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

 - Class of 1915

Page 27 of 472

 

Massachusetts Institute of Technology - Technique Yearbook (Cambridge, MA) online collection, 1915 Edition, Page 27 of 472
Page 27 of 472



Massachusetts Institute of Technology - Technique Yearbook (Cambridge, MA) online collection, 1915 Edition, Page 26
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Massachusetts Institute of Technology - Technique Yearbook (Cambridge, MA) online collection, 1915 Edition, Page 28
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Page 27 text:

Q6 TECHNIQUE 1915 will follow will continue right up to Mayor Curleyis limit. In addition to these big concerts of the year, there have been the usual barn-stormingv trips in the towns around Boston. Some of these have only pleased the mana- gers by the financial returns, but others have proved very pleasur- able affairs, as the concert and dance at Framingham High School, lasting till the departure of the last car. To promote even better fellowship among the members, a smoker-re- hearsal was held in the Union early in March. Each Club took its turn performing for the enjoyment of the others, and the intermission was filled with smoke and knocks. At this meeting the new constitu- tion was submitted and accepted. The system of hurried elections pre- ceding the annual banquet in May has been modified, the Executive Committee and the newly organized Faculty Advisory Committee select- ing the general manager, the treas- urer, and Club managers from among those trying out for the posi- tions. The rest of the system of election and management has been overhauled and improved upon to an extent that assures for the coming years even more progress and success than has fallen to the lot of the seaso11 of 1913-19141. R. D. SALISBURY, '14. THE BEGINNINGS OF THE TECH many changes in the nu- ts merous undergraduate activ- ities at the Institute. Some have expanded and grown in strength, some pursued an even and undis- turbed course, and some few have gradually dwindled and finally dis- appeared. Most noticeable of all have been the modiiications in the regulation and interrelation of the various forms of student endeavor. More, these changes, great and fun- damental though they be, must be regarded as the mere foreshadowing of still other and more far-reaching changes which must come inevi- tably with the passing of the old, and the birth of the new, Technology. Increased opportunity for new, in- creased scope for existing, student activities are the logical comple- ment of the general expansion and development promised by the great change. It is good and desirable that an institution should follow the normal course of evolution, and that each year in its history be a record of definite progress. But periods of rapid growth must be associated with rapid changes and the certain unavoidable losses incident to them. At such times traditions-for, with the brief memory of the briefcr SHOW HE last few years have seen I , g .,,,vQipf:g:::'.5ae.wr..:mff-Q-7me ,- X v-H is :ea'nmEw+-- - ffl :fn E . 5 I -..W , ,,.,,.,,,,,...,,.f,, ., ,. h L , ,M I Q . . . . rw I :.-V 111' 1 u uw- ' My ' n tt'--li' Fam!!! . . .f-4... ,I .. .r.-...- -. -J - .... 1 .,... ,,,,,,,,,,,,., n E I am- - ., -.,!,,.,,,,,,,,.f. . - - - Qty - , uf-I---gm.- 1--. 5 . -..- EE:-L-,..: im. --I 1 ,,,M.,.,,,, , 5 i lx ., A I.:-Lanai! ,, ,- when f,c5'.!,ee.'t...um:cQR:xxN2 ggritgi - : .ar :.: - 'H ' ' Qg:::: ',Ft::::f:i::::::,',':m.-:'.',':'77! 2 E 2 E Li.. - -fi x w un rl -K . 11 I '. :1211:mC':'A4!un'., ,1. w:! f -' 5 . as : -E ii

Page 26 text:

