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

 - Class of 1915

Page 18 of 472

 

Massachusetts Institute of Technology - Technique Yearbook (Cambridge, MA) online collection, 1915 Edition, Page 18 of 472
Page 18 of 472



Massachusetts Institute of Technology - Technique Yearbook (Cambridge, MA) online collection, 1915 Edition, Page 17
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Massachusetts Institute of Technology - Technique Yearbook (Cambridge, MA) online collection, 1915 Edition, Page 19
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Page 18 text:

1915 TECHNIQUE 17 never to be forgotten, and never to be replaced by anything to come. Their college days are over, those happy, care-free days of little work and much play,-days that hold memories dear to the heart of every man among them. VVhat one is there but can remember his straw- bestrewn and sheepish arrival, the hazing, the rushing, the day that Petey Simonds put the cow in the chapel, or the night he danced the Salome at the Sophomore banquet? VVho but can remember how, as a Sophomore, he nailed the class numerals to the chapel spire, and how as a Junior he fell a victim to the charms of the college widow? But memories such as these fill a chapter long since completed: the page has turned, and a new one be- gun. The scene has shifted, the past is behind. Let us then look to the present. These men arrive at Tech with a new and broader view of life, with a new purpose,-a determination to reach the height of their ambition, -a determination strengthened by the fact that their playtime is over, and the business of life before them. Work is first and foremost in their consideration. But need it entirely occupy their minds? Even realizing that no longer can class politics, athletic attainment, musi- cal club trips, or editorial fame hold charms for these men, is there not some way for them to help, some field for their energy besides the class-room and laboratory? Right here in our midst is a veri- table mine of talent, backed by ex- perience that should not be neg- lected. Here is a man who was president of his college musical clubs, here one who wrote the music for the college show, and another who edited the university daily. Wle do not ask these men to join in the rush for office, there are men in plenty here to do that, but can we not avail ourselves of their help, their co-operation with us in making our efforts more fruitful and our clubs, shows, and publica- tions the best in the country? This then is the place of the college man at Tech. THE COSMOPOLITAN CLUB f' ' HE very cosmopolitan nature of Technology, with its 50 nationalities and its 113 for- eign students, rnade it quite fitting that, in the spring of 1910, a Cos- mopolitan Club should be organ- ized, which should have for its purpose the bringing together of foreign and American students under purely social conditions rather than in the business-like class-room, where only a slight acquaintance is possible. Through the activity of Mr. Gorton James, then a Junior, and the generosity of Mr. George VVig- . . ,, ,, ..,.....,.s.,-f..n....,......,:--v... A- ,L ,..'-'H-...m,,.-....s... :-.:,z:.',':,u.'. N . bl -iii, . 3, inn, . E AEA 4' f' 'min 'I 559- alt.. .Q1LLu.c'emf.a.'9ff41z4:ws:b-'-RP-e-Q 2221222 ' ' L1 .bag MW' if lfhEis:ri '9'55SiseiIfI1' I H 1'- -my pg ' 'vzefuimzlemffaeffwaafcffff 4 ta , LL . L AHRE!! 5442. .:jf,'f1uzcsomcv1ff:z T ' , 2 I KKXQMIEQF' A 35.3-5-.lmndannnnn rg.-5'.!5g6'Zi'6lHfMQcQm.:rceN 3 . . N 51 rv. ,. .. . Q-g::::'-' Fur:m-:m::::::,wm,','lR 2 . 2 2 2 2. '. -f-'X A-'rt'- '-1 .1 QI 1 s 'FEfcc'e'.ff:'W':'Lv':. .c',. :-'-':a-',:f?'. -rzzrfiii I X415-no. T' ,

Page 17 text:

16 TECHNIQUE 1915 well equipped in his particular line of work, but he has behind him the many years of successful work of Tech in training men and women for their work. He who goes out from the Institute into any kind of work has a rich heritage of well- earned traditional value in the very fact that he has studied at Tech. I have always found that Tech is a name to conjure with, and we all know that this would not be so if the students had not gained from the Institute that knowledge and skill whereby they have made good. HORTENSE W. LEWIS, Vassar, ,97, IVI. I. T. 1899-1900. THE COLLEGE MAN AT TECH F' I ' HAT of our college men? Are they not quite an im- ' - portant factor in Tech life? Considering that about twenty-five per cent. of our student body is made up of men from other colleges and universities, we can but admit that theirs is quite an important part of the life at the Institute. VVhat are their sentiments with regard to the school? What part do they, and what part should they, take in our student activities? Before we either enjoin them to take part in these activities or judge them too harshly for failing to take an inter- est in the things that are of interest to us, we should first pause and con- sider the conditions under which they have come, and the part that Tech should play in their lives. Some of these men have spent but one year at another college, others have spent two: we will but con- sider the case of the man who has either obtained a degree, or has, at least, spent three years at another institution of higher education. A college training is a strange adventure: the value obtained there- from is illusive and intangible, but it is there, nevertheless. It has been well said that the value of a college education rests, not in the courses chosen nor in the volumes that are studied, but in the associa- tions, the meeting of fellow-men on a common ground, the grasping and conquering of new conditions,- in short, the Ending of one,s self. An eminent authority has said that the great benefit derived from col- lege life lies, not in what one gains in concrete knowledge, but in what one loses of that which is objection- able in him,-all of the rough spots, the meanness, the selfishness, and the petty conceits being rubbed off, and the true character beneath polished by the contact with fel- low-men in the daily life upon the campus and in the fraternity house. And so with these men one great phase in their lives is past and gone 9 E 5 7- X -.,,--..,.fmf,- 1 --.... - Eur, P-. 5 .5 - r-E rf-w'f si rib: i l . ,. . . ,L4f62WEr.LkbalL-y, .f, 6' 1 Yr -4,-M5E,3 57?.i4fQv'g?fEgm5:::m..:l N.-. Mi: Q , 15: Ehzg in .E--fffififf u me QQ, W-WF4Q4341j542fF--l'Y'+i g -:::az:::.:-: gm. .::x4f,'s:z:zoa:w4mW :T G f, lf- Y- gi-yur...i-nigvccaffifliliii'11 c ,, ' . ' rei- : S f E 5 ff Q -gloom--1 am- irgjhksi Egan! 'Left:.':-F :::2f.'f:,ccc':a','F57F ---- F l .EA -i t' WX' I M 3' fl' 5 il M: 5 ,m -.L . . . . . .. . -: , 115-,M-1 L. ,. fi KQE fi F'. 'E51F,Hq',Ifz4-fpJ1vf,5f,,1gr-F,1grg,vfi i 41 Y -5 nl



Page 19 text:

18 TECHNIQUE 1915 glesworth, a member of the Cor- poration, a club was organized much after the pattern of the young, but highly successful, Cosmopolitan Clubs of Harvard and other col- leges. An organizing committee was brought together, consisting of upper classmen from several na- tionalities, many members of the Faculty, and President Maclaurin, a man of exceptional cosmopolitan experiences and sympathies. It is noteworthy that many members of the Faculty have enjoyed very active membership in the club since its organization. The officers are taken from all nationalities, and one or more members of the Faculty hold positions on the governing board as advisers. National chairmenn are appointed each year to represent the members of their nationality at the meetings of the governing board, when the number from any one nationality is sufficiently large. Several entertainments, known as national nightsf' are given during the year entirely by the representa- tives of one country or of a certain part of the world, each aiming to show the customs, games, and other interesting features that exist in one particular country. Many of these programmes have proven some of the most enjoyable that have ever been given in Technology. They are in- tensely interesting, varied, and are carried out with great enthusiasm. Is The foreign students at the Insti- tute have found the Club of great benefit, and have welcomed the opportunities it has offered not only for becoming more cosmopoli- tan, but for becoming an integral part of the active student life. The club is so popular with Ameri- cans that the American membership, one-third of the total, is generally full. The membership fee is small, but the members, numbering some eighty, are very enthusiastic. Pleasant relations exist with the Harvard Club, many hospitalities being exchanged during the year. A joint dinner will be held this year. Recently an alliance with the na- tional association of college Cos- mopolitan -Clubs has been effected, which, it is expected, will add much strength to the local organization. ,M THE PROFESSIONAL SOCIETIES NE of the most important factors .in the efficiency of the training at the Insti- tute is the fact that in each depart- ment where it is possible there is what we term a professional society, well organized and open to all. These societies are seven in number: the Architectural Society, the Archi- tectural, Civil, Chemical, Electrical, Mechanical, and Mining Engineer- ing Societies, similar in government and purpose, but each according to : .h,v1f,af:,awL:L'oaLz.::.'r-.aaiwfxlzaw ,ff 1 ...:1..,...,a,..f.. ,- ,, -- . 4 ...,,,,,..,,... ...... . .. .. . ..-4.-. - , : , ,rzc-aarme-::.-:faa-riaili ai' rn, - 'ln :11,,,... f ...Z..I.1if?!.Ch7 ''-4f5l.F.-M1'-- - - 3 L '15 EGF, , ,27 Av 5 ..-.maz:::'7:.fS-,zf1::P7f4ZH3::f.ms,1,. Al Fi'- 1-725 -...., . 5 A :.4...f ,- ff,,:,W'Z:-,ga.gr E,.,....,,..... - ,fy I ,I--.3:muvr::aeffvr1h:5'?'J::.4m,'.v. ' 3 - - 2--19 gnu ' : 3...,,w. : M2412-' . Aa- -: sMlL':?:E'f4!f?:H?'1'4fL--'1-I---gMn?.' ' i-.eaiiii -,,,,,Jl :7 3.!,7W.:lH.LfM::-,.-,n.r 4 -I A ,Q . ..............Q...,,,,,,,mzgggm1:,., : 5 : ma: EE-2-I E' ' ' 'U' - ' il- , .ltr q X Vfafifiii uM.....-........,....,, , , ,fx H2 g fi ' N ' ' E5 im, ,..-..,..'.,...-.,,.,.,,.,....,,. . . . . . .L ,, Kxuigujqi, .x I Q.: T3 g:mi.,l,,,7?m,ZHc,yn?n,:'grL,L'?l:EI H:H::i-:

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