachlan, A. D 37 Macullar Parker Co 33 Main, Chas. T 52 Manhattan Rubber Mfg., Co., The 21 Marceau 55 Mason Regulator Co., The ... 16 Massachusetts Institute of Tech- nology 54 McGraw Publishing Co 45 Metcalf Co., T. 53 Moore, Alexander 34 Morse Twist Drill and Machine Co. 56 National Shawmut Bank .... 40 National Tube Co 27 New England Towel and Coat Sup- ply Co 5 Niles-Bement-Pond Co 29 Norton Co 13 Old Colony Trust Co 40 Patten Co., C. A 12 Peerless Rubber Mfg. Co., The . 25 Phillips ' Back Bay Express ... 34 Photo Era 32 Pierce Co., S. S 50 Prouty Davis 33 Pureoxia Co 50 Rail Joint Co., The 24 Rhodes Bros. Co 50 ANCOCKVI HATS AND FURS The standard of style and excellence. Drv cold storage for furs. 420 WASHINGTON STREET 10 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV Roberts Iron Works Co 49 Roe, Stephens 39 Roessler Hasclacher 20 Rudolf, C. J. S 33 Saco Pettee Machine Shops . . 29 Sampson Cordage Works .... 44 Simplex Electrical Co 26 Smith-Premier Typewriter Co. 55 Smullen Co 36 Spaulding Print Paper Co. ... 34 Standard Steel Works Co 13 State Street Trust Co 12 Stephens, Roe 39 Stone W ebster 42 Suffolk Engraving Co 41 Tech, The 32 Tech Tog Shop, The 33 Technology Review, The .... 46 Todd, Thos 38 Vacuum Oil Co 39 Valvoline Oil Co 18 Van Noorden Co., E. ..... 39 Van Nostrand Co., D 52 Waldo Bros 44 Walworth Mfg. Co 7 Weston Electric Instrument Co. . 30 Whipple Co., J. R 12 Wilkinson Co., A. J 18 Woods Machine Co., S. A. . . . 35 Wright Bank Note Co., E. A. . . 55 No Stropping No Honing 19 10 ADVERTISEMENTS 11 ESTABLISHED 1818 ' 6 Aj mr U r BROADWAY cor. TWENTY-SECOND ST. NEW YORK. FINE SUITS AND OVERCOATS Ready-MaJe To Measure FUR OUTER GARMENTS, MACKINTOSHES, RAINCOATS Travelling Goods Tweeds for Rough Wear Ulsters Steamer Rugs Cabin Bags Trunks Sweaters Cardigans Mufflers For Automobiling Caps and Gloves Gentlemen ' s Motor Coats Slip-ons, light and heavy Dressing Gowns Lambs ' Fleece Polo Ulsters Luncheon Baskets Flasks Pipes Furnishings Everything usual much unusual Club Colors Scarfs Belts Shirts Pajamas Underwear Hats Dress and Negligee Hunting Silk Hats Many Enghsh Novelties Shoes From the desirable Lasts Walking Shoes Hunting Boots Slippers Our Livery Department affords all equipment for house, club, carriage and automo- bile servants. We offer everything for wear while riding, driving, hunting, automobiling, golfing and for tennis and polo. Illustrated Catalogue, also Booklets Mailed on Request He who deliberates is lost. 12 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV Hotel Westminster COPLEY SQUARE BOSTON CHARLES A. GLEASON The Cxiisine is Famous Open Until Midnight MOST CENTRALLY LOCATED. COMFORTABLE HOSTELRY IN THE CITY Every modern convenience. Running hot and cold water and public telephone in each room. Prices $1 a day and upwards. European plan HANOVER ST., near Adams Sq., BOSTON tate Street Crust Company Back Bay Branch CORNER MASSACHUSETTS AVE. AND BOYLSTON ST. J oung ' s ottl Court Street and Court Square Boston  arlier ©ouse School and Tremont Streets Boston otel Couratne Boylston and Tremont Streets Boston J. R. WHIPPLE COMPANY C. A. Patten Com pan y jHercl ant Cailorg Makers of GOOD STYLE CLOTHES FOR YOUNG MEN AT MODERATE PRICES 43 TREMONT ST. CARNEY BLDG. They laugh that win. 19 10 ADVERTISEMENTS 13 BALDWIN LOCOMOTIVE WORKS Broad and Narrow Gauge Single Expansion and Compound Locomotives Electric Locomotives and Electric Trucks BURNHAM, WILLIAMS CO. PHILADELPHIA, PA., U.S.A. C ' lhle Address: Baldwin. I ' hiladdphia STANDARD STEEL WORKS CO. HARRISON BUILDING, PHILADELPHIA, PA. 623 RAILWAY EXCHANGE BUILDING, CHICAGO, ILL. STEEL TIRED WHEELS SOLID FORGED ROLLED STEEL WHEELS LOCOMOTIVE TIRES RAILWAY SPRINGS FORCINGS CASTINGS Alundum Steel users can appreciate the importance of maintaining uniformity of quality. Grinding Wheel users are learning to appreciate it, too; particularly users of Norton Wheels made of Alundum. Uniformity is just as important in Grind- ing Wheels as in Steel. The Norton Electric Furnaces at Niagara Falls provide Alundum of a uniform quality — an abrasive material that ' s hard and sharp. You can duphcate a certain grade of Norton Grinding Wheel three months from now, or three years from now. NORTON COMPANY, Worcester, Mass. New York Chicago Niagara Falls Are all the people mad? 14 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV ||L Hayward Buckets and In Digging Machinery - T s ' X Are fully illustrated and y described in our catalogue, copies 1 f of which will be sent on request. THE-HAYWARD-COMPANY 50 Church Street, New York, N.Y. LIDGERWOOD Hoisting Engines Are built to gauge on the duplicate part system Quick delivery assured Send for Latest Catalogue STANDARD LIDGERWOOD HOISTING ENGINE More than 32,000 Engines and Electric Hoists in Use STEAM AND ELECTRIC HOISTS LIDGERWOOD MFG. CO. 96 Liberty Street, New York AMERICAN Hoisting Engines For DERRICKS PILE DRIVING BRIDGE ERECTION Built with Frictions Guaranteed not to Stick, Slip or wear out. Write for Catalog American Hoist - Derrick Co. Chicago ST. P.AUL, MINN. New York Pittsburg N ' ew Orleans There is a specific bacillus for every classified disease. 19 10 ADVERTISEMENTS 15 The Hartness Flat Turret Lathe IS NOW BULT IN TWO SIZES 3x36 with 14-in. swing 2x24 with 12-in. swing OUTFITS OF TOOLS FURNISHED FOR BOTH BAR AND CHUCKING WORK Important Features Single Speed Drive. All Changes in Speed and Feed Instantly Obtainable. Cross-Feeding Head. Turret Stops Operate in Fither Direction. Turners with Double- Size Turning Adjustments and Roller Back Rests JONES LAMSON MACHINE CO. Main Office Works, SPRINGFIELD, VERMONT, U.S.A. British OfBce : Jubilee Building, 97 Queen Victoria Street, London, England. France and Spain: Bon- villain Ronceray, 9 and 11 Rue des Envierges, Paris, France. Germany, Belgium, Holland, Switzer- land and Austria-Hungary: M. Koyemann, Charlottenstrasse 1 12, Dusseldorf, Germany. Italy: .Adler Eisenschitz, Milan. Western Union and Lieber ' s Codes Used In uplifting get underneath. 16 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV Mason Reducing Valves Are The WORLD ' S STANDARD VALVES V For automaticallv re- ducing and absolutely maintaining an even steam or air pressure They are adapted for every need, and guar- anteed to work per- fectly in every instance Write for full information and splendid references ' Bhe Mason Regulator Co. Boston, Mass., U.S.A. ASHTO N POP SAFETY VALVES tSS STEAM GAUGES HIGHEST GRADE SPECIFIED AND RECOMMENDED BY THE LEADING ARCHITECTS AND ENGINEERS Thousands in Use in All Parts of the World WE MAKE THE •BEST The ASHTON VALVE CO. 271 Franklin St., Boston, Mass. NEW YORK CHICAGO LONDON Eighteen Years as Main Valve Specialists ---r RlPAK ' i! T:- P BAJ, (C1(? J-ir?, ' C..- ' — SI — i=— -IS ' .Vai Most PtRFtCTLv UALANCEO Slide Valves Automatic Plug SnapRimo Piston VALvts Address AMERICAN BALANCE VALVE COMPANY U.S.A. Main Office, San Francisco, Cal. Eastern Office and Works, Jersey Shore, Pa. A STEAM-TIGHT PISTON VALVE THAT REMAINS STEAM TIGHT IS THE Amrriran rmt- lug Balitr Frictional contact of the rings against the Valve chamber. AUTOMATICALLY regu- lated. Combined advan- tages of the Plug and Snap- ring Valves without the drawbacks of either. Wears the Valve chamber TRUE. Autumatir ADiuBl ' Mf t Autnraatir Hatrr Sclirf Ptr. Ptr. tU. Multi-ported, Double-act- ing and Only Correctly Bal- anced Slide Valve is the Kark Milamt with Double Admission and Double Exhaust and inter- nal or External admission. Balanced MEYER CUT- OFF VALVES, partially bal- anced D VALVES, etc. Hell is paved with good intentions — also asbestos. 19 10 ADVERTISEMENTS 17 ' |%wrflr P® |, When in need of U}tgi) (J ratic Cngtnrrrius specialties specify LUNKENHEIIVIER ailunlirnijfimev Companj? Largest Manufacturers of Hi h- rade Engineering Specialties in the World F Generel Offices and Works CIINCINNATI, OHIO, U.S.A. Branches NEW YORK, 66, 68 Fulton St. CHICAGO, 32 Dearborn St. LONDON, S.E., 33 Great Dover St. We manufacture a complete line of Iron and Brass Valves, Lubricators, Cocks, Injectors, Oil and Grease Cups, Whistles, Whistle Valves, Water Columns and Gauges, Pop Safety, Relief and Blow-off Valves, etc. mmmmm ' ' ' ' r-mmmmmtmm j.fpi.iw_yii,iiii JENKINS. THE METAL AND WORKMANSHIP ARE THE BEST ALL PARTS ARE INTERCHANGEABLE JENKINS BROS. VALVES NEED NO REGRINDING, AS THEY ARE MORE EFFECTIVELY REPAIRED BY RENEWING THE DISC, WHICH CAN BE EASILY AND OUICKLY DONE WITHOUT REMOVING THE VALVE FROM THE PIPE, AND AT A SLIGHT COST . JENKINS BROS. == NEW YORK BOSTON CHICAGO PHIUDELPHIA LONDON P m 18 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV Valvoline Oil Company Successor to LEONARD ELLIS SOLE MANUFACTURERS 7RA□EMAR Cylinder and Lubricating Oils, also Kerosene, Gasoline and Naphtha, and Automobile Oils 27 STATE STREET, BOSTON, MASS. W. H. DRESSER, Resident Manager N. B. — Valvoline is sold only to the consumer A. J. WILKINSON COIVIPANY DEALERS IN MACHINIST TOOLS AND SUPPLIES ' w.|4 tVvVv, 2 J mmm __it DRAWING INSTRUMENTS etc. AUTOMOBILE SUPPLIES CARPENTERS TOOLS ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES CUTLERY etc. BOAT HARDWARE STAR LATHES 180 to 188 WASHINGTON STREET, BOSTON, MASS. Every one ' s reason is his own private way of deceiving himself. 19 10 ADVERTISEMENTS 19 . s .fi 0 a •OB . u u S3 a Z a o fl3 Many hands make light wcrk — also a good jack-pot. 20 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV Problems in Dyeing WE are prepared to dye any shade u pon any fabric submitted, or we vill match any required shade and submit ex act dyeing directions. Information of a tech nical nature cheerful ly given. No charge is made for such service, and in accepting it there is no obligation to purchase from us anything that you can buy or that you think you can buy to better advantage elsewhere ADDRESS Cassella Color Co. 182-184 Front St. : New York BRANCHES BOSTON . . PHILADELPHIA PROVIDENCE . ATLANTA MONTREAL . 39 Oliver Street 126-128 S. Front St. 64 Exchan§:e Place 47 N. Pryor Street 59 William Street FERRO-ALLOYS Poluekmetos Brand FERRO-CHROME FERRO-SILICON FERRO-MANGANESE FERRO-TITANIUM FERRO-VANADIUM FERRO-TUNGSTEN FERRO-MOLYBDENUM Mf fi (METALLIC) m% , CHROMIUM- iMARGANESE- i ' M MOLYBDENUM- t TUNGSTEN ' ' OE t ' - ' (METALLIC) The Roessler Hasslacher CHEMICAL CO. 100 WILLIAM STREET, NEW YORK ■We solicit your inquiries when in the market B. P. Clapp Ammonia Co, PAWTUCKET, R. L : Manufacturers of- ANHYDROUS and AQUA AMMONIA Central Office 257 BROADWAY, NEW YORK Works : Cincinnati, O. Pawtucket, R.I. Washington, D.C. Louisville, Ky. Home is where the mortgage is. 19 10 ADVERTISEMENTS 21 Avery Chemical Co. DYESTUFFS AND CHEMICALS Largest Manufacturers of Lactic Acid in the World 7 SEARS STREET BOSTON, MASS. MECHANICAL RUBBER GOODS BELTING HOSE PACKING CHEMISTS ' STOPPLES LABORATORY TUBING Baeder, Adamson Co. ESTABLISHED 1828 Boston Store, 68 and 70 High Street Manujacturers of GLUE, CURLED HAIR, FLINT PAPER GARNET PAPER, EMERY PAPER aud EMERY CLOTH, GROUND FLINT and EMERY, HAIR-FELT for Covering Boilers and Pipes and for Lining Refrigerators Graduates of the Institute of Technology are invited to acquaint themselves with the manufactures of the above firm STORES Philadelphia New York Boston Chicago FACTORIES Philadelphia Newark, N.J. AMERICAN DYEWOOD COMPANY .IBanufatturcrjs of 3niportcrg of Dyewoods and Extracts Aniline Colors and Indigo 1 1 5 HIGH STREET, BOSTON. MASS. THE BOURSE. PHILADELPHIA, PA. 82-84-86 WILLIAM STREET, NEW YORK. N.Y. A genius is a man who has a hunch the ordinary man lacks. 22 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV Adolf Kuttroff President Carl Pickhardt, 1st Vice-President M. R. Poucher, H. L. Waldo, Geo. M. Snow . . . Vice-Presidents R. Reichard Treasurer Fr. Kuttroff Secretary Badische Company Sole importers of the products manufactured by Badische Anilin Soda Fabrik Ludwigshafen am Rhein, Germany Formerly sold in the U. S. by Kuttroff, Pickhardt Co. and latterly by Continental Color Chemical Co. 1 28 Duane Street, New York Branch Offices Boston 86 Federal St. Philadelphia ... 238 Arch St. Providence . . 80 So. Water St. Montreal . . 6 Lemoine St. Chicago . . . 228 Randolph St. Established 1851 EIMER £5 ' AMEND COR. THIRD AVENUE EIGHTEENTH STREET NEW YORK IMPORTERS AND MANUFACTURERS OF Chemicals AND Chemical Apparatus Assay Goods Complete Line of all Tcstiiig Instrumeiits for Cs=i: Light : Heat : Gas : Etc. Pure Hammered Platinum at Lowest Market Rates Balances ' Weights Complete Laboratory Outfits A good Jolly is worth whatever you pay for it. 19 10 ADVERTISEMENTS 23 CHICAGO Monadnock Block NEW YORK CITY Hudson Terminal PHILADELPHIA Pennsylvania Building ATLANTA Equitable Building THE LORAIN STEEL COMPANY PIITSBURG Frick Building Annex Girder Rails, Higii Tee Rai s and Specia Tracl( Worl( E ectrical y We ded Joints CLEVELAND Rockefeller Building ST. LOUIS Third National Bank Building SAN FRANCISCO Crocker Building GENERAL OFFICES : LONDON, ENGLAND Pennsylvania Building, Philadelphia 71, King William St., E.G. The Mummy hasn ' t had any fun for more than 2,000 years. 24 TECHNI QUE Vol. XXIV G RIFFIN W HKKL Co. Manufacturers of CHILLED IRON CAR WHEELS OF ] EVERY DESCRIPTION r Foundries Located at Chicago Pullman Detroit Boston St. Paul Kansas City Denver Tacoma General Sales Offices: 138 Jackson Boulevard, Ci 4ICAG0, III. Over 50,000 ' t miles w in use J Rolled from Best Quality Steel CONTINUOUS JOINT WEBER JOINT THE RAIL JOINT COMPANY GENERAL OFFICES: 29 WEST 34TH STREET, NEW YORK CITY Makers of Base Supported Rail Joints for Standard and Special Rati Sections, also Girder. Step or Compromise, Fro and Switch, and Insulating Rail Joints, protected by Patents. HIGHEST AWARDS— P :iris, 1901): Bultalo. 1901: St. Louis. 1904. WOLHAUPTER JOINT Catalogs at Agencies Pittsburg, Pa. Portland, Oregon San Francisco. Cal. St. Louis, Mo. Troy. N.Y. Baltimore, Md. Boston, Mass. Cliicago, II ' .. Denver. Colo. New York, N.Y. London, E.C., Eng. Montreal, Can. ESTABLISHED 1887 HOMER F. LIVERMORE HIGH-GRADE STEEL, MALLEABLE AND BRONZE CASTINGS TO MEET SPECIAL REQUIREMENTS A SPECIALTY 85 AND 87 PEARL ST., BOSTON, MASS. The heart has no wrinkles. 19 10 ADVERTISEMENTS 25 RAINBOW PACKING MAKES A STEAM, FLANGE, AND HOT WATER JOINT INSTANTLY Don ' t have to use wire and cloth to hold Rainbow : Can ' t blow it out Thousands of Imi- tators. No equal. Will Hold Highest Pressure : : : : : THE COLOR OF RAINBOW PACKING IS RED Notice our Trade-mark, the word Rainbow in a diamond in black, in Three Rows of Diamond extending throughout the entire length of each and every roll of Rainbow Packing It is an undisputed fact that Rainbow Packing is the only sheet or flange packing in the world that will carry in stock for months and years without hardening or cracking. Sole manufacturers of the well-known Eclipse sectional Rainbow Gasket, Peerless Piston and Valve Rod Packing, Honest John, Hercules Combination, Zero, Success, and Arctic Packings. A full and complete line of fine Mechanical Rubber Goods, including Belting, Hose, Valves, Mats and Matting, Gauge Glass Rings, Tubing, Discs, etc. THE PEERLESS RUBBER MFG. CO. i6 WARREN ST. NEW YORK CITY Detroit Locomotive Tlues ARE Seamless and Cold Drawn FROM THt HFCHLST QRADL Of BASIC OPLN HEARTH STLLL DETROIT SEAMLESS STEEL TUBES CO., Detroit Makcri of the Best Locomotive Flue in the World BUFFALO WIRE WKS. CO, Formerly Scheeler ' s Sons MANUFACTURERS OF WIRE CLOTH WIRE WORK AND ARTISTIC METAL WORK Send for Our Catalog No. 5-S BUPEALO, N.V. Be a mixer but don ' t get mixed. 26 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV THE :5IiW£X :£l£crRl(AL (? no STATE STREET BOSTON SPECIFY H-C c jaap °tl V MOTORS l ttQ ' 1 HEY represent the X result of thirty-four iV j|Upg years experience in mfUKk- design and construction •• of Electrical Apparatus. The Holtzer- Cabot Electric Co. BOSTON { BROOHLIISE), MASS. CHICAGO. ILLINOIS Our real importance is never equal to what we give ourselves. 19 10 ADVERTISEMENTS 27 National Tube Company MANUFACTURERS of WROUGHT PIPE ALL KINDS-SIZES ' s-INCH TO 30-INCH BoilerTubes, Casing, Tubing and Drive Pipe, Gas and Oil-Line Pipe NATIONAL DEPARTMENT, McKEESPORT, PA. Water and Gas Mains fitted with Converse or Matheson Joints Shelby Seamless Tubing for Mechanical Purposes Seamless BoilerTubes, etc. Cast and Malleable Iron Fittings for all Pressures and Purposes Brass and Iron Body Valves and Cocks for all Pressures Kewanee Unions Kewanee Specialties Drive Well Points and Well Supplies NATIONAL TUBE COMPANY GENERAL SALES OFFICES. Friclc Building, PITTSBURGH, PA. District Sales Offices : ATLANTA CHICAGO DEWLR NEW ORLEANS NEW YORK PHILADELPHIA PITTSBURGH PORTLAND SAN FRANCISCO ST. LOUIS SALT LAKE CITY SEATTLE It is easier for a poor man to be good than contented. 28 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV ?j The Student of Today is the Superintendent of Tomorrow WE WANT BOTH TO KNOW, USE AND APPRECIATE Do You Want a CATALOG? F Armstrong Tool Holders They make One Pound of Tool Steel equal Ten Pounds in Forged Lathe and Planer Tools ARMSTRONG BROS. TOOL CO. The Tool Holder People 104 N. Francisco Ave. CHICAGO, ILL. Patented February L ' s, Isyy MILWAUKEE, WIS. Steel Founders and Manufacturers OPEN HEARTH STEEL CASTINGS FROM 2 OZ. TO 50 TONS GEARS AND PINIONS FOR ALL TYPES OF STREET RAILWAY MOTORS SPECIAL TRACK WORK HARDENED CENTER STEEL BOUND BUILT-UP ENGINES Ames Center-crank, simple and compound Ames Side-crank, single and four-valve Vim Center-crank, automatic and throttlin({ Re|{al Side-crank, JESSOFS STEEL Awarded Gold Medal World ' s Columbian Exposition Awarded Grand Prix at Paris : : Nineteen Hundred Best Circular and Band Saw Plates Best Annealed Tool and Die Steel Double Shear and Sheet Steel Truss Spring and Blister Steel Annealed Die Blocks William Jessop Sons, Limited chief American Office 91 John Street, New York W. F. WAGNER, General Manager Manufactory, Sheffield, England Operating Jessop Steel Company Washington, Penn. Manufacturers of Crucible Sheet Steel for Saws and Other Tools Bosl BOILERS yl  • pd 0 ' ' Horizontal Tubular oOf) P - ' Portable (coal and wood burninii) 8 Standard Return Tubular Portable 81 9 Empire Return Tubular Portable Locomotive Tubular Lpri ht Tubular Laughter is the world ' s oil and wine. 19 10 ADVERTISEMENTS 29 Saco and Pettee Machine Shops Cotton Mil imacl)itter|) SHOPS NEWTON UPPER FALLS, MASS. BIDDEFORD, MAINE NILES-BEMENT-POND CO. Ill BROADWAY, NEW YORK OLIVER BUILDING, BOSTON Builders of METAL WORKING MACHINERY Of All Kinds and Sizes Steam Hammers Hydraulic Machinery Electric Traveling Cranes PRATT WHITNEY Precision Machinery Small Tools and Gauges Many men keep busy all the time being important. 30 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV CCURACY, Durability and Beauty of Design — the three fundamental features by which the worth of Measuring Tapes is determined — are best combined in those that bear the trade-mark UFK N So ld everywhere. Send for Catalog 7N £ ( FKJN Pule tJO ' Saginaw, Mich., U.S.A. New York London, En . Windsor, Can. CHRISTIAN BECKER Formerly ot and successor to BECKER SONS and BECKER BROTHERS Manufac= turer of the Kjr ' ' SI Original Becker Balances AND Weights of Precision For Assayers, Chemists, Jewelers and for all purposes where accuracy is required Price I ist and Catalogue sent on application Telephone Call, Factory and Residence, 140 New Rochelle FACTORY NEW ROCHELLE, N.Y. NEW YORK OFFICE, 7 MAIDEN LANE NEW WESTON ALTERNATING CURRENT PORTABLE AND SWITCHBOARD AMMETERS AND VOLTMETERS ARE Absolutely Dead Beat. Extremely Sensitive. Practically free from Temperature Error. Their indications are practically independent of frequency and also of Wave form. NEW WESTON ECLIPSE DIRECT CURRENT SWITCHBOARD AMMETERS AND VOLTMETERS (Soft Iron or Electro- magnetic type) are Remarkably accurate. Very low in price. Admirably adapted for general use in small plants. Well made and nicely finished. All of these NEW INSTRUMENTS are excellent in quality but low in price. Correspondence regarding these and our well- known standard Instruments is solicited by NEW YORK OFFICE: 114 LIBERTY ST. Weston Electrical Instrument Co. newark, nj. Friendship survives death better than absence. 19 10 ADVERTISEMENTS 31 The Slogan of the Cameron ' ' Character: The Grandest Thing ' ' Many prominent Consulting Engineers received their first knowledge of Pump Construction from the Cameron Sectional View Cameron Pumps have been doing suc- cessful service nearly fifty years. Excellent in design, simple, compact, strongly built, and with no outside moving parts. The steam mecha- nism consists of but four stout pieces, no minute steam ports, grooves, packing rings or other trouble- making de- vices . The pump cannot reverse until it has comj leted its full stroke. The removal of one bonnet or cover exposes the four valves in the water valve chest, pemiitting of quick replacements and repairs. Any one or all are thus quickly reached when necessary. There are other excellent features about Cameron Pumps, and if 3 ou will write for our Catalog, edition IT, you will learn why Cameron Pumps are preferred over all other duplex pumps. We also build Condensing Apparatus for high vacuum. A. S. Cameron Steam Pump Works Foot East Twenty-Third Street New York None are so tiresome as those who agree with us. 32 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV l t:ec[i Published tri-weekly, will give you all the Institute news, in- cluding that of graduates and undergraduates. Subscription list for 1909-1910 now open. The Price is SI. 30 Per Year 86 Issues of Live Technology News Address all subscriptions to the Circulation Manager, THE TECH. TO ADVERTISER.S Have you ever thought of the value of the advertising columns of The Tech, which reaches over a thousand incipient engineers three times a week? For full particulars, address the Business Manager, 491 Boylston Street, Boston, Mass. Is the Ideal Magazine for the Amateur Its Technical, Pictorial and Literary Features are universally admired. 15c. per copy; $1.50 per year Sample Copy for 2 cents EDITED AND PUBLISHED BY WILFRED A. FRENCH, Ph.D. 383 BOYLSTON ST., BOSTON, U.S.A. Do you want to be a Success in your Profession ? If vou are entering the chemical or metallurgical fields ' We can help you The degree of success that a man attains depends largely upon what he reads to keep in touch with the best practice of the day. Electrochemical and Metallurgical Industry is a clearing-house for chemical and metallurgical ideas. Engineers of the highest authority contribute to its columns, which contain all important live matter in regard to chemical and metallurgical engineering. Published monthly. $2.00 a year. Sample copies on request. Special rates to students. Ask for our combination book and subscription ofTer. Electrochemical and Metallurgical Industry 2S9 WEST 39th STREET, NEW YORK The loud talker is getting the short end of the argument. 19 10 ADVERTISEMENTS 33 PROUTY : DAVIS Cailois auti Clcaucrsi Sgg Boylston Street Tel. 1938- 1 Back Bay The Boston Pressing Club CA unique arrangement for the care of your clothes by the month, quarter or year. CWe are the only American concern of the kind in the city. CRemember us when you return to the Institute next term. SPECIAL RATES TO CLUBS, HOTELS, DORMITORIES, FRATERNITIES, ETC. AUTOMOBILE DELIVERY AMERICAN WORKMEN MacuUar Parker Company GIVE SPECIAL ATTENTION TO Clothing Young Men and Boys Garments in Latest Styles and Fabrics made in workshops on the premises A Full Line oi Furnishing Goods 400 WASHINGTON STREET BOSTON Tech Tog SKop THE PLACE. TO BUY YOUNG MEN ' S rURNISHINQS Shirts, Collars, Gloves Neckwear, Hats, Caps Umbrellas MODLRATL PRICLS fIRST-CLASS LAUNDRY Look for the ' Red and the Gray Charles J. S. Rudolf 484 BOYLSTON STREET Opposite Rogers Building A ride goeth before a fall. 34 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV A. V. FABER OLDEST LEAD PENCIL FACTORY ESTABLISHED 1761 7f CAST£££. t S@ DRAWING PENCILS THE FINEST IN EXISTENCE 16 DEGREES OF HARDNESS CALCULATING RULES For Electrical and Mecnanical Engineers, Arcnitects, Surveyors ana 1 ecnnical Purposes Generally. Unequallea for Accuracy, VorKinansnip and Finisn Obtainable through all Dealers in Mathematical Instruments orDra-wing Materials BLUE PRINTS OUR facilities for making Blue Prints of architectural and engineering plans are unequaled. We are always pleased to give estimates. A FULL LINE OF DRAWING MATERIALS At Lowest Prices Mailing Tubes — All Sizes Spaulding Print Paper Co. 44 Federal St., Boston, Mass. Tel. Main 4103 BOOKBINDING IN EVERY STYLE Binder to fID J. ,, fiDueeum of jfine arts, etc ALEXANDER MOORE Established 1850 II Hamilton PI., opp. Park St. Church, BOSTON H16G1NS r DRAWING INKS 1 ETERNAL WRITING INK ENGROSSING INK TAURINE MUCILAGE PHOTO MOUNTER PASTE DRAWING BOARD PASTE LIQUID PASTE OFFICE PASTE I VEGETABLE GLUE, Etc. Are the Finest and Best Inks and Adhesives Emancipate yourself from the use of corro- sive and lll-snicllinK Inks and adhesives and adopt the ( ! i«s ' InksandAcllusives. They will be a revelal Ion to you, thoy are so sweet, ilian, well put up, and withal so elHclent. AT DEALERS GENERALLY BR. cHEs CHA8. M. HIGGlNS CO.,Nlfrs. Chicago, London 271 Ninth St., Brooklyn, N.Y. PHILLIPS ' BACK BAY EXPRESS TEN FIRST-CLASS TEAMS Baggage Transferred to all Stations TWO MEN ON EVERY TEAM Furniture packed and moved. Freight v fork of all kinds promptly attended to. Special teams furnished for any kind of work 32 COURT ST. 34 ST. JAMES AVE. TELEPHONE 978 BACK BAY Pleasure limps for him who enjoys it alone. 1910 ADVERTISEMENTS 35 S. A. Woods Macliine Co. ' W Specialties Planers Matckers Moulders Automatic Knife Grina( ers wj% BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS A Failure is a man who has blundered and has not been able to cash in the experience. 36 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV J. O. SMUULEN A. D. MURRAY O. M. LAN E e; . D. Cross SMULLEIN , CO. Cadovjs H 1 C3 H E: ST Gi R A D E ROPULAR P RICES 51 SUMMEIR ST., doR. CHAUNCV ST. WOULD BE GLAD TO SUBMIT SAMPLES AND PRICES ON REQUEST CHARLES JACOBSON (Formerly with F. L. Dunne) Custom Cailor LADIES ' AND GENTS ' SUITS MADE TO ORDER Cleaning Repairing Pressing Monthly Pressing ill MASSACHUSETTS AVE. Phone 2161-3 B.B. GENTI-EIMEN Ti WHO DRESS FOR STYLE ' I NEATNESS, AND COMFORT I WEAR THE IMPROVED | BOSTON GARTER THE RECOGNIZED STANDARD The Name is stamped on every loop — CUSHION BUTTON CLASP LIES FLAT TO THE LEG— NEVER SLIPS, TEARS NOR UNFASTENS Samplepair, SilkSOc, Cotton S ic. Mailed on receipt of price. GEO. FBOBTCCM lun BoatoQ, Hut., U. S. A. ALWAYS EASY HEWINS 5t MOLLIS Men ' s Furnishing Goods 4 Hamilton place BOSTON A stitch in time saves embarrassing exposure. 19 10 ADVERTISEMENTS 37 $1-25 $1.25 SI.OO 50.75 $0.73 A. D. MACLACHLA 502-504 Boylston St., Boston Dent BusKCo. IS SCHOOL STREET BOSTON - - MASS. Cecb Gmblems Pins • Flags • Spoons • Clasps Duckies and Stationer A PE,RFECT PEN FOR PARTICULAR P E, O P L E M O ORB ' S ' NON-LEAKABEE FOUNTAI N PEH. =MOORE ' S= Non-Leakable Fountain Pen We guarantee this pen absolutely non- leak- able. When the cap is turned on, it is air- tight and ink-tight. It is the only clean-to-handle pen made. The ink never dries up nor thickens — writes readily after anv period of disuse. Various Styles. $2.50 and upwards. Ask your Dealer AMERICAN FOUNTAIN PEN COMPANY 7 11 BOYLSTON STREET BOSTON, MASS. Distilled waters run deep. 38 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV GEO. H. ELUS CO. Printing 111 CONGRESS STREET TELEPHONE, MAIN 1549 Branch Exchange Al BOSTON, MASS. U.S.A. THOMAS TODD BOOK, JOB AND MAGAZINE PRINTER All work done in the best possible manner and completed WHEN PROMISED 14 BEACON STREET BOSTON MASS. William B. Libby Thz Garden Press FINE MERCANTILE BOOK AND JOB PRINTING Monotype Book Composilion 227 Tremont Street, next to Majestic Theatre Boston Telephone The flirt is a beauty on whose bluff you can ' t bet. 19 10 ADVERTISEMENTS 39 lb Work by (he Sun — . ' A MeansiWice theWorkdone. THE COPPERWORK, SKYLIGHTS, ETC. ON THE NBW Boston Museum of Fine Arts INCH DlNi; 20,000 sq. ft. skylights, 45,000 sq. ft. copper roofing HAS BEEN ERECTED BY E. VAN NOORDEN COMPANY BOSTON, MASS. Vacuum Oils Are used in every corner of the globe where wheels turn. They are used most because they lubricate most Made only by Vacuum Oil Company ROCHESTER, N.Y. SCOTT STRAIGHTWAY GATE, J. D. GLOBE ANGLE, CHECK, RADIATOR, BACK PRESSURE, POP SAFETY RELIEF VALVES ALSO: GATE COMPRESSION FIRE HYDRANTS, INDICATOR POST FLOOR STANDS MANUFACTURED BY ROE STEPHENS MFG. CO. DETROIT, MICH. CHAS.A.G.WINTHER, Consulting Engineer 170 Summer Street, Boston H. M. LEVINE SJatlor MOST EXCLUSIVE LINE OF PATTERNS IN WOOLENS EVER SHOWN FOR THIS SEASON 125 TREMONT STREET BOSTON Never believe a relative. 40 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV THE NATIONAL SHAWMUT Sl ' l y T gOR over thirty years this Bank BANK W -j- M has been a depository for the ir r Tl funds, not only of the Capital $3,500,000 nJ U Massachusetts Institute of Technology, but of many of the students Surplus and Profits as zvell. $4,500,000 ■ No account too small to receive the most Deposits courteous consideration. No account too $90,000,000 large to be amply safe guarded. BOSTON MASSACHUSETTS OLD COLONY TRUST COMPANY Capital and Surplus .... $7,000,000 THIS company invites the attention of Technology students and graduates to the superior facilities afforded for their banking at its Temple Place Branch and at its main office in the Ames Building. Interest is paid on all deposits of $500 and over. OLD COLONY TRUST COMPANY COURT STREET 52 TEMPLE PLACE Well, we are all mortal. 19 10 ADVERTISEMENTS 41 Half-tones, Line Plates and Color Work For Cccl)tttque X9t0 p= l % J Suifolk Engraving Eledrotyping Co. 234 Congress Street, Boston BOSTON PROVIDEN ' CE NEW YORK When found make a note of it. 42 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV STONE 5t WEBSTER 147 MILK STREET BOSTON, MASS. UGEINE: CARPEIN LOW TEMPERATURE ENGINEERING Special aimd AUTorvi atic A pf i_ ic AxicaMS oi ELECTRICAL REFRIGERATION R NEIWTON massaohuse: GEO. H. BARRUS, 74 1 2 PEMBERTON SQUARE. BOSTON One vast, substantial smile. 1910 ADVERTISEMENTS 43 (Some Large Shafting and Heavy liearmgs at the Dodge Works.; THE DODGE LINE embraces everything for the mechanical trans- mission of power from the heaviest rolhng mill equipment to the smallest countershaft. Every installation, large or small, is given the benefit ot our 25 years ' experience in this field. General Catalog C-7 sent on request. Also other Dodge publica- tions,— ' Rope Driving, Tg8 Harnessing of ' ater Powers, T116 Friction Clutches, T123 Sate Construction of Flpvheels. Dodge Manufacturing Company MISHAWAKA, INDIANA Boston Brooklyn New York Philadelphia Pittsburg Chicago Cincinnati St. Louis Avoid crowds. 44 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV SAMSON SPOT SASH CORD Proved by both tests and actual experience to be the most durable and economical material for hanging windows. Guaranteed free from all imperfections of braid or finish. We make extra quality solid braided cord for all purposes, including Sash Cord, Trolley Cord, Arc Lamp Cord, Bell and Register Cord, Solid Braided Rope, etc. Seiui for Catalogue. SAMSON CORDAGE WORKS, Boston, Massachusetts JAMES P. TOLMAN, 1868, President HERBERT G. PRATT, 1885, Treasurer Sewer Pipe 36, 33, 30 and 27 in. our specialty 3- foot lengths ; deep sockets ; corrugated ends; also smaller sizes WRITE, rOR PRICILS ILvens £r Howard Fire Brick Company ST. LOUIS, MISSOURI, U.S.A. KING ' S Windsor Cement FOR Plastering Walls and Ceilings Elastic in its nature, can be applied with 25 per cent less labor and has I2j. per cent more covering capacity than any other similar material J. B. KING CO. NO. 1 BROADWAY, NEW YORK WALDO BROTHERS C. S. WALDO, Sole Partner BUILDING MATERIALS ATLAS PORTLAND CEMENT 102 MILK STREET BOSTON Genius must ever walk alone. 19 10 ADVERTISEMENTS 45 It ' s what an engineer reads tliat laiwlv determines his decree of success. To keep in touch with tlie actual ])ractice of the best engineers of the day and with the latest developments in his line of work, every engineer should read the leading journal in his chosen field. The Leading Engineering Journals are: ELECTRICAL WORLD The foremost authority of the world on all branches of electrical work. Weekly ' Ldition. $}.oo. Monthly Eciilioii, Si.oo THE ENGINEERING RECORD The most valuable j)aper published for the civil and mechanical engineer. Published Weekly — $j.oo a Year ELECTRIC RAILWAY JOURNAL The undisputed authority on the construction, operation and management of city and interurban railways. Published Weekly— $ .00 a Year Sample Copies on Request OUR BOOK DEPARTMENT CAN SUPPLY ANY ENGINEERING BOOK PUBLISHED McGraw Publishing Co. 239 WEST 39TH ST., NEW YORK 02.S37 Where there ' s a will there ' s a lawsuit. 46 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV PREPARATION FOR THE INSTITUTE OXE of the most important factors in the success of a student at the Institute is a thorough preparation. Chauncy Hall School prepares exclu- sively for the Institute; and the purpose is not merely to train its candidates to pass the entrance examinations, but to give them intelligence in observation, accuracy in reasoning, and facility in expression. The teachers are men who are specialists in their several depart- ments, and the laboratories and equip- ment are excellent. This is the only school devoting all its energies to the prepara- tion of boys for the Institute of Teclmology. Chauncy Hall School Established 1828 458 BOYLSTON STREET BOSTON HAGAR KURT, Principals American Bank Note Company Engravers and Printers of Bonds, Stocks, and All Kinds of Securities for the New York and Boston Stock Exchanges J. C. Bla den, Resident Manager 387 Washington St., Boston, Mass. % l ecItnoIoQQ Bi nieni ( WAxXzxXxs DXacja inc, xUucrtcd tor the interests of the pCixssajclmsetts iustitxitc j)f cchnolofjiv, and ubUshcd by the Ixxmui Association 83 ilcxwbuvij . ttcct, Boston THE REVIEW aims to develop closer relations among Institute men and to stimulate their interest in the work of the College. It is in no sense an engineering magazine, but deals broadly with the problems of Technological Education and the responsibilities of the professional man THE REVIEW is published during Januiiry, April, July and October. Communications should he addressed to THE TECHNOLOGT REVIEW, 83 Newbury Street, Boston, Mass. ubsrrtptt0u, $2,UU a f far finale (Uo iirs. 50 rents ' olumes I, III, IV, V, VI, VII, VIII and IX, finely bound in half morocco, are ready for delivery at $2.25 each, or will be exchanged for unbound sets, provided they are in good condition, at $1.25 each. (If sent by mail, 30 cent.s extra.) Give the people what they think they want. 19 10 ADVERTISEMENTS 47 THE BEST WORK AT LEAST COST NEVER FAIL TO PLEASE EVERYONE THE GRIFFIN MILLS Are used by the Largest Cement and Fertilizer Manufacturers in the World. Send for Catalog BRADLEY PULVERIZER CO. BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS DO THE MOST WORK WITH LEAST POWER HAVE VERY FEW WEARING PARTS You cannot write a man down by writing him up. 48 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV DIXON ' S FLAKE GRAPHITE CAN do certain things in lubrication that oil or grease alone cannot perform. It fills up the microscopic irregularities existing in all metal surf aces, becomes pinned on the microscopic elevations, form- ing a strong, durable veneer on the metal surfaces and thus preventing actual metal-to-metal contact. Can we tell you more about it in our booklet, Graphite as a Lubricant ? We will be glad to hear from you. JOSEPH DIXON CRUCIBLE CO. JERSEY CITY, N.J. AN HONEST REGISTER ■pVERY part interchangeable and made within ■ limits of 1-1000 inch. Cold rolled steel replaces cast and malleable iron, and durability of working parts increased by the use of hardened steel. More International Registers in service than all others combined. THE INTERNATIONAL REGISTER CO. 124 W. Jackson Blvd., Chicago, 111. ALPHA PORTLAND CEMENT The STANDARD AMERICAN BRAND OUTPUT 13,000 Barrels per day H orks a ALPHA, N.J. c5 MARTIN ' S CREEK, PA. New England Department 521-322-323 Board of Trade Bid-, BOSTON F. .A.. Kinney, Manager C. L. BERGER SONS SURVEYING ENGINEERING Astronomical Instruments of Precision 37 WILLIAMS STREET. BOSTON They secure In their Instrumpiits: Accur- acy or Divison, Simplicity of .Manipulation, Llehtness comtjincd with StrcnKth, a Chromatic Tele.scope with hiirh power. Steadiness of Adjustments inider v:iryiin; Temperatures. Stiffness to avoid any lic- mor, even In a strong wind, and Thoniuuli Workmanship in Every Part. Tlieir In- struments arc In eeneral use l)y the United Stales fiovernment Engineers, Geologists and Surveyors, and the range of instru- „ . i„ r .r ments, as made bv them for Iliver, Harlior. CItv. Bridge. Tunnel. Railroad and Mining Engineering, as well as those maue lor Triangulatlon or Topographical Work and Laiui Surveying, etc.. is larger than that of any firm in the country. ll.MSIKATKn . 1ANU. L . nD C.VTALOnrE SENT ON APPI,IC. TIO A sincere man — one who only bluffs part of the time. 19 10 ADVERTISEMENTS 49 ROBERTS IRON WORKS CO. ' Boiler Makers, Machinists and General Iron Workers Steam Boilers, Tanks, Kiers, etc. Plate and Sheet Iron Work of all descriptions 180 to 198 MAIN STREE,T CAMBRIDGE,PORT, MASS. ilolJErt a. B3ott a Co. INSURANCE 40 IsUbt tvcct, TSogton CONSIDER The great saving if you were to insure at your present age. Suggest the subject to your parents or guardian, and write for facts to CHAS. S. BURKE, General Adent Connrrtirtit (Enteral ilife 3fn6urancr Co. Lowest Non-Participatinii Rates OLD SOUTH BLlLDIiNG, BOSTON The less you require looking after, the greater is your reward. 50 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV RHODES BROS. CO. Groceries and Provisions Wholesale and R etail Importers and Receivers on Commission 438 to 444 Tremont St., 170 to 174 Massachusetts Avenue, BOSTON 256 to 260 Warren Street, ROXBURY DISTRICT 10 and 1 1 Harvard Square, BROOKLINE, TE,LE,PHONE CONNECTION Incorporated LONDON PARIS BERLIN ESTABLISHED 1800 Choice Roses Orchids and Violets 124 TREMONT ST. TEL. OXFORD 1737, 1738, 1739 BOYLSTON FAIRFIELD STS. TEL. BACK BAY 2323, 2324 Cafe ' des Invalides Better than Coffee Richer than Coffee Seven=eighths Coffee PUREOXIA Ginger Ale The opinion of ourselves most to be distrusted is our own. 19 10 ADVERTISEMENTS 51 CURTIS ENGINEERING SPECIALTIES IMPROVED PRESSURE REGULATOR DAMPER REGULATOR List of Specialties We Manufacture ImproYed Pressure Regulator Improved Pump Regulator Water Pressure Regulator Relief Valve for Steam and Water Steam Separator Tank Governor and Pump Expansion Trap Return Steam Trap Balanced Steam Trap Damper Regulator Temperatu re Regulator Cellar Drainer U. S. Ball Cock Write for the - d ' Este Engineers ' Manual mentioning Technique BALANCEn STEAM TRAP RETURN STEAM TRAP JULIAN D ' ESTE CO. 24 Canal St. Boston, Mass. A pedagogue likes to teach us what he knows. 52 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV Yachting is a Pastime that encourages Scientific Investigation Geo. Lawley Son Corp ' n BUILDERS OF Steam and Sailing YA C H T S Motor Boats, Row Boats Marine Engines and Boilers South Boston Massachusetts Address all Communications to the Corporation ARTHUR D. LITTLE Chemical R Xpert and Engineer 93 BROAD STREET BOSTON CHARLES T. MAIN Mill Engineer and Architect International Trust Company Building 45 MILK ST. BOSTON, MASS. ARTHUR F. GRAY iHtU Arrl|ttrrl lEltgtUr r : : : Designs Mills, Manufactories, and Power Plants Exchange Building, 53 State Street TelepSone, Main 3836-2 BOSTON, MASS. THE NEW FOSTE R Fifth Edition, Completely Revised and Enlarged, with Four-Fifths of Old Matter Replaced by New, Up-to-date Material. Pocket size, flexihle leather, elaborately illustrated, with an extensive Index, 1636 pages, Thumb Index, etc. Price, $5.00. ELECTRICAL ENGINEER ' S POCKETBOOK The Most Complete Book of its Kind Ever Published. Treating of the Latest and Best Practice In Electrical Enixinecrmt;. By HORATIO A. FOSTER (with the collaboration of eminent specialists) Contents: Symbols: Units: Instniments: Measurements: Masnetic Properties of Iron: Electro-ma ' uets; Propertiesof Con- liuctors; Kelat ions and Dimensions of Conduct cirs: lindert;nnind Conduit Construction: .Standard Symbols: Cable Testing: Dy- namos and Motors: Tests of Dynamos and Motors: The Static Transformer: Standardization I? ules: IlliuninatingEngineermu: Electric Lighting (. rc): Electric Lighting (Incandescent): Electric Street Hallways; Electrnlysis: Transnussion of Power: Storage Batteries: Switchboards: Lightning Arresters; Electricity Meters; Wireless Telegraphy: Telegraphy: Telephony- Electricity In the U.S. Army: Electricity In the U.S. Navy: Uesonance: Electric . iunmiil)llcs: lilcctro-chemistry and Electro-metallurgy; X-Rays: ' EIcctrlc Heating: Cooking and ' Weldljig; Lightning Conductors: Mechanical Section: Inde.x. D. VAN NOSTRAND CO., Publishers 23 Mu-ray and 27 Warren Streets NEW YORK When in doubt, mind your own business. 1 9 1 C ADVERTISEMENTS 53 HOUSE ESTABLISHED 1871 THE fWf{ PRESS TELEPHONE, MAIN 1498 T. O. METCALF CO. T Y P E LIT ' ' ' prrTE ( Pnutrrs 152 Purchase Street. BOSTON I T is better to have your printing done by the Griffith - Stillin s Press than to wish you had 368 Congress St., Boston (two blocks over the bridge) Printers of Technique 1910 TRADE GONDA MARK THE STANDARD OPEN CIRCUIT BATTERIES OF THE WORLD The batteries bearing the well-known trade-mark GONDA ate beyond question the best made in the world, and are everywhere regarded as the standard. Do not be imposed upon bv in- terior batteries. See that every cell you buy bears the trade-mark GONDA THELECLANCHE BATTERY CO. Ill to 117 East 131st St. NEW YORK CITY ANDREW W. HOLLAND. Presiiient JAMES P. CRONAN. Treasurer Sanufai-tDrers of HiQ h Grade Paper e Boxes The: Cox Co. • 463 Commercial Street BOSTON Telephone 1 74 Rich. Any one can cut prices, but it takes brains to make a better article. 54 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV The Massachusetts Institute of Technology C Boston ARTHUR A. NOYES, Ph.D A c t i n g-P resident JHE MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECH- NOLOGY offers courses, each of four years ' duration, leading to the degree of Bachelor of Science, in Civil, Mechanical, Mining, Electrical, Chemical and Sanitary Engineering, in Architecture, Chemistry, Biology, Phys- ics, General Science, Geology and Naval Architecture. To be admitted to the first-year class, applicants must have attained the age of seventeen, and must pass satisfactory examinations in Algebra, Plane and Solid Geometry, Physics, English, History, French and German, and must present teachers ' certificates for one of a series of elective subjects. A division of these entrance subjects between June and September or between two successive years is permitted. Entrance examinations are ' held at the Institute in June and Sep- tember of each year. In June applicants may be examined also by the College Entrance Examination Board in New York, Philadelphia, Chicago and many other cities in America and Europe. A circular stating times and places is issued in advance, and will be mailed on application. Graduates of colleges and scientific schools are admitted, without examination, to such advanced standing as is warranted by their previous training. Graduate courses leading to the degrees of Master of Science, Doctor of Philosophy and Doctor of Engineering are also offered. Special Research Laboratories of Physical Chemistry, Applied Chemistry and Sanitary Science have been established. Correspondence should be addressed to Prof. A. L. Merrill, Secre- tary of the Facultv. PUBLICATIONS The Annual Catalogue (issued in December), the Report of the President and the Treasurer (issued in January), the Register of Former Students (issued in March), and any of the following descriptive circulars will be mailed free on application: The Massachusetts Institute of Technology: An illustrated pamphlet describing the laboratories of the Institute. Circulars of the Departments of Mechanical Engineering; Mining Engineering; Physics and Electro- chemistry; Architecture; Chemistry and Chemical Engineering; Biology; Naval Arrhitecture. Circulars in regard to Admission of Students from other Colleges; Summer Courses; Advanced Study and Research; The Research Laboratory of Physical Chemistry; Five-year Undergraduate Courses. Suppose you be, not merely seem. 19 10 ADVERTISEMENTS 55 iHarceau Official f)otograpi)er for Cedjuique 1910 160 Cremont Street, 23o ton WORLD-WIDE DISTRIBUTION C There is no mistaking the superiority of a typewriter that, in 17 years, has built up a market in every part of the civilized world. CThis international endorsement of The Smith Premier Typewriter proves our right to offer it to you as the world ' s best typewriter. Write us or any Smith Premier branch for a detailed description of its advantages THE SMITH PREMIER TYPEWRITER CO. 15 Milk Street, Boston, Mass. E. A. WRIGHT Colie fe Sn£fraver, ZrrintGr and Stationer 1108 CHESTNUT STREET PHILADELPHIA tfjl Commencement Invitations. Dance Invita- j] tions and Programs, Menus, Fraternity Inserts and Stationery. Class Pins, Visiting Cards. Wed- ding Announcements and Invitations : • • • SAMPLES CHE ERFULLY SENT ON REQUEST Anybody can win unless there happens to be a second entry. 56 TECHNIQUE Vol. XXIV •MORSE DRILLS No matter how seldom you use tools , you need tlie best MORSE DRILLS, REAMERS CUTTERS CHUCKS, TAPS, DIES, etc., are without question as good as can be. Large m a n u - f acturers w!io have had a chance to trv out different kinds already know this, and others are going to know it, if telling will avail. Send for catalog which f uHy illustrates MORSE TOOLS To prevent objections is better than to answer them. : - r- U ' .- ■■■ ' 1 ' ' ..•T• ■ V $: ' 5 -■l ' ■ .■ •■ ' if v . ii . - -■ • ' ■■ ti ij ' ' ' „. ,.1.; v. .- ' ' ' • ' ■ ' ■ ' ■ ' ' ■:- • ■ ' i ' ■ ' i ' J- ' ' - -.- ' •■;■ ■•.V ■ r ■■. ; . ■ ' ' ' • -. ' ' T ;J y ' ' ■■ ' lit ' •■ ' ■ ' li. j ■ ' ' , '  ■. :■ ; y, , « , . yt- ' fl f ' r ' , ;rv ;:! ij. ' -., ■ ■■,■■: ' i|A ! r■ ' J ■• ; ' (•; -flit, . ,..• ' •« ' IK-. 1- ' V„ T i :y ■ . t1; ;■ I. ' I . ■ 1 : , • ■ ' r ' .t. t m( wmm


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