1915 TECHNIQUE 25 mation day by day, making possible the co-operation and unity of pur- pose which now exists. To tabulate all the reasons in support of a daily newspaper at the Institute would require much time and space, but it suffices to say that it is a most necessary convenience and that it furnishes experience to the men actively in- terested in a very valuable line of work-journalistic writing. To quote from a recent Engi-neering News concerning this latter point: The average citizen is more or less at the mercy of the press as regards the status of municipal projects in- volving the services of engineers or architects. On account of the igno- rance of the reporter, he may get distorted ideas concerning various public improvements. An unpreju- diced, non-technical opinion com- ing from a reputable engineer will appeal to the average citizen and enable him to talk and vote in- telligentlyf' . . . ':Of the two, however-the engineer, trying to write a news- paper description of something he understands, or the reporter, con- fidently describing something he does not understand-commend me to the former. The daily affords practical experi- ence in telling the storyf, Its value is unquestionable. L. W. SNOW, '111. THE MUSICAL CLUBS f 'Y HE Combined Musical Clubs, Q with the largest membership 5' in their history, and with many changes in the concert system and the organization, have had a most successful year. From the best material that has tried out within the memory of the most perennial member, the final cut left some thirty in the Glee Club and about thirty-five in the lVIandolin and Banjo Clubs. The nrst joint concert in which the Clubs have taken part since 1909 was held with the Wesleyan glee and mandolin performers, on the day after Thanksgiving, in Jordan Hall, Boston. A loyal band of Wesleyan alumni turned out to welcome the visitors and to entertain them after the concert, which, with each club striving to outdo its rival, was unusually good. Two weeks later the Winter Con- cert, the Hrst oflicial appearance of the Clubs for the year, was held at Copley Hall, before as many under- graduates and their fair ones as could be comfortably accommodated at the dance that followed. The past few Home concerts have proved so successful that they have outgrown the old quarters. Junior Week will see the Clubs performing in the ball- room of the Copley-Plaza for the first time, and the dancing which E . -,,w,',.ra....---H:::su.:m-..::mfm:ma 0 w. v::f'::e:m::w,.1-1-,win f--' :fa . E. .3 1nfufrgfyznumumvgulnmv ff -is mu'1uupv1n-.ufJhuunrG5'2- L -if + . . : , ,, - .111-:::'a1.:...-:-5,-:mgi:.j:g':.-.A - W E .:::rr':,75:'::1u:u'1fx: 1','f,z.'.7 .H X . :'!'l'l?55 .. - '- E 195f4f'f5fms1fw-We 2,-fgzi. fy ' r' M-: ' . 4- E , :AA-.M ,- fa,,.1495525i'2.:3i?,i?2Df-. - i' - 56 A ji, :liri1'Mmiuu1 frzfz.-34,3-grmmllg gs-gg!! lik? 5 :,....-:f-ffflff I! I U 'MQ QW l ij. : L Aim: Um. .:1zf1f'A'o'wm1vr Ki, A i.5.L:.f H11 a w m as ...maiiirfiixexenexx - 3 537.9225 W -I v 1 L' V 1 an I E'Jh::L-',FSI:U:-fm::::f::,c',', :L',',1T75 'Q 2 E Q 1 1- ', .Hi 'iginrsf' IZ' 'x .I U V. I '. it f F.1.:1:':.?l',C'!'AZ'5.',':'.L5'.. ':v':i4'. :':::':E I -L' JI9-nn, T' E ,



Page 28 text:

1915 TECHNIQUE Q7 student generation, events of a past decade must be regarded as such- are in danger of oblivion. Some, of necessity, cease to exist with the disappearance of the thing or event which gave them birth. Others, in which the original cause persists, are so altered as to lose all semblance of their earlier form. Cognizant of these facts, it was With an especial pleasure and in- terest that the Writer received a request to draw up some record of the beginnings of the Tech Show. By rare good fortune there Was in his possession a brief statement of the ShoW's origin, Written by the one most concerned in it and best able to describe it. This may be given in its original form :- 6'To the Tech undergraduate of to-day, the Tech Show seems so much a matter of course that he can hardly imagine that the early spring ever arrived Without bring- ing the Tech Show with it. The Show to be given this year will be the sixteenth in the history of this now thoroughly established annual festivity. But With this taken for granted, it is a Tech generation, and more, since the Show had its beginning. There is not a little danger that the origin and purpose of the Show may so soon retire into remote tradition as to become myth- ical. Therefore the Venerable Ones who Watched the ShoW's beginnings think it Wise to leave authoritative record of them. In the late Winter of 1899 the Athletic Association of M. I. T. found itself, 'not to put too ine a point upon it' as Mr. Micavvber would say, 'bankruptedf This pain- ful fact was impressed upon the collective mind of the Association by the refusal of certain Boston firms, Who shall be nameless, to furnish any further medals for dis- tribution by the Association until at least some share of the last medals furnished had been paid for. This condition of things was the more embarrassing as several medals had been earned and not yet presented, and the Winners of them were be- coming explicit in the expression of their opinion of the Association. Money Was imperatively in demand. The Association appointed a com- mittee of Ways and means. That committee decided that the aggre- gate talent of Tech might be equal to the presentation of a Minstrel Show, for admission to Which the friends of Tech might be coerced into paying a quarter each. Coun- sel as to the most effective method of getting up the aforesaid Show Was sought of an Old Friend of Tech. This friend expressed an un- expected faith in the artistic re- sources of Tech, and very strongly urged an extending of the Minstrel idea from the twenty-Eve-cent en- ' .... a...-,..,T, ,1.....-. :.. . . 5, A5 : ,. ,y:,'4n5Aii::'.iaLa..-:f::L:E:n2f1mgL- gr 'gg w':::::,2:f'r,:.L::M.'.3:l3'5,7',g1' 1'--f -. -J a . I E 5 --- - '-2 Lewfra-maaf.1 .'ff.m's-w-- -- -2 '- .-...ii nq-Yfgm 5 A L ,W - 'li -1 ,QI QA, V 'W I s.-V fam i 125 ' 'u wfffe7 u fffWM'f!,9jQs,,.w-f. 4- in 2 ada.. 3,425 llil!2L2ZZ?iZWE an f : : E: : -E,n:T :ann .,.....,......mQxu...-. N X E :gm-Leu - - I IX PM .faq ik I - 3 ---,,.m,.f,,7.m...,,.....,..,.,1 .,.....+:5 ......... !k,.....,-......,.,.,.... ,, . e - - - 1- - A ' -. . V: f ? . . ..a-..,........,-,,... M..-.......-. Eu.. . . . . 4-L, . f xKn5,1.m I ' f' .

